Dewi can. Bellefonte, Pa., February 3, 1911. The Three Great Channels. Every human being—man. woman and child, hero and convict, neuras- | thenic and deep sen fisherman, athlete i and invalid needs the blessing of God | through three. and only three. great | channels responsibifity., recreation and affection: work, play and love. | With these any life is ‘happy in spite | of sorrow and pain. successful despite the bitterest failures, Without them a | man breaks his heart, severs his con- | scious connection with God. If you | want to keep a headstrong, fatuous | Youth from overreaching himself you ! try to sive him responsibility, recrea- | tion avd affection. IF you want to put i wcournze nnd aspiration into the gelati- | nous character of a street walker or | the flickering mentality of a hysterie you lnbor 10 furnish just the same trio —wor's, recreation and: affection. In every case the healing power which you want to give is real life, and real life means just these three things. The same needs are fixed for all of us and the same ail sufficing bounty in the supply if we can get and keep in touch with it.—Atlauntic, Mice For Whooping Cough. A fairly alarminz relic of medieval nosirums came to my notice recently. A mother was discussing with her housekooper the probability of her <hildiren taking whooping cough, which was then prevalent in the community. The housckeeper, a most dependable, valuable helper, of more than average good sense and judgment, said: “Mrs, Black, if you'll let me I can keep your children from having whooping cough. T've kept lots of children from having it, but 1 wouldn't do it without telling vou first.” “Well, Martha, what is it?” “You catch a live mouse and kill and dress it and stuff it and bake it and feed it to the children. It isn’t bad to take, and of course they don't know what it is. That would spoil the <harm.” To wy friend's exclamation of horror =he replied with conviction. “I've given it to lots of children, and never one of them had whooping cough.” Mary Newell Yom in Designer. When Wagner Died. “Nearly all the visitors to Venice,” | says a letter from that city, “go to the | Vendramin palace to see the place where Wagner lived nearly a year and where he died in February, 1885. We who were here on that glorious spring «lay when they bore the master = way. | who remember the long line of mourn- fing barges. wish that the palace could | fave amone other mementos a pie- | ture of that occasion. The great state | barce contained Anton Seidl's orches- tra. aud after it came barges with | singers, nobles, great men and women, | all in deepest mourning. This is the | scene which some artist should fix on | canvas. But, alas, he who saw «ould never know what it represented | unless he had been here at the time. The music. under Seidl and Neumann, | and its effect on the mourning throng! no brush could portray.” Thoughtful Girl. The young man was calling on the! girl. He didn’t know her very well, but she looked good to him. He want. ed to call again the next night, but hardly had tne nerve to ask permission | fo do so. i “I'd like to come up again,” he said | when he was ready to go home. “How! about next week some time?" A look of disappointment came over | her (ace. “Next week?” she sald. “Why, isn't that—er—well, I'll tell you | what to do; you come up tomorrow, align and we'll decide which night | next week you may call”—Detroit | Times, | The Sou! of the Houss. There are big houses and small, | handsome and plain, dear and cheap. | but every house is like a suit of clothes | in that it makes such a lot of differ: ence who is walking around in it.—| Life. True enough. If she's there, it sees | like home: if she isn't, it doesn’t. No! amount of clegance of edifice or fur- | aishings can compensate for her ab! sence. She is the indispensable fae- tor to any home life worthy of the] name. Troy Press. Look About You. It is wonderful how much one can fearn by cultivating the habit of ob. servation. As you walk in the street or ride in the car you pick up a sur- prising amount of information. Our fellow beings are intensely interesting, and they are constantly teaching us something or other. Do not let your knowledge stagnate. Put it to some practical use. Neo One to Do It. “You say you have three small chil- dren. Can't you find work?” The man with the three days’ beard and the ragged trousers wiped away a tear. “Alas, mum,” he said, “it wouldn't ‘be any good. They ain't old enough to work yet." Raving. “Jolin, the cook — been drinking again.” “Is she very drunk?’ “Oh, very. She says she'll never feave us."—Washington Star. In the Toils. “; understand your cousin married a struggling young man.” “Yes, he struggled all right, but he couldn't get away from her." Pitts. burg Press. it’! | recounts “Which Cariyie?” There is nothing to mark the Arch House, where Carlyle was born. in the Scottish village of Feclefechan, from Lhe other lowly dwellings that line the village street, and a native guide will be wnecded If the pligrim desires to find his way to Carlyle’s grave: hence the story of the great writer's brother, James, who was met one day in the village by a bund of Americans. Igno- rant of his identity, they asked him the whereabouts of Carlyle's grave. “Which Cariyte? “Oh, the great Car- Iyle, Thopas Carlyle.” With unmoved face he gave the information asked and was rewarded with a fine outburst of hero worship. “We have come all the way from America,” said the spokesman of the pilgrims. “to lay this wreath on our great teacher's grave.” “Ha!” rejoined James, still unmoved. “It's a gey harmless occu- pation!” All of which, and especially that “Which Carlyle? goes to show how vain is the search of the man who visits Beclefechan ou the lookout for worships of Carlyle. Argonaut, Ths Czar's Soufiser, Czar Paul's snuffbox was as sacred as the imperial crown itself. No one was allowed to touch it. Kapioff wa- gered that lie would take a pinch out of it. One morning he walked up to the table which stood near the bed on which the ezar still reclined and bold- ly took from it the majestic snuff- box. Opening it noisily, he inserted his fingers, and. while aul I. was watching him in stupefaction at such audacity, be sniffed up the fragrant powder with evident satisfaction. “What are you doing there, you rogue?’ exclaimed the czar excitedly. “Having a pinch of snuff, sire. I have now been on duty for eight hours and, feeling drowsy, 1 thought it would keep me awake, for T would rather break the rules of etiquette than neglect my duty.” Paul burst out laughing replied: “That's right enough, my lad, but as the snuffbox is not large enough for both of us you can keep it for your- self.” and merely Juvenile Wisdom. From some examination papers in a Massachusetts—we repeat, Massachu- setts—town: “Capillavity is when milk rises up around the edge of the bottle and shows good measure.” “The settlers gave a Thanksgiving dinner to the Indians for their kind- ness and to the Lord for fair weather. They kept up their festivities for three days, cating all the time. A party of sixty Indian warriors came, rolling their warhoops down the hill.” “Henry VIIL by his own efforts in- creased the population of England 40,000.” “Esau wrote fables and sold them for potash.” “The Lupercal was the wolf who suckled Romeo and Juliet at Rome.” “Lincoln has a high forehead, which is a sign of many brains.”—Every- v's. Nelson as a Courtier. Nelson was the hero of England even in his own time, but not ap- | parently of the court. Samuel Rogers a conversation with him which appears in the life of the poet by I. Ellis Roberts. “I heard him once during dinner,” says Rogers, “ut- ter many bitter complaints (which Lady Hamilton vainly attempted to | check) of the way he had been treated at court that forenoon—the queen had not condescended to take the slightest notice of him. In truth, Nelson was | hated at court; they were jealous of him.” But then it must be remem- bered that Rogers was renowned as a particularly ill natured gossip. The Ruling Passion. it is related of a certain German sa- vant, to show how strong the ruling passion is in death, that as he was | dying he exclaimed in French, In which language he was deeply learn- ed, “Je meurs” (I die). Pretty soon he opened his eyes before passing away and added: “Man kann auch sagen, Je me meurs!” (One can also in French use the reflexive form of the verb “to die’) His last flicker of interest was in the word more than in the fact of death. Disraeli’s Humor. 1 was introduced by particular re- quest to Mrs. Wyndham Lewis, a pret- ty little woman. a flirt and a rattle— indeed, gifted with a volubility 1 should think unequaled and of which 1 can convey no idea. She told me she liked “silent, melancholy men.” I answered that I had no doubt of it.— Letter of Benjamin Disraeli to His Sis- ter. An Optimist. “Pa, what is an optimist?" “An optimist, my son. is a man with 11 cents In his pocket who doesn’t grow sarcastic when he reads that his country’s per capita wealth is §37."— Birmingham Age-Herald. Worth Trying. “1 washed Willie's pants t'udder day, and dey shrunk so dat de po’ chile kin ha'dly walk in 'um. Won'er how 1 gwan fix um?” “Try washin' de chile. shrink too.” Maybe he A Spoiled Evening. “Did she have a good time at the dance? “Not very. You sce, nobody raised any fuss because her partner took more than five dances with her.”"—Detroit Free Press. A friend that you have to buy won't be worth what you pay for him, mo matter what that may be.—Prentice, | mained behind at Hic Srother Wa: Different. A noted Philadelphia attorney ieils one on himself. He left his native town in Tennessee years ugo and lo- cated in Philadelphia to practice law. He has been uniformly successful His brother, on the other hand, re- the family home- stead. Returning to his native town some time ago, the attorney met an old darky in the road. “Hello, uncle!” he said. Dut the old man did not recognize the boy he used to know in the prosperous looking citi- zen who addressed him. “Well,” asked the lawyer, the Blank family?” “Oh, they're all right,” said the old darky. “Jim Blank has gone to Phil- adelpbia and done made a lot of mon- ey. He's a lawyer, sah.” “Is that so?" answered the attorney. “And his brother Tom, how is he? Has he made a fortune too?” “Lawdy, no!" answered the old darky. shaking his head. “He ain't no lawyer, Marse Tom wouldn't take a dishonest penny from nobody.”-- Philadelphia Times. “how are A Russian Railroad. Nicholas 1, of Russia had quite an original way of transacting business. He sent one day for his engineers and gave them eight days to bring him the | rodie of a railroad to connect St. Pe- tersburg with Moscow. At the end of the allotted time the plan was pre- pared. “What,” said he, looking at it, “what is all this—these twists and turns, this serpentine track? Yon must have misunderstood me.” “Sire,” said the spokesman, “we have drafted the shortest route whick would embrace on the line the leading towns and villages." “Give me the pencil and rule,” he said, and he struck a bee line from one city to another, “FMere—you under- stand me?” “But, sire, you leave the large towns entirely out of sight!” “That is their affair. within sight.” Let them come And so the road was straight as an 1. Her Joke. “Madam, your account is ov erdrawn, | and we have had to send na number of your checks baek.” “How perfectly funny!”-—New York | Press. Made It Lean. Teacher—Now, Harold. can you tell me what made the tower of Pisa lean? Harold—1 guess there must have been a famine in the land. Exchange, By Contraries, Things go by contrarie: in this world. People whe have nothing te sav are always talking. —Chicago Ree. ord-Herald. | i made as' { | A Wedding Gift. { opening tie way du pleasures which can- | of Dr. P Piesar's Favorite Prescription. It Sma ' not be enjoyed. The health of the child | nourishes the nerves and so cures ner If you pay ten dollars for a wedding | depends upon the health of the mother. | vousness, it strengthens the body anc gift You canuot get Whyshig So valuable | The heath of the mother depends upon | | makes the mind cheerful. It practically or She iit you Jou miy ebuin Sik free, | lrselt Healthy is enjoyed ; does away with the pain associated —Dr. Tere Medical ' by those who keep the delicate feminine | the baby’s advent. It makes weak wom Adviser. Itis Some, Se marks for organs in a healthy condition by the use the newly married all the rocks and shoals i en strong and sick women well. has found shipwreck. It points } the way to easy and happy maternity, and how motherhood may be robbed of its | pangs and health given to the child with- ' out the loss of health or beauty. This | book contains 1008 and 700illustra- cloth Dinding E tions. It is bound in neat and is sent free on receipt of 31 one-cen stamps to ufray She pense of mailing only For 31 cents you can sm = t Hood's Savsaparilla, Peculiar to Itself. 2 al In combilation, Fobra and process, Hood's Sarsapariila is therefore Peculiar to Itself “It is made from the best blood purifyi . alternative and tonic ingredients by such original ing gift of more real Se all : methods as to retain the fu medicinal value of each and all the j 1 in the world. Address Dr. R. | The severest lotuns off servivia, . salt rheum, catarrh, rheumatism, dyspepsia. and debility are Every mother owes her child a good | constitution. It is healthy than rich. With health all thi HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. 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AA Al Bl i HE EE | ROYAL Standard Typewriter Whether you use one machine or fifty, your typewriter equip- ment is an item of EXPENSE. Reduce the expense, and you increase your PROFITS. It costs less to It does Better work, and ’ : i ROYAL TYPEWRITER CO. Royal Typewriter Bldg., New York. BRANCH OFFICE 55-47-0t 904 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. BF te Shoes. THE MALLORY STUDIO, Representative at Bellefonte, Pa. WY UY TY WY UY WY UY WY TY WY ey Worth Health: feet. them get wet. Bush Arcade Building, Yeagers Shoe Store Are Children Bringing Up? It can't be done without RUBBERS. This is what appeared in a recent number of the American Journal or The family doctor should din it into the mother's head all the time, that the health of their children lies in the Keep the feet dry. Never let No child should be al- lowed to go out in snow or rain, or when walking is wet, without Rubbers. REMEMBER, Yeager's Rubbers are the best and the prices just a little cheaper than the other fellows. Yeager’s Shoe Store, BELLEFONTE, FA. LYON & CO. On account of numerous requests from a great many patrons, we will continue our Big : Sale Two WEEKS LONGER. White - New Goods added every day in all departments. The finest line of new Dress Goods in all the new Spring shades with Trimmings to match. Everything in washable fab- rics in stripes and checks. RUMMAGE TABLE. Our Rummage Table has been very busy. We are pnt- ting on new remnants, odds and ends, every day. EE —— LYON & COMPANY. Allegheny St. 4712 Bellefonte, Va.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers