ATTORNEYS, The Rational Hote Pe D. P. FORTNEY ATTORNEY-AT\LAW BELLEFONTE, Ps Offices Nerth of Court House, Ee —— WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR Ma RADRIAON Fo. 19 W, High Street. Ad professional business promptly attended ts eee oe = 8 D. Gsrne Iwo. J. Bowes W.D Zzam ICS ETT, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Eaour Broos BELLEFONTE. Pa Successors to Onvis, Bowzs 4 Onvie Consultation in English and German, P— — C LEMENT DALE ATTORYEY-AT-Law BELLEFONTR, PFs Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors ros iret Nations! Bank. ire i 1g G RUNKLE ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, Pa | AR xinds of legal business attended to prompt iPpecial sitantion given to collections. Office, # Soor Crider's Rxchange. ire i NW B SPANGLER ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR.P; { Practices in ail the courts. Consullstion Bogie! and German. Office, Orider's Exobang Butiting to# Did Fart Hote! : EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location : One mile South of Centre Mall josommodations first-class. Good bar. Partim wishing to enjoy an evening given specty stention. Meals for such oocssions pow pared on short notice. Always prepared for the translegt trade. BATES : $1.00 PER LAY. LIVERY = Special Effort made to ccommodate Com. mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a R. R 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trav Manns Desicns Copyriaurs &c. Anrons sending a sketeh and description ¥ naceriain oar of fn is probably tle etliy confidential, atetis y dest agency for secr ring ix atents, LC na taken through Munn & Co. receiv seinl notice, without charpa, tn the Scientific Huerican, A him 7 fila strated eekly. Taraost adh nthe, $1 WURH 8 Coors. New York ge 894d by all ne dealers. Preamety (Bon Anka Aslip sen D.C Pes's Yale Banking Company : CENTRE HALL, Pa W. B. MINGLE, Cash H. G. STROHIEIER, CENTRE HALL, . . . . . Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH. GRADE . . . AONUMENTAL WOR in ail kinds of Marble aw Granite, ' ws an wg ay prion p— PEN - LaRcesy suming: | Lgency IN CENTRE COUNTY H. E. FENLON Agent ! Bellefonte, Penn’a, MILLERIM, PA. BA. BHAWVER, Prop. Pst class accommodations for the travels @00d able board and sleeping apartments The oholosst liquor at the bar, Stable ae tommodations for horses ls the best te be bad. Bus Wand from all traine eon Whe Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, at Ocha. ———— og gpm roddbbddid bd bbl bbbb bbb Jno. F. Gray & Son Succdisors to. GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World, . . .. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST .. . . . No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring your life the contact of THE HOME which in case of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiume paid in ed- dition to the face of the policy. Money to Loan om Fired Office in Celder' Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone ONT TTT rr rrr IIT Irrerrererediid THE PANTHER AND THE DOG. In 1795 Joseph Ingham, of Quaker parentage, removed from Berka County (of which he was a native), to Bradford County, Pa., when ’* wad & "howling wilderness.” in which roamed panthers, bears, wolves, wild and deers Like all the other early settlers, he lived in a small log house, until able to build a better residence Like the others, he and his family endured great hardships and privations, which are unavoidable in settling in a wooded country with. out roads, churches, mille, or stores, or mail facilities. Often the whole neighborhood (2 short time before harvests) would be entirely out of grain of any kind, and would havd , Btarved had not greens been plentis ‘ful, and drdves of deer in the EE which supplied them with meat Wild animals at that time were numerous in the woods, and destruc tive to sheep, swine and poultry. Te protect his farm stock Mr. Inchan raised two dogs When quite young though brothers of the same age and size, they differed wonderfully In dis position and conduct Ono of then bright, vigilant, active, display ing great int gence, and eglvins promise of making a useful watch The other acted stupid, dull lazy, sleep most of the time. Noi much was expected of him. When full grown, amazing change had taken place in thelr characters and conduct, The bright, vigilant pup became a lazy cowardly cur, and could not be induced to take a pig bs the ear. The stupid velope 1 gent, cats Vas dog. ing nn an sleepy pup de the most intelli watchful dogs in the was known te seize a bu nose on the full run, and throw him flat on the ground by jerking his head to one side He seemed to be alwavs awake, and on guard, day and night The one was 1able dog the good fot into one of and He courageous count 1 by the other “One night.” was awakened by sald my father, *9 the Cowling of the cowardly dog. When I got up in the morning he led me upon the orchard hill above the ho The other dog was missing A tracking snow had fallen the evening before. and 1 found the tracks of a wild beast and the dog's tracks. The wild beast had come from the woods and started foi the sheepbarn He had been inter cepted by the dogs and turned on his back tracks, evidently having gives up his intentions of feasting on mut ton and not feeling sure he could whip two dogs that appeared warlike i and furious. When about fifteen rod; from the house, the courageous dog had attacked him. If he had expected Any assistance from his cowardly | brother he did not get it. The cow- ardly brother that “discre- the better part of valor,” and bad kept himse!f at a safe dis tance from the combat. There were evidences of a desperate fight between wild The snow for rods around was trampled. and the combatants had fought, standing on thelr hind legs and fought on the ground, rolling and | tumbling. The wild beast was al | panther, larger and with sharper | teeth and claws than the dog, who | died on the battle field in the unefjnal and when found was partly eaten up by the panther, the remains having been dragged about a dozen rods and buried under the roots of 4 tree that had lately bein blown down by the wind. Evidently the panther intended to come back in the night and make a supper out of the re- | mains. “There's many a slip between | the cup and the lip.” The panther | never ate any more of the dog. My father gnd “Life” Marsha noted hunter—started in pursuit of the pan- ther with dogs and guns. He had | gone about a mile into the woods, | pawed together some leaves from | under the snow to make a bed and ' had lain down to rest after his ox. haustion from 1attling with the dog Started up from his slumber by the dogs, he sprarg into a tree, whick | was fust what the hunters wanted but bad management of himself. He was goon dispatehed by the rifles of (80 believed beast ground dead, the cowardly dog be came very brave and bit and shool the lifeless pashan 4u'lons 4o he wes allowed to do so. J, W. * lngm, n the Indiana Farmer. . Professor J Laure: mee markable article in which he says “May it not be the psycholog ia new aristocracy of the simple {i ity and not for the shadow, for the | rather than for the external, {time to create a ~MMASONrY has, nor how much one knows, Fiches, may be the root of all evil; | of prices cannot be living." {ree in the May Scribner, writes a re- hour tc call for the creation of | of those who care for the real- ward pleasures of the mind May it not be high ask how much one | in the sense of | andard of | | i show? Gold, sense of a st increased cost d, in the in our er i but gol evil 0 Tex ‘stravagance has ational vice but atic pot oly nal men § O00 « the that there y oxist in affairs, that 5 ciation prudent use of tment of and incomes found neces. of prosperity and ¢ t enance of a condition of vidu al th “ or o% ree s pet sit which always have sary to the suppor fo the mainte solvency The speaker Craze ns a squandering on pleasure nually sums money running into hundreds of millions of dollars.” he continued. "The initial cost of auto- mobiles to American users ayounts to noi less than $250.000,000 a year The up-keep and other necessary penditures, as well as incidentals which would not otherwise be in- curred, amount to at least as sum is equivalent more This vast in actual economic weste each year pro that io me adjus rns bean ires automobile We are vehic CAR® of to riore than the value of destroyed in the San Francisco fire perhaps to twice as much, This sum, as large as it is, doea n whole economic this single item of indulgence. The thousands of young and able-bodied men employed in manufacturing ma- chines and in running and caring for cars, all are withdrawn from produc- tive usefulness: they become consume ers of our diminishing surplus pro- ducts and constitute an added bur- den to the producers. The economic influence of this withdrawal from the producing and addition to the con- suming class, i132 bound to be mani. fested in a tendency to higher prices, Its effect already must be consider able, and is comparable only to the maintenance of an enormous stand- ing army. “Thousands upcn thousands of our people, frenzied by desire for pleas. ure and crazed by passion to spend. have mortgaged their homes, pledged their life insurance policies, with drawn their hard-earned savings from banks to buy automobiles; and have thereby converted their modest assets into expanding and devouring liabilities. The spectacle is astound- ing. “In the matter of individual ex- penditures it is the fashion now to be and the fashic Individual miserly i is running riot, thrift is considered not but ig upon as ¢ and a thing to despised It sald that this ig day of 3 {1 things, and tha as wealth EO®R NOW, may no accumulated by the of savings and econo< This may be true if we shall measure wealth only by billions or hundreds of millions, but, just a surely ns there ever existed virtue in of contentment and inde hoarding 8 vid v3? not a longer be just as surely as individ! national extravagance ever, of reckoning they are Among nations, and permanent wealth and ual and day among individuals, 31 #0 much of rick as they are the pr and thrift; not nat) iral resources oducts of economy! alone economy in the but economy of tke “The ma the present’ dependent upon the sustained purchasing power of the indlivdual which in turn depends not wholly ipon the expansion of credit Herein lies one) of the chief elements of weakness and! ntenance of “If the banks may by increasing loans create credits, which in turn create purchasing power and a sus« hereby still further advancing prices " the benefits of which all classes’ share except those who possess fixed incomes, it may be asked why this is not good; why not continue to pro- mote the general ability to spend; why not continue giving to each ine dividual an amount of enjoyment, luxury and pleasure unknown before, particularly when all this may be ace complished by merely Increasing loans? The simple but comprehen-! answer fx that it’ run every act of wastefulness and every item of extravagance must be paid for to the last farthing; every, item consumed must be earned.” Mr. Talbert also discussed the dan. ger of the country losing its favorable | trade balance and of adding an ad-j verse trade balance to the other debit! | items which run against this country, to the extent of hunfreds of millions of dollars a year, Talbert esti 000,000, including $200,000.,000 i Cambridge, Mass. —Dr. Charles W. Pliot, Harvard's president emeritus, asserts ‘‘that the lust for gold and the thirst for power, considered by Americans as the main objects of ex- istence, have caused the present reign of discontent which is sweeping over the country.” “The object of life with the ine dividual as with the nation results from the succession of pleasureable emotions and feelings,” he adds. “Progress {sa measured by happiness, not by dollars and cents. The aver age workingman fails to realize this. Neither social prestige ner riches can promote happiness or retard ft. The happiness of a community can be furthered not by increasing its total wealth or distributing it more evenly, but by improving its physical and! moral welfare, “Sensuous pleasures, like eating and drinking, scribed as animal, and therefore un worthy, but men are animals and have a right to enjoy without re- proach those pleasures of animal et fstence which maintain health, strength and life itself. These pleas ures, taken naturally and in moder. ation, are all pure and honorable.” Over 500,000 Workmesn Injured Each Year in the United States. New York, N. Y.—<At the annual convention of the National Associa tion of Manufacturers at the Waldorf. Asteria the important subject under consideration was the means of pre- venting accidents, During the past rear ntable accidents Injured half a million work. men in the United tes and entailed a loss of $260,000,000 to manufac These statistics turers. caused the to look into the matier and sek the consensus of ¢plnlon, Printing Conditions Rosente, Say Typothetae Delegates, Washington, D. C.—~Delegates to the twenty-fourth annual convention of the United Typothetae of America take a roseate view of conditions in their trade. Business is good, the say, and labor trouble are scarce. { | } i f i | CURING A CAPITALIST His Doctor Just § Switched Him From Money Making to Basket Making. The of many from of * millions,” and exe man down experience a capitalist, who broke sent cure’ WHS tag "An eis Te the OYETrwork ation and York, is told in first ulted but an examina! he had no org near He special O0Ccu] New Outivok. had ist, that kind, He told suffering ward trembling the heart zinegs, pain difficulty in tion, and, most of all, apprehensions, such as that of being fall, o ying his mind, of death--he was afraid continually tired harassed He was informed that these were merely the ordinary symptoms of and were not dangerous. "One hundred per cent are curable” and packed his « “occupation a famous ion bad Cong shown any that he called the frion hat he Was in of diz neck, with pal pitation poor sieep, occasional back of the concentrating his atien in the from variou about to sudden alone to be and was wor ried and neurasthenia of cases of said the lent off 10 cure.” neurasthenia specialist, the The and exercise after his arrival, the y the morning WHE ¢8COrie arts a: crafts shop connect a forty-acre county. He ficient and busines the the was instructress, who « pature of the avo hit choose to he isily 1¢ mig Here, tients bn ally employed in one of found and {1O0, apparently the of ti elie of ne ie le i ities, Lreak patiently Gus is had undergone down aller om was hammering a converung sheet brass with a view to into a lamp shade A matre who had pro in sanita Yun sel fice with n of nearly GO viously spent eight years practically the riums. bedridden printing « n she b two i the ting type in tivity tha ud known greater ac before {«¢ and clined to subject fhe rr Iwo the hvstern gecud other to sacle cure in of trained Over a a silk rug. tern were chattering the eonstructior man New joom in A business the down from A 1180s 00 modelling from & Neg York overwork talist, was he capi in what nt eventunily of last the fashionables leading a life of 100 strenu ty that had told on constructing a stamped with absorp PRY become BB Jur debuy who one Season's Nong RAYE her nerves was leather portfelio tion Half a dozen others mostly women, were engaged at ing. bookbinding, block printing, tap estry weaving or basket making, each under treatment for some derangement patient decided his band at basket making, and although he figured out that it would take him about four days to turn out a product that might sell for 10 cents, he was 8O0Nn BO interested in mastering the manual details of the craft that he was disinclined to put the work aside when the medical superinten dent suggested a horashash ride When, at the advice the special ist. the capitalist had he to try the occupation and exercise cure, he with little faith that it would him to health, though he felt that there was perhaps a slight chance that it might help him. The romedy seemed to him too simple to overcome a disease that was paralye ing his energies, To his great surprise he began to improve at once, and though for the first week he got little sleep, and his dizziness, with the pain in the back of his neck and his apprehensions, continued to recur for weeks, they did always at increasing intervals. He learned bookbinding, and sent to his library for some favo©ite volumes and put them into new dress; he made elaborate waste paper baskets and beat brags into ornamental desk trays, which he proudly presented to his friends in the city as specimens of bis skill. Work with him, as with the others of the patients, was continually varied by recreation. in the summer months there was lawn tennis, golf, croquet, canoeing, rowing, fishing, riding and driving. In winter such outdoor sports as skating, | tobogganing, coasting, skiing, snow. shoeing and lacrosse were varied by billiards, bowling, squash, the med! cine ball and basket and tether ball. The capitalist was astonished to find that he could take an interest in games. The net results of his expert. entire young wood cary. one of them Dervous The new 0 try much did =o restore 80 months he returned to New York sound in mind and body, feeling younger than he had for years. A Grand Future. “That boy surely will go to Con gress when he grows up,” says the father, after a vain effort to convince his young hopeful of the enormity “What makes you think that? the Beats The Comet. Is this the gas company?" “Yes, sir.” “Well, say! Did you read in the Papers that the tall of Halley's com-. et ls composed of gas?” “Yes, but what has that’ “And did you notice that it was eusure d as being $15,000,000 miles ong? ii ay Yes, “Hello! gir, what" “Nothing I just wanted to say that if the astronpmers measured it with this meter in my house it would be 40 miles long Chicago but f O00 000 Evening Post Unsightly Complexions, ut use of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, for purposes nov rifies and beautifies and hands, but irritation and he pores, the eommon lackheads, redness yellow, oily, mothy wholesome conditions of. and skin. All who de Heght in a elesn skin, soft, white hands, wholesome scalp and five, hair, will find Cuticura Boayp successful in realizing pvery expectation, Cuticura Soap and Ointment are admirably adapted to preserve the health of the skin and scalp of in- fants and chi and to prevent minor blemishes or inherited skin hu- Mors g chronic, and may be lused from the hourof birth. Cuticura "Remedies are sold throughout the cliv- {lized nd to Potter Drug & Boston, iTR Bot yk, 32 ce on care and alp and hair. ira rEGry air nation, es, b and ghiness and other ur the complexion rou a clear, glossy most 1A dren, beecomis world proprietors build- Melbourne. court ing is to be constructed in For COLDS and GRIP, CArUDINE is remedy i $ cures its aad the feve Hie ¥'s best ye wll ens 8 08 ! 14 mmeGistely ee, WC. sldrug stores 10 dyes were fo ing » used for Easter CREs, to be poisonous. Try Murine Eye Remedy For Re Pa Wes BY Ws tery Fyes end Granulated se. It Soot hes Eye Palo. Murine Eve Remedy Liqu ?5¢. and Be. urine Eve Balve. 25c. an v 81.00, Stee] used are very mueh Buy "BarTre Axe” Snogs And The Varm., two sons wepe eave and work th destiny in ciLy. The ner wanted to keep the boys on farn So he sent them to an liege, one to learn and general agricul- other to take a8 course usbandry of this experiment was OF took ‘a great fancy td and a great interest in of it The science attractive it, 2 knowledge of the of nature, and gives ie work This is knock out the drudger» life and give one broad Joys farmer's the farm } nn pecially owledge HE is ints one into beautiful laws a charm to iH h the way to farm YIOoWms very of The agriculturs! coll our greatest publie takes much of the work by The farn ege is today titution i udgery out of ting intelligence er is the real pro- ducer, the real benefactor in trade end commerce, and it is more sone ble to encourage his development fhan that of any other class. There #8 no kindlier fortune for a boy than to get him interested farm experience He is pretty certain to pttain to great worth Ohio State sourna;: dr farm fn it in Did A youn men Lose Her, was timidly court ing a pretty girl. One afternoon, nu) the garden, he scraped up courage enough to ask in a tremulous whis- per for a kiss “A kiss!” she said me for a kiss? “You ask Now, applied to the hand a kiss signifies respect Oa the forehead it denotes friendship. Upon the lips it denotes all things or nothing.” She paused pen- sively, then went on: “You may. ince you wish it, kiss me. You may express yourself in one kiss. Pro- ceed.” The timid young man, confused, pondered her!” he muttered to himself “Where, then, shall 1 kiss hort His meditations were interupted by a pretty whistle It was his divinity, her red mouth puckered in- to the shape of a rosebud, her hat guilled down over her eyes, hiding er forehead completely, sand her red and “I musn’t lose the pockets of her jacket! — Answers, During 1909 Chile produced 18.- 179 Mons of copper, as against 19.- 463 tons In 1908. A Breakfast Joy— Sweet, Crisp, Golden-Brown Post Toasties Ready to servedrom the package with cream—no Te Ca “The Memory Lingers” Pigs. 10c am M3c,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers