336.75 & )00.00 300.00 [71.62 60.14 168.414 f§ )00.00 100.00 200.02 )00.00 368.39 168.41 Jashier ondition-— to Renew | greatly in- remaining the raising sal. Every at is worth to sell it. knowledge 1at fact lies present un- 1 lot. So knows less the timber s farm, he true value. osts, poles, , ete.), are e locality? est adapted should the at unit of board foot, 501d? What 1 the basis purchaser? > questions be able to tion before is wood lot may be at ling singly more expe- 1 may have * the local 18 wood lot heir timber 'y as in the etables, or e only way 3 full value. success in in the reec- rees are a 1en this is d and the eir produec- ther crops, tly be ex- the most arm. | for dairy sirable for is they are d stimulate rain is re- > fed. The lore grain ly, adding ind for ten ce. money to costs quite a rundown rtant parts rg, is the orner and I posts de- fence, and d not be nly. ERSTE a 4 TER ER TST THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL “i PROFESSIONAL CARDS A HOLBERT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW SOMERSET, PENNA. Office in Cook & Beerits Blk, up stairs VIRGIL R. SAYLOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW SOMERSET, PENNA. &! G. GROFF JUSTICE OF THE PEACE CONFLUENCE, PA. Deeds, Mortgages, Agreements and all Legal Papers. promptly executed. Sodieedredoaloaloafoodrefredodtoddodoied FOR A FIRST-CLASS’ Galvanized or Slate Roof, PUT ON COMPLETE AND REASONABLE WRITE TO J. S. WENGERD as we can furnish you anything you want in the roofing line, outside of wood shingles, at the very lowest prices. o 0.0 00 0 0 WPVIPOVY a aA fi SO BB BS OB OS OO POV PPL PPVVTIYY R. D. No. 2 MEYERSDALE, - PA.3 SOPBP IPP I IS OBPS HO emember That every added’ sub- ~ seriber helps-to make this paper better for everybody PROPER USE OF WASTE FATS Saved From Any Kind of Meat They Are Valued by the Economical Housewife. Have you ever noticed how enticing sweet potatoes are when served with Maryland pork and beans? Somehow the pork greases make them seem more like a dessert than a plain vege- table. Neither cream, lard, butter, nor beef can take the place of pork fat for sweet potatoes. Pork fat also gives a tang to beets, parsnips and carrots which cannot be duplicated in any other way. The waste fat from beef makes a better cake, a better pie crust and better candies than the highest priced butter. Cookies, puddings and cakes have a savoriness so enticing when made of beef drippings that not even the most delinquent appetite can say them nay. The fats, oils and greases from lamb or veal all lend themselves to the economical housewife as a great improvement over costly butters and cheap lards for: frying, broiling and preparing food in all sorts of other ways. One part of these fats will give a happier flavor to fish, beans, carrots and peas than ten times as much butter. Indeed, a spoonful of it will do the work of a whole pound of butter. Then there are the ‘“grube,” so called by the Jewish cooks who re- | move the fat and grease from geese and fry it with the goose flesh into crisp, brittle flat cakes. The grease from the geese and other fowl is wide- ly used in Jewish homes. Some stu- dents think its use has much to do with the relative absence of wasting distempers, among the people of this ancient nation. IDEAS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER Seven Little Things of Moment With Which All of Them May Not Be Acquainted. When it is necessary to boil a cracked egg add a little vinegar to the water. This will prevent the white from boiling out. If you have difficulty in cleaning the candle grease from metal candle- sticks try setting the candlesticks in a hot oven for a few minutes. This will melt the grease. Of course, care must be taken not to leave them in too long or the candlesticks will melt as well as the grease. If you wet a spoon before using 4t ‘to serve Jelly you will find the jelly will not stick to it and the serving is more easily accomplished. To clean-fly specks from varnished wood, wipe with a soft cloth dipped in ‘equal parts of skim milk and water. To pick up little pieces of broken glass, wet a woolen cloth; lay it on ‘the floor where the fragments are and pat it. The little particles will ad- here to the damp cloth. The skin of new potatoes is more easily removed by rubbing with a stiff little brush than by scraping with a knife. If curtain rods or poles are rubbed with hard soap before being put up, the curtains will slip on them easily. Homemade Wall Paper Cleaner. The following mixture is more easily applied, and does the work more effec: tively than any of the baked prepara- tions that are sold at a good price for a small quantity—one generally paying the sum for the label and tin, to box it up for sale. Take one part sal am- moniac, four parts rye flour, and water enough to form a dough, then use on the soiled parts as if the mixture was a sponge. As the dirt is transferred from the wall to the cleaner, turn the soil in, and work out a clean part of dre mixture. A little practice will soon show how easily this is accomplished, without waste to the mixture. Never g@ontinue rubbing the soiled surface of the cleaner into the wall. THE CHARM | Compound, a most valuable tonic and -I-are now children be- { OF MOTHERHOOD Enhanced By Perfect Physi- cal Health. The experience of Motherhood is a try- ing one to most women and marks dis- tinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one" woman ip a hundred is prepared or un- | derstands how to properly care for her- self. Of course nearly every woman nowadays has medical treatment at such times, but many approach the experi- ence with an organism unfitted for the trial of strength, and when it is over her system has received a shock from whieh it is hard to recover. Following right upon this comes the nervous strain of caring for the child, and a distinct change in the mother results. There is nothing more charming than a happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under the right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from an unprepared condition, and with am- ple time in which to prepare, women will persist in going blindly t_