Salli Bellefonte, Pa., June 4, 1915. New Idea in Pumping Water. Pumping water by explosion, or with an explosion pump. will be the method employed by the Egyptian gow ernment in draining a lake at Mex, near Alexandria. When the plant is completed it will be the largest pump- ing installation in the world. There will be 18 pumps, each capable of a delivery of 100,000,000 gallons of wa- ter per day, to a height of about twen- ty feet. The pump works automati- «cally at a rate of about ten explosions per minute. There ~re no pistons or other moving parts, as in the common type of water pump. The water is raised by the resulting gas pressure within an explosion chamber; the chamber is then emptied of the prod- ucts of the burned gases, and the mext charge is compressed for firing by the incoming water, following each Qperation. EH - Medical Triumphs. . Nowhere have the triumphs of medi- al science been more conspicuous than where engineers have performed their greatest feats. De Lesseps de- cided that Ismailia should be the headquarters of the Suez canal, but the prevalence of malaria made it necessary to transfer the headquar- ters to Port Said. In 1886 there were 2,300 cases of malaria at Ismailia; in 1900 almost exactly th» same number. In 1901 Sir Ronald Ross was called in to advise. In 1906 there were no fresh cases, and malaria had been stamped out. De Lesseps’ attempt to - construct the Panama canal was de- feated largely, if not mainly, by the frightful death rate among the labor- ers; 50,000 lives are said to have been lost, the result of malaria and yellow fever. : Couldn’t Take the Money. A benevolent old gentleman was passing down a back street in one of our football-loving towns, when he saw @ number of boys playing the great game. One of the boys was far smart- er than his companions with the ball, and at last scored a good goal by kicking the ball through a space marked by two tin cans. The old gentleman thought he would like to reward the boy for his smartness, and with this intention called the boy to him, and asked whether he would like a sixpence or a box of sweets. “Let's have the sweets, mister, please,” he said; “for if I take the ‘tanner’ I shall be a professional, and I don’t want to be one of them for a bit.” The Inspector’s Advice. The late Inspector MecCluskey— “Gentleman George,” or “Chesty ‘George,” as he was known in the New York force—was a good friend and a bad enemy. The inspector, while by no means vindictive, did not readily forget an injury, and one day an elder- ly millionaire who had injured him in the past rushed excitedly into his of- fice awd shouted: “McCluskey, one of your men just called me a spavined old mule. What are you going to do about it?” “Do? Why, nothing,” the inspector answered. “I can’t patch you up—I haven’t the knowledge. Go and consult a vet.” Labels Ready. "While many women carefully write out labels on pieces of paper and glue to the jelly glass, it gives a neater ap- pearance to use a manufactured label. These are put on the market so cheap that 25 cents buys a book of several hundred, which come in different gizes in perforated sheets. Some books are filled with assorted labels, others come in separate books of each kind, such as apple jelly, canned peaches, ete. It takes but a moment to pui such a label on the jars and they add much to the neat appearance of well-filled shelves. Peruvian Plant Grows “Wool.” A plant producing the finest quality of cotton is indigenous to Peru. The fiber so closely resembles wool that ‘the entire product is utilized in’ the manufacture of woolen goods which are, in certain respects, improved by the admixture. This peculiar cotton «commands a price of 10 per cent high- er than other qualities, and Peru is the sole source of the world’s supply. It 4s being more and more extensively ‘cultivated year after year; but in spite of increased outputs, the demand ex- ceeds the supply. It Seemed Unreasonable. During his last illness, Curran, the great Irish wit, was one day told by . his medical attendant that he seemed to cough with more difficulty than he had done the previous day. “That’s odd enough,” replied the famous Irish- man, “because I've been practicing all night.” To Separate Tumblers. ‘When two glass tumblers or dishes stick together so that there is danger of breaking by forcing them apart, put cold water into the inner one and place the outer one in warm water. They will immediately separate. B-ware of Misunderstandings. Little inharmonies between friends @re dangerous, not in themselves, but fn the bitter memories and misunder standings they may leave in their trails.—William George Jordan. Yield of Oil From Cocoanuts. It i: said 40 cocoanuts will yield & galic. of oil. 3 BEING GUIDED BY APPETITE In the Case of Normal Person There Is Much to Be Said in Favor of Such Action. Doctors say that this is a danger- ous thing to do. If you have hard- ened and deadened the membranes of ‘your palate and your digestive sys- tem by the excessive use of narcotics like tobacco or opium or of alcoholic stimulants, of course you cannot trust the cravings of your degenerate ap- petite, says Leslie's Magazine. But if you are well and sound and fairly sensible, perhaps the desire for any particular sort of food or drink is as good a guide as one could have for the proper diet. Amusing stories can be collected in almost any company of singular experiences in this line. One hears incredible tales of dying men who gasped out a request for fried oysters or mince pie or some- thing equally silly—were supplied with the coveted dainty and proceeded to get well at once. : One lady recently told of a child of four who was lying at the point of death, but who begged for pan- cakes and ham gravy. One can hard- ly conceive of parents who had al- - lowed a child of that age to conceive a fondness for those particular edi- bles—but this one had surely become acquainted with them and liked them. As he seemed likely to live but a few moments in any case, he was gratified. Smoking hot pancakes, liberally en- livened with ham gravy, were given him until his eccentric appetite was satisfied. Then he fell into a gentle slumber, and a few days later was playing about the house as well as ever, MUCH JOY IN ANTICIPATION Its Stimulating Effect Seldom Given | . the Credit Which It So Thor- oughly Deserves. Few people realize how much bene- fit they obtain from anticipation. In- deed, were it not for its stimulating effect upon our minds half the joy of living would vanish because by look- ing forward into the future and trying to realize our pleasures and ambitions before they actually come to us we largely increase their happy effects. The man who is unable to anticipate the future in any way whatever, who sees no reason in trying to taste his joys beforehand, who derives no satis- faction in ‘building upon his hopes, misses a great deal of very wholesome pleasure. Common sense tells him, so he argues, that it is unwise to count upon anything in this life unless it is actually in his grasp, but then most of us get some very real joy at times in acting contrary to the routine teach- ing of common sense. We do not mean by this, of course, that it is ever hest to ignore our. better judgment but, even #dmitting the fact that an- ticipation is not always the part of wisdom, there is no questioning the fact that it is very delightful to be unwise in this way at times. If we did not look forward to what is to come with hearts full of hope and expec- tancy how could we get through with some of the harder days of life? If we did not depend in so large a meas- ure upon our anticipations how could we hope to overcome our discourage- ments? Anticipation is in a way the twin sister of the zest of life—Charles- | ton News and Courier. Properly “Land o’ Cakes.” Scotland came to be known centu- ries ago as the “Land o’ Cakes,” and as such has been celebrated in prose and poetry. One may yet, in traveling through that northern land, come up- on country inns and herders’ huts, see women who never attended a “cooking school” and who over a peat fire in the great chimney place, a griddle swung by a crane over the slow coals, baking a cake more than a foot in diameter, savory and promising of a meal for the gods, and who when the big cake fs ready for the turning will seize the griddle by the handle, give it a toss in the air, and turn that cake with an art motion not to be seen in any other place on earth, the big round slab turn- ing a loop-the-loop and alighting with the other side down in the same place as before to the breadth of a slender stem of the heather. ¢ The Dardanelles. The Dardanelles takes its name from Dardanus, who was supposed to have founded the lost city of that name near that other and far more famous lost city, ancient Troy. It is from one to | five miles wide, the most romantic part of the passage being only a mile wide between Sestos in Europe and Abydos in Asia, where “Leander swam the Hellespont his Hero for to see,” at the time of the largely mythical war of the Greeks and Troyans so celebrated by Homer. The feat of Leander had for long years been pro- nounced impossible, but Lord Byron, rhyming voluminously of all this re- gion of song, in 1810, swam the Helle spont, club-footed as he was, from Sestos to Abydos. Deadly “Observation Mines.” The “observation mine” is worked from a station on shore. The firing pins are fixed in a buoy, which floats a few feet beneath the surface of the water, and above the explosive reser- “voir. An electric cable runs from the anchor, beneath the bottom, to the shore station. When a pin is driven into the top buoy, it causes a bell to ring or a light to flash in the shore station, warning the observer on duty that a vessel is passing over a mine. The observer thereupon closes the firing circuit and the mine explodes. Certainly Not His Hat. The good parson was preaching out of town and he went into a barber .shop and got a shave. The porter brushed a hat and handed it to the parson, who donned it in an absent- minded way. The parson dined at the home of a pillar of the church that evening and the guests were all strict church members. When the guests were leaving the host handed them their hats. He looked inside one hat to see the name and seemed deeply shocked. “Is this your hat?” asked the host. “Yes,” replied the parson. “That is mine.” The host handed the hat to the parson and he glanced at the inside of the band before donning it. And there, pasted into the crown of the hat, was a card bearing this legend: “No; you d—— fool, this ain’t your hat!” Seventeen-Year Locusts. The song of the cicada is the nois- fest in thie insect world. The 17-year cicada has been called the Rip Van Winkle of the insect world. From its tiny egg there issues a creature with soft white body and molelike front legs. It hurries to the ground and dis- appears beneath its surface sometimes to a depth of twenty feet. For seven- teen years it digs its way around in absolute darkness and then comes to the surface to join in a marriage revel- ry of a few brief weeks. It is a full- fledged creature of the air, though in- cased still in grave clothes of parch- ment, but it soon splits these up the back, pulls itself out, dries its power- ful wings and flies away with the whirr of an aeroplane, to live but a few brief weeks.—National Geographic So- ciety Bulletin. Couldn’t Ask Them In. A special constable, one bitter night, tried to restore his circulation by slip- ping into a private bar which hap- pened to be on his beat, and digested | & warming half-pint of ale. As luck | would have it on leaving he ran : straight into the arms of his inspector and sergeant. “What d’ye mean,” thundered the superior, “by goin’ into a pub while you're on duty? Didn’t ye see me and the sergeant comin’ © down the street?’ “Oh, I saw you all right,” retorted the constable, mind- i ful of the proverb touching the rela- tive values of sheep and lambs, “but I only had twopence.””—London Tit-Bits. Refrain From Scolding. Scolding is not necessary in order to emphasize a rebuke, and some- times the reproof that is tactful and kind, makes the most impression of all.—HExchange. Daily Thought. Be careful to have your sons well instructed rather than rich, for the hopes of the instructed are better than the wealth of the ignorant.— Epictetus. CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas.H.Fletcher. 1n use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. 1 AE < Nature’s Object Lesson. In almost every community will be found some one woman whois a splendid example of perfect health. She knows nothing of diseases which afflict most women. Motherhood to her is pure joy with scarce a pain-pang to mar -it. She can enjoy life to the full, eat heartily, sleep soundly and throw her whole energy into work or play as it may happen. That woman is Nature’s object lesson. She has no privilege above any other member of her sex. No rights that do not belong to every woman. This fact has been lifted from misery up to the high level of robust health by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. The possibilities of perfect health inhere in every woman. Its development is ob- structed by local diseases. “Favorite Prescription” removes the obstruction and makes weak women strong and sick women well: —*"“When Russia went to war the Czar with a stroke of his pen put one hundred and eighty million people on the water wagon. And, believe me, this water wagon ‘ikon’ is no bluff. It is harder to get a drink in Russia today than it is at Lake Mohonk. How wise was this edict of the ruler of Russia is now shown in the condition of his army. Their fighting effectiveness is higher: than that of the French and fully equal to the English, measured by the physical fitness of the units composing the forces. On the other hand, the German soldiers nearly all carry flasks of whiskey or other spirits. Ivan the Siberian knows this, and I fear that the famous edict is sometimes broken when a batch of pris- oners is gathered. in. The flasks are certainly contraband of war.” That's a Hard Qall. The married man who hasn’t any- thing running around his house but a fence is always the lad who doesn’t like the way the fool neighbors raise their children.—Cumberland Press. Suggest New Danger Colors. As a substitute for red in danger sig- nals, which is the color less easily dis- tinguished by the color blind, experts have advocated blue circles with wide yellow rims. Medical. Giving Out THE STRUGGLE DISCOURAGES MANY A CITIZEN OF BELLE- FONTE. Around all day with an§faching back, Can't rest at night; / Enough to make any one “give out.” Doan’s Kidney Pills are helping thousands. They are for kidney backache; And other kidney ills. Here is Bellefonte proof of their merit: William Woods, carpenter, High St., Bellefonte, says: *‘I strained myself by heavy lifting and that start- ed my back aching. A catch caught me across my loins and I had to lay off for the day. I took Doan’s Kidney Pills and less than one box rid me of the attack. I have not had any trouble from my back . since.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Woods had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 60-23-1t Farm Impiements, Etc. i \ Bellefonte, Prepared to supply the Farmer’s every want. The oldest house and Largest Dealers in the county in Hydrated Lime and Fertilizers of every kind, for every use, and well - prepared for drilling. McCormick Binders, Mowers, Tedders, Hay Rakes, Hay Loaders, Walking and Sulky Plows, Harrows and Land Rollers, Conklin Wagons with patented truss axles, and a complete line of Farm Machinery and Im- plements, Binder Twine and Farm Seeds. Coal, Wood, Wall Plaster, Cement AND BUILDER'S SUPPLIES. An Old Established Progressive House, with an Up-to- date line, with a guarantee back of it. ~ McCalmont & Company, 60-15-tf Penna. Shoes. Shoes. BIG REDUCTION ON THE PRICES OF SHOES Men’s $3.50 and $4.00 Working Shoes re- duced to $2.73. Men's $2.50 and $3.00 Working Shoes re- duced to $1.98 Men’s Mule Skin Shoes, ‘good to wear and comfortable for the feet, $1.48. Men’s good heavy Shoes for work, $1.73. Men's $3.50 Dress Shoes, now only $2.73. Boys’ Scout Shoes $1.19. Ladies’ Rubber Heel Juliets, all stylesi$1.19. Old Ladies’ Comfort Shoes, good quality, at $1.19. A big lot of Children’s $2.00 Shoes reduced to $1.19. Shoes for the Baby—new spring Shoes, all colors, reduced from $1.00 to 65c. New line of Children’s Shoes; Russia, Calf and Gun Metal, hand sewed, worth $2.00, now $1.48. This is an Unusual Sale for this time of the year, sales are usually put on at the end of a season, on odds and ends, but I guarantee these reductions are bonafide and on New Spring Goods. Come, every person that needs Shoes, but bring your CASH along as these prices are : FOR CASH ONLY. Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Bldg, BELLEFONTE, PA. 58-27 Dry Goods, Etc. Summer Parasols and Umbrellas. Our large line of Silk Parasols has been again replenish- ed. We have never sold so many Silk Parasols in the months of April and May, as this season; all the new shapes, Domes, Bell and the plain shapes in all the new colors, also plain centre with Persian border to match; solid color, colors with hemstiched border and handsome princess handles. Plain silk parasols in all new colors, black and white, handsome handles from $1.50 up. A complete line of Silk, Union Taffets and colored umbrellas at 25¢, 50c, and 75c. Silk Hose. Ladies’, Men’s and Children’s Silk Hose in black, white and all the new shades, children’s silk cotton socks solid color and fancy tops, 12, 15, and 25c. ’ Silk Gloves. Ladies’ long and short Silk Gloves, all colors. glove, black and white only, $1.00 quality at soc. Lisle, long Corsets, Corsets. Bon Ton and Royal Worcester Corsets, all the new mod- els for Spring and Summer, low, medium and high bust from $1.00 to $5.00. * Coat Suits and Dresses. Our Coat and Suit department is still in the lead, every thing new in color and style, also black, is here for your selec- tion; also a large assortment of the Waldorf Washable Dresses . ‘from $150 up. ° LYON & COMPANY. Shirt Waists. . Qur assortment of Washable Waists is as large as early in the season; also a big line of Washable Silk Waists. Carpets, Mattings, Linoleum. New Floor Coverings in Carpets, Mattings and Linoleums at lowest prices. Window Draperies. New Scrims in white, sand, and ecru colors, from 10 cents up; also white with floral border,in all colors, Cretons and Dimi- ties to match. Shoes. Shoes. Men’s, Womens’ and Children’s Shoes in patent leather, black and tan. TLadies’ and Children’s low shoes in white, pat- ent leather and gun metal; all to be sold at right prices. Lyon & Co. Bellefonte