————— THE NINE- LIVED CORN. The corn was killed in early May, The flood had washed it quite away, i ge later on it died again, nd rotted ‘neath the constant rain. Once more we tolled its final knell; The seed had not been tested well Yet, Then later it began to spront, dled. The weeds had run it out, 4nd later yet, still thin and pale, It perishes In a storm of hail Then came a flerce and burning heat. It died that week of “fired” feet. And then the awful smut arrived And not a single stalk survived, And soon we watched it, in dismay, Dry up and shrivel quite away, Then came the last and saddest death wilted ‘neath breath, It the frost king's Nine times, We built it dled; and yet that fall, new cribs to hold it all 1 Now tell me is there any cat With lives enough to equal that? rcorge Fitch, tleman. SSAC SRSA SASISISISS Pericles. { 2 sasa5eses283 | By J. Lovering. The foundaticns of the Burden tor- | tunes had come out of Gould and | Curry away back in the early ‘50s, and on this foundation “Old Ike” | Burden had raised a substantial mon- | ument that in passing through the | hands of his son, Johnny, had, if not increased in size, been very tastefully | ornamented. After the death of his wife, Johnny, now the Hon. Jonathan | Burden, had devoted himself solely | to the education of his daughter, Ade. | laide. After her escape from the hands of her preceptors, at the aga | of twenty, father and daughter had spent five years in travel, visiting a few of the known points of interest | and a great many of the unknown. | Then the Hon. J. Burden had peace fully departed this life, leaving all his worldly possessings to his daught- | er, Perhaps some of this was passing | through Miss Burden's ever-busy | brain as she sat idly chipping the rock beside her with the odd-looking little hammer held Perhaps | and what is more probable—she was | thinking of one or the other of new hobbles—geology and children. Of the two, children—and the ragged. | er and the dirtier apparently the bet- | ter—held the first place in Miss Ada lalde Burden's heart. “Say, you hain’t ye? Miss Burden prided herself on her | nerves. So it was when this abrupt | question was fired into her solitude. | she merely ralsed her eyes slowly | till they met those of the speaker. | Then she started, and for a moment gazed in surprise. Over the rock | she had been listlessly chipping ap- | peared the head of an angel—a shock | of waving golden ringlets framing a face of perfect oval, with a skin of | the traditional “roses and milk;” vio- | let blue eyes shaded by long raven | black lashes, and Cupid bow lips of | moist carmine parted to show beyond | a gleam of pearls. “You hain't be ye? inquired angel, impatient for reply. “Well, no-—that is, not exactly” replied Miss Durden, slowly, eveling the angelic face wonderingly. The angel, minus the wings, now came around the rock and took up its stand in front of her, resolving itself into a very dirty little boy of twelve or thirteen. “lI didn't know,” explained the boy. “I see ye had er lot of spec’mens, and ye was hackin’ at ther outcrop like ye was.” Miss Burden's answer was to take one of the grimy little hands In hers and draw the boy down on the rock | beside her, where with one arm around him she nestled him close | against her. The boy viewed this performance with wondering eyes, but offered no resistance to the eca- ress, Once snugly ensconced, Miss Pur. den sald: “Now tell me your name— mige is Adelaide Burden” “Min'e Pericles Finerty, Wheredju live?” “Where do I live? "Most anywhere ™ At this the boy turned a solemn, questioning look upon her, and then remarked, gravely: “Now you're kid. din’ “No, I'm not, Miss Burden, “Wel, then, that?" Miss Burden smiled. “It is this way,” she explained. “1 have a little money and no relatives and like to travel, so that really I have no home.” The boy's blue eyes opened wider still and they fairly sparkled as ha said: “By jove! ain't that great? Then, seeing the surprised look on her face, “say, that ain't swear, is it?” “Oh, no, that's not swearing. But what makes you ask?” “Oh, dad says no gent’'man swears in the presence pf a lady, and that swearin’ Is a useless sort of vice” she her | prospecting, be the | really,” protested whatjer mean by “Does your ‘father ever swear?” “Oh, lots, but he says it's only be- cauce when you's in Philistia do as Phil'stines do." This was too much for Miss Bur- den's gravity, and she laughed long and loud, the boy's high falsetto join- ing in until the rocks rang with the musie, “Say,” sald the boy, suddenly, want some zirkins?"” “Zircon crystals?” “l guess 80. I know where they's some dandles” “Yes, I would like to get some.” “All right; come on; ’'tain’t far’ “Now tell about yourself,” she questioned, as they climbed the steep hillside. “Where do you lve?” “Up there,” with a nod up the can- yon, “With your father and mother?" “Mother's dead. Dad an’ I bach itr “What is she persisted. The boy did not answer, and the glimpse she caught of his face showed it hard and set in an ugly, deflant scowl, Miss Burden saw she was treading on dangerous ground, and at once changed her tactics. Taking a base of advantagh of her sex, she sald: “Dont go so fast; you must remem- ber 1 can't climb like you can. I “ fu your father--a miger? exhausted, a moment the boy was beside the hard look gone, his face long with contrition. “Please forgive me,” “I=-I didn't think.” “Why, certainly, dear” tell me, who named In her, he pleaded she sald. you Per icles.” “Dad did, I ’spect.” “Did he ever tell other Pericles?” “Oh, yes,” and his eyes began to “1 know all about him and all the rest of them old fellers, but I don’t like them so much-—they's too much like falry stories. Tell what I do like, though—" “Yes? you about the * that feller Porthos a buster, though?” “The Three Guardsmen? “Yes, them's the fellers. Dad told me all about them-—but this ain't gettin® zirkins. If you're rested we'll try again.” Another long, hard climb and thes stepped on the narrow shelf platformed the entrance to what was evidently an abandoned mine ing out a short stub of a candle, the lighted tunnel “Come on™ he called shoulder. “Ye can git kins here ve can lug” For half an hour voices and the click, on rock came softly from the mige. Then the volces grew more and more listinet, and a faint yellow gleam could be seen coming nearer At last the light stopped and over his 11 the zir- ai the sound “What is it, Miss; found some “No, I'm coming” answerad voloe farther back in the darkness. As if the vibration of the voice had a trem through the rocks and ering from the rcof. For a moment the light way- ersd, then fell spluttdring on the damp floor “Hurry, mor rman Miss Burden, hurry! It's cavin’ In!” and in the dim light that streaked in through the entrance Miss Burden saw the boy. his face | against the opposite wall of the nar- row passage, thrust his against one of the “props” ported the roof, “Jump right over moe—don't stop— screamed the form qulvering with that dup- boy, his the strain, As Mise Burden sprang over him she saw the “prop” was bulging out little i ™ show ge NMOw much there's left™ “Mister” drew back with a grin. “Ef I hed know'd it war Finerty's brat I'd know'd jest a little thing like a cavein 'ud never killed him." Then, with his head In the opening, “Took out, Fid, I'm coming” and he disappeared through the hole, fol- lowed by one of the others, For a few minutes from Inside came sharp commands and the sound of men laboring. Outside the others lifted and pulled in response to the commands. Then a joyful shout of “There you are!” and a slight figure, an almost undistinguishable mass of mud and dirt, one leg dangling, was handed out and lald carefully on the ground, Miss Burden took the solled head with ite golden curls in her lap, while one of the men, with a deftness which showsd practice, slit the stocking from the injured limb and proceeded to set the brokem bone, improvising splints from a cracker box brought up from the “hack.” “There!” sald the self-constituted surgeon, as he finished his task, “In two months’ time you'll be able to got out and break the other leg.” had hardly winced, only now and then tightening his grasp on Miss Bur den's hand, his eyes watching every move of the operator. Now he heav- ed a sigh of relief, and, turning his eyes up to Miss Burden, said: “Say, 1 ain't 80 big, but I done that ‘most as good as Porthos, didn't 1?” smiled, and fainted, while Miss Bur den's tears, falling on his face, left the dirt and grime. New York News THE FOREST RESERVES. A Western View of the Need of Pro tective Measures. people of the Pacific The States future prosperity depends largely up i i $ i It 18 partly sincere and partly The sincere portion arises ignorance of the relation be only. from How dense this ignor- is may be gathered from cer newspaper articles, which as that the only purpose of the irriga on the other. ance tain sume This is really only a small their purpose. Mining upon them quite as much as irrigas part perpetuity of the forest reserves. The portion of the that shame sacrifice the future welfare of whole country to the immediate pro i fit of a few timber barons. with home making in the slightest de | gree { the government to open all agricul home makers to mestic use. It is a way as to feed the by building homes. i sert the wilfully blind anxiety for ungerupulous cupldity, which would ruin every home In Oregon and Wash- ington if it were not checked. Irrigation and water supply aside, to the facts. of timber cannot last much the market. with the welght that was pressing down from above It was haedly a second before she sprang out of the tunnel, and that | slowly | : turned louder rumble, a splintering of wood. flying down the mountain side the to close and the tun. nel was gone. chief characteristics. One look gave, then flew down the hill with a swiftness and vigor that gave the lle to her seeming weakness when climbing up that same path but a short time before. In five minutes she had reached the county road, an- other minute and she had halted one of the “hacks” that now usurp the functions of the obsolete stage be tweon Colorow and the “Creek” By an apparently special act of Provi- denice, the “back” held for passeng- ers four miners on thelr way to the diggings of Beaver Dam, A few words explained the situa. tion, and In a quarter of an hour from the time of the cavein five men wore at work oving the rock and debris that hk the entrance of the tunnel, Even Milas url was lifting and dragging at rocks she had never dreamed it possible to move. Soon an opening was made and the workers began to move more carefully and to speak In lower tones. “Reckon there ain't much left of th’ poor leetle devil,” whispered the driver, peering into the cavern. “Don’t ye gamble on that, mister” remarked a faint volee from within. “If yo'll jest lift this timber 1 bit ! foreign markets we act like a prodl gal who squanders his inheritance. In a few years we must go begging folly of forest waste, which the gov. ren land. Would they not gladly ex- areas of reserved forests? helps more the development of a tract of uninhabitable desert?—Port land Oregonian. Narcosis by Blue Rays. A dentist at Geneva, Dr. Radard, experiments with the narcotic effect of blue light, has submitted his re sully to the Swiss Soclety of Odon- tology. He claims that a complete narcosis can be obtained If the rays of a blue electric light are brought te bear ou the human eye, while all other rays of light, particularly of daylight, are kept off it. The nar cosls thus obtained is so complete that, during the same, little dental operations, snch as pulling or filing teeth, ete, can be executed without causing the patient the least amount of pain. While the effect of the blue rays Is a very strong one, that of violet-blue and green rays is less In tensive, and yellow or red rays show no effect at all, The Inventor is as yot ynable to give a definition of the cause remarkable discovery. How York Tims. A statistician declares {hat It costs $25,000 to rear a boy in New York city. Some of the young men on Broadway, snarls the Washington Star, do not appear to be worth it. It is sad for the New York Amer: can to read that burglars cultured enough to rald an art store should fall before the commercial spirit sufficient ly to include in their booty the register, O.al can marry any asserts Gertrude Ather- ton. Every day seems to bring some- thing new for the men worry about, whines the Washington Post “Any woman she wants,” to in South Africa is responsible for the ‘sleeping sickness.” Around here, in sists the Washington Post, in the summer it is to blame awake, A G-months-old St suing his grandfather There's precocity for you, the New York Herald. Knows only his pa, but his grandpa! baby slander. Louis for determine wheth er or not a witness ig telling truth may be all right, thinks Washington Star, but there are that they will merely the for new complications in expert testi mony. Scientific tests to the apen investigation doubt that has the Long beyond presence certain, ob ican, rainfall. It is serves the New some of our most disastrous have been due to the wirespread and reckless destruction of the equally York Amer trees. There are no hogs kept as free from conditions that as those in the great corn raising States of the Union. They are not fed on slops and garbage, declares the New Orleans Plcayeune, as are in most European countries. However, the time is not far away when all the meat product of the United States will needed by our people, and there be none port, so that the countries will tarians in spite of cause disease those be to ex European vege will poor of have to become themselves Professor F E Jaffa, after putting some students of Berkeley on a diet of peanuts, reports that tem cents worth of the contain more than twice the protein and six times the amount of energy embraced in a porterhouse steak The essential question arises, to the New York Sun, whether the peanut bulk is to be masticated a la Fletcher or to be gulped according to Wiley. goobers Says the Cleveland Plain Dealer: If people must wear coverings for their heads—and there is such a ne cessity under certain conditions—the straw hat as a sunshade and the cap as a scalp warmer would seem to be appropriate. For all round utility the cap is probably the best headgear ever Invented. It might not be a bad idea to have an international com- mission appointed to solve the prob lem. It is sald that threefourths of the white people of Georgia are rejoleing over the passage of the prohibition law and are determined to uphold it. It seems to be purely an economical measure to the Minneapolis Tribune. One of the prohibition leaders in the Legislature declared that it was equivalent to the immediate introduc tion into Georgia of 100,000 desirable laborers. A former general of the National Guard recently criticised the admin {stration of the United States Army because it neglected to seize upon the military possibilities of automobiles Major Hersey, chief inspector of the Weather Bureau, complains that the army is deficient in balloons by con trast to the Ewuropsan contingents But the country, suggests the Provi dence Journal, will not quite despair go long as the army can march and shoot. The new proposition in Prussia to reserve cars on Saturday night rail way trains for the intoxicated is novel and startling, but it will have the sympathetic approval of decent folks all over the world, asserts the New York Times. The drunken man in a public conveyance is an Intolerable nuisance the world over. Cured By Nineteen Days’ Fast. After fasting for nineteen days, Mrs. Robert Barry, of this city, re cently walked for the first time in thirteen months. For a long time she had been bedridden with dropsy and rheumatism. She heard of a man suf. fering from the same afflictions, who had been cured by fasting, and re solved as a last. resort, to try the remedy. She claims she will be com- pletely cured In a few weeks. The presence In San Bernardina of Dr. Tanner, who fasted for forty days, and who has made his home here for several months, is sald to have en couraged Mrs. Barry in her drastic method of treatment and adds addi tonal interest to the feat.—San Ber can. Jno. F. Gray &Son | ye Caeclron HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies io the World. . . , THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No Assesscents Before insuring r life see the contract of THE HOME which in case of desth between the tenth and twentieth years re. turns all premiums peid in ad. dition to the face of the policy, First TTT TT TT TT TT TT TT TTT TT IT TTT TT TT TT TT TY to Loam on Mortgage Office In Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connectio. Money i 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Duress Taave Manns Desicns CopynicHTs &C. Anve ne sending a sketoh sand description may aulckly ascertain our opinion free whether an inveniion is probably patentable, Communica Uons strictly confidential, Handbook on Patents sent free. (idest agency for secaring patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, tn the Scientific American, A handsomely (lnstrated weekly, Largest oir culntio » of any scientific journal, Terms, $3 a year: four months, $l. Sold by all newsdaaters BUNN & Co sc1srasens, New York Branch Office -~ Wauhir=san, I JEORGE CROGHAN, HERO. but August 2, fame 1813, for Major George 2, 1908, hero were his great victory. sent by General poor little stockade, Fort Stephenson, at Lawer Sandusky, now Fremont, Ohio, The place was only because it guarded the approach to Harrison's headquanr ters and stores, up the Sanday | On the morning of August 1 Gen | eral Proctor, the British commander with 500 regulars, veteran gunboats of fleet, ers, Commodore bard the fort with 700 Indians, swarmed through | the opposite side. To one of a less | age than the young commander, | Situation must have seemed hopeless | under him, Groghan had 180 { from place to place to induce the be { lief that he had several guns. Late in the afternoon of the 24 the enemsy made a united assault. So valiantly | and effectively was it repulsed that | ‘he whole British and Indian force | made precipitate retreat into Canada “It will not be the least of General | Proctor’s mortifications.” wrote Har. | tison, “to know that he has been | baffled by a youth who has Just nassed his twenty-first year. He is, however, a hero worthy of his gallant incle, General George Rogers Clark.” Croghan himself wrote fust before the battle: “The enemy are not far distant. I expect an attack. 1 will defend this post to the last extrem- ity. I have just sent away the wom- garrison that I may be able to act incumbrance. Be satisfied. { shall, I hope, do my duty. The ex- aniple set me by my Revolutionary kindred is before me. Let me die rather than prove unworthy of thelr name." The battle of Fort Stephenson was the first really brilliant effort of the War of 1812, General Sherman said it was “‘the necessary precursor to Perry's victory on the lake and Harri won’s triumphant vietory at the Thames, which assured to our imme- diate ancestors the mastery of the great West, and from that day to this the West has been the bulwark of the nation.” For his exploit Croghan was bre- vetted lieutenant-colonel by the Pres- fdent of the United States, and Con- gress awarded him a gold medal. Some months ago the grave of Col- onel Croghan was found in a neglect. ed family burying ground in Ken tucky. The remains were taken to Fremont, and on the ninety-third an- niversary of the battle were rein. Jerre on the site of the former vie- ry. Fremont is unique in possessing her old fort in its original area, with its original armament and with the body of its defender, and her citizens cherish the honor of living where of old time a great act was greatly done. ~Youth's Companion. A SN SHON SO. Sh SR MUCH THE SAME. *1 understand yon married a tan. ner,” said one woman to another, as they met in after years. “Well, something like that,” an. swered the other, country school veneer, News. Rd i ! ATTORNEYS, ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFPONTE, PA Offices North of Cours House ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Ko. 19 W. High Street. All professional business promptly attended w A am Iwo. J. Bowes W.D Zzaay ATTORNEYBAT LAW EsoLz Brock BELLEFONTE, PA, III ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA. Office N. W. corner Diamend, two doors from ied ATTORNEY-AT- LAW BELLEFONTE Pa. All kinds of legal business stiended 0 prompily Boor Crider's Exchange. jr ATTORNEY-AT- LAW BELLEFONTRPA Practices in all the courts. Consulistion Is English aud German. Office, Orider's Exchangy tye Old Fort Hotei EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor. Location : One mile South of Centre Hall Aseommodations first-class. Good bar, Partie wishing to exjoy an evening given spooisl attention. Meals for such Sasiand pared an short notices. Always for the transient trade. BATES 1 $1.00 PER DAY. [he National Hotel MILLEEIM, PA. L A. BHAWVER, Prop. Pst clam socommodstions for the travels 00d table board and sleeping & partments The ehaloest liquors at the bar. Biable ap ommodations Sr horses is the best to by Bad. Bs Wand from sll teasing on the lewisbarg and Tyrone Baiirosd, st Coburg Special Effort made to Accommodate Com mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Pena's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, Pa W. B. MINGLE, Cashis Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . . H. GQ. STRCHTIEIER, PE™N Manufacturer of and Dealer In in ail kinds of Rl i dh ii i ] LA.egency IN CENTRE COUNTY Agent Beliefonte, Penn'a.