Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 10, 1911, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    mms es
| piles and piles of glitteringgold and silver TWO VALERTINES ) “Violets!” cried Miss Lizzie and she The Wanderings of the Moon. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
- t ap heaps of rustling green | — kissed them. —
| 0 heaps AE ea iS aces Miss Lizzie opened the missive in the| But this was not all, for with them was To in the remarkable variations
| windows of the big brick building opposite postofice wad blughed a painful Grinaon 3 ny acte and whest Miss Lizsle unfold. Cn the Te the moon during the il DAILY THOUGHT.
ER SS | there were no little | as she at contents. Then itin t light whi erent months we must consider the ef- ' :
Bellefonte, Pa., February, 10, 1911. | chi ta pushed it back into the envelope and |came from her western window, she fect of the inclination of the ecliptic to Sink a song of valentines. of cupids and of
— i made happy. He had no wife and, ap- | turned away to hide two slow tears that | found these words: the earth’s equator. The ecliptic is the hearts, : :
WANDER—THIRST | parently, no relatives. And so it was no | squeezed Hicmseivee from her middle-| “Hidden in her little body path in which the su appears to circle Joly ‘tle boys and girls and pretty silver
— > behind : i 3 Bat ins bel ’ ; heavens once ar. :
wider that his eyed had grown hardand | ages eyes E Lizzie Deen young | There's a heart so big and sweet The eclipti Vey es plane of the King and Queen of hearts—oh. my!—cakes and
Yhure atesome who want the sea, “and his lips had thin and Ee A ot Deine Sorry cd ne: at all good- | That I hide myself within it equator at two opposite points, calied the candy. too! ;
Ad some Who wait the Une, | yielding for lack of something to smile | looking, squeezed is theword. She con- | Finding rest and home complete. vernal and autumnal equinoxes. The You'regoing to give a party? We'll tell you
But Yite and sca are botls for me ‘about and that his face was lined and | cealed the comic valentine in her faded | : sun arrives at the vernal equinox about what to do.
Since wander-thirst is mine. ! sallow, although Mr. Granby was not so seal muff and hurried home. Safe at last Like a weary homesick wanderer the 21st of March, and at the autumnal : Te .
Yio bat srl cal jou me very old. | in her little room she threw Yyeraelt That at last has found repose Ssuigox Jou the Zin of September, n. Joverdoving oid Saint Naluatine feels
Wherever | may be: : is grated window he watched the bed to hide her shame. For - begging ring the interval the sun is north of “sore” that he no lcnger plays presiding
Pm blessed or cursed with wander-thirst, | es Bra laughing seated | neath Miss Lizzie's old maidish unattrac bam Tove og her 10 keep me ya the equator, and consequently its path deity in maidens’ love affairs, he can con-
And 30 the Road for me. ' upon the stone steps below He | tiveness there was a heart forever girfieh oY $32) 8 be KNOWS, lies high in the heavens, as seen from our sole himself with his increasing popularity
The Road that girths the hemispheres! : the flutter of crimson hearts and | in its honesty and simplicity, this| “Oh,” whispered Miss Lizzie, “oh! who hemisphere. with the “Small fry.” Not even in the
What witchery it gains i papers, while now and then some ' heart had held a secret so dear and rare could have sent it? : Ncw the moon travels around the earth good old days, when every damsel swore
When the wide earth leaps before you | bit of sentiment, shouted in a$hrill child- that Miss Lizzie hardly dared herself to And as if in answer to her question the in a plane not very much inclined (only by charms and portents and forecasted
With the sunlight and the rains! ! ish voice, pierced the plate glass window. = contemplate it, therefore shame, burning, | door softly opened and then closed again five degrees and eight minutes to the her future with implicit faith, was Valen-
When the mist is onthe meadows, Mr. Granby almost smiled as he realized smarting shame, was Miss Lizzie's, for | and when Miss Lizzie glanced up, there path of the sun.) But the sun takes tine Day held in such high regard as it is
And the traveler casts his load, that it was the fourteenth of February and | she knew now that the secret was no | right before her smiling down at her twelve months to circle the heavens, by the twentieth-century child.
Oh! the moonlight and the shadows | that St. Valentine was ruling on the steps | longer hers. The doggered verse under- stood the Man with-a-Past. Moreover. while the moon takes less than one Itisa pretty fine thing to be a modern
And the magic of the road "below him. | neath the cruei caricature had told her | Whatever of romance his past may have month. Accordingly, at one time we boy orgirl at any time, but never more
: The children were counting their val- | that someone had discoverel her treasure | contained, he looked perfectly satisfied find the moon near the sun, and about so thanat a holiday season. Of all the
So long its length has led me entines. Cora Marsh had most. of and was laughing at her for trying to i with Miss Lizzie and the Present.—By two weeks later just opposite the sun. fete days of the year, Valentine Day, how-
O'er continent and sea course. “Fifteen!” she told off proudly | guard it. Margaret Seaforth, in Shop Talk. It is clear that when the moon is near ever, is pre-eminently for the children;
That I have power to become i The others followed by thirteens, tens, | .y old and plai ! the sun, as at new moon, it will be north their have a full share in the pleas-
Whate'er I wish to be; and sevens. No one had less than five. ou are ugly, h, A Lawless Boy. of the equator if the sun is north, and ures and profits of Christmas, but the
From the lark that rules the meadows No one, unless we except Winny Dickson | But you make eyes just the same, — em south if the sun is south. But when the 14th of February is an occasion that
To the coyote in the hills— who, admiration and in her big | You are trying all you can A class of undesirables has been large. moon is opposite the sun, as at full moon, every boy and girl can rightfully claim as
1 may be any wild thing ! black eyes, strove to catch of the To get a certain man, lyin the public eye for a number of it will be north of the equator if the sun his or her own special holiday.
My vagrant fancy wills. | beautiful hearts and darts and knots But you'll get left, Miss Lizzie!” years, both town and country being af- is south, and south if the sun is north. —
Sometimes I am a sea-gull which emerged from the fancy envelopes. Jon'¥l gel Yh Lizaie! flicted with its presence. and although a We have just seen that from autumn Valentine Cookery, — Sandwhiches
Where the shouting combers crash For Winny's little cold hands were empty. These were the words that had accom- | number of remedial measures have been 10 Spring the sun is south of the equator. ghould be cut heart-shaped and filled
Nobody paid any attention to her. A !panied the re of a hideously | tried, the discouraging fact is that the It foilows that in winter the full moon ith red sweet rs mixed with mayon-
1 swoop and dip where blue tide-rip : z peppe y
And spume and spindrift flash: girl with no valentines was not very in- female who leered at her with a - | number of boys arrested for lawlessness Will be north of the equator, and will run pate.
Where the wicked little cat’s-paws teresting on the fourteenth of February, | be youthfulness. The last line had been | increases so rapidly and so constantly, high in the sky. On the other hand, dur- Baking powder biscuits cut with a
Whisk across the ground-swell’s breast as a sort of curiosity, and their in pencil. There could be no doubt | that larger court quarters arc necessary, ing the summer, when the sun is north of peart.shaped mole, split n. buttered
Or the oily sea lifes lazily , hile took no note of | that Miss Lizzie’s persecutor meant her | Recently, because of the depredations of the equator, the full moon will be south nq spread with currant jell * make an
With storm-clouds in the west her tment. Winny was too | to understand. | boys, the property-holders in upper Man- of it and will run low in the sky. Some ,pnetiizng change from the re sand-
proud plucky to let them see she | By all that was congruous Miss Lizzie | hattan were obliged to form a protective variation is produced by the inclination ch,
And I have been a a fir-tree cared, but after the girls had gone on up | should have been living in some quaint | association for the defense of their houses of the moon's orbit to the ecliptic, but A cake for children’s valentine fete
mo abull-elk’s mating ground; the hill, she sat down in the sunshine on | old-fashioned cottage with a rose garden | and shops against boys who, among oth- br inclination, being small, may be ghoula be iced with a pink icing with a
ve heard the hill-wind singing the bank steps and hid her face in her | and borders of box. She should have been er pastimes, raid temporarily vacant neg ected in a general explanation. border of white icing heaits and a white
Upon his midnight round; shabby faded frock. Winny was attended by a faithful family servant, at | houses and carry away door knobs, win- 0 moon rises, on the average, about ¢oun sugar figure of Cupid on top.
