en — —— mre omen Temorratic; Waldman " Bellefonte, Pa. October 28, 1927. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. : DAILY THOUGHT. Give what you have. To some it may be better than you dare think.—Longfellow. —A downtown hostess with a repu- tation for novel ideas in entertaining has completed her plans for a Hal- lowe’en party. Witches and black cats will predominate. The wall dec- orations are of black silhouette, Witch- es and cats of all sizes appear ona white ora yellow background. Grin- ning cat lantern sare to be placed on ‘mantels and in corners. The witch fig- ures on broomsticks, large and small, will be suspended from chandeliers, in parlors and hall, and in every available vantage point. The colors of decor- ation will be yellow. The dining room table, covered first with a white damask cloth, is adorned by cutout paper cats and witches and yellow satin ribbon strips. The fa- vors at each plate will be candy boxes -in the shape of black cats and witches. HOBBLE MARCH. The program of the evening is a varied and mystical one. First will come the “Hob-(ble) Goblins’ March,” given by several lively young women, | ‘wearing black pointed witches’ caps, capes, hair hanging down and with “their red dress skirts “hobbled” below the knees. They will march in and around the rooms to a lively tune per- formed on banjoes. This will be fol- ‘lowed by “The Witches’ Dance,” a piano selection. : The witches will then preside over ‘the story telling, two or three guests ‘having been asked to narrate ghost stories (five minutes’ time being giv- en to each), While the story-telling is going on, one of the witches will ‘hold a teaspoonful of salt, saturated with alcohol, and ignited, causing a ‘weird glow in the darkened room. A FORTUNE-TELLING FEATURE. A large pasteboard clock dial will figure in the next number, which is a fortune-telling feature. Each guest in turn will swing the pendulum around the clock face and will receive a card bearing the number at which the pendulum stops. These cards are decorated with black cats and witches and bear a verse suitable for a for- tune. The refreshments are to be of the regular Hallowe’en order—fruits, pop- corn, nuts, candies, etc. The “witches’ cauldron” will be brought in and plac- ed in the centre of the table after the refreshments have been disposed of. The guests rise and joining hands cir- “lowly around the table, reciting or humming, Hubble, bubble. Toil and trouble. Witches thrive And cauldron bubble. At the last word the one who is at the head of the table puts his hand into the cauldron and pulls out a favor in the shape of a bonbon. This he breaks open, putting the cap on top of his head and reading aloud the fortune. The song is then repeated until each has had a cap, when a! march is played and the guests re-! turn ‘to the parlor, where a lively Vireinia reel will wind up the even- | ing’s festivities. | —“There is no earthly aliment but | somewhere God hath an herb for its | healing,” says a quaint writer. “The ] trouble is that we think the herb has , a hard foreign name. ; far lands, but find it at last in our own garden plot.” —To the whimsical palate of an in- valid, a dainty is far more acceptable | . watever it may be, if it is served in | some unusual form. i For the busy housewife who has i but one pair of hands on which to de- : pend, in performing her various du-' ties, time is a most important con- | sideration, so she has little for frills. A few moments spent in arranging . and garnishing a dish will make all the difference between its being eaten : with pleasure or refused with distaste. | iL 1s not easy for everybody to pre- | pare a dish so that it appeals to the eye: but with little practice the art may be acquired. | So many fetching things may be! done with the ordinary foods com- mon in every home. Take the lemon | or orange: a whole set of dishes may | be made from a few. The lemon has | a spout all ready made for a pitcher, | cut a ring for a handle, scoop out the pulp, shave off the bottom to make it I level and behold a pitcher, not for | cream, but for jellies or custards, | junket or tapioca. Cut the lemon | crosswise, scoop out and put on han- | dles and you have a sugar bowl; cut | a smaller lemon the same way. in- sert a ring for handle and you have | a cup. Pigs, using toothpicks for “legs, black pins for eyes will delight | the heart of a child—a lemon is shap- - ed like the body of a pig. With dates, figs and raisins flat- | ‘tened and decorated with cloves. all | sorts of turtles may be formed. Pea- | nuts with toothpicks will make all! kinds of animals and men. Unless one has tried doing these things for a | grown person, it will surprise you to | see how much these: childish toys will | please an adult. We are but children | at heart and when one is ill one ig ill : mentally as well as physically; so sim- | ple things please and divert us. ' With the varieties of gelatin on the market, with custards and fruits one | hay 2 large field in serving the in- | valid. | FRIED APPLES AND RACON. Thinly sliced bacon is delicious when browned under the flame of the broiler in a gas stove. It is then free of excess fat, crisp and appetizing. Good results can also be obtained by frying in a heavy skillet, draining the slices and absorbing a large part of the fat with brown paper. Apples or tomatoes can then be fried in the fat and according to the Bureau of Home Economics, U. S. Department We seek itin ” of Agriculture, make a particularly Sisractive | breakfast dish. he on owing pe is suggested for apples and bacon: Select good tart ap- ples. Peel and cut themin to 1 inch cubes. Fry the bacon in a heavy skil- let. As soon as the slices of bacon are crisp, remove and drain them on clean brown paper. For frying the apples you will need about one-fourth cup of the bacon fat. Put the apples in the hot bacon fat, piling them up rather high in frying pan. Sugar to taste. Be sure you use enough sugar; ap- ples fried this way require a little more sugar than apples fried in ordin- ary way. Tell Why State Widens Highway. Secretary of Highways Stuart has explained the department’s policy rel- ative to the establishment of max- imum right-of-way width of 120 feet along Pennsylvania highways. The tremendous increase in traffic, he said, necessitated planning to take care of future increases. | and should prohibit future develop- At present there are 1,540,000 reg- {ments from creating restricting ac- istered motor vehicles in Pennsyl- | tions on so-called ‘bottle necks’ on the highway system which are so danger- ous and so much deplored by the traveling public at this time. “The actual of the land within the ultimate hway width vania and within the next 10 years this number is expected to increase to 2,600,000. The 1921 Legislature enacted legis- lation empowering the head of the FOR Dry Cleaning way department to establish [does not change from the present Should Be width and lines on any any state | practice of merely taking what is re- highway at any time, and fixing the | quired for construction as the devel- Is Essential to Good Health. minimum width of such roads at 33 | opment of the highway requires, znd you would be well, see to your Pressing Stickler & Koons 8 West Bishop Street Bellefonte, Pa. this is the particular point that has been misunderstood. “In most cases it will be many years before the full ultimate width of the highway will be required, but at that time it is contemplated that local de- velopment shall have a chance to have changed to such an extent that it has conformed to the new ultimate width and the net result will be very con- siderable saving in property damages and the opening up of many of the present narrow and restricted sections and the avoidance of an increased number of such conditions in the fu- ture.” The department of highways has received many requests for informa- tion concerning this work from many States which contemplate similar legislation. feet and the maximum at 120 feet. “The width of the highway.” said Secretary Stuart, “is determined by the secretary of highways and varies according to his judgment as to the future requirements and possibilities for construction in the various sec- tions. Some of the county authori- . tise have misunderstood the intent of ithe act. It provided for the estab- lishment of the ultimate width on the proper location and the property- owner may not develop his property in the future within the width of the highway as established and collect damages therefore when the land is required for highway purposes. This provides building lines of ample width elimination. Faulty kidney ac- tion permits toxic material to re- main in the blood and upset the whole system. Then, one is apt to have a tired, languid feeling and, sometimes, a toxic backache or head- ache, and often some irregularity of secretions, such as scanty or burn- ing passages. More and more people are acclaiming the value of Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in this condition. For more than forty years Doan’s have been winning favor the country over. Ask your neighbor! DOAN'’S Fr Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y. 72-37tf CHICHESTER S Ep, Ordinary Phonograph Music Here is a visualization of music as played by an or- dinary phonograph. It is far-away... formless... a mere outline of thinsound, \ unshaded and incomplete. n the Thomas A. Edison’s invention of the Phonograph, comes this announcement of his latest contribution to music . . « the Edisonic . .. uN Now, a golden year in the life of Thomas ‘history of music... Now, the Edisonic . . . still another mile- stone in a great career ... Now, music A. Edison and the of a revolutionary quality... of an inspiring resonance, a beauty, an all- pervading illusion which ordinary phonographs have never achieved before . . . Now, Mr. Edison has bestowed upon music a new dimen- sion. Edisonic music comes to you with flowing, surging, leaping contours. It is music with volume - . - music which surrounds you like sunlight. It is music with perspective . . . It is “stereoscopic” ing the music of graph as a beautiful picture, viewed through stereoscopic lenses, surpasses the flat monotony of a lithographed post- card. It is Edisonic music, Mr. Edison’s latest gift to you. As if to signalize the Golden Anni- versary of his invention of the phono- graph, Mr. Edison has sent the new Edisonic from his laboratories a finished, a perfect thing. Musicians, critics, and all who have heard it, acclaim it as a marked advance in the history of music. J. A. HARTER announcing Thomas A. Edison’s latest achievement “Close-up’ > music with a new dimension the astounding EDISONIC Hear the New Edisonic You will call its stereoscopic tones “astounding”, “superb”. You will marvel at the “close-up” illusion—at the way the quality of each orchestral instrument seems to come right up to you in clear relief . . . at the full mellowness of the bass notes and the sparkling purity of the treble. ++ ++ 0 f o w o But... the Edisonic can never be adequately described ... nor can pictures do justice to the chaste, decorative beauty of the Edisonic cabinets. ++ + Let us play the Edisonic for you. Then imagine it in your own home . . . flooding Cc. Q * ’ . 5 it with beauty . . . giving you, at any time, just the music 50th Anniversary of you like without even the annoyance of changing a needle! \ N of startling nearness, - « « “close-up” music music, as far surpass- the ordinary phono- ++ +{ +3+ +}+ Edisonic Close-up Music Here is a visualization of the same music as Re-Created by the new Edisonic. The music, like this picture, is close up, is complete. There is full detail . . . form to every sound. There is depth, perspective, beauty . . . the living artist seems present in the room. The Schubert Edisonic, design. ed for the home or apartment of moderate size,is handsomely finished in two-tone English Brown Mahogany. The price is notably low—$135. Harter’s Music Store, Bellefonte, Pa.