Bellefonte, Pa., June 26, 1914. KITCHEN NOT WELL PLANNED Generally Designed by Men, They Usually Are Most Unattractive Room In the House. Have you ever been in a Kitchen where the sink was jammed way off in a dark corner? asks a woman who goes in for making scientific kitchens to order. Have you worked in a kitch- en where you walked 20 feet each time you hung up the egg-beater? Have you bumped your head against a closet over the sink as you washed dishes? Have you felt that the kitch- en was the hottest, dingiest, most un- attractive room in the house? That kitchen was planned by a mere man. The worst fate I could wish any architect is to prepare three meals a day for -a week in a kitchen of his own designing. Then, and then only, would he realize the faults of ineffi- ciently placed equipment. Tables and sinks of the wrong height, no: light over one’s workable, pantries | that defy a giraffe to reach their top shelves, and pot-closets so low that they can hold their own against any other fat reducer. Then only would an architect know that it did make a difference if the sink drain were placed to the right or left; if the china shelves were wide or only. eight inches; if the kitchen were painted emerald green or a shade of ‘burnt umber and white. TT | RICH IN PALAEOLITHIC RELICS | ‘Remarkable Find in Welsh Cave Has Thrown Much Light on Life of i the Long Past Centuries, In a recent lecture in the Old Coun- try, Prof. W. J. Sollas, told of a cave | rich in palaeolithic relics in human and animal skeletons and implements, situated near Rosali, in the Gower pen- insula in South Wales, and is known by the name of Paviland cave. The discovery there, said the professor, of a painted skeleton, long known as the “Red Lady,” had rendered it famous. Recent investigations showed that this skeleton was the remains of a member of the tall upper paiaeolithic race. The bones of the animals, most of them extinct, were in agreement with this conclusion, the most abundant be- ing the horse, cave bear, bison, rein- deer and rhinoceros. The mammoth was less common. The implements in- cluded objects carved out of mam- moth’s ivory, ivory rods, awls and amulets, bone marrow scoops, and wolves’ teeth, perforated for suspen sion as a necklace. The cave, which was an ideal hunting lodge for palaeo- ; lithic man, was the most westerly out- post of the race in Europe, Wife's Allowance. The abysmal igncrance of a great majority of married American women concerning the simplest facts and forms of business is amazing and pa- thetic. Before showing a high school girl a cook-book and teaching her how to make pie we would show her a checkbook and teach her how to make ' a deposit. You have insured your life, ‘we trust, in favor of your wife; but have you explained to her what she should do with the money if it should fall into her hands—what sort of in vestments to make; with whom to con sult; how to check up a bank pass. book? : The best beginning for such an edu: cation is to give your wife—at once—! a fixed allowance, whatever portion of the family income reasonably belongs! to her for her personal use. There is 10 more reason that a wife should ask | her husband whether she may have $2 with which to buy a pair of gloves than there is that he should ask her ' whether she will please see that the beds are made and the dinner cooked. If a wife cannot handle her own pin money intelligently, what is the use of leaving her life insurance ?—Phila- | delphia Saturday Evening Post. No Lack of Mustard. It was an inconvenient time to want | mustard—Sunday at an hour when all the delicatessens in the neighborhood were closed. “Still it is not so bad as if it were pepper or salt or vinegar we need,” | the woman said, “because we can get mustard at the drug store.” When the man went out to see about it, sure enough she was right. | Mustard in any quantity desired could ; be obtained at the corner drug store. “We have to keep it for plasters,” the clerk explained. “Notwithstand- ing the advance in medical science and new-fangled methods of treating disease, hosts of people still pin their faith to the homely mustard plaster as a panacea for all fieshly ills, and no druggist can afford to let the stock run out.” Economical Handling of Salt. The salt harvested in the Saline valley of California is now transported to Swansea, the nearest shipping point, 26 miles away, by means of an overhead tramway, which was recent- 1y completed at a cost of $500,000. The material is conveyed in buckets, and the hourly capacity of the line is 20 tons. A very interesting feature of the line is the fact that the downpull of ‘the buckets as they make a descent of the mountain is utilized in rasing the buckets over the next grade. Salt has been mined there for years, but the amount of the product has been limited to the local consumption, as the expense of getting the salt to the shipping point by mule power has been prohibitive. | : hill. -cember of 1883 the sunsets and after- 8ir Norman Lockyer and other as- WARNED OFF THE PREMISES Picket Waxed Indignant at Careless Action of Scouting Party of the Enemy. “Many a man goes to war without ' the slightest conception of what it really is,” said a veteran of Gen. Robert E. Lee's army. “In 1864 I had command of a detail made up of a dozen or two recruits that had just come up from the gulf states. The first night we were near the enemy, I managed to find a deserted cabin, and, after placing my picket out in front, we flung ourselves down to sleep. In the middle of the night I changed the picket, selecting for duty a young | fellow who had exhibited the most in- tense longing to exterminate the en- tire northern army. “About dawn I was awakened by | the well-known ‘ping, ping!’ of bullets against the logs of the cabin and the | expostulating voice of my picket. Go- | ing to the door I saw that a small | scouting party of federal soldiers had ' discovered signs of Confederates in the cabin and were trying to drive us out by firing from the opposite I turned to my picket and gave a gasp of astonishment. The young ' | man stood in the midst of the clear- I ing while the bullets whistled around him. There was no sign of fear about him, but he was tremendously excited. He had dropped his musket ' and was waving his arms, trying to at- tract the attention of the enemy, and shouting at the top of his voice in tones of remonstrance: “Sa-a-y, you fellows over yonder! Don’t you all be a-shootin’ in here; | thar's folks in here!”—New York Evening Post. | HARD TO EXPLAIN GRATITUDE Sweetest Reward That Can Be Given, and the One the Least Easy to Classify. | 1 | i Gratitude given or received is one of the best things in the world. We need far more of it and far better | quality. Yet I have never read any | satisfactory account of what it so glori- | ously means, writes Richard C. Cabot ! in the Atlantic. Its value begins just | where the value of pay ends. Thanks | are personal and attempt to fit an ade- | quate respense to the particular serv- | ice performed. Pay is an impersonal coin which has been handed out to many others before it reaches you, and | will go to many others when it leaves : you. It is your right and you are not | grateful for it. But thanks are a free | gift and enrich the giver. There is no nobler art than the art of expressing | one’s gratitude in fresh, unhackneyed, unexaggerated terms which answer de- | votion with fresh devotion, fancy with ! new fancy, clarity with sincerity. Art | ists who get their reward only in, money and in the stale plaudits of clapping hands are restless for some- | thing more individual. They want to be intimately understood and beauti- fully answered. For such gratitude they look to brother artists, to the few who really understand. There they find their best reward; but even this ! leaves something wanting. Lavender as Tobacco Substitute. Sweet lavender is now on the mar | ket and on the side table and the smell of it is clean, sweet and delicious, says the London Chronicle “office win- dow” man. “But did you ever smoke it? This business of the tobacco trust .worries the smoker who may have to : ‘pay more for his pipeful. Then comes | ' ‘the glad news that we are growing to- bacco and even cigar coverings—in order to beat Sumatra at her own | game. And also comes a Madrid pro- | fessor, inquiring what the ancient Ro- mans smoked. Fine pipes have been | .dug up in Spain from Roman settle- | ‘ments, but they have no trace of to- | bacco or opium. Yet they are adorned | with bas-reliefs picturing the lavender plant. And in 1276—before tobacco came to Europe—a Spanish writer sald that “whoever smokes lavender feels active, ardent and vigorous.” But why is it that smoking never crept into Roman literature?” Taken From the Spanish. The origin of the American dollar mark in the abbreviation of the Span- ish-American “pesos,” with the p and the 8 monogrammed, was described by Dr. i¥lertan Cajori of Colorado college in the Popular Science Monthly. Doc- tor Cajori gives more data on the history of the mark, showing that in Argentina $ usually follows the nu- merals in the short advertisements in newspapers, but usually precedes the numerals when they are arranged in columns. Mr. E. Tobitt of the Omaha public library says it contains an original ledger of George Washington, in which the § is used frequently. The diary of Ezra L’Hommedieu, written in 1776, shows the earliest occurrence known of this use. It became preva: lent gradually, being used at first as an occasional substitute for the word “dollars” spelled out. Peculiar Sunsets. Green sunsets seen by the Russian explorers in the newly discovered polar land have been matched in Eng- land. Throughout November and De- glows were of wonderful intensity and varied colors. At Chelsea especially the sun went down over the Thames amid a blaze of unearthly beauty ranging from deepest red to green, as may be seen in a series of water color sketches made at the time and now preserved in the Chelsea free library. tronomers attributed these winter sun- sets to the volcanic dust projected by the great eruption of Krakatoa, in Java, in the previous August, | spring. words. om OM JOY! SEASON TICKETS) For CHAUTAUQUA WEEK Reckless Travelers. Imagine two people starting off for a journey of years, in an entirely unknown country, full of perils and of pitfalls, and having no map to guide them, no knowl- edge to guard them in their travels. That is the condition of most young married people Their courage is magnificent, but it avails nothing. Like the path of some desert caravan marked by bleach- ing bones, the path of life is covered with the memorials of human failure. Dr. | Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is designed for such people. It garners in its thousand and odd pages, the wis- dom of centuries. It treats of the vital questions that affect parents and off- It treats plain truth in plain This book is sent free on receipt | of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for paper cover- ed book, or 31 stamps for handsome cloth covered. Address Dr. V. M. Pierce, Buf- falo, N. Y, Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Do You Suffer From Backache? When vour kidneys are weak and tor- pid they do not properly perform their functions; your back aches and you do not feel like doing much of anything. You are likely to be despondent and to borrow trouble, just asif you hadn’t enough al- ready. Don’t be a victim any longer. The old reliable medicine, Hood’s Sar- saparilla, gives strength and tone to the kidneys and builds up the whole system. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar com- bination of roots, barks and herbs. No other medicine acts like it, because no other medicine has the same formula or ingredients. Accept no substitute, but inejse on having Hood's, and get it today. Coal and Wood. A. G. Morris, Jr. DEALER IN HIGH GRADE ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS AND CANNEL COAL, Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw and Sand. i. ALSO FEDERAL STOCK AND POULTRY FOOD BOTH 'PHONES. Yard Opposite A: P.R.R. Depot. 58-23-1v Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at i following brands of high aaa Hirles the WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The only place in the county where that extraor- dinarily fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food and feed of all kinds. All kinds of Grain bough! oil St oan ought at the office Flour OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. 47-19 MILL AT ROOPBSURG. Revised ‘version. Be sure you are wrong, retain the best legal talent available. then go ahead. —Contact (Nev.) Miner. Medical. The Weary Way DAILY BECOMING LESS WEARISOME TO MANY IN BELLEFONTE. With a back that aches all day, With rest disturbed at night, Annoying urinary disorders, 'Tis a weary way, indeed. Doan’s Kidney Pills are especially for kidney trouble. Are endorsed br llefonte citizens. “I suffered for years from weak kid- neys,” says Mrs. Mary Hull, of 223 S. Al- legheny St., Bellefonte. “Not long ago the trouble became worse and I knew that if I didn’t do something to check it, it would become serious. I had a dull pain across the small of my back and often sharp twinges darted through my body and nearly bent me double. I could hard- ly straighten after stooping. Dizzy spells were common and black spots often float- ed before my eyes. One of my family had taken Doan’s Kidney Pills and she said they did her a lot of good, so I decid- ed to try them. They greatly relieved the backache and removed the dizzy spells, I have had very little trouble since.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kid- ney Pills—the same that Mrs. Hull had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 59-20 Meat Market. Attorneys-at-Law. (Get the Best Meats. by buying poor, thin v 4 a use oy or gristly meats. LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and ly my customers with the fresh- est, choicest , Dest blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no igher than poorer meats are elsewhere. I always have —— DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. \ Restaurant. ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, Oysters on the half shell or in any style desired, Sand- wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can be had in a few minutes any time. In ad- dition I have a somplets plant prepared to furnish Soft Drinks in bottles such as POPS, SODAS, : SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener- ally all of which are manufactured out of the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. Money to Loan. ONEY JO. 1oaN on good security and Ouses to Fenty. M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, 51-14-1y. Bellefonte Pa, LIME AND LIMESTONE. LIME. H-O Lime Put up in 40 Lime and Limestone for all purposes. LIME. to 50 Pound Paper Bags. American Lime & 58-28-6m for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- ical form most careful farmers are using. High Calcium Central Pennsylvania Time Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown and Spring Meadows, Pa Stone Company., General Office: TYRONE, PA. Groceries. Groceries. KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law,Belle fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts. - Room 18Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y. B. SPANGLER.-Attornev-at-Law. Practices in all the Courts. Consultation in English or German. Office in Crider’s Exch Bellefonte, Pa. 40- S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Temple Court, Belle- fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promotlv. 40-46 J H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second to promptly. Consultation in English or Centan floor. All kinds of legal business att M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices in all the-courts. Consultation in English and German. Office south of court house. All professional business will receive prompt at- tention. 49-5-1y* J KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given al egal business entrusted to his care. Offi- 0. 5 East Hich street. 57-44. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul- tation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 58-5 Physicians. ces—N GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su; State College, Centre county, Fa. ‘Sfiice at his residence. Dentists. vv: R. J. E. WARD, D. D. S., office next door to Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for painless extract. ing teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices reasonable. 52-39 R. the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All mod- ern electric appliances used. Has had years of experience. All work of Superior quality and prices reasofiable. 45-8-1y H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office in Plumbing. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER, When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escaping gas. you can’t have good Health. The air you reathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’s the only kind you ought to have. Wedon’t trust this 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 Tr, unsanitary work and the lowest grade of finishings. For the Best Work trv Archibald Allison, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-14-1v. Fruits, Confe ctionery and FINE GROCERIES. White Almedia Grapes, Florida and Naval Oranges, Lemons, Ba- nanas, all in good order and free of frost. Large Spanish and home-grown Onions, sound and in good order. Fine Popping Corn, on the ear or shelled; this goods will pop. We have revised the prices downward on our Beans; come in and see the fine stock and present prices. If you want a fine, sweet, juicy Ham, let us supply you. The Finest Meadow Gold Brand Creamery Butter at 40c per pound. Sweet, Dill and Sour Pickles; our Fine weather yet for using Mince Meat. Nothing else will compare with what we make at 15c a pound. SOME SEASONABLE GOODS. Spinach 10 and 15c a can; Rheu- barb, Jersey packed, sanitary cans, 10c a can; Pumpkin 10 and 15c a can; all large No. 3 cans. Fine Golden New Orleans Mo- lasses, by the quart or gallon. We have some fine Marketing and Clothes Baskets ready for the spring trade. We are still handling the fine German Kraut. In order to meet the demand for small quantity, we have some packed in half-gallon Olives by the quart are very fine, . a SECHLER & COMPANY, sa. Bush House Block, oi. Farm Impl ements. Mason Jars at 25¢ a jar. Bellefonte, Pa. Farmers’ Supply Store, It cannot be excelled for light ru runs it. safe and durable. sired by the purchaser. your inspection. BINDER —both riding and walking, ers and Grindstones, BROOKVILLE on a farm. Call in and look us over. JOHN G. sl Should you want an Ensilage Cutter, we handle and recommend THE BLIZZARD Large capacity, easily fills highest silos, and is simple, Self-feed table, mounted or unmounted as de- Four sizes. CHAMPION MOWERS yet on hand, if you should need one to cut difficult grass that the other makes of mowers choke on, get this one. JAPANESE BUCKWHEAT for seed. Just as profitable a crop as you ean sow, as you don’t have to wait a year for returns. Manilla Hay Rope and knot passing Pulleys. Walking and Riding Cultivators, Wiard Plows a low Doubletrees, Hay Track put up to save labor. Harvesters’ Umbrellas at half price, section and repairs for most any make of machines, Sickle Grind- AGONS A SPECIALTY. In fact everything used Both Phones. nning. A regular farm engine Will have one in stock for A few 5-foot TWINE DUBBS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. This Agency represents the largest Fire Insurance Companies in the World. —— NO ASSESSMENTS —- Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. The Preferred Accident “bw Insurance THE $5000 TRAVEL POLICY $5,000 death by acéidait, ,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, ) 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot," 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 per week, total disability, Or aa ei ebiity. 10 per week, partial disability, Pe limit 26 weeks) FehiY. PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion. Any person, male or female, engaged in a referred occupation, including house- foening, over eighteen years of age of moral and physical condition may nsure under this policy. Fire Insurance { invite your attention to my Fire Insur ance Agency, the sf and Most Ex tensive Line of Solid Companies represent by any agency in Central Pennsylvania H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest * er’ to the finest BOOK WORK, that we can not do in the most satis- factory manner, and at Prices consist. ent with the class of work. Call on or » communicate with this office.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers