THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., JUNE 10, 1909. Woman's World SHE EARNS $10,000 A YEAR. Miss Katharine |. Private Secretary to the Late H. H. Rogers. Katherine 1. Harrison, private secre tary to the late H. H. Rogers, Is harder to reach than J. PP. Morgan, James Stillman, John W, Gates or any other of the of finance. She the one woman in the world who knows everything that goes in Standard Oll. For doing what she is required to do not the least of her duties is to keep her mouth sealed-she re celves $10,000 a year. You might count on your fingers the women in the Unit ed States who recelve this salary. What made Katherine I. Harrison so valuable to IH, H. Rogers and his part ners in the Standard Oil? A hundred answers could be given to this ques tion. Other women are as bright, and other women are possessed of equal executive ability. But the best answer of them all may be summed up In two words te trustworthiness Miss Harris can hold Inf would make Harrison, kings is on HER HL absol q mn on secret, nyioiate and Ant lyn } ntributes t the fami 1 has And ho old Is Well, she was Mr. Rogers’ private sec retary for eighteen ye She may be thirty Lve; she may be more Next to Mrs. Hetty Green she ranks today as probably the most important business woman in all New York r Queen rook the welfare of 1 pretty fortune Miss Harrison! street, B w ars New View of Education of Women. Dr. Charles W. Eliot has been ex | ceedingly gracious to college women's | clubs since he laid down the burden of | {Harvard direction, and only spiteful | | women recall what strenuous opposi tion he made to certain Innovations in | Radeliffe. He has been addressing the | intellectual women in and out of sea (son, and he has urged them not to hen peck the men because of those intel llectual attainments. In a recent ad dress before a college club of Balt) | more he praised ‘higher education for | women enthusiastically, but he depre leated the limited view generally as signed to It. He thinks that In the home education is of more genuine benefit to society and for the future of the race than in the professions and that In the last analysis knowledge (benefits women only In so far as it [trains them for thelr natural duties Instead of seeing the menace other! great educators see In the desire which the modern woman has for obtaining the best edueational advantages, Dr Eliot takes vast comfort In the idea The next generation, he thinks, being trained by intelligent and Intellectual mothers, will swing (he pendulum the other way for the men of the Amer. fean race. Instead of Lelng consumed with business ambitions to the exclu [ston of mental culture, he holds, they will be trained from thelr cradle up. ward to estimate properly the neces. sity of roliege training. THE AGONY OF INDECISION. Bome Women Slaves to the Habit of Vacillation, I would rather regulate my life by the flip of a penny than suffer the tor tures of Indecision that I know some women do, says Ruth Cameron In a Pittsburg paper. “Shall “1 get straw matting or denim for the new bedroom carpet?” “Shall I have Mary sweep the front room today and wash the blankets to morrow wash the blankets today and clean the front rooms tomorrow? “Shall 1 have roast lamb and aspara gus for the special company Sunday, or { o8 would it be better to have planked steak 7" Hours and nerves and complexions they wear out swinging the balance back and forth between such welghty questions these and in the end make no wiser decisions than if they had settled them offhand. Some wom en make themselves fairly wretched over their wardrobes, such awful op portunity for vaclllation they find in choice of material and trimming and make. To others papering and carpet ing resolve themselves into a perfect agony of Indecision. “I would rather clean that house from top to bottom than pick out a living room carpet again,” 1 heard woman say the other day. “I do belleve 1 got more tired fre ramping around and trying to make uj vy mind than from all the sweeping dusting and washing 1] did.” mve just been through the agonies of paper a room in my home, w perhaps accounts for warmt It took 1 paper, an between poppy borde: the rose border mother alm take to her bed. Indecisl is a disease, and, what's more, it is a chronic and a cumula disease, T more you let be undecided the more unds are going to be, M« nt ] BIIrOR 1 ¢ as one Owl he sublect two weeks to pk k out that yellow paper with the and the pink stripes witl ost had t he r your declisl stanza HELPS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD. ’ 1 v d water plece not « fina plecs er and hang other w» ttempted To kes an It too fre bolling. buttered milk piieher, pessing It with crisp, hot toast In this way each person can have toast as soft or as crisp as de sired The best” doen It early RWAY k toast from being soggy in, try serving the in a covered ently housekeeper who wants “the her own marketing and before the foodstuffs are does pleked over or wilted from the hot sun should understand It makes More Americans cooking with curry powder | a delicious change for the cooking of meats, rice, eggs and fish. An Anglo Indian will tell you we know nothing of the use of curries, but that is no reason why we should not learn There are fewer reckoning days if housekeepers pay cash. If they per. sist in running accounts for groceries and other staples they should have a book and see to It that the right price is put down the minute anything is bought Director of Reformative Institution Dr. Katherine Bement Davis of Bed ford, N. Y.. Is the superintendent of the New York State Reformatory For Women and has been able to do much i for the unfortunate women committed to her chinrge. A thorough collegiate and special training has fitted Dr Davis for her important work, and she possesses unusual administrative abll ity. Poise, firmness, judgment, sym pathy and good sense are her distin gulshing traits Regarded generally as one of the ex. | pert authorities of the subject of the treatment of delinquent women, , Davis {© frequently ealled upon to | make ad’: os before women's clubs : i i : medical skill was put to | ‘uring the recent catas «ina, where she gave » suffering and helpless. CLEVER ART FORGERS, They Flocd the Markets Abroad With Their Wares. | PARIS THE CLEARING HOUSE.! The French Capital Is the Chief Mart For the Disposal Imitation An- tiques—Italy Leads In the Production of of the Spurious Articles. Italy has always been the classic soll for fabrications, but in some depart ments Holland and Paris run her close. Vienna specialty for rock crys tal and thirteenth century gold work, Florence and Lucca for fourteenth century armor, London imitates the pate tendre of Sevres Constantinople makes oriental weapons, Madrid Da mascus swords, Dresden sculptured ivories, Alx-la-Chapelle pewter plate, Berlin man potteries, Amsterdam wrought Iron, lains, Odessa elry, while 1 clearing hon tallan Italian has a Rotterdam Indian porce tiars 1 1 ar 4 . and 1 y oy and a jew fr Teh is and Paris Venice, t gotten its tradit : in glans Hamburg not for ms and turns out its i 180 wy, has own old wares Sevres and Dreaden innocently hels ed the counterfeiter by selling thelr not yet decorated pleces, If Imperfect for a trifle. On this genuine ground the forger worked with ease. This trafic has stopped. Still the forger knows no obstacles or over comes them, and false Sevres and Dresden are supplied by all dealers, and the purchaser rarely has the mi nute knowledge that will save him. In the eighteenth century oriental porce- lalos were openly made In England and Holland and sent to China for decoration. when they returned as real China porcelain, or the reverse proe ens obtained. The porcelain was made in China and decorated In what was presumed t be the Chinese style In Europe. Paris at the present moment makes and exports old China porce Iain, and many a tourist who buys a heen find at Hongkong or Shanghal merely | brings back coals to Newcastle, Rho dian plates are made near Paris In ab solute perfection. Except as a matter of sentiment there Is no need to seek the old. Be cautions, too, In buying Greco-Rome 1+ pottery. It Is made at Naples Most of the genuine snapped up long ago or else are owned by museums or by the heirs of those for whom they were wade and who do pot need to part with them London National Review, Time's Revenge. “I wonder If everybody will have what he wants a hundred years from now." “1 doubt It. The men will then prob ably be agitating for the suffrage Loulsville Courter Journal, 1 mostly things were | The Body of Penn May be Brought To bring the coffin containing body of Willium Penn, which in a practically i in Buckinghamshire country, and banks of the Delaware river, | ject of a movement CONZTEsS, Representative Palmer, of Pe y nia, 1s one of six members of the house behind the plan, and he will confer with President Taft to enlist his support in the proposed removal It that, Penn's distiz career not marked the BOW TeDos es abandoned England nave It interre considering his grave 1 approj Why Some People Fall ] 1" Some people tall work they oi Ae down in the because are Robbed While they Slept ne THE RAT PROBLEM Pure Food ’ an c¢ssential to Good Health Kinds PPeAarance variably cases fatal and in some years the firm of SECH 0, BELLEFONTE. has been the the alone always was a guarantee word and a Godsend to housewife for the reason that name of purity and quality in any thing that | came from this famous grocery store The long experience In this one line | enables BSECHLLER & CO. to buy In- telligently and sell to those who appreciate the fact that CHEAP. of good PURE GROCERIES are the EST health FOOD, and an assuranos to the consumer What you buy from SECHLER & CO. Is always right and the price con sistent every day of the week, and every woek of the Year When you have intelligent consid ] Leration of your health, the matter of providing for your table should be the first to enlist your attention, and that is why BECHLER & COS dro- gery Btore can supply every want Sechler & Company, Bellefonte, Pa. reliable groceries | Made a Good Record, The Philipsburg Journal of Thursday ays that Hon J, ( yer, of Bellefonte, ight an » on bu r friends. “1 el | has been Ness and ¢ 1 *¢ IL Bai that he can look 1 his of Centre county i the legislature, " He convictions and his ses, but demonstrated that he was o loaf, but to w nat only nr Pi om not t the best pe ¥ and : rk, and to do nterest of the he i ie could in the ple Information Wanted I a & is ih, nv nvile, present LEGAL EX ADVERTISEMENTS . f cole as show ar mire RE ely 1 he reddit rs and those logs entitle eorive the SAme w ot the parties 0 interest for the purpose of his sppointment st his offes Bellefonte Pa, Rooms No. 8 Oriders Exchange fh Saturday June 3. 199 at 10 0 clock the fore noon when and where those who desire may st tend or forever afterwards be barred from con ng In on said fund N.B SPANGLER Auditor Se IAL COURT PROCLAMATION Whereas the Honorable Ellis 1. Orvis. Pres dent Judge of the Court of Common Meas of the ah Judicial District. consisting of Lhe county of Centre. having issusd his precept | bearing date the fist day of May. 18 10 me | directed for holding s Court of Common Pleas ] Orphans Court, and Court of Quarter Sessions in Bellefonte, for the county of Centre | commence on the THIRD MONDAY OF JUNE being the fist day of June, 1000. and to contibue | one week, notice is hareby given that all per | sons summoned as jurors are hereby notified to | trend Given under my hand. st Bellefonte, the tnd {day of June, in the your of our Lord, 18. and {the one hundred and thirty shind rear of the | Independence of the United States Sheriffs OMece WwW. E HURLEY Bellefonte, a Sheri? June tnd. 19 and to Two Ways of Doing In days agone, a bullder dealt with a dosen diferent supply houses. Me bought his brick and stobe here lumber there, glass elsewhere, and nails and bolts round the corner A building that didn't “jibe” was the usual result, Dut Do one person could be blamed for it'or held re sponsible In THESE days Mr Builder does it differently. He makes his plans orders everything from one complete supply house, and when the material comes, IT SUITS And you are here now, today, with the BL. Co “not yesterday with the dosen Bellefonte Lumber Co, TI rrrrrTIITIITITTT™ : W. H. MUSSER, Zreneral Insurance Agent Notary Pablic ang Pension Attorasy. BELLEFONTE PA., Centre County Banking Co., Corner High and Spring Btreets, Receive Derosirs Discot Notes M NT cert, Cashier. Beezer’'s Meat Market IGH I', BELLEFONTE. PA st quality of ICED HAM Pork Sausage, €L Bi. gO 10 BEELER Dr. Sol M. Nissley, Veterinary Surgeon, PHILLIP Patents, Trade Marks, Labels, { ore “ her large WINDSOR HO TEL t PHILADELPHIA ra LL J.D. SEIBERT LINE OF RUBBER TIRES Baby Carriages ar Automobiles John | Scbring, ar: F.Gray & Son GRANT Jno. JOCOMROT | HOOVER : Insurance: ALSO Life and Accident AD Oe an lag ew Are pre Insurance, and Surety Bonds. Criders’ Stone Bld., Bellefonte HARRY FENLON { Frederick K Foster I Wm Burnside LIFE ACCIDENT TORNADO INSURANCE, BONDS of every description . CoNnor 14 FIRE AND Texrie COURT, BELILEFOXITTE, aa wy ra FLLEFONTROENTHRAL RAILROAD Te take tH tf Dee. 7, 198 vouaie | rt |- i] ai hE ahh Li dt hd! EEANGSEEsEUREx CESESS5EE5, a » x - * - x Trains from Montandon, Lewhburg. Wi. Ham t, Look Haven and Tyrone, connset with train No. 5 for State Oolisge. Trains from State Colleges connect with Penna. Rall road at Bellefoule for points sast and west, F. MH. Tuonas, Sapt. . K. RHOADS At mus yard, opposite the P, R. R. Passenger station, sells only the best qualities ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS COALS sme A180 Al KiDAS Of conan
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers