~~ 83 ga —Gather melons in the early morning, while the d2w is still on: put in the cold spring or well, or cellar floor, until are scrum on a hot day. Of course, ice d be so much the better. or other ob fully, and if maggots appear wash the | . wounds with a weak solution of carbolic acid and water. If the wounds are deep and difficult to reach, inject the solution with a small glass syringe. —Oats that are to be used for hay are usually seeded and grown in the same way as oats that are to be cut for the gram; that foto 9. they are sceded very in the ng upon -prepared | The better the land is prepared the surer will be the results. —Most horse owners feed too much hay. Never give a horse any more than he will eat up clean. Many excellent horsemen give no hay at all at the noon meal. They fill the mangers in the even- ing and give the horse all that he will clean up in the morning, but no more. —Manure stains on white or gray | cial horses are very unsightly and at times mighty hard to. remove. Ammonia isa’ great help in such cases and when am- monia will not do the work whiting will cover up the stain, althoug | i will not remove the cause of the trou. ae, —Pliny said that thunder is rarely | heard in winter, and that the great fertil- | ity of the soil is due to the frequency of | thunder rain in spring. Science has dis- | covered the cause of the nourishment in | rain water to be due to the presence of great quantities of ni n and ammonia in the thunder rain and in hail. | —It pays to top-dress meadows direct- ly after mowing, even with fresh barn- yard manure, for though there will be some loss from evaporation, this is more | than offset by the protection provided against sun and drought. But if the manure is properly composited it can be | applied as a top-dressing at any time without danger or loss. —The heifer intended for the future | milk cow should not be allowed to be- come too fat. From the time she is taken from the dam till she is weaned and turn- | ed into the pasture she should be fed liberally on those feeds which will develop her milk-producing organs. Those feeds are those usually given to the milk cow to promote the production of milk. To a hard-working horse ST is almost as much a necessity as f Un- less a horse lies down larly his rest is never complete and his joints and sinews stiffen. While it is true that some | horses sleep in a standing position and continue work for many years, it isequal- | ly true that they would wear much longer ! and perform their work much better if | they rested naturally. —An authority says one of the relics of barbarism that anti-cruelty societies and owners should take notice of is the habit still in vogue of burning a horse's shoe on to his hoof. The fact that a horse does not go lame immediately after the operation is no proof that the animal has not been injured. It only takes a little more time and work to carve a setting for a shoe, and it is humane. —According to one of the experiment stations, it Er 25 per cent. more feed to put a pound of grain 1 than it does on the hog, and 85 per cent. more feed for the pound of grain in the case of the older hog than on the 40-pound hog. The farmer's profit will come from choosing <aflv-maturing types of of the compact form, in turning them off young when compara- tively rapid gains may be made very cheaply. Keep the cows free from mange. If the coat is filled with the filth common to this and other skin troubles, wash the animal frequently with warm water and at soap, the lather well to tne roots of the hair with a stiff brush. § i ! Follow this with an on of any of the Vell Jrsowh Scant: If these cannot a cent. solu- tion of Be provers, will This remedy i ! £ £15; i 5% ir H °s figs 1 3 i 588 Es i i g fpf § i iE i A ; i i } g : 3 BH : tH | i i 7 5 i i i i ii i Se i i gig E § : 2 : i 4 si li 3 th g i g & | ble of doing as much work in the day as ‘very lately one has FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN DAILY THOUGHT Dare to be what you are, and to learn to resign with a good grace all that you are not and to be- lieve in your own individuality. — Amiel. A five-year-old girl had been working in the shrimp canneries of Florida all day when Mr. Owen Lovejoy, militant in be- a invited her to be Jom. o Sh She tbiatia a that she to i tears, wag “13 tired to have he piicher took- ed." Her hours of toil consisted in plucking _ the heats Yom pi tion of the eats constantly into the baby fingers, destroying nails and flesh. An army of children is engaged in the Schools of motherhood exist injthe nor- mal schools of France. Babies are brough and the students are taught pe of our American M attention to the fact that our educational gives our girls more training in mathematics than in motherhood. Prance, like us, is stirred oye the .pay question for teachers. A great ua a was recently held in the hall of the Societes Savantes in Paris to advocate equal pay for equal work. J A camp perched on the Palisades above the Hudson river is the hermitage of a New York business woman who found her health breaking under the stress of office work. For six or more months of the year she lives in the camp, arriving at her desk at ten every morning by spe- arrangement. She finds herself capa- when she began at an hour earlier. She cooks in the open, spends Saturday after- and Sundays in a bathing suit, recovered her glesps in 3 tent, and has Half a million dollars and four years of time have been expended States in preparing a report on the con- dition of woman and child wage earners in our country. The two of the nineteen volumes-to-be are now issued. T show six million American women wor for wages which a rs day. They show that women sweat-shop workers, who have to do home work be- sides, average only about tvo dollars per week. Standing this figure over against the six dollars of exclusive factory work- er, we have an estimate of four dollars for household d The great fic- tionists who have been lineation of woman may be outstripped in dramatic intensity by the naked facts set forth in the work of Commissioner of by the United | Democ amous for their de- | of Ww of forte, Pa., will be a candidate for , Su to the decision of the of at the pri Democratic voters of county at maries to be held Sept. 30th, 1911. AUDITOR. We are authorized to announce that Jeremiah be a candidate expressed at the primaries as al m to be held Sept. 30th, 1911. We are authorized to announce that Captain W. H. Fry, of F township, will be a candidate voters county, as ex- Pressed at the primaries to be held Sentember W thorized t H. R! if 'e are aul oannounce John H. unkle, * | To the Democratic Voters of Centre County. county. Labor Neill. Commissioner, subject "to" the decision of the — Democratic voters county, as expressed the primaries Sept. 30th, 1911. With surgeons, nurses, attendants, and | “we are authorized to announce that William spectators all women operations of the | H, Noll Jr.. of Spring township, will be a candi- most serious import are today performed dd fo Frio Commotion, wir Lo th under conditions which would have been | S6Csion of the Tieaotit ces 0 be held on Sat. | counted impossible a few years ago. Even | heard the statement that, althou women might make satis- factory famliy practitioners for such cas- es as whooping-cough and light measles, the hand feminine was never steady enough to wield the knife. In a photo: ph showing an operation being per- ormed at the new clinic in the hospital | of the Woman's Medical College of Penn- sylvania, not a man was present with the exception of the photographer, who en- tered the room just long enough to make | the picture. Students at the college hail | from every corner of the globe. Oriental | students are always in attendance, for in | many eastern countries women doctors | are much preferred by women patients, | and their practice is assured. Miss Kristine Bonnevie, of Christiania, is the first woman to be admitted to the | Norwegian Academy of Science. She has | a big record for learning—a degree of Doctor of Philosophy, the ition of con- servator of the zoological laboratory in | the university, and the authorship of sev- | eral scientific works. She travels the ' world over in her scientific research, and | mingles politics with science, belonging | to the new party—the Liberal Left. Miss Anne Royall, who published a newspaper in Washington in 1825, has been honored after sixty years of oblivion the erection of a tombstone and the ng of wreaths by various organiza- She was a woman journal- ist, to which fact the public has sudden- ly awakened. : 3 g : iE A kitchen of six feet in width, furnish- ing to dozens of as t a va- riety as a large city hotel t offer, is the contemplation of the house- wife. such a kitchen the meals of dining-car go forth. The kitchen is twenty feet long, and in that six-by-twen- ty space are stationed a chef, two cooks, a dishwasher. The scientific packing Wecelsayy fositiie prapar| of a complete meal could well a many 5 Sone Biden, Rex u 3 i es. Cu fitted down to the floor and up as as one can teach hold ready spices, supplies, such as , flour, vinegar, Preserves ready for serving are The new club-house for American wo- men in London was by Mrs. Whitelaw Reid. It is a four build- ing, standing at No. 31 South A st. | Its appointments are marked uiet tones and restful atmosphere. bye urday, Sept. 30th, 1911. * | We are requested to announce that William A. | EARLE C. TUTEN (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) | . | Fire, | | Life and | Automobile Insurance i t None but Reliable Companies Represented. Surety Bonds of All Descriptions. Both Telephones 56-27.y BELLEFONTE, PA JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. | This represents the largest Fi Insurance the Wand: re — NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Pioberty 22 we are in position to write Cffice in Crider’s Stone Building, 4318-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance Co. THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. We are authorized D. of gars to Gone So | cratic vote # Sihegounty as shown at the ori 1 hereby announce’ SEER TERE Soh 1911, EDWARD C. McKmviey, of Boggs We are to announce that W. Francis Seer. of | % a cundidase In the nomi- hy or Roe oe De oth, wn e are athorized to announce that A. Dietrich, of will be Candiiats De Eo § § i Be i i i gaf i Eg i OVERSEE OF THE POOR. We are authorized to announce that P. H. Gher- rity is a candidate for ination for over-seer of the book of Bellefonte subject to the de. the primaries on Sept. 30th. » A Set of Harness in Nickle or Imi- Rubber, at........... $12.88 Commissioner. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for County Commissioner, subject to the decision of | the Democratic voters as expressed at the pri- | maries September 30, 1911. Howard township | has not had a county official for thirty-five years | and as a life long Democrat, I ask kindly support in securing representation on the Democratic ticket for this end of the county. If elected I will do the best I can for every tax-payer in the | BURDINE BUTLER. The arm portions of white kid gloves can be cut into bands, collars and cuffs to trim the waist of chiffon marquisette or velvet. ta! This harness is equal to any $15 set on the market. TV STMT LST ETL LT LV LVL : w 5 ? To insure prompt accompan’ to which he will cheerfully give his con rEg James Schofield, § Spring Street 55-32 Bellefonte, Pa Sechler & Groceries and Wi age we take no chances on a faass Wine sl yene ne Colon Caley al—Several per Ib off ori sales earl ues of anything now offered. We have just opened some Large, bright, perfect fruit at 10¢/ . for sales Sechler & Bush House Block, - ith the coming of old Standard hot weather bever- eC Se Bint ot Japan fine | fine Sf each kind on all Our RC aflees have not changed Ve rcently but look fi c n wi moderate decline. Our 23¢ and 25¢ Oty are The st var: olives that are worth 35¢ per +% of one qt. or more. Sours. New full Cream Cheese 18¢ are in demand just now and we always have them in abundance. If you want some nice, brisht country we have them Finest Hams and boneless breakfast bacon at 18¢ per Ib. 56-1 - Company Food Products. per half per Ib. Fruits and Biscuits Company, Bellefonte Pa., Lime and Crushed Limestone. ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY-—, NG, Altorneys-at. ors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice courts. Consultation in or German. W * SED nant Spe i ard O.0 5. office next door te wh Meals are Served at All Hours half shell or Xa style tr ET is Sa Soe Sition Fugva a complens Dard. POPS, SODAS, SARSAP C. MOERSCHBACHER, High St., 50-32-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. 3 BUILDING MATERIAL : When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On LUMBER, MILL WORK, ROOFING, SHINGLES AND GLASS. This is the where close and EE of ate materials Et the orders of all who know of AN ESTIMATE? BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO. 52-5-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. Your land must have LIME if you i Be di A A Mn AB. AM OM AM IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician F po study, expenses, etc., and 55-1 WAS TAS TAS TAT a dn a i Me Be le NM le A Bl B-0 You Farmers and Agricatirisls E-Q drated lime (H-O) through your drill quick results, or use ordinary lime, fresh forkings, or lime for general use. BE SURE TO USE LIME Ground Lime and Limestone for all purposes. Limestone crushed to any dy Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, ’ The largest lime manufacturers in Now is the time to r orders for All railroad Ane 10 dace your orden fo Rs oo Salon AMERICAN LIME & STONE CO., 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. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. SS SL SR AEA, eats ee want to raise paying crops. Use Hy- or broadcast when you seed, for Tyrone Fi and Union Furnace. connections. Office at TYRONE, PA. The Pennsylvania State College. aa AL Ba. Bb AB Be dB AB A A Teacher A Lawyer A Physician A Journalist THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa, a a dn ii ln dB Mi OB Mr Be er Me 0 Be Mel 0 i Get the Best Meats. a save nothing by Saving peer, thin LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and customers with BS at RE 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. 433¢1y. Bellefonte, Pa. EZ Coal and Wood. EDWARD K. RHOADS Siovine wud £ a ANTHRACITE AND 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 suit purchasers, EE ay 4h Nv a} phatchuse friends and the public, at his Coal Yard, near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. 1618 Telephone Calls: {Sonera 100 ME S——————— Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers