Bellefonte, Pa., April 3, 1914. MEXICAN POTTERY. Skilled Primitive Methods of the Workmen of Durango. Practically all the pottery used in the Durango section of Mexico, from the tiniest teacup to the largest flower- pot, is fashioned by hand from Duran- go clay. There are about twenty such factories in the city, employing from five to fifty men each. The clay used in this industry is obtained from the base of Durango’s famous Iron Moun- tain, one mile north of the city. The vessels are all fashioned by hand and foot power. The only instrument used is a large wooden wheel, through the axis of which passes a pole about three feet in length, terminating at the other extremity in a small wooden wheel set parallel to the big wheel. The operator sits so that he may turn the large wheel (set horizontally near the floor so that it will move freely) with his foot, which in turn causes the little wheel above, on a level with * his chest, to revolve very rapidly. A , convenient sized lump of the clay dough is placed upon this little wheel, and as the mass revolves by the im- pulse of the laborer’s foot, he hollows out and fashions the vessel. The skill and dexterity of these work- men is little short of remarkable. ! With only the eye to guide, he fash-' jons with astonishing rapidity vessels which do not differ one from the other in either size or shape. A single la- | borer is able to complete about thirty- | gix dozen jars of nearly a quart ca- pacity in a day.—Argonaut. LIGHT AND THE EYES. | Glaring or Dazzling Effects May Re- sult In Permanent Injury. In a paper read before the Interna- tional Exposition of Safety and Sanita- tion in New York city G. H. Stickney called attention to the fact that the most common defect in lighting is ex- cessive glare and absence of diffusion. Glare may emanate directly from the | light source or be reflected to the eye ! by a glossy surface; it can also be caused wherever excessive contrast of intensity appears in adjacent fields of vision. The dazzling effect is unpleas- ! ant and interferes with seeing. Under continued exposure eye strain and even permanent injury to the eye may | result. : | An unshielded light hung over a ma- chine is a common source of eye fa- | tigue. The glare may not be so evi- | dent on first glance, but when the workman's eyes have been subjected | to such light for a long time discom- | fort and inability to see result. Glare from glazed paper, desk tops or polished metal often induces eye, trouble, headache and other indisposi- tion, though the sufferers may not be aware of the cause. The remedy is to : change the relative positions so that the reflected light is kept out of the! eyes as much as possible and to en-| large the dimensions of the light source. —Engineering Record. . Popular Judgment of Genius. i Fabre’s first entomological work gain- | ed the honors of the Institute of France and a prize for experimental physiol- | ogy. His extraordinary absorption in his entomological pursuits was a source of perplexity to those among whom he dwelt. One morning he was passed by three women vintagers on their way to work. When they passed him again at sunset he was still seated on the same stone, with his eyes fixed on the same spot, whereupon he saw one of them tap her forehead as she whisper- ed, “A poor innocent.” But more than one country guard suspected that he was up to no good in his mysterious wanderings about the countryside. However, the sight of the little dark ribbon of the Legion of Honor, with which he had been decorated by the. French government, was generally sufficient to allay suspicion.—Westmin- | ster Gazette. Hail to the Chief! Jones had not wanted to go to the gregarious feast where the speeches strung out endlessly. Circumstances obliged him .to stay. The speeches were strung out partly because the chief and dullest orator was not ex- pected until late. Finally he came, and there was a rush of committeemen to escort him to his place. “Hello!” exclaimed Jones’ compan- jon, “what is that they are making such a pother about?” “We still follow,” answered Jones sourly, “the ancient custom of bringing in the bore’s head.”—New York Post. A Vaishnava Love Lyric. In one of our Vaishnava lyrics the lover says to his beloved: “I feel as if I have gazed upon the beauty of thy face from my birth, yet my eyes are hungry still; as if I have kept thee pressed to my heart for millions of years, yet my heart is not satisfied.”— Rabindranath Tagore. Look Pleasant, Please. / “How did you manage to quiet that ugly, howling mob so quickly ?” “Got a camera man on the scene,” answered the resourceful police cap- tain. “Then every man of them perk: ed up and tried to look handsome.”— Louisville Courier-Journal. Some Heat Left. First Married Man—Is there ever an occasion when everything at your din- ner table is stone cold? Second Mar- ried Man—No, not everything. We al- ways manage to have a heated argu- ment.—Judge. ~ " Ever Eat It? There is a dish of the olden time that has been crowded almost out of mem- | ory by the ruthless tide of common | events. It was a cold weather food | that came with the snow and hog kill- | ing time and then vanished with the | angry clouds and howling winds. When one ate it the green grass melt- ed away the snow, the birds sang in the blossoming cherry trees and old frigid winter became the middle of May. It was so easy to eat. It melted in the mouth like ice cream, it was so soft and delicate. Let a person fully satisfy his appetite on it. and he could go out in zero weather and enjoy a tropical blessing. This food did not last long, for it was part of a1 event that soon hurried by, and this was a grateful dispensation, too, for a person would be apt to eat too much of it if it lasted long. But it is well it passed away. This degenerate generation, filled with caramels and angels’ food, couldn’t appreciate it. But in those beautiful days before the war it was a beloved diet We refer to hogshead cheese.—Ohio State Journal. Moods of the Bay of Fundy. The bay of Fundy is full of strange and contradictory features. Grand | Manan island, which lies to the port hand of a vessel entering the bay, is one rocky graveyard—on the reef to the southeast an impaled ship is a com- | mon sight. Every indentation. nay. every rocky cranny. bears some ter- rible and suggestive name descriptive of some maritime tragedy. On the island, twelve miles in length and scarcely inhabited. is a graveyard | filled with the bodies of unknown sailors. A little above Trinity rock the coast of Nova Scotia rises in rocky parapets from the sea and a narrow \ inlet admits to the Annapolis valley where. strange to say. the eye rests on a fertile valley of apple orchards which raise the highest priced fruit in the world. In this sheltered space is a climate which, owing partly to the gulf stream and partly to position, differs altogether from the arctic cold of the stormy sea without.—Westmin- ster Gazette. Cold and Colds. “Without having gone anywhere near either pole.” writes a correspondent of the London Chronicle, “1 have had my experience or the fact that intense cold outside stops the cold in the bead. We were six men essaying the ascent of the Grand Combin in the Alps (over 14.000 feet). From our first attempt we were driven back by a thunder- storm. and a stay of some hours to dry in the hut with the stove going woke up all the microbes. When we return- ed to the hut next day from the valley there were at least four severe colds among us, with sneezing and sore throats. On the third morning we trav- ersed our peak, slowly cutting snow and ice steps in weather memorably bitter even for that height. On the other side it suddenly occurred to me that I had no ‘cold’ left, and the others made the same discovery.” Not on the Play Bill. Miss Mary Moran, the English ac- tress, tells of an incident that occurred | when she was playing Belle, the wick: ed lady in R. C. Carton’s play, “The Tree of Knowledge,” to a holiday au- dience. At the end of the fourth act Belle leaves her husband and goes away with the villain of the piece. In . a moment of remorse she bends over her sleeping husband, kisses him and, taking from her neck his mother’s chain, she places it beside him, re marking as she exits: “The best and the worst of us are fools.” On this par- ticular occasion the clasp of the chain refused to unclasp. Twice she tried to remove it, when a voice from the gal- lery exclaimed: “Keep it, Belle. You'll want something to pawn if you're go- ing to skip out with that other bloke!” Prosperity Is Communistic. A man cannot prosper in any honest business without benefiting the com- munity as well as himself, for he can- not induce men to deal with him with- out offering them an advantage; and, taking all the transactions of life to- ‘gether, the advantages which men offer to others must. on the whole, be equal | to those which they receive themselves. Doing business, therefore, is a very ef- fectual and extended mode of doing good, and the fortune which is ac- quired in doing it is, in a very impor- tant sense, the measure and index of the good done.—Jacob Abbott. Out of Harm’s Way. “And you say you never attend wed- dings any more?” asked the sweet young thing. “No, I do not,” replied the bachelor. “And why not, pray?’ “Why, don’t you see what's happen- ing every day to innocent bystanders?” —Yonkers Statesman. Testing a Man. An epigram of Myrtle Reed's seems to have made a hit with New York women. In “Threads of Gray and Gold” she writes: : “The only way to test a map is to marry him. If you live, it's a mush- room. If you die, it’s a toadstool.” Sarcastic. “I try to mind my own business,” paid Mrs. Slothington. “I never saw any one.” replied Miss Cayenne, “who endured failure with greater fortitude.” — Washington Star. Life's i.ittle Sorrows. “Rich women have no real joys.” “No; the stores never have a clear- ance sale of diamond necklaces.”— Louisville Courier-Journal, A young man idle, an old man needy. =Italian Proverb. 4 A Pen Picture of Lincoln. And now Abraham Lincoln rose from his seat, stretched his long, bony limbs upward as if to get them into working order, and stood like some solitary pine on a lonely summit, very tall, very dark, very gaunt and very rugged, his swarthy features stamped with a sad serenity, and the instant he began to speak the ungainly mouth lost its heaviness, the half listless eyes attain- ed wondrous power, and the people stood bewildered and breathless under the natural magic of the strangest, most original personality known to the English speaking world since Robert Burns. There were other very tall and dark men in the heterogeneous assembly, but not one who resembled the speak- er. Every movement of his long, mus- cular frame denoted inflexible earnest- ness, and a something issued forth, elemental and mystical, that told what the man had been, what he was and what he would do in the future.— From “The Valley of Shadows,” by Francis Grierson. Measuring Light Speed. Even in this speed mad age we can never hope to equal the speed of light, which the scientists tell us is 186,000 miles a second. If light could not ac- tually be measured no one would be- lieve it. There is a delicate instrument used in measuring light which throws a beam of light upon a revolving disk. There was some doubt about the fig- ures obtained in this way until it was found that when the earth was in the part of its orbit nearest to Jupiter eclipses took place sixteen minutes earlier than when it was in the far- thermost part, whereas by ail rules of astronomy they should have taken place at the same minute each time. It is deduced from this that the light was not instantaneous and consequent- ly took sixteen ‘minutes to traverse the diameter of the earth's orbit, a dis