Demorralic ata, Belletonte, Pa., January 29, 1915. scm. A DOMESTIC TREASURE. Mrs. Lyman sat at the breakfast ta- i ble in her 99-cent calico wrapper, which was clean but unattractive, and listened rather wearily to her adored husband’s conversation. In her youth she had been called a beauty, but 12 years of unselfish pam- pering of her family, together with a constant struggle to “get ahead” upon a limited allowance, had merged her charms into workaday obscurity. She had become nothing more than 2 housekeeper who was “careful and troubled about many things.” Mr. Lyman did not suspect that he was not a model family man. He had grown accustomed to seeing his wife work from morning until night, keep- ing their home in immaculate order, making dainty clothing for the chil- dren, and cooking meals to please his | fastidious taste. On this particular morning, he was discussing pretty Mrs. Hickson, the wife of his new partner. “She is really the most delightful |! woman I have met in manyea day,” he | said, with candid enthusiasm. “She is | so bright and up to date and young- | looking; I was surprised to learn that che is the own mother of Hickson’s fif- teen-year-old daughter. I supposed she was a second wife.” «] heard Mrs. Hickson say she had always ‘boarded, since her marriage,” quietly remarked Mrs. Lyman. “Of course she has lots of time to take pains with herself. I guess she doesn’t do much but play bridge and flirt.” «Phat is very ungenerous, Bess,” | “Mrs. Hick- : son is a lady of exquisite taste, and said Lyman reprovingly. you should not be scandalized because she is not inclined to be a back num- ber. I don’t wonder that Hickson is proud of her.” «1 don’t think she is as pretty as mamma,” loyally declared little Bert Lyman, whose youthful mind grasped the inference that his idolized mother was suffering from indirect criticism. Mr. eLyman laughed. ; “There was a time, son, when your mamma was a daisy in looks, but that was before she settled down and had | twoeexpensive youngsters to take care of.” “And a popular society man,” added Mrs. Lyman, with a shadowy smile. Lyman did not appear to catch any | sarcastic intonation in his wife's mild | observation. “Well, IT must go downtown,” he said, glancing at his watch. “A man can’t linger forever in the bosom of | his family. By the way, Bess, I wish | you would see that my evening clothes | are all right. I'm going to an Elks’ re- | ception tonight. There will be a dance | afterward, and that calls for stiff togs.” “Are you going, mamma?” asked Vera, the small daughter of the house of Lyman. “No, dear, T hadn’t thought of going anywhere.” . Lyman looked up in careless won- der. “Go, of course, if you wish, Bess. 1 didn’t think to ask you, be- cause you never care for such af- fairs.” Mrs. Lyman gave her customary an- swer to her husband’s indifferent in- vitation. «I think I should prefer to stay with the children.” She did not mention the fact that all her party gowns were several years behind the fashion. - “I thought so,” said Lyman, accom- panying the remark with a light con- jugal kiss. “Those muffins were tip- top, and the beefsteak broiled to the queen’s taste. Nobody can beat you, Bess, in the culinary department, even if you don’t shine in social functions.” After the children had departed for school, and the morning's work had been done, with the inefficient aid of the diminutive colored maid-of-all- work, Mrs. Lyman went to her room. Seating herself before her dressing- table, she gazed critically at her re: flection in the mirror. “I am altogether too domestic,” she commented audibly. “I think I'll fur- bish up a little, even if we go without a new parlor carpet and lace curtains in the sitting room.” During the following week, Mrs. Ly- man went on several secret pilgrim- ages downtown, and heroically prac- ticed mysterious exercises in the se- clusion of her room. When Mr. Lyman announced his in- tention of taking a trip to Chicago on business which might detain him a few days, he did not notice that his wife packed his suitcase with unusual cheerfulness nor did he think it strange that she made him promise to wire her when to expect him back. Chance sometimes assists plotters, and Mrs. Lyman’s plans to amaze her liege lord were aided, beyond her ex- pectations, by his accidentally meet- ing, on his way home, a traveling man who was an old acquaintance. They crowded as many reminiscences |° and jokes as possible into the two hours they spent together on the train, but still their fund of anecdotes was not exhausted. “As you are going to make my town,” said Lyman, “why can’t you put up at my house? I can promise you a good dinner, and tonight I'll take you to the club, and show you a jolly bunch of boys.” “1 wouldn't like to drop into your family circle inopportunely,” objected the friend politely, really yearning for a home meal. “Oh, that’s all right,” said Lyman re- assuringly. “My wife is the good sort, and makes everybody welcome. She 1 | | will treat you to cooking that will meit ‘in your mouth, though she may re- : ceive you in a calico dress, just as she | comes from a kitchen. Sometimes I | wish she had a little more style, but ‘she is a domestic treasure. I'll bet ' she can make a dollar go farther than | any other woman of the present gener- : ation.” { When the train pulled into the sta- : tion, the two gentlemen hurried out | upon the long platform, chatting jovi- ally. | Suddenly Lyman caught a glimps of ; a trim, graceful woman, in a modish | tailor-made black suit, with her blonde hair fetchingly marcelled beneath a heavily plumed hat. | “There is a swell woman,” ex- ! claimed Lyman. “I can’t fancy her {in a calico wrapper.” | The lady under inspection turned | her head in a way that gave Lyman a : full view of her face. Instantly his | eyes bulged with astonishment. | “She looks as Bess used to,” he | muttered faintly. “It can’t be possi- | ble. It is, by Jove.” Mrs. Lyman’s perfect costume in- | spired her with self-confidence, and nothing could have been prettier than | her manner of greeting her puzzled | spouse. | “Why, Bess, I—I'm surprised,” he | stammered, fairly limp from bewilder- | ment. | “You act as though you had en- | countered a ghost,” was the laughing | retort. | Lyman collected his wits sufficiently | to introduce his friend, who pinched { him on the sly and whispered: | “You're a rare humbug. Home body! Calico wrappers! Good Lord! Tell | that to some other scout.” | Lyman had hardy recovered his com- | posure when they reached home. | Mrs. Lyman led the trio, and was cordial in seconding her husband’s hospitality, remarking ingeniously: “I am afraid you will find things rather | ‘muddled. I have been out all the af- i ternoon, and left the children playing | circus.” i ! Lyman scarcely recognized his the first time, and he was almost speechless with mortification and dis dinner of tough fried steak, plemented by a thin lemon pie from a bakeshop. . The mystified husband felt that he | must be dreaming. Mrs. Lyman seemed sweetly unconcerned, and :n her awkward maid. joker, and wondered if he would be able to get a satisfactory lunch at the club. ; his wife aside, and whispered: company, too!” “I didn’t get the dinner,” said Bess innocently. . | man; “but why didn’t you?” man, not a whit abashed. of being merely a queen of the cu linary art, and IT am going to try to be as young and agreeable as Mrs. Hick: son. It would be great fun to be taken for your second wife. upon the table. to-date clothes. “Hereafter I shall be ready to attend parties with you. Of course, you will not mind a few extra bills. I know me—I have been such a frump—but it is never too late to mend.” Found the Cause. bit? I have my way of earning a liv. ing and they have theirs.” “But what about doctors?” asked. “Oh, I was in a town in Indiana last week and one day I felt shivers go up my back. I went to a doctor and he said I was in for the grip. Then hot flashes came and I went to another i. D. He said it was a case of typhoid and wanted me to go to the hospital at once. Felt a bit better, but went tc a third, and he said it might be a case of bubonic plague or spinal menin gitis. He was way off, however.” “But did anything really ail you?” “For sure.” “Then you got over it very speedily.” “I did. I brought my will power to bear, you see. Yes, something ailed me. I was in love with a mighty good-looking girl and I found out that she was a grass widow and had nc chance to get a divorce under five years!” London’s Wonder Street. Fleet street was formerly the won der place of London, where all that was novel, bizarre and marvelous was exhibited by enterprising showmen Ben Jonson alludes to “a new notion of the city of Nineveh, with Jonah and the whale, at Fleet bridge,” and at the Eagle and Child was exhibited a col lection of freaks and monstrosities that set the whole town agape. In 1710, too, was advertised as on exhi bition at Fleet bridge, “two strange, wonderful and remarkable monstrous creatures, an old she dromedary, sev en feet high and ten feet long, lately arrived from Tartary with her young one, being the greatest wonder, rarity and novelty ever seen in the threc kingdoms.” home, in which disorder reigned for | no way disturbed by the unappetizing repast, or by the blundering service of | Never had her conversation been so engaging. The visitor thought his host had developed into a bad practical Lyman finally began to get angry. After the wretched meal was finished, | i “but not “eater; he contrived to draw | i “What under heaven do you mean, Bess, in getting up such a dinner—for | “lI should say not,” grumbled Ly- i “For two reasons,” replied Mrs. Ly- : “I am tired “I have decided that it doesn’t pay to spend so much of my allowance: Tt shows more in up | Dr. G. H. Wells at Homeopathic Meet- ing, Tel Tow to Escape Heart Disease. Atlantic City, N. J.—Lolling means longevity and would save the present generation from heart disease, assert- ed Dr. G. Harlan Wells of the Hahne- mann Medical college, Philadelphia, in a paper read before the American Institute of Homeopathy. “It means that the heart simply has to push the blood through the arter- jes and veins,” he said, “instead of having to lift 150 tons more than four feet from the ground daily during the time an ordinary human being is awake. “People of the earlier periods and the savages lolled at every opportu- nity, stretching out flat while eating and lying on their backs while rest- ing. They didn’t have heart disease and the copying of their methods would save the present generation from that ailment.” Speaking before the bureau of ped- ology, Dr. Joseph P. Cobb of Chicago said that of two and a half million ba- bies born in the United States each year half a million die before they are a year old. serted, 60 per cent are attributable to gastro-intestinal diseases, and at least turbances as contributory factors. the subject of infant feeding,” said Dr. manity. The great mass is still de- pendent upon the instruction of physi- cians and nurses and the mothers of the preceding generation. lack of attention and study given ma- ternal feeding by the physician di- rectly in charge of the baby.” SUNDAY UP ON PIKE'S PEAK Noted Ball-Player Evangelist Has “Best Time of His Life” on Famous Mountain. Colorado Springs, Colo.—Billy Sun- ways trying to knock the devil out of i The photo shows Billy, who is now on Billy Sunday on Pike’s Peak. a tour of the West, engaged in a snow- ball fight on the summit of Pike's | Peak, 14,147 feet above the sea. Mr. | Sunday, because of the fact that he is | always in training, was the only one ' | of the party who was unaffected by the | you must have often been ashamed of | high altitude of the playground, where | during his stay here he can be found ! almost every Monday, his day of rest. | LOLLING GIVES LONG LIFE | Of the deaths, he as- | 20 per cent more have digestive dis- ! “The agencies already aroused on | Cobb, “only touch the borders of hu- . The great- | est error of infant feeding today is ! business, though most of the time he is engaged in that herculean task. Force of Habit. The telephone operator was spend- ing the summer holiday by the bound-’ | ing sea. On the first morning, how- | ever, she had occasion to berate the i maid of the lodgings for real or im- : agined negligence. “Why didn’t you { call me as I told you this morning?” i she demanded. “I did, miss,” roplied ! the maid with an injured air. “I called out ‘Seven-thirty,” and all you ses was ‘Number engaged.’” Nautical. It was in New York. The sea-faring; ‘man was steering a zig-zag course, | yYawing now to starboard and now to’ | port. A young woman bound in the: j opposite direction sought to minimize ; the danger of a collision by making a: { wide detour. But the sea-faring man. ! stopped dead. “Keep a straight coursej | ahead, miss,” he said gallantly; “let me do the tacking.” Chin as Point of Beauty. The habit of absent mindedly finger- ing the chin is imprudent because in doing so the skin may be stretched and the pores unduly enlarged, induc- ! ing wrinkles and extraneous matter | to gather. After the age of twenty- ! two or twenty-three years it is well | to watch with jealous care this par | ticular portion of the face. | | Thought on Patriotism. It is to be feared that the patriot- . ism of this day has but little regard! | for such common things as individual economy and providence, although it is by the practise of such virtues only: that the genuine independence of the industrial classes is to be secured.— Samuel Smiles. Couldn’t Land Him. “] admit that the architecture of this house is something fierce,” said the agent, “but just see how handy the’ _ place is—only a stone’s throw from | the station.” “I see it is,” said Tomp- : kins, wearily, “but I'm such a rotten ' shot it wouldn't be any satisfaction to me.” day, ex-ball-player evangelist, is not, | as he travels about the country, al- | appointment when they sat down to a | y lumpy | mashed potatoes and soggy bread, sup- : Benedictional Kiss. It is the custom in many sections of the United States for the clergyman ‘who performs the ceremony to kiss the bride. The kiss from the clergy- man is a relic of the benedictional pax, which was a charm calculated to bring all marriages to a happy end- ing. Merely a Surmise. “Your honor,” said the counsel, “this man’s insanity takes the form of a belief that every one wants to rob him. He won’t allow me, his counsel, to approach him.” “Maybe he’s not so crazy, after all,” mur- mured the court in a judicial whisper. Po Destroying Equilibrium. “That former enemy of yours is pay- ing you a great many compliments.” “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum; “and I wish he'd quit it. One of the easiest | ways to throw a man down is to swell his head until he gets top-heavy.”— . Washington Star. | Worth It. { “I understand that tenor keeps his | voice in order by swallowing glycerin, menthol, camphor and oil of cinna- mon,” said the musician. “Great i Scott!” replied the ordinary individ- ual. “No wonder he insists on such high wages!” To Be Determined. “What are you going to do when you get home?’ “I don’t know yet,” replied Senator Sorghum. “I've got | the other night. “Do you know,” said the dry goods | drummer, “I don’t blame the doctors a | was ' | Pre-Natal Influence of Box Car Makes Quiet Life Unnatural to Mite of Cat Family. Wilkesbarre, Pa.—Born in a box car in which its mother was imprisoned at | Akron, O., Blackie, an eight-week-old kitten, now in the possession of Barn- well & Becker, grocers of this city, is declared by experts to be a splendid example of pre-natal influence. Taken from the car when it arrived at the Pennsylvania station here with a ship- ment of potatoes, the kitten, though scarcely able to walk, mewed piteous- ly until one of the firm’s drivers placed it upon the seat beside him and drove ! off to the barn, the motion of the wagon seemingly lulling it into quiet and contented slumber. When attempts were made to raise the kitten, first in the store barns and later in the cellar, it refused to eat, and Edward French, a driver, con- sented to drown it in the river. French noticed that the kitten quieted again when his horses started on the trip, and became convinced that the strange circumstances surrounding the kitten’s birth and arrival in the city controlled its cenduct. Instead of driving to the river, he made his rounds for the dmy, feeding the silent litte on the driver's seat and leaving it finally asleep there for the night. The kitten refuses to take to the ground, and every day now French is to be seen about the oity delivering groceries and carrying beside him always the kitten Blackie. WHI Adopt “Mashers’”’ Bil. Boston, Mass.—The senate passed to third reading the “mashess’ ” bill, which would punish with six months’ imprisonment any man who accosts a woman or girl with whom he is net soquainied. KITTEN WAS BORN TO TRAVEL | to wait and see whether my reception by the town folks is in the nature of an ovation or the third degree.” World’s Swiftest Dog. | The swiftest dog in the world, the : Russian wolf-hound, has made record { runs that show 24 yards to the sec- | ‘ond, while the gazelle has shown | measured speed of more than 27 yards a second. | | Sugar and Cement. Tests have shown that as little as | one-quarter of one per cent of sugar | will prevent cement settling, while | from one to two per cent will make it | set quickly, but later disintegrate. Medical. Doubly Proven BELLEFONTE READERS CAN NO LONGER DOUBT THE EVIDENCE. This Bellefonte citizen testified long ago. Told of quick relief—of undoubted benefit. The facts are now confirmed. Such testimony is complete—the evidence conclusive. It forms convincing proof of merit. James H. Rine, 239 High St., Belle- fonte says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills are certainly a wonderful kidney remedy. Ten years age 1 first used them and at that timel told in a pub- lic endorsement of the benefit I had had. That statement holds good. I have often advised my friends to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and in every case where my advice has been fol- lowed, relief has been had from kid- ney trouble.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that James H. Rine had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 60-5-1t School of Manners. “I think the Philadelphia trolley- men are the most impertinent I've ever met,” snapped a woman passen- ger to a conductor in a near-side car “Maybe we are, madam,” replied the P. R. T. em- ployee, “but did you ever stop to think that a conductor's manner ie usually a reflection of that of the people he deals with?”—Philadelphia Ledger. For Beginners in Crime. A regular text book for thieves and burglars has been discovered by the New York police. It contained instruc- tions how to file bars, how to pick a lock, how to avoid leaving finger-prints and many other tricks of the trade. CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas.H.Fletcher. in use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. Hats and Caps. Re-action is the thing to fear in the use of the common cathartic medicines. - One of the features of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, is that they do not re-act upon the system. Every dose leaves the sys- tem stronger, instead of weaker, and { tends to establish a healthy regularity | which can entirely dispense with medi- cine. The “Pellets” are very small in size and small in the dose prescribed. One produces a laxative, two a cathartic effect. Remarkable, Indeed. “Strange things, dreams are,” said J. Fuller Gloom. “Every time I eat horse- radish I have a nightmare.”—Kansas City Star. Little Hotel Wilmot. The Little Hotel Wilmot IN PENN SQUARE One minute from the Penna Ry. Station PHILADELPHIA i | i j : We have quite a few customers from Belle- | fonte, We can take care of some more. i | i | | | They'll likeus. A good room for §1. If you bring your wife, $2. Hot and cold running water in every room The | Ryerson W. Jennings Co. Clothing. BELLEFONTE, YouCanSave $5.00 to $10.00 On Your Suit or Overcoat if you buy it at FAUBLES. Mid-Winter REDUCTION Sale now on. FAUBLE' PENNA. 58-4 Automobiles. Wagner Separate Unit Starti vice, Hot Jacket Carburetor £ The equipment on all models includes the tem, rumble 3-PASSENGER ROADSTER § 985 5-PASSENGR “SIX” TOURING 1385 EZER’S BE GEORGE A. BEEZER, Propr. Improved Design su Manuiacturing Metfiod Sd to Values. Timkin Bearings, oating Rear Axle, Crowned Fenders, -skid Ti s Bn > and Lighting, Dimming Head Li en fe Ear Pe: ne-Man Type ED Da osine tires. ..NEW FEATURES IN... STUDEBAKER CARS Three-Passenger Roadster and Five-Passenger “Six” Added to Line. Prices are Lowered. agner separate-unit starting and lightin, - asoline gauge, dimming attachment for head lights, switch I 2 ish By ice, anti- gasoline tank in dash, crowned fenders, Shibler carburetors and non-skid tires on rear wheels. THE NEW PRICES. 5-PASSENGER “FOUR” TOURING $7985 7-PASSENGER “SIX” TOURING 1450 GARAGE. s9-3-tf Bellefonte, Pa.