\. gn nA ia 1930. tellefonte, Pa., April 4, ABSOLUTELY NO “IT.” J Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) iffeur in Boston. He has achiev- | a miracle! She has the love- ist ears and she looks, somehow, | young Shelley must have. I— sat was all there was on the page. As Ann finished he re- sed the letter, smiled down at 3ut—but that’s not me!” she red. Vhat do you know about your- ? he asked. And added, teas- y, “Ill bet you don’t even know : nose should be powdered.” aon made no move, She couldn’t. an when he placed cool, imper- a ers under her chin, tilted head a bit and calmly powdered nose for her. The first hundred feet are the lest,” he said. “You'll get used : after that.” feel,” she confessed, “like Joan g to the stake.” 11 right—feel that way,” he sug- ed. “She went with courage— France. You're going with age f~r”—he grinned swiftly— re automobiles and babies, more os and homes. Let's go!” ney went. To Ann the runway ned miles long. Her knees )k. She was conscious of misty s all around her but Tommy had sed her not to look at the people. [ust move easily, naturally,” was parting injunction. acily, naturally—“She has no how charming she is—She has loveliest ears and she looks as ag Shelley must have.” nn moved as in a daze. In that > she reached the end of the vay. And there was Tommy to it her. [hank you,” he said—just that. Jid—was I all right?” she ask- looking more like young Shelley 1 ever. only hope they noticed the pers,” he replied. he other trips, as he had >hesied, came easier. Some she le in the black evening frock he secured ror her; others in the rt little ensemble with its partic- hat or the little white jersey with wrapped skirt and sports o passed the day to dinner time, had dinner with him at the hotel. had wondered about dining with . Perhaps his wife—But she had >ked the thought. | Why shouldn't I?” she had de- inner ‘ ‘It’ Ss 1ided of some ost defiantly. ness with him!” [s it—strictly business with you ?” inner questioner persisted. nn, however, refused to pay any ntion to that. He was nicest man she had ever met, of course she liked him. Who ldn’'t? He was so generous in his reciation of what she had done. But I haven't done anything,” told him, “It’s the shoes—and clothes. They're beautiful. It’s me at all.” questioner, strictly nd so she believed. Yet among | se present that night was one ) had come to scoff and, if she not remained to pray, at least been forced to pay tribute. Good gosh!” gasped Marge, 1 appeared on the runway. he felt precisely as Cinderella’s ) sisters must have felt at the ball. hardly heard her mother’s com- it. The latter was as impressed, jough her reaction was phrased erently. I should think,” she remarked, at Ann would hate to have rybody looking at her that way. if—as if she were an actress or iething.” ‘his she repeated to Ann herself, r. Oh, it’s not so bad when you get 1 to it,” Ann assured her. for was it. Not with the unfail- support of Tommy Adams’ en- ragement and enthusiasm. It ried her along through the second and the third to that moment sm Tommy gripped her hand, julsively and gratefully. Just about twice as many orders I dared hope for.” he assured her. yw can I ever thank you enough?” ‘he show was over; already the way downstaris was being dis- ntled. Ann herself had changed k to her own clothes. Sensible , sensible shoes. The sort of :k and coat that would be suit- e for the office and good for two rs. The butterfly had crawled k into its cocoon. ‘his evening she had a moment h her employer downstairs. And you once told me,” he had iinded her, “that you had nice th and were good to your mother were not the sort men marry. well, I suppose I might as well render to age and shut up shop my daughters are forever urging to.” ‘And what will I do for a job n?”’ Ann had demanded. “Am I be fired—just because I've made jpectacle of myself?” : jis eyes had looked down 5. He was a bearded, moth-eaten re with hair in his ears and yet— 1, there was that in his eyes that de the shadowy past, when he i stroked a college crew, seem s dim and incredible. ‘If I were forty years younger offer you another job,” he had ured her. “But—if you're really ning back I'll be glad to have 1 ‘And 1,” Ann had assured him, ill be glad to be back.” And she meant it. She was glad : show was over, glad that Tommy ams was going away. She had iched the point, Cinderella was dy to return to her hearth. This had all been in her mind as » had shifted from the little black ning frock she had worn last. ‘I hope you inherit that,” Marge | 4 told her—meaning that she, me much ! ' she never had expected to be kissed. as | Marge, - would be glad to borrow it frequently. Ann however, didn’t want it. She folded it carefully, left it with the other costumes that Tommy’s packer would attend to presently. The show was over. “What is he paying you for all this?” Marge had demanded curious- ly. “Don’t you wish you knew?” Ann had evaded. Actually Tommy Adams had never mentioned paying her anything. She had supposed he would sooner or later. At the end, anyway. Now she hoped he wouldn't. be—well, awful to be paid. And Ann knew why. “I might have known,” she assured herself fiercely, “that I'd go along for years never thinking twice about any man —and then make a fool of my- self.” Well, he’d never guess that any- way. And, of course, she must say good-by to him. So she confronted him, “Thank me?” she repeated. it’s been fun, truly. —” She had a feeling that her voice was going to betray her. And she simply couldn't meet his eyes. “I—"” began Tommy, with characteristic impetuosity and then checked himself abruptly. He snatch- ed up his hat and coat, adding, “I'm going to drive you home.” “Oh, you mustn't!” phrased Ann’s lips. But the words did not come. “Slip into this— it's cold outside,” he commanded. As if she were no more than an automaton controlled by his voice, she obeyed. They found his parked roadster | and he helped her into it. Traffic at ! once engaged his attention; he was silent for a moment. Then: | “You're a peach!” he announced , huskily. “I—" He did not finish. ! But his right hand found hers and gripped it hard. | “You mustn’t—mustn’t!” “Oh, phrased | Ann's lips —but again the words i did not come. , “Im not going to let you say | good-by and walk out of my life,” i he added. “I—can’t. You—you don’t : want me to, do you?” ! The tearing wistfulness of his voice. His hand holding hers, thrill- ing her through and through. No!” clamored Ann’s heart, | spite of ail the conventions in , world. i She didn’t want him to walk | of her life. But he must! And imust tell him so. She lifted { head determinedly, forced her | to meet his. i lips to say what they should. But they rebelled, quivered briefly. And | he, manlike, misread her intent. “Oh, my dearest!” he breathed “You don’t—you in the out she her, eyes | triumphantly. don’t!” | The next instant, careless of traf- i : fic, his free arm went around her, !and drew her to him. He kissed "her swiftly, exultantly, as Ann nev-; er had been kissed by any man; as He had taken her by surprise. That might have been her excuse. Only { —Ann was honest. passively either—for one cataclys- mic second. She realized .that, and | was swiftly, searingly shamed. “And that,” she commented, her | voice savage in its bitterness, “is . the sort of girl you think I am!” i The car swerved as his startled eyes held hers. “What do you mean?” he asked. “The sort that will have an affair with a married man,” Ann went on. She was furious; with him and even more so with herself. She remem- bered Marge's prophecy and flung that at him. ‘Well, go on. Tell me that your wife doesn’t understand you. That you're starved for sympathy and—" | “My wife?’ he said. Then he grinned. “But—I haven't any wife!’ i Ann sat slim and small, wide- ‘eyed and openmouthed. “You—you ; haven't any wife,” she echoed dazed- ly “But you said—" They had crossed Massachusetts . Avenue, were swinging into the { Fens. He §iopped the roadster short. That left him with both ‘no more “So I did,” than laid them over hers. he admitted. “But I “lied. I had to, you see. Because you applied fertilizer. Poultry manure !are that sort of girl.” ! Ann was trembling—but not from the cold. “What sort of girl do you mean?” she asked. “The sort that just has to freeze .up when you're with any man who or happily married,” he explained. |“’m not old emough to be your , father—thank the Lord!—but I want- ed you yourself, not an iceberg, land so I invented a wife for myself. I know you, you little idiot. ‘You and letter carriers—anybody who ‘you feel quite sure won't misunder- stand your motives,” he went on. | “But if you hadn’t thought I was married you wouldn't try to at- ‘tract me for anything; that you weren't the sort of girl that would | chase any man, that—" | He checked himself there, but on- ly to draw her toward him, swiftly, irresistibly. “As if you-—needed to chase any into man! he finished, huskily again, as plants are at rest in the fall his lips met hers. | There were, fortunately, compara- (tively few cars passing. Because i that kiss was not brief. Tommy, at ;least, put all his heart and soul into it. And-—well, so did Ann. | “But,” recalled Ann suddenly, “you showed me a letter.” “Oh, that,” he explained, still holding her close, “was to my moth- er. I bagged that idea out of a story | I read. I wondered if you'd fall for it.” Ann’s thoughts were already tak- ling yet another twist, however. “1t—it. wasn’t just the pretty clothes?” she broke in swiftly, “You're—sure it’s me—" “What else could it be?” tested. “But—but I've never had any It! | ay His arm tightened around her. he pro- mm It would |. And tried to force her | then set from 14 to 16 inches apart, i the pips or eyes upright in position | She had yielded her lips—and not i Regular and the plants, and a good commercial fertilizer drilled in and covered as to penetrate and warm up the bed. . Or if one ;may be made down the space be- , tween the rows ‘hands free but for the moment he plied. isn’t old enough to be your father— soil should be well drained. As soon ,as a plant have taken hold of the soil, it needs . young plants can get it. can be nice to bootblacks 2 ‘and phosphoric acid. to each ton of stable -- FARM NOTES, —Raspberries, both red and the black caps, respond very quickly to the use of fertilizer. If the soil in which the new plants are put out is not rich, one should apply a good dressing of poultry manure or some well rotted barnyard manure. ' —A shade for the hogs pays. —Cattle given free access to corn silage and alfalfa will balance their own rations. —The greatest mistake in feed- ing orphan Iambs, is in feeding too much and too often. Nothing will solve as many prob- lems of the pork producer as will plenty of good pasture. —Many stockmen fail to balance their rations because they feel it necessary to feed what they have at hand, —Where pastures supplement grain rations for hogs, a saving in concentrate feed is made, the ration is improved from a dietetic angle, healthfulness is promoted, and the hog is brought to a marketable age at a lower cost than where grain feeding in pen or dry lot prevails. —On many farms a small flock of sheep should be profitable. It does not cost a great deal in either money or labor to keep a flock of sheep, and there is a double return from them in the form of mutton rand wool. —A good disinfectant used oc- casionally in the poultry house not only destroys the germs of contag- ious diseases, but also many ex- ternal parasites and some parasitic worm eggs. One of the best disin- fectants for this purpose is creosol, one-half pint in 8 quarts of soft water. A 5 per cent solution of carbolic acid also is good. ; —QGood heavy oats make a fine feed for poultry, and especially if mixed with a little corn and wheat. 1 : —The roup season is on. Guard against dampness, and drafts, if you would keep your flock healthy ~and on the job. —Cabbage isrich inthe green ma- terial needed by laying hens. About six pounds of cabbage may be fed per hundred birds per day. — i —Hens in the breeding flock ‘should be allowed out of doors in direct sunlight during the winter rand encouraged to take plenty of . exercise. a —One year old asparagus plants are best for setting. The field to be set should be trenched to a depth of at least four inches, the trenches being five, five and one half or 6 feet apart, according to the prefer- ence of the grower. The roots are with the root fibers spread out, and for growth. The trench is not filled in with soil until the last of the first season’s growth, but just a little soil is caved in from time to time after the first covering which merely covers the root in its loca- tion. After the asparagus has been growing, a handful of fertilizer may be applied between these plants at ‘the bottom of the trench, steady cultivation must be the practice of the grower. At the end of the first year the as- paragus bed is on the level, the gradual filling in with soil having brought the trenches up to the gen- eral grade. Early in April of the following year a shallow furrow is made down each row directly over soon as applied. The furrow may be left open a few days before the fertilizer is applied to allow the sun is going to use the com- post of manure a deeper furrow and the manure ap- A light sandy soil is best for this crop. It must be rich with some | is excellent for this purpose, al- though it is better applied in the growing season after cutting is dis- continued and the bed is given its period of rest in growth. Southern slopes are most favorable, and the is in its position of | in the soil, and growth its roots | food. Therefore, it is fertilizer in the hest to use rows where the tion of any undigosted plant food, Barnyard manure lacks in potash | Three or four | hundred pounds of acid phosphate | or poultry’ manure makes a much better as- paragus manure. After -the beds are established, top dressing with ma- | nure in the spring or summer is the most economical method, as the active plants can then make .. use of the added fertility in. their growth. The roots get practically nothing from manure after the after (the frost has killed the foliage. ; Neither does the plant make any use of the manure during the cut- Hing season because, in the utiliza- | “You are a darned little idiot!” , exploded. “Why do you think I came to your office? Because, of , course, for all you did your best to freeze me, I couldn't get you out of he ,my mind. I couldn't understand it | myself—but if that isn’t ‘It’ what | have you?” | The searchlights of a car that was approaching illumined them briefly but they were superbly, sublimely i unconscious of that. For: | “And how!” he added, his veice i making music of the shop-worn phrase as his lips came back to hers. | —From the Hearst's International Cosmopolitan: ‘ler, North 58 degrees West i Shorb, root and foliage must work to- gether in the process : of assimila- tion. During the cutting season the asparagus is being daily deprived of its foliage possibilities. Its growth at this time is produced by the food material already in the crowns and the moisture in the soil to which its vitality responds. Manure applied one year is beneficial the next year. When the plants have grown to bearing size, the feeding roots are located between the rows and ma- nure applied there sooner reaches them. : S———————{ o————— PENN STATE THESPIANS PLAN A SERIES OF SHOWS. Three performances will be given this spring by the Penn State Thespians, a group of student spe- cialty actors at the Pennsylvania State College. The first show will be a college and campus revue to- morrow, Saturday night to be fol- lowed by a musical comedy in May, at the time of the Junior Prom, and a repeat performance during June commencement week. The revue, which was written by Frank Morris and Richard What- stone, students, will include a danc- ing chorus of twelve men and ten specialty numbers. The individual numbers will be led by the dancing team of H. G. Sapper, and E. C. Kelly. Sapper is also coaching the chorus, Production of the revueis under the general direction of Hum- mel Fishburn, assistant professor of music at the college. Bigelow, Sanford Co., rugs America’s oldest rug manufacturers, on display at W. R. Brachbill’s furniture store. 14-1t NEW ADVERTISEMENTS XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa- mentary having been granted to the undersigned upon the estate of El- len M. Stuart, late of State College bor- ough, deceased, all persons knowing themselves indebted to same are request- ed to make prompt payment, and those having claims against said estate must present them, duly authenticated, for set- tlement. HAROLD B. SHATTUCK, RAY D. GILLILAND W. Harrison Walker, Executors, State College, Pa. Attorney 4-11-6t DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.— Let- ters of administration having been granted to the undersigned upon the estate of Josephine Alexander, late of the Borough of State College, deceased, all persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate are requested to make prompt payment, and those having claims against the same must present them, duly authenticated, for settlement. CAREY C. ALEXANDER, Administrator, W. Harrison Walker, State College, Pa. Attorney. 5-11-6t HARTER NOTICE.—In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre .ounty, Penn., No. 99, May Term, "930. Notice is hereby given that ap tion will be made to the above on the 21st day of April, 1930, at ten o'clock A. M.,, under the Corporation Act of 1874 of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the supplements there- to, for the charter of an intended cor- poratioh “to be called OMICRON AS- SOCIATON; the character and object of which is to hold property, real and personal, and for other purposes set forth in the Certificate of Incorporation; and for these urposes to have and to possess and enjoy all the rights, bene- fits and privileges of the said Act of Assembly and its supplements. The proposed charter is now on file in the Prothonotary’s office of Centre county. 75-13-3t ARTHUR C. DALE, Solicitor. lica- ourt OTICE OF PRIMARY ELECTION © TO BE HELD MAY 20, 1930.—In accordance with the provisions of Section (4) of the Uniform Primary Act, approved July 12, 1913 (P. L. 719) Notice is hereby given that there are to be nom- inated at the Spring Primary Election, to be held on TUESDAY, May 20th, 1930, in the COUNTY of CENTRE, and to be vot- ed for at the General Election, to be held. on Tuesday, November 4, 1930, Candidates for the following named offices. , United States Senator (to supply va- cancy). : Governor Lieutenant Governor. © Secretary Internal Affairs. Judge of the Supreme Court. Two Judges of the Superior Court. Representative in Congress. Senator in General Assembly. Representative in General Assembly. Republican County Chairman. Republican Vice Chairman. Republican Member State Committee, Democratic County Chairman. Democratic Vice Chairman. Democratic Member State Committee. Upon the days above named the polls will be open from 7 o'clock A. M. o'clock P. M. < 07 JOHN S. SPEARLY Newlion 1. WILSON : oun ommissio Attest, Fred B. Healy, y J - 75-12-3t Chief" Clerk. S writ of Levari Facias issued of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, to me directed, will be exposed ‘to public sale at the Court House in borough of Bellefonte on FRIDAY, APRIL 11th, 1930. The Following Property: ALL that certain messuage, tenement and tract of land situate in the Town- ship of Ferguson, County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de- scribed as follows, to wit:— . BEGINNING at stone thence by formerly .of HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a John Erb, now Isaac Mil- 274 perches land formerly of , Stewart and Company now J. Watt Miller, South 50 deg. West 152 perches to stones by fallen pine; thence by land: of Charles Miller South 60 deg. to stones; thence by . Bast 280" perches to a pine; thence by land. of + J. W. others North 57 degrees East 128 perches to the place of beginning, containing 206 acres, 18 perches and allowances. Being 'the same land that was con- veyed to Harry G. Sunday in the name of Harry G. unday by Deed from J. W. Sunday and wife dated March 10th, 1921 and recorded in the office for the recording of Deeds in said County in Deed Book 127 page 250. Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of Harry G. Sun- day and Mary P. Sunday, Defendants an tenants. . Sale . to. commence at 1:30 o'clock p. m. of said day. E. DUNLAP, Sheriff Sheriff's. Office, Bellefonte, Pa., March 17th, 1830, 75-12-3t Campbell and Free SILK HOSE Free Mandel's Knit Silk Hose for Wo- ‘ men, guaranteed . tc wear months without runners in leg or “Holes. In heels or toe. ‘A mew palr FREE if they fall. Price $1.00. YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP FARMER was advised by his livestock com- mission man to ship eighty lambs then ready for market. The following day, as he was getting ready to deliver the lambs to the railroad, his telephone rang. The market, he learned, had broken badly. By delaying shipment another week, the farmer secured one-half cent per pound more than he would have made on his original offer. The Modern Farm Home Has « TELEPHONE Bank Account, with the maintenance of a proper balance not only gives one money in hand for present needs, but what is much more valuable, establishes a certain credit with the Bank. The banker knows this, and prospect- ive borrowers who tell him they have no bank account, show a lack of business sense, and are at a disadvantage. There are few people, who at one time or another, do not have to borrow— often the need is urgent. Relations with a strong Bank will al- ways help. The account may be small, but it puts one on better terms with those from whom one wishes to borrow. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. HOWARD M. MILES | lana J. Fred and Anna M. Neff, Terre | We are Showing Men's Suits that, we stand back of —as low as $18.50. It’s the Fau- | ble Store that tells you this. We also show better suits priced from $22.50 and upwards, that, we, the Fauble Store, say to you : These are America’s Best Clothes priced to show a saving of from $5.00 to $10.00. A look will prove this to you beyond a doubt. Will you let, us show you ?