Bellefonte, Pa., May 24, 1912. THE QUEST. Anything that is homeless arouses one's sympathy and a homeless cow | should naturally share in this outpour- ing of kindly emotion. But the night that the McLane's cow lost her happy home nobody in the summer communi. | ty sat up and wept in tender commis- eration. Just why the cow chosen should have when the McLanes’ man had his back turned for a fatal instant is one of the mysteries of bovine phychology which nobody can figure out. In something like a panic she lum- bered along through the trees until she saw a light. “Aha!” said the cow. “home at last.” The light shone from the cottage oc- | cupied by Miss Atkinson, a maiden of & considerable number of years, who was entertaining at the moment three other staid and elderly women at bridge. Just as one of the three had sald | disgustedly that she made it spades Miss Atkinson, who was facing the porch, gave a bloodcurdling “A man!” she hissed. “There was & man peering in through the porch screen door! He disappeared when | oper: ' Oné of the bravest of the four ven- tured out to the porch and in a quav- ering voice demanded to know who | was there, while the others supported her with the carving knife and the broom. Nothing answered from the silence, | which made it all the worse. The guests put Miss Atkinson to b- ' with the hot water bag and the | smelling salts and locked every win- dow in the cottage. Then, shivering with fright, the three held hands and bolted for the hotel. It was a little later that the Bundy | cottage was upset. Mrs. Bundy had put the children to bed and was cro- cheting while her guest, Mrs. Hulton, was reading aloud a particularly grew- some detective story. Suddenly Mrs. Bundy made a startled clutch at Mrs. | Huton’s wrist and said: “Lis-s-ten!” Mrs. Hulton heard it, too. *Th-th- there must be t-t-two of 'em!™ stam- mered Mrs. Hulton. “I can hear four f-f-feet juct as plain!” There certainly were several differ ent footsteps outside the cottage— slow, careful footsteps. There was also deep breathing. Then something blurred against the low diamond paned window over the corner win- dow seat. gave a cheep like a strangled chicken and nearly went over backward in her rocker. Holding the family revolver at arm's length and with her head turned the other way, Mrs. Bundy sat down again and they listened. There was noth- ing to be heard. They passed the rest | of the night on guard. Farther down the lake shore, on the rustic seat facing the moon, Laura Spilger and her young man sat talk- ing. Their absorption in each other was so great that they heard nothing until something strange was thrust over Laura's left shoulder. Young Burmaster made a wild but futile grab at Laura as she leaped in the air. Landing on the extreme edge of the slippery terrace, she tumbled down | into the lapping waters with a gur- gling splash. Then as young Burmaster, too, sensed the presence of something weird and inexplicable he felt his scalp twitch in freezing horror, and leaped after Laura. Hand in hand they arose, dripping, and stood affrighted in the two feet of water at the shore's edge. From the Spilger's cottage came questioning rumblings. Laura's fa- ther was demanding to know the rea- son for all that uproar. Getting no answer, because the two in the lake were still paralyzed vocally, he came forth to investigate. “What do you want?” he roared at something creeping by. “I'll teach you to prowl around my house, consarn you!” Presently there was the spite- ful pop of the little Spliger boy’s air- gun. Nothing happened. The Spilgers and young Burmaster sat up very late discussing the mystery. It was dis- couraging to the Spilgers to find that their peaceful summer home was get- | ting just like every other place, and one had to lock and bar doors and windows and take in the washing at night. The Doggetts were roused from slumber by some one fumbling at the kitchen window. At the Plunketts some one was distinctly heard at the chicken house. Mrs. Pilking said she heard footsteps on the Pilkins’' front porch that night and the Pikes report. ed that their mignonette bed had been | trampled. A —— At an impromptu mass meeting a the next morning the cottagers voted to spend $50 a month fer a watchman, Then they took naps all the rest of the day to make up for their wakeful night. But early that same morning a weary and homesick cow had broken into a gallop as she spled the Mec. Lanes’ barn and in two minutes more she was munching her feed and ~ switching files. —For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. to wander from the comfort- | able, hay stuffed barn toward dusk | shriek | and her cards flew all over the room | Thereupon Mrs. Bundy "THE PRESIDENTS OFFICE. ' Elegance In its Architecture and In Its Appointments, The president's office is an ellipse in plan. A triple bay window forms one end and at the other is an open fire place. Four doors, opening inward. are equaily disposed. two on each side. and are curved to conform with the curve of the wall. The tall windows | are bung with stately, heavy curtains and are flanked by bookcases set into the wall. The fireplace is incased in fine war- ble, and fluted ionic columns support the mantel, on which stands a bell glass covered clock, flanked by can- delabra. In the fireplace are complete preparations for a wood fire. Even the paper is placed under the logs. | ready to ignite. The style of the room is classic co- lonial, and the woodwork is painted a creamy white with blue white em- bellishment. Each of the four large ornate door frames is surmounted by a rich pediment. The wall is covered | by a warm olive green burlap, which | extends up from a paneled wainscot to | a wide, elaborate molding or entabla- ture of plain plaster. A flat dome of | this virgin plaster surmounts the recom and gathers in its shallow, inverted basin the light from the bay window and gives play to every tint and shade of gray. i Pendent from the middle is a chan- | delier of electric candles, and triple | groups of the same adorn the wall be- | tween the doors and windows.—Wil- liam 8. Nortenheim in National Mag- eine. ” | - | a | ,.__ SIKH SOLDIERS. An Interesting Division of the British Army In India, | In the English papers one may fre-' quently see pictures of tiny soldiers, about seven or cight years of age, | , gravely saluting elderly officers. These infants at arms are boy recruits hold- | ing regular and dignified places in the Indian army. Each Sikh regiment is | allowed twelve of these little chaps, who are trained almost from babyhood, They are pald each 3 rupees and S an- nas a month and at the age of sixteen enter the regular army. The Sikh soldiers are an interesting and remarkable part of the British army in India. Their conduct in fron- tier engagements has distinguished them as brave, steady and devoted to their English officers. Yet about fifty | years ago these well ordered soldiers were fanatical savages who in their mad uprisings shook the power of ! Great Britain. Once conquered, they | accepted British rule and were trained | ‘and disciplined into a well equipped | army of 30,000 soldiers. They formed ! part of the force that subdued the mu- | | tiny. The Hodson's horse troops, | which helped capture Delhi, were com- posed of Sikhs whose devoted service | | to their leader made them famous. | Their scarlet sashes and turbans gained | them the name of “Flamingoes.” Thelr | descendants are no less determined | fighters and stanch soldiers.—New York | Press. Some of the medical treatises of an- | cient Assyria are models of simplicity, ' and we cannot doubt the effectiveness I of their prescriptions. Thus we are ' told that if a man has colic we should ! “make him crouch down on his Leels ‘and pour cold water over his head.” | That ouglt to cure colic if only the | water is cold enough. Again, “When a | man is bilious rub him with an onion | and let him drink nothing but water and abstain from food wltogether.” i The onion part is probably decorative. ‘At least it can de no harm, while the abstention from food is salutary in the extreme, even for those who are not very bilious. But if a man is in “a weak state” why should it benefit him to “strike him on the head fourteen times with your thumb?’ This is sug- gestive of faith healing. Primrose Day. Primrose day in England, the anni- versary of the death of Benjamin Dis- raell, Lord Beaconsfield, had its origin in the tribute, a modest wreath of prim- roses, sent by Queen Victoria for the | funeral of Beaconsfield. The general impression that the primrose was Bea- consfield’s favorite flower came from a misunderstanding of the words at- tached to the queen's tribute—“F. Viec- toria. His favorite flower.” The pub- lic thought the queen meant that the primrose was Beaconsfield’'s favorite flower when in truth she meant that it was the favorite flower of the prince consort.—New York American. “Swallowed a Word.” Little Mary was telling what she thought was an exciting story about a dream. She stuttered in her effort, | gulped and paused hopelessly without | completing the sentence. “Why, child, what is the matter?” Yer mother asked. The little girl smiled ruefully and replied, “1 swallowed a word.”"-In- dianapolis News, : The Main Thing, Aged Snitor—It is true that I am considerable older than you, but a man is as young as he feels, you know, and- Miss Pert—Obh, that doesn’t matter! What | want to know is if you are as rich as you look.—Boston Good Substitute. BEdna—Did Mabel get that six shooter she spoke of providing herself with as ——— 1 Assyrian Healing. | a protection against burglars? Eva— No. She got a «i= Soter.—Judge. There are persons who are not ac- tors, not speakers, but influences.— | "KILLING A COBRA. A Plucky Crow For Which the Big Snake Had No Terrors. If the testimony offered by an Eng- lish naturalist in Ceylon be given full credence, then the cobra is not so dangerous a snake as popular reputa- tion makes it. In at least two in- stances, reports this naturalist, cobras were chased by large birds. In neither case did the snake seem to have any hypnotic power, such as is generally credited to snakes in general. A crow was seen fighting an in- truder into its nest situated at the very top of a tree. The crow was circling at close quarters and pecking hard at the nest, cawing loudly all the time. The nest was some forty feet above ground. Presently a snake came out of the nest and started to descend, with the crow in hot pursuit, pecking at the co bra continually, The snake took refuge about ten feet down in a clump of ; dead ferns, from which it was chased out by the crow. It came from branch to branch until it reached a large hori- zontal limb, which stretched out about twenty feet. Here the snake was ant a great dis advantage, inasmuch as it could not turn upon the crow. The latter seem- ed fully to appreciate the situation, and its tactics were excelient. It would peck hard at the spine close to the tail and then peck near the snake's neck. At each peck pieces of the snake's skin were torn out, whereupon the cobra would lie quite motionless. But just as soon as it evinced signs of again attempting to escape the crow would recommence its attacks with | extraordinary surety of aim. After fifteen minutes the cobra was dead.— Harper's, AMBERGRIS. from the wastebasket every day. The Part it Plays In the Production of Costly Perfumes, Ambergris is supposed to be a morbid secretion of the liver of the spermaceti ‘whale, found floating or washed ashore. It is a little lighter than water and might easily be taken for a plece of the bark of a tree. On examination, how ever, it is found to be of a waxy na ture, streaked with gray, yellow and black and emitting a peculiar aromatic odor. It fuses at 140 10 150 degrees F. and at a higher temperature gives cut a white smoke, which condenses into a crystalline fatty matter. It is found in all sizex, from a pound up to twenty or thirty. but occasionally pieces weighing 100 or 200 pounds are found in whales. Ambergris has been known from an early period, some pharmacopoeias pre- scribing it for fevers und nervous com- plaints. It is sometimes mingled with the incense burned in churches and is also putin certzin kinds of wine to im- | prove the “bouquet.” But the great use of ambergris is in the manufacture of perfumery—not that its fragrance is either very pow- erful or pleasing, but it possesses the peculiar property of causing other in- gredients to throw out their odors. making them more specific and dura ble. In this respect it bears a resemblance to the use of mordants in dyeing, with- out which the colors would fail to be- come permanent; hence all the best perfumes contain ambergris, which is one reason of their costliness, and hence also the fact that “homemade” | depositing it in the Bank of Rio .n cologne, for instance. smells only of | alcohol.—~Exchange. The Bloodhound, The bloodhound is sometimes called the sleuthhound, and it is the largest variety which hunts the scent. Th male weighs from 83 to 100 and the female from 93 to 110 They vary in height from twenty-three to twenty-seven inches measured at the shoulder. The color of these dogs is black and tan, brown or liver col- ored and sometimes tan flecked with white or badger colored hairs. It is a popular impression that the blood- hound Is ferocious and savage. He probably owes this reputation to his having been used to bunt men. A pure bloodhound when he has caught the man does not worry him to death, but runs up to him to be fondled or bays at him—that is, stands and barks. This is the statement of an authority on the bloodhound.—New York Sun. Progressive Courtship. “No, Annabel Green, | cannot marry rich bachelor uncle declares cut me off with a nickel If I without his approval” And the man with the weak chin sighed § ¥ g “Very well,” replied the determined girl; “I will go to your uncle. What is his address?" “Don’t go, Annabel!” cried the youth. “It would only prejudice him still more marry you I will marry your uncle.”— Buffalo Express. Why Certainly. May-—Girls, what do the papers mean when they talk about the seat of war? Blla—I don’t know. any more than 1 do what a standing army is for. Bell -How ignorant you are, dears! The Oh, well, what's the difference? 1 will | simply marry Fred instead of Jack.— Louis Globe-Democrat. The self satisfied person is cheaply | Things China Knew Long Age. There is a distinct tradition of fiying machines at a very remote date In China. according to the author of “The Civilization of China,” and rough wood- | cuts of such cars have been handed down for many centuries. There are even hints of the X ray, there being a record of a physician of the fifth cen- | tury B. C. who was able to see into the | viscera of his patients, while another physician, who lived about 1,800 years ago, was accustomed to use an anaes- | thetic and operated upon the bowels and offered to cure the headaches of a military commander of his day by opening his head. Hypuotism has been used for hundreds of years, but is for. bidden by law. The ranks of the Box- | ers were largely recruited from the so- | clety of the vegetarians, who vestver | Py eat meat, smoke nor drink. The Office Boy's Windfall, It takes little 10 encourage a poet. A typographical error, says the Washing- ton Star, fanned the lame of hope in the breasts of the Crestville versifiers. The local editor had written this notice for the head of the editorial page: “Poultry taken in exchange for sub- scriptions and advertising.” But in the paper the note appeared as “Poetry taken in exchange.” However, the only person who profit- ed by this error was the office boy, for the next fortnight he sold to the Junkman a quarter's worth of paper Youth's Companion. Womanly Intuition. Mrs. Flatleigh—The new family up- stairs have a lot of money, but they used to be very poor and ordinary. Mr. Flatleigh—How do you know? Have you called on them? Mrs. Flat- leigh—No. but there was a half eaten broiled lobster and a whole Camem- bert cheese in thelr garbage can on the dumb waiter this morning.—Judge. The Star of Brazil. The most important cut stone of Brazil is that called the “Star of the South,” which was found by a negru woman in 1853. It was appropriated by the mine owner who gave her in return n pension for life. The stone was sold for $15,000, the new owne! neiro and receiving on this security « loan many times greater than the value paid for the gem. The diamond was at length sold for ten times th amount paid. It was finally acquired by a syndicate and cut in oval form at a cost of $2,600 by a firm In Am sterdam. An Indian rajab offered more than $500.000 for it, but was refused A little later it was bought for the gaekwar of Baroda. How We Bite. A ten-pournd bite requires a 40-pound contraction of the human jaw muscles. That is because our jaws are built on He { same princi as a pair of tongs. In order to ascertain the of the! ordinary jaw, an instrument was recently | devised, with a name that would put the | avarage jaw to a severe test, viz., the gna mometer. With this weird | instrument about 50 experiments were | tried on all classes of folks, the full reg- | ister of the gnatho., etc, being repre- | sented by 275 pounds, says London | Answers. A working butcher taken as quite a strong man, but his bite | only registered a power of 165 pounds. The man with the highest record was a | printer, who registered 270 pou Among the women the highest was 160 i In selecting meats for the teeth-testing experiments, it was found that the ten- | derest meat was hot boiled tongue, the | central part of which only off a resis- tance of from 3 to 4 | In order to crush the loin pork chops a | force of 20 pounds to 25 pounds was re- quired, while mutton chops demanded from 30 pounds to 40 pounds. Round of beef took 40 pounds to 50 pounds, and beef-steak, well done, 60 pounds to 80 pounds. One baby in arms, a couple of others | tugging at her skirts as she moves about | the house, no help, and yet this woman | manages to sweep and cook and sew. Is it any wonder that she wears out fast? Is it any wonder that her nerves are rack- | ed? Hardly a woman is exempt from “female trouble” in some form. It is upon the woman of many cares, the woman who cannot rest, that the disease falls the hardest. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription comes to every weary, ng woman, vexed by woman's ills, as a boon and a blcssing. It heals ulceration and inflammation. It dries the drains that sap the strength. It cures female trouble, strengthens the nerves, and makes weak women strong and sick women well. “Favorite Prescription” contains no alco- hol, neither opium, cocaine nor other narcotic. It cannot injure the most deli- cate woman. | —Soils that are heavily manured for cabbage, lettuce, celery and other crops will not need very much manure the fol- lowing year, when planted with tomatoes, peppers and root crops, especially if a fair amount of commercial fertilizer is used. ——Preacher—Here, stop fighting, little y. * Little Boy—What, stop, and my girl standing on the corner eyeing me! Not on your life! She'd think I was a quitter. —Alfalfa is a lime plant, and a dress- ing of 60 bushels of slacked oyster shells or 50 bushels of slacked stone lime to the acre should be given. —Finest Job Work at this office. a Clothing. you dont can’t know is The Best in Central See If you are not a custo- mer of the Fauble Store you are missing. You better we can serve you unless you come and see for yourself. It will cost you nothing to inspect what we honestly think may do you a lot of good. We would like to FAUBLES know what how much Men's Store Penna. It you. | they _ When you engage a servant, especially in a position of trust, you demand refer- ences. You are not content to just read these references and take them for what . You inquire into their genuine’ ness. you give your health into the care of a medicine should you not exercise equal care? Anybody can claim cures for a medicine. But proof is a dif- ferent matter. The closest scrutiny of the claims of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is invited. Does it cure dys- pepsia, "stomach trouble,” weak heart, : | sluggish liver, worn out nerves? Does it may fairly be enrich and purify the blood and make new life by making new blood? Hundreds | of thousands of people testify that it does. Look up the testimony and decide wheth- er you can afford to be sick with such a remedy within reach. —_ Endorsed at Home. SUCH PROUF AS THIS SHOULD CONVINCE ANY BELLEFONTE CITIZEN. The public endorsement of a local citi- zen is the best proof that can be produced. None better, none stronger can be had. a man comes forward and testifies loli feliow citizens, addresses his friends you may be sure he is so Te Cone! I Vila i oo one's ex for the public good is an act of kindness ing statement given by a resident of Belle- cases §3 ; of kidney disorders, a tial of Ban's Kidney Pills that they will %5vs a effect.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. no other. 57-19 —t ne Jon Printing. = FINE JOB PRINTING oA SPECIALTY—0 WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no le of work cheapest ** ' arth ths BOOK WORK, that we car: not do in the most satis- fi manner, and at Prices consist- ent the class of work. Call on or ———— Insurance. EARLE C. TUTEN (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) Fire, Life and Automobile Insurance None but Reliable Companies Represented. Surety Bonus of All Descriptions. Both Telephones 56-27.y BELLEFONTE, PA JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. represents the Fire is Age in the World. NO ASSESSMENTS — to give call before insuring your Lv coll bn position to write lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. as The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BENEFITS: » gSEEEEE Aenean ine edby any agency in Cen H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa.