Deore ican Bellefonte, Pa., June 19, 1914. BEST TEA ON MOUNTAIN TOP Long Cultivated by Priests of Budde hist Temple In the Western Part of the Country. The best tea in all China, and, there- fore, in all the world, grows on top of a small mountain in Western Sze chuan, called Ming Shan, and is culti- | glass flasks with it. vated by the priests of the Buddhist ' temple on its summit, according to the Youth’s Companion. Tradition says that a Chinese pilgrim brought the seeds from India centuries ago. There are only a few pounds in each crop, and these have always gone as tribute to Peking for the use of the imperial household. Who will get the precious tea now? Will it be reserved for the AIDS VICTIMS OF INSANITY French Physician Has Found Adminis- ' ) y . Chicago complained that her seat was tration of Oxygen of Much Value, If Not an Absolute Cure. A new and extraordinary use for oxygen has been found by Dr. Tou- louse, chief physician of the Villejuif The Immortals. Mrs. Partingtons and Mrs. Mala- props are still with .us in the flesh. Recently a woman at the opera in too far back. She said she could hear i the music all right, but the perform- insane asylum. He finds it a most valuable aid in the treatment of mad- . by his landlady, armed with 2 flatiron, ness. : Doctor Toulouse makes certain that | , the oxygen in the steel cylinders in which he receives it is pure and free from nitrogen; then he fills small A rubber bulb enables him to regulate the pressure in the flasks, and a rubber tube con- | nects these with a fine hypodermic ! | needle. Through this 250 cubic centi- ' meters of oxygen are injected under | the skin. A physician who has watched the | operation and its effects upon patients, | reporting his observations for La Na: | ture, says the results are remarkable family of the president of the repub- ! lie, or will it be scattered among those who are willing to pay a big price for such a luxury? There is a saying in China, that to make a perfect cup of tea you must take leaves from Ming Shan, and wa- ter from the Yangtze. No one sup- posed the actual turbid river water to be meant, but no one could explain the proverb until De Rosthorn, who wrote an interesting treatise on Chinese tea solved the problem, or thought he did. De Rosthorn was once crossing the Yangtze near its mouth, at Chen- Kiang, when he saw some men in a boat, dipping water into buckets. He inquired why they did that, and was told that at the bottom of the bay there was a spring, remembered since the time when the present river-bed was dry land, and that this spring water was highly esteemed in cookery. Here, then, he concluded, he found that special water of the Yangtze which, with Ming Shan leaves, made the best cup of tea in the world. TO QUALIFY AS “BEST MAN” Man Who Has Risen From the Ranks to High Position Describes Re- quisites One Must Possess. ‘What constitutes the “best man” in any line of commercial activity? was a question put to the New York agent of a steel corporation who came up from a puddler in his company’s plant. The requisites to make such a man, in his opinion, are: “Amenable to discipline and able to take criticism in good form. “Able to apply fairness and consid eration to those who through force of circumstances are placed under him. “Must not hesitate to criticise when criticism is needed, and for the sole benefit of his company. “Performs such work as comes to him with the best at his command. “Does not pay too serious attention to the clock and is willing to work a few minutes overtime without protest. “Takes the assignment of new and difficult work to him with good grace. “Always ready to profit by his asso- ciations with his fellow workers.” Keeping House Plants Healthy. No one who has not seen a really well care for and healthy collection of house plants can imagine the charm and beauty they can lend to the room in which they live. Unhealthy plaats are depressing, and unless one is will ing to give the window garden a rea- sonable amount of care it is better to dispense with it altogether The house plants will cheerfully repay any in- telligent attention, though they resent meddling. The real gardener the one who has the true love of flowers at heart, knows when to leave well enough alone. Do not disturb the roots at all during the winter unless they are attacked by insects, for most plants are resting and cannot then put out new shoots. This is particu- larly true of such plants as palms, rub- ber plants and ferns, which had best be shifted and fed with fertilizers only in the summer. Soft wooded plants, like geraniums, are not easily injured by transplanting; but even so if they need extra feeding on account of large growth, it is much better given in liquid form. Loyalty, For those who are not merely loyal, but also enlightened, loyalty, never losing the definiteness and concrete- ness of its devotion to some near and directly fascinating cause, sees itself to be in actual spiritual unity with the common cause otf all the loyal, whoever they are. The great cause for all the loyal is in reality the cause of the spread and the further- ance of the cause of the universal loy- alty of all mankind; a cause which peobody can serve except by choosing his own nearer and more immediate appreciated cause—the private cause which is directly his own—his family, his community, his friendship, his cal} ing, and the calling of those who serve with him. Yet such personal serv- fce—your special life cause, your task, your vocation—is your way of further- ing the ends of universal humanity. —Josiah Royce, “Loyalty and In- sight. To Remove Paper. An excellent way to remove paper from the wall when about to repaper a room, says Modern Priscilla, is to make a rather thin paste of flour and water and go over the paper with a large brush or cloth, wetting every part. After allowing this to stand for a little while the paper may be taken off in great strips withlut spreading a particle of dirt or dust. among patients in a condition of acute | mental confusion, who are always greatly improved and often cured en- tirely by a few injections. The excited and victims of insomnia become calm and lucid. In cases of acute mania, dementia, epileptic fits and certain cases of mel | ancholia gcod results have been ob tained. The oxygen treatment is now being tried upon other forms of in- sanity. HARD LINES FOR BUSY MAN One Unfortunate Circumstance He Could Stand, but the Other Was Almost Too Much. He was a very®busy man, and she was a very pretty girl. She insisted upon having a love letter every day. She got it. “You write the loveliest letters, dear!” she said. 80 very, very busy all the time, 1 think it is splendid of you to think of me!” “I don’t forget you,” he replied. “My secretary has instructions to write you a letter for me to sign every morning. He is a most efficient and capable young man.” “And you don’t know how greatly I appreciate the flowers and candy you send me every week.” “I'm glad you get them. secretary to make a memo to send you some every Saturday.” “How sympathetic! And it is so thoughtful of you to think of the plays I like best and the books I prefer.” “It’s a pleasure to know you are pleased. My secreta~y, gets the tick- ets and picks out the books. very capable fellow.” Two months later the very busy man said: “Dodgast him! how in thunder can 1 break in an- other secretary?’—Judge. Time Wasted in Mourning. Every day I see a certain fellow sit- ting on the bank of the stream and mourning for the water that has passed. He fails to realize that he can never grind his grist that way. He started out to be a colonel, but corporal was as far as he got, so he quit. He fails to realize that there would be a whole lot more satisfac- tion and money in being a good cor- poral than in crying on the banks of a stream hecause he couldn't be a colonel. If the good Lord intended him to be a colonel he will get there some day—but not by sitting in the corner and crying. The colonels are made of the fellows who were the best corporals, and no one should keep that fact in mind more than the corporals. But the mourner sits and sits and gazes pathetically down the stream at the water disappearing around the bend. You know and I know, but he doesn’t. It never returns.—Kansas City Star. First Aid. David was capitalist and consequent- ly also philanthropist. To him one day came Simple Simon and begged the loan of a dollar for three weeks. Simon got the dollar on condi- tion of paying back two dollars at the end of the period agreed on. He was hurrying away well content with his bargain when David came to the door and called after him: “Just a minute, Simon,” said he; “I’ve been thinking that you are a poor working man, and that it will be hard for you to scrape together two dollars in three weeks. Now I want to make things easy for you. Suppose you pay me right now cone dollar of what you owe me. Then when the loan falls due you'll have only one dollar to pay.” Simple Simon gratefully accepted the suggestion, and David repocketed the dollar.—New York Evening Post. Scribes and Paraphrases Defined. Taken from the examination paper of one of my scholars, writes “Teach- er” tc the Glasgow News: “The scribes and Paraphrases were cheats and hipocrytes now a days they are called lawyers.” The perpetrator of the above, a boy of ten, makes up for his want of book-learning in a superabundance of mother-wit. An example of his quali: fication in this respect occurred only a few Sundays ago. He had brought me the verbal mes- sage that one of the class was down with pneumonia, and he had pro- nounced the last word with a “p.” 1 took the trouble to correct him. “Oh, I kent fine, 'twis ‘neumonia,’” he said, unperturbed: “I jist say’d ‘pneumonia’ so as these yins’—and he indicated the rest of the class— “wid unnerstaun’ us.” “And when you are I told my He isa I don’t mind so much his eloping with my fiancee, but ers on the stage “looked like migno- nettes.” Proof of Insanity. A Pittsburgh boarder is beaten up because he demanded prunes for breakfast. Well, how would one ex- pect a woman to deal with an insane man?—Cleveland Plain Dealer. —1If you always want to have the best take the WATCHMAN and you'll have it. | raised a child until they used “Favorite ' heartburn, flatulence, biliousness and the There is a saying that “a man’s first right is to be born well.” It is a constant reproach to motherhood to see a puny, pining baby grow to be a puling, peevish boy. It is a reproach because proper preparation and care will give the moth- er the health without which she cannot have a healthy child. The use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription as a pre- parative for the baby’s coming gives the mother abundant health. The birth hour is practically painless, and the mother rejoices in a hearty child. This is the testimony of many women who never Prescription.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets relieve many other physical evils resulting from constipation. The “Pellets” are small The dose is small. The benefits are large and lasting. CHAUTAUQUA. Coins of Small Value. Doubtless the smallest coin in the world circulates in the Malay penin- sula, simply a thin wafer made from the resinous juice of a tree, and has current value of about 1-10,000th of a cent. In the southern parts of Rus- sia the peasants use a coin of such small value that a quarter of a mil- lion of them are worth no more than $1.25. The old Japanese mouseng was worth 1-112th of an American cent. In Portugal the reis is the lowest standard of value, but no 1-reis pieces are coined. A 3-reis piece is equivalent to 6-100ths of a cent. Quite Simple. “A savings bank,” said the child, in answer to the teacher, “is a place where you can deposit money today and draw it out tomorrow by giving a week's notice.” Too Good an Excuser. A young man, having broken an ap- pointment with Doctor Franklin, came to him the following day and made a very handsome apology for his ab- sence. He was proceeding when the doctor stopped him with: “My good boy, say no more; you have said too much already; for the man who is so good at making an excuse is seldom good at anything else.”—Life. CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas.H.Fletcher. in use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. , "\ AOTOTS DRE OL Ewes R2.G0 » Create Hw rg a BON ST RSON TIOEES EY, UE \ V Ea or Bellefonte July 7:10 13 Adriatic Band Dunbar Singing Band Romano Orchestra Tuskegee Institute Singers The Toy Symphony The Four Artists Judge R. M. Wanamaker D. S. Parkes Cadman Mrs. Edith E. Smith Mrs. O. D. Oliphant Frank Stephens Illustrated} Lecture : ‘“T'he Panama Canal and the Panama-Pacific Exposition” Illustrated Lecture : ‘Bright Eyes and Wild Hearts of our Northern Woods”’ by Chauncey J. Hawkins The Avon Players in “RODA’’ by Alfred Noyes and “CINDERELLA” by Anna Oppenlander Motion Pictures. 59-24-4t Shoes. Clothing. Hats and Caps. Comfortable Clothes from style and quality. ~ $15.00 to $25.00 OMFORTABLE “HIGH ART” Summer Suits with a slice from weight and price, but none Comfortable Straws, in soft Panama and like shapes that are muss-proof. $1.00 to $5.00. Comfortable Knee Drawers for those who like to “leg it” at their ease. 50 cents. Comfortable Undershirts without sleeves. Comfortable Outing Shirts, that are made right out-and-in and in-and-out. $1.00 to $3.50. Comfortable Pajamas to lull you to pleasant dreams. 31.00 to $2.50. And a comfortable store where you're free to come and go as though you owned it. FAUBLE’S They’ll let your muscles spread themselves. 50 cents to $1.00. Hardware. Automobiles. wie, 59-11-1y A Porch. Shales Street Temperature Up? Porch Temperature is Down—When the VUDORS are. A porch that is a porch should be cool—where you can eat delightful meals and even sleep. Vudor Porch Shades give you complete privacy and help you to cool air, which makes sleep 0’ nights, the deep sleep you thought you’d lost with childhood. When it’s blazing ~ outside, you're cool. When it’s sticky inside, you have the “I want food” feeling Air gives. joys without its inconveniences! The Potter-Hoy Hardware Co. Bellefonte, Pa. ny “ey Ee] or Get Summer's STUDEBAKER SIX $1,575 you want that “SIX” which offers most for the money. Therefore, you want a “SIX” whose important parts are manufactured and not purchased. You want no lesser standard than the Studebaker standard of manufacturing. You want no electric lighting and starting system less efficient than the Wagner-Studebaker. You want ample carrying capacity FOUR TOURING CAR......... SIX TOURING CAR............ +25” TOURING CAR............ BEEZER’S GEORGE A. BEEZER, Propr. Also agent for You want a “SIX” for its puculiar and inimitable “SIX” smoothness. And en passengers. And how can you look further, when you find all Jor Sohn Y in er autaker “SIX”—Linked to the lowest price in the world ? GARAGE, §9-3-tf Bellefonte, Pa. Chalmers Cars.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers