Bema Fda ~ Bellefonte, Pa., September 29, 1911. — - — ZEBRAS IN AFRICA. They Are a Fearful Pest and a Menace to Civilization. Zebras in Africa are a nuisance and a menace to civilization, according te John T. McCutcheon in “Hunting Ad. ventures In the Biz flame Country.” He says: Then there's the ubiquitous zebra, almost as numerous as the koangoni. You see vast herds of zebras ot many places along the railway, and there after. as you roam about the level spots of est Africa, you are always | running into herds of them, At first the sight of a Lerd of zebras is a | surprise, for you have been accus-| tomed to seeing them In ihe small numbers found in eaptivity. It is al source of passing wonder that these | rare animals should Le reaming about the suburbs of towns in hundred lots. You decide that it would be a shame to shoot nn zebra and determine not to Join in this heartless slanghter. Later on your sentiments will un-| dergo na change. Everybody will tell you that the zebra is a fearful pest and must be exterminated if civiliza- tion and progress are to continue. The zebra is absolutely useless, and efforts | to domesticate him have been without | good results. He tramps over the plains, breaks down fences, tears up the cultivated fields and really fulfills no mission in life save that of supply- | ing the lions with ford. As long as | the zebras stay the lions will be there, but the settiers says that the lions are even preferable to the zebras. Under the old game ordinance expli- ing December 15, 1909, a sportsman | was allowed two zebras under his | license. Under the new one he is al-! fowed twenty! That reveals the atti- | tude of east Africa toward the jaunty little ped pony. THE TONIC OF VICTORY. Army Surgeons Say it Acts Almost as an Anaesthetic, Bonnette, a French army surgeon, | writes in the Presse Medicale of the | extraordinary Indifference to the pain | of operation manifested by the soldiers | of Napoleon while the great conqueror was sweeping victoriously over Europe. While the defeated soldier is full of imaginary terrors, subject to panic, | madness and treason, tle conqueror, on the other hand, is intoxicated with sue- cess, says the New York Medieal Journal, Nothing, not even the morbifie microbe, can resist troops who believe themselves to be invincible. Victory is the most powerful of re storatives nnd deepest of anaesthetics. Legless members of the old guard crowded into an ambulance would at sight of the emperor rise on their stumps to salute him. After Eylau Larrey operated uninterruptedly for thirty-six hours, and he reports how the soldiers seemed unconscious of their own troubles, lost in thought of the glory of their leader, and, maimed as they were, lending their best aid to fel- low patients, At Borodino Larrey disarticulated the shoulder of a colonel, who immedi- ately set out for France on foot, where he arrived after three months walking. After fording the Beresinn, a river in Russia, General Zayonchek, seventy- five years old, had his kneecap shat- tered by a bullet. Amputation was per- formed in three minutes in a violent snowstorm and in bitterly cold weather, yet the white haired officer was placed in a sledge and taken to Vilna, where he died at the age of eighty-six years. Many similar anecdotes ure told by our civil war vetermns, Stupid Fish. Professor Uaro.d [iussell, the Lon- don zoologist, will have none of the popular yarns about the wonderful things fish will do when put to it. He says they are deaf, dumb and vir- tually color blind. When the ealcare- ous stones are taken out of the ears of | fish they lose all sense of equilibrium | and roll about as If crazy. Most fish | hunt their food by only defective ' sight, but the eels by even more de- | fective smell. A conger eel with I which Professor Itussell experimented devoured with the same avidity fish dosed with clieese, anchovy, camphor spirits, turpentive and iodoform. ~— Where We Aim. William Dean Howells in one of his | talks about literature said: “Good lit- | erature is always condemned on its first | appearance. ‘That ix because, being original, it is new und strange. Shel- ley’'s work was bitterly condemned ut first. So was Coleridge's. So was Words- worth's. So was Stephen Crane's.” Mr. Howells paused, then added Im- pressively, “Stones are only thrown nt those trees which are heavy with fruit.” The Fertile Rock. Gibraltar is often called a barren rock, yet it has 456 species of indige- nous flowering plants, Castor oil planes, daturas and daphnes attain the dig- nity of trees and gernniums and helio- tropes the proportions of hedges. “These floral delights often conceal ca. non and other armaments. The few snakes that are found are small and harmless. Tizards several inches ‘emg are often seen. One of Them. Figg—As a talker Brown's wife is certainly a wonder. Fogg—Right you ! the skin. | hotter climates the increased activity | of the liver and the presence of great ' light favored a dark skin. i | The mountaineers of Asin and the are! Wonders never cease.—Boston Transcript. | sup. THE HUMAN SKIN. Changes In Its Hues That Have Come With the Ages. COLOR A MATTER OF CLIMATE. Man's Original Shade Is Believed to Have Been a Brownish Yellow—The Same Forces That Made Men White, Black and Yellow Still Operating. Man's original color and the cause of the changes in that color to the various hues that mark the skins of the differ- ent races bave long been a study among men of science. The theory of Professor Lionel Lyde, an English scientist, is that, whatever the color of primitive man in the be- ginning, the conditions of life during the glacial period were such that uni- formity of results must have been pro- duced. Nearly every anthropologist is ready to admit now a common origin for all mankind. Where man origi-, nated is not kmown—very likely in southern Asla, possibly in Africa, cer- tainly not in Europe. they say. His original color Is supposed to have been a sort of brownish yellow not like any | of the colors of mankind today. and scientists call him, for the sake of | calling him something, a Condwana. He lived in southern latitudes. This, | they think. is certain. Then came migrations, and then, Professor Lyde believes, the variations of color began. Some turned white, some tnrned black, some brown and some yeilow, all ac- ' cording to the climate in which they found themselves, Climate influences worked directly | and Indirectly. In the tropics the skin and the intestines perform work which in temperate zones is thrown on the Jungs. So when man found himself in cooler lands the increased activity of the lungs. together with the lessened light and heat. favored lightening of When he found himself in The old theories of race are pretty . well discarded, for men of the same i race, under differing conditions, would come to be outwardly very different. Thus even in Africa, which everybody thinks of as the land of blacks, black ' is not at all the universal color. In ' the Sudan, where there are great light | and little humidity and no shade, the | men are very black. Elsewhere in Africa, where there are forest, more - humidity and less light, though about equal heat, the color is brown and even yellow. As primitive man went on his way over the globe he adapted himself to the conditions he found. Professor Lyde thinks that it is light and not heat which is injurious. There are in the tropics dangerous X-like rays which must be stopped, and they were stopped by the darkening of the skin. Since lack of moisture also tends to give n tawny color, it is found that in rainy countries the people are fairer than in places where there are long and frequent droughts, The race, then, that found a home in moderate and damp climates turned whiter and whiter. It is only in such climates that white skins ean endure, and presumably, if the present white race was turned into a different part of the world for many hundreds of years, the whiteness of skin would gradually be lost. Perhaps, since the white man is spreading over the world to-day, it would be fair to say it will, in such cases, be lost, the whiteness being retained only in climates that have the conditions under which Re race was first bleached. Intensity of light and little humidity | made black. Trade winds and little | humidity gave the tinge of brown to, the subtropical Mediterranean peopie. | Then comes yellow, which Professor Lyde puts down as the result of “vast desicenting grass lands” in intemper- ate latitudes. The yellow man is the product of the grass lands, with lack of humidity and seasonal extremes of temperature. The color n man exposed to such con- ditions would naturally take would be | one which conserves heat nearly as well as white, but which also protects | frem light, for which combination yel- low was the hest, or red. The nor- ' mal color of these folk of the grass ! lands would be changed by special local conditions, such as the presence of mountains or proximity to the sea. | maritime Mongolinns are lighter in ! color than their brothers of the inland plains. uo Professor Lyde, therefore, skin color is entirely a matter of climate. It is a well established phenomenon now because the different portions of the human race lived segregated for thousands of years in special areas, but the same forces that made men white and black and yellow are oper- ating today, slowly, but surely. Men who change their dwelling places will still, after hundreds of generations, change also thelr skins as they did in the epoch of the first migrations.—New York Times. Not Consistent. “You are very foolish, Mary, to think of geiting married. If you will give up the idea 1 wHl raise your wages a dollar a week.” “Huh—a dollar a week! That's a fine argument ag'inst marridge to be put up by a lady that's drawn $400 a month alimony.” —Judge. The soldier is the only wild animal that does not eat what he kills.—Jes- | mons. “Jim,” says Mrs. Mann, “1 see that the best butter is 3 cents cheaper at the market than it is out there at our store. This Is market day. you mind going down there on your way home and getting me two dozen eggs and some corn and a few" — “Oh, I'm awfully sorry, dear,” breaks in Mr. Mann, “but this Is go- ing to be my busy day. | won't be home till pretty late, and there are a lot of extra things that 1 simply must attend to, and” - “Never mind. dear,” says Mrs. Mann. “I'd just as soon do it myself, but I haven't any money, and if you will leave me a ten dollar bill I'lI"— “Come to think of it.” breaks in Mr. Mann right there, “1 won't be so very busy today. 1 was thinking about next week. I'll go to the market for you very gladly. "Cleveland Plain | Dealer. The Gulls and the Black Crickets. When the Mormons first settled in Utah black crickets came in myriads from the mountains and would have destroyed the crops had it not been for the gulls that came by hundreds and thous: uds from the surrounding |t lakes. At that time the settlers at Salt Lake regarded the advent of the birds as a heaven sent miracle. and ever since the gull has been esteemed almost as a sacred bird by the Mor About the beet and alfalfa fields when they are being Irrigated the gulls still collect and feed largely on field mice that are =o destructive to crops.—Success Magazine. ER ibp Saving Him. “Why have you and Miss Sweet broken off your eugngenent “Because shi loves me so" “That's n queer reason.” “Not at all She believes in fortune telling. nnd when she went to have her future revealed not long ago she was informed that she would be married three times. That settled my case, for the time being at least. She said that she was determined that I should not encounter the danger of heing first on the list.”"—Pittsburg Press. Looked Ominous. “Mabel, what are that young man's intentions?’ “1 don't know, papa. He is keeping me in the dark.” “That is the reason | am asking. Tell him he need not mind turning |* down the light any more when he ealls.,"—Houston Post. Medical. The Only Way MANY BELLEFONTE CITIZENS HAVE DIS COVERED IT. Just what to do when the kidneys are affected, is a question that concerns both young and old. Weak kidneys neglected in childhood lead to life-long suffering. People of advanced years, with less vital ity, suffer doubly. In youth or age, lan. guor, backache, urinary irregularity, dizzi- ness and nervousness make life a burden. There is one remedy that acts directly on the kidneys and cures these troubles. Doan’s Kidney Pills owe their world-wide fame to the fact that they cure sick kid- neys and cure them permanently, Fol- low the example of this Bellefonte citizen and you will be convinced that this is so. Mrs. James Rine, 239 W. High street, Bellefonte, Pa., says: Some years ago 1 procured Doan’s Kidney Pills at Green's Pharmacy Co., and their use cured me of kidney complaint and backache that had caused me no end of suffering. At that time I told of my experience in a public statement and [ now take pleasure in con- firming that testimonial. The relief Doan's Pills gave me has been permanent,” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. —r waiter in a restaurant went to ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Coustitutiona! Amendments. POSED AMENDMENTS TO - H St ION SUBMITTED Ri THE S OF THIS COM DoALTH R THEIR APPROVAL OR EIECTIO he ha TASSENIELY THE CoM. SYLVANIA. AND oF THE COMMONWEALTH 5 IN PURSUAS A&E | OF ARTICLE, i OF THE. CONSTITUTION. Number One. A JOINT RESOLUTION. | Proposin aX an amendmen: to the Constitution of Common ivania, t wealt Pennsy so J» Io ie the courts of Common legheny Count Section 1. Be it Tesolved bY the Senate and House of Represen! of the Commonwealth of Peli lvania in eral Assembly met the fol amendment to the Constitution of Pennsy be, and the same is , Dro- Posed, in accordance with thane eighteenth article That section six of article five be amended, by sriking out the said section, and inserting in reof the following: Section 6. i the county of Philadelphia all the jurisdiction and powers now vested in the dis- trict Soutts and courts of Common he 0 such changes as may be made by this ho tion or by law, shall be in Phil phiz vested in five distinct and separate courts of equal and co- ordinate 2 Jurisdiction , composed of three Judges each. said courts in Philadelphia shall Sa respectively as the court of Common Pleas number one, Pour two, number three, number four and number five, but the number o said courts may be by law increased, from time to time, and shall be in like manner iceesive numbers. The number of jud y of said courts, or in any county where 2 tablishment of an additional court may be author- law, may be jncreased from time to time, rr w er such increase shall amount in the whole to three, such a. judges com a dist} inct and sep.rate court as aforesaid, which be numbered as aforesaid. all suits shall be instituted in the aid courts of Pleas without designat! Common ing the number of the said court, Os business amon ary hi tribute and apportion the g them in such manner as shall be Bs of court, and each court, to w an, be thus have exclusive jurisdiction thereof, subject to change of venue, as shall be In ad SY dn of Allcuhen all the jurisdiction and powers now vested in he several numbered | courts of Common court of DON Flom A of all the judges in Con in said courts, Such juris- diction and powers shall extend to all at law and in equity which shall have been insti- tuted in the several numbered courts, and shall be sul to such chiaites as may be made sul to ¢ pane of venue as by e president udge of said court shall be Judges i rt eg ges na court may w Jom time to time. This amendment shall on the first day of January oh its —~ A true copy of Resolution No. 1. law. MCAFEE, Number Two. A JOINT RESOLUTION. P an amendment to section eight, artic Eu Si, snide Section 1. Be it readived by the a an House of Representatives of the Commonwealth - of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met. That the following is as an amendment to the Constitution of t ommonweaith of nia, in accordance with the provisions of the eighteenth articie thereof: — Amendment to Article Nine, Section Eight. | Section 2. Amend section sight, articlenine, of | the Constitution of Pennsylvania. which reads as | follows: — “Section 8. The debt of any. county, city, bor. ough, township, schogl Sistrice or other munici for incon rated district, except as herein never Stel seven per centum provid assessed value of the taxable property ig nor Msetsei] any such m iy drict incur any new debt, or increase its indebted- ness to an amount exceeding two per centum upon such assessed valuation of property, without the assent of the electors thereof at a public election in such manner as sBalt be ovided by by Jaw: but any city, the debt St whic! per centum of such PO exeieds may be authorized by law to increase the same three per centum, in the aggregate, at any one time, upon such Yajuation $0 as to as fol The debt of any county, “city, bor- ough, ok chou) district, or any municipal- ity or incorporated district, except as herein pro- vived, shall never exceed seven per centum upon the value of the taxable property therein, nor shall any such municipality or district incur any new debt, or increase its indebtedness oan an amount exceeding two per centum upon such as- sessed valuation of property, without the assent of the electors Sheen] ata a pubis election in such manner as shail be provid, aby law; but any cy: city, the debt of which now exceeds of such valuation, may be I by law 10 increase the same three per centum, in the aggregate, at any one Hime: upon valuation, except that anv debt o) incur- red by the city and countv of Philadel a for the ruction and deve! ys for Secretary of the ROBERT MCAFEE, 5631-13t Autc mobiles. mm sme seep The “FORD” AUTOMOBILE a eeds no ing. wrpower and dura It’s smooth-running motor, ample bility tells the tale. Every car sold to sell: others. It is the one car that speaks ps for itself and the prices commend it to would-be purchasers: Read the list. Touring Car, fully equi Torpedo Body, fully eq Runabout, fully equipped , like above picture $ 780.00 725.00 680.00 . . W. W. KeicHLINE & Co., Agent Centre County Branch # 5% Bellefonte, Pa. Pleas shall be vested in one | ROBERT Secretzry of the Commonwealth. | e | Bush Arcade Building, Shoe s. Fitzezy The Ladies’ Shoe that Cures Corns Sold only at Yeager’s Shoe Store, BELLEFONTE, PA. Yeagers Shoe Store LYON & CO. Coats and Coat Suits. Everything new and the latest fall models in this department. We are the only house that can sell you the “Style- rite,” man-tailored Ladies’ Suits. Coats cut in the new popular lengths, semi- h fitting back, new style skirt, all colors and black, from $10.00 up. COATS. Our Ladies’ and Misses’ Long Coats are now ready for your inspection. We are showing all the smartest models. The new Polo Coats with reversi- ble English blanket cloth in greys and browns, with the new roll sailor collar, or notched, manish collars. We also show the new Caracul Cloth Coats cut in the newest models. Our special Seal Coats we want to show you. One style 50 inch long, made with a roll shawl collar, lined all through with guaranteed satin; handsome metal buttons; regular price $25, our special $18.00. Another Seal Coat, 52 inches long, made with a deep roll shawl collar, handsome frog ornamet but tons, lined all through with the best quelity guaran- teed satin; regular price and quality $35, our price $25. A full line of Misses’ and Children's Suits and Coats. We invite an early inspection to see all our new Fall styles. Everything in all the latest models. New Dress Goods, new Trimmings. All the new Fall colors and black. LYON & COMPANY, Allegheny St. 47-12 Bellefonte, Pa. A a