The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 01, 1910, Image 3

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    S— _— TE
SIDNEY JARVIS,
Singer and Actor, Values Doan's Kid.
ney Pills.
Mr. Jarvis, who is one of America's
leading baritones, played the part of
the ‘Old-Grad” in the Fair Co-Ed
Company with Elsle
Janis, He writes:
“For a long time
was troubled with
backache. I
sulted some of
most prominent phy
sicians with
factory
was advised to
Doan’s Kidney
benefited after
ning to take them. Continued
cured nletely. 1 cheerfully
recommend them to any one suffering
with kidney trouble.”
Remember the name——Doan’s.
sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
NOTHING DOING.
Pills,
and felt goon
use
ine com
np—-Help me, kind
better days dan dis—
Jinks—8o0 have I This weat
Tough Luck.
“1 thought said
young
he ss
bird
“And I thought it was.”
better half. “1
it showed no indication of
a single The
have me."
you this was a
chic ken,”
awed away at a portion of the
rejoined his
looked in its mouth and
plish as She is Spoke.
Vv John, sabeo, geo
ch sabee want for
the matter
What's
inaman
. eak English?
}'L you sp
There Are
Reasons
Why so many people
have ready-at-hand a
pa ckage of
Post
Toasties
The DISTINCTIVE
FLAVOUR delights
the palate.
The quick, easy serving
tight from the package—
requiring only the addition
of cream or good milk is
an important consideration
when breakfast must be
ready “on time.”
The sweet, crisp food is
universally liked by child-
ren, and is a great help to
Mothers who must give to
the youngsters something
wholesome that they relish.
The economical feature
appeals to everyone—par-
ticularly those who wish
to keep living expenses
within a limit.
Post Toasties are espe-
cially pleasing served with
fresh sliced peaches.
“The Memory Lingers”
Postum Cereal Co., Tad,
Battie Creek, Mich.
hls
sald at last,
looked at
“80,” he
The man
wonderingly.
almost to himself,
to you!"
For answer she smiled at him
tle uncertainly, but still
the
which first attracted
High up on the slope of
hills they sat under the
scrub cedars.
them, over a descending
ta of 30 miles of pale greens and lav-
endars and blues of the land
the California sun, the ocean shim-
mered in the distance. It was very
about them, for the bordered
path behind led to a fountain in ruins
and beyond that a deserted mansion
faded under the sunlight, desolate,
They had climbed there be
had wanted to show her the
a lit
him.
the
had
{oot
Below vis
wuse he
view, one
She had come with her mother among
he swarms of winter visitors flock-
ing to the southern coast, and when
he had first her Dr. D :
stepped inside a magic circle
which there was no escape
seen
He was used to the winter visiu
inured to the sparkling,
from east, always healthily, un
amused by their girlish
their guileless smiles at
one of the few bachelors at the
pretty girls
the
flirtations,
him,
hotel
He could not explain why, when he
had met Gerfrude Whitcomb that first
night he had been so immediately en
thralled. She had regarded him disin
terestedly, rather coldly, until he
exerted himself to bring forth a
smile of interest—and when Dr. Duval
chose to talk one listened He had
watched the falat blush rise to the
pale oval of her and seen her
great eyes darken and soften; he had
brought a ripple of laughter to her
-and her laugh was music,
had
f .
iace
and she permitted it, In.
The Girl's Face Grew Serious.
dolently,
they had
and the
She
tively,
gracious and amused so
drifted through the
winter was nearing its close
regarded him a little dpecula
as though surprised at the feel
his voice “I had no idea”
“that you
cared. [ thought it was just
"You did not think at all!” Dr. Du
« interrupted her brusquely it
ver entered your head to wonder
whether | falling in with
vyou-—whether it meant anything seri
sus to me You are so used to admi
ration that one man
means little to you and,
care for me
woeks
slowly, really
Yi
ne
were jove
more or
besides,
If you
tell me, haven't you
met any one you cared about?”
The
you
had
Gertrude,
girl's face grew serious and she
“No,” she
“I'm afraid not i
Ife fa too full of inter
Ske turned and
him again, and he noticed
for the first time that her smile was
unfeeling Then she sprang to her
feet lightly “Come, let's walk on”
ordered “And we won't talk of
sald carelessly
want to
things!
“No.”
again!”
All the way down the winding trail
sald Dr. Duval bitterly, "never
and fun, but the man
her.
far in the distance below,
bling structure buried In
flowers and again his consclence re.
proached him. The rambling cottage
did not
of a
Dr. Duval was not a man to desert old
friends for new,
Ever since he was a boy the Morgan
place had been nn second home to him
and Mrs. Morgan and Carlotta his
chums, advisers and confidents. He
could see Carlotta’s rapt little face,
pale, yet glowing like a white flower
under her tawny hair, and her odd
brown eyes with the light In them
Ie sunlight through water as she sat
Hastoning to his tale of a baseball
ghme, oi his entry into the medieal
college, of his first real case, of most
things which had ever happened to
him,
And now in the turmoil of this trag
edy which he felt had come to him he
had a sudden desire for the long,
living room down there with Mra.
placidly sewing by the open
window and Carlotta leaning forward
in the old mahogany divan listening
whatever he had to san
interest
For a grown man, Dr. Duval was
very boyishly homesick and heart
Gertrude Whitcomb parted from
at the hotel with some irritation.
The trip home had been dull. She haa
exerted herself for a man so ad-
had scarcely answer-
comforted herself, it
his disappointment.
not imagine he bad
devoted to her!
pleasing on the whole,
And in a very satisfied frame of mind
she turned to the question of what
she should wear down to din-
ner for the delectation’ of the other
guests
Dr.
i CAr
cool
she
because of
really did
was
She
the same time was on
toward the ram-
It was almost like old
welcomed and fussed
cver and graciously forgiven for his
vinter's desertion
“You
we understand,
Duval at
speeding out
times to be go
are so busy with your work,
Morgan had sald
varite preserves
wistfulness of
from him by
was like some
in the shadows
Mrs
out his {a
arlotta, the
whose face was hidden
its joy in his presence,
graceful white wrait}
of the big
“1 had forgotten,” he
the privilege
“how
ag she
And C
got
room
told her with
of ifelong acquaintance,
wonderfully pretty you were,
Carlotta! What have you been doing
with yourself? You shine.”
“Don’t talk about me.”
nervously A great fear
this stupid, blundering man should
discover it was her happiness in
ing him again that transformed
her “Tell me of yourself, of
seem to
begged the gi
was hers lest
ROE
had
has happened to you this winter
had come to tell them
late at the Morgana, and
left he fell oddly
An
he
at peace [or a whose heart
h only that afternoon been broken
He was surprised whem noxt he
Miss Whitcomb that he felt pons
the resentment which had at
first been his at her refusal In some
strange way that fever had burned
itself out as though a cool hand bad
banished it utterly. He simply did
not care, She was just as beautiful
and fascinating as ever, but his ro
crashed that aflterpoon in
foothills and he had no desire to
broken pieces She was
y glittering for comfort,
urt his pride by her
othing cures a man's devotion as
stab at his pride Nex
Carlotta’s smile stayed in his memo
it was not,
some weeks later in a sort of he
dizsm that
Nay.
of unstable
contented
saw
’
bitter
had
the
pick up the
and she had
carelessness
8 @&
rrified
and a man
was simply
he was fickle
affections—it
had been ur
broken, and
vhere he belonged
Having
the rambling
self drawn
than In the
sence, he
awakened
ofta’s real
womanly sympathy
tearfully, before the &
over and when Gertrude
was only a vague memory,
that he ider a spell, luckily
now had gone bac)
once found his
he found him
sistibly
years before. It was
told himself, that
him and
loveliness
welcome
cottage
there irr oftener
ab-
had
shown
her
And when,
Whitcomb
Dr. Duval
renlized he had always loved her and
always should
“1 don’t deserve anything so
der®ul” he told her, “as that
should care about me, Carlotta!
been stupid in many ways—but
my right mind now!”
“I've always cared.”
simply. For a moment
The previous winter, when he
deserted the cottage, often troubled
But with all her sweetness Car
Morgan had clever instincts.
winter was past and he was
hors now for always, and she was the
womans who knows when not to
won
you
I'm in
she
she hesitated.
her
lotta
The night fragrance of roses floated
In the man's heart was a thank.
ful and wondering content that things
were as they were, and in Carlotia's
Useful,
“May 1 escort you to the swimming
party tomorrow, Miss Ethel?"
“Why, ves, I'd like to go, thank
you, but mother will have to chaperon
me."
“Dodo you
sary I"
“Of course | do. I'm never aframd
when mother's along. Mother knows
just what to do for cramps, and she
can swim like a champion duck!”
think that's neces
“There's Lots of Horses, But There
is Only One Judge Kinne"
Says Judge.
During the second Cleveland cam-
palgn, Col John P. Irish, the golden-
tongued orator, and Judge Kinne of
Waterloo, Ia, the man with lungs of
brags, were stumping lowa in behalf
of the Democratic candidate
They were driving In a buggy on
the road to Sidney, a young city in the
southwestern part of the state, when
they came to a fork of the road where
there was no sign board. Which turn
ag they had
time to make the town any-
way.
“There's a farmhouse
questions,” sald Irish, and climb
He got it,
turn saw the horse,
ened at something,
and on
evidently
at runaway speed.
Judge Kinne
reins, climbed
into the
When Irish
road,
caught up to him,
after his roll in
least
stunt,
“You're
road,
the
disfigured
roadway, not in
on the right fork of the
all right, judge, but why didn’t
hang on to the horse?’ asked
layghing heartily
“Why didn't I hang on to him?
his deep sub-cellar
“T'H tell you why 1 didn't, my
friend. There's lots of
this world, but there is but
Kinne”
horses in
Judge
one
THOSE WHO SCOLD ‘CENTRAL’
No Greater Boor Than Man Who Is
Always Raising Row With
Telephone Girl.
There surely exists no greater boor
pup than the man who Is always rals-
ing a row with the telephone girl,
writes Tip in the New York Press. All
ver, everywhere, in Europe and this
country, reports of nervous
breakdowns of “hello girls Lots of
nen, and whole scuds of women, seem
to think these girls cre trained talk-
ng devils, with a special spite re
served for the “phoner” alone. It is
ly, not to say brutish, to scold the
ww something she cannot
No matter how well trained t}
the
and
cote
drivers
this
ever seen here be
ssed thing Tip
If any dog tries
over a woman
man that hears
iim is Hable to entertain him by
punching gun wads of his face
ind pushing his teeth down his throat
with the end of sixahooter gun.
ywed
snd brow beat
than
ore. There is one bls
must say of Texas
or run
first
women In
ouniry Were
0 browbeat
lown there, the
out
No Plated Stuff Wanted.
There was a small crowd at the
soda counter hen the tall man
rushed in and ped an empty bottle
over the drug scales
“Acid!” he whispered, excitedly
“Ten cents’ worth of acid, and quick!”
The soda water crowd began to sit
up and take notice.
“What's he going to do
acid? demanded one
“It's a secret,” answered
with that
the drug
“Nothing unusual,
“Well, rather.”
“What! You mean to say he is go-
I hope?"
“Oh, no. Listen. There Is a sliver
wedding at his house tonight and he
is going to test the presents as fast
ns his friends bring them.”
And then and there they
the meanest man in town.
voted him
Chinese Death Penalties.
China has just received from
guillotine. It will be
to recent regulations,
cutions will no longer be public
oxo
The
old code, had six degrees—death by
torture, immediate decapitation and
exhibition of the head; immediate
decapitation without exhibition of
the head, decapitation after some
ing after some months. According to
the new code the death penalty is In
four decrees--{immediate decapitation,
deferred decapitation, Immediate hang.
What They Intended to Do.
“1 hear,” sald Mrs. Oldcastle, “that
Mr. Goodman intends to leave his for
ne for the purpose of founding some
kind of an eleemosynary institution.”
“My good gracious!” exclaimed her
sostess, as she tried to pitk a chunk
of paint from a genuine Rembrandt,
‘why should he want to do that? 1
think if he didn’t want to leave it to
als family he'd give It to charity.
That's what we and Josiah intend to
fo with ours.”
Warning to Flies.
Atlantic City has begun war on the
files by posting official bulleting rela.
tive to the subject In all the markets
and stores. Even now we can seo a
flutter among the files, and after read:
ing the bulletins they will undoubtedly
hiko across the meadows to Pleasant.
ville and disappear into the woods,
S423 8 AA ARARRARARRARRRARZRRRARAAALILIAD
Che ational Hote!
MILLEEIM, vA.
BA SHAWYER Drop
Plat lems acovmmodations for the Aree
Sood table board and sleeping & partmess
The shctoest Liguom at the bar, Blabie se
somamodations for horses Is the bast to b
Bad Bes toand from sll trains on fiw
Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, st Osbuse
Jno. F. Gray & Son
(BRR Toby
Control Sixteen of the
Largest Fire aod Life
losurance
in the World, . . ..
THE BEST IS THE
CHEAPEST . . . .
Ne Mutual
No Amemments
Before insuring life see
the contact of HE HOME
which in case of death between
the tenth and twentieth years re-
turns all premiums paid in ad.
dition to the face of the policy.
to Loam on First
Mortgage
Office 1c Crider’s Stone Budiding
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Telephone Connection
Money
Superstition About Clock,
The famous
Court
clock Hampton
palace, England, is sald by
superstitio
many us
when a person ssident in
castle dies
corded Is
queen of
IONE a
The first ins
that of Anne of
The
i aE
tance
James |
was striking four at the m
Other
oment, mn
mediately stopped instan
are cited
How Did He Know?
On the first night
retty young actress
front of the
the
Lie
advanced to
stage flaunting in an
’ * ew Th
st 3,000
lady who sat with her husband In
row Fete RB 30
& qy o ¥ 5
costume i8t hiave
francs’ said, audibly, a
the
front
iechanically Then
fixed on and was
him
Women Church Officers.
Scottish
A farmer or small
Kentland
Banking Arrangement,
trader In any
with one or two of
an eos
fixed
ils drafts for
, and the
interest only upon the
drawn
Where Appetite is Keen,
A day's rations for one man on a
sledge journey across the Polar sea
consists of four ounces of condensed
mil one-half ounce condensed tea,
one pound pemmican, three
{liquid petroleun three
(liquid) pure alcohol, one pound ¢
biscuit
ounces
ounces
ship’ 8
Oil,
Labor.
If it were not for could
neither eat so much nor relish so pleas.
antly nor soundly nor be so
health useful, so strong nor
#0 patient, so noble or so urtempered.
Jeremy Tayior
labor men
sleep so
ui nor #0
His Penalty.
What did »a
yo 1 asked for my hand?” Gerald
sald that he wouldn't stand in
way of my unhappis
badly
Gertrude when
He
sAY
money
Dally Thought.
We are apt to measure ourselves by
ance. But, in truth, the conduct of our
Hves is only the proof of the sincerity |
George Elliot
And Neither Means It,
A man who has kept accurate count
says that of ten men you meet eight
will say something disagreeable, while
nine out ten woman will say eome-
thing agreeable
Scarce,
We have heard of the man
thinks more of a good lecture, or of
a good book, than he thinks of his
stomach, but we never knew him.
Atchison Globe,
who
Must Be Original,
There is nothing very good to be
done with ready-made clothing for the
mind.
Better Plan of Education,
It is better to teach children what
they should do than what they should
not.
se ——
Ahead of His Times,
A crank is a man who is thinking
now what the world will think In a
quarter of a century.
Fashion and Heppiness,
Only those women whom fashion
does not affect can be truly happy
Exchange, ih
cheats
ATTORNEYS.
D. P. PoRTVNY
ATTORNEY ADIAW
PELLEFONTR Pb
Ofos Werth of Cour Rouse,
a
w. BARRON WALKER
ATTORNEY ATMAW
BELLEFONTE PA
Fe. 19 W. High Stress.
All professional business prompdy ettenied 9
EE i i ane
iD. Ome Iwo. J. Bowza w. 0 Zeaey
LETS, BOWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
EscrLr Broom
BELLEFONTE. PA
AMocessors Ww Osvis, Bowes & Onvis
| Oonsuitation in Englab sud German
ANTI
CuEMENTD DALR
ATTOREEY-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office NX. W. corner Diamond, two doers from
First National Bank. res
—— raion
Ww @ RUNKLE
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW
BELLEFONTE PA
All kinds of legal business stlended wo prompuy
Special attention gives to colisctions. Ofos, M
Soot Criders Exchange. 1
B. SPANGLER
NH.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
BELLEPOFTR.P A
Practioss in all the oourts. Copsuliation IS
English sad German. Ofce, Orider's Exchasgy
Building. tyed
id Fort Hote:
EDWARD BOYER, Propriews.
One mile South of Centre
LIVERY =
Special Effort made to
Accommodate Com
| mercial Travelers...
D. A. BOOZER
| Centre Hall Pa. Penna RR
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Trace Manxs
Desions
Corvymants &C.
A nyone sending 8 sketch and description mey
Pekly ascertain our opinion freq whether an
nition ie probably pateniabhm, Communion
Listas strictly eonBdential. Handbook ou Patents
a Sron Claes ency fOr securing palenis.
ents taken 0 rash Munn & Co. seceirs
Bo notice, without charge, in the
“Scientific American,
A handsomely (lostreied weekly. Largest oon
oniation of any entific Jourasd, Torms, $i a
ver ; Tour months, $i. SoM by all a
MUNN %C Co 2 seem New York
Beanob (re
Peat okey Buty Compan
CENTRE HALL, PA
W. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢'
Receives Deposits
cm
H. GQ. STROHTIEIER,
Manufacturer of
and Dealer In
| HIGH GRADE ...
| MONUMENTAL WORK
in ail kinds of
| Granite, Dow" ®0 = sw my prion
a
LARGEST |NSURANCE
¢ Logency
IN CENTRE COUNTY
H. E. FENLON
Agent
Bellefonte, Penn’ a.
The Largest and Best
Accident Ins. Companies
Bonds of Every Descrip-
tion. Plate Glass In-
surance at low rates.