SUPPOSE YOU Your burden is heavy, I haven't a doubt, But others have loads they must carry about, And they are not whining. Some people are glad If but half of the way Lies out of the shadow, or part of the day They the sun shining, Suppose you try smiling Ree I know you lonely, but othegy hearts ache, And bravely refuse to be bitter Because of life's sorrow They think of the joy in the land far And hasten the pas With hopes of to Suppose you try smiling. are or break away, sing hours of today Morrow slow TRY SMILING. This funny oid world is a mirror, you know, Turn its way with a sneer, or face of un Toe, And vou will see trouble, But meet it with laughter and looks cheer, back will come sunshine and id dent Your bhless Suppose v ull of And t ings to donbie, oun try smiling glad, wid, those who are ourage, 100 MADY are vou need cheering burden, the way Is not All places are open to Too many lack « ‘hose near So ag yo hh your upward your heart will And If a. ring. try smiling Youth's Companion, Suppose el BEE BR Tew . Amy Evershed accor ling Jolcey and friends, friend in their Hilda were 0osom 1ip that early twen- standard of bosom tween gl rl They other spent ains be ties. each and the t other made a point of twice or most f four hours every ainder of wenty effusive secret from the ther. Their ennyerse, viva voce 1 one perpetual inter confidences. Had them the hint that thi XCOSS | ness was bound by rea too last resented th ridicul i tion +1 Lior hange of mutual athed to f fond- you pace, they or later, fact, Was would have indigna Suggestion with 3 the rea ana was #4 riit aller tively. “I really thin nad, Amelia.” “Oh, nonsense. It’ juet There's no fu 1 beginner to whom 0 teach rudiments a man Biss of who knows thea Lie sive me or more than | And how con ver had demanded Hilda, periority of an engaged Evershed i now had my in a probationary way, just to keep my hand in the time when Mr. Right galdom styles him) comes Whenever an opportunity has my way, 1 have seized it. and he most of it And 1 always (which brings me back to started) that those men who had vious practice and experience much the beat lovers dt bridge is bad but from SBumblepuppy In love-making—may ‘he saints deliver me! “Have 1 not spoken good practical sense? Would you find your Reggle's woolng so acceptable if he were not an expert at it? You know you wouldn't.” “I tell you Reggie is not an expert tie has had no previous practice In making love,” exclaimed Hilda, al- most crying with indignation at the idea. “No? There was a note of amused incred- nlity in the interrogation. Moreover, brief as it was, it seemed to Hilda to be pregnant with sinister meaning. “I don’t understand you, she flashed out. “You are you kn ring that you any experien with girl, smiled, enigmatic what | know.” little Amelia men, sort against {as servant. long. come where we proe- enough: Amalia" hiding from me know noth- Reggle? him? Far from it. I that handsoms ahl agreeable something ing against know about and but eminently what is entirely t perfect, You thing Amelia Do I Amelia uttered these smiled two could, and of light or under discussion, “What e you driving at, provokir gly words, one who deal throw a good fest mean tions me what you covert | 1 girl to whom Reggie before he became If so answer Hilda," who Is amused cont ulous ore and me id, do keep LO say 3 re especially she Wr as bro} there top here by any such ridie- retorted ‘ glad of an ex inating the interview When next 1 your “Good - meet you, | be in right mind took h went up to her bedroom and * two hours and three-quarters, tears brought relief, anger never brooding thus ons er departure the Tears of while her no do. alone, her had magnified to dn astonishing extent SAW a secret her Reggie and saw herself betrayed, in affections, by hey faithful and devoted She saw her lover's heart stol- en away from her lald waste and desolate by the ser- pentine wiles of that diabolical minx. All this and a hundred other things When Hilda came down to tea she found her rf Philp just returned from business. He saw at once by her red and swollen eyes, that something was the matter. He asked her what it was. Then out it all dame. "All" do I say? Yes, far more than all Philip, who was a good brother, was greatly aroused and perturbed by the tdle of his sister's wrongs. "Something going on between Smart. Shryke and Amelia Evershed,” he ex- claimed. “Tut-tut! It—it is too out- rageous. | can-—can-hardly believe it either of him or of her” “But it is true!” eried out Hilda, clenching her hands excitedly, “she as good as confessed it to me. 1 don't blame Reggie so much--disloyal and perfidious as Le has been. It is more that snake Amelia's fault than his. She jeal- BURP them- selves She tween Amelia her tenderest posed friend most she saw, besides, has beguiled him to his downfall, like her congenial prototype in the Garden of Eden.” After tea, Philip put on his hat, and, with a determined alr, sallied forth. Hilda had no doubt from his manner that he had gone to demand an expian- ation from Reginald Smart-Shryke It was three good hours before he came back. Hilda looked up at him anxiously. “Well 7 e inquired “It is all right,” answered her broth- er, smiling. What do you mean by ‘all “1 mean it is as 1 half from the first. There egregious mistake, Amelia Evershed care for Smart- ver been any- right?” suspected has been an doesn’t twopence has ne them.’ told haven't Shryke, and there thing between “Reggie has "NO: 1 have this?” mart-Shryke, 1 TN hea hh 1 Amelia's She has told you seen S been to me," “Ah! done having that minx's plat For I'm a Philip allowed tonished your having that, yourself would But She marry he » * 0 unhappy imtions against Jolcey at the Amelja Evershed ingled reproach ther Hilda with bosom, iat he had You did a rise out words In for eact ra is has nation Where » from may be af { a 1% puzzling questions to the Mormons The has pl fry Y Massachusetts fish anted thia + Com mission about S0.000.000 and if one In maturity danger of a failure The young enemies, h them is lobater ired not of the ear, a hund would reach there would be much lobster crop many jlobaters that very have so OWOVer the death rate high among The law firm of Pu in Westfield, Mass., band and wife, Mrs for member, having the bar last week 25 old and was married five years ago. She began study of law three years ago out of interest in her hus- band's profession itnam & Putnam of hus Putnam, the jun- been admitted to She is 25 vears congists the Half-Deaf People. “If you are deaf in one ear,” said the “1 don't care about giv. ing you a job.” “Why? aswed the applicant “Because you can’t tell what direc. tion sounds come from. Hence in a place like this you would be in great danger “How direction do you know I can’t teil what sounds come from?” the aps “No person deaf in one ear,” replied the boller maker, “can do 80. A mah deaf in one ear will look behind him if a gun goes off on his right will Jook up in the air * If a child shrieks at his feet. He will look wild ly In front of him if a locomotive whistles in his rear. A is no place for such a man.” “I knew | was like this’ applicant, “but I didn’t know all half- deal people were” “They all are,” sald the boller-mak er, “and my shop is no place them." --Philadeiphia Bulletin. Making Stovepipes Fit. If you should h Blove, your pi for it slit one end, with a ave an odd size 1 and too large cut a ping |i about five inche lap over t i brad and Grease Spots on Carpet. tak aif of each, & 13 "n 8000 1 ana the pulp ade of a poun sugar, and boiliz oint Boil twenty remove minutes skim: from the jars steadily and fire Stuffed and seal in Potatoes - t a the top pf hot, Soo portion well with =a into a from baked potat teaspoon all hot bowl, seasoning rected for the skins, RACross the add butter, of salt and pepper, as di mashed potatoes lightly piling up ture quite a little above the in a fluffy mass, Brush with butter and place oven until * well brown Serve standing. Macaroni a I'Espagnole sauce from one 3 out interior, put hot milk, the mix the top lightly back in the ed on tablespoonful salt. layer of boiled sprinkling of chill sauce and chopped onion, and continue this order until dish is full, having the macaroni last, in a hot oven for forty Washington Star. French Rolls.- one cup of butter and lard, mixed in equal proportions, one-half cup of good yeast, or half a cake of compressed yeast and a teaspoonful of salt. Add flour enough to make a stiff dough. Let It rise over night; in the morning add two well beaten 1 thoroughly and let ft UE A IeRG minutes, — into balls as large a8 an ogg: then roll between the hands to make long rolls (about three inches). Place close together in even rows on well buttered pans. Cover and let them rise again, then bake in a quick oven to a delicate brown, Grind pip dnp An Aplin Obdiddddbdbddddbddididbbbdd Good enough to yet so Full description or by mail Rochester, N. Y. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE IGNS Ce PYRIGHTS &c Sail Fimercan mek ly sont . riswadoaiors HUN i to 30 10roadeny ~ New York rr rETTY SHOES For Everybody The old and The The rere BE Er Cre For Gentlemen and the Radcliffe Douglas The Tourine Are on our shelves your inspection, Also fleece linzd for dies from $1.00 to $2. The best makes of on ber Boots and Shoes. Come to see us. We are always glad to meet our old as well as new cus- tomers. C. A. KRAPE SPRING MILLS, PA. 00000000000 000000S Hornet Chasers. horn is such a may H a way {1 being of and the young. Ladies Babies » n a Aniline A 8 a 2 4 4 a gag TTT TT TIT TT PP Tr eT Po TTT IT ITY I PIT er rT To rTiTeree i danger ke Polly can be stung. into hor. either Chasing Evans done wit Divide number camps~-the ch nets Place a on a fence or resent a hive. Each hornet nis ball with which he the hive, around which the are grouped, armed with bats off the bails Every ball driven back from the hive counts a point for the chasers. A ball touching the hive indirectly, even after it has been touched by a chaser, is good and counts for the hor nots The hive is attacked and defended by the right and left hand alternately, as the umpire commands. The side first making fifteen points wing, after which parts are changed, the hornets becoming chasers and vice versa This game can be played in the house by using soft balls and battle. doors. hout players the and tare Me to rep. has a ten- hit chasers to ward Iwo AEETR mark or on top of a Ix ‘ socks to HR on a. 43443 ; Jno. F. Gray & Son Succdssors to. GRANT HOOV Eg) Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies io the World. . . .. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No Amcuments Before insuring your life see the contract of THE HOME which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums peid in ad. dition to the face of the policy. 1122132: Add A 4544 2 to Loan on First Mortgage Office in Crider's Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Tr rrr rrr rrr TTY Money i 4444404854544 88000438880 8050430440 v ¢ 411 0il a - ¢: ¢ 4 ¢ Bd ¢ | ARGEST |NSURANCE Agency ‘IN CENTRE COUNTY a Nw H. E. FENLON js Agent Bellefonte, The Largest and Best ¢ Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- ( tion. Plate Glass In- surance at low rates. Sh i —— 0 a i— PIANOS AnD ORGANS THE LESTER PIANO is » strictly high grade instrument, en dorsed by the New England Con. servatory, Boston, Mass ; Broad Street Conservatory, Philadelphia, as being unsurpassed for tone, touch and finish, . THE LAWRENCE . . 7-OCTAVE ORGAN is the only organ with the Saxa- phone combination and correctly imitates orchestral iustruments, TERMS to suit the buyer. Ask for catalogues and prices 2 CE ZEIGLER #4 SPRING MILLS. ADVERTISING PAYS. “-— .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers