% J? FR y andt® Ps (ARI JEN SE Ele 2 SICILIAN FOWLS. The Sicilian chicken.s name signifies, are from the Sicily, They were first he United States, about Dawes of Dedham, was a sea captain, Capt oranges Amer as the 1863 Mass, Dawe JH08 ain raisins and took on fckens as a the voy- led was d tion, They £ 83 near; yeriod " Pp £06 nights bost ings makes ¢ changes clover after sprinkied, with meal which will onions cCoopps Hshed. Parched gro ed cracked corn is a of food for nary routine ates rectivd of bowel complaints especial ly if some of the grains parched until burned. —E Amer}- can Cultivator, being be very ac i fine splendid change few days from the ordi of every das It stimu- them if warm, a: good cor- re D. 8. in the FEED IT ALL ON THE FARM. Rye is a very profitable erop on the farm, both in its green and ripe stages. The grain is good fed to the poultry, about 20r 3 per week, and ground and Three parts 1 part and one part wheat bran, mixed with water or milk and fed sweet, makes an ex- cellent fead In order to make the best profit out of it, the ground should 3 thoroughly LE bed and sire. Before the last #ould top dress with stable manure, sing from 3 to 6 loads per acre, ac cording to soll. In seeding | use 1% bushels per acre, sown broadcast Should be seeded not later than the first of September, and harrowed in well. Where a person seeds in corn, ft is better to use a drill, and spread the manure as soon as the com Is harvested. But I prefer the former way; then you have about 8 or 10 weeks pasture before winter, and as soon as the ground Is settled In spring it is ready to turn on again. But do not let stock on while ground is muddy. 1 sow to common red clover In ¥Fobruary. 1 pasture until about the lest of May or first of June, then let times fed to pigs rye, corn meal prepared so as to have od seod tain the mois harrowing | rye and clover grow. When the clov- | er is blooming freely, ¥ and put up for Te feed, in this way, and using nothing but pure bred calves and pigs for eating the green crop, and feeding the clov- er hay and rye straw to the calves through the winter, I am sure 1 can make more profit and bring the ground up at the same time. In sow- ing for the only use 134 per acre mow the crop Treated rye grain, and do pasture The clover and rye very valuable to in the seratching shed for the the Indiana bushels not 1 so late in sprin hay mixed is also use poultry.—~—C. O. B, in WHAT PURE MILK MEANS iirymen ure bride one groom was jess bilnd, but gi and as license arform ceremony. “How much dew that come to, son?” tae man then inquired, bringing a handful of change from a deep trousers pocket “Name yer regular figger that you charge th’ swells. I'm goin’ th’ limit, by Jinks!" “Oh, 1 have no regular charge,” the minister sald; “Just give me what you taink its worth" he groom turned and eyed his bride in a speculative manner, “She's a good gal, ef she ain't much on looks,” he sald, thoughtfully, “an I'll be gosh derned ef she ain't wuth a dollar an’ forty-five cents!” Ho was about to hand over the sil ver, when the lady caught his arm, and deducted the filve-cent plece from the sum. “Wait, 81” she sald. “Take back this nickel; you don't know it, bat wioen I was a child I chopped off two toes with th’ hatchet.”-~Harper's Weekly, Consider Cuba's Feelings. sliver What on earth does a little nation like Cuba want with an army of 6,000 soldiers? Cuba is now a republic, and it seems to us that she ought to be able to get along without soldiers, ex. cept possibly a few companies of militia for show purposes on fast days. She isn’t big enough to fight any other nation If every man on the {sland were In the army, and if sae were attacked by a foreign foe she would have to yell to Uncle 8am for protection. Let her save her money and bulld roads with it.—~Los Angeles Times. SWEED'S HELP WEARY. PROF. LEE EXPLAINS HIS THE. ORIES OF THE USE OF SUGAR Work Burns Up the Carbohydrates Which the Body Needs and Sweet Things Are the Easiest Way of Supplying the Want—Alkalis Serve the Same Purpose. Prof. F. B. Lee of the physiology at Columbia who made the state night at the Muscum of Na tory that candy thing to freshen didn't hat en oo chalr of University, the turai other ment I His pretiy gi up sald statement was a on, wang that literally. rl manual i Manual $s b 2 HA cxperim prting h an hour ir and went the sugar quickly 1 lenished the yvdrate, and the and energetic again t to the second cause, th naterials which produced activity, especially muscular There are at least these waste recognized as important All are acids In is a variety of lactic acid acid, the second potassium phosphate and the carbon dioxide, like the we expel from our ad the action of these on particularly on the muscles, have found that each one of producing fatigue. wasted tired made threa material whi been ing fatigue reaction One called sarcolactie used I have Woe the lungs and is Cc apabl acids cause fatigué be removed by the That has been proved largely correct The most eatable form of dinary cooking soda, sodium bonate. Doctors give it in where aclds are a prominent feature, and it has been found very Acids appear in some diseases, nae cessive fatigue, even coma relieve that, and will do more if our experiments work out properly. In my own work I have found that injec. tions of alkalis remove fatigue pro- duced by the waste materials 1 have mentioned.”"-~New York Sun, THIRD RAIL EXPERIMENTS. - How Best to Avoid Trouble From Snow, On many short electric rallways In this country the current is supplied to car motors, not by an everhead wire and grooved wheel, but by a rail laid beside the two on which the cars rua. “Contact” is effected by a slid ing shoe at tae side of the car, which Ww connected with the driving mechan. {sm by a suitable conductor, Inasmuch as the New York Central expects In the course of a few months to begin operating a portion of its line near this city by electricity, vr... Intend stem, it 4 nas on the vielal of Schenectady t {iscover how difficultie king been maki ; short riments arranj In one COV. or third 80 that rd against tae 1 Tt {ding MGIHE » down, along MOTHER Her Prov Aart JOus py iy malig swell become woRaive ry great and suffering fits lope has s¢ lected her away a few ning jum alighting with all ner. the hoofs Then, springiag 1g this operation roots of the backing make a run in the alr and the patch, get pointing downward out again and re until she has chopped the cactus plant to pieces, she loosens and clears a space large enough for standing room. She then will enlarge it by pawing and digging with aer gharp Here she gives birth to her young in undisturbed security, knowing that she can leave them In comparative safety during the day and return to them at night to give suck. Should it be in a locality where eagles abound h the mother not venture far away, as the soaring down on the young. taking them away if she is not there to do battle for thelr lives —From H. H. Cross's "How the Antelope Protects Its Young” in the Century. pentis hoofs. Iwever, does eagle often WOODS A Malden Speech; Very few pergons acquit themselves pobly in thelr maiden speech. At a wedding feast recently the bride groom was called upon, as usual, to respond to the given toast, Blushing to the roots of his hair, be rose to his feet, He intendad to imply that he was unprepared for speech-making, but, unfortunately, placed his hand upon the rides shoulder, and looked down at her as he stammered out his openisg (apd concluding words, “Thig-—er--thing has been thrust im Cook derers County have been Sixteen murders committed New Year's states Tribune, exactly fifty hanged in years, since the Chicago Mrs, Craigie in a Americar women large families, but they of their cl} Too America Is the young of l.ondon + BAYS don’ ildren haps; these Kanga using gages, whicn them Th duced for ie} willl bleached and in Box claimed that th raising these h in feeding the on for the al: has set in Americal eagles particular] to the Just why the sig harmlessly any senti all it ought to be it the destruct eagle, as bird. It aiready be ard to lead correspondents in giving the hunter brings an singular that men destroy the very ast survivor of a disappearing spe cles of bird or animal. One would think that the rarer a bird or beast became the greater care there would be to protect it. But the lust for tro phles will not have it so, and the slaughter of eagles will go on until this great bird shall be extinct, ex- cept perhaps in the naticual reserva tions, where the Government's strong arm extends. least of the merican 5 theoretically ia our national has a noveily, to consume dotails whon some down It is guns want to become 80 rare as to much apace eagle with ATTORNEYS. D. FP. FORTREY ATTORNEY BELLEFONTE, PA Office North of Court House Eo ——————— YW. HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA [-AT-LAW No. 19 Ww, High Breet All professional business promptly attended to J , LAZY B. ». GErrio no J CE Ti Bowen : G, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYEAT LAW EsGLz BLOCK ] BELLEFONTE, PA. Buccessors 0 Orvis, Bower & Opvis Consultation in English and German re ee — CLEMENT DALE ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTR FA Office NW Dismoud, two 4 First Natioual Bank corner sorry froven We G RUNKELE ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLZFONTE. Pa business alicnded Lo promply to ool Office, ire All kinds of legal PApecial attention given foor Crider's Exchange HN B. BPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFORTR.PA courts. Consulistion is Office, Crider's Exchanges fyod eciion Practioes in ail the English snd German. Buliiin 0d Fort Hotel EDWARD ROYER, Pr Location : One mile South of Centre Hall Accommodations first-class bar, Part wishing to enjoy an evening given specisl attention. Meals for such oocasions pre pared on short notice. Alwsys prepared for the transient trade RATES : " 00 PER DAY The Net tional | Hotel MILLHEIM, Pa IL. A. BHAWYVER, Prop onrietor Good First clams socommodstions for the traveler @ood table board and sleeping apartments The choloest liquors at the bar. Stable so commodations for horses is the best 10 be bad. Bus to and from all tralus om the — and Tyrone Raliroad, at Coburs LIVERY = Special Effort made to Accommodate Cor. m ercial ‘ravele CI'Seeeee D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a RL R ——— CENTRE HALL, Pa B. MINGLE, Cashi¢ Receives Deposits . , : Discounts Notes . . . MARBLE xo GRANITE [VIONUMENTS. 23> H. G. STRCHIEI] Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble ano _— I Lr LADIES Safe, Quick, Rellabie Regulator Snperior te Sthel remnd hh prioes. Curs Son W - = very 200,008 rion. x Kista "or by Was Te er i Pr. La¥Franco, Philadelphia, Pa, wr Se NEW LIFE TEA ALWAYS CURES CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADACHE, Joba D. Langham, Holley,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers