-. ~ - Donor td 1911. ————— Bellefonte, Pa., November 10, General Sutter Discovered the Precious Metal In California. “It is not generally known,” said a mineralogist, “that the discoverer of gold in California was a Pennsylvanian and at one time a resident of Philadel- This distinguished pioneer lies buried in the soil of Pennsylvania al- lost forgotten. He was General John ‘A. Sutter, a Swiss, who emigrated to Philadelphia in 1834 and became a citi- zen of the commonwealth. His grave is in the Mennonite burying grounds at Lititz, Lancaster county, in which yillage he spent the last years of his life. “General Sutter was born in 1803 in Baden. Germany. near the borders of Switzerland. Upon his arrival in this country he speut some time in Phila- | delphia. subsequently removing to the | vicinity of Lititz. where, in the midst | of relatives, he engaged in farming. | Possessed of a roving nature, however, | it was not ng before he yearned to | explore the great unknown land be- | yond the Rockies. After many priva- ! tions he reached California some time in the early forties and staked a claim. i It was in the fall of 1848, after a heavy | rain, that, attracted by yellowish de- | posits in a small stream, he made his great discovery of the precious metal, The news of his find spread rapidly, | and the following spring the great | rush from the east began. “General Sutter amassed a consider- able fortune through his gold diggings. but lost most of it through unfortu- nate speculations. He returned to Pennsylvania in 1871 and spent his declining years in retirement, living on the pension of $250 a month voted him by the California legislature. He died June 18, 1880. Two of his pall- bearers were Generals John C. Fre- | mont and Ambrose E. Burnside, who had been his friends in California.”-- Philadelphia Record. FATTED SHEEP. Tails of the Syrian Breed Weigh Ten to Fifteen Pounds. It has been suggested that in the sheep fattening process, which is com- mon in the vicinity of Damascus, one might be able to trace the original meaning of thie Biblical phrase. “the fatted calf.” Mrs. McIntosh thus de- scribes the process in her book, “Da- mascus:"” “The sheep differ from ours. When we show pictures of the latter to the natives they ask what animals they are. They miss the enormous tails of the Syrian sheep, in which the fat of the body seems to concentrate and . which, after skinning and preparing. " Wales. often weigh ten to fifteen pounds. “Early in the summer the head of each family buys cr sets apart one, two or three sheep, according to his rank in life or his wealth. The wom- en and children devote themselves with great zeal to fattening these sheep. The children fill large baskets with mulberry leaves and carry them to their mothers. These several times a day and also in the night take lit- tle wooden stools and sit by the sheep. With one hand they keep the sheep's mouth open: with the other they cram in the leaves, forcing them down the throat. “Twice a day the sheep ure led to the viilage fountain to drink, and their counts are frequently washed, About the end of September the work of the women and children comes to an end. The sheep have grown so fat they cannot stand up. They are then killed. Their flesh is boiled with spices and put into pots for winter use. This mincement is eaten as a relish at fes- tivities” it Was His Mistake, Mr. Newed (the week before his birthday)-—Good gracions, here are six boxes of cheap cigars my wife has evi- dently bousht me for a present! | conldn't possibly smoke such vile things, and still I wouldn't like to hurt her feelings by refusing. I'll just sub- stitute six boxes of my best Havanas and throw these cheap ones away be- | fore she returns. Mrs. Newed (the day after)—Oh. Tom, 1 bought six boxes of cheap ci- gars yesterday for my dear Uncle Jo- nas, the sea captain. who lives in 1 have just posted them to him. They only cost me 5 shillings a box, but I'm sure he won't be able to tell them from good ones. Why, how | funny you look, dear! Are you ill%- | London Tit-Bits, Too Much Appreciation, A blography of Huxley dwells on the annoyance which he suffered from | bores. But the plague had its fuany side. Huxley once wrote to a friend: “I had a letter from a fellow yester- | day morning who must be a lunatic, to | the effect that he had been reading my essays, thought I was the man to spend a month with and was coming | down by the 5 o'clock train attended | by his seven children and his mother in-law!” { Defunct, Arithmetically. “So poor Dinny is a dead man." i “01 didn't say that. OI} tould youn he was half Lilt from a blast in the quarry.” “Well, an’ wasn't he half kilt only | iast month fallin’ down an elevator? How many halves has he got to 4 ¥ killed 7" —Boston Transcript. ——— Quite the Other Way. “Does your wife go to services to see what other women wear?" “No,” replied Mr. Cumrox. “We are | now sufficiently prosperous for her to go in order to let other women ree : what she wears.” Washington Star. | CREEPING CACTUS. Plants That will Across a Desert. “The isolation of the desert lowlands Curious Travel {| of Lower California, combined with alternations of long continued droughts and heavy rains, has resulted in the development of the richest and most extraordinary desert flora in the world,” says E. W. Nelson in the Na- tional Geographic Magazine. “Cactuses of many kinds abound, varying from giants standing with massive fluted trunks fifty to sixty feet tall to little straggling stemmed species too weak to hold themselves upright. The fruit of many of these cactuses is edible and much sought for by birds and mammals. They were ' inclination to self desiruction, which once one of the maiu crops of the In- | dians who lived In this arid region. The cactus forests often form thorny jungles through which it is impossible “to pass. “After months among these thorny plants we supposed we had seen them in all their eccentric variations of forms. One morning. however, while crossing the Llane de Yrals, in front of Magdalena bay. | rode out from a dense growth of bushes into an open area and pulled up my horse in amaze- ment at sight of the most extraordi- dinary of them all. Before me was a great bed of the creeping devil cactus, which appeared like a swarm of gigan- tic eaterpillars creeping in all dirvec- tions. These plants actually travel away froin the common center of the group, and | saw many single sections | twenty or thirty yards away from the others. The part of the stem resting on the ground sends down rootlets, | and the older stems die in the rear at about the same rate as they grow in front, so they slowly move away from the colony across the flats where they ive.” A SECRET LIBRARY. Important Papers That Were Stored Awzy by Queen Victoria. Within the walls of Buckingham pal- ace and constructed on the “strong room” principle is a room known as the “secret library,” and in this ave stored documents and private letters which were they sent forth to the world would doubtless set the whole universe talking From the very commencement of her reign Queen Victoria assiduously stored away in nice order all family and other hmportant papers, her only assistant in this duty being a secre tary, who entered her service within fourteen years of her accession to the throne and who retained his place un- til her majesty’s death, though he him. self had no access to nine-tenths of the papers which are docketed, the late queen alone retaining the keys of the safes and cabinets in which her | wgecret library” was contained. Just before her death her majesty added to the list of her papers a batch of letters of the most private and con- fidentinal kind, addressed by the late prince consort to his brother, the Duke Ernest of Coburg. and it is a well as- cortained faet that when possible xe acquired every scrap written by her late consort to his private friends. It is said Ly those who are qualified to surmise that the “secret library” not only telis of royal marriages, births and deaths, but that it is virtually the private history of Europe during the last half of the nineteenth century.— London Tit-ilits, European Civilization. The first pavements in Paris were laid about the year 1200; in Loudon. about 1417. Berlin was without pave- ments far into the seventeenth cen- tury. No houses had glass windows as the fourteenth century anything NAPOLEON AND SUICIDE. His Draft of Poison and His Com- ments on Self Destruction. It is sald that when all seemed lost to Napoleon in 1814--the year before Waterloo—he thought of suicide as an end to his career. He actdally took a draft of poison. but the essential element in the concoction bad lost its efficacy. He, however, conquered his A half a hundred vexing ailments can! be traced to constipation. Biliousness, | headache, vertigo, sallowness, nervous- ness, sleeplessness, irritability, mental de- | pression, and cold hands and feet are only ' some of the symptoms of constipation. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con- | stipation and they cure its consequences. !| ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. ~——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. he ever afterward held in abhorrence, even during his hopeless exile at St Helena. When during his first con- sulship one of his grenadiers killed himself Napoleon issued an order to the guards: “The Gre.adi-¢ Gobain bas killed himself owing to a love affair. He was otherwise an excellent soldier. The first consul commands that the Hood's Sarsaparilla. TT a —————————— — Could Hardly Hear ALSO GREATLY IMPAIRED. 1 was afflicted with catarrh,” writes F Kansas: “1 EDEN Rm mS mR) mm Sm ZR ZS several guards should be informed that a sol To Se vi dier ought to conquer the grief and could hardly hear, taste or smell. [was bitterness of his passions: that there about io Sive up in despair, “Ri aking is the sume courage in enduring with three bottles of this medicine I was cured, patience the pangs of the soul as in and have had no ret of the disease. facing bravely the fire of a battery. To | cures, not si because it contains Sar saparilla, but because it combines the ut give oneself up to grief without resist- ance or to kill oneself to escape is to; d ferent in ¢ ents. There is no real . g substitute for it. An i abandon the field of battle before being ne] A hy prepa Joi 3 besten: a Ie P # » i 3 - ¥ In a conversation with Goethe, Na-| oc ob i vial id form. or poleon blamed the poet for allowing Sarsa Werther to commit suicide, and in 1816 | = ns a hie said to O'Meara: l Plumbing. “Suicide is the act of a gambler who! —rermmmee has lost eversthing or of a ruined Good Health profligate. 1 have always thought that | and | a man shows more courage in support: | ing the evils thar afflict him than in | Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. getting rid of his iife.” TRAGIC IN ITS BREVITY. The Story cf the Duel Between Hamil- ton and Burr. The story of the [Hamilton-Burr duel | is tragic in its brevity. The little party | of five—the principals, their seconds and the surgeon—wis on the ground | not long after sunrise. The prelimi- | pariex were soon arranged. As Pen- | dleton, Hamilton's second, gave him | his pistol he asked. “Will you have the hairspring set?” “Not this time,” was the significant reply. and then the men faced each other. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escaping gas, you can’t have good Health. The air you breathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING | ie the kind we do. It's the only kind you ought to have. Wedon't trust this work to boys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our | Material and Fixtures are the Best | Not a cheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good work and th According to the best authorities | finest material, our " ne upon a disputed subject, Burr fired at. . the word. At the report Hamilton Prices are lower started forward with nn convulsive than many who give you poor, unsanitary movement. reeled. involuntarily dis Sore and the owest grade of finishings. For charging his pistol into the foliage | ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Bellefonte, Pa. above him. and fell teadlong. Burr, | with an expression of pain upon his | Opposite Bush House face. sprang toward him. but Van Ness, | 56-14-1v. his second, seized him by the arm and | hurried him down the bank and into | their boat. Hamilton. being lifted up, revived | for n moment and gasped, “This is a | mortal wound, doctor.” Relapsing | again into unconsciouspess, he was | 1 pi revived by the fresh air of the | [INE JOB PRINTING river. “Pendleton knows” he said, | oA SPECIALTY -~—0 AT THE WATCHMAN Fine Job Printing. | | | | | | | trying to turn toward his friends, “that i I did not intend to tire at him." At 2 the afternoon following be bad breathed his last OFFICE The Snake Stone. In most accounts «f =nake charming in India the snake stone plays an im- portant part. When the charmer is bit- ten the stone is applied to the bite and | is supposed to aid iu his recovery. Writing in the London Field, Lieuten- | ant L. Mackenzie gives some notes on two of these stones, which he bad the opportunity of seeing. They were tri- angular in shape. flat and rounded. There is no style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK, that we can 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. © with smooth polished black surfaces. ' before the twelfth century, and as late | might be thrown out of the windows of Paris and London after three times calling out, “Look out!” Shirts were ed.” 1580. Forks were unknown, and table | manners were exceedingly “unsightly.” Occupation of Idols. Some strange occupations figure on Indian census schedules. At the last census in many villages of Halidarabad and the central provinces enthusiastic and devout enumerators returned the | village shrines and temples as “sccu- not known until! the time of the ecru- | saders, and the fine clothes which la- | dies and gentlemen wore were seldom | washed, but only occasionally “scent- So late as 1550 there were to be found in Paris but three carriages, while in England coaches date from pled houses.” The occupant was the idol, whose occupation was stated as ' “granting boons and blessings, living on contributions from the tenants.” Other callings returned on the sched: ules include collectors of edible birds’ nests, receivers of stolen goods, | witches, wizards and cow poisoners.— Pall Mall Gazette. Stumbled on the Will, Wills have often proved a stumbling block to the novelist. One flagrant case may be mentioned. A popular writer causes an old aristocrat to have his “last will and testament” witness- ed by his butler and his housekeeper, yet he makes them both benefit under it. By so doing he renders the will a But the author does not know Every Woman's Privilege. Mrs. Byram-—That's the kind of a husband to have! Did you hear Mr. Dike tell his wife to go and look at some $100 hats? Mr. Byram--My dear, have I ever deprived you of the priv- lege of looking at $100 hatx?-Chicago ews. Venus will not charm so much with. out her attendant graces ns they will without her.—[ord Chesterfield. They are said to come from the hills of Tibet and to be the solidified saliva of | ET kee il the markhor This animal is spoken | ian 116t aon A ronabie stent of in Lieutenant Mackenzie's note as | ible. Communications are strictly TENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and de- Handbook patents sent free. Oldest agency the “Persian snake eater.” Its saliva | for en pacents. 60 vears experience. Pat- is thought to contain an antidote to | $s taken through Munn & Co. receive Special snake poison. The wmarkhor is a spe- | SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, cies of wild goat found in India, Tibet | a handsome illustrated weekly. Largest circula cz | tion of scientific al. Terms H] and Kashmir. four oH $l. all year TT ——_ MUNN & CO., Joan of Arc's Bell. 52-45-1y. 631 Broadway, New York. In the cathedral church of Notre | Branch office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C. Dame, Paris, there is a bell which | : - dates from the days of Joan of Arc— Travelers Guide. “the blessed bell” which sounded the | - err tocsin when the Maid of Orleans ap- | peared in August, 1420, and Paris was | besieged by the English. This historic bell, referred to by Vector Yugo in ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table effective June 19, 1911, READ DOWN READ UP. . “Notre Dame de Paris.” was given to! — STATIONS —— the cathedral in 1400 by Jean de Mon- | No 1 No5 No 3 No 6 No 4 No 2 talgn. It was refoonded in 1686 and | | ____L_ then rebaptized under the name of Em- He" be EFONTY 0 5059 45 manuel Louise Therese in honor of | 715 656 2 32. F. Nigh... 927 452 933 Louis XIV. and Marie Therese of Aus- | J 21 0) 230. Bon, Sa 4 3 01 | tria.—~Tondon Globe. 729 2 47.F.. Dunkles..... 913 4 38 918 Ts Ae 7 33/7 131 2 51. Hublersburg... {9 09 4 34 9 14 — 737 7 18 2 55/.F Snydertown. .. 9 06 4 29! 9 10 He Knew Jim. jus a iy ogg itanYy essass 2 u 15 9 % Jim had made an unsuccessful at- | 746 7 28 3 05)... Lamar... ‘85 4 i ’ 01 tempt to conquer the world and came | 7 $87 » 398). Ciimtondale._ 1828 4 181 3 back to the Tennessee town dirty. 735617 39 316|...M .... {8 48) § 09) 8 50 worn out and hungry. 8 2 z 43 z Cogar Spring. 842 403 8 44 “Uncle John." he said melodramati- | § fo 78 3 sl. Mill HALL. 8 5 1ute cally, “I came home to die.” (N.Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) “No. dod gast vou,” sald unsympa- | jj 40| 845... Jersey Shore......| 309 740 thetic Uncle Jim. “you came home to | 12 15! 920 Arr.) WM'PORT } ve: 235 1210 | eat!" —Success Magazine. Zin WL &R fr 29 +88 730 650. PHILADELPHIA | 8% 11 30 it Surely Will. 1010 850... NEW YORK........ | “And you like chicken. Sam? 1 » “Gee! | certainly does, boss.” “And you get 'em once in awhile?” “Oh, sure, boss, | gets 'em.” “How do you get ‘em, Sam?” “Well, boss, yon know dat ol’ sayin’, ‘Love will find the way. ”-—Yonkers ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD. Schedule to take effect Mondav. lan. 6. 1910 Statesman. WESTRARD EASTWARD -. == STATIONS: {TT TT oT Quick Time. {No5{tNe3 Nel tNo2/tNo4 Noé Ada—Men are slow! It took him on : - : nearly two hours to propose to me last night. Floss—And bow long did it take you to accept him, dear? Ada— Just two seconds. i Consolation. Binks—Confound it! I've gone and sat down on that chair 1 varnished this morning. Mrs. Binks— Well, for ; once you've stuck to your work.—Bes- i eS ton Transcript. PSEREEEEEES Clothing Y From the Fauble Stores, a guarantee that means some- thing The Fauble Guarantee. Every Suit or Overcoat bearing the Fauble Label bought of us and not prov- ing satisfactory to wearer, we will refund the pur- chase price, or exchange as purchaser desires. Do you know of a safer way to buy clothes? Do you know of another store in Central Pa. that can show you as large an assortment of Men's and Boy's clothes as you will see here? Do you know a Men’ S store in all Pa. that sells any better clothes than you see here? Do you know of a store any place where prices are low- er, Values Greater than here. Think this over. These are all good reasons why you should be a customer of the Fauble stores. FAUBLE'S Bellefonte, Pennsylvania —