Sl ATTORNEYS, D. P. PORTH EY ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE » Office North of Oourt House WwW. EARRIAON WALKER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEVONTA Pe Fe 1? W_ High Street. All y peoiumional business promptly attended » Ee - Cr — a — x $ D Goria Jwo. J. Bowes GHETTG, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT-LaW Eaore Brooa BELLEFONTE Pa. Aovessors 10 Orvis, Bowen a Orvis Consultation in Englab and German —— WD Leen ¥ 8 B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY AT Law BELL A&FONTR Practices in all the courts English and German. Ofce, Butlding Consgl alloe Orider's Kxohs CLEMENT DALE ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE Ps Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doers Dros First National Bank. ir Penn's Valley Barking Company CENTRE HALL, Pa WwW. B. MINGLE, Receives Deposits . . Cash Discounts Notes . 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trae MARKS DesiGns CoPYRIGHTS ae. Ar IF AO Sar ' sul < Sone en, Terma, §3 MUNN & Co.2¢ 36 8readeny, = New York ’ qrasssssiissiisssstisg Jno. F. Gray & Son Successors to. . , GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Costpanies in the World. . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No Amestinenty Before {neuring your life see the contsct of THE HOMR which in esse of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ad dition to the fac e of the policy. to Loen on Fired Mortgage Office ts Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Money CENTRE MALL, . . . Manufacturer. of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble am NNN W.-C. Ot GEST |WSURANGE Lo egency ¢ ¢ IN CENTRE COUNTY ¢ H. E. FE ENLON Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. The Largest and TS Post Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descorip- tion. Plate Glass In- surance at low rates. VOD VHB DVD i By (Copyright, When Webster sign outside Smith placed his door of the cottage he had chosen for an office and liv ing room, he gave a sigh of relief. The first step in his career had been taken Smith was a parent, a leading if a nearby city, was Smith's residence in the suburban vil ag “What a lawyer out the indulgent member of the bar responsible for lawyer An want of had the will they there, dad?’ he wsked his father “Never mind, Webb reply. “Wa are overrun ioehta deuce had been his with budding fiploma-bred attorneys ut where no one lawyer named Smith and let's what's in you" So the newly admitted bar had c¢ ee to mem little father than tise the arts of one Bla Blairville had never had a ful blooded attorney-at-law before. There Was old the to satisfy his ckstone mag mag Squire Brown, strate, who spensed just warrants so much per head thought of the ‘squire simple : questioning a enters d country folk Smith read, wi ever advent of Webster #1 Kn wee kly Te orney-at-L.aw, as the july noted in the ommented on around the cracker barrel at then Deacon and Jones’ grocery forgotten habit of and the attorney still waited his lime went on ft has a loing at client Repeatedly inform his fs too wearls Le had ther longer ebater OFT for 0 Ha ne a X ge Sa a treated litenesn, steadily spent vitation and reading decisions higher urts Then She was town rnérs, up on the pike roa Hairville at once be ame intere d z rriater, ar pondered ot A wa) to get ac juainted Betty was a typleal When Smith first saw in a Auffy pink gown Telia at once for Miss for Webster Smith had a dec ng for ink it had ite H at coliege. and g0 far as to call him P was a hot, duty ing. Seeking a wyer had esd hammock on the porch of his fan in one hand the other Evidently the story had not very interestin f he was from hi summer ker she Jer sh girl was dressed Hetty, ided lik his favor had been Fome nkey August morn nook the young onsed himself In a office, sgazine in cool and a m roved aroused g slumber b a knock on one of th porch 1 i while a idly, wa snving " this Mr. Smith?” autily volce, beg leaped from the ham bowed to t vigion in him, and whom he at recognized nt Betty Sloan Webster Smith, at your service! he exclaimed Won't step into the office? ‘1 would much here where it is Smith,” she replied come to consult nean’ Her words brought him earth. She had come to consult him on legal business His first case! Smith could not bring his senses to gether to figure kind of a case she could have for him He brought hls chair “A cellent must confide yer, 1 have been told” comrthenced Betty, with an arch glance at the at. torney before her, “so first of all 1 have a confession to make.” 3 OW before Mice you prefer to sit out and shady, Mr. “You see | have you on legal busi cool out what out Necessary nin terrupted the yo man The for ing WOInAnL her hand glowly Young waved him to “That's just it, ‘Miss Sloan,’ say, ‘Mrs.’ "” “What '" day dreams had in that explanation. Betty ried woman again he thought of her, a pink slip of a girl, mar stop, and said here calls should one they avery me when gasped the astounded man glipped away WAS & mar had she was been for I have } Turners ong enough to with them 107 I want a di the last word, to a whisper, interposed, Therefore, 1 resort, have last you coming to bad as It wan have been ven though sbe were married. he might be abl to secure dwell oY. person, RIG ay. He would ited we words You sda tween soba had not bean here long before I heard gpeak ing of never had a cas fel sorry for any one who hw and I invents d she every one the new lawyer, who here always not ev? gineas, so 1 And well, said your nd u will forgive me? asked, brightening a little, as saw him hore There is noth happiness had her name spent together that I x i 11 itt wn me Ove Yiu © 1 and old her want you to be wked up his for he knew 1 girl, let me happiness she hear you loved say Webster, 1 an Last Re came to the she whis glad | ‘Court of sort," pered Priceless Memento. “And this,” says the proud man, “is one of my most priceless possessions I would not sell it at any price.” “Why, it's simply a queer photo graph. What does it symbolize?” asks the Interested caller “That is a picture of my left ear peared in It "Please pase the salt’ at a Not Disposed to Draw It Out. “To read a Bible through, at the rate of & chapter day, would take three years and three months.” “Well, I should read more than a chapter a day and get it over with.” FARM AND BEES SUCCESS IN BEE MANAGEMENT Profit Not Now Measured by Increase by Swarming as Formeriy— Various Methods, I PHILLIPS, PH. D) excessive rearing of the wrong season or in the increase number of reduces the surplus tion The sive hee ing simply fo broo ideal keaper Se a a oe Ho wn ——————————————— I ——————— a WE a E me rkers ti queer e, PARR partment from w= ire also undesirable drones ing and the irones die of Queens < sometin winter and ear and there is no brox n the bees can repiace them ! queen 8 enlo nies are hope los Hee keepers in the north buy queens the spring. and natu than leaving een until the uently from southern breeders early In this rally is better the colony with out a qu bees rear as it is Important that brood Can there be no stoppage In Season rearing at USEFUL SELF-DUMPING DRAG Handy for Hauling Stones and Other Heavy Materials and is Easily Overturned. 3 This sled works eith form either end. It ing stones and other and it can be and for haul materials, very er side up is handy heavy roned overt easily ee ee Self-Dumping Drag. and quickly. By putting a clevis In both ends it can be drawn both ways, and be adapted to a variety of uses, ————————— 1 0 A Flies in Alfalfa, Prof. H. W. Howard of the Wash: ing®n state experiment station has discovered that the common house fly multiplies and thrives in the alfalfa flelds. This discovery has caused a great deal of Interest in the west, and investigations by scientists are now being made to ascertain just how the fly breeds in alfalfa and how the pest may be overcome, tered, Is Very Useful In Ascer taining Conditions. (By DEWEY A ealizing BEELEY. dep ndence y farmer upon sho ald LECes the required and moisture crop Lo succs guful ! nning with this knowl dre, the 3 f actual through the use of accurate instru. iral to detern ments follows in nat sequence, ine how nditd wonditions expe- measuring up to the ideal records cannot be made, how- EOOd more or ald of BENRCH f f ¥t3 insiru- are weather recorders. workers and asparagus ext where vegetable re is needed winter plowing - fae moist to facil The community id It napection of little mortar fire Keep paint implement proposition to commer the chimneys now may save a bad brush going until on the place is cov- the every ered Alfalfa is not adapted to poor lands here until they have been en hed Fasten down the or. better tops still, of the hay B cover them ways big an agent sell you int chase him off the place tries to tree Trees sot need paint pound or two of nalis will make cos all tight and save loss and d {eeltg between neighbors, ia the harness tied up with string anywhere? Take them off and do the job of repairing you ever did some stuff for whifMieirees. Get out need them before you know Have a8 bottle of rubber cement on hand and some good glue. Fix things, and do it while the other work is not pressing If you have no silo, got a feed cut ter and a gasoline engine, at any rate, Trey will pay for themselves in a single season if you have any animals to feed Time is saved by doing now much of the work usually done in the busy gpring, such as hauling stones, clear. ing away trees and brush, fixing the grape arbor, ete, With western corn land selling at £200 and even more per acre and corn at present prices, it takes a mighty clever feeder to show a profit at the end of the season, | LIVE NEWS OF THE STATE licted owed girl a half breed in a hut 1e stable, Ed. an engineer, here, put The family toid that Donley had and they near threatened y oOmmit suicide, that within days had kept a close walch on him Reading Borcky, aged VOArs, injured six after he attended the funeral is grandfathe Borcky, that his death resulted in a Phoenix. ville hospital i ky fell under his train at Perkiomen and his “1 leg was severod le %t WAS wadly Joseph Junction Scranton Benjamin H. Throop, having just attained his majority, has fallen heir to a fortune of $5,000, 000. By the will of his grandfather, the late Dr. B. HH. Throop, he was not to get the money until he was 21. Altoona Frederick Durr, aged 30. a brakeman on the Pennsylvania Railroad, was thrown from a car hy the snapping of his brake stick and sut in two. Tamaqua Andrew Carnegie sig nified his willingness to donate $3500 toward the payment of a pipe organ for St. John's Reformed Church.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers