Bemorrif Wan Bellefonte, Pa., September 11, 1914, THE OTHER ALICE. “It’s all the fault of my abominable hand-writing, and careless habit of never crossing my t's,” reflected Owen Barton, as he reread the prim little note of acceptance from a girl he had never invited. “And I've no one but myself to blame,” he added in acknowledgement of the fact that Alice Barl and Alice Bart did look very much alike. “Of course, there’s nothing to do but carry off the situation as if I had in- “tended it that way, and take Miss Barl to the dance. I might have known she would be invited to the Darvin’s dance on Tuesday. The Barls are an old family here—older, even, than the Barts, and the Darvins belong to the conservative set. “But—why, the situation is ridicu- lous! I hardly know the girl.” He searched his memory for recollections of Miss Barl. It was fanciful fate that caused him to meet Alice Bart, the one of his choice, on his way home from the office that afternoon. She was stand- ing in front of a jeweler’'s window. “You are late,” greeted she. “Guy Pilson has been before you, and I've promised to go with him to the dance Tuesday night.” There seemed to be no doubt in her mind that he had in- tended to invite her, “Procrastination has defrauded many a better man,” retorted he regretfully. “Oh, well, we'll all be at the same place,” she returned lightly. Then the expression of her blue eyes changed to glittering hardness as her glance re- turned to the jewels. “I must have them—the diamond and sapphire necklace!” He could see the slim fingers grind together. “Father has more than half promised me—’ Barton’s eyes shone in responsive understanding. She seemed born for things like these, and it was his idea of serving the woman he loved to deck her with glittering jewels. “Some time—some time, Alice, 1 hope to be in a position to buy things like these, and have the right to give them to you—" He spoke with hur- ried eagerness. She laughed in response, but some- thing in its quality disappointed him; there was more calculating appraise- ment than tenderness in her eyes. As he presented himself at the old Barl homestead on the evening of the dance, he was met by Alice’s mother. When Alice appeared, dressed in a simple white dress, he exerted himself to please, and acknowledged to himself that though she was not the type he would have chosen, she was a girl any man might be proud to escort. Yet when he arrived at the Darvin’s and saw Alice Bart, his ardor for Ler flamed afresh. In a filmy chiffon gown over blue satin, she gave an effect not often seen in Edgetown, and about her throat was the necklace of @diz- monds and sapphires she had coveted in the jeweler’s window. During the evening Barton wan dered cut on the veranda for a coc: breath and a quiet smoke. At first : he thought he was alone, but in a fev, moments he discovered two men seated on a bench around the corncr. “For months I've foreseen this crash coming in Bart's affairs,” said one. “Fer old friendship’s sake, I'd have been willing to give him a loan to tide him over, if he'd shown any disposi- tion to retrench in his personal ex- « Ppenditure. For with care and economy "this might have been averted. But at . his present rate of living I knew I * might as well throw my money out in the street for all the real good it would do him.” “Yes, that’s true,” responded the other, and Barton recognized the voice of Matthews, the senior partner in the firm where he worl~7. “He's the sort that never dcnies his family anything —whether he can afford it or not. Why, only yesterday he bought his daughter a diamond and sapphire necklace.” “The one she’s wearing tonight?” “Yes, and the thing's caused much comment. Ycung Barton’s been beau- Jng her around a good deal lately. But I noticed tonight he brought ‘Paul + BarPs daughter—Alice, her name is, too, I believe. A fine little girl!” i “The other girl wculd ruin any rman,” returned the other lightly, as “he threw away his cigar and they re- «turned to the ballroom. A couple came out on the veranda and occupied the bench around the corner left vacant by the two men. , Then sudden perspiration stood out . on his forehead, for the couple was no . other than Alice Bart and Guy Pilson, a wealthy young fellow who was visit- ing in Edgetown. And before he knew it, Barton was " made witness to the latter’s proposal There was not much It was evident of marriage. sentiment about it. . that Pilson wanted a beautiful, accom- . plished woman to grace his millions, and Alice wanted millions to back her. beauty and accomplishments. ‘Presently they returned to the ball- room, but Barton. still sat in his shadowy corner—cutting dance after dance—and thinking. At last he no- ticed the guests were leaving and went in to find Misg Barl. During the ride home, her quiet, * gentle presence acted as a balm on his overwrought nerves. “Matthews is right—she’s fine andy would be a true helpmate to any man, and something in her soft, dark eyes - as she said good night gave him hope. ' {Copyright, 1914, by the McClure Newspa- per Syndicate.) - | to cut into one of these streams, will GREAT HARDNESS OF WATER Try It by Putting Your Arm Over- hoard When Riding in a Speed Boat. Here is a fact which is probably novel to the average man who has not spent much of his life thinking about motor speed beats. This is what we may call the hardness of the water when a boat is running at speed. Water at 50 miles an hour is not the limpid liquid we are accustomed to bathe in. If you put your arm over- board from a hydroplane running at 50 miles an hour and strike a wave crest the probability is that you will break your arm or wrist. because at that speed the water has not time to give, not time even to change shape, and striking it is like striking so much metal. In the great hydraulic mining noz- zles, where a stream of water under enormous head is used to wash down hillsides, a swordsman, in attempting shatter the sword without being able to penetrate the water. The stream is like a bar of iron. The fact that water at relative speed is so hard— or that its inertia is so great, to be a little more accurate—is the reason why a skipping stone travels over the surface, and is the reason why a hydroplane boat slides over the sur face instead of plowing its way through. The picture we must have in our minds, then, of a speed boat is that it is traveling not in water; as we ordi narily understand it, but over the sur- face of a semi-solid, very much as a’ sled travels over snow. The hard- ness of water at 50 miles an hour we might compare with the hardness of cheese—at rest—American Magazine. Women Naturally Seek Matrimony More Than Men Because of Teachings of Generations. Women have the marrying habit; men do not. This is not strange, for generations of girls have been taught that every woman should be married, i and that to remain unwed is a dis- grace. Being a “married woman” has | been a sort of boast of superiority on | the part of wives. Naturally, because , their mothers and almost every other person of their own sex put a great : deal of emphasis on the desirability of being married, and none at all on . the desirability, which sometimes ex- ists, of remaining unmarried, girls looked on marriage as the goal of ambition, and bent their whole ener- gies to getting husbands. Rather than endure the unjust stig- ; ma of being ‘“cld maids” they too! the first man who gave them a chance. Their object was not love, : not a husband, but simply to acquire ; the status, privileges and deférence ° which they had been taught were de- . nied to all of their sex except the “married woman,” : Can you imagine anything more dis- astrous? Hon ag | Yet this is only half the story. The other half consists in the fact that ; the very same mothers who fairly drive their daughters to marry are | singularly reluctant to see their sens | wed. The mother who is employing | all the arts and craft of the chase to ’ entrap some other woman’s son for | her daughter’s husband, will weep at ilie announcement that the other ! woman’s daughter has shackled her | sen.—Mother’s Magazine. ! QUEER THINGS ABOUT DEBT Only Thinv That Goes Contrary to Naturz’s Laws—Every Debtor Is a Creditor. Debt is the one thing which goes cenfrary to the laws of nature, be- cause you can contract and expand it at the same time. Nothing exceeds like debt. g Everyone is always in debt to some one else. Every debtor is a creditor, every creditor is a debtor. There be- ing no clearing héuse of humanity, the thing goes on from day to day getting more complicated. When you borrow money from a man who is willing to lend it to you, you are his creditor to the extent that you have favored him with an oppor- tunity. Everybody starts by owing the gov- ernment his part of the interest on the national debt. As this is increas- ing all the time, the fatal habit some people have of putting off the day of their birth counts against them. It is declared to be immoral for poor people to borrow money. Rich people, who have inherited money which really doesn’t belong to them, can, however, borrow all the money they can get, a practise considered highly proper. Debt is a poor sleeping companion. He won’t stay hitched. If you put him off in a room by himself and draw down the blinds, he always breaks loose and interrupts you just when you are beginning to enjoy your- self. If you fail to pay his board and lodging, he grows larger and eats more. And what a witless companion he is!—Life. " Too Much Decoration. Mr, Smith, out walking with his small son Bobby, met Mr. Brown, a fellow architect. They strolled along together. To keep their minds in work- ing trim, the two men patronizingly picked out the good and bad ualities of the new buildings they passed. Presently Bobby spied a spotted dog. “Look, father,” he said scornfully— “look at that dog. I don’t like ft. There’s too much work on it!”—Every- body's. ‘Depew on the War. Former Senator Chauncey M. ‘Depew, who has long been an ardent admirer and personal friend of the Kaiser, severe- ly censured the German ruler in an in- terview with the World correspondent. “This war is the crime of all centu- ries,” said Mr. Depew with impressive earnestness. “Itis a crime of ambition —the dream of a man who thinks him- self another Napoleon. “Ten million men will die as the result, directly or indirectly, of this crime, and for generatiohs Europe will suffer in- calculably. ? “It is almost incredible to think,” con- tinued Mr. Depew, “that one man could throw the whole world back into the six- teenth century. Something is wrong with the Kaiser. Either his environment is at fault, or there has been a complete re- versal of his mental processes. “This war will mean the geratest im- pulse for socialism that history records. It will mean an end to all kings with real powers and an end to all bully buieau- cracies.” It is recalled that on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Kaiser’s reign, Mr. Depéw’s speech in honor of the German monarch attracted world-wide attention as a model of expression.—Gazetie Times. “Prevention is better than cure,” says the familiar proverb. So familiar indeed is that proverb that we lose its force. We need to be reminded that prevention is better than cure because it saves us time. money and suffering. We also need the reminder that prevention is a great deal easier than cure. Many times disease which might have been prevented cannot be cured at any cost. About one-sixth of the deaths of this country are due to consumption. The use of Dr. Pierce's | Golden Medical Discovery has saved thousands and thousands of men and women who suffered from obstinate | cough, bronchitis, “weak lungs,” bleeding | of the lungs, and similiar ailments, which, | if neglected, or unskillfully treated, lead y to consumption. Ninty-eight per cent. | of those who give “Golden Medical Dis- | covery” a fair and faithful trial, are per- manently benefited. There is nothing “just of good” as Dr. Pierce’s Golden | Medical Discovery. -—They are all good enough, but the WATCHMAN is always the best. Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Shoes. Pure Rich Blood Prevents Disease Bad blood.—that is, blood that is im- pure or impoverished, thin and pale,—is responsible for more ailments than any- thing else. It affects every organ and function. In some cases it causes catarrh; in others, dyspepsia: in others, rheumatism; and in still others, weak, tired, languid feelings and worse troubles. It is responsible for run-down condi- tions, and is the most common cause of disease. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the greatest puri- fier and enricher of the blood the world has ever known. It has been wonderful- ly successful in removing scrofula and other humors, increasing the red-blood corpuscles, and building up the whole system. Get it today. 59-34 Excursion. Niagara F alls] Personally-Conducted Excursions September 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. 59-25-16. er Ws mn anew imme von I. EY Ew SRI The tel RE pressure. better in your own bus Telephone now. : BELL TELEPHONES. ephone is business steam Install Bell Telephone Service in your shop or office, and watch the business dial jump with the increased You can prove it by thousands of other men whose Bell Telephones help in every transaction and speed up their affairs. iness by getting a Bell Do you know the rates? Call the Business Office from the nearest public telephone and find out how little it will cost per month. The Bell Telephone Co. of Pa. W. 8S. MALLALIEU, Local Mgr. Bellefonte, Pa. 7 Re You can prove it still zz wp NN AAEEAEEHEEAAAAAEEEEEAEAAAR AAA AEE EIS MIS AE EE A A A IS A Dollar That Can’t Be Spent By HERBERT KAUFMAN Author of *‘Do Something! Be Something!’’ VERY dollar spent in advertising is not only a seed dollar which E produces a profit for the merchant, but is actually retained by him even after he has paid it to the publisher. Advertising creates a good will equal to the cost of the publicity. Advertising really costs nothing. While it uses funds it does not use them up. It helps the founder of a business to grow rich and then keeps his business alive after his death. It eliminates the personal equation. [t perpetuates confidence in the store and makes it possible for a merchant to withdraw from business without having the profits of the business withdrawn from him. It changes a name to an institution—an institution which will survive its builder. It is really an insurance policy which costs nothing—pays a premium each year instead of calling for one and renders it possible to change the entire personnel of a business without disturbing its prosperiry. Advertising renders the business stronger than the man—inde- pendent of his presence. It permanentizes systems of merchandis- ing, the track of which is left for others to follow. _ A business which is not advertised must rely upon the personality of its proprietor, and personality in business is a decreasing factor. The public does not want to know the man who owns the store— it isn’t interested in him but in his goods. When an unadvertised business is sold it is only worth as much as its stock of goods and its fixtures. There is no good will to be paid for—it does not exist— it has not been created. The name over the door means nothing except to the limited stream of people from the immediate neighbor- hood, any of whom could tell you more about some store ten miles away which has-regularly delivered its shop news to their homes. It is as shortsighted for a man to build a business which dies with his death or ceases with his inaction, as it is unfair for him not to provide for the continuance of its income to his family. - (Copyright.) AN - re Yeager’s Shoe Store x "FITZEZY” The bates! Shoe that Cures Corns Sold only at Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Building; BELLEFONTE, PA 68-27 Dry Goods, Eic. LYON & COMPANY. La Vogue Coats and Suits We have just received another large assort- ment of new styles in Ladies’ Coats and Suits. We can show two hundred different models in these garments. La Vogue Coats and Suits offer the newest style features at moderate cost. A remarkable combination of reason- able prices and authentic styles. The very modes favored by fashion’s leaders; the iden- tical designs your magazines have described, we have ready for your inspection. Those who choose now will get a full season’s wear . at no advanced cost. Misses’ and Children’s Coats in white and all the new dark colors. Dress Goods and Silks. Our Silk department is now at its best. New stripes, plaids and brocades, for street and evening wear. Brocaded chiffons for the new blouse. All the new weaves in the wool- en fabrics in stripes, plaids and plain for suits and dresses. ; Lyon & Co. .... Bellefonte