AS Me Gs SND. 6B MIs 5 wall DREAM FANTASIES oom Visiting cards ¢ rn sty’e accord- ing to latitude, aid »: an example a Bellefonte, Pa., October 27, 1911. ing the snake charmer's fate, the rat- ___ tling of a chain and the sounds made! by beating the ground with a switch. It appears to perceive only sounds of hizh piteh. for it pars no attention to the low notes of the inte or the beat. Paris contemporary ro ='s an incident in 1844 who X. C1 ou : sent Cause and Effect In the Visions | under Louis Phill + os winister ex- Childrens Models for ! traordinary to China. The couriesy i ONE WAY TO SAVE MONEY. That Come In Sleep. | ho ambmandor Ero to © osed (ie I Of the drum. Barnand also con- Dresses tiers _—— | Chinese ata = se 3 - . has thelr firmed, in Cerion, the results of ob- Al ead Au n and Contract a Good Sized Debt, Ther “Bogen” : When th ‘Ph oO : lola had servations made in the London zoclog- y Winter got, B the Begelistions Cut Ready feal garden on the supposed power of fascination exerted by serpents upon birds, and he concindes that this pow- er of fascination is also purely imag- inary Work Hard Till Its Paid, Perhaps you thts you can't save. You have debts. Well, the way tc BH | cure un debt is by e niracting another It Explained the Meaning of the Oft | one. You meet your debts, do you not Recurring Fancy That a Cat Was Well, contract a debt to the bank. Ciawing the Slumberer's Throat. Just agree with yourself that you owe Rapidity of ths Dream Process. the bank £1,000 and must pay this debt in soll fnstalliments—a dollar or 1/7 1011-1912 ! been completed and M. de Lag one was | ready to embark a dol gation brought him a great roll f raper. ‘The ambas- sador seeing this parcel al once thought this was a procont, lnowi © Chinese methods, Lut to Lis surprise th y start- | ed to unroll the cyinder, whch extend- ! ed to about Efiy 1ooters of over 162 feet. Then he ! craed that it was To Sew. Blow tho Steam Aside. i The wise woiian sent a sudden vigor- ous puff of breath at the jet of steam rising from the copper teakettle she Mothers everyw here appreciate the wonderful op- portunity which pare {at » It was a personal experience of a singular character that first impressed two or five aut of each week's wazes. { the viziting card of the “doyen.” S d D mr | the visiting card of the “doven.” In wo DE rom tend Tr Tesaits Then pay th:t debt. The bank, unifke UPON We. some years ago, the Imper- | 0 "0 0 0G (FETE ter TRS tilting. repeated it hastily as she emy-may e Dresses filled the blue teapot and sot the ket- tle back on the stove with 2 nod of tri- umph. “The! (rick has saved me many tance of dreams as a subject for se- rious investization, says H. Addington Bruce in the Outlook. Until! then | your oiler creditors, pays sou for ihe use of your money and will return it to you in time with interest. For yon wl emblossador add- 1 read, “The am- board the hamilie ed a few words, whic! bassador of Fravee regres that he is offer them for obtaining garments already cut and ready 1 for ¢ in 2 dy I y to sew together for their children. Semy-mayde Dresses relieve you of the tty of te, a he . a | caldod hand.” sho sso a = ¢ 8 are an pactner with it. It is your bank had Shated the opinion prevailing | able to offer only these simple words as a ne Whi . She : he Ho Wheth shopping about from store to store to obtain suitable trimmings and ab- and its business is to make money for AMONZ laymen—and, it would seem. | to your exeellency.” er ! read it or was told it 1 am not solutely do away with the necessity of cutting cloth according to pat- You among mest selentists also — that | >. sare, but until 1 tried it 1 was akvays | tern. Every Semy-mayde Dress guaranteed perfect or your money back When you start 2a bank account yon dreams are entirely fanciful and | St abb getting most painful litt] burns, Steam . . meaningless. But my experience wis The Building of Homes. is so easily blown aside if you have | become a capitalist, a banker, an in vestor in securities and a substantial citizen, inte ested in the development Dwelling houses way be conscructed of anything from paper to concrete, When built of paper (hey consist of WORTH CONSIDERING Semy-mayde also offers you the oppor- tunity of fitting the dress to the Child the presence of mind to remember it | that yon ean easily keep it from reach- ine your hand until you can set down such 1 couid no longer believe this, To state ir briefly, it Involved the recurrence of un most bizarre dream. of your town und country. You ne wie Fron Sweet 3 Anal fen ike te » . ground plans, front elevations and a kettle or not 't fore as 3 quire standing, respect, peace of mind. At least twenty times during a period | Pi When they progress. to the Kettle or pot. Don't forget it next ¥ as you go along—and this is an advant- Your point of view Is changed. You ©f SIX monihs 1 had the same dream- a ° DE Pa or . ed time the ld slips or the stenm comes i age which cannot be had with ready- namely, that a cat was clawing at my something more substntial they do ypexpectedly from the kettle spout. rH) made dresses (which usually have to be remodeled to quite an extent to fit the child.) no longer “see red.” Your fellow men appear to you as they really are—co- | mot resemble in vation or the gro sny way the frout ele- Jd pian of the paper You wil bless me for the hint." —New throat. The stege sotting and the mi York Tribune. workers and friends—not oppressors or schemers agninst your welfare. Yon have done your part, you have unified your interests with the right ones caught step with the march of prog ress. It is only those who resist this march that get hurt. Don’t get under the car—get in it. Going in debt to the bank means going in debt to yourself, nor incidents might vary, but always the central episode was the same, and usualiy the fury of the dream cat's onset was great that it wonld awaken me. Naturally this recurient dream puzzled me, so much so that | spoke about it, Then one day the accident heavy cold that settled in my throat led to a medical examination, whi bh much to surprise, revealed the sO of a stage and are fu these par vefore disappeinting The mortgage, however, always comes up to expe ta- tions. ‘The houses of the elost may be distinguislied Ly the Lu:iler's pan- try, the midd'e «larses by the re ep- tion hail apd those oo tho Lol pollid by the parlor. Hor + anful to eat in, sleep fa, batoe in, dress i2, hide in, be seen in, die In, siore jn in, in- THM, ag nr Public Baths Abroad. London probably possesses more pri- vate baths than any other city, but in the matter of public baths it ean- not claim first or even second place, says the London Chronicle. Tokyo, Japan, has over 800 public baths, where 400.000 persons bathe daily at a cost of about one halfpenny each. Constanti- TEACH YOUR CHILD TO SEW Semy-mayde Dresses offer also an ex- cellent opportunity for teaching chil- dren to make their own dresses. The chart which accompanies each package and the complete A ae for sew- ing the dress together are so simple that a child of ordinary intelligence if she knows how to use a needle at all and can operate a sewing machine, can very easily make her NE dresses. to your family, to the general good. my sure and bu daa \ in 3 This should he the most sacred of your Presence of a zrowth, requiring imme: ponges fs typliicd by a perkie: pe DOPE probably rank: second: then The public schools of this country, in obligations nnd should come first. It inte treatment by the surgeon's knife. (joced ¥inglish « o-iotr: 1a eo, romance C007 Sf. Petersburg, mons for the the large cities especially, conduct sew- Some time afterward it suddenly o-- town Atl os Ts olan ar vast vapor baths to which the Rus- | ing classes for girls and Semy-mayde is the “preferred creditor,” and you'll by a southern planters mnasion, poetry Dresses are largely used by some of . » a . > . ans Je hon nd woery Nat find that ali your other creditors will ¢WTed to me that since the removal poo roca emiosered cottage and hue Sans flock in thoy sands every Saturday | these schools. be willing to stand back while yon of the dangerous growth 1 had not mor by n modern Mat. Life evening. The fines! public bath in the | ee world is at Vienna. It has a basin 578 Semy-mayde Dresses may be had in For it insures the payment + every other obligation. A man who is saving is trusted and helped. His credit is good. He can “do things." People piace confidence in him.—Chi- cago Tribune. DAVID GARRICK. The Great Actor's Art and His Wife's Ruffled Feelings. Mrs. Garrick's admiration of her husband's dramatic talents was in- tense, and on his great nights she would hang over her box next the stage in rapturous delight. The one flaw in her idol, she claimed, was a iaste for low life, for which she blamed him greatly, insisting that he loved better to play Scrub to a low lived audience than one of his superior char acters before an audience of taste, On one particular occasion she was in her box in the theater when Gar rick's impersonation of Richard [1]. was applauded to the echo. In that day a farce followed the tragedy of the evening, and as Mrs. Garrick rose te leave before it her husband came to the box to say he had some business in the greenroom which would detain him. so most unwillingly the lady was obliged to acquiesce and remain through the closing entertainment. This proved to be a comical series of blundering adventures which had Le fallen a countryman who had left his farm to see London and on his return gave his neighbors an account of the wonders hie had met, This characterization was received with such j.enls of applause that Mrs. Garrick, ever zealous of her husbanpa's fame, began to think it rivaled those lately lavished on Richard II. Her feelings were neariy worked up to fo- ver heat when she was attracted by the frantic efforts of her little spaniel dog to oveileap the balcony that sepa- rated him from the stage, when she immediately became aware of the truth that the acior was Garrick and ex claimed, “Strange that on cog should know his mas‘er v hen the woman who loved him best in (he world could pot pierce his disguise.” “- pay fit. His Biggest Failure. John Jacob Astor was asked one day what was the largest amount of mon- ey he had ever made in ome trans action. This he declined to answer. but eaid that he would tell the Inrges sum that he failed to make. With De Witt Clinton and Gouverneur Mor- ris, he said, he had planned to buy Louisiana from France and to sell it to the United States government, re- taining the public domain and charg: ing 2% per cent commission, They changed their minds and Mr, Astor said that he lost $30,000,000 by failing to go into the deal. Fancy Prices In 1849, A tourist lately on the Pacific slope picked up a menu used in 1849, when California was the mecea of gold min- ers. The items and prices in that wild country ran as follows: “Bean soup. $1: hash, low grade, 75 cents; hash. 18 carat, $1; beef, plain, $1; beef, with one potato, $1.15; baked beans, plain, 75 cents; baked heans. greased, $1; two potatoes, 50 cents; two potatoes, peeled. 75 cents; rice pudding, 75 cents. The Privilege of Wealth. “That man is getting to be a regu: lar customer here.” “Yes, and he must be a multimillion. “Why so, Mayme?” “He ain't afraid to ask to see some- thing cheaper If he (eels so inclined.” ~—Pittsburg Post. Quick Conclusion. “1 see that one convict fatally as- saulted another.” “They must have some bad men In’ that penitentiary.” Cleveland Plain Dealer. . wi A— once been troubled by the eat clawing dream. Its significance now began to dawn on me. I had suffered no pain, not even in- convenience, from the growth in my throat. been aware of its presence. But un- questionably the organic changes nc- companying it had given rise to sensa- tions which, slight though they were, had made an impression on my sleep- In fact 1 had not consciously | Serpents and Music. Barnard oncindes from his person- al observation of cobras in Ceylon, says the Scientiiic American, that the serpent’s traditional Jove for music is a pure fable and that the only ef- fect of music is to arouse the reptile's curiosity, which is excited by any loud and aout sound. The cobra protrudes its head from its burrow alike on hear- ing consciousness sufficient to excite ! it to activity. My recurrent dream consequently was to be regarded as a symbolic representation of the disor- der in my throat—an attempt to inter. pret it, to explain it. And. indeed. even in the dream, for all its fantastic imagery and symbolism, the seat of the trouble was indicated plainly enough as I could appreciate after the surgeon had completed his labors, An experience was reported by Al fred Maury, one of the carliest scien- tific investigators of the phenomenn of sleep. who dreamed that he was living in Paris during the Terror anil had been put on the proscribed list. After many exciting adventures he was captured, tried and sentenced to execution. He saw himself dragged through the streets amid a clamoring multitude and forced to mount the scaffold and bare his neck to the fatal blow. In that instant as the guillo- tine knife descended he awoke to find that a piece of the cornice of his bed had fallen and struck him on the neck. Testifying even more impressively to the twofold action of the dream proc- ess and to its rapidity is a dream ex perience of my own. In this dream 1 was walking alone at night along a country road. It was lined on both sides by trees which, as 1 learned from a man who presentiy joined me, | I picked some | pears and ate them as we walked nnd | The road seemed to overlook | were laden with fruit. talked. a broad valiey in which I saw a soli: tary light. My companion told me that it was in bis home and invited me to | pass the night with him. After a tir- ing walk we reached the house, 2 small two room cabin. He retired into the inner room and I went to bed in | the outer. i had not been long asleep when, in my dreams, 1 was awakened by the noise of somebody running. and the thought instantly flashed into my mind that my host’ was making off with my money. ' Ing, “Stop. stop!” Then I veritably awoke and as I did so distinctly heard on the pavement below my window the sound of hu: ried footfalls and a voice crying ex citedly, “Stop. stop!” At once it wus clear that these two words, penetrst- ing to my sleeping consciousness, hud provided the necessary stimulus to set up a dream process which, in the frac. tion of a second. had interpreted then ' as best it could and had presented tiie results of its interpretation in the form | of a curious little narrative of noctur- nal adventure. , Dreams may be produced by the use of artificial irritants. One sleeper, whose nose was lightly tickled with n ' feather, had a horrible dream of » mask of pitch being alternately ap: ' plied to and drawn violently from his ' face. Another, at whose feet a Lot ' water bag vas placed, dreamed th! he was walking over hot lava. In a second experiment of the same soit | the accidental slipping of the cover , from the hot water bag led to an enh. orate dream of capture and torture Ly . Rocky mountain bandits who insisted that the dreamer kiew how to convert copper into gold and held bis naked! , feet in a fire in order to compel him ¢, communicate his valuable secret. Simi. larly the application of a slight degree of heat to the feet of a patient with paralyzed limbs was followed by =a dream of being transformed into bear and taught to dance by being placed on red hot iron plates. Life without laughing is a dreary + blank.~Thackeray. 1 leaped up shout. | feet long by 156 feet wide and ean | accommodaie 1,500 persons. ter is changed thrice daily, More Useful. | The wa- ' Bride Elect—What would you have thrown instead of rice? Rrutal friend —A few grains of common sense.— Judge. The Bell Telephone Company of Pa. 4 By Rear Window!” The Bell Telephone Suardshynightasly y, and brings im- mediate help when danger threatens. in your home? CO. of Penna. W. 8. MALLALIEU. BELLEFONTE, PA. 7 and the Read the list. Torso Car, fully equi; T , THE BELL TELEPHONE ; FF = === A ————— Au'omobiles. Have you a Bell Telephone 3 pu ” The “FORD” AUTOMOBILE Needs HO boost , Is Scull rnning motor, ample power and durability teils the tale. car sold h to sell: others, It is the one car hE prices commend it to would-be ps for itself purchasers: , like above picture $ 780.00 . 725.00 680.00 W. W. KEICHLINE & Co., Agent Centre County Branch £5 + Bellefonte, Pa. i many different models, in Ramony Percales, Naushon Ginghams and Hyde- grade Galateas and a large number of different patterns in each model. The sizes are 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. The store where you bought this pack- age can also supply you with any of the other models shown on this sheet. The SEMY-MAYDE is exclusively controlled by WARNER-GODFREY CO.. 86-88 Worth Street, New York City. Sole Selling Agents Allegheny St. Sltoes. Yeagers Shoe Store Fitzezy The Ladies’ Shoe that Cures Corns Sold only at Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Building, RELLEFONTE, PA. re}