Jp I——— CENTRE HALL PA . nn compress ———— - I A—— — MEN AND WOMAN'S CLOTHES, It may be lald down as a general rule that the ordinary man never —— onthe emerson on that point are, as practically all he thinks the woman thinks of It When a wife, for Instance, comes into the room wearing a new dress, with a smile on her face, and turns around several times and asks him what he likes the pattern exceedingly and that he doesn’t think he ever gaw her wear anything more becoming. If, on the contrary, she comes in with corrugated brows and inquires in a distinctly dis- satisfled tone what he thinks of the dress, he Instantly remarks that, though it looks fairly nice, yet there Is still something about It that he doesn’t like. He can’t say exactly what it is that seems out of kelter, but there is certainly something wrong with that dress and it ought to be altered at once. But it is only Just to the men to say that thelr igno- rance of what constitutes the fit of a dress Is paralleled by the feminine in ability to realize what goes to make up a well-fitting suit for a male per BON. As a rule, a woman's advice with to a man's suit is the most ng a man can take. respect dangerous tl! each To with new comes and about SO886e8, ©, freshness of a ne, there an anescent it which no It Is a lon i beginning wit breeze, th 8 the earliest warble bird, a tiny patch of sky flown to earth, [ streams, and the twilig is premonition alr, h end sunshine, takes on littie by little a of verd at hiding the skeleton outlin trees and the 8 misty dream of beauty. varying shades; e meitis the snow and of the ploneer blue down ntain buds T in showers of mou ht piping of frogs. and expectancy the IK “ooking eart h robe first, half es of the landscape In There are here and there where r " 4h Then, with fre ire, pale Ereen wrapping there are oaks, splotches of brownish purple, and ng the hillsides great masses of dogwood and Judas tree and reaches of white and pink All along the way ards are white and purple lilacs alr with fragrance, and the fields are spangled with golden dandelions. als alo blossoms, billowy Ie in doory loading the n increasing he ranks of That men eof wealth | pumbers are deserting t *the idle rich” and devoting their time, talents and a part of thelr money to useful public service, is one of the encouraging fruits of democracy in this country. The charge has often been made that very wealthy men do pot bear their just proportion of the public burdens, and possibly many of them do not. Possibly many of them lack a sense of responsibility. During the past quarter of a century, bow: ever, there have been in American public life, or semi-public life, » great number of men who feel that riches, as well as noblesse, oblige, says the Boston Globe. It would be a superfluous task to enumerate them— the men in whom a social consclence has been developed and who find the performance of publie duties more at tractive than polo or golf. $ in The courts and the imperious ruler by divine right do not always pull to gether, as appears from a case in Ger many, where a tenant of the emperor sued his landiord and won in two courts, There this In the reign of Frederick the Oreat, who wanted to remove a mill that spolled his view from Sans Souci, ut the courts upheld the sturdy Still such things occur infrequently eyough in Germany to get into print when they do happen. It has been decided by a Chicago fudge that the earning capacity of a performing monkey 1s $300 a week. If it Is impossible for one to be a ball monkey. A Boston clergyman American women wear says poother church trial is imminent, There have been several cases late y of doctors being sued for sewing p surgical supplies in the bodies pt their patients. Perhaps, after all, B trust to raise the prices of doctors’ outfits would not be a bad thing, A Chicago boy fell from a fourth- window and struck on a cement widewalk without being seriously in. gured. This may be regarded as a strong recommendation for cement - * wo w- i 5 - Amid and “ana Chicage exciting scenes of turbulence disorder, which at times bordered upon a riot, the Repub- lican National Convention wound up its labors by nominating William How- ard Taft of for President and James Schoolcraft Sherman of New York for Vice President. President Taft renominated at 9:28 o'clock, p. m., by a majority of 21 The him 81. Vk Sherman did announced Ohio was tal vote cast for Yotie was b much better. His es O87, President s ¢ President i Voile was and Senator La Fol form The dele letie’'s names were the only ones ally pres WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. exe En It was pres son, of Californi ent ernor Muns ERies w ular Republi gleam roller The Roosevelt to bolt with h ere Aas Borah vor {00% Among Dixon those were Senator delegates who refused comprised such lead Hadley, Stubbs and thelr delegates in the regular Republican con did vote oo ia m ergor i Ney 0% d re vention, but not President ft was had produced ment to fist fights The final session began at 1.45, when Senator gavel whacked the table The convention had been adjourned meet at 10 o'clock, but at that hour a delegates were of the convention Root’s to ony goats few sleep, but the long sessions well along in the evening There were few vacant seats in the the long session. The Blaine Club of Cincinati, was one of the chief attractions at the convention. It costs, including hotel bills and § i { i publican national convention. Colonel Rooevelt talked to many visitors about forming a third party. Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth en tered the hall with Congressman Long: worth and was an interested specta- tor. The seseion was opened with pray- er by John Wesley Hill a close friend of President Taft and has been sttmping for | prayed foarve i fervently and is ie He m for the President that the country might be gpared from rev- olution The Mis up contests were taken and a8 usual : this viva provoke Aonid seated with a viva vooe vote voce hoots and the “aves Yols 10 Come me of sound and to be eve Senator Re had then seemed aves National Committee in Session. Missourl,, Ohio and were carried around. and of their bearers seemed to be half frantic. Mr. Allen sald when order stored: “This statement from ana, Nebraska Was re Mr. make on the case {8 not for the pur this convention. 1 will not read the whole of his statement because the delegates have it in their hands. Mr. Hoot let the Roosevelt demon. stration go on for twenly minutes be- fore trying to restore order. With a few raps of his gavel it subsided They've put the ban on the bear dance and the turkey trot in a great many dance halls in Chicago, but that didn't prevent a number of lively cou ples from executing the dances on the sidewalks opposite the Congress Hotel to the ragtime tunes of the campaign bands. A negro delegates from Georgla of fered a full set of delegates tickets for the conservative sum of $25. He “needed the money” he said, It was 2:20 when Mr. Allen began reading” the Hoosevelt statement, | There were a good many interruptions At the Colonel's request that Rocsevelt delegates should not | there were cheers and jeers. { “If a man doesn’t know when he's { dead his friends ought to know vole uproar. After i onel's the Col. Allen's re the hullaballoo over statement and Mr | marks was over the regular program i me was taken up. the report of | committee and then ex-Vic Fairbanks, chairman of the resolutions came forward The Taft men | 538 | t + iret the rules ePresident came committee read cheered on to the platform. him No minority report en platform presented by the Roosevelt men ator of platform well known doctrines when the ann ed was Sen ftiwen Wisconsin offered ng the contain ithe sides cheered vote latform 1 } 4 ih absent 5 The rol ! wn tl been completed SRR Roo TERS RE GALLERY having re { the wi de for President of said Chairman motien to nination ecedented m Howard majority ominated States” Was no ies Is i ren ¥ ited There make President's unan: hie is unpr call for Vice Presi however, struck up My Country, "Tis of Thee Every: body in the hall, even the Roosevelt men got up and sang Arkansas There was nt proceeded at once to tions nomine band or dent The seconded the nominsgt no on other nomination man's nomination by acclamation, but there were some cries of “No!” The any way the hall and delegates who had sat {or nearly eleven hours could not be kept any longer. On the roll call for candidates for : Vice-President Alabama yielded Ney York, ex-Representative J. Van Vechiten Olcott, presenting the name {of Wate President Sherman. | was adopted. in absolute silence. As the last of the delegates left the ball, the band play: ings Flow.” | When it came right down to the point of burning all their bridges be { hind them and taking thelr chances on la dead open and shut game of win or lose, there was a scurrying to get from under, and the colonel was left hold: ing the bag. Chauncey M. Depew found himsell widely quoted as pessimistic because of having sald Jocularly: “It seems to be a question which corpse will hav the most flowers.” . i i i i i { ROOSEVELT NAMED BY NEW PARTY REBOLUTIONS CONDEMNING REG. ULAR REPUBLICAN CONVEN. TION'S ACTION FOLLOWED BY SPEECH OF AC. CEPTANCE. { i i —————————— i i i i Chicago ~The third party An hour after William Howard Taft had been renominated by the Republi can national Theodore Roosevelt was the tion Progressives chestra Hall A litt nom is here convention of the Na Or nominee al assembled In ai the whic he and hat le later had accepted ination kKed those in convene at £ the aE&IiN in ix t i r In move week asgisteq iaunchi new ment 10 and ratify their indorsement « candidacy The fight wi It was Roos Never formed THEODORE ROOSEVELT. y ¢ Fp wp I n inois; idaho, and Senator of Kansas, conspicut absence, but crowd ca The people in Senator Er , wy JI TATH were ue for the red nd the hall- they hems And when the men alike-—{felt make the fight were content ing resolution had p Roosevelt had taken platfe seemed as if human strength and man voices conld do no more A speech nominating Ci velt was made by Comptroller William A. Prendergast, of New York i to have presented the Colonel's to the convention Dean Will Draper Lewis, of University Pennsylvania Law School, who was to make one of the seconding speeches, delivered the address which he had prepared for the Republican conven. tion. “l want to say that if a popular pri mary were held in New York today Mr. Roosevelt would poll mare votes than Mr. Taft,” said Mr. Prendergast. assed and the lone]! Roose who was | name | am | the of sciousness the President can ook with any honest pride upon his nomination, because he knows it was obtained by ciety.” During the cheering that followed the Pennsylvania delegates arrived and were loudly greeted. Resuming his speech, Mr. Prendergast advanced “l make special referenos to th commandment: “Thou shalt not steal, he suid Representatives of twenty-two Siates composed the notification commities which informed Roonevelt of bis nemination in stood RE EDONBOY movement The commities Comptroller W. A. Prendergast New York ver Former Congressman Richmond Pearson, of North ( rank Knox, of Michk A thew Hale, of Massachusetts: David fa Colonel and the tai consisted in a senes for of of Mey Lissner, of California; arolina; ¥ James R. Garfield, of Ohio of Kentucky; Everard Jr.., of Utah: Vermont; J 1 ¥ i" t of J5 of of nne Fr, Valter Thomps idge Oscar RH e Ben BD Andrew Rahn, of M \ IGE o Judge Sie Vers Judge f arth 1% $s 11 ¥ of North Dakota Willian Ad White John ( of of Kansas: Green. TE TLELECRARPY POON Getting the News to the Country. these were Finley P. Dunne ("Doo ley”), Willlam Allen White, Elbert Hubbard, George Ade, Percy Hammond, George Fitch, Sam Blythe, Edward J. Clark, John Callan O'Laughlin and, last, but not least, William J. Bryan, Roosevelt Ate and Listened. While hig army of followers fought face to face with the Taft forces on the floor of the Republican convention in the Coliseum, Col. Theodore Roose velit sat in his private rooms on the twelfth floor of the Congress hotel at lunch, and listened over a megaphone telephone to the proceedings of the convention and sent gpecial orders to his lieutenants President Taft's stock went up the scale at an amazing rate once it be. | came known that the unanimity of the | Roosevelt plans had been broken. It was reported that Governor Had ley and Col. Roosevelt engaged in a heated argument at one of their last conferences. Governor Hadley, It was sald, had minced no words in making his position clear and Col. Roosevelt plainly indicated his surprise at the turn matters had taken. The Blaine Club of Cincinnati, which came to Chicage 375 strong, broke ranke before the nominations and 300 left for their homes on a special train. A negro delegate from South Csro lina is nursing & throat with a real raspy feeling. This delegate discov. ered that he could pull off a perfect imitation of a Mississippi steamboat whistle. He and hie friends were so elated with this discovery that the man with the voice worked overtime.