- s CEE EE ns rT Benoa dpa. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. The Wind and The Thermometer. One of Many. | McCalmont & Co. Hurry the baby as fast as you can. Ten persons out of twelve, perhaps, if ‘He has gone in for politics, I hear.” Hurry him, worry him, make him a man. required to answer off-hand, would say | “Well, he certainly is interested in the Me ALMONT & co ia ° Off with his baby clothes, get him in pants. that the wind affects the thermometer, situation in Washington.”’ . Bellefonte, Pa., March 8, 1901 Feed him on brain-food and make him ad- | making the mercury register a lower tem- “How doyou mean? Whatsituation ?"’ a —— — vance. perature. Asa matter of facet, itis bard ‘Any old situation they care to give him “HAVE THE— FARM NOTES. : Hustle him, soon as he’s able to walk. for any of us to realize that it does not, for there.” { Into a grammar school ; eram him with talk | we have the evidence of our own feelings O..iciiiriieterassterirensie es sarassusinsssesessissnsesserss 0 — Dairying isa paying business even in Fill his poor head full of figures and facts, that it is colder in the wind than it is out BucnaNAN Mick., May 22nd. Se LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE Cyr times of depression. Keep on a-jamming them till it cracks. ol it, Genesee Pure Food, Co., Le: Roy, N. Y. : marie: in : : Yet, when we come to look at the mat- here i teach tl Once boys grew up at a rational rate ; : fonts dpoi Gentlemen :—My mother has been Af great | = = © (uesssisessbasssesiieseseiesieniaeiisinnesneninasetaninnann —There is no way to teach.a cow gentle- Now we develop a man while yon wait. ter frem a scientific standpoint, we See | .,fee drinker and has found it very injurious. oO oO ness but by gentle actions. 3 : that the wind not only does not, but can- | Having used several pack ages of your GRAIN-O, Rush him through college, compel him to not. affect the thermometer provided of | the drink that takes the place of coffee, she finds IN —Study the demand of the market and grab 2 } : it much better for herself and for us children to Ty course, it be the ordinary dry-bulb instro- | grin; She has given up coffee drinking entire: ment, and that eur increased sensation of | ly. We use a package of Grain-O every week. I cold, when exposed to the wind, is not |am ten years old. Yours respectfully, really an increase of cold brought to the | 45-20 Fannie WILLIAME, Let him forget he was ever a boy, body by the wind, but a loss of heat. ; Make gold his god and ils jingle his joy, If two thermometers be hung close to- tempered help to look after his cows. Keep him a-hustling and clear out of breath, | gether, one exposed to the i and the —Did any man ever succeed in kicking Until he wins—nervous prostration and death. | other sheltered from it, they will show the a cow into submission ?—Farmer’s Review. | Nixon Waterman in Christian Endeavor World. same temperature, for wind is merely air the tastes of the customers. Of every known subject a dip and a dab, CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. — Remember that the cow’s digestive system is not proof against bad feed. Get him in business and after the cash, All by the time he can grow a moustache ; Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a doliar to the farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he can get repairs when needed, for he knows that the best machinery will wear out in time. Goods well bought is money saved. Money saved is money earned. Buy from the largest house, biggest stock lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a bond; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat —No dairyman can. afford to hire ill- Business Notice. — Grease is fatal to lice. An animal in motion, and is no colder than still air, Castoria hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what yon buy. All who kuow that is in good condition is seldom attack- | If you see little girls or little boys with other things being equal. The reason why the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them ed by such vermin. It is only when the their hair cut straight off all round you it feels colder 18 that Ig Causes : Wore Japa SEE WHAT WE FURNISH : animals are half starved and receive no | need not regard them with pity or sym- evaporation Tom es mn an b tye nase ; care that they become thus afflicted. The | pathy, for they are in the height of fash- | Some 0 the heat out of the y..' 4D CASTORIA LIME—For Plastering or for Land. cows need the currycomb as well as the horse, and with their skins kept clean, plenty of food given., and dry bedding, they will keep clear of lice. — Cut clover has become a regular ration for hens in winter. The best arrangement for steaming this is a candy pail with a close-fitting cover. This can be bad at a grocery store for 10 or 15 cents. Screw a picture knob to the top and it is ready for business. Such a tight wooden pail will hold the heat all night, and the clover should be cooked in the morning. When using cut clover be sure that the pieces are ion. The recent revival of the fashion occurred in London and Paris almost at the same time. It is told how mothers—long before the days of fashionable hairdressers for chil- dren—used to turn a bowl over the heads of their young hopefuls and trim all the hair off evenly that stuck below the rim, or that a rope was tied around the head and the hair clipped off below this. These two methods of getting some sort of evenness in the ‘home clip’”’ will give one a very good idea of the new juvenile hair cut, which is called ‘‘the Puritan.” the stronger the wind the more heat it takes away. It is precisely like blowing the breath on a hot liquid to cool it, the heat is constantly coming to the surface of the liquid, and as it comes there the breath blows it away. Thus more and more heat is taken, until the lignid becomes cool. Wind cools one’s body in the same way, and not by imparting cold. There is no evaporation from a dry-bulb thermometer, and therefore it registers the same in a wind that it does sheltered from the wind. Her Lucky Dream. FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of J In Use For Over 30 Years. CHAS. H. FLETCHER. Money to Loan. M ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. FARM IMPLEMENTS of Every Description. FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. PHOSPHATE—The Very Best. SEEDS—Of all Kinds. WAGONS, Buggies and Sleighs. In fact anything the Farmer or Builder Needs. The man who pays for what he gets wants the best his money will buy, There is no place on earth where one can do better than at McCALMONT & CO’S. ; ~The history of the origin of the round- | profitable Vision About a. Treasure Came to an | 5-141VT. Att'y at Law. | 46-1 BELLEFONTE, PA very short and that the whole mas is thor- | 123" sole dates back to during the great opable Sing ie EL E, oughly soft, else the clover may cause the | Rebellion. The Puritans, or friends of the hens to become crop-bound. Parliament, who denounced the ‘‘unlove-| A singular certification of a dream was Castoria. Real Estate. — Asparagus roots may be planted in liness of love-locks,” were understood to | the experience of Mrs. Rachel Moores, of spring or fall, but unless the ground is | distinguish themselves by having their Texarkana, Ark. In 1866, the year fol- : well drained, spring is preferable. Good | hair cropped off around their necks, while lowing the close of the sectional war. she Jonx C. Muss : EpyuND BLANCHARD. strong one-year-old roots are best. The | the cavaliers wore long, flowing ringlets. | was living with her husband, Major David Te Sec'y. soil should de made as rich as possible. If | In the days of pretty, witty Nell Gwyn | Moores, on a plantation about 30 miles do 2 Are very stony the stones should be removed, | the roundhead style was in vogue, and |south of Texarkana. They had a large %Coooce RAL ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE as they are much in the way of cutting the | doubtless the plays lately put on our |sum of money which the husband took out | ¢ 6S88SS8 TTTTTTT 00000 RRRRR III COMPANY stalks. In garden culture it is hest to dig | boards have had something fo do with call- | one night and buried. ; c § 8 T 0 0 R II trenches about three or four feet apart and | ing attention to the fashion. ‘Ten years later he died quite suddenly, 5 8 as x 9 2 iy alia 12 inches deep: then put in a layer of without ever revealing to thie wife the hid- | S T o 6 RE : ads manure to fill about half of the trench 'af- | Pare glycerine is a good remedy for cold ing place of the money, and although | ¢ = © Ss 8 7 0 o "RR CENTRE COUNTY ter it has heen packed down. On this put | sores. So is peroxide of hydrogen. Apply diligent and repeated search was made, no oceece A SS88888 T 00000 RR 1111 two or three inches of soil on which place the roots, spreading them out in all direc- tions, and cover with fine soil packing down all around. The plants should not stand closer than two feet in the rows, and as they start to grow more soil should be drawn into the trenches until the surface is level again. All that is necessary dur- ing the season is to. keep the ground loose and free from weeds. To raise a first-class crop the bed has to be manured every year by scattering manure over the plants in the fall. If white or blanched asparagus is desired, the roots have to be set deeper and the rows have to be hilled up similar to what is done with celery. — More even distribution of the forest growth over farming sections is needed, for as it now is the forest growth in mountains and other sections is unfit for agricultural purposes. The sections best adapted to farming are largely void of trees, In time of drought the sections which suffer most severely are those where timber is most searce. Southern Indiana, which has been cleared too much, years ago when there was still much simber standing, produced far better crops than now. Rains were with a bit of absorbent cotton the moment that the disfiuring little blister begins to form. To whiten and plumpen the neck, bathe with hot castile suds and rab in co- coa butter. Every morning sponge with a lotion of two ounces of alcohol, two ounces of 1osewater, fifteen drops of tincture of benzoin, It is quite evident that the circular skirt is in for some time at least. The new touch isin the tucks at the foot. In the first part of the winter these were put in a circular ruffle; this treat- ment is still adhered to, but the very new skirts have the tucks at the foot of the flare without a ruffle. Some of these skirts have tucks that are two inches wide, three in number, and they go around the skirt without any break in width or line. This is the easiest meth- od to follow. The more complicated treatment is where the tucks are ten and twelve in number, graduated in width, and graduating in line up at back. The expert seamstresses’ say that this is not very hard to do. There are home diess- trace of the buried treasure was ever found. Mrs. Moores, who is now more than 70 years old, has remained a widow, living most of the time aione since her husband’s death. A few weeks ago she had a vivid dream one night, in which she saw = the old plantation with certain landmarks the spot where, as her dream indicated, the money was buried. In a few nights the dream was repeated, and thereafter at intervals for more than a dozen times, each dream being an identical repetition of the first. Mrs. Moores is not at all superstitious, yet this oft-repeated dream led her to make a secret investigation recently, when, strange as it may seem, the long-lost treasure was found, and that, too, at a place in the woods marked exactly as that so often in her dream. The money was all in 20-dollar gold pieces, and the total ‘amounts to $2,800. Starving Man Beaten to, Death, George Gala, a laborer: from Providence, R. I, lost his life in a cheap Bowery restaurant in New York, Saturday morn- ing, because he could not pay six cents for The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his CHAS. H. FLETCHER. personal supervision since its infancy. ‘Allow no one to de- ceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘“Just-as- good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the heaith of Infants and Children—Experience against Experi- WHAT 1S CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. [It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, ‘Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth: ing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimi- lates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Real Estate and Conveyancing. Valuable Town and Country property for sale or rent. Properties cared for and rents collected Loans Negotiated. Titles Examined. Certified Abstracts of Title furnished upon application. If you have a Farm or Town property or sale or rent place it in our hands. : If you wish to buy or rent a Farm or ouse consult us, If you wish to borrow money call on us. 1s your title clear? It is to your inter- es to know. It is our's to assure you. Office Room 3, Bush Arcade, BELLEFONTE, PA. 45-47-1y Telephone connections Green's Pharmacy. then much better distributed through the | jpakers who deny this assertion. It all | food he had just eaten. Gala went into Mother's Friend. Wipe. lotus colle Ses float lb fle Mon 2 growing season and showers were frequent | qepends on the pertness, therefore, and re- | the place about}? o’clock and ordered coffee ¥ and mild, but now. rain too often falls in 4 heavy, sudden down, pours, often doing damage to growing crops. These severe rains are usually followed by hard winds that soon dry the moisture from the land in the growing season, and in winter the wind having uninterrupted sweep drifts the snow in great banks along fences and leaves wheat fields bare. ! ! We cannot undo the harm done by too excessive clearing, but one can improve matters by planting trees in shelter belts on the sonth and west sides of our farms. For a perpetual wind-break, the Norway spruce undoubtedly leads. A good shelter belt should contain four rows of spruce, ten feet between rows and trees five feet apart in the rows, and the trees placed so as to break the space between rows. Spruce, seedlings can be got from nurseries when about ten inches high for about three dol- lars per hundred. Se very careful in mov- solves itself into a question of how muc you know. } Bi There is no difference of opinion, hows ever, between the amateur and the expert that such a skirt is very graceful. The skirt is’ long with the two inches on the ground in front and six in back that isnow allowed on any fabrio soft enough | to stand tucks. Heavy cloth gowns would not look well made this way if they are to be worn for the morning hours. There probably has never’ been a skirt more graceful than: the present ove. The softness of trimming at foot and the fact that the gown falls full and soft about the ground without stiffening, and all lines are long and well shaped are qualities that make the skirt of to-day a beautiful thing, —if rightly made. In the prettiest of these tucked models the tucks graduate from three inches'to a and batter cakes. He ate ravenously and then told the cashier that he had no mon- ey. Itis the custom on the Bowery to beat a man severely ‘when he fails to pay for his food, because, according to the restaurant people, there are so many hungry wretches in that thoroughfare all the time that the eating houses would have to go out of business unless the ‘‘welehers’’ are severely punished. In accordance with this rule, as soon as Gala said he could not pay he was set upon by several waiters and roughly handled. One man hit him in the face, knocking him against a counter, whieh his head struck with great force. He fell unconscious and was dragged to the sidewalk, where a policeman found him. An ambulance was sent for, but when it arrived Gala was dead. : x Four waiters employed in the 'restau- rant. James Francis, William Dennis, Israel THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of CHAS. HL. FLETCHER. THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT In Use For Over 30 Years. ee Swallowed $1,000 Diamond. ‘Harness Oil. fr ge gp CJTHER HEADS MAY ACHE, fF i cenit cmt oc cslicall in but yours needn’t after the hint we give you here. Green's Headache Cure always cures headache. Tt cures any kind of headache. More than that, it relieves sleep- . . lessness, melancholy or dejection. Can’t harm you, no matter how long” you continue them, if you follow strictly the directions. ; EE isscmsntf al] gg : | half inch'in width: and up to'a deep point | Spellman and William . Allen, were; ar- | Negro Robber Shot and Doctors May Try to Recoo- ing evergreens not to let the roots get dry, | at each side then slightly down ED Sie od. ¥ 9 0 Robber Shel S800 or ay Try as this means certain death to the tree. well down. in front. ‘Bis San Hae — RET we Ld —The making of hotbeds is a matter so he tasks over eo Sate oi Sis} mnewikéiereioiw suing. % Aa commonly understood: as perhaps scarcely | % ntion out of 1ashion pads alt La Tent fo tgan fn i / Ny ud ’ to rae is Trioat this time; yet she Sik wow so lsey i lery Gerigress at Last Aupiopridies, u Suficighit mous, a following from ick’s, dealing as it oes hd Bees. , 1 ahsol la te! and or a Re resentative Stanle Davenport of the ; OYE Ah LA pnaduihl principally with the proper heating of the | hip yoke ora trimming thas optines one, Wilkesbatre district, focls. one thas eh, le JL URERA beds, may not come amiss to those inter- | BIVes these tucks suc free play. They are | pefore terminating his Congressional career 3 Anders re hig EE oot kot ‘or giv HOH THY ested in starting cabbage, celery, lettuce, thread tucks, ran’ an inch apart, aud are | pe has been able to secure an increase in| po Oe ehied oii a Jin ee HARNESS. etc., in March or early spring :- stitched down on both edges.” They ate | the appropriation for a public building at | «= SEC mT Lo ina street station | OT The ordinary hotbed consists of a pile of graduated from eight inches in, front to| Wilkesbarre which will permit the exeen- | out BL Co ens El L. fermenting stable manure, covered with a four in back. When they are not exactly | gion of the project. ~~ hi 9 Ta a a 0 Siro pe i frame and glazed sashes,in which is a layer | O0 the bigs there is a shallow pointed hip | = The Omnibus Public Building bill, which | oo" FELT Be 50 41 ge rson’ x isnmshet of fertile soil. . The bed should be located yoke that olds the circular skirt, pat’ in-| passed the House and Senate to-day, con- i iamond ton r SISOS 8 iv front Shere ib will be easy of access, but it | t0:tucks, on its edge. ~ [liu | tains an item raising the limit of cost for a male an. eflort tn geisg a fing aid should be on dry ground and not where!