Bemoraic: Walcynas, Bellefonte, Pa., November 19, 1915. LOVE THAT LIVES. [By William Visscher.] : After dinner, in Arthur Johnson's Major Tom Bob Hart, bachelor, ex-sol- dier, and relic of romance; his com- panion, Arthur Johnson, little more than half the age of the major. cigar the major had sat for some min- utes, “lost to the world”—apparently. “Major, I'll bet a horse that you are thinking, this minute, of some prehis- | toric love affair. rate!” “Arthur, boy, you like me, don’t you?” queried the major, in a voice full of pathos and touched with solici- tude. “Who does not, major, that knows you?” “Well, I'm glad of that. You are just the kind of a friend I like to have. You are fond of me without having any very good reason for it. “In this way you remind me of a sweetheart I had once—got her yet, as to that. But her husband and I are friends. “Often she and I call each other ‘Honey,” which is a common expres- sion of friendly affection in the South, where we both came from. “Now it may seem funny to you, but that little woman doesn’t know that I am homely.” “Is she blind?” the younger man promptly and bluntly asked. “Of course she’s blind. Blind as a bat, and yet her eyes are as good as anybody's. She is simply a living ex- emplification of the’ trite old saying that love is blind. “I'll tell you just how it was, and I'll test your credulity right at the start. Make you smile, too. “I was a handsome boy. “Gee! but you do laugh, don’t you? And yet I had tried to prepare you for it. Well, I was handsome. That sweet- heart of mine and I grew up to love each other, just naturally, and in fact we didn’t know it until too late. “When the war came I went. Be: fore the storm of patriotism was over. a great, big man, who was not nearly 80 practically patriotic—or idiotic—as I was, came along there and told my sweetheart things that I had not thought to tell her. Moreover, he was accumulating gold while I was not gathering anything more substantial than glory, but I was fairly windrow- ing that. It has melted like the snow forts of boyhood. “Those who had the direction of her ways directed her toward him and he gathered her in. He has her yet. “After thé storm went down, strange as it may seem, there was no calm for me—perhaps there was too much calm. “At first I frequently saw my old sweetheart, then came long spells when I didn’t see her at all. At last it dawned upon my opaque heart and brain that I was in love with that lit tle woman, and always had been. Sometimes I thought I would try to steal her. But I thought better of it. and she—Heaven bless her!—wouldn’t have thought of it at all. “I did the next worst thing, how- ever. I told her that I loved her, al- ways had and always would. To my utter astonishment, dismay, and hap piness, thereby perplexing me more than ever, she confessed—that she had loved me in the old days, and—but she loves her husband. “The other day I was telling her that she was the only woman I had ever loved and that she was always a pearl. She said: : “‘You're a dear old fellow, but you must not talk that way.’ “‘Oh! That's all right’ I said. ‘I am old and homely enough to be a privileged character.’ “She leaned over, her elbows on the marble between us, hands to her face, and looked searchingly and in- quiringly into my eyes. Then as if deeply bewildered and amazed, she said: “‘N-0-0! Are you homely, Honey? “Yes, indeed, picturesquely homely. Don’t you see that I am old, and wrin- kled, and bald, and stooping, and lame, and querulous, and fidgety, and—’ *“ ‘No,’ she exclaimed, ‘I only see my zallant boy sweetheart, and his pa- tient, knightly, hidden soul. I remem- ‘ber the flash of your sword in the sun- light that morning when, as the boy- captain that you were, marching with your men tc the war, you saluted the + cheering village girls in passing. The gleam of that blade has always kept you and your eyes before me.’ “Say, my son, I have clung to a spar amid the crawling canyons of the ocean, until dashed breathless and un- conscious upon a long stretch of white beach on an arid island of the seas; I have faced the fierce siroccc and fore- most focal fire of battle, time and again, and felt its fiery breath blow back the brown locks that then were mine; inspired by a something whose achievement might be borne to her, I , have poured out a stream of impas- ' sioned eloquence before an audience of heroes and statesmen, until they climbed to chairs and tables yelling: ‘Old man, you're a king!’ But never— even in the deepest intensity of any instant at such times as these have I had such satisfaction and triumph, or more of a yearning for more of life, than when my old sweetheart leaned over and said, with the light of love in her eyes and its music in her voice: “‘N-0-0! Are you homely, Honey? » —San Francisco Argonaut. Ah! you sly old pi- A man with & grouch is his own pun- ishment. ONLY ADVERTISING OF VALUE Must Be Absolute Truth Is the Un- varying Experience of American Men of Business. The only kind of advertising that has any real value is that based on the truth, so that when the convention “smoke-house” the two cronies sat: Of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World, in session at Indianap- olis, reaffirmed “truthful publicity” as : their slogan they but formulated the Toward the end of a specially good , World. unvarying experience of the business Linwln’s famous remark to the effect, that “you can fool some of the people all the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can-_ not fool all the people all the time,” is peculiarly applicable to the publicity field; the attempt to fool the people by means of dishonest advertising is cu- mulative in its retribution and the ad- vertiser who tries it spells his own ultimate confusion. tics prove that the public is quick to detect the fraudulent variety; faint earmarks of insincerity and mendac- ity soon become conspicuous warnings, and the truthful advertisements bring results out of all proportion to those which fail to keep faith with the buy- er. Even without the laws here and there aimed at the dishonest practice of the fake advertiser, the business ! world is learning quickly that the suc- cess won by the trickster is a transi This is by no | means a mere assumption, for statis- | tory one, while the firm foundations : are those that are built upon truth | him,” said Britherby. and sincerity.—Philadelphia Ledger. FISH KNOCKS OUT FISHERMAN Gives Man Black Eye and Breaks Its Own Nose—Will Be Kept as Trophy. It was a starlight night and “Joe” Rivers’ good launch Yankee lazily slid through a succession of oiled waves. Biff! and Skipper Jerry Shively at the wheel measured his full length of six feet five upon the deck. Bang! Some- | thing careened off the spokes of the wheel and lay fluttering in the scup- | the bark of a dog. pers. “Who did that,” bellowed Jerry as he arose to his feet and glared down upon the cowering crew. “Something from overboard,” timor- ously replied William Askerson, able seaman. “Seen it come aboard.” Yankee settled back to its course, while the crew began to search and . 120000000 0% e000". % 0.0.0.0 5 0800000 0.0.0.0 00 00 OOOGOOOOIOI ese e%e%s es’! Ld 200000 0% eee’ '%% 0%’ WHEN THEY MET By KENNETT HARRIS. PaaS OS a 0,0.0.00.00000000 20200 0% 0s a 0 0 ee ete atu es 00 0 oserelelels OOOOOOO0 ° 0% 0% %s es" %s% »%s . eo" '0%%"%" 'e%"s "0% . '0%0%0%0%%"¢" 'e! The light struck Britherby’s glasses | at such an angle that they presented nothing but a flashing blank to Gral lup. Behind the glasses Britherby’s eyes at the moment were resting on the Janeway bungalow across the streei, but Grailup did not know that and he stiffened indignantly and passed his new neighbor with a stu diously averted gaze. The next time they met neither took the least notice of the other. Grallup remarked to his wife that that fellow who hzua bought out Korker's equity evidently was a cut or two above Bib berly Heights—or thought he was. Britherby, a day or two later, was talking to Morfew, whose house is be tween Grallup’s and the former Korker place. : “Who’s your distinguished neighbor on the north?” he asked. “The nabob of the place, I presume. I think I made a mistake in not asking his per- mission to butt in here. He seems to resent it.” “Nonsense!” said Morfew. “That's Billy Grallup. Nothing of the nabob about Billy. Great chap, Billy. You'll like him when you know him.” “I don’t believe I'd want to know Morfew meant to ask Grallup what he had been doing to his face, but for- got it and so the feeling between Britherby and Grallup remained and grew. In course of time they were in- troduced and acknowledged the intro duction as coldly as politeness al- lowed. After that they bowed scru- pulously when they met. It was early last fall that the pas- sive hostility of the two men became active to the verge of tragedy. One still, calm aight, somewhere about twelve o'clock, Grallup was aroused from an uneasy slumber by “Confound it!” exclaimed Grallup. “I wonder whose darned dog that is. + I wish I was within good shotgun range of it—and had the shotgun.” A quick succession‘of staccato barks ; Seemed to answer his thoughts with A few turns of the wheel and the finally came upon the fluttering thing | in the scuppers. It was a flying fish, and not a large one at that. But it had sent a man who weighed over 250 pounds to the mat for the full count of ten and had given him the blackest of eyes in the bargain. The flying fish and the black eye were brought into port here one day last week by Mr. Shively, who pro- poses to keep the first and is making every effort to rid himself of the lat ter. The flying fish had its nose broken in the encounter and only lived a few minutes.—Los Angeles Times. Sheep. Made Much Trouble. The exploits of the proverbial bull in the china shop have been emulated, if not surpassed, by the raid of a shecp on the Rugby (Eng.) branch of Lloyd’s bank. The sheep dashed in to the rear of the bank premises, with two drovers in hot pursuit. entrance to the kitchens, it made a terrific clatter among the pots and pans, and then leaped through a win- Gaining dow and turned on a water tap. The | drovers were capsized in the struggle which ensued, and the sheep bolted through another door and got into the main office. A dozen bank clerks, ' aided by rulers, induced the animal tc return to the kitchen, where it was eventually cornered, trussed up, and ignominiously carried away, after hav- i ing kept the bank staff busy for nearly two hours. Roped and Tied. The men engaged in cutting off the ends of protruding ties on the ele vated railway at New York were ex- plicitly instructed for the sake of in nocent passers-by on the street be: low never to allow a piece of tie to fall to the street without a. rope at tached to it. One day, as the end of a tie was | sawed off, the man on the job threw the rope, tie and all, into the street. “Hy, there, what er you doin’?" yelled an indignant foreman. “Ye told me not to let anything drop to the street widout a rope attached,” rejoined the man in a surly tone. “Well, ain’t I obeyin’ orders?” —r————— Refractor for University. The astronomical observatory of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor hopes ultimately to possess a 24-inch refractor, thanks to the generosity of R. P. Lamont of Chicago. This tele scope was ordered in 1911, and the latest report of the Jena glassmakers was that the crown disk had been made, while a mass of flint glass suffi- ciently large for the flint disk had been produced. The completion of the latter disk would require some months, even under normal conditions, and the war will probably cause further delay. Meanwhile the mounting has made good progress at the observatory shop. Good Flour From Old Wheat. Wheat thirty-four years old has just been threshed, and it made exception ally good bread. The wheat was grown and harvested in 1881 hv a farmer near Grantham, Lincolnshire. England, who swore he would not sell it until it reached a certain price. That price was still a secret when the farmer died. The grain was then put { on the market. bringing a good price. defiance. Grallup got up and leaned out of the window, listened a minute, closed the window and said something improper. “I might have known it,” he contin- ued, savagely. “He's about the only man in the suburb who would main- tain a nuisance like that.” He tried to ignore the noise, but the closed window had.only slightly dulled it and it was too maddeningly irreg- ular. He bounded cut of bed and into his slippers, threw a coat over his shoulders and, stopping only to take a couple of croquet mallets from a closet in the hall, hurried out of the house and ran down the street toward Brith- erby’s. The barking had stopped, but he knew where to go. He was almost at Morfew’s when he ' was aware of a ghostly white-clad fig ure hastening toward him. The next moment he was face to face with Britherby, who was in pajamas and carrying a baseball bat. For an instant they glared at each other in the moonlight. Then Brith- erby spoke: “So you thought it was about time to do something, did you?” he snarled. “I should think it was, myself. A man who will keep a dog like that I've got my opinion of, any- way.” “What are you talking about?” de. manded Grallup. “I'm after that in- fernal dog that’s been barking. his head off in your yard all night, if you want to know. Do you mean to say it isn’t your dog?” “I never owned a dog in my life,” said Britherby. “I thought it was your dog and I was going to take the liberty of killing him—and you, too, if you offered any objection.” “I had much the same idea,” said Grallup. “But if it isn’t your dog. whose—" Furious barking interrupted him. It came from the rear of Morfew’s house. “So it’s his dog!” said Britherby. “Now, what do you think of that!” “I think as you do,” said Grallup, grimly. “Morfew’s a good man in Some respects, but this is an outrage. [ suppose he’s lying’ there snoring!” “I'll tell you,” said Britherby, pois- ing his club. “If youll stand by me I'll batter his door down and if he doesn’t get up and kill the beast, we will.” “I'll just go you on that proposi- tion,” said Grallup. They pounded until Morfew came to an upper window and asked them what the dickens they wanted. “We want you to come down and do something with that dog of yours,” said Britherby. “You've no business keeping a brute like that around,” supplemented Gral- lup severely. “Have you two been drinking or are you just plain crazy?” asked Morfew. “Routing a man out of his rest at this time of night! That's not my dog, you lunatics. I don’t own a dog.” He slammed down the window. The two laughed. Then Britherby shivered. “You'd better come back with me,” suggested Grallup. “I've got some medicine that’s good for that and you can wear my overcoat home.” : “Thanks, old man,” said Britherby. “Any other time I'll be delighted, but I guess I'll get back to bed now.” He held out his hand and Grallup grasped it cordially. “Geod night, old chap,” said Gral- lup. “I'll see you in the morning, then.”—Chicago Daily News. | ' by red. Also International Stock Food can be secu n Btjons RAY-O-LIGHT cn RAY HIGHT OI, RAY-0-LIGHT OIL. RE i ale PRE RE Bl Ae Th ER EE, TET i : 7 oi od ETT SL A YX discriminate in the choice of your milk, yet to the uninitiated all milks look and taste about the same. But you know differently. You realize that some cows yield better, creamier and more healthful milk than others and that methods of caring for and keeping milk differ. : You know about milk — that’s why you're particular; but are you equally well acquainted with kerosene? If you are, your choice is certain to be ATLANTIC Why? Becauseit's refined and re-refined by oil experts, by men who know how to use methods that get every little bit of good out of the finest crude petroleum Mother Earth yields. Atlantic Rayolight Oil is made right—it’s a pure kerosene. It burns without smoke or smell, it doesn’t char nor spoil wicks, but it does yield an intense heat and a brilliant light, and it burns slowly and economically. Ask your grocer for it by name, because now, for the first time, you can buy kerosene whose makers you know and upon whose goodness you can implicitly rely. What's more, its price is identical with ordinary kerosene. Atlantic Rayolight Oil is won- derfully useful for purposes other than lighting or heating —a few drops in the water when washing windows or mirrors will give them a beau- tiful polish. How do you use it? Maybe you know a way that'll get you something worth while. You never can tell. ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY Pittsburgh and Philadelphia Get a PERFECTION Smokeless Oil Heater and say good-bye to that breeder of colds —a bleak, draughty hall. These heaters are invaluable — their uses are manifold. They keep every part of the home comfy -— yes, especially that spot that for half the year nothing seems to make habitable. The initial cost of a Perfection Smokeless Heater is small and, if Atlant.c Rayolight Oil is used, its upkeep is little. It’s appearance is handsome and you can get one at almost any dealer’s. Funeral Director. Meat Market. H. N. KOCH : : » (3¢t the Best Meats. Funeral Direct ne Ww ELI 2 bin por i or gristly meats. use only e €C LOT Book ork LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE d suppl i ; Successor to R. M. Gordner. and est, choicest, best blood and muscle sab: . . ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no STATE COLLEGE, PENNA. Job Printing higher than poorer meats are elsewhere, I alwavs have en Done Here. — DRESSED POULTRY — . . Sane in Feason, and any kinds of good eats you want. Day and Night Service. ev MY Shop, 60-21-tf. Bell and Commercial Phones. P. L. BEEZER, nn High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa Flour and Feed. ——————— — rm 7 Announcement. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, — BROCKERHOFF MILLS, : BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at all times the following brands of high grade flour: The Farmers’ Supply Store We are Headquarters for the Dollyless Electric Washing Machines Weard Reversible Sulky Riding Plows and Walking Plows, Disc Harrows, Spring-tooth Harrows, Spike-tooth Lever Harrows, Land Rollers; g9-Hole Spring Brake Fertilizer Grain Drill—and the price is $70. E ST. : SE on DEST POTATO DIGGERS, HIGH GRADE Brookville Wagons—all sizes in stock. Buggies and Buggy Poles, Manure Spreaders, Galvanized Water Troughs, Cast Iron Hog and Poultry Troughs, Galvanized Stock Chain Pumps, Force and Lift Pumps for any depth of wells, Extension and Step Ladders, Poultry Supplies and All Kinds of Field Seeds. Nitrate of Soda and Fertilizer for all crops, carried at my ware- house where you can get it when you are ready to use it. VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The only place in the county where that extraor- dinarily fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY and feed of all 3a Soliciting a share of your wants, I am respectfully yours, Al kinds of Shain bought at the office Flour - v XC or wheat. aged for whedk: JOHN G. DUBBS, OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, 60-14-tf. Both Phones Bellefonte, Pa. BELLEFONTE, PA. . 7-19 MILL AT ROOPBSURG. EE ———————— ee —