Page 6 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLFFONTE, PA. SEPTEMBER 24, 1908 | 99 sensationalism or gensunlism she is en. | >. | GOVERNOR HUGHES’ FAMILY. “ e 99 [sensai wensualism she ts en- | Return of Penn. Interesting Hovseata ot Naw Vari As to Salomania fe yn] YOU ARE GOING TO BUY |} | State's Chief Executive. | The same authority remarks of Eva | | four ’ arts \ TIT ’ . N Tanguny's “Vision of Salome,” “Her | "- . Philadelphia's Grand Histor | Mi Jolt hears one Hl ol I.. Craze For Stage Dancing dance consists In reality of the most | Stockers ano Feeding Cattle fecal Pageant In Honor of Her | Charles Evans Hughes. chief aXe ative and the Merits of the Re- rapid method of cro NE a4 stage ever — Q . " - Quaker Founder--Some of the | of New York state, was nominated | spective Styles—Isadora Dun- witnessed and the most da ing undres I'HIS SEASON Quaint Novelties Planned. | a second term despite the opposition « can Vs. Numerous Salomes. SYEF seen on 4 8! \ge Ouse te resorts You want to buy where you can get the best cattle | many influential politicians of his os under police survelliance money. Write or wire at once to | party. The hearts mentioned belong g And this reminds that one actress to Charles BE. Hughes Jr. nineteen N with the dance! But whi has appealed to the authorities and the FTER an ab | years of age, who Is a student at shall 1t be—the classical dance | candidates for office for laws and HN J. LAWLER : R Few : of the Greek us interpre sence of ove Brown university; Miss Helen Hugh i } l : ; 200 years Wi by the American girl Isador: . 163 EXCHANGE BUILDING lam Penn is to re a Daneat of ihe seductive dance of Ba Wn, UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO turn to Philadelphia \, joins, the \ aughter i H rodlas, as in : and the Quaker Cit gE erpreted by Gertrude Hoffmann, Mand i : : is making elaborate e Allan, Eva Tanguay, La Sylphe or o , Sound, safe, conservative, strict honesty and preparations for hi- | i } {some other of the many aspirants for | 7 a square deal guaranteed. reception. Wha ul ; popular favor In this style gf dancing? pr 4 : Penn first visite HO The craze for the dance Non. Mis ~ oa : ESTABLISHED OVER 25 YEARS the Pennsylvania . ' ! ; | Duncan and her revival of the classic Eh 7: REFERENCES: y ] : i : | style find some admirers, but it takes p | no expert to see that the craze Is great metropolis, some 22 years ago, it wasn J " aN . EY a very lively place ? . est over the kind of dance with which i ! ; We handle mote stock es In fact, there wasn't | \ . | little Salome stole the heart of Herod bof eR selection at all time any Philadelphia at | the Tetrarch, supposing that the bruta | gb wheade ) he f all until he got ther: { monarch who beheaded John th lap Come A Fl Y i Or teleygrar The red Indian wi 4 tist to please his favorite had such a y i ket prices the sole inhabitant 4 p { | thing as a cardlac orga: Along New Wo oY % a you money. there was nothh York's Great White Way almost every bs 1 vhon » has n 4 16 1 , A COLONIAL GEN- doing in the line « : 7 a other playhouse h aS ) of some TLEMAN. political excitement kind on the bil except an occasional scalping bee, an | Miss Duncan wi assle follow ¥ 3 W n Aeitarian. ate ‘ ‘Eh Aaa asst gt Sa Lt bands tn no NNN RE ERE NA HANES AEA NE NER NAN scrapple had not even been Invented ing at tn terion atira a seled £5 "1 & RE I A A A A A A ARR AEE EEE EERE EE EEE EE EEE EEE. a When he returns on Oct. 4 to part : au nee, bh e police do have to tig 1 » ers’ week Penn will find his ti $250.00 Worth of Presents will be GIVEN AWAY FREE! not only livelier than it was, but trans to our customers in the next two months ending Oct. 15 formed into a city so vast and strange t l l ask a policeman hotel. those 1 treaty, w t | with friendly whoops, but every « ¥ HU HEARS PAPA IS else and everything else will strange NATH MES. HUGHES AND DA and 1 The week geant consist lowing a will cor be in elal rules of the In of Ler sion fifty l A AR AN ahaa aaa EE EE EEE EE a a Ns aaa Aaa mass sft AAAs CENTS Cf YEAGER’S SHOE STORE, BELLEFONTE, PA. tt tt tt 2 2 Th ltt LAs Sf ff a hh an th fn DE a a Bh ta ohn hh hh hh hh EN EN ss aaa lan] F445 3442345504538 8 8888888 BARB BBBBBLLBP2 235880004 AAA AAA AR AAR RAR AEE EE EEE EE AAR AAR ANA EA AEE. nE an. ¥ +e ¢ ’ - . ’ f Ke SERENE ENNENNEENEE UNE EEEEEEEEEEE pocket with the mouth pointing 8 m™ ois ABOUT STOVES You will be surpri Ready ¥ THE POTTER-HOY HARDWARE CO SEEN EENCENPEEZENENEEEEEEEEEENN nm 55] “@ ® ed ok PC els gre onl ely o HILL AT SEVENTY. niet point on: put JER oe poo X aus, - = " w - - = ; SE wo CE We'll Buy One Package. F DO IMeAns 80 | et aE Then You'll Know convey by her move: tions of the poetry of Sophocles ar WILLIAM PENN IN 1008 | nterest and respect time Wi Penn landed. There his seventieth birthday Mr. HU | pag contemporaries. She has " . uso be ber of handsome Hoa ond og Rp al. quite a vogue 1a Earope, though th The best way to know Mapl-Flake 1s to use it. So we epresent the life of the Amer Fi vom po . S00 Arawn ws ave been Heo! ere who sak as to her - » a i ny ek aon » wi a e Ay i A.B claims to dancing Attic lore and legend offer to buy the first package, to le t the TOM Ad itself show : : poetry and philosophy, that she would the Swed ttlers, wh MI dhl neso abs next be Interpreting with her lm! ' y . ‘vo ” , . 4 the Swetish settiers, who W nthe cab was Al Smith, a Gre: | en pms iran on | you how much you've missed. Let us do it now dating I elf by some for northern veteran, win : arithms, the parliamentary record ar fous "i he of tha fo ‘ ! engineer Americs n y the tarifr Miss Duncan refused to Ix he e are not ¢ ! pe 5 ‘1 " in Our I. aple syrup, re wy first church built in t . © | “stung” by such remarks and, er weather is the ti { t that ent We want chil Or them. state | © ited ection aged by her reception abroad, ret show duction « he ! to her native heath, otherwise Amer! forme enerally us ean soll-for she floats + eHreser " |) Francisco-determined t riod ‘ ming t 2 | | plause of the home publie show: this w ' 1 ag to establish a school or ' pal part we pag re w \ | | shall teach dancing as i ‘ A . mum 1 i it five lar: ™ mpany o | | taught it, not only as an art, but as O P k F mounted unmounted marche 5 “an ald to health and the corre \¢ Heat pr ucing 1 i ! ! ne ac age ree One of 1 f | 5 show Penn's « . velopment of children” sparis CINDIOV At | ' 8 ng . Mapl-Flake itll try int ! Tower « London a ; Fea. But, as to the Salomes and § " should be Mapl-Flake ‘rd EN APi=- ake n teil you more than prisoner, another the throne of Char ‘ is the Salome dance an “ald to healt} batacns . nH | we ask you to try 1 » hve han ha " to Penn. The third will show Pe a a of the growth of a morbid and viclous . Rema A ya delay. and his little band making thelr w taste? Opinions differ A well known But whea aco : have better food than up the Delaware on the Welcome, 1 teacher of dancing and former master And wheat half-cool onl al If ! rm what Mapl-Flake means to fourth =» illustrate Penn making t of ballet says that dancing in this coun treaty with the Indians, white the In. | | Be | | try ns a stage art is deteriorating. He will show the proprietor In his barg: | | | | avers: | . ‘ of stzte propelled by many oarsmen | || “The younger American will accept | Else part of the wheat goes to waste. Worse | Three floats will fllustrate the event — - =| | none of the amusements which divert | than that, it ferments and causes digestive dis surrounding the great fete arrange i 1 ; ed his father. To forget his strenuous, | orders, by Major Andre when the British arm: Copyright, TA, by C. A. Zimmerman. | merve racking business life he demands Even mere economy requires that the wheat . occupied Philadelphia, Mounted an JAMES J. MILL, an equally strenuous, nerve racking f . C t Out Th Co foot soldiers will represent the Britis! | throttle, The archale locomotive wn | form of amusement, something that be prepared in the proper wa) u 1s upon army, and these will be followed Li: | sent from Paterson, N. J, to 8t. Lou will thrill him so abnormally that his —- E————— and mall 1 to the Hydionic Food Co., Battle Crook, Mich. the Continental army, headed by Gen | and up the Mississippl on a steam. highly strung nervous organism will So we spend 96 hours to make Mapl-Flake, I have never used Mapl- erals Washington, Wayne and Late | Bome years ago Mr. Hill enjoyed |guffer a reaction or, more properly | It could be prepared, as some flakes are, in 18 or Flake, but if you will a yette cruise to the const of Labrador. I! speaking, jerk itself Into a different q 20 hours, One squad of the City troop of Phil | late Danlel Lamont, who also was I* |'plane of operations, me an order on my grocer adelphia will appear In the parade e« | terested In ralirond matters, was one « “The average dancer would be quite We steam-cook the wheat for six hours, Then for a 15¢ package free, I corting a reproduction of the cariin the party. Mr. Hill was much am wontent to give the public the same we cure it for days—a partial digestive process. 4 shall be glad to try it. ya by Lafayette during his visit to | to learn on his return that he and | normal, sane, graceful dancing which Then we flake each separate berry so thin hiladelphin” In 1824, and another wll | mont were suspected of planning ! |leaptured the admiration of our nd- , ’ escort Abraham Lincoln in the repro | bulld raliroads in Labrador, Sapiure but she dances for AE. that be full heat of our ovens can attack ev ery duction of his historical visit to Phila “Worse than that,” sald Mr. [110 | ter and jam, and there will be no hut parti . ' delphia in 1564, when he came to at | guardedly, “we were planning to bull. | ter, to say nothing of jam, If she falls Then those thin flakes are toasted 30 minutes o tend the sanitary falr, rallronds on the ocean.” to thrill, and today in her plunge inte tn a heat of 400 degrees. City " \ ' and he I. w king granting a charts 0 4 moral or physical, or Is It an evide 1.1 The particles must be heat so the digestive juices can get Gf us nd this covpon—now, before you We will then send you an order, good ocer’s, for a full-size package free. f it’s as good as we say Name St. Address
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers