BDeworraic: aro “Bellefonte, Pa., March 29, 1912. TAKING A STAND. “1 hope you won't wisjudge me, Dick, but I have had to take a stand in the matter,” Mrs. Deighton said, regret- fully, as, having measured a cupful of flour and dropped it into the sifier, she looked across the kitchen at her brother. “Do you really mean, Kate, that you are not going to invite the family to celebrate mother's birthday in your home as we have done for the last six years; in fact, ever since she came back from the east to live with you?” her brother asked. “Exactly.” Mrs. Deighton measured another spoonful of flour, set it on the table, seated herself on a chair near and faced her visitor. “I quite expect- ed that you'd be coming, Dick, to learn my plans for mother's birthday, and you're entitled to know them, for you, at least, have always been apprecia- tive. You see, entertaining 22 chil- dren and grandchildren of mother's has meant a lot of work and expense for me, but | have felt that it was worth while if only mother and the family were pleased. But human na- ture, especially woman nature, craves appreciation, and since I've heard of certain disparaging remarks about my method of entertaining, made by dif- | ferent members of the family, I have decided not to have the birthday meet- ing this vear.' “But we've always had a splendid time,” Dick urged. “You mustn't take the family's personal view, but the general view, and 1 happen to know that most of us thought last year's en- tertainment the best of the lot.” “l heard that Fred's wife said she never had a duller time,” Mrs. Deigh- ton replied. “Maybe she wasn't feeling well; makes big diYerences,” Dick gested. “And Jack's wife said that | might have used my best tablecloth and nap- kins, as she would have done if it had been her mother's birthday.” “Bessie's only a bride, and maybe she would have put on more frills and less rozst beef,” Dick said sooth. ingly. “Margaret criticized me for having the children; she said they made her nervous. That's because she hasn't any of her own. However, | must say that if 1 were to have the family this | year, | wouldn't invite the children, at | | that sug- least with the grownups; they got into so much mischief last year when I! couldn't be around to watch them.” | “Well, I'm sorry you've decided not : to have us this year,” Dick said as he ! rose to go. “If every one were as appreciative | as you are we'd have it as usual,” Mrs. | Deighton replied, proceeding to meas- ure another cupful of flour. Dick reached for his hat. one of your famous sponge you're making?” he asked. “No; it's the white pound birthday recipe.” “Birthday cake? I thought—" Dick stopped. “Well, give my love to moth- er. I'm sorry not to see her today, but I'm glad she's having a good sleep this mérning. Lucy and 1 will come in to see her on her birthday if you'll be at home, Kate." . “Be at home? Why, of course I'll be at home. Where else should I be on mother's birthday?” Mrs. Deighton asked wonderingly. “Tomorrow I shall make the sponge cake and co- coanut layer cake-——that's Jack's favor- | ite. Thursday morning I shall boll the ham and roast the beef. Of course, the boys aud their wives will feel that the least they can do is to come to see mother on her birthday.” “Is that cakes cake Is there any special time you'd like us to come, Kate?" asked Dick. “Between six and half past,” Mrs. Deighton answered promptly. “Mark gets home a little after six.” “We'll be here,” Dick said. “I'll let Jack and Fred and Bob know, Is there anything you'd like us to bring, Kate?" “Nothing except the children. I've made a batch of lemon and one of gin- ger cookies especially for them. And, Dick, 1 hope that neither you nor any of the others will feel hurt at the stand I've taken this year about the meeting here on mother's birthday. I feel that | couldn't have it after all the criticism. You understand, don't you?” “But 1 thought—" Dick began. Mrs. Deighton counting out a dozen eggs from a basket, placed the twelfth one on the table, and then said, a note of satisfaction in her voice: “You know, it's one thing to invite a num- ber of people to your house and quite another thing to have that game num- ber come as in duty bound. I've made even more preparations than I did last year, because there'll be 24 of us in- stead of 22, since Margaret's nieces are hers, and not a soul will dare to criticise things, because of being self- invited. Do you see?” “Maybe; but I think it will take a woman to understand your argument,” Dick answered, laughing. Strange. One of the strangest things in this world is why the kind of woman who is proud of her intellectuality nearly always marries a man who llkes to tinker with sick chickens.—Galveston | News. Unreasonableness Permiseible, Human beings were never 1 ein’! be entirely reasonable jec « . ment and persuasivenes : | ate, isn't he?” | no ed to play a part (LL Work The Gothic sculptors produced « and grotesque carvings from a techul- of Gothic Sculptors. Tu le ep! standpeint, but they were the first to attempt intimate speech in dressed to the common people, and both Rossellino and Glotto with their clever followers are heirs of the hum- bler craftsmen whe broke the bonds of convention to immorialize the homeliness and variety of daily expe- rience and common types of human nature. art ad. Money Question from Woman's View. Most men trust their wives with their hearts, but draw the line at their pocketbooks. Some day | am going to write a book on the righteousness of a husband giving his wife a regular al- lovance and never asking her to ac- count for it. Better still, a common purse and let her help herself. As long as any woman works for her clothes and board and lives on bounty she is a serf-—Exchange. The Impeccabie Sardine. They can be given to children with. out fear of their choking. It can eas- ily be recognized that the bones are taken away. A large number of con- | sumers evidently judge thus, as sar- | dines so prepared have a first class reputation. They are to be found on all tables where the lady of the house wishes to show she lives in style.~- From an earnest advertisement. Nicely Put. Brahms dined one day with one of his fanatic admirers, and the latter, | knowing the master’s predilection for fine wine, had a bottle of renowned quality brought te the table toward the end of the repast. “This,” he ex- claimed, “is the Brahms among my wines!” The guest sipped of it, say- ing: “Excellent, wonderful! Now bring on your Beethoven!” By the Evidence. Donald, aged 4, had been to school with an older friend and had seen the teacher put a star on the cards of each child whose conduct had been | good. That evening while walking out | with his parents, he remarked after | looking at the starry sky, “There've | been lots of good boys today.” Early Type of Letters. The type of letters in early manu- scripts was the same as that of those | used on the earlier metal plates and! wax tableis. All letters were capitals, | Minuscule, or small leitering, as op- | posed to the majuscule, was invented in the seventh century. An Explanation. “Your nephew is a college gradu. “Yes,” confessed hon- est Farmer Hornbank; “but in justice | to the college I'll own up that he had | sense beforehand.”—Woman's | Home Companion. Tamed at the Start. Statistics show that in nearly all | cases the college girl, when she mar- | ries, stays married. Probably she | starts out by giving her husband a | vivid description of the hazing stunts | she has participated in.—Cleveland | Leader. How's This for a Record? A New Jersey woman has been a | cook in a family for 42 years. She! has never asked for a vacation, has | never found fault with anything, has | always cooked on a coal range and is | happy and contented.—Exchange. Provided for Burial Vault. i By the will of a Frengh lady who! died recently a farm was left to the town on condition her family vauit was kept in repair; while the rest of | her estate was to be divided among | those attending her funeral. What Fear Did. A wealthy man in New York com- | mitted suicide when his doctor told him he had appendicitis. A post mor- tem revealed that he did not have it. His fear of evil was worse than the | evil itself. (Prov. 1:33.) i Brute, Indeed! The Wife—I do believe I would fall dead if you were to come home early | some evening. The Brute—You will | have to offer a bigger bribe than that. | ~Indianapolis Press. “ All is Character. “Behind every foreground of action | lies the background of character on | which the action rests and from which it gets its life and meaning."—Phil- lips Brooks. | Helpc to Feed Japanese. i Most abundant of all seaweeds are | the kelps, distributed along every coast in the world. From these the Japanese prepare many food products, known under the generic name kombu. Uncle Eben, “De man dat gits de mos’ out 0° life,” said Uncle Eben, "is de one dat’s willin’ to jump in an’ he'p heave cotton while he's down to de dock waitin’ foh his ship to come In.” —— Attitude and / rt Fewer people n 7 be reading wh: ’ tures taken who think Globe. ha Profit in Seaweed. Tua sume species of seaweed used in Japen for the manufacture of kan: ten exists in inexhaustible abundance on our Pacific coast ard at numerous | places along the Atlantic coast, while related species, of equal value, are abundant almost everywhere in tem- perate waters. In this country the product commands high prices, so that the manufacture of seaweed Insin- glase ought to prove a highly remu- nerutive industry. Story of Chicago Physician. A prominent physician tells story: by dispensary to ask aid for her little son who had one of his fingers smash- ed with a baseball bat. At the first room where she applied a curt atten- dant told her that tite boy could not be treated there. “Wrong place,” he explained, “this is the eye and the ear department.” “Vere is der thumb and finger department?” inquired the woman, simply. Importance of Eeing Correct. ing her class about the wicked chil- dren mocking the good prophet, and how two she bears came out of the mountains and “ate up” over forty of the wicked children. “Now, boys,” she concluded, teach us?’ “I know,” eaid one young- ster: “it teaches us how many chil- dren a she bear can hold.” Touching Tenderness. A tender parent has been discovered in New York. Having been warned that the milk he sold to others and fed to his own babe was slowly killing Get Out of the Rut. “The dull man is made, not by na- ture. but by the immersion in a sin- gle businegs, and all the more if that be sedentary, uneventful, and inglori- ously safe. More than half of him will remain unexercized and undevel- oped: the rest will be distended and deformed by over-nutrition, over-cere- bration. and the heat of rooms." —Rob- , ert Louis Stevenson, in “The Wreck- this | A poor woman went to a near | | ful The Sunday schoo! teacher was tell- | why a certain tree in the garden was “what lesson does this | the latter, he promptiy took an ex- pensive bottled milk for the child, though he cheerfully continued to | supply the infants of his poorer neigh- | this way: bors with the condemned stock. Presumably. Piys IX. was not without a certain sense of humor. One day, while sit ting for his portrait to Healy, painter, speaking of a monk who had left the church and married, he ob- served, not without malice: taken his punishment into hands.” his own No Excitement. “A man doesn't seem to take any pleasure in writing letters to a woman after he has married her,” said Mrs. Gloomer. “No,” replied Miss Cayenne; “he seems to lose all interest when | there is no possibility of his letters be- ing read to a jury.” ———————————————— Catty” “Mrs. Bdgeaiong spoke very admir- ingly of you,” said the woman of coi- the “He has | eiliatory disposition. “Yes,” replied Mrs. Flimgilt. “She is always doing | that. It's a way she has of convey- | ! ing an impression that she is one of | my intimate friends.” Dickens’ Real Home. For 14 years Dickens made Broad- | stairs his principal summer home in | England. London alone held a superior | place in his affections. He felt his powers at their amplest when he was at | the little channel codst town. Japanese Shun Factory Life. i | | | Of the Japanese factory laborer the i average “work life” is short, very few being able to last longer than five vears. Hence the rural population hesitates to migrate to the city when | country employment is abundant. Its Origin Lost. The property of the English crown has been marked with the broad ar- : row from times so early that no one can now tell when it was first used for this purpose or what was its mean- | ing. Inoperative Adage. “Politics makes strange bedfellows,” said the ready-made philosopher. “Not out our way,” rejoined Senator Sorg- hum. “When a man gets into politics there he doesn't have time to sleep.” The Latest Cut. The young man was disconsolate. Said he: “I asked her if I could see her home.” “Why, certainly,” she an- swered; “I will send you a picture of | it"—Ladies’ Home Journal. March of Progress. “I see they have torn down a 20- story shack in New York to get a site to put a building on.” “Yes: and they are using last year's dread- noughts for targets.” Well Connected. “Yes,” remarked the telephone girl as she gazed out at the waves and wondered what their number was, “I am connected with the best families in our city.”—Catholic Universe. For Perfect Peace. Nothing can bring peace but your- gelf. Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles.—Emer- son. He Is Immune. The curious thing is why the hook- worm never seems to attack the mid- dleman.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Tree-Dwarfing Process. The Jupzuese process of dwarfing © Vine about ten years, iol juil3 | | { | | er” A Terror, “Some 0’ dese reformers,” said Uncle Rasberry, “makes me think of 'Rastus Pinkley's dog. [I says to im, ‘ 'Rastus,’ I says, ‘is dat dog good foh rats? An’ he says, ‘No: he's mighty bad foh rats.” ‘Does he ketch ‘em an’ kill ‘em?’ ‘No, says 'Rastus; ‘he don't ketch ‘em, ner he don't kill 'em. But if dey comes foolin’ around him he'll mighty near skeer ‘em to death.” The Crooked Tree. Childish impressions are as strong as, frequently, mistaken. A thought- child, hearing someone wonder s0 crooked, replied, remembering the proverb about “As the twig is bent, the tree is inclined”: “I suppose some- body must have stepped on it when it was little.” Problem of Universal Peace. War sweeps away not only some of the bravest and best of a nation, fit also disposes of the offscouring of the countries at war. When, then, war censes, a pressing problem will be how to prevent the accumulation of the dangerous classes no longer left on the battlefield. —Christian Register. After the Robbery. Woman (to detective)—Why, it was There came a ring at the door and there stood two men who said they were from th’ gas company, inspecting meters. They looked so dishonest 1 thought they were, 20 1 let them in! — Many a woman has to lie down several | womanly organs’ Exactly. And it cures times a day because she “feels faint” or | headache, dizziness, fainting spells, back- has a “spell of dizziness.” Perhaps she | ache, and many other i ills, because these tries to “do something” for her trouble. are caused by the derangement or dis. Dizziness is in the head, and the head is | ease of the delic ate fer mine organism, treated. The faintness seems to be! That is why “Favorite Prescription” caused by the heart and the heart is at- | makes weak women strong and sick tended to. But the condition grows no | women well. better. Women in such a case who have | m— sed Dr. Flertes yi Perscription | ——For high - class Job Werk come to have wondered to find dizziness and faint- | ness both cured. Why? “Favorite Pre- Jee WATCHMAN Office. scription” is a medicine for disease of the | - Fine Job Printing. Medical. FINE .OB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY —0 AT THE WATCHMAN There is no style of work, fiom the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest OFFICE The Proper Course INFORMATION OF PRICELESS VALUE TO EVERY BELLEFONTE CITIZEN. How to act in an emergency is know! edge of inestimable worth, and this par ticularly true of the diseases and ills o the human body. If you suffer with back" ache, urinary disorders, or any form of kidney trouble, the advice.contained in the fQllowing statement will add a valua- ble asset to vour store of knowledge. What could be more convincing proof of the efficiency ci Doan’s Kidney Pills than the statement of Bellefonte citizens who have been permanently cured? Mrs. J. F. Thal. 23W. Thomas St. Belle. fonte, Pa., says: 1am very grateful to Doan's Kidney Pills for what they have done for me. My back ached for a long | time and 1 had severe pains in my kid- neys, accompanied by headaches and at- tacks of dizziness. The kidney secretions caused me no end of annoyance. 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