Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 29, 1912, Image 2

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    nt a mem memes messin me SP —————————— So | eo A A
fe i —" _—
from Mr. Burke—he's had two already— / “I want to see you,” said the voice FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN ARM NOTES
| and give it to you." : shamelessly. THRIFT OF OZARK COUPLE Ro r —
| So when the music began, Mrs. Fallet| Even over the insensate wire the an- DAILY THOUGHT.
~ gt won the veranda aiid Nstencd to Mr. | cent spell ssserted fiself Took Matter of Presents Into Their — | 000 oe American farmer has $40.000.
= Bellefont NEmer — | Burke's amiabili Dead Sea ap- “When, Delicia?” said Clay hoarsely Own Hands on Silver Weddin All wise work is mainly threefold in character. | C00 invested business, and produc-
’ 9, . i - 9 a {
en Coy, Montpomary. | come at four, ers sorts be hose da” Anniversary. Sood is wi ail " olassweute
MY CUP IS A CUP OF SORROW." Iwas s walls Colt i and ihe futes three! "its mdecontly sadly hat © dons| Everyone who has got several girts | Wrinkles, the most terrible encanies of | , The provement of 2 heed ia 2 gro.
My cup is a cup of sorrow, | cajoled through fifteen minutes of ironic ' care.” exactly alike will appreciate the , come almost imperceptibly. At a rr os be. based Juila
And, turn it as I will, | SWeetness, then witha Sigh of satiety the | “I'll come at three,” said Clay. He be. | shrewdness of this Ozark couple who, first they ave a mere Betwark of UnY | of milk and butter fat produced and the
The breath of the myrrh and aloes music stopped, and and Clay went | gan a word, broke off, and was silent. in the matter of presents, took things | 4 ound the JR: Gevelon ines | amount of feed consumed per cow
its sharp : ou n upon veranda. They ound know, . Tou ’
Bui nod veis | Shemicives's window sway rom Mim | can't tay over the ulphone, but || Speski of being thirty” sad HI | Sel and MES deeper urrows are —Ruming tw caves on 4 single cow
With the bitter dress unquatied, 8 White gown, W mn . Buck, “reckon Cy Wasson and his kes are many, and they are not necessa- | her f remainder been
Jessn. 1 trv to remember the dark; alu, they fourd Pematies | - Wife, that siide eve trom lowa, ayout Hi the heralto of oid age, for Mo one | rod, ing the aides of the lacrapion pe
Thine havderdraugin! was awkward. ! and wi his forehead | take prize.” | would a these lines, w | butter, is a cheap way of making beef
My path is set with briars; You had a pleasant summer,” said SN AanE Of. 3d Wie). is. “How's that?” asked the stranger | are character making. But no young | that is bound to become popular.
phy veut uy naming fect Clay at length. . : “I must have misdirected it,” he said | who was waiting in front of the black- Youmans is inclined 10 Welowme ving | - pig is the most economical pro-
Coin | OR gu S38 id or sd ie | shew eS wa bn |, Th, EY oy peg Br
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Pui ever) fui would Ygte. game within his reach, and she twisted As the full nocmy ol the situation “Well, you see Cy and Mirandy Sou ul the muncies ol the tut Paves he | jive and feed consumed the Hr
Jesus I try to remember “I'm told you are a subject for con- lh Was said and done, a" nice, tidy wanted to celebrate thelr silver wed: |is careful to avoid the little tricks of | °F TU Ou Set, 00 Jurpishing :
A wearier road was Thine! tulation,” said Delicia suddenly. She soul, and naturally averse to enormous | 9108: They had never celebrated any | wrinkling the brows and of frowning.and ' & market at home for grain and dairy
My croabiniol fire andisvin: §id not look at him. “Mrs. Fallet is very situations, shivered in its shoes. anniversary before because, as Miran- | equally careful in preserving the skin
It wounds to the very bone: charming.” | However, about two o'clock, when Clay | dy told my wife, the silver wedding | it:ljas bean expused oclimatic con-| —Holland Fupports a population of 200
But if to the top of Calvary “Thani you,” said Clay. His voice had sat long enough alone, facing the tan- | was tbe first one where the presents Hoss sm and wild, idk to the square while we have
I needs must climb alone, suggested anything bit 3 sticeensicl lover. | gle of his fae, a Messenger brought him | would be worth more than the |, DO holiday sitkers were | work to sustain 34.
When the soul I would have died for am so glad," said Delicia, “that you | a note. victuals. | ning, 2 ne oo Suard | pay a tax of $5.80 per acre and still make
Turns, ice and stone, from me. gre lappy. Jf the laugh with hich she | Bt gaye uD its contents to-unsiealy fin. “Even then they worried a good dea | f.beaten complexion, dried and tanned | 1" The secret lies in intensive farm-
Svisudl 3 Vvemeae, been what a laugh should be, the effect | DEAR BOY: I readdressed your letter | {OF f68F everybody would bring pickle by sea air and sun. But the wrinkle every square inch and every
-y might have passed. As it was, Delicia and sent it to someone who has more forks or butter knives. But after a | which threatens women of this age with ounce of natural f
ee. Storwel with cuts jn er trod, at the | 10 it than 1._ She will never Know. Whils they bit ou 28 Vea that worked Somes from toy wid though t, too much. 3 Lm thar
— ty o own { tated your 's curly a's ral 3 i has been a steady
THE CONQUEROR MAN. “Suppose you take me back,” she said ‘most accurately. That squares us,| “They wrote at the bottom. of the | 13WWikiikles and the 3 wrinkles | has 0.3 steady Seonanc in mber of
cn bravely. “I have the next dance.” | doesn’t it? I have been rather ha invitations, asking the folks not to buy | gre "HE to avoid, for invariably 1st 20 years, al there is an increas-
onge 11 = Sida lute Went, 2 | hope you may presents until they got there, for the | Women who concentrate on any sub. ing demand for wool and mutton.
he mon come. Good-by, | jeweler from Buckeye Bridge would ject, whether reform of laws or on the Ve should like to have our farmer read-
[Concluded from last week.] So all that was unsaid continued un-|and in It was my fault; T| po on on yard with a full line of sil | ers who have a practical knowledge of
The friend shrugged his shouiders and |said, and the old story woke up and should have known better. Ee ‘Per. | the sheep industry give us their reasons
crossed one knee above the other. to get it was not a LiLiA. , - |
*Osual summer Crop.” happy evening for Clay. Neither, for the | From which, after the first dazed com.| “That was clever,” sald the stran- haps when we have passed through the [oF this B Sumber of shesp ain
crop,” he suggested. y. hich btedly | remedy.
“Flora and Tom,” said Delicia, “Elinor | matter of that, did Mrs. Fallet enjoy her- | prehension, Clay made two thoroughly | 8er. “Picked out their own presents, nervous age, which our own undoubtedly
and Blake, May Kearney and the Andrews | self greatly. masculine deductions: ¥ | you might say.” is, we shal have arrived at the immobile = —The following powder given each day
man—" On the way home she spok: of Delicia. | “She never really cared, he said bitter-| “Yes,” said Hi, “but that wasn't the {= Wiel oUF pi eats mo. | issaid to be good for skin disorder
When she paused invitingly, the friend | “It's quite too bad,” she said, “you two I. Siding 2 definite hurt to his pride in | best part of it. We learned afterward | the Turks ver, st Ea ect smooth- horses: Finely powdered iodine of pot.
: they dickered with the jeweler and got | ness of skin. Such Save per ash, 4 ounces; granulatedsugar and com-
a again: lity would not each
and the pretty | tie thing. “Women are all alike—inconstant as | nim to give them 20 per cent, on all Perhaps be aitragtive, but the ines woh | Lon galt, of 1 pound. Mix
on
™ he fi " we let the sub ” | the very deuce!” ” ’ | into 32 powders.
yidgw he_Suiched i At Joust that's i pose et os oh Ab Sey es Tak: up his stick, | Be 80/d."—Youth’s Companion. | come from laughter give an attractive Feed nocorn, but let the grain feed
c . consider it's in very good taste, dragging a Mo at. Dicken wp J wrinkle, and the old lined face of the oats and wheat bran. Use tincture
arlously: sulici o De iy, sig Ps strong is a book of splendid life in which | jodine on the lumps every second day
Delicia, 1 haven't met ber "| “Dear mel” said Mrs. Fallet coolly, Heaslip Lea, in Woman's Home Compan. AMERICAN DRY FLY FISHING youth may read many noble lines of dif- | until the skin becomes a little tender.
“he'll beat the Country Club tomorrow Fhe you Teproving me, dear boy, for my | ion. | quished. . SITOwS: vam. | . that many a crooked-
night. Yes, she’s pretty as a picture,” taste : _— The Angler Fishes the Water and Not | * Emotion i 3
said the mutual friend, and departedwell || Not in the least” said Clay; ‘you| Fancy man dying of thirst, by the | the Rise as Te a fo a Ee at Se foge fd Lila iu mir
eS hid t no| Mrs. Fallet shrugged and smiled. “If |} a of sparkling water, England. actress remains young because of '
news of Delicia. Having leamed from | it's a subject you can’t bear to touch or | quench their thirst te spri !
the society columnsthat was at home | even speak of, we'd better have it out, | on their way ing. But he doesn't American dry fly fishing may be de- | by her use of grease paint, the ap- |
again, he became aware of an unexpect once and for all, and look at it t" | know whether the water will quench his | fined briefly as the art of displaying | which A Go 3 Sena.
know ps
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continued change of her facial expres- | Pf
and wrinkles are kept away a good
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; namely, for some reason he de-| ‘There's nothing to look at,” said » | thirst or not. He never will until | to the trout a single artificial fly | ha compressing
sired not to see her. Further, he desired With more than a shade of irritation. He t t the other floating upon the surface of the SEA | one, nag wacom miaB he lips is a bad |
not to think of her, and that gave him | was fighting within himself to overcome | thousands have slaked their thirst at the | in the exact manner of the natural | tensity of expression which is bound to |
DO I a OE | a a ae. are SUG 12 Sidon IOUEhe There ars | tumeet | a a beauty. | This year is one of bumper crops,
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ance for the time when Delicia should re- | endeavoring to preserve a gentlemanly | Who are offered healing in Dr. Pierces| UPOR occasions, somewhat rare in- A charmin Sle IY Oduce a tine. | the oats promises to
turn. The old story had seemed old in- | concentration of emotion should question Golden Medical Discovery. It has heal- | 9¢d, but nevertheless of sufficient fre- | Rirrow of or Aktemivey. and ry round 7 he Top dor Pr
deed, yet it threatened at odd moments a | his state of mind, justly annoyed of thousands whose lungs | quency to render the fact noteworthy, women realize that Ppt | 00 F700, 000 ..
and this Clay purposed to “It’s an old story,” he said, as he had diseased, whose blood being impure the American dry fly man casts con- | more than anything elise in beauty. ts {ar | 000 bushels lan than the best
i mal
were
avert if at all possible. said before, ‘and it's over and done with, | bred disease in other organs nourished | sciously to a rising and feeding trout— The first for wrinkles is
olf Sab edeul iS dead) Je sid sg i Yio please over and done with,” said by the blood. 2nd yei these th fini oe varias Fostom of the, English ap Jost if ue aged Joa : to coe fom in the last three
n. “m1 » i Mrs. Faliet, “when you look as you look- ry fly “purist.” | the eyes, when opportunity ofiers, three | is
sleep. “Am I a cad?” Then he tied his y : y : remedy. They are not sure it will cure! “iyo trout streams of this coun- | Or four times during the day, and for a more to the farmers faith in the sureness
tie for the tenth time in a half an hour | ed tonight at a mere cured he. i
ho pelimnpmngieg bong ig vi Rg bi Big po ay dul ed 1ilety eight perce, try, however, the orthodox manner of {€W minutes cultivate a placidity of of a return
and
all e thought and com the features into
weekly dance at the Country Club. Now Clay had supposed that a front of | It almost always cures. fishing and floating fly is to fish all the |; = 0 Ipose retards very con- the climatic conditions.
Mrs. Fallet was very beautiful that | marble inacritability hid his gnawing un-' = When Fig A constipated habit use | Water as when wet fly casting. | Ea iho hab proceed iy. Son a —The owners of the largest peach
night. She wore a gown of shimmery | certainties. He had also considered that | pr, Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. In America, owing to the fact that strenuous life. There are, ot course, more Orchard in the world, located at Americus,
silver stuff, exquisitely simple, with rosy 2 prying World L Souid never Hit hs vag. | —— the dry fly angler fishes the water efficacious remedies, and the art of the | Ga havesolved the problem of inadequate )
orchids that Say Jad sant her Her ayes “My dear Lilia” he I Any tak | Change for the Better. and not the rise, wet and dry fly fish- ' beauty specialist is incalcuable in this age. failitiss and high cost of *
cool as well, and not so still. ly, “jealousy makes a_great deal of unl! The care of the African population | Ig are far more closely related than Massage oo he Sf wrinides=~in | Fyre were 236,000 beating trees in this
She, too, had seen the society columns, | happiness for itself. Don’t you think al- in the Belgian Kongo in the past his is the case in England, where the or- | tisa a idea - alv na 10 wash the | Orchard, which were pion. hig in
and the mutual friend sometimes adorned | this is unnecessary? ‘ | been so murderously indifferent that| thodox sportsman stalks the trout, .. co = SCP ios and from | huge sprinkled with oil set on
her Sitting room. ; They had come to Mrs. Fallet's door, it is a pleasure to note a change for| casting exclusively to a rising and ihe temples toward the eyes, the fingers | fire. Unable to get their hauled to
When s e looked in the mirror just be- | and, having entered the dim cool hallway, the better. An order has gone into! feeding fish—Outing. being used always in preference to sponge market by the railroads in to save
fore her maid brought her coat and scarf, | Mrs. Fallet laughed. She laughed very .mect to prevent hereafter the impor- or face glove. | them, and held up by middlemen who
she smiled at herself unkindly. softly, but it added fuel to Clay's flame. | (0 © 00 00 aad Lanshorta. | : | wanted all the profits and held down the
“You can't have two bites at a cherry— a think 1 4 Setter s2y Food night,” he | tion of. saccharine. sweets in the. Bel. Bishop Blames His Hair. | . | demand by extravagantly prices, the
meaning happiness, he. said to herself. wid st Bn Lig Nd thie AINSI ==" | gian African territory. Saccharine| . Father William J. Dalton of the' Bamnyard.—An amusing game called | owners decided to sacrifice the vast orch-
r old girl, I'm afraid there's rather erha head i Prodiicts and Drosuces » ened with | Annunciation church teils this story Barnyard.” In thisone person is chos- ard and plant the land to cotton.
a bad quarter of an hour on the way for finitesimal hope flickered for a moment, | Namer stand
you. Why couldn't you have let well | a subconscious desire for a quarrel which | substances other than cane sugar, of a Catholic bishop well known in To oF The a I na in in| —It is claimed that goats will eat the
enough alone?” | should set him free. The word tingled | beet sugar, milk su this locality, but at Father Dalton’s re- , _- : : | following: Hazel, crab, blackberry, ce-
i with possibilities; but he thrust the | sugar particularly those cweolerry | Quest, nameless here: ae a rat CTEar 01% | dar, hemlock, holly, willows, haws,
thought away from him. He even offer- “The bishop is a large man with He makes an exception of one, however, Squawberries, hi , sagebrush,
3 ; ; : with glycerine—s B,. elder,
Something of the ssme sort she said to | ed to kiss her, with a sense of nobility | 1"; Sivceling rin Hot be Japosted, bushy back hair,” the priest relates. the one it would be the greatest fun to Sreasewood, Sumac, ash, jack oal,
Clay. i ahoga rosebush,
Be Dresden Judy's back, jan't shor” | ARE UPOR HIN, re kite. meant to include in general all syn. Te often on his tours through Kan-| play the joke on, and him he names, per- | i orry™alier, sala ag rush
“Naturally,” said Clay, a trifle stiff, “I| “Not tonight,” she said, and gave him | thetic chemical sweetening which | 54% wears a silk hat. His crosier he NaR% JSP SRESICE oo 0 (| of onk elm and many others. As
haven't seen her.” her hand. does not possess food value. We wish | °a'ried In a large leather case. each, as if naming them, Br i | their taste, even to the poison ivy, which
“If you had rather not see her,” said - | We could belleve that this tariff anx.| ‘Recently in a jerkwater Kansas jictle way in front of them and says: Some breeders say
Mrs. Ratlet, isn’t it just as well you » Clay had hie. weit. 4p. to | fety to protect the Kongo population| toWR Where silk hats are scarce ex-| “Now, when I say ‘Three!’ every one im- | vided they have a sufficient
But Clay pretended not to hear; he | her room and went to bed. She lay | against deleterious sweets was some- | Pt on the heads of traveling musi- | itate the natural cry of the creatnre I've es Jo vars Role dick.
. Sy adel dear: awake for three tortured hours before she | thing more than an exhibition of the | ¢ians, the bishop was just alighting named you, very and all at once. | gives the venison or game flavor to the
It was inevitable that before the even. | arose and sought in the Japanese cabinet | USual protective philanthropy which from his train when the negro porter One, two, three! ' And, instead ofa wild | igh C3C (GL (OF Tl 8,0 Fo BREE
ing was over Delicia and Mrs. Fallet|on the wall for a white powder which | bars a competitive product to make 2PPeared at the car door waving his Duthusst of conflicting barnyard Cries, | 11 e mutton flavor.
should meet. There are always Fates in | disposed of the rest of the night quite sure the sale of something else. crosier case. jefe Ra Sey Sllehee SAtiph Sor He | :
petticoats who attend to these details, | dreamlessly. “‘Hey, boss!" the porter called. ‘1, who Sf Sjuack. ON¢ | —The question has been asked: “Wha
and there is almost always an appreciative | _ As for Clay, he went home and sat by reckon you all had better take yo fid- ' jn spirit of fun. His amazed
audience, petticoated and trousered, to | the window, and considered—like the The Future Woman. dle wif you. De company is not | sion
remark the subtleties of the situation. immortal bovine of the poem. The re-| “Woman is toda y , ”,
In this instance, however, audience was | sult of his considering was a letter, ac- | pe woman of the A a ey kum a8 hb THe Hoss" — Washisgon Herd
M ceptable only
the vernada a little in advance of Clay's | You must give Clay this, that he found pou peuker, Lady Warwick, wis
broad shoulders, put out her hand mself in an situation, that suffrage
her litle mocking laugh to a young man, | he was trying to make the best, question to a New York reporter. She The Gloom of English Clubs.
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pleasantly ugly, advancing from the! of it. He had loved Delicia, and Delicia | continued: Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, at a din. |
. m over. Then, with the “The parasitical woman will be ex.| RF In New York, was talking about
“You!” she said. “Id no idea you of the incomplete amorist, | tinct in a generation or two. Then| EUSlish clubs.
were in town.” Then to Clay, “I fancy he had loved Mrs. Fallet; whereupon De- | certain witticism of Lord Saye and There is something very triste,
you've met Mr. Burke?” ' come ba old | .gole's will be unin . very depressing,” he said, “about the
"How'do, Mon "said Burke | feeling. Also, Delicia still cared for him. ReligTble. really fashionable clubs of Pal
cheerfully. * to get you on the He knew every shading of her voice too; “Lord Saye and Sele attended re- St. James’ street 1 Ploca f Mall |
this evening, Mrs. Fallet. I'm well not to be aware of that. But Mrs. cently a book dinner. At this dinner ales and Plesaqilly, “Tho|
mighty glad to see It's the merest Fallet cared for him too. At this he | everybody had to represent some book | ®t di8nity, the somber quietude of |
chance that I'm—" he broke off | groaned aloud. It was as Mrs, Fallether- | title. Well, Lord Saye and Sele just | L-c>® ¢lubs, gets on an American's
into the dark beside him. "Miss Tf once told him, a weary world, = carried on his arm a petticoat. hetves, :
say! Are you deserting me? You know | and full of women. | “Ye.was Hug, “An American visitor to White's zi
ak Jala ately: a has been said, Be wrote | 11s Lites Handicaps" |(01ce id that the air of the Place!
of course, came oul : | ?
os Sod Sed. She i 1%, civen” us i seemed to him to suggest that the |
oung, the sm
distinct suggestion of nervousness. an easy minute since. [want Pampered Too Much. : ————
know Mz. } ontgumery,” she said, | no bigger thing in life than to make you ay are always yiorving,” re |
” ; , now, I give baseball magna : +
SO vail Bulle, | way| “I have to be careful not to produce Representative Henry of Texss was | which sift two teaspoonfuls of
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do you do, Mrs. Fallet?” said | of this—" anyth » lained {
little dance,” said Burk ho | went on in small black letters to the bit- “He is engaged to a Chicago "
! our town ” and knew ‘not {er end. which said merely, but necessari- Dave to cater to the tired business : girl”
ly,
ub dances this summer have _ This letter he addressed to Mrs. Lilia] “I dom’t let the tired business man | teq.
: uncommonly nice,” said Mrs. Fallet ' Fallet, arrayed it in six two-cent stamps, | worry me. He roots with the others! «
! Sie appealed to Clay with a | wiote Delivery,” across the top | when he gets to the ball park.”—
5 of a smile. "Haven't they?” | of it, mailed it. Washington Herald.
i “Rather,” said Clay, and would have, When
v2, mate; bis foe Hampel une iphone was mercifully Sunday , the
tongue- upon ; A Converse
- and persistently. Lady Warwick, aan dinner at Sher | ITO t0 do plain sewing, address en- Tn,
across a
ry’s in New York, said, apropos of art: | Y61oPes, or something of that sort?”
Delicia spoke past him, delicately ab- | receiver. His tired brain woke “Art is the pursuit of beauty.” quash-—much in
Tm only jun home from Virginia; this | The fog through which we come She smiled and added:
's a »
2 very charming place,
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“And from what they tell me of the
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goings-on in your Great White Way | moronto i
hee paper)—Here's an article on |
o said, a little stupid. Bete, Ihe yutuuit of beauty is alvin “Women’s Work for Feeble-Minded.”
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A New Deal. | the feeble-min
licia?” . “If you remember, Wombat Wife (sweetly)—They usually mar
said the voice with a wonderful | married fust a yeas Ago. "4% | ry them, dear—Canadian Courier.
“1 remember.”
“We ought to remember the anni The Way of Portraits.
versary in some way. Yes, just a year He
ago the wedding cards were out.” a 1s Caroline having her
_ “Forget it. The wedding cards are | * gne_Well, she has reached
being shuffled for a new deal” We Then fhe ey Ieliel thw
A ———————
~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, photograph.
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