ERR July 19, 1912. ~ Bellefonte, Pa WATERWAY’'S WAR. By PlHmmer Erskine Co.reville set him down for a diam= | mer the very first evening. He was pot the advance agent of some theater rompany or he would have hung =a w bill in the bar room of the le hotel the first thing. Since there were no show bills in evidence, e must be a salesman even though carried no sample trunks. Outside of Col. Carr and his guests at the old Carr homestead, the only well dressed men to drop off at Carrsville were drummers and advance agents. But though Frederick Waterbury: (they got the name from the register) arrived on the noon train, he made no effort to see his customers, a proceed- ing which surprised the hetel habitues greatly. He smiled tolerantly at the very ob- vious efforts made to pump him, and seemed to delight in returning an- swers concealing in their very frank- {7 ness. In the end, even Jed Hawkins, | the lawyer, abandoned his cross ques- | tioning. For two or three days Waterbury idled about the town, driving occasion- ally, but for the most part hanging about the hotel, the center of the town's gossip. Then he furnished a real sensation. He had taken title ta the west side of Bailey's pond. “He got it, sure enough,” declared Hawkins. 1 saw the papers. He's got the old Bailey place and a strip off the Mehan farm and ten acres from the old Coon farm. ‘That gives him about two-thirds of the pond. Won't the old colonel be mad, though, when he finds out? I know he wanted to get the Bailey place for himself.” Carrsville had been the home of the Carr family for a century and a quar- ‘ter, but Col. Cephas Carr was the only one who had fared well in worldly ‘goods. The whole township had bes longed to the Carrs once but now the {entire estate consisted of some hun- /dred and forty acres. Carr had sought to repurchase the land about the little \ EAPRESS OFFICE - 711 “What are you doing here!” lake that had been seld to pay the debts of his ancestors, but his domi. neering ways had not gained friends for him. Carrsville, fully appreciative of the situation, chuckled to itself and pray- ed that it might be there to see when the colonel heard the news. As most of them were in dally attendance on the arrival of trains, the wish was gratified some three weks later, for the Carr carriage drew up at the sta- tion shortly before the arrival of the noon train. Waterbury, whose frank good nature had made the whole town his friends, was sitting on the baggage truck when the train pulled in. From the Pullman, at the forward end of the train, emerged the colonel, tall, severe and stately. His townsmen regarded him curiously but they gasped when with a start the colonel paused in front of Waterbury, “What are you doing here?” he de- manded imperiously. “Following your advice,” explained Waterbury. “You suggested that I ‘was more ornamental than useful, so I've gone to work.” “And have selected Carrsville as the marrow fleld for your somewhat limit. ied abilities?” “Precisely. Small beginnings make big endings,” reminded the younger jnan. “I've taken the old Bailey farm and am going to raise fur.” “To raise fur.” “Precisely. Muskrats, sauirrels, pe haps foxes and bullfrogs. Of course the frogs are not fur bearing, but there's a good market for their legs.” “On my pond?” The colonel was in. ieredulous, “On my two-thirds,” corrected Wat. jerbury. “If any of the muskrats or 'trogs get over on your side, just wade out and chase them home.” The hands holding the heavy cane ftwitched nervously, but by a violent effort the colonel retained command | of his temper, and passed on. ' Fresh sensation was found that levening in a telegram that was sent |: to New York. It may have been a wiolation of regulations, but the jentire town knew that the colonel had wired: “Keep Cilio in city. Young Whater- fury here.” It was brief enough, but sufficient to give the hint that a romance lay be- fiind the matter, and interest grew at grew thease pavipaned wnban The colonel, with growing uneasi- ' Less, observed the change of senti ment. He had been accustomed io dominate the small community and row he found that Waterbury's more practical ideas were being accorded the greater respect. It was intolerable that this enemy should invade his own town and destroy his prestige, but it colonel stormed. in all innocence, had raided the colo- | nel's pet stock and bad cost him half { a million in less than six hours. Wat- erbury had been regaried as a thing | of evil. The tacit acceptance of his attentions to Clio Carr became active opposition. He was attacked in his | stock operations until he dropped from the street and then, be- cause he had done so, the colonel had | consent to Fred's marriage to Clio. To justify himself in his daughter's eyes, he had pleaded that Waterbury. | 'had no means of gaining a livelihood, ignoring his millions. Until he ar- lated himself upon the success of his | isirategy, yet here was Waterbury | ‘calmly establishing what he could see | was going to be a very profitable busi- | mess, Not only that, but he had utterly de- stroyed the picturesqueness of the lit- tle lake that had added so much to the wiew from Castle Carr. The huts of sightly, though they were too crowded ‘to be picturesque, too suggestive of man’s industry, but the fence poles stuck gauntly from the water, and, of course, boating was impossible. An offer of purchase was treated with disdain, and Carrsville grinned delightedly. They had suffered from ‘the colonel. In Waterbury he had appreciated Waterbury accordingly. Then came the final straw in the in- timation that a scion of royalty had decided to visit “the States” and would accept the colonel's repeated invita. tions. “I am anticipating with great pleas. ure,” wrote the Personage, “a visit to Castle Carr. I recall the photographs ‘an American country place.” the window, looking out across the rank marsh grass to the ugly wall and the colony of muskrats on the further ‘side. At last he went over to ‘the table and drew out a telegraph blank. Clio appeared three days later in answer to the summons, It was too durk to see the lake when she arrived, but early the next morning she looked out of her window and giggled with bury's attack. She preserved a grave face at the interview with her father, and pres- powers, Apparently waiting for her on the piazza. “What do you think of the fur farm?” he asked. your side of the water?” “You ought to be ashamed of your- self, Fred,” ly horrid.” “It's your father's fauit,” he defend- ed. fered with,” “I know,” she agreed. in an awful fix.” “Look here, Clio,” he said earnestly. “I've either got to lick or be licked. I've licked him good and I'm going to rub it in. It's the price of peace, dear. Your father will respect the man who has defeated him. He never will if I appear to give in. I've worked like a day laborer ever since spring and I'm entitled to my victory. You come to ‘make terms, don't you?” “To plead with you,” she corrected. “To ask you, for the sake of old friendship, to give up this idea. You ‘will be paid all you have expended and a handsome profit.” “And if 1 refuse?” fessed, “I think father might be will ing to merge the two properties. We could build on this side of the iake. it would help the view.” “I think I'll drop over,” laughed Waterbury, “and talk over building plans, Come and see the place.” With little exclamations of wonder and delight she accompanied him over the farm. Waterbury could afford the best and his place was most com- plete. “It seems a shame that this will all have to go,” she said, regretfully. “I suppose you will give it up.” “For you, ves,” he assented. “And count it well lost in the bargain. I think I'll keep a couple of muskrat families, though, as a sort of re- minder to the colonel.” The colonel stared when he saw the two leave the carriage together, and Clio, tripping up the steps, ex- plained: “He says that I am the price of the property, father. You told me to ‘make the best bargain I could. He; ‘would not listen to any other terms.” The colonel sank back in his chair ‘and helplessly regarded his prospec- ‘tive son-in-law. Only surrender was: possible. “You have stood my test,” he said with dignity. “I wanted to prove you ‘before I gave my consent.” ‘Waterbury, his arm ‘round Clic’s waist, smiled pleasantly. that, do you?” he asked. The colo- nel’'s head sank. Even last ditch he bad been driven in defeat. i | was none the less a fact though the Copyright, 1911, by Associated Literary | { Ever since the day Fred Waterbury, | Waterbury had some | knowledge of her coming, for he was “Look good from | | “] didn't want to make trouble, | |S and I wasn't going to see my musk-' ruts go homeless this winter, nor was | 1 going to have my frog industry inter- “Well, a8 a last vasart™ she con-, | ¥ made this hig excuse for refusing his | beat fa a half teaspoonful HE great difficulty is always te open people's eyes: to touch | their feelings and break their hearts is the difficult thing is to break their —Ruskin. Casy heads. USES FOR SOUR CREAM. Sour cream is such a valuable aid | quietly | in coo%ery that not a tablespoonful of it should ever be wasted. To each cup of thick sour cream, of soda, | ! then use with a scant amount of ba- | | king rowder. With cream very little | i shorte)ing need be used, one to three rived in Carrsville he had congratu- | | tablesjoonfuls, according to the rich- nes of the cream. Drop Cookies.—Use half a cup of butter, one cup of sugar, one egg beat- en ligh’, half a cup of sour cream, one- | fourth of a teaspoon of soda, two and a half cups of flour and three and a ! half teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix in the usual manner and drop from a spoon upon buttered tins, shap- ing each portion into a smooth round. Dredge with graulated sugar and bake ‘the muskrat tenants were not so um- in a mrd~rate oven. Half a cup of co- coanut may be added before the flour and tha quantity of flour reduced a little. Sour cream used in a white sauce . served with codfish is a new dish te more than met his match and they | you showed me and am anxious to see | For an hour the colonel sat before a most unfilial appreciation of Water- | Il“eéntly she departed’ behind the Carr chestnuts, clothed with plenipotentiary | she scolded. “It's perfect: | pe c= i | B many, o1t once tried it will often be repeated It of'¢n happens in warm weather, with even a Vmited supply. that some of the milk will get sour before it can be used If a quart or more is on hand rome of the cheese aay be prepared. Set the thickerel milk on the back part of the tev, and when a curd is formed, drain off the whey and season with calf, Luter and a little thick sour! cream. Scur Cream Filling for Cake.— Sweeten and chill a cup of sour crear. Whip 't. keeping it cold while doing go, and when stiff fold in a cup of nuts: hickory are best. This is ex- cellent for layer cakes. Raisins added to the above filling makes a variety. Lemon juice and nowdered sugar may be added with the raisins, Graham Bread. —Sift together one cup of zraham and one cup of wheat flour: n~dd a teaspoonful of soda, a | half twwepoonful of baking powder, a cup of sour milk, a half cup of me- lasses, n fourth of a teaspoonful of ¢alt: combine the ingredients and bake in a bread pan one and one-half hours. ett Fare. » TEGHEN ABINET 2 HE most solid comfort one can fall back upon, ix the thought that the business of one's life—the work + at home after the holiday is done—is to “But father's “You don't expect me to believe | from the | help in some small nibbling way to re- duce the sum of ignorance, degradation and misery on the face of this beautiful earth, George Eliot, HOUSEKEEPING NECESSITIES. To many some of these may come under the head of luxuries; but most of us are able to do without the neces- ! saries if we can have the luxuries. Seasonings, spices and herbs of zl kinds, including cayenne pepper and paprika. Catsups and piquant sauces. Small cans of vegetables, meats, soups and fish. Extract of beef and bouillon cubes. Canned sweet peppers. Salad dressings, Jar of grated cheesa. Crackers and cans of condensed milk. For utensils, a double boiler or two, several wooden spoons. Wire whisk and Dover egg beater. Frying basket and individual baking dishes. Coffee percolator. Zinc covered table. Meat chopper. Bread mixer. These are a few of the {ndispensa- bles in a well-ordered household. Hot Chicken Salad.~Mix a pint of cooked chicken cut in cubes with a cup of cooked peas, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little red pepper, a teaspoon- ful of onion juice, a sweet red pepper cut fine, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and set aside to season. Make a sauce of a fourth of a cup of butter, the same amount of flour, seasonings, a cup of cream, a cup of chicken broth; add the other ingredients and let stand over water to become hot. This is goed served from a chafing dish. A pretty luncheon biscuit is made by putting three small biscuits tn each of a set of patty pans. They will look like a clover leaf when baked and are called clover biscuit. Willing to Help, “Look here, waiter, this oyster is still alive’ “Yes, sir. Do you want to kill it with your fork of shall I get a ham- mer?" || PREPARING THE STEAK delicious cottage | | SOME TIME-HONORED WAYS OF COOKING AND SERVING. Has Been Devised—Delicious In the Form of a Pie—For Those Fond of Hamburg. Blanketed Steak.—Wipe a sirloin | | steak, cut one and one-half Inches thick, and broil five minutes. Remove to platter, spread with butter, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Clean | one quart of clams and discard tough | muscles. Cover steak with soft por- tions, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and dot over with one and one-half | tablespoonfuls - of butter. Place on | grate in hot oven, and bake until clams are done. Garnish at ende with sprigs of parsley. Beefsteak Pie.—~—Wipe one and one- half pounds of round steak with a piece of cheesecloth wrung out of cold water, and cut beefsteak in one inch; cubes. Put in a stewpan, add half an onion, peeled and thinly sliced, and pour over four cupfuls of cold water. Cover, and bring quickly to the boiling point, and then let simmer until meat is tender, the time required being about two hours, Add one teaspoonful of salt after the first hour of the cpok- ing. Melt four tablespoonfuls of but- ter: add four tablespoonfuls of flour, and stir until well blended: then add {| gradually to hot stock. Wash and pare potatoes, and cut in one-fourth inch slices: there should be one and ! one-half cupfuls. Parbeil in boiling salted water eight minutes, drain, add to meat, and cook three minutes, Turn into a buttered baking dish, cover with pie paste or baking powder biscuit mixture, and bake in a hot oven. If covered with, ple paste, make several | incisions in crust, to admit of the es- cape of gases. This is a good way | to cook tough steak. Hamburg steaks should be chopped to order, the meat coming from the | ' round. Season one pound of Hamburg | | steak with salt and pepper and a few | drops of onion juice, and form into six | cakes, handling as little as possible If cakes are pressed too compactly | they will be solid. Put in a slightly greased hot iron frying pan, sear an one side, turn, sear on other side, and cook six minutes if liked rare; eight minutes if liked well done. Let stand around edge of frying pan to brown edges. Remove to hot platter, put { around mound of julienne potatoes and spread with maitre-d’hotel butter. Pour buttered caulifiower in four core ners of platter and garnish with sprigs of parsley. Planked sirloin steak is prepared on ong of the up-to-date planks that fit into a nickel frame with nickel and ebony handles. Remove flank end | from a sirloin steak. Wipe steak and broil or pan-broil until nearly done. Pipe a border of highly seasoned mashed potatoes around edge of slight- ly buttered plank and make nests of mashed potatoes. Place steak on plank and put in hot oven to brown pota- toes and finish cooking steak. Fill mashed potato nests with canned peas reheated and arrange around, at equal distances, piles of buttered carrot cuges and stuffed tomatoes.—~Woman's Home Companion. | stn evils | i Laundering Soiled Towels. Oftentimes the towels become gray and dingy looking. Treat them in this manner and they will become white again: Place them in a kettle and cover with cold water. Add shavings of pure white soap and the juice of a lemon. Place on the back of the stove and Alloy the water to gradually come toa il. If very much soiled, the process may have to be repeated. Rinse in tepid water, then in slight- ly blue water amd hang in the air to dry. New trength for Bad Backs BELLEFONTE RESIDENTS ARE LEARNING HOW TO EXCHANGE THE OLD BACK FOR A STRONGER ONE. Does back ache, feel weak and Do suffer headaches, languor and is Die cat an proven ir a ag Convincing proof in Bellefonte endorse- Nir. H. Wh Co Shim fost 3 EE Sh AE SR Rn name—Doan’s—and Jake — —— : ee ifove ar ny aood newspapers published, but none that is quite as good One Hundred CHILDREN'S Knee Pants SUITS STRAIGHT PANTS. $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00 Suits. Your choice for $1.25 REPED BEES PEEEBRERE, Sizes from 10 to 16 years. All FAUBLES. ERE EER EERE as the DEMOCRATIC WATCHMAN. Try it. Yeager's Shoe Store Fitzezy The Ladies’ Shoe that Cures Corns Sold only at Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. —