Bellefonte, Pa., December 23, 1910. They Impede Circulation In the Scalp and Invite Baldness. Ingenious men are continually con- triving new kinds of shoes, new sus- ——————— os : THE MOONLIGHT SONATA. i {Continued from page 6, column 4. ‘as sovereign mistress of the evening i sky, and the scene which it illumined was of extraordinary beauty and re pose. From that height the view em | braced the entire city of Bonn, which | climbs zigzag along the bills, tra: | ersed by its sparkling river, now hid . den by its coat of ice. There was some penders and hundreds of different | thing fantastic in the vast immo kinds of braces. but so far, says the Therapeutic Gazette, no one has taken up the idea of making a hat which will hold on the head and not blow off and at the same time not bind the head all around like a constricting band. Some men go without hats at times with the idea that the hair is improved py ventilation and sunshine. Undoubt- | edly this does improve it. but the prime secret is not In not wearing the hat at | all. The ventilated hat will not pre- ' vent baldness if this same hat be worn tightly around the head. If a string be tied ever so lightly around the fin ger the effect upon the circulation that finger. A tight hat will affect the elrculation of the scalp in the same way i may be easily marked in the end of i , i Hats which arc easily blown off | | bility of the landscape. in the strikinz | contrast of the immaculate snow which covered the city like a shroud | should never be worn, as they will not | and traced upon the distant height» stay on unless jammed so tightly Upon | , great white line which formed the | French: the head as to Impede circulation. All stiff. rigid hats should be very light, and one should select a size larger than the head measurement and cor- | horizon and of that deep blue sky now | unruffied by wind or marred by cloud “() night.” murmured the musicinn | as he leaned with his elbows on | rect the over size by inserting felt | (he window xill—*O mysterious moun strips under the sweat band, thus giv- | you are my friend: | understand ing a cushion-like effect and prevent- the scalp. Was Yet to Come. “Gracious! That's a peach of a black eye. Where did you get it?” i “Got it 0 the left side of my nose. Where did you think I got it—over the ankle bone?’ “Don’t get heated. Iow did it all | happen?” i “That's different. It was all a plece | of my confounded nck, 1 was up on | the Blue CHfY road locking at a plece | of real estate when along came a coat- | less and bareheaded Aellow running | for dear life with « lot of panting pur- guers streiching in a long line behind him. | joined in the chase. Being fresh. I rapidly overhauled the fugl- tive. 1 hac uearly collared him when | a big rufian grabbed me and profane- | ly told me to clear out. | spoke rudely | to him and kept on running, and he | suddenly reached out a fist like a ham | and knocked me into a diteh. And | what do you suppose it oll was?” | “Give it up.” “It was u rehearsal for a moving pic- ture film, snd now my portrait will go all over the country and be seen in thousands of theaters ax i bruised and battered butter-iu who got just what was coming to him!" —Cleveland Plain Dealer. His Interference. The twists and turns taken by fak- ing horse dealers to get ont of their bad bargains are proverbial. A little incident illustrative of the tribe took place recently at a stable on North Broad street. where an irresponsible settler had succeeded in palming off 2 defective horse on i too easy buyer. The new owner turned up with the horse a few days after the purchase and angrily exclaimed. “Didn't yon say this horse was perfectly safe nnd wouldn't trouble anybody ?* I'he deal er coolly asked. “What's the matter with the horse?’ The dupe replied: “You know well enough. He inter feres badly.” With a curt “Well. he doesn’t interfere with anybody but himself. does he?" the fake dealer brushed the matter aside, and the pur- chaser found himself without a reme- dy.—Philadelphin Record. A Great Military Feat. Nonza. in Corsica. is very proud of the story of a great military feat per- formed there long ago. It is told in “Romantic Corsica.” by George Ren- wick. The French in 1768 had subjugated all the northern cape with the excep tion of the tower of Nonzu, which for a considerable time sustained a close siege. Attacking parties were driven back by a fierce fire. but at last the garrison agreed to surrender if allow. ed to march out with all the honors of war. This was conceded. and old Captain Cascella appeared. staggering under 2 load of muskets and pistols. “Why is the garrison so long in com- ing out?’ asked the French com- mander. “It is here. sir,” replied Cascella. “1 am the garrison.” Glass Solvent. Hydrofluoric acid is an acid com- pound of hydrogen and fluorine. it may be prepared by the action of sul- phuric acid npon cryolite in an ap- propriate apparatus made of lead or platinum. It may thus be readily ob- tained in a liquid form and is color- less. Its vapors are exceedingly poi- sonous, and the liquid itself. even when mixed with more or less water, causes severe swellings on the skin. Great care must therefore be taken In working with this acid. Hydrofluorie acid dissolves glass, forming hydro- fluosilicic acid with its siliea: hence its use for making etchings on glass — Exchange. : They Come Later. The Young Wife showing her furni- ture)—Here's the rocking chair for the parlor. Isn't it just lovelys Mrs Old- ley (rather critically)—But 1 don’t sce any rockers, dear. The Young Wife— Oh. they'll be here nest month. You gee, we are buying the chair on the installment plan, and we have oaid | everything vou say to me. ing the constriction at that portion of | son of resignation you teach me thi | evening 1 shall never forget! Give Descend upon bw | me inspiration How He Got It and the Worst That | co. 11 ihe train of your majestic and | The les silent splendors in order that | mu your immortal beauty to that pout child who has uever known you.” The two spectators of that strate geene remained mute, awed and fax nated by the exaltation of the youn: musician. He remnrned to the plano near which Alice wax sitting, lost ia a deep reverie tle took her hand and said: “My child. you do not know the ap pearance of the clear. soft night. | which draws over the heavens its in perial mantle, dotted with glittering: stars; you do not know what the beau | tiful round won says to the proud souls and inciturn hearts thai love solitude and sorrow. Ah, well, 1 shu try to tell you all that!” She was almost on her knees be fore him. He resumed his place at the piano and pinyed, What be played no facility of style no artifice of language, can ever oa press. There are certain musical sense. Our sentimental personality ix deliciously or terribly awakened. Final ly the last note dies away. We rv what we have so vividly experienced. and we quickly perceive that it ix un impossible sk. So the devotees .! the occult sciences pretend that music is the language of the spirit world. When the musician had finished he looked around him. The blind girl. motionless and transtigured, seemed to be in heaven. In one corner the boy. to whom this bumble home be longed. was weeping freely, his head between his hands. Master Joachim was standing behind his companion with bis enormous mouth open in amazement and his eyes fixed on the piano, approached the blind girl and pered to the old organist: “Come. und do not make a noise.” Silently they gained the door and disappeared. A moment later tle young artisan “IT WAS AN ANGEL." raised his head and said, “Ab, how strange, Alice, they are vot bere!” “It was an angel, my brother. lle has flown away, but 1 am sure he will return.” Iv. HAT night when the poor ma sician returned to his humble attic in the !"latz Roemer his bitterness of spirit had van ished. He kindled his meager fire lighted his lamp and throughout the night covered with his accustomed scrawl many of those long white sheets of paper lined with black which had aroused so much suspicion in the minds of the good women of ihe aeighborhood. When the pale winter's sun again shoue upon his window the composer, overcome by fatigue. was sleeping with his head resting upon his scattered sheets, but before he fell asleep he had finished his work, which he called in memory of that event: night “The Moonlight Sonata” Today that sonuta is considered oo of the most sublime creations of hn. man genius. The young man who on that Christmas sve played the role of consoling angel to the blind girl was ealled Ludwig Beethoven. for the rockers yet.—Chicage News. —— works which seize upon the soul | soothe it, soften it or agitate it. Bach | chord. each note, causes the vibration within us of some hitherto unknown | turn to ourselves, we try to analyze = musician In absolute surprise. ‘Ibe | young man smiled, softly closed the | kissed her un the forehead, then whi Different From a Mountain. A certain Phliadalpking who Is at { once n minster of the gospel and a | registered physician ad an amusing | experience in his attempt to corner a Christian Scientist. Every tice they met this Scientist took occasion to scoff at medical science and to dwell upon the wonders thst could be per- form=a turough fala. “You are convinced that through | faith you can do anything.” said the , medical man one day. “Yes.” he replied: “faith will move | mountains.” A week later he was in the doctor's | office with a swollen jaw. due to tooth- . ache. “What. you here?" the doctor ex- claimed. with feigned astonishment. “Oh. doctor.” he said. =I have suf- | fered agony a!l through the night. 1 | simpiy can’t stand this pain any ! longer!" “Have you tried faith?" the physi. | | clan asked him. “Yon know you told | me faith could move mountains.” “But this is a cavity, doctor.” Pleasing the Sultan. { which illustrates exactly the attitude | of the sultan of Morocco toward the One day the sultan asked a lady, the | wife of his dentist, to play one of the | planos that were in the room of the palace. She played several pieces. one { of them at length catching the sultans | fancy. whereupon the following little | dtalogue took place: i Sultan - That piece is very nice. | What is it called? The Active Sloth Bear. “The sloth bear appears to be the most active of all the bears in the zoo. Whoever misnamed the animal ought to bestow a more appropriate title,” said a woman visitor who =at on a bench in frout of the bear dens. “A more befitting designation would be ‘Ursus pugilisticus’ or something like that, for he is certainly the most pugnacious of all the bruin specimens here. And he gets away with it. too. . although he weighs only 250 pounds. , fails to catch his opponent. 1 1 saw him knock out the hairy eared bear in a fierce fight over a plece of meat, and he gets the better of the great Yezo bear of about 1.000 pounds in the adjoining inclosure. They fight through the bars. You can hear the snapping of the big bear's jaws as he But the nervous sloth bear is as quick as a cat with his long claws and gets in a dig on the other one's wuzzle tha: makes him snort with pain.”—New York Sun. Don't take pills unless you have to. If you do need a laxative medicine, use the kind that will not make you a victim to aid eal re Su ania story. | Sie pill abit-—Dr. Pierce ef Pheu Pel. i ! i { ! | Dentist—It is the “March on Cadiz.” | It was written to commemorile the | | Spaniards driving the French out of | be uble to speak of you and disclose | Spain, Suitan-—-What! Were the French in | Spain? Dentist —Yes, Sultan—How many of them? Dentist— About 200.000. Sultan (in a surprised tone)—And the | Spaniards drove them ont? Dentist —Yes, every one of them. There was a slight pause while the sultan was thinking hard, and then: Sultan (quietly)—Play it again. A Christmas Suggestion. A book cover makes a good Christ | mas present for the girl who is apt | to be accompanied by her hook. The | covers come in natural linen. | Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, : a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it THE CENTURY In 1911 The Century. THE LIFE OF MARTIN LUTHER A great biograp vivid, dramatic, readable. won ROBERT HICHENS'S THE DWELLER ON THE THRESHOLD A powerful new novel by the author of “The Garden of Allah"—its theme, physical research. A rich and varied feast of good things for readers of The Century In 1911. Send for Prospectus to The Century Company, UNION SQUARE. 5545 NEW YORK. —— Money to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN on good. security an | mal houses to rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, lA a Mill Hands. The fact that a great body of indus- i referred to as “hands,” | shows how small account is taken of their | human necessities. They are just “hands” to the mill owner because it is the labor of their hands which makes his profits. for | ny re blood Bo the and | gu anc . y is pure ‘ plentiful. For those who undergo the ceaseless strain of daily toil, there is no medicine so helpful as Dr. Pierce’s Gold- en Medical Discovery. It cures disorders of the stomach and other organs of diges- tion and nutrition, purifies the blood, heals “week lungs” and bronchial affec- tions. It cures ninety-eight inevery hun- dred who use it. Hood's : Sarsaparilia. gfe Fo Get it © . In usual form chocolated s called uid Jo 55.80 | carpet Cleaner. 10 Days Free Trial In Your Own Home of the improved “Simplex” We want to sup- ply one lady in every borhood witha | “Stmplex” Vacuum Cleaner, for adver- tising purposes. Write today for the most liberal of- fer ever made. The “Simplex” s guaranteed to do as good work as | electric machines costing $100.00 and | over. It is light in weight {only 20 Ibs) | runs extremly eas: ! and can be operated rfectly and easily one perso. With ordi nit ry | care the Simplex ' | will last a lifetime. « : scription our jon free whether an invention is probable patent k on patents secunng years expenence. - ents taken th Munn & Co. receive Special Ba ei . a handsome tion of any Patents. TENTS, TRADE MARKS. COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and de may quickly ascertain opin Communications are strictly sent free. Oldest agency patents. 60 5 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, illustrated weekly. Largest circula- scientific . Terms $3 a year; four months $1. Sold bv all newsdealers. MUNN & CO.. 5245-1y. . 631 Broadway, New York. Branch office, 625 F St.. Washington, D.C. ILES.—A cure that is guaranteed if vou use RUDY'S PILE SUPPOSITORY. D. Matt. Thompson. Supt. Graded Schools, Statesville, N. C., writes: “1 can say they do all you claim for them.” Dr. S. M. Devore, Raven Rock, W. Va., writes: “They give uni- versal satisfaction.” Dr.H.D. McG, Clarks- burg, Tenn. writes: “In a practice of 25 years 1 have found no to equal yours. Price 50 cents. Samples Free. Sold . ¥ and in e by C. M. Dros MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster Pa. ——— Travelers Guide. (Era RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. ‘Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1809. READ DOWN | — 1 STATIONS T : No 11NoS|No 3 No ofNo ano 2 — —— ~ _" Tels % 100 5 051 9-40 718 7 22 ooo S514 8 927 720071112 37 168 5114 47119 21 7 718 845 441 915 7 2 1843 438 413 7 8/7 23 “ie8 39! 4 MY 08 7 8 "836 4 05 7 4017 3! 2 58|......... Nittany... .. IB 34! 4 2719 2 7a Soll... Huston... 2 $ 7 48if7 "18 26) 4 752 40 822 41480 7 56|17 49 "18 18' 4 0918 48 8 02{ 7 54' "812/403 843 HH 130 1a (N.Y. River R.R.) 11 40 8 ersey Shore...... 309 752 1215 9 ¥ . Vive] 238 17 112 20 11 30, LLVMPORT | 47 | 23 5% 230 650. ThE RRA 56 1% WALLACE H. GEPHART., General Superintendent. ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. Schedule to take effect Mondav. fan. 6. 1910 ow as tt STATIONS. I pe t Nos t No3 Nol tNo2't No4[No 6 p. m.la. m.|la.m.|Lve. - - Ar. . 0 2 00) 10 15| 6 30|... 6 00 2 07) 10 20} 6 35]. 5 50 212102316 547 217 1027/6 548 221 10 306 5 40 226 10 34/6 535 2% 10 406 53 235 10 45|7 525 5 07 a sol sls! w 8 Bears the ZA Titer: 51-14-1y. Atorney La. Dealers and Agents Wanted to sell 340 a Signatare of y | both our hand and electric machines. F.H. THOMAS. Supt, __ i ) [a eo 200.00 30 an Always Bough Children Cry for | Electric Cleaner Co. Children Cry for i 98 Jack Bou! CHICAGO, IL | Fletcher's Castoria. | ™ 50" Fletcher's Castoria. | Clothing. ha. y of in Clothing. —————————————————— apa a — a —_ . sear nam - em a —— | SE ce em — ) UIE EEERE SOR SESE Sr Te: EVENT OF THE YEAR Pr BEE M + dy kind usually costs. Allegheny St. Bellefonte. Suit and Overcoat Sale Beginning Monday, January 2nd, We offer EVERY SuiT or OVERCOAT in our « entire stock at from 25 TO 40 PER CENT. REDUCTION This includes every suit in the store---Men’s, Boys’ or Children’s. Every overcoat, every rain coat, every pres- to coat---all shown alike. Buy Honest Clothing The Fauble kind for less money than the ordinary shod- This sale will last through the entire month of January. We would advise an early call. Don’t miss this, it’s a money-saving opportunity THAT'S HONEST. Now is your time to | The Fauble Sure § BREET, 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers