Demon Yada be washed. It is astonishing how WASHING FURNITURE. Easy to Restore Tarnished Pieces te Original Freshness. “Very few people know that furni- ture ought to be washed,” sald u sales- man in the furniture section of a large pure soap. Then with a cheesecloth all the woodwork dirt will come off. A second plece of cheesecloth should be wrung dry out of to- | hot water. On this should be poured a tablespoon of first class furniture pol- tsh. The heat will spread the polish through the cloth. Next the furniture should be gone over with the second cloth. There will be no need of put- ting on more polish, for that much will do all one needs. Too many persons make the mistake of using too much polish and leaving it thick on the furni- ture. where it looks dauby and where it gathers more dirt.” There Is furniture in homes today that i= cast off because of its appear- -| ance when it might be brought back da Be sure that the sheep barn has a tight roof, a dry floor, good ventilation and no drafts. Hold on to some of the clover for spring feeding. It is great when the sheep get tired of timothy. Look out for sore lambs. When such conditions are discov- ered, rub the affected parts twice a day with salted butter. —Hogs properly sheltered will thrive on much less feed than those exposed to cold. Alfalfa hay and corn have been found tisfactory teats on ewes with to be a most sati fattening feed for hogs. Hog manure is almost the richest of any made on the farm. Save it all and put it out on the land. If the food 1s allowed to sour in the troughs, it will throw the hogs off feed. good provision for slop. o weather. The best feed we find for young pigs before weaning is shelled corn, from one feed till the next and sprinkled over, when damp, with middlings, with a small i of oil-meal and added. Salt the mixture lightly and feed in troughs. ~For instance, in some sections gra growing has reached the limit of t- me success in fruit growing is quite as much the hunting out of a market growing the fruit,and this be kept in mind from the moment the plantation is planted. With such an in- terest on the part of the grower there | need be no fear of a poor market. —Fruit culture is an important adjunct to farming, and should not be neglected. That has been decided by past exper- ience, but the uestion arises whether it common level. everywhere. The truth is that success in any kind of business depends more up- on the m. t than upon the busi- ness itself. In other words, a man to be a successful fruit grower must be one adapted to the work, one who has a love for the occupation and who will make it a study. There cannot be a financial success as a rule, for there are good it growing, Just The has much | for turkeys | hen now than it | don’t winter the | die before i i the to! the il value, the slop encourages the | take it about 140 to drink freely, which is desirable in : first to its original freshness by this simple process of washing. Many persons do not know that a fine bit of mahogany is improved by careful washing, and hundreds of pianos have never been more than dusted in years. A square of cheesecloth for the washing and an- other for the polishing will do the work, and the resuit will well repay the effort.—Indianapolis News. HOT DRINKS. 1f Taken Above 130 Degrees They In- | jure the Stomach. Many people without realizing it are in the habit of drinking tea at much too high ua temperature, Sir Henry Thompson points out in his book on “Diet In Relation to Age and Activi- ty.” “Few persons are aware that they habitually swallow hot liquids, tea es- pecially, at a temperature which if applied to the hands or feet would in- flict painful scalds. Most teu drinkers 145 degrees F., which the mouth bears very well it slowly sipped. while the cup itself is too het to be held by any hand. “But the habit of swallowing such tea is injurious to the stomach, and it ought not to be taken above 130 de- grees or so. Again, water at 120 de- grees, which feels a little more than lukewarm in the mouth, causes severe pain if the band is dipped in it and cannot be endured.” He has, however, some good words to say for the early morning tea. “This morning tea in any case should be taken at least an hour and a half before the first meal of the day. For many years I have been accustomed to write for an hour every morning in bed after tea, as | am doing at this moment, and at no time do 1 find the brain clearer for work, while the ap petite for solid food is excellent when the hour for breakfast arrives.” Trudging For the Wash. The Portuguese country people as a | great physical en- a result of the usual thing have durance, doubtless as wgurvival of the fittest” for many gen- | erations. The laundry workers are an example of this. People come in from long distances to get soiled clothes of city customers. The clothes will be placed in big panniers on the family donkey, and the peasants will start back late in the afternoon. Some of them will travel all night. and it will be sunup before they reach their homes, many miles from Lisbon or Oporto. A day or two later they are trudging back to deliver the clothes, now spotlessly clean. and to get an- other lot from the same patron. Many a countryman and his wife take a jaunt of fifieen miles or more, which | makes one think that there might be many who could rival the feats of Weston and O'Leary as walkers if they tried.—Christian Herald. oe ——— An Early “Trust” As an example of trusts and monop- olies prevalent even in that early day it may be mentioned that in 1750 one Benjamin Crabb obtained the exclu- sive right to make sperm candles in Massachusetts for fourteen years. A year later, however. a factory was started in Providence. R. I.. and with: in the decade there were eight fac tories in New England and one in Philadelphia. Their output greatly re- duced tha price of candles. which not long before sold for 5 shillings a pound. In those days $1.25 was worth fully three times as much as it is nmow.—N. Hudson Moore in Designer. The Sixteenth Century Critic. «But why. prithee.” contended the critic. “should this pew play- wright. Shixpur, have introduced a comle gravedigging scene into his trag- edy. perdie?” “Tix easy of solution. by hen.” an- swered the second critic. “Our author hath put in gravedigzers for the pur- pose of unearthing a plot! Boy. a cup of sack! Wit was crude in them days.—Cleve land Leader. ——————— Flacing the Blame Little Eva—Mamma, didn’t you say that if my new dolly got broke some- body would have to be spanked? Mamma— Yes, dear. Little Bva—Well, she broke her arm today. Spank her, please. —Exchange. —e———— Interested. wYWhat did the rhinoceros do when you fired at him?" asked the eager Yatener. “He just stood still and watched me run.” — Washington Star. | { | i | VARIETIES IN CHEESES. Sgrmesan !s So Hard That Cutting Is Practically Impossible. The difference in cheeses Is some- times confusing to those who have not access to a large market. Edam, pine apple. Parmesan and Roquefort are hard cheeses, Neufchatel, cream and cottage cheeses soft. Genuine cream cheese is made from a rich cream thickened by souring or from sweet cream thickened rennet. Neufchatel §8 a soft rennet cheese made from cow's milk either whole or skimmed. Cottage cheese is made from sour milk without the use of rennet. Roquefort ts a hard rennet cheese made from the milk of sheep, the name being derived from the village of Roquefort, in the southeastern part of France, where the cheese is ripened in caves or natural caverns. Edam is a hard rennet cheese produced in Holland and Is made from unskimmed cow's milk. Parmesan is an Italian cheese known for centuries in that country as Grana, the term referring to the granular con- dition of the cheese. It is so hard cut- ting 1s practically impossible, and we get it In this country grated in bot- tles. This cheese is made from skim- med milk. Pineapple cheese is said to have originated in Litchfield county, Conn.. and is a hard rennet cheese made from cow's milk. The flavor of different cheeses is given by the meth- od of ripening. due to the action of bacteria. Hard and soft cheeses differ mainly in the fat constituents and methods of manufacture. but most of all in thelr keeping quality, the hard cheeses keep- ing for a protracted time.—Good House- keeping. MAKING A PICTURE LOVER. A Cynical and Caustic Fling at the English Art Patron. The general art patron in England is a brewer or distiller. Five and forty is the age at which he begins to make his taste felt in the art world, and the cause of his collection is the following or analogous reason. After a heavy dinner, when the smoke cloud is blow- ing lustily, Brown says to Smith: “I know you don't care for pictures, so you wouldn't think that Leader was worth £1,500. Well, I paid all that and something more, too, at the last academy for it.” Smith, who has nev- er heard of Leader, turns slowly round on his chair, and his brain, stu- pefied with strong wine and tobacco, gradually becomes aware of a village by a river bank seen in black silhou- ette upon a sunset sky. Wine and food have made him happily sentimen- tal, and he remembers having seen a village looking very like that village when he was paying his attentions to the eldest Miss Jones. Yes, it was looking like that, all quite sharp and clear on a yellow sky, and the trees were black and still, just like those trees. Smith determines that he, too, shall possess a Leader. He may not be quite as big a man as Brown, but he has been doing pretty well lately. There's no reason why he shouldn't have a Leader. So frredeemable mis- chief has been done at Brown's dinner party. Another five or six thousand a year will exert its mighty influence in the service of bad art.—George Moore. —————————" Proper Breathing. | To breathe properly take a deep, slow breath, another and another. Put both the hands en your ribs and see how they expand and contract as you preathe in and out. Put one hand on the low ribs In front and the other opposite it on the back. Feel how the back swells as you breathe. There is a powerful muscle called the dia- phragm that divides the chest from the abdomen. As the Heart and lungs are in the chest, the diaphragm may be called the floor of the chest. It is fastened to the backbone, the ribs and the sternum, or breastbone. And when people speak of diaphragmatic breath- ing they mean just what we are doing now—filling the lungs with air and emptying them by the expansion and contraction.—Boston Herald. Our First Cup of Tea. The first cup of tea made in this country was brewed on the Shapleigh estate in Eliot, N. H., It is said, early in the seventeenth century. Nicholas Shapleigh of England, a rich tea deal- er, fitted out an expedition in 1623, placed his son-in-law in command and directed him to explore a portion of the new world. The son-in-law landed at Kittery Point, and two years later Nicholas settled in what is now Eliot. The estate is still owned by his de- scondants.—Boston Globe. Old Acquaintances. “Mrs. Von Queer says that in a pre- vious existence she was a stray cat in a medieval alley.” “That's funny. I wonder if she re- calls the gentleman in the purple vel- vet doublet who opened the casement in the castle tower and flung a boot- jack at her: That was me."=Cleve- land Plain Dealer. Her Joy. ’ | “How did you get along at the card on : “Fine. My husband lost five games that he couldn't blame me for.—De- troit Free I’ress. A Genial Reply. i Mrs. Wiggs—John, what is an abso- lute vacuum? Wiggs—An absolute vacuum, my dear, is something that exists only in your mind.—Chicago News. Not His Style. “I thought you said the colt could | win in a walk?” “Well, they went and entered him in a running race.”—Washington Herald. | Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, A poor washerwoman in Concord was seen to be hurrying her work and rolling down her sleeves considerably before her usual hour for leaving. “I'm going out” she informed her employer, with a pleased and rather consequential air. “Where are you going. Bridget?’ “To hear Mr. Emerson lecture.” “Why, he is very deep, Bridget. Most of us can't understand him very Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of "Roller Flour Attorneys-at-Law. J © Mmm ne SQ" ioe, Pa. Attorey a ice Room 18 Crider’s y 51-1-1y. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. nal the Courts. in N German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, B. Bellefonte, web Feed “Oh, 1 don’t understand him, mum, S. TA — and Counsellor a but I like to see him stand up there Corn Meal H Faw. fice Garman House Block Be . usd talk as i be Shought everybody | d G pi tended to promptly. rv) was as as was.” The great philosopher was absolutely an ran J smear Aer Eochange, second tree from pride, and he made his hear- . All kinds of legal business ers realize his perfect democracy of Manufactures and has on hand at all times the to promptly. Consultation in English or Geran. feeling. : {loving SrRBs a He . Family Preserves. | WHITE STAR The following recipe was sent to| OUR BEST the editor of a newspaper who had HIGH GRADE established a household column. It | was evidently given by a person of | experience: i To make a good jam place one fin- | ger or possibly two lightly on the up- | per edge of an open desk or bureau | drawer, close the drawer quickly with the other hand and keep closed for two or three seconds. SPRAY Open it, remove the finger or fingers. _.. .. secured. Also I sonal Stock Food) adding plenty of interjections. This recipe has been tried by every mem- uu vind of ber of my family and has never falled. exchanged for wheat. er ———— Northern Eskimos. The northern Eskimos have abso- lutely none of the conveniences of eiv- and feed of all kinds. OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. 47-19 MILL AT ROOPSBURG. VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT Grain bought at the office. Flour heat The in the where that extraor- | = he aCe ir tle of spring wheat Patent Flour Dentists. , ARD. D. D. S., office next door to A {lization. The weapons they use in| the hunt are tipped with bone or, more usually, with native copper, which | Fine Job Printing. , they work «quite skillfully. Bows al Rr erp = arrows and sealing spears, with nde RINE JOB PRINTING canoes, constitute the ontfit. Vegeta- | bles are unknown in those latitudes, o—A SPECIALTY—o0 and they subsist wholly on flesh and AT THE fish. WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is ng style of from the BOOK WORK, An Earthquake. The secretary of agriculture asked the chief of the weather bureau, “As a | sclentific man, can you tell me any-: thing definite about an earthquake?’ “Cartainly 1 can,” replied the weath- er man, who is witty as well as wise. i “An earthquake is a great movement . in real estate.”--St. Louis Republic. that we car: not do in the most satis Fa OX the class of work. on or communicate with this office. Breakfast Habits. Insurance. TIT Sgn Pe, Ofte years of experience. work act had reasonable. WY and I —— m————— Lumber. —— —— So — SE — POLST BSNS MST BST MSOSY BUILDING MATERIAL i When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On Mrs X.—~When my husband stays | out all night I refuse to get him any | breakfast. | Mrs. Y.—When my husband stays out | all night he never wants any.—Boston | Transcript. ! JOHN F. GRAY & SON (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life The wicked are always ungrateful. | Cervantes. : | I the largest F the World. gi ——NO ASSESSMENTS — . This represents Medical. Insurance Companies in ——————————————————— ’ Accident Insurance. ITE ——— Ee —— | Crying for Help| Zasagsssrmases R pc rymg P large lines at any time. onte now has a First-Class Res- Office in Crider’s Stone Building, LOTS OF IT IN BELLEONNTE BUT DAILY gp, s Stone BFONTE, PA. | Meals are Served at All Hours a—— ! the Steaks, Chops Row style desired, Sand- The kidneys cry for help. i wiches, Soups. and anything can Not an organ in the whole body so \ dition I have a plant prepared to delay comtrudied. ee The Preferred Jo Mave 8 Comet P bottles such as one so important to . | - . The kidneys are the filters of the Accident SODAS, Abs i When they fail the blood becomes SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., uenthoy fal + Insurance Co. WO mn There can be no health where there i ally all of which are manufactured Sut Of is poisoned blood. : — purest syrups and properly carbonated. Backache is one of the first symp | THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY toms of kidney trouble. a C. MOERSCHBACHER, ” It is the kidney’s cry for help. Heed | 4 BeneRTs: ; Aly High St., Bellefonte, Nouns Kidney Pile are what is want- | sm on a = Meat Ret. ed. i loss of one one foot, Mar Arie what overworked kidneys £0 om of her foo. Ee ——— They strengthen and invigorate the | kidneys; help them to do their work; | 25 pep esl, total Sisabiay, Get the Best Meats. never fail to cure any case of kidney 10 per ial disabili — EUS proof trom a Bellefonte dit | Cima: 26 weeks : You save nothing by poor, thin . i izen. : PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, or gristly meats. 1 use on , Mrs. John Andress, 245 S. Spring street, payable quarterly if desired. LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE Bellefonte, Pa., says: “1 willingly confirm customers with the fresh- the public statement I gave in praise of Larger or smaller amounts in proportion, 2a Best blood and muscle mak- Duas's Kidoey Bil two years 6s, user house: ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no they me so . 1pro- ty hd bent me 20 grea. Lore | § pod ol ed pel condi ma Fire Insurance 1 invite your attention to my RE id eth in e The Pennsylvania State College Offers Exceptional Advantages IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist A Teacher An Engineer A Lawyer An Electrician A Physician A Scientific Farmer A Journalist Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. TUITION IS FREE Or secure a IN ALL COURSES. PR Ww aa A BB AB. AM BM higher than poorer meats are 1 always have —— DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. 1618 Telephone Calls: { Central ato —————————— et. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers