| When Servants Were Fined. What would servants of modern | times say to the following rules and = | regulations that were adopted over 300 | years ago in the household of Sir J. | Harrington, the translator of Ariosto? | A servant absent from prayers to | be fined twopence; uttering an oath, a —Land plaster, or ground gypsum, it is | penny: leaving a door open. a penny; said, will prevent flies from breeding in | a penny fine for any beds nnmade, fire manure pits, and is used by some * | unlit or candle box uncleaned after 8; men for this purpose. |any one breaking any of the butler's Bellefonte, Pa., November 21, 1913. FARM NOTES. —Young pigs are so quire an excess of that element if given an opportunity, thereby stunting their growth. E flock owner of long experience in wed Es breeding ewes fully realizes that the condition of ewes at mating has a decided influence upon the breeding qualities of both ewes and progeny. —Always try and select the best and most Ty looking stock for breed- ing And if they have the proper attention, so much required, nine times out of ten they will prove good breeders. —Six pounds of skim milk to two pounds of cornmeal makes an economic- al feeding ratio for growing pigs. A 100 pound shoat will make very satisfactory gains on two such feeds a day. Eight pounds of skim milk make a gallon. —An application of nitrate of soda to the late cabbage patch will have a good effect and will be the means of reviving partial towards foods rich in protein that they will ac- | | are not red haired. many plants that look puny and poor. Constant watchfulness for insect pests should be the slogan this month and | next. i —The cattle should be salted at least | twice each week. The better practice is | to have the salt by them at all times. Either use rock salt or have the common | salt under cover so the wet weather will | not dissolve it. There is no danger of an | animal eating too much salt unless it has | not had any for a long time. —The apple crop is going to be a big one, which makes it all the more neces- sary that the orchardist and shipper cul- tivate an enlarged demand by putting onto the market good, honestly packed, honestly labeled fruit at reasonable | prices. Let the cider mills and vinegar | factories take care of the culls. —A good brood sow is the foundation of one of the most profitable branches of live-stock industry. She should come from a family that fattens ly and has not suffered deterioration through im- proper crosses or been weakened in con- stitution by inbreeding. To bring large litters the sow much have room for them both before and after farrowing—both in length of body and in udder capacity. —President H. S. Waters, of Kansas Agricultural College, says that this coun- try has the greatest hog shortage in years, and that it will take two years of corn crops to bring the hog supply to the normal. Eastern farmers who are turning their attentio: to pork production will have little cause to regret their action during the coming two or three years. There is money in good —It is not necessary to make idle pets of young foals, but they should be taught to lead at the halter, stand tied in their stalls, as well as display manners in the stable, wisely suggests a horse trainer, and he adds: A wild, tricky foal, unbrok- en when young, makes a double task when sub to the break harness of a 3-year-old. Their first lessons are never forgotten, and it pays to master them when young. Rhubarb in Winter.—Rhubard can be forced as a winter crop on a large or small scale. Many people have a few “hills” in their cellar and thus furnish the family table. In recent years it has devel into considerable of an indus- try in some sections. For the winter indus! left in the ground until they are frozen— at least they are left out of doors until after the first “freeze up.” The roots can be plowed or dug up while the ground is still soft, then after it is frozen they can be carted like so many chunks of rock and put in the place : A Greenwich, N. the roots are 2 g 7 35is 8 g 3 i : 8s : : | i i g 7 : 2 | Hil I it 7 : : 3 § : g ih : 5 + ity th ® 3 g § 2 i i s g g | tH : 2 I ; gE g 8 g g g i Ff Iz ) i 3 i 8 4 ) glass, a shilling: twopence fine for any one who has not laid the table for din- ner by half past 10 or supper by 6; any one being absent without leave, four- pence fine. n penny fine for any fol- bwer visiting the cook: a fine of a penny for any visitor's room left un- tidy for four hours after he or she has dressed: » penny fine if the hall be not cleaned by 8 In winter and 7 In summer: a fine of threepence if the stairs be uncleaned every Friday after dinner. All these fines were deducted from the servants’ quarterly payment of their wages.—London Standard. Red Hair and Temper. “All mankind.” said Major Hurst. a well known English student of eu- genics. “may be divided into those who are red haired and those who It is a fundamental difference.” In almost every case of a red baired child the major has sue- ceeded in discovering a red haired an- cestor, and he thinks that practically | the whole of the red haired population springs from a single red haired man far back in the pust. Here are some of his concinsions: In order for red to appear it must be in the ancestry on both sides. A red father and a dark mother. or vice versa. bardly ever have a red child. Two reds always have red offspring. But it is exceedingly rare to find two reds marry, as they seem to have a mutual antipathy. It is a popular fallacy that red haired persons have any distinctive tempera- ment. They are no more hot tem- pered than other people. A Story of Talleyrand. During the troublous days of the French revolution. when aristocratic heads were dropping in the basket in the name of liberty, fraternity and equality. Talleyrand lived and pros- pered by virtue of a marvelous ability to tell just the psychological moment to jump off one hand wagon and aboard another, . The name of this French displomat bas been kept alive more than have those of most of his contemporaries by a vast number of anecdotes in which he figures. It was Talleyrand whom Mme. De Stael. homely but brilliant, tried to corner by asking him If she and the beautiful Mme. Recamier were to fall into the water, which one he would rescue. And Talleyrand smiled in his most languishing manner and re- plied: “Ah, madame, but you swim so well, you know!" Wangen’s Fountain of Wine. A fountain of wine is one of those historical extravagances which are generally associated with the name of Nero, yet on every July 13 the public fountain of Wangen, in the Alsace wine country, lows with wine. In the middle ages the commune of Wangen was sentenced to make an annual pay- ment to the monastery of Strasburg of 400 measures of wine. In 1793 the pay- ment was abolished by the Directory. Under Louis XVIII. two merchants se- cured the transfer of the payment to them, by means of forged documents, for £650, but the commune commenced proceedings against them, in which it was victorious on July 18, 1830. Since that date a communal festival has been held on that day, and from the public fountain erected to commemo- rate the victory wine flows for one hour in the day.— Westminster Gazette. No Complaint to Make. It was at the vaudeville. The girl with the excruciating voice bad just finished her song. “Just think!" groaned Brown to the stranger beside him. “We paid real money to hear that!” “I didn't.” was the placid response. “Came in on a ‘comp.’” “But you had to spend car fare to get here. did you not?" asked Brown. “Nope.” replied the uncomplaining one. “I live in walking distance.” “But,” persisted Brown desperately, “at least you hoped to be entertained, not punished.” “No. | didn't care,” grinned the stranger. “I came to get away from Rome. My wife is cleaning bouse.”~ Parson—By parcel post. “But | thought there was a limit as Reminding Him. Milllynns — When | married your mother | was earning $10 a week: two years later | bought out my employer. Daughter—And put in a cash register, -Town Topics. Beware of him who hates the laugh of a child.—Lavater. ORIGIN OF BLACKMAIL. The Term Was Born of Outlawry on the Scottish Border. The etymology of the expression “blackmail” is historically interesting. It appears to have its origin on the Scottish border and dating from times when frequent political feuds between the then two kingdoms of the British islands tacitly justified a sort of per- ennlal terrestrial buceaneering as be- tween borderers of each realm. Many of these were outlaws on both sides of the border. Their neighbor- ing victims to save their cattle from being lifted sometimes compounded for safety by an annual payment as insur- ance to the bandits. This fee not only gave them immunity. but entailed them to protect them from rival free booters. It was their “mail,” or “pro- tection.” The “mail” coach was so named because it had its armed guard with loaded blunderbuss on the dickey. But the mail paid by border farmers was not for honest royal protection, but for guardianship by thieves, and hence was “black™ mail, the color of black being typical of what was nefa- rious, whether in art or in guardian- ship, while the guardian of this stamp was known as the “blackguard” of the | district. The last named latter day | term of reproach seems to have ob- | tained its expression originally as here described.— London Field. | Respectability Killed Him. | There was a hermit in the center of | London only a few years ago. His = hermitage consisted of a cellar—the | sole vestige of a house in Clare mar- ket pulled down and forgotten by its | owners. He lived there for a long | time, supported by scraps of food from | the tradesmen of the neighborhood. | and might have lived there longer still | if a journalist had not “discovered” | him. He was interviewed and photo- graphed to death, for the workhouse authorities, nearly next door. who had hitherto turned a blind eve toward him. were compelled to oust him from his hermitage and make him clean and respectable—a process to which he sue- cumbed.—London Mail, Just Like a Man. “John.” she said, “I have an awful pain in my right side. I'm afraid it’s appendicitis.” “Are you sure?’ he replied, without looking up from his paper. “John,” she walled a moment later, “it's getting worse.” “Is it?" he asked. still interested in the sporting page.—Chicago Record. Herald. “Received your ‘Medical Adviser’ and I think it one of the greatest books of the age,” writes Mr. M. H. House, Charlestown, Franklin Co., Ark. Thous- ands of people have expressed similar opinions of the value of Dr. Pierce's Com- gon Sense Medical Adviser. It is sent ree on pt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stam for the paper-bound book, or 31 stamps for cloth binding, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. rm Medical. Corroboration OF INTEREST TO BELLEFONTE READERS, ee ——————————————— Waverly Oils. TEER “Waverly” Prices 76 Gasoline (73°.76°) Special Gasoline (68°-70) Motor Gasoline (63°-65° Auto Gasoline (60°-62°) Family Favorite Oil, 150° 9% Pittsburgh Lamp Oil, 175° - 6c All f.0.b. Pittsburgh, with extra charge for wood or steel barrels. All refined products from Penn- sylvania Crude Oil. Waverly Oil Works Co. 58452t PITTSBURGH, PA. A 20¢ 18¢ 16¢ 14¢ bs | nary ine grade of spring wines ear oor = Coal and Wood. A. G. MORRIS, JR. Shipping and Commission Merchant, and Dealer in COALS) CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains, ——) BALED HAY AND STRAW (re Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. FEDERAL STOCK FOOD. | | KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers, respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. Commercial 204 E. | Belt = - TH 58231v Telephones: { Money to Loan. | ONEY TO LOAN good securi M houses to rent, RY. a8 | J. M. KEICHLINE, A -at-La ttorney. a, 51-14-1y. Flour and Feed. (CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain on hand at all times grade flour: the following brands of ish WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock and feed of all kinds. Pood All kinds of Grain bought exchanged for wheat. u theofice Flows romans am AB De Be. BB Dl DB od Ba A, Be Pi lB Bo MB BB. BB BB SECHLER & New Mackerel First Catch of the Season. 10 pound pails, 20 fish, at +10 pound pails, 16 fish, at 10 pound pails, 12 fish, at These goods are open for your inspection. Come and SECHLER & Bush House Block, - 57-1 58-20tf. 'FINE JOB PRINTING MURRAY'S Rheumatic Remedy THE MARVELOUS CURE FOR S B. Na Attorneys-at-Law. KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law, ote. In Bractienyin all_douns’_ fC SPANGLER -Attornev-at-Law, in all the Courts. Consultation in Office in Crider’s Exchange. S. TAYLOR—Attomey and RHEUMATISM, H*® igh ir Jonte, Pa. All kinds of legal $5.00 the bottle at your drug- JH ome orn and Counsellor at Law gists, or sent Parcels post on re- o floor” Al kinds of legal business er iended ceipt of price. Money refunded 34 if it fails to cure YOU. ETTIC, BOWER & ZERBY—, G ors 1D OMY. Borer Boer the courts. Consultation in or German. M —Attorney-at-Law. in all the , WM. H. FIELDING, J ec Te i, A viessiona 495-1y° Sole Agent. Druggist, LYNBROOK, N.Y. ne job Printing. Fi o——A SPECIALTY——0 AT THE | WATCHMAN OFFICE. le of work, from the * to the finest BOOK WORK, Get the Best Meats. SEL Sr LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and supply customers with the fresh. Shen bet blood ind muscle mak Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. High Street. COMPANY. $1.40 $1.60 $1.75 J ces—No. 5 East High KENNEDY JOHNSTON-Attorney-at-law Bellefonte, Pa. P attention legal business at ak to his ve street. 44. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney. 57 tation in B a Law. in Crider's ish and German. Olen Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When have dn Stare vir Ppiog steam pipes, leaky Jas. you fant have ood 4 Hes . The air you poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’ gust to have. We don't rust hie work Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with 8 BE BE good work and the Prices are lower than many who give you s anion tree of ls Fo ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-14-1v. 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, Tobtranbe Commmarss the larusst Fire = NO ASSESSMENTS not fail to give us a call before insuring your REE Office in Crider's Stone Building. BELLEFONTE. 43-18-1y. PA. see them. COMPANY, LIME. ical form most careful Lime and Limestone for all purposes. H-O Lime put up in 201b. paper bags for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- High Calcium Central Pennsylvania Lime ., AMERICAN LIME & STONE COMPANY., Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown and Spring Meadows, Pa, LIME. farmers are using. General Office: TYRONE, PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY ie Ee oe pte 10 per. week, partial disability, PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. - ina SEE Fire Insurance age of may CES H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa.