WORK FOR THE SUNSHINE. There's work for the sunshine from the dead Must be kissed to the beauty of white and red; , The trees, shorn of fruitage of grief Must feel the sap's thrill in the veins o' the leaf The daisies must blossom--the lilies lean the rose of There's work and deep in uit a ve} reap! green for the sunshine il Washington Star HERE" of i exclaimed stiddden he caught lustrious fig ush ure in his Serve, im pre not a hundred yards He t lying handy, room his farmyard. that was Wok up an old flour it grimly and strode cireuitons!s upon the impudent thief. : It a big fleld, considering how best ished was ane nn something Proximity proved the -—{ young fashion of shifted hb at his and woman town. The | is pipe and pulled beard. wonderfully haif minde sternly “No. YO Wi she ‘ dione I : ing hunt ached tramping weary ruefully wot only r¢ thron ever looked that | 3 fessed. “Of course it's stealing! I'ma thief mI hor ket and held f forth her slim. arms, w the wrists together, the woman fran oon g. #oe % . Oil. 1 she GOW. has. put 1 with in a manner whieh George could not 1 He laughed and manacled the pretty thief with his thumb and first fi “Now, what have yon self?” judicially. “Oh, I won't do it again. sir!” Her eyelashes fell roguishly. George discreetly let go and picked up the basket. She was a little witch. “Are you staying in Fensbro' (the village, miss?” “Yes; but I'm lost!” hiopelesaly, “Your best plan would through my farmyard.” George led the way at a good pace, “How far is it to Fensbro' 7’ she in quired. “Two miles, mise" “And what time Is it, please? “Half-past 8." “Half-past 8!" well feel hungry,” “You might bave a bit of breakfast with me-that Is, if you don’t mind,” dubiously. They stood by the farmhouse door, “You might dry your feet as well,” he pursued, slowly, “and then I could put you on the lane myself. Polly's out for the day—that's the worst of it. Hut come in, miss.” And George crossed the threshold, It was quite a charming little adven. nger, to say for your be to ent surprised. “I may ture to Hose Carol, and, desirous of | seeing it through, she followed the big | 1 | farmer without demur. a snug chair to his hearth, | He drew then he brought forth a palr of capa- | four feet into them, ald, humorously! and | of breakfast. | girlish | sodden This man “You might a pineh!” get at he With a laughter, and 1 3 she sat restrained Rose ripple © her to dry. the changed them watched table. acoed and filling the breakfast She quick to Polly must very “doing for ut when he started loaf of bread longer i i | i his he amusing to see this was Riess SITE i plo | hig ser | It man Wis and n to slice himself” } i i + could contain | Ho was awkward, moving in those ridiculous slippers, but ¢ got to the | i ! i i BUYING CLOVER SEED. The Increased attention being gly- en to the growing of clover upon farms where the hay is fed upon the farm renders the seed an {important of the in the spring chase of the seed needing attention. { by matter. Thiz is one earliest seeds to he and therefore the pur- @ of the things It 18 well forelock, ws; and and ready 8 OF early to take time the LY 8 Practical get your clover seod And rigl warn those for sow- would on n 5 tear hare like to We who hav buy clover always wt cost for Ccoslly unt the gotten, but fie lds with all for a very f 3 Our weeds, Yer seead If wl for means poor one pure i i best start amples iritieés in fs 1 tras Gat PROFIT FROM he la the first of October follow the sows for and while they v wore glop freely i took them from the Corns ground made into They a warm place slop a good rye i them 1 to ETOWw and of of about AC Teg the vers CATE not seem They were hearty, ate wel given twice as to keep and were bedding about A woey them clean everything I could made a failure on pigs. 1 suppose and used mill pay a little i the of fall pigs ia and and but that batter Cost ANY Mone: make readers ne of thig article w “How Mra Xawi Mr ershoes be “My I believe I might have not.” i wy on did said her busband, as N ting room cold’s is well as guess x well to remain at | he se i as far forth The on- before the stove, tertainment opened with a selection by thie band, then prayer by the Congrega- tional minister, then the band again, then a song by the Methodist minister accompanied by his wife at the cabinet | organ, and then the lecture: after that the baud once more, and then the bene. diction by the Episcopal minister.” “Well, whatabout the lecture?” asked Mrs. Sawin “I ean hear ministers any day.” “The lecture was on Scotland.” said Mr. Sawin, slowly. “I never felt much drawed to Scotland, and I guess after to-night I shall give up all thoughts of ever going there. Folks that haven't got any more idea of the English ian. guage after all these years need a mis sionary, but 1 don't feel any call to be one. And as for their houses, there wasn't one single good two-story frime bullding in all the stereoptics that ran throwed on the sheet, If It ha'‘n't been for the band, 1 should have felt I'd wasted my fifteen conts’ admis sion.” Youth's Companion. ! Besides rice, teakwood forms the principal product of Siam. the I have had fine pigs i two hundred pigs t I had 175 head shotes, about weighing ye balance around pagunds, [| think if a man tries ralse a great many hogs better have them come the spring. He will have enough fall pigs out of his spring litters to keep him buay through the winter, and in the spring | they will go out and make a good hog | in a little while. t I expect to breed thirty sows for spring farrow commencing to pig about April 20 to May 20. I aim to have all my sows come in as near together as possible. | used two | boars and hand breed all my sows, | so I always get good litters, | ex- pect some of your older hog ralsers | can, no doubt, tell me a great deal | more than I know about raising hogs, ay 1 am young in the business, but I am doing fairly well at it—J P| Fletvher In the Massachusetts Ploughman. On luck with farrow and at the of pood. had twenty ia at thrifty one about 1 140 ton 0 them h e Tw ii GROWING CARROTS FOR STOCK FEED. For several years we have been raving carrots on a rather small scale, feeding them to both horess and ~attle with good results; and we know that their value when prop erly used is far in excess of what the analysis would seem to Indicate, The food value of one amall | will go a carrot is ndeed; far toward thrifty too, but one carrot a day Keer ing a For ent, ing up the appetite, toning up the di- gestive ng flow of condition, cow they are excel and Inereas! They valuable organs milk, will be found to the who has who has his cows should far only feed They only dry during nter be sown thi rows enough apart ith hor groymmd is thorou vation w loose. loamy is 1 If it can or soil there ttle rich. month before 50 bef i8 still nure thoroughly il 20 far toward If manure generous profitably mula is recommended “EES in demand the rich and them: are enjoy ites and our take all fully and well form- with a warm tocked with care our dom rest fully markets can get and then plied. Asmall area of ed, properly poultry fully iy be S60 large City they are not sup equipped house and selected fowls, a of nuous profit Of course this profit will great y de pend upon cost of food and care and attention given them. 1 al ways feed a variety of food to my poultry. corn, wheat and oats with plenty of green food, will surely in- crease the laying as well as the fat tening of our poultry.--Louls Camp bell In Poultry Products. will most sure source cont the BRREAKING THE COLT. The breaking of a colt is often: times done in a vicious and brutal manner which often ruins the ani for life. It is good policy to catch and handle them when quite young, all the time quietly and gent: ly teaching them to lead. The colt will never forget this kind treatment in his earlier days, and when he {a being broken to harness a colt han. dled in this manner will be far less troublesome. (wesar was murdered at 58. Gram was only 43 when the Civil War wd ed. Napoleon and Wellington were the same age at Waterlod, only 46, ' i i | i i ATTORNEYS. D. ¥. FORTNEY ATTORNEY AT-LAY BELLEFOXTE, PA Office North of Court House YW. HARRIZBON WALKER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA No. 19 W. High Street Jxo. J. Bowen - T1G, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW EscLe Brook BELLEVORTE, PA, | Eucoessors 0 Osvia, Bower & Orvis | Consul B.D. Gerria son in English and German CLEMENT DALE Ww os Sees ok ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Ofica N. WW. corer Dismond, two doors from First National Bank, he YJ G RUSKLE * ATTORNEY -AT LAW i BELLEFONTE PA. | All kinds of legal buxiness attended to promptly fpecial stiention given to collections. Office, Boor Crider's Exchange. re | HN B. BPANGLER ATTORNEW-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA | Practices in all the courts. Comsuliation is i English snd German. OfSce, Orider's Exchange | Bu roe 1eiing “ — CHO H0000PELLVVLL000000000 To save money and to have a clean job of PAPER HANGING or PAINTING done, go to— .P.R. Auman.. SPRING MILLS, PA. Wall Paper Furnished at 3c. per Bolt and Up, . . . 000000000 )000000000000000 ROBO LA00000G0000000000000000R0RRCYS SPIDER THREADS THE BEST. Fer Use in Telescopes Nothing Has Been Found So Good. tronomer aller The a pain true and magnifying pow An instance of the dus spider lines is found he Allegheny same sot yf of the tran. in observatory, where the in the microme rument has been ter use since BUNNY GAVE HER A BURPRISE. Mrs. Edgell Found Cottontail Rabbit Sitting Up Behind Stove. When Mrs. Nellie Edgell into the sitting room of her home Thoroughfare Neck, she was aston ished to see a cottontail rabbit sitting up behind the says a Leipsic Del., dispatch She held our her hand and called persuasively to Bunny, but he dashed around the room a panic She opened the door and the rabbit hid under the farmhouse How bunny got into the zitting room was a mystery until Mr. Edgell picked dp a log to pul in the big stove. The log was hollow. Bunny had crept into the log and had been carried into the house. The winter here has been so severe that hundreds of rabbits and squirrels and partridges have been found dead from axposure. stepped in stove, Tae sia Gorman Hard to Caricature. Everybody who is familiar with the features of Senator Gorman is aware that cartoonists invariably fall to get any charscteristic phase in the Mary- land statesman’s face which they can exaggerate successfully. A cartoon {st of some note tried for an hour one evening when sitting spposite Senator Gorman at dinner to “catch” hm, but was unsuccessful, aithough he thought that one drawing was fairly good. He called Senator Gorman's attention to the tyouble he was having, “Well” said the senator, “every one of the prominent cartoonists has said the ¢ame thing, Nast and Gilliam have told me I ought to do something to change my appearance so that { could he successfully rartooned.” ddd ALLL 00 ALLAN L ILL EDWARD BOYER. Proprietor Location : One mile South of Centre Hall Accommodations firstclass. Good bar Parties wishing enjoy an evening given special attention, Meals for such ocoasions pre- pared on short notice. Always prepared for the transient trade BATES : $100 VER DAY [A f spring Mills Hotel BPRING MILLA, PA. PHILIP DRUNM, Prog, First-class accommodations st all Umes for Let man and beast, Free bus 10 snd from af trains. Excellent Livery attached. bosrd first.class, The best liquors wines ai the bar, Penn's Valley Banking Company © CENTRE HALL, PA. W. B. MINGLE, Cashief Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . . a — $ Sond Bindi lipid didi dd Bp dpi Bindi Binnie Jno. F.Gray &Son Successors to . . GRANT HOOVER) Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies io the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . ... No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuri contract SECT t 3 1 £3 AR AR 2 ng your life see f THE HOME of death between re- sina id in ad ums pai in age ie face of the policy. ¥ the which the te twentieth years to Loam on First Mortgage Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection be TTT rrr rt TI rrr rrr rr rtididde LIVERY .« Special Effort made to Accommodate Com- mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penna R. R . . re ———— VND VV PVD OVER 76 MILLIONS $ Represe nted In the REDERICK K. FOSTER AGENCY WITH FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES ALONE... The Largest an d Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- tion. Pilate Glass In- urance at low rates. ¢ 4 Also, District Agent for . .. ‘ The Manhattan Life Insurance Cg, you will be convinced of a few facts in Footwear . «..C. A. KRAPE.... SPRING MILLS Ps. - BO YEARS EXPERIENCE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers