Buca Fi Beilefonte, Pa January 20, 1911. m—— The Kirghiz Hunt Wolves and Foxe. With Great Golden Eagles. All wanderers are tovers of the chase, but for sheer love of sport and daring exploits the Kirghiz take the palm. Central Asin ix the home of falcoury, which was vo! Introduced into Burope until the crusaders brought bmek falcons with them from their eastern wanderings. But imagine the ambition of the men who fly their birds at wolves and foxes instead of at quails and partridges! Not content with hunting game birds with small falcons the Kirghiz capture and train the great golden engles, with which they bunt such game as gazelles, foxes and cven wolves A well mounted Kirghiz falconer, carrying on his wrist one ‘magniticent birds, is a fine sight. The weight of the eagle is such that the owner requires n support for his wrist, and the hunters are usually to be seen with a tittle wooden bracket that sup- ports the arm against the hip eagles nre hooded. ax all falcons are, but can be used only in winter, when they nre hungry and keen In summer they ure fed on murmots and live a restful life. sitting in the sun in front | of the ten doors, When gazellex or wolves are the ob- | jects of the chase the eagles are aided by long sleek greyhounds of a small breed. the dogs running in and pulling down the quarry when the eagles have sufficiently bewildered it.—Wide World Maguzine. NATURE'S PAINT BRUSH. Colors. Shades and Tints That Cannot Be Reproduced by Man. Nature paints in the most striking colors und =hadex and tints with a delicacy never achieved by the brush in the bands of the artist The highest ambition of the manufacturer of paints is to produce colors which look lke | pature’s. The yhave never succeeded Graxs hus n green of its own the leaf nnd <o has the distant ocean None of these hus ever heen repro duced and put in cans with a price label on them. Winter apples now repose on the shelves of the paint chemists Honor awaits the man who ean combine col- ors to produce the tints of red of the Baldwin and Northern Spy They come pretty near It, that is all ‘I'he same fs true of the colors with which Oec- tober first touches the maple leaf. If all the paint grinding works in the world were multiplied ten thousand times they conldn’t turn ont pigment enough in a year wo do what anture does In a chinnge (rom <enson to sen son Nuture's brush ix busy everywhere all the time In the life of u leaf it appliex the brush day by day, follow: fog with its tinrs from budding time | until it fQutters from the branch It touches the valleys and the nills, the growing grains. the flowering plants Never ix it idle -New York World Legend of Holyrood Palace. Holvrond palnee. Edinburgh, Scot. land. once nn British royal residence, Is the subject of 0 strange legend ert Louis Stevenson alludes to it in his little book on BEdinbnrgh silly story nean passage he writes, “of nn subterra between the eastle of Holyrood and 2 bold highland piper who volunteered to explore its wind ings. Ue made his entrance by the up per end, playing a strathspey The cu vious footed it after him down the street, following bir descent by the | sound of the chanter from below, until all of a suddeu, about the level of St Giles’, the music came abruptly to an end and the people in the street stood | Whether | at fault with hands uplifted. he wax choked with gases or perished in a quag or was removed bodily by the evil one remains a point of doubt, but the piper bax never again been seen or heard of from that day to this” National Shortsightedness. _ “In this country.” said the sociolo- gist. “everything possible ix done to discourage people from marrying.” “How so?" inquired one of the Us teners. “Yon have to buy the marriage lHeense, fee the preacher, the boys give you what they eall a ‘shivaree. your friends throw old shoes at you. the newspapers print caricatures of you, life inxurance agents hound you. you bump right up against the cost of lv. ing. and if you find you've made a mistake you have to go to no end of trouble to get a divorce” Chicago Tribune. His Strong Point. “This is a pretty bad report card,” sald the father of the young hopeful as he looked over the teacher's figures, “You seem to be ‘poor’ in pretty much everything.” “That's ‘cause teacher only puts down th' studies I ain't good in. I ought to have ‘excellent’ in one thing." “And what's that?" hopefully in. quired the father. “Fightin [ can lick any boy in th’ class! —Cleveland Plain Dealer. — — oe — Shop. “Take your arm away. sir!" sharply exclaimed the indignant maiden “80.” sald the young editor musing. ly, “an unexpected accident. we re. gret to say, prevents our going to press.” —Chicago Teiune. Judged It Wy Himself. Tawking—- Why doex a hen cross the road? Poorpeigh--Really don't know! A hen hasn't sny tallor.— Boston Transcript. of these | The | No has Rob: | “There is n 1 SPARE THE OLD THINGS. A Plea For the Preservation of Keep- sakes and Sentiment. Most everything is belng sacrificed nowadays to the spirit of practicabil- ity. Old love letters are destroyed be- cause desk room is ucaded. The spreading oak that marked for dec- ades the turn of the road is sacrificed to give room to a modern electric sign that tells the same story. The baby’s first pair of shoes, wee, dainty and soft as they are, are thrown in the trash pile that there may be room in the top “rawer for the powder box. All of this destruction of “auld lang syne” sentiment and the basis of remi- niscence is chuck full of wrong. The most Interesting place in or near Washington is Mount Vernon. The most magnificent square in Philadel- phia I< Independence hall. The most valuable spot in Texas Is the old | Alamo at San Antonio. Such places as these contain the story of Ameri- can history, and the citizen who views and thinks while viewing-—-and no one can view without thinking becomes instantly a patriot, likewise a better husband and a better father, Keep the old love tokens. Don't de- | stroy the “old gray bonnets.” Treas- ure the little shoes. Save youth's love letters. And we may not have as i much room. but we will have more sweetness, and there will he more { heart in the world. ~Wichita Beacon, IN A RAILWAY SMASHUP. Time Enough. If you were a passenger on a rafl- | road train that collided with another, | jumped the track, ran into an open | switch or fell a vietim to any of the other misfortunes that railroad trains are heir to, what would you do or what do you think you would do? A writer in an engineering journal, after describing from his personal ob- | servation what most passengers do in such times of stress and peril—that is, | “stand up and howl”--gives what he calls sound advice, which is simply “to | drop upon the floor, preferably in the aisle, or cling to the seat frame.” {| That advice is not only sound, but i simple. The trouble, however, Is that | not one person in ten can tell with | any degree of certainty to what ex- | tent the same kind of mental demoral- | ization that causes the volunteeer fire- man to throw mirrors out of the win- | dow and tenderly carry feather beds | downstairs would possess him in such an emergency. The man who believes i with absolute conviction that he | would remain calm, cool and collected | under all circumstances may be the "very man who would make a mental | aviation flight that would cause the rec- ords of the champion aeronauts to pale Unto insignificance. Cincinnati Times- | Star. Wasted Ability. Mrs. Norton had attended the con- cert given at the town hall by Mile. Faure, a young Frenchwoman whom HISTORIC LOVING CUP. Owned In Turn by Goldsmith, Garrick Dr. Johnson and Burke. The famous literary society of Lon- don called the Savage club has tradi tional connection with Will's coffee- house and the Mermaid tavern of ear- ly days. The reader of Mr, Watson's volume of history and anecdote relat- ing to the club will come across in its pages incidental mention of things that recall names that are famous in our literature. How rich in associations a simple drinking cup may become Is shown by the following: In 1902 there was brought to the club a most remarkable relic of which the lord mayor of London had recently obtained possession. This was a lov- ing cup holding a pint or a little more which, as certain inscriptions testified, was at one time the property of Oliver Goldsmith. On Goldsmith's death it passed into the hands of David Gar- rick and thence to the possession of one of the literary and artistic clubs of the day. Then after an interval it passed into Dr. Johnson's hands, for one of the in- scriptions engraved on its silver rim records that it was presented to Burke by his friend Samuel Johnson, doctor of letters, as u memento of Johnson's | visit to Beaconsfield, which was Burke's home, The date of the pres- entation was 1779, five years after the death of Goldsmith and five before the | death of Jolson, | The Proper Thing to to 0 if You Have ! ESSEN'S BAKERY. | Said to Be the Largest Breadmaking the summer residents were trying to ; sions through a fire in the city studio, where she lived and taught. At the end of the concert the differ- help, as she had lost all her posses- | ent opinions expressed by the villagers | | as to the exhibition of piano playing to | which they had listened had no effect | ‘on Mrs. Norton, : “I dou't know whether she played | too loud or whether her pieces were | the best or not,” she announced de- | eisively. “All I know is that I kep’ | thinking if I could roust out that but- | ter fingered Clancy girl that's pretend- | ing to help me with my kitchen work {and set that madem’selle down to shelling peas and beans and shucking corn 1 guess the boarders would have their meals somewheres time!"—Youth's Companion. near on Facts About Animal Structure. | The complexity of animal structure | is marvelous. A caterpillar contains more than 2,000 muscles. In a human body are scme 2,000,000 perspiration glands, communicating with the sur- face by ducts, having a total length of some ten miles, tvhile that of the ar- teries, veins and eapillaries must be very great. The blecod contains mil- lions of corpuscles, each a structure in itself. The rods in the retina, which are supposed to be the ultimate recip- ients of light, are estimated at 30,- that the gray matter of the brain is built of at least 600,000,000 cells. The Joined Fragments. Waiter —What will you have, sir? Customer (looking over the restau- rant bill of fare)—-Permit me to cogi- tate. In the correlation of forces it is a recognized property of atomic frag- ments, whatever their age, to join, and— Waiter (shouts across the hall)--Hash for one!—London Tit-Bits, The Fluent Speaker. “Pa, what's a fluent speaker?” “One of the kind you are glad to hear because the things he says never cause you to change your opinion.” —Leslie's Weekly. Reassuring. Terrified Rider (in hired motorcar)— I say—I say-—you're going much too fast. Chauffeur—Oh. you're all right, sir. We always insures our passen- gers.—London Punch. A Money Maker. Smith—He Is not rich, and yet he makes n great deal more money than he spends. Jones—How can that be? Smith—He works in the mint.—-New York American. The inevitable consequence of pev- arty is dependence.—Johnson. i 000,000, and Meinert has calculated | i men, divided into two shifts, Concern In the World. The largest bakery in the world is located in Essen, Prussia, the home of the great Krupp gun factory. It is a vast building, in which seventy work- work night and ay. Everything is done by machinery, says the London Post. A screw turns unceasingly a kneading trough, into which are poured some water and ten sacks of flour of 200 pounds each. This machine makes about 40,000 pounds of bread each day, in the shape of 25,000 small lonves and 25,000 large loaves, produced hy 230 sacks of flour of 200 pounds each. All the operations of breadmaking are performed in this colossal bakery. The wheat arrives there, is cleaned, ground and brought automatically to the kneading trough by a series of rising and descending pipes. There are thirty-six double ovens, and the workmen who watch over the baking of the bread earn from 8 to 10 cents an hour, making an average of 90 cents a day for eleven hours on duty. They have coffee and bread free; also the use of a bathroom, for they are required to keep themselves spotlessly clean and must wash their hands sient times a day. " — on a busy day. of better materials. Machine. 55-47-9t The Brown Rat. place they inhabit. It will clear them out in an amazingly short time. But most people prefer the rats. Were it not for cats, owls, weasels and a few other animals in combination with man, in # short time the whole coun- try would be one vast rattery, for the rate at which these animals incrense is stupendous. doubt one of the worst forms of ver- min, but they possess one good quality. In a tight corner few animals are more courageous than the brown rat. Rats hard pressed have been known to fly at a man's throat. Two or three, secure in a little fortress with a small open- ing only large enough for one at a time to come in and go out, will defy a score of ferrets, and if one ferret with more courage than his brothers does venture to enter the lions' den he must look well to himself or he will never come out alive.—London Globe. They are without easier to operate, and capable of unlimited speed. A Royal in Your Office will Soon Save its Own Cost. Price, $65.00 The right price to pay for a high-grade writing ROYAL TYPEWRITER CO. Royal Typewriter Bldg., New York. BRANCH OFFICE 904 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. The best way to make a good clear- | ance of rats 1s to turn a cobra into the i The Royal represents economy in more ways than one. keep in order, because it stays in order—doesn’t waste time by breaking down It turns out more work, because it is easier to understand, lasts longer, because it is simpler, has fewer working parts, and they are made WV NYTVY VY TY UYU WY WET WY WY WY WY UY UY WY WY WY WY WY WY WY WY ww Conversation. Conversation warms the mind, enliv- ens the imaginaticn and is continually starting fresh game, which is immedi- | ately pursued and taken and which would never have occurred in the dull- er intercourse of epistolary correspond- ence.—Frankiin. Lad Finger Custard.—Linea dish with | six | fingers broken in half. Make a | of one quart of milk, half a cup | of sugar, one egg and one tablespoonful | fornstarch, Put on stove and watch care- as it burns easily. Stir continually, | eto touch bottom of pan. As t coats the remove from | py “Add one ul of vanilla. | When lukewarm pour over the lady | Bigess. Can be served wi th whipped | Se a Witney Archimedes said, “Give me a fulcrum for my lever and I will move the world.” Ne, like Archimedes, demands a ful- her lever. She will lift the sick | Whether you use one machine or fifty, your typewriter equip- ment is an Reduce the expense, and you increase your PROFITS. It does Better work, and — EE EE——— SE tl ee a a Aa AL Als Aldo shde dil ROYAL Standard Typewriter item of EXPENSE. It costs less to CY CY WY CY OY WY WY UY UY UY WY UY YY WY WY WY YY WY wv WY YY YY vw up to health, move mountains of disease, but she must havea fulcrum for the lever of help. That fulcrum is just what is supplied in Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical . No medicine can help te sick which does not work with Nature. That medicine is most helpful which most readily lends itself to Nature's use. . Golden Medical Discovery works with Nature, by removing the | from her way, “making her pia straight.” and ing her to her | healing without let or hindrance. i i Worth Health: feet. them get wet. Bush Arcade Building, Yeagers Shoe Store Are Children Bringing Up? It can’t be done without RUBBERS. This is what appeared in a recent number of the American Journal or The family doctor should din it into the mother's head all the time, that the health of their children lies in the Keep the feet dry. Never let No child should be al- lowed to go out in snow or rain, or when walking is wet, without Rubbers. REMEMBER, Yeager's Rubbers are the best and the prices just a little cheaper than the other fellows. Yeager’s Shoe Store, BELLEFONTE, PA. A —————— LYON & CO. White Is now on at our and Wash Silk. the Bargains. as we advertise. Allegheny St. THE LARGEST Sale new and bought with s make this the largest and best White Sale we ever held. New muslin Underwear for Ladies and Children, new Table Linens and Napkins, Towels, etc. Muslin and Sheetings at old prices. New White Goods in Cotton, Linen Lace and Embroideries, the finest and at lowest prices. New Tailored Shirt Waists, Percales, Ginghams, in fact, every- thing that belongs to a large store. Complete in every department. We cannot give you a full list of all Come in and see our stock and you will see we mean to do Rummage Sale. In addition to this big White Sale we are making a Rummage of all small jots of odds and ends in everything in the store. This will mean goods bought at less than cost for winter and sum- mer stuffs. The Rummage Table will mean dol- lars saved for all customers. LYON & COMPANY, 47-12 store. Everything pecial care to Bellefonte, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers