oS A BAH SS A JAPANESE GARDEN, This Recipe and You Wil | Have One Complete. A H( RSe AT THE SHOW, { Story of a Ribbon Winning From an | T H E G RANGE Equine Viewpoint, Smith, the Photographer, WW. Bmith, the photographer, will be in Centre Hall on Friday of | this week, until 2:30 p. m. Follow The classical garden, like a sonnet, it governed by special laws of harinony and rhythm. It must have its five hills, its ten trees and its fourteen stones. You can get along without the hills, and you can without the trees but you cannot get along | without stones. Indeed the perfect type of the flut garden is nothing but an archipelago of rocks in of white The stones be the foundation; the rest are mere ac- are what Is wanted suggest woods and for the Japanese recog- nize that there are sermons in stones, Each stone has its name and relative Ne { lorachid 1a be boon ace ia the There is Taw \ pata eta ha guardian the center and hh, REE afflicted with wean kid- kg . . [ neys. lf the chiid urin- | opposite it the belleview stone. Across . ates too often, if the | | the stone urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child | and so on. reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon’ it, the cause of One of the popular features of the in New York is the I of park police horses that is al- d. The winning of a blue ¢ / / ¢ / / : ¢ / : : ¢ ¢ ¢ ’ ¢ ¢ ¢ ® Conducted by J. W. DARROW, Press Correspondent New York State Grange annual horse show Women as Well as Men | Are Made Miserable by | Kidney Trouble. Kreamer & Son You will find at Our Store a complete line of ‘ . «General Merchandise... Embracing ‘ DRY GOODS GROCERIES BOOTS AND SHOES nie Laon by 3 these police horses is told in “Horses Nine,” by Sewell Ford, The one ol A GRANGE LIBRARY. wot y E along vie viewpoint of the horse. | An Important Consideration In the Hest Grange Work. It is well for us to remember in our | outline of grange work for the year be fore us that some provision should be {| made for a library, or, if one is already owned, then additions should be made to it syst There is nothing which enters more deeply into the warp and woof of one's character than the | ad. The practice of keep minds of our young | beautiful and bright, cheerful and wl books is of | difference be boy vio Las duiiior { So it | that one morning | Skipper heard the sergeant tell Reddy { e had been detailed for the horse Reddy had saluted and nothing at the time, but when once out on he told Skipper all about it. sare an’ it's app’arin’ before s¥ the swells in town ye'll be, b'y. Phat | hooks we re do ye think of that An’ mebbe | ye'll be gettin’ a blue ribbon, Skipper, me lad, an’ mebbe Mr. Patrick Martin | will a roundsman's berth an’ | chevrons on his sleeves afore the year's out.” The horse show was all that Reddy had promised, and more. The light al most dazzled Skipper. The sounds and the smells confused him, but he felt Reddy on his back, heard him chirrup softly and soon felt at ease on the tan- bark. Then there of | hopes an noise, and SKipper, with some fifty of | it is imposs his friends on the force, began to move | fied around First it horizon abreast, then by twos, and then a rush | poin to troop front, i they swept around as if th harnessed to a beam by tra length. After { dozen were picked out and put tl their paces. Skipper was one of the says: uippened Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis- A sen courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor | and cheerfulness soon | disappear when the kid- | neys are out of order | or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent X 7 that it is not uncommon pebbles, Hust show sald they squad. | cessories. Speaking stones . stones that were post matically tones tha passions me Wo . : composition. eh? ing before the 4 stone in I young men ai wolnen uplifting i helpful thought | inestimabl | we | formed tl | the one who 1 not is Yuh » cascade is the moonshade Have from go The qn the future t The hills unmask each other by rule, 1 reading and { The principal hill has its two foothill he diffi.) ! A I} i : as | iis - { pk { EB its spur its distant peak, seen the di . Cully Is ki , and the fir great as be. | | ) ; : Lk step should be tc treatment : through a valiey, and the low hill that M LE wd tad ted) ited and the uneducat- | : ; Eas ’ se important orpa | must stand on the opposite side of the 10 a di ion of the Next tot actual society of a no- | . 8 gue - : 3 and bladder and not to a habit as I author is the benefit | ake ’ : ed by reading his books. The | { 7 people suppose. ight into harmony with the | ', | " cipal the n ! which the Tree of Perfection, afterward to be satis- | ignoble things. The | "Pros of Bclence his | golitude bow thelr I and nobler, and his outlook on | Let the grange | he . Just now you will find goods adapted to the Fall and Winter Season, and the prices al- together reasonable no matter from which department you may wish to buy, BUH hills, st of | tween tl unpleasant i ed. k ble, i {to be gail { mind is In se high 1 As there are a principal stone and a “prin around the Tree there be a i men | erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need same great remedy, | The mild and ate effect of | Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold t by druggists, in fifty- Kk cent tree,” sholi aku, Wis a great We invite you to Our Store and ask that you give us at least a share of your patronage. T0000 00ND Nw BWW - of the 9909900000 YYDVVYVYDVDG with low or the 9% 9999090000009 0000900 the circle. changes, ¥ § sen wien, in {i hicher i Tn pond, wre elevated, x a Home of Brawp Root. ding many of the letters received nonial in writing Dr. Kilmer N. Y., be sure and , three bridge | principal hill, so must as well as men are made mis- Is of the writer, so that | | of Evil, the Tree i the reader broadens, his ideals are | Th come a permanent fixture.~ | { iol i } i 4 and mandarin Some more evolutions —————— ; recipe for “ALWAYS A GRANGER." | a a Japane | Ham Verbeck in Country Life Then three of the six were se the of the squad. ( and two others remai of the ring. Men wearing tall, black hats, white shirt front and ea whips, came and looked carefully Skipper showed could waltz in time the people who banked far up Id and clapped their hands until it seems as if a thunderstorm had b At last one of the i a blue ribbon on 8 When Reddy got | he fed him four after the other. knew he Reddy showed the paper. rest these men to the as Skipper oon big Next that was bilge Him A Reward and a Fine. A few owing to the ous depredations of rat banks of the Thames, were compelled offering a reward of £5 for infor: years ago, to issue 1 brought ordered t« ning 1 drawed the ye're paid, we've £3 world with.”-—Londou «1 this nel, ft to start the Answ HO Ors Encouragement of a Great Singer. Grassini, the Italian singer. was very much interested in the young girls among her relatives and always ready to encourage any talent she could find in any of them. One day a novice was brought to her with the unpromis ing words, “She is a spoiled contralto and will never do anything on the stag jut the singer listened while the young girl began her frightened trills, when suddenly Grassini caught her in her arms with delight. “Why, Fou are not a contralto,” she said, “but the finest soprano in the world. Your voice is far stronger than mine. Study well You want of my help. There is a rich bank in your throat.” The little singer was none other than Giulia Grisi, great none Linguistic Instinet, The strength of the linguistic instinet in children is shown by the remark: able shifts they will make to find forms of expression for their perception or feelings. An examination of these shifts will show that the energy of the child manifests itself slong precisely the same lines as have been taken by the languages of the races of man- kind toward their ultimate forms. Thus, lacking the word “wide,” a little etic said, “Open the door loud” ex fending the meaning of the word “loud” drecisely as we do when we apply it colloquially to colors. In a Quandary, “Mary gets so excited when she reads history.” “Does she?” “1 should say she did. She's been reading English history, but she had to stop when she got to the Wars of the Roses.” “Why did she stop?’ “She couldn’t tell which rose she pre. ferred to have win.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer, Why He Moved Away. Kind Lady—8o you were in one places three years? Why did you leave? Tramp—I wuz pardoned, ma'am. Chicago Journal, He who has health has hope, and he who has hope has everything. —Plat), Can the dentist siways be depended upon to Ail a loog-felt waat, True Purposes Should Be 1 iiys of Made Known. ago, ir says a writer in he “Why, rau but didn't y ireside, or Fe it” an- know aptly en a why men and women PATRONS ne State Gran DOD Members o do not unite with us. progressive, anxious to secure for his iends the very but felt powerless found others » did and dis- vinpathy vorid over. hie objects of worker » 1, and 1 often stock plirases ns that con- werd. First * you seek inge will aid i be will ap the best peo- » with us did they meaning of the them and to r allegiance. excellent men been the order be knowl poses are. the io “always irate » pu Postal Savings Banks. vings bank + $¥stem will eir girl to go and deposit however money and receive a teed by the United we have not only that will by all the boys wether, but we 18ts of the ris of patriotism and that will thrive and uture. There are the grange advo hinent postal sav- of chief of of thrift and econ ted and the love of country done so ef- N. J. Bach nent, of economy action tines 0 y Lire abli of nks, but the habit one that could be iy in no ether way. National Lecturer. Strengthen Wenk Points. i stronger than its It Is w» we are weak that ies always attack us. Individually we must fortify our chara igainst the attack of every- thing unworthy of our best selves. As must fortify such places in i any in ducement an attack by an enemy Where do those th to use our Order for selfish ends usually try fpproach u tion and be Of in is LO weal Here Or enen cfr an order #3 Tv Our organization as oer io who wis on our guard. Grange Needs and Gives Help. The gre in need of the help which the is ge men greater need of the grange. need of the farmer for the grange and the help | ganization is immeasurably greater. New York state leads in grange mem hership with 70.000 Always the Mode, “You don’t care much for display?” man, “Yet there is some satisfaction In not being wholly out of style.” “That is the point exactly. The things that money buys go out of fash. fon in a few months, but the money it. tury." Washington Star. Cruel Perversion, Bhe--Do you reeall the day we were married? Hel wish to grecious I couldi= Yonkure doloauen. How the Farmer In Benefited. The gra: tue : ge 18s a benelit to fo train fulness: cogs gends the great It furnishes a his des for the g others materialize: it efforts greater ETROge fits portion as to benefit bi dividual mes grange, “W but asks rather, n through ire ood of himself directs his The just in pro- ves through the grange When the in. to ask of the for me?” “What ean 1 put into it?" tix tll the greatest usefulness of the grange be realized. —W. N. Giles, Becretary New York State Grange. can io nsefainess he farmer isocintes er od hat SiR is there In it Blaine Said. once said: “The ers of the will control its desiing Azaingt the storms of popu. net frenzied madness that with established order, spirit of anarchy that What James G. James G. Bia republic fie GI inst government, the farmers of the United States will stand as a shield and bulwark, themselves the willing subliects of law.” To strengthen this bulwark is the work of the grange. If the quoted remarks are true, then the triotism of all. dn Colonel Hezekinh Bowen died recent. He was general superintendent of the New York state He served ant colonel —-———— Twenty-six states of the Union were represented at the late meeting of the sational gravge at Lavsing, Mich, i Woman Is eligible to any office in the grange, and there are three offices which women must fll, The resources of the national grange ame ant to $04,628.06, guile a respecia- le sum. Last year 200 new granges were ore | 70 OUR MANY FRIENDS : Dress Goods Fancy Waists RINC LLS SP Mi A Complete DECORATED DINNER SET OF 120 PIECES Will be Given Away Absolutely Free ly free. will be given a ticket entitling the hold- er to a set of beautiful decorated dishes. These tickets are given in all cash pur- chases except flour, sugar and coffee. No tickets will be given on book accounts. A full line of merchandise, such as is kept in a general store, at prices to astonish you, Just received a barrel of Butcher pepper, the very best, at 20c a pound. GIRLS WANTED AT MILROY. We are needing girls to work in the hosiery mill. Light, work Good wages gun anteed shove post of clean voarding Apply by letter or in per THOMPSON RROS., Milroy, son to Pa A UETIN THOMAS, M.D, (ALLOPATH,) PHYSICIAN AND SURGRON, CESTRE HALL Pa, Office aid ressdonce at Miss Lizgie Roukie's on Main street, Calls attended to day or night, Men and Women Wanted, Men and women in this enunty and wd) ining terrbtorien, are wanted 10 represent sod sdvedtive an old estate Hishied borer of wold foancial winds fog Melure to men $21 weskly, 10 womer $12 1 KI8 serkiy with expe a ve widvur eed even Moiny By ehek direct fron Lendguariers. Hore snd bigs furnished when ne dees py 3 sition permanent Address, i i i WW WW NW i i i 5 F. E. Wieland, Linden Hall. Has something new to offer in Shoes, and for the next two weeks will sell them at greatly reduced pri- ces—a complete line of Men's Heavy Rubbers, Felts, and Overs, Arctics and Leggings. A new lot of Boys’ and Girls’ School Shoes, and a complete line of Over Shoes for Men, Women and Children, Come and see them even if are not ready to buy, R—— AT SAT. 5 3 2 18 E83 3 apap gradge pnd gud in didi J a La iiiaiSAasisasntaa L y 3 3 Sonim Se god pti dipped pd pulp pps Spd Bue BB BBB ep Luly Ape The Centre Hall Roller Flouring Mills J. H. & S. E. WEBER, Proprietors ™ +4 + i hg 5 ¥ 5 Snaps X WHITE LILLY FLOUR ad MLL. FEEDS 5 Apetoption YiyY The Highest Market Prices will be paid for all kinds of Wheat, Corn, Oats, Barley, Rye, Buckwheat. Baled Hay and Straw will be bought at all times, at the est prices the market will afford. rvYyYY a i A +o TE COAL All sizes of Coal, the best Grades of Coal to be had, always on hand. We invite school boards to consult with us before placing orders for fucl. tainty S88 8. i < pei amomaby fmatip slpndt post spmiadhpaty ET TY AY YOY OY FY TT 00 Trey Pristina stmt sts. shoei: sds BEA ASA 008800 RRERBR ORE RT RST RI SIT TTT wn wn oy R76 MILLIONS ¢ JOHN F. GRAY & SON Represented in the EDERICK FOSTER GENCY WITH FIRE IN URANCE COMPANIES ALOE... ————— The Largest ana Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- ton Plate Glass In- surance at low rates. Also, District Agent for... / The Manhattan Life Insurance Co, HTN WWW NWT Successors to GRANT HOOVER Control sixteen of t)e largest Fire and Le Insurance Comps: es in the world. The Best is the Cheapest..... No mutuals ;: no Assess Ie te, «Money to Loan on First Mortgage Office in Crider’s Stone Buildir g Bellefonte, Pa, BE” Telephone sonnestinn FR K. i / ¢ / Clover seed wanted Price seenrd. [Ing to quality—J H & =. E Weber, i ® Centre Hall ard Oak Hall, ..Pianos and Organs... THE LESTER PIANO is a strictly high grade instru- ment, endorsed by the New England Conservatory, Boston, Mass.; Broad Street Conservatory, Philadelphia, Pa., as being unsurpassed for tone, touch and finish. THE LAWRENCE 7-OCTAVE ORGAN is the only organ with the Saxaphone combination and correctly imi- tates orchestral instruments. TERMS to suit the buyer, Ask for catalogues and prices. C. E ZE GLE, SPRING MILL , PA. A y ers Pill Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black ? UU: BNR WD VD VV BBN Act directly on the liver, They cure constipation, biliousness, sick-headache. Sold for 80 vears, {.5 Ayer GUCKINGHAM'S DYE WORRIES OR RP Alle 00. SasBiUa. BR The Best * 6&4 000 AdvertisingMedium The Cente Reporter One Dollar Per Year NY S——————— 0 S550 Tee Strength-Giver "grat Jayne's Tonic VerMruce od
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers