Thursday, August 7th, 1913, THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PENNA, I Pleasant Evening Reveries ers as They Join the Home The Home Circle Dedicated to Tired Moth. Circle at Evening Tide. Forget It. itself is sufficient bur- den without adding to it irritation over trifles and outbursts of temper because of petty annoyances. Forget it. By continual thinking weather, by keeping an thermometer and adding fort by a fussy disposition, to his head more blood than gan should contain, and the result is misery and possible prostration or sunstroke. The wise way is to buckle down to business and Forget it. Smile as smile. The ism, which The heat of of the hot eye on to discom- one draws that or- sweat. Sweat and habit of optim- forgetfulness of small things, will make you fairly comfortable even under uncomfort- able conditions. Therefore— Forget it. And also— If something has gone wrong with the farm, or the store, or the shop, or office, if the plow Is perverse or the store stuffy, or the shop slow or the office oppressive, why Forget it. Life is too short trivial. He who heats his blood and actually poisons it, as labratory tests have shown, Whatever your trouble—it is not big as vou think it is—unless make it so by dwelling on it brooding over it. Forget it. Do not brood harbor resentment. not get warm mentally. afford that. Forget it, Blessed is the man enough to forget, says exchange, noted for its truthf ings. you mental includes to treasure up the does that only as you and Do not Do Forget Dismiss it You who 80 Wanted, a Girl. wanted daughter—in a thousand homes, bright, smiling helpful, always willing to hold baby, set the table or sweep the and to do these things so happily cheerfully and well, that baby crow, the table will balanced picture, and critical grandmother will under the chairs r in the corns the com. Wanted—a ter, the touch fingers brings a happy light to weafy eves of a father and mot the sound of whose cherry volce merry laughter is a joy household. Where in which such a wanted? Does an) girl? There is a situati sh is advertised have world a girl—a Yes, floor, and will a well areful, y dust r« the daug! CAressing Ving the her and le daug one¢ can the the | cannot | the | applicants? Ah, occupied. She own which she cannot is enshrined in the hearts mother; her brothers { have bound her about with the cords of love, and will not let her go. LJ LJ LJ error that is that in order to know the world he must disregard home restrictions and sow wild oats. The son who sows wild oats will reap a harvest of shame. Nay, more, he will compel his father and mother to reap with him and be sharers of his shame. Every son needs to be care- ful of his character, with which he enters business or be- ging a professional career. If it is shoddy or spotted the best men will shun him as a deadly poison. . LJ . saying that when poverty the door, love flies out is like most generalities truth Extreme poverty the graces of life and but there is as much homes of poverty as the homes of wealth. It is in homes of those in moderate circum- stances, removed allke from the ery of poverty and the ennui temptations of ri that the genuine enduring affection Is found | We are prone to think that wealth is a desirable quality in a suitor, and but it should not be placed same catagory with manline and character A modes! with youth and energy | Increase Vears pass is wealth enough JAfe has a deeper interest for the you who feels that | isband’'s su 8 depends as mud Bon | {are there not | she is already home of her give up; she of father and more { The deadliest can mise | lead young men The old comes to the window, only a half Is inimical to to life itself, love in the the hes, {| 80 It is, | in the intelligence | | « ompetence | | | | her economy and wise manage ment as upon his energy capach « arnest labor an » BAY | home | the children |: n that old age may | and comfort enjoying warned is | tO : adorned ’ iit may the ve ¢ 1 and der ther Fact, FUN AND FANCY. Bright, Sparkling Paragraphs—Selected and Original. CAL CADY AND HIS FIDLLE. took his his fiddle don't vou bow, 80, 1 know When Calvin Cady And drew it ‘Cross Though I'm a deacon, I couldn't help Around the room with fi Alack! my Christianit) bleas prance endish glee to me, an angel dance, ms s make VA the Ke llemande Trip lightly ‘We wor But when Dream.” Gee Now ream Like wild- We'd cl With he imps Religion Until Of Now gathered Where saints told The angels pla While suns f Through h Somehow, 1 The Lord will le His fiddle and 1} that ‘ers ven = really £8 oH Old Mother Nettico Wanted a petticoat And went down town And when she got there The girl said with a stare; “They're not wearing them things any more.” to a store, A Mean Man—Ar of having an umbrella in his possession for more ty vears That's long ought to return It, that has been than twen- enough; Pious Nell—~"1 saw a girl in church with a hole In her stocking. I sup- pose she was too good to mend it on Sunday.” Bell-"She would rather re- member the Sabbath day and keep it holy." Where It Belongs~"Tommy,” sald Mr. Figg, sternly, “1 hung a motto In your room to the effect that little boys should be seen and not heard” “Yessir.” “I find that it has disap- peared?” “Yessir” "What did yom do with it? “IT took It down to the deef an’ dum orphan asylum.” Getting Back at Pa~The father, anxious to Impress his offspring with a spirit of thankfulness, repeated at the supper table, as he had often done before “Remember, children, when 1 was a boy I often went to bed hun- gry and seldom had a square meal” “Well, that shows how much better off vou are since you have known us,” replied little Willie, who was tired of hearing about It Circus Rivalry ~P. T. Barnum dled but a few months after his competi- tor In the "show" business, Adam Forepaugh. When Barnum arrived at the pearly gates he was welcomed by Forepaugh, who exclaimed exult- ingly, “Well, Pete, I got ahead of you this time!” P. T. did not answer, but smiled as he pointed to a large bill posted near the malin entrance. I{ read: “Walt for Barnum--coming soon.” roroying an Alibi~~"Uncle Remus!” ol. White, who had been aroused in the middie of the night by a suspicious noise In his poultry. house. “Is that you In there, you Ohlo man boasts | he | black thief?” “No, plied a frightened vole. “Dis {mah ousin, dat looks so much ime, and steals evervthin® he his wi Ah's dis sleepin’ de He Had sah,” humbly Fike can jay ked han's on xt hom minute, jest." sah to Buy.~A\ Unsu ccessful. — n or he Helping It Along. marked ) } hed very like | doubted inte ful new pl InN proa have ested in this for municipal tifying of citiegp—but-—would manifest your interest In a substan tial way?" "As how?" inquired leading citizen ‘Would you, for stance contribute directly to jeause?™ “I don't quite get you” the response “Well, a afar buy me a, ticket out of sponded the frowsy an the the one Don't Cher Know!—On eXCur- sion given by Secretary Langley to the members of the National Academ? of Science down the Potomac the oth- jer day, Bernard Green, of the library of Congress, is credited with having {told the best story of the afternoon Mr. Green happened to be crossing ithe ocean a few years ago on the | Fourth of July, which nations! holl- day was celebrated with great enthuse. lasm by the Americans on board. "1 say,’ asked one of the Englishmen “what is this the anniversary of any- way? Isn't it to celebrate the battle of Bull Run or something of the kind," “No,” promptly spoke up an American, “not Bull Run-John Bull Run.” Hw She Worked 1t-~This story a married couple comes from ford, England. The husband, the attention other women obtained from passersby, remarked to his bet. ter half “Folk nivver look at thee. I wish I'd married some one better looking.” The dame tartly replied; “It's they fault, Dusta think a man’ stare at me when you're walking wi’ me? Thee step behind and that'll see whether folk don't look at me” He hung back about a dozen yards, and for the length of a street was sur prised to mee every man his wife passed stare hard at her, and turn round and look after her when she had passed. “Forgive me, Bal, lass!” he contritely exclaimed. “I was wrong, an’ I tak’ It back, I'll dh say owt about they face again” The wily feminine had accomplished the trick by putting out her tongue and grimacing at every man she met! the of Brad- noting | Georges | 30th has a | { balance | | Millhelm It is the capital | | terly of | | Evans, | past in | mis- | and | most | | INK { found that wo to | tio her | in- | OVER THE COUNTY, will | Hall, | The and fair Centre exhibition Grange Park, Grange open on September 13th The SBauers and State College John Garner, The Zettle annual Pennington bakery has been pure hased the lveryman families will hold their | reunion in Harter's grove in| Valley, on Saturday, August at by her hi the Mrg, John Stuart home at State with her son Atlantic of summer Elmer Bollinger and sister, H. SBllence, of Bridgewater, S. ter an extended visit of months with relatives and friends and vicinity, have left home in the far west. Daniel C. Rossman, of Hall, has greatly improved dwelling. A bay window bullt and the whole structure re painted, making the home one of the prettiest in that community Rev, E. E. Henney was substituted the presiding elder to hold quar- conference meetings on the Valley and Penns Valley He is located at Benton, Pa accompanied on his trip by closed and will City for has College in the Mrs. O DD. af- several in for their near Centre his farm and porch were by Sugar charges and was his wife, Dr. 1. was the Kryder Evans, guest of his near Spring week, urday Dr Reformed number of of brother, J. Mills, returning to his Evans has charge at Years, Pottstown, Wills during the home Sat- been serving a Pottstown for a elected col- fiscal been board for the prev meet- treasurer of the taxes, but it was contrary t has school taxes Winegardner he Millhelm the school The board at a had elected the ward to collect the 11d be to leot Year lous to law The United Evangelical congrega- rin [Stops Falling Hair Hall's Hair Renewer certainly stops falling hair. No doubt about it what- Lemont, Linden Hall, T il yr Hill and Centre wild a pleni Grange Park August These Ongreg mpose the Centre | charge {of the i mination and den F. H pastor 188CY } day tions co nan Foss is re any interestis ning reminiscences A grandmother, y« and having many of her fami pass vith » of r hildren mg and reasons vigor for bes childrs 0. H rer ant REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. d Atherton et Charles Amelia EER twp H. Laird atman Thomas Foster ot stard, tract of | lege: $800 Thomas ‘ustard $400 | Charles Johns o 8 | Willams, tract of land | twp $1600 Ellen Fisher tract of land T. G. Wolf tract of land Frank to in William D State Eimer E College Foster « al to of land In tract twp human N in Liberty et al to in College et al to W in Haines twp Rex ot ux to 8 tracts of land In lege; $1 W. H twp. Houtz $400 Boob ter Lycoming Sheriff Too Alert. Sheriff Tomlinson frustrxted an tempt of two prisoners to escape {the Lycoming county jall a few days ago. The young men were Homer | Kramer, of Jersey | Lapp, of Williamsport, one with stealing an automobile other with stealing a bi had taken a plece of fron their beds and used it as a hook to loosen the stones In the four-foot wall They were hoping If they could suc ceed In getting into the all that they would find something could use to help them over the wide wall charged and the yele. They they out Suffered Eozema 50 YatreNow Well Beems a long time to endure the nwful burning, itching, smarting, skin-disense known as “tetter”-an- other name for Bozeman. Seems good to realize, also, that DR. HOBSON'S ECZEMA OINTMENT has proven a perfect cure, Mra, D. L. Kenney writes: "I can not sufficiently express my thanks to you for your Dr. Hobson's Bogema Ointment. It has cured my tetter, which haa Houbled me for over fifty years” A ruggists, or b Ta boc. PLEIFER CHEMICAL CO Louis, Mo, C. M. Parish, rs phe Rory PaAdv, Aug. Hall will|"™ Thurs- | ga - | at- | ! from | Shore, and Samuel | pipe from | | yard | ever, You will surely be satisfied. CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA'S BARD | The peaks Altoona very Tribune of recent highly of John H ham a native of Centre ounty Is likely to become famous i a The Tribune says “Many forests sylvania beautiful Campbell, that time until date Chat poet Years ago and rivers were verse of the mountains, of Central Penn- commemorated In by the late James H Williamsport From the days of the fortunate Jacob Huff, of ‘Faraway Moses," little was written In rhyme about the fairest land on earth, Ja- Huff's little volume of poems was published in 1885, The contents were written while he was living in Colo- rado, and he was dreadfully home- sick: hence the title he gave it ‘Songs from the Desert Just when he seem ed to be halled as the foremost poet of Pennsylvania he died suddenly from an attack of heart failure. the past has arisen sylvania He is John Clinton county He old-fashioned Scotch-Irish stock, his ancestors having founded the village of ‘hatham's Run, midway between Lock Haven and Jersey Shore and fought in all our wars was edu cated at the old academy in Rebers- burg ‘entre county, and began his ol teacher at Balley- vania Furnace Al poetry, It al un- twelve months a in Central Penn- H. Chatham, of comes of good “During new bard He wrote it; all through an a« siness man he kept stroying went nce life as a versifying he t he revisited the his youth at Balleyville, nEs ant pat urg, and of Indian 1} ndian steps of the 0. attle of which from nto Stone Val- He gtarted grim tragedy many st epic of this ago, and of be the long aut he has commemorat iments who ANZAS | Mrs. Bargain Hunter — “Oh, Anty! 1 see by Bargain Brothers’ ad. in the pa- pers they're selling dollar wash bo ilers for fifty cents. Anty Drudge — “No wonder! Since I've told the women of this town how much bet- ter they can wash clothes with Fels - Naptha in cool or lukewarm water, without boiling, they have no use for washboilers. The stores can't sell 'em to women who have learned the new way of washing, and that's why they're so cheap.” Fels-Naptha Soap takes the dirt out of clothes in cool or lukewarm water, with no boiling, scald - ing or hard rub- bing, instead of leaving it to el- bow work on the washboard. Clothes wash- ed the Fels- Naptha way last longer and are whiter, sweeter and cleaner. onl red end ran rare FELS 4 00. PRILADELFNIA 50 CORTRIGHT SHINGLES ii rr sil | DUY.§ PP J What could be better for town or country buildings than a roofing that won't burn—won't leak—that is lightning proof—lagts as long as the building itself, and never needs repairs ? Cortright Metal Shingles meet every one of these requirements, Beware of imitations—None gentine without the words * Cortright Reg. U. S. Pat. Of.” stamped on each shingle. For Sale by CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING COMP North 23rd Street, NY PHILA :LPHIA, PA. Young Ladies Spill Out of Canoe. Miss her adelphia, drowning and Fagle Lock dies by Miss forme ing UE on untary ing eno Jo} the tempted igh she e in Frankenfield Edna Tidlow, of Flemington, cousin, Miss Jobson, of Phil- had a narrow escape from in the canal at the Bald dam Friday afternoon, says the Haven Express. These two la- were being taken a canoe ride less Kelse) of Sunbury of Flemington, and on reach- canal the two ladies both at- to get out too hurriedly and consequence received an invol- bath that was not to their lik- Miss Kelsey Was fortunate to keep the boat righted and scaped a ducking the rly lock tender, who number of Years again all would promptly icceeded deep ing but propriation lege professors eight paved the persons he has been had a like opportunity, as probability the YOUng have drowned had appeared on the in getting both with considerably thankful has i ii during ti ma Employ el not Dot Bpot from water their dre wet and extremely Bince receiving increased from 1 a “ reased has inf( and new bullding FITZ-EZY THE LADIES SHOES THAT CURES CORNS SOLD ONLY AT Yeager’s Shoe Store, HIGH STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. NSN STAPLE GROCERIES FRUITS—Oranges desir. able quality are not plentiful but we have some fine Floridas at 30c, 40, and 50c a dozen. Good Lemons are scarce and high; we sell fancy fruit 30c and 40c a dozen, of NUTS-—Finest California wal- nuts 25¢ per Ib. Fresh roasted peanuts, 5c per quart MINCE MEAT der for Easter. orders. is just Send in in or- your FANCY EVAPORATED CORN, price reduced from 25¢ to 22¢, or 3 Ib for 62¢c. An ex- cellent grade of Dried Corn at 15¢ per pound, SUGAR—When we made a price of 5¢ per pound on Frank. lin Fine Granulated Sugar, it was not as a cut, but as our regular price, and you do not have to buy it on any special days—any day you want it and in any quantity desired. We do not except any early ad- vances on Sugar, EVAPORATED FRUITS-—AIl new crop goods. Unpeeled peaches at 12¢, 15¢, and 18¢c, Apricots at 16c, 20c, and 25c. Fancy peeled peaches at 35c. Prunes at 12¢, 15, and 18¢c—all fine quailty. COFFEE-—~We are ablbe now to give you a word of encour agement on the Coffee proposi- tion. There has been a turn in the market and pricces are a lit. tle lower, and we take the first opportunity to give you the full benefit of the decline, not in the way of changing prices on our standard grades, but in giv ing better values all along the line. Our standard grades at 25¢c. 28B¢c, 30¢, 35¢ and 45¢, are far superior to any goods usu- ally offered at same prices Our late purchase will be on sale by the 24th or 26th of March. SECHLER & CO. BUSH HOUSE BLOCK, BELLEFONTE, PA. EVERY MAN Every man should have intimate relations with a good bank, ready at all times to help its patrons. Let us open an account with you, We may prove to be a friend when YOU 0200 ORB 4 «v's vv 's os aed FIRST NATIONAL BANK, there, ladies
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