Bemoraaiy atc. Bellefonte, Pa., June 3, 1910. —— EE ——— BIRTH OF A VOLCANO. Though volcanoes are often spoken of as burning mountains, they do not burn at all, nor, in the proper sense of the word, are they mountains at all. A volcano is really a flaw in the crust of the earth through which the fierce glowing heat lying below the crust has | managed to burst a hole. Through this hole great foods of melted rock spout up. Some volcanoes work at inter- vals; some are in eruption all the time. As the melted rock jets up into the air and falls it naturally builds itself into a mountain round the hole. The nex! eruption has to burst its way through the heart of that mountain. The chimney it spouts through is usu- ally called “the pipe.” Sometimes an eruption is so fierce that when the lava (another name for melted rock) spouts out it is burst into bits. When it falls it is sometimes as fine as dast, sometimes the size of cin- ders. Most volcanoes, indeed, are sim- ply gigantic cinder heaps. When the force is not so great the lava in the pipe simply bubbles over and flows down the sides of the moun- tain, exactly as porridge boils over the edge of a pot. As lava is liquid, the slope of a lava volcano (or lava cone, as it is usually called) is always very gentle, Falling cinders, on the other hand, pile themselves up quite steeply. A lava cone, then, is always less steep | than a cinder cone. And a volcano wever burns. What looks like flame is only the glow of the white hot lava on the clouds of steam. The more steam there is fore- ing its way up the pipe the more the lava bubbles, just as in the case of the porridge. If the pressure of steam is very great, then you have the lava blown to bits and falling as cinders, while the mighty clouds of steam rise high above the mountain. It is this steam that is mistaken for smoke. Sometimes a cone sends out lava and cinders alternately, so that you have a great mountain of cinders bound to- gether by layers and walls of lava, These walls of lava are due to the fact that sometimes more lava wants to come up the pipe than the pipe will hold, so the lava bursts its way out through weak spots in the sides of the mountain, Etna has no fewer than 700 of these cones on its slopes. One of them, Monte Rossi, is a hill in itself, being 450 feet high. Indeed, a model of Etna looks as if it were cov- ered with pimples, When Elna is really roused it is far more dangerous than Vesuvius. In 1169 it nearly destroyed the city of Catania, killing 15.000 people. In 1669 it found its pipe so inconveniently small that it had to crack one of its sides, This crack was no less than twelve miles long. At the bottom white hot lava could dimly be seen through the clouds of steam. In 1755 millions of gallons of boiling water were shot out of the Val del Bove, which is a great circular pit on the slope of the wountaiv, four or five miles in diameter, its sides being cliffs nearly a mile high in places. The greatest volcanic eruption ever known took place in the East Indies in 1883. The story makes almost in- credible reading. The volcanic island of Krakatoa commenced proceedings | by blowing half of itself into thin air. | From the opening no less than a cubic mile of rock was shot out, A column of steam and iava dust rose into the air to n height six times as greai as that of Mount Everest, It spread and spread till for hundreds of wiles around the air was black as mid- night. Sounds as of distant cannonad- ing were heard 2,000 miles off. Sea waves fifty feet high killed 33,- 000 people and were felt as far off as California. Instead of an island half a mile high there was now a hole a quarter of a mile deep. The shock of the eruption sent air waves three and a haif times around the earth. The fine dust in the upper atmosphere add- ed for months afterward a strange glow to the sunsets in England and did not vanish completely for three years. The exact cause of the eruptions is not known for certain. A popular the- ory is that they are caused by, water getting in to the white hot mass which is supposed to lie under the outer crust of the earth. And it is certainly a fact that practically all volcanoes are close to the edge of the sea. Some lava flows slowly, some quick- ly. Vesuvius in 1805 sent out a lava stream that in four minutes had reach- ed a spot four miles off. The size of a lava stream is sometimes gigantic. In 1783 Skaptar Jokull in Iceland emitted two streams at one time. One was forty miles long by seven miles broad. the other fifty miles by fifteen. The average depth of both was about a hundred feet. ‘Lava cools very, very slowly, except on the surface. which cools at once. It is an extremely bad conductor of feat. Twenty years after a stream of fava wage sent out from Jorullo, in Mex- fco, tourists could light their cigars trough chinks in the surface, and the surface had been cold for twenty years. In 1828 a layer of snow many feet thick was found under a layer of Vesu- vian lava. It was still unmelted and is probably there still. — Pearson's Week!y \ Classified. The suggestion has been made that goats’ meat prices should be taken away from the provisions list and quot- «ed in the butter market.—New York Tribune. The heart of man is never as bard as his head.—Lamartine. EE —— What Causes It and What Would Hap- pen Without It. What is friction really caused by? Why will two things in contact not silp over each other easily? It is be- cause every substance known to science has teeth; microscopic, it is true, but still teeth. Tbe result, then, is ob- vious. If we shove a book across a table the teeth of the book interlock with the teeth of the table just as cog- wheels do, and the push has to be strong enough either to bend them enough or to break them off for the motion to continue. i It has actually been observed in a microscope that if the push is only a slight one and moves the book only a short distance, on the pressure of the hand being removed the book actually Jumps back to its former position. j This action is a slight bending of the i two sets of teeth, only not far enough | for them to lose their relaitve posi- | tions, and their elasticity on being re- ! teased makes the book fly back. It has been shown that this friction is not so much between different bod- ox as between bodiex of the same ma- terial. One industrial application of i this is the bearings for steel axles. | They are made of brass instead of | steel. { In some things we want as much i friction as possible and in others as ! little. ‘The former is illustrated in the | friction between an engine wheel and the track, sand sometimes being pour ed on the track to increase the friction. The latter case ix illustrated in all bearings where rotating metal ix in contact with stationary metal, some- i thus lessening the friction. {| Many peculiar things would happen | if there was no friction. All screws in | wood would immediately twist back { ward rapidly and shoot out into the { air; trains could not run save on cog- (ged rails, which would probably be times ball bearing< being substituted. | i legislation, from the public its power establish such laws as it desires, either by emasculating an enactment perverting the essence and pur- of it” So writes Samuel Hop- Adams In American Maguzine, and he cites these instances of bow the joker game Is worked: “Sometimes It Ix in one word, as where the sale of a piece of public property to the lowest bidder was once authorized. Sometimes it may inhere | in that elusive character, the comma, | as in the case of the aril clause of an old schedule providing for the free en | try of fruit planix, where somebody | carelessly allowed » comm to creep! in between ‘fruit’ aud ‘plants,’ thereby | admitting millions of oranges and lem | ons into the country duty free and costing the treasury hundreds of thou. . sands of dollars in los« of imports. | Nobody ever found out whether this was a printer's slip or a carefully de- vised scheme. Certain It is that the framers of the schedule never intend- ed it | “Again, the entire body of the pro viso may constitute the joker by pur- porting to carry one meaning when ft In reality carries quite another. Con gress still preserves the tradition of the Irish representative from Massa. | thusetts who proposed that March 17 be made a lega! holiday in celebration | of the ‘Boston tea party. Several New Englanders whose zeal exceeded their erudition warmly supported the measure until some one pointed out that March 17 was much more closely | associated with the supposed birth of | the proposer's patron saint than with | the destruction of the obnoxious tea, which latter. indeed. was a midwinter | necessary above as well as below, thus | ! having four rails instead of two: build | ings would rumble down. and new ones | i could not be built unless molded in | place like Edison's or else riveted to- | gether. People would have to wear ! shoes with long spikes in them and then have to be careful, for dirt grains would slip over one another easily and | would act like deep sand. But one | great thing would happen—machines | would run at 100 per cent efficiency, would give out as much energy as was put into them.—Lawrence Hodges in New York Tribune. i | 2 City That Does Not Live Up to Its ! High Sounding Title. The same manners and customs pre- vail in the Bokhara of today that were famillar to our uight prowling friend | of Bagdad. A blindfolded horse still . plods round and round beneath a beam, | grinding the corn between an upper | and nn nether millstone. ‘I'he cotton Is | #till carded by the primitive agency of In double bow, the smaller one affixed { to the ceiling and the lurger one at- { tached to it by a cord and struck by a | waist, | mallet so us to cause a sharp rebound. | "The reis-i-shariai, or censor of the | | morals, still rides slowly through the | towti, compelling the children to at- | tend the schools and their parents the | mosques, inspecting rie weights and | measures and keeping n watch over | the behavior of the community as a | whole. When a tradesman Is found | guilty of cheating he is stripped bare | fo the street, forced to bis knees and | | flogged with a stirrup leather by one | of the censor's attendants | The city gates still close with the set- ting sun. After dark no one is allow- ed abroad, the only sound at night be- ing the melancholy beating of the watchman’s drum as he patrols the streets with a lantern in his quest, un- like Diogenes, of a dishonest man. With its filth, fanaticism. vice, cru- eity and corruption, Bokhara the No- ble. as its people insist on calling it, comes nearer to being a hell on earth than any place | know, and that is the best that | can say about it.—E. Alex- ander Powell in Everybody's. —— Mark Twain In Parliament After a visit to Englund once Mark Twain said on his return to New York: “Among other honors heaped upon me by Englishmen was that of being pho- tographed in parilament. 1 am not a member of parlinment. But peither am | a member of congress. Has any fellow American suggested that I should be photographed in congress? No. 1 blush to say that they have not. And yet here is an honor that might without risk be bestowed on any great man. And yet it was not bestowed upon Washington, Jefferson or Lin- coln. When | saw that photograph, with the mother of parliaments in the background, and realized my advanc- ing years 1 said to myself, ‘Here are two noble monuments of antiquity— two shining examples of the survival of the fittest!" ” In No Hurry. “Too many people” said a clergy man, “regard their religion as did the little boy in the jam closet. His moth- er pounced on him suddenly. He stood on tiptoe, ladling jam with both hands from the jam pot to his wouth. %“«Oh, Jacky! his mother cried. ‘And only last night you prayed to be made a saint! “His face, an expressionless mask of jam, turned toward her. “¢yes, but not till after I'm dead.’ he explained.” A Matter of Economy. Mrs. Nocash—Mercy! You let your girl off every afternoon? Neighbor—Yes, indeed; it is such a saving. The more she is away the fewer dishes she breaks.—Illustrated Bits. Sloth never arrived at the attainment of a good wish.—Cervantes. The world moves slowly io Bokhara. | i | | festival.” Women and Young Girls Who Are Ex- | pert Swimmers. The pear: divers of Jupan are the ! women. Along the coast of the bay | of Ago and the bay of Gokasho the | thirteen and fourteen year old girls, | after they bave finished their primary | school work, go to sea and learn to dive. They are in the water and learn to swim almoxt from babyhood, and they spend most of their time in the | water except in the coldest season, | from the end of December to the be- ginning of February. Even during the most inclement of seasons they sometimes dive for pearls. | They wear au special dress, white un- | derwear and the hair twisted up into | 1 bard knot. ‘The eyes are protected | by glasses to prevent the entrance of water. Tubs are suspended from the i A bout in command of 4 man is as- | signed to every tive to ten women | divers to carry them to and from the fishing grounds \Vhen the divers ar- rive un the grounds they leap into the between twenty-five and thirty-five they are at their prime.—New York Sun. ' The Court Always Tries to Settle Them by Reconciliation. In one important respect the Swiss surpass other nations in the manage- ment of their divorces cases, says an English correspondent, In every town there is a kind of offi. cial paper known as the Feuille d* Avis, in which one may read daily the fol- lowing announcement: “M. and Mme, X., who are in io- stance of divorce, are requesied to ap- pear privately before the judge. aloue or with their lwyers, In order to come to n reconciliation if possible.” Before the beginning of every di- vorce case in Switzerland this notice is published and sent out to the inter ested parties, leaving the couple, of course, free to attend before the judge or not, as they wish. Often the couple meet, Although there are no statistics pub- lished on the subject, 1 am told by =n leading lawyer in Geneva whose spe. cialty is divorce cases that at least 30 per cent of divorce cuses—"much to my loss unfortuuately,” the lawyer added. with a smile—are settled by the paternal advice of the judge at these meetings out of court, In fact, Swiss inwyers will not defi. nitely take up a divorce case until it has passed through the reconcilintion process. If one of the couple does not attend the rendezvous this means that the af- ; fair is to be fought out, but in any case Swiss divorces are not expensive. The average cost in a contested case Is $200, often $100, and the lowest when both parties are agreed $10 or $15.—8an Francisco Chronicle. Be a Real Power In the World. It is a great thing to start out in active life with the resolution that you will not be a mere cipher in your com- munity. but a real constructive force; that you will stand for something more than a rea. living getter or a dollar gatherer: that you will not be merely one more citizen, but a strong. robust, vigorous force, a power respected. a force that moves things. To be known as a progressive man who stands for everything that is for the betterment ol his community, every one should be ambitious to be something as a citizen besides a specialist in his voeation.— Succes: Magazine. ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Groceries. Groceries. CETTE Sechler & Company When by m the a, buy the more 18 cent grade. 20 cent paper you saw this ad goods advance on the market. the retail price usually follows. But in regard to the recent advance in Coffees we have not followed the ice or reducing goods and maintain the standard of our De Sie Timintaln the Mani If you are using a Coffee at 20 cents per pound fry our If you are paying 25 cents for your Coffee try our goods. Or if you are buying at 30 cents try the high grade goods we sell at 25 cents per pound. This is a severe test but we are very confident we can make good. Give us a trial, vertisemen rn is — FEE course, either uality. We He int and please mention in which t Sechler & Bush House Block, - Company, 55-1 Bellefonte Pa. The Pennsylvania 55-1 A Scientific Farmer Or secure a Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. State College Offers Exceptional Advantages IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician A Teacher A Lawyer A Physician A Journalist Machamicl and ising Engineering ar YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. TF ouTacs of Sead, expen, ce ad showiod vosions Bald by Gradua address. THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. ee co i —- pe S———————— oe — Yeagers Shoe Store Johnnie's New Panis. Johnnie told his mother that his new pants were much tighter than his skin. Why, how could that be? Well, I can sit down with the skin on and I cannot with the pants on. That is the trouble with the average ladies shoes, they are too tight that they cannot sit down or stand up. Come and be fitted with a pair of Fitzezy Shoes, they are made without linings and can be worn tight with. com- fort. They are just like a kid glove, they give with every movement of the foot. Corns will vanish when you wear them. Your bunions will be relieved at once. We rantee to give you immediate comfort or refund the money. Ladies, if you have foot trouble come to us. TEER SOLD ONLY AT Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. LYON & CO. CORSETS.—We are receiving ond lot of new models in summer : : i ; : | ; : feazis iit { : $ LYON & COMPANY, Allegheny St. 47-12 Bellefonte, Pa.