THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. Thursday, January 9th, nn, Points for Mothers | enormous white hall, Timely Hints on Care of Baby. What mother does not long to give her baby all the advantages possible for normal development? Yet are many, having had no special train ug for motherhood, who negleet meth- ods best adapted for a child's welfare, Take the question of pure air for bables. Many a mother thoughtlessly allows her baby to stay in a heated room in which there are several cupants. With so many people breath ing this same atmosphere it soon has its oxygen exhausted, and it is not an uncommon thing to see the baby yawn and become fretful. Those who ua- derstand this cause either fmmediate- ly change the air in the same rood | or take the little one into another room that has been specially aired, that he | For this | may regain hls composure. same reason it is imperative for grown ups to avold keeping the baby in rooras where household duties are being per- formed, as the odors from cooking, the dust from sweeping and the steam from washing all rob the alr of the freshness so beneficial to the health of an infant. Busy mothers especially should see the training a baby to stay and that place should be and well ventilated Frequent this room can be made tasks, to change positions and to look after his comfort Even in cold of fifteen given to bables menced i the old, and an excell warm is to put advantage of in one place, made clean trips to between weather indoor airings minute periods They sho little one wher is a month beneant some warm welght covering and place him face forward toward widely oper : be taken room are the constan tiny lungs the portant as his [ood resh, pure § required to renew y his bloo and the beneficial effects produced | it are good tem eeks Improved Just baby is fully as im and , red ch and an appet when ft 14 a baby out of doors in winter is a question often asked by the 14 mother. It is wiser to wait until he is three months old and thea only on pleasant days. He should be tucked snugly into his carriage and kept In the sunshine, out of the wind. with the precaution always of shading his eyes from ight. Days when it 1s very cold or when the winds are heavy and a in an alr sleeping room tuted. When bables are out of doors they should be constantly watched to pee that they are not suffering from cold. as it is important thet a baby's bodily heat shonid be maistained. It is well for mothers to remember that many of the diseases of infynt life are directly attributable to overbeated and vitiated air, so that riding in electric or steam cars in winter or the carry ing of children Into departmgent stores is done with attendant risks Six Don'ts For Mothers. Haven't you seen mothers, not only the young, inexperienced mothers, but women of mature years who are old enough to know better, constantly do ing things to their children that make you want to shake them and If pos gible bring them to a sense of realiza tion of the error of their ways? Mothers will persist in allowing themselves to grow old in feeling. Of course they cannot stay the passage of years, but they can keep young In thought by making themselves a com panion to their children, joining in their play as well as the more serious phases of their lives Mothers must take themselves rust mer The grow ing girl and boy who ean have mother help them out of a tighe place in thei Jessons or can go to her for a clear an swer to a question rare get that disagreeable know It all air 80 common to young America Never try to force your confidence. If you have tried the chum of your child from the the confidence will be given unsolicit 58 Confidences that are asked or de fanded are al and with a sense they refused dren never confide sympathetic mother. The ehild realizes he will be crit scolded for the little mistakes he make he will hide everything possible fro the mother, but If he Is sure of he ready sympathy the confidence will given unasked Avoid allowing an eid to see th you are disappoloted In him. There po surer road to self cvmsclonsness nl the don't care attitude than If the bos and girl feel that mother thinks them a fallure, On the other hand, don’t think you ehildren are prodigies. Children ally know they are not the hum wonders their fond mothers believe them to be, and when they are con stantly exploited they are bound to In conscious of embarrassment nnd heln ander a strain show up to bad advan tage. And If the child agrees with the maternal opinion he becomes a bore and disgustingly conceited. is safe to wegin takin Youn the sun! should be avoided, open sn hst! care not to © itally perplexing children to ‘ grudgin whe ways of resentment altogether Chi willingly In an wm ven are not moment » \ laa Haw there | inexplicable. i 4%. But 1 00 | | valuable time IF a list of addresses Im The Romance of Electricity, We stood on a high platform sur rounded by handles, switches, signals | —apparatus enough to put all New | York into darkness or to annihilate it | in an instant by the unloosing of ter- | rible cohorts of volts—and faced an | sparsely peopled ! by a few colossal machines that seem. | ed to be revolving and oscillating | about their business with the fatalism | | of conquered and resigned leviathans We were alone in it save that now | | and then in the far distant spaces a! disappear be- |} and glinting columns of hall enchanted and 1 understood nothing of | understood that half the | electricity of New York was generated by its engines of a hundred | and fifty thousand horsepower and | that if it were lifted the elevators of | New York would be immediately para- | lyzed and the 20,000,000 lights expire | beneath the eyes of a startled popula. | tion. 1 could have gazed upon it to this day and brooded to this day upon | the human imaginations that had per- fected it.—Arnold Bennett in “Your United States.” figure might fit tween the huge metal, It was a Spouting Whales. The prevailing impression that] whales spout water through their blow holes is declared to be incorrect. Ac cording to Professor Willy Kukenthal of Breslau, what has been taken for fountains of water by sailors and oth ers is really the breath of the whale charged with moisture, like the visible breath of a man on a cold morning Dr. Kukenthal the breath of the whale from the lungs under powerful pressure and the expansion of it as it hes the air makes the vapor visible. A whale's blowholes directly with the lungs, but the mouth with the nasal suggests that is sent out rend connect has no connection that it is impossible f en in at the mouth blowholes Dr out the fact th blow and large at young to blow on h A Comet Sears, of the from had so colli i" possible that it paper, with o my ol crowds hearing Lalande destruction of the that the predicted the impendir id such par 1 to order earth ic ensued police b the publication of paper to reas sure the public mind But even then it was popularly believed that the pa per had been deliberately toned down and comet | ter of a century the anics continued for a quar The Appian Way. The famous Appian way, called Re gina Viar “the queen of roads.” Is at once the oldest and n lebrated of all the highways laid down by the Romans. It linked the capital of the Caesars with all the Imp ters of southern Italy and structed or partly constructed the Censor Applus Claudius Cas 13 B. C. In view of the natural stacles presented by the route the cost must have been enor foundatie had strata ost ce yrtant cen was oon ander 1s in ob of the enterprise mous In a which all loose were laid mented, and the pavement of blocks of basaltic with precision did not show deep rom soll been cleared strongly ce these placed large hexagonal lava. fitted together that the Jolnings several above was such The Limerick Variety, ars ago M. Paul London correspondent of the des Debats, went to Limerick on the | occasion of a great Nationalist ing. On arriving at the hotel he asked | for a room in the front of the house A servant took him to a dark room looking on tn an court yard, M. Vill to the window and satisfied himself that there was » | mistake “This is not the sald he “Oh, sir,” the back of the Villars Journal Some Jye¢ meet stoall inner ars went front of the house.’ the servant said; “it front.’ yes, Then There Was a Row, “Now, sir” commanded, “look | me in the face deny, If you dare that you married me for money!” He raised until firected to countenance tered “Well, | don't you, she and they and his were fal eyes her think | dear?” the cash, Mall enrned London | college | unsightly | Woman's World Mrs. Grover Cleveland to Marry Again, being | | GROVER CLEVELAND PRESTON MRS, PROFESSOR The « ail ie pom Cleveland, land, twenty s¢ United States by Joh Princeton Mrs. ( nt of Mr old, but geven ington bride,’ be m the y¢ int was | Eageinent Princeton repudiate terly false” when cial announcement of the mother Professor Thomas Jes Pre and’s flance, is fifty and is a graduate of Pri young man his university interru «1 by ilins and completing his education and made ther of the Clevels } business, in which he and notable success, esta self at the head of a very manufacturing company After acquiring a substantial fortune and feeling that | could not compensate ed college career he ness connections and, forty years of age, study two years at the Borbonne Returning to America, he ! | Princeton and took his degree of doctor | of philosophy. He then called t his present professorship at Wells « lege, Aurora, N. Y. Although It was: a student at Princeton that Mrs. Cle land first met Professor Preston college where he DOW Serves As a fessor is her college. It was at Well that Frances Folsom was a stu dent when the rumors began to spread that she Id one day be the bride of Grover Cleveland } in continued busines for his aba nds T closed his busi although almost went abroad Paris enters WAS wou Handy Telephone Tables. The new telephone tables with wood en stools will appeal to many house | keepers, as often it is difficult to find a table the correct height for the tele phone to rest upon These tables, which come In mahogany, onk and mission, are and good looking and would not at all mar the appearance of any room, pro vided, of course, that one was selected in the wood rest of the furniture. They are square or three cornered In design and have swinging wooden with a round stand cov ered with green baize on which to rest | the telephone Under the table Is a shelf to hold the necessary but very | telephone directory, the wooden stool can be slid under the | table when not In use, The three cor nered shaped table will be found very | new small same ns the Arms, while | | convenlent for fitting into a corner of | Very Formal, “Are you on very friendly terms with | your neighbor in the apartments?” “Well, no Rhe'n ways sends her curd 10 horrow flour, and If she four and sugar she sends two cards.” Washington Herald rather formal-al when she wishes wants both He Would, Indeed. A man would save a great deal of portant in his business were as easy to remember ns a bunch of funny stories «Washington Star Cynieal, Mise Yellowlenf It's better to have loved and lost than never to have lov od at all, Mr Knox Sure That's a cane where vou win when you lose, ~ CHongo Newn Fidelity panrehased with money, mon. | the necessary tablet and pencil, tablet at hand, py ean destroy. Beneca any room or hall On the top of the table ean be plac od | whit b| every telephone table should be sup | plied with, as it Is often difficult remember a number given over wire If there is not such a card or | to | the | Your Fortune In Teacup. The following rime, which is the translation of an old Chinese tea song. will prove useful In reading teacup fortunes: One leaf alone, alone you'll be; Two together, the priest you'll see; Three In groups, your wish you'll gain; Four, a letter from a loving swain; Five, good news the letter will bring: Bix In a row, a song you'll sing; Boven together, great fortune walls For you, So say the teacup fates Tea leaves short and tea leaves tall Bring you company great and small: Tea leaves many and dotted fine Are of bad luck the surest sign; Ag and clean the rim, oup of joy o'erflows the brim, | have The Apparently Drowned. The frequent occurrence of drowning accidents serves to emphasize the need of a thorough understanding of the principles underlying resuscitation and particularly the fact that success ulti mately depends on preventing perma- nent Injury from lack of blood to the brain. “Efforts at resuscitation should | be used for at least two hours after apparent death,” says Dr. F. W. Hitch | Ings of Cleveland in the Journal of the | American Medical Association The heart may continue to beat for ns long | a time as five minutes after cessation) of respiration, althongh it usually stops | in two or three minutes Add to a | possible flve minutes the seven min-| utes during which the brain may be) completely resuscitated after total ces gation of the heart beat, a possible | maximum of twelve minutes of rela | tive death may be undergone with re covery." | Respected His Scruples. In the mathematics class one day al Willlams college Professor 8 w hi was rarely made the subject of col Jests, annoyed some man “squeaking” rubber | bladder The fromm near a certain after and wins excessively a small seemed to con Jack Hollis, and his neighbors | answer Pro noise querying each of receiving a negative fessor 8, sald ster: “Hollis, do that unbearable Hol had been the gullty son all nlong, assumed ¢ bravery but 1 pre Profe you know who is making noise 7 or why iL sho mm Express AsOn W Lond particular re ved His Fault ui a ev | All A Model of Politeness. “Mme X . as | te “As an echo! WI that? oy We Cand Hanual Cough, Cold SoreThroat . Sloan’ 8 Linime nt gives quick relief for cough, cold, hoarseness, sore th roat, croup, asthma, a fever and bronchitis, HERE'S PROOF, Me Arnerr W. Puionof Fredonia, Kan, writes: “We use Sloan's Link ment in the family and find It an ex- cellent relief for eolds and hay fever attacks, It stops ox ighiug aud snoes ing aumost lustantly. LOANS LINIMENT RELIEVED SORE THROAT. Mus, L. Breewen, of Modello, Fla, writes: * I bought one bottle of your Liniment and (tdid moall the good In the world, My throat was very sore, and it cured we of my trouble.” GOOD FOR COLD AND CROUP. Mur, W. IT, STraxon, 3721 Elmwood Avenue, Chioago, 111, writes: “A lit tle boy next door had eroup, 1 gave the mother Sloan's Liniment to try. She gave him threa drops on sugar before going to bed, and he got up without the eroup in the morning.” Price, 250.,500., $1.00 Sloan's with eet collects the Invisible e Fly germs of them over — spreads — our food and poisons us with typhoid. The Mosquitos is vu injects into ur veins MALARIA. E ARE all exposed to such dangers—our only armor is good red blood! 1.et your stomach be of good digestion, your liver active and your lungs full of good pure air and you don’t surrender to any of the discase~ honring germs, The best known tonic and alterative, that corrects a torpid liver, and helps digestion so that good blood is manufactured and the system nourished, is pions (olden edical P)iscovery This famous medicine has been sold by medicine dealers in its liquid form for over fort y yoars iving great satisfaction. If you prefer you can mow obtain Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery tablets of your druggist at $1.00, also in 5c size or by mail—send 60 one-cent stamps, R.V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N.Y, for trial box, sf are fully and ly answered in the People’s Medical Ad. Questions of Life 5.) 5 Bare ir All the powiedse a yous wife or daughter should ave is contained in this big Home Doctor Be containing pages with engravings bound in cloth, sent free to anyone sending 21 one cent stamps to prepay cost of wrapping and postage, SMOKELESS = THIS Pes RFECTIO Will Heat Your Spare EL Room It means a lot to your guests to find a cosy, well-warm- ed room awaiting them. A Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater is the very thing to drive away chill and damp in a hurry. No smoke or smell with a Perfection. Just clean, glowing warmth at a minute's notice. A Perfection Heater gives nine hours’ com- fort on a single gallon of oil. Handsome, yet inexpensive, Dealers everywhere, or write for descriptive circular. Get a Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater now, and be comfortable all the rest of the winter THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY A BUSINESS HELP FOR BUSINESS MEN The Bellefonte Trust Comp'y, Bellefonte, Pa. The New Year that finds you without some money in bank will not be for you the happy and prosperous year we wished you last week. Money does not make one happy, but the need of it makes one miserable. Let us start you in the good habit of saving. The First National Bank, BELLEFONTE, PA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers