ong son NOR US AA IRI IH ht LW “ & Roe a With June's first fair touch Felt through last breaths of May; With the world boon aglow, Comes Memorial Day. A day, when with flowers, And slow, solemn tread, We go to the graves of Our dear precious dead. We whisper above them; Their souls surely hear! And they feel that their loved ones Are lingering near. The fairest of blossoms, All pink, white and red Form soft, fragrant coverlets To spread o'er our dead, Then gently and sweetly A farewell we say To those loved who are sleeping On Memorial Day. —Age-Herald. Ay T WAS the after one of the battles, The surviving soldiers of the battle were fatigued, and glad to drop down almost anywhere te rest. Those who had been on the re- serve were caring for the dead and wounded, and in the hospital tent were those who wore the blue and those who wore the gray, groaning with the wounds received in bat- tle, and being treated by the Union physicians. Near the hospital about a dozen Union men were sitting upon the ground, around a fire of sticks and limbs, trying to “cook coffee.” On the right and on the left, in front of them and in the rear, could be seen the dead bodies, dressed In uniform of the friend and of the evening greatest the foe. They were just taking the coffee from the fire when a soldier came up, and discovering that the dozen men were of his company, sald: “How is it, boys; are you dry?” “Trying to cook our coffee, Ned,” sald one of the soldiers, "but 1 guess it will be Virginia mud and water mixed together.” i “I've got something good,” said | the first speaker, producing his can- teen, which had hung across his shoulders. “What is it?" “Whisky,” replied Nad “You're a trump.” “that's jolly:" “that is just the stuff;” ‘that will re- vive us; and other expressions of satisfaction and pleasure were made by the men. “Here, sergeant,” sald Ned, reach- ing the canteen towards a tall, noble looking fellow who had been silent, “throw aside your temperance prin- ciples for once and take a drink.” “Not any, Ned, thanks,” replied the one addressed as sergeant. “Come, now! you have fought like a tiger all day. You do not kcow but what you might have to rally in five minutes.” “True, Ned, but excuse me, “Not a drop? “Not a drop!” “Say, sergeant,” sald Ned, “if It is agreeable to the boys, we shall ad- journ the drink for five minutes and you tell us how you came to be such an advocate of temipe rance., asked one. " Memorial Statue of the Late General Franz Sigel, by Carl Bitter, “1 second the motion,” soldier, “And so do 1!" “And 1, too!” “Well, boys,” said the sergeant, “1 will tell you. It is a short story, and therefore soon told, When I sald another owing to the death of my father. 1 came home to help my mother, who needed me. My father had been a prosperous farmer; he had that fru- gality and sturdy industry character istic of the Vermont farmers. mother 1 always considered the most handsome woman on earth, at least she appeared so to me; and as a mother, there never was one better. “After my father had been dead about a year, somehow I acquired a passion for hunting, fishing, and es BE ———— ——— me all night. She had faithfully kept her lonely vigil watching her drunken son, weeping and praying. “fT am awfully thirsty,’ 1 sald. My voice sounded strange, weak and un- natural. I got up; my mother rose, went to the well and brought me a cup of water. As she handed the cup to me she bowed her head that I might not see her grtef; but I saw From Her Hand and 8 Cor tents.” “1 Took the ak J t Drank drop into that cup. I took the cup from her hand and drank its con- tents, tear and all, Yes, boys, 1 drank my mother's tear, and I made a solemn vow that 1 never again would drink her tears. “1 led my mother into the house; I led her to the armchair, and as soon as she was seated I got down upon my knees. * ‘Mother,’ I said, it shall be the last.’ “ ‘Charles,’ said she, fingers through my hair, God bless you.’ “1 looked up and my mother had fainted. [I took her In my arms, one might take a child, and placed her upon a bed. “1t was the beginning of what came ‘this is my first; running her ‘I hope so. T0 oR G. Bn CODER All Posts Contributed to Monument For Dr. B. F. Stephenson. Every .Orand Army Post contrib- | uted to the $35,000 required for a memorial to Dr. Benjamin F. Ste- phenson, founder of the Grand Army of the Republic, the design for which, | by J. Massey Rhind, the New York sculptor, has just been accepted by a commission at Washington. The statue, which will be a trian- gular shaft, thirty feet high, with | symbolical groups on each side, will | be ready for unvelling on August 1, 1909. It will be erected at Pennsyl- vania avenue and feventh street, N. W., Washington, on a $10,000 pedes- tal for which Congress has made an appropriation. The front panel of the shaft sym- bolizes Fraternity, a soldier and | sallor clasping hands and holding the flag between them. Below is a portrait medallion of Stephenson, with Grand Army badges on either side and an inscription, “Grand Army of the Republic. Organized by B. F. Stephenson, M. D., at Decatur, lil. April 6, 1866.” The other panels of the shaft sym- near being her death Days bed. dered, for my praying for me, reformation, And at pecially cooning. There was nothing that delighted me so much as it did to take my dog and go out with some | of the neighboring boys and bring home a number of coons. One night, | three or four of our neighbors came | to our Bouse § alter 1 me, _They thought | i ing to my father gon, and that she hoped he Every word she like a knife cutting sald was aie be before lb ever tasted quo. they had found i new place-—a corn fileld-—where there was plenty of game. 1 needed no urging. 1 kissed my mother good-by, told her that | would not be late, called my dog, and away we went, “1 drank some whisky, and on my return reeled and staggered around the yard a lite in a vain attempt to find the steps to the house. 1 stum- bled over something, fell down, and was unable to get up. After a little I went to sleep——a regular drunken sleep. “It seems that in the night some time my mother became anxious be- cause 1 did not come home. She had not been to bed, but had fallen into a slumber upon the couch. She awoke, as I sald before, some time had befallen me, arose from the and started out to find me. And she found me in a condition most deplor- able, indeed. “At first she thought I was dead, or that I had been brutally treated by a highwayman. But when she stooped down to look at me, and saw, by the moonlight, my face, she knew that her only child was drunk. She tried to waken me; she tried to get me into the house, but she had not the strength. She went to the house and got a pillow and placed It under my head. She covered me with blankets; she protected my face from the dew by placing an open umbrella over me. She drew her shawl tightly round her shoulders and sat down by my side. “In the morning I awoke just as the sun was rising. I found her there. Great tears were chasing each was nineteen 1 had to leave school other down her cheeks. I saw at YORK. —By St. _Gaudens. A “Bat, thank God, my mother got well. It was a long time before she was able to leave her room. 1 was her constant companion. Somehow it seemed to me that her life depended upon my care. “When the war broke out, | made up my mind that I ought to enlist. I told my mother about it, and asked her advice, * ‘Charlie,’ she said, let you go.’ “8he blushed as she looked me in the face. But her reply was one never to be forgotten. “Charlie, I am afraid that you will be overpowered by strong drink.’ “ ‘Mother,’ said I, 'I solemnly vow by the sacred memory of my dear father, that I will never drink an- other drop of Intoxicating liquor without your consent.’ * “Then you may go to the war, Charlie.” That was her reply, boys. And 1 tell you what-—when I drink an intoxicant, it will be when my mother's own hand brings it to me and she asks me to drink it.” “Amen,” sald several of the sol- diers, who were listening to the ser- geant’s story, “I say, boys,” sald Ned, “here goes the whisky.” Turning the canteen upside down, he emptied its contents on the ground, As the liquor went gurgling out, he sald: “I've got a mother, too, and I'm done with Hgquor.” “And I, too!” “And 1!" Every one took the pledge, and ft was afterwards said that the men who were gathered around the camp- firs that night were the I am afraid to Memorial to Be the © in Washington Dr. Benjamm Btephenson, Founder of the Or ganization Front Panel of Tn: angular Shaft Massey Rhind, Erected by to Sculptor ne bolize, respectively, Loyalty, with a emale for the other, and Charity, a are, beavily draped, caring young boy standing at her side The Missing. But, ah! the graves wha or knows; Uncounted graves, found ; Graves of the precious no sound Of tender weeping goes No loving step of kindred —0O, how flovs And yearns our thought to them! which never can be "missing." will be heard, But Nature knows her wilderness; There are no “missing” ways; In her gla wach grave CAess, We cannot lay such wreaths as summer lays, And all her days are Decoration days! Helen Hunt Jackson heart is no forgetfulness: keeps, she will adorn, she ADMIRAL FARRAGUT. Our Nation Forever, Ring out to the stars the glad chorus; Let bells in sweet melody chime; Ring out to the sky Bending o'er us chant of a nation sublime: One land and a history glorious! One God and one faith all victorious! Jno. F. . Gray & Son Caceres HOOVER) Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life rance ales in the World, , . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring your life see the contact of THE HOMBR which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth iy re. | turns all premiums pai ad. dition to the face of the oa to Loan on Firet Mortgage Office In Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Money : B50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Manks Desions CoPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch snd description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an investing is probably Aten piab in, Communion Lions strictly oontident ial 1 Landbonk on Patents sont Trea, Oldest agency Tor sec ring patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsonmicly Mustrated weekly, JTarsost air. enlist 3 af AY a jenLibe jour ramd, Terms 83 a your gr months, $i Bold by all nore MUNN & Co, 3c18roasmar. New York Hranch OfMoas sghir*ran. D. Midnight Murderers. By W. T. HORNADAY. The desire to murder for the sake | and | Among the lions, tigers, jaguars, and pumas of the New York Zoological Park, twenty- there has been but That was the crime of who deserved | h as punishment. It was one of the most ennning crimes | and is now historic i For a year Lopez pretended osten- | Twen'y times at least he acted inviting me reach him and stroke him. At last we decided to give him a cage i was purchased. The animals actually | tried to caress each other through ’ the bars, and the big male completely | At the end of two days it was con- to permit the female | to enter the cage of Lopez. She was just as much deceived as we | were, An animal that is afraid always When the the | unwillingly, or not at all. In an | her, | of her treacherous admirer. instant, Lopez rushed upon We beat him | we but he held her, as a bulldog would hold a kitten, | He was deter- | McClure's Magazine. ‘Milk and Butter in Japan. There was a time when milk was | and strong- | Recent statistics, | wil | worked a great change in this respect | and milk and butter are now in great favor in Japan. Whereas twenty-five | European restaurant, or eating a European meal at a friend's house, | They are, how: | ever, quite content to do without. As to dairy farms, they have in. ter, however, is a byproduct at these , It is to milk that they look Milk has a curious ; history In this country. Thirty or | forty years ago it was abhorred. The | average Japanese could not induce | himself to drink it. But to-day many bottles of milk daily, partly because | doctore have recommended it as a unique and wholesome Loveragoe. | “Milk halls,” too, are now quite num. | erous. Butter will probably take | much longer to come widely into’ vogue, because of {is expensiveness. A pound of fresh butter costs at least | Japan, Demand For Telephones in Pekin, | Advices received at Washington state that in Pekin there are now about seventeeh hundred subscribers to the telephone system, and that TES TTT rT TT TTT TT TT TTT TT ITI TTT I TT TTT YT IY YY ATTORNEYS, ATTORNEY -ATLAW BELLEFONTE, Pa Office North of Court Houses esa e— ww. HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFPONTR, PA No. 19 W. High Street. All professional business promptly attended tw esa W.D Zzasy Iwo. J. Bowen C=-ETTIO, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW FaorLz Broom BELLEFONTE, PA. — CLEMENT DALR ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, Pa Office N. W. corner Diamend, two door from First National Bank. re Ww G. RUNKLE ATTORNEY -AT LAW BELLZFONTER Fa All kinds of legel business stiended to prom pi; Special attention given to collections. Ofce, 36 floor Crider's Exchange bo K B. SPANGLER ATTORERY AT LAW BELLEFORTR PA Practices in all the courts. Consulisiion is Bnelsh and Germans. 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