The days of chivalry are not past. A entered our office the other day we took our feet off the desk. t Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate nd invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. and inv tiny granules, easy to take ms candy. A bachelor girls’ elub is an associa Son of women who think they are more likely to get husbands by pre tending not to want them. nll For HEADACHE Flcks' CAPUDIVE ther from Colds, Heat, Stomach or ryvous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you, t's Bqniq uid--pleasant 0 take—acts immed) miely 5. 10c., %5¢., and 50 cents at drug cere eta Women seem to live faster than men. Many a man has lived to flirt with the daughter of the woman he CAINE Rear marrying. Poeumonia and Consumption are a» ways preceded or an ordinary cold. Ham Hins irard Oil rubbed into the chest draws out the inflammation, breaks up the ould and prevents all serious trouble. Nog a ‘Bad Chap After All. Hawks—Oh, well, Jones isn't such a bad fellow, after all. Taylor—What makes you say that? “Well, be wouldn't lend me the $10 i asked him for, but he didn't take Advantage of the opportunity to give me good advice. " Made Him Ridiculous. Joseph Leiter, in an Interview oa lis yacht Chanticler, sald, with a smile: “Please quote me accurately. In an Baterview, you know, the slightest ig- mccuracy can make a man ridiculous, It is like the Frenchman, who thought be had a very fair knowledge of Eng- lish, nevertheless, said to a father: t “*Aba! Your son, he resemble you. WM chip off the old blockhead, bain?” r-Rechange. On “the Senators. The wit of mmuses Nashville frequently. Bizhop Ward, senators, came forth from a Nash wille rcception the other day and ean- fered a waiting motor car. “Ah, bishop,” panions, “you are not like your mas ter. He was content to ride an ass” “Yes, and so would I be,” ‘Ward answered, “but there's no such animal to be got nowadays. They make them all senators.” All in Good “Time. the proud owner of a pet pig, and in himself. After a few weeks, as the sald to him “William, I'm feeding your pig enough. Beem to be fattening at all™ “I dont want him to fatten yet” William replied, knowingly bog until he gets want him, then I'll him out.”—Tit-Rits Ncte From the Basswood Bugle. Somebody took the rope off the bell n the fire engine house to use for a lothesline, and now, when there is a fire, the constable has climb up dnto the tower and ring the bell with a hammer. Somebody took the ham. mer the other day and, when Hank Purdy 's cornerib ketched fire, the con- stable store for to borry a hammer. had lent his hammer to Deacon Ren- Irew, begin to mad got there and hunted around in Khe barn for the hammer and got back Ro the engine house, the angry ele ments had done thelr worst and Hank's corncrib was a mass of smol dering ruins Judge's Library. At the One Horse. Jere lL. Sullivan, Hotel and Restaurant Employees’ In- ternational alliance, said in Cincin- mati, apropos of Labor day: “Our American hotels are better than they used to be, and for this bet terment my organization deserves no Httle credit. “We have today no such hotels as the One Horse of Tin Can, where, if gou asked for a bath, they used to give you a shovel and tell you to go down to the hollow and dam the creek. “An English earl once visited the One Horse hotel. put ceremony led him outside, point wd to a window on the fifth floor, and sald: I *"*Thar's yer room."” HEALTH AND INCOME Both Kept Up on Scientific Food. { Good sturdy health helps one a lot fo make money. | With the loss of health one’s Income 4s liable to shrink, if not entirely dwindle away. When a young lady has to make her own living, good health is her best asset, “1 am alone in the world,” writes a Chicago girl, “dependent on wy own efforts for my living. 1 am a clerk, and about two years ago through close application to work and a boarding. Bouse diet, I became a nervous In and got so bad off it was almost le for me to stay in the office day at a time. suggested to me the idea Nuts “which I did, at least two s of an over _ nourished owe the recovery of my health, and the ability to retain my position and tucome. | Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “There's a Reason.” ar rend the shove leery A new ous appears from time to time. They genuine, true, and full of human TVIINIG 6 GEPNDD CHAPMAN SR on ASEH ML Es ALS main 3 And the As thet day of days drew near. I can see the deep old cellar Stood along the wall close by. NN THANKSGIVING, Those Who Have Abundance Sharing With Their Less Fortunate Brethren. first not Gov- The sober jovfulness of the England Thanksgiving did itself in a single day feasting and rejoicing, infant colony enter an its own number of It Is true that these venison for visiting Indians. guests contributed the nee of the enlony, hat the feast was In the for It would be hard to contrast than imagine a that which garb and quiet manners of the Pil grims, schooled The Indian could be dignified enough upon occasion. but uncareful self-indulgence than the colonists’ hospitable confidence. That mutual and good understanding, to the con- tinuance of which these days feasting evidently necessary years of peace and security colony to barden Into! Pligrim strength. We call Thanksgiving day especial: | iy a Sarae festival, and its associations | are most delightful in family reunions and home pleasures. Yet the prece dent of Plymouth hospitality ha« never been and never ought to be neglected. who are blessed with home joys take pleasure In sharing them with the homeless. Families enlarge them selves to Include not only the scat tered next of kin, but those also who are far from their own home circle. A touch of the blessed spirit of home joy and mutual helpfulness stretches beyond the limits of the family to include those for whom the day would otherwise be lonelier than others days for privation of home companionships This gracious hospitality of the Thanksgiving season brings home memories to many guests It ought to have its teachings for many others young men and women in our towns who dream of homes yet to be earned or realized-—in keeping them in tourk with the true home spirit. There ia no selfishness in true home love It is not merely as a refuge for our NPA SAN ANIA NAN NS selves that we bulld the walls and lay the hearth and kindle the fire and spread the table To gain a bome and make it beautiful is the dream of many of these homeless ones. To make home ministrant and hospitable and so to crown it with a higher beauly ought to be the sug gestion of the happy feasting and fel lowship of Thanksgiving The community was the bost In that first Plymouth festival, yet the community divided into families. As they kept the feast in the large family groups into which the necessity of house building and defense had up to thia time divided them, did any of them think, we wonder, of the law of the passover established for other exiles and pilgrims so many centuries before: “And if the household be too little for the lamb, let him and his neighbor next unto his house take it according to the number of soula™? As a community we are today much | further from absolute want and peril of starvation than the Pilgrims were yearly feast of thanksgiving Yet there are many of our people who, if they keep the feast, must keep it in the midst of poverty and peril of want. In the widst of greater want and peril the forefathers Invited | strangers to the feast, providing what | they could They were wholly free { from that false pride, so common now. | adays, which thinks most of appear ances and is ashamed to offer hos { pitality unless it is possible, also, to | make a show of wealth. Out of what i they had the fathers gave God thanks ‘ and entertained the strangers at their | gates. The other spirit of false pride | and shame robs both guest and host {of the best joy of the Thanksgiving | time-—the joy of common faith In the | Giver of all good, and of cordial wel come which has nothing to conceal and nothing to assert. PROOF POSITIVE Chick—It looks to me as if I were an orphan ee —— HORTICUITR EE A JOINING LIMBS OF A TREE Select Two Small Opposite and Twine Them Together Horizontally. When a tree Is small, clent growth, select two branches growing opposite and | SEVERAL ENEMIES 0 OF APPLE Bitter Rot or “Ahttracross Seriously impairs Both Eating and Keeping Qualities of Fruit. Bitter Rot or Anthracnose | cent years this fungus bas been in vestigated and its survival in the nursery fruits and cankered branches proved. This bitter-rot 18 also a ripe rot and the disease develops in the later sca in re | | | | | | i | at A In the sketch, the other as a rope Is twisted, ing the ends free as in B. about & year for nature ics. and in time as the bark through the growth of the tree connection will become as one plece, C, thereby binding the together, This method may be used several times in one tree Trees the Limbs Joined Together. treated in this manner will not split through rapid growth or by the wind This method can applied to all ept the peach tree be Lees ex So Great ls Demand for Best Grades of Stock That it is Always More or Less Scarce. (By C. BL. BARNES) an interesting fact that extension of fruit growing In the country has been at by a decline in prices, but advance, The the multi It is great parts of question whether or not es will bave the effect of prod glut, 80 88 10 render profiticss the bor and expenditures of the frult grower, scems, then, very likely Ww meet a negative reply in the first place the all the fruits of North world-wide. The world's them is insatiable tiles for distributing gsyatematized through Intelligent operative arrangements between growers and transportation agencies, and selling agencies in the city, it scems as t ough the problem Is to be, how to get rid of surpluses get enough of any kind good fruit. In years of great abund ance In American apple orchards, in Mexico at In London they have retailed at 25 cents iplece Other fruits, capable of bearing transports. long distances, have con manded proportic ately high prices UCIDE & demand for America Is appetite for and as the facil) them are better co f of cents aplece has been Such exceptional tures are not, I'be moderate ¥ high for It would seem then, that the grower need only see to it that his fruit is of good quality, attractively put up and .otelligently marketed, be certaly of a reasonable reward Put the day when neglected orchards produce salable crops has parsed. The grower of today must be equipped by study for battling with insect pests; must be insistent In ~ultivation and in the use of the sprayer; and must, in short, give as close attention to his trees as the stockman does to his cattle, ——— —————— The Pig ard the Orchard. The two go together well, The etirs up the soll about the trees [bt ting in the sunshine and moisture to the roots and fertilizing them, while devouring many grubs that would oth: erwise prey upon the fruit. But many orchards cannot be fenced and many owners of fenced orchards, even, wonld like to have the pig confine his efforts around the trunk of each tree. To secure thiz have four fence panels made and yord the pig for a short time in succession about each tree, Many Dangers Mensce Trees. The apnle tree has a hard time of it, surely. The Mrine station enumerates as many as 33 Inseots that injure ap ple trees, Some of these are more serious than others; for Instance, San Jose scale and the codling moth do more damage than the plant lee. When the various fungous diseases are counted In, this is a pretty strenu. ous existence for the apple trea Attacked by Bitter Rot. | son and seriously eating and keeping qualities For i { the application of sprays. Since we | know the life bistory of the fungus | better It has been possible to control Hitter-rot successfully under orchard | conditions as the annual sources of in i fection by have been mastered. applies grown in low, moist situations i i Hable whi trees side from selecting high, situations for the apple spraying with Bordeaux prevent this disease Storage Rots —These apple are extremely va ples infected before stor to develop duris of rot due to | bitter-rot may this way and still, black-rot velop from to be spotted stever may be by orchard mixture wil rots of 1g storage that not much commonly and the rots which the gradual invasion infection. be Even overlooked nore Attacked by Fly Speck, molds It is found, the apple scald 1 ena in which various organ sally hast wk with rapi course, that rr & Nn Fe 11 res of storage will furthermore, bruises any dency to sun dead tissues upon or ten henom tema that nor: do thelr we dity the It understood, of peratu control no of this development sn pe Growing Berries. ist not forget 1 fruits You m are forest ATTORNEYS. D. » romrewmy ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE Pa Ofios Marth of Court Rouse SS wos w— W. RarmmON wWaLxzm ATTORNEY ATAAW BELLEFONTE Pa Fe 19 WW. High fest All Prolmuional business prompdy sttended ‘ » Gero Jee. J Bowss -ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORKEYB AT LAW EsoLs Brooms BELLEFONTE, Pay “aovessore to Orvis, Bowzs a Ouvis Jonsuitation in Euglieb and Geormen I I' B. BPANGLER . ATTORNEY AT Law BELLEFONTE FP &y Practioss in all the courts Conenl ation 8 English snd German Offios, Orider's Exconsgd Buiiting yell og BuEN IT baLr LA WD fansy ATTORFEY-AT-LAW BELILEFONTR Pie Office X. W. corner Diamond, two doers frony fire: National Bank. Lye © CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashia Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . EXPERIENCE Trace Manus Dcsions CorymicuTs &C. 1 and demrriytion Brie PHL sd book on Palate i WO TInE DRleTUs, oh Munn & Co. vecehyy beso pops pgm: charge, tn the scenic Jimerian, rfl nsdn ad Fos] Y Hy A handn — a by ali new ot moisture to raspberries, currants, ete. | continue to hoe and cultivate the | strawberry bed. All weeds and dead branches should be cleaned out of the small fruit gar | dens and burned. Where ground freezing is to be ex | pected straw mulch will protect the { roots of the orchard trees There is scarcely a farm apple or chard in existence that cannot be ren ovated to a profitable purpose. Brush and rubbish left in the or chard is a hiding place for insects, let alone being unsightly and untidy. Young trees will grow later in the fall than older ones, and the sap-run should be checked as early as possi ble, A covey of quail In an orchard will prove a good friend to the grower, be- cause they eat a tremendous number of insects. Attractive flower beds add moch to the charm of the flower garden. Co leus, salvia and phlox are well adapted for bedding purposes, In the extreme north fruit growers find that it Is much better practice to cultivate the orchards from the be ginning to the end of the season. In Alling apple barrels, All until the last layer stands an inch above the chiné of the barrel. ‘This ensures sol. idity when the head is pressed down carefully. When the grourd freeses hard enough to Fold up a wagon, is the time to mulch the etre v berry bed with straw or marsh hay. Doua’t be in too big a hurry. Late in the fall plow a furrow down through the orchard between avery two rows of trees I” the ground Is apt to be wet. The trees will do 8 great pon can §3 Jno. F. Gray & Son Swecdssors y “x GRANT HOOV Control Steen. of the Largest Fire and ance Companies io the World. . ... THE BEST IS THR CHEAPEST . . . . No Muth No Ascent Before insuring your life see the cont~~ct of THE HOMB which in csse of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ode dition to the face of the policy Branch ¢ 100 to Loan on Fired Mortgage Office tz Crider's Stone Bufiding BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Momey H. GQ. STRCHIEI CENTRE HALL, . . . . Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIOH GRADE ... MAONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble aw Oranite, Donat fail te got my prion ER, PN HW wn Ww IN CENTRE COLKTY Agent Bellefonte, Penn‘a. sin lil The Larg st and Pant 4 Accident Ins. Companies { ponds of Every Lewcrip- tion. Pilate Glass in surance at low rates, i