Bellefonte, Pa., August 2, 1912. THE FIFTH STENOGRAPHER. (Copyright, 1911, by Associgted Literary Press.) Mr. Benjamin Holbrook, of the firm of B. Holbrook & Company, jobbers, had been absent from his business for three weeks, and therefore entered his office resolved to get back into harness as speedily as possible. After wading through a mass of accumu- lated correspondence, he rang for his confidential stenographer. She failed do appear. A second and a third ring ‘were equally barren of results. Mr. ‘Holbrook grew indignant. With a sav- ‘age jab, be touched another button on his desk, and in & moment Wat- son, his chief clerk, stood at his el ‘bow. “Watson,” he demanded, “why doesn’t Miss Gayley respond to her call?” “Miss Gayley you were away.” “An office romance?” “Yes,” responded Watson with a smile. “Smithers, one of the book- keepers, is the other guilty party.” “Well, he got a sensible wife, con- found him. Give him a ten per cent, raise. At the same time he robbed me of a good stenographer just when she had become efficient and valuable, Jt strikes me these cases are becom- ing pretty frequent in this office, aren't they, Watson.” “This is the fourth in three years.” “Exactly,” agreed Mr. Holbrook. was married while | dng to her one day, he on the one side | add to it a tablespoonful of boiling of the big, flat office table, and she | water. confess to himself that she did not look it. “Have you had any experience in this capacity?” he asked, “None, whatever,” she answered. “But 1 have a good education and have fitted myself carefully for such a position, and 1 feel 1 can meet all the requirements set forth in your somewhat unusual advertisement.” “It was a little out of the ordinary, wasn't it? “Yes.” “But there was a reason for During the last three years | lost no less than four stenographers through matrimony. It was a desire to secure some one who would view business as other than a stepping- stone to marriage that prompted that ad.” “l can safely say that there is no prospect of my making such use of it,” replied Miss Holmes. A trial showed that she was well equipped for the position. Mr, Hol- brook reflected, also, that he had never recognized so many good quali ties in an applicant before. He there- fore engaged her, and in a few weeks found reason to congratulate himself; for she developed an efficiency even above that of her very efficient pre- decessors. In a few months he began to regard her as indispensable, and it. found himself regretting that she was | tomatoes in quarter inch. slices. near him in office hours only. And then it came. on the other, facing him. grasping for some solution to a knotty business problem, he allowed his mind to wander. The plainly have, He was dictat- | While | drippings; dip each slice in crumbs, | ' How Rubber is Cured. . Rubber reaches the market in almost , every possible shape and color. In most , cases the queer names in the market re- | ports are mostly descriptive. Thin, pale | crepe, for instance, arrives in long strips, , generally about four feet long and eight to twelve inches wide. It varies in thick- ness from one-sixteenth to one-half an inch and has a roughish surface, from which the name crepe is derived. This { rubber is pale yellow in color, and when HEN we shall bulld our house “Ifs walls shall be the quiet background for the loveliness of life, hung over with the few records of our own: and other's growth made In the playtime of art: its furnishings the prod- uct of that art's more serious hours: its implements from kitchen ware to dress- Ing table touched by the sane and hal- lowing hand of purpose and taste. —Wiltlam IL. | be used. Price. | Hard, fine Para is prepared by native | labor of the Amazon by dipping a so- | called paddle in the rubber and then | holding it in the smoke of a fire, which | hardens the coating of milk. The paddle | is then dipped again for a second coating WAYS OF SERVING TOMATOES. There is no more delicious fruit- vegetable, if it may be so called, than the tomato. Sliced after peeling, the rich coral rounds may be dressed with a large biscuit, generally Weighing about sny favored salad dressing, or to | sixty pounds, has been built up. The ' operator with a knife then slits the bis- of place with peaches and cream. | from the paddle. Rubber so prepared Tomatoes are served with rice, | contains a large proportion of moisture, macaroni, as escalloped dishes with | but is stronger than any of the planta- crumbs they are delicious baked, | tion rubbers. . stuffed or fried. From the come large supplies of | clean, black rubber, coagulated originall Fried Tomatoes.—Cut smooth, solid | i, Jarge blocks and then cut up into small Dry cubes to permitit to dry and ripen. The | each slice and roll in crumbs, dust Congo also ships rubber in ish sau- with salt and pepper. Beat an egg, | collected directly from the tree, the lish a nce being caused by small Have a hot frying pan with | Portions o the bark adhering. by the natives digging a trough in the | earth and running the latex into it. In time the mass in the foagulates from the outside, forms a hard skin, and | finally becomes hard then in egg. put into the hot fat and {ry brown on each side. | Tomato Hagh.—Chop cold meat fine, throughout. But held up to the light is quite transparent, | must suffer. , which proves its purity and accounts for | ach ought to be the first care. | the very high price obtainable therefore, disease shows its symptoms in head or | The so-called sheet rubber is similar to | heart, blood or liver, the stomach should crepe, but slightly thicker and not so | be first examined for the cause of the transparent. It is prepared in a different | disease. | manner, and, unlike crepe, must be put Discovery was made to match the dis- through the washing-mills before it can | covery that many diseases, remote from { | i and again smoked, and so on until quite | There are some forms of animal life| which are nothing but a stomach. All other parts and organs are dwarfed or rudimentary; the stomach is the center of being. As a matter of fact the stom- ach plays a vastly more important part in the life of the highest type of animal life, man, than is generally recognized. The stomach to him is the center of ex- istence, for man is primarily a stomach. Starve him and he weakens in brain and body. Feed him with innutritious food, and blood, and muscle, nerve and bone For this reason the stom- Pierce's Golden Medical the stomach begin in the stomach, and that when diseases begin in the stomach they must be cured h the stomach. “Discovery” is a specific for diseases oi the organs of digestion and nutrition. It strengthens the stomach, heals weak lungs, purifies the blood. Women at last had the ballot and an oily politician was after the suffragette many cream and sugar vies in honor | cuit down one side in order to remove it | oR ppeal to the hand that rocks the cradle,” he “Cut it out, ” interrupted his pal. “This is a fashionable audience and there ain't | | i The Gold Coast ships rubber prepared | a mother in the house.” _—— New Strength for — re — —— — DID YOU GET ONE OF THOSE BOY’S Straight furnished office faded from his vision. | ‘ith 1 d . i | i "| season with butter, salt and pepper; | THSLY : The table became a dining table, cov- | put in a baking dish and pour over } sis kind of Jabber holds the Moisture | Bad Backs ered with snowy linen upon which | cooked tomatoes that have been well | WIC 3 was Arigina by Bp Se lak, and, silver gleamed and crystal sparkled— | ceqqoned. Add a ltie butter and | piTe RE SC PP re Gvory coast, | BELLEFONTE RESIDENTS ARE LEARNING such a dining table as one sees In & | your if Jiked, not omitting a Mavor- | the French Sudan, and in the Sierra| HOW TO EXCHANGE THE OLD BACK “Four in three years, of which your own case was the first. Matrimony is & noble institution, Watson, but it can- | not be allowed to play hob with this wo business the way it has been doing. 1 propose now to get a stenographer | | rh site him at the who will regard this office as some. | he saw her sitting oppo m { thing more than a stepping-stone to marriage. Miss GQGayley's successor must be at least thirty-five years old. You wil! advertise at once for a lady He Allowed His Mind to Wander. confessing to that many summers, If you cannot find her, I'll have to get a man—but I prefer the woman, if she exists.” Benjamin Holbrook had never been me. ried. At the age when other men take unto themselves wives, he had ‘been too busy smoothing the path of the newly established firm of B. Hol- ‘brook & Co. over the thorny ways ‘which infant industries must travel. Matrimeny, he had reasoned, must wait upon success. Success he had finally achieved, and now it waited upop matrimony. If questioned, he would not have been able to say whether he had eluded matrimony or matrimony had eluded him, but now, at the age of forty, he was forced to confess to his friends that while it was still possible in his case, it did not seem very probable. Being a bachelor, he had never been able to fathom the mental processes which led & girl to abandon a comfortable salary in his office for the purpose of sharing the salary of u male worker in the same office, and in much less degree had he been able to understand the line of reasoning which led the aforesaid male worker to persuade her to de so. In employing office help, the head of the firm was able to discern merit at a glance. All his male subordi- nates had good qualities. The four women who had reigned in brief sue- cession in the office were all well en- dowed in this respect—so well en- dowed, indeed, that four of the male subordinates had discerned their merit even better than the boss, with the result that for the fifth time in three, years that gentleman, with all a bachelor's dislike for change in the existing order of things, faced the dis- agreeable prospect of becoming ac- customed to a new stenographer. It was this fact, coupled with the knowl edge that there were yet several un- married men in the office, all with good qualities, that led him to issue, his edict concerning the age of the next woman who should grace his es- tablishment. Watson's advertisement brought but one applicant to Mr. Holbrook— a handsome, somewhat sad-faced wom- an, whose gown of black well became the slender plumpness of her figure. “l am Miss Holmes,” she stated simply. “I have come in answer to your advertisement for a stenogra pher.” “Thirty-five years of age, or old. er?’ added Mr. Holbrook. “l am able to meet that condition,” ‘was the calm reply. The brad of the firm wae fapeod tn | home; rect methods. | She came out of it .n confusion. TR but Miss Holmes faded from the picture not at all. In his reverie | dream table—and then Benjamin Hol | prook, bachelor, aged forty, came | back to earth with a rush. He was in | Jove, He was certain of it, despite the novelty of the sensation, Mr. Holbrook was accustomed to a- | «Wiss Holmes, can you still safely | ! gay that there is no prospect of your | making business a stepping stone to marriage?’ he asked suddenly. i Miss Holmes was also in a reverie, *“]—1 think so,” she Eas). “Then there is a doubt?” i “Yes; there is a deubt,” she ad-' mitted. “1 ask you to give me the benefit of | managed to | “Oh, 1 am not thinking of resign- ! ing.” she protested. i “I am not asking you to give the | business the benefit of the doubt, Miss Holmes; I am asking you to give} it to me. 1 dé@sire you to resign Can't you see what 1 am getting at? I love | you. | want you to be my wife.” “Wouldn't that be playing hob with the business?” she asked after a! pause, smiling through her blushes. Mr. Holbrook rose from his chair and started toward her. She fled to the door in a panic and paused with! her hand on the knob. “The business is inured to such ex- | E periences by this time,” he laughed, still going toward her. “You must re. member that my own romance has a | § quartet of precedents right here in the | office. However, it shall be the last; | for my next confidential stenographer | shall be a man.” | Miss Holmes covered her face with her hands as he reached for her. ] “If that is the case, B—Benjamin,” ghe murmured, “you might begin to Yook around for the man.” FIRST CLEAN THE SYSTEM Thing to Do in the Instant That the Presence of Tuberculosis ls Suspected. ! \ The fever of consumption is not pri- marily due to the presence of the tu- bercle bacilli in the system. Indeed, unless there are ether conditions which cause the bodily temperature to rise it is inclined to be sub-normal. One of the interesting revelations | of modern medicine is the fact that | these germs may exist a long time in | the human body without there being any rise of temperature whatever. | This is plainest seen in a tubercular | abscess, but it is also seen in the many cases in which for long periods { there is no fever. What does cause | the fever in the earlier stages is a dis- ordered state of the alimentary canal, | The stomach and bowels become de- | ranged and full of toxins which, be- coming absorbed, poison the system ' and cause the temperature to rise, For | years it has been the practice of the writer to reduce any temperature to normal, especially during the first | stages of the disease, simply by wash- | ing out the stomach and effecting a | complete cleansing of the intestinal | tract. Later on the fever is due to | the absorption of broken-down lung tissue and to ptomaines, and so is quite another story. When, therefore, tuberculosis is sus. | pected the temperature should be! taken and if fever is present the per- | son should invariably go to his phy- | ‘sician and have his digestive tract thoroughly cleansed, when by proper | diet and outdoor life he will be able | almost certainly to overcome the pres- | ence of the tuberculous germs, Celestial Swats. | Mrs. Willis—I suppose that in heav: en we will be disappointed in not find: | ing certain people there. | Mrs. Gillis—Yes. But we'll be morg | disappointed at finding certain other | aenple there — Puck, | | ful of cold water, add to the der, then lift and carefully place in a { Cut rounds of stale sponge cake, lay | yolks, then fold in the whites. ing of onion juice. Brown in the oven | Leone neighborhood the natives collect ! «nd serve hot. | rubber from the same trees, but give aj Tomato Mayonnaise.—This sauce is t deal more pains to the preparation. | delicious and goes well with broiled | resulting product is known as "Sierra fish, cold meats and vegetables. Stew | 290 hzuis onary oe rib ' half a pint of tomatoes, soften one | oo cus young als, So os in Te teagpoonful of gelatine in a teaspoon: | gon, that of an orange to that of a man's hot toma | head. The rolling process is done while to, stir well and rub through a sieve. | the strips are fresh, and they become one Let cool, beating occasionally, then | compact ball. Rubber treated thus is of | add a half pint of mayonnaise. It a reddish color, for which reason the gives the sauce a beautiful pink color; balls are known as “red niggers. heaped in cucumber cups or green pepper cups and served with fish or —Finest Job Work at this office. | cutlets it decorates a dish effectively = Bilious people have a sorry time. Their lives are Jercucally divided into three | periods: time when they are coming , down with biliousness, the time when ! | they are down, and the time when they | are geiting over the attack. Dr. Pierce's | Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness, and I sick and bilious headaches. They cure one of parsley, a half teaspoonful of | to stay, and do not make victims of the salt, and a dusting of cayenne. Bake | pill habit. in a hot oven 20 minutes and serve in — : ‘ the same dish. —If you see it in the WATCHMAN, it's true. And not only true, but it's all and is pleasing to the palate as well. Tomato Farci.—Cut four tomatoes in halves, place in a frying pan in hot fat, the cut side down; cook until ten- baking dish. Pour over a little olive oil, a tablespoonful of chopped onion, 1 FOR A STRONGER ONE. Does r back ache, feel weak and painful? Do you suffer headaches, languor and s the urine discolored, passages irregu- lar? T'he kidneys are calling for help. Sick kidneys cannot do their work. Give them the help they need. Backkache is generally k ache. Tocure it you must cure the kidneys. Use a tested and proven kidney remedy. Doan's Kidney Pills have stood the test. A remedy especially for kidney ail- ments. Convincing proof in Bellefonte endorse- ment: ‘ Mrs J. | Tavior, 19 3 ater § St., Belle onte, , says: “Wet just as - ly of Doan’s Kidney Pills to-day as 0) two yeurs ago, when we ly recom- mended them. y are procured at Green's Pharmacy Co. and brought relief from backache and kidney trouble, On several occasions since t t en Doan's Kidney Pills and they have al- est benefit, We recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills to other kidnev sufferers at unity.” For sale by all rs ho 50 ents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. 57-26 FFOHEN| ABINET ¢ 3) NE deed may mar a life, And one may make it; Hold firm thy will for strife, Lest a quick blow break ft, —Richard Watson Gilder. LEFT-OVER CAKE. Ways of using 'e‘t-over cake are well to keep in mind, as often a few pleces of cake combined with other. tirings will make a most palatable des- sert, Peach canape is one pretty dessert. on each a half of a peach, pour over a little of the juice and heap on a table. spoonful of sweetened whipped cream. Trifle.—Cut stale cake in slices and gpread preserves between them. Lay in a deep dish and heap whipped cream over the slices. Garnish with a few berries. Sponge Cake Porcupine.—Cut large squares of stale sponge cake, place in a pudding dish, moistened with sweetened orange juice. Blanch a few almonds and press them, sharp end up, into the cake. Pour over a soft custard and chill before serving. Mock Plum Pudding.—Soften two cups of stale cake crumbs in a quarter of a cup of hot milk. If the crumbs are dry they may need more. Add to the softened crumbs a well-beaten egg, a half cup of sugar, a fourth cup of molasses, a fourth cup of stewed, chopped prunes, three-fourths of a cup of raisins, two teaspoonfuls of mixed spices, a fourth of a teasponful of soda, a half teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of lemon juice and a fourth of a cup of flour. Bake in a moderate oven 45 minutes. Serve with an egg sauce. Separate the yolks from the whites of two eggs, beat well, add a fourth of a cup of sugar, a teaspoonful of vanilla to the Serve Ladies’ Cures at once. Berry Whip.—Fill a dish half full of stale sponge cake. Sugar a quart of berries, mash them slightly and pour over the cake. Beat the whites of three eggs stiff, add three tablespoon- fuls of sugar and beat in gnough Ler- ries to color and flavor. Heap on the dish and serve with cream. A delic'ous dessert may be pre pared with sponge cake over which is poured a soft custard flavored strongly with coffee. lettin apelin Bush Arcade Building, Yeager's Shoe Store Fitzezy The that Sold only at Yeager’s Shoe Store, Shoe Corns BELLEFONTE, PA. Pants SUITS | that we are selling for 1.25 they were $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00 Suits. ABOUT SIXTY OF THEM LEFT. Don’t Miss This Fauble’s