f Song of the Search. With garments crumpled and torn, With her heart in a desperate mood. A woman fumed in unwomanly rage Seeking a of food. earch! cooker Search! search! By subway, Wherever She sang trolley, in church, she went. in dolorous voice the song of her search! by Search! search! search! While the cock is crowing aloof! An earch! gearch! For has no forsooth! It's oh! for the of slaves, When your When ladies And were waited search she cook days servants dare not shirk, a dish to wash like a Turk! ad never on gearch! begins search! Till you ache in every will condescends only to same old tiresome search! brain search! Search! your to swim! limb! { who won't. { cook, cook who wash, or Or who It's always the game Whichever way you look! crumpled and torn, and red, at night to a comfortless With garments With eyelids She returns home tum! Dies, heavy And bed. Sear 1 . Al weary to ‘h! search! search! \ Next day it And The begins again; be till eternity refrain! — Puck. we fear it will burden ; ’ n SeSeSesesesesesesesesesasesat he Big Bear of the Tetons. § G 1525252525 eheseheseseset " 26262526252525252525 25 about what he is,” sent “Our Teton large as some are none That's David a8 i lies are not tips but nd iverups in som dark « when there and {hear . y ang scuiue sha - 5 y Pers ked make 80 Cun r a wie powerful Most t lair anon, these range far and wide, just huntin trouble.’ The Big Bear tb chief i up and War ¥ rar OWS Pore rant his cher for David hide for t you can laughed, enough over the and nis bear's d You must be epredati RAE years his sister d had $0 many bears iring their five in Basin } contempt He made bear. A a bull the Teton for no good w add meat corne hardly you sharp when a bear with cubs, or r a grizzly. And one shoot ; ar on a ledge above, | might roll down upon In | as David summarize it, | a man who hunts needs— | just gumption! While David and Marta fast David enlarged upon his for putting an end to the His sheep back from closed by a hi; t You i wound or | would | as one brief, would anything break plans | ate bear corral lay a little way cabin It was fence of woven | the en- h willows. At ae ear the of the corral | fence path pines talon was set leading which squarely ac and up feathered the the m ross an old the of a on back into base untains David's corral the come down this path and | into corral, partial lv knocking down the fence, When he had slain to his bloody satisfac- tion, he had climbed out at the same place and returned to the upper moun- tain fastnesses. “1 mean like spar of every trip to bear had climbed over the to watch every night, said David, just inside the fence, close the broken place, and as the old fellow comes down the path and over the fence, 1'll shoot him.” This campaign seemed to David and his sister certain of success, Night after night David watched, ready for the fatal shot the moment the bear should life his head above the fence. During the day David slept and rested, and 80, fresh and enthusiastic every evening, he resumed his watch for the marauder. “1 think he'll come tonight” David said on the fourth evening, as he took down his favorite rifle from the small arsenal on the cabin wall, Da. vid Hanlon's “fad” was guns. He possessed seven of the best and lat est patterns. Nor was his fad an extravagance, for the guns were his stock in trade. His hunting brought him many a dollar for game, and heads and pelts for Eastern taxiderm. inte, A few years ago there was an abun- dance of bear, moose, elk and deer to when back Da in- in the Teton Basin. Even now, the big game hus been driven by the encroachments of settlers, vid Hanlon still derives a come from his beloved mountains, During the summer thurist season he acts as guide in the Yellows National Park. Every autumn, when the game season opens, he earns from five to ten dollars a day as guide for the wealthy sportsmen who come from the Bast hunt big game in the Teton range and in the Jackson Hole country which lies just south of the rroat park. David Hanlon has his mountain life man. Your true triune nature—a of beauty, a with simple man's The tang of sage on mesas, the incense and murmur of pines on the the gleam of the eternal silver seams fourteen thous- and feet up yonder on the these are things incomparably pre- cloas to the lover of the free, wild out doors. Marta Hanlon under her become an a good horsewoman snow-shoer as well When ie brother his the side the corral, stood her rifle co good tone to lived and loved a8 a true sports- sportsman has a appreciation philosopher's content living, and the primitive of chase, the far, high poet's passionate love the slopes, peak 8B rifle, 8 tutelage she shot. She and for had was had her brother’ excellent 100 an adept took on Yther of Mi- AS ¢ is > venlently mear the kitchen door. the supper di : any sounds she washed listened for unusual the corr About nine o'cl wild bles talnpeding +} Lat sne waiting powerful slaps y Big Bear of th te: the corral from was waiting rear! But David realize Tetons had en- the front, while David the himself had iit the Big Bear reception had ram, close how his to frustrated for the frightened about him, ward the ing each prog sheep surged thrusting him On they Sate, knock down and tramp! on the fallen The onslaught thousand fear-maddened was terrific and unexpected David was knocked down trampled back to- fence, othe TT ing of the creatures that and 80 The shar his grease buried p little hoofs cut his hands face. He could smell in the wool He being alive under frantic flock He was suffocating! Dimly he heard two and he wondered dully how his which had been knocked from hand, had contrived to go off twice! Then his whole body seemed burst ing for want of air. Motes of flame danced in the black void. His eye- balls felt big and ready to burst, the was the rifle reports, Marta ran cautiously toward corral. She reached the gate of pine poles and looked in. The Big Bear stood just inside. He had climbed the gate and descended unexpectedly upon the sleeping flock Near him lay a bleeding, quivering carcass, rip ped wide open by one slash of his razorsharped claws. Marta arrived at the gate just in time to see David go down under the stampeding flock. But the bear was between her and David, and must be disposed of before she could at tempt the rescue of her brother, She rested her rifle on the gate took good atm. Bhe fired twice, The bear paused In hls slaughter and wheeled cinmsily toward the girl He was hard hit, hut Marta saw there was yet enough vitality and fury in that big, shaggy body to carry him over the gate. He cag toward her, \ horribly -— almost human agony was not squealing cries of Marta she did or of her rifle-barrel pole of the The bear flung barrier, and the sti poles creaked and weight, He and anger, frightened « lose nough, but of herself She walted, her the top control weapon, still resting gate, on the of alnst panel with himself ag ong swayed uprens is great $0 that his foaming, gaping was not six inchs from the muzzw of Marta's rifle. Then Marta fired a fatal shot. The bear shook the gi! in a last spasm of Blood gush ed from his mouth and nostrils as he fell back heavily, After a few vulsive quivers the quite still Even then Marta enough of his death the gate and ering his body She a few rods sped across the cor assistance, two slreams 1 direction With and rolled She had minutes have put mouth ile rage, con big, dark bulk lay beside the gate, Was not certain to risk opening ent the corral over ran along and after climbing ral t The flo hat fi the enc Marta pushed the sheep off David's $11? Just round frantic haste body. arrived more under i forever to Davy bear-hunting. an en lon's Then CArs as ne sweet waters § glow / Marta floated 8, 10 find nto him from David Dir As UMBRELLAS AS LIGHTNING RODS. of a Well Phenomenon. A Recent Observance Known noted 1 rising ‘he experience de sacri y writer is iden 1 with experienced silk of the ered as SIMiAar g of elect: wel effect arresting the int an effect is produced simi 3 the erfor is not In this case t iar y that will not apologist for umis a ligh ning-rods which would s of this artic recall that be the x tha Lhd inven Jenja. this by interesting to once cons fered “Good ‘Shots. “During the past fiscal ar,” said Shaw of the Treasury De gpent $1.42 per capita But we have something ye Secretary partment, navy to show for it “The other day our bluejackets set up a target twenty-one feet long and seventeen feet wide A mile distant was a battleship moving tem knots an hour, rocking slightly over the waves and rolling from the recoil of the gun. The men reached down into the hold of the vessel and took a cart. ridge and shell weighing three-quar ters of a ton, swung it up forty feet, put it into a gun and fired at the target. They reached down and got another cartridge, swung it up and fired it. And from that moving ship, out of ten shots they put nine thir teen-inch holes through that target ene mile away in five minutes by the watch. Men that can do that are cer tainly worth $1.42 per capita. — Washington Star. An inhabitant of Farmoutiers, France, has left a legacy sufficient to provide prizes of 256 francs each yearly for the two most polite schol ars—-male and female—of the town. The winners are to be elected by bai lot of their schoolfellows, We on the Kansas are being ruined by rei The million wihent gon will due ti which shortage of harves hands into the elevator in of a find tl me 1eir way and be marketed at handsome figures, is the lation of the Kan sas Clty cons Journa ached The Dewey has re pines. A long task her tow difficult and from Mar other ome unaccompani 3 a we the NeW our power OCH fixed Senate fond ter he riend might ter er where Quay a tiny ft thus I am not ing © Tarpon magnificent and smile AnsSwereo Ling, good x vaes tt Sport sO read the telegram little smiie “Tarpon may M.S QUAY Then he } be bi bu wis no: guilty o in Batt Neither wa Trafalgar 80 Rojestvensky cowardice or Lreason of the Sea of Japan Villeneuve thus guilty at nor Ney at Waterloo, declares New York Times, [If there Was appalling difference between the ar ity for it must be placed on shoulders than his, It would be ghee nonsense and worze deny grea ability and courage to the commande who safely and unhesitatingly con veyed the Russian fleet strange waters all the way fron Cronstadt to Tsu Shima. Had the whole Russian Admiralty been ani mated with as great a spirit as his the outcome of his enterprise migh have been far different from what ¥ was, It was for the Russian govern ment to ask pardon of Rojestvensky | rather than to censure him, A 5 AAAI 0 good things possessed by others, SS OU SMSO ll A woman's idea of a true believe: | is one who belleves as she doea, EO EN a oh a a Jno. F. Gray & Son Succdssors to . GRANT od Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . Ne Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring r life see the contract of HE HOME which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premidms paid in ad- dition to the face of the policy. Money to Loan on Firet Office fn Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT rrr rer ITrrrrrreeeeiiiid LARGEST [NSURANCE § Leency IN GENTRE COUNTY H. E. F E| NLON Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. 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Immediately a cunning look came {ato the man’s eyes and he looked about him warily. “1'I1 tell you if you keep it dark,” lowering his voice. “I have a mania for swearing. I write ‘cuss. words’ all around. It's great sport. they have to hire a man just to follow me round and rub ‘em out. But,” coming a little closer, "I'll tell you a secret. I'm four ‘damny’ of him and I've got ‘hell for, at in here journalist pincotit’'s Magazine, OFF AND ON AT STATIONS, “Yes, he works off and on." “Why, I heard he had a good, steady jo “So he has, but he's a railroad con | ductor.” Philadelphia Ledger, ee a ee ea! i i i ATTORNEYS. D. F. FORTNEY ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Office North of Court House, Ww. HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA No. 19 W. High treet, All Jhutusional b business promptly attended % “Iwo. 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