RAR For February festivities that take place on or near the fourteenth of the month, there are this year a host of charming novelties. The old-fash- loned valentines are, of course, out of date for everybody but children, yet the sentiment of the day still lingers In the hearts and darts and paste- board Cupids used on the new candy- boxes. What, for instance, could be A prettier remembrance for any young man to give his “best girl,” or even & young woman for whom he had no particular regard but to whose family he was indebted for invitations to dinner or tea, dances or other func- | tions of the season, than one of these | candy-boxes? Two different styles | are shown on this page—one covered with bright-red paper and decorated with a big bow of red ribbon, having in the centre Cupid himself, with his bow and arrows; the other simpler, but just as effective, covered with white crepe paper and decorated with a gilt arrow plerced through two | hearts. If these boxes are wanted for souvenirs at luncheons or parties they can easily be made at home by a clever girl, for the crepe paper is | very simple to manipulate. The heart- | shaped pasteboard boxes can be bought ready-made at most stationery stores, and the hearts and arrows cut out of red and gold paper respec- tively, declares McCall's Magazine. Even easier to make is the little round box shown at the top of the left-hand corner of this group. Any i CANDY: BOX. BF WHITE CREPE BADER "DECORATED WITH HEARTS AND ARROWS A ROVEL IKE-cneam on CHARLOTTE-RUSSE DOX of paste, and a twist of baby ribbon. | The white ice cream basket is made | in exactly the same way, with the substitution of white paper for red | and a little pasteboard Cupid stuck ! on the handle in place of the heart and arrow. The favors for a valen- tine dance, children’s party or cotil- | lon are simply fancy paper hearts | fastened on slender sticks, wound ; with paper and decorated with ribbon | streamers. The candle shade makes | a most effective table decoration. It | is of white paper, decorated with | red hearts and gold arrows, and the | top and bottom of the shade are fin- | ished with twists of the paper touched ! up with gold paint. St. Valentine's Day was originally | the day dedicated to the incoming of | The Romans kept it in honor of Pan and Juno, and the festival, | which lasted several days, was called “Lupercalia.” The early Christian | this much-abused feast, very adroitly reconstituted the old practice of the lottery of lovers’ names. In place of | ens, whose appellations, written on | slips of paper, were drawn by the | young people of the time, the church | substituted the names of the saints. | The idea had its own beauty, and the | notion of dedication waa thus pre- served in a more spiritual sense than | in the old Roman festival. This feast, | and not the existence of the real St. | Valentine, is the origin of the gallant | : Danse 24 OR” COTILLION . 4 l/ a foundation for this. It is covered with white crepe paper and a big red heart pasted In the centre. It adds to the appearance if the edges of the paint, as shown in our illustration. For serving refreshments at a val- effective than heart and arrow can be so easily and quickly made. Buy some rather thin bright-red pasteboard at a stationery store, and also a sheet of white pasteboard. Then get some of the ordinary pleated lotte russe, bisquit glace, ete. arrow is cut out of the white paste- board, painted gold or covered with gllt paper and pasted across the large heart that has just been cut from the red pasteboard. A circle is then cut out of the heart, through arrow and all, the ice cream box inserted in the opening and held in place with a little paste, The paper baskets can be even more quickly made, the foundation being the same sort of pleated paper case. In making the red paper basket, this is given a handle formed of wire, with red crepe paper twisted around it and a heart and arrow pasted at the top. The paper itself is simply covered with a frill of red paper, held in place by just a touch 14th of February is intended to com- memorate. Some St. Valentine “Don'ts.” Remember that you want to enjoy the St. Valentine party as well as your guests; therefore observe these : rules: ! Don't fret and worry every hour of the preceding day until you are ner | vous and sensitive to everything that | Don’t rush your games too close on | each other's heels. Young people ! Don’t seem to be making an effort | i h-6. That Little Valentine Boy. His other name is Cupid. ‘That is | what the old Romans called him He had still another name given him | by the early Greeks, Eros. But what. | ever he may be called, he is the same Jolly little sprite that you paint, draw | or paste on your valentines as the | love fairy. He looks very harmless with his chubby-baby cheeks and his loving | eyes. But look at him closely and | you will find in those eyes sparks of mischief glinting through the love, like points of mica in a quartz rock. PIGS AND CONCRETE, I should like to hear from some of your readers in regard to concrete floors for pig pens. All our pens have old must lle on it. of our young pigs got lame, and as they grew their legs got crooked. They continued lame until ner. matism 1 over with and he seems to with plenty of sanitary place for pigs to lie on; but I know from observation that in cold weather pigs partly themselves with théir beddin the floor. Will pigs get concrete floors that are well T. M. L. Monmouth County, floors for pig pens wood, have talked the matter owner of hink concrete the only the the place, floors ing bed: are cover $ 1 g and lie directly on i 1 rheumatism from 1 bedded? N. J. [Concrete are much but not more are kept tight Ce very cold and must bedded will be more or sort mentioned, ed rheumatism tion for a pig with a twodnch pil sleeping place by should be be eanlly for replacing when try Gentleman more durable than sanit fine The ideal pen flo Ank place 80 constructie removed POULTRY OUTLOOK Poultry fool of all ki: {ly advanced In price for the ‘ has stead pas three or four years, but that is no reason for killing if your tock at th { i838 Beason of the afford to kes present price cannot at the will poultry eggs | same proportion keeping poultry is before, notwithstar al food expense mature fowl, find that the and raise strain the surplus market, the pri same the on the poc) will In most food parket age and ing ns a to prices to people that want keep them yourself for s market with eggs. and at prices of profit in keeping any of your promisi market, they layers. —Am, Poultry Journal sand fey 15604 Re the pul b have age, and you profit, either eggs there is a handsome Do not kill ng pull them els valuable are {oo INDIGESTION IN CALVES Dr. David Roberts, Wisconsin State Veterinarian, says: stion occur from many costive- hess, a too liberal supply of milk; the furnishing of the long after calving to young calf; allowing the calf the first milk of a cow been hunted, driven by “Indige causes, as milk of a cow has road, quickly feeding from a by hunger, it clogs the stomach; pall milk that is fermented and spolled; wholesome food: The licking of hair from its forma- the stomach will ing pens, themselves or others and tion into balls in Is——— BLACKHEAD DISEASE, Investigation of the black head dis ease has been continued at the Rhode issued, but after reading it through the fact is evident that by no means all is A Modern Custom. Frequently it happens that the modern valentine is sent by men as an expression of courtesy or to show ap- preclation of social favors received. For this purpose a pot of growing flowers, a daintily bound volume, a basket of glaced or tropical fruit or bon-bons in elaborate receptacles of satin, porcelain or crystal, are all welcome tokens to most women, who gracefully accept them in the same spirit in which they wore sent. In Shakespeare's Day. In Shakespeare's time there was a | practice of greeting the person met by saying, “Good morning, "tis Val entine’s Day,” and the one who made the salutation first was entitled to a present. At this time the element of choice appears to have joined forces with chance, for it Is written that divers young persons contrived to ac. | cidentally see each other before they : saw anybody else on the morning of 8t. Valentine's Day. i i under all precautions and changes of method losses from this cause were ed to point to the source of the dis. ease from some cause after the birds were hatched. It was shown that by removing the turkey eggs three or four days before hatching, washing cent, alcohol, finishing incubation in the machine, and keeping the poults board floor and keeping them away from ordinary fowls, losses from blackhead disease were reduced from 80 per cent. to about 15 to 20 per cent. It is thought that the discase may be conveyed by common fowls and prove fatal to the turkeys while not necessarily fatal to other fowls; but the precise way in which the tur keys catch the disease does not seem to be settled -—American Cultivator. COST OF SILOING. Figures have been gathered by the Department of Agriculture from some thirtyone farms with reference to : Rvs — Cy Soh radep the time and labor consumed In put ting up silage and the cost per ton In estimating the cost of filling a rate of 15 cents an hour was made for men and the same for 8 team of horses. Engine hire was rat g:neer, twine at 111-2 cents a pound coal at $5 a ton; and gasoline at 13 cents a gallon, Ten con sidered a work cost of » storage, as determ! tigation, varied on the varigus farms. yield hours The ned by were day's average per acre was and the average cost per ton ¢ t4 cents. The rage amount uge cut was 49 and the nut! ing i GOOD TREATMENT PAYS Kindness to a gentiment; it is sound wall Weil horse isn't merely business that is and better work than neglected fed or abused the win I0Na are properly used of this kind and its cost fn Farmers’ IMPROVES SOIL soll In ele the sahil uable does not who oon i Were WHAT OT 3 lE DOING The pleasantine and healthful ness of the jife of the scientific farm The farm in er should nphasized of the superintendent of the largely niroduction Yolves a very of rap the teleph rural deliv one, ery, many of the advantages former iy available only in cities and towns farmer. large estate : for the of high ial ability. Thus the superintendent of a farm may look get to a pleasant wholesome, profitable and useful life Colman’s Rural World are now shared management of a ishes opporty by the furn {ton exercise fo ard from the oul FARM NOTES Scatter cracked corn and wheat over feed yard, so they will have to exercise in getting it; for fowls that exercise are more healthy end lay better, Give them occasion ally cooked meal, mixed with chopped onions, pulverized egg shells, a little charcoal and sulphur. Chickens like to scratch and every poultry yard should be well supplied with chaff and gravel Fowls should have a moderately warm place to roost in cold weather, attention to these details in the care of poultry will bring good results, We have reliable information to is paid to cleanliness of hen houses and drinking vessels, chickens usual ly have cholera, croup and vermin. Keep the hennery clean. The inside walls, perches, etc, should be thon oughly whitewashed every spring and fall. The floors should be swept out occasionally and sand, sulphur and unsiacked lime plentifully springled about, Keap drinking vessels clean, and supplied with cold, fresh water twice daily. If troubled with roup, put two teaspoonfuls of sulphur and four tablespoonfuls of unslacked lime to each gallon of water. If troubled with vermin, grease well under wings, and lightly on the head, with kerosene mixed with cook: ing oll—onethird kerosene to two thirds oll; then turn chickens out close hennery tightly and spray nests, and every nook and corner thorough. ly, with benzine, or gasoline. Keep closed some time, then open doors and windows, and air well before time for chickens to go to roost. —From the “Care of Chickens” in the Indiana Farmer, 1 Addl ded dodo bd Bd de Biddle t Jno. F.Gray & Son § [Burcdssors to... GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Like Insurance Companies in the World, . . . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . No Mutuals No Assesuments . tf Before insuring your life see the cont-act of THE HOME which in case of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ad. dition to the face of the policy, to Loam on First Mortgage Money Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT rrr YI TI rrr rr Téddd 80 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trave Marks Desians CoPyRIGHTS &C, Anyone sending a sketch and deseri 8 Guickly ascertain our opinion free w invention is probably patentable, Con ihe tions strictly confidential, Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for ssonring patents, Pateuts taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely (lustrated weekly, Largest oir. eulation of any sclentife Journal, Terms $5 a year: four months, §i. Bold by all newsdealers, MUNN & Co,3c1eresewar. New York Frnnoeh (Moa 48 aah irerian While walking on the trestle of the Erie Rallroad at Riverside, N. J., forty feet above the Passale River, twelve-year-old Edward Berger missed his footing and fell between the ties, striking the framework in his descent to the ley water. As the boy fell Chris Naumann, of 44% Main street, with a friend, Peter Brueck, started across the trestle on their way from Hawthorne to Pater- gon. They saw the boy struggling in the river and Naumann ran to the nearest pler and clambered down the steel work. At the base of the pler, which is barely wide enough for a foothold, Naumann took off his over- coat and threw one end to the boy, who was clinging to a cake of ice. The boy caught the coat and Nau- mann hauled him to the pler. He exhausted and unable to help and Naumann, who is big and muscular, put the boy on his broad back and started up to the top of the trestle. He had first instruct- steel was Naumann trestle and ing reached the top of had started to walk An which Brueck express, saw | { | i i § i i | i the trestle when Naumann ing himself to a tie with the other. The express roared above them, his friend's escape. enough to tell the story of the boy's double peril and Naumann's galian- try. The boy recovered enough to tell it himself, SHADOW-TAGQG. Shadow-tag is a good game for the early morning or late afternoon, ‘when the shadows are long and clear. It may be played in any clear space where there are one or two trees, or a house, to afford shadows, For the shadows are the “gozl” where the plavers are safe, and the child who is “it,” instead of tagging the others, tries to step on their shad- ows as they run from one shade to another, It is great fun, for unless you are careful your shadow is apt to bob up unexpectedly and will be stepped on before you know it. We played ‘“‘shadow-tag” very success fully on a roof garden, where two sheds gave us the necessary shade and an open space of gun in between made the shadows of tlhe runners very distinct. In cold weather, when you need to exercise, and don't know exactly what to play, it is a good idea to ron races and let one of the children find prizes for the races. The prizes may be anything she finds at hand—the more ridiculous the better——but it makes the race more interesting to have them, particularly if they are presented with a speech. It is well to let all the players have prizes, though of course the winter recerves the first prize~Ellzabeth Webb, in the Washington Star. An Almanac Church. In the tower of St. Botolph's Church, Boston, England, are 365 steps, corresponding to the days in the year; the church has twelve pil lars, fifty-two windows, and seven doors, representing the — A —. T_T ————— A Er — a FTOHMNETYS, we D FP. PORTIEY ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Office North of Court House, re Ww HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA No. 19 W. High treet. All professional business promptly attended te ———— ee ————————mte FESS ELIS, 8. D. Gerris Iwo. J. Bowen W.D Zzxaw C-FrTiG, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT-LAW EaoLe Broox BELLEFONTE, PA. Buccessors 10 Orvis, Bower & Oxvis tation in Englah and German. CLE EXT DALE ATTORNEY AT-LAW EELLEFONTE, Pa. Ofioe N. W. corner Dismend, two door from First Nations) Bavk, re WW, © BUSKLE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLZFOXTE Pa. All kinds of legal business site: ded Wo prompily Fpecinl siten fou given to colistions. Ofos, M8 finor Crider's Exchanges re KR B. EPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFORTR. FPA Prastioss fo ull the cours. Copsulisilom is Euglish sad German. Ofice, Order's Rxchonpy Busting (rok Old For Hate EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor, Location : One mile South of Centre Hall, wishing to enjoy an evening given special attention. Meals for such oosssiond pared on short notice. Always for the transient trade. RATES : $1.00 FER DAY. III nnn [be National Hotel MILLEEIM, PA. L A. BHAWVER, Prop. Puwt clam socommodstions for the travels @00d table board and sleeping & partments The eboloest liquor at the bar, Stable ase ssmmodations for horees is the best 40 bg bad. Bos wand from all trains en Me Lewisburg and Tyrone Raliroed, st Oodusg LIVERY Special Effort made to Accommodate Com: mercial Travelers. D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a R. Rk Penn's Valley Bankhg Company CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Ceashi¢ Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes - re H. G. STRCHIEIER, CENTRE MALL, . . . . . Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE... FMMONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble ao Granite, 25h umn pre, PEM Bellefonte, Penn’a. The Largest and Best Accident ns,