AI lin. In the Passing Shower. Four years in Alaska was a long time. And that length of time away from her and no letters—seemed like four years of eternity to Buell Searcy. Now he was sixteen days on the way home and he groaned with the remem- brance of it. A woman's love for money had sent him to the frozen North. It was not Cella Acton who cared for money—it was Camilla Ac- ton, the aunt who commanded a rich | marriage. | The girl's mother, widowed and dy- | ing, had given her, at three days old, | to John and Camilla Acton; and to them the girl had given loving obedi- ence. They were good to her. The daughters of the house had no more | advantages. But life in the Acton circle took money. The three sons spent much at college and out. The | household purse was not growing per- | ceptibly heavier with the years. When the time would come for the estate fo | be divided among their own, the Ac- tons felt that there would be nothing | to spare for the little niece. Celia must marry money. ) But, unfortunately, Guy, impulsive Guy, had in the Christmas of his sen- for year, brought a classmate home with him. “He's the best fellow on earth, Mam- sie,” Guy had informed his parent, “but”—this is for Doro’s benefit, that she might not mistake him for an elig- ible—" he's poor—my!” Dorothy evaded Buell Searcy, but the pretty slight Celia, forgetting mat- rimonial needs, fell at once under the charm of his soft brown eyes and gen- tle manners. A year after, when some slight de- gree of professional success was Searcy’s and he dared to ask the Ac-! tons’ consent to his marriage to their niece, he met hasty refusal. “If 1 give up the law and go away, to come back rich, will you give her to me?” Searcy had asked. : “Yes,” they had answered, to be rid | of him. But he had believed in their ' promise and gone to the Klondyke, The aunt had stipujated that he write only in reply to Celia's letters. When no answer came to his second letter after it had been three months sent, he was hurt and puzzled. At parting, Celia had slipped a card in his breast pocket, a card bearing a little spray of forget-me-nots, and the words, “Buell, I will wait.” The for- 1 He Was Hurt and Puzzled. get-me-nots withered and the writing became dim with the pressure of Searcy’s lips but Celia’s letter never | came. Mrs. Acton alone, could have told him why. : One day, months later, an appealing little note reached an Alaska postmas- ter, but he could reply only that the! gentleman named Buell Searcy had gone, nobody knew where. : Celia despaired. “He is dead in those awful blizzards,” she mourned. “He would have written again! Oh, | Auntie, I know he is dead!” Near the end of the fourth year, Payne Lindsay, banker and man of forty, met Celia and was charmed with | the wistful blue eyes. The aunt was | much elated when this “difficult catch” | made a first call. When Lindsay's at- | tentions became pronounced, Mrs. Ac- | ton arranged for Celia to spend a long requested month with a cousin in his his. city. “We are gratified at the honor you pay Celia in wishing to marry her,” ran Mrs. Acton’s reply to Payne Lind. ! say's letter, a few days after, “and. since you are compelled to go abroad | so soon, you have our consent to an | immediate marriage, should she favor | you.” “You are sure Aunt Camilla and Un- cle John wish it?” Lindsay, smiling, unfolded the aunt’s letter. | “Give me another day,” Celia plead- ed with blanched cheeks. “Tomorrow —tomorrow evening—I will answer you.” “A lover's yuarrel, darling?” Mrs. Irving studied Celia’s pale face next morning. i “No, Cousin Alexandria, Mr. Lind say is coming tonight.” Celia spoke dully. “Then run out for a walk after lunch,” responded that brisk match- maker, relieved. “You need color.” Who would have thought of rain so brilliant a June afternoon? stepped hastily in the waiting-room the big railroad depot which she was and sat down behind a littie whiseshaired lady in mourning The | woman, who possessed a delicate con 4 ‘ | said his companion. . suaded her to marry another. I should | supplemented. ' lifted the traveler's bag. | paler. | again. dence-inviting face, was talking to a tired-looking man. “And this is the first rain you have sees in four years! My dear sir, where have you been?” “I've been where there's no mois ture but frost,” responded the man. | “It's a miserable place up there to live, madam,” he went on. “I would not send my worst enemy to Alaska. My friends were sorry to part with | me, but glad to see me get away—glad | to see any one leave that awful coun- i | try!” “I hope you brought a fortune back.” | “Not I—" The man smiled grimly. there as we foolishly believe before | we go to see. [| am a small man, yet my hands,” he held up a pair of brown | hands with enlarged joints and palms —“my hands are large. Work hard | and grinding, made them so. And it was worse than useless. Besides— she” He caught himself up. “You left some one behind?” His listener hazarded. “My sweetheart,” he answered, but ' she never wrote to me after her peo- | ple sent me away. I suppose they per | not have come back, but I was home- sick for better things.” “And you are going—where?” she | “I'm going back where I threw up my work for a will o' the wisp, to! begin all over again.” “Your train, madam!” The maid “Good-bye and God bless you. my | son,” she said. “You will write to me? I, 1, too, am alone in the world.” | She passed on. He turned for a last | look. Celia who had listened, clinch- | ing her hands until the nails cut inte | her delicate palms, looked straight in- | to the mellow brown exes of Buell Searcy. The room whirled before her. Searcy reached her in one stride. “Celia—is it you? Why did you not | write to me?" quivered on his aston- ished lips. “I did,” she faltered, “three times. Buell, and when you did not answer, I thought, O Buell, I thought you were dead!” “And 1—I thought some rich man | had claimed you. Has he, Celia?" ! The girl flushed. A rich man asked | me to marry him last night: am to | answer him this evening.” i The man's worn face grew a shade | “I never expected to see you | 1 haven't any right to say a word, for I've come back as poor as I went away, but now that I find you! free, Celia, don't tell me—" , Her soft hands hurt under the grip of his strong ones. People were star | ing at them. “I must go home,” she said, drawing her hands away gently; “the rain is over and the zun is out.” He slipped her arm in his and look- ed into her eyes. “l want to know,” he persisted, as she drew him hastily toward the. street, “if the sun is out for me or has set forever. Celia, you were will ing once to take me penniless—would | you be willing now?" : Celia smiled through the tears that | sprang to her eyes. : “I would,” she said simply, “without ' any one’s permission this time.” i And Searcy wished that the travel ing public could be blotted from the ! face of the earth that he and she might | be for one instant alone together. i | we sat all that glorious afternoon in- | BEWARE MENTAL VAMPIRE He Likes Best to Get His Prey into a Corner and Drain Him Dry of Suggestions. If you value your own ideas, if you | have use, or even respect, for the! casual products of your own brain, ‘ware the vampire! He is, perchance, | at your elbow as you sit in friendly and bibulous intercourse. He lurks, mayhap, in ‘the adjoining barber chair, or lies in wait next to you in the street car. No poet hn: sung him. But he is close at hand, and ready, with fiendish smile and suave speech, to lure you into an expansive | or an eloquent moment. ! Frequently he is the paragrapher on some daily or weekly publication. | and teas, and people got thin and hag- Beneath his deceptive exterior of re- spectability may even lie the hard. ened heart of a jokester for & comic. Often he is a writer of Mngitive— which means seldoin seen—versc, sto. ries, sketches, plays, even novels. Al ways he has his note books handy — if not in actual evidence, at least Loe hind those eager, listening ent: of All is sustenance to the mental] vampire. The eulogy of the conduc tor on a bad nickel, the compliments of the chauffeur who carelessly miss. es his pedestrian, the chaffericg of the housewife, the small talk of the bars, the repartee of the newsboye, the latest exploit of the drapée:'s clerk. But best he likes to draw lis prey into some corner and drain Lim dry of anecdote and suggestions If he is clever at his trade you will pot even know your loss until you see some distorted image of a pet slery, expression, opinion or fantasy ia print. By that time the vampire bas taken his ghoulish appetite to otfier quarters beyond reach of your right eous wrath. "Ware him! Little Girl—Oh, mamma, why does she kiss him? Why does she? Does she like him better'n the chopper? | fer in town? | answer: | “Gold is not piled up in the streets | i | tuce and parsley and chickens and knew if the lettuce farmer took fit | walked the porch the morning of the | party. | cheated. | place caught the entertaining fever. SUMMER PARTIES. “No,” said the girl who had been two months at a summer resort. “I can't say that I feel rested. You see, ' I had to work so hard dodging par- ties! i “When [I first settled down at Cumagen Woods I thought I had a breathing space ahead of me. Every | woman and girl there said things lke this: ‘Isn't it perfectly heavenly to get out of doors and be close to na- ture and drop all the rush and worry and social doings that one has to suf- | Then some one would ‘Perfectly grand! I am 80-0-0 tired of it all!’ | “‘Aha!’ I said to myself. ‘I have | found the place I have long been seek- ing.’ “Then in about a week I observed that Mrs. Fink next door was moody and restless. Finally she burst out | with her troubles. She said she had decided that she ought to give a | party because she hadn't done so for ! two seasons, and was indebted to all the old residents. She said it was such hot weather that she just dread- | ed it, but it had to be done and she might as well get it over. “So she walked two miles up and | down the lake front inviting people, | and it was so hot that when she got | i home the family had to put her to bed and keep ice on her head all | | might and the doctor's bill veas about ! ten dollars. Mrs. Fink then used up | two days in driving about cajoling | farmers into promising to deliver let- | things for her salad and another ! whole day in making the salad. i “She nearly had nervous prostration | over the lettuce because, as she said, | the farmers didn't care whether they did as they said they would. regarded the desire for lettuce merely as one of the silly vagaries of the summer residents and she into his head to go on a picnic or drive to town that day he'd do it, and then what should she do with forty women coming? “We were all so worried over Mrs. Fink's lettuce that we distractedly party, and when we saw the lettuce farmer really drive up we just cheered out loud in our relief! He didn't bring the nice, erimpy, curly kind that she had ordered. “It was about 110 degrees in the shade that afternoon, and if you walked by any house in the place you could hear mutterings and grumblings from the unhappy women within who were trying to curl their hair and get into their party clothes. All of them were wondering what Mrs, Fink want- ed to give a party for, anyway, and wasn't it horrid having to go? The perspiration rolled off Mrs. Fink's face as she told her guests how glad she was to see them and then every: body sat and crocheted and mopped her face and ate three times more than was digestible and said what a beautiful time she had had and then rushed home to get into a kimono and to feel thankful that it was over. “Then Sally Casey arrived one day and asked me to an afternoon bridge The weather was perfectly ideal, the kind that makes you want to run bareheaded through the woods and shout because you're alive. But doors quarreling over cards and 1 was sick two days from the stuff I ate, and a woman who didn't get the prize said that the woman who did “By that time every woman in the There were invitations out for nearly every afternoon and evening, because every one was afraid that if she didn’t give a party she wouldn't be asked to the others, and, of course, no mat- ter how much ycu hate to go you nearly die if you don’t get the chance to go. Nobody had any time to do anything but whitewash her shoes and press out her dress-up dresses and shampoo her bair. “There were sewing parties and card parties and luncheon parties and corn roasts and watermelon parties gard and dyspeptic and cross and quarrelsome, and above it all rose the wail at each party: ‘Why did she take it into her head to give a party | and make me ¢limb out of the ham- mock and get into tight clothes and sacrifice myself!” Yet we were all scared to death for fear there would be a party that we would not be asked to. “But a great and bitter rebellion was seething within me and one day I found a soul who could understand. Catherine Smith and I fairly wept as we both talked at once and con- fessed how we hated summer parfies when we wanted to rest from the ef- fects of the winter parties, “As we were discussing possible methods of escape Catherine grabbed me with a shriek. ‘IT have it!’ she cried. ‘I know how we can escape all the rest of the parties! Just say: “No, thank you,” instead of “Yes, | thank you,” when we are asked!’ f “It really was simple, wasn't it? So that was what we did and we be- came known as the social outcasts of | Cumagen Woods, because if you don’t | gn to their parties the women all get | mad at you. After they were all mad | jit us Catherine and I had a delightful e. - Oh. does she? “A pretty girl can wear almost any- —It's her brother, ch thing.” by sa It's r, child ross” or quite tlie Pie Littie Girl—Oh, that's ail Oh, what became of it? Gir! at the Back—Oh, shucks! What ever did they shut it off so fast for? wanted to see the brother and sis er ‘ad to see each other. | wonder married the other man. Judge. A Suitable Name. “Why do you call your country place ‘The Balkans?” “Oh, it gives me nothing but trou. ble.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. And I was innocent enough to | | believe that I had. . The onl in the here that - ee es or They og be secured. Also International Stock Food All kinds of Grain bought at the office. Flour | exchanged for wheat. . Ne *) —— Gun Powder | ment for blood, nerve and muscle. the or- | Attorneys-at-Law. : i } 1 1 in | gans digestion and nutrition must IIE me — s us i Pingled their part. Dr. Pierce’s Coden Magical | With water. Nitre, charcoal and sulfar without that exact proportion . and and com nutritive organs into perfect working con- It has no equal as a cure for dis- eases of the stomach and organs of di- gestion and nutrition. mingling have no more explosive value than common dirt. The nourishment of the body is made out of the food whichis eaten; bread, meat, potatoes, etc. But unless this food is perfectly mixed in the | stomach with the digestive juices it is as | incapable of nourishment as the unmixed | elements of gun powder are of explosion. | For this reason health cannot be gauged by appetite. To obtain the benefit of — - food, to have it converted into nourish- | - ! » : b CURTI Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour | Feed | Corn Meal | and Grain Manufactures nd has 23 hand a tan ites the WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT dinari wheat Patent Flour SPRAY FAT AT LTE NT LV OT AY AVY AV AV AY AVY AY AVY AY AV AV. and feed of all kinds. | OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, | 4719 dition. 1 i ‘The Pennsylvania State College. —Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Saddler Ve New Departure in Business Surely, you must think well of 3u¥ Plan that will save you some lars on a set of Single Harness. Now it is up to you to make us make good. SCHOFIELD'S MAIL ORDER DEFT. A Set of Harness in Nickle or Imi- tation Rubber, at........... $12.85 This harness is equal to any $15 set on the Genuine Rubber............ $14.85 which has no equal for less than $17. To insure p shipment money should Address all communications to E. N. SCHOFIELD, Or etonie Pa to which he will cheerf his prom: ully give prompt GUARANTEE—The above ae goods i rep- James Schofield, Spring Street 55-32 Bellefonte, Pa { S. TAYLOR~Attorney Offers Exceptional IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician to furnish Eromime Tes, The courses in Chemistry, Civil, and holding positions. For specimen examination courses of study, expenses, etc.. A Scientific Farmer Or secure a Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been ence. courses are especially most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general Electrical, Mechanical and among the very best in the United States. Graduates aa 3 Be Be Bs Bs. Bl. Be Me. BM BB The Pennsylvania State College Advantages A Teacher A Lawyer A Physician A Journalist extensively modi- varied of electives, after the Freshman year, and PE ory the Englar, Finch. and bh, 3xin and adapted to the wants of those w seek either Coleme Education Engineering are YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. rs or for ivi pape A catalogue giving full information respecting positions held by graduates, address. THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Sechler & Bush House Block, - Groceries and Food Products. and new and blend fia blend for iced Tea. ou wank someting fine, 0. the 50¢ woods ind you are to go stil] higher, one will more than please you. scarey a line of Stratghi Teas For pez 1b off on sales of one pound on alt” of Te # have not ve but look for ne I Er ut we lool for an ues of anything now dre in demand just now and we always in FTN WHR JTC Bick, STIL SuiY Sried Avni Ve ave Sechler & Company, Company a ——— sn Lime and Crushed Limestone. H-0 Increase Your Crops HO ‘Lime is the life of the soil. Some Farmers have actually doubled imestone and Lime for all purposes. 55-46m . USE CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA LIME their crops by use of “H. 0.” lime Drill it for quick results. If you are not getting results use “H. 0.” lime We are the largest Manufacturers of Lime in Pennsylvania. Ground i IWorks at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forger and Union Furnace. "Write for literature on lime. AMERICAN LIME & STONE COMPANY. Offices at TYRONE, PA. a A me J KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law, f Fa; Practices in al courts, OB B. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. Practice. in all the Courts. Consultation in German, Office i | Bellefonte, Pa. i Crider's Exhale and Counsellor Law. Garman House block, Belle: i fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- + tended to promatly. 40-49 H. WETZEL—Att and Counsellor at Law, Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business to promptly. Consultation in English or German, | {AETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY—Attorneys-at- TG. ER At Eagle k, Bellefonte, Pa. | ors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice | the courts. ep Nation in English "Prices nal M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. in all the courts. in and German. Office south of court house receive i | i | All professional business will prompt at ! pre! soy 495-1y* i A ! Physicians. i S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and i State i State College, Centre counts, FB | Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D. D. S., office next door to Y. M. room, Dh Rm igs es iim ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours half shell or hn any Syl desired, Son: op, fl tny'ling outa A dition I have a plant prepared to as furnish Soft in bottles such POPS, SODAS, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener- ally all of which are manufactured out of the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte. Pa. TT tmbieg.,. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When have dripping steam he Jou have dtwping Pipes, leaky Jas, You Sant have good Heal, The air you poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It's the only kind you ought to have. Wedon't trust work to Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior article i entire establishment, = And with good work and the finest material, our . Prices are lower than many give you r, i i I hg the Best Work try ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. EDWARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, and Dealer in ANTHRACITE Axp BITUMINOUS COALS CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains. —— BALED HAY AND STRAW — Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as mav suit purchasers, respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard, near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. 1618 Telephone Calls: {Sentral Hike) Meat Market. ——————- Get the Best Meats. oh save nothing by Jui poor, thin LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE pg est, Ee er micas Moe re, . 1 always have — DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 4334ly, Bellefonte, Pa. A ARR