10, 1911. a em. The motto of the highland host that battled for the Stuart cause, which — — bonny Prince Charlie headed, appar’ ently was that heaven helps those who help themselves liberally. They levied toll on the henroost, stable and, ac cording to the author of “The Land of Romance,” even on the pockets of the Covenanters, At Swarthholm a party of these ma- rauders overhauled the house of a tai- jor, and when one of them was about to cut up a web of homespun that had taken his fancy the good wife earnest ly remonstrated. «“A day'l! come when ye'll ha' tae pay for that,” she solemnly assured him. Scissors in hand, Donald paused. “An' when will she pe hafing to de that?" he asked. “At the last day.” said she. “An' that will pe a fery goot long ' bonnets. credit,” the robber coolly returned. “She wass going to pe only taking 2 coat, but now she will pe taking a waistcoat as well.” A Mountain In the Sky. Somewhere many miles away from this earth an enormous mountain twenty miles high is flying through space. The mountain is known astro- nomically as the planet Eros. The or- dinary man has long taken it for granted that all the planets are more or less round in shape. The small planet Eros, however, Is an exception to this rule. According to the latest astronomical information, it is a mere mountain in space, “without form and void” and as it turns upon its axis first one corner and then another is presented to view. These small worlds (few are over ten or twenty miles across) are not large enough to have sufficient gravity to draw thelr strue- ture into symmetry and remain as ‘when launched into space—mammoth meteorites. A tantalizing fact for as. tronomers is that the ancient Fros passed very close to us about Jan. 24. 1894—hefore | the planet was recognized—and that quite so near an approach is not due again till 1975. “The Mine's Blown Up.” 1 was sitting on the edge of my bed, loosening the heel of one of my rubber boots with the toe of the other, when suddenly through the stillness of the sleeping town, from the power house half a mile away, came a low and ris ing note, the great siren whistle in the power house. Almost fascinated, | listened as the great note rose higher and more shrill and died away again One blast meant a fire in the town, twe blasts fire in the buildings at the mine and three blasts, the most terrible of all, a disaster or trouble in the mine. Once more, after an interminable pause, the sound came again and once more rose and died away. 1 did not move, but there was a sudden cold ness that came over me as once more, for the third time, the deep note broke out on the quiet air. Almost instan taneously the loud jingle of my tele phone brought me to my feet. 1 took down the receiver. *“Che mine's blown up,” said a woman's voice.— Atlantic. Saying No. The author of “Pat McCarty,” a book of verse with a setting of prose, shows how naturally some of the Irishmen or Antrim dilute the wine of narrative with the water of verblage. In the ex cerpt below—"The Way We Tell Story” —the diluent is used with a par ticularly free hand: Says I to him, 1 says, says I, Says | to him, | says, The thing, says 1, | says to him, Is just, says I, this ways. 1 hev, says 1, a gre't regpeck For you and for your breed, And onything 1 cud, I says, 1'd do, 1 wud indeed. I don’t know any man, 1 says, 1'd do it for, says 1, As fast, [ says, as for yoursel'. That's tellin’ ye no lle. There's naught, says 1, I wudn't do To plase your feyther's son, But this, | says, ye see, says I, I =ays, it can't be done. The Spectacled Bear. The spectacled hear of Ecuador is go called because of a patch of white around each eye, which makes the animal look as though he was peering through a pair of great spectacles. In size and general color the spec: tacled bear looks not unlike the Ameri: can black bear. But its hair Is very shaggy. At each side of the head is a white bar, which gives the animal the appearance of wearing un halter. But the most distinctive feature is the white around the eyes. Attachment. The schoolteacher was trying lustrate the difference between plant: and animals. “Plants,” she explained, “are not sus- ceptible of attachment to man as ani- mals are.” | | Lena | of Montana, Too Precious. “Makers to his majesty” and “im- ported” are words that carry much weight to many minds. It is strange what a glory a foreign label can cast upon a commonplace article. The fact of a commodity having crossed the wa- ter, however, is not taken quite so se- riously today as it was some fifty or sixty years ago. M. C. D. Silsbee gives an instance in her “A Hslf Cen- tury In Salem.” ‘Miss Ann M. Rust was one of the two milliners. She had a large collec- tion of finery, shelves full of handsome ribbons and glass showcases of rich embroideries, besides the Inevitable Once she imported nn quan- tity of exquisite French caps. The strings were somewhat crushed in the transit across the ocean. The caps were quickly disposed of. An aunt bought one, and Miss Rust innocently observed that a “warm iron would make the creases all right.” “What!” indignantly exclaimed the aunt. “Smooth a crease made In Paris? No. indeed; never!” A Famous English Clock. Wells cathedral contains one of the | most interesting clocks in the whole world. It was constructed hy Peter Lightfoot, a monk, in 1520 and em- braces many devices which testify to | herologist's ingenuity. | Several celestial and terrestrial bodies | are Incorporated in the interes.ing movement and relationship. They in- dicate the hours of the day, the age of the moon and the position of the planets and the tides. When the clock | strikes the hour two companies of horsemen fully armed dash out of gateways in opposite directions and | churge vigorously. They strike with thelr lances as they puss as many times as correspond with the number of the hour. A little distance away, seated on a high perch, is a quaint figure. which kicks the quarters on two hells placed benesth his feet and strikes the hours on a bell. The dial of the clock is divided into iwenty- four hours and shows the phases of the moon and a map of the universe. — Harper's, He Made Them Listen. “xX Beidler, the old vigilante leader was elected sheriff of Lewis and Clark county, in which IHel- js situated. During Beidler's | incumbeney the jail was rebuilt and i i 5 i to il. | observing, by abstinence from labor, | i i i i 1 “How about burs, teacher?” piped ¢ | small boy who had passed the sum | mer in the country.—Chicago News. Make Children Happy. The first duty toward children is to make them happy If you have not made them happy you have wronged “them. No other good they may get ean make up for that.—-Charles Bux- ton. Hic Reward. Lawyer Brown -—So I called the judge a llar. Lawyer Jones—And ther what did you do? Thirty days.—Toledo Blade. And the Grounds. Tady Customer—Do you keep coffee in the bean? New Clerk—Upstairs, madam. This Is the ground floor.— Princeton Tiger. Tawyer Brown-— ' ' Powell—Well, 1 was in no danger of whereby to better it.— Alfred Austin. | ed a law that “anybody who is found | one of the new fashioned steel cages for the prisoners installed. Beidler invited all the notables down to see the cage when it was completed. The governor aud the state and city offi- cials and many prominent citizens nee cepted the invitation. “NX” took them into a cage and excused himself for a minute. He went out and locked the door. ‘Then he took a chair and sat down outside. “Now. dern ye,” he said to the im- prisoned notables, “ve've bin edgin® | off lately when I was tellin’ my stories of the old days an’ not listenin’ to ’em. Now I reckon ye'll listen.” He kept them there three hours— until he had told his whole budget of tales.— Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post. Max O’Rell’s Reply. Max O'Rell at a dinner in Montreal | at which were present English, Scoteh, | Irish and French was asked to give his opinion of the different races. Here is the answer he gave on the in- stant. | “Phe Scotchman,” he said, and he | clinched his right hand tightly and pretended to try to force it open with | his left. “The Englishman” And he went through the same performance, opening the hand at the end after an apparent struggle. “The Irishman”— And he held out his hard wide open, | with the palm upward. “The French- | man”— And he made a motion with both hands as if he were emptying them on the table. There was not a word of explana- tion, but all understood thoroughly and had a hearty laugh. A Good Shot. A sportsman of great imaginative gifts and fond of telling his exploits related that at one shot he had brought down two partridges and a hare. His explanation was that, al though he had only hit one partridge, the bird in falling had clutched at another partridge and brought that to earth entangled in its claws. “But how about the hare?’ he was asked. “Oh,” was the calm reply, “my gun kicked and knocked me backward, and 1 fell on the hare as it ran past!” An Old Christmas Law. The general court of Massachusetts Bay Colony, following the example of the English parliament, in 1650 enact- feasting or any other way, any such day as Christmas day shall pay for ev- ery such offense 5 shillings.” This law was repealed in 1681. it Got Warmer. Little Willie-8ay. pa, doesn’t it get colder when the thermometer falls? Pa—Yes, my son. Little Willie—Well, ours has fallen. Pa—How far? Little Willie—About five feet, and when it struck the hall floor it broke.” On the Trail. “I'm gunning for railroads” an- nounced the trust buster. “Then come with me,” whispered tify near humorist. “I can show you some of the tracks.” Brooklyn Life. He Was Immune. Howell — Her laugh is contagious. catching it. She was laughing at me. —New York Press. know To the worst is one way & emma i i ' Why She Quit Her Job. A lady of my acquaintance in Tokyo, says a writer in the World Wide Mag- azine, possessed a valuable servant of somewhat mature years who rejoiced in the poetic name of Oharu San-— “Phe Honorable Miss Spring.” - One day Miss Spring brought In juncheon as usual. All seemed serene; there was not a shadow of a cloud in the domestic sky. But at teatime no ten appeared; neither, in answer to calls at first patient and afterward jipatient, did Oharu. ihe lady went herself to the back re- gions and found—desolation. The char- After awhile ; | amusement without drawing attention to this peculiar proceeding, and pres- ently he had his reward, for when Adam Smith poured himself out a cup of this queer decoction and tasted it he quite innocently remarked to his visitor that it was the worst tea he had ever met with.” Not Stealing. David Belasco delicately dissected a certain playwright one evening at a dinner given by the former to some of his friends of the theatrical profession. This playwright is successful and pro- duces many plays, but, it is admitted, £2 LA | Allegheny St. Bellefonte. ivi Clothing. Sincerity. Be resolutely and faithfully what you are; be humbly what you aspire to be. Man's noblest gift to man is his sin- : 4 ang - cerity. for It embraces his INtegrity ion free whether an invention i probable pat ot also. Thoreau. able. Com Mrictly - Patents, TENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS. Anyone sending a sketch de- &c. Too Busy For Repentance. Singleton—Do you believe in the olé SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN adage about marriage in haste and Te a handsome illustrated weekly. Largest circula- pent at leisure? Wedderly—No, I don't Hon of any scientific journal. Terms £3 a year; After n man marries he has no leisure °° months $1. lers. ~Smart Set. MUNN & CO., 5245-1. @1 New York. BIN ch office. Go en. Tr: If we gave assistance to each other no one would be in want of fortune.— ol box was filled with gray ashes, | owes nearly all his best ideas to oth- | Menander. ILES~A cure that is guaranteed if you use the kettle cold. Half the luncheon ers. | RUDY’S PILE SUPPOSITORY. plates lay Immersed in a bowl of | “One night the playwright imagined ' D. Matt. Thompson, Supt, Graded Schools, soupy water; the other half stood on that be heard a noise in his house,” | Se en 1,can y they do the sink ready to be put away. Oharu = sald Mr. Belasco. “He lighted a lamp, | important to Mothers. Raven Rock W Va., writes: ive uni- herself simply was not. | went downstairs, searched his library, | gzamine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, Yea SutiyfacHon. oe ar The next morning. however, she re- parlor, dining room and kitchen, then | a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, L have found no Jetnedy to equal yours.” appeared, very much on her company went to the butlers pantry and there | and see that it Kits, RT. die be CoS Farrah. manners. with a clean kimono and her discovered a masked man kneeling | for free Sample. hair done in 2 shining bun to denote over the chest of silverware. Bears the ol ZA Tt 52.25-1y. MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster Pa. the state of a matron, demanding the “Aha?” said he husklly. ‘Stealing? | Sigmibue ot Wo 4. 0 — fragment of wiges due to her since the “Oh, no,’ replied the burglar calm- | ears, . “ beginning of the mouth. The lady ex- ly. ‘I'm only adapting.’ ” Toe Kind You Have Always Bangnt. | T¥aveien de | postulated and asked why the servant ! ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLV — was leaving thus suddenly. . ANIA. “Oh,” replied Oharu, “just as 1 was Castoria. Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1908. washing the plates yesterday 1 remem- : EEE | cma Carpet : Cleaner, A — READ DOWN ! READ UP. pered that Saito San, the pawnbroker, PE _— aaa . . seme i wanted a wife. Therefore 1 went out | 10 Days ree Trial No 1No5No 3 ‘No ofNo dino and married him.” ! - YI 3 i ste In Your Own Home re 5%. 5 i Py oP: sl a Unjustly Accused. They 33 ~Nigh.........| 8 31} 4 58 9 27 Andrew Carnegie, when talking othe improved 7 7 718 2 45| HECLA PARK. 2 iH an a about the Scotch dialect once, said: TORIA 66 é 9 Ban 34 Hie .....| 8 43] 4 38) ¢ 13 “Scotch dialect ix a lingo hard to un- 5 7 798 2 Bl Haney 2 ia a derstand, and it often causes awkward : oR 5 Nittany... {8 34! 4 fu 2 mistakes. Once an American divine 746 7 ® 3 a B 2 440 Ww spent Christmas in a highland inn. On The Kind You Have Always Bought Hand Vacuum Cleaner Tar a 3 9% Sinondale. At 2 4 1812 ¥ Christmas morning he gave the maid has borne the signature o Chas “i “The Cl That Cl Clean’ | [36/749 3 16....M 8 8 i 4 09118 48 a tip of a soverelgu, and he said, look- Fletcher. and has been made under e Cleaner That Cleans Clean™ | 8 75 32 Cola Sorin. 812. 403 843 ing earnestly at her, for she was a DE Supers] Sp op We want to sup- | 810/802 3 Nina | 3 0 10 14 pretty maid: ie. Sounds, oF istons and ply one lady in every | Ti Pine AY “Ix, you know, Kathleen, you are A i the Deri of E curD, { he ood witha 11 40; 853... Jersey Shore 1 309 752 a very good looking lassie” Experience against Experiment. Stmplex”’ Vacuum 12 15 9 30 Arr. | wi'PORT | ve. 2 35! 17 “Of course Kathleen was pleased, | Cleaner, for adver- fiz2e 1 Ble) aR ane 2 9) 6 put. being modest, she blushed like a WAT. 16 CASTORTA tisimg purposes. 7% 650... PHILADELPHIA | 18 3 11 30 rose and answered: i Write today for 1010 900... NEW YORK i 900 “eal, na! Ab, na! But my kissing, the most liberal of- iin Ba vy (Via Phila.) ir, is beautiful!’ Castoria is a harm i : { p.m a.miAr ve. a.m. p.m. * The divine frowned, Castor Oil, Pare Be er eves wade Week Days. a. ing Syrups, It is Pleasant. It | The “Simplex” WALLACE H. GEPHART, Leave the room, you wicked contains r Opium, Morphine nor r General Superintendent. young baggage! he said sternly. other Narcotic substance. Its age is s guaranteed to do - p— Ye yn its guarantee. It destroys Worms as good work as ol ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. He didn’t know, you see, that wod- allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea | electric machines i est IKkathleen had been simply praising and Wind Coli. It Slieves Tee | costing $100.00 and /§ | *7Schedule to take effect Mondav. Jan. 6. 1910 in her highland dinlect the superior Flatulency. It assicnpiates the Food: | over. It is light in | | WESTRARE fown.| BASTARD charms of her cousin Janet of Pee- a ah Stomach and Dowels: | weight (only 20 1bs) | | ee ReRO AoW: STATIONS. |” 4B bles.” Children's Panacea—The Mother's runs extremely easy § tNo5.tNo3 Nol tNo2/1 No4/No 6 — Friend. nd en be aperel i MY + 1 Philosephic Tea. ectly and easily p. m.ja. m.lam.|Lve.o~ Arla. p.m The famous — Smith had all the > | by one person. INL 630. Bellefonte... 8 sx proverbial absentmindeduness of the Bears the Signature of With ordinar 3 12 H Be a i 3 philosopher. An amusing story of him gl . care the ** Simplex" Lime centre. is told in Mr. Fyvie's book, “Noble CHAS. H. FLETCHER. will last a lifetime. 23 Hunter's Park 5 40 Dames and Notable Men of the Geor- Dealers and Agents Wanted to sell 3% a cots 5 gian Era” “Mr. Dawer, it appears, In Use For Over 30 Years. 5438621m both our hand and electric machines, 2% 5 called one morning upon the Scottish . 3 philosopher just as he was jreparing Electric Cleaner Co. his breakfast. As they talked the ckson Boul. CHICAGO, ILL. learned man took a piece of bread and Money to Loan. ” ny . 1 340 33% butter in his hand and, after rolling NEY a o it round and round, popped it into his TO LOAN on good security and a. ma ae teapot and poured the boiling water houses to Ten M. KEICHLINE, Children Cry for Children Cry for upon it. Damer wat hed with quiet S1aey. AttotneyatLaw, Fletcher's Castoria. Fletcher's Castoria. r— . cre————— Clothing. RERRERRRREREK SRE ERE REREREE 2 iN There Are Always Interesting Values At The FAUBLE Stores. NOW after thirty days of price slashing we find odd and small lots of Suits for both Men and Boys that we don’t propose to let price stand in the way of selling. There are about One Hundred Mens and Boys combined that you can buy while they last at Just 1-2 The Regular Price If we can please you, the price should tempt you. Fifty Suits The Fauble Stores. BREESE ERE DEDEDE DE