Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 21, 1914, Image 7

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    Bellefonte, Pa. August 21, 1914.
[Continued from page 6, Col. 3]
“I was too unhappy to think of fear,
and I was chiefly nervous about you,
all alone in the house with father.”
“I didn’t like it very much myself.
11 buttoned my bedroom door and sat.
! by the window all night, shivering and
“No, you must go back to the house |
at once, Patty, dear. Father mizht
wake and call you and that would
make matters worse.
drizzle or I should stay out in the air.
Oh, I wonder if father's mind is going
and if this is the beginning of the end:
If he is in his sober senses he could
not be so strange, so suspicious, so
unjust.”
“He could be anything, say anything,
do anything!” exclaimed Patty. “Per-
haps he is not responsible and perhaps ;
he is; it doesn’t make much difference
to us. Come along, blessed darling!
I'll tuck you in and then I'll creep back
to the house if you say I must. I'll go
down and make the kitchen fire in the
morning; you stay out here and sec
what happens. A good deal will hap-
pen, I'm thinking, if father speaks tv
me of you! I shouldn't be surprised
to see the fur flying in all directions.
I'll seize the first moment to bring
You out a cup of coffee and we'll con-
sult about what to do. [I may tell you
now I'm all for running away!”
Waitstill's first burst of wretched-
ness had subsided and she had recov-
ered her balance. “I'm afraid we
must wait a little longer, Patty,” she
advised. “Don’t mention my name to
father, but see how he acts in the
morning. He was so wild, so unlike
himself, that I almost hope he may
forget what he said and sleep it off.
Yes, we must just wait.”
“No doubt he'll be far calmer in the
morning if he remembers that, if he
turns you out, he faces the prospect of
three meals a day cooked by me,” said
Patty. “That's what he thinks he
would face; but, as a matter of fact,
I shall tell him that where you sleep
I sleep, and where you eat 1 eat, and
when you stop cooking I stop! He
won't part with two unpaid servants
in a hurry, not at the beginning of
haying.” And Patty, giving Waitstii!
a last hug and a dozen tearful kisses,
stole reluctantly back to the house by
the same route through which she had
left it.
Patty was right. She found the fire
lighted when she went down into the
kitchen next morning, and without a
word she hurried breakfast on to the
table as fast-as she could cook and
serve it. Waitstill was safe in the
barn chamber, she knew, and would
be there quietly while her father was
feeding the horse and milking the
cows, or perhaps she might go up in
the woods and wait until she saw him
. driving away.
The deacon ate his breakfast in si-
lence, looking and acting very much as
usual, for he was generally dumb at
meals. When he left the house, how-
ever, and climbed into the wagon. he
turned around and said in his ordinary
gruff manner: “Bring the lunch up to
the field yourself today, Patience. Tell
your sister I hope she’s come to her
senses in the course of the night
You've got to learn, both of you. the:
my ‘say SQ’ must be law in this house.
You can fuss and you can fume if it
amuses you any, but ’‘twon’'t do no
good. Don't encourage Waitstill in
any whinin’ or blubberin’. Jest tell her
to come in and go to work and T'll
overlook what she done this time. And
don’t you give me any more of your
eye snappin’ and lip poutin’ and head
in the air imperdence! You're under
age. and if you don’t look out you'll
get somethin’ that's good for what ails
you! You two girls jest aid an’ abet
one another—that’s what you do, aid
. and abet one another—an’ if you carry
it any further I'll find some way o
separatin’ you, do you hear?”
Patty spoke never a word nor flutter-
ed an eyelash. She had a proper spirit,
but now her heart was cold with a
new fear, and she felt, with Waitstill,
that her father must be obeyed and his
temper kept within bounds until God
provided them a way of escape.
She ran out to the barn chamber and.
not finding Waitstill, looked across the
field and saw her coming through the
path from the woods. Patty waved
her hand and ran to meet her sister.
joy at the mere fact of her existence.
of being able to see her again and of
hearing her dear voice almost choking
her in its intensity. When they reach-
ed the house she helped her upstairs
as if she were a child, brought her cool
water to wash away the dust of the
haymow, laid out some clean clothes
for her and finally put her on the
lounge in the darkened sitting room.
“Il won't let anybody come near the
house,” she said, “and you must have
a cup of tea and a good sleep before 1
tell you all that father said. Just com-
fort yourself with the thought that he
is going to overlook it this time. Aft-
er I carry up his luncheon I shall stop
at the store and ask Cephas to come
out on the river bank for a few min-
utes. Then I shall proceed to say
what I think of him for telling father
where you went yesterday afternoon.”
“Don’t blame Cephas!”’ Waitstill re-
monstrated. “Can’t you see just how
it happened? He and Uncle Bart were
sitting in front of the shop when I
drove by. When father came home
and feund the house empty and the
horse not in the stall, of course he ask-
ed where I was, and Cephas probably
said he had seen me drive up Saco hill.
He had no reason to think that there
was any harm in that.”
“If he had any sense he might know
that he shouldn’t tell anything to fa-
ther except what happens in the store,”
Patty insisted. “Were you frightened
out in the barn alone last night, poor
dear?”
It's beginning to |
. bristling at the least sound.
The Story of Waitstill Baxter
‘His lordship replied that the note was
Every-
body calls me a coward, but I'm not.
Courage isn’t not being frightened.
It’s pot screeching when you are!
frightened. Now. what happened at
the Boyntons?" i
“Patty, Ivory's mother is the most |
pathetic creature I ever saw.” And]
Waitstill sat up on the sofa, her long |
braids of hair hanging over her shoul- |
ders, her pale face showing the traces '
of her heavy weeping. *I never pitied
any one so much in my whole life.
To go up that long, long lane; to come !
upon that dredry house hidden away in |
the trees; to feel the loneliness and the |
silence and then to know that she is
living there like a hermit thrush in a!
forest without a woman to care for |
her it is heart breaking!”
“How
fal? !
“No. Everything is as neat as wax. |
She isn’t ‘crazy,’ Patty, as we under-
stand the word. Her mind is be-
clouded somehow, and it almost seems
as -if the cloud might lift at any mo-
ment. She goes about like somebody
in a dream, sewing or knitting or cook-
ing. It is only when she talks, and
you notice that her eyes really see
nothing, but are looking beyond you,
that you know there is anything
wrong.”
“If she appears so like other people,
why don’t the neighbors go to see her
once in awhile?”
“Callers make her unhappy, she
says, and Ivory told me that he dared
not encourage any company in the
house for fear of exciting her and
making her an object of gossip be-
sides. He knows her ways perfectly |
and that she is safe and content with |
her fancies when she is alone. which |
is seldom, after all.”
“What does she talk about?" asked
Patty.
“Her husband mostly. She is expect-
ing him to come back daily. We knew
that before, of course, but no one can
realize it till they see her setting the
table for him and putting a saucer of
wild strawberries by his plate, going
about the kitchen softly, like a gentle
ghost.”
“It gives me the shudders!”
said
Patty. ‘1 couldn't bear it. If she
never sees strangers, what in the
world did she make of you? How did
you begin?"
“I told her I had known Ivory ever
since we were school children, She
was rather strange and indifferent at
first and then she seemed to take a
fancy to me.”
“That's queer!” said Patty, smiling
fondly and giving Waitstill’s hair the
hasty brush of a kiss.
“She told me she had a girl baby.
born two or three years after Ivory,
and that she had always thought it
died when it was a few weeks old.
Then suddenly she came closer to me” —
“Oh, Waity, weren't you terrified?"
“No, not in the least. Neither would
you have been if you had been there.
She put her arms round me and all at
once I understood that the poor thing
mistook me just for a moment for her
own daughter come back to life. It
was a sudden fancy. and I don’t think
it lasted, but I didn’t know how to
deal with it or contradict it. so 1 siin-
ply tried to soothe her and let he:
ease her heart by talking to me, She
said when I left her: ‘Where is your
house? I hope it is near! Do come
again and sit with me. Strength flows
into my weakness when you hold my
hand!" 1 somehow feel. Patty, that she
heeds a woman friend even more than
a doctor. And now, what am I to do%
How can I forsake her. aud yet here is
this new difficulty with father?”
[Continued next week.]
The beautiful water lily roots in the
mud below the stream. All the fragrance
and fairness of the flower are affected as
the root is affected. If the roct is injur-
ed the flower droops and its whiteness is
marred by blot and blemish. A woman’s
beauty is intimately related to the health
of the delicate female organs. No wom-
an who suffers constantly from female
weakness can retain her good looks. One |’
of the facts noted by women who have
been cured of diseases of the delicate
womanly organs by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, is the return of the color to
the cheek and the brightness to the eye
when the cure has been completed.
“Favorite Prescription” has been well
‘named by women who have been healed
by its use. “A God-send to women.” It
dries debilitating drains, removes inflam-
mation, ulceration and female weakness,
and re-establishes the ailing woman in
sound health. Sick women are invited
to consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All
correspondence private. Address Dr. V.
M. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. x
Pessimistic Judge.
Counsel in a case before Mr. Jus
tice Darling at the Old Bailey, Lon-
don, England, wanted a shorthand note
of a statement which was being made.
being taken; he could see the short-
hand writer at work. Counsel said
the judge had noticed what he had
not. Mr. Justice Darling: “There are
some advantages of being on the
bench; there are not many.”
Benjamin Franklin on War,
Benjamin Franklin said in 1783:
All wars are follies, very expensiv4
and very mischievous ones. In my
opinion there never was a good wai
or a bad peace. When will manking
be convinced and agree to settle theiy
troubles by arbitration?
Always Enough.
“Supply governs demand,” quote(
the Wise Guy. “Yes,” agreed the Sim
ple Mug, “in spite of the fact that sc|
many people want to borrow troubl
|
|
does the house look—dread- |
there is always enough to go around.’
The Pass of Thermopylae
By HERBERT KAUFMAN
Author of “Do Something! Be Something!”’
ERXES once led a million soldiers out of Persia in an effort
to capture Greece, but his
invasion failed utterly, because a
Spartan captain had entrenched a hundred men in a narrow
mountain pass, which controlled
the road into Lacedaemon. The
man who was first on the ground had the advantage.
Advertising is full of opportunities for men who are first on the
ground.
There are hundreds of advertising passes waiting for some one
to occupy them. The first man who realizes that his line will be
helped by publicity, has a tremendous opportunity. He can gain an
advantage over his competitors that they can never possess. Those
who follow him must spend more money to equal his returns. They
must not only invest as much, to get as much, but they must as
well, spend an extra sum to counteract the influence that he has
already established in the community.
Whatever men sell, whether
it is actual merchandise or brain
vibrations, can be more easily scld with the aid of advertising. Not
one half of the businesses which should be exploited are appearing
in the newspapers. Trade grows as reputation grows and advertising
spreads reputation.
If you are engaged in a line which is waiting for an advertising
pioneer, realize what a wonderful chance you have of being the first
of your kind to appeal directly to the public. You stand a better
chance of leadership than those who have handicapped their strength,
by permitting you to get. on the ground before they could outstrip
you. Ycu gain a prestige that those who follow you, must spend
more money to counteract.
If your particular line is similar to some other trade or business
which has already beer introduced to the reading public, it’s up to
you to start in right now and join your competitors in contesting
for the attention of the community. The longer you delay the more
you decrease your chances of surviving. Every man who outstrips
you is another opponent, who must be met and grappled with, for
the right of way.
Eastern National Forests.
In the White mountains the latest sur-
veys show 138,572 acres that now belong
to the government. They cover the |
northern slopes of the Presidential range, |
the eastern slopes of the Carter-Moriah |
group, and a portion of the northern
slopes of the Franconia mountains. In
the South, where more extensive pur-
chases are made, reports for June, 1914,
show 916,000 acres. These include, says
an acount in the American Review of Re-
views, portions of the high mountains in
North Carolina surrounding Mt Mitchell,
“the great black dome,” which is the
highest point between the Rockies and
the Alps, the North Pole and the Andes. |
Large forest tracts have been taken in
the rocky uplands of western Tennessee,
and in the National Bridge country of
Virginia, but not including the bridge
itself. These southern mountains in-
clude the headwaters, not only of the
Tennessee river and other important
tributaries of the Ohio, but also the Ca-
tawba, the Yadkin and many mountain
streams that feed the long navigable riv-
ers. The latest purchase at the South
comprises the famous Pisgah forest, near
Asheville, N. C,, 86,000 acres, long held
in charge of a trained forester by George
W. Vanderbilt. This does not include
5000 acres surrounding the mansion at
Biltmore. More than 1,000000 acres
have now been made a part of the East-
ern national forests.
Medical.
Out of the Gloom
MANY A GLOOMY COUNTENANCE IN
BELLEFONTE NOW LIGHTENS WITH
HAPPINESS.
A bad back makes you gloomy.
Con be happy with continued back:
ache.
The aches and pains of a bad back
are frequently due to weak kidneys.
Doan’s Kidney Pills are recommended
for weak kidneys.
So Bellefonte citizens testify.
Mrs. Sara Miller, 210 E. Howard St.,
Bellefonte, says: ‘The first I noticed my
kidneys were weak was when I began to
haye headaches and dizzy spells and
spots floated before my eyes. I also had
pains in my back and a dull ache across
my loins. Icouldn’t do any lifting and
if I sat down. I could hardly get up with-
out help. Ials)had rheumatic twinges.
After [ had taken two boxes of Doan’s
Kidney Pills, the rheumatic pain~ disap-
peared and I was relieved of the other
troubles. Ihave had very little trouble
since.” :
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply
ask for a kidnev remedy—get Doan’s
Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Miller
had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props, Buffalo,
N.Y. 59-33-1t
(Ceopyright.)
Excursion.
Niagara Falls
August 28,
September 11, 25, October 9, 1914
Round $7.30 Trip
FROM BELLEFONTE
SPECIAL TRAIN of Pullman Parlor Cars
Dining Car, and Coaches through the
Picturesque Susquehanna Valley.
Tickets good going an Special Train and con-
necting trains, and returning on regular trains
within FIFTEEN DAYS. Stop. off at Buffalo
within limit on return trip.
Illustrated Booklet and full information may
be obtained from Ticket Agents.
Pennsylvania R.R.
59-25-16t.
Hardware.
Guarantee
of the three biggest mills
in the business is a mighty
good thing to have behind
the roofing you buy. en
We’re mighty glad to have it
behind the roofing we sell. That’s
why we carry
Certain-teed
EET ER ST TN
ROOFING
The guarantee label protects us as |!
well as our customers.
Whatever building on your place
wants a roof, come here and get
Certain-teed— 1...’ your best insur-
ance. It comesin shingles as well as rolls.
Whatever else you need from a pound |
|
|
of nails to a cross-cut saw, you'll find the
right quality and right prices, right here.
Diewine's Hardware Store
.59-10-tf BELLEFONTE, PA.
Hardware.
The Potter-Hoy
Hardware Co.
“If I had only known!” That is the cry
of somany who pay the costly penalty
Nature exacts even for sins of ignor-
ance. There is no excuse for ignorance
of the laws of health and physical ® being
when these are taught with the purest
science and in the plainest English, in a
book which is given away. Dr. Pierce's
Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, and over
700 illustrations sent free on receipt of
stamps to defray expense of mailing only.
Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in
paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth
binding. Address Dr. V. M. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y.
CASTORIA
Bears thesignature of Chas.H. Fletcher.
In use for over thirty years, and
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Shoes.
Clothing.
—1If you always want to have the
best take the WATCHMAN and you'll
have it.
Little Hotel Wilmot.
The Little Hotel Wilmot
IN PENN SQUARE
One minute from the Penna Ry. Station
PHILADELPHIA
We have quite a few customers
from Bellefonte. We can take
care of some more. They'll like
us. A good room for $1. If you
bring your wife, $2. Hot and
cold running water in every room
The Ryerson W. Jennings Co.
Hats and Caps.
JUST 34
+ 20 OF THOSE
Men's Suits
AT
$10.00
left.
They are from
$15.00 to $20.00 values.
This wil
You will be
I clean them up.
sorry if you
miss getting one.
They are
"AUBLE’S
Automobiles.
..NEW FEATURES IN...
STUDEBAKER CARS
Three-Passenger Roadster and Five-Passenger “Six” Added to Line.
Prices are Lowered.
Timkin Bearings, Full Floating Rear Axle,
vice, Hot Jacketed Carburetor,
The equipment on all models includes the Wa,
tem, Gasoline gauge, dimming attachment
rumble gasoline tank in dash, crowned fende
Wagner Separate Unit Starting and Lighting,
n
Improved Design and Manufacturing Method Add to Values.
Crowned Fenders, Non-skid Tires on Rear,
Dimming Head Lights, Switch Locking De-
e-Man Type Top, :
gner separate-unit starting and lighting sys-
for'head lights, switch locking device, anti-
rs, Shibler carburetors and non-skid tires on
ersize tires.
rear wheels.
THE NEW PRICES. +
3-PASSENGER ROADSTER § 985
5-PASSENGR “SIX” TOURING 1385
5-PASSENGER “FOUR” TOURING $ 985
7-PASSENGER “SIX” TOURING 1450
PEE ———.,
TEI PR A
BE
GEORGE A. BEEZER, Propr.
EZER’S GARAGE.
59-3-tf
Bellefonte, Pa.
mens)