Dewar Yada Bellefonte, Pa., May 9, 1913. mm ae IS SHREWD BUSINESS WOMAN Mrs. Frank Hing of New York Has Been Successful in Accumulat. ing American Dollars. Waiting on customers with an Ori- ental charm and politeness that daily wins new patrons to her laundry ia Bleeker street, Mrs. Frank Hing, daughter of the Flowery Kingdom, is rapidly accumulating American dol- lars that are estimated already to reach into the thousands. Mrs. Hing, who is a fine specimen of the Chinese matron of middie age, is a militant suffragist of the most pro- nounced type. She is an advocate of “yotes for women,” and points with pride to the action of the new Chi- nese assembly in granting suffrage to her sisters in China. The first Chinese business woman In New York city, and probably in this country. came to the United States only two years ago, quickly acquired a speaking knowledge of the English language, and by reason of her fine aptitude for business was speedily el evated by her husband to take full charge of the laundry. Mrs. Hing receives the laundry pack- ages, gives out the checks, receives the money, pays the bills, and her hus- band stands over the washtub and tooks the meals in a rear room, as- tisted by an 18-year-old son. Soon after Mrs. Hing assumed charge of the business she began to buy and sell second-hand clothing. All day long, and even into the late hours of the night, men who are in trouble financially can be seen enter- ing the laundry to part with wearing apparel in order to raise money to eat and to pay for a night's lodging. Many of these come from the large men’s hotel across the street. In all such transactions Mrs. Hing takes ad- vantage of their plight with Chinese cunning and gets for a trifling cost garments that are renovated and aft- erward sold at a big profit.—New York Herald. Flight Would Not Be Hopeless. Thomas B. Reed did not “think im- 'perially,” to use Mr. Chamberlain's sonorous phrase, and it was danger ous to wax eloquent in his presence ‘lover American expansion. Once, when were in the thick of our troubles in the Philippines, Mr. ‘Reed, Mr. Choate and Mr. G. W. Smal ley were guests at Ellerslie, Governor Morton's place on the Hudson. The |situation was debated at length and ‘with great freedom. “Mr. Choate,” writes Mr. Smalley in “Anglo-American Memories,” “gave us in a forcible and forensic way— and no man could state a case better —the reasons for keeping the Philip pines and reducing the ‘rebellious’ ‘Filipinos to order. “We all listened. No one interrupt: ed the flow of Mr. Choate’s argument. Mr. Reed, who, as is well known, had opposed the acquisition of the islands, did not venture a word. At the end, Mr. Choate, urging that surrender was impossible, asked: “‘What do you suppose the Fill: pinos would do if we withdrew the American troops? “Well, drawled Mr. Reed, ‘I don't suppose they would pursue us farther than San Francisco.’ " “That ended the discussion,” con cludes Mr. Smalley.—Youth’s Com panion. Finesse. Senator Cummins, discussing a cam- paign victory, said with a smile: “It was won by finesse. The finesse displayed in it reminds me of a Con- cord banquet. “‘Why is it that you fellows are omitting wine from your banquet this year?” one Concord man asked anoth- er. “‘So as to make sure of the pres- ence of the Al after dinner speakers of the country,’ was the reply. ‘We have invited them, and they won't dare to stay away.’ “‘Why not? “‘For the reason that if they did people would say it was because there ‘was no wine, you know.’” Flies in New Houses Explained. . “Moving into an apartment that had never before been occupied,” said a flat-dweller, “we were struck unpleas- antly by the number of flies we found there and for their presence we were quite unable to account. “It was some relief to us to be told ‘by a friend that there are always lots of flies in new houses; that they are ‘drawn by the paste used in the paper- ing, and while the work is going they have free ingress; and then when the ‘house is finished it is likely to be closed up and the flies left there to be found when the first tenant moves in" Pronounced Check. Woggley had been found guilty, and ‘sentenced to pay a fine of $50. “Oh, well,” he sald, “of course I'll ‘have to pay, because I am in a great ‘hurry to get on, but I haven't $50 in my pocket. Will you take my check?” . “Sure,” said the justice. Woggley drew his check, and at once proceeded to crank up his ma- chine. “Hyar, mister,” cried the justice, “they hain't no need o’ your doin’ that, I'd ought to have told ye we'll hev to hold that there car ez s’curity till the check goes through.”—Harper's Week- ly. ees A—————————————————— — : WOMAN BREEDS ESKIMO DOGS | Seems Queer Occupation, but She i Has Made a Remarkable Suc- cess of the Work. At Grove Park, one of the suburbs . of London, Mrs. Scott conducts a very | interesting dog farm. Her specialty is Eskimo dogs, which she breeds and | | trains for the market. The market is | not very large, but it is sufficient to | make it worth her while to raise and | train the best possible Eskimo dogs. | It is not the food market, nor the or dinary dog market. It is the market ! for Eskimo dogs which are trained for | Arctic exploration. i If you decide to make a journey to | one of the poles, you know that Eski- | mo dogs are absolutely essential. You can get good Eskimo dogs in Greenland, or in Alaska. But the good dogs in Greenland may not be exported except by special permission of the Danish government; and the good dogs in Alaska are not so good. One trouble with ordinary Eskimo | dogs is that they have no breeding and no discipline. They will obey the master with whom they have been brought up, but when they start after fish or other game, even their master can control them only by the exercise of brute force. For the purposes of your exploration you need dogs that will obey orders given by a white man, dogs that are broken to the har ness and are not afraid of work, dogs that have learned team work. It is this kind of dog that Mrs. Scott raises for the market. Her ken- nels have only pure blocded animals of carefully selected stock, and from earliest puppyhood she trains them in how to eat and how to work. When she gets through with an Eskimo dog the animal is not nearly so ferocious as one that just “growed up” in the surroundings of an Eskimo village. They adapt themselves quickly to new masters, and they have acquired good eating manners, so that they are not so likely to attack the cupboard or fresh game. Mrs. Scott feeds her animals no meat except pemmican and dried fish brought from Norway; a large part of the diet is a specially prepared biscuit. She has supplied trained dogs for a number of Arctic and Ant- jione expeditions.—Scientific Amer- can. SEEM TO HAVE LONG LIVES Politicians, in England, at Least, Find It One of the Healthiest of Professions. Politics would appear to be among the healthy professions, judging by the number of members of both houses of parliament who have passed the age of three score and ten. The lords, whose legislative duties are less stren- uous, have, however, a larger number of veterans in their ranks than the commons, as there are 23 peers who have reached eighty and over, while only 19 members of the lower house have seen their seventieth birthday. The oldest peer is the earl of Wemyss, who is ninety-four years old, Lord Strathcona and the duke of Grafton following with ninety-two and ninety-one years respectively, to their credit. Mr. Samuel Young, who is ninety, in spite of his name, is the doyen of the commons, Mr. Thomas Burt, the “father” of the house, being only seventy-five, and junior in regard to age to Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, Mr, Jesse Collings, Sir Henry Kimber, Mr. Robert Cameron, Sir John Baker and Sir Thomas Roe.—London Globe. Le Petit Caporal. Las Cases, the blographer of Na- poleon Ronaparte, thus describes the origin of the title Le Petit Caporal: A singular custom was established in the army of Italy, in consequence of the youth of the commander, or from some other cause. After each battle the oldest soldiers used to hold a council and confer a new rank on their young general, who, when he made his appearance in the camp, was received by the veterans ard saluted by his new title. They made him a corporal at Lodi and a sergeant at Castiglione; and hence the surname of “Petit Caporal,” which was for a long time applied to Napoleon by the soldiers. How subtle is the chain which unites the most trivial circumstance to the most important events! Perhaps this very nickname contributed to his miraculous success on his return in 1815. While he was haranguing the first battalion, which he found it nec- essary to address, a voice from the ranks exclaimed, “Vive notre petit caporal! We will never fight against him!” Hand Mirror of Brass. Now only Egypt's first ladies ever indulged in the I tury of a hand mir- ror. True, they v ere not made of the heavy plate glass that is used in those in present use. Before this mirror became oxidized it was in a highly polished state, and brass, when polished, can reflect a face to all intents and purposes as well as glass. The body is round, or as round as it could be made with an Egyptian hammer, and the handle has the same graceful curves of those of today. French Machine to Moisten Stamps. French postoffices will in future be provided, officially, with stamp moist- éning appliances, an innovation which is hailed by the press as a hygienic reform. As “the action (of stamp licking) was not only dangerous, but entirely devoid of elegance.” Les Nouvelles put it |p. 1 i {= IDEA SEIZES ENGLAND | League to Prevent Domestic Breezes From Developing Into Gales Is Latest Fad Taken Up. | A National League for the Promo | tion of Domestic Rappiness is the lat | est ‘proposal for England. It has for its promoters a few clergymen who have been impressad by the extraordi- nary number of ccuples in their par ishes who have obtained separation orders from the magistrates because of domestic strife. The idea of tke clerics is that magistrates are toe accommodating to applicants chafing under the matri- monial harness and if efforts were made to subdue domestic breezes they would mostly be prevented from developing into gales. So this league is to organize ministers of all denom- {nations and kind Christians of both sexes to act as peacemakers. They will take their respective par ishes under survey and in cases of household strife where the husband is at fault the member of the league most likely to infiuence him will be selected to intervene and subsequent- ly keep an eye on the culprit. If the wife is the offender then some sym- pathetic woman will plead with her. Most enthusiastic workers among ihe poor, especially in the north, call these separation orders the “working elass equivalent to divorce,’ the lat- ter being too expensive for them to obtain. The consequence is they have no real freedom, and looseness of morals is the result. In industrial centers, where both husband and wife are wage earners, this is especially the case. Lancashire alone has 25,000 people separated by law, but not free to remarry. SAYS OYSTERS SUFFER AGONY Dr. Wiley Asserts They Endure Ago- nizing Pain When Doused With Tabasco Sauce. “Oysters on the half shell suffer un. lold agony when eaten,” said Dr. Har- vey Wiley, formerly Uncle Sam's pure food expert, the other night, according to a New York Herald Washington correspondent. “Ninety per cent. of them when eaten are alive and kick- Ing. They suffer the most excruclat- ing pains when you jab them with a fork and follow with a sprinkling of salt, pepper and tabasco sauce. “It is true that they are a very low order of life, but ac they eat and drink they must be live animals and have feeling. Imagine some monster com- ing to earth from Mars who thought that we poor human beings were very succulent morsels of food when eaten alive. It would indeed be a nice sen- gation to be poked full of holes and covered with about six pounds of salt. “However, this will not deter me from indulging in the delicious half- shell habit. I am going to eat my oysters in such a way as to save them pain—one jab with a fork, put the sauce on quickly and then gobble it. “It's a good thing that they can't yell and jump, for if this were so our dining rooms would be full of tragic moanings and shrieks. However, this would not be so bad, for we would then have the alternative of cooking them.” Paid Scott $15,000 for a Poem. What is the highest price ever paid by a publisher for a poem? It would be interesting to know whether any advance has ever been made on the $15,000 that Scott received for “Rokeby.” Stephen Gwynn, in his life of Moore, tells us that Murray offered $10,000 for the copyright of “Laila Rookh,” “but Moore's friends thought he should have more and, going to Longman, they claimed that Mr. Moore should receive no less than the highest price ever paid for a poem. ‘That’ sald Longman, ‘was $15,000 paid for “Rokeby.”’ On this basis they treated, and Longman was inclined to stipulate for a preliminary perusal. Moore, however, refused, and the agreement was finally word- ed: ‘That upon your giving into our hands a poem of the lemgth of “Roke- by” you shall receive from us a sum of $15,000." Light Like That of Day. Patents have just been taken out in Germany for using marble instead of glass in lamps, which has the effect of making the illumination scarcely distinguishable from daylight. In numerable experiments have been made with tinted and patterned types of glass with the idea of producing this effect, but all have been failures. As a last recourse a sheet of white marble was planed down until it was semi-transparent and then different intensities of light were shown from behind. The result was exactly what so many hundreds of experiments had failed to produce. Developing this discovery the pat- entees have fitted lights to the cor nice of a room with such success that it is dificult to prove that it is arti ficially lighted. Poet's Unhappy Childhood. their support. His lonely and unhappy shildhood explains the melancholy that his life and writings, s1a0e¢ Forrest L. Bullock. | Money to Loan. er —— i Attorneys-at-Law. i TO LOAN on good security and | KLINE Attorney-at-Law, houses to rent. all courts. 1M. KEICHLINE. | | S fonte, Pa. i in 51-1-1y. Pa. | | | CURTIS Y. WAGNER, i BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of | Roller Flour | Feed Corn Meal and Grain and has on hand at all times the avy following brands of high grade flour: ————— | YHTE STAR Fine Job Printing. OUR BEST FINE JOB PRINTING oA SPECIALTY-—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no of from the cheapest * * to the BOOK WORK, that we car: not do in most satis- manner, and at consist- ent the class of work. Call on or with this office. . co — oo ns ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a FirstClass Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours for pic-nics, families and public gener. EE Sones the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C MOERSCHBACHER, High St.. Bellefonte, Pa. HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT | The SPRAY can be secured. Also and feed of all kinds. Stock Food | | All kinds of Grain bought at the office Flour | Du indy of Givin T. H. H. Robes You are safe when you deal with us—42 years in one store room is a HAVE BEEN RIGHT and always give satisfaction. Our goods in Robes, Blankets and Har- ness is at the present time the Larg- est that has ever been placed upon a Bellefonte market. Get the Best Meats. a save Rolling by Juying peor, thin LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and my customers with the fresh. blood and muscle mak- 4 and Roasts. My n are no higher than poorer meats are I always have ~ DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want, P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. You will miss it if you should fail to call and see us, and examine our large stock, and get our prices, as the Tariff is off. This is to your advantage. | ntee that our prices and {oo pr goods After Forty-two Years of Honest Dealing we have earned a place in the public confidence unquestion- James Schofield, § Soeiea Suse §5-32 Bellefonte, Pa The Centre County Banking Company. Strength and Conservatism are the banking qualities demanded by careful depositors. With forty vears of banking ex-- perience we invite you to become a depositor, assuring you of every We pay 3 per cent courtesy and attention. interest on savings and cheerfully give you any information at our command concerning investments you may desire to make. The Centre County Banking Co. Bellefonte, Pa. Lime and Crushed Limestone. 58-3-1v Increase Your Crops Lime is the life of the soil. USE CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA LIME Some Farmers have actually doubled their crops oy use of “H. 0.” lime Drill it for quick results. If you are not getting results use “H. 0.” lime We are the Manufacturers of Lime in Pennsylvania. Ground imestone and Lime for all purposes. Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forge and Union Furnace. Write for literature on lime. AMERICAN LIME & STONE COMPANY, B. SPANGLER—Attomey at Law. Practices a German ice on Crt ders Exchange. HE Er ictrp Gomeig Law. Office in T WE...) oe Seah Ene Eeehange, seco Consultation German. H. J All kinds of legal business to promptly. English or ETHIC, BOWER & ZERBY-— ors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. the courts. Consultation in or M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. J in all the courts, in’ Eaclian and German. Office south of court house. All business will receive prompt at 1y* Bes | KENNEDY ACHNSTON-—-Atiormes at. law |J legal asiaess entrusted to is Aig i ces—No. 5 East High street. 57-44. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul- err Physicians. FANCY PATENT 7 S GLENN, M.D; Physician sod Surgoge, at his © 541 pute in the county where that extraor- —————— Dentists. -.. = } === | DF E50 C A D. D. S., office door te ing Plumbing. Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have duppiag steam pipes, leaky | Health, The air you poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It's the kind you ought to have. Wedon't trust work to boys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are lower than many who give you Fe Jusanicery work and the lowest grade of finishings. the Best Work try - or ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-14-1v. Insurance. EARLE C. TUTEN (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) Fire, Life and Automobile Insurance 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. Th Sore ars Ja et © NO ASSESSMENTS — Lo a to Ee HO Ee rovon 10 wits large lines at ary time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY