RT NST Brmoreaif Waldo Bellefonte, Pa., August 10, 1906. —— FARM NOTES. —Good cream should contain 22 per cent. of butter far. If it falls below that standard much of the hutter fat has not been removed from the milk. —Pansy seed may be sown in the fall. Make the beds fine and press the surface smooth; sow the seed in rows, sprinkle a little fine dust over the seed, and lightly press the surface again. —Good cider vinegar 1+ always salable, aod it pays to convert the surplus apples into cider for the purpose of waking vine gar. The artificial vinegar cannos be used for choice pickles and other purposes for which good cider vinegar only is adapted, aod does not, therefore, largely compete with it. —Roses may be propagated by hardwood cuttings taken in the fall and planted in the spring. Some varieties are propagated by layering on the ground to take root. e slips used for cuttings are inserted in sand, kept slightly moist, vot very wet, when they will take root. As varieties of roses differ so much in their pecaliarities eue system of propagation may not answer for all. —There are many methods of preparing “fy killers.” One plan is to dissolve a pound of napbtbalive in agallon of kero gene (which will 1equire two or three days), then add a gallon of crude petrole um and a gill of coal tar; shake well and apply with a brush. No fly killer will last more than a day, as it is soon dissipated. Toget the best results it should he ap- plied at least once a day. —Pampkins are good feed for lambs in the fall, especially when they are troubled with paper skin, caused by worms in the intestines. They will eat them if they are sliced or cnt and sprinkled with salt, but it is better to provide flat-bottomed troughs, with compartments, each beibg large enough to receive the ball of a pumpkin cnt in such fashion as to have the pieces lie flat, with the inside uppermost. —Until the ears of sors shail be well filled out the crop may depend on one or $wo showers. If the rain shall fall a day or two before the silk appears tbe corn grains will be tall. The crop is ove that is subject to mauy circumstacoes, but rin at the proper time will make a great dif- ference. This shows the importance of keeping the surface of the soil loose, thus affording a mulch and preventing loss of moisture. —When the wool buyer comes around the farmer will wish that be bad looked after his sheep a little more closely, cut down the burr and brier bushes aod re moved the tags in the spring. A dirty fleece weighs more, but the buyer is keen- sighted, and is sore to deduct from the price paid for good clean wool more than enough to make up for the extra weight. Bear this lesson in mind and keep the wool clean next year. —One of the difficulties with young trees when the ground alternately freezes and thaws is that of being injured by high winds. When a thaw occurs the ground is loosened around the trunk, and becomes 80 softened that the trees are thrown over. This muss be guarded against by carefully trampling the soil around the trunks when- ever the ground thaws. This is the season when all young trees should be staked, as the wotk can be done now to the best ad- vantage. —It is only possible to keep the black- birds from pulling coro in one way. They are too brave to fear the lines spread around the field which frighten away the crows, but they will keep far enough out of the way of the man who bas a gun and tries to shoot them. The best plan is to let them have corn, not that which they would pull, but corn soaked and spread aronnd the edges of the field, especially on the side next the woods, whence most of them come. [It takes only a little corn to stop them, and feeding thew a few days insures their services all summer io de. stroying insects after the corn has grown too large to be puiled. —The farmer who sells his cream and feeds his refue Al) ; find it a Eat profitable m ng, as he retains the truly valoable matter and sells the most valaeless even though the price of the valdeless article is greater, for no range of prices can obliterate the fact that one article ie of more nutritive value than another. In other words, if the far- mer can by selling bis cream at ah obtain a large profit from that wh really of but little value as a complete food, retaining the valuable substances at Hi EEL il bi inl $58 seid i i i is: A) i g fi Ly : i gk i g § : 22 i 3 i i g al AHH = ii il i it fie . 3 =2 Hi g i f 2343 EE gE 2 i § E F g z i | h : i ge rEa?1 : i BFE Hi if 15 iit : 5 i piEid i} Lt it | 3 i rn” ABOUT WOMEN. FROZEN DESSERTS. Frozes Rice Puppise WITH CLARET SAUCE.—Two cups of rich cream added to va cup of warm hotied tive, with a dash salt and a cup of sugar, a teaspoon- ful of lemon juice - a Pat these together and beat until near the boil- ing-point, and shen remove from the fire aod beat until cold. Fold in the etiff whites of four eggs, and freeze. In serv- ing, pass a sauce made by boiling together a cup of sugar and a cup of water for five minates, and when cool adding half a cup of claret. This sauce is served either hot or cold. FUR AND Rep Raspeepry IceE.—Boil together two cups of water acd one cup of sugar for three minates, and pour this over a table. spoonfal of granulated gelatine mixed with a quarter of a cup of cold water. Stir well, and when dissolved add a quart of rasp- berries, mashed fine, and the juice of two lemons. Stiain, and when cold fold in the whites of four eggs, beaten stiff, and freeze very solid ; alter the dasher is removed the ice should stand two bours. A pretty dessert is made with ball this rule, served in tall glasses, a spoonful of whipped cream ou each portion, and afew raspberries on top. Or, there may be a layer of the herries put in the glass first, then the ice, then the cream and fruit. PLAIN VANILLA PARFAIT. —Parfaits are more easily made than ice creams or ices, since they do not require to be pat into the freezer. This rule is for the simplest of all. * Beat the whites of three eggs to a stiff froth. Pat half a cup of sugar aod if a cup of water on the fire, and stir until the sagar dissolves ; then let it cook until it threads. Pour very slowly over the egg whites, beating all the time. Flavor with vanilla, and when cold fold iva pint of cream whipped stiff. Put into a mould, and bury for four or five hours. BoMBE GLACE.—With a small freezer of raspberry iceand a mould of the vanilla parfait ove dan easily make this delicions dish : Take a large melon mould aud line it with the raspberry ice, and fill the centre with the parfait. Cover the mould, bind the edges with a strip of cotton cloth dip- ped in melted paraffive, and bury io ice and salt for two bons. A plain orange ice may be used instead of the raspberry it that is preferred. One of the newer forms of combining fruit and ice cream is called. PecHE MELBA.—Make a rich, plain, white ice cream and freeze very solid. Sbred finely a small pineapple and sweet- en if necessary. Dip oat rounded epoon- fuls of the cream, and arrange on & round platter ; press a little pineapple on the sides of each to conceal the cream. Peel some large, flue peaches, and cut into balves ; put one less on each ball of cream, fill the inside with pineapple, and put a moraschino cherry on each. Some of the syrup may be mixed with the piaeap- ple used in the peach if desired. DELICIOUS CAKES. There are two new aud very delicions cakes which bave not yet found their way into common use. One is called : ORANGE CREAM CAKE.—Bake a sponge- cake in two deep layers, and when cool turn these upside down on a table. With a sharp knife cut out all the crumb from each except for two inches around the edge ; the crust must not be cat into, bow- ever. Whip a large cup of cream until stiff and firm, flavor with orange, and fill the two spaces in the layers, letting the cream rise in the middle of each. Make a soft boiled icing, and spread on the part of the cake that is outside the cream avd put the two layers together, the two crusts outside and the cream within, held together by the icing. Cover the sidesand top of the cake with the icing, and when cold pout sestions of chrystallized orange around the ge. The second new cake is called : MocHA TART.—Geta bottle of Mocha extract. Beat together the yolks of five cg with a cup of granulated sugar, aod one and a ball tablespoonfuls of the extract. Sift five times a cup of flour wix- ed with a level teaspoonful of baking Jou. der, and mix with the yolks. Beat light the whites of the eggs, and fold in. Bake in two or three deep layers, aud between them pot this filling : Halt a pint of shick cream sweetened to taste, and flavored with oneand a balf tablespoonstul of Mo- cha extract. Over the sides and top is this such §iling « One cup of confectioners’ sugar; m! wi th one and a half tablespoonfuls of Mocha extract and enough water to make it spread smoothly. Maoy housekeepers like small cakes to gerve with ices. A good plan is to make an ordinary sponge cake, bake it in a thin layer in a biscuit tin, cut it while warm and ice these with either with confectioners’sugar. Th decorated as to suggest that they are all quite different cakes. Faxoy Icises.—For boiled frosting, cook a cap of sugar with a third of a cup of water, withous stirring, until it forms a thread. Beat one Jags egg-white stiff, ra bra, fa dio a4 a r a Tops ata pb vor, and beat until cool encugh to spread ; nse immediately. Confectioners’ sugar makes icing more simply, and is better for summer use ; to make it, mix one cap of with the an- beaten white of an egg, either one ta- 1 of water or as much fruit juice —orange, lemon, 2urrant, ete. To ancy aniee, some rounds may be dipped is icing, and when cooled on buttered paper half a candied cherry may be put on half a blanched almond on others, pistachio nut on still others. Al- y be chopped and sprinkled on sor a little melted chocolate may in with the egg. Favey colored may be made by using fruit paste in Juantitier. with » violet slog ga et may be put on top rose color a bit of candied rose , a pistachio nut. Of course must correspond with the deco- - Bh it a je e by merely using a little Das or erty wnt the the other is maple syrup rred into a beaten egg white. ih £% i fist Bigg Tue President of the Prison Association of New York is represented as baving said recently: *‘Pablic protection is the only motive which justifies the State in depriving the crimival of bis liberty, revenge being wholly alien to its mojesty. Bat imptis- onmeut that is not reformatory insures protection onl, while it lasts. Therefore only by life imprisoument or by reforma- tion seems to be more humane, besides be- ing less expensive,” The president seems to bave used ‘‘re- venge'’ ambiguously; there is a decided distinction between retribution and revenge, and it is impossible to prove that retribution is wholly alien to the majesty of the law. it **under the old criminal system of one thousand or half a thousand years ago the State figured as an avenging fury, pursning the criminal,” that is Do reason that it should not now (while endeavoring to reform) as one of the means of reformation teach the criminal that *‘the way of the transgressor is bard.” be president in arguing for the indeter- minate sentence says: ‘‘Experience has shown thata large majority of criminals cau be reclaimed. In the Elmira Reform- atory eighty per cent are reformed.” We fully concur with his view upon this point. Many are the young men we bave known (some of whom we became acquainted with when visiting a reformatory, and others whom we knew before and after their go- ing there) bave been reformed. He thinks that the ‘‘residuam of irreclaimable erimi- nals should never be set free,” and fioally says, ‘‘Those guilty of capital crimes ooght never, I think, to be set free. The pos- sibility of the repetition of the crime out- weighs the possibility of reformation.” We agree with him in that view, but think that be does not state the case as strongly as he might. The possibility of the repetition of the crime plus the evil effect upon the community of releasing them are the reasons why they should not be set free. A judge in Kansas City, io a recent marder trial where the case was clear, thus addressed the young Negro who bad killed another Negro much older and of the worst possible reputation: Well, you're gutity of murder, all right but you're a poor, ignorant black mau, and I don’t want to hang you. Youn have po friends. You bave noone to Pleas that you were insane when you killed this man. If I sentence you to bang, you will hang just as sure as there's a God in heav- en. There will not bea whole lot of wom- en circulating petitions to save your neck. There will not be a lot of fool men writing letters to the governor to save you. No one will send you flowers. You'll just be forgotten until the day set for your hang- ing and then they'll hang you. I'll sen- Sente you to thirty years in the peniten- tiary. There are various causes for a fearful increase of crime at the present time; but the principal cause is the sickly sentimen- tality of society; the sympathy with the murderer and the forgetting of his victim; the opportunity afforded for delays and the license granted by judges to counsel. If there were more judges who would con- trol the court in harmony with the prinei- ples of judicial administration, and if per- were convicted and speedily executed, the number would not have increased as it has; it would bave decreased. The arguments against capital punish- ment, iu cases where no ble mistake can exist and where the crime was premed- itated, will not bear inspection, whether they studied from the point of view of human nature, history, or the Bible. The thing will be worse before it is better, and it will never be better until a respect for iaw returns to the counntry, judges and juries do their duty, and courts of pardon will not undo the result except when the case is absolutely clear. New Jersey, that so long was a model for justice, has fallen upoo evil days. A grandparent far gone in dotag membering the last grandchild, sitting in judgment upon that child, could hardly igo farther astray than the Court of Par- ons has done in several recent cases.— Christian Advocate. ——Unecle Josh—It seems the minister bas bad rbeumatism for the last three ears, but he basn’t said anything about Aunt Hetty—Whby, I could have told him just what to do for it. Uncle Josh—DMehbe that’s one of the reasons why be kept it quiet. —Dr. Inswim—Congratulate me. My practice is increasing so that I really can’t attend to it. Miss Quizzer—How nice! I congratulate both yourself and patients. ——4What would you think of a girl thas treated you as she’s treated me?" “I wouldn’t think of her—I'd quit it.” ——8he—Don’t you want to read Na- ture’s book? He—What does it expose? —_—— WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Cas Food, regu Stomach ving healthy and natu . The Br tente Princea—The Mother's Friend. THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BGUGHT Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. In Use For Over 30 Years. The Centaur Company, New York City. 51-2lm What Shall be Dette Win the crim | =» we can protect ourselves from the crimival’ sous guilty of murder in the first degree | ¢, but re- | pa tice, a period of maximum im y and one of decline. The days hi, age Twain followed its fortunes were the flocd tide. In the middle third of the last cen- tury the traffic along the river increased rapidly. No competitor 10 the river asa path of transportation between the interior and the gulf seaboard existed. With the advent of a railroad, however, linking to- gether the North and the South the decline of the Missiseippi as a vational highway began. At the time, too, says Robert Mar- shall Brown, in ‘The Balletin of the American Geographical Society,” there seems to have arisen a belief among mer- chants and traders in grain that its transit through zones of warmer weather was in- juriouns to that staple, and even in the years that followed, when the shippers had freed themselves from the superstition of the warmer zone’s effect on grain, much of the grain was shipped overland from St. Louis to New York and there loaded for fereign trade. At the present time there are, in the opinion of Mr. Brown, three factors workiog toward she rehabilitation of the Mississippi river as an artery of commerce—the maintenance of alow water channel, the survey of a 14-foot waterway and the Panama Canal. The first of these factors is already beginning to have a ben- eficial effect, aud in 1899, three years after the project of sustainivg dredges which shonld operate in the low water season from July to January was adopted, a navi- gable channel of 8} faet was maintained from Cairo to New Orleans. An examina- tion and investigation in regard to the 14- foot waterway is now in progress and plans are being prepared and the cost estimated for such a coarse. The ning of an isthmian canal is still so far in the future that its effect upon the development of the Mississippi can only be conjectured. Mz. Brown considers, however, that while the river will always be a factor in the com- merce of the Mississippi valley, it is im- probable that it will ever again attain its old importance. glucose, MARBOT WALNUTS. Mixed Nuts. ——Cogger—Up to the bubs, eb, and bave telephoned for a team of mules to pull you om? Motorman—Yes. II ever get this auto out I shall offer it to the harbor dredgers. Couger—What in the world nse would it be to them? Motormau—Why, it is such a perfect mud machine! — good satisfaction. ——Pat—They do say thot young Dr. Callaban is no good. Mike—Perhaps. But Oi’ll say this fer | MINCE MEAT. Jeune Dr. Callaban—be basn’t killed any- y yit but phat wud hov died annyway some toime. ——Knicker—Is Jones a philaothropist? Booker—Yes; he bas endowed a library of books at the racetrack. ——Take Vin-te-na and the good effect will be immediate. You will get strong, you will feel bright, fresh and active, you will feel new, rich blood coursing through your veins. Vin-te-na will act like magie, will put new life in you. If not benef money refunded. All druggists. able in price. FOREIGN FRUITS. Medical. the fruit we have. ad THE KIDNEYS WEILL. Hearn ts Worti Savino, axp Sous Prove Kxow How to Save I. Many Bellefonte people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the Kidneys, when they know these organs need help, 8 kidoeys are responsible for a vast amount of suffering and iil- health, but there is no need to suffer nor to re. main in danger when ail diseases and aches and ins due to weak kidneys can be quickly and | 49.1 jenisanently cured by the use of Doan's Kidney SECHLER | W. R. Camp, of the firm of Kirk—Camp Furni- ture Co., Logan Ave. and 14th St, Tyzone Pa. 3 “Experience has taught me that u's duey Pills is an excellent remedy and one that In the fall of 1897 I r publication in our local Dapers a state nt covering my experience with this remedy, d recommending it to others, and now, in the th of June, 1003, I jus: as euthusisatically mend it as I did at that time, Doan's Kid- Pills completely relieved me of an aching in e small of my back and lameness through the ns due to kidney trouble. We always keep fais pre. inthe house, for use in case of eed, and it has never feiled to give splendid sat- faction. I heartily endorse it. | For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster- Titbarn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for e United States. ‘Remember the pame—Doan's—and take no sher. 51-28-¢.0.u. Im jirieny tulfills its promises, ve {o from the men who ground it—packing it sent it. ACETYLENE The Best and Cheapest Light. COLT ACETYLENE GENERATORS.......... GIVE THE LEAST TROUBLE, THE PUREST GAS, AND ARE SAFE, 4 44-26-1y OFT DRINKS Generators, Supplies and Fixtures... . JOHN P. LYON, BUSH ARCADE, Agent for Central Pennsylvania § |. for she J. B. Colt Co. SARSAPARILLA, SODAS, POPS, ETC., C. M 80-321y High Street, i ¢ § ‘ 1 d i 4 4 { { 4 {ur { ages ourselves—we did so, Sbuying 1 Singapore Pepper, and for five years { sold it to you at 15¢ the Ib.~then itad- vanced to 20c. For the past three : years we have sold it for 22c., itis sifted free from stems and dirt before i grinding and is just what we repre. | PURE SINGAPORE PEPPER The price is still 22¢. the pound—we invite your trade for pure spices, GREEN'S PHARMACY 00., Bush House Block, BELLEFONTE, PA. NW WY WT Te TY EE ——————————— Temperance Drinks. pe Bh TLL in bottle such as SELTZER SYPHONS, tor pie-nies, Hunilies snd the public. . all of which are manu of the purest syrups and blie is cordially in The these drinks. Deliveries will nude free of charge within the limits of the Mississippi's Glory Past. Groceries. Tue history of the Misses Rippl as po high- way of commerce e the bistory of many enterprises and nations, shows a period of SECHLER & CO. PURE FOOD STORE. We carry a full line of al! goods in the line of Foods and Fine Gr-ueries. MANHATTAN DRIPS A fine Table Syrup in one goart, two quart and four quars tin pails, at 12c., 250., and 45¢. per pail; try it. Maple Syrup in glass bottles and tin NEW ORLEANS MOLASSES The finest vew crop New Orleans—a rich golden yellow and an elegant bak- er. That is the report our customers bring to us. Fine Sogar Syrups—no These Nuts are clean and sound, heavy in the meats and in every way very satisfactory. We bave some very good California Walnuts but not equal to the Marhots., Fine Almonds and EVAPORATED FRUITS. Peaches 10¢., 12¢., 150. and 182, per pound. Apricots 150., 18¢. and 20c. per pound. Prunes 5¢., 8c., 10c. and 12¢. per pound. Raisins 10c. and 120. per pound, either seeded or unseeded. Currants 10c. and 120. per pound. Citron, Orange and Lemon Peel. Dates, Figs and fine Table Raisins. Ali tbese goods are well worth the prices named on them and will give The foundation of our Mince Meat is good sound lean beef, and all other ingredients are the highest grade of goods. It represents our best effort and our customers say it is a success, and at 124c. per pound is very reason- We are now receiving some of the finest California Naval Oranges and Florida bright and sweet fruits. This fruit is just now reaching its very fin- est flavor. They are exceptionally fine and at reasonable prices. Lovers of Grape Fruit can be nicely suited on Lemons for some time past have been a difficult proposi- tion, but we now have some fine fruit. & CO. Pare Food and Fine Groceries. BELLEFONTE, PA. Green's Pharmacy. Al Bo A Be Ro A Be tbl. Bl A. PERERER b r Twelve years ago ground black pep- b per was selling nere at 40c. the Ib,— r and not the best at that. We thought we could save our customers money by buyiog in large quantities, direct ) y » ’ > > » ’ p b b y » ’ > r > » > ’ » ’ » r > imported and in pound pack- out carbo to test BELLEFONTE, PA Insurance. JL00k! EEAD JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency represents the largest fie Insumdce Companies in the ——NO ASSESSMENTS, —~ or pot 11 to give us a call before Jauring iy as we an ti write large lines ot NS time, Tn pomtion to Office in Crider's Stone Building, 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Tue PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY ; Benefits : $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of Loth feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,500 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eye, 2% pe week, total disability, 0 mt re disabi r week, partial! disabili limit 26 weeks. Ay PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. amounts in pro Larger or smaller portion. Any persou, male or female inap occupation, in. rs of age of good moral and ph ga] Soudision may insure under FIRE INSURANCE I invite your attention to my fire Insurance Agency, the strongest and Moet Extensive Line of Solid Companies represented by any agency in Central Pennsylvania. H. E. FENLON, 50-21 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Saddlery. MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly vets—for the next thirty days. We have de- termined to clean up all summer goods, if you are in the market for this class of goods you can’t do better than call and sapply your wants at thie store. We have the largest assortment of SINGLE Axp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the county and at prices to suit the buyer. If you do not have one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you bave missed a good thing. We are making a special effort to sup- ply you with a barness that you may have no concern about any parts breaking. These harness are made from select oak stock, with a bigh-grade workmanship, and A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YEARS with each set of harness. We have on haud a fine lot of single harness ranging in price from $13.50 to $25.00 Sam We carry a large line of oils, axle grease, whips, brushes, ourry- combs, sponges, and everything you need about a horse. We will take pleasure in showing you our goods whether you buy or not. Give us a call and see for yourself. Yours Respectfully, JAMES SCHOFIELD, Spring street, 59-87 BELLEFONTE. Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, Buocxesuorr Mivts, Beiievonts Pa, Manufacturer, and wholesaler aad retailers of ROLLEE FLOUR, FEED, CORN MEAL, Bt. Also Dealer in Grain, Manufactures and has on hand st all jimen the followiag brands of high grade WHITE STAR, OUR BEST. HIGH GRADE, VICTORY PATENT, FANCY PATENT-—formerly Phos nix Mills high grade brand. The only place in the county where SPRAY, Boring wheat a ned. ——— ALSO: ; . INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD. FEED OF ALL KINDS, : ' Whole or Manufactured, All kinds of Grain bought at office. = OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street, TF oi ROOPSBURG,