“Demoreatic atcha THEY EAT NO BREAD. , ~~ Places Where the Poorer People Have to Use Substitutes. =m , Pa., January 6, 1911. Write to a BUSINESS LETTERS. Man Just as You Would Talk to Him at Your Desk. LAWS OF WARS. The Code Now In Use Among All the Civilized Nations. The “laws of war" as at present formulated by the civilized nations forbid the use of poison against an en- emy; murder by treachery, as, for ex- ple, assuming the uniform or dis- the flag of a foe; the murder those who have surrendered, wheth- upon conditions or at discretion: tions that no quarter will be given to an enemy; the use of such ‘arms or projectiles as will cause un- necessary pain or suffering to an en- emy: the abuse of a flag of truce to gain information concerning an en- emy’'s positions: all unnecessary de- { There are regions wherein the poor- = Business letter writing is no longer er classes or peasantry eat little or no merely “correspondence,” but “litera- bread. Baked loaves of bread are ture,” and the correspondent who for- practically unknown in many parts of merly wasted his precious breath on southern Austria and Italy and throughout the agricultural districts of Roumania. It is said that in the village of the Oberstelermark, not far from Vienna, bread is never seen, the staple food from ground beech nuts, taken at breakfast with fresh or curdled milk, at dinner with broth or fried lard and with milk again for supper. This is also known as heiden and takes place of bread not only In the A trian district named, but In Carin and in many parts of the Tyrol. In northern Italy the peasants aff a substitute for bread called polenta, Eggs RE% 3 g such Inanities as “Yours received and contents duly noted” is now relegated to the “old school” class, and unless : he is willing to adopt the new rules of he is likely to change straight to the subject at Issue y, without frills, even eliminat- | ing the time worn advice, “Awaiting our early reply,” and closing without i absurdity of “Begging to remain.” {| “Write to a man exactly as you “ a porridge made of lLoiled grain. Po- | would talk to him if he were sitting at struction of property, whether public or private. lenta is not, however, allowed to | your desk,” is the maxim of one of They also declare that only fortified places shall be besieged; open cities or villages not to be subject to siege or bombardment; that public buildings of whatever character. whether belonging to church or state, shall be spared; that plundering by private soldiers or their officers shall be considered inad- missible: that prisoners shall be treat- “granulate,” like Scotch porridge or | the best authorities on letter writing like the Austriaii sters. but is boiled ' In Chicago. By eliminating useless into a solid pudding, which is cut up | phrases having no bearing on the sub- and portioned out with a string. It is | ject the business man not only saves eaten cold as often as it is hot and is | his own time in dictating, but that of in every sense the Italian's daily his stenographer in transcribing tie bread, A variation of polenta called mama. liga Is said to be the favorite food of the poorer classes in Roumania. Ma- notes. By the old method of letter | writing tke opening and closing of | letters contained almost five lines of | useless “form” matter which would ed with common humanity; that the | malign is like polenta in that it Is | average on 100 letters just 500 lines of personal effects and private property | made of boiled grain, but it is unlike | superfluous effort.—Chicago Tribune. of prisoners, except their arms and! ammunition, shall be respected; that | the population of an enemy's country | shall be considered exempt from par- | tinct, after the fashion of oatmeal | ticipation in the war, unless by hostile | acts they provoke the ill will of the en- | emy. Personal and family honor and the | religious convictions of an invaded peo- | ple must be respected by the invaders | and all pillage by regular troops or | their followers strictly forbid New York Herald. Ru | KEEPING TAP ON THE CROPS | The Way the Agricultural Depariment | Gets Its Information. The details of the comprehensive sys- tem employed by the department of agriculture in gathering the crop in- | — the latter in one important respect— the grains are not allowed to settle into a solid mass, but are kept dis- porridge.—~New York Herald. COMPRESSED ICE. Sinks In Water and Crumbles Powder When Warmed. All know that ordinary ice will float. Into This relative lightness of ice with re- spect to water is due to expansion of the water at the moment of freezing. If water Is frozen under immense pressure it seems that this expansion is prevented and ice heavier than wa- | ter is produced. G. Tamman hes prepared this modi- fication, which he calls Ice IIL, as follows: He compressed water to 3,000 formation from all over the country | kilograms (5,614 pounds) and cooled are interesting. There are 30,000 it In solid carbon dioxide snow and township correspondents scattered all | finally in liyuld air. Under these con- over the Union, whose duty it is to go ditions a colorless, transparent ice is carefully over the territory and submit | formed. It is much denser than ordi _each month concrete information as to | nary ice and heavier than water; con- the condition of all kinds of crops. In sequently it sinks when placed In wa- addition to this branch, 3,000 “county | ter. Ice III is very unstable, and on correspondents” send in separate re- | slight warming it swells out and ports from those of the township men. breaks up into a dense white powder. A state agent makes a further report | The volume of the resulting powder direct from his agents, and an organ- | is apparent!y four to eight times that ization in direct communication with | of the original ice. This powder form- the department, comprising seventeen { ed by the breaking up of the dense ! traveling “field agents.” go about the | form is nothing more than ordinary | country and make separate reports for = ice in the form of fine crystals, whieh, | groups of states. Special cotton cor- | of course, on further warming melt at | respondents are also employed to fur- zero degrees centigrade. i nish accurate information concerning | Experiments on Ice III. show that it | the cotton yield. Five different repor 3 | is mpossible to obtain it by separa- are sent to Washington each month | tion from water at atmospheric pres- by five different sets of correspondents, | sure and then suddenly cooling. There i This safeguards the government crop | would never be a possibility of this | reports for accuracy in local crop re- | unstable form of solid water being ports and keeps the great crop account | formed in nature.—New York Tribune. | THE CRESCENT. Legend of Its Adoption as an Emblem i by the Turks. | The crescent has been known since | time out of memory. In ancient my- | thology it decorated the foreheads of | Diana and of Astarte, the Syrian Ve- { nus. In the days of Rome's greatest | glory the ladles wore it as an orna- ment in their hair. Since the foundation of Constanti- nople, the ancient Byzantium, it bas been the emblem of the city and as such adorns its walls and public bufld- ings, besides being stamped on its coins and postage. The legend which accounts for its universal adoption in Turkey, and Constantinople in par- ticular, Is as follows: Philip of Macedon laid siege to the city in the year 340 B. C. He chose a night of unusual darkness for the pro- posed assault, but was foiled by the moon suddenly breaking from behind a cloud. In commemoration of this providential deliverance the crescent was adopted as the symbol of the city. The Mohammedan sultans were slow to assume this emblem until some one mentioned that it was the symbol of increasing greatness, power changing as rapidly as the phases of the moon. —Westminster Gazette. Federal Homestead Laws. The federal homestead laws begin | with the act of 1862, now a part of the United States revised statutes, Their policy is to give portions of the pub- lic lands to those who will settle, cul- tivate and make permanent homes upon them. Any person who is the head of a family or who is twenty-one years of age and is a citizen of the and cost estimates for the millions of ' American farmers. These records are | sent to the agricultural department, Of- | ficials of the Lureau of statistics and a | board go over all the five reports from | five distinct groups of correspondents, ! and from all the figures a crop report ! estimate is distributed to 70,000 post- | offices throughout the country every | month.—National Magazine. The Electric Fan. Back in the early eighties Dr. 8, 8. ‘Wheeler, an electrical engineer of New York, was experimenting with a small electric motor. In the course of his ex- periments the dector conceived the idea that steamboats might be run with electricity if the propellers could be directly connected to high speed electric motors, doing away with all the gears then in use in steam propul- sion. With this idea in mind he had a small screw propeller constructed and fastened it to the armature shaft of his sinall motor. To his surprise the experiment resulted in a fine breeze of cooling air which more than delighted the experimenter, for the day was de- cidedly hot. It is needless to add that the experiments with screw propellers ended right there. and the engineer took up the study of the electric fan, with the result that he soon perfected = i: seem to have been a mixture of beer and buttermilk.—London Chronicle. ——— When you make one mistake don't make another by trying to lie out of It. The Fateful Message. Hubby—Didn't I telegraph you not to ng you? Wifey— could not help it, Frank. She insisted on coming after she’d read your tele- ‘gram, Genuine benevolence is not station- lary, but peripatetic. It goes about doing good.—~Nevins. A Prosaic Interpretation. Professor Brander Matthews of Co- lumbia in one of his brilliant addresses on the drama said of an unimaginative and prosaic dramatist: “He it was, I am sure, who in his youth on being asked in examination what Shakespeare meant by the phrase | ‘sermons in stones’ wrote in reply: “ ‘When passing by a tombstone you may learn the name and the dates of birth and death of the departed one and also from the inscription a valu- able moral iesson from his or her life. Walking along a road you may see from the milestones the number of miles to the nearest towns and thus ac- quire geographical information. Heaps of stones by the roadside indicate that repairs are to take place and so indl- cate a lesson in mneatness.’ "—Detroit Free Press. An Author's Insight. There is no surer mark of genius than the intuitive insight into charac- ters and social conditions of which the author has noc personal experience. “What does Ben know of dukes?” asked homely old Isaac Disraell when he heard the title of his son's latest novel. Trollope wrote Inimitably of bishops and deans when he had never been in a cathedral close in his life. Young Disraell wrote so well about the great ones of the earth whom he had never seen that the critics busied themselves in finding “keys” to “Vi- vian Grey” and “The Young Duke.”— London Saturday Review. A Touch of Family Life. When the country youth proposed to the city girl he received the conven- tional assurance that she would be his sister. It happer-d that this youth had sisters at how. and knew exactly his privileges. S. ne kissed her. At this juncture she availed herself of the sisterly right to call cut to father that brother was teasing her. Father re- tion was dissolved by mutual consent. —Judge. Only That. “I don't know whether I ought to recognize him here in the city or not. Our acquaintance at the seashore was very slight.” “You promised to marry him, didn’t you?” “Yes, but that was all.”"—Louisville Courier-Journal. The only fallure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he sees to be best.—George Eliot. United States or who has filed his declaration of intention to become such may acquire a tract of upappropriated public land, not exceeding 160 acres, on condition of settlement, cultivation and continuous occupancy as a home by him for the period of five years and the payment of certain moderate fees. It is expressly declared that no lands acquired under this statute shall in any event become liable to any debt contracted prior to the issuing of the patent therefor by the government to the settler.—~New York American. Cheap Family History. Even in political defeat there are compensations. A Washington heights man who aspired to office tells of one that he discovered. “Must have cost you a pile of money to run, didn't it?" a friend asked. “About $1,600, but still 1 came out $400 ahead.” “How?” said the friend. “On genealogical research. My wife has a socletr bee in her bonnet and had about ag ced to pay a man $2,000 to look up my family history, but when I became a candidate my oppo- nents did that for me and saved us the money.”"—New York Times. Eight Lions. There are eight lions known world over—the lion of St. Mark's base much curiosity. Long—In what direction? Short—Oh, she was continuously ask- ing me when I was going to pay my board bill.—Chicago News. The Next Question. “Dora's invited to a swell party,” sald the mother. “How much will the gown cost? asked the father, who knew what was coming. —Detroit Free Press. Not a Freshman, Caller—I didn’t know your son was at college. Is this his freshman year? Mrs. Bunderby—Ob, no, indeed! He's & sycamore.—Boston Transcript. i i { dangerous lunatic. Saved by Her Voice. When traveling to Paris with some other ladies on ome occasion Mme. Grisi had a thrilling adventure. At a | small wayside station a man entered the carriage. and it soon became ev'- dent from his threatening gestures and eccentric behavior that he was a Though her con- panions were panic stricken. Mme. Grisl retained complete presence of mind and with the utmost composure began to sing. At once the maniac was quiet. His whole attention was riveted on that magnificent voice. and he remained the most appreciative of listeners until the train reached the next station, where he was secured. It transpired subsequently that he was a maniac with homicidal tendencies who had escaped from an asylum. Well Settled. Riggs—Did your wife's father settle anything on you when you married his daughter? Briggs—You bet he did. He settled himself on us, and we can't get rid of him.—Boston Transcript. Fashion's Whirl. “How long do we stay at Jupiter Junction, John?" “Twenty minutes, my dear. You won't need over two gowns.”—Louis- ville Courier-Journal. There is no beautifier of complexion or form or behavior like the wish to scatter joy and not pain around you. Medical. Cure Your Kid- neys. DO NOT ENDANGER LIFE WHEN A BELLE- FONTE CITIZEN SHOWS YOU THE CURE. Why will people continue to suffer the agonies of kidney complaint, back- ache, urinary disorders, lameness headaches, languor, why allow them- selves to become chronic invalids, when a certain cure is offered them? Doan's Kindey Pills is the remedy to use, because it gives to the kidneys the help they need to perform their work. If you have any, even one, of the symptoms of kidney diseases, cure yourself now, before diabetes, dropsy of Bright's disease sets in. Read this Bellefonte testimony: William E. Haines Sunny Side St., Belle- fonte, Pa., says: “The public statement that I gave in favor of Doan's Kidney Pills some years ago still holds good, as the cure they effeated in my case has been permanent. In 1890 I began to suffer from a lameness in my back, accompan- ied by a dull, lingering ache in my loins that made it hard for me to attend to my work. I did not rest welland I was ata loss to know what to do. After trying a number of remedies without being bene- fited I learned of Doan’s Kidney Pills and got abox. They proved to be just the remedy I required. removing my trouble in a short time. I have been fully con- vinced of the curative powers of this prep- For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Poster:Milburn Cos, Suffalo, New York, sole Tr States. ry re Doan’s—and take The Century. THE CENTURY In 1911 THE LIFE OF MARTIN LUTHER A great biography ivid, dramatic, readable. ROBERT HICHENS'S THE DWELLER ON THE THRESHOLD In 1911. Send for Prospectus to The Century Company, UNION SQUARE. 5545 NEW YORK. r——— ea wr——— Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE. PA. 4719 MILL AT ROOPSBURG. All kinds of Grain bought at the office. Flour exchanged for wheat. re me ov | Attorneys-at-Law. J © Mme .Law, Rooms 20 & 21 . Pa.. 941, KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law, S fonte, Pa. Practices in all ont Room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 5l-1-1y. — -at-Law, in all the a Be Ea German. Office in Crider's Exciaige, 5. TAYLOR -Atiorney and Counsellor at SPANG! . Office, Garman House block, Belle- Corn Maal TL fa oe amnion et Bet am J Ee J Manufactures and has on hand at all times the to promptly. Consultation ia English or German. following brands of high grade 394 ETTIG, BOWER & - WHITE STAR Lav Eagle Block. Balitonte, ba. Success: OUR BEST ors toOrvis. Bower " Practice nal HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. FANCY PATENT and German. Office south of dn ERuian The place in the county where extraor. to a3" hi hig gh i AB A I S P R AY S. M. D., Physician and Su W* Eten: can be secured. Also International Stock Pood =~ = == oo 2. and feed of all kinds. Dentists. DX J. E. WARD, D. D, S., office door to ¥Y. M,C. A, 100m, High street, reasonable. D® "i Sra, Ses JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. Fine Job Printing. Th electric used. Has — mz eh reasonable. ok of Sef iy FINE JOB PRINTING : 0—A SPECIALTY—o0 Lymbes > AT THE avareay | WATCHMAN OFFICE | J BUILDING MATERIAL | S— AL LB R When you are ready for it, BOOK WORK, you will get it here. On LUMBER, i that we car: not do in t! most _satis- MILL WORE, | | entwith the class of work. Cail on or OURING, pus iy ts AND GLASS. | Insurance. | | BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO. 52.5-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. 1 Fils Agency represents $he Jamar: Fire — NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before ing your ESTAURANT. i: we Wa Dusit oo Bellefonte now has a FirstClass Res- app Tee in Crider's Stone Building. pa. | Meals are Served at All Hours : Steaks, Roasts, Oysters on the i half mel or in any style desired, Sand- i | ERE 11 The Preferred Rad di 3 SODAS, Accident IR SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC.. Insurance Co. THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BENEFITS: tensive ed by any agency in H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. The Pennsylvania State College. IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician al a a aa BB i Bl le OB Se AM Be ee re AM The Pennsylvania State College Offers Exceptional Advantages A Scientific Farmer Or secure a Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. otros of ssdy. expenses, ic. amd SSRN, a a %1 EEE Boiron dls A Teacher A Lawyer A Physician A Journalist | Get the Best Meats. , thin JO LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE customers the fresh- ing and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are elsewhere. I alwavs have — DRESSED POULTRY —— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 43-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. ———————————————— Coal and Wood. EDWARD K. RHOADS Mheroian: "tnd Dealer in ANTHRACITE Axo BITUMINOUS COALS CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains. — BALED HAY AND STRAW —— Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as mav suit purchasers, respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard, near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. js Telephone Cals: {SEINE lhe EE Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria.