5h . producing anything? _ is imperative for creating purposes. ° florist Greek und my tailor Russian.” 6, 1911. Shut OF All the Power When You Quit Work at Night. It is a great thing to learn to shut off the mental! steam when you quit work, says Orison Swett Marden in Success Magazine. What would you think of a factory manager who would leave all of his power turned on after the operators had left the factory, the delicate machinery running every- where, pounding itself to pieces, grind- ing out its delicate bearings without Many of us do not turn off our mental power after we are through producing or creating for the day. We carry our business home, take it to bed with us, think, plan, worry and waste precious ener- gy in all sorts of ways. in superfluous thinking. foolish worrying that pro- duces nothing, but grinds out the ex- quisite mental machinery and unfits it for the next day's work. It is a great art to learn to shut off power when through our day's work. so that we can ofl our mental machinery. re- fresh our minds and recuperate our- selves, so that we can go to the next day's work completely reinvigorated. Many men seem to think that they are accomplishing something if they keep their minds on business even when not at werk. but they really ac- complish less than nothing because they are wasting precious mental en- ergy. the pewer for concentration, the vigor, the focusing of the mind. which | VON MOLTKE'S METHODS. An Incident That Showed His Grasp of Military Detail. The parents of a young soldier, who was a private in a Prussian cavalry regiment during the Franco-Prussian war, became very anxious about him. Several battles had been fought and they had received no news of their boy. After some hesitation the father went to see General von Moltke and after a long wait was admitted to the | presence of the great field marshal. “What is your business?’ asked the general. “Use as few words as pos- sible.” The visitor explained that he wished to know the fate of his son, a private in a certain regiment. Moltke smiled. but not unkindly, and drew forth a square of cardboard covered with dots. lines and crosses of various colors. “This line.” he said, “indicates the | line of march of your son's regiment. | ‘These dots mark the distance of euch | forced march. Tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock the regiment must be at this | point here. Take note of the situa-| tion.” He said no more, and the in- terview ended. i Long before the hour named the fa- ther was at the point indicated on the | map. Just before 7 o'clock the trum- pets of the advance guard were heard | in the distance. and precisely at the hour the father saw his son.—London | Telegraph. ! Olenty of Stability. A western mining prospector was | paying his first vizit to New York. “What do you think of it?" asked the | proud Gothamite. as he pointed out the skyscrapers. “Waal,” replied the miner, “it 100Kks | like a permanent camp all right.—Suc- | cess Magazine. Object Unobjected To. Doctor—You are now convalescent | and all you need ix exercise. You should waik ten or twenty miles a day. sir, but your walking should have an | object. IP'atient—All right, doctor: ri travel around trying to borrow enough to pay your lnll.—Boston Transcript. His Preference. Magistrate—You say this man stole your coat. Do I understand that you prefer the charge against him? Pat—Well, no, your worship. 1 pre- %er the coat, if it's all the same to | you!—London Telegraph. The Better Way. #1 expect to wake up some day and Sond myself famous.” “Better keep on dreaming, old man.” ~Exchange. Subtlety may deceive you: integrity pever will.—Cromwell. ’ And All of Them Americans. i An English visitor has recently been expressing his wonderment at the fa- cility with which America assimilates its stream of immigrants. A friend with whom he was talking on the subject remarked. “My housemaid is a Norwegian, my grover a Scotchman, my butcher is a German, my druggist is a Pinn. my barber an Italian, my ne'¥sman a Jew. my laundryman is irish, my fishmonger English, my —American Hebrew, Correct. “It's easy to find out what time it is,” said a married man. “If the hall clock says 5:20, and the drawing room clock says 5:50, and the dining room clock says 6:05. and my watch says 6:15, and my wife's little dinky watch says 6. it's 6 o'clock in our house.”— Gas Logic. Had the Moving Mania. | Sunday Schoo! Teacher—What! Don't | you want to go to heaven when you | die? Little Emmn-Well, you see our family couldn't think of living in (one place the whole year round.— Puck. i | visitor in the French capital | notices that its people have somewl.:! | different idens from ours as to the use | matter or force. The so called “con | The wood or whatever the substance | happens to be becomes ashes and zas. | and if we could gather up all the prod | conservation or indestructibility of th. | stuff of the universe would seem to | vance party. in order to mark the Quickly as It Came. The sea of Galilee is not always calm. The mountains immediately ad joinging it are 2,000 feet high, al through their deep gorges the storm winds are sucked into the hollow of the lake, so that sudden squalls come literally out of a blue sky. One charm- ing spring morning we started out to sail from Tiberias to Capernaum. There was not a ripple on the water or a cloud in the heavens. But wheu we were a quarter of a mile frou shore out boatmen noticed a band of rough water rushing toward us from the other side of the lake. In spite of our remounstrances they immediate ly gave up the plan for making Caper paum, took down the sai! with soch frantic haste that they nearly upset the boat and then rowed for the lan! with all their might and with such ex cited urgings to one another that w thought them a cowardly crew. Iiut hardly bad the boat been beached in = sheltered cove when the wind wa; howling down on us from the moun tains and the heavy breakers were foaming along the shore as far out into the lake as we could see. A quar ter of an hour later the sea of Galilee was again as level as a mirror, and only a soft, warm breeze was blowin: over the smiling waters.—Travel Mag azine. SEWERS OF PARIS. How This Great System Swallows Up the Litter of the Streets. The Paris sewer system is said to be the finest in the world. The observant soon of sewers, for he will see porters throw big bundles of paper down large open: ings left in the curb, and even ruus and garbage. i On Shrove Tuesday there is a car nival along the Paris boulevard: From noon to midnight the crow: | throws paper confetti in such quan | tities that the brood streets are con ered with many tinted paper snow | when the last revelers leave for home The visitor wonders how this mess is to be cleared up. In the morning, how ever, every scrap is gone. If he bad stayed out inte enough he would have seen the litter swept and washed right | into the sewers, | Perhaps that takes him underground | to visit them. one of the sights of | Paris. There are nearly 2,000 separatc | channels, some great aqueducts nav! gated in a boat. with walks on eithe side. They carry the tMephone and telegraph cables. electric light wires gas mains and pneumatic letter tubes ~Telephone Review. Matter and Force. There is no such thing as a loss of servation” of matter and its forces was demonstrated years ago by Joule and other scentists. When, for In stance, a thing “burns up,” as we say, the substances that give out the light and heat are changed, not destroyed. ucts of the burning we should find that they had not lost a particle of their weight and that the form of the: only was changed. The eternity of matter was a teaching of the old Grees philosophers, or of some of them a! least, and the modern teaching of the corroborate the ancient idea.—New York American. A Trail of Twisted Trees. All manner of devices have been em ployed to mark a line of march, but ft is thought that the most curious method of “blazing the trail” is tha: still to be seen in Africa. In the year 1880, after a fierce battle with the Abyssinians, the dervishes pur sued their foes as far as the lake dis trict. The mahdi's men had smal! knowledge of geography and little to- pographical intelligence. So the ad- route for those who came after aid also to guide the force on their return journey, twisted the saplings along the way into living knots. The war end. ed, but the tied up trees grew aud flourished, although uncouthly twisted and distorted, and are now the only reminders of that uprising of the der vishes. John Bunyan's Indictment. The bill of indictment preferred against John Bunyan ran thus: “John Bunyan hath devilishly and pernicious ly abstained from coming to church tv hear divine service und is a common upholder of several unlawful meetingzs and conventicies, to the disturbance and distraction of the good subjects of this kingdom, contrary to the !nwx of our sovercign lord the king.” ie was convicted and imprisoned twelve years and six months. Levity In Court. Judge—-You saw the prisoner steal the sheet of music. What happened next? Witness—Then he walked out of the store with an abstracted air, your honor.—~Boston Transcript. A Diplomat. Little Wille—Say, pa, what is a diplo- mat? Pa—A diplomat, my son, is a person who can prove a man a liar without calling him one.—London Tit- Bits. No great thing Is created suddenly any more than a bunch of grapes or a fig.—Epictetus. a —— wr —— ernor than Major.” There are only about twenty left of this band of monkeys, which in some mysterious manner came over from Africa many years sgo and claimed citizenship in Europe. They are pro- tected by martial law. and any addi- tion by birth to their number is care fully chronicled und announced in the jocal paper. The apes change their place of residence from the highest peaks of the rock to lower and more sheltered portions and back again, ac- cording to the state of the weather. They show their sense of humor by throwing stones at the soldiers. but they are often not seen for weeks at a time save in the early morning. A few years ago. on account of the diminishing numbers of these animals, some apes were procured from Bar- bary and turned loose upon the rock. But resident monkeys killed them all. Although so fierce to intruders of their own kind. they never attack human beings and are greatly beloved and esteemed.—New York Press. PIES FOR THE KING. Ancient Custome That Are Still Kept Alive In England. The city of Gloucester, in England, annually presents the king with a ple. Almost from time immemorial Glouces- ter until the year 1834 followed the custom of expressing its loyalty to the throne by sending to the sovereign a lamprey ple. In 183+ the custom was suspended. but it was revived in 1893 and has since continued. it was felt that the year of the dia- mond jubliee required some special ef- fort. and therefore the 1897 pie. which { was in May dispatched to Balmoral upon a gold dish. was of a more than usually elaborate character. This ple weighed twenty pounds and was adorned with truffles, fine prawns on gold skewers and aspic jelly. On the top was a representation of the royal crown and cushion. with a scepter to which were attached streamers of royal blue. and at the base were four golden lions. By the survival of an ancient cus- tom the town of Yarmouth is bound to furnish to the sherilfx of Norwich annually a bundred herrings baked in twenty-four ples. which are then sent to the lord of the manor of East Clare ton, who conveys them to the king.— Harper's Weekly. The Transformation of Percy. His name was Johnny, and his ambi- | tion was to be grown up. He had watched Cissy and Percy, but that's another storiette, as Kipling says. “Papa.” he piped as he walked with his dad on the beach, “what's under those rocks?" “Limpets!” snapped papa. This was not the first question. “Wouldn't they rather walk about, pa?” “No! rapped out pa. “They prefer to cling where they are!” “Is everything that likes clinging to something else a limpet, pa?” “For goodness—yes!" rounred father. Johnny thought. “Well, pa.” he concluded, “is Percy a limpet, pa. when he says goodby to Cissy in the passage?'—London Ap- swers. There Was a Coolness. Two fashionable Philadelphia women met in Chelsea one morning recently. As they shook hands and stopped to speak Mrs. Brown said to Mrs. Jones, “That's a beautiful hat you are wear ing.” “Yes, my dear. Isn't it cunning? And I'm so glad you like it. John gave me the money, and I had it imported from Paris.” Next day little Susie Brown was playing with the Jones girl. and she sald. “My mother says your mother has an ugly oid hat what is her last year's lid made up new.” And when Mr. Brown and Mr. Jones reached a mutual friend's, hoping to spend the week end together. they found a coolness between the fami- lies.— Philadelphia Times. Hot Air az a Polisher. Hot air i: used for polishing The articles to be treated are placed in a basket in nu centrifugal machine driven at a very lizh speed aud heated air is blown froin a pipe through the basket. A high polish is thus produced very rapidly. Nickel plated articles that have become tarnished are made bright fn a few mint tes. Wet metal, fresh from the bail. needs no preliminary dying, for the current of air dries and polishes it at the same moment. sumption ENTIRELY CURED. INTERESTING CASE. WwW. H. Binghatn, Pa., : “Iwasina i i very and feared 1 was Busan wis entirely never nd In cases where a gh toning, rilla ood's effected thous- There is no real substitute for it. If to buy any p ration said to be Wiged are 18 In » Fauble’s Clothing Stores. sm m— It's Complete! Boys is at its Best. wear, Our Fall and Winter show- ing of Clothes for Men and New Suits, QOvercoats, Raincoats, Under- | - Hats. Everything that «Man or Boy wears is here, and MORE AND BETTER than you ever saw in Belle fonte at any time. you to see what ywe are show ing. The Kind of Merchandise, the Quantity, the Style. It will help you to select the Best. We want i - coremmon an ETROUSE 8 BROS SALTINONE . . THEZISAFEST STORE N o& BALIINORE for you to trade with in cen- tral Pennsylvania. A look is all that’s needed. You can’t make a mistake. We guard against mistakes, with our guarantee of money back any time you want it. Do you know of a safer way to buy clothes. Let us see you. That's all we ask. The Fauble Stores Bellefonte, Pa. |No Better Than Father Used to Make. Young Husband—Still sitting up. !ldear? You shouldn't have waited for | me. 1 was detained downtown by im: jporam and— Young Wife \=Try some other excuse, George. That's the kind father used to make — Chicago Tribune. i How He Began. ! “Nevertheless, 1 cannot begrudge him ila cent of his fortune. He beran a ithe foot and got many a kick.” “He aid?" “Yes; he was a blacksmith.” —.Indge ' One of the most striking differen es | between a cat and a le is that o cat | bas only nine lives.—Mark Twain. : Do not take upon yourself a load of ! hatred It ix n heavier load than you think —Mme. de Sevigne. Oh! “The little son of the hostess a mighty ugly. izn't he?” “Do you think so" “He certainly doesn't take after mm | mother. Must look like his father.” “His mother says he does. I'm bis father.” —Houston Post. Dangers are light if they once seelt light, and more dangers have deceived men than forced them.—Bacon. S—— — Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When wile you avy + dnpping steam Dies, lok} fas. you tm t have goo Zies The air you poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING al HEL fo ee nd Our workmen Skilled Mechani jo a no better anywhere. Our it Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior article i enti establishment, And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are lower than many who give you r, unsanitary work and the lowest e wos dhe lowe grade of finishings. For ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE comm There is no style of work, from the cheapest ** ger” to the finest BOOK WORK, that we car: not do in the most satis- factory manner, and at Prices consist ent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office. | Patents. TEN TRADE MARKS, COPYRIG PE mune Senin + se ad, ge ion free whether ping ere 4 is ale al Communications are strictly ET » ents taken t M 3 1 Sau chara ihe oe SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, a handsome illustrated weekly. Largest circula tion of scientific Terms year; four mo $1. Sold bv all a 3 ? MUNN & CO., 52-45-1y. = Yi Branch office, 625 F St.. Wi on, D. Travelers Guide. sr ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table effective June 19, 1911. READ DOWN READ UP, re. Srations {1 No 1 No No 3 No 6 No 4No 2 — Ee id ASE EE a a. m.|p.m./p.m.|Lve. Ar.jp.m. p.m. ¥ 6% 5'30| BELLEFONTE. "6 40,5 05 9 45 7 15| 6 56| 2 32{..F .. Nigh.......... | 927) 452 2 7 20167 03| 2 37........ Leo... 921) 4 47 727 708) 2 "HECLA PARK. 915 441 921 729 2 47| F...Dunkles....... 913 4 38 918 7 33i£7 13 2 51|...Hublersburg.... 9 09! 4 34 9 14 7371718 2 F-Snydertown....| B 06) 4 8 10 7406720 2 58......... ittany...... 19 04 4 27, 9 07 7 42/17 23 301. F. Huston... 9 02| 424 904 746/728 308..." Lamar. 8 50 421 9 01 7 48/17 30 3 Clintondale..... 18 56 4 18 7 52| 7 34 3 12/F Krider's Siding, 8 52| 4 14| 8 55 7 56/7 39| 3 "%1e8 48) 4 09, 8 50 a1 18 F cout 41 4 44 HE | 84014 18 (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) 11 40] B 45l........ Jersey Shore......... 3 40 12 15 9 20/ Arr. nz 27 1 fa aon a i 3 730 650... PHILADELPHIA... "uw 13% 1010) 850......NEW YORK......... I) md a wlAn ) I | oy lL 1M. eck Days. vel a.m, p.m, ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. Schedule to take effect Mondav. Tan, 6. 1910 EASTW. T Readdown. | ARBad vi, | STATIONS, || No5tNo3 No 1 Not Nod Ne 6 .[Lve. Ar. WET a EE Ei eeeme) 8-37 |} 05 8B ore. | 851%: 4 6 46H s Park| 831 gungtle 1a ngs 2 pl adie 8 i ales He oo 5 roo ru i 4 13720 . Bloomsdorf..| 7 40 340 7 35 PineGrove Ml! 7 35 lan F. H. THOMAS, Supt.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers