"Bellefonte, Pa., June 16, 1911. Most of the Raw Material Is Bought From the Government. Jewelers derive their gold supply from various sources, such as old jew- elry, banks and refineries, but the greater part of the raw gold used by the manufacturer comes from the gov- ernment. From the refiner the gold comes to the factory in the form of buttons or granules. The refineries employ the waste of the jewelry shops and by burning off the material portions and subjecting the result to certain proc- esses recover much gold that other- wise would be lost to the trade. For many years there was a steady drain on the gold coin in circulation, caused by the use of the coin by jew- | elers in search of raw material. The fact that our government turned out a coin that after passing through the assay office was of twenty-two carat fineness, only two grains below the | pure gold standard. and had also been worked over, the silver and copper forming the alloy having been mixed ' thoroughly in the gold before the coin was minted, made the gold coin par- ticularly attractive to the jeweler. The manufacturer experienced no trou- ble when the gold coin was used, in- g3much as the alloy always had been | combined with the metal, and all that was necessary for the commercial utilization of the coin was to alloy it sufficiently to bring the gold down to the point required; also, from the jew- | eler's viewpoint, a lot of time and diffi- culty was saved. inasmuch as this scheme did away with much bookkeep- | ing and rendered unnecessary the ty- ing up of considerable amounts of | money in the purchase of raw mate- | rial to be held as stock. Later, how- | ever, the government made up the | pure gold in brick or bar form, and it is in that shape the greater bulk of | the supply is now derived. Thousands of dollars pass between the banks and the manufacturing jew- elers every year in the forms of bars of gold, the banks handling these for | the benefit of their clients. The bricks vary in value according to weight from $200 to $500 and come with the gov- ernment assay office stamp as a guar- antee of purity and fineness.—New York Press. STANDARD MEASURES. The Old Bucket and the Half Bushel Basket Were Alike. Farmer Giles had heard rumors of | the short weight scandal; but, as for himself, he was honest in thought, | word and deed. He was naturally in- censed when an apple buyer from the city objected to his balf bushel meas- | ure. “I've used that red bucket five years,” he said, “and I know it's correct.” “A dozen years’ use wouldn't affect its correctness,” was the reply. “Have you any other reason for thinking it is correct?” The farmer controlled his anger and after a moment's thought critic to the cornerib and showed him a basket woven from hickory splits. “That measure twice full fills this,” | “And this holds exactly a | he said. bushel.” “How do you know it does?" “Because Bill Sullivan made it, as he makes baskets for everybody, and he said it was a bushel.” Still the man was not satisfied. They | went to interview Bill “Why, of course,” said the basket maker, “I weave every one of them of an exact size. 1 make only one pattern basket to hold a bushel.” “But how do you know the pattern holds a bushel? “How do | know? I'm sure of it 1 made it originally to hold two of this half bushel basket.” “And this half bushel basket?’ Bill frowned and pulled his hair in an effort to remember. Then his face brightened. “Why, yes,” he said, “I'm sure of it. 1 tried it one time, Giles, by that old red bucket measure of yours!” — Youth's Companion. The Way to Bake Beans. To make baked beans soak one and one-half pints small white beans over- night in soft water. In the morning drain and parboil, but not enough to crush the beans. Place in the bottom of a bean pot several slices of bacon (salt or fresh pork), then put in about half the beans, over which sprinkle salt, a heaping spoonful of brown sug- ar or New Orleans molasses, then more slices of the bacen. Over this place the rest of the beans, with the salt, sugar or molasses and bacon on top. Cover with soft water and bake at least eight hours, though they are bet- ter if baked all day. Add soft water as needed. The High Hatbox. If you keep your hatbox on a high shelf in a closet you may find the fol- lowing suggestion worth trying: Slit open the two upright edges of one side of the hatbox, so that when the cover is raised this side will drop down as if on hinges. This will allow you to re- move or replace the hat without taking the box from the shelf.—Harper’'s. His Sincerity. “I was surprised when 1 heard that Grabrox had joined the church.” “I wasn't. I happened to be present when he and his business partner shook dice to see which member of the gr should join.”—Indianapolis Jour- led his | BASEBALL STRATEGY. ——— ' Bench Orders at Times Queers the So Loose the Animal Can Almost Turn Batter With the Fans. One of the charms of the game is its | ' but fe v yeurself hoarse. “Hit it out, you, you ‘bonehead! What yer standing there for? Think this a pink tea? They're all good—hit ‘em! And the player at the plate, bearing, longs to obey—for all players love to hit—yet holds him- k ‘ dering the game. A man is on | There is but one out. Hits have few and far between, but a lo i will score the man. How get | iy? By meeting one which “cuts heart of the plate” square and A How get the pitcher to serve ball? By “working” him until ! balls have been called. when | fourth '»:ll must come over the pla of i by gd the orders. If they go wrong. if the pitcher succeeds in getting three strikes across before three balls, the batter | strikes out. and a groan goes up from | ! i { i a TS RS. SKIN OF A BADGER. Somersaults In It. is : i g li gkg as might be expected from an anteater of the dark continent. He who has removed the pelt of o badger and Is at all uhserving does not wonder at this anir 1 being sharp bit ten and that he ¢ + to hang with bulldog tenacity “y+ formation and adjustment « we are noted. ' Neither is it go mney of 0 mystery how he manages to bore through the soll so rapidly that half a dozen men with shovels cannot overtake him, for he is | a mass of cords and muscles, particu: larly in the neck, chest and shoulders, ¥ or the batter be given a pass; hence the crowd. But the batter knows, and the pitcher knows. and the team | knows, and the players on the bench . know that the man at the plate struck out because he was obeying orders.— . World Today. TOLD IN FEW WORDS. Shortest Robber Story In History, as Narrated by Voltaire. In his study of “Seven Great States- men" Andrew D. White describes the work done in the eighteenth century by the French minister Turgot against the vicious system then prevailing of “farming out” the taxes, combination of contractors resulted, who grew enormously rich at the peo- ple’s expense, not. however, without able criticism. This syndicate assumed the charac- ter of what in America of these days A great would be called a “combine,” and at | the head of it were the farmers gen- eral, wealthy, powerful and, as a rule, | merciless. Their power pervaded the entire nation. from the king's apart- | ments at Versailles to the cottages of | the lowliest village, To those men and their methods Vol- taire had made a reference which ran through France and indeed through Europe. A party of Parisians were amusing | each other by telling robber stories. ! Presently Voltaire, who had been listening quietly, said: “] can tell a robber story better than any of yours.” | The whole room immediately be- | came silent and listened to the great- est personage in the French literature | of the eighteenth century. | Voltaire after clearing his throat be- | gan as follows: “Once on a time there was a farmer | general.” Then he was silent. Presently all began to cry out: “Why do you stop? Go on. Tell us | the story.” “] have told the story,” said Vol- | taire. “Do you not see that my state- | ment implies the greatest robber story | in history #* i - | What Is a Bath? What is a bath? Is it the simple | bath of hot or cold water and soap, | or the Turkish bath of hot air or the | Russian one of steam, or the mud | bath of Saint-Amand-les-Eaux, or the | compressed air bath of Reichenhall, or | the baths of wine favored by famous | beauties, or the sun bath of modern hygienists, or the Laplander’s plunge into the hot blubber of a just killed ! whale, or the bath of asses’ milk, to provide which for his consort an Earl of Portman bought cheap the Port- | man estate north of Oxford street as a | farm to keep a herd of asses? Now. which of these is a bath?—London Chronicle. “The Almighty Dollar.” The idea of the forceful phrase “the almighty dollar” is much older than the time of Washington Irving. Ben Jonson's “Epistle to Elizabeth, Count- ess of Rutland.” commences thus: ‘Whilst po for which all virtue now is sol And almost every vice, almightie gold. --London Notes and Queries. or —— When Tennyson Sat Up Nights. We have bad Alfred Tennyson here; very droll and very wayward, and | much sitting up of nights till 2 or 3 {in the morning with pipes in our mouths, at which good hour we would get Alfred to give us some of his mag- jc music, which he does between | growling and smoking, and so to bed. —Fitzgerald's “Letters” (1838). | Had Misjudged Him. | “Does your father ever kiss your | mamma, Willie?” asked the lady who ' had once been the gentleman's sweet- ! heart. | “Yes, every morning when he goes away to the city.” “Dear me! And to think that I once ' doubted his courage!”—Chicago Rec- ord-Herald. Creditors have better memories than : debtors.—Franklin. ——— — — ——— ——— very similar in physical construction to the ground mole, The badger toes inward sharply when traveling and always on the walk, twisting about here and there very much like the movement of a skunk, while if it be in winter he makes a business of hunting buried dormant woodchucks. He is a for bearer of rather coarse quality. and there is a great range of value in the pelts taken. depending upon the length of the coat. A badger is chiefiy valuable when it has a long coat, so that the guard hairs can be plucked and used to make shaving brushes. CORSICAN CRUELTY. it Loomed Up Large In Napoleon's made him forget the pain he bad gra- tuitously inflicted by some show of af: fection. But tenderness was not In his character. Corsicans scarcely know what it means, and. though Napoleon used to say. “1 am less of a Corsican than one thinks,” he was really more so than any one or be himself thought. Instead of quieting his nephew he be- came angry and gave him a violent slap on the face. The child ran weep- ing to his Uncle Lucien, who was pres- ent. while Mme. Murat was so upset that she wax taken ill, “from the ef-| fort.” says Lucien. who relates this episode, “she made to control her feel- | ings. which such violence to her child outraged. As for the First Consul, he | left the room, shrugging his shoulders ' and slamming the door and saying that Caroline had always been an affected creature and acted like all parents who spoiled their children.” — Turquan's “Sisters of Napoleon.” Old Time Smallpox Cure. | To cure smallpox was apparently a | very simple matter in the good old times. John of Gaddesden, court doc- tor to Edward 1l.. has recorded that! he got rid of the disease by the simple ; expedient of wrapping his patients in | red cloth. | some other red cloth. the son of the illustrious king of Eng- land suffered from smallpox. I took care that all about his bed should red, and that cure succeeded very well.”—London Chronicle. i i Sleep and Dreams. i The brain is more active while en- | gaged in dreaming than when not thus engaged. The only perfect sleep is that which is dreamless The moment the sleeper begins to dream he begins to work. and the more vivid and pro tracted the dream the more intense, naturally, becomes the work It is possible that at no time during the waking hours of life is the brain so | active as it is In the strange business ‘ of dreaming. i ——— A Treasure of a Cook. Mr. Newedd—What! No cook stove g Ee PP L=* APPETITE &c. Anyone sending a skeich and Script may quickly ascertain Is loss of vitality, vigoror tone, and is en an are . i ne Drogirating ¢ on patents sent free. Oldest agency In aetious sd especialy Joiv Seople coi ken Mons & . receive Special hand, medics to tke lor itis me | NOO® Without GLATER WU RICAN 's Sar. » Sm hie se afin 8 a adams ped nek Lani Sct and up the jon of any Ti a s “Since 1 began taking Hood's Sarsa-- $1. Sold bv all newsdealers. porilia my appetite hag greatly i MUNN & CO., also sleep . 1 recommend 1 1y. New Y medicine to all who are suffering from in- AL oh office, 68 F Sr Washinsion. D.C. digestion, nervousness or impure blood. N. Y. ILES.—A cure that is guaranteed if you use re is no real substitute for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Get it in usual liquid form or D. Matt. aoe oda in ies “S622 Statesville, N. C., writes: Plumbing. = Wh Good Health « Ei™umel ans 52.25-1y. MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster Pa. Good Plumbing Travelers Guide. GO TOGETHER. SRE Re When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul Y escaping ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1909. poisonous; your system READ DOWN READ UP poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. wesc peit STATIONS SANITARY PLUMBING |'™** a is the kind we do. It'sthe kind you 4% P6551 3 20 JE} INTE. "10% 4 ought to have. Wedon't trust work to : 715 706 232 857 452 9 boys. Our are Skilled Mechanics, | 7 2017 11} 2 37 18 51) 4 47/19 21 no better anywhere. Our 1 7211718 245 . 845 441915 Material and iRnn 38 3 4300 0 an 737) 728] 2 55/... | 3% § 29 08 Fixtures are the Best ]87% 18" RE ine 746 7 . Not a cheap or inferior article in our entire ! 1a 3% . i » : ae 5 establishment, And with good work and the | £87 & 3 18 Rls Pres arel Huh ECE ces are lower 810, 8 02! 3 30. MILL HALL..| 8 05! 3 56 8 3 than many who give you , unsanitary (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) work and the Jowest grade of fnishings.” For 1 40 853...) re......| 309) 752 12 15| 9 30 Arr. WM'PORT } kv¢: 2 =| t7 ARCHIBALD ALLISON NES 1 HE ha. 8 Reap i 2 | ’ i | . Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 7 3| €%...PHILADELFA.... 18.36 1 2 56-14-1v. 1010, 900... NEW YORK......... | 900 (Via Phila.) . p.m. a.m. Arr. Lve.! a.m. p.m, | t Week Days. Fine Job Printing. : FINE JOB PRINTING a — er ———— as smo | ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. Schedule to take effect Mondav. Tan. 6. 1910 Treatment of Children. in the house? | gave you money to A SPECIALTY—=0 WESTWARD | [EASTWARD Napoleon had a singular rage for Duy one. Mr. Newedd—Yes. my love, | ° Readdown. Staion. | r Fed ve pulling children's ears. sometimes so Dut 1 found 1 hadn't enough to buy a | AT THE tNo5 tNo3No1 {tNo2(t Nod No 6 hard as to make th nild stove and hire a cook. too, so 1 let the i ! ! : a i e poor ¢ ren cry. cod! ! p. m.ia, m./am.|Lves. Ara. m.p. m..p.m Caroline wis very vexed when she Stove 50. But the codk is here, and; , ,; cyMAN OFFICE 2/00( 10 18) 6 30|.. BellSfonte...| "8 50 600 saw her little Achille the victim of his She's 8 treasure. She has just gone : 3 hernie| B31 13 0 5 47 uncle's caresses. and more than once Ot t0get us some crackers and cheese. | 3 B 0 se 3 Stevens... 835 34 her son's tears made her weep too. There is no style of work, from the 030 6 pines Park 831 5 One Joy the First Consul, pulling the | cheapest “Dodger” to the finest i : B i § 2 --Fillmore.. 83 3 8 ears of the little fellow, hurt him, and “Waddles....| 8 20 | he cried out. To teach him not to ery p.., hmprtans 0 Haiers, RIA, BOOK WORK, : 5 i £18 .Krumrine..| 8 207 ; his uncle pulled his ear again, harder. g ,.¢q and sure remedy for infants and children . —=2 I ber Achille, having freed himself, cume gpd see that it that we car: not do in the most satis- | $23 Tu er] ae back to him in a fury and, raising his factory manner. aid at £yicts OS na sad BB 3 Bloomadert,| 7 2 330 little fist, shouted: , _Bearsthe 7 communicate with this office. F. H. THOMAS, Supt. You are a villain, a wicked, wickea Signature of y - — eter etme at | villain!" In Use For Over 30 Years, Te rr. : g To prove the contrary Napoleon The Kind You Have Always Boaght. | Children Cry for Children Cry for should have embraced his nephew and Fletchwr’s Castoria. Fletcher's Castoria. Clothing. Clothing. LA FRR REREEREEREE SEER EER SINT SOME RE BARGAINS Bellefonte. Allegheny St. In Men's and Young Men's Suits. Odds and Ends, One and two Suits of a kind, all this Seasons Goods, priced away below their real value. LET US SHOW YOU. The Fauble Stores. } BI EEERRRREEE SEE BEES EEREE Be RREERES SEE EER EIEEES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers