THE CENTRE D EMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., JANUARY 1 1903. TROL ER 5 4 — " “FOLKS of ASN AEN ; " fs AN ODD BOAT. hy Water as Water, Driven Thraugh One That Is Well ns Of course any boa, unless it happens hoat or a gravy may be called a boat, but a boat deiven by wa Its pan and a to be an lceboat, a slo boat, 1 am speaking of ter as principal parts are a tall the small end of the chimney cork, into which a rubber, bent glass or lead tube is tightly fitted; pr chimney up in the pan with the small tube project- fng over the rim, fll th mney with watir well as through water, lpgmp chimney with a thie water and set the « craft afloat It will move with the case and grace of a turtle, fast, until all the water run You can produce a better imitation of speed by 3 using instead of the pan a i le himney though not NO out has wool THE WATER BOAT AFLOAT en boat of more shipshape model, with the water tube projecting over the tern, but unless the very broad of beam it will capsize. In fact, the boat is made not to go fast, but to illustrate a principle by going at all, and example of the same principle is given by the wa- ter mill now to be described vessel Is another ne lamp or plugs waler more, wheel ame di upright from ppositle of a the in back ding the + gun is ¢ back led by firing Find His Nose. If on Van 0 party of friends, UL I them y catch hold of his nose with hi bh and and of his right ear with his left hand. After he has done so, tell him to place each are eatch hand and left ear RIE) a hand iiekly as possible in verse position--that is he must hold of his nose with his left at the sam time grasp his with his right hand Tell him this operation sev eral times, and the more often he does It the more he will fur nish for the since he will find it ever mors difficult to grasp his nose and ear and will spend considerable searching for them in places where they cannot possibly be. to repeat amusetnent company and mors time Twe Marble Trick. Place un ordinary marble in the palm of your left hand. Cross the first and midd'e fingers of the right hand (the middie over the first), so that you can feel the marble in the cross so made-that Is, with the right hand side of the middle finger and the left hand side of the first finger touching the marble at the same time. Do not look at the marble while doling the trick You will be astonished when you distinctly feel not one but two marbles. Practice a little while, and You can have lots of fun among your friends and with some of the older ones Loo Nleopers, A slecper Is one who sleeps. A sleep er Is that In which the sleeper sleeps A sleeper Is that upon which the sleeper runs while the slecper sleeps. There fore. while the sleeper sleeps In the sleeper, the sleeper carries the sloeper gver the sleeper, under the sleeper, Grandma's Glasses, When grand na puis her glasses on And looks at moe just so If 1 hove done a naughty thing Bhe's sure, po-eliow to know, How Is It she con always tell Bo very, very. v ry well? 1 howd put | look in f 5 mppes "ry. yo! ! want if v rand glasses off no eves, | shoul he 4 "nd It tres on nar ehty tee? TOILET TIPS, Don't go to bed without brushing the teeth. Of the mineral acids as skin whiten. ers only one is of service—-hydrochlorie. It Is well te start with a weak solu tion, say 1 per cent, To whiten and soften the skin boll a few medium sized potatoes, move the skins and use them as you would a plece of soap for washing the hands par- re- A hit of pumice stone Is to be found on the dressing table of most women these days and is invaluable in remov Ing all traces of grime on tnger tips or around the nalls Two drops of camphor on your tooth brush will give your mouth the fresh est, cleanest feeling Imaginable, will make your gums rosy and absolutely prevent anything like cold sores or af fections of your tongue. The water of the toilet must be soft If possible use distilled water. A little borax or a few drops of ammonia will goften hard water, but habitual use of either Is not advisable, too dry a skin being the result. A water softener Is better Oriental Rugs, In buying antique or modern oriental rugs there is a trick of the trade looked out for, Many old rugs are so touched before displayed for sale that the home furnisher deceived into thinking she is purchasing perfect . ompl shed 10 be is easily ly genuine goods, This Is ae by the crafty oriental by He shaves the upper surface of the faded course lessening the wear various prog CRS the par: and of wenve, removing worn, retints the A rug recognized ing powers of the rug, or he upper surface with water colors shaved Is easily and lack of fo as certain that rug you view bas not been touched up with pigments have it sent home on approval and be soft Wing frequently boul by thinness the have in fore deciding to buy it take a clean muslin rag, dip in clear water well and with it surface of the rug if giens of coloring natter out gO gently over the may we « wn In ing ldenl Nursery. % strik that trained woman in Tulane oa that trained wo inss of women the age ca | loudly for mors men e trained woman Is one ho has no ‘verves,” who has a good, strong is swift to serve others and who that as they body, is a mind wishes to know why LILES ary are are needed io the home for the woman who bulids as the Ihe in society, for at the last the is the teacher by the laws of her life and subtle graces of mind, heart and perception Such women first of one who / how AR great writes an epic poem trained wo man is needed Yoman her (haracteristie Worth, The woman who carries herself well apt to command respect than who trudges along with her head Inclined forward and her shoul ders In a stooping position. The pos sensor of a graceful, erect carriage un lmpresses us as having characteristic worth, says the Pittsburg Observer. There are many noble heart od women who really do themselves in- Justice by the awkward way they car ry themselves, [It Is very bard for oth. ors to see beauty and grace of heart In an unlovely outward appearance. It Is the exterior charm of the rose that gives Ntting expression to its hidden PW ORT ness is hore the woman consciously Are Women Too Restless! I'he American woman Is restioss, dis satisfied. Society, whether among the highest or lowest classes, has driven her toward a destiny that Is not nor mal. The factories are full of old maids. The colleges are full of old maids. The balirooms In the worldly milleux are full of old maids, For nat ! ural obligations are substituted the fies titlous duties of. clubs, committees, meetings, organisations, professions, a thousand unwomanly occupations Bverybody's Magnzine, Mutton Fat, If uncooked mutton fat In soaked In cold water twenty-four hours, then ooked In water, putting a seant quar: ter teasp ouful of soda to a quart of water, It loses its strong taste and ean, be used for pastry. Do the same with mutton dripplogs. Al hacon and haw fat should be clarified and kept to fry gis in. | she | to shrink; In others to expand | dued shade of blue, hie Hotrope and olive | ostentatious, of red are to be avolded | the higher { thing, not as | tention There Ww barm in Clothes nnd Colors, White makes sw i look big, in nocent, winsome and classie, Clear white is for the blond, cream white for the brunetie, Is It not the won in white who has all the attention and the wide eyed young thing in with a blue ribbon, who captures all the beaus? Black Is the thinnest color a stout woman can indeed, the woman who wenrs black to hest advantage Is who is stoul and and binck heir In gowns of certain colors flesh seems A sub white, A3) | has black eyes with under black, which while the loss of course, Is flesh seems certain shades of green color blue, pale gray and almost any shade Mauve and green are the two about the especially effect of shades of colors that in decoration throat and helpful in shoulders are the diminishing i flesh The Rasiness Woman, Frequently when a girl enters busi ness she thinks of it as a temporary a career or a profession She takes It merely as a means of earn until she arted, ng a ny MArTies, indifferent at looking the right omen.” but t if you are a poor forward warringe “with person the 1 nt time « other LER to grand should remember th say. vou | worker you will be a poor homemaker You must realize that by ind, by sell discipline deve loping learn ng y will «ful to 1% ness It wish for a home of you will Ix RAreaderambs For Breakfast, made pala HE WAS A PAINTER. A Drunken Prisoner's FExsense In a New York Police Court, gd or seers chance, If that Ones be pa is the good humor unscathed at As a ru in thei make any Incr “No sir,” protest«d a man who kept himself from falling over by holding on ners ously to bar: “I'm not drunk ‘cause no one's drunk who's not falling all over himself.” Excuses of the most wonderful kind, some of them really ingenious, others merely ridiculous, are put forward when the futility of feign the magistrate is they may get awn withough not seldom still He r cups, they are loath to ating adm ons the ing Innocence has been discovered The | cleverest explanation of that kind that | I ever heard was advanced by a man | who, when taxed with having dis played unmistakable signs of intoxiea tion, simply replied that he was a painter by trade “That has nothing to do with your | condition,” sald the magistrate, “Of course it han” rejoined the pris oner, and kept on twisting after the stripes until 1 got =o dizzy that the cop thought I was boozy." Edward Blorkman in Century. An Obstacle te Plety, A story told by a western congress man is about two brothers, Ed and Jim, who dealt In wool at their home in lowa. Jim went to a revival meet. fog (unthinkingly, the congressman says) and “got religion.” conversion and urged Ed to come into the fold. The latter pondered gravely for a time and then sald: “Ain't any doubt but what religion's a good thing, and I'm glad you've got it, Jim, but 1 guess you better let me alone just pow.” be continued reflectively. “You see, Jim, one of us Las got to weigh the wool.” Chase That Frown, Learn to laug's. A good langh Is bet. ter than medicine, Learn how to tell a story. A well told story Is as welcome as a sunbeam In a sickroom. Learn to keep your own troubles to yourself. The world 1s too busy to eare for your {lis and sorrows, Learn to stop eroaking. If you ean not see any good in the world, keep the bad to yourself. Learn to hide your fos and aches under plensant smiles one cares 16 hear whether you have earnche, headache or rheumatism, i day {| your speed all the time and she | us | | given end | you ! takes stond { but In “lI was painting a barber pole | | barbarie, are established by precedent In his first | burst of enthusiasm he told his brother of how much better he felt since his | NERVOUS ERGY, Don't Overdraw Your Account In the Bank of Nature, | You have a deposit of nervous energy placed to your account Iu the bank of your body. It may be large, in which happy you are a millionaire In strength and accomplishing power, or It may be so microscopic as to need careful husbhanding and little expend! ture to keep it from dwindling out al together But pers, cCuse many and millionaires become pau “dime savings” swell into millions, It depends upon the way the capital Is managed. You may think you have so much that there Is no need to be economical. You get up in the morning and feel the blood bounding through your veins like moun sone | tain cataracts, and you think you can turn the mil! wheels of the world, You work day and night or you play and night, which is sometimes more exhausting, and go at the limit of You are over drawing bank account of energy, and that needlessly, for you probably have enough to last a long and useful Your | Ufetime, It pays to sit down and sharp en your tools, and it adds cent per cent | to your body bank deposit Another with not half brains or bustle will get ahead of you In the end, for Ie act, every thought, go » mark. He wastes Everything he does your makes every tralght to the no effort means something rd some You spend a great deal of on quarry He keeps y alm and wings hi bird You get wi teruples and It helps town ammumon your becn use are overanxious cool nkles bhaecome tality prime CARLO LEGEND. A MONTE The Story the Crouplers Tell of the Wandering Jew and ted # ¥ he } & bitterly sa nan SOR m about hin fr the room to disap hurries Pi one k where He is the Wandering Jew, and until be can bet at Monte Carlo he must continue his wanderings, Get on the “blind side” of any of the old cro plers of Monte Carlo, and they will tell you this legend. Have they seen him? Of course they have and are fully per suaded that the aged and mysterious stranger is none other than the man condemned to perpetual earthly wan- derings nearly 2.000 years ago HOW & lose a The Wom And this feat fSWeors of hw am wear It only in the town of Langum In that little Welsh man neither is nor pretends to be in other villages he sometimes pretends to be, this nook the Pembrokeshire coast he is simply An nie Williams" man or Mary Jones man and recognizes himself as such In Langum woman is the dominating force in the market; she is the house hold financier, the family accountant and in fact fills all the positions which in any other community, civilized or Women of Langam, n supreme~without the ballot ther London An in the cap of woman is no which Jems br beet ae she Is allowed to village sev uestered on given to man. Whether he of Langum has resigned or been divested of all re spousibilities of life Is no part of this story There Is another Important fact In Langum life-oysters, The place is fa mous for them. But Langum oysters are in no sense rivals of Langum wo mankind: their proverbial dumbness precludes that Newport's Architecture, The cottages of Newport afford a strange commentary upon the oon trasting tastes of the American nn tion. Their heterogeneity were impos sible in & race of settled culture, in a race of common blood, In a8 country of Hmited extent. But the United States Is a nation of nations, Its people are pot Americans, bat Englishmen and Scotemen, Frenchmen and Germans, talons and Spaniards of the third or fourth or tenth genemtion, says the Rmart Bet. Their taste In archilton ture Is a taste that was horn on tae sunny Mediterranean shore, in Normandy orchards, In elie in and Italy, in baronial Seatiand amd England. [It = revels fhe ol taux, the niles the «0 thie gins of New fe beck, Florovee nud Fale oo ¥ side by side ou the won o separated only by a geile 0m Vom “ANtWe cons . the | RAFTS OF GNAT EGGS. | Their Floating IHustrates a Curious Property of Water, Many simple experiments show that the surface of water possesses a prop- erty which enuses it to resist the pas sage of bodies either from above or be low. This is true not only of sonpy wa- ter, but of the cleanest and purest wa- fer as well. A sheet of fine gauze tends to float, because, its weight being wide. ly distributed, each of the numerous | separate wires is resisted by the sur. | face film that the water readily pass through the meshes RO cannot Insects und plants utilize this fact in | : voter | Leave Bellefonte 4 44 pm, arrive at Tyrone aie ] many interesting ways. plants whose leaves flout on the water Rome the upper surfaces of the This consists of a great number of mi nute hairs the tops of the leaves. Water cannot penetrate these hairs leaves are forced down beneath the surface covering Among even when the The little rafts of eggs that gnats set | afloat on the water are kept from sink ing and from being upset through this same principle, The tiny eggs ha their glued there | of each « spaces | light readily pass and again it will right upper surf points all npward, and they are ] that, wi ind the pols the wid if the that together open space all 3 Hoist With His Own Petard, A Philadelphia ergyman u ry of a yonuy | | i 4 girl to ci tatiou d n he replied £0 10 4 strang Greenery For the Table, TORY. the O14 needle Sree, An Incident That Startled Lady of Some year CLOrs Thre of the ott a theaf in the great y& at let nuffin Was the explain orl to you, un down, and say mone twelfl 2 nite, lie only thor 2 to nobod) he guarded the next night In of a disposition to the jetter as » boax Ly police and--nothing happened The next phase of the mystery was astonishing than ever A heavy pers and taken from the strongroom arrived at the bank, with a letter complaining that the directors had set the police upon writer, and that be had therefore pot appeared as he promised, but to prove that he was neither a thief por a fool he sent a chest of papers be had taken from the bank. Let a few gen tdemen be alone in the room, and he would join them at midnight, sald the writer, and to cut short a long and strongroom spite regard more chest of | securities strange chapter of bank history, a man | into the | strongroom of the bank at midnight | stone | directors to put out the | with a dark lantern burst after calling from behind the walls for 1! lights. He was one of a strange class of men who gained a living by search ing the sewers at night, and through | an opening from a sewer he had found his way Into the richest room In the } world —8t. James Gazette The Strain on Parents, “What her slow perusal of the newspaper and keeping ber place on the page with a | dusky forefinger, Mammy Jones began ta rock faster “You know w'ant hair is, 1 pose, don’ you? she inquired. “Oh, yas'm.” responded Rally prompt “Well, den, does you know w'at a me In? asked her mother rocking stil) faster, “Ne'm” admitted Rally with great reluctance “Well, chile, You ean’t take de place ob gq rated animals fo’ on”. i ly, allowing 1 on its wo «1 up de mo! # an ky he tn t wilen t Ran nf ret me to ry ob Tus. Lark | Leave Belle | Leave Bellefonte 106 Is mohair, mammy? asked | Sally Peterson Jones, looking up from | BAILROAD SCHEDULE. PErasyLYANLL RAILROAD AND 4 BRANCHES, In effect on and after Nov, 24, 1901, f VIA. TYRONE WESTWARD leave Bellefonte # 52am, arrive at Tyrone i 05 am, at Altoona, 1.00 pm: at Pittsburg y 0 m Leave Bellefonte 1 05p m; arrive at Tyron 22pm; at Altoona 3 10 p m : at Pittsbur 606 pm, ieave Hefonte 4 44 pm: arrive at Tyrone 600; at Altoona at 6 50; at Pittsburg at JO & VIA TYRONE-~BANTWAKD Leave Bellefonte 9 63 am, arrive at Tyrone 11 06:at Harrisburg 2 ¢0 pm; st Philadel phia 5 47 3 m onte 1056 pm, 2pm: at Harrisburg 6 45 pm; at delphia 103 pm, arrive at Tyrone bila 600;at Harrisburg at 945 vp m. VIA LOCK HAVEN —BASTWARD. | Leave Bellefonte, 9.22 a. m. rive st Loe have a very simple contrivance to ke ep | Pas : : leaves dry. | Haven. 10.30, leave Williamsport, 12.46 p.m arrive al Harrisburg, 2.15 p. m., at Philadel phia at 6.2%. m. m, arrive at Lock Haven 210 p mat Williamsport 2 48pm. ; Harrisburg, 500 pm; Philadelphia 7 2 pm ; and Buffalo 740 pm Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha ven, 9.15 p.m. lsave Willlamsport, 1.35 &. m., arrive Harrisburg, 4.15 &.m., arrive at Philadelphia at? 2 a. m. ViA LEWISBURG Leave Bellefonte at 6.40 a.m, arrive at Lewis burg at 9.06 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 &. m., Philadelphia. 2.17 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 2.16 p. m., arrive at Lewis. burg, 442, at Harrisburg, 6.5 p. m., Phila- deiphlaat UW 2p. m BALD EAGLE VALLEY. WESTWARD, EASTWARD. - ~XH AVA < - Py XE - [A —— IN BE et St at Bh gs et et me RO BS BE NO RS RE RI NR | Hannah Port Matilda Martha Julian Unionville Bnew Shoe Int 25S wie wo a Ll DL Ll lh a he Ee Eh ho he ee de fe 4 Milesburg Curtin Mt Eagle v3 Howard 15 Eagleville ¢ i2 Bosch Creek - pet BEE » . A ET El pa ISS Mill Hall LR Lock Haven ns every day +74 " 43 w “ " “- LEWISBURG & TYRONE KAILROAD In effect Nov. 3. 140 WESTw AR EASTWARD 14 AN | = ~~ x i» - -. E2EENS » — - CRLEBRERS PIN SNOW SHOR BRANCH. on effect on and after mand 5.45 p.m. m vn. m 5 " 53 “ ticket ageaamt Ww D i R. Woon Fass At (yon Tus CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA Time Table effective Nov. 24. 190 READ DOWN No 1INo0.3 No EEAD TPF STATIONS No.2 Ne - 7} © -i Am. pm f LEPOXTR | 9 835 5 if 6&6 Nigh § 1 Lion yw Heola Park 7 Dunk les {ublersburg Saydertown Nittany Huston Lamar Clintondale Krider's Sid'g Mackeyville Jedar Springs Salons Mi | Ar Ly Ar Hu p.m L 5 uns 88 haat EEE ~~~ raha bh a ara PLUUNERSL ARTES 8 0 Jersey shore....... Te | ] 8 IAT. Lye! # 1H iLve Wmnsport } Io ont {(Phila. & Reading ry) PHILAD. ....] ~NEW YORK....| (Via Phila.) P-m.a mA 8 8 po Lye lp mam, t Weeks Days, can NEW YORK . Lv. 4A ® (Via Tamaqua) * Dally. + Week Days i Sam Phlladelphis &) bound train from Wil and west bound from db ELLEFONTR CENTRAL RAILROAD. To take affect Apr. 5 189, | « : £1 ss” ne® 2l- ph m— Ay r. Bellefonte. ~Lolevilie.. Morris — =» - a SRBIF2n L303 § 3-4 bidet] - a a) : Sune! asoase™ » -EE8gR a sNSEags SEs ¥ Ee aa lh | tie] —— ooh Bo TE28 i 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers