Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 20, 1906, Image 7

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    Bemorralit adn,
I IIIS
Bellefonte, Pa., July 20, 1906
————————————————————————————————S
MAKING MAPLE SUGAR.
The Modern Way and the Crude
Methods of Early Days.
Important changes
dustry have lessened the work of the
In the early days wooden
buckets and handmade cedar spiles
were used. That made bother in the
had to be
farmer.
g
§
:
E
over a precipice. Almost anywhere,
unless he knows the signs, he may skee
in the tracks of an avalanche and be
overwhelmed. Examples of each of
these several kinds of disaster have
amateur skeers, whose name nowadays
is legion, would do well to take a
careful note.—~London Graphle.
Sufficiently Identified.
She walked Into a branch bank on
upper Broadway and pushed a check
through the paying teller’s window,
“You will have to be identified,” said
he. “I don’t know you, madam.”
“You don't, eh?’ sald the woman,
with fire in her eye. “Aren't you the
father of the Smith family that has a
flat in the Plleremin apartments?”
“Y-e-8."
“Well, I am the red headed janitress
that your wife's always complaining
about. When you left home this morn-
ing I heard you say: ‘Emily, if our
children get fighting with that old fury
in the basement don’t quarrel with her,
Wait till I get home and let me talk
with her.’ Now, if you think you can
Faubles Great Clothing House.
-.
i
Po
———————————
CONTROL OF ENERGY.
is It Possible For the Human Race
to Avert Extinction?
The only conceivable way in which
the human Intelligence can ever suc-
seed In averting the “procession of the
great year” is not by postponing the
issue, but by reversing the process.
The question is this: While energy is
being dissipated in accordance with
the natural law, can we so manipulate
things as to accumulate energy, mak-
ing the unavailable available—notwith-
standing the fact that cosmic processes
seem to be essentially irreversible?
Now there is assuredly no inherent
reason why we should not accomplish
this. It is true that hitherto all the
atomic evolution that has been ob-
served is atomic disintegration. We
may speak now, indeed, of the analysis
of the elements. But so it was, we
may remember, that the older chem-
istry began, and yet analytic chemis-
try was the precursor of synthetic
chemistry. We began by breaking up
compounds, but now we can make
ly, it 1s more than probable that we
shall ere long learn to achieve the
synthesis of the elements as well as
their analysis. No energy Is ever lost.
Even when the radium atom, itself the
child of the uranium atom, breaks
down and dissipates its energy, ending,
it is supposed, as the dull atom of lead,
the original energies are not destroyed.
Why should they not be gathered up
again and thus again become avail
able? Are matter and energy to go on
their way, ultimately destroying the
human race? For myself, I incline to
the view that victory will rest at last
with “man’s unconquerable mind."—
Attorneys-at-Law
—
C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 420 &
J e 21, Crider's Exchange Bellefonte, an]
B. SPANGLER.—A’ «rney at Law. Practice
eo inalithe courts. Consultation in Eag
and German. Office in the Eagle building
te, Pa. wm
8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellors
. , A No. 24 Temple Cour
floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of
attended to promptly. 0
Kae WOODRING
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Bellefonte, Pa.
51-1-1y Practices in all the courts,
C. HEINLE.~Atlorney at Law, Bellefonte
Pa. Office in Hale building, opposit
essional business will re-
30 1%
H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at
e Law, Office No, 11, Crider's Esdinnge
second floor. All kinds of legal business atten
to promptly. Consultation in English or Gulinen.
ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneysat
Law, le Block, Bellefoute, Pa. Sae-
cessors (0 Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all
the courts. Consultaiions in English or Yan
man, 3
. Practice in all the courts, Consultation
English and German. Office south of Court
rofessional business will receive
J M. KEICHLINE-ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.—
n
house. All
prompt attention.
19-5-1y®
8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su
State College, Centre county, Pa.,
at his residence. 55 41
R. H.W. TATE, Dentist, office inthe
Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All iS
c appliances used. Has Jon of ex-
perience. All work of superior quality and
reasonable, iy.
Meat Markets.
(FF* THE
I
C. W. Saleeby, F. R. 8S, In Harper's
Magazine, BEST MEATS.
Thackeray and Dickens,
This is the way George Henry Lewes
once characterized Thackeray and
Dickens in the way of service to a
friend: Dickens, he said, would not
get the best of an argument with"—
“Here's your money, madam,” said
the paying teller. A:.d she took it and
went.—Everybody’s Magazine,
You save nothing by buyin thin
or gristly meta” Taner feoc,
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and supply my customers with the fresh.
ACD t blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices sre
no higher than poorer meats are else-
Where Lincoln Put the Whetstone.
A soldier at whose house when a boy
full every fair day during the season, | yincoln paused in his tramps in Illi-
BEES
give you a farthing of money, but he
an average of ten quarts, although the | ;,i5 41d who lent him a whetstone to give 3 take no end of trouble for you. whers T always have
general run Is about half that amount, | garpen his jackknife met him during ; He would spend a whole day, for in- ——DRESSED POULTRY, —
unless the eathel hots 80 the treed | ho war in , Washington, Lisools so stance, in looking for the most suitable Guine in season, and any kinds of goed ;
4 membered cident an ke o TT I for you and would re him- meats you want.
Good, honest , sirup welghs eleven | 4. nae of the whetstone. Spo A LI LE BIT Joist EE Food nor RD : Tar My Suor.
pounds to the gallon, and It takes a | wy, 04" grawled out the old soldier, ray would take two hours’ grumbling | iv P. L. BEEZER.
barrel of thirty-two gallons of sap to “whatever did you do with the whet- - indecision and hesitation in writing a High Street, Bellefonte
make a gallon of sirup. stone? 1 never could find It. We OF MONEY two line testimonial, but he would put
lowed mebbe you took it along with : Lis hand into his pocket and give you a AVE IN
THE MAGNETIC COMPASS.
First Used on European Vessels In
the Twelfth Century.
Some Asian people, perhaps the Chi-
nese, discovered many centuries ago
that a kind of iron ore possessed a very
peculiar quality. We call this ore mag-
netic ore, or, in more common lan-
guage, lodestone, and it is very widely
distributed, especially in the older
crystalline rocks. It was found that if
g a bit of lodestone were placed in water
> upon a piece of cork or straw braid it
would turn till the axis of the stone as-
sumed a north and south position. A
you.” “No, ne! I put it on top of the
gatepost — that high one.” “Mebbe
you did. Nobody else could have reach-
ed it, and none of us ever thought to
look there for it.” There it was found
where it was placed fifteen years be-
fore. The soldier reported the fact to
the president.
handful of gold and bank notes if you
®
wanted them. YOUR MEAT BILLS.
There is no reason why yon should use poor
meat, ot Jay exorbitant prices for tender,
juley = #. Good meat is abundant here~
abouts, because good catile sheep and calves
are to be had.
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good, We doa't
Jrotisg to fire it away, but we will furnish you
D MEAT, at prices that you have paid
elsewhere for very poor.
——GIVE US A TRIAL—
Sudo i na don’t save in he long Toa and
ve r Meats, Pou and Game (in sea~
son) han have been Fn Be ou . in
GETTIG & KREAMER
Bush House Block
buys a whole lot. of
good clothes at the
Fauble Stores
All summer clothes
reduced. The re-
duction will help pay
A Too Familiar Snake.
Seeing snakes is a common experi-
ence with the inhabitants of India and
one unconnected with any suggestions
of bibulousness. An English nurse
tells of a little boy who lived in the
next bungalow to hers and had his
bread and milk every day on the
veranda sitting in a child's high chair,
One morning, hearing him talking and
crowing to himself apparently, she was
paralyzed on looking out to see him
gently tapping the head of a cobra
Why He Wanted a Pass,
When Jim Fisk was In his glory as
a railroad magnate one day he was
greatly annoyed by people asking for
passes over his road for all sorts of
reasons. He was well worked up when
a seedy looking Individual asked for a
Berieroxvte, Pa.
been : 44-18
RT a: ig out-of your Ba
na ” The e was —
” peculiarly susceptible to magnetic i0- | “ne applicant replied, “Because I SUMMER VACA- milk ot of the bowl, paying rn fo New Advertisements.
fluence. do not want to pay my fare.” to the child. In that mysterious coun- | ___ ra
It is an open question whether The Fisk called a clerk and said to him: try the snakes may be heard rustling
Chinete utilized the directive power My “Give this man a pass to anywhere TION EXPENSES. across the verandas and have an un- R. J. JONES
fey Jogestoe, Sut it viging that ie and return. He is the first man that tidy habit of shedding thelr skins any- D
pass used oday.”—Bosto 5
European vessels before the twelfth has tod the truth today. mer Let. ys show you where. VETERINARY SURGEON.
century of our era. By that time the
true magnetic compass had been evolv-
ed through the discovery that if an
iron or steel needle were stroked on a
lodestone it would receive the attrac-
tive and directive power of this ore.
With this appliance placed at the
service of navigation the vessels that
had hugged the coasts soon dared to
venture even out of sight of land. A
pew impetus was gradually given to
cartography, for now the true direc-
tions of the coast lines might be chart-
ed with some approach to accuracy. It
was the happy fortune of Italian sail-
ors to make the surprisingly excellent
surveys of the directions and lengths of
the Black sea and Mediterranean
coasts and along the Atlantic to British
waters that have come down to us in
the so called Portulan maps.—Cyrus C.
Adams in Harper's.
A Couple of Bulls.
On the edge of a small river in Coun-
ty Cavan, Ireland, is a stone with this
inscription: “When this stone. is out
of sight it is not safe to ford the river.”
But this Is even surpassed by the fa-
mous post erected some years ago by
the surveyors of the Kent (England)
roads: “This is the bridle path to Fa-
versham. If you can't read this you
had better keep to the main road.”
what, an HONEST
CLOTHING RE-
DUCTIONSALE
really means to you.
A Graduate of the University of London
has permanently located at the PALACE
LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he
will answer all calls for work in his profes
sion. Dr. Jones served four years under
State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls .
by telephone will be answered promptly
day or night. 50-51y
IE YOU WANT TO SELL
standing timber, sawed timber
AT and chemical wood.
IF YOU WANT TC BUY
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Sigoature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
|
Natural Fitness.
“My friend,” said the man who was
getting out of the barber's chair with
a slashed cheek, “you have enlightened
my mind on a point that has hitherto
been a mystery.”
“What is that, sir?
“For the first time I understand why
in former times the village barber was
also expected to be the town surgeon.”
—Washington Star.
lumber of any kind worked or 1m
the rough,
hite Pine, Chestnut
or Washington Red Cedar Shing
les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors,
Rael Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete,
to
P. B, CRIDER & SON,
Bellefonte, Pa.
Travelers Guide.
48-18-1v
ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
densed Time Table effective Nov. 6, 195.
OARDING.—Parties visiting Phila-
delphia can have first-class and
Miraculous Multiplication. uares from business
all accommodations six
EERE EEE SE re ERI,
sq
| t f city. Terms $1.25 and $1.50 "
Ju Jay win resesth Susi o gio ner Be Ecortai, | mee | ee en SER rel By hee wiih
> for £1 3s. was Informed by her house. | , “Mrs. Jones just got a divorce from No 1|No ojos] No 6|No 4|No2 | (Formerly of Bellefonte,) 1606 Green, St.,
had become still more wonderful, for | FCB STOR a yl Py joe, a
3 ow consisted of 1,125 pleces.— other. 3 - a oe 3 2 3 n Best Route to the Northwest,
i SR “No,” replied the first. “She got the 9 ! . 213 ia H+ In going to St. Paul, Minneapolis th
Disappointing. salad."—New York Press. 13 fg 09) 4 48/9 0% | Northwest see that your tioket v7
Mrs. Justlooking — Have you any 74807 to od| 4 41 3 02 | Cb reads via The Pioneer Limited on,
hand embroidered waists? Salesman Do not try to drive your employes 7 47/07 19 02 4 38! 9 00 | the Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail-
(who has waited on her before)—I'm | ahead of you, but keep ahead of them 185 53 2 1» 39 way—the route over which your letters
very sorry to disappoint you, madam, | and invite them to come on.—Success 781 7 8 52! 4 28] 8 51 | Standard aod com ont sleepers with
£] but we have.—Chicago News. Magazine. S01 7 18 48| 4 23] 8 46 | longer, higher wider berths. Leaves
v 4 falda 8 8 Union Station, Chicago, 6.30 p- m. daily;
: ’ arrives St. Paul next a 7.35 %
: 8158 18 38 18 33 morming
. Minneapolis at 8.00 o'clock.
Colleges & Schools. SRR] vara iow Biv BE os JOHN R. POTT,
ane walon i 28112) Room D, Park Building, Piveare.
fossa FAUBLE'S Ht
4 Chemist, A Teacher, 100 9 NEW YORK........| #430] 9 00 Fine Job Priuting.
An Engineer, 4 Lawyer, p. mia. m.Arr. {Vis Pilla.) ia. m.lp. m.
An Electri A Physician. {Week
4 Scientic Farmer, 4 Journalist, 10. Jar ~REW YORK... 1] 4
<rort, if vou wish to secure a training thst will fit you well for any honorable pursun «0 life, Via Tiida) GEPHART,
General Supermteend! n.
{HE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE ELLEFONTE BEN TRAL RAIL. FRE JOB PRINTING
OFFERS EXCEITIONAL ADVANTAGES. Schiele wa Sfiest Monday, May 3. 1905. mA SPECIALTY—-0
TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TT a a AT THE
No. 1 Suton, to.
4 EING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensivel: »0 as to fur y WATCHMAN OFFICE.
alsa & much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman ar har rou AN Lv Ar. a.m |e om
lug story ; the English, French, German, Spanish, Latin aad Greek Languages and 3°00] 1 ~Bellefonte...| 0 188018 3 —
:ures ; Psychology; Ethics, and Political Science, Theee courses are 3 10 oe 8 40| 12 40.6 10
to the wants of those who seek eitherthe most thorough training for the Profession 312 10 reeces Mortis. .....| 8 37] 12 87/6 07 | There is no syle ot work, ‘from the ‘cheapas
of each or a genes! College Education, a iiaten a do 8137 10 een SIOVODS.......| © 25] 12 35/g 03 | Dodger” to the
Be Chest in the United Graduates have no difficulty {n securing and holding positions. 38/10 a. sala. $—BOOK-WORK, —¢
FOUNG WOMEN ave admitted to ail courses on the same terms as Young Men. a2 10 Briarly... TOS FEET 4 t3at we can not do in the most satisfactory man
THE FALL SBSSION ovens Scptesber 18th. 1906. IR 1 8 30 13 208 43 | prices consistent with ine clams of work. Call on
for ving fui or feate with this office.
a Papedimen EAs Ha rR er pd ng fuii Information repsecting courses of commun
THE REGISTRA 52 Sng Sent Sed Sent Send ‘ a 1 1
BR. LB ow w/w - ' f woreda 138 [4%
State College, Centre County, Pa.