i Ave PanNNSYLVANIA KK. Philad. & Erie R. R. Division and Northern Central Ry, | Time Table in Effect Maj The Rickertonian Theory | of Partial Impact. By J. R. Wilkinson, of Canterbury College, New Zealand. l fs ¥ | Spring Mills Hotel | BFRING MILLS, PA { PHILIP DRUMM, Prop. First-class socommodations at o/l Umes for both man and beast, Free bus 10 sud from sil trains Excellent Livery attached. Table bord fSmstclass, The best liquors and wives et the bar Centre Hall Hotel CENTRE HALL, PA JAMES W. RUNKLE, Prop, Newly equipped. Ber and table supplied | with the best. Sommer bosrders given epocied | sMention. Heslihiy wocality Beautiful seenery Within three miles of Penus Cave, & mest besoth | ful subterranean cavern: suirancs by & bond Well looawed for hunting and fishing 29, 1904 NS LEAVE MNMONTANDON, EASTWARD A, M Ha: ristiirg New Tr Al Tratn 64 Weck dave lor sunbwr arriving at Philadelphia, 11. 45 a LOrs 2.05 pow, Baitimore 12.15 p. m., Wash gton 1. Op mn Parlor ear sod passenger ogee! to Piulladel phils tending to come together in cne mass, losing all light and heat 922 A. M The theory of Pret. Bickerton eries halt to i roarrg, m, and in the splendid chapter on the im. ton, and | : y y % y 8 it is sho hig the expansive We Balu got alway: the best looking cow that County, mos it is shown that th expansiy power of Bal h most and best milk. Watch ughman heat of partial impacts scatters and redistributes through , x 8 { Jer i i“ . $ : { od i i 3 gives the nba nantity and quality —— space Lhe matter that gravitation brings together, i 3 wiiAT v ¢ the milk, Ix Quan ' . font DE) PIGS IN CLOVER But what {3 “partial impact?” The stars (commonly, but wrongly fixed) ri rw and intermedia » < 4 { ay ye i 4 > . Te eh >i \ vv ’ Pon’t keep anything that « 4 “ move, each with its own dirsction and rats of motion. There must also Phin at 6.2 p Jn, New York § re ' » L s : i I %1 4 i 1 its board. Cloy and a little corn or in space dead suns, that is, whose light has shone in past and Ps LAE On a nag | grail will make ' i y . aa a Mr through to Philadeiph - grain wili make a much cheap« I grow died leaving Ka them and di “1 wihes 10 Philadelphia, HE leading sclentists of the day still teach that, through the oe working of gravitation, all matter in the universe is gradually Nn EO SA | NN Nea yo aah Banbury and inte Ha York pase ng iv for nrg fur seraglor New WATCH THE MILK. We may have said before that it is 'Mcient ? qual it rtilizer Me, for a quick and H. Harmon Massachusetts into unknown space, such dismal pessimi: mortality of the cos John ), BL in nore, Washingion bad I he vx ta Philadelphia : sek days lor Aunbur Potevilie #lALIONS, BIT "i ze l Lon hs th be : othe; . slars ages od them apd pst out, invisible Of has its own motion itmure ane SUCCESS WITH STOCK as with every tie Buccess with stock, thing else, depends upon being gel with them, and upon knowinng anc anderstanding ach animal individ aally. No, it isn't h trouble They rrying are ar fou must them miu dollars 100 yvOur ana watch THE GRAIN BINS Considerable labor may be proper construction of No work is more faRgred that of shove ¥ frequently the getting inte the hb is low This attaching a spout to ths of the bin, or the front boards may movable, Removable boards =! be preferred if the the storage of roots It bins than from pills gaved by grain bins able of can be labor » lower partion he | bins are is much to take roots from In the air. and by prop ing of the roots In “® kept open the bins ia good condition un EXPERIENCE WITH CEMENT FLLOOR Five vears ago, wher an old barn. 1 throughout the whole barn, but at same time put on the bl inch boardin I built another bs in the suggested quite as sanitary of planing posal, [I ¢* trouble straw on go out of the fn the ‘they ings out the udde floor. 1 the cement them on ily taken out Ww Cultivator 1iilt over § ) nut floors 1 at ning pitie mill 1 w SELECTING WINTER LAYERS The pullets 1 ] spring will ter, and ti el a be mad: watched couid 4d position made the birds ove points that t! hardy winter that the indica 4 tar Fill hatching not progen: weak, r and with car It will auch will on! Woarels a Y PLANNING A COW BARN Were 1 would same rv have a low bul ning at angles with 10 that rations uid be from the hay bam tween ooing door, the hay ontamin- ated by od om animals. and in case of fire there would be a8 much greater chance to aave the stock Having a barn of the usual style, 1 am remodeling the tleup as best | can under circumstances. The front partition has been moved into the driveway one foot. In the space thus gained a zinclined watering trough runs, the top of which is three feet from the floor. At Intervals of six feet, and run- ning back from the front wall four feet and nine inches, and five feet high, are strong partitions, with a stanchion plece on each side firmly bolted. The stanchions are feet long and slant backward at top 1034 inches from a perpendicular. The cows will stand upon a floor 4% feet wide, made of two layers of two. inch plank. The plank rests on heavy sleepers, which In turn rest on a foundation of amall stone topped with clean gravel to keep out the cold air All the space behind the cows is to consist of a stone foundation topped with gravel and covered with a four fach layer of Rosendale cement, which, In turn, is covered with two inches of Portland cement. The wood work is about finished, but the cement floor will not be put in until spring, when danger of frost Is past. [ hope to be able to save ¢®ery particle of liquid manure, which I intend to use in my orchard, baving as yet found ings #5 new buil truct the cows under e would them, run comaected for a day's carrier he the thay, but lding for to and hay run in Tha hy a the by entrance » inning barred would aot he fr the ors the 3 § ration for pizs and shoats during period than the pigs aad shoats are grain while of five welsh 1€ ZTass a little the On running on age months they the way While on the they are compelled made to all om 150 to 175 pounds her hand i on We wher: Erass alon it will both more th fase in weight months bh made at 8 {OsR that time, to gh an 125 pounds during the young shoat's cost than will made me keep the i in good t from t} fattening cond; until the in no sense on 14 8 weaned interferes w I “@t ts as rapid gains « that Ean fed in ring period, so the extra of grain i young shoat dmount xill a make one ON Os bee eon have grain that while ause the butcher has and has heen fed are thicker than of one grow the frame learned other CATCRSS shouniders hog that growing kept titer quality hat lowed to and fattened a few months in is too ial fat ase there 15 an fat and lean hams and shoulde the ham epicure ie CArcasa profitably ion to the apt to While the the Disgaea “ is t that w One and give FLOWERS AND wers that THEIR CARE require a quantity of ng longet lay A whic? >» be benef alum or borax Another ia to hard an be Put and off 80 fresh m $ ’ > UE the water In id method of pregeryvin Adis Hh nda in ¥ i lip the ends in parafin woh stemmed flowers a8 roses Kept fread in UE manner into a8 vase gerted cut very warm water as each tha that no stom morning, tha flower ia in end of the stem under water the freshly done air an This ieavi water till pro cut reach cut must |} every flowers to cool in next day. Flowers always bush plants with then the ends left and root when should repeat the 48 from for on the plants draw together, the nourishment can ge to the of plant After the flowers are cut from the bus cut the ends of the stems in an oblique fash ion with a sharp knife. At night flowers asould kept very cold When intelligently cared for they mas be kept fresh for a week and many kinds loager.—Ohio Farmer, be ¥ the or feiss Ors the ol be The Taste in Seda Water, Year in and year out, vanilla flavor ing is the standard at the soda fous tains, Chocolate is second, strawber | ry a bad third, and lemon is some where in the ruck among the also rans. ! It depends a good deal upon the weather, but this Is the normal pref. erence, say the mixers of the sods fountains. The warmer the weather the sourer the flavors demanded by the public. On a hot, muggy day, there is a great run on lime juice and phos phates of all flavors. On just com i fortably warm days, chocolate, straw- berry and all the sweet flavors are In | demand, fee cream soda i» not liked so much | as it was a few years ago. Among the fancy soft drinks, egg phosphate is the favorite, Every year a few now drinks” are sprung. They rarely last more than a season. Sometimes, af | ter a rest of a year or two, a health | drink that has run its course is put out again under another name, “health | rection. Occasionally, therefcre, two tive Influence for ns p ever increasing and finally comet curves round the or riginal n two slars w i falr and : or partial Sin Teel ¥ ys | min speed, ation of the one, that that attrac with ag 2 T he from have felt each other's approach each curve each into always prevent mpl other round jar will come awful collls the a oc sLar impact art part By WW. CC. Jameson gels 5 Reid Aga! trading . § Chin anda igandags iia and now time v By Minnie HEN FRENCH OF NEW ORLEANS, Described by Jules MHuret in Paris “Figaro.” * x ing saey Cling ouses with green @ir Span sll gajer isd aad vf are in ea i and ti also they While the Anglo-Saxons sw districts with broad they their 3 i Charles avenue, follow They Ii treots where they ve in were born, ng and so fAlthy that it is ercsg them except at the corners where a few paving stones form a ford French ex finds passably g restaurants of the city, called “"Frenche Restau rants" -~kept by the garulous South- erners—which have the apearance of those old restaurants of our meridion- al cities, where one is served on coos ery highly apiced, as will give it the Southern tradition, but which in real ity holds scarcely any relation to the French cuisine But in all the streets ons meets constantly the Southern type, eyes black and brilliant, black mustacha, an easy supple walk with nothing of the Anglo-Saxon rigidity to which one becomes accustomed in the Northern States. It seems anoma- bus to hear these people speaking English. Likewise it is a dalight on without pay impossiblis to have heen In these stre clusively It is the few placed to hears that yoy ie ON here one themselves at once in our language as purely and as clearly as if they And the life there led is charming ~a life easy yet active and without the rigorous hypocrisy of New Eng land. People know how to amuse themselves, to entertain themselves and to mix work with pleasure. The which I have already de scribed, is one of the sipuns of it But all the year balls, dinners, recep tions and excursions follow one an other. Bundays one goes to break fast, or to dine at West End, a res taurant bulit on the water, i New le rity, £8 Ie French element, f tie emeni y of tl of the Creole and amalgamated 110 years ago a Spanish colony, itself very dist which conce It is nguished, ied nothing to cur own of the two races haa been formed the Creole of New Orleans, ductive grand seigneur, One afternoon | counted there fifty young ladies in tollets of perfect for me a distant vision of Parisian bal blanc and put to rest at once my homesick: ness. from the fusion eon polished, se and ioht Bili, Ii elegant taste, who created invention of Trousers. Trousers originated in the high- lands of Central Asia, the first of which there is any record having been worn by the Ayran people, who, un- der Cyrus, descended from the moun tains into the plains of Mesopotamia. The Romans later observed that trousers were worn by their “barbar- ian” neighbors, the Germanie tribes, as well as by the Persians and others, The Romans themselves finally adopt ed trousers when campaigning or traveling north of the Alps, but were careful to doff them as soon as they reentered Italy. For small children to be left en- tirely nude was customary among our classical forbears. It is still a custom among the lower classes in many of the tropical countries, nota bly the West Indies. Indian chil dren outside the zone of the Indian school rarely wear clothing when the weather Is warm.-Washington Star. A white headed vulture taken In 1706 died in the zoological gardens at Vienna in 1824, thus living 118 years ington VF. M Weck For Ea ), Nagar Mh passenger OO ok NTE CENTRAL RAILRO Week aye FTATIONS Ean EE . ¥ RE > Bad wk ak of BB Ve EAR BE SLY STy ae Eh ORE ewe wu BOB BRB RBI FUMIE RPE RP OO Ur 8 SLLERR ¥ on Additions eave Lowist don st 50s Nn. 58 m 45a m.. i and 7585p m., returning leave Montandon fo Lewisbtizg at 7.40, 9.274. m. 10084. , 4.80, 5.4 po. and 8.13 On Sundays trains leave Montandon 2.23 any 100la mand 4.46 m burg $85 a mm. 10.00 8 mm. and 4.48 pm W. W. ATTERBURY, I. R WOOD General Manager Puss. Trafic Mgr GEO. W. BOYD, General Pass ger Agt urg for M« Ih ret Romance of a Box. The wife of a painter named Oury residing at Condesur-Marne, France has just unearthed a fortune in » strange way. Eight years ago, whes her husband's parents died, he re ceived, among other things, a box His wife, in dusting the room, let it fail. When she picked it up she dis covered that the bottom lay on the floor. The box had a double bottom, and between the two was a small zine boa containing Rente certificates for $2, 200. No interest has been paid os these for more than half a century, #0 that the total value of the treasure is pow considerable. It is believed that the box once belonged to a bu= dar Few Solid Gold Dinner Services. They say it is all nonsense talking of solid gold dinner services, for there are not more than three or four of them in the world, and they are too amall for nee in a party of any size In many large houses in England and algo in the United Stats, a quan tity of silver gilt plate, which looks precisely the same, is in use. but the feeling prevails that silver gilt is not as “becoming” to other table furni ture as pure, dazzling silver plate, and that it must be displayed with great discretion .~ Boston Herald. Heated throughout. Pree carriage to all iraing 0d Fort Hate! = ISAAC BHAWYER, Proprister. location : Ouse mile South of Centres Ball Accommodations fretless. Good bar. wishing 0 enjoy an evening given sliention. Meals for such oorasions, pag pared om short notice. Alweys prepared for the transient rads. BATES: $1.0 PER DAY. Penn's Yalley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA, W. B. MINGLE, Cashief Receives Deposits | , Discounts Notes . . . hte 8 : r—————— BELLEFONTE, PA. F. A. XNEWOOMER, Prop Heated throughout. Pipe Sadbling BATES, $1.00 PER DAY. Bpecial prepasetions for Jwrors, Wis and any persons coming to town on special castons. Regulus boardes well cared for. ATTORNEYS. am 1. BH. ORV C. M. BOWER QRVIS. BOWER & ORVIS ATTORNEYS AT-LAW om BELLEFONTE, PA. 08 in Crider's EB aiid a change building on second EL ORVD O0T, DAVID ¥ FORTNREY Ww HARRISON W FOoRTNEY & WALKER am ATTORNEYS AT-LAW BELLEFONTE. Pa Offos North of Court House re EMENT DALE fl W ATTORNEY AT-LAW EELLEFONTR PA. Offos XN. W. gorser Diamond, two doors frome inst Nations! Bank. re W G RUNELE ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE Pa. All kinds of logs! business silended wo prompaly Bpecial atten'ion given to collections Ofioe, 38 Soor Crider's Exchange ree 8S. D. GETTING ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA. Colicctions and all legal business sttended wo rompily. Consultations German snd Eagilsh, Office in Exchange Building re NR B. BFANGLER ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR. PA. Practioos in all the courts Covsulistion is English and German. Ofice, Crider's Bichange Bullling trol — - ERY Special Effort made to Accommodate Com- mercial Travelers..... D. A. BOOZER 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Traoe Manxs Desians CorvymiauTs &C. Anvrone sending a sketch and Sescription quickly ascertain our opinion free whether invention is probably patentable, Communion. tions strictly confidential. Handbook on sont fron, Oldest for Seairibg patents. Patents taken rough Munn & Co. reosive special notice, without charge, in Lhe Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly, Jarret Terme 2 a culation of any scientific journal : four months, $1 Soild by all newsdeniors, MUNN & Co,se oem New York Branch Ofos, #25 ¥ St. Washington, 1, i, oS The readers of this pa. per are ~onstantly upom the alert to ascertain where goods can be pun chased the prices, and if a merchant does not keep the buyer conven sant with his line of goods, how can he expec? to sell chem? LE a at lowest advertise and