THE CENTRE DEMOC RAT, BELLEFONTE, PA Thursday, September 9th, 1909, CR —— — FRANCIS SPEER'S Breezy “That” Column That some married men in Belle- | fonte are not home long enough to get | home sick. That Bellefonte has too many people who go to church merely from the force of habit, That Bellefonte has breezy girls, The place along the sea shore. That the only way some girls in | Bellefonte can make a name for them- gelves is by marrying. That many of the girls in Belle- fonte with white faces have necks as | yellow as a goose egK. | That the young man in Bellefonte | who is dead in love will get awake again—when he gets married. That we have women in Bellefonte who trust thelr husbands which Is] more than any other person will do. That Edward Gross, of Bellefonte, | says that Bellefonte butchers arn't all | dudes if they do wear killing costumes. That some Bellefonte have a career like a ball. They are helped out of one only to get into | another That the average golation some for pretty them Is | men in golf hole from grapher's came: more real ut raed en he ret they made It almont as Cod North Pole That it low In the who » the other night gentleman that practice the white caps may sting him | up at the first telephone pole. The citizens of this section of the town are getting tired of witnessing this scene, If the gir! doesn’t behave her- self she will sent to the of correction k in sald there Is a colors Ward, of Bellef ne after a white This is to If he keeps 1 fel Nort} inte, girl warn the up this A Been me very be house That there Is a woman in Bellefonte who If she had died In infancy It! would have heen better for her rela- | tives here, and she would not have so | much to answer for In the hereafter. She has always been a nuisance and | will be that until! she dies truth, the whole truth and nothing but | the truth, no matter how harsh and | unkind it sounds. It is often better to eall a spade a spade than to go around the bush about it That when a young lady in fonte Is #0 handsome as to be the centre of attraction of more than one young man they should choose a wid- er platform than an ordinary porch way to settle any differences they may have, eapecially If the striking atti. tude Is resorted to as their expres- sion of thelr intense love they have for the girl. The young fellows had bet ter draw lots than fight a duel, for it may ultimately be found that the prize Is not worth fighting for, Belles | sawmill | Scotia where they purchased a lumber | | stud cu Po— OVER THE COUNTY, visiting her son Dr G. P, Ard, at State Hospital at Spring City, Pa. Huvett & McNitt outfit from Snydertown to { tract and will operate same. The venerable Henry T. Buffalo Run, was a recent visitor at home of his sister, in Juniata, and while | there attended a reunion of the former ents of Juniata Academy, of which | he was one, A balloon, said to have contained a man and woman, and which left Cleve. land Thursday, passed over Philipsburg | in a northeasterly direction about eleven | o'clock Friday morning. It was visible the naked eye, and excited riosity. to Thursday of last and wife, of Tusseyville, went io Phila delphia, where they will stay for the future. Mr. Bitner had no special work in view, but if nothing better turns up go back to the trolley line and je the duties of a conductor at the home § Byy roi the fonte, {rove te » ~ stati Bruce | . of Cherokee, lowa, can in company with Miss Margar of B urg, has in the west for some months, They Chicago over the lakes by steamer, and visited Buffalo andNiagara Falls They were met in Bellefonte by | Q A. Kennedy and daughter, Mary and expect to visit friends at Centre Hall for an indefinite time, €e east etta Goheen, wa lst who been came from The Centre Hall school board and Miss Katherine Forcey, of Beech Creek, who had been elected to teach the Intermedi. ate grade of the Centre Hall schools, had some misunderstanding as to salary, which led the young lady to apply for a | school at Barpesboro, Cambria county, and was elected to teach there at a sala ry of $55 per month, or $15 more than that offered by the local She accepted the latter position For some time Samuel Shoop, of Centre Hall, had been making periodical board This Is the | trips to Altoona, and everyone thought he was simply looking after the pleas ures of some orphan girl or widow, but recenjly he announced that he had | parchased an establishment on Chestnut | Avenue in that city and had already assumed charge of the same, There are three rooms—one devoted to tobac is an ice cream parlor, Left 38 Children, Thirty-eight children mourn the death of their father {oR W. Miller, aged 76 years who died Thursday at the coun: ty home at Indiana, where be has been an inmate for several years, Mr Miller was married four times, One wife sur vives him, are shipping a | Norris, of | the | great | week John Bitner | 0, one to confectioneries, and the other | AS TOLD BY HIMSELF | DISGOVERER'S STORY | . { DR. COOK SENDS ACCOUNT OF HIS JOURNEY TO POLE | Eskimos His | Intense, But Traveling Comparatively | Great Unknown Land. Coadjutors—Cold Was Game Abundant and Easy—A | A. in Dr. Fredrick Cook, of who succeeded reaching the North | Pole gave out the following brief | description of the expedition. Brooklyn, | and frost,” says Dr. Cook, “we have at | | last succeeded In reaching the North | Pole, esting A new highway, with an inter- strip of animated nature, has been explored and big game | located, which will delight sportsmen and extend the Eskimo horizon, “Land has been discovered on which rest the earth's Northernmost rocks, A triangle of 30,000 square miles has been cut out of the terrestial unknown “The expedition was the of a summer cruise In the Arctic seas on the r Bradley, which arrived at the limits of navi in Smith und outcome schoone gation Yelghta i ific slog mrature sank to minus 83 Cen. f Ans ware ral GOERS Were II n but A ©“ SOON Ww ’ a» pee We monotor y ing ¥ the aon and now nd the range of rints of bears nor detected nteadl) found oursely oy all Hf we lthe forint t the 1} of Even icroscaop ic deep penls were were n¢ maddening Ir of Ir in the under of the wenme almost longer us n uence shifting desert wt | nen. durable dally routine Conditions Improve. surface of the back offered loss and less trouble and the weather Im proved, but still remained the life-sapping wind which drove despair to its lowest recess. The extreme cold compelled physical action. Thus, day | after day, our weary legs spread over big distances. Incidents and positions wera recorded, but adventure was promptly forgotten the next day's efforts Previous Attempts te Reach Pole. Bore of the most recent, worthy, attempts to reach Pole are enumerated below Walter Wellman, an American, left the Island of Spitzshergan for the pole in a balloon August 15, 1900. His alr- ship became disabled after he had | traveled 30 miles and he was forced to return In 19086, Peary, UU. “The there in or note the North Commander Robert KE BN. reached 87 degrees, § minutes, equivalent to about 203 miles from the pole, Commander Peary is now in the polar regions on another expedition. A relief ship was sont out a month ago to endeavor to in September of - 'BEYOND RANGE OF ALL LIFE Mrs. M. P. Ard, of Novdwacd. 8 | Young | hardships before “After a prolonged fight with famine | haunts | gen and | creatures of the | The | { make a reduction of 25 per cent. In | plek him up. He started from gya- | { ney, N. B., July On September 3, 17, 1008, | 1906, Captain Roald Jorwegian, completed | through the North- WESL passage He left Christiania on | the Gjoa, June 17, 1903, arrived | at Herschele Island in the Arctic ocean 1606 In 1004, Baron Toll, a Russian, led a polar exploration party by but all the members from the cold. In 19003, Erickson, a Dane, headed an expedition and got as far Island, where they were destitute condition, In year Brooklyn the ship America ther north than Abruzzi His Amundsen, a the first voyage and Way Siberia, peri as Saunders rescued In a | the same Anthony Filala, galled proceeded of a on fur- | the great rescued made his explorer, and the Duke party endured they were The Duke of the Abruzzi expedition In 1900, i In 1866 Dr. Nansen reached 86 de- | grees, 14 minutes on the vessel Fram, | which left Ingor Strait August 4, 1897 | Professor Andree made his fatal trip in 18087. He left Tromsoe, Nor- in his balloon, the Eagle, bound | f the pole. Bince his departure nothing authentic been heard of Professor Andree, | 1882, the Greely was lost has in the ! Henrletta In ex tion pid near In 1802, reached It the Greely expedition 83 degrees, 24 minutes 6 B John 1 1845, | Franklin REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. r tat ’ BLOOD i on ir : 5.3 8:6 Si We live by our blood, an it. We thrive or starve, blood is rich or poor. There nothing else to live on or by. When strength ic | spirits high we arc be freshed—bone, mu brain, in body and m» continual flow of 1 This is health. When weak, in low s; cheer, no spring, when not rest and sleep is n we arc rved: « poor; th is litt! in it. Back of the blood to keep the blood rich. it fails, take SCOTT'S EMULSION It sets the whole body going again—man, woman and child. a> i ct Send this advertisement, together with name of paper in which it appears, your address and four cents to cover postage, and we will send you a “Complete Handy Atlas of the World" SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pear! St., New York EYES EXAMINED FREE! All Work Guaranteed. > ® PROF. ANGEL, | EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Two Davs-Tar Brocksmnory Hovse Wednes. Morning until Thursday | Even’g, Sept. 22 and 23. 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