BEFORE MACHINERY CAME. IMPLEMENTS OF THE OLDEN TIME GROUPED IN LITTLE MUSEUM. Doylestown’s Unique Exhibit—Overa Rare Old Fireplace There Are Quaint Reminder of Times That Succeeded Those of the Indian Firestick. Pa. the visitor may see a fine exhibi ton the primitive imple ments of household, farm and in provincial Penn col of most gen fustrial use sylvania. A still joction is to be found, h . : LQ ra in more complete wever, at celebrated home standing a short di LQurt House and of the finest and shr Stat It fouse ccll iargely gath Heary Mercer, in studio collection some respect completeness, Wile the name has been prot the nufact for garden que cxperiments al of his brother, doubtless | with his achicvement al tive clay produ ihe latter known in connect industry a effort to display of found within vania. One can scarcely amount of labor ing, labeling and aibit, now the walls studio, shrubbery mansion. building, the visitor whelmed by the ments awaiting ng his curiosity building, stories and crnamentat exper shenta SOCUi0 involved arranging almost entire and celling which is in the rear And sian Yel, the outsids shows a a would require da the individual their nistory ties er uring trouble smthusiastic collector the most to be found in any The comprise derful tics on ancient the fire-sticks through the lighting, witl cand!a FE or exhibit earliest fn 1 it a of « because of t Varn endl firo-sti ably Greorze Crook is cls one of the scribe dians cade Eastern similar cont contribuling es among the India per Delawars On huge vividly with CX an clongated rock, which hickory cordw where it crackled &n Imaginative household sat bef: cornerseat of U to the salamander piping its pl note in the simmering But this is only tures that may be the study of the innumerable ing it, for here terns with the every possible device for spinning and carding; every known contrivance the pioneers for cooking, baking and brewing: every possible household help known to the provincial house wife-—dishes, pots, pans and of crudest form, bread and bowls, home-made basketry in form and for every possible use, even to the contrivances, arranged on the game order as the basket weaving, for bec-hives, horse-collars, ete, one side cpen firepl th olden nn iis greal maw Lt tO sed fire the firepl exhibits we find “light curious display,” of % ttle kettles butter every ing of the exhibits are found remind ers of the days when and even hand implements, except the plow, harrow, cider mill and some flaxdressing and spinning coniriv ances, wore unknown on Lhe farm and in the household, and when the few mechanical workshops that, with the tavern, tho log church and the store, made up the crossroads village, were of the hamblest kind; of ths days when even in the more oretentious setiloments there were rurcly mare than the blacksmith, wheolwr'ght, shoemaker, tallor, and, at ths most important places, the joiner and the carpenter, with the tanner and sad dier, all working with rude ocla and almost without any laborsaving fix tures of any kind -—Philadaiphia Ie cord. Malaga exports 4,000,000 palm leat tolr tu New York annually. THE STING OF THE HONEY BEE. Used by the Insects Only in Self-De fence—How Beekeepers Avert Danger. sting of the honey complicated apparatus, student of nature proves an interesting study. To who is familiar with the a practical point of view igs nothing attractive 1i} grown The very the is a to be boy bee and to the only there it. He, 11 about many people, carries ane idea that the principal mission of the of comes near and one bee is to make , and 1 honey application when a bee Weome Vv Often the uneasy thing to strike at buzzing In does not that such a procedure invites the bee to make ation PARCHED POPCORN, it's Made of Sweet Corn and Has the Good Old Fashioned Sound. When th gweet corn commences 1 » & . 3 to ripen in the garden sled several having these ¢ the st firm main just ripen dry remove ya dist fine ears large grains nd let Arg re as alks to quite stalks with into bunches with they When from ing the husks, bin a strip of muslin and hang away in she attic in a dry place. After a fow weeks, according to What to Eat, the corn will be ready for parching, and then of popcorn may be enjoved Place an iron spider or frying pan over and turn into it a cup ful or two of the corn, which should be husked and removed from the ear before using; the fire must aot too hot, and the corn must be gtirred frequently with a long fork, may After a time are on they the corn are urb- this new sort tiie re, just he cr it scorch are almost round and will turn a deli cate brown color, when they done. bowl and pour over It 80 they will be buttered evenly, one bulters ordinary popcorn; the corn as soon as buttered and the corn is ready to eat. This dainty may be called “parched popcorn” to distinguish it from ordinary popcorn. A rallway Is to be bulit to the region where the Mocha coffee grows, It will extend from Hodeidah, on the Red Sea, to Sannaa, the largest city in southern Arabia, with a population ; of 75,000, as The Spread of i Machiavellianism By Ida M. Tarbell. UT the joes it formula not only ruins the men who practice it~-what for corporation, must ? Take the employes of of the freight who, as the the gre: dy of men of matter do Young a great necessity, know meaning i Hird "ig y rl vei llvae practices of bribing cley raflroad fees to turn information concert concerns n i least one £1 eat 4 to fd sive as have become a matte; a8 n to know he information He Ww nen ne in Yet the mone informait poration } v DELray ions | His hon stimat There ear be no « fon of caused Deserted Ireland. By Plummer PE. Jones, N Os 7 3 A Deceptive Privilege of Labor By George \\ FEW . ¢ 4 . ; Power. Taoussiyg Ma. WwW One By within «¢ manages out skill, shrewd reer of leadership and high-minded me od: there are political all. an underhand one attracts slack as he ia pai it But the role is, afte intent of intentioned th cumvye ae pian and mar with fusiry well ficht ti gens ral will It the unscrupulous, : ho who casays it finds hi almost inevitably impelled to fire. Not infrequently a man who hag achieved turns to political activity He then arually becomes te ter of the party machine, following almost cf necessity of intrigue, bargain, office-mongering, bribery The man of the higher type is not drawn to such doings, while on the other hand the competition ir the unsavory work has a demoralizing effect on those who strive for political power.—The Atlantic, Progress in the Philippines. By R. L.. Bullard, NEW force was at work among Moros, and ‘what in civilized mer we tail at as low and vile became in these savages a saving vir tue making for peace and progress, The followers of the dati Alag and the men of Pugaah, who, on account of a damsel bought and paid for but never delivered, had for years been attacking each other on sight, and dared not now as they loved their live: meet on market or trall, wiped the score from mamory to come and earn money together on the American road. The sultan of Balet and the sultan of Momungan, next-door neighbors, who, in a way to rack the nerve and wreck the best men ever built, had long been either at war or in a state of cofftinual guard night and day against each other's raids, forgot the old cannon that had been the cause of the trouble, and came to work on the road without friction. Men to whom it had been discredit, if not dishonor, to be found with out arms, gradually came to lay them aside at the white man’s {ngistence, for a short time at least, while they labored. Harder still for a Moro, ~whose law fs an eye for an eye, conduct for conduct to all generations, —a datto, a favorite of mine, under the same Influence, came after six months to look, if not with forgiveness, at idast without excitement and feverish desire to kill, upon » Moro road laborer of mine, some of whose people in long-gone times had fought and wounded the datto’s grandfather ~The Atlantic, maelf 10 devil leader of in manipulator and mas the familiar methods SUCCOSS 82 0 able Advancing eum would seem Indianapolis News, had was prices of crude pet indicate to the 8 Btar conclusion ta io that come to the little time a drilling more done President demns the the That's a heads i greg corporation good At declares the Journal the money lanta pass it to the needs it, Intimations Chinese selzure natter was for Theophilus the Lyman Gover did Parsons EOAVE ireasurer Of Boston Post New Hampshire any strongly preser mills, the McLane, of state the case nor not {OD i that “forest the White Mountains means times more of than to New when he declare vation in a hundred other shire” benefit to gtates Hamp We have, most of us, come to that it will not do to substitute personal will, or the personal whim, for the law, or to admit that any gov ernment has the right to license men to violate the law. In a self-govern ing community rebellion against the law is rebellion against and so is anarchy, declares the In dianapolis News, For the law is made by the people, and is their will Whether it be a corporation, a labor union, an individual, a saloon keepet see the obscure or prominent-does not mat ter. The law binds all, and must be enforced on all alike. at Ramsey, Huntingdon, England, called to protest against the action of lord De Ramsey in notifying nearly 1,100 tenants to quit the land, James Keir Hardie laborers to form a strong union to protect themselves and to enable them to obtain land which would render them independent in times when without employment. Men, he sald, had been driven off the %oil and into the town slums through fle land being turned into deer forests for American millionaires ard ofper id lers. Landlords, he declared, played the same part to soclety as did the parasite to the tree, sapping away its strength and giving no return. i i { { i ATTORNEYS. ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Office North of Court House. WwW HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Ko. 19 W. High Btreet All professional business promptly stiended to Jwo. J. Bowza W.D Zessy CET BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT-LAW EsoLe Block EELLEFONTE, PA. TRESIETIESIIIIINS CM LEMERT DALE w ATIORBEY AT -LaW BELLEFONTR, Fa Office XN. W. vorner Diamond, two doors from First Nations! Bank. jre NKLE RT id 6. RU ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA. All kinds of legal business sliended to promptly fpecial attention given 0 collections. Offoe, MM floor Crider's Exchange rs N B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFOXTEPA. the courts. Consullation i» Ofice, Order's Exchange yok Practioes in ell English end German Butting Old Fort Hotel EDWARD ROYER Loostion One mile Bouth of Centre Hall Accommodations first-class. Good bar, Parties wishing to enjoy an evening given spocial sttention. Meals for such occasions pre pared on short notice. Alweys prepared for the transient trade BATES : $100 PER DAY Proprietor The National hae MILLEEIM PA. 1. A. BHAWYER, Prop. First class socommodstions for the traveler @ood table board and sleeping & partments The cholosst liquors at the bar. Stable so commodstions for horses Is the best 10 be had. Bus toand from sll trains on the Lewisburg and Tyrone Ballroed, at Cobura en SE a ial Effort made to commodate Con. mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a RL. R Penn's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashie Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . . MARBLE ao GRAN VIONUMENTS. <> H. G. STRCHIEIER, CENTRE MALL, . . . . . PEN, Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble ax (Granite, Doo" ni to get my prion Safe, Superior 10 other remedies Cure aarenteed, 8 1 gists or hy ma i Pr. LaFrance, Ph Iphia, Pa, A A A AO wl BR See. EW LIFE TEA CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADACHE, And imparts now on . lire od detent Beorreal 33 all John D. Langham, Holley, N.Y.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers