Brac pan ‘Bellefonte, Pa., February 17, 1911. A Tip on Oats. According .to the Saturday Evening Post, a man who had a country place on Long Island came to New York one morning to do nu little speculating. He was a great believer in tips. On the ferrybont it came to him | that he had had somehow a tip on | oats. tie couldn't remember just what ft was, but somebody had told him to buy oats. So when he reached his broker's office he looked into oats a bit and bought some. Oats were active: He pyramided skillfully and by the | close of ihe market was £7,000 ahead. Of course such luck as that had to | be cel-hrated, nnd it was, As the cele bration went on the oats buyer told the story several times nnd each time took on importance in the recital as an oats | buyer until he tinnliv becane the oats | king. [le reached his railroad station somewhat lute and found the stable man waiting for him with a trap. “By the way.” said the stableman. “did you remember to order that five bushels of oats 1 asked you to buy this morning?’ Not Safe. The negro on occaxions displays a i fine dizserimination in the choice of | words “Who's the best whitewasher in town?" inquired the new resident. “Ale [Hall am a bo'nd a'tist with a whitewash brush, sah.” answered the colored patriarch eloquently. “Well, tell him to come and white- wash my chicken house tomorrow.” Uncle Jacob shook his head dublous- ly. “Ah don’t believe, sah, Ah'd engage Ale Hall. to whitewash a chicken house, sah.” “Why, didn't you say he was n good whitéwlasher?” “Yas, sah, a powe'ful good white- washer, sah, but mighty queer about chicken house, sah, mighty queer!"— Human Life. Her Revenge. A little gir! had been so very naugh- ty that her mother found it necessary to shut her up in u dark closet—in that family the direst punishment for the worst offense. Por fifteen ininutes the door had been locked without a sound coming from behind it—-not a whim- per, not a suiffle. At last the stern but anxious parent unlocked the closet door and peered into the darkness. She could see nothing, “What are you doing in there?” cried Aud then a little voice piped from the blackness: *{ thpit on your new dress. and I thpit on your new hat, and I'm wait- ing for more thpit to come to thpit on your aewy parasol!” — Philadelphia Times. she He Made Good. Lord Lansdowne once had a remark able jwophecy made concerning him while he was an Oxford graduate. Jowett, hix tutor at Balliol, greatly ad- mired him and always said that he would do great thing~ “Phere woes a man.” remarked Jow- ett, "who ix as certain to be foreign secretary in due time in whichever party te chooses fs (omorrow's sun 8 to vise.” Of course at that time Lord Lans downe had not the least idea of filling such a distinguished post, and yet in 1000. after a brilliant political career. he found himself at the bead of the foreign office.— London M. A. P. Her Lost Chance. Mrs. B.—1 wonder why Miss Single ton refused the curate when he pro posed to her?” Mrs. D.—Ail a mistake, wy dear, a sad mistake; you know she has grown a little deaf, and she did not suspect he was at all “gone” on her. She ac- tually thought he was asking her to subscribe to the new organ fund, so she told him she was sorry, but she had promised all her money in another direction. Mrs. B.—Then what happened?” Mrs. D.—The curate felt himself in. sulted ard departed in dudgeon, and she's lost the only chance she ever had. London Telegraph. Sense of Humor Declining. “Do you think Americans have a great sense of humor?” “Well,” replied Senator Sorghum, “I'm afraid it isn't what it used to be. The folks out home are becoming so faterested in economic issues that they don't seem to care whether 1 tell them any funny stories or not." —Washing- ton Star. Wrong Trail. First Professor of Chemistry—What are you working at now? Second Pro- fessor—I'm trying to ascertain the cause of baldness. First Professor— Oh, stop it! You're wasting your time. What you ought to be doing is trying to ascertain the cause of hair growth. ~Chicago Record-Herald. Ready Demonstration. “Do you think you can make my daughter happy?’ asked Miss Thirsty- smith’s father gravely. “Why. I have already. haven't I?" replied Spooner. “I've asked her to marry me."”—Smart Set. His Lost Leg. A mendicant approached a man on the the other day and said. “Dear gir, ¥ have lost my leg.” to which the man replied, as he hurried away. “My . dear friend. | am very sorry. but I have not seen anything of it.” 1 | The Salen. The French academy was originally a junction of the drawing rooms of the Marquise de Rambouillet and ber ! daughter. Julie d’Angennes, Duchesse | le Montausier. The salon as a neet- | ing place for conversation and the pro- | auetion of beaux esprits and writers hardly existed before these ladies | apened that of the Hotel de Ramboull- { Jet. Prior to this social event women ! of tiptop quality and rich bourgeoises received their company in their bed- rooms. There was nothing answering | to the English parlor or the Italian | ball of conversation. The bed. as in i the sleeping room of Louis XIV. was surrounded by a balustrade, outside of { which gentlemen who had dropped in to visit remained standing. It would ! have been shockingly unmannerly of | them to step over the barrier. The {lady of the house. dressed in her best Aixbabille, sat on the edge of the bed. Ladies calling went within the balus- trade nnd sat on folding stools, or has- socks, according to rank and age. ‘ Mme. de Lafayette painted from life in describing in “La P'rigeesse de | Cleves” a conversation on love, in which the dauphiness took the lead, ! reclining on her bed. —London Truth. ene —— Guilty Anyway. The most striking instance of a van- ished man coming again to light to take part in legal proceedings is that which occurred in a ease where Dan- iel O'Connell was defending a man in- dicted for murder. The case for the | prosecution scemed as clear as pos- | sible. and O'Connell contented himself with fewer questions than were to have been expected of so eminent a cross examiner. When the case for the ‘crown had closed he announced that he had but one witness to call, but that witness was important to the case. He was the murdered man, very much alive. There was no doubting the man’s identity —everybody knew it. The judge therefore turned to the jury and directed them to acquit the prisoner. To his amazement, however, they returned a verdict of guilty. Asked for an explanation, the foreman nbserved that they had no doubt that the prisoner was innocent of the mur- der. “But.” he added. “we find him iuilty of sthealing my ould gray mare three weeks age. » Who He Was. The *cub” reporter ix the greenest reporter on the stafl of a newspaper. When anything particularly stupid happens on the paper he is the one first to be accused, and he is usually rightly accused. The only salvation for him is to improve, which he does in nine cases out of n dozen. The Bos- ton Journal told recently of an amus- Ing “break” of a wholly innocent na- ture which a certain cub made. The reporter had been sent to a sub- urb to report a sermon. He arrived late, near the close of the service and took a seat near the door. last hymn was over he asked his neigh- bor, an elderly gentleman: | by order of Count Schlick from the sil- | ver of Joachimsthal, in Bohemia, and | Thus the name means etymologically | “of the valley."—London Chronicle. When the | “What was the text of the sermon?’ “*Who art thou?" parishioner. “Boston reporter,” replied the other. The man smiled. Subsequently he told the preacher. who next Sunday told the congregation--at the cub’s ex- pense. answered the Jewelry Store Romances. A wedding ring whose scratched and dulled surface bespoke years of hard service at washtub and dishpan lay on the jeweler's work table. “Why has it been laid up for re- pairs?’ a visitor asked. “Has marriage proved a failure?’ “On the contrary, it has turned out a great success, and the ring has been brought back to bear witness,” said the jeweler. “Sec this new inscrip- tion, ‘Ten years of fidelity and love. ‘That sounds pretty good, doesn't it? No failure there. Five or ten years from now, if they are both alive, some- body will probably add another post- script, and so en at regular intervals to the end of the chapter. Jewelers meet more of these little romances than the unsentimental person would dream of.”—New York Sun. No Right to Live. Begzar—Won't you give me some money. professor? My money is all gone, and 1 can't live. Professor—Iow old are you? Beggar—Forty years, sir. Professor—Forty years! Don't you | know that according to the latest mor- | tality tables the average age of the male population of Europe reaches only thirty-four years and five months? Statistically you have no right to live any longer anywsy!—Meggendorfer Blatter. Two Faults. “You hunt too much.” said Louis XV. to the archbishop of Narbonne. “How can you prohibit your curates from hunting if you pass your life in setting them such an example?” “Sire.” said Dillon, “for my curates the chase is a fault; for myself it is the fault of my ancestors.” Politeness. Politeness is a sort of guard which covers the rough edges of our character and prevents them from wounding oth- ers. We should never throw it off even in our conflicts with coarse peo- pl. Capacity Diminishing. Mrs. Guzzler— Aren't you axhamed to come home in this condition Mr. Guzzler- Mortitied to death. my dear. 1 find my capacity isn't what it used to be.—Philndeiphin Record. Mirth Is too often but melancholy m disguise. — Leigh Hunt. The Scandinavian Eddas the Most Re- cent of the Seven. The world has seven Bibles. They are the Koran of the Mobammedans, the Eddas of the Scandinavians, the Tripitaka of the Buddhists, the Five Kings of the Chinese, the Three Vedas of the Hindus. the Zendavesta and the Scriptures of the Christians. The Koran Is not older than the sev- enth century of our era. It is a com- pound of quotations from the Old and New Testaments, the Talmud and the gospel of St. Barnabas. The Eddas of the Scandinavians were published in the eleventh century and are the most recent of these seven Bibles. The Bud- dhists’ Tripitaka contain sublime mor- als and pure inspirations. Their au- thor lived and died in the seventh cen- tury before Christ. The sacred writings of the Chinese are called the Five Kings, “king” meaning web of cloth or the warp that keeps the threads in their places. They contain the choicest sayings of the best ages on the ethicopolitical duties of life. These sayings cannot be traced | to a period higher than the eleventh century B. C. The Three Vedas are | the most ancient books of the Hindus, | and it is the opinion of great scholars | that they are older than the eleventh ' century B. C. { The Zendavesta of the Persians is the grandest of all the sacred books | next to the Bible. Zoroaster, whose | sayings it contains, was born in the twelfth century B. C.—New York Her- ald. History In Toys. The history of the world is crystal- | lized in the children’s toys. Each great | war leaves soldiers in the nursery cup- board dressed correctly to a strap and | button. This has always been so. As each successive ange in the world's his- | tory has gene by the weapons of that | age have passed to the hands of the ! boys as toys. There are In our great | museums miniature crossbows, spears | | and shields. Toy armor as finely In- | laid and engraved as any reul accou- terments Is occasionally to be Seon | and old prints show the boys playing ' with such fizures. Even the children | of the French revolution had their toy | guillotines.—Collier's, The Dollar. There was a time when dollars were minted in Englund. In March, 1797, the mint issued stamped Spanish dol- lars worth 4s. 9d.. but they were called in seven months later. It was from the Spanish coin that America got the idea of her almighty dollar. but the name was made in Germany. At least “thaler.” of which “dollar” is a corrup- tion, was. The original thaler was the silver guldengroschen, coined in 1518 known at first as the “Joachimsthaler.” The artificial has Fosuntly been manufactured. one, consists pri in the as of tiny Capa, ike the orc of i oe ra y removed weak alcoholic solution. promeed yogi a with water, but hardens | on drying, just st like its prototype; it is eminently for filtering water for sanitary or industrial uses, and it can be employed for all the purposes that are usually assigned to the genuine article. i i : i great many women—thousands in- #0 ot have been cured by Dr. Pierce's treatment, have been given up by local physicians after years of suffering on the part of the women and experiment on the part of the local doctor. In Dr. Pierce's sans The Royal represents economy in more ways than one. keep in order, because it stays in order—doesn’t waste time in breaking down on a busy day. easier to operate, and capable of unlimited speed. lasts longer, because it is simpler, has fewer working parts, and they are made of better materials. A Royal in Your Office will Soon Save its Own Cost. Price, $65.00 The right price to pay for a high-grade writing Machine ROYAL TYPEWRITER CO Royal Typewriter Bldg., New York BRANCH OFFICE 55-47-9t | treatment experience takes EE the delicate womanly organs more than half a million women in a prac tice of over thirty years. Sick wome: are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by let correspondence takes the There is no form e of disease which can be new to him, and the use of | ter, free of charge. All an | Favorite Prescription” re- | by his professional advice and fatherly mass, which Fe | counsel have been the means of cure of supplemented i absolutely private and strictly confiden Ba Address Dr. R. V. os Buffalo IS S—— ROYAL TYPEWRITERS. Rood's Sa: saparitta. Peculiar to Itself. a combination, proportion and process, Hood's Sarsaparilla is therefore Peculiar to Itself It is made f nd Sues. + bioad rif al and gredi rom purifyini ternative and ton and methods as to retain the fonfen I value of Oui age a by such original ‘The severest forms of scrofula, salt rheum, catarrh, rheumatism, dyspepsia, and debility are cured every day by HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Fo peek of FLEECE, M1 1m weg ow wi of who prefer medicine in tablet - up Hood's Sarsaparifia in chocolate-coated tablets as well as in the usual liquid form. ucing Hood's rilla to a solid extract, we have retained in the tablets t! a a yredient except the loghol, Sold by riots he ent by of oT HOOD Co.. Lowell, Mass It turns out more work, because it is easier to understand, Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. EE Ce El Al AB SM AB AM AM Bir OM AM. A. A A. AA. AM. AM Whether you use one machine your typewriter equip- item of EXPENSE. or fifty, ment is an Reduce the expense, and you increase your PROFITS. It costs less to It does Better work, and VY PWT OY UY UY UY YY WY YY YY YY vv WY WY wv vv “ew THE MALLORY STUDIO, Representative at Bellefonte, Pa N—— eee eee Shoes. Worth Bringing It can't Health: The family doctor feet. Keep the feet them get wet. lowed to go out in when walking is wet, REMEMBER, Yeage cheaper than the othe oo Balding, Yeagers Shoe Store Are Children RUBBERS. This is what appeared in a recent number of the American Journal of the mother's head all the time, that the health of their children lies in the No child should be al- the best and the prices just a little Yeager’s Shoe Store, SELLEFONTE, FA Up? be done without should din it into dry. Never let snow or rain, or without Rubbers. r's Rubbers are r fellows. { | | | sm———————__ Dry Goods. = 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 J been very busy. We are put- ting on new remnants, odds and ends, every day. LYON & COMPANY. Allegheny St. 47 12 Bellefonte, Pa. ima