The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 19, 1906, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    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.
“-— .