Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 17, 1908, Image 7

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    At the End of the
Lower Level.
By AZILE AIDYL.
Copyrighted, 1908, by Associated
Literary Press.
“My heaven!” said old Sinclair as he
rose Impatiently from the table and
reached for his hat. “If anly I was
strong enough to work it I'd risk the
cave-in, put up a drill there at the end
of the lower level and bore through
that confounded rock myself, and the
timber gang c'd go to"—
The door slammed, and his daughter
heard him stride on down the trail
leading to the mine.
Helen did not wonder at the outburst
of temper. Her father had sunk his
last dollar in this mine, and now with
riches—as he confidently believed—al-
most within his grasp the timber gang
refused to work without their last
month's pay.
It was impossible to “drift” without
them. The mine was unsafe and liable
to cave without the support of the big
timbers. Sinclair was confident that
once through this wall of slate which
they had struck In the lower level he
would find again the rich ledge which
had suddenly stopped 200 feet above.
Then wages would be pald with inter-
est.
To Mason, the owner of the adjoin-
ing mine, he had said, “Any darn foo!
knows that a high grade four foot
ledge Isn't going to stop off short, as
though cut in two with a saw, unless
old nature's had a spasm and in twist-
ing things about given this slate a
chance to wedge itself in.”
And now as he swung on down the
steep trail he met Mason coming up.
“Things have come to a crisis there,
I hear,” said the latter, nodding his
head In the direction of the mine, “and
I'd like to talk to you about it before
you go down.
“The miners will not work without
the protection of the timbers. [ be-
lieve you are nearer through that slate
than you realize. 1 was down in the
drift today, and the character of the
rock is changing. It's quite possible
that one more day's work would bring
you to the quartz, but the men have
quit and you are helpless. What I
want to propose is that you let me go
down there and work for two or three
days. No, no” as Sinclair raised his
hand to protest; “it's all right. There
is less danger of a cave-in with only one
drill at work. Let me try it for a cou-
ple of days anyway.”
“It's exactly what I would do my-
self if 1 was equal to it,” said Sinclair,
“but it's a big thing for me to accept
from you, Mason. If anything went
wrong I"—
“Nonsense! [It won't go wrong, It's
only giving me a chance to prove I am
right. And no one need know what 1
am doing. I'd a little rather you would
not speak of it, particularly to—to Hel-
en. Just a notion. And now I'd like
to begin this work tonight.”
Sinclair simply grasped his hand.
Then together they strode down to the
mine.
Nverything was quiet. The pound-
ing of the stamps had ceased. The
only sign of activity was in the engine
room, where the engineer was. as usual,
pumping the water out of the shaft.
Sinclair motioned to him. The huge
“bucket” poised at the mouth of the
shaft. They stepped well on to the
center, holding to the rope, and began
their descent. Down, down, past the
different levels, which were swallowed
up in inky blackness, the bucket glided
noiselessly on, the only sound being
the drip-dripping of the water as it
percolated through the timbers lining
the shaft.
At last they came to a standstill
1,000 feet below. Sinclair reached
over and pressed a button at the side
of the shaft, and the entire tunnel was
ablaze with electric lights, stretched
along its roof,
The two men traversed the entire
length of the tunnel to the end of the
“stope,” where the miners had ceased
work a few houré before. Sinclair
helped Mason to get the Burleigh into
position, and then, saying he himself
would remain at the engine through
the night In case Mason wanted help,
he walked through to the shaft and
signaled to be hoisted above.
Mason worked until early morning,
set off his blasts and went home for a
few hours’ rest. Returning at 2 o'clock
in the afternoon, he saw that his work
of the night before had uncovered rich
gold bearing quartz. He chipped off a
piece and put it in his pocket, and then,
intensely excited, he pushed the car,
filled with the worthless slate, along
the track to the crosscut, where an
enormous bulkhead support was being
built with the “waste.”
Mason deposited his load on the
“dump” and turned to push back when
he heard an appalling roar, but only
for a fraction of a second. then a tre-
mendous crash, and he felt himself
hurled with terrific force against the
bulkhead, and all was blank.
* . * . ® * -
Up on the hill at the Sinclair cottage
Helen had just returned from her ride,
but she lingered, chatting with her fa-
ther and feeding Sultan his usual
lumps of sugar. Suddenly they heard
a dull, muffled boom,
Sinclair turned ghastly white as he
exclaimed:
“My God—a cave!”
“Oh, dad, thank heaven the men quit
work! There's no one in the mine.”
“But there is! Mason's there!” cried
Sinclair as he rapidly tightened the
girth of Sultan's saddle. “He thought
he could bore through that wall him-
self. He's been there since yesterday.
He asked me not to tell you.”
And the old man sprang into the sad-
dle like a boy of sixteen and dashec
down the steep trail.
Helen sank imply on the lower step
of the porch. Mason to do this thing
for her father—Mason, whom she had
flaunted and treated with scant cour-
tesy!
Her father's words, “He asked me
not to tell you,” spoke eloquently of
wounded pride caused by her mocking
words which had sent him away, with
the command to remain away for the
last three months.
And now-—oh, she could not bear it!
She gathered up her riding habit and
ran swiftly down the trail.
When she reached the mine the en-
tire population of the camp had gath-
ered In excited groups near the holst.
Sinclair, ready to make the first trip
down, would permit no one to go with
him. Slowly the engineer lowered the
old man down the shaft.
The time seemed an eternity, par-
ticularly to the tall, slim girl who stood
motionless and white apart from the
crowd. her eyes stra®ed to catch the
slightest vibration of the signal wire.
At last came two short jerks—the sig-
nal to holst quickly. A great sob came
from the entire crowd.
“It's no use, my friends,” Sinclair
said, with his eyes on Helen. “The
cave began in the 800 foot level and
has buried everything as far as the
crosscut.”
“But the manhole, dad!”
through Helen's white lips.
“There is only one chance in a mil-
lion that Mason was at that end of
the crosscut, But if he was he would
by this time have made his way
through the north drift to the foot of
the manhole, and then think of the
climb—hundreds of feet!"
Sinclair led the way, and the anxious
crowd moved on to the north end of
the claim, where now existed the only
egress from the lower level.
Dozens of men were ready to make
the descent down the small round
came
| well, with its hundreds of feet of lad-
der, but Sinclair selected one of the
younger, stronger men, and just as he
stepped over the edge a ‘“clip-clip”
was heard. He drew back, and the
crowd listened.
The sound came nearer, eager eyes
peered into the dark below, and in a
few moments eager hands stretched
down to lift an exhausted, half faint.
ing man to the surface. His forehead
was cut, and the blood made his white
face ghastly. His left arm hung limp
and broken.
Helen, with a cry, pushed through
the crowd to his side and oblivious of
any one in the world but him whis-
pereG a word in his grimy ear.
His pale face Lrightened. His eyes
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THE PENNSYLVANIA
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TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur-
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ogy
tures ; Psyc ; Ethics,
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Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding pos!
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YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men,
WINTER SESSION opens January 9th, 1908.
For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information respecting courses of
study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
shone as he took her hand, and, turn-
ing to Sinclair, he said: “You were
right, old man. The gold is there. But
I think,” with a glance toward Helen,
“that 1 as well as you have found a
fortune through the lower level.”
Supposing the Ax Had Fallen!
Some years ago an inquisitive med-
fecal student, while examining a guil-
lotine in a big waxworks exhibition in
Loudon, took it into his head that the
sort of yoke which fits down on the
shoulders of the criminal to hold him
in his place would not be sufficient to
confine a person who struggled.
His curiosity on that point led him
to watch till the place was empty,
when he actually put himself in, let-
ting down the yoke. He soon found,
however, that he was quite unable to
lift it, and it at once flashed into his
mind that the sharp ax suspended over
his neck might not be firmly fixed or
it would fall, as it should, with a
touch.
He was afraid to struggle lest the
shaking should bring it down and at
once deposit his head in the basket of
sawdust below him, into which his
eyes were of necessity steadily look-
ing.
Having stayed some time in this
plight, he was overjoyed to hear the
approach of a visitor, whom he im-
plored to release him. It was in vain.
“I'm thinking,” said the gentleman.
a Scottish visitor to the metropolis, to
his wife, “that he must be hired to
show how the thing acts, and 1 think
we'il better not interfere.”
So the luckless student was left till
one of the attendants came In and
made fast the ax before releasing him
from his predicament. The ax was
afterward removed and laid by the
side of the structure to prevent future
accidents.
Lincoln's History of Himself.
When Abraham Lincoln was elected
to congress Charles Lanman, then
editor of the Congressional Record, ac-
cording to the regular custom, for-
warded to Mr. Lincoln as well as to
ull other members elect a blank to be
filled out with facts and dates which
might be made the basis for a blo-
graphical sketch in the directory. Mr.
Lincoln's blank was returned prompt-
ly. filled up in his own handwriting
with the following information:
“Born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin coun.
ty. Ky.
“Education, defective.
“Profession, lawyer.
“Military service, captain of volun-
teers in the Black Hawk war.
“Offices held: Postmaster at a very
small office, four times a member of
the Illinois legislature and elected to
the lower house of the next congress.”
Wrong Way Around.
“Alr. Purslington says he believes a
man should pay as he goes.”
“Judging from the way he gets in
debt, he must be accustomed to travel.
ing backward.”—-Washington Star.
the source of a conflagration that oc-
curred in Worcestershire, England, in
from a horse drawn vehicle to one op-
erated by a motor. The work was not
quite completed when the company re-
ceived warning of a fire which had
broken out on: a farm at nearby Kemp-
sey village. However, the engine was
in sufficient running order to be sent
on forthwith under the action of the
newly installed motor.
Unhappily the engine's funnel had
not been protected by a spark pro-
tector. As a result the trail of the
snorting mechanism was embellished
with a gorgeous train of sparks. There-
in lay the cause of trouble. In a lane
the fire engine met a wagon loaded
with straw, which it promptly set on
fire. Unheeding. it hurried on its way |
and in its course presently Ignited |
some stacks which bordered on the
road. It still pushed on relentlessly.
however, and came to a standstill oniy
when the water tube of the moter
burst. It was still some hundrels of
yards from ite destination ard thove
it remained =v aus! hal, leer while
the fire a* ("2 Zar: hur.od fof cut
--Boston Po:
.
A Stowaway.
She (on the Atlantic liner)—Did you
observe the great appetite of that stout
man at dinner? He—Yes, He must
be what they call a stowaway.—
don Telegraph. .
Almost every woman suffers from ‘‘female
tweakness’’ in some form. There is no need
0 exhort the sufferers from the more
Serions forme of such disease that active
“teps should be taken to effect a cnre. Pain
and enffering deliver that exhortation
every day. It in the fortunate woman
whose disorder is seemingly slight who
needs to be warned, Jost a hriel ase of
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription in her
case will establish her in sound health.
Negleot always means complications and
slower cure. Women who suffer from
chronic forme of the womanly organs are
invited *o coneult Dr. Pierce, by letter
free. All correspondence confidential.
Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Heovs SARSAPARILLA
40,366 People
RECOMMEND IT
For the blood, for lost appetite, for that
tired feeling, rheumatism and other
tronbles—that number having written 2s
in two years telling of cares and remarka-
ble benefit from it. Thi« great volume of
testimony should convince you of the
sterling merits of this great medicine.
Get a bottle and begin to take it today.
“I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for
impure hlood and general poor health, 1
had no energy, and did not feel as though
I could do my house-work. When | had
taken two bottles of this medicine 1 was
entirely enred and I am «till in good
health.” Mrs. L. Emmett, Croshy, Texas.
In usual lignid form or in chocolate.
coated tahlets called Sarsatabs, 100 Doses
One Dollar. 53 28
i
i
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1
i
Attorneys-at-Law.
C. MEYER-A
21, Crider's
Law, Rooms 20 &
Bellefonte, Px.
B. PANGLER « AuoineyavLan. Prac.
N. ces in all the Cou Consultation in
nglish and German. Office in Crider's Ex.
change, Bellefonte, Pa. 0.22
Law, ce, Garman House Block,
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at
tended to promptly. 0-49
H. 8. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at
-
I
S KLINE WOODRING
.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Hellefoute, Pa.
51-1-1y Practices in all the courts,
H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at
. Law, Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange,
second floor. All kinds of legal business attend-
ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Ger.
man. 30-4
ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY-—Attorneys-at-
Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa, Sue.
cessors 10 Orvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in all
the courts. Consultation in English or Surman,
50
J M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law. Prac
. . tice in all the courts. Consuitation in
nglish sand German. Office south of court
house, All professional basiness will receive
prompt attention. 49-5-1
—————
Physicians.
8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur-
eon, State Coll ntre county, Pa,
Office at his residence, ei Te Visa
Dentists.
BNE AnD, D. DS office pest oor to
«M. . room, street, n
Gas administered dig painless Seletonis
teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices
reasonable,
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in
the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All
modern electric 3 plianese used. Has had years
of experience. All work of superior qualit} and
prices reasonable, ly
ATENTS, TRADE MAR
Tht, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and
description may quickly are our opinion
free whether an invention is 7 patentable,
Sendianiestion ig So den Bandvooy
on nts sen y es lor securin
pateni. 60 years porte Datei Tre
hrongh Munn & Co. receive Special Notice, with-
out charge in the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
a handsome {illustrated weekly. Largest ctreuls
iation o! any scientific journal. Terms $3 a year;
four months §1. Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & CO,
361 Broadway, New York.
Branch Office, 625 F St, Washington, D. C,
52445-1y.
COPY-
Hair Dresser.
R THE LADIES.—Miss Jennie Mor-
gan in her new room on Spring St., ly
used as offices by Dr. Locke, is now ready to
tmeet any and all patients wishing treatments by
electricity, treatments of the scalp, facial mas.
sage or neck and shoulder massage. She has
also for sale a large collection of real and imita-
tion shell pins, combs and ornaments and will be
able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles
including creams, powders, toilet waters, ex.
racts and all of Hudnut's preparations. 50-18
D* 8. M. NISSLEY
VETERINARY SURGEON,
Office Palace Livery Stable,
Bellefonte, Pa.
53-20-1y* Graduate University of Pa.
GET THE
BEST MEATS.
¥ nothing by buying, , thin
ny a An Dao
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and su
ing Steaks and Roasts. M are
ao higher than poorer meats are else
where.
I always have
wee DRESSED POULTRY joe
Game in season, and soy kinds of good
meats you want.
Tay My Suor.
P. L. BEEZER.
High Street. Bellefonte
43-84-1y
Travelers Guide.
ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1908
Reap poww Reap cor.
a ap Stations —
No 1(No 8 No 3 No 6 No 4 Nog.
A. m. p.m. p.m. Lve, Ar. p.m. p.m. a. m
#705 655 220 BELLEFONTE. 910 505 9 4
715 708 2383.......N eee | 857 452 92
TMM 2A ....... 851 4472
727 718 245. .HECLAPARK. 845 441 91
T2 247 ..... Dunkles......| 8 43] 4 38] 9 1
7 83117 23) 2 51...Hublersburg...|f8 39! 4 34/19 0
1a 73 255 | 886 420 50
7 40/7 30 2 58....... Yoreeeen | 18 34] 4 27/19 ©
7 42/17 83) 8 01 ..... eee (IE 32 4 2419 0
746 738 308 JI829 421 BS
7 48 17 40] 8 08 ....Clintondale.... 18 26] 4 18/18 §
752 7 44) 8313 Krider'sSiding.| 8 22) 414| 8 6
7 56/17 49 8 16|...Mackeyville,...(18 18] 4 09/18 4
802 754) 8 22..Cedar ww! 812/408 8 4
soil 25) cesses. SalOna....... 1810 401/84
810! 802 330. MILLHALL..| 805 856! 8 8
(N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.)
1 8 53.........Jersey Shore........., 8 09 753
12 15| 9 30(Arr. } waroporT J LVe| 2 35 17 20
fig 20 uae & Baling A. 230 650
780 680... FH Assscsssrsss 18 96 11 30
10 10{ 9 00.0... NEW YORK........ 9 00
(Via Phila.)
p. m.is. m.[Arr. a. m.lp. m,
tWeek Days
WALLACE H. GEPHART,
General Superintendent.
JJ ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL-
ROAL.
Schedule to take effect Monday Jan. 6, 1908.
WESTWARD EASTWARD
read down read up
No.5 to.afF Srariens. No.2 No.
P.M. AN. (AN am [vow ie,
2 00! 19 15/6 30, ...Bellefonte....| 8 50] 12 50/6 (
2 07! 10 20/6 85 ..... Coleville......| 8 12 40/5 80
2 12 10 23/6 38|...... Mornis....... 887 1237547
2 17] 10 27/6 48.......Stevens.......| © 35] 12 355 48
..Lime Centre,
2 21/ 10 30/6 46. Hunter's Park.| 8 31 12 31/5 40
2 26 10 34/6 50. ...,.Fillmore......| 8 28) 12 285 35
2 32 10 40/6 85|...... Briarly.......| 8 24] 12 24 5 30
2 35/ 10 45.7 00 ...... Waddles.....| 8 20 12 20/5 25
2 50 10 87712... Krumrine...... 8 07! 12 07 5 07
YT, Eg]
731 ...Blormsao:....| T 40 i
sw| [735 Pinewrove isl 735 lsoe
F. H. THOMAS, Supt.
Fauble’s Great Clothing House
3
SOME YOU TAKE
ONE-HALF OFF
Others you Deduct a Third
«0-0-0-0-0-0-0-
There is nothing in the
Clothing line reserved.
Black Suits, Blue Suits, Fancy Suits,
Trousers, Rain Coats--Men’s,
Boys’ or Children’s,
in fact everything that looks like Clothes, is subject to a reduc-
tion of at least ONE-THIRD, and many New Suits, one and two
of a kind, we have cut the price in HALF.
Can You Beat it.
IT'S AT THE FAUBLE STORES.
ee 0" 0 0= =O O———
M. FAUBLE AND SON.
It’s Honest.
——
ITRICEEETEEIE SEEPEERERIE IE
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BEEESEESEESEEES BEERS EENR5Y.