Pimples rncmeay Tor Neuralgia. Cayenne pepper is excellent. Take scme jelly in a spoon, add cayenne pepper the size of a pea and carefully cover with jelly. Swallow quickly so the pépper will not touch the mouth. Take this two or three days in suc- cession, then skip three days. TELEPATHY IS WIDESPREAD | —— Are looked upon generally only as an Instances Frequently Indicate a Trans | annoying disfigurement, something to be i mission of Thought, Says One ‘got rid of in some way as speedily as | Who Should Know. ; possible. But the pimple is only a symp- i : tom, and though the symptom be sup- : i pressed the disease is unaffected. Pim- : ples, blotches, eruptions, are the signs of ; bad blood. Make the blood pure and the A | devoted Tover 15 5 remote iene. of the Demaoraic: Wald, EE eran HONTOKNOWRABIES Gordian knot,” said Paul, after a full : hour of conversation, “except to settle { the whole matter by following our own Symptoms in Do gs a L ayman May Understand. Belletonte, Pa., February 5, 1915. ; | minds and getting married at once.” HER LITTLE DAUGHTER i “But the folks at home wen’t con- [By Victor Radcliffe.] ; sent,” said Clytie. “And they have set : Are we all mind readers? Can any | business or professional man, with ! “The poor, dear little thing!” said Miss Delevan, pitymgly and indignant- She was a child of emotions, was Clytie Delevan, and her gentle but forceful soul was moved to its depths. For the moment all her thoughts and sympathies were with a strange girl Jhe had never spoken to and had seen ut once—just now. Clytie was passing an obscure cot- tage. Three or four little children were playing about the rear porch. Beside it was a young girl at a wash " tub, fair and energetic. This was Vivian Grey, tLe “poor, dear little thing.” “Well?” suddenly challenged the preoccupied Clytie, and a handsome young man startled her by stepping Into view from behind a tree. “Dear! How you frightened me,” said Clytie chidingly, but with gen- tleness. “Did you find out what you wanted?” asked Paul Sercombe, her lover. “I have made all kinds of inquiries,” replied Clytie buoyantly. “I have even seen her. Oh, Paul! she is such a sweet, patient self-sacrificing little creature, [ just love her. There she is with an Invalid mother and five little brothers and sisters, bravely fighting her way, and this horrid Uncle Wyman has passed them by, who have nothing and need so much, for selfish me, who has everything in the world.” “Including myself,” suggested Paul with a smile. “I won't answer that "until I see how you will carry out your part in a certain plot I am about to set afoot. You know Uncle Wyman seni for me to stdy a month, and if I pleased him l am to become his heiress.” “Yes, I know,” nodded Paul. “Well, I found out that he has had aearly all his relatives on the same basis, and has scared them all off with his gruff tyrannical ways. I have found out that if I don’t suit he is g0- Ing to decide on the Grey family. That Is as it should be, for Vivian is his own niece and deserves good fortune. And she is going to have it, if my helping can bring it to her.” “As how, now?” queried Paul. “Whisper—T’ll tell you all about my plan,” said Clytie. A precious plan it was! Paul looked dubious, but entered into its details “Eh! Where? When? How?” to please his peremptory lady love. The program was set and started in motion the following day. Paul called at the Wyman home. Clytie introduced him to her uncle, who bristled up and looked sullen and suspicious, but when Clytie suggested that he show her “dear friend” from . ber home town around the place, Mr. Wyman ungraciously assented to the proposition. He came back to the house half an hour later, alone. He was fairly quivering with indignation and rage. “Why, where is Mr. Sercombe?” in- quired Clytie in her sweetest, but falsest tone, well knowing. “Gone!” roared the old tyro. “If he ever shows his face here again I'll have him horsewhipped from the place!” “Uncle!” cried Clytie in affected horror and dismay. “Why,” shouted Mr. Wyman, “he ac- tually criticized my chickens, said they were half-breeds, called me ‘Old | Top,’ asked me how much I was worth, and said he believed he'd become my son-in-law. Yes, he will!” bellowed the irate old man. “I am so sorry, uncle,” declared Cly- tie. “I—I think a great deal of Mr. Sercombe.” “Well, forget him!” fired up her in- tractable relative, “or give up all hopes of ever inheriting any of my wealth. Now, young lady, you listen to me; if you ever meet this young man again or go to skylarking around with him secretly, I'll pack you off home and settle the whole business by taking in the Greys. They're a brood, but the girl is a worker and she’s the last pick, so mind your p's and q's, if you're wise.” Clytie went away by herself and laughed in high glee. Then, notwith- standing the dreadful threats of her waclic, that same evening she met her | their hearts on my being an heiress.” | “Haven't I got enough to care for both of us?” demanded Paul. “Yes, indeed, so I want to fix it so Uncle Wyman will surely drop me as the prospective heiress and take up that dear, little, deserving, hard work- er, Vivian Grey.” “Let us elope.” “Audacious!” But it seemed the only way out of the dilemma. They carried out the program in due romantic style, too. The next morning there was a wild time around the Wyman home. A serv- ant came to her master, pale and breathless. “Oh, sir,” she gasped, “burglars!” “Eh! Where? When? How?” chal- lenged the old man, startled. “Miss Clytie, sir!” “What about her?” “Gone. Ladder up to the window. Left this note.” “Dear uncle,” it read, “I love Paul be Mr. and Mrs. Sercombe and off on our wedding trip inside of an hour. Forgive.” “I discard her forever!” yelled the Irate old curmudgeon. “She shan’t have a cent of my money. I'll act quick, before her father comes snoop- Ing around to influence me to change my mind.” Then Mr. Wyman primped up and went down to the humble Grey home. heard a bright cheery voice singing. He peeped in at the window. Busy-bee Vivian was ironing and singing to sleep her little brother in a chair near the table. Everything was poor, but scrupulously clean. “I'd like to have that music down at the big house,” chuckled the old ty- rant. “That girl knows how to make things look home-like, and that’s what I want. Morning, Vivian,” he greeted, as he entered the kitchen. “Why, Uncle Wyman, this is a real pleasure,” said Vivian, sincerely, glad to see her arbitrary relative, and he was convinced that the expression was genuine. “You can drop that ironing,” he ob- served. “What for, uncle?” “Going to move, all of you. I'm through experimenting with my kin of high ideas. I'm going to adopt the whole family and make you my heir- ess.” Grateful little soul! Vivian sat down as if the burden of the ages had rolled away from her weary shoulders. It was two years later, and she was happily married, and old Uncle Wy- man had found peace and comfort amid true family surroundings, when Vivian met Clytie. Then the whole story came out, and there began a rare friendship that beautified the whole of their lives. (Copyright. 1914, by W. G. Chapman.) WORK OF ANCIENT DENTISTS Remarkable Teeth Decoration Shows That They Possessed Consider- able Skill. By far the most transcendent ex- ample of teeth decoration which has place called La Piedra, near the point on the right bank of the Esmeraldas river where it empties into San Mateo bay. It was accidentally found by Mr. Pinzon and Mr. George D. Hedian, the latter an American consular agent at Esmeraldas, and was kindly presented by Mr. Hedian for the Heye museum mer. The skull was seen projecting from the bank, but no other parts of the skeleton were uncovered, probably having been washed away after the bank was undermined.’ The upper part of the skuil is in fragments, but is restorable. The skull, slightly deformed, is that of an adult female. The decoration of the teeth is unique and presents a new type of facial ornamentation. In- stead of small disks being set into arti- ficial cavities we find in this case that certain teeth of the upper jaw were al- mos® entirely covered on the outer face by an overlay of gold. The en- | tire enamel of the teeth decorated has been removed, with the exception of narrow bands at the bases and the up- per parts, where they were close to the flesh and embedded in the jaw. The removal of the enamel is through to the dentine and was skill fully accomplished. It appears that in some instances swing was done slight- ly under the enamel, at the upper part, so that the gold overlay, or covering, might be fitted under it in order to make it more secure. The teeth thus practically ‘“face-crowned” are the four incisors and the two canines. The overlays are missing in all but one of the teeth, the left lateral in- cisor. This gold covering is slightly folded or bent over each side of the tooth for greater security. A Real Wonder. Snooker (fiercely)—Your fowls have | been over the wall and scratched my i garden. : i Chanks (coolly)—Well, there’s noth- | Ing extraordinary in that. It's their nature to scratch. Now, if your gar- den were to come over the wall and scratch my fowls it would be extraor- dinary and something worth communi- | cating.~—Pearson’s Weekly. so I couldn’t disappoint him. We will | may know a mad dog, and discusses | | | ; | | | dinary symptoms observed is a change | in the disposition of the animal. : has been affectionate, he often be- As he rounded the shabby house he ' | been, in the imagination of men, one Hydrophobia Is Usually Spread by the | Infected, Ownerless Cur Traveling Far and Wide, Says a Phil- adelphia Veterinarian. Philadelphia.—“Mad dog!” A terrible ! cry, and one that sends the bravest 1 stampeding frantically. It has always of the most dreadful warnings. And | why not? The statistics show that | among hydrophobia patients the mor- tality is 100 per cent, says the Phila- delphia North American. Then, too, there are people who say there is no such thing as rabies, that | i it is all the wild-eyed superstition of a | fright-crazed people. In these summer | months, when the rumors fly, which ! are you to believe? | Here below is the expert testimony | of an authority upon the disease and | situation, Dr. C. J. Marshali, the state | veterinarian. He tells just how you ! the state of affairs with evident surety. | The symptoms of rabies are very | easily recognized by a person who is | familiar with the disease, yet the av- | erage layman seldom recognizes it, Doctor Marshall says. Among the or- | if he | comes cross and irritable, while dogs that are of a nervous, ferocious tem- i berament frequently become very af- ! fectionate and timid. In many cases | the animal goes away from home and | may travel several miles, and on his ' return will show that he has been in a number of fights with other dogs. There is always a change in the voice of the animal. Instead of a bark he makes more of a cry and does more barking than usual. In some cases dogs that are affected are constantly even licking through the skin and do- | ing extensive damage to that particu- : lar part. They usually have a de- | praved appetite, and will eat pieces of : wood, cloth, leather or any rubbish | quently chew up the furniture or tear ' and sometimes even tear their teeth and cried like a tired baby. It seemed | that they may find. Dogs that are kept in the house or in kennels fre- the bars of the cage with their teeth. out or lacerate their mouths through such violence. Doctor Marshall has very dubious | opinions of those who deny that there : is such a thing as rabies. He says: | “There is such a disease as rabies. | have seen hundreds of dogs, a number | of cats, many head of cattle and a large number of horses die of the dis- ease which has been, by all the means , of establishing a diagnosis known to , our profession, declared and verified as rabies. There is no disease of which I know that is more easily recogz- nized or more sure to cause death, or | ' one that causes more intense suffering at present come to light in America i is in a skull discovered in 1909 at a : ] ' have bitten persons around the ex- during my visit to Ecuador last sum- | in its victims than rabies. In my, opinion it is unwise for intelligent per- | sons to deny its existence, or to mini: mize or magnify the losses and suffer- ; ing occasioned by it. I know very well | that all'animals and all persons bitten by a rabid animal do not develop rabies, but I know of no transmissible ! disease in which all animals that are | susceptible will develop the disease ! when exposed to it. The best records I have at hand show where rabid dogs | tremities 17 out of 100 have developed the disease, while 80 out of 100 kitten about the face have produced the mal- ady. This is because the teeth of the animal when slashing at the legs be- come cleaned of the poisonous saliva, and usually do not carry, by the time : they cut through to the skin, enough | disease germs to impregnate the torn | flesh. : “On the other hand, when an uncov- ered portion of the body is bitten all | of the deadly bacteria are on the: points of the dog's teeth and tear into the flesh fully armed. I know that the | British isles have exterminated the ' disease by judicious use of muzzles and by proper quarantine measures. No cases have been reported from Australia, and probably never will be . as long as the present system of quar- i 3 antine is in vogue. The only way that : rabies can be spread is by the bite | of an animal. Dogs, being loose and free to roam, are naturally subject to, | it. No dogs have, so far as my records! i or knowledge of them go, been known ! to go mad of their own accord. It is] simply a disease which is carried from, place to place by dogs which have | been. bitten by ether dogs and which! will bite still other dogs in their turn. The mad cats which are occasionally| seen have been bitten by mad dogs. The horses and cattle have been con- taminated in the same way. If every| dog in the United States were muzzled and quarantined as they are restricted, in England and Australia there would be no rabies. “It is the owmerless dog which causes the trouble. He travels far and wide, fighting over a wide range of ter- ritory. In one of the stray flurries he may be nipped by a dog which is in the early stages of rabies. He may be caught by a raving rabies sufferer and bitter before he can escape. In any event, he develops the disease. “The household pet, no matter how carefully he is watched, may on some pleasant little jog, when out for exer cise only & few minutes, perhaps be cut by a contaminated hound and doomed. However, these animals ly spread rabilea. : complished psychic, | fcal aid. , wonderful science, the more you will proper development, become an ac receiving and transmitting ideas without the use of a medium so gross as the spoken word? Recent experiments in the Charcot institute in France, and in the psychiatric clinic of the Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore would seem to lead to this belief, and Nor man R. Frescott states his belief that this is true. “There is not a man or woman alive today,” said Frescott recently, “who has not been at some time or another the ‘receiver’ or ‘transmitter’ in a tele pathic experiment. At times, it may have been wholly unconscious; at oth- ers it may have been dimly guessed: then again, it may have been thorough- ly appreciated, but attributed to that very convenient old invention, the law of coincidence. One is talking to a friend, perhaps. He stops and when his friend replies, he realizes that he knew before just what his friend was going to say, and the exact language in- which he would clothe his ideas. All of us have felt that, day after day, many, many times. “That is telepathy; the transmission of thought through ether without phys- The more you study this be impressed with the fact that, for Its success, it depends largely on two minds being closely attuned; there must be absolute harmony if there is to be success. Such instances as I have mentioned a little before are found in their greatest frequency, be- tween husband and wife. And this is natural because of all persons in the world husbands and wives are most closely associated and bound by the closest, dearest, most binding ties. . ‘Two minds with but a single thought; i two hearts that beat as one,’ really ex- ( bresses the idea perfectly. It is, I might say, the philosophy of telepathy . crystallized in an epigram.” + licking or biting the body, sometimes : — Obstacle to Enjoyment. Many of us are plenty old enough to remember the big open fireplace, the enormous amount of wood it required to keep it going, how the cord sticks had to be dug out of the ice and snow, how it was a struggle to get the big back log in place, how every morning the fire had to be started over again, unless you were cunning enough in . Woodcraft to hide some coals deep : enough under the ashes to keep them until morning, how in the early hours of the bleak days the rooms of the house were so cold it required great courage or the insistent commands ; of the head of the house to get up to make that fire. But this is not all. It will be remembered also that in real weather the fire from the open side of the room baked you on one side while the other side was frozen, and all the day long the frost on the windows maintained the beauty of the formation into pictured mountains and valleys undisturbed by the heat from the burning logs. ~The Earth Breathes. It has been proved that there is a regular exchange of gas between the interior of the earth and the surround- ing atmosphere corresponding to hu- man breathing. Doctor Boernstein, an Austrian physician, sank a tube in the ground to a depth of more than ninety feet, connected with a mercury ba- ! rometer on the surface. From 7 a. m. to 5 or 6 p. m. the pressure of gases given cut by the earth was found to be less than the atmospheric pressure. | During the night the condition was re- versed. The earth for ten or eleven ‘hours absorbs air which it gives out during the other hours of the 24. The cause has not been defined, but it is surmised that, considering light as a material physical agent, the pressure of light is added to that of the air.— Harper's Weekly. Supreme Excellence. In character, in manner, in style, in all things, the supreme excellence is simpiicity.—Longfellow, As Poor Richard Says. A penny saved is two pence clear, a nr. a day is a groat a year. Save and Tune Medical. It Happened in - Bellefonte. AND IS HAPPENING TO BELLE. FONTE PEOPLE EVERY WEEK. The case told below is not an un- common thing. The same occurs frequently and will continue to hap- pen as long as folks have kindeys and over-tax the kidneys. Mrs. Isaac Wyland, Wilson St, Bellefonte, says: “Last winter I caught a cold, which settled on my kidneys. My back to ache and I was in bed for a week. I didn’t rest properly and in the morning felt all out of sorts. Often the pains were so severe that I cried My housework was a burden. Dizzy spells were common and my sight was blurred. Doan’s Kidney Pills took hold of the trouble at once and after I had finished one box, the pain in my back left and I was strong as ever.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Wyland had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 60-6-1t f | pimples will go away and the skin be- come clear and smooth. The blood can be cleansed perfectly by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It pushes out of the body the waste matter which corrupts the blood. It increases the blood supply, and enriches every vein with a full flow of rich, pure blood, : When the blood is pure the skin diseas- | es, which are caused by impure blood, are naturally and permanenly cured. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. Shoes. Proof of Insanity. A Pittsburgh boarder is beaten up by his landlady, armed with a flatiron, because he demanded prunes for breakfast. Well, how would one ex- ect a woman to deal wiih an insane man ?—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Little Hotel Wilmot. Hats and Caps. The Little Hotel Wilmot IN PENN SQUARE One minute from the Penna Ry. Station PHILADELPHIA We have quite a few customers from Belle- fonte. We can take care of some more. They'll like us. A good room for $1. If you bring your wife, $2. Hot and cold running water in every room 7 The Ryerson W. Jennings Co. 59. Clothing. Half BELLEFONTE, 70 Boys Suits Sizes 11 to 17 Years. All Winter Weights. Bloomer Pants. Odds and Ends, at They Wont Last Long. = Get Busy. FAUBLE Price PENNA. 58-4 Automobiles. ..NEW FEATURES IN... STUDEBAKER CARS Three-Passenger Roadster and Five-Passenger “Six” Added to Line. Prices are Lowered. agner te Unit Starting and Wan: Separate yu Jacketed Carburetor, The tem Improved Design and Manufacturing Method imkin i Floating Rear Axle, Crown enders, % Re Lighting, Dimming Head Li C e-Man Type Top, —g uipment on all models includes the Wagner Separate-unit starting and lighting sys- asoline gauge, dimming attachment for Add to Values. ] Non-skid Tires on Rear, ts, Switch Locking De- ersize tires, head lights, switch locking device, anti- rumble gasoline tank in dash, crowned fenders, Shibter carburetors and non-skid tires on 3-PASSENGER ROADSTER § 985 5-PASSENGR “SIX” TOURING 1385 THE NEW PRICES. 5-PASSENGER “FOUR” TOURING $ 985 7-PASSENGER “SIX” TOURING 1450 BEEZE GEORGE A. BEEZER, R’S GARA Propr. 59-3-tf GE. Bellefonte, Pa.