¥ » SD atcmant Bellefonte, Pa., December 8, 1911. FARM NOTES. — —A good axle grease is made from tal- low, eight pounds; palm il, ten pounds; plumbago. one pound. Heat and mix well. —The sait in butter, as in other foods, is simpiy a matter of individual taste. What is known as "sweet cream butter” contains no salt and is popular in certain cities. It does not keep as long as salt- ed butter and may be considered a fad. —A an lo prevent rats from eating good pias in the horse stable is to sprinkle salt on the sills, plates or other places where rats frequent, and they will not disturb the harness. It is the salt that collects on the leather from the horse which they seek. —It is a mistake to feed sows and small pigs in the same lot with fattening hogs on an excessive corn diet. A little corn to hogs and pigs gives en- ergy and thrift, but too much corn to these will retard growth and prevent and song litters. Too much | corn with sows growing pigs is too much fire in baking bread; it burns in- stead of bakes. —A weed isa t that is useless or oh 0 I ing more or less a t t is wn Corn in a potato field is a weed, —Already the weather p busy telling of what a long Phe ter we are going to have. They each year. tell it if the fur is the foxes, or thick husks on the or by the ne, and now this they tell it by the nuts. The suppl nuts this year was unusuaily large, say, this is a sign that the win be long and cold, as nature is viding a plentiful abundance of food the squirrels and other wild things of the are win 2 35.880 possible, chickens should be marketed be fore the first of November, and if not they should be held until the holidays, in order that the best prices may be secur- | ed. This, of course, refers only to send- | ing to an open market, and does not ap- | ply to any private custom. | —To prevent tools from rusting, a cor- nt says take two parts each of responde! graphite and tallow and one part gum camphor; melt together and if not safe enough to form a stiff paste, add more tallow or lard. Remove all rust from the steel surface, wipe dry and apply the paste. Let it remain on for 24 hours, then rub dry. Unless the tool is needed, | even longer than one day will be still bet- | ter for the tool to be covered with the preparation. The above preparation has the effect of a coating of oil, though every vestige lus apparently been removed for | + Cow pea hay is nearly equal to alfal- fa in feeding value, contains nearly one-half more flesh and milk-making ma- terial than clover hay. It is rich in min. eral matter that is needed in forming bone, blood, flesh and milk. These qual- ities make it especially valuable for feed- ing growing cattle and pigs, dairy cows and fattening steers and ogh. cow pea enriches the land on which it grows, the same as alfalfa, clover and soy-beans. It makes hard soils mellow and aids in holding loose soils together, and stands dry weather well. ~The nearest approach to a mi’k mo- nopoly of a single farm is the Borden concern, which is not only the largest maker of condensed milk, but which sells and delivers in New York alone 2,000, quarts of fresh milk. It also sells gi i is 3¢ ill Hz fs + i 3 JE g 8 =n : g i fi Bs i {i | § : : : siEF i 2 g i i : LH i ? $2 : i § 54 g | : g 5 i 3 os Hy i ! 5 i 8g ih i / Es § 2 ig a — § E ] : i i < ¥ THE WORD PARADISE. 1*s Earliest Meaning Was an Inclosed Pleasure Ground. The earliest meaning of the word paradise appears w have been a wall ed in pleasure ground. In the Hebrew it was “perdes,” in the Persian “fer- dus,” and from one or other of these the Greeks appear to bave derived the | our own word. We also know that the | uncient menarchs of Chaldea and As- syria and also of Egypt constructed vast inclosures of forest land for the preservation of wild animals kept for hunting purposes. and these were also called paradises. Thus the historical meaning of the word comes to this: A space protected from all incursion from the ounier world. in which those who were privileged to enter were able to indulge in such pleasures as pleased the fancy. It is easy to see the translation from the material to the spiritual meaning. paradise in the latter sense meaning the place of the elect or chosen. This is strikingly borne out by the fact that the favorite battlecry of the Moslems, whose firin belief it is that those who die fighting go straight te heaven, was always “Fight! Fight! Paradise! Par- adise!” And the strong probability is that they got the word from the Per- sian campaigns of the cighth century. The use of the word in its present form in the New Testament Is of Greek origin. and its description as applied to the garden of Eden is prob ably of Hebrew origin. dating from the period of the captivity. MILLET’S SKETCHES. The Painter Didn't Values Them and Let Them Go Cheap. I sold Sensier n quantity of Millet's sketches, and this is how I got them. I went into his studio one morning and found the servant making a fire with pieces of paper that looked as if they bad pencil marks on them. [ ex amined them more closely and, seeing that they were the painter's sketches, began to upbraid her for what she was doing, but she very coolly told me that her master had told her to burn up the papers. 1 could hardly contain myself with astonishment. when in came Mil- let, and I begun to reproach him for the destruction of what 1 knew would sooner or later bring money. To all of which he calmly replied: “Ah, they are good for nothing. 1 have got out of them all 1 want.” Just then [ no- ticed a pile of paper in the corner, and I looked it over and found that it con- . | sisted of sketches. “What will you take for the lot | - | asked. “Anything youn have a mind to give.” said Millet. “Will 300 francs be enough?” “Oh, yes." I handed him the money and took the sketches home and counted 800! Soon after 1 sold them to Sensier, who mounted them carefully and set to work to sell them. From this one can get some idea of the endless prelimi- nary study Millet gave to the prepara- tion of a picture.— Charles Jacque in Century. Almost an Accident. The fussy little gentleman sidled up to the cabman, who was standing de- jectedly at the bottom of the hill “And pray. my good fellow.” he purred, “what's the matter?” “Matter, sir!" replied the cabby, turning the straw in his mouth. “Why. a genelman's 'osg ran away with a broo'm. Never seed anything like it, sir. Down the ’ill he came, with the reins a-dangling and the sharves splintered. and kuocks a butcher's barrow into a china shop!” “Dear me!” muttered the O. M. “Yes,” continued the cabby. “Then he bangs agin a carringe and pair and smashes the hoffside back wheel all to bits. Then he hupsets a phaeton and a gig, and if he hadn't run agin my old cab and turned it right over I'm werry much inclined to think there'd have been a haccident.”—Lon- don Answers, it Shocked Her. “My gooduess,” said Mrs. Oldcastle, “1 can’t understand how any one ever - | is able to muster up enough courage or daring or whatever it is to go flying on an aeroplane, There is nothing in the world that could induce me to travel on one, no matter how safe they might “Yes, it's perfectly awful the way folks risk their lives.” replied her host- ess as she rubbed an $8,000 solitaire on her velvet sleeve. *[ really think a good many people go crazy over them kind of thiugs. When [ was a girl I went to see a man who went up in a balloon and came down on his parasite, and it affected me so I never want to seen anything of that kind again as long ms 1 live." —C'hieago Record-Her- ald. Sarcastic. A young author, evidently desirous of benefiting by the experience of an older brother craftsman, once asked Richard Henrys Stoddard how he had acquired such a masters of Anglo “1 don't now how | ever did it.” replied the poet. who. after a mo- ment’s reflection. added. “1 think, however, | must attribute ir to the fact that 1 never had any education.” Duties, Mun cannot choose his duties. He may choose to forsake his duties and choose not to have the sorrow they But he will go forth, and what find? Sorrow without duty— herbs and no bread with them. Cr — p— ? | + highest lewe.--Ciles. highest liberty is harmony with LOCKED IN ONE MAN'S BRAIN So Accurate Are These Wonderful Standards That Twenty or More of Them Rubbed Together Adhere as Though Made of One Piece of Metal. In a closely guarded room of a small shop in an obscure Swedish village a word “paradelsos,” from which we get | man toils in secret, says a writer in Cassier's Magazine. Just how he ac- complishes what he does no one knows, not even his sons who work with him. Johannson has made the world beat a path to his door, for he has discov- ered the secret of making a more ac- curate limit gauge than any previously in use. A single set of his gauges gives a practically unlimited series of sizes, rising by steps of a ten-thou- sandth of an inch—much less than the traditional! hair's breadth—to twenty- six inches. It is said that 80,000 com- binations of these gauges ave possi ble. No dimension within their limits has been cited that they failed to repro- duce. Extreme accuracy in building machinery, particularly that of motor- cars, is of the greatest importance, and the first step toward that end is the perfection of a standard. Making such standards is a tedious and expensive process But Jobannson has not found it so. or else he values his se- eret lightly from the pecuniary point of view, for he is able to pay Uncle Sam a duty of 45 per cent and still offer his gauges in the American mar- ket for a few hundred dollars, although they could not be made here for many times their price. When two of these Swedish gauges are “wiped” together =o as to exclude the air from between them they ad- here with a pressure which experi- ment has shown to exceed thirty pounds to the square inch. Twenty or more pieces may be thus wiped to- gether and supported horizontally by merely belding the last one, which means that the accuracy of their vari ous surfaces is almost absolute. Finishing one surface or two sur- faces to a very close limit by lapping —rubbing together with a fine abrasive between—is a comparatively simple matter. But achieving such perfect parallelism as is shown by these re- markable gauges is quite another thing, a secret quite well worth know- ing. The pecaliarity about this mysteri- ously powerful adhesion of the sep- arate pieces is that the feel of the built np gauge thus formed is exactly the same as that of a single plece of metal. and this hoids for any combi- nation, the number of pieces forming it not affecting the sensation in the slightest. Any skilled mechanic will understand Instinctively the meaning of this and its testimony to the ac- curacy of the gauges. For instance, 1 one inch gauge may be built up of pieces representing 0.540.240.0535 .1504+0.1 inch, and the resulting piece will be one inch abso- lute. or any one of several other com- binations may be made to represent an inch, and blindfolded the most expert mechanic could not detect any differ ence between the manner in which this composite inch gauge and the one piece inch gauge fitted in a snap gauge of the same size. [t would be an easy matter to confuse the two in handling. Mr. Johannson, the backwoods in- ventor who discovered what thousands of the most expert mechanics in ma- chine building centers have vainly sought for half a century, limits his output to a few hundred sets of gauges a year whether purely from inclina- tion or because of mechanical difficul- ties in production is as much a secret as the process itself and one that he will doubtless take with him when he dies. ~Mrs. Justwed—There's nothing in the house fit to eat. T'm going home to my. Mother. r. Justwed (broke)—Wait till | get my hat, and I'll go with you. — Medical. A To Ailing Women A LITTLE SOUND ADVICE WILL HELP MANY A SUFFERER IN BELLEFONTE. No womancan be healthy and well if the kidneys are sick. Poisons that pass off inthe secretions when the kidneys are well, are retained in the body when the kidneys are sick. Kidneys and bladder be- come inflamed and swollen and worse troubles quickly follow. This is often the true cause of bearing down pains, lameness, backache, side ache, etc. Uric poisoning also causes headaches, dizzy spells, languor, nervousnoss and rheu matic pain. When suffering so, try Doan's Kidney Pills, a remedy that cures sick kidneys. You will get better as the kidneys get bet- ter, and health will return when the kid- Mrs. J. F. Thal. 22W. Thomas St.,Belle- fonte, Pa., says: “Iam very grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me. My back ached for along time and I had severe pains in my kidneys accompanied by headaches and of dizzi- ness. The kidney secretions were too fre- quent in passage and caused me no end of annoyances. When my attention was called to Doan’s Kidney Pills, I procured a supply at Green's Pharmacy Co. and it did not take them long to give me relief. 1 cheerfully recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills to any one afflicted with kidney com- When Mrs. Thal was interviewed on Nov. 22, 1900 she said: “I still have un- limited confidence in Doan's Kidney Pills, for whenever I have used them in the past two years, they have benefitted me. You may continue to publish my former en: dorsement of this remedy. ——Mrs. Matelot, a working woman, | hastened to the mechanism and attempted | » Attorneys-at- -. and her two children, a son aged twelve | to wind it up, but was unable todoso. A| _-— Law EERE and a daughter aged fourteen, have lately storm had arisen. Mrs. Matelot, there- | ar been d in France with the Cross | fore, set her children at work turning the | § “350 "Fo: ~Altoriey at Law, and Ribbon of the Legion of Honor for lantern with their hands. The young- | Room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y. heroic conduct. The oun; eS JLo ad on} follow- | — keeper o Kerdonis thouse on | ing night. Only on the third day did ‘ —Attorney-at- an island beyond Quiberon. The light | they receive relief. ' B iD ofl the Connie. aon in was 3 evolving one and the hasbogd was si —————— | Bellefonty. Sor Office in Crider’s E careful to keep it in operation. t I a8 z ‘ — was taken d i n with n ts of Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, H La = . evening is | — m— ! >. —Altorney Counsellor at illness Mrs. Matelot lighted the lantern | | a ices yarman House Wack, Hell and started the clockwork. Soon the | Flour aud Feed. | ioieatopmometiv. Jamesn, opy En ing a her | ¥ J H. WETZEL and Counsellor at Law. um. woman | : . po y atLaw. + CURTIS Y. WAGNER, a I ; to promptly. i oyu busingss ended Insurance. i BROCKERHOFF MILLS, em re —— - ig BELLEFONTE, PA. GT: BOWER & ZERBY—, . EARLE C. TUTEN Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of | El gree pr 2S | the courts. Consultation in or German, {Successor to D. W, Woodring.) ur ' Fire, Roller Flo J imal the cours, Co aie 2 in house : Feed All business will receive at Life Corn Meal FE ——— d it = Physicians. an and Grain nT —————————————— ——— — Automobile Insurance W = ie Centre coun. hu B Manufactures and 3 : sopnuiartares di int on haf as ab times the oh DESUCHCS on gr Note but Reliable Companies Represented. WHITE STAR Dentists. Surety Bonds of All Descriptions. OUR BEST RTT ee Both Telephones 5627.y BELLEFONTE, ea | HIGH GRADE DF AD, D. 0S; oes to VICTORY PATENT oe OH : FANCY PATENT | [5 cell SuperiorCrown and Bridge work. OHN F. GRAY & SON, |= place in the county aco ee St. er H, W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, . ' em electric used. Has . ! of Fire S P R A Y and prices reasonable. Soa Life be = -— = nt I ce. All of ———— ] P— a ————————— i — Acci nsuran kinds of Grain bought at the office. Flour Fi Ages Tepresents od Fire | OFFICE STOR ESTAURANT. . ' and ~BISHOP STREET. — NO ASSESSMENTS — hy BELLEFONTE. PA. gute sow lay a ik Class Res Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your * MILL AT ROOPSBURG. Lite or Property as we are in position to write ——————————— Meals are Served at All Hours Office in Crider’s Stone Building. ane Saadiery. half or in any style d Sand: 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA. a ps a “sh — en din haves E Dian: Drepiied to POPS, WwW SODAS, ARILLA, iT he Preferred Accident { Insurance Co. | THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY 3 i : BENEFITS: by accident, $5,000 2 and one foot, 630 2% : foot, oye total disability, weeks) TH FERRER § (limit 10 per week, Phimit 26 PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. partial disability, weeks) good zaoral this A Fire Insurance 1 invite your attention to my Fire Insur. ance of and Most Ex. ed by any agency in Central hn H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. LST NSM DNC LY LV MTD LAV LC LST LOLOL LST LTB 50-21. “Ta. 4 ’ q . we Lime and Crushed Limestone. ES 8 [ o3 ag plan that save you some C. MOERSCHBACHER, on a set of Single Harness. Now it is up to you to make us 50-32-1y High St, Bellefonte, Pa. Why send your money awayrhen {| COM and Wood: In quality at less money, a guarantee to be as or A antes EDWARD K. RHOADS A Set of Harnese in Nickle or Imi- tation Rubber, at.......... $12.85 This harness is equal to any $15 set on the Tloning and Copumienn or ANTHRACITE ann BITUMINOUS COALS CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains, which has no equal for less than $17. To insure prompt shi t should accompany order. cut of the harness will be mailed upon request. Address all communications to E. N. SCHOFIELD, Mail Order AT ANAT LAT LV BTA te Pa. to which he will Gu Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. U ARAXTER ~The above goods are as rep- James Schofield, : : KINDLING WOOD Spring Street 55-32 Bellefonte, Pa ATA AT ATA by the bunch or cord as mgv suit purchasers, respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard. near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. mn CAT AVANT AY AVY AV AY AVAYS VAT AV AVAOY AV LAVATVAWT er Your land must have LIME if you quick results, or use Works at Frankstown, Spring The largest lime man tes ——— a — ro —— PP A ——— The Pennsylvania State College Offers Exceptional Advantages IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician 851 Ce a a dB Bi Bl ln Bn. Al AB AD. Bo. H-0 You Famers and Agricaliurists EO drated lime (H-Q) through your drill ordinary lime, fresh BE SURE TO USE LIME Ground Lime and Limestone for all purposes. mmm— Limestone crushed to any size. ow in he {1 5, 0, ES SS ie AMERICAN LIME & STONE CO., 56-4 Office at TYRONE, PA. A Scientific Farmer Or secure a Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. 161s Telepbone Calls: { Contra) Bika Money to Loan. —— NEY TO want to raise paying crops. Use Hy- ewan Ys Pay 1 forkings, or lime for general use. De Pa. pA] 51-14-1y. oo Heut Market RT —— TS - - Get the Best Meats. Teg Se LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE REET 1 alwavs have ~— DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, 4334-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. Forge and Union Furnace. in Pennsylvania. a High Street. A Teacher —avarvaag A Lane BUILDING MATERIAL : ysician a x A Journalist When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On aa al dh ad di Bn dl EB Ml Mn in aa an. ob Sd 0 TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. LUMBER. WORE. ne ding Hi : the English, Frer German, Span I 3 yout SaGLES he count n Chem, ge chmod Mp ERO I pean of YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. know fe; F AN ESTIMATE? - THE REGISTRAR, 051. Bellefonte, Pa. State College, Centre County, Pa.