Part 2. MAGAZINE SECTION. \__- Cendre M— Hemocr BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1906. l. Farm Notes, Choice Fiction, Current Topecs. "LIKE A PIRATE OF OLD. ALEXANDER MACLEAN ROAMED THE SEA IN SWIFT SCHOONER. Accompanied by Thirty Reckless Buccaneers He Defied Governments and Gunboats—Now in Toils of the Law, There's never a law of God or man Runs north of fifty-three Captain Alexander Macl.ean, as bold a rover as ever lived during the priv ateering days when pirate ships lay waiting in the pathway of Spanish gal leons, will roam the sea no more, That he will not sail the deep in that free-handed manner which made him the object of search by United States and British authorities. A few ago, under an indictment for 18, weeks conspi- » his men t { Siars un up the flag.” hoisted an s known, yelled out d to you” and Stripes were Alec,” a Now fire and ove cutter IR nue turned ‘ navigator has jernment thorities, but ago the Carmencita made a raid copper islands and bad brus! the revenue patrol, one of the crew | ing wounded and { for treatment, The attention of Mexico having called the illegal acts of the C mencita's crew, that government November 1, 1904, cancelled the ican registry With this taken from him, Macl.ean had the name o the schooner changed to the It is understood that when he into Drake Bay for supplies he only 100 skins on board taken the sealing preserves of the Arctic that government officials have and i bold au a to Ar Mex drop; i Bus lacLean sea; he Kn deep Olng¢ on shore L& Ire " the Lhe Re Tel 8 2 4:82.23 3-4, Poacuning for Seals, a reer — aa — ~~ /Eag niin W— — (i ALEX. MAC LEAN aot in aj tereats and ing Islands cruise United prevent i ently to protect the st prosecution under or British laws, the hit changed Carmencita | papers out in Mexi Thirty Devils at Beck and Call, On May § she headed for the north ern islands, Maclean sitting aft, thirty reckless daredevils forward and cases | of repeating rifles and ammunition in the captain's cabin, Bhe had cleared for Victoria for a eargo, but instead salled for the little islands In the Ber. ing Bea, where It was understood a new rookery was discovered Captain Maclean has had a varied | experience with the authorities, not | only on the Carmencita, but on other vessels of which he was master, Al one time a revenue cutter annoyed him by demanding that his papers be sent on board for examination, Upon his refusal the revenue officers threatened to open fire on him, Invoked the Stars and Stripes. Maclean hearing this, ordered one ard oe R on itn A raid on t Was the real « Groat Britain, Cans States have an Je ment to 't appar gner from ted Stales Wan registry RE: either ame to taken Always Eluded the Law, _— Japanese Dwarf Trees. arkable a tree at wrinkled In An the legs of a litt boy Infinite patie: and skill and time are given | stunt and dwarf into 1 tesque growths on to Liese gro —-_— - Will Wed for Love Oaly, Princess Yictorla « only unmarried ward, declares that If she marries at all it will be for Khe is thirty seven years old, and for twenty years has refused to consider every marriage ’ England of King Ed daughter love proposal suggested by ber father, the | that It was once carried all the way to} King “If I marry. It will be to the man of my cholee” she Is reported to have sald “Father, mother, and govern ment shall not choose for me. 1 will jove the man I marry, if I ever marry.” This bold declaration by the daughter of a king has shocked royal and aristo eratie circles all over Europe, but It has been read with delight by the Buoglish people, and It appeals equally to Americans. The | - gent to Seattle, Wash, xr heon on away H Acapulco had from BO ei i Ye } n order) Huge Precious Stones. the | me! FREEDOM FOR RUSSIA, UNDER C(ZAR'S RECENT MANI FESTO, LAST ABSOLUTE MON « ARCHY DISAPPEARS. The New Empire Promises to Be a Regime of Constitutienal Liberty and Representatien—Victery of the People Widely Celebrated. As an outcome of the tremendous agitation which has been shaking Rus sia to the very core, the Czar has sur- rendered and has granted rights | which if consummated, will result io civil liberty, seemed for a time as though the history of the French ri ny be re that the the bureaucracy driving their arrogance and d self es fail to red peated; ristocracy aliead , WOuld {romatic Havana. fF The Two or n Papa day, and iulging.” equisite | a subtle se who use y and spar peveral days benef of a Havana.’ — Prior to the dlscovery of t) Afri dinmond a few months | welg) in the neighborhood pound and a half, the largest pv diamond was exhibited In Parle, having a value | of one million dollars. This was the most valuable stone In the world: the largest and best ruby In existe in | owned In London, and Is valued at | $50,000, It has no parallel, even In { the Crown Jewels, and It is related on 0 ing ing non | Bt Petersburg for the Czar to have a look at. The largest and most beaut | ful eat'seye In existence weighs ones hundred and seventy carats and In Ine sured for 50.000 rupees. The higeest emerald In the world welghs 2.080 earnts, and Is In the Imperial Jewel Office In Vienna. ———— The most costly church of ita size, in Ameriea, is In the quaint old town of Bt. Augustine, Fla, DRESS REFORM FOR WOMEN. Advocate of Practical Walking and | Heavy Skirts, Dr, Cora Smith Eaton, of Minneap ols. Mi 1. believes Li | ny ¢« S| aches and ills from which suffer are the direct result of clothes they wear. Bhe says that her professiomnl capacity she tri impress upen lier ween patrons need of dress reform “Not the time hideous bloomer cestume years ago,” k ghed the doctor a rational, sible and adaptation our « i ITAL (is " “And asked “Normal, women the “8 what are unrestricted in the world was that which | A a 5a 2 - —— a r- oy - LT SETAE A Ema order, though really a of the Empire It Is a delight to wateh move about In her brisk, energetic way, Her body, sensibly clothed, and beautifully poised, with that fine, straight line beloved of physical cul fturista, from the head to the heels, In responsive to the many demands of her busy life. It would be Impossible for her to accomplish her work, she says, hampered by the usual style of dress, modification the doctor ———— Favorite Among Cigar Markets. Bismarck used to boast that in his fifty years he had smoked over 100000 clgars. In later years he was seldom without his Immense ui, Working Garb—Relicef From | HUGE IRRIGATION DAM. CANYON IN MOUNTAINS OF WYOMING. \S Government Works Will Store Flood Water® For Ferdiization of One Hundred and ¥F fty Thousand Des- ert Acres, A quarter of a century we of the buffalo, and il sheep pasture, w ranch house, the in in Wy great £ ol ols Arg nt irrigatiol Vol I J Colonel ter Known ] irvey of connect cted a nd oming is 1 activ incl ne yeu i Glant Forces of Nature. nature's great handiworka All has wen cut out hy the sliver rushing In its bed below, For count loss anges it has enten its way through granite and limestone, wearing, wear ing, wearing away. For centuries and ages It has flowed, ceaselessly and likewise uselessly on its way to join the flood of the issouri: now it Is to be harnessed and made to produce for man. A thousand farmers will make ROCK BARRAGE ACROSS NARROW stream, | for themselves and an annual product | * three million dollar | In the canyon proper the ¥ My X a | To Vie wWrougo great ft won- 1HGers the sands ( ind rocky | iil np, and Ling 1 them smooth, The Rock Pile of the World, in the canyon's middi below dam 4 shi | The Governmen | What does all . of the west t Irrigation Program governn signify ’ Rimp \ i on has decided to use the mot from the sak of westor: lands to make its desert soil and fur: many hom bu opportunit It ! that any men will find employment in construction of dams and canals 1 EYery western community, at fis the works are y frie by one, new farm homes w established, adding to the nation's | wealth and balancing our population pow inclined cityward | For a thousand ng mlendid dam re w Hike d | Mle before private capital would de velop It to Its magnificent full capaes ty, for the difficulties In the way of {the engineers are many and unknown: but the government will meet all ob stacies and overcome them, and finally turn over to a thousand farmers a srfect job of engineering, compara ve to the great works of the Pra. vian Incas, the Egyptian Ramesses or the British engineers of India—an en during monument for all time fo the wisdom of the present generation of America, ish ans oon years longer 1 iy star “ uid SEE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers