Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 02, 1906, Image 3

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    THE MOOSE HUNTER.
How He Entices the Bull With a
Bireh Bark Trumpet.
The moose calling hunter is one who
WHERE HUXLEY FAILED.
One “Art” In Which He Was Sure
passed by a Porter.
Rather a good story is told about
Professor Huxley when he was dellv-
ering a lecture to the Literary and
Philosophical Newcastle-on-
Tyne.
graphical Distribution of Fossil Re-
mains of Animals;” consequently nu-
merous diagrams were required. Old
Alexander, the porter of the institution
and quite a distinguished character
amoung the members of the society,
was assisting the professor to hang
the diagrams. The screen on which
the diagrams were hung was not very
large, and Huxley, do as he would,
could not prevent the blank corner of
one diagram overlapping the illustra-
society,
tion of another one on which the pro- |
fessor placed great importance,
‘What was to be done?
or asked Alexander to bring a pair of
scissors, Lord Armstrong (then Sir
William), Dr. Watson and several oth-
ers were present at the time. The
scissors were brought, but as the joint
was somewhat loose the professor was
not able to cut the paper and threw the
scissors down in disgust, adding that
they were useless.
“Yera guid shears, professor,” said
Alexander.
“I tell you they won't cut,” said Hux-
ley.
“Try again,” said Alexander.
will cut.”
The professor tried again and, not
succeeding, sald somewhat angrily,
“Bring me another pair of scissors.”
Sir William Armstrong then stepped
forward and ordered Alexander to go
and buy a new pair.
“Vera guid shears, Sir William,” per-
sisted Alexander, and, picking up the
scissors from the table and placing his
thumb and forefinger into the handles,
he stepped forward and asked Huxley
how he wanted the paper cut.
“They
“I tell you they won't cut,” said the |
professor.
“Bring me a new pair instantly,” said |
Sir William.
“A tell'ee ther'r vera guid shears,
only the professor canna cut wi’ them,”
replied Alexander,
“Well, then, cut it there” sald Hux-
ley somewhat tartly, at the same time
indicating the place with his forefinger.
Alexander took hold of the paper and,
inserting the scissors, pressed the
blades together and cut off the required
portion as neatly as if he had used a
straightedge; then, turning to the pro-
fessor, with a rather significant leer
and twinkle of the eye, said, “Seeance
an’ airt dinna gang thegither, pro-
fessor.”
The professor and all present col-
lapsed, Huxley put his hand into his
pocket and, taking out a sovereign, gave
it to Alexander, adding at the same
time, “You have dene me.” The same
evening Alexander related the story
with great gusto to a friend. When
asked how he dared to make so free
with such a distinguished man, he re-
plied with great emphasis, “Lord, mon,
they bits o' professor bodies ken neath-
ing at a’ except their buiks.”—West-
minster Gazette.
THE GOLDFINCH.
Changes In Plumage That Are Pase
zling to the Novice.
Most every one in America is ac-
quainted with the goldfinch, but many
people know the bird by the name of |
lettuce bird, on account of its bright
yellow color. Goldfinch is a very appro-
priate name, as the bright yellow of
the male, when in breeding plumage, is
like burnished gold. The female gold-
finch is more modestly dressed than
her mate. The changes in plumage of
the male are very interesting and to
the novice somewhat puzzling. Until
student becomes acquainted with
bird he may wonder why he sees
males during the winter, The truth
at this season the flocks of supposed
emale goldfinches are really of both
sexes, the male bird having assumed
the previous fall, usually by the end
October, a plumage closely resem-
that of the
SFEEFE
aE
ruary, when one can notice a gradual
change taking place in some of the
birds. This renewal of feathers is ac-
The profess- |
The subject was “The Geo- | ings.
your stand. I once called from a hill at
sunset and learned later that my
friends four miles away heard me dis-
tinetly, and therefore a moose with his
keen hearing might have heard it five
| or six miles off.
The experienced hunter begins very
low, as there is always a possibility of
! a bull lurking in some near thicket, and
| calls not more than once in ten min-
utes, some think every twenty minutes
! often enough. It is probably too fast
| once the response has come. The bull's
answer is a deep, long grunt, varied by
the snapping of branches as he plunges
forward through the woods, but stop-
ping at times to thrash some bush in
his course,
It is indeed one of the most impress-
ive sights in the animal world when at
length in the last dim afterglow the
much heralded monster heaves his bulk
| into view, overtopping the shrubbery
| like an elephant, locming huge and
black against the last streak of red
light. No matter how much we may be
expecting it, the coming is always a
| thrilling surprise. We knew how big
| he was, yet how startlingly huge he
' looks, and those heavy antlers, a heavy
burden for a man, he switches about
| as an Indian does the eagle feathers in
| his hair.—Ernest Thompson Seton in
| Seribner's.
Jackson and Polk.
| One of the last carthly things that
| Jackson did was to read a note from
| Polk asking his advice about the ap- |
pointment of certain federal officers in
the south. Polk had been in office only
a few weeks at the time, and he want-
ed to get the indorsement of Jackson |
for his administration. In order to
| win Jackson's favor Polk was called
| “Young Hickory” by his admiring
| friends, but “Old Hickory's” favorite
| for the nomination in 1844 was Van
| Buren and not Polk. Jackson was a |
| Texas annexationist, as was Polk,
| while Van Buren's opposition to an- |
| nexation was what caused his defeat
| for the candidacy. Yet personally he
| preferred Van Buren. Polk, after his
inauguration, made war on Francis
| P. Blair, who edited Jackson's and Van
! Buren's old organ at Washington, the
{ Capital, and thus displeased Jackson,
| though the latter knew that Blair had
| been lukewarm toward Polk In the
| canvass. Blair was forced to get out,
| and the Capital was changed into the
| Daily Union, with Ritchie of Richmond
! as its editor. From the hour of his re-
| tirement until his death, through Van
| Buren's administration and in the open-
| ing days of Polk's, Jackson remained
| an influential figure in the Democratic
| politics of the time—St. Louis Globe-
' Democrat.
Early English Lotteries,
Probably the tirst public lottery ever
| eid took place in England in 1567,
when 40,000 chsnces were sold at 10
| shillings each, the prizes cousisting
i chiefly of plate and the profits going for
| the repair of certain harbors. The
drawiug took place at the west door of
St. Paul's cathedral. In 1612 another
lottery took place at St. Paul's. This
was for the benefit of the Virginia com-
pany. The highest prize was £1,000,
and £20,000 profit was gained. Again,
in 1630, a lottery was promoted In or-
der to bring water into London, and
after the civil war another lottery help-
ed to replenish an exhausted national
exchequer. Private lotteries soon be-
came very common, and, being general
ly conducted on fraudulent principles,
an act of parliament was passed early
in the reign of Queen Anne suppressing
them “as public nuisances.” In 1694 a
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A CREATIVE VOCATION.
it Is a Constant Tonic as Well as a
Perpetual Delight.
If you want to be contented and
happy, if you want to experience a
perpetual satisfaction as you go along,
choose a creative vocation. A routine
life where there is nothing new, noth-
ing special to be learned, is discourag-
paralyzing to ambition, but cre-
ing that you have created, that you
have brought something new into the
added to the real wealth of the world;
that you have not been merely working
over what somebody else started or
created, but that you have brought
something out of the mysterious realm
of mind, made it tangible and effective
and started a new impulse in the world.
We get closer to nature when we are
creating, whether in art, in literature,
in invention or in working at new and
progressive ideas. We can feel our
mind reach out into infinity and grasp
and bring back something fresh, new,
something never seen on this earth be-
fore. It is perpetual delight and a con-
summate satisfaction.
This is why brain workers are longer
lived than other people. Creations
keep the creator always young, since
we are perpetually in contact with the
new, the youthful, when we are cre-
ating. When we are stretching the
mind into the unknown and calling out
something new we seem to touch hands
with the Creator himself.
People who never think or do any-
thing original—mere automatons, cogs
in the wheels of the great world’s ma-
chinery, the mere routinists, do not
know the exhilaration which comes
from the consciousness of creating
something new and fresh every day.
The creator feels that he is accom-
plishing something worth while; that
he is doing something which the world
needs, which will make it a little better
place to live in, and the very newness,
the novelty, the mystery of creation,
! makes it the most fascinating thing in
| the world.—Orison Swett Marden in
| Success Magazine,
Heart Burials.
The body of Louis IX. after his
| death at Carthage in 1270, is related to
have been boiled in wine and water in
| order to preserve it for transportation,
| and it was then shipped by Charles of
Anjou (1.) to Sicily. Here the flesh and
viscera were deposited in the Benedic-
| tine Abbey of Monreale, near Paler-
| mo. The heart and the bones remain-
| ed, by desire of the soldiers, in the
camp, Later his son Philip (Le Hardi)
| having carried them and those of his
brother, Tristan, into Italy, they were
taken to Paris in 1271. On March
21 of that year the bones, reduced to
ashes, were deposited temporarily in
Notre Dame, whence they were pres-
ently borne in state to the Benedictine
Abbey of St. Denis, and at each spot
by the way where the bearers paused,
seven in number, Philip subsequently
caused a cross to be raised.
Charles of Anjou dying at Foggia.
1285, his Leart was sent to Angers,
while his body was entombed in San
Gennaro, at Naples. His viscera re-
mained in the Duomo at Foggia.
Philip III. (Le Hardi) died of pestl-
lence at Perpignan Oct. 5, 1285. His
flesh was buried at Narbonne. His
bones were transferred to St. Denis.
His heart was given by Philip IV. (Le
Bel) to the Dominicans of Paris.—Lon-
don Notes and Queries.
Not a Safe Rule.
“I believe,” said the -enthusiastic
young author, “that the first thing a
man should do when he proposes to
write a paper of any kind is to get
full of his subject.”
“1 disagree with you,” replied his
more mature friend. “In fact, I shud-
der to think of what might result if I
followed your advice.”
“What are you working on?”
“An address on intoxicating liquors
to be read before our temperance so-
ciety.”
wels,
Stomach
"The
THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT
Bears the Sigoature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
In Use For Over 30 Years,
The Centaur Company, New York City.
51-7-21Im
loser—in fees, expenses and waste of
time. As a peacemaker the lawyer has
a superior opportunity of becoming a
good man. There will always be enough
business. Never stir up a litigation. A
worse man can scarcely be found than
one who does Who
a fiend he
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a mere
whe wrote them, but an activ
tioner of wide experience who lived up
to his own teaching.—Frederick Trevor
Hill in Century.
Samuel Johnson and Women.
Of marriage in the abstract Johnson
highly approved. “Every man,” he
said, “is a worse man in
he is unfit for the married state.”
He
knowledged, however, that he had once
been on the point of asking Mrs. John-
son not to marry again. She might
well have granted his request without
any fear of being tempted to break her
promise. Johnson ridiculed the idea
of a man being unwilling to marry a
pretty woman lest he should have
cause for jealousy. “No, sir,” he said,
“I would prefer a pretty woman un-
less there are objections to her. A
pretty woman, if she has a mind to be
wicked, can find a readier way than
another, and that is all.” He had, in
fact, made a profound study of wo-
men from every point of view. And
yet Johnson never took women quite
seriously and would not hear of their
assuming an equality with men, either
in mental or bodily pursuits.
-——Take Vin-te-na and the good effect
will be immediate. You will wet strong,
yo will feel bright, fresh and active, yon
will feel new, rich blood coursing th h
your veins. Vin-te-na will act like
will put new life in vou. If not benefited
money refunded. All druggists.
Business Notice,
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
PDANGER IN DELAY,
KIDNEY DISEASES ARE TOO DANGEROUS VOR NELLEPONTY
PEOPLE T0 NEGLECT,
Th da f ki
(hat they ot A hol Detone the aor:
er them. Health is ually
DE Rt
urinary roubles, dropay,
i dines iow In
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cured people right ein
* Dr. i. D.
versal ;
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TIT
MOTE 5.IR0E wat wey
J. M. KEICHLINE,
S14-1yr. Att'y at Law,
Groceries.
SECHLER & CO.
PURE FOOD STORE.
We carry a fall line of all goods in the
line of Foods and Fine Groceries.
MANHATTAN DRIPS
A five Table Syrup in one qoart,
two quart and four quart tin pails, at
120., 250., and 450. per pail; try is.
Maple Syrup in glass hottles and tin
cans.
NEW ORLEANS MOLASSES
The finest new crop New Orleans—a
rich golden yellow and an elegant bak-
er. That is the report our customers
briog to us. Fine Sugar Syrups—no
glucose.
MARBOT WALNUTS.
These Nuts are clean and sound,
heavy in the meats and in every way
very satisfactory. We have some very
good California Walnuts but not equal
to the Marbots. Fine Almonds and
Mixed Nuts.
EVAPORATED FRUITS.
Peaches 10c., 12., 150. and 18c. per
pound. Apricots 150., 18¢. and 20.
per pound. Prunes 5o., 80., 10c. and
120. per pound. Raisins 10c. and 120.
per pound, either seeded or unseeded.
Currants 10c. and 120. per pound.
Citron, Orange and Lemon Peel.
Dates, Figs and fine Table Raisins.
All tbese goods are well worth the
prices named on them and will give
good satisfaction.
MINCE MEAT.
The foundation of our Mince Meat
is good sound lean beef, and all other
ingredients are the highest grade of
goods. It represents our best effort
and our customers say it is a success,
and at 1240. per pound is very reason-
able in price.
FOREIGN FRUITS.
We are now receiving some of the
ficest California Naval Oranges and
Florida bright and sweet fruits. This
fruit is just now reaching its very fin-
est flavor. They are exceptionally fine
and ab reasonable prices. Lovers of
Grape Fruit can be nicely suited on
the fruit we have. Lemons for some
time past have been a difficult proposi-
tion, but we now have some fine fruit.
SECHLER & CO.
Pure Food and Fine Grooeries,
19-1 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Green's Pharmacy.
PEERPER
Twelve years ago ground black pep-
per was selling here at 40c. the Ib.—
and not the best at that. We thought
we could save our customers money
by buying in large quantities, direct
from the men who imported and
ground it—packing it in pound pack-
ages ourselves—we did so, buying
Singapore Pepper, and for five years
old it to you at 15¢ the Ib.—then itad-
vanced to 20c. For the past three
years we have sold it for 22c., itis
sifted free from stems and dirt before
grinding and is just what we repre-
sent it. t
PURE SINGAPORE PEPPER
The price is still 22¢. the pound—we
invite your trade for pure spices.
A ll 0 a BH BiB D. i
GREEN'S PHARMACY (0.,
Bush House Block,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
44-26-1y R
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4 ls Ml BA Bi A Bi I Mc. Bs 0 Bir A Bi A Fi Ml. Bo
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PareNts. Paid
balsa elthand dewriplon, my
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pine,
special
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Se er hoe + or
Co. receive
Buasen ‘Orris, as F Sr., Ri, YORE
J ook! READ
Sm"
JOHN F. GRAY & SON,
{Successors to Grant Hoover.)
FIRE,
LIFE,
AxD
ACCIDENT
. INSURANCE.
This represents the largest
Fire Cinvaraaece Companies in the
——NO ASSESSMENTS. —~—
Do not fail to give us a call before insuring
Lif
TRO IES Nice W Ly ve *1¢ 1a’ position ‘to
Office in Crider's Stone Building,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
AAA VATA Ay
THE PREFERRED ACCIDENT
43-18-1y
INSURANCE CO.
THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY
Benefits :
$5,000 death by accident,
5,000 loss of both feet,
RD toy p oth hats re Tout
oss of one
3500 bo of iber hand,
ol
630 loss o iv
f
p+] week, total di 3
1 mis okn), —
week, 3
Blimit 26 weeks. -—y
PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR,
payable quarterly if desired.
Larger or smaller amounts in pro-
portion. Any person, male or Hr
fh E
teen
ph tion may insure under
FIRE INSURANCE
I invite your attention to my fire
nsuarance noy, the strongest
and Most Extensive Line of Solid
Companies re nted by any
agency in Central Pennsylvania.
H. E. FENLON,
Agent, Bellefonte, Pa.
ATA TAT AT LAT ATI
Saddlery.
10 PER CENT. REDUCTION
ON ALL GOODS SOLD—~WHY YOU
SHOULD VISIT THE
COUNTY SEAT
A ——
You can combine business with
Pleasure, and make the trip pay
or itself. You will save more
than your expenses by calling at
SCHOFIELD'S HARNESS FACTORY
and purchase bargains that we
are now offering. All leather
"are advancing in price.
We have now in a very
assortment of
HAND-MADE HARNESS—LIGHT
AND HEAVY~—
at all prices. Our stock of Blan-
kets and fine Robes is complete—
and nicer patterns than we have
Yh. Ne qu
supply you an n
horse ov Axle ars
Dressing, Harness Soap, Stook
Food, Chicken ¥ood ; the ‘best in
the market. Money refunded on
all goods if not satisfactory.
Very truly yours,
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
Spring street,
BEDLEFONTE PA.
Flour and Feed.
S———