£ EB i x i ® : safely through his collezs ‘nothall | period. After thn: vet --nhghly choose a career fr- * —— Sufi Bellofoate, Pa., , May 10,19 1912. PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. in high social circles the girl who wants to cut out another girl orders ‘mew dresses snd more hats. Among savages she sticks on a few more ibeads and feathers. But in some | middle western towns she rolls up her ves, opens the flour bin and cooks moe calculated to knock the igpots off anything culinary the other gir! ever dared dream of. . That was why Mrs. Fruby said to ther daughter with a hint of excite- {ment In her voice, “Try him on beaten | scults, Sadie! And your chocolate ;marshmallow pudding!” ~ It had been hard enough all her lite for Mrs. Fruby to be outdone by Mary Sandler without having to en- ‘dure seeing Mary Sandler's daughter iget ahead of her own Sadie. And of ‘tate Rosa Sandler had asked Peter ‘Vernon to dinner entirely too often ito suit Mrs. Fruby’'s plans. So had ‘half a dozen other girls. For Peter {Vernon was & matrimonial prize, the e of which a small town does not see more than once in a generation. ‘He had an interest in the big engine iworks, which made money so fast ‘that it gave the populace the hie- {coughs trying to count it. Natural jealousy of Mary Sandler made Mrs. Fruby consider Rosa a ‘deadly rival. Rosa was nearly as pretty as Sadie and, moreover, she ‘was a good cook. So were Margaret and Agnes and Carrie, other aspirants. Louige--Mrs. Fruby merely smiled at! ‘the idea of Louise Being built on solid lines herself, {Mrs. Fruby had an imagined contempt ifor ethereal creatures like Louise, | who looked as though a puff of wind | might easily remove her from the .scene. Louise was of the ethereal,’ «useless kind and Mrs. Fruby knew | ithat no sensible man wanted a help- | iless wife. Men, she often told Sadie, | {liked energy and ability in a girl. As| ‘for cooking, it was doubtful if Louise | {could even cook a pan of fudge with! lout burning it. i Peter Vernon was a tall, thin young sman with a well set head and a kind- | lly, if shrewd, smile. “He's not the sort to get taken in!" A iMrs. Fruby said thankfully as she | superintended Sadie's work making | the beaten biscuit for that night's supper, to which Peter Vernon was coming. “Does your arm ache? Let me beat awhile!” Peter Vernon liked the beaten bis-! reult immensely. He ate six. And he ‘had two helpings of the chocolate marshmallow pudding, | “She nearly beat her arm off mak- ing those.” Sadie's mother coutided to him “But, 1 tel! you, nothing daunts Sadie! When she does a thing she does It!” } “They certainly were mighty good.” repeated Pe'er Vernon, “We always ‘have ‘em Wednesday evenings.” said Sadie’s mother with a sudden inspiratign © “And vou drop | in that might without waiting to be | asked, since you're go rond of 'em!™ | “Yee, do!” echoed Sadie. i Heaten Lisculls are hard Many were the Fruby put in over them, because they | had to be made regularly on Wednes. days. Sometimes Peter dropped in,’ and If he did not he was certain to be! met on the street the next day by Sadie or her mother and pinned down to another date. Mrs. Fruby took his fondness for the marshmellow pad: ding as an especially good sign “You keep it up, Sadie” she told | her daughter thie evening Peter had | stayed a half-hour beyond his usual time. “I can begin to see that you're winning out!” “I don't know, ly. “He goes to Isabel's and Marga- ret's, too—and Louise's!” “! wouldn't worry,” declared her mother “1 guess Isabel can’t make biscuit like yours and Margaret's cake is a joke. And you know Louise! Why, vou've got ‘em all on the run'” “Tut he never says anything.” Sadie oe protested. “1 mean anything that I could take as—" 2 “He ain't that kind," declared Mrs. | Fruby “He ain't going to make love | to a girl till he's engaged to her! You beat those biscufts longer next! time!” | Shortly after that the local newspa- per contained the unexpected an- nouncement of the quiet marriage of Peter Vernon and Louse, the ethereal. Mrs. Fruby, after a hysterical scream when she read the news, told Sadie plainly what she thought of Peter. She talked so vehemently that she did not notice how pale Sadie’'s cheeks were. Sadie usually “was stolid and nnmoved. “Well,” Mrs. Fruby said at last, | wiping her eyes, “it can’t be helped. ‘You'd better stir up some beaten bis. cuit for supper tonight—it’s Wednes day!” Habit was strong in her. It was then that Sadie voiced a ‘brand new theory of Iife. Beaten | biscuit!” she echoed grimly. “I never! to make. | want to see one again! I guess what ld you eat doesn't count for much, after | all!” Not Looking Too Far Ahead. “What is your boy going to be when he grows up?” ~ “I don't know. We've not got that far yet. We're devoting all our time | to ways and means of bringing him | —There are many good newspapers published, but none that is quite as good | 2s the DEOCRATIC WATCHMAN, Tryit. | weary hours Sadie ee * Sadie said diblous % HER CHOICE OF METHODS. Mrs. Briggs had passed the after- noon at her club, where she had lis- tened to a dear young girl, direct from the chautauqua platform, deliver an inspiring. uplifting discourse on the benefits of moral suasion. Therefore, when she arrived home and was met at the door with a tale of woe relating to the behavior of her only offspring—of his refusal to go to school, his stealing all the doughnuts the cook had hidden for supper, his unforgivable rudeness to his maiden aunt and his taking his father's fish- ing tackle from its sacred box and mixing the contents together on the parlor floor—of all these and sundry other misdemeanors, each sufficient to merit a physical reproof, she bit her 'lip nerveusly and asked where she might find her sou. Having found him in the laundry, where he was prepared to spend the night in case of necessity, she led him gently up to her room, asking not to be disturbed by any one whatsoever. “Son,” she said, sorrcwfully. “I've Leen told that you were very naughty today.” “Do I get licked?" asked son, irrel- evantly. “You realize, don’t you, that you were naughty?” she repeated, ignoring his question. “Then 1 don’t get licked?” anxious to know. “Listen to mother, dear.” Son winced at the endearment. “You are my only boy, and | feel so proud to own you. But—" She drew him clos- er to her and endeavored to lift him to her lap. “Gee, | ain't a baby,” he objected, strenuously, as he wriggled away. Son was Mrs. Briggs breathed a deep sigh. Then she began again: “Mother Is proud of her boy, but she wants him | to deserve her pride. You want moth. | ar to always be proud of you, don’t you? “Say, you've got powder all over one side of your nose,” exclaimed the object of her pride. She wiped her face quietly, then she waited a moment to collect her wits. Her son didn't seem to respond to mother love, so she thought that per- haps she would better try something else. “When you refused to go to school today, dear, you knew, didn't you, that even if 1 didn't find it out, even if your teacher didn't send a note home to me, your conscience disapproved of your actions? Your conscience was sorry that you weren't trustworthy.” “Teacher wouldn't have sent a note home, because they haven't got us fixed in our own rooms yet, and they don’t know where we belong.” son ob- | jected. “Bat never mind what your teacher does, son. Think of your own better i nature, to which you have done an in- justice.” Son made no comment. | aged, his mother proceeded. “You knew it was wrong, too, to take Mary's doughnuts, didn’t you? And you are sorry, aren't you, that you offended your Aunt Alice?” Still no comment. “Son, are you listening? Son!" He turned toward her. Huh?" he asked. Then his eyes were again di- Encour- rected out of the window. She fol lowed his gaze, and saw behind the lilac bushes, where they felt that they were free from public eyes, Mary and her husband-to-be bidding each other a tender farewell er's eyes taking In the scene. “Say!” he remarked. know about that!” He nodded his head sagely. “I've seen them doing that ‘most every day, but I never told, for | wanted something to hold over her, when she started to tell on me. Going to fire her?” Mrs. Briggs exclaimed gently that Son saw his moth- “What do you Tn QIVE Em GOOD SEND-OFF Camp Cock Teoted Funeral March to Call Men to Diet of Wormy Pile. “Hank” Peters, a veterun fife major of the Civil war, has been cook in a lumber camp for a score of years. The old soldier has an {irrepressible , sense of humor, and still preserves ' the shrill fife which he used in many it was perfectly proper for Mary to kiss her future husband. Then she drew the shade, that no further inter- ference from outside should prolong their conference. “Now, son,” she began again, as she drew him firmly toward her, “mother wants you to say that you are very sorry and to promise her—" “Aw, son ain't my name,” broke in the boy, crossly. “An’ you ain't ‘mother'—you're ma. An’ you're talk- in’ like the teacher does, ‘cause she dasn't lick us. What's the matter?” “George.” called Mrs. Briggs to her battles. A shipment of “grub” was received at the lumber camp not long ago, ‘n which was a box of coarse raisins. | When the cover was removed “Hank” . discovered that the dried fruit was i filled with worms and shoved the box | aside to await orders for its condem- nation from the “woods boss.” When the gruff old Scotchman arrived, how- ever, he received the suggestion with indignation. “Dump those raisins in the lake?" he roared. ! kind. Bake some pies, ye lazy rascal, husband, whose steps she heard de- scending the stairs. “Come here and deal with this impudent young one. He needs a good whipping, If ever any boy did!" As her husband entered the i room the added, to insure good meas ure. "He's ruined your fishing tackle —you'd better use your slipper on him.” A Good Demonstrator, The car had wheezed slowly along, until finally Jobleigh grew impatient. “Look here, my good man,” he said to the demonstrator, “I don't want an old snail of a car like this. I want porac speed.” car like this,” said the demonstrator. “Economy? retorted Jobleigh. “Where does the economy come in? It costs just as much as run as any other car, doesn't it?” “Yes,” replied the demonstrator, “hut think of what you'll save on finag."--Harper's Weekly. The story of Tantalus mocked by the food he could not touch, the fountain he could not taste, is the story of every dys- Pepi Life to him must be an endless ceaseless mortification of the flesh. a can be cured. It is being cur- every Jay by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden M 1 Discovery. Cases of the most complicated character and of long standing have yielded to this medicine, when every means had been tried in vain. “Golden Medical Discovery” cures 98 per cent. of all those who give it a fair and faithful trial. I'm thinkin’ that'll keel the worms, an’ as for the boys, they're worm- proof!” Without a word “Hank” baked the pies. As the “cocokee” was about to take the long horn from szbove the door and announce the evening meal, the old cook stopped him and reached for his fife. “I'll call the boys this evening,” he said. From the doorway the astonished . lumberjacks heard the old fife drone the slow bars of a civil war funeral march. As he turned to re-enter the “Ye'll do nawthin’' o' the shanty “Hank” remarked to his as-. sistants: “If the boys have to eat that pie, it's a good send-off we'll be giving | them!” : “But just think of the economy’of a | More Appropriate. Representative Henry, the international marriage, said at a dinner in Waco: “What kind of men are these dukes and earls, anyway, that they can frank- condemning f ly admit marrying heiresses for their | money? “I heard a story the other day, a story about an heiress who said to her titled fiance: “‘My dear, I'm rather a new wom- an, you know, so do you mind asking the bishop to omit the word ‘obey’ in our wedding ceremony?’ “Lord Lucian stroked his mustache, smiled synically, and answered: “No, I don't mind, my love. I'll just tell the old boy to make it ‘love, honor and supply.’” Hood's Sarsaparilia. Hood’s Sarsaparilla for Spring Troubles. Diseases and ailments is Peculigg 10] to Itself. blood, expelling humors, re! in in building up the system, at Itis a grand good medicine for cleansing the feeling and rest he It accomplishes its hw wordert rial resultn curing bos, Bg fering a WALT and combines the utmost values of the best t this season, because it remedies that physicians prescribe Jor the these i JRI0oses, We believe i fohe the most eff ectiy fective preparation of roots, barks an Sarsaparilla today. In usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs. “Since taking Hood's Sarsaparilla ‘When I ha that tired feel 1 a a i I ey | Hood's Sarsaparil, we s builds me he goes to show that | have an excellent aj petite oD Ba S. Johnsson at high hs ose E. a, Pa and am in the best of | health.” Mrs. Prince, Bushville, N. Y. Packer, Job W&S C REASURER'S SALE OF UNSEATED LAND FOR | 50 | NON-PAYMENT OF TAXES FOR 1910 AND 1911, | Wn FMam............... . 1381 WE fa ss 1 ap AE Seabis to the provisions of law relating to the sale of i unseated ands for the non-payment of taxes, notice is here- | ; by sven that there will be exphaed to DBlic sale of ouery 208 264 | he following tracts or parts of tracts of unseated lands in | 87 425 | Centre re County. | nsylvani Vania, for taxes dus and unpaid thete- "50 853 | an, a the ouse in the Borough of Bellefonte, on Mon- | 100 ! y, June 10th, 1D ae Leh m., and to continue from | 341 | day to day, if necessary, by adjournment, until are ‘Sold. 3 309 | Benner Township. iar 3% Acres Per. Warrantse Owuers Taxes >: {a ! 100 Hig i M.......... WC Heinle............ccomes Fe] 16 Lingle, Jr ‘Howard E Weils a Wm BY 3 ; - . I 10 12 Pe 38 i NG = # Smith, Jno... Chas Bilger..." 19 bo Boggs Township 0 1" ® | 10 2:36of42478 Cotting'r. Garret. 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