77 PERFECT HEROISM. usually found fn the finest grade of Hood's Sarsaparilla —— Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, Bewsowait iain. | ROYAL ETIQUETTE. ... ro a, gy Mon Semapentie : i Cou of Dr. Fi Mueller In | World over preferring to grind the m—— mn Ee —— s— "His Tragic Death. “bean” rather than use the extract. Patents, Bellefonte, Pa., August 18, 1911. Heroism has been defined as “the Vanilla 1s found growing wild in the sam— ————— Assumes umber | triumi over Bahamas, West Indies and Central Commonly piciples, boils P* COPYRIGHTS. THE \ | of Curious Phases. of suffering, of sickness, of isolation | the nelghboring islands it hes been [TPS ALICTEATE Be XRIL Ne DY | ion free whether an [+ prbable parent An Od Romantic Curtain “That Hat and of death. An instance of this tant article of export. But American CULcausing any priiy for securing bert years Spence Pi, They the whole is securing patents. 60 years experience. Fallen Into Dosustude, THINGS THE KING CANNOT DO Sassling sud Slotioys o%8 oeaitation Of | vaniila is the best.— Harper's Weekly. renovated. Sirengihened and toned by Hood's BT vag Mum Co. veceive a rec ag the be oalle of she Tam land Marvin's book. “The Excursions Played No Fe Yo. My da Jakes had a oh ou on her . SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, reminded of a custom now fallen into | He Is Barred From Accepting Gifts ©f a Book Lover. John Addison Porter. once secre- parla and a bottle. This did herse | tion of any scientific journal. “Terms*$3 a year; desuetude, but which at the time I| From Individuals, He Must Not Be. Dr. Franz Mueller of Vienna, who her. She has' never been troubled since. | 1°07 Months 81. Sold bv all newsdealers. speak of (1870) was a favorite method of bestowing a marked compliment upon any one whom you wished par- ticularly to honor. The serenade was not only offered to visitors of distinction. but prevailed extensively as a delicate attention which you might re the lady of your choice. It wus W,ught the prop- er thing at that period for a man to engage the best brass band he could afford and to proceed with it after midnight to the house of his preferred and then to stand beneath the win- dows while the musicians played their most sentimental and sonorous selec- which, despite his exalted position g8 sovereign of the realm, King George V. cannot do. These disabilities range over all sorts of matters and concern etiquette, politics, religion and law. To begin with etiquette, it is an estab lished practice that his majesty must pever call upon or grant an a to a foreign monarch except in presence of a responsible minister. Etiquette aso precludes him from ac- i fell a vietim to the bubonic plague when that disease was first under bac- | teriologieal investigation in that city in 1807, contracted the malady from bacilli in culture tubes. When he be- came certain that he was imected, he immediately locked himself in an iso- lated room and posted a message on a window pane: “l am suffering from the plague. Please do not send a doctor to me, as in any event my end will come in four or five days.” At once a number of his associates, all of them young physicians, with much to live for and with full knowl- tary to the president, overdrew his ac- count on one occasion, when he went off on a vacation, and Comptroller Tracewell disallowed it. When Secre- tary Porter returned to Washington he told the president about it, and Presi. dent McKinley telephoned to Trace- well to come to the White House. On his arrival there Tracewell was ask- ed why he had disallowed that ac- count, and he replied: “1 disallowed it, Mr. President, be- cause it is my duty as comptroller of the treasury to protect the money of the people from every kind of miscon- straction of the law. If you should draw one month's salary in advance I Piumbing. Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. | | . MUNN & CO., om Branch office. 625 F Sr Waal. bE Money to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses to rent. J M, KEICHLINE, orney-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. 51-14-1y. Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table effective June 19, 1911, tions. It was not an uncommon sound | “ePting a gift which a loyal Subject edge of the chances to which they | should certainly disaliow it.”—Cincin- ——— ares. oul se } of escaping READ DOWN | |__ReAp wr. even to hear a double quartet of male | may wish to make ji Should. the would expose themselves, stepped for- | nati Commercial Tribune. B22 ou ae ao Your system becomes No 1/No5'No 3 Sino 'No No 4No2 voices, with a French horn thrown in, re lO I a diine ening en. | Ward and not only offered their serv- |, Oe ara poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come. rh» " a singin eath the windows of some ’ i but in some cases begged to be 0 ext State. a. m.|p. m.|p.m.|Lve Ar./p.m. p.m./a.m. nv] ny while paterfamilias or | abies King Seoree, 3 SOSH: Sites ni to Dr. Mueller. The patient re- | A disheveled citizen rushed into the SANITARY PLUMBING n os FEY] BES §EONTE " 0's 8 8 the butler made ready some light re- | “hich are subscribed for by a fused to permit it and died alone with. | Police station and shouted for venge- | yin we do. It's the kind you | 320/701 2 don... 921 447 927 freshment for the donors of this grace- of people together. in the time predicted. ance. ought to have. Ws dot trust this work to ig 708 : Fo . LH is 4 ful compliment. A king never writes a letter to ay At the end he wrote a farewell let- | “The motorcar that hit me five min- 50%. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, | 7 33 07 B 2 51... Hublersburg.... f9 09 4 Hou These romantic attentions have tak- | body outside his family Sisls. con. | ter to his parents and piaced It against utes ago was No. 41144,” he spattered. Materi 7 30.7 2 3% FSmderows. | Ni 00 en flight with the advent of electric | Other correspondence io to retaries, | the window so it could be copic.l from “I can prove that he was exceeding terial and 7 42/17 23| 3 01 -.F.. Huston —— 1902 424] 904 lights. elevated railroads and other | ducted through one of LIS SSSFERRR | (he outside and then burned the orig- | the speed limit, and 1 want—I want”— Fixtures are the Best | 7 87 30| 3 08. Ciintonauic. 18 % 4 18 8 % voices of the night. but even New Yor. Ser due Jaing Ogre ‘alvep subject, | 10al with his own hands, fearful that —s want a warrant for his ar- 78 73) 3 12F Krider's Siding 832 4 14/ 8 8 had a few hours of stillness after mid- it might be preserved and carry out Not acheap or inferior article in our entire ¥ Cedar g 842 night. and the night watchman lent | What he does when Be Wishes = Ny ! the EO | “Warrant, nothing! What good fuablishment, And with good work and the 8 74 18 ae Salona." 840 18 sa an indulgent ear to these revelers, who | Such a visit is to Oe a] | would a warrant do me at the rate he e | 8101752 330... MILL HALL..| 835 356 8 would doubtless be locked up as dis. | Other strictly observ oI VANILLA BEANS | was going? I want extradition pa- Prices are lower x Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) turbers of the peace did they hazard | Guette is that py hone . | pers.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. than many who give you poor. unsanitary | 1 oo 5 Mola {JOTeY Shore,....| 300 780 such an enterprise under our modern | ® king shall wi gs Fr OE st Pods | work and the lowest grade of finishings. For 112 27 11 3 Lye. | WM'PORT | Lve 238 1113 regime.—Richard Hoffman's “Musical | to which he has t | They Are Not Beans at All, but | The modesty of women naturally makes t ork try 73 68% hila, & Re Ry. 18 36 11 2 Recollections.” | Similarly he cannot become a Free | Filled With Tiny Seed. | them shrink from the indelicate ques- ARCHIBALD ALLISON Whitwick wii Hates | Mason, and if he happens to be one at | The vanilla plant is the only orchid | tions, the obnoxious examinations, and un- ) 1010 850......... NEW YORK......... i 9 00 HE WAS THANKFUL. | the date of his ascension he must re- | | sign from the craft. of any industrial value. As orchids | pleasant local treatments, which some King George. | go, the plant is not unattractive, for | physicians consider essential in the treat- Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. | | however, has not been initiated. the foliage is much greener and more | ment of diseases of women. Yet, if help WALLACE H. GEPHART, But Still He Thought There Was a| Even in affairs of the heart a 80Ve™ | enduring than in the case of most of | €an be had, it is better to submit fo this | Superintendent. i i i | . | : t Week Days. Little More He Might Get. ord i Fine Job Printing. | elgn must bow to the will of Others. the species. It is a climber, and when | roca, than let the ditease grow and TT eJov Printing. Old Simon, as we will call him, is | Although King Cophetua might have tue leaves are fresh it brightens a woman undergoes all the annoyance and quite a character in his way. He be. loved and shared his throne with a | smuil tree trunk wonderfully. The | shame for nothing. Thonsands of wo- FINE JOB PRINTING | TD ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. Schedule to take effect Mondav. Tan. 6. 1910 lieves in asking for a thing until he | beggar maid, the royal marriage act| Vanilla planifolia, to give it its full | men who have been cured by Dr. Pierce's wanted doing and that thing wanted doing to the property. In prac | tice. however, he has to obey it, just | nilla of the industrial world. They Eszamine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, that we car: not do in the most satis- factory manner, and at Prices i 2 EE WESTWARD [EASTWARD gets it. and then—well, he is imme-| would render the occurrence of dl name, is a terrestriai parasite. It Favorite Prescription write in apprecia- A SPECIALTY Readdows | erations. Reed 4p. diately in need of something else. He | such romantic union impossible in Eng: | climbs from the ground, but once es- | tion of the cure which dispenses with the ? 9 #NoS/tNo3 No1| No2/t Nod No 6 has lived on the same estate all his| land. Members of the blood royal | tablished has feeding stations on the | gxaminations aiid jocal reatments. Thre AT THE | ony . | i life, and until quite recently he was must have the sanction of parliament | bark all along the line. The leaves— dulicate Te as "Favorite Prescrip- | WATCHMAN OFFICE |g (0 6 Bs Lve. neh Pal ia paying a merely nominal rent—£1 a | before they can marry. and this would | long, very smooth and light green— oo" "oo debilitating drains, irreg- 2 07| 10 20 6 35(.".Coleville....| s 4 1 4 850 year—for the small cottage he occu- | certainly not be accorded unless the are alternate, and at the axil of each | arty and female weakness. It always | { | 83) 12% 3 48 pied. i birth and position of the lady were | is a sucker a few inches in length that | helps. It almost always cures. There is no style of work, from the | 2 wst waldo Simon. however, wasn't quite satis- | beyond reproach. | fastens itself securely i the tree, ly- ere | cheapest ger” to the finest | ki 831 12 3 $4 fied. Whenever he paid an installment 4, English king's position toward | lux flat against tue bark. | 824) 12 24/5 3 of his rent he called his master's at-| spa 1aw : somewhat peculiar. a The blossoms are inconspicuous. It t at #5 Moth BOOK WORK, 8 20| 12 20 55 tention to the fact that this thing | yatjeally he is above the law. is the resultant pods that are the va- mporta ers. | | ! At length Si- are slim pods six to eight inches long Ey koe a y 31! Bloomsdorf. | 740 mon’s master decided on a bold move. | a Ne a Thieus : or hoi and when dried for the market are of | 0d see that it I ics 340 73 PineGrove M 3 : sl Soa 3% The next time Simon turned up with | yo country. Any royal proclamation | ® rich, deep reddish brown. These | pears the Tz — i — .H. Supt. the quarter's rent and the usual list| pian he issues is only binding in so | are called vanilla beans, but without | signatare of y y 2 Z sons mn > a of suggested repairs the owner WAS | par as it is founded upon an existing | yam Thay Fi 2 bens the In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Children ry prepared to meet him. i | seed em is as fine as dust. ese The Kind You Have Always Bought, ’ “Look here. Simon.” he remarked. | B® BEE Se Coe | seeds are the black specks that are Fletchwr’s Castoria., Fletcher's Castoria. “I've been thinking the matter over, ul king set up private tribunals, such as | ss e————— comers : . e———————— memes in recognition of your long and faithful | os | Gi service I'm going to make you a free! the star chamber. or adq to the juris | Clothing. Alothing. gift of the cottage you live in. From this moment it's yours to do as you like with. Now. what do you say to that?" “Thank ‘e, sir—thank ’'e.” returned the old fellow. *“An' now. sir. what about that bit o' paint for the back door? Ye'll throw that in, o' course?” —London Answers. Waterlogged Servians. An Englishwoman traveling in Ser- via thus gives a striking glimpse of her own prejudices and tastes. “The Servians drink too much cold water, and they drink it till they are pulpy. An average Serb drinks enough cold water for an English cow. I doubt whether the language contains an equivalent for ‘bad training.’ for when I tried to explain the idea it created surprise. A doctor told me he had never heard the theory before. To him it seemed a natural and wholesome habit. Moreover, he added. ‘there is plenty.’ and seemed to think it was rather wasteful to leave any unswal- lowed. To me it explained the lack of activity. The nation is waterlog- ged. All day long and every day the Serb calls for a glass of cold water. and when he has drunk it he calls for another. Perhaps owing to this he has little space for alcohol. At an; rate. I never saw a drunken man, even among the peasants.” Washington and the Artists. Writing to a friend May 16, 17835, Washington thus described his experi- ence with portrait painters: “I am so hackneyed to the touches ! of the painter's pencil that I am now altogether at their beck and sit like patience on a menument while they ure delineating the lines of my face. It is a proof among many others of what habit and custom can effect. At first 1 was as impatient of the request and as restive under the operation as a colt is of the saddle. The next time I submitted very reluctantly. but with less flouncing. Now no dray moves more readily to the thrill than T do to the painter's chair.” Infinitesimal Webs. Mexico, the land of Montezuma, prickly pears. sand. volcanoes. earth- quakes, etc... has many subtropical wonders both In vegetable and ani- mal life. Among these latter is a spe- cies of spider so minute that its legs cannot be seen without a glass. This he would levy taxes right and left little araneida weaves a web so won- | dertully minute that it takes 400 of | “hos asking anybody. - Allegheny St., them to equal a common hair in mag- nitude. A Great Descent. “I can trace my descent from Ho- mer,” said Lord Siatey proudly. “Indeed.” replied Miss Cresse, who didn't seem to be at all impressed. “It is certainly a great descent.” | diction of a court. By a special act of | parliament it has also been decided | | that if his majesty were to lose an ac- tion brought against him by the reve- | | nue authorities he would be liable for | the payment of costs. ! By the law of the land the king can- not possibly commit an offense. Any | injury or wrong suffered by a subject | , at his hands has to be attributed to | the “mistake of his advisers;” hence | ft happens that King George is the! | only person in Great Britain who can- | | not arrest a suspected felon, even if | { such a one were to be seen by him en- tering Buckingham palace or Windsor | | castle, The reason for this is because no action for wrongful arrest could | lie against him, and therefore if the person arrested by him were proved | innocent there would then be a wrong | without a remedy. Another legal dis- | ability of the king is that he is barred : of all rights in matters relating to land | after a lapse of sixty years. He is also prohibited from serving on a jury or. from giving evidence Until so comparatively recent a pe- | riod as 1870 if a subject were convict. | ed of treason or felony the king could | claim his property. Another lapsed prerogative of the crown is one known as “corody.” During its existence a | king who wanted to advance the in- terests of a royal chaplain could com- | pel a bishop to support such a clergy- | ‘man until a benefice had been found | | for him. Nowadays he has not even | the right of founding a bishopric or | creating ecclesiastical jurisdiction. | Similarly he must always be a mem- | ber of the Church of England and : cannot change his religion. i The theory that the king “reigns, but does not govern” is amply borne out by the political system of the , country. While the members of par lament are his majesty’s “faithful commons,” they have certain privi- | leges which he himself does not pos- sess. Thus King George can summon | or prorogue parliament at will, but he cannot prolong it beyond a definite | period. Similarly he is absolutely de- | | barred from imposing any sort of tax- i ation whatever without first securing ! the consent of parliament. So jeal- | ously guarded is this privilege that a | king cannot create new officers with | new fees or annex new fees to exist ing officers, as such a course | be considered as imposing a fresh | In bygone times. however, when English monarch was in want of | ish monarchs. King George is © of the few men possessing a | | stake in the country without the pi | lege of recording a vote. — | Bellman. | God pays, but not every Saturday. | Alphonse Karr. i TO SELL CLOTH = 3 IR EEEEREEEEREE SEES DSSS SEER — WE KNOW OF — BUT ONE WAY NG SUCCESSFULLY AND THAT’S HONESTLY For twenty-five years the Fauble Stores have been selling the best clothes we can get, and doing our best to sell them honestly. You know the result. Have you profited by our way of Clothes Selling ? If not, Don’t you think it’s time you do. You will find it will pay you. Bellefonte. TRY US! Next week we will show new Fall Suits for Men. Come, have a look. Costs nothing. The Fauble Stores. The Best Store for Men and Boys in Central Pennsylvania. BEE ESSEC EEE ES Ser 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers