The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 14, 1897, Image 3

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    How to Remain Young.
Strive always to be culm; be cheerful |
and sleep well;
Delight in music: much with little ehi
dren dwell;
With moderation eat; salute the open
hig day
With glad
dawn or gray:
Thy burdens bravely
thou no delay
To help a feeble brother on the rugs
way;
Think not much
fret and grieve
That thon must
beauty some day
“Gool-morning!” be It rosy
bear,
yet
too of self,
all earth's wealth and
leave:
Trust thou in God; and in the holy foot
add
who live
Kons
those
1
Of forever,
count them dead.
way:
Wise as the serpent
ax the dos
then like
Boe
tielice an
LOVES COMING.
If a
with rood
#XRCl symme
beauty,
tiful,
countennnes,
loving
humor and intellect,
igure,
ielby was
tempi:
they ho
years,
the ele
in the
on
tho
alt
ence,
when one sun
drove up to the hou
a gentieman
Mr. Lam!
stranger :
neither
over
she chi
endeavored
fathe,”
atone
to nim
tion.
Reynol
best part
India island
and inde
tie gun
we
45 yeu
tion aj
backed 1
few met
feel ne
give
kind a
worthy
Boowines
ent,
Jdenaie
yet wt
easiness
SO
Lamberso
and when
Selbys that
was aion
hie
Jacent proper
magniticent
home of Mr
had a housekee
to him, and
Never a da)
did not visi
Jennle
customed
presence
at first
done all
agreeable, and
with personal char
character
was not to
Jennie certain there
thing excellent in Leynold
f
Was was some
Lamberson.
because her
on his friendship
ather set so high a valoe
About this time young Freeman Sel
by eame home from college to spend Lis
vacation, bringing with
named Perry Dana, It
that a good-looking aud talented young
man like Dana should captivate the
heart of Jennie Selby,
To vay that Dana was a passionless
person would not
Still, there was a
his nature that
warmth of love, and though Le might
prove a tolerably sympathizing friend,
he never could play the role of a lover,
Poor Jennie Selby éid not, or would
not, see this,
So day by day went on, and only
found her more interested in her broth
er's friend. But there was a heavier
Borrow soon to come to the Selby home,
and Jennie was to feel its bitterness
more than any member of the family.
Her brother had returned to college,
and with Perry Dana. Not a word of
love had been spoken by the young col. |
legian during his stay, and yet he had
taken moonlight walks, read poetry
and even composed a sonnet for Miss
Belby, and at last had gone away, leay-
ing a void in Jenuie's heart that could
not he easily filled,
Jenule's father suddenly found him.
self stripped of all the steady asecumu-
lations of an industrious life. The fam-
fly would Lave bad no home had not
Reypold Lamberson stepped forward
and purchased it for them from Mr.
Belly's creditors, Jeunie's gratitude
wax intense. la the first moment of
him a friend
was no wonder
have been
certain
was
COTTeet.
coldness in
ingensible to the
gained when that beloved spot was
In her ecstucy she wandered
round the pleasure grounds with the
ardor of a child.
she was standing by a favorite rose
striding down the walk which lad
her retreat, swinging himself alone, as
It were, by the vibration of his
seemed in motion, outspread as though
anxious to grasp whatever might come
first
was to avold him, but gratitude toward
one who had reseued her father from
within reach Jennle's tmpulse
and when he came to
hind herself
heart
feeling toward the man
all,
ruin forbade her,
the where she sat
thore
spot
down wus hor
but a generous
ho bad done so much for thi
little
in
Her wind wos elasnped
1
looked into his face, and
r eves, she ¢
mbe
ton hils
her
its rugged sur
and
gasped,
her ag
of Reynold
was kneeling befor
recovered from
ungainly
Jennie
figure
Or ner
love,
and
as was hi
rolled away,
8 custon
but
brent hed
he Sell ys:
that
ibounded generosity,
fod that Je
Jennie
$ per nnie
"sacrificing
mrents in the
or eldest broth
ivy shut
* OYEe8
2 Jennie
inet in her har
usual
air, for 1 would pot of choice speak it
within doors.”
Jennie
Lamberson by her side.
she felt
coming for which
walked down the steps with
fer heart beat
wildly: there
she was not pre
pared
shrubbery.
and said
Lamberson pointed to it,
“Sit there.”
She took her seat mechanically, and
without raising her eyes awaited his
words,
He did not offer to sit beside her, but
stood with folded arms and
chest, looking down ere he spoke,
length he said:
“Perhaps you have considered me un
generous in asking you to marry me
under the circumstances which have so
unfortunately occurred, I am well
aware that my personal appearance is
not likely to aid my suit. You are bean
tiful. 1 have searcely a claim to com
mon good looks, But | have a heart
a heart that loves with a devotedness
you little dream of, 1 do not expect you
heaving
Al
wife I predict that my homely face will
grow brighter and better looking to you
every day yon live beside me. 1 will
win your love by kindness, and there is
scarcely n heart that can long with
stand a pure aml unselfish devotion,
Having sald this, 1 have only one more
remark to make, If you digilke me so
much that it will give you pain to be.
come my wife, I will here thls moment
release you from your promise, and,
leaving you, never look upon youy face
again.”
Jennie Selby vome and stood beside
him, Taking his broad Lasd in her
own, she said:
and do my duty by vou, [I have no
wish that you should suffer on my a¢
rount,
feelings,
| mygelf,
| “As heaven Is my witness, 1 will try
|
|
i
We cannot always control our
You this well
I am willing to trust to
and to yourself to work a chauge in my
nffections This Is all 1 «
Can you take me thus?”
*1 can,”
know as HE
time
an promise,
was the reply,
‘he beautiful Jennie Selby hie
wife Heynold
parents believe
is nowt
Lamberson and her
thelr
happy as she assures them that she is,
York News,
ol
danghter Is as
| New
|
EQUINE DENTISTRY.
Sure
An Interesting Branch of Veterinary
gery... How it Works,
PPOs
horses’
is admin Ted o The Dore,
80 h with a view to deadening
he
under
md
muscles
haif
the anaesthetic
pain as to relax the
is placed or about
influence of The
horse is very sensitive to ifs lafluence:
sk, nnd
care and careful attendance are neces
sary in administering
the pain is deadened
the use of It is attended with ri
it Rometimens
by injecting eo
caine into the gum with a hypodermic
| syringe, or the gum is treated with a
sponge dampenasd with cocaine,
The horse's mouth is beld open with
an instrument. The of for
cops has a cutting edge, thus making
it pesmsxible to the beak firmly
down about the tooth. The tooth may
come out comparatively easily: some
times 8 tooth i= but it ‘is more
likely to be firmly held In the jaw.
Sometimes when a tooth ean not be
pills] out with the forceps it is taken
out with the forceps used as a lever, a
block is placed for a fulcrum on the
tooth next in front.» Somefimes the
horee's jaw is trephined. A plece of
the jawbone at the base of the root of
the tooth is removed from the outside.
It may be that with an opening at the
root the tooth ean be drawn: If it ean.
not be it is knocked out from the under
side. When trephining bas been per
formed the cavity around the roots of
the tooth is scraped out and freed from
all diseased matter,
The necessity for having a tooth ex.
fracted arises comparatively seldom;
probably not one herse In a hundred
ever has n tooth pulled: PO per cent
of the teeth that are pulled are molars,
The charge for extracting a molar bs
usually $20; for extracting an incisor
“from $5 to 325.
beak ihe
settle
joose,
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
The United States Civil Bervice Com
has
still
represent
inission given out
to
tgures which,
slight
spproximately the
of the
hoy ( f
including
though subject chang:
present
I'h
Froud
extent Classified service
whole
eral
and
(0)
that
branch, or
u lal
be required to he elas
Hund persons
OPV joe
judicial branche
The civil ret
otfeers Hot
any per
14 *
ly as rer or
by direction of the
who has be
tion by th
tive civil
mated to
ployee, 84.02
inden
sil - §
ind =o far th
met without trouble
chief source of supply
Hees Dew Ones ar
methods are adopted,
industries may so
Rublx
nearly unigne
barrass is a substance as
and na
as jg Known to men, Fortunate
ever, if is mt
plant, and the utilization of new species
has already begun, None of them com
pares with two found in the valley of
Amazon, but commercially impor
tant quantities of
each of
the
the gum come from
a dozen piante growing in al
many fropical lauds. The
Landophilia, a climbing vine of Centra
Africa, seems to be most likely of then
all to take the place of the Boazilian
trees if the latter are doomed to ex
tinction.
Much
assassins of Pars, writes a correspon
dent, amd in many fabulous
gainx have been atiributed to them as
a result of their erimes, but these exist
most as
hns
CANeR
Statistics recently compiled by the pre
feel of Paris police throw a good deal
of light on the assas«in's trade as
practiced in modern times. Especially
interesting are they in view of the pop
lar, but very erroncous, Gea that the
asenssin's trade is profitable. That
it is guite the reverse seems to be
provea by a record of the profits gain.
wi by notorious assassins during the
Inet thirty years. Biographies of a
large number of Preach murderers,
ome of whom paid the pepal-y of
Jeir crimes on the guillotine, while
fn Xew
the average
transported Cale
murder
money at Nis
donia, show that
or far less
sre
minke abom
than is made by any third
en day lal 0
PF OF ©
such
there
A Tell-tale Nail,
i'r. John Donne, the famous English
divine and poet, who lived in the reign
of was a veritable
Holmes in bent of mind. A writer in
Tid-Bite tells of one of his famous ex
ploits
He was waking in the churchyard
while a grave was being dug, when the
sexton cast up a moldering skull, The
ily fook it up, and, in bandling
it, found a headless nail driven into it
This he managed to take out and con-
cel in his handkerchief. It was evi:
lent to im that murder had been done.
He questioned the sexton, and learned
James 1. Xherlock
doctor i
ing found dead in bed one morning,
two quarts of brandy.
“Had he a wife?” asked the doctor.
“Yeu”
“What character does she bear?”
“She bore a very good character, only
the neighbors gossiped because she
funeral. She still lives here”
The doctor soon called upon the wo.
man. Ie asked for and received the
particulars of the death of her first
busband, Suddenly opening his hand.
kerchief he showed her the tell-tale
nail, asking, in a loud voice:
“Madam, do you know this nail?”
The woman was so stirprised thei she
confessed; was tried and executed.
A TALE OF FRONTIER LIFE.
HREOOLLKOTIONS RECALLED BY IN.
DIAN INCUKSIONY,
What un Lewell Kepevier Discovered ia
the Historic Toews of Dusstable-
Mirnenious Keenpe Prow a Misra.
ble Kxisiosen of a Descendant
the Itowerr War.
tiers of CUslonianl
The Talk eof
Melghborkeood,
wl One =i
Viemes
the
From tie News, Lowell, Mass,
Mr. Hiram Bonulding, who was for many
venre the of ihe Mansa pong
House, a Bostou summer resort, is undoyis.
sdiv ns well known as any man in Mid Howex
Mr. Bpau dig, besides baviag Leen
# popuinr hotel man, boasts of belay a lines!
Aesop
proprietor
County
wit of Jolie Bpau'ding, a well known
wino was killed in with the
the eommand of
ws Capinin John Tyog in 1804. He
lwo 10 of the
Corpet Band, of Dun
iY known af the
other Bandmas er
the Dest known citizen
: everywhere for his
: character,
ULE Is the wife of this
& well known as ber
recent severe |ilness
malaria caused grave
Herons acquaintances,
nus seemed powerless
and fever, {impaired
aot or, and genera: wreioh-
clinese we tie B, uniii ber sttention
was exlind to Iie, Willams’ Plok Pus for
Pale Peo i she began 1o use thems, Oa
i Bept. 7, 1806, Mra
¢ first box of Pink Pllis,
he News reporter that on
of the hardest
her, Ebe
rdiog to diree-
we iwrial poison sees
Her action
Jud
he fae
lans while serving in
as the first leater
ne
ilstind by
ail traces of
pished at my recov.
and my neighbors,
surprised.” sald she. “to
what is des
edicine, the
fe WAS more Ast
my inshand
are not
“1s BUoh a enampion of
AGG
ng, ths
ig
“1abie
he
homey
1s
i by all
receipt
xox Tor
the
icine
six b
1K or DY
ans Me
One Well-Morteaged Cow,
re 8B 1 is f
th a
more
lake
a farmer
ured by
with red
ow with
COW gpot-
like
“Oh,
t eleven
white
Fame Thine.
what the doctor say
atm nd, did
hat you must give up relig
(ake to drink
| You must stop doing se
h work and take a tonic." —
irler-Journal
JUPT try a
ther i
100, bor of Casoarets, sandy ea.
feet Liver and bowel regulator msde,
The man who would be considered wise
Heart Disesse Relieved in 30 Minutes,
Dir. A«new’s Cure for the Heart gives per
fect relldf in all cases of Organic or Sympa
thetic Heart Disease in 8 minutes, and
seodlly effects a cure. It is a peeriess rem-
ody for Paipttation. Shortness of Breatn,
Smothering Spelis, Pain In Left Side and
all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. Onadose
convinces. If your druggist hasn't it In
stork, ask him to procure it for you. It will
save your life
Whon a little man is Hfsed up everybody
finds out that be is litle,
Then an art cle ber bean wold for MW pears, In
pie of competition spd cheap lftetions, it wees
have superior quality Dobbine' Kieot fe Soap hae
been rotviantly nade and sod witce 186. Ask yous
grocer fov si. Bes. of ali
Of British birds the cuckoo lays the small
est ogg in proportion to its sige,
Cascan~rs sgtimnliste Heer, Kidneys and
boweis, Never scien, woakea oF grip. ie,
In Germany aspatagus is peeled before ft
is canned by the ald of a apooial machine.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums reduces inflamma.
Honallays pain, cures wind colic, Bo. a bottle
The smallest mouse will canss the biggest
elephant to quake with fear,
FITS stopped tree ani Permimentt enred. N+
fin ufter first Guy's tie of Jom Kianes Ginmar
Nerve Rasroumn, Free $2vind bott irenis
We. Send to Ur, Kine, 1 Arch St., Phils, Pa
Car axies are made by a recently-patented
mechanism, Ay
45 LNG i SN SN
Mas 8 Cure for Cons i'n: tion has saved me
Maar a dostor's bill 4 PF. Hanoy,
P.ane, Baltimore, Md, Dea, 4, 1594
Ther Is no water on the moon's surface.
Wien Willons or ewt've, eat a Oan-aret,
sendy oatharu Care ai We. le
Monlevideo's population bs 344,342, r