—— A — — Think not alone Down the broad thoroughfare we know as life; He hath for comrades in the daily Those noble ones whom other days known, Who, like himself, sirode on and made no Q'er moan feel this fearless one must walk strife have earth's injustices. "Tis his lot to The martyr’s anguish, vet his master will Before no altared ignorance can kneel. All patiently he takes his bitter fill Of mockery, and with untiring zeal ! Works out his mission with full meed skill His is the form that here and there meet Standing g erect feet, of we at his while curs snarl Lurana Y. Sheldon. et [Lady 1 By NE i“ All Paris was talking about her Before Evelyn Stair had been the gay capital twelve hours friend, Nancy Forbes, insisted taking her the new ment. “But, my dear Nancy, a violent hurry Evelyn “1 in Paris sides, in her on {0 see excite- not protested I am to see her,” have a before n ) we haven't seen days when there is far own since the tails, and terest in—what * “The Aer real Paris every we more doin: me has one Green a see her,” for tell and you well—) her ring le ft which gli istene the “Engage so glad,” kissed “He Dick Nancy. an arti me, he ha and honors in many You hour at The mean real of your were beaut that self-——th el hat said goo me on old --the one that bunch of forge pillow, once “Oh, don't Nancy! It was the al silly boy girl a and one day, when the boy he—he changed his mind.’ “And the girl?” queried impetuously. “The girl? quite changed. It's a silly sometimes have,” said little piteously. Nancy's brown efes filled with tears and. she felt for her friend's hand and squeezed It lovifigly as they entered a quiet street, “You see, no one was to blame,” explained Evelyn. “There was never any real engagement. My father wouldn't hear of it till the boy had made a name. He was an artist, you see, with nothing but promise, S80 he came away to Paris, and for a time everything seemed to prop- hesy splendid things. Then a letter came--jit was a very brief letter,” continued Evelyn, after a pause, “and--and was not even written by himself. A friend wrote it. 1 sup- pose he was too busy to do it him- nell." “What a horrid thing burst out Nancy, angrily. “It wasn’t nice. But there was a reason, and it didn't matter much, anyhow. There was nothing In it but a few lines, to say that something unforeseen had hap- pened which must end our—our friendship. He asked to bo forgiven and forgotten, and that was all There was no address.” “But his friends—-his relatives?” *He had no near relatives, and his friends, he dropped them all, as he id me. None of us ever heard of him again.” one ingland, But of those steps ten years used to sleep wi -me-nots under upon a time?” usu and grew Nancy Oh, the girl way girls Evelyn, a to do!" I suppose ‘oo in Green en TIS BRIGHT. can't believe cad,” said pause, by sn't in to love a i orga her his name? for ally know *. and | your artist was a afte | nat then | was . k, somehow, 1 | Nancy, human you and What Perhaps 1 have met gners in the st something have been in er a i | him each Paris near- of uestioned | saw a change companion’s from Evelyn again Years past, and schoolgirl Jay's academy, and C ‘ayne, a boy with a paint ht the local rustics to box, 00 barns through magic unches of ad reme { rd frie Wag co: looked up as her and for the moment nothing but green and gold; out the tangle eyes met her own, eyes in the strong chadow in face was painted, but whose spirit seemed to reach out to the other girl's troubled consciousness with a suggestion of Infinite caim. All the subdued noise and chatter seemed to have left this end of the room, and something of the strange spirit of serenity and tenderness which the painter ha. embodied in his ideal seemed to have communi- cated itself to the frivolous Parisians who stood there rapt and silent in front of his masterpiece, And yet, like all the great things of art and life, the picture was simple, Just a girl in a green gown, part- ing a tangle of green boughs as if to send yet one more lingering glance to some one who was going away, and for symbolism might Lave served as a flash of his youth (0 a man when he is tired and gray. The luminous landscape k then sl of owls almost which in the Te questionings to which she begen to possessed the key. think it might be a yourself?” whispered a curious glance at her suggesting vague Evelyn, and to feel she aloae “Don’t portrait Nancy, friend. Evelyn did not snswer, S#ange answers to those vague questions began to float through her mind, and with it all there grew and grew a sense of familiarity with every de- tail of the picture. The very boughs familiar friends, and the girl who parted them? Ah! Now she saw the likeness Nancy spoke of. It was indeed herself—the old real self that Nancy had questioned her about less than an hour -the self Evelyn fancied had been laid aside long ago with an old green gown. “Come,” said Nancy, watching her friend I will tell you the story who painted ‘The Lady in Gold.” ” “He and he you of with seemed like old ago who closely, “and of the man Green and was came to was Paris six English,” they found a quiet cor- down. "He was young, years she ago, began and was ner } ae sat brilliant, and before long be- » ghining light There was of Lemaire’s. too great to sald, future the to this no for him, add master that he loved autiful girl, his friend, and if yon f i and her wasn't down on in a mon quite knew h Vayne OYer ent, was paint again. saved his hospital fo went dared on, not and Dek p broken to tell “an and done grew as through the -three-then four, and he came back to Paris with “The Lady in Green and Gold.’ “Oh, ‘splendid? Splendid!” with shining eves, “Wasn't Just think of him there in his lonely village, working on year after year till he mastered that unruly hand. Liter ally he had to hecome as a little child and begin life all over again. Ah, that was herole, If you like,” concluded Nancy; “far more herofe we But Evelyn had suddenly ceased to listen. She had riseh to her feet and, with parted lips and all the color gone from her face, waited for two men who had entered the room and now came toward them, One of these was keen of face and slight of build; he wore a foreign decoration in his Dutton-hole, and had the modernity of America writ. ten on his every look and movement; the other was tall and strong, like a knight of old, and his badge of honor was an empty sleeve.—~New York Tribune. one tWo Hye, re- it? o" The First Rothschild, Frankfort is easily ahead of all the towns of Germany in the abundance of texts for the eloquence of British a first glance little more than a sil- houette, and the cool foreground was barely relleved here and there by a flash of sunlight that played through the green Jeaves like the gleam of a fairy's wing. One gleaming touch of light caught the gold of the hair, and a fow high ligats defined the outline; otherwise the figure as it stcod there, with its back to the dazzling sunlight and its facy looking straight out of the picture, was wrapped in shadow, And out of the shadow, In turn, smiled thy wonderful eyes-——oyes practically the creators of the mod- ern city, their emancipation is a mat- ter of yesterday. When Amschel Rothschild was born In 1772 In a wretched slum in the Judengasse the Jews were still shut up every night in thelr own quarter. He lived to be twenty before he saw his family, now lords of the earth, permitted to live freely in any street they liked. By 1812, when Amschel died, the Jows had by their banking houses trans. formed the town from a decaying mediaeval memory into A great bank- ing centre.~~London Chronicle. hotel the keeper Atl the trusts are highly uropean anta Journal, beneficial opinion, observes hat sent 0s hould cons its pric according t invested in » manufacture of smokele s iw + migh g (4 a i the “awakening inks the Kan the large menians mas we They knew that tl desig the Saltan’s religi ormed Sultan's to their fate with open |SACT oir to the government went canard, roel A delighfol the farmer now current in BOTTOW of a Infes eating ds Transcript legend, the imagi nary husbandman da very uneasy in his imaginary mind. He dogsn’t wan! the rats to lve, and he doesn’t dare slay them. At any moment, thinks he. the barn may mount skyward cows, hay-loft, brown Dobbin and all He ought to know better. Time and time again the sclentists have ex- plained that dynamite can be ham. mered without exploding, and that it can be burned without exploding: it won't gol off unless #t meots with a spark and a blow simultaneously 3 ites the press, whose barn iz tov] with of late been the the rats that have namite, writes According to Boston Congreaation Painted | the Church, Decoration Day was yesterday cele brated by about twenty members of the Fastern Avenue Congregational Church In a manner that was esseqtl ally practical. They painted the church, For a long time the church had been in need of a good thick coat of paint. and the members decided to include the church in the decoration plang of the day. They were engaged the greater part of the morning and the afternoon, and the church is now ono of the most attractive buildings in the neighborhood. In order that the work ghould not cease, dinner was provid for the workers by the women of the ehureh. =Soring ela Union. 9 990% DOD VeDYDDDRDYD PIAA IAAI III I bib 1 Jno. F.Gray&Son Successors by . GRANT HOOVE 0) 4 Control, Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies io the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring ir life see the contract of HE HOME which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth years re. turns all premiums paid in ed dition to the face of the policy. to 1 Losn on First Mortgage Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection rrrrrYYrYIYIYTIIYITYY | ARGEST lt LBENCY IN CENTRE COUNTY H. E. F E N LON Agent Bellefonte, Money ! ¢ ¢ : ¢ ¢ ¢ 4 4 ! Penn’a. The Largest and Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- tion. Plate Class surance at In- low rates. WN WN BW TWN ATTORNEYS. D. P. FORTREY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Gfios North of Court House. BE a RE SS Y. HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA No. 19 W, High Street. All professional business promptly stiended te B.D. GerTi0 ae ————————— irre — Iwo. J. Bowen W.D Zzuay CSRS, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW EsoLe BLook BELLEFONTE, PAs Buccessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis fa BB BBB DD DDD DDD DDN 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Manxs Desions CoryriGHTS &c. A POne sending s sket description msy kiy asceriain « $ free whether ja probably pal . vi ETS OR Liye inden tial. H Shook of Patents ia taken through Bin & or receive “Scenic American, Tp York wold boe, with wi charge, In 1h t ge 1 Terms 33 n Branch Offices 63 F 8, Waahirwun, nan, attend returned witl There was i feet and t peat of his trousers Jeft ‘fv ord 9s oF ANEINE time a the mak f most fell The father did made a grab fo hesitate long child, pulled heels 1aid } im over his The little fellow screamed and yelled until he almost drowned the noise of the train; but during the lull in the uproar the father heard a laugh be- hind him. He angrily turned to see the cause, when, seated quietly two benches in the rear, he saw his son Charlie laughing heartily over the plight of the other boy His father rubbed his eves to dis- pel the {llusion, but there was no mistaken Charlie. Then he looked at the boy on his lap. Behind the tears was a face that he had never seen before. He had spanked some other man's son!-—Philadeliphia Ledger. E COULDN'T Dealer—*This will be three dollars and forty-seven cents.” Poet-——* Exactly; three dollars and forty-seven cents. 1 shall have to get ft charged-—unless (hesitating) unless you can change a ten-thou- sand-dollar bill."—Somerville Jour- nal. HER OCCUPATION GONE. She--“This paper says that glass mirrors were known in A. D. 23, but the art of making them was lost and not recovered until 1300, in Venice.” He—*My! This world must have been a dreary place for women be- tweon those dates. "Yonkers States man, Edwin Anthony, in an article pub- lished in the Chess Players’ Chron- lele, computed approximately that the mumber of ways of playing only e first ten moves on each side is 69,518,829, 100, 644, 000, 000,000 199,000 se mine... ban Ahi, aud German. ———— a oe — CLEMENT DALE ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE, PA. Office N. W, corner Diamond, two doors from First National Bank. ire w.e G RUSNSKLE ATTORKEY-AT LAW BELLEZFOKTE, Pau All kinds of legal busines altended to promptly Epecial altention given to collections. Office, M Soor Crider's Exchange he R B. BPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFORTR. PA the courts. Copsuliation i Otce, Crider's Exchange fyod Practices in all English and German. B Ying Old fort Hotel EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location : One mile South of Centre Hall Accommodations first-class. Good bar, Parties wishing to enjoy an evening given special sttention. Meals for such o0Casions Pris pared on short no Always prepare for the transient trade RATES : $1.00 PER DAY. = - - EE ——— fhe K National fice Hotel MILLHEIM, PA. I A. BHAWYER, Prop. Fist clam soocommodations for the traveier Good table board and sleeping & partments The cheloest liquors at the bar, Stable ap sommodstions for horses is the best 10 by had. Bos and from all trains on the Lewisburg and Tyrone Ralisosd, «ti OCoburs LIVERY .2 Special Efforts made tu Accommodate Com. tal Travelers. D. A: BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn'a RL R CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢/ Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . . MARBLE no GRANITE 25 H. GQ. STRCHIEIER, CENTRE HALL, . . . . . PENN Manufacturer of and Dealer In MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of LADIES safe, Quick, Reliable tor Ei SE tiadelphia, Pa. LEBR'S... NEW LIFE TEA CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADAC HE, Sli Te Bee Bll ‘ohn B. Langham, Holley. Holley, N. Y. Ho. 200.530 g vm Pr. LaFrance,