o- A Colum Dedicate to Tired Mothers @s They | Join the Depart- | Home Circle at Evening Tide. Home Circle Crude Thoughts As They all rom the ditorial Pen:— Pleasant Evening Reveries. ment. “Would you have the world better and brighter? Then light up the way as you go; Make some little part of it lighter With beams from your life’s steady glow; Make the world you live in your debtor As through it you journey along. Be good, and the earth will grow better; Do right, and the right will grow strong; Trim the lamp that is left to your keeping, And fan it with breezes of hope, Lest shadows your life o'er creeping Leave others in darkness to grope.” If your Christianity will not last all the week and stand the wear and tear of every-day things of life, you may be sure you do not possess the real ar- ticle. Do not complain of your wife's ex- travagance with a cigar in your mouth, or a “pint” in your pocket. Beware of the woman who talks about heaven in church, and about her neighbors on the street. How many wasted flowers are strewn over graves, of which one small bud, pink with life and hope and fragrant with sympathy, would have eased the pain of some aching heart for even a little while, had they been bestowed while the loved one was with us. There are too many homes in which is heard only fault-finding instead of loving commendations; bickerings and strife instead of sweet, happy compan- jonship. Remember like produces like. May this be borne in mind by all, and a constant effort made for purer, brighter homes. The gleeful life of happy children is the best home music, and the graceful figures of childhood are the best statu- ary. We are all kings and queens in the cradle. A home without a child! It is like a lantern without a candle; a garden and no flowers; a vine and no grapes; a brook and no water gurgling and gushing in its channel. Whoevertakes a little child into his love, may have a very roomy heart, but that child will fill it out. The children keep us from growing old and cold; | they cling to our garments with their little hands and impede our progress to petrifaction ; they win us back with their pleading eyes, from. cruel care; they never encumber us at all. A poor old couple with no one to love them, is a most pitiful picture; but a hovel, with a small face to fill a broken pane here and there, is robbed of its. deso- lateness. Appreciation is one of the Christ-like emotions of the human heart. To look at motives and not at results is the right thing todo. How often the best laid plans lead to failure. A word of appreciation has led many a discour- aged heart to pick up the broken threads and weave them into a new web after they had lain among tattered ideals for months or years. Kind words bring memories that echo through the years long after the lips that utter them have crumbled to dust. Children carry the memory of words of appreciation with them through child- hood, and often recall them in old age when enveloped in the shadows of death. They are like the perfume of the violet that lifts its head above the spring snows and whispers to them of the sunshine. Money cannot buy, in- tellect cannot create so rare a gem true kindness. It is a heart product and needs the tenderest culture. Tt killed by indifference and enfeebled by neglect. is Don’t be a grumbler. Some people contrive to get hold of the prickly side of everything; to run up against the sharp corners, and find out all the dis- agreeable things. Half the strength spent in growling would often set things right. You may as well make up your mind, to begin with, that no one ever found the world as he would like it ; but you are to take your share of the troubles, and bear them bravely. You will be very sure to have troubles laid upon you that belong to other peo- ple, unless you are a shirk yourself, but don’t grumble. If the work needs doing, and you can do it, never mind about the other person who ought to have done it and didn’t. Those work- ers who fill up the gaps, and smooth away the rough spots, and finish up the job others leave undone, they are the true peacemakers, and worth a whole lot of growlers. TO LAND OWNERS:—We have printed and keep in stock a supply of trespass notices containing extracts from the far-reaching trespass law pass- ed at the 1905 session of the Pennsyl- vania Legislature. The notices are printed on good cardboard with blank line for signature, and they will last for years in all kinds of weather. Every and owner should buy some of them, ag t w requires land owners to post their lands if they want the protection of the latest and best trespass law ever nd all orders to THE Beis, t as REQUEST FOR PRAYERS What He Asked for and How It Was Interpreted. In a village on the eastern coast of Massachusetts it is the custom far the minister to read in church the requests of members for the prayers of the congregation on special occy- sions. One Sunday, relates Everybody's Magazine; the regular minister had exchanged pulpits with a clergyman from the interior of the state to whom the custom was new. The deacon at the usual time in the service, ascended the pulpit stair and gave the minister the written requests for prayers, explaining what was to be done with them. A few minutes later the congre- gation was puzzled and not a little amused to hear in a slow and delib- erate voice: “A man going to see his wife de- sires the prayers of the congregation for his safe return.’ The notice was: “A man going to sea, his wife de- sires the prayers of the congregation for his safe return.” Counting Boys Into a Circus. One of the leading lawyers of New Hampshire, who was noted for his jokes, was at a circus one day, and as he stood by the entrance to the tent a crowd of small boys came along and peeped in, with longing eyes. Suddenly a smile came over the face of the lawyer, and he step- ped up to the man at the entrance and said: ‘Let those boys In, and count them as they pass.” Of course the ticket taker did as he was told, and, when the last boy was in, turned to the lawyer and said, “Thirty-six, sir.” The Iawyer looked up with a smile, and said, “Thanks. I guessed there were about that many,” then turned and walked away.—DBoston Herald. 7 Most Unkindest Cut. With reference to the humors of country ‘‘soclety’” reporting, Mr. Melville Stone, of the Associated Press, tells of the account of a wed- ding published in a Kansas paper. The story, which described the marriage in the usual flowery adjec- tives, concluded with this surprising announcement: “The bridegroom's present to the bride was a handsome diamond brooch, together with many other beautiful things in cut glass.”’—Har- per’'s Weekly. Hard on Hin Mr. Nokker—A thing you don’t have to work hard to get isn’t worth aaving. Mrs. Nokker—I guess that’s right. remember what a cinch it was to nnd you.—Cleveland Leader. r Given Away. Mrs. Thomas Johnson Smith was Leing married for the fourth time in the little country church in which she had been raised. The ceremony was proceeding with all solemnity until the minister reached the point “Who gives this woman to this man to be his wife,” and a voice away back in the congregation replied, “I generally do.” Mixed Up the Order. She—I married my first husband for money; my second for position; my third for love.” He—Were you happy? She—No, none of us were, for my first husband married me for love; my second for money, and my third for money and position. Affection never met!—London Truth. The Ruling Passion. Dan Cupid cries: ‘Oh, maids, behold! I offer here Some hearts of gold!” The maidens scan With critic rown His stock, and ask Are they marked down?” —Baltimore American. He Didn't Need Any. “Jane,” said the fair hostess when the salad had been brought on, “won’t you please .pass the oil to Uncle Reuben?” ‘“‘Never mind,” replied Uncle Reu- ben. ‘‘I guess I don’t need none. I greased my boots just before start- in’ from home.””—Chicago Record- Herald. The Proportions. “Sir!” cried the grocer, indig- nantly, ‘‘do you mean to accuse me of putting chicory into my coffee?” “Not at all,” replied the custo- mer, coolly. ‘I always give you credit for putting some coffee into the chickory.””—Philadelphia Led- ger. The First Requisite. “It strikes me Mrs. Bragley weuld@ make a fine mother-in-law.” ‘“Mother-in-law! Why?” “She's got such a charming daughter.””—Boston Transcript. Fattered Hervelf She Was Keeping the Angel Quiet. A certain prominent minister was compelled not long ago to give strict orders that while he was engaged in the preparation of his sermon his young son must be kept reasonably quiet. In spite of this, however, there arose one morning a most astonishing noise of banging and hammering, which seemed to indl- cate that the steam heating pipes were being knocked to pieces. Hur- rying out of his study, the minister encountered his wife. “My dear, what in the world is’ Bobby doing?’ he asked. ‘Why, he is only beating on the radiator down stairs,” was the-some- what surprised reply. ‘““Well, he must stop it,”’ the min- ister said, decidedly. ‘1 don’t think he will harm ft, dear,” his wife answered, soothing- ly; ‘and it is the only thing that will keep him quiet.””—Harper'’s Weekly. Sacrificed to Affection. He was a silver gilded youth: on his face a look of anxiety as he en- tered a hairdresser’s shop in Bond Street. Earnestly he put the ques- tion to an assistant: “You supply Miss Birdie Beano of the Galety Theater with powder, don’t you?” “Yes, sir.” “Is it quite harmless?’ ‘“Absolutely. It is invaluable for the complexion.” : He was not yet satisfied. “But is it digestible?’ he inquired. ‘“‘Digestible, sir?” “Yes. Is it digestible if taken in- ternally ?” The assistant opened wide eyes of astonishment. “But Miss Birdie Beano doesn’t take it internally!’ he exclaimed. ‘““No, no, no, of course she doesn’t. But I have to .—Pall Mall Gazette. To Pedestrians. Be good, Be kind, Beware Behind. —Birmingham Herald. Norman Cuteness. On the road from Caen to Vire in Normandy you may see the follow- ing sign in a fleld by the road: ‘‘Horses taken in to grass. Rea- sonable rates. Horses with short tails, 50 centimes a day. Horses with long tails, 1 franc a day.” If you can induce the owner of the field to explain he will wink and tell you that a horse with a short tail is so worried by flies that he hasn’t time to graze, while a horse with a long tail can flick off the flies and eat grass at the same time. A Western Ceremony. In some parts of the West, no time is lost in the process of ‘“‘giving in marriage.”” A couple once came before the justice of the peace. “Link,” he said. They joined hands. “Have him?”’ “Yep.” “Have her?” “Yes.” “Married! pincott’s. (to the woman.) (to the man.) Two dollars.” —Lip- Strict Mamma. Little Girl—My mamma is awful strict. Is yours? Little Boy—Orful. Little Girl—But she lets you go anywhere you want to, and— Little Boy—Oh, she ain’t strict with me. Little Girl—Then who is she strict with? Little Bits. Boy-—Pa. — London Tit- Slight Mistake. It was after dinner. “Pardon me, old chap, but I don’t believe I ever met your wife.” “That’s my wife at the piano.” “Playing accompaniment for that fat girl with the cracked voice?” “My dear sir, my wife sings.”’— Milwaukee Sentinel. Sufficient Reasons. Louise—Aren’t you going to Os- tend this year? Kathie—No; there. > Louise—Then why to the Riviera? Kathie—Because everybody knows me there.—Die Muskete. nobody knows me don’t you go Out of Danger. “Does your chauffeur have any perquisites?’ asked Mrs. Van Upp- son. ‘““He had one the first week he was with us,” replied Mrs. Neurich, “but I {induced him to sign the pledge, and he hasn't had any since.””—Chicago Dally News. Beyond the Limit. r Miss Jenks—Have you really bre- | ken off your engagement to him? ~_ Miss Flyte—Oh, yes. I just had “to. He was getting too sentimental —began to talk to me about matri- mony.—Philadelphia Ledger. Curious Figures. Casey—O! see thot thim Arny- chists do be creatin’ a great disturb- ance abroad. Dugan—Faith they are! There isn’t a crowned head but do be shalk+ in’ in his shoes.—Boston Transcript. The Whole Trouble. Some folks can’t mind their bush ness; The reason is, you'll find, They either have no business Or else they have no mind. —The Catholic Standard and Times This the hat she is wont to wear. There the comb, and above the pins. And this the ensemble that brings the grin. She’s So Rude. “You naughty child, what did you beat the cat like that for?” “Mummy, I saw her spit on her hand and then rub it on her face!” —Ally Sloper’s Half-Holiday. Visitor—You say that the climate here is the healthiest in the country? Native—Yes; our climate certain- ly has wonderful live-giving proper- ties. Here’s an excellent proof; Last summer there were fifteen attempts at suicide. Well, fourteen of them were fruitless.—Bon Vivant. Premonition. Mr. Goslin—What did your father say when you told him you were en- gaged to me? Miss Giltbonds—He said he had kick coming. : 80 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS CorYRIGHTS &C. yone sending a sketch and description may ly ascertain our Spinion free whether an ntal unica. nial. HA Boo oP ts. ng Patents taken pre special notice, without charge, mm Tgouiys arge, int weekly. T.argest oly Scientific Amer A handsomely illustrated Wi four months, $1. Sold by all newsdeal 361Broadwa NN &Co,2s or Ye ‘Washington. D. KILL vw COUCH AN CURE THE LUNGS «wr. King’s ov Discovery Price 50c & $1.00 Free Trial. ( GNSUMPTION FOR § oucks and {OLDS ’ Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- wil. All LES, or MONEY BACK. AAR VEY ORPHANS COURT SALR —of Valuable— Real Estate! By virtue of an order of sale issued out of the Orphans’ Court of Somerset county, Pennsylvania, and to me directed, I will of- fer at public outery, upon the premises, on Saturday, February 23rd,} 1907, At 2 O’cloek P. M., the following property of Silas Tressler, lately deceased: An interest of, in and to a certain mes- suage or tract of land warranted in the name of Enos Moor, adjoining lands war- ranted in the name of Joseph Grundy, Jacob Miller, James Carey, Ebenezer Griffith and others, situate in the township of Elk Lick, in the county of Somerset, Pennsylvania, containing three hundred and sixty-three and one-half (363%) acres and allowances, being 45 acres, more or less. TERMS, Cash. H. SS. TRESSLER, 2-14 Administrator. HEALTH HINTS. Never get politics. For palpitation of reading market quotations. A good way to treat appendicitis is to cut out the surgeon. Avoid late hours; when the clock strikes 23 it is time to go to bed. Maladies which fail to respond to any other treatment should be treated with silent contempt. Remember that care killed a cat, and the man who has no more than nine lives cannot afford to worry. Nose-bleeding is frequently caused by not minding your own business. It may be cured by calling the police and diving into the nearest drug store. If you are fat, get thin, and then get fat. Nature never meant you to be satisfied with your weight. A bee sting is good for rheumatism, | and therefore those who have hives are seldomftroubled with sciatica at the same time. Drink plenty of water, some of the clearer varieties being preferable ; that which you get from the milkman may contain bacili. For hay fever, take large doses of poison in rapid succession until reliev- ed. Those who have tried this sterling remedy have never complained of the same trouble afterward. Physicians say that laughter is an aid | to digestion. Therefore. be mirthful; the more the merrier. Young men, grin, and young girls should giggle as much as possible. You may be thought silly on the part of your friends, but they will not be surprised. Walk four miles every morning as soon as you are dressed—not before. Returning, breakfast on a small dish of evaporated bran and skimmed milk and a cup of imitation coffee with con- densed cream. This is a wonderful flesh-reducer, and is said to stimulate the digestive apparatus immeasurably. 1t will make you a child again, and so whet the appetite that within thirty seconds you will feel as if you had never eaten a thing in your life. —Ex. ——— mr A Marriage Proposal. One of our giddy youngsters of the male persuasion recently decided to make a formal offer of his heart and hand to one of our representative ladies to whom he has been paying attention for a time. He cautiously prefaced his declarations with n few questions: “Did she love him well enough to live in a cottage with him? Was she a good cook? Did she it a wife's Would she consult his tastes and wish- es concerning her associates and pur- suits of life. Could she make her own clothes?” The young lady said that be- fore she answered his questions she would tell him of some negatives she possessed. She never drank, smoked or chewed ; never staid out all night playing billiards; 3 street corners and ogled giddy girls: never “stood in” with the boys for cigars and wine suppers. “Now,” said she, rising indignantly, “I am assured you do all these things, and yet you expect all the virtues in me, while you do not possess any yourself. I can never be our wife,” and she bowed him out and eft him on the door steps to silently meditate over his venture, a wiser man. —Ex. | | cold feet, especially in | the heart, quit | LAXATIVE think | uty to make home happy? never lounged on | AY RATA pot), MEAN Tho difference between Hitting and Missing ia thedif- tierence het “een an Accurate and an Inaccurate Arm. Choose wiscly—~discriminate! Get a STEVENS! Forty Jens of experienceis behind our sried snd op ine o x £8, PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS Rifle Telescopes, Etc. Hola tn stamps for 140 ce catilog describing ntire STEVENS line, Ask yourvealerandinsice! © un the STV rt tain, we Loexpress prep receint of caraior vr i :selv i ustrated, anid i tains points on Shoot. fae, Avnmanitton, 11s, Leautifu! three-color Aluminum Hanger will be for- warded for 10 ents in stumps. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO.. ] P.O. Box 4006 CHicoPEE FALLS, MASS, U.S.A. Heart Strength Heart Strength, or Heart Weakness, means Nerve Strength, or Nerve Weakness—nothing more. Pi tively, not one weak heart in a hundred is, in self, actually diseased. It is almost always hidden tiny little nerve that really is all at fatlf. This obscure nerve—the Cardiac, or Heart Nerve =—simply needs, and must have, more power, more stability, more controlling, more governin strength. Without that the Heart must phn to fail, and the stomach and kidneys also have these same controlling nerves. This clearly explains why, as a medicine, Dr. 8hoop's Restorative has in the past done so mueh for weak and ailing Hearts. Dr. Shoop first sought the cause of all this painful, palpitating, suffocat- ing heart distress. Dr. Shoop's Restorative—this popular prescription—is alone directed to thea weak and wasting nerve centers. It bullde: it strengthens; it offers real, genuine heart help. If you would have strong Hearts, strong gestion, strengthen these nerves — re-esta = them as needed, with Dr. Shoop’s Restorative ELK LICK PHARMACY. THE CI IG ARETE (oY Tup Er ter iid SLU QE hU nd yo The Red * / | Clover Blos= NE / scriand the ot Horey Bee = 15 ul every bottle. 2 ma Coes Cures all Coughs assists in expe Colds from the System by gently moving the bowels. A certain curefgii, 7 for croup and = whooping-cough. 2 ” (Trade Mark Registered.) \ ai KENNEDY'S scam HONE TAR PREPARED AT Tiik Losi batliny of E. O. DeWITT & CLU., L= Lau, U. 8. A. SOLD BY E. H, MILLER. JA A Vv St ke, gi gt. gv. 4 Pou are respectfully inbited fo call at our office for the purpose of examining samples and taking prices of €n- graved Calling Cards, Inbitations, etc. Our twork the best, styles the latest and prices the [otoest. Eran, Sr £18, Forks, Kaives Stamped == ® AT ROGERS BROS. slwevs combine the desirable features iu rilver plate—artistic designs with 4 ighest grade of plate, Remember the ui Sold by the gen me Ro io by &