_Bsiofouts, Pa. “March 22. oe, HER RESTFUL SUMMER. “This going away for the summer,” announced Whatcher at the beginning of the season, “is merely a fad. Why 80 away to some swampy lake and contract (yphoid from the water sup Ply and quarrel with all the other wom- en there and have nerves over John- nie’s tendency to explore the bottom of the lake and Mamie's admiration for the ribbon clerk on his two weeks’ vacation when you have a perfectly good spot lo rest in right here? The Street is wide and shady; the yard is large, the house is roomy and the porch is screened in. The motor car out in the garage probably won't blow up yet for awhile, and there are oodles of hot water. Why not be orig- inal and stay where you can enjoy life? Then when fall comes you will } TT EE > " aa re O00! 000~ Oo | 000s ° The Whole World Is to Participate In the Great San Francisco Panama - Pacific. Exposition In 1915 By HAMILTON M. WRIGHT, E whole world is interested in | H the opening of the Panama ca- i nal and in the great interna- | tional fete at which the United States will celebrate the completion of the canal, the Panama-Pacific Interna- tional exposition. to be held in San Francisco in 1015. The proclamation of the president, issued by authority of congress, has been deliverad through the instrumen- | tality of the department of state to ev- parts of the world. world in Fecoguition of America’s great be rested and in fine condition for | the rush of winter!” So the Whatchers stayed at home. It was carly in June that the What- chers’ cousins from Six Corners, Ia. wrote that they would be in Chicago in a day or two and that they would dearly love to see their relatives if the latter were in town. There was nothing for Whatchers to do but con- fess by letter that they were indeed in town. When the cousins came they brought the baby and little Susan and Amanda and a rabid desire to see as much of the city as they could by working 24 hours a day. They said it was splendid that Cousin Whatcher owned such a nice touring car, be- cause it was so easy to get about in it. So they burned up as many gallons of gasoline in a day as the Whatchers had used in two weeks. After they got the hang of things, the cousing used to let Mrs. What- cher stay at home and take care of the three children while they roamed the city. Al day long while Mrs, What- cher sat smothered in sticky children | she thought of the cool lake breezes playing on the cousins’ brows and how she had planned a daily drive through the parks aad how she wasn't get- ting it. When the cousins arrived home in time for dinner they would ask moth- er's darlings if they had been happy. Then as (hey dressed hastily for the theater they would give Mrs. What- cher directions on how to put the three angels to bed. Sometimes they let Mrs. Whatcher go along if they wanted to be shown something, but she had to hold the two children to pay for her | treat. When the cousins left Mrs. Whatcher burst into relieved tears and Whatcher, who was privileged to gaze upon his motor car for the first tle in two weeks, swore in sympathy. When Aunt Martha wrote that she had heard they were in town and would seize the oprortunity to pay them a visit and do her autumn shop- ping at the July bargain sales the Whatchers ran around in eireles, but Aunt Martha arrived before they had found cover. Aunt Martha wus a vigorous per, son, who did net mind that the holtest wave of the season made its appear- ance in her (rain. Ilo! weather al- ways reduccd Mrs. Whatcher toa pulp, but Aunt Martha, who was going to feave them some money some day if phe ever died, insisted on having her tear niece's valuable judgment on her purchases. Krom eight o'clock in the morning until five o'clock at night she dragged her dear niece tlirough fur- nacelike basements, pouncing upon ' eight-cént Bingiinm marked down from . fifteen and { ten Coe a —— cake tins that were ‘they’ were at home, When the supply of basements ran out Aunt Martha took to stuffy cor- ners, where she unearthed yezr-before- last’s silks, in price reduced one-half. After she had accumulated two trunk- fuls of this sort of plunder, she trip- ped on a cobblestone and sprained her ankle. Then Mrs. Whatcher wait- ed on Aunt Martha for two weeks, be- cause Aunt Martha hed a prejudice against trained nurses. Alter this vis- itor's departure Whatcher was able to c2ten an eceasioral glimpse of the wife of his boscm, but he asked at first who the cliange lady was, for che was such a wreck that he didn't know her Junot as Mrs. Whatcher was begin ning fo ger resiel Whatcher's sister and ber amily dropped off the train to visit the dear relatives and inci- dentally to shop. As Whatcher and his sister always got along together just as beautifully as do gunpowder and blazing matches, the visit reduced the Whatcters to still deeper misery. Then the people next door got a phonograph and the young man across the street .took to playing the cornet. In the midst of these afilictions two more cousins from Iowa came, be- cause, as they said, the other Iowa cousins had had such a perfectly grand time that they didn't want to miss the chance, since the Whatchers were in town for the summer. They sald they thought the Whatchers were very wise not to attempt to go away, since Mrs. Whatcher looked so sickly. The place for her, they sald, was at home, where she could have absolute quiet and rest and do exactly as she leased. - The cook left in the middle of this visit and the second gir! gave notice, 50 Mrs. Whatcher celebrated the de- are of the cousins by going to a sanitarium for a month Costly Knowledge. Every tallor knows a lot of promis. ing young men,—New York Tribune. ery quarter of the globe. Inquiries as to the exposition are pouring in upon the exposition management from all The nations of the | Thomas Hastings. bay are Messrs. McKim, Mead & White of New York, designers of Mad- : ison Square Garden, the Boston Public the Agricultural building at, library, the World's Columbian exposition; president of Car-' rere & Hastings. architects in chief for the Pan-American exposition at: Buffalo; Henry Bacon, designtr of the Lincoln memorial; Willls Polk, assocl- | ated with D. II Burnham ef the! World's Columbian exposition at Chi- cago. These architects and their asso- ciates pronounce the site of the expo- sition as unsurpassed for a great mar- itime celebration, The exposition struc- tures will be the largest and costliest ever erected for a world's exposition WEI 3 Tl Sr oc SR] Vax £7 THE NEW SAN FRANCISCO, LOOKING OVER THE ClIY T0 THE HARBOR, SCENE OF THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EZFGIITICN IN 1915. huge Grecian columns adorned with the flags of all the nations of the world and surmounted at convenient inter- vals by classic arcades. At the junec- | tion of these two streets will be erect- | ed a civic center. The buildings in | this architectural group will cost close | to $9,000,000. The nucleus of the civic! center will be a new city hall to take the place of the one destroyed in 1906. The exposition authorities have voted | ' the sum of $1,000,000 for a great audi- torium to accommodate visitors to con- | ventions during the exposition. A] great opera house will be erected by private capital at the civic center, and the famous singers of the world will be heard in San Francisco in exposition | achievement at Panama are preparing for participation in tlie exposition upon a more comprehensive scale than at any of the greatest of former world's | expositions, | i i plays that the world bas seen. The foreign nations wiil be repre gented br the finest assemblage of dis- The strange tribes and peoples of Pacilic ocean countries will participate in a wonderful week's festival in which the nations of the orient will take part The most marvelous parades ever wit. nessed will be seen on the streets of San Francisco, The commonwealths of the United States, each of which: as a member of the Union has taken its part in the building of the canal. will be repre- sented by the most magnificent state displays ever assembled, California has dedicated more than $20,000,000 to the nation's fair, ond the city of San Fran: cisco. the west and the nation are co- operating to render the exposition one that will express in every way the pride and patriotism of the American people The Panama-Pacific International ex- position will be the greatest exposition fn the history of the world. A notable commission of nrehitects of national reputation is engaged upon the plans. and within n few weeks first cogstruc- tion work will begin, when grading of the site and the building of a sea wall, which will serve in part as the basis of a magnificent esplanade along San Francisco harbor, commendes. Among the noted architects who are designing the wonder city which will rise from the shoves of San Francisco and will be visible in detall to passen- pers ou ships entering the Golden Gate. The site of the exposition takes ev- ery advantage of the combination of cisco its chief charm. The main fea* tures of the exposition will be located at Harbor View, on San Francisco bay midway between the ferry building and the Golden Gate. and the perma- nent buildings to remain after the ex- position is over will be erected in the west end of Golden Gate park. which fronts on the Pacific ocean. These sites and intermediate locations will be connected by a marine boulevard that sweeps from Harbor View through the Presidio to the Golden Gate and then turns south to Golden Gate park. A trackless trolley will take visitors over this magnificent scenic boulevard from Harbor View through the military res- ervation at the Presidio, where the gov- ernment is planning a wonderful mill- tary display, to Golden Gate park, and one admission wiil include entrance to both features. The site expresses the maritime character of the great ceie- bration. In harmony with the exposi- tion San Francisco itself will be an exposition city in 1915. The parks and water front of the city will be im- proved at an expenditure of millions of dollars. and the ferry building, the main entrance to San Francisco, will be adorned with a grand court of hon- or. Market street and Van Ness ave: nue. the two main thoroughfares of San Francisco. each running from the bay and meeting in a V in the heart of the city. will be decorated with | sition grounds. harbor and hills that give San Fran | days. Great saengerfests in which the choral societies of foreign countries participate will be held upon the expo- The Panama-Pacific international ex- position will open with a pageant in San Francisco harbor of the battle- ships of the navies of the world. The foreign vessels will first assemble at | Hampton Roads, where, joined by ships | of the American navy, the entire fleet | will be reviewed Ly the president of | the United States and foreign digni- | taries. This fleet, the largest ever as- | sembled, will then proceed through the | Panama canal to the harbor at San | Francisco. where it will participate in | the most spectacular naval demonstra. | tion ever witnessed. San Francisco in ' 1915 will see the flags of more nations | than have ever been brought together | in one place at any one time. From unofficial assurances now received it is | anticipated that 100 foreign battleships | in addition to those of the United States navy will be gathered in San Francisco harbor. A huge commemorative edifice, in | ago, pay him a wonderfully | deed! | the big | Mellor. | quently ordered for his own | enjoyment, a soup with four cabbaes | ! in it, gruel, | preys, salt meat, i cheese. | bage water, and closed the banqueting . with goblets of burgundy. 8ig Salary Explained. “And how is vour excellent son, the . | divinity studen:? He graduated from the theclogical academy about a year I belicve?!” “Yes, just a year And he's doing so well! They large salary | and next year he's to get more.” “In- That's very unusual. Perhaps it is his excellent delivery that nets him the large emolument.” “Yes, that's it. He's one of the pitchers in league.”—Cleveland Plain ago. Dealer. Advice to Lawyers. To a counsel arguing before him at Clerkenwell (Eng.) county court, Judge Edge remarked: “Let me tell you a story of a case in which as | counsel 1 appeared before Mr. Justice 1 had used my strongest ar- guments, and thinking I was not con- | vincing him I used some weak argu- ments afterward. Mr. Justice Mellor ; sald to me: ‘Now Mr. Edge, don't put too much water in your brandy.” Monarch’s Odd Menu. Peter the Great loved, and most fre. | special pig, with sour cream for sauce; cold roast meat, with pickled cucumbers for salad; lemons and lam- ham and limburger He began dinner with cab- New Town on the Map. A little girl in the Atchison depot was watching a freight train go by. “Mamma,” she said, “where is Capa city?” “I don't know; why?" asked the mother. “I see it on a car there,” she replied. “Capa city” happened to be “capacity, 52,000 pounds,” which she really saw. Truth About an Author, Hardy's secret, it seems, is like that | of Richardson. Both are famous as | anatomists of the feminine heart, and each in his youth wrote the love let. ters of many humble and illiterate | young women. Literary biography, like ! history, repeats itself.—Boston Tran- | script. i Hood's ‘Sarsaparilla. —_ “Tommy, you ought to funn | tricks like the ou ought + rnd y “I can’t think of nuthin’ funny, Mr. Nexdore.” “You might break up your father's graphophone with an axe.” Medical. Burdens Lifted. BELLEFONTE BACKS—RELIEF PROVED BY LAPSE OF TIME. Backache is a heavy burden; Nervousness wears one out: Rheumatic pau; utinary ills; All are kidney bu Daily effects of eg weakness. No use to cure the symptoms, Relief is but temporary if the cause remains. Cure the kidneys and you cure the cause. Relief comes quickly-—comes to stay. Doan’s Kidney Pills cure kidney ills; Prove it by your neighbor's case, Here's Be lefonte testimony. story of a permanent cure. Hiram Fetterhoff, 28 Ww. St. Bellefonte, Pa., : “Ihave no ta. tion in ey ng Doan's knowing them to be a first-class kidney femedy. For some time [ was annoyed by irregular passages of the kidney secre- tions and reading that Doan’s Kidney Pills were good for kidney complaint, I pro- Sired a supply at Green's s rmacy Co. Their use relieved me and I am now in much better health. Doan’s Kidney Pills are certainly an effective medi- cine,” (Statement given October 21, 1907.) NO CAUSE FOR COMPLAINT SINCE, When Mr. Fetterhoff was interviewed on November 22, 1909 he said: “I willingly confirm my former endorsement of Kidney Pills. The relief they brought na has been permanent, For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. 57-10 FROM Honey to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses to rent.’ J. MBE MLINE, w, I Pa. 51-14-1y. “The Best Physician for the Blood” * ‘A woman's crown of glory is her hair.’ she was a little, girl she had If Jhis is true, | "a. N.Y.. "my daughter, 19, has a most royal crown, eiirely due to Hood's ad dreadful sores on hel 's Mrs. Mary Lawyer, Fulton- rsaparilla. ad, which was at one time com- pletely . Her hair all came out, and it was Hose to prevent hes her actaichin the inflamed skin. Treatment for a year failed, but when she ood’s Sai Rt ade the most wonderful change. hair. Sinc tainly the best and cheapest iscases.” The hair came out a A Nn fa that before she took the second bottle her head e then Hood's Sarsaparilla has been the standard remedy in our family. Fad off, so healed and covered with fine silky It is cer- was all physician for the blood I have ever em ‘for blood 57-10 way 3 Oils Comfort and Safety in Automobiles de« ory largely upon using the right Gasoline, Waverly Gasolines—three grades— fp pt Independent Refiners, PITTSBURG, PA.’ WAVERLY OIL WORKS COMPANY, Clasters Craster’s purport like Bartholdi's statue of Lib- erty, will welcome vessels from afar. The structure, to be known as the St. Francis Memorial tower, will be 850 feet in height, with a base 220 feet square. The shaft will be eighty-five feet square, with corners rounded, and of steel construction and terra cotta veneering. The approximate cost of | CLASTER’S BELLEFONTE, PA. STORE OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 8 0’CLOCK the tower will be $1,000,000. From its summit the sightseer will look almost straight down upon the waters of the | Golden Gate, 1,300 feet below. Opening of the Newest SPRING S ring Suits, Boys’ Our Advance iS now in the last day. You are Cordially invited to our Men’s, Women’s, Boys’ and Girls’ WEARABLES Whatever is new and stylish and desirable will be found in our complete and attractive stock of Men's Spring Suits Women’s and isses’ Spring Suits, Coats any Dresses. full swing Saturday, March 30th, is A general saving of from 25 to 50 per cent. in all departments awaits your coming. Display and Best in Spring Sale SCENE IN GOLDEN GATE PARK, SITE OF THE PERMANENT FEATURES OF THE PANAMA- | PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT SAN FRANCISCO, 1916. CLASTER’S