Bewuifvan Bellefonte, Pa, November 6, 1914. WEAT TBEY LON'T HEAR The girl who likes to talk dropped the slice of lemon into her tea, medi- tatively. “It’s perfectly wonderful,” she mused, “how deaf a ‘man grows after he's married. “When he’s just engaged,” she went on, “he can hear his adored one’s faint- st whisper in a boiler’ factory going full blast, but afterward—honest, I've seen women who had to chloroform their husbands and tie them hand and foot before they could get the wretches to listen to something that it was ab- solutely necessary to tell them! “There’s my brother Edgar. Now, he’s a perfectly good brother and al- ‘ways bought me exactly as fine candy and flowers as he gave the girl he happened to be in love with, and nat- urally I think a great deal of him. I never saw anything like the devotion he bestowed upon Mae while they were engaged. It was what you might call oppressive to the innocent by- stander. “If Mae was at one end of a ball room 70 feet long and Edgar at the ‘other surrounded by a cordon of men and Mae chanced to whisper to her partner that she believed she had dropped her handkerchief, I give you my word that Edgar would plunge through that mass of men instantly as though he were the locomotive draw- ing the 18-hour special to New York. And before Mae’s partner had time to stoop Edgar had recovered the hand- jkerchief, presented it to her and anx- Jously inquired whether there wasn’t ‘something else he could do for her, all before the dead and wounded that marked the tumultuous progress through the ballroom had had time to pick themselves up and dust them- selves off! “I began to believe that Edgar suf- ferred from what is known as acute hearing. He always was leaning anx- ously forward and saying: ‘Yes—what did you say, dear? Afraid he might miss something, you see. Well, they've been married two years now, and he's Just as much in love with her as ever, ‘but I'll tell you what happens when it is necessary for Mae to communicate something to Edgar. The scene is after {dinner and Edgar has the newspaper. Says Mae: ‘“‘Edgar!” Then she repeats the ‘name three times. Then from behind he paper comes a sound like ‘H'm?’ ays Mae, ‘Edgar, the queerest thing Bappened today. The man who was to ring your new suit of clothes deliv- ered a pound of prunes instead!’ "Thrilling silence from behind the pa- er. Mae takes a deep breath. ‘Ed- Pe she says, ‘the tailor’s man left a [pound of prunes today instead of your Dew suit!’ “‘Jemima!’ explodes Edgar at this nstant, ‘listen to this.” Then he reads ‘something aloud from his newspaper. ! “Half an hour later when he goes to ut on his new suit and finds a pound of prunes instead he raves and wants fto know why on earth Mae couldn't ake enough interest in his affairs to tell him! “Why, there’s a deep ocean rumble {all over this broad land of wives tell ing things to their husbands who aren’t listening. It’s a substratum on which are built all the conversations and all he daily deeds that are done! Hus: bands are being told that the gas bil’ is overdue and that it looks as though Willie was coming down with the jmeasles; that mother is coming for a six months’ visit and that the new jvelvet gown from Celeste is ruined, ‘that the cook has left, or mice have ‘eaten the best bindings on the library jshelves, or the White's dinner party ‘is postponed, or that Uncle Hiram had a stroke of paralysis yesterday—and do they hear? They do not. | “They go blissfully on in their calm, peaceful, unlistening mental attitude, tand let the dear creatures babble fran tically, imploringly, beseechingly. “The only time they came out of ytheir trance is when they find the gas man has turned off the gas or discover mother’s trunk in the guest room and [then they demand to be told why. The wise wife does not burst into tears and insist that she has already told ‘her husband 16 times—she says meek- ly ‘Yes, dear, it is my fault, and 1 Jshould have informed you’—and then goes downtown and charges something perfectly awful on that month’s dry oods bill in revenge. He doesn’t know it’s revenge—he calls it extravagance, but that gives him something to talk about and keeps him amused, so it's for his own good. : “Do you know what I'm going to do jwhen I get a husband?” asked the girl ho likes to talk. “When I have some- ing to tell him I'm going to send him telegrams, collect, to his office!” Philippine Trade Schools. In keeping with the program of the foureau of education to encourage pu- ils and teachers to produce articles f commercial value, the division su- rintendent of schools at Albay, in he Philippines, has requested the eachers to encourage the pupils to pend their vacation in the household ndustry centers established in their ‘towns. According to the Daily Con- ular Report, the Leyte trade school s wrested from Iloilo the distinction of being the most advanced trade chool in the bureau of education. ork in the Leyte trade school dur ing the past year amounted to $11,142, lout of which $2,572 was paid to the fpupils for their work. One pupil learned $113 during the year, and two other boys earned $76 each. [rN WANDERING ISLANDS. Those of the Rio Grande Made Trouble For Us With Mexico. The wandering islands of the Rio Grande in their migrations from side to side of the water course have caused years of diplomatic correspondence and ' 4 discussion between the United States | C2Urt attendant said reprovingly on and Mexico. The refusal of certain small bodies of land to remain perma- nently attached to one or the other of the river's banks deprived them of a fixed legal status as either Mexican or American territory and brought about their participation in many illegal ad- ventures, which in turn led to misun- derstandings between the two coun- tries. In no river is spirit more evident ' than in the Rio Grande. Along its sinuous route below Rio Grande City it pushes its way through miles of level sand in its final reach for the ! 1f, twi 1 ; guir, twisting and donbling upon itself ; was summoned to Versailles to play like a sea serpent. In 1848 it was fix- ed upon as the boundary line between the United States and Mexico. The boundary was to be the “middle of the river, following the deepest channel.” But the river possessed characteristics that had not impressed themselves upon the framers of the convention as ! possible causes of friction between the people living along its banks. dition to its eroding power, exercised through long months of low and mean water, it could during flood periods leap with torrential force across a narrow neck of land at the base of one of its long loops and cut for itself a new channel. action of the river Texas soil would casions a plantation occupied by jacals and Mexican citizens would overnight find itself a part of Texas. An example will serve to show both the extraordinary actions of the river and the difficulties in the way of any satisfactory adjustment of conflicting interests. A certain Josiah Turner be- gan to farm the Galveston ranch, on the Texas bank. Eight years later he | | | | | ~ PEPPERY COMPOSERS. Masters of Music Who Had Nice Tem- pers of Their Own. The conditions under which we live : and work have made the American peo- ple a nation of pill users. Naturally ; many pills are put on the market that i.are simply made to meet the require- Even in the presence of his royal | ments of those to whom any pill is a pill, * pupils Handel would sometimes fly into ° In ad- | Through such avulsive | most violent passions. “You forget yourself, Mr. Handel,” a one such occasion. “You should show more respect to her royal highness!” “Royal highness!” snorted the musi- cian contemptuously. “Bah! De re- spect is due to me! There are many brincesses, but only one Handel!” On another occasion, when George IL. sent a message summoning him to an interview, he returned this answer: “Dell his bajesty he bust waid. By tibe is bore imbordant dan his!” Viotti, the famous French musician i of the eighteenth century, had an equal contempt for royalty and an ex- aggerated - opinion of himself, as the following story shows: One day he before Marie Antoinette and the court. The performance had begun; the open- ing bars of his favorite solo command- ed breathless attention. when a cry was heard: “Place for Mgr. the Comte d’Artois!” At the sound Viotti immediately ceased piaying, cast an indignant glance at his audience, placed his vio- lin under his arm and walked out of the place. When Marie Antoinette once inquir- ed of Gluck how his new opera was progressing he answered, “Madame, it is nearly finished, and I assure you it will be superb,” a conceit which was rivaled by that of Meyerbeer, who, sometimes become Mexican, and on oc- | When a friend declared that if any. ; on his head. answered, thing better could be composed than one of his rival operas he would dance “If that is so I should advise you to start practicing at once. for I have just commenced the fourth act of “The Huguenots!’ ” Even Haydn. usually the most mod- est of men, showed at times that he ; had as good an opinion of his own was surprised when 221 acres of Mexi- can land came across the river and at- tached itself to his ranch. An arrange- ment was effected by which he became the owner of this land. Six years later the river cut off a piece of Mr. Tur- ner’s land and took it to Mexico. Twen- ty-one years later the river made up its | mind to repay the farmer for what it had taken from him and so carried back into Texas a piece of land far larger than the tract originally lost. The Mexican owners claimed posses- sion, and a new convention dealing with the questions under dispute be- came necessary. Brigadier General Anson Mills, U. 8. A, appointed to represent the United States. recommended that the “cutoffs” be forever elimindted from the hound- ary line, all those occurring on the right of the river to pass to the juris- diction of Mexico, those on the left to that of Texas. The inhabitants, if any, should retain their citizenship in the country from which they had been so suddenly and violently detached, or they might acquire the nationality of the country to which they were now attached. Any cutoff exceeding 650 acres in area and having a population of over 200 souls was not to be consid- ered a banco, and the old bed of the river should remain the boundary. A convention embodying his recommenda- tions was finally ratified by both coun- ' tries. Thus the great turbid, silt bear- ing river is left to pursue its way un- trammeled, but the terrors so long syn- , onymous with its name have through the operation of this equable arrange- ment become a part of the storied, ro- mantic past. Corpuscles In Normal Blood. Normally there are approximately 5,000,000 red blood corpuscles in the cubic millimeter. merits as any of his admirers. On one occasion, when a friend said to him of his “Salomon” symphonies, “Sir, I am strongly of opinion that you will never surpass these wonderful symphonies.” he answered placidly, “No; I never mean to attempt the im- possible!” CURIOUS CARD TRICK. It Deals With. Odd Numbers, and the Explanation Is a Mystery. There is a puzzle which may be per- formed with any odd number of ob- jects, playing cards being usually em- ployed, and which any one can do, but no one seems able to explain the rea- son for it. Let us suppose the number selected to be twenty-seven cards, al- though fifteen or twenty-one would do just as well. : After having them shuffled hold them in the left hand face upward and then deal them face upward one at a time in three piles so that the fourth card comes on the first and the fifth on the top of the second and so on until you have three piles of nine cards each. Request any person who is watching you to make a silent note of any card he pleases, and when you have finished dealing to tell you in which pile the card lies. By picking up the three piles again one at a time as before, the not- ed card will reappear. Ask in which pile it came that time and place that pile in the middle as before. Upon dealing the cards into three piles for the third time note carefully the card that comes in the middle of each pile. With twenty-seven there will be nine in each pile and the fifth will be the middle card. Now, when i the person who selected the card names ' the pile in which his card comes you The number is tem- | porarily diminished during fatigue and ' after the ingestion of much fluid. Fast- ing and profuse sweating increase the number of red blood cells by concen- trating the blood. In high altitudes the number is also increased. There are 5,000 to 10,000 white cells in the cubic millimeter, the ratio of white to red cells being about 1 to 500. In health the blood amounts to ‘about one- thirteenth of the body weight. New Zealand Oddities. The crow in New Zealand strikes as sweet note as any head in the wood- |, land. The robin has no song and no red breast. The native hen is the great- est of rat killers. There is a caterpillar which turns into a plant. These and some other productions of nature have done for New Zealand what the kanga- roo and the ornithorhynchus have done for Australia—given it the suggestion of oddity and the marvelous. Just Practicing. “Son, you mustn't carve your name | on the piano. Another such episode and I'll punish you severely.” “Dad, how can you expect me to ' carve my name in the temple of fame when you won't let me get any prace tice?”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Musical Term. ater you know anything about muv- Cc 29 “Yes,” replied Mr. Growcher. “What's a rest?’ “The time it takes ’em to change the record in the music machine next door.”—Washington Star. That's Different. Mrs, Exe (complainingly)—Such serv- ants as we get nowadays! Mrs. Wye —Well, one can’t expect all the virtues for $4 a week. you know. Mrs. Exe— But I pay $5.—Boston Transcript. In the battle of life we cannot hire a substitute.—Harold Bell Wright. will know it was the middle card of that pile. With this knowledge in your possession you can finish the trick in any manner you please. This is only a statement of results, but what is the explanation or reason for it? What is the rule that makes it always come out right, regardless of the number of objects used, so that it is odd?—New York Suan ee emma: rei. The Box Was Good. Wife—Charles, wasn’t that a good box of cigars 1 gave you on your birthday? Husband—I never saw a better box, my dear. Flour and Feed. (CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hendat at fi times the following brands of high grade fl WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT place in the county where that extraor- y fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food and feed of all kinds. All kinds of Grain bought at xchanged for wheat. ug the office , Flour The onl; dinari OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. 7-19 MILL AT ROOPBSURG. i ! and one pill as good as another. But there is progress even in pills, and at the front of this pill progress stand Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, a scientific medicine which relieves constipation, and does not beget the pill habit. Coal and Wood. A. G. Morris, Jr. DEALER IN HIGH GRADE ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS AND CANNEL COAL Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw and Sand. ALSO FEDERAL STOCK AND POULTRY FOOD BOTH ’PHONES. LIME AND LIMESTONE. Me TO LOAN on good security and Meat Market. (Get the Best Meats. You save nothin by buying poor, thin or gristly meats. i use onl LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, Dest blood and muscle mak- — DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. Restaurant. ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, Oysters on the half shell or in any style yd Sa wiches, Soups, and an; eatable, can be had in a few minutes any time. In dition I have a complete plant prepared to furnish Soft Dri in bottles such as POPS, SODAS, SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener- ally all of which are manufactured out of the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. Money to Loan. houses to rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, Attorney at. Law. 51-14-1v. te Pa. LIME. Lime and Limestone for all purposes. H-O Lime Put up in 40 to 50 Pound Paper Bags. LIME. 58-28-6m for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- ical form most careful farmers are using. High Calcium Central Pennsylvania I.ime American Lime & Stone Company., Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown and Spring Meadows, Pa General Office: TYRONE, PA. Groceries. Groceries. Fruits, Confectionery and FINE GROCERIES. The Finest Meadow Gold Brand Creamery Butter at 40c per pound. Large Spanish and home-grown Onions, sound and in good order. If you want a fine, sweet, juicy Ham, let us supply you. Oranges are a standard fruit for all seasons. The goods we are now receiving are the California Valen- . cia variety, of excellent quality at 25¢, 30c and 40c per dozen. Extra fancy large fruit at 50c and 60c per dozen. Bananas are also an all-year- round fruit. We give careful atten- tion to having nice, clean yellow fruit. When you want some nice, clean fruit send us your order and you will be pleased. Our Olives are large and of the very finest flavor at 40c per quart. Burnett's and Knight's Extracts, Crosse & Blackwell's Table Vinegar in bottles. Durkee’s Salad Dressing. SECHLER & COMPANY, 57.1 -- - Bush House Block, - . Farm Implements. Buy some of our fine cheese and compare it with other goods. We have a fine grade of Olive Oil in tins of half pint, one pintand one quart size. But none of the oils in tin will compare in quality or body with our high grade Rae’s Lucca Oil which comes only in glass of three sizes, at 30c, 50c and 90c per bottle. : STIILL IN THE PRESERVING SEASON. We sell pure Spices by weight only—we keep no package Spices. We have a full strength pure Cider Vinegar and a White Vinegar of high grade, each one at 25c per gallon. You can depend on these goods being just what you want. New Evaporated Peaches, Apri- cots and prunes are just now ar- riving. We are up-to-date on all these items. Let us have your orders. Bellefonte, Pa. : Farmers’ Supply Store, BELLEFONTE, PA. look it over—oprice is right. for all time, force and lift easy. The Cow and Hen are Money Earners. The American Cow and Hen are money earners and the question is all in the balanced rations, that are required to bring out their productiveness. FEED THE COW ENSILAGE and use the Blizzard Ensilage Cutter for Silo filling. All Experimental Sta- tions use the Blizzard. Easy to operate and has a self feeder, making it ab- solutely safe for the operator. We have one here on our floor. Come in and THE NEW IDEA MANURE SPREADER is second to none and will do the work to your satisfaction. Wiard Walking and Sulkey Plows, Spring and Spike tooth Harrows, Single and Double Disc Harrows, Steel Land Rollers, Grain Drills, Galvanized Water Troughs, Cast Iron Hog Troughs—rat proof, any length, Galvanized Chain Pumps—good Running Pumps carried in stock—put in the well and guaranteed. Cutting Boxes and Corn Crackers, Corn Shellers— both hand and power, Poultry Netting, Poul Scrap, Alfalfa Meal and Charcoal—everything to make the hen profitable. BROOKVILLE WAGONS A SPECIALTY. A Ladders—both single and extension, up to 40 feet J for apple) picking. All kind of field SEED * = at the right price and will stand up to the State's Test. carry 5 to 6 grades in stock to suit all customers and at prices as low as any tramp agent offers you as he says at cost. Look out Iokiout foriHie: the runners who are selling at cost. JOHN G. T Both Phones. Grit, Oyster Shells, Beef n't worry about Fertilizers, we | DUBBS, BELLEFONTE, PA. ER, Attorneys-at-Law. KLINE INE WOODRING=Aliomey. at- Law Belle Pa, Practicesin all courts fous 18Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-ly. B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Practices in inal the Courts. Consultetion | in English rman Xchange. Bellefonte, Pa. ee in Crijers 40-; S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Co llor ba. Se ar CPi i on! a, tended to promotiy. ol legal a J H. of le; usin to promptly. ne oa) business. German M. JEL IND Atomev. at-Law. Practices in all the co Consultatio; English and A an Office south ion Jb Enka All professional bs - Al prof i usiness will receive proln Eye ous. KENNEDY JOHNSTON-—Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention en all legal business entrusted ces—No. 5 East Hieh street. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul- tation in English and Germ: Office in Crider’s aes Bellefonte. 58-5 Physicians. to his care. Offi- 57-44. ERS GLENN, M. D., Ph d State ate College, C Centre ins Se W?* Dentists. R. J. BL CARD, D. D. S,, office next door to net Fart hE ada iniste: d for r painless extract- eeth. Superi eth, 8 or Crown and Bridge work, Prices Dentist, Office in D5 H, ” al: Arcade Bo 2] onte, Pa. All mod- ours om Disha appliances Has had Jease perience LA A; work of Superior quality Plumbing. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have dripping steam pi , leaky water- fixtures, foul sewe ot pes escaping as, you can’t have good Health, TH The air you reathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’s the only kind you ought to have. Wedon’t trust this ak to ys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior ariicle | in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are lower than many who give you r, unsanitary work and the owes de o the Best Work t 21a Sssnngs. Vor Archibald “Allison, Opposite Bush House - 56-14-1v. Bellefonte, Pa Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life "Accident Insurance. Tis Agency represents the largest Fi Insurance ro in the World. re —— NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BENEFITS: %3.000 death b; accident; 5,000 joss of Eh fen is ,000 loss of both han 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 per week, total disability, (limit 52 weeks) 10 per week, partial disability, (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. alae or smaller amounts in proportion Any person, male or female, eng in preferred occupation, inclu house eeping, over eighteen years of age good moral and physical condition mag nsure under this poiicv. Fire Insurance a invite your i attention to my Fire Insu1 ce Agency, the strongest and Most Ex Pe ine of Solid Companies represen! ed by any agency in Cen Central Pennsylvan:T : H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING 0—A SPECIALTY—o0 WATCHMAN OFFICE. the finest BOOK WORK, cannot do inthe most satis- A and at Prices consist- There is no eof orl from the pest ** v3 fact « ent with the class of work. Call onor comr with this office’