March 1, 1912. Bellefonte, Pa., When Angeline Came Home. | nn— — “Yes, we're awful glad to get back. 1y pjtten all the tenpenny nails to town,” confided the twelve-year-old | sister of the young woman whose spe- | cial young man was calling for the! first time since the family returned from the lake. “Er—Miss Angeline—your sister—Is | she glad, too?” inquired the young man craftily. “My goodness, yes!” said the small girl in surprise. “She's the gladdest of us all. Angeline didn't seem tO care for any of the things that were real fun, like Ted and | did—she was | always afraid of getting sunburned or; something. | don’t think when you | grow up there is much left in life to enjoy. All Angeline wanted to do was | to put on another dress and do up her hair and moon around with the count.” The young man sat up straight. “The : count?” he repeated inquiringly, with a hasty glance at the stairs. “Who, was he?” | “Why, didn't you know there was a. real count at the lake?” asked the small girl in surprise. thought Angeline would have written you about him, because that was all she could talk or think about. “When she found his name on the register,” went on the small girl, “I thought she'd have a fit or something, , for she came rushing upstairs and | dragged out her best white embroid- ered linen suit. “ ‘Why, she said to mother, ‘did | put on this horrid, cheap blue ging ham for breakfast this morning? Do you suppose he was the one who sat at the next table? “1 was excited, too, asked her if he would walk on a tight rope, or something, she pushed me out of the room. as excited as Angeline and rushed around whispering together. Ted and 1 decided that he must have two heads, or something, so we started out to find bim. There was a strange man read: ing a magazine in the arbor and when | we walked in and asked, ‘Are you a count?’ he stared and then he laughed. After that he said he wasn't, but he'd be pleased to direct us to the end of the pier, where we could pursue our inquiries. “There was another strange man there and I didn’t like him half so well as the first one. He kept jumping around and his eyes snapped and we stared at him a long time, till he al most jumped at us. Then | asked him, ‘Are you a count? And please tell us what you count? “1 don’t think he liked us, because he threw up his hands and dashed away. “He acted different with Angeline. He was always leaning over her chair and smiling and his voice sounded like the inside of marshmallows. There wasn't any other girl there as pretty as Angeline, so, of course, she cut out all the others.” “She did, did she?” remarked the young man in tense tones, with an- other glance at the stairs. “Go on!” “Oh, my, yes!” sald the small girl “She told mother she guessed if any of those washed out, uninteresting girls there thought they were going to get ahead of her they were mistaken. Mother got real patronizing to the other women and was always talking about estates and family trees and how Angeline was such a sweet and lovely and brilliant girl that she had Trustful “] should have ‘soon to be a large extra dividend. but when | i i i i Apolonia If old Jedediah Haymaster had real- in two that people invariably mentioned | when called upon to describe his char- acteristics and abilities, he would have accumulated quite a little scrap iron heap by the time he was sixty- five. As it was, what he had accu- mulated was the awed dislike of his townsmen and a collection of stocks, bends and mortgages that would sink a ship. Jed Haymaster could make money with his eyes shut and one hand tied behind him. Make it he did, with no quarter for the innocent bystander. : Having all these years of practice | behind him, it was easy for him to in- | dite the letter to Mrs. Daw. Apolonia Daw had come to town a few years before as the bride of Henry Daw, who had died shortly after. His young widow had continued to reside in the pretty cottage Daw built for her, her small income sufficing for her quiet needs. | Most of this income came in the shape of dividends from her stock in the Haymaster engine works. This | stock her husband had purchased | cheap when old Jedediah had started | this, the tenth of his big enterprises. Jedediah disliked women mixed up in his business affairs and entitled to participate in the annual meetings of | stockholders—and, besides, there was 1 Whoever held Mrs. Daw’s stock at that happy time naturally would get the fat dividend upon it. Therefore Jedediah wrote her that it had occurred to him that she might like to invest her money in govern- ment bonds or something else solid and trustworthy instead of having it ‘in engine stock, which, while good, “All the grown up women were just might he seriously affected by some unexpected disaster. He would, in the generosity of his heart, take her stock off her hands, now that the dangers | of possessing it had been made clear to her, and he remained hers respect- fully. : Apolonia Daw wrote ack on paper faintly scented with violets. She said she certainly appreciated his deep in- terest in her affairs, because she had a business way since she had been left alone. It touched her greatly. But the fact that he was at the head of the engine works gave her such a | sense of security that she had never worried a bit about her stock. The Haymaster engine works was just as | | Teeth Were | found very little genuine kindness in | Artificial By Peegy Powens “Jack, dear, be sure to come home | early,” said young Mrs. Clark. “Why, Kate, what's up?” | “Have you forgotten the Mortons | and Healys are coming for dinner?” | “Believe me, 1 won't forget it again. I'll be in time to change my collar. Good-by! Hope your first dinner will be a howling success. Mrs. Clark was busy arranging the flowers for the table when her best friend called for a few minutes’ chat. “You're the cutest little housekeep- er!” exclaimed Lillian. “How happy you must be in this darling bunga- low!” “I'd be supremely happy except for one thing. If I tell you, promise on your honor you'll never repeat it to a soul.” “i'l be as mum as a safety deposit vault,” rejoined Lillian. “What's this awful mystery?” | “All my front teeth were knocked | out in a frightful automobile accident | when I was a school girl,” began Mrs. Clark. ! “That's ancient history now,” inter- rupted Lillian. ] “Not to Jack, however. the least conception that mine are artificial.” i “He married you for better or worse and he's better off than having to pay | dentist bills.” i “Why don’t you tell him?" “Impossible! Jack was absolutely shocked when he discovered my He hasn't | “Do You Doubt My Veracity, Kate?” switch and false puffs, and scandal solid as the Bank of England to her | ized the first time he noticed my pink with his keen judgment and strong hand at the helm. So, thanking him again, she remained his most grate. fully. Jedediah read this with his face gscrewed' up in a tight knot. “The woman's more of fool than most of em!” he said as he dipped his pen in ink. “She hasn't sende enough to | get scared!” This time he wrote that her trust in him was, indeed, flattering, but that he was only a weak, human man who did not claim infallible judgment and he could not bear to have it upon his ! conscience if she should suffer finan- | cially through him. Of course the | engine works were as solid as any, | but he begged to pc it out to her that | industrial stocks fi :tuated unexpect- | edly sometimes. They were delicate. | He considered it his duty to look out {for her. So great was his concern | that he would offer her $5'a share ‘ always known her fate would be differ- | above par value. ent from the common run of young! Apolonia answered that she wished | there were more men like Mr. Hay- women. ‘No honors,’ she said once, ‘no honors ever heaped on Angelie’s head master in this hard world. Things would ever make her forget to be nice | would take on a far different aspect to those beneath her. 'then. She said there were tears in “The other women just sniffed and | her eyes as she wrote and that she left Angeline alone, but she had the A would be less than a woman if she felt count, so she didn’t care. She used | the slightest quiver of doubt in the to talk about it to mother and say, ' engine works under his guidance, ‘Won't the other girls back home be | while, if she descended to the depths simply crazy jealous when they hear ; of selling her stock, she would really about it, though? And mother would | be an object of contempt. No, she say, ‘It only father doesn’t act up!’ | assured him, she never would be un- “It was real fun to see Angeline grateful or foolish enough to think sweep through the hotel lobby like a | she could better herself by getting rid queen and smile sweetly at the other : of her engine stock. Again she was women and see how cross they'd look ' his most gratefully. and how they'd rock fast and talk aft- | Jedediah gazed at this epistle hos- er she'd gone. | tilely and breathed hard. “Yet she | can’t be as allfired smart as she “One afternoon the count was going ' must be if she isn't a fool!” to take Angeline riding and she came | downstairs all rigged out and he! So he called on Mrs, Daw that eve- wasn’t there. Finally she asked the | ning on the way home. She fluttered man behind the desk, ‘Have you seen to welcome him as though he were the count? I am waiting for him.’ her dearest friend and clasped his “There were a lot of people around | hand warmly. Jedediah, really look and they kind of laughed. Then the ing at her for the first time in his life, man behind the desk coughed and | saw how very pretty she was. sald: ‘Well, there were two men wait-. “I called,” he said,“‘about that stock. ing for him, too, while he was in at !I don’t seem to have made myself lunch and they took him away. They clear in my letters. You worry me, —er—had a warrant. He's been jump- Mrs. Daw, with your sublime woman's ing board bills all summer and the de- ignorance of business affairs.” tectives just ran him down here. They = Apolonia leaned forward and looked said something about a forged check, | Jedediah fairly in the eyes. “Dear too. | Mr. Haymaster,” she said, seveetly, “So Angeline was just as glad to “I wouldn't have you worry about me come home as the rest of us,” said | for the world! And you made your- the small girl. “She got terrible home- | self quite clear! I think it would have sick after that. Ted and 1 were glaa | been brilliantly clear even if 1 had to come, because father wrote that | been as ignorant as you thought me! | powder box. He abhors anything | ralse. Horrors! Whenever he men- tions my pearly white teeth I fell like | an escapeu convict.” : | “Don't fret over imaginary troub- | les,” said Lillian, as she left. Cheer | up, girlie! Your husband won't care.” | The guests came, but no Jack. | “Jack is famous for his forgetting,” | commented Mr. Morton as they sat down to a cold dinner. “Indeed, he's never been late to dir- aer before,” protested his wife. “Hi- ‘her something important detained aim, or he missed the suburban train.” As the last course was served Jack ippears with profuse apologies. “Beastly sorry to be so late! Could not reach you by ‘phone; missed my ‘rain, had to wait an eternity for the aext one.” “Jack,” Kate said after the guests departed. “Why weren't you home on time? That dinner was one dismal, ireadful failure.” “Don't be a human interrogation soint. I've explained nearly a bun- ired times already. Do you doubt my veracity, Kate?” “Was that pretty stenographer in ‘he office late, too?” “How dare you make such & re mark!” “So this Is our first quarrel?” “Stop your weeping. If you must know, I broke my plate.” “Your plate? What are yon talk- mg about?” “It's a wonder 1 knew after all this sxcitement. My teeth are false ones, and I had to wait at the dentist's un- til the plate was mended. Are you satisfied now?” “f am overjoyed, sweetheart,” ex- slaimed Kate, - “What do you mean?” “Only that you can’t be so appalled now, when I tell you my teeth were knocked out in an auto accident and are also artificial,” confessed Kate, much relieved. “Oh! 1 knew about yours all the tie,” said Jack. “I saw them in a glass one morning.” —— To Conserve India’s Rainfall. A great scheme was proposed at Bombay recently, by which it is pro- posed to utilize India’s huge rainfall for the purpose of providing electric power for industrial purposes to the Bombay section of Western India. Dur- ing the monsoon season, there is a rainfall on the west coast averaging 175 inches at Lanoul, and sometimes greatly exceeding this figure. Three WIFEY HAD | I'd get married tomorrow,” said the | got hold of. Rotting shingles, sagging A LONG HEAD People With Patriotic Instincts Paid for the Patching Up of Her Old House. “If 1 thought I could get a wife as smart as the wife of that man who bought property up in Westchester, pessimist. “It was a bum house he weather boarding, and defective plumbing sent cold chills chasing sll over the man every time he looked at them. Luckily for him his wife was | not subject to chills. She joined a! literary society, and one day when nosing around among historical docu- | ments she discovered that their di- lapidated little cottage had been some- body's headquarters for about fifteen minutes in some war or other. “ ‘Patriotic societies can’t afford to let this house go to rack and ruin,’ she said with spirit. ‘It won't cost over $300 to make repairs. We couldn't raise $300 in three years, but the societies can get it easily enough, and it is their duty to do it’ “She wrote fervent appeals to pub- lic spirited citizens who have a han- kering for investing money in historic landmarks. Pretty soon contributions began to come in. They were not large, but they were numerous and the first thing that man knew he had enough cash on hand to buy new shin- gles and patch up the weather-board- ing. What better investment can a | fellow make, 1 should like to know, { than a shanty with a historic past and | 2 wife with a Wall street head?” Historic Church. One of the oldest churches in Amer- icq is tlie French cathedral or basilica It is one of the most imposing struc- tures in Canada. Tt contains several important pictures, including a pic ture of the crucifixion painted by Van Dyck in 1630, which, with several oth- er examples of the old masters, was srs causi at this time. of roots, barks and herbs, so as to raise the all blood humors, blood diseased and run- ! { i | | | i i of Quebec, which dates back to 1647, | of disease | mented by his | father) [ina p more than half a million women | looted from the churches in Paris by | bY letter, free of the revolutionists of 1793 and pur- | a chased by Abbe Des Jardins of Que- | Buffalo, N.Y. ee EE A i EEE Hood's Sarsaparilla. Medicine for the Blood is Needed Now: Because the unhealthful modes of living during the winter have made the blcod impure, of appetite and that tired feeling, as well as the sores and eruption that occur Be sure to take Hood's Sarsaparilla this spring. It combines the great curatives principles oa pn to their highest efficiency in the ea principles 57-6 Get Hood's Sarsaparilla today. All druggists. Clothing. INT ARAN TE OEE bec, who happened to be in the | Cream Puffs.—Put a cuplul of he French capital at that time. | water and half a cupful of butter into The vestments are superb and the | 33ucepan on he Tange. Sen jt bul lection of sacred relics is the 1arg- | kil it 1s smooth and iP sh co until it is smooth and well cooked. Se est in North America. They are kept | aside to cool. Add to the cold past in two large vaults in the sacristy and | three unbeaten eggs, beating them i include skulls or bones of more than | well. Dip the mixture out and drop upo 400 saints, beside pieces of the true | 2 pan. It will make about 1 cross and crown of thorns, the cradie | puffs. Bake 25 minutes in ahot over of the child Jesus, a piece of rope | should be hard, like shells, whe they are taken from the oven. If the with which the Savior was flogged | ;re flat, the oven was not hot enough. and a fragment of the veil of the! holy mother which shows a stain of | the blood of her beloved son which | Claster's fell upon it as she kneeled before the 2 cross.—Exchange. : ' LADIE'S CRAVANETTED GARBARDINE COAT ABOSOLUTELY WATERPROOF $15 Garment at $9.98 Reckless Travelers. _ Imagine two people start off for a journey of years, in an enti unknown | country, full of perils and of pitfalls, and | having no map to guide them, no knowl- | edge to guard them in their travels. That is the condition of most young married | people. Their cou is magnificent,but it avails nothing. Like the path of some | desert caravan marked bleaching i bones, the path of life is covered with the | memorials of human failure. Dr. Pierce's | Common Sense Medical Adviser is de- | signed for such le. It garners in its thousand and pages, the wisdom of centuries. It treats of the vital ques- tions that affect parents and ing. It | treats plain truth in plain w is | book is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stam book, | for covered or 31 stamps for Tr hn covered. | Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. | A great many women—thousands in- | deed, who 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 treatment experience takes the place of iment. There is no form | acting he delicate womanly | organs which can be new to him, and the use of his “Favorite Prescription” supple- advice and | DT Ee the means of | in Apactin of Thirty SOS a | This is a fine loose mode), made of charge. All correspon. | cravanetted garbardine cloth, absolutely bsolutely private and strictly con- | waterproof. High military colar, flap fidential. Address Dr. R. V. Fierce, | pockets, straps on cuffs. Colors olive and i tan. Sizes 32 to 46. Being wholesaler: | we are able to quote you a price on this | that other merchants have to pay for it | themselves. Remember this is a coat | that retails everywhere at $15.00 while | our price is a 98 CLASTER’S BELLEFONTE, PA. women are p—— i | | Everything for Men, Woman or Child | 1 tions. from Head-te-foot. EE " —— i Insurance. " ies sm —————————————— ER cm — a —————— ! SEC ETSELERES To 0 ARLE C. TUTEN E | (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) | Fire, Life and Automobile Insurance None but Reliable Companies Represented. Surety Bonds of All Descriptions. Both Telephones 5627.y BELLEFONTE, PA JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life ‘Spring 1912 Stetson’s Hats Opened To-day an unusual display of the Very Best Men’s Hats made in America only at FAUBLE'S The best Store for Men and Boys in Cen- tral Pennsylvania. Allegheny Street - Bellefonte, Pa. Accident Insurance. is Suc 18 te a: Fife ‘ — NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life in position to write J a a me Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA. The Preferred Accident there were some new puppies in the barn. “Oh, here's Angeline! Say, Angle, why didn’t you write to Mr. Hopingon about the count when you wrete te him all those times from the lake? He didn't know a thing about him.” Up to Date. “I had a nightmare last night.” “You mean a night airship.” | You gee, I know all about that extra dividend that is coming. I'm going | to marry your son and he told me | about that dividend some time ago. | But I appreciate your interest!” . Jededigh Haymaster stared. Then | he suddenly held out his hand. “You win,” he said, briefly, “and 1 suess we need you in the family. | You're too smart to run around om your own account, Apolonial” lakes or reservoirs are to be formed. One at Lanoul will be large enough to hold sufficient water during the long- est breaks in the monsoon season, and the Walwhan Lake, covering 2% square miles is to serve for the re- mainder of the year and will have a The generating station is to be at Khopoli, 300 feet above the sea and #0 miles from Bombay. L———————"— a —-— capacity of 2,600,000,000 cubic feet. | j SY Ww Ww W W Wi Wi wi Wn n mn Mn Mn mn mn mn Mn Mn Mn nm nm mn mn Mn mn mn Mn Mn Mn nm Mn Mn mn Mn nm mn mn m n n mn mn mn n W W Wr Ww Ww W