1 watched the patient foot-hills | Mr. Granby watched the pathetic once her slave and her bully, and she dow glass—sash and all—and electric and fiityone minutes later every day. This "A novel idea for a small party is to
And saw the growing light figure below him for a moment. Perhaps | should have had her little circle of geatle | gas hxtures, in some instances doing as Interval is called the daily retardation. It puke small cakes in rather deep tins. In
Of coming morn when day was born rougish Cupid, who aims his arrows at | narrow-minded folk steeped in the refine. = high as $1,500 worth of damage. Firing is shortened or lengthened according to the center of each cake have a small val-
From out the womb of Night. the most unexpected tavgets, plereed Mr. | ment of a former generation. That was bill boards is an everyday amusement, what part of the ecliptic the moon is entine motton water color paper and
Just now I am a white beach: Granby's Leart at that t, for sud- | the environment to which she had been the record for some sections being as near. In the latitude of New York the rapped in paraffin paper. This is baked
Behind me grasses sway, Say became conscious of a strange | born. She didn’t belongin a middle class high as twelve in a single twenty-four interval may vary in length between j, the batter. The cakes are iced and
Before me hiss of sea-foam kiss there, not love, perhaps, but that | boarding house with people like Miss | hours. In the case of the lawless boy it twenty-three minutes and one hour and gecorated with roses and hearts.
And slap of lazy spray: which we are told is akin to it, pity. | Tritt, the stenographer. But Miss Lizzie is hardly fair to lay the blame for his seventeen minutes. The retardation iS [t may be well if the guests are young
The snipe that pipe at daybreak. Mr. Granby did not often im- | hadn't been trai iodo anything but to | misdeeds upon the police. For one thing, greatest then the move path js Ste. to advise breaking the cakes before eat-
The lost things thrown ashore, pulses. His acts were consequences of play a Gg a Witle when her par- | the officer runs a chance of having the Ero um, ovistm, I least w the ing. An element of chance can be given
Here find a home "mid stranded foam much cool deliberation. If occasionally ' ents died, jeaving her a mature case dismissed and receiving a reprimand path 3 e smallest inclination. by having but half a couplet in each cake.
And crashing combers’ roar. an impulse did visit him, he discouraged { orphan of thirty-five, was too timid at the Children’s Court, according to atter condition occurs, with re. ‘The one whose couplet finishes the rhyme
it religiously. But now his impulse was | to attempt any of the independent things ' whether the judge on the bench is t to the full moon, about the time of ig partner for some game or dance.
So some may want the sea, to go down and comfort the little weep- | she saw women around her doing. In- much swayed by the "boys will Le the autumnal equinox. At that season —
And some may want the pine, ing figure on the steps, and he obeyed it. | stead it seemed to her simpler to sell her boys” sentiment. And once the case the full moon travels in a path very little A pretty table set for a valentine lunch-
But pine and sea are both for me "Sinn, quite extinguished in her faded | little property and to take up her abode | against a boy is dismissed, he publishes inclined to the horizon, and so, for sev- eon has a centerpiece formed of a low
Since wander thirst is mine. skirts, looked up at agreatly coated figure [in a cheap boarding house. By strict | the fact far and wide in his neighborhood eral evenings in succession, will rise at pow] of Boston Buds, the small, fragrant
The long trail-call is on me wearing a sealskin cap. : | geoiomy could make both ends meet. that he “has licked the cop,” and, of nearly the hour of sunset. This is called pink roses which, because of their short
Wherever I may be: ; “What's the matter, little girl? Didn't | So for the last five years she had gone her course, both the authority of that officer the harvest moon. The next following giems, are less expensive than most
I'm blessed or cursed with wander-thirst, you get any valentines?” a naturally gruff | plaintive way, laughed at by the other and his diligence in noting infractions full moon in October also has its path kinds In this, asparagus fern is thrust
And so the Road for me. voice, striving to be gentle, asked. boarders, including Miss Tritt, hurt in | suffer a “great sea change.” In addition, but little inclined, and its retardation plentifully. A pink ribbon is tied around
By B. MacArthur. | No, sir,” said oN too unhappy to | every clinging sencibilics hiding more and | the boy in a number of cases, misinter- shortened, and is called the hunter's the bowl, with a big bow at one side, and
— ' be much it the t Mr. : more within h f, but still preserving | prets the leniency of the court and con- moon. from this come out narrow strips of pink
| Granby to inquire into her grief. the innocent immaturity which made her | strues it both for himself and other mem- Some persons suppose that the crescent ribbon to each place, where they are at-
THE VALENTINE. Then her stubborn and hatred of girlish. : bers of his gang as permission to contin- of the new moon promises wet or dry ' tached to a place card. If the luncheon
— | being pitied forced her to say something She's like a violet growing in a - | ue in the role of anarchist—for he is lit- weather, according as its horns are 80 in- is a small one, four candies, if larger, six,
Never, since Cupid began to shoot his | that was not true. “But I ain't crying | den of cabbages, “The Man-with-a- erally that since he is a law unto him- clined that the hollow between them
i sed for lighting, shaded with f
arrows was there seen a more beautiful | for that!” she continued. had thought after he had sat opposite to | self. Those who supposed that Denver | looks as though it could, or could not, ar ighing, = Wy ancy
valen ! Some ortuna A little twinkle shone in Mr. Granby's | her at table for a week—thought it while | had solved for all time the problem of hold water. Of course there is no rela- | yf possible, have original sketches in
ho ie OF the om fonLmate eyes. It might have been the beginning | he joked with Miss Tritt who giggled and | the bad boy are at the moment consider- tion between the weather and the posi- | ink or water color, re the place cards.
now and again, but this had “decks” to the | of a smile or the glistening of an unshed | tittered immoderately, for the Man-with- | ably disturbed to find that the methods tion of the new moon’s horns. The in- | Or they might be made of pink cardboard,
number of four—"decks” of lovely gold and | tear. He liked the child's spirit. a-Past had a gallant manner with women | of the Juvenile Court there at the end of | clination of the moon can readily be ac- | cyt heart shape, with the name and an
silver lace which could be smoothed | “No, that's right,” he replied approvi which Miss Tritt translated into a per- | ten years of operation, are under a hot . counted for, at any time, when we bear They
ng- ¢ \ s a jate verse printed on them.
toa orm flatness when the valentine | ly. “There's another mail after school sonal admiration. Fancy, then, her as- | fire of criticism from State officials, the in mind the fact that a line drawn from appro] be ye se pi like valentines as
was folded away in its box, or could be | tonight, you know. What's your name, | tonishment when she discovered that she | charge in fomerel being that the court tip to tip of the horns must always be at
: 13 My h . A tiny pink lope,
lled out, tier upon tier of shining glory, | little girl?” had a rival in the dowdy little old maid | has had a demoralizing influence on the | right angles to the direction of the sun-: cue pose Able, Pe hve Ones
means of the neat little paper su Winny told him. Then Mr. Granby | across the table. youth of that enterprising city, the com- set. “at the places, with a valentine inside. If
hidden cunningly under the A went into the bank again. "| The Man with-a-Past had done various | Mitments to the State industrial schools | the place cards are place-cards only, more
work. When this was done, your delight- | But on his way back from Juneh, J things in his life, some of them not at all pe ae of Joys 8 of 5 Xtal years id A Runaway. fun and interest will result if a valentine
coupe before . credi f s under ncreased ie a ist ay at ol A
BS hewn end i son's door and Bir Granby alighted. though he a Bnet, last biennial period more than two hun. Whena team runs away it is usually I Team
A w ; ; it. the result of carelessness; the reins are : ;
vista, a lovely Jake on which asilverswan | “Show me your prettiest valentine,” he | different, his first environment had been | dred and ninety per cent. The commit. ! : One mother of fertile brain and deft
was rg. On his back perched said to Mr. Dobson who came bowing to | much the same as Miss Lizzie’. She had | mess to reformataries have Servet louse 5 i Ta Ty | fingers hos planned a little Valentine af-
ucily a rosy id i m m. stayed in it until she been forced per cent. These increases are ¢ 14 : aa linnine | J2Ir fO ebutante daughter. Here is
2 a itor Who sled 91 you 2 The lovely gold and silver valentine staved Bat olor broken away | €d by its critics to the influence of the [182 runaway disease called “galloping | Rind %
» 3 her scheme: First, cards, "hearts." The
from a rose-wreathed quiver. All around | With its swan and its cupid was laid be- | from it in his youth. To him Miss Liz, | Juvenile Court. Consumption, 2nd that uniaway, fike She | tallies are to be white card surmounted
the top-most “deck” were bouquets of | fore him. zie was like a sweetold memory of things | A most ambitious effort to solve the ' ‘by a red heart. These latter can be easily
A " i : . : The neglect cold, the cough uncheck : :
nk roses with floatin ribbons | Mr. Granby seemed unimpressed. “That | which he had foresworn. Failure sof problem of the alleged bad boy has been A A made by cutting a heart at the top of the
Fink Tose their stems, gale te y grace- | the best you've got?’ he asked in his | some natures and at fifty-five the fone | made by the Child Welfare Committee, | «=, bronelva) affection Sev eloped, deplet. | ton isi Sh it red, or So pasting
ful, true-lovers knots were inscribed | sharp, dry way. with-a-Past knew himself to be a failure, | Which opened an important exhibit in | ®¢ ¥ ty, No little in quate and ‘red crepe paper on. Pierce small eyelet,
touching sentiments such as “Ever thine,” | Mr. Dobson assured him that nowhere | He had never seen anybody just like Miss | New York on January 18th. An especial | 200, Poor un ituilo nourish the ov ' run narrow red ribbon through; tie in
“True love's token,” “To one I love,” and | could be found anything more desirable. | Lizzie since he was twenty and had run | study has been made of juvenile courts and renew \ waste bseus! h en the op to suspend from bodice.
“Love's offering.” After all these glories | Cutting the shopman short—"Wellgive | away from home to write plays. He had | in ten cities and the most commendable | funaway gal Be Pi o's Gold Modo i She has chosen for prizes: A bronze
had been exhausted there was still anoth. | me that, then,” Mr. Granby said without | given up all thought of writing plays long | features of these several courts was pre- | pt BOCC Pl FEEUS SOREN J ORE | heart, paper weight, a picture, a pen
er joy in store, for inside the covers of | €ven asking the price. Oh, the difference | before now. Instead he made a sented, and recommendations made, look- | "#E0NE ee ana oa wiper—red heart with leather cover,
this wonderful missive, in golden letters, | between grown-up lelike Mr. Granby | living by selling articles compiled from | ing to the embodiment of these features TRANS: | | ierced by gilt dagger; a red heart filled
) 1 2 . : i | obstinate coughs, bronchitis, “weak
was printed the dearest little verse: — and little people to whom five cents is a | encyclopedias. Y the Man-with-a. | into what might be called a nearly ideal | oi ab : with bonbons.
pom. fortune! | Past had fought his fight with the world | system for children’s courts. As this ex- | lungs.” spitting of blood and like forms © gy 'in the dining room will be suspend-
Kind and gentle, | His clerks found him unusually gruff | and had lost, therefore Miss Lizzie dared | hibition is later to be sent toother cities, | 0 \/SF°8 BREE gl tion ""S¥" | ed from the chandelier a large red crepe
Frank and free,— and short that afternoon. failed to | talk to him, for out of her own wounds | Opportunity to examine its study of this ully treated’ ‘eac to consumption. paper heart. In the centre of the table
She's the Valentine notice that, as he looked from his grated | she comprehended. important matter will be given to many Som vy Don't there is to be a large bowl, either glass,
For me.” window after the schools were out, he She thought of it all as she lay on her thousands of people, and it is to be hoped | e Jewelry 8. | china, silver, or even a new tin pan will
’ smiled a little. For in the jittle §roup bed—of all the little harmless, friend] that at leasta few hundred public spirited | Don't . f jewel ' answer, as it must be concealed by flut-
There wasnt a child in Maple Village for | that counted now but a few bela | acts which had changed her life into y men and women in all communities will n't wear a quantity of jewelry. ings of red per tied around with
two long weeks,ever since its first appear- | entines on the Winny, her black
steps, der 0 a| ake a point of familiarizing themselves |. Don't wear precious stones in the morn. ibbon. Hidden wi little sur-
ance in Mr. Dobson's shop window, who | eyes shining and her aching little fingers | PS torr How could she help loving = Diamonds, emeralds, or any other | Fe Thon Br
: her-i with this of the Child Welfare Com- | IN8- , prises for each guest, the whole conceal-
had not gloated over this valentine, hop- | forgotten in her glee, was the centre of him for being so good to it Was un-| .;itee’s a In judging of the wis. | Kind are out of place at the breakfast Py by ground cork FR procurable
I : O! | maidenly, but how could she help it? | tabl
against hope that the fourteenth of | attraction, for in her hands she held the ¥, od dom of the recommendations it should be | eS : .__ | from the r. as white come
a. might find her selected as the | coveted treasure of Maple Village. And Surely Suey h gd Bim no Pein amd borne in mind that one inv tor only bon't a guia fe wear anything Bows 8 ig e grapes
“kind and gentle” one mentioned in the | as he turned away from the , Mr. tothing Sei, still, last night he | covered the several cities, although of at S actu I hecgagary tofasten "attached to each one of these gifts is a
charming Valentine. Many times did Mr. | Granby saw her raise it to her lips and called her Elizabeth! How sweet jt | course. many distinguished jurists and Don ; Op Sp t : 5, | NATTOW red ribbon extending out from
Dobson, smiling through his spectacles, | kiss it’ reverently—By R. B. T. in Shop | 124 sounded. Nobody had called her by | 0¢ial workers aided in the use to which | t in the evening mix Tow JEWEIS. | the pie to every guest whose place has
open the covers that he might delight the | Talk. ns ol de le Liz. | the collected data was put. : Nf gol Recklet is worn the ear, rings | been designated by a red cardboard heart,
eyes of some little rosy-cheeked, wide- et—— zie to every She had always wish. |. When all is said and done, the basic Old Corvespond, ewels which do not : Dearing on one side his or her name and
eyed maiden with the tender lines inscrib: | 1... yong Where the Shawl Come |ed they wouldn't call her that, she hated | {act remains that the bad boy is the pro | \ ib WCC Fiirecs Home Notes, Om the reverse side a “play” on the word
ed therein. Many a time did he behold | “"® 30. But tow she ‘was that this, | duct of weak or vicious parents and the RYMORIzE your { fess. relating to the article. For instance:
the disappointed falling of an r little | From. her own stately name belonged to him method of dealing with juvenile lawless- ' A sleigh bell—("Beauteous belle, why
face when to the question of "How much | — alone ness followed in some places in New| There is a saying that “a man’s first slay my heart?”)
for that one?” accompanied with a mit-| No doubt there are many to whom the M 3 Xs Jersey offers some intere results. It | right is to be born well.” It is a constant | ay) ink eraser—("I cannot erase your
tened finger pointing to the covered | vanished glories of the mir shawl AY 2 wan received the V. C. for | ig the parent, not the child, that is haled | reproach to motherhood to see a puny, image from m ")
weasure, he “One dollar.” | are quite well known by name, but few |2 smaller effort of courage than Miss |, court and punished and so efficacious ng baby grow to be a pulling, peevish | A red candie—("Light o' my heart.”)
one of the children in ' who know anything of the country of its Lizzie displayed in going to lunch that |}, been this means of correcting a great . It is a reproach because © A box of bread crumbs—(“Crumbs of
Maple Village had that much to spend | origin. Yet mir has always been | noon. She took her place 3 he sabe and growing evil thata juvenile court has | preparation and care will give the Pp | comfort for an aching om
on St. Valentine's offerings. Many of the | celebrated as one of the most beautiful opposite the : been made superfluous in some localities, | the health without whichshe cannot have ; An awl—(“Thou’rt awl mine, sweet
children contented themselves with home- on earth. It has been compared to | With a certain quaint ty. The Man- | 5nd in others the arrests are now very | a healthy child. The use of Dr. Pierce's valentine.”)
made creations of odds and ends of col- itzerland, but on 3 Frandor scale, with of HiPath smiled at the touch of rose! few, ! Favorite Perscription as a preparative for A rattle—(*You've rattled me, sure!")
ored papers, and hardly anyone felt justi- | its girdle of snow- mountain peaks that ki T ed in her Cheeks. Whatever the cure preferred, the pub- the baby's Sonia gives the mother' A fig—(“Youcut ap figure.”)
fied in spending more than a five-cent | surrounding a serene valley. It has al- | _ Miss Tritt giggled. ; ‘Get any valen- | ji. generally, cannot afford longer toleave | abundant health. e birth hour is prac- | A chain—(“I am chained to thee.”)
on the more artistic valentines at | ways held a foremost place in Indian his- | tines today, iss Lizzie?” she asked | the lawless boy wholly to the police and cally phinijess, and the mother rejoices | A piece of court plaster—("I heal all
r. Dobson's store. So, while the cheap- | tory as the habitation of the most beauti- | knowingly. to the courts. “Thou art thy brother's | in a healthy child. This is the testimony | wounds save those of love.")
er valentines one by one, | ful women and most cowardly men, qual- | Then Miss Lizzie understood and of | keeper” in this matter, than which none | of many women who never raised achild | A tiny cap—(“How captivating you
picked out after by happy children, | ities which are attributed largely to their | her Widerstapding came the first false- | ore urgently requires immediate atten- | until they used “Favorite Prescription.” | are?”)
very secret and important in their senti- | methods of life. hood she ever told. She looked her
: tion.—January Vogue. | —— | A little mirror—("Look herein and see
mental errand, the fourteenth of Febru- Though in summer the tem: is | tormenter Sauarely in the face. ; J Se — | Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure heart- | my love.”) !
ary found the saucy cupid still perched | warm— ir being 6,000 above No, Miss Tritt," she replied lying 0dd Facts About Fishes. , burn, flatulence, billiousness and themany A toy watch—("I watch for a word of
upon the back of the silver swan in Mr. | sea-level—yet it lacks the arid, parching | stoutly. And, somehow, Miss Tritt found iii | other physical evils resulting from con- encouragement.” )
Dobson's window. heat of the plains, and the women conse- nothing more to say. Fish told, light sleepe : stipation. The "Pellets" are small. The At a signal from the young hostess all
It was there when the group of lassies | quently are not subjected to that prema- Yet Miss Tritt had won her point, for biti AT ye positions: | dose is small. The benefits are large and | draw their prizes from the pie—the last
hurried down, to the ih mail for the ture oid age which OueFidkes Se women | when od Manwitha Past @ hod Miss and uqtont y asSuine Singular Dosions lasting. | to withdraw a prize reciting a verse,
precious missives they w they were | who do not live in ills. houses | Lizzie ea after- — ' The choice of refreshments lies entire-
about to receive. It was the custom of | are not of the usual flimsy nature, but | noon, he was thanked and refused with a them is the change many of them under- |
i ly with the hostess. This one, however,
Maple Village to send its valentines | built of wood and thatched with straw, | brevity wholly unlike Miss Lizzie's go while : Pw Maniacs. | prefers chafing-dish oysters, lobster sal-
through the mails, and the clerk smiled | usually with stones to hold the thatch in . But with Miss Tritt looking | , Usually their soots and stripes become | Not all the lunatics ar behind the | pre eS eT
good naturedly as he counted out the big | place, and are two-storied. on and reading her secret how could darker and more distinct when they fall | paps. —Charleston (8. Co News and | o.
Shite envelopes to the little maidens who | In winter when the chill winds sweep | dootherwise? Thus did poor dove-like | asleep. Occasionally the pattern of thelr; Courier. : >
stood on tiptoe before his window. Then | the Himalayan range every method is | Miss Lizzie seek to display the wisdom coloration fs eniitely Chang]. The ol Quite so. There are yet a few men ; Te ;
they rushed away, seating themselves on | employed to keep the houses warm, and | of the serpent. nary » for instance, Presents mn at large who try to do business with. Another advice whieh is pretty hich
the steps of the bank across the street in | to this desire for enervating heat is at-| Accordingly the Man-with-a-Past went daytime beautiful iridescents hues play- out advertising.—New York Herald. | paper heart almost six feet high, w
the warmth of February sunshine, eager | tributed the cowardly nature of the men. | to walk alone and as he strolled i over its Silvery sides, ut at ght, on is made upon a frame, so that it will
10 look at St. Valentine's gifts. And that | Not content with employing, as an aid to | the wintry stretches of the little park he | falling asleep. it takes on a. dul Dictincoirning Marks. stand on the floor. Satin bows and small
was how Mr. Granty came to see them. | their warmth, the animal heat of their thought upon many things, and a tint, and siz conspicuous black bands ngs 9
st
silver arrows are then presented to the
|
ranby accounted very rich i i i lower nown women i their on its sides. If| Willie—How do you manage to tell | guests by the hostess, and as the couples
Maple Vilage. The a TE el re iS rs aT EE derstand | it is suddenly awakened by turning up of | these twin sisters apart? Cecil—' march to supper they use the Wriows 10
substantial grounds for their belief in his | rising to the upper chamber by means of | ing of what might have happened. At lights in the aquarium it immediately re- | \When you kiss one of them she | pierce the paper heart, passing through
wealth, for, beside being t of the | holes in the floor overhe d—the men | first he howned and then he smiled and | Sumes fhe giivery it Shows W threatens to tell her ma. While se oth- it i» puirs atthe game me ue, thor Nolen.
ak, he'was waster of eal ata | Wr eles i OE ey | St a Ere DOU. DE et! “So to the principle of “protective col. | ** When kissed says she WILIEEP | neq “day is the “Kindergarten: party.
were his, and he was known to own stock | charcoal heater. This excess of artificial | the cabbages are trying to force you out!” | oration,” and it has been pointed out that Going Too Far. | All the guests dress their hair like chil
in many desirable companies. But the | heat, to which they obstinately cling as a | Then he turned a on his heel and | the appearance of black hands and the | 3 in the witness | dren wear children’s hats made of
children had a simpler reason for believ- | custom of old standing, has made them | sought a certain florist. Seeponing of thie spols serve to conceal Baldheaded Man (in paper. In the drawing room a long
ing in his riches, based on a theory of | the jest of all India, and there is no doubt | So it as Miss Lizzie sat alone fish from their enemies when lying box)—The violent disorder was so tet | table arranged with chairs around it as
Cora Marsh's, brightest and prettiest of | whatever from a point of | in the feeling very hurt and mis- amid eel-grass and seaweeds. ' pible that it made my hair stand on | they are placed in a kindergarten. Each
the little girls. view that it has much to do with their | erable and , a knock came at her SY | end. Judge (severely) -Be good enough “boy and girl!” is then set to work to
“You see,” she said, “he must be just | pusillanimity. door, and when she pein it there was re PellowsNegtto a man what's | to remember that yon are on outh! make a valerie | wi of Wits of colored
, he owns the bank, and — one to be seen. a the j you know © ee iin — paper, ndergarten
io el all ‘the money in!” x ——She—Now that you have looked po her, an odor ue lovely irgranse Girl—Myself. If he's nice. | It #3 not so much being exempt from outfit.
No one thought of disputing Cora, and | over my music, what would you like to | stale air of the passage. For tied Se— faults as having overcome them that | Scissors, paste, several kinds of colored
y x
from that time her little circle pictured | have me to the knob of door was something ~-—=hen Matriage it & failure it is| go on advantage to us. , paper and bits of colored baby ribbon
the great man as undisputed monarch of | He— or dominos. velvety and dewy and purple. very often due to a lack of capital. { must be placed before the “children.