The Centre Democrat, BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1006. Farm Notes, Choice Fiction, Part 2. —— MAGAZINE SECTION. Current Topics. and other producing Interests in the Middle West, which consider the Ger- man market their “velvet” ter in the distance Cooper Rivers, In 1 old statues and o must be a charming a] nnd the he park wari Great Courage to Withstand Rebuffs It required great courage to under. take this work at the time and in the manner she did, But she possessed that requisite and exercised it on many occasions, She never faltered, never lost heart, though she was con- stantly subjected to ridicule, calumny and opposition, Few women were brave encugh to follow her in those days. In 18562 she addressed a large Ve convention of men teachers. A clergy- IN THE WARM SOUTHLAND. A FEBRUARY JOURNEY FROM THE LAND OF ICE T0 THE LAND OF FLOWERS. BIGHTY-SIXTH BIRTHDAY. I na ni CELEBRATION OF WOMAN SUF- FRAGISTS IN HONOR OF MISS ANTHONY. spot, tll STOCK EXCHANGE SEATS, GERMANY'S NEW TARIFF ACT ALLOWS SMALLEST RATE ON AMERICAN GOODS. Flowers in Winter. Then we ] encountering everys | bloom and trees | Breezy Account of a Midwinter Trip month of May to Charleston, Jacksonville and St. me | Bave an exquisite Augustine.~Hotels which Are camelia, and 1 saw ag Palaces. drove through the t wn ns Points of Vantage Where Millions Are Made (and Lost) While You Wait. In keeping with the recent remark. able rise in stock prices in this coun- ( in were mel ed a white immense bush Securing This Unlooked For Conces- the ¢ sion Makes Secretary of State 2 Diplomat of First Rank-German Market Prized. Protest Against Laws Which Allow Mothers Small Protection Over | Children — Plea for Exercises of ts 1 1 Corrective Ballot, It is a rare occurrence when noted men of the country gather together to do honor to a woman who has worked and striven for a cause to which many of them are Yet this was the case a two a when statesmen, lea jurists, and literary I joined paying homage to Anthony, the great on occasion | day. This meeting held It ton, D. C,, in February, 4 of course, being pres to listen to the addresses and rds of felicity had just con convention of woman suffragist i Jaltimore ratulation Lgonistic, ant Wee or political rey lor or ghts in Mi the woman of her nt} Al ai Alli nt 144 Le mong ‘ongratu- rfoa i to stitutional wv n suffrage gress word to praise 1 The Rev prom e ine ove em rs 1© § me- : that any man who wt of especial learning im- a gown, It w rofes of graduates, y sat upon the 1 that the lom he m er sex. 1 Accs pt R mediately of coll pt and of men whe Bench. She a symbol of ns as trae SOTS, Supreme g is | state WT 1 wise Over One Hundred Woman Leaders. In this of Miss dred bration hday, one hun. ocates cele with hi connection Ant and fifty ony s adv suffrage swooped down bers of Congress and hurl Statesmen all sorts of feminin on the subject. In appealing on © | man who was present her afterwards. I “You spoke ably and we “but 1 had rather see 1 and sister dead in the aves to hear them speaking from a public platform." 1,” he sald (ry [4 ’ Unceasingly prea trine of woman's suffra she and She | | | | solons of the Capitol, th was made by the women thal not intend female to fent to man, and that she given justice through the b The principal address wa Miss Mary Thor who protested criminating against err v ¥ the against women to ¢ have no right th cradled In our age of seven now our bo; permiss have it we bevond said, “and need not the army and navy if the willing. The girls of Maryl cannot contract legal marriag: sixteen years of age, maj sent to thelr own degrad their destrover go free. Thin tice to igno ) grant us the power to who cannot protect he ask our ie f q re terrible innocence protect the himself “The ir cigarette vender, ar ply the nefarious trades next door to our very homes and we are powerless to save the boys of the land from their influ We of Cangress the right ) express opinion at the lot will be the surest and | accomplish what we! ence ask t our bal becau it ne Xx fou Wa) to 0 jlesire.” Miss Anthony's Remarkable Bal tie Against Ridicule and Calumay. Susan Brownell Anthony was born | §6 years ago in the Hicksite Quaker settlement at South Adams, Mass, and was as quiet and gentle and obedient a Jittle Quaker maiden as any of her playmates in that tranquil spot. Her life was uneventful until she took up teaching and went out into the world She was 26 years old when she made her first fight for the right of suffrage. It was for the right to vote at a tem-| perance meeting which was dominated by young wen. The Sons of Temper ance were holding a convention at Albany, N. Y. and the Daughters of Temperance were invited to meet with them. Susan was one of the Daugh- ters who accepted the invitation. Ear ly in the proceedings the young women discovered that their position In the convention was purely an honorary one. The men did not propose tnat they should have any voice in the pro ceedings It was against scripture and against her natural sphere that woman should raise her voice In the councils of men, were the arguments of the men in answering the protests of the women and In refusing their petition to be allowed to vote. Suddenly a tall, slender Quaker girl arose from her seat and, followed by pix others, marched out of the convent. fon hall, The leader was Susan B Anthony. It was her first rebellion against that order of things which gave men a monopoly of power, Bhe immedintely set about organizing the Women's New York State Temperance Society. That was the real beginning of what has beem her life's work In which the central theme has ever beon (qual suffrage for the gexes, , lon. , Jeered al | the early days of the Rights eform, for neglect. id ted was the rr other i from lured mas ected to ir ald of them i the ballg and M thony Khe proved her irs naking every bal int Fy oy were rable People Stanton made fired them mauship by | Partial Suffrage in Many States. “I never saw t! ] tately Quaker girl coming wn, ald Mrs Stanton, “But v I knew another bombshell wag to be hurled into some assembly of men' Miss Anthony was arrested and fined for illegal voting in 1872. She had] east a ballot at the election. She never! paid the fine. Since then four states have granted the right of suffrage to] women; 23 states have given them the right to vote at school elections, and New York permits women taxpayers to | vote on all questions affecting the tax ation of property. For years Miss | Anthony hoped to live to see a woman | elected and inaugurated as President | of the United States, but she has a | bandoned that hope now, realizing that such a thing will not come to pass in her day. | Her life is now Jess strenuous and she and her sister, Mary, have a quiet pretty home at Rochester N. Y. Bhe keeps In touch with every cause in the! interest of or for the advancement of woman, and in her voluminous corres pondence continues to give advices and | counsel to women in all quarters of the globe. Out of her little workshop in the attic of the Rochester home comes much of the ammunition used in continuing the battle for suffrage Six years ago, at the age of 80 ghe learned to operate a typewriter, which she employs In her personal corres pondence and In earrying on hor wor! Time has dealt gently with her. She fs stil] stately and erect. and her step has the vigor and elasticity of most women many years her junior, Her memory is undulled by age, all of her faculties seem to retain the keenness which made her surh a power In the prime of her life. Her Interest In the world's affairs Is unabated, and her mind Is attuned to every movement having for its object the betterment hat complimented +I strife of mother than ed the doc equal rights. Few, even among women them- | 1907, | now | of mankind. United States and cannon and war, which threatened tries. Germany, not sword, but mercial nevertheless seriously can Indus | The | reichstag 4 recent action iN passing March 1 a88¢ of the glslation xt, until June le ring from ne a nt men whedules against tariff » Cling “a dipi 0% pur macy ¢ for ration In her governments that 10 anot xieen r the Germar have os obtain th« Germany, with of our schedules goods entering th as of notable raft several ades t f the Ameri ions in ation nan one I in 10 de B4} retary diready given ample promise of being a dip! ymat of the first class, he would | w halled as the new stellar light | in international politics All Done in a Month. Only a month before the action of the reichstag, the German government was still apparently Inesorable In its pos tion that the maximum rates would be enforced on March 1 In the light of the relchstag’s action, at the earnest solicitation of Chancellor von Buelow, one might be led to think A colossal bluff had been attempted, and pushed to the last moment by Germany But this, It Is understood here, is not the case The seed of education as to the result of the tariff war, which Mr. Root had been sowing, did not sprout until within the last few weeks; then its growth was rapid . Realizing that Mr thot Root was tourhly familiar with all the premiss and sound in his understanding of whit | the results would be of ANY course pur sued by Germany, and that he could not be shaken from his position of polite regret that no concession Was at thin #nd of the wire, the German statesmen quickly went to their relchstag, and had legislation passed deferring the trouble Had the department here shown signs of hysteria, or had Secretary Root not fully anprecinted the aeveral angles of the eaee or had he made ex: cited offorts to have Congress act hur riedly In giving Germany concessions hefore March 1. the (Germans would have dosided that the United Biates could be coerced by actually applying the maximum tariff, but Mr. Root's placid explanations that nothing at all conld be done here, either before orf after March 1, had an exceedingly quieting effect upon German tariff opinions Secretary Root's Impassive attitude, which was so remarkably effective In this case ia all the more notable, In view of the flood of excited protests that have come to Washington from associations of farmine ~anufacturing, possible Root not | War has been averted between the the l com- very important Ameri German defer } of the maximum mw MILLION A IRES | try is the rapid advance in rates which New York Stock | seats are selling. | the Exchange is strictly 1,100, and scats are of ardent d« the part hundreds of marke operators, whom memb would be | rially valuable : sold for $55 wm days ago mem! for $90. limited ire on of hip mate A month , & record price ago a DA 0 an ne seat was that if n of this character soon the reach $100,000, or somewhat 50 r cent. greater than h seats were sold two Exchange this was re believed pe whict lo wk WW). and , and Wall to why is upon Rarda« the sake in t cour rule oon! chang for healt the | prot al cash, at | {than to be a member lexe cutor | obtaina p14 | spirited, {ing advances in t | been scored thi : ang » 1 in ———————lI— OR WAITERS, -— Caddies Feasted as Guests of the | Germantown Cricket Club, Near | the Philadelphia, A111, {rong Millionaire and " of promin- social and erved f the a banquet | » g i alicxon | Ger. | e lads t. but show. 1 men gf undone : | ons of the State De partment | Oa nonths | 10 sixteen year banquet board, tumes, S old me lub, wielded the carving huge slices of turkey were prompt hurried to i milliona amu Heebner, f and ly the hungry you re walters © Brown and Direc ty Potter would rush from the carvers side, carrying plat ters heaped with turkey and tempting vegetables, Edward 8. B Jr. ickley, {their behavior during the year president of the club, took a hand and was assisted by Vice-President H. H Kingston, Harlan 8. Page, Howard | Perrin, Joseph 8. Clark, Charles T Cowperwalte, Henry A. Lewis, Robert C. Cooke, William R. Buckley, C. H Potter, William Disston and W. Find ley Brown, and all of them were busy looking after the wants of their cad dies, all of them men of great affairs After the collation had been served, William C. Houston, chairman of the golf committee, called the gathering to order and made a brief address, in which he consratulated the boys upon As a { means of still further pleasing the ead les, each was presented with a box of eandy and prises ranging hn to $2.60 In gold. —-— A Propelior In the Ain An English device ia reported of an alr motor boat, which, while not re markable as a speed craft, is yot very useful in navigating many bodies of water which on account of their ex treme shallowness are practically clos od to navigation. Other deeper rivers and lakes are likewise avoided by a screw or paddle wheel craft on ao count of their growths of rank vege tation, A fat, shallow draft launch has been constructed which overcomes both dif fioulties, for ita screw propeller or fan works, not in the water but in the air, Driven by a motor, the fan whirling ia the alr sends the boat along st & good rate of spoed. — Curara one of the deadly poisons and that with which South American Indians annoint thelr arrow heads, has been found very helpful in the at Exchange The membership of to therefore objects many to seat A few ership rights were sold | bought | the unprecedented price of $35,000. | there is another | i give | either houses here were built before the war, ia and are immense three story structures | ings are on the doors which pr | $ A We left eighteenth lHghtful « "Beminole ngton’s bi 8) Was on February pending two de | rded the mn Wash-| one Acoom- bragal hat 1 and fo f | Li I of was always a go trip 1 had to my head from the wo started until be ] gh son who was sick ing to the Isthn passage for us completely dism: was sick, only gentlemen, bein ious in rthday x tha 7 of n ah ant men 1 om the hour| J ng Lor tho i ye # thi Bg ex 1 * "nr pleasure CALHOIUN MONT there The street +) broad, the houses our he tha on th oe tt grout side planted with vegetables, | story i magnolia trees, roses in fullbloom,and | to block till a wealth of vines everywhere The | Here we [ | 3 als . - on | We ramble ’ 1st appearing i through th ding extendir think ils ve : e sireet eir 18 € market from yt coOuni« i and tha fresh Arkey wor in 1 al PN } v running way back, with two and thre verandas facing the Sou Quaint old cary are also resplendent with great brass knockers The view fine and expansive, In fis hist cluding Charleston Harbor, Fort Sum | Gardens story th to atch the sea breeze wr da " nd srrabee Ww wk, telling mare ote onsin Ginseng Wausau, Wis GINSENG 7 = : . wy, enitivat ABSrens : Wie 03 Adams Si, treatment of hydronhobla — A SAFE INVESTMENT 85 or More Per Month Buys Protected Interest in Tropical Plantation. This Compary 12 deve Shett f ZC8 » uw! Campeche, Na Rl Guarantees 8 Per Cunt. Interest 5 tn \ ™ rood "ne i ne wyshie shares perv ieanrually t WV Lenever jose Ls your 2 Jarusry’ 2 { hereicte 0 y is ends reid ; paid oust svar : wa feces ve a © “© Terres, sarh= reare and re of rubber the sass of I've ! evelcped ‘he peter arent © berecuer i : § Jat amen SOCK will provide our rharet ert § substantial ine Corre for Ite end 8 legacy for thelr families. Nearly 1,000 sharers under experienced Maragers, sr ployed Mahogany, from our $0 C00 000 ferert being sent 10 shiploads to Urited States ports A woodturning factery has beer satls Hehed. Stores, tories and wnnety In Operation, Now is the Time to Invest. ANmtied purmber of shares offered at par, $2300; paysite 55 per month por share. Each share of sock Popreserts fourteen sever of land. Price of shares will 000n be increased to $I80 The peckhoiders’ money 1s fully secured sa the ene Hire property Including ever 200 bold ire rativosd Hine, oe. pei far fn full and deeded In trurt for protection of stockholders 10 Philade 'rhia rus’ company Investment returned In core of death If degived, or 3000 persons already receiving dividends. making appiioation now you secure shales st Par and receive 4 pr of on your money Apr! Ist, BOARD OF DIRECTORS Wu Nn ARmgrnane vo Mite, De Pent A. La AAT TR Erany. en rerie Rive, Baa down, PR w today roe hook tet Adndeamaly Mustrated papar. reques postal et TE Pate Sir Rid Bonhint And h charge. a. hd pi INTERNATIONAL LUMBER & DEVELOPMENT CO, 790 Drexel Building, Philadelphia, Pa.
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