THE AFTERMATH. en from my weary fall Away The thread of tangled so, ice, and say today,” fingers life which I have “She And do not flow. ar hearts, on that day When first my eyes earth and woe; all before me Weary ‘way which, however feet must go let one tear of sorrow the time for tears was unclosed hen stretched the Q'er weak, my Weary because Death holds was good:” the way have trod: I've sinned my sins: stood. | I answer Heap not, my Bay not, me, “She Praise not in which my feet but be it under- for them only to my God nor scatter flowers above grave; The offering sO poor! Give to the living hearts that mourn and crave Who have so much before them to endure, seems so useless and The way has been so weary and so long! * to see the strained eves sought i 141; longed for death My far-off en And I have -88 one For sight Xe pie sie oR ste ste she a%e SNES ad adie adltad 3 Silk “dugout” w was a palace Though but a cellarlike hole ground with walls of sod tv feet high boasted a board floor an pane glass on hinges, and the sides were with tarred Bit ther over Qugout. for mo sick, when mother was sick, the shone iohtly y vi miles of Yost The dejected thinking “Lot nice “Yes some wild toast, or “Toast Met's buy “A silk cried K Mollie, hast was as if had proposed buying the white star hone in at out window night But the idea fasci ertheless and presently face it more cal Fred had a Kitty a two-cent piece, } ured silver half-dime, and little Chris a big' old-fashioned penny with a hole in it. None of them had ever had any other money, but Fred was to begin next week work for the blackemith on the adjoining claim, and he rich already. “Dear me, how dreadf-ly fine it would be,” sighed Kitty at last, “but we couldn't ever get enough, unless” “—ghe hesitated, “unless Hal would help.” “Hal.” lined paper, the and that and shadow was sun {les ¥ 3 rags seemed to have ry wink BOgwicks sat the barn silk dress.” itty beautiful the dug avery ated them, they nev could mly. precious gold dollar. {ollie a treas to felt repeated Fred, with fine scom. “He never spends a cent on anybody but himself. He doesn't care whether any of the rest of us ever have any good times or not. 1 houldn't wonder if it's worry over Im that's making mother sick.” Silence fell upon the little for awhile, and then Mollie rose. “F muess I'll go and make the “oe sald, “we're sure of that anyhow.” I get her some wild flow ried Kitty. fry to market her butter and upon these occasions she always wore | had alwaya worn. she always look- ed to Hal she And yet somehow ed “fixed up” in it. How would she look in a new silk dress? What if he should take hold and help the youngsters out with dream? Whether ft flowers or found in it was because marked that he go to the city was that morning, old glory. Mother two months her hand bouquet of tonst or the chick whether re- to was the the prairie his trap, or Hal had casually had decided not after all, certain it mother was better next and the sun shone with its morning, put out Kitty a bache- her birthday later, had receive on just from lady's slipper and fresh from the garden, and golden shower her, completely en- to button purple about her. in the world” a handfu! of the over which purple lor's when a fell all veloping “What grasping low. silk were rioting Such a shrief five began, heavy vel roges she as a rose from the young Beswicks!' Fina “A aught the words, mother cs dress—for you! gazing first » gasped, ired sil and then at faces iO Ca herself had gx v, while she And the elegan Bic into this me they money i ndor, were when wien and ato come from”? tticoats kings! had it Whe Just then Hal slipped a ten d¢ bill her hand “It's for a and and he thought it was time juit spe everything on m3 needing pe And where ilar into hat linings things.” said. "l ling assed from overspread we dear I do with it° ress in mit—and such And would laugh cried, over of her riches One morning in through a Indian sum Next ward mbarrassment the sun haze, as had come day people were gaz for millions of tiny par be in motion high immer, shone ellow though earl ing sky ticles seemed in the air. Could it be volcanic On the third morning particles had begun to settle, hoppers!” exclaimed Hal, coming with an anxious face. Sure enough, inside of an hour the air was full of them. Mother spread sheets and aprons over her cherished marigolds and lady-slippers and over some of choicest vegetables, and then treated to the house to of the things that filled her sunbon- net and caught in her hair. Hal ing in mer to ashes? the moving “Grass in “smudges” of half dried priarie smoke the insects out of the thrifty ing himself by chasing a great tum ble weed that was leaping and bound: port of the family until next year. But all night could be heard in the cornfield, grat ing, grating, moth gater, and all next day the alr was so thick with them that the chil high south wind, while Kitty picked anemones and yellow Johnny-Jump- ups and purple sprays of “shoe string,” “buffalo beans.” womething in the trap he had set ast night. ! All this time, Hal Beswick ley in the barn loft, face downward in the . The shadow of his mother's | By the next morning the haze was in the alr again, and the unwelcome visitors had disappeared, ieaving des olation In their track. Not a veg etable remained, even the onions had vanished, leaving only little holes to y his door. janybody but himself." en now he was planning a forty- ings on fine “store clothes,” and ving a good time.” | Did mother ever long for pretty ‘clothes, he wondered. The very sheets and aprons moth er had put over her flowers had been eaten through, while the cornfield stood like a skeleton army, with only the stalk and the middle rib each blade to tell the story of the plenty that was to have been. The little Beswicks sat again on the barn doorsill. Hal stood near by, stroking buttercup’s nose. They all understood now serious was the situation and the same thought was in all thelr minds. Finally, he spoke oul, “Being's we gave it to her, she wouldn't want to suggeat it. But if she was willing to sell it, with what I've saved up to go to the state falr there'd be enough to carry us over wos gratefully waited went about with the welght of So a committee upon mother as she a weight on her heart, til the crops should come again. The committee hesitated and stam. mered, She mustn't think they would go very much {if—well, the his mind and-—and another change silk if he should gelling the they could get her dress another vear. As if silk dresses grow bean stalks. Mother's face she could spare year. And weeks with know about on buffalo radiant, Yes, dress for grew the did; but when a brand-new silk trailing over aisle the of eves looked wist. and five she later a purple roses rustled down the church pairs fully after it, sighs arose. Mother, sitting between son Hal and little Chris, black alpaca had since Hal could remember, but hers was a sigh of relief contentment Congregationalist Christian World. dress of five her she worn ever and and we ———— OUR BUSY RICH, Only About 76,000 ; Fariiere Now Own Automobiles. Ever been to Hays Clty, Kas.” when you go there t agk for 41 i Thomas Kedd 'r8 and that wn autor Ones The by farmers of ten owned ut lows, five th farmers » owned by spent $3,200,000 luring 1908, $2,750 Nebraska town forty and In one population, au Year 1o if LACK OF FILIAL RESPECT. of Most of Our Tribulations, At the Bottom Na- tional manifest to the most careless th the public thoroughly American determination “housecleaning.” ned no or state; it pervadea the entir politic from ocean to ocean. shall result in Governors who execute the laws without judges who will lence ised CON a aro peopie are to have general This sentiment is to section e body confi It ix 3 will rigidly fear of favor: justed, speedily jurors who will do their duty, to the offender and Iynx-eyed to the a new era will come to bless our land. Our tribulation is all of the people themselves. Nowhere else in Christendom are found chil dren with so little reverence for par deed” the average American family. It not look on his daddy as an imbecile or a fool. This is the observation and the testimony of pretty every foreign observer who a boy sitting while a decrepit man ten Is standing, painfully holding to a strap. town, the capital of what we fondly Let us take read: “He that spareth the rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes.” And remember chaos in the fam: fly makes anarchy in the state.- Washington Post, — Milk for the Young. The venerable Julla Ward Howe, In the interest of the infant population, appeared before the Milk Investigat ing Committee of the Massachusetts Legislature, Mrs. Howe sald: “There is no substitute whatover for milk as a food for children. The milk Question concerns many, and espeo fally Infants, for it seems fo be actu ally a question of life and death.” Tip asks if she means a cow's milk or human milk. Indeed, and certain, there is no substitute for mother's milk for infants, but from the attitude of many sanitarians one might think if we had pure cow's milk the question of baby foods would He sattled for good. Tip in the New York Presid PENNSYLVANIA Prevents Explosion, Pittaburg.--While firemen powerful streams of water upon him, W. A. Weaver, the Atlantic refining plant, daringly through fiame and shut a valve, which fire spreading from a burning still of benzine to great tanks of nearby. In the vicinity over 30,000 | barrels of petroleum in various | stages of refinment were stored, Two | hundred people, called from their beds by the peril, cheered the super- intendent as he came, scorched, from the burping still. What Hkely would have been a catastrophe simi- lar to that at Sheraden several years when 200 persons were serious- ly Injured in a gasoline explosion, was prevented and the loss confined to the benzine still dashed Orchard Inspectors End Tour, Womelsdort The Bpectors the Division have completed thelr orchards for the second Summer, Most of the excellent and in every instructions of the have been followed, above the average. est peach orchards Franklin 8. Merkel, and Livi ngood, of Robesonia. One of the ines orchards lg on the 10 te Asylum, where of Malcol dition orchard in- of Zoology, of the | time this orchards look where the inspectors conditions are Among the fin- are those of of Flee LW vd . of tour Cane Ee Mate Romance In Tobacco Bag. id Two weeks Pr jester REO Bpencer per, of ) Park, found the and ad 1d: ws Of a young wou Jersey Oity, N. J., inclosed in iage of smoking tobacco, with asking the finder to write replied and received a re- he forward photograph to writer, who Quite a number of facts regard. herself. Harper, who is an eld- batchelor, intends to comply the request Har pen f name an of & pach & note Harper him told the Girl Dies For Love, Shamokin son, 20 years, ieged to have beer intent a 10 becuse affair Fredri resident ung Ye n % an id a4 On Heat Victim, Falis Dead In College Frank Fi } ident of a pleasure ; the campus and high Univer fell Memorial Hall Heart disease caus- ed his death i daughter was with him at the time he was strick- en Bailding. nich, a Dunnellen, while visit. buildings of Le- dead in Brown tr ro rig sity Man's Miraculous Escape, Mauch Chunk Andrew Ruf, a butcher, was being slowly smother ed to death in a smokehouse when his cries for succor were heard. His escape from death was miraculous. The door to the smokehouse has an outside lock This door Ruff left open when he entered the building, but a sudden gust of wind slammed it shut, Joshua Harlan happened by and heard Rufl's faint cries help. far s OX Hits Hor Father With Hammer, Pottaville Because her fataer objected to her going out nights ac er nightfall, when ae entered his fin. al protest Myrtle Conrad, aged 17 years, struck him during a fit of an- ger on the head with a hammer, in- flicting serious injuries She was placed upder arrest and after being arraigned before Justice of the Peace Freller, was put under $300 ball for her appearance at the next term of Criminal Court Woman Tries To Kin Herself, Lancaster, —— Declaring that he: could bear, Mrs. Sophia Miller, aged 55, of this city, drank a big dose of oxalic acid and then sat down on for the death summons. Neighbors notieed that she was {ll and medical The woman was removed to a local hospital, wheis it is stated she has a fighting chance for her life. $100,000 Fire At Dunbar, Dunbar. Two bulldings in which were some of the principal stores and offices and several dwelling apartments were burned at a loss of nearly $100,000. Aid from Uniontown and Connellsville saved the rest of the business section. The burned structures were the Qurham Building and the Wilson & Wishart Bullding, on Main Street. Boy Burned To Death. Ashland. — Three-yearold Welst was so badly burned while playng with matches here that his death followed very soon after his removal to the hospital. The little fellow, after getting matches, went into an upstairs room. Shorty aft- orwanrd the father was attracted by the baby's shrieks of Agony. ————— Leslie he ational Hote! MILLEEIM, PA. BA. SHAWYER, Prop Plest elem accommodations for Whe travels $004 table board and sleeping & partment Tho sholosst liquors at the bas, Stable ae Sommodations for horses is the best ts by Bod. Bus tonnd from sll trains es me Lewisburg and Tyrone allroad, at Osha 3 Jno. F. Jno. F. Gray & Son (Siccn, “4 fy Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST ., ... No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring r life seo the contract of B HOMB which in esse of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premdums peid in ed. dition to the face of the policy. to Loam om Fires Mortgage Office tn Crider's Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Money TTT rr rr III Ire ereveey FEMININE NEWS NOTES. aron said two rich girls ha the » University of Illinois conferred : Mrs. Ella Flagg Young the degree of Laws at the commence- ment exercises OF Pyrapst of Doctor Announcem A. Murray Youn widow, both of made in Paris Mrs. Arthur Brady, of Westchester County, N. Y., was a vietim of a mys- terious shooting in her residence near iden # Bridge ent of the betrothal of 1g and Marion Btory's New York City, was Go President order lorough MecAneny with- drew his discharging men and women who clean municipal buildings in New York City The will of Miss leaving $4.000.¢ Anna T Various f the P Jeanes, chari- ennsylva- Thompson, onaire, of rookiyn, N. Y., was off pennile ” raths O 80ns and nephews ill beque millionaire of United ane, and Will vi rk Cit I New Y¢ Cousin 5 am PROMINENT PEOPLE. siovanni Schiaparelll who No- of died estate seman, $08, left an Fey i - The portrait bust of John D feller William Coupe: finished and sent to be cast The funeral of Bishop McVickar was held at Providence, R. 1, five of his colleagues officiating at the ser- vice J. P. Btuart complained of inade- guate protection given by the Italian Government to aries George Turner the United States in ndiand fisheries case ue Rocke made by was argued seven days the New. at The for fou Hag Eugene Zimmerman, of Cincinnati, sald if Colonel Roosevelt should be elected President again he would be- come a British subject. In administering the oath to the newly appointed Chief Magistrates, in New York City, Mayor Gaynor urged men out of business. Thomas A. Edison, Archduke Leo youog men of the country. nearly thirty-three years, two years more he will have served Supreme Court at Washington, D. C. Ton Members of an Alabama Concern Accused of Swindling. Montgomery, Ala.--Ten indict- roents were returned by the Federal Grand Jury which investigated the al- leged gigantic jewelry swindle in con nection with the bankruptcy proceed. ings in the City Jewelry Company. Those against whom indictments were returned are: George H. Shreve, Hillard C. Shreve, Jesso H. Shreve, Reuben T. Shreve, Joseph E. Shreve, Archie C. Bhreve, Daniel H. Shreve Luther N. Johnson, A. F, MCKIE ang Samuel Coplans. OTHER THINGS. "Remember, my boy. there are other things worth’ while in college besides athletics.” “I know. The mandolin and glee clubs aren't hall bad."-Loulsville Courier-Journal. he ATTORNEYS. P. FORTREY D. ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEVONTE, PO Ofios Werth of Cour Houses. a —— Ww. HARRINOY WALEERS ATTORNEY ATLAY BELLEFONI 2 PB Fo. 19 W. High Sweet All professions) business promis srrended w a es ee vem ———— DD. Gowrie Iwo. J. Bowes 5-51, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYB AT Law EsoLr Broom BELLEVONTER, Phy Auooessors to ORvis, Bows & Oxvis Consultation fn Englah and German CLEMENT DALE —— * i 1ehey ATTORYEY -AT-LaW BELLEFONTE Pa. Office BN. W. corner Dismond, two dners from first National Bank. free W G. RURKLE ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE PA All kinds of legal business atiended w prompaly Bpecial stiention given to collections. Ofoe, 8 Boor Crider's Exchange. red KN B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT LAW BELLEPORTR PA Practices In «il the courts. Consultation is English and German. Office, Orider's Excrangt Ruining 1 gta Old Fort Hote : EDWARD ROYER Propriewy Location 1 One mile Bouth of Centre Ball Assommoedations fintclass Good bar. Per wishing to enjoy sn evening given sttention. Meals for such ofossiond pared on short notices. Alvam for the transient trade. BATES 1 $1.00 PER DAY. LIVERY 2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Cepitre 1141, Pa Penn's R. §, 50 YEARS® EXPERIENCE UTE Tra or Mans Desions CoryricuTs &cC. ing a eked oh mud doscription may free w? American, Sclntic MUNN & Co. a New for Peat’s s Vall bing — CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashig Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes , H. GQ. STROHIEIER, CENTRE MALL, . . . . . PEN Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIOH GRADE... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble au» LARGEST |SURMAGE