ATTORNEYS, DO ons D. P. FORTHEY ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEVONTE Va Giflce North of Court Housa sero Sor ————en J EADRISON WALKER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTR Pa Ko. 19 W. High Street. All profemionsl business promptly attended Sr —————————— 8 D. Gernie Jwo. J. Bowen CGFA, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT-LaW EaoLz Broox BELLEFONTE, Pa Buccesars wo Orvis, Bowes & Orvis Consultation fn English and German. Br a — CLEMENT DALE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR, Fa. Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doers from First Nations! Bank. br CRE W.D Zeamy WwW 6 RUNKLE ATTORNEY-AT.- LAW BELLEFONTE, PA All kinds of legal business attended to promptly {Bpecia! attention given to collections. Office, floor Crider’s Exchanges. he NH. B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR.F2 Practices in all the courts. Consultation b Eoglish and German. Ofice, Crider's Rxcrasyr Buri ting ty —— lo tort Hotei | EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location : One mile South of Centre Hall decommeodations first-clam. Good bar. Partie wishing to enjoy an evening given special sttontion. Meals for such occasions Pre pated on short notice. Always prepuied for the transient trade. BATES : $1.00 PER DAY. LIVERY 2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com. mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penna RL R 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Treats MAnks DESIGNS Anyone sending a sketch an guiekly ascertain ong opine invention is probably paten! tions strietly confidential, }! pont free, Oldest spencer for s Patents taken thromeh Munn & sr vial netics, without charge, in the Scientific American, seal A handsomely filastrat ad wookly enlation of any scientific wrna your: four months, fl. Sold Uy all news MUNN & Co,2crereer New Yo Feaa’s Valley Banking Company LL —————————— CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢ Receives Deposits . . — H. @. STROHIIEIER, CENTRE HALL, . . . . . Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble am Granite, Downs fafl to get my prios, PEMN LHgency | IN CENTRE COUNTY H. E. FENLON Agent | Bellefonte, Penn'a. Ce ——————— Aeeldent ns, Bonds of Every thy Me deloal He MILLERIM, PA. & A. SHAWVER, Prop. Plast clap accommodations for the travela @ood ble boerd and sleeping apartments The choloest liguors at the bar, Stable ae semmodations for horses is the best to be bad. Bus Wand from all tralne en the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, st Osburn Ey TRIN LAS a Add ddd dd dd bd ddd bedded ddd 3 Jno. F. Gray & Son (Surctor 20.1; URANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life rance Companies in the World. . , . . THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutual No Assessments Before insuring contract of r life see HB HOMB which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth years re. turns all premiums paid in ad. dition to the face of the policy. the Money NEWSY GLEANINGS. President Taft, in Plitshurg held the diplomacy of Seer np. atary Knox, Troops were held In readiness to prevent a May Day outbreak in Paris Many were Pope Rome the pligrims at audience by American received in i” in the attack on insurgents” new House Speaker The planned a Cannon Thousands of persons saw the body of Riornstierne Rinrpzen in the ca- thedral at Christiania, Senator Lorimer issued a statement in Chicago denving the bribery charges made against him Mr. Roosevelt was acclaimed at fates In of the Duteh royal heiress’ birthday at The Hague The names of 208 persons namin. ated for election to the Hall of Fame were made public by Dr. MacCracken Eastern railroads preoared for a; peneral advance in freight rates fol- lowing the ertample of the Western lines hanes Hearst sned for libel kK Times, The Associated i 1 the vepapers all William R The New Yor Press and n over country Mr. linger Vr Ral- Pinchot for the Vertrees, charges attorney that Clavi interdats seek to drag the Pres. ident into the controversy Two ana, nanny $50. COM. is the new afored prizes, agereegating by the I of which Lord Northeliffa head. were announced nt Paris fener of Licenses § M3; New Maver of of abtaining ¢ Commiss port to the «avs the question tic servants is more than ever a prob. lem The Provincial Court at Berlin tained the refusal of tha Imperial Bank to nay to the Turkish govern- ment $3,000,000 which Abdel Hamid, the deposed Sultan, has on deposit. #18. FEMININE NEWS NOTES. Mrs Marraretl McKim filed Renn for divorce from Emith Hollins McKim Two of Mra. B. C. Hyde's sisters, Luey Lee and Sarah Swope. testified at the Hyde trial in Kmnsas City Miss Ada Rehan, who for a gen- eration dalighied theatregoers on both sides of the Atlantic, is fifty years old. Miss Kitty Cheatham, whose per. formances for children are well known in this country, will sing in Paris and London. Mrs. Mary Goddard, the oldest Quaker preacher in the world, cele brated her one hundredth birthday at her home in Durham, Me. Fifteen women have been elected to the new Parliament of Finland. The previous Parliament, the first to which women were eligible, had nine- teen women. All the girls at a secondary school in Temesvar, Hungary, threatened to go on strike unless the new rule that { they must all wear their hair tightly pleated was eanceled, Mrs. T. F. Beal, a rural mall car rier of the Burbank distriet in Call fornia, goes over her twenty-five-mile { route in an automobile which she bought with her own earnings. Mrs. Marie Berg. purchaser of the | Grover Cleveland farm near Prince- ‘ton, N. J, sued in Trentoh to have Fmerson {Nov } enit in ag part payment as in excess of the : value of the property. i Mrs, Charles G. Ames was elected | president of the School Voters’ i ized in Beston. ! school conditions and to help to bet- | ter them. | HI. ©, Prick Secures the “Greatest Rembrandt" in Europe, London.— Through picture dealers {| H. C. Frick, of Pittsburg, has pur- | chased from the family of Prince | Tarnowsky, of Cracow, Austria-Hun« ! gary, the famous “Polish Rider” of Rembrandt. The price is not given, but it is nderstan to be Jréportiais IIT] YE USING INCUBATORS. Our first incubator was a hot water cellar. it, as hens, and as well temperature, than in a under the to thrive The chicks were given to hens, sev: the game day filled Direc- CEES the machine was were to turn the eggs day. them certain days on re- on fif- for a do, SOMe warmer than others trays would an hour; longer than out hecause To leave won't warm days the main out more than teen minutes, The trays well out placed as possible. alwavs as were of the draught dinner: about to see after lamp time eggs, directly trimmed the this gave the before * night Not until the nineteenth day, when some of the eggs were pipped, did we need to look after the machine through the night It is better to leave the incubator ten or after hatching, although machine handlers warm Ox or wn is dry. given through chicks in hours gH. the as the twelve gome cessful removs chicks goon as Two hatch that if heat, and healthy. Never remove an Incubator box, until warmed ; fore this result. cholera, and each left to This of the WAYS Very se 4 , ~ to a irooder, the d« the CEES tesla were remove all reduce that To do this left in create tend to the odors are un chicks directly from A i brooder, or thoroughly be to a 00D, they have been removed will surely chicken follow few when they are is done Bowel all disaster trouble, little such ills will other, until there will represent the flock, the trouble with so many hatches, and is in no th fault of the machines is moisture needed machine: differ. different be is incy dom or t was ¢ oo ent makes probs treatment A sale sent with have better air the machine refilling with that test a good per and run the hours empt; ¥ ¥ : need rule is to follow directions the hine, until you ma that a different Always thoroughly hatch, proved after freah ¢ machine A good p to set the Aan Iie time, test same nite often at and gq the raited from and eggs: the machine , 11 ¢ » hatch full of eR hee red £1 i the hens the hens fresh then finish follow ing hens, Keep cellar, or ture, a xi basement place for an incubator Indiana Farmer sha Pd Many giv the this plan with hens alone, the good eggs to part of other ma the reget + sl a room * the ne ou POULTRY HOUSE CURTAIN I see in your valuable paper of January 8B, 1910, an article headed “Fresh Air Poultry Houses,” in which the writer seems to have had no practical experience with one of those fresh alr houses. [ wish to say that in the last ten years we have tried several kinds of pounitry houses, and find that the curtain front, or fresh air houses, give far and away the best resulis, both for winter and summer use My house is bullt 48 feet long by 12 feet wide, divided Into € pens, 8 by 12 feet each and faces the south. The walls are & foet high on the north, and 7 feet on southt. The north side and ends are made of good tongue and groove lumber covered with a good grade of rubber roofing: the top is made and damp drafis out is made just as tight as possibile, ly entirely open, excepting a twelve inch hoard at the top, and a row of sash with 16 inch glass at bottom; the rest is covered with pouliry net ting, with a good heavy canvas to be to top of the sash in cold windy weather, a The foundation rises above the ground and ten inches is filled In out and fresh dirt put in when need ed. The roosts are bdullt with drop boards, with a curtain to draw down fn front of them at night. The floor is kept covered with a good deep Hitter of straw, in which is thrown 2 an hour or two, and then slip to a nloe cory nest which is £33832§3°23 io fly 8084 0) j | sasad | WT lS K. of the an upstairs closet, Indiana Farmer, GET THE COOPS READY On cold and stormy dave have ! the men of the house making chick | en They can work in wood-shed or summer-kitchen, there is a stove, and even they not claim to ex carpenters, It will be surprising | many serviceable be in a short Iittle expense Make the coops that | sire to be used for the mother hen and her brood tight except the fronts which can made two inches apart, nailed on upright, two these loose the bottom that the hen can let in and without raising the box. Do not make any floors the coops, these are better made separate from the coops, as may not be wanted all times and can be cleaned more eas lly when used Have a COOps made for breaking up broody hens. These can made of parrow slats nailed just close <¢nough together to keep the hens from getting out, Do not neglect getting things ready much as there probably the work begins —Indiana Farmer, recess 8, In COOSA, the any- where he though do pert how made Coops and Can time with very be of slats Leave 80 out of at be to they at few be possible now, as as will suring he no time when PURE TRY. farmer (0 read START WITH the Get as will teach hi how farmer fowls feeding and and what good breeders are to make the of what we need to make both Whe: a bred in the Yun Lr farmer embarks meet, pure he can got. We don't should get mean SCOring Qitry that he that he should bird that sum of is to find a ing strain of whatever breed fancy The way ig to ERS hatch your own birds, but not bus two SLIDES would best get a higt him a wants to do has a lay- he may adil boi or will big cost money: what he that breeder cheaper and than better nd do less four be way jets kamp vou can raise a good the first year.—A VERMIN LULLE gene acid 1 and drop When the or Put fire at stir the mixture away in until wanted, ot al K sf out twelve and 1 Ts walter mix t sh gpray about the the spt Naws ACTIVE is not laying Spanish alright Kei, we week during dndianapolis ety ve THE Pure blood gign, for all leghorns and show the blood not worth keeping nests are not. used, watch and tell other wavs Good layer takes a lcok In at negt every once in a while, is first off roost at sun-up, and hus tiles here and and Where tras there, always scratch ing and pecking, and strays far {rom hen house lookinz for big bugs and getting worms. Always on the look all kinds of tidbits to satisfy the hunger brought on by laving big eggs and lots of work With well filled craw from foraging she is late to roost. Her sleek coat is close fittines, eve restless, face and comt bright cherry red.— New York Press A A— MORE MALE Almost every poultry raiser has more male birds than he actually needs. Instead of letting all of them out for BIRDS, one strong male bird in each per of ten females and keep the other male confined, and at the end of each They wil | be ego much more vigorous and the | increased fertility of the ezge wil more than offset the extra care, The their honor do not trust them to & pen the whole season, but alternate | them with males just as good prod ably but with not a single prize t¢ | their honor.-Indianapolis News, NOTES. There is but one way of building up the utility of a flock, and that is By proper selection. If each year the eggs from only the best layers are used for hatching purposes, each suo ceeding generation will become more prolific; and this can also He great Iv assisted by securing new males from some strain that have like wise been carefully selected. In this work of selection the trap nests Is GLEANINGS Many a man's only idea of making New York meat prices are still go ing up. The meat strike lost ground when the first empty stomach pro insurgency, declares Memphis Commercial Appeal, Bome day, prophesies the Atchison Globe, a philanthropic rich man will get revenge by leaving his fortune to the lawyers, so his kin can have the satisfaction of watching them waste it in fighting among selves. hesitates is lost, it thinks the New York before you leap. A “man's man,” explains the Wasn- ington Herald, 18 not necessarily a man whom any old skate can take away from his wife for an entire evening. as well, to look is just Times, ’ fhe best thing we can do opines the Denver Times, ig to bi f new and favorable rade aw with Canada outside the present tariff til. And to that end the administration at Washington, D. C., should *move with “Ye celerity. it Is duties of the In the Brit noticed indica As a result, said creased spirit ish the in remote tions of a revival of {1} saye the New York Tribune. There also been a considerable increase, it is reported, in the sumption of spirits of ether as a bev erage since the price of whiskey was raised. under vudget police have land distillat districts of Ire on of liquor, has con Gould says merger of with much tele George J unction graph that the the and telephone companies will greatly improve the for the benefit of dear public: which is an admission that the is bad enough at present But his progeni tor, recalls the Philadelphia Record, was not in the habit of making pre tenses of a £ love the public when he entered - gervice the Ld service of into a deal the York the Bays New The rehabilitation ment will not be day or a week or a month Jr a year; but Mavor has begun the good work, and he*has begun it ly and His method had this superlative comparison with other schemes of police regoner ation—It back ard it sends back law. ¥ 5 1 be no permanent .eform of World of Police accomplish Gaynor sane intelligently. merit in gets to the law the police to the i law. defying police force other basis There | no louis 8 Lemmy Siar changes assurance to the St new A the gamne ball any more desirable for schools and than changes did. there is strong reason (o suppose in of the opinion expressed by a nsrominent fig who a8 saying that present sxcitement will be allayed by some insignificant changes, and the game will go on as before. In this he is probably mis taken. The whole country hag jweity nearly reached the “show me” stage with regard to making a beter game out of intercollegiate football that the prospective make of foot colleges the oid ndeed otherwise, view ure in the sport, is quoted In the inscription on Mr, Cleve carried to an excess, asserts the Phil adeiphia Record. The fact that he had been President of tke United States is not mentioned, while the dates of his birth and death are given. But these dates are of far joss importance than the fact that he was twice President of the United States -he was the only ex-President ever elected—and the dates do not iden. tify the person in whose memory the monument is erected Presidential service would, Still, any degree of simplicity, even an exoreme one, is welcome in contrast with the panegyrics which it was once com mon to carve on even unimportant persons Jlocution.” We are indebted to the before just what was the matter. The pynonyms of circumlocution are vari pus: for instance, diffuseness, peri pharsis, pleoniasm, prolixity, tautol ogy, all of which means indirect and many words where few would suffice The Touch That Falled, : portly old gentleman had just finished a sumptuous dinner. As he turned to leave, the walter tauched } arm, and in an insinu- ating manner, said: "Haven't you-er-forgotten thing, sir?” “Why, ves, so 1 have,” replied the old gentleman, “thank you for the i The some. plate, he pocketed the had laln underneath it, out past the cresifalien ional Monthly. Lifting a hich ed wd Nat Of Honor. Al Trottier at a banguel queer ideas of Pecullc™ Code ie men.” sald ciubman, ¥. ‘have very Weill Known nit Ters honot rom Pitsburg to smoking com ullman, There were us in the compart- king and reading, All of door banged and the con- clor's volee cried All tickets plense “Then one of the men in the com- partment leaped feet, scanned the faces of us and said 01 Po ‘es hie the of impressively: Gentlemen, [| trust 10 rest : aw ly iON EY and to your he the geat and remained ere in a small silent knot until the cpnductor was safely Phils Times, past Philadelphia Was Mad, the elevator hotse, Manages terms with almost he carries The dived 4 4% 8 4 i And under The Garvin, one Why by Minister { of tO orbs WelgQ stepped rrying two heavy y ova try af lhe eievalol ficor 4 julgd slate] Al on Atchis the joke KONE apologize Universe Running Down, absolutely certain that { the solar system is run- the tons, moving thousand times express train goes, friction of {0 the ex- it an hour in SI0W proce that will arth to a stand- bY the i es one erything else their “wed aia Jumping Te Conclusions, it's nr proverbial is a slors ing lady pa- asion asked nn 10 accom- a i HeTance and OCA; med the the bishop KAY there?” Flan hy, par. ne heen Tickling, a am M A Ain Ignorant Uabeliever, lat Nell Burgess used to anecd his claims were always ignorant swaggering fellow.” gin, “declared in a ba an He, ve in no hereafter ile, and that's the end Why, you must George,” the barber ssid. “Huh, not me.” was the reply. i'm to fond © me meat for that’ "™ «New York Times, be a Unitarian, A Sceptie. My dear, | was Mra detain. o Knicker-——1 won't beli ve it yu have data and a scientific 1. --Harper's Bazar ; Children Especially LiKe The sweet, “toastie” flavour of Post Toasties Crisp, fluffy bits of per> fectly ripe white corn— cooked, rolled and then toasted to an appetizing brown. g Served with cream and oil inty d “the whole family. the Give the home-folks a treat,