'- Introspection, What is it makes a man? It is the. battle wild and red, The will to face the foe; To stand among the sick and deal Nor any fear to know. a] min Righ! have comes the the Fame fade as What is it makes is the battle for When Pride and When friendships might, to fight It gone, tue alone, Still on, makes a man? Soul in peril placed false gods beckon fair, thine eyes to train Spirit there © What is It is the When Still on the And feel it siars thy makes a man? mite of Love through thy d thy Living worth What is it It is the littl That filters That makes while And takes thine -T. l.. Hinckley, Register © + us the all in in trust, the Christian PIS PS 2p WwW Bo Ww Eo WB AA rls PLP | THE TRIUMPH OF OPPO SITION HARRIS DEANS, Eda & BY T. EMR PE PEPER E PEPE PE PEPE PN *“1¢," sald t only “Instead agreed the “I don't generously; being forced constantly “Well, the girl “When amended the young mi “1 was only your “Thank | | | | he voung man, "'% tolerate {idn't hate an studdengy f in pra * fully. “When “it will make a name “You m man, could “You! “1 don’ he said, sh “Natural " “The nounced who is girl” “That's you'll p thinks you “Well? “Nothing.” “1 sup moment think that's The girl “Wh be ons say ereas,” merely s. "The faraway naturally ple.” The youn chair ette “Anybody remarked mind mu them.” “Well, of me “1 suppos a girl's be “You haven't cried a trifle thrown % with ength, what = nia what people what girl, he assented th rown honestly not.” Over. thrown me ove breathlessly, dTve u over." “Excuse ma.” gaid coldly, “who proposed the marr “Of course.” she me for my actions.” “I'm not blaming you at stated, “I'm simply facts.” “Uncle { out, “Oh, fon, “it's cniy 10 see you h daughter to “That's w the girl, blandly be happy and “Pont you Young man mildly, “that it easy to be polite as rude? “No,” was the decided re “I'm glad,” was the genial com ment, “you're doing it because it's easier. 1 was thinking perhaps you thought it was clever.” There was long pause “l dare say some girls might like you,” sald the gir reflectively. “That must be a fearful strain on your imagination” suggested the young man. “Because, ” by. the young age?” sald, “if you blame uncle's " he all, pointing out 8 a perfect idiot!" she burst well,” demurred her compan- natural he should want appy. You've been like a him."™ here he's an idio* “He wants marry you. ™ find,” sugges:dd said me to vet SE the is Just as ply. she went on conclusive ‘even our curale's married.” “That's a pity,” sald the young mian, vindiotively, having seen both ths curate and his wife; “otherwise there might yet be hope for you” “It you weren't my guest'™ »srisd the girl rising, “Pardon me” aol your guest” “Oh!” she gasped, sazing roun helplessly. 4 8 - Jon “Fm here as a prospective part owner,” explained her cousln. “If | marry you we shall share it bet ween us. “KM you marry me!” cried the girl, controlling herseM with an effort. “I think that was what uncle sald” “You mean if 1 marry you!” sle eried, stormily. “Comes to the game thing” argued. he protested, “I'm gw needn't look so upset, “You'll be all right. you," “What is he like?” ghe inquired, curiosity overcoming her anger. “O=h, all right. Bit soft, you know, Doesn't smoke or drink, or——facl is, he doesn’t do any thing much.” “And you think he'li suit me?” she sald, slowly. The young man nodded. The girl jumped to her fee, “You're a horrid, mean cad!” cried, “Seems to me,” agerievedly, “I'm time when 1 try “If you have nice,” she sald, are.” With a vindictive for the door. “Where are manded. “I'm going to tell un¢ you," ha Hor- “You went on she sald the young man, only wasting my to be nice to you" been trying to be emphatically, “you | made glance she oft to?” he de you I hate, de- le that and despise she said ly. him you let him loathe liberate “Tell “1 shall i she said, as | behind her. “So,” sald me?" hat,” won't ps slammy THArrY dedure t X she d’ the dinner induce uncle the that vening, “nothing you to marr} “That's “I'd + about hog Des ried sooner door to door,” « “An taf unsa down there no a brea! may pleased 2a Horace to I confine yourself few need to diet for a that nm you've days sAY I'm very t ne Cand cot to h ati gard much more table m iliicent may ri % . ~ Ty uggestion as CONG arrangement ohn Aas SOme ES houldn’'t sorry,” “ doubtfully, Hel gald, began “you d | be ghe FOUNE Mat mea GE s sha Suppose ane on't really Horace lariing ¥ $08 0 ¥ round hae was ! only il cooler.” In the 1? {again | “Well, ace?” who “Nothing: girl oat the grow reserved you think of Hor cousin " said what do inquired “He—he's very nice, vaguely, "We're “Good gracious, no! she "One's quite enough in a family.” “One of whom-—Horace or The girl dabbled hand water. “Oh one ambiguously. “Do you know” man, curiously, go well 1 meant to } “Really!” she gald "Of course—of course, me?” “Well, assertion. “It's a great gift” she murmured. with a half glance at him, “to be able to judge people so easily.” The young man modestly applied himself to the sculls once more, “What will Horace say to you when we get back? she asked suddenly, after a long pause “S8ay? Nothing” "Ohi “What would you say if you were he.” “Punch my head” sald the young man curtly. “I mean punch his that is—punch the fellow's head who was with you” “Would you?" She surveyed him with some interest. “Do you mean really punch?” “Yes¥ he said stoutly, oblivious of the injustice of such a proceeding. “How lovely!” gighed the girl. Bhe looked at him dreamily, “Why?” she asked at length. “No, you needn't tell me,” she cried, hur riedly, as the young man rested on his oars. “Because,” he sald, disregarding ber protest, “life wouldn't be worth liv. fng when you Weren't with me, and | “You mustn't.” she cried, desperate. her rl the gir . i not a bit alike, are wo? " cried. ® me her in the of each,” she replied, sald the young “if 1 didn’t know you should almost think you we nice” you do know rather.” was the confident 1 have asked at all | to hear,” he sald ; “1 told you not to,” “You shouldn't if you d&in't want sulkily. For her continued oars. “What was the other murmured at length, With a few strokes the young man turned the nose of the boat toward bank and shipped his oars. From a window which looked on te lawn the old man interestedly retriever sidle up to a h lay unregarded by the dozing Irish terrier. wandered across the house, Just then came from the landing house ly. in | he the she leaned back closed eyes, while stubbornly at a while seat with pulling reason?” she a whic of a eye boat couple aACross lawn the His the to the unembarrassedly They were were the they walked in a only Most { hand in hand. they world inhab! tants. A sudden growl Irish gnawing the detected drew his at ler, pow wide bone wit] again to the terr and while his relish away “H'm!" gzald the curious } ~The IMPATIENT SPARROWS. Clamored Because Dear, Generoug Old Lady Was Late. man who § home sf thie tim in is! A abt eak year od surprise SPArrows on the They basement doo ihe house and convention toward the formed one single the others Says have and i in br nl the New been a ira to throw handaful y #ireet She scattered s tha and summer,” ing face Unie they get weather BOON a beam the ¥ is Loo they come ooking _ om I'm just ' ng ane 0 NOISY after and for it ‘m an early riser a litt tRis morn that's tl I wonder who's when I'm love because they them But gtarve™ ¢ reason they were 8 going to take There won the way | have Care oO, hooey poy ye? ¢ ae ® b them - 3 be many 0, to be em in Tous 1 jove th much life won't be SHE GOT HER BEAR. | Prodded Mim Out With Mer Scissors “Thén Tomahawked Him, As for that grit of women-—mean {ing Indlan wgmen—which has bees celebrated In a well known book, there is a story in Fur News which is good evidence of their physics) courage. Hae ‘ A dealer in skins tells of a squaw who was walking along on her snow shocs one day when her small boy saw a bear curled up under the snow in his winter sleep. 8he could not kill him where ghe wad, 80 she lashed a pair of scissors to a sapling, prod ded him out and smashed his head in with her tomahawk az he emerged, “1 gave her $10 for the skin,” writes the dealer, “so it was nota bad (ing’s work. Another ingenious plece of hunting that I remember was ac complished dy an Indian who found two moose in a yard-—that is, the snow clearing which the animals make when the frosts are breaking up and | the snow is too sharp and brittle for | thelr comfort, “He crept up and got the female | with his tomahawk. The male was {driven to fury and it was unsafe to approach him. The stroke of a hoot would have put the Indian out of business In close order, “Having no gun, he improvised a bow and arrow from the trees, stuck a sharp file Into the point of the ar row, made a bowstring with the laces of his moccasins and shot the beast through the heart” ¥ § i i i i Since the unification of the Wesley Brotherhood and the Brotherhood of St. Paul in the Methodist Church, which brought 1800 societies to gether, the membership, which was 160,000 at the time of union has taken & rapid stride forward. nme - This year's “senior wrangleshlp” at the University of Cambridge, England, gives great honors to a young Rus- sian Jew, eeTesiezoee oTesTa rT» TarTarTesre se resbastasTe Te Teste Household Notes op Sine < a a GRAPE GELATINE. and Individual molds can at the dealers to supply your needs for making gelatine, blanc manges, and gimilar dainties. One of the newest designs Is a grape mold, | and whew the gelatine is emptied on | a dainty plece of china it looks just like a bunch of luscious grapes, The | fruit may be dropped into the jelly | before it sets to carry out this il lusion.~~New York Times, CARD CATALOGUE. clever housewife has * for home catalogues, only a shoe to fit and alphabetical ! Large A “card made a | It is | although | and tp Af catalogue the library holder is cards cout in It, in Canning” hints on cards, { from papers and Fed Under come sortg of use bux, stand order, come “ «kv + recipes usually clipped magazines and “Quick Ren hings which applied in the home alds, burns caning, 1} ) and of household labor The children do up, considering ement * past- on 11 “il ily got of a fdents. be ea and | In cas poison, fod { : depart thelr ments sect most it g BY: Bre: Ty superior day amu The mother, Hips AOONE i clippings : : : nlent — New York Trib me. BEST CARE white rENYY C3 VEILS very 11 eT dificul ter to bring it back to its original i Boiled mat I white carefully You can water. Pass with also the an vel! gum ara! waier, orf been boil Pin 0 even dry and same as Times BY OF LINEN BIWEAES any ay be no CUSHION Pretty touch of ho while the COVER 3 3 add a room, and i only £ sofa # L thay r beautifu ney Aare welk worth to make 1 cover, answerin of ol fo a in {-fashioned I coffee It may Narrow ootton charmingly: mer i done In the | a comfortable, grandmotherly look And last, but not the mesh Is | wide enough to permit the design be carried to perfection with French embroidery ribbon An ecru scrim cover estan by a design large brows { daisies done with the last-named ma | terial. The flowers are nol scatter i : { give It a is very ful Re be embroldered soutache erized = cross-stitch tonal Cast, is made bean of ! ed broadcast on the pillow, nor have { they any stems. The design Is quite | conventional; the daisies—which per haps are botter described as siars save for the yellow rosettte fo the center of the five petals—are placed in a double row around the edge o the pillow, thus forming a border This leaves the smooth material ir the center and insures the comfort of the pillow when In use —Pitlts burg Dispatch. aon iF hb. RRCIPES Orange Fritters Divide the or anges into quarters, removing all the pith carefully: dip each piece ints sifted sugar, then into good frying batter and fry in deep fat until 3 . golden color. Drain by the fire and serve on a doily. Mock Mince Ple~-One cup ‘thick sour milk, 1 cup sugar, 1-2 cup mo lasses, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoonful mix ed apices, butter size of butternut 1 cup raising cut in two, i tablespoos of vinegar, Glace Meringue.—~One guart cream 8 tablespoonfuls gelatine, 1 small out of sugar, 1 small tablespoonful of va nilla; soak gelatine in oold water then dissolve In 1-2 pint 5% cream which has been heated; add all In gredients and freeze; pack and Inf stand 1 or 2 hours; then beat to » froth the whites of 4 eggs into which stir 4 tablespoonfuls of sugar; turn cream into dish in which it Is to be served and cover with meringue and brown In oven. Serve Immediately. Chocolate Ple.—A large eoup of milk, ® eggs, 92 heaping tablespoon: ful cocoa, pinch of salt; flavor with vanilla; mix chocolate with 2 table spoonfuls milk; stir in the large cup sealed milk. Beat 1 whole egg and the yolks of 2 with the sugar. Pour the hot milk over sugar and eggs, stirring briskly; add sait and vanil ia. Bake as we do custard ple. Frost with the whites of eggs, browning In oven. | Jno. F. Gray & Son Burcdssors to... GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Lite Insurance Companies in the World. , ... THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . No Mutuals No Assessments - . Ld Before insuring r life see the contract of THE HOME which in esse of death between the tenth and twentieth years re. turns all premiums paid in ed. dition to the face of the policy. to Loan on First Mortgage Office in Crider’s Stone BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Consection Money EXPERIENCE Trave Manns Desions Co PYRIGHTS 4c. ng a skeich writ iain our orn balily pater : thy fidential, Jia wh, Oldest agency for » is taken through Mur ” Pare notice, without chargs, | gh fimerican. y iHinstrat od weekly argent oir. k f any scientific jour Marte $a months, $l. Bold by all newsdealers, MUNN & Coc. New Yori Rranch Offos mabireran, 1. al. BURDE?T They E'S BEAR STORY. were resting around the Pres- campfire in the Louisiana tfnebrake. The dogs were asleep with the fatigue of the chase, the guldes were lying around feasting thelr eyes upon the distinguished ruest, the President was ng the campfire as a sports “Boys,” he said, "did you near Bob Burdetté's bear story “Wah Bob Bu'dette Ah?” asked Guide “Not exactly,” the Pres “Bob was a mueh bear hunter He is youth, but when sider he became brave e 1 ana enjoy- man can. ever wre a b'ah hun- Eanolds dent an- iwered, nan than year in bh braver trailed he grew 0 fol. - nough ow the lecture Play rm." The guides beast, didn’ aL Kn but they ow this last- al smoked their il “Bob's bear sto 't,"” the President ‘sn't here, and I'l] around in his shoes a bit, There were two men going through a field A large and mean-dispositioned bull walted until they had gained the midd field, when ng. “The two me but the bull clos: nooking at thelr coat the fugitiviea made for a thinned into it, while the other refuge in a hole in the ground “The bull made for the man in bole. It flashed over as he dived in. bobbed out egain, the pull made for him, and he bobbed in and as the bull shot back and forth. They kept this up for a while, and the man in the tree yelled: ry needs Bob to continued, “but fell he 3 rattle ie of the be set upon them, their and ana lives, be Ea One tree n of and took BE is. the out fe fool?’ “The bull was dashing across the hole with mad roars, and the man m the tree yourself,” he reétorted “Thar's a bear in this A One of the guides threw a log on the fire, an owl hooted off In the tim- ber, and there wasn't a nature faker within 500 miles. =Bt. Louis Post. Digpatek 4 ond -e ATTACKED BY AN EAGLE. Discovering an eagle's nest in the lace of the Lost Well Canvon Cliff, Arthur Williams, a Riverton {Wyom- ng) rancher, got two cow sanions te re her fledgelings. A rope was dropped from the top i the cliff and down this Willisms iid a distance of 200 feet until ope posite the nest. At that moment the mother eagle appearod, and without hesitation attacked the maw. Will fams struck at her with a stick he rarried as a weapon and at the first blow it was dashed from his hand by the beating wings of the eagle. Peck. ing, clawing and striking stunning blows with her wings, the eagle was beating the man when one of Will iams’'s companions dropped a hea~y stone on her and she fell into the sanyon. Although severely lacerated and bruised, Williams nevertheless se. tured the nestlings and then de scended to the floor of the canyon, where he attempted to capture the parent bird. As he grasped her, her vitality returned, and she beat him 3 and soared away. Williams’ companions gave his wounds emergency attention, draw. ing the torn flesh together and plas. tering it with postage stamps. He was a dilapidated spectacle when he quence. ls —————— REAL MERIT. “There's ane thing I like about, those sheath dresses,” sald the hus band. “What's that?” asked the “ite. “There don't seem to be a lot of buttoning to do at the back!" Yon kers Statesman, | ATTORNEYS, D ¥. PORTURY ATTOREEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA Offices North of Court House ee Ww HARRISON WALKER ATTORNKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Fo. 19 W. High Street. All } professional DuNinom Promptly attended ne ema W.D Zzzaw cen Rs B.D. Gerri imo. J. Bowes CGETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW EsoLe Brook BELLEFONTE, PA, Buccessors to Onvis, Bowes 4 Ozvie Consultation in Buglsh and German CLEMENT DALE ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, Fa. Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors from irst Natiopal Bank. re Ww. G RO NKLRE ATTORNEY AT. LAW BELLAFVONTE PA. All kinds of legs] business sitended to prom puly Fpecial atten lou given to colisctions. Office Soor Crider's Ex: Sang Irs ! { i i i i i i { BH B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFORTE VA in all the courts. Consuliation iz 20d German, Offoe, Orider's Exchange t Hotel i Fort EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location : One mile South of Centre Hall | Aosommodations fmstclam Good ber. Perties wishing $0 enjoy an evening given special sttention. Meals for such ootasions Pre pared om short notice. Always prepared for the transient trade. BATES : $1.00 PER DAY. fe ——— i ——— [he Aatignal Hotel : MILLHEIM, PA. L A BHAWYER, Prop Fist clam socommodstions for the travel @00d table board and sleeping apartments The eboloest liquors at the bar, Blade se smmodations for horses is the best 0 be bad. Bus boand from all trains on Be Lewisburg and Tyrone Ralirosd, at Cobuse —— LIVERY 2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa, Penn’a RL R | Practices English Bustin Pena’s Valley Banking Company ———— ————— ——— CENTRE HALL, PA V. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢ Recelves Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . H. 0. STROHMEIER; CENTRE HALL, Manufacturer of | and Dealer in HIGH CRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble aw Granite, Pm di wen mr pron PEN * . a. ¢ LaRoesT | NSURARG Legency I CENTRE COUNTY {H. E. FENLON Sr Agent Bellefonte, Penn'a.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers