Ey aun = TH a Sis The Hall of Fame. Wait not for Luck to draw the hplt, Nor Chance give up her key-— The door that opened for the great Is open yet for thee, Lome is a sleepy sentinel, “wo. And Chance a fickle light; Many a man hath passed them both, And entered in the night, Have little care if neither heed Thy clamor, call or din— Take up the magic torch and key, And let thine own self in! BY2S2seseseseseSesasesesesesesasese A Dream and The Waking Lr Lr Lr Le TL TLE LL LE LE LU ELT And, there in the midst tering, fashionably clad throng Mary, pink cheeked, smiling and talk- | anims about art; Mary In aesthetic array, with the gown coiled ser of a c¢hat- stood ing ately strange rain of her cli pentwise about and tucked behind her dainty ear, Could she be that demure, shrink- Robert had rted dances fou: ago? painting under work of Mary’ nging } i er feet a rose country girl e801 to rural Evidently sideration hands. It amazingly tall reed lik scanty draperies danger of slipping off looked from Mary to tl back severai times » VEArs the cOn- was the was the portrait of an e¢ woman whose nminent altogether, Ro- seemed in I 1e@ picture 3 iz ho before his be bert and wildergd conscience grasped the signi- ficant fact of her artistic achievement Then, quite Mary saw him. “Why, Rabert with anfeigned deli with tched indeed, I'm very iy! These festive fr look at my pictures health now and jauntily. To the listening said: “This is an old home, Robert Nearing How are Robert?” cordially, in town?” As a matter of come to town he did not “Of course, chat about home “I live here rival in art, and hemians we got gether.” Robert stayed a throng had flu pink draped lamp with its half emptied drew up an easy if where pretty, s all manner old friends and her fostered her orphaned a parental tenderness Robert was a man sternly upright, and bat slow of served. He had Jove tient silence for six years, which his se« hopes had hel through much toil and di Now that realization of his am- bition had speak, there light—a man against not the shadow of a “Are you engaged to he asked presently, in a strained that i Mary. “Oh, no, chums—good fellows He is a and, like most of the tribe, poor charming. He writes me and poses for m; of us thinks of marriage. We talked the question all to a sensible lusion “And you've given up the marrying?’ Robert asked Mary nodded and off the tip of} the bud she toyed with ! I don't idea this way, said low, glasses “That is one-sided things.” she laugh-| ed, good naturedls “It is great fun, wally. It spoils one for the humdrum life of old-fashioned woman.” “hat is just why I object to it. I'd rather happily married and | gettied what you call ‘hum-| you do here { even If suddenly, turned and Nearing!” she going forward “Robert, real- in to outstre glad see you, iends come irink to my then,’ group friend fre Robert Mary, tho tell her s just then. solel} wists '1} you ii 282. wild ttered herse her f fine chars weet natured, singularly re-| Mary in pa during ped hi m | speech and sap pointment the given him the right to} was man in | another his whom chance Marry hard, startled | he dl Siem aim con- voice ohad iaugaea We're writer | fear,” and | stories about | Neither | have | ome | sketches over and « conc idea of like the of you Mary,” involuntarily the young ine at the ing at the gland because of your absurdly view of 1% il the see You down In drum life’ than living as Couldn't you paint as well, you were married?” “Dear, no,” said Mary, very posi tively, with a laugh at the absurdity | of such a thought “Marripge spoils | art. But what of yourself, Robert?| Why don't you take your own advice and settle down.” “Because,” sald Robert gravely. “There is only one girl in the world | to me, and she don’t want me” The smile died out of Mary's eyes momentarily. “I'm so sorry, Robert,” she said simply. Her eyes strayed inadvertent ily to the picture in his hand, and she wondered vaguely if she was the only woman in the world to Ted Hartley. “if she should even change her mind she will find me unchanged. | think she knows that, although | have never told her so. 1 have loved her a good many years, and always =1l love her, but—well, it was not to be. That's all.” Then Mary understood in a flash of regretful comprehension. That night Hartley called with the proofs of ® story which fhe wanted se ——— Mary to read. It was a brilliantly written sketch of the decadent type, in which a man of the world had wooed and won a less worldly woman. “I don't like it,” Mary told him, frankly: “It leaves a bitter taste in the mouth.” “Pays well,” ly. “And by a true one." “Are you the hero, “I am,” he admitted, “And the surely myth.” “Your Frost.” “Ted, you deliberately lieve that you cared.” “1 succeeded perfectly, as gee in the story.” Mary's eyes hardened and a curious pallor supplanted the rose of her cheek. “Are you telling me the truth?” she asked in a low tone, “This time-—yes." “Now 1 begin to change in Eleanor. I used to love to have her here, her happy presence was so infectious, so delightfully Then suddenly she grew moody. tells me had favor because she no longer her work. So Ted Hartley? To to analyze life's lighted an in- proud of Ted, way, complacent- the story is sald the Ted?” unblushingly. girl— she Is a quondam model, Eleanor made her be- you will understand the gen Grace lost with takes an that is gon be able master she artists interest in doing, to write well emotion nocent Are you your achievement?” ‘Oh. come you life. not now. Meg, you're not this late day,” growing Ted exc “Squ 1eamis squeamish at lames uneasily ar repeated with scorn “No, I am shamed to capable of not squeamish I am a have touched hands with a such despicable t Ted threw down | his story i 1 man reac hi ry y and rose, authorita- hehind back hands he Wave and cl your conduct will lessen now much?” behind him place on herself. to despise the door into 1} and you 100 closed vacated abandoned the next Ma- to the into the tawards outskirts the driver usly She uddenly slowed lighted an« damp grass of the lawn fo front door, turn the over the the way long great vielding knob wr of tne living Rober hear h, his ar head resting on clasped in an glowing the attitude of deep reflection, and 4 1 ied amaz word drew a sharp breath of star ment “Robert.” said Mary, in shaken voice * 1 have my right mind—finished Do you still and held never a forever He rose face paling by turns in wavelike sion “Mary, 1 anyone so much never wanted amiled radiantly Robert,” she Register Mary “I'm so glad, Haven whis Whalebone £3,000 a Ton. Several of the whalers reached he Davis Str: e failure Most of lean, only Dundee Scotland, and ait fishing is a the having Another report ships whales ured in the strait has arr from Hudson Bay h one small whale, and the Scotia, which went to Bast Geeeland, se cured four, the produce of which has disposed of. The Amer ican fishings are also a fallure, and as the Dundee stock only amounts to 39hundredweight whale bone will prob. bly reach the unprecedented figure of £ 3.000 ton The cause of the failure was southeasterly hurricanes, which packed the strait with ice and reaching the fish Gazette Iwo been capt vessel ived per ing-grounds. Westminster Rules for Success, “Start right” “Aim right.” “Keep pegging away.” Any one who observes these three rules is assured of success, accord ing to President Edward A. Poteat, of Farman University, who addressed college at the University of Chicago today. “If you start wrong you are sure to go wrong,” he declared. “If you aim at nothing you will hit nothing. aim at riches; aim at com- piete manhood. “Above all, strive for patience. As between the patient man and the bril- lant man, give me the patient man every time.’—Chicago Special to the New York World, a — Turkey Talk. “My dear,” remarked Mr. Grouch, “this turkey is unusually tough. Muy I ask where you got it?” tertainly,” replied Mrs, Grouch sweetly. “I purchased it at a station ery store. Do you suppose | got it from a butcher shop?” “N» indeed,” replied Mr, Grouch, jabbing the carvingknife into hard flesh of the bird, “I have been under the impression for the past ten minutes that you procured it from a hardware store.'—Woman's Home Companion. PURE WATER BY OZONE. Vosmaer System Tested Philadelphia. Vosmaer method of water by filtration and the tem has just undergone inspection by the city authorities, the United Water Improvement Company having submitted a proposal to construct a water ozonlzation plant at Queen Lane, agreed to install a plant ing $1,090,000, at its own expense, tO rent the same to the city for a royal ty of $35 per 1,000,000 gallons, the city to have the privilege of purchas ing the plant at cost price at any time. The lons of drinking The The purifying OZONE BY S- cost plant converts 1,000,000 gal Schuylkill water fluid daily. The between the mud-colored river that enters the filters and the liquid Issuing from the “mixer” im pressed the visitors, The water is first passed through a rapid filter of sand and coke. At the conclusion of this process it is clarified, but still contains many bacteria The germs are destroyed by coming in contact with the ozone, which is extracted from the air by the aid of electricity The air is dried old storage ap paratus and passe row cylinders, known Here it { tric current passing through a fro into pure difference water clear in a « yd through long, nar a8 o0zonizers comes in contract with an ele metal Jectricity flies m the this comb in what and 1 with the ischarge, ates ozone contact dry air The ozonized next pumped into a mixer, where filtered water An ucted of glass, won the constr high has and eighteen inches been erected at the top and the ozot the bottom, convert water into a through the Dr: Leffmann sal particle of entire le every tact with ozonized ery germ in th ling fluid tom of the mixer Coplin rel spark Director opinion concerning the experiment He admitted that ter of its bacteria bu tioned ozone purifieq wa whether ths he operated would be nec The ozoniz ed b many most successful water of tending prevented the except in a few germa the srodu adoption Gibbs th prod 1c can be oO Philade ph a Boston Transcript SAYS es 0200¢ tained GERM DESTROYED BY TEA British Army Surgeon, Who Says Will Prevent Typhoid. itive of typhoi England M2 a prever been announced iz discovery is made DY ajor McNaught, a who surgeon in the Bi acquaints gsion in Americs of his expesiment finds that the typl culture army, ew Ome ri numbers the cold y of cold «3 soldiers recommends substitute for during wiles aBrvice LY el i ilized weoeome infected bottles teens when ster is likely to and filled with of tra gterilization heen water are infection Major ervbody capable for a long MeNaught = drink tea if a proper manner tea physicians constitutes a and harmful bev the tannin and other which are drawn out only tinued steeping, which tive of harmful consequences ed” tea gives a stomach and a face If employed in the manner ed, in localities where typhoid is known to be present, tea may thus serve as one of the essential pre cautionary measures to guard against infection by this dread disease Labor Men in American Public Life. “A former union president once told me that he had examined the roll of a Congress several terms back, and had found that more than half of the members had worked at one time at some trade” writes M. G Cunniff in the World's Work “Mr. Littlefield, for example, worked for some years at the carpenter's bench. Mayors, Governors, Congressmen, Sen. ators and even Presidents have at times In their careers worked with thelr hands, There are three Con gressmen in the present Congress who show with pride their * union cards. Men of this stripe have had no difficulty in appealing to the ‘la bor vote' Legislators without num- per stand on their labor record in the State legislatures.” osha —-— mssim time uggests that prepared in according to refreshing not erage for it extractives, after con produc Boil the the are coppery coat to saffron hue to indicat The Strand Theatre, London, has been bought by the Great Northern, Plecadilly & Brompton Raliroad Com: pany, which intend# to use the site a8 a “tube” station. In London the underground railroads have to buy their station and entrance and exi sites STATE OF PENNSILUANI. Latest News Gleaned From Various Parts. Neil announced that paid to the miners for the month of January will be 6 per cent. above the basis. This is the same as the December rate, Alvin G. Garber, son of Dr. M, B. Garber, of Ephrata, Lancaster County, died from convulsions, with which he had “heen afflicted for four- wen vears., The boy, who was 16 args of age, suffered as many as a hundred convulsions daily, and his ase was a puzzle to many gpecial- iste, Directors of the Collegeville Na-~ ional Bank met and organized for first vear of business. A. D Fetterolf president; M. B. Linderman, vice president, and H. T. Hunsicker, secretary. WwW. D Renninger is the cashier and A. 71 Allebach, clerk The other dis are B. F. Bteiner, Clamer, W. P. Fenton, Di {rusen, E. S. Moser, Horace Place y, John U. Francis, ¢,, 1] Hillegas John D. Frant ieman, 1. 8. Buch C. B. Rizott, an Italian er, of llentown Was ari charge Commissioner the rate of wages the was elected eclors Landes will and 11 . Qe, erstwhile week dog last nday $ ’ Su i § O Anna Snowd were marrie was somewhat by Cor garved man Else rian Or 1 . that married Frans columbia girder in ut of An- the nixville, were sail Bremen, air way to this 1, after five day before Js Tot Just as falling crushed the life © thony Barasch, an emplovee of Phoenix Iron © ompany, Pho his wife and two children ing ‘out of the harbor of Germany, on th try to join him, separation The death, arasch received a letter from his wife telling of ex- perienced at the expected fulfillment 1 cherished hopes. News band’s death will be brok- when she lands in New coun VOATS the joy en to het York The anual Fellows' Orphans’ Pennsylvania was at Arter's Station, cided to commence work immedi ately on a new home to be erected near to the present structure. The new building, which will be a three- story brick, will cost $17,000. When it 18 completed the present building will be turned into a home for old and disabled Odd Fellows. The Schuylkill County Medical Soclety at a meeting held in Ashland moeting of the Odd Home of Central held at the home wuen it was de- of a State institution for the treat- ment of Inebriates A resolution was adopted asking the Schuylkill Legislators to support a bill with this aim. Dr. G. H. Moore, of Schuyikill Haven, was elected presi- dent; Dr. G. O. Santee, secruiary, and Dr. David Taggari treasurer of the society for one year. At the annual meeting of the Re- tail Merchants’ Protective Associa- tion of Monroe County, the following officers were elected: President O. BE. Phillips; secretary, John C. Ben- singer; treasurer, T. D. Dreher; directors, BE. W? Chamberlain and WwW. L. Boening, of Mount Pocono; J. H. Zacharias and T. B. Drake, of East Stroudsburg, and E. G. Dor- shimer, of Saylorsburg. Albert Ulmer, farmer, went to Easton, transacted some business and then disappeared. His family Is much worried in consequence, Jno. F. Gray & Son Ga Sueccdsso GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies io the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE Cl {E. \PEST . * * . No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring your life see the contrsct of HE HOME which in esse of death between the tenth and t tieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ed. dition to the face of the policy. sp Money to Loan on First Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection | ARGEST |NSURANCE § AL gency Agent ) Bellefonte, Penn’a. The Largest and Best Accident Ins. Companies / Bonds of Every Descrip~ tion. Plate Glass In- surance at low rates. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE CopYranTy Vig : sy 4 Amer “Scientific American. EL a 1 mes, $2 a I newasdeniers, MUNN & Co, — =. New York Branch (Mea rong SEA GULIS OF SHETLAND. nly Tree on the Island. Up a little lane of gtireet ig an lLerwick's one garden At least it space n the there is a enclosed of this space is a tres is not a very tall tree; you in fact, a biscuit over it is a tree the land And Shetlan Children first the streeted Lerwick are This is not tree in Shetland As there are no trees in Shetlar 4, there are no birds { the sea gulls, which you can by the thousand. The s¢ the sparrows of Le Wick, an they have a great share in town's life than Ba the of London. In the you will note that chimney pot over every roof in The air is high, plaintive, sad, shrill, ould free In d who are brought for the time {0 sex won dors of one- shown this tres t fiction. It is the , except, of con i as sucl a sea gull Sea gulls the town full of their haunting iong drawn every hover cries Their cries are to { or the cawing of rooks England Every familiar sea gulls its own band of never mix, The are to us in house has {ts and sea every gulls They children in each house have pet names for their own particular sea gulls, and, having called them by those names, they feed them every day And each sea gull knows what is meant for him No sea gull attached to one house ever seeks to eat the food scattered from the house next door. He does not dare; the other sea gulls would kill him. So all day long the sea gulls hover and call over the roofs of Lerwick. The people of the town, if they come across a little pile of rice laid upon the roadway, step over it with care. They know that it is placed there for some sea gull. And at night the sea gulls leave their own appointed chimney pots and fly grace. fully away to their resting places on the rocks of the Isle of Noss London Express, Making a Million Dots. The English noblemen of a cen- tury ago used to spend a great part most ccentric character. For instance, in 1770, before the days of rapid transit, an earl wagered that he could find a man to travel from London to Edinburgh and back in less time than it took another peer to make a million dots. Sir George Liddel lald a wager, and won it, that he could make a journey to Lapland and return, bring- ing back with him two native women and two reindeer, within a specified time. Sunday Magazine. ATTOR NEYS., D F. FORTNEY ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, P| Offices North of Court House. i SEE. w HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY -ATLAW BELLRFONTA PA AE ——— “ Fo. 19 W, High Btrest. Al ¥ Pojmtonsl business promplly stiandod 8D. oxrre Iwo. J. Bowen w.D2 CSET, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT-LAW EsoLz B BELLEFON Buccessors to Orvis, Bower & Ozvis Consultation in English and German, TEE nd CLEMENT DALE ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PAs Office N. W, corner Diamond, two door rosy First Nationa! Bank. ree , Pl | | G. RUNKLE ATTORNEY -AT LAW BELLEFONTE, PA | All kinds of legal business attended Wo promptly fpecial attention given to collections. Office, “ ire floor Crider's Exchange i i i i i | i i | ATTORKEEY-AT-LAW BELLEVORTRP Practices in all the courts. Consuliation Rasiistiang German. Office, Oriders Bassani 0d Fort Hotel EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor, | Location : One mile South of Centre | Accommodations first-class. Good bap. 1 wishing to enjoy an evening attention. Meals for such pared on short notice. Al | for the transient trade, { RATES : $1.00 PER DAY. i g— - Ss The National Hotel MILLHEIM, PA. I A. BHAWYVER, Prop, First clap sccommodstions for he tos tabls board and sleeping & oholoest liquors at the bar, Bible fons for horses is (he best to Bus tosnd from all trains on aj Tyrone Batizoad, 4) LIVERY .2 Special Effort made tu Accommodate Com. mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penna RR Ry i i i i i Penn's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashidf Receives Deposits Discounts Notes . H. G. STRCHIIEIER, PEMN. Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK In ail kinds of Marble aw Granite, Pe" wm nso LADIES ERLLANTS Safe, Quick, Reliable Rao Superior to of] ERE glets or by mail i X Pr. LaFrance, ——— NA TS to NEW LIFETEA ALWAYS CURES CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADACHE, A a * lohn D. Langham, Holley, KN. Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers