THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURd, PA. HOW TO IU V CI TS OF MKAT. lu Order To Secure the Host nt the Lowest Triers When buying beef In small quanti ties it Is well to bear in in'.nJ that while a cut from the round will tint '.:.' ke a satisfactory ilaln roa. t It la i veilont us a pot roust A rtf-ak from the top of the round, If iionnded un.l rubbed will oil nnd vinegar lu.lf nn hour H'fo" cook ing, inay be brollud and will pleaso those who do not Insist uon the tvaderl.iln. Tho "short" ptnaks aro i lmost as good as tho ioi'tcihousu If J T 'lierly cooked, although they, too, I rk tho tenderloin. iu purchasing lumb or mutton it I ossiljie to achieve good results ' '-..i small money by the oxerclso of J . lament in buying. Long iiko I .-, lerod my tribute of gratitude to .t household writer who first tau- t rue the value of a forequartor of la. nb or of yotin ni.tton. From tho foreiisi. ter of lainb or youns; mutton which means a year ling iamb weighing from seven to t?"i pounds you may secure a roast, s 'lish of choi)s. u st-jw und a aouo. Have yoi.r butcher "lift," tho should r out, taklnf; awny u gco.l deal of V.s meat from tho ribs lis he does r. !u a ton-pound forequartor yon till have a shoulJer roi'.s'. of from f ..nd a haii' to live tiounds. Your Vi'.ci.er will wUhlo break the bono but don't let him do It ! Have tii-: piece roasted s it is, and you mill flml it delicious. For a change you may sometimes hav the bono f:f rat ltd idtoseLhcr and f.ll tho orl t .a with good stufilns. Yen will now have from seven to t;i nice chops, according to the si.-e the Hii'L-ii'jartcr, which you ;.n broil or fry, and for which yon would pay front 20 to 2S cents a pound If you bought them by themselves, tn tcfid of with tha rest of the larja piece. From the nock and trim Liiiitj of chops you i,a t,;u!:o a tew or a soup or both. Tho breast ray cither be cut up into stew meat r else rolled into a little roast and tahed. nerved with tomato sauce it is au appetizing dish. If you have a small family you may secure variety in buying a log cf mutton by having it cut in two, tolling the half nearer tho shank, serving it with caper sauce and roast ing the loin end. Or you may cut a couple of chops from the loin end of the leg und roast the part near Gie shank. Veal, too, may be bought with Judgment. The fillet la the most ex pensive cut, but it is no better than the loin or the shoulder. When the "i.t'er has had the bone removed (to used for soup), the hole loft fill . with a good stuffing, and the :-at slowly and throughly roasted id served with a rich brown gravy. Is as savory a dish as can be off jf;d, and will bring Joy to thoso whose gastronomic consciences per Ktlt them to eat veal. GUIDES TO HEATTIL A little soda water will relieve alck headache caused by indigestion. Avoid prolonged use of the eyeB tor near or fine work; rest the eye by looking at objects at a dlstlnce. If you want your feet to look small, you must buy your shoes very carefully. Shoes 111 bought will look big and ugly, no matter how small Uiey may be. Don't forget to brush the hair for ten minutes every night with a whalebono bristled brush. This mnv make the head a little tender at first bmt the tenderness soon wears off. The white of an egg when beaten with milk and drunk night and morn ing is of service In mild cases of Jaundice. When beaten with sugar and a very little water It will make the voice stronger and clearer. Table Service. In entertaining It is better to ser fs a simple meal perfectly than to attempt a more elaborate one Im perfectly prepared. In waiting at table, pass dishes on the left side and hold them low enough for the persons to help them, selves with ease. All soiled dishes should be re moved from the left. In passing a plate on which the food has been placed, put It on the table In front of the person for whom It Is intended. , Do not wait for it to be taken from the tray. Soup It served by the hostess; fish, roasts and entrees by the host. Go careful that hot dishes are served thoroughly hot, and on hot plates, as few things are bo object ionable as food that should be hot being served lukewarm. S'.aladH aro mlxe 1 and desserts served by the hostess, while ege tables end side dishes are usually nerved by the servants from a side table, the guests helping thomelves. Everything needed for the table should be at hand so that there may be no unnecessary delay In serving. Finger bowls, extra cutlery, silvev, rn"kel ice nnd an extra supply of bread can a!l bo at hand :n case they are required. An Aid To Wiistili:;;. To huve the wear on the foot of w"h sic i vis end dresses, got a soft bristle scrub brush, gather It In our iiuntia in a bunch, iind work ths iwlVixi, vM) pl :itv r.f yonp, lightly arvcr it. Tii v, ill ra:i;ove dirt In-taoUy. Coddling tho Stomach. Do not pampur tho chlldron with hot house method.; thero is' a common-seine method. If tho children or tho man or woman show a tendency to 1k "off their feed," IT they begin to Uwo flesh, thnlr stomach should bo tuned up with a harm less tonic which will Inrreaso tho secre tions of tho digestive tract. A tonic made of natlvo medicinal roots which will In vigorate the stomach Into greater activ ity and lnrrensn tho secretion of tho phosphates from tho food a remedy which will do this Is one which has stood the test of public approval for nearly forty years, and contains no alco hol or narcotics. We refer to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It can be given to the smallest child with perfoct freedom. If the blood is Impure, if pim ples, bolls, headaches occur, If the stom ach Is weak flrft eradicate tho poisons from the blood. AX IMITATION OF HATfHK'S METHOD of restoring waste of tissue and Impover ishment of tho blood and nervous forco Is used when you take an alterative extract of native roots, made without the use of alcohol, like Dr. Pierce's (lolden Medical Discovery. This vegetable medicine coaxes the digestive functions Bnd helps in the assimilation of food, or rather takes from the food Ju.t tho nutriment the blood requires. Along with Its uso one should take exercise In tho outdoor air. get all ons can of (tod's sunlight nnd nir; practice a deep breathing exercise every day. This "Medical Discovery" gives no false stimulation, heransn It does not contain alcohol or a nnreoMc. It helps digestion and the nssimllatlon of such elements In tho food as are required for the blood. Unlike a cod liver oil, against which tho already sensitive stomach will declare open rebellion, this tonic has a pacifying action upon the sensitive stomach nnd gives to the blood tho food elements tho tissues require. 1? maintains one's nutri tion by enabling him to eat, retain, digest and asslmilnto nutritious food. It over comes gastric irritability and symptoms of Indigestion, and, in this way, fever, night-sweats, headaches, etc., are done away with. In-. Pierce's (iolden Medical Discovery purities tho blood and entirely eradicates the poisons that breed and feed disease. It thus cures scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, bolls, pimples, and other eruptions that mar and scar tho skin. Puro blood Is essential to good health. Tho weak, run down, dcbllltn ted condition which so many people experience Is commonly tho effect of lmpuro blood. Dr. Pierce's (iolden Medical Discovery not only cleanses tho blood of impurities, but It Increases tho activity of the blood-making glands, and It cnrlchos tho body with an abundant supply of puro. rich blood. A consideration of first importance in deciding what medicine to lako for the cure of blood or stomach disorders is as to Its harmlossnoss. Dr. Pierce is frank and open with tho public for he tells Just what Is contained In Dr. Pierce's Ooldcn Medical Discovery Its ingredients are Golden Seal root, Queen's root, Stone root, Illack Cherry bark, Illoodroot.Mandrake and puro trlplo reflncd glycerine. Concerning Golden Seal tho highest medical authorities agree with Prof. John M. Scuddor who says, "It stimulates the digestive procosaoa, and Increases tho assimilation of food. By theso means the Mood U enriched, and this blood feeds the muscular system. I mention the muscular system becau.se 1 believe It first feels the Increased power Imparted by the stimulation of Increased nutrition. Tho consequent Improvement on tho nervous and glandular systoms are natural results. In relation to Its general effect on the system, there is no medicine in use ntxmt which there is iuch general unanimity of opinion. It is vnivcrinlly regarded as the tonic useful in all debilitated states." Concerning Uloodroot The American Dispensatory sayi, "Stimulates dlgostlve organs. Increases action of heart and arteries stimulant and tonlo. Very val uable as a cough remedy acts as a sed ative further valuable as an alterative." Read all about yourself, your system, the physiology of life, anatomy, hygiene, simple home cures, etc., in Tho Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book of 100H pages. For cloth-bound copy send 81 cents in ono-cent stamps, or for paper covered 21 stamos. Address Dr R V Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. A Lincoln Anecdote. On one occasion when he was busy President Lincoln received u delegation of men who weio endeav oring to hurry the passing of some petty bill. When they, entered Lin coln looked up gravely and said: "If yon call the tall of a Bheep ii leg, how many legs will the sheep have?" "Five," said tho Bpoltes.nan. "No," said Lincoln, "It would only have lour. Calling the tall a leg wouldn't make it one." The delegation departed lu dis comfiture. Exchange. Innocent. Tho Colonel (at young Adlo Pnte's examination for military ser vice) Is there any reason why you should not serve three years? Havo you any infirmity? Young Adle Puio Yes, colonel, 1 am nearsighted. "Prove It." "Well, do you eee that nail over there in the wall?" "Yoh." "Well. I dou't. Not the lturglnr. She wus telling a circle of sym pathetic friends about the burglar scare In her home. "YeB," she said. "I heard a noise, so got up at otice. There, under t'm bed, I saw a man's legs htlckiai; out." "Good gracious!" exclaimed one of tho ladies. "Tho burglar's logK?" "No, rny husbiind's legs. Iw bud heard the noise,, too!" Perfectly Safe. "You don't moan to tell called Jim Jeffries a liar?" me j on "That'B exactly what I did." "What did ho say?" "I don't kuow. Ho was In San Francisco at the time. I wus In Chi cutfo." Cloveland Press. r, f'ERIL OF RICH MEN'S S0N3 . Detectives In New York Largely En k gaged In Watching Them. The luring of a young Pittaburg millionaire from New York into the Jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania Courts in order to prevent him from dlasl patlug bis fortune and drinking hlin solf to death, raised again tho terri bly trying question as to w hat tho rich tnan shall do with his sons. There have been some very for tunate rich men In New York. John D. Rockefeller Is a Bample. Not for years, if ever, has he passed an hour of anxiety as to tho personal career or habits of his only son. William Rockefeller has less money uud moro sous, not one of whom has shown a disposition to go to tho bad. Tha Vanderhllts down to the present gen eration are clean, decent young fol lows, with one exception, and he has been more foolish than vicious. Jay Gould's oldest son has turned out a man aftor the father's heart, while the other sons aro quiet business men, excepting that one of tlu m has allowed himself to attain a form of notoriety because of ui:ploanant dom estic lawsuits. Tho young men above mentioned are not saints, but nono of them have become rakes, rounders or drunkards. Each has stood up again.it such op portunities for VarhiiMs as would make a father or mother shudder If tha whole tdory could bo told to thein. But there are hundreds of rich mra In New York who havo not boon so fortunate In their sous. Horn to great wealth; knowing nothing of the get tins of money, and a groat deal about the spending of It; rov.red in luxury, and without the need of worii ; with gilded paths of pleasure open to them In many directions; with no luck cf advisers to lure them on; only half responsible to their parents in tho days of youth, and not at all in those of early manhood; it takes a strong and courageous nature to withstand temptations and keep clean. There are only too many sad examples that show they do not, says the head of a New York detective agency. "There is a popular Impression abroad," he said, "that our mon aro mostly employed by wives who wish to keep an eye on their husbands, or by husbands Interested In the move ments of their wives. This is not so. For one case of this sort we have five whero fathers arc keeping tab on the movements of their sons. Not for tho purpose of discipline or correction, but as a safeguard against compromising evils. There Is many a boy In this town who was getting himself snarled up In difficulties, before whom the way was suddenly straightened out by nieais of whlcn ho had no knowled?. The fathers . knew the facts and took a quiet hand in developments. In nine cases "out" of ten ttTe "boy'does not know he Is shadowed. In the tenth case he Is brought up with a sudden Jerk and then there is all sorts of trouble to pay. "I have heard surprise expressed la quite a uumber of cases where the will of a departod father or mother provided for the trustseelng of the portions of this boh or that until he should have urrived at years of rather maturemunhood. I am confi dent that in every one of these cases the parent kuow more about the life of the son than the latter ever Imag ined. That this step was taken to protect the son against himself." Landing in England. Thero ii no country whero tho mat ter of landing from American passen ger ships is so easy and so expediti ously done as England, says the Tra vol Magazine. Of course, it la a free trade country, the freest in the whole world. There are duties levied on tabacco and spirits, but travellers are allowed a half pound of tobacco, in any shape, and a half pint of spirits, which also means the same as perfume. Sugar Is dutiable, whether in grain, sweets or in Jam, but a small quantity Is free ly passed. In-all cases, however, these goods must be the actual proporty of the passenger, and be for his use and con trol. Cocoa, coffee and tea are also dutiable as are reprints of English books. Outside of these things, as named, passengers can brug in any. thing, motors, bicycles, horses, but no dogs, for which animal a not to exceed six mouths quarantine awaits. Keep dogs on the American side. The customs officials are life ap pointees. under the civil service and will be found most obliging and helpful. In fact, they are a model to tho customs world. Tell the truth at all times to these officials and you will be all right. They are marvel lously keen on spotting the supposedly smart liar. Women as Floorwalkers. Women are fast replacing mon as shopwalkers In millinery and dress shops. In the largo and fashionable West End drapers' establishments the tall, imposing, frock coated man still reins supreme as shop sentry, but In the smaller shops all over Londou tho woman "walker" is rapidly gaining ground. It costs much less to employ fem inine shopwalkers and It Is said that a woman establishes more friendly and confidential relations with the custom ers than Is possible lu the case of a man. By reason of this Intimacy t-hu can offer vory valuable advice to pro prietors as to the class of goods which are popular with the customers.. In 1C20 the first large copper colni wre minted In England, OUTING FPU XEW VCIIK'S r-r.mi. "Cheer Up" SliiKi (lie North I'.lM-r (o the Tenement Dweller. You may know the great river up and down with nn Intimacy deter mined by your occupation, your pro pinquity and your soul, Fi'.yn tho Now York Hernld. You may know it whero It la tho Hudson, with head Innds overlapping blue on blue, or whero It is called North River, because it U on tho wiv.t, nnj Is no moro a Vlvor but a tklo cut by a thousand keels. Yoj may know it luxuriously from beneath tho awning of a whlto gilt yacht, or hurriedly from the crowd ed dock of a ferryboat, or with the hupgi-ilng thrill of the homecomer when tho tired ship Is wnrped Into her pier. Thero are many ways to know tho river, but you may never know It deeply enough to say "God made It" until you see It nnd feel It and breathe It from the railing of a recreation pier on a muggy summer eight, backed by a couple of thou sand of the people who nmnnge somehow to be cheerful though they will never yot n right good rest till they ure dend. Take n poor, nodden, pulpy dlsln togratlim lump of human flesh, with th toul of It very Htlil and feeble in side, drag It out to a wooden place over the water, away from the dlnhos and tho muls nnd the stench of rii" and metal, blow clean, fresh tiir upon it, and brush its deadened nerves with a quickening bar of mu sic. Would you believe it? Tho lump has ronio to life ngain, and moves and even ptniles, nnd before tho evening passes will lit; planning an other day's work for to-morrow. Tho pavllllon Is filled. Every soat r.round tho batv.l.'itand Is taken nnd benches by tho railings. Scores of people aro walking nrm In firm from end to end of the long, coot tunnel in the thick, hot night. Manners are as free as tho air. It's "Kntle" hero "Billy" there, nnd nowhere any af fectation or pretence. That Is worth noting, that for downright simplicity vuch. ex proc&f ja'orv of. child jood alonp te a recreation pier on a sweltering night makes an admirable model for the world. These are working peo ple, Into whose every pleasure a certain sadness creeps because there Is so little time between a toll and a toil, and so seldom any real rest un til tho end. It Is a complicated mixture of races on the pier. If there is any perceptible preponderance) you would say It is Irish. But you have no sooner reached that conclusion than Italy overwhelms you with volubil ity und vowels. A Hebrew family, aloof and hap py, has a bench close up to the mu sic. The boy of ten and the girl two years younger detach themselves, with parental permission, and go for a promenade. Nothing could be grander than tho assumption of masculine authority which the llttlo chap assumes. He puts out his chest lifts his head and smiles upon all tho world as he escorts his sister through the crush. "I don'd see dor Rosenlobens here to-nlghd," says the mother. "I von der " "Vy. don'd you know, mamma?" shouts the eldest boy. "Last nlghd, when dey vas here In der preezes, dlrtr bouse vas burgled, au' dey gan not afford no recreations no more." Lamentations follow till tho music renews, and til else Is forgotten. There are children of many racoo and many degrees of cleanliness. Mo-it of them are In rags, most of them are pale, but all are self-contained and bold. The tolls and peiilB of the water front graduate them early Into life. There Is a boy. with one arm missing. You will see many like him on the west side. Such a procession of childhood along the pier! Here is n Btumii, Binall man of nine, limping with & stone brulso, marching past like a veteran In a Grand Army parade. Another, with the wlstfullost face and the oddest covering of rags, has certainly stepped out of one of J. O. Brown's pictures for a rest from that eternal pose. There are notably few men In tha asuemblage. You ask one of the uni formed guards whc.re the men nro und he Jerks his head to one Hide toward the river frojit. "They're mostly up thiu lu the saloons Jaw In'," he explains. Z&fZ 1 Avertable Preparation Tor As similating flicFoodnndRcfhiuV ting the Stomachs and Dowels of Fromolcs Digcslion.Chrcrfiir ness ami Rest.Contains neillicr OpiimvMoTphine norMiiicraL 'OTlAHCOTIC. Imyjnn Seal" silx SmMt MJU Mm- A perfect Remedy forTonstipo- limi mir stinvrh llinrrhrwi Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish- ncss find LOSS OF SLEEP. Fnc Simile Signnhira cf NEW YORK. Tlioto Printing Prnti:r, Photography has taken such a hold on the popular f;im;y In tho t,vM few years that nearly every family has some member who Is Interested In It. It Is especially enticing !e i'huro of the ploiiRure derived in first snnpplng the pictures and the sub sequent process of developing. One of tho many small articles needed if tho printing frame, which in itself in very simple In construction. This frame Is made of boards In two parts, with handles at the end of each part. The two sections are hingr-d to gether at the ends opposlto the hnn- dies, preferably with spring hinges, so that the apparatus Is normally held in a cloBe position. In the cen ter of the back section Is an opening, rectangular In form. The front part la divided transversely near the end. the divisions being connected by hinges. It will thus be seen that by opening one part on the hinge the sheet of sensitized paper can easily be placed over the opening, which Is, of course, covered by glass, and In order to determine the progress of the copying the top part can be turned backward and the edge of the heet turned up In the usual mannef A pad In the top portion securoly holds the sheet in position. What Comprises Argantlna Argentina Is the United States of South America. II Is ma le up of four teen states and nine territories. The population is about 5,000,000. These states have greater power lndividunly than our3. They mny. wi'h the consent of Congress nuke tra-les for the fostering of Industry, immigration, colonization, railways arir canals. SUN SET MAGAZINE buiJtifullyuluitratcd.goodtlona nd articles tboul Culoroia snd 11 lU Vu Wot yatf CAMERA CRAFT devoted each mouth to tha a . tulle reptoduclioa ol die but $1,00 woik of amcleui and prolouiooal , jml photographers. ROAD 07 A THOUSAND WONDERS a book oi 75 paoa, containing 120 colored pi.ologr;h ol J5q 7K pictmemjue apoU iu California nd Okoo. Total . . . 53.25 All for . . . . $1.50 AddnM all order 1 la SUNSET MAGAZIKS Rood BuIIJi-w Sao FoacfaM T -a . h . . ,, w-aaMP a EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. l MAGAZINE READERS nn For Infants and ChHdren. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the if (V Mi Signature Aw In Use For Ovsr Thirty Years TMI O HTAUH IOMNHY. NtW tOXM CITV. it" iir'lr" i'm iri i"w'"iLLlS3 Trurker'8 Course. Slalo Colli go Will Tench M.vkp! Gardening. In the winter courses in ;ie;nciil ture nt Pennsylvania State College horiicuUure lias a prominent j lace, lut the importance of insti notion in tnatket gardeni'iiK and green house management lias led the col lege to make sjecial provisions for it, as the demand for vegetables and small fruit is increasing. Ralph L. Watts, a graduate of State College and one of the most successful market gardeners of Pennsylvania, has been secured to assist Prof. IJutz in the winter course. lie is a scientist who has made a big commercial success and is a popular instructor at the insti tutes of New Jersey, Maryland and Pennsylvania. He will present his methods to the students who take the horticultural course at State College. These winter courses k gin December 3rd, - continuing twelve weeks and the enrollment of students promises to be large. Many a fellow never puts his best fxit forward unless lie lui a kick com hitf. The girl Is the mother of the woman Just n-t "the boy is the mtlier of the man." The period when the wonmnlv functions begin is one to e iicfully watched nnd considered. Irregularity or derangement nt this time nuiv be promptly met and cured bv the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, lint ejected at this critical period may entail years of future sull'ei -iiitf. "Fa vorite Prescription" acts directly upon the womanly organs Klvinjr them per fect vigor abundant vitality. It removes the obstructions of health and happiness, nnd delivers womanhood from the cruel bondage of "female weakness." Well recognized authorities of all schools of medicine have nothing but praise for the Ingredients or Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Rend to Dr. It. V, Pierce at Butlulo, N. V., for free booklet giving ingredients and what medical authorities say about them. Not a patent medicine but a "Favorite Prescription" of Dr. Pierce who makes the diseases (,f women his siteciulty. It lias forty years of cures back of it. The lar.y mmi Is never behind time when it is time to stop. QncK climatic chanuks try strong constitutions h,j oause, among other evils, nasal eatarrh, a troublesome and offensive disease. Sneezing and snuf lling, coughing and ditllcult breathing, and the drip, drip of the foul discharge into the throat all are ended bv Kly's Cream Halm. Tins honest remedy con tains no cocaine, mercury, nor' other harmful ingredient. The worst cases yield to treatment In a short time. All druggists, r0c, or mailed hy lOly Pros., 5t Warren Street, New York. The eloak of religion Is seldom syn onymous with the mantle of charity. A Rcliabla Remedy FOR CATARRH Ely's Crssm Bate la quickly abtnrbft. Civci Kaliel al Oncn. It r.luHBscs, Foot Los, heals and protects the diwitsi'd lncin. brrtne roultinj from Cuturrh and drives awny a Cold in the Head ijuiek'y Kuir the Hi-uses of Tiisto and Hiuell. J'ull siz" CO cts. ut Druggists or by liutii. I,iptid dream Palm fur use in atomizers V3 "l. Ely liMthers, Cfl Warreu Btrwc-t, New York. J 4 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers