a— _—_—e Pa., August 11, 1911. Bellefonte, Pa. RIDING THE BELLS. Spectacular Feats of the Daring Ringe ers of Seville. The ringing of a bell is not, as a ruie, a performance particularly trying to the nerves, but there is one set of bel! ringers the members of which must know no fear. for a moment of tremor would in all probability be for them the moment of death. They are the bell ringers of the Giralda, in Se- ville. When the city is tv make merry on fenst days the ringers ciimb to the belfry, and then Ly the aid of a rope and steps cut in the wall of the tower each mounts to the bell he is to ring and stands astride the shoulder of the brazen monster. Then he presses the bell with his feet, holding on the cross- plece vn which the mass of metal is swung. Gradually the great bell sways to the muscular movement of the man astride it until it acquires a momen- tum that swings the hammer, first gently and then with increasing force as the sweep of the bell widens until the air is trembling from the giant blows that strike the massive sides of the monster. The mere vibration of the atmos- phere as the huge bells ring out would be enough to make an unpracticed ringer turn dizzy and fall from his perch. But this is not all, for many bells are ringing in the belfry at the same time in obedience to the move- ments of their riders, and the din is deafening. Notwithstanding all this, the riders bend and rise and fall with the action of the bells, now appearing to the ob- server from below to be in a horizon- tal position as the bell reaches the limit of its swing and again riding gracefully to an upright position as the monster sways backward with an- other thundering note. The most extraordinary part of the daring performance is the sight of a bell ringer calmly swaying the bell while it bangs far out of the belfry over the city, for the outward swing sends the counterpoise with the ringer into space beyond the arch.—Success Magazine. "HEIGHT AND WEIGHT. Their Relation to a Man's Chances For Long Life. The ideal insurance risk, from the point of view of height, Is sald to be from five fret seven inches to five feet nine Inches tall. According to the Na- tional Fraternal! congress, longevity and build have a close relation; the greater the variation in heizht from the above figure the greater the risk. Brockbank says that tall men are pot so long lived as their brothers whose heads are nearer to the ground. Men who are both tall and stout are not as good risks as stout men of me- dium or below medium height, says a writer in American Medicine. They do not bear acute illness so well, and ac- cidents to them are likely to be more severe. Risks over the allotted limit of weight are especially liable to dia- betes, heart affections, apoplexy. gout, diseases of the kidneys and arterio- sclerosis; excessive eating and abuse of alcohol are common nmong this class. It is stated that stout men under forty are worse risks than those over forty and under sixty. and that men who were unduly fat while they were boys are considered poor risks, especially if the tendency is hereditary. Stout men are better average risks than their very thin brothers who are liable to tuberculosis and disorders of the nervous system. But for even the featherweight tliere is much consola- tion. He bears ncute illness better than the heavyweight, and most of the people living beyond rhe allotted threescore years und ten are cf light build. A slim, wiry. small framed man is said to b+ a better risk that a thin but big boned one. Ore Deposits. Men sometimes dream of enormous wealth stored deep in the earth, below the reach of miners, but experts aver that there is little or no ground to believe that valuable metallic deposits lie very deep in the earth's crust. Such deposits, it is said. are made by under ground waters, and owing to the pres- sure on the rocks at great depths the waters are confined to a shell near the surface. With few exceptions, ore de- posits become too lean to repay work. ing below 8,000 feet. Nine mines ten, taking the world as a whole, poorer in the second thousand than in the first, and poorer yet in third thousand. A Stationary Growler. “Well, how are you making it now?" “Still in the low grounds.” “Why don’t you climb higher?’ “High climbin’ makes my head swim.” “yell, then, get a move on you.” “Oh, no! I never move until the rent is due!”—Atlanta Constitution. Strenuous. “Was the play exciting?" “Oh, very! The management engaged two leading ladies, and was a constant struggle for the of the stage.”—Louisville Courier-Jour | nal, Waiting For the Chance. Marks—My old aunt bad not dead twenty-four hours when her rot died too. Parks—The poor dled of grief, 1 suppose. poison.—Boston Transcript. Ma 0} | , an adjuster.—Judge. white does not spread. whereas in a stale egg the yolk lies tat and the white secms watery. 4.—The shell of an egg after a cer tain length of time loses its chalky appearance and becomes shiny. 5.—The air space in the large end of a pewly laid egg is about half an fneh in diameter, and as the egg ages this space grows larger. In storage eggs it sometimes extends to one- fourth the length. An expert can very closely approximate the age of an egg by examining this space. This is known as candling and is done by holding the egg In a beam of light. A simpler test is to bard boil the egg and notice the relative size of the space. THEIR AWFUL SECRET. It Caused the Real Estate Agent to Change His Mind. When the family who admitted that they were moving because the tenants at the old address made their lives miserable confided to the renting agent that they had one peculiarity which they wished him not to mention to their neighbors in his building the agent got uneasy and executed a men- tal quickstep trying to devise some way to break the lease. But aloud he said very courteously: “1 shall be glad to oblige you if 1 can. What is it you wish me to keep a secret?” “The fact that we pay our rent promptly on the 1st of every month,” sald the head of the family. “That was something that nobody else in the other house did, and the agent as an incentive to quick action on their parc published the news of our promptness. The only action it stirred them into was persecution of us, and they car riled that to such extremes that we | aad to move. If vou will kindly re, | train from using us ax a club to whack sour delinquents into obedience we will appreciate it.” The agent resolved not to cancel the | Jesse. but at the same time he relin- quisbed a hastily conceived plan for procuring prompt remittances. — New York Times. That Yankee Dodge. | The description of the first operation | under ether in Europe ax given by Dr. F. Willlam Cook in the University! College Hospital Magazine is repro- duced in the London Lancet, and the scene is referred to as the “most dra- matic ever enacted in which medical men grouped the stage.” ‘he opera: tion was performed by Robert Liston on Dec. 21. 1846. “At 2:15 Liston en- ters, that magnificent figure of u man | six feet two inches in height, and says, ‘We are going to try a Yankee dodge today, gentlemen, for making men in- | sensible, so Liston introduced ether to a London hospital.” The subject was | a man, thirty-six years old. whose | thigh was amputated. ‘The operation | was successful, and Liston uttered the epilogue, “This Yankee dodge, gentle men, beats mesmerism holler.” Marvels of India. i What a wonderful country is India! There is only one India. Its marvels | are its own. There is the plague, the | black death. India invented it. The. car of Juggernaut was also India’s in- | vention. So was the suttee, and with- | in the time of men still living 800 | widows willingly and. in fact rejolc- | ingly burned themselves to death on the bodies of their dead husbands in’ n single year. And 800 would do it this year if the British government would let them. Famine belongs es- | pecially to India. India has 2,000,000 gods and worships them all. On top! of all this she is the mother and home of that wonder of wonders. caste, and also that mystery of mysteries, the Satanic Brotherhood of the Thugs.— Churchman. Setting Her Right. { The pretty and petulant wife of a copgressman stood for n moment be-! fore the window of the receiving teller | jn a Washington bank. then tapped the | window with her parasol. exclaiming: “Why don’t you pay attention to! me?” “We pay nothing here. madam.” was | the reply. “Please go to the next window.”—Denver Republican. | i Those Useless Questions. : “How did you get the bruised face?” “It was caused by the batrack last night.” “Accidentally *’ “No; I think it attacked me pur posely.”—Kansas City Journal. Biblical Reference. “And who,” asked the Sunday school teacher—*who was it that cried, O king, live forever?" “All the life irsurance agents,” sug- gested the small boy whose father was : form A QUEER LEGEND. Fedor Kosmich, the Hermit, May Have Been a Russian Czar. A curious legend is associated with the name of Alexander 1. of Russia. It is to the effect that the emperor in 1825 was sojourning in the Crimea. When near Taganrog his coachman by some means managed to overturn the carriage of a court courier named Markof, who was killed. The em- peror, wishing to rid himself of the cares of state, so the srory runs, caus- ed it to be reported that it was he himself who was killed. Then he car- ried out a plan which he had for long conceived of retiring to Si and living there under an assumed name. Schilder., the historian. professes to have satisfied himself that at all events the remains In the Cathedral of Peter and Paul are those of the courier. Schilder asserts that he learn- »d this much from the chiidren of Markof. According to the legend, Alexander 1. of Russia died in Siberia in 1864, but history records that he died at Taganrog in 1825. It seems that in 1825 a mysterious stranger appeared in Siberia. He gave his name as Fe- dor Kosmich and never revealed any other or the place whence he came. He lived the life of a hermit and was received generally with respect. In 1276 he accepted the invitation of a rich merchant to take up his abode in his house at Tomsk. There he was very retired and held chmmunication only with Mlle. Kromof and the mer- chant. her father. . Every one who saw him was struck with his ex- trnordinary resemblance to the de- funct czar. The Grand Duke Nich- olas Michailoviteh contributed an arti- cle in the Revue Historique in which he denied the sensational part of the story, but admitted that the hermit of Siberia might have been a natural brother of Alexander I.—Londen Globe. IRISH BROGUE. It Is Really the Old Time Method ef Pronouncing English. Perhaps nothing illustrates better the vicissitudes of pronunciation in English than a study of what is called the “Ir'sh brogue.” This lingual mode, for it is scarcely to be called a dialect, is usually presumed to be a deteriora- tion of language due to lack of educa- tion and contact with legitimate sources of Fnglish. It proves after a little study to be a preservation of the old method of pronouncing English, which has come down to a great de- gree unchanged in Ireland from Shake- speare’s time, In Elizabeth's time, however, it came to be realized that if there was to be any real atilliation of the two countries | then the Irish language must be sup- planted by English, and a definite ef- fort in this direction was made. This change of speech, resented and resist- ed. was nevertheless successfully ac- complished all over the island except in the west within a decade after Shakespeare's death. This fact takes on a new significance when we study what we now call the Irish bregue in connection with what is known to have been the pronunciation of English at that time. The two are found to con- in practically every respect. Irishmen pronounce English as their forefathers learned it and have pre- served its pronunciation because they have been away from the main cur- rent of English speech variation ever, since.—~Harper's Maguzine. Uncalled For Courtesy. The Vicomte Toussaint was former- ir a colonel in the French army and mayor of Toulouse. He was a brave man and a dashing ofiicer. During one of the hottest engagements of a terrible year of war, noticing that his troops were bending forward un- der a galling fire to escape the bul- lets of the enemy while he alone maintained an erect position, he ex-. claimed. “Since when, 1 should like to know. has so much politeness been | shown to the Prussians? The sar- casm took instantaneous effect, for the | soldiers rushed forward and carried » everything before them. i There are many people who think that fresh air and out-door exercise will keep 2 man in perfect health. Yet a trip through a farming country will discover any number of farmers suffering with stomach trouble. It's the usual story: Too much work, too little rest, and un- suitable diet. Whenever the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition become diseased, the whole body is men- aced, through the consequent lack of nu- trition and the of the blood supply. Dr. Pierce's Medical Dis- covery cures “stomach trouble,” renews the assimilative powers, purifies the blood, nourishes the nerves, and gives vi- tality to every organ of the body. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Medical. Comes Quickly. DON'T HAVE TO WAIT FOR WEEKS. A BELLEFONTE ILLUSTRATION. Waiting is discouraging. Prompt action pleases everybody. A burden on the back is a heavy weight. Hard to bear day after day. Lifting weight, removing the burden, Brings appreciating responses. Bellefonte people tell of it. Tell of relief that's quick and sure. Here is a case of it: William McClellan, 244 E. Lamb street, Bellefonte, Pa., says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills fixed me up in good shape and conse- quently I think highly of them. I suffered for a long time from a pain and lameness across my back and some mornings I could hardly get out of bed. My back ached constantly and the Kidney secre- tions were irregular in passage. Hearing a great deal about Doan’s Kidney Pills, I decided to try them and procured a supply from Green's Pharmacy Co. They cured me and | am now enjoying good health. My advice to anyone afflicted with kidney complaint isto take Doan's Kidney Pills.” (Statement given Oct. 21, 1907.) RE-ENDORSEMENT. Mr. McClellan was interviewed on Nov. 23, 1909,and he said: “I have taken Doan's Kidney Pills once or twice during the past two years, while suffering from backache and they have given me prompt relief. You are welcome to publish my testimonial at any time you desire. For sale by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take 56-29 Price 50 cents. no other. Money to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN, on good security and Te Or KEICHLINE. Attorney-at-Law, 51-14-1y. Bellefonte. Pa. Saddlery. ) New Departure in Business Surely, you must think well of any plan that will save you some dollars on a set of Single Harness. Now it is up to you to make us make good. SCHOFIELD'S MAIL ORDER DEPT. Why send your money away when you can buy at home goods better in quality at less money, with a guarantee to be as represented or money refunded and all freight charges prepaid. A Set of Harness in Nickle or Imi- tation Rubber, at........... $12.85 This harness is equal to any $15 set on the market. Genuine Rubber............ $14.85 which has no equal for less than $17. To insure prompt shipment money should accompalty order. A cut of the harness will be mailed upon request. Address al! communications to E. N. SCHOFIELD: al Dept., A Bellefonte Pa. to which he will cheerfully give his prompt attention. GUARANTEE—T he above goods are resented ~ pid in il james Schofield, Bellefonte, Pa NAAT ANY AV AVAVAVYAVAVAVAVAVYAVAVAVAVAVaAY, 4 Spring Street 55-32 . Autc mohites. The “FORD” AUTOMOBILE Needs no boosting. It’s smooth-running motor, ample power and durability tells the tale. Every car sold helps to sell others. It is the one car that speaks for itself and the prices commend it to would-be purchasers: Read the list. Touring Car, fully equipped, like above picture $ 780.00 Torpedo Body, fully eq Runatout, fully equipped pped 725.00 680.00 W. W. KeIcHLINE & Co., Agent Centre County Branch # *s¢ Bellefonte, Pa. Yeagers Shoe Store Fitzezy Ladies’ The Shoe that Cures Corns Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade baidio o Sold only at “tr LLEFONTE, 2 Dry Goods. LYON & CO. Summer stuffs must be sold now. We are adding new things every day to the Clearance Sale. Now is the time to save money on all hot weather stuffs. Washable Goods, In addition to closing out we are marking down all odds and ends in Wool Dress Goods; one Pattern in each piece. This will mean a new Dress or Coat Suit for half price, All odds and short lengths must be ‘sold to make room for new Fall goods. Come in and see the Bargains for hot weather. A —— LYON & COMPANY, Allegheny St. 4712 Bellefonte, Pa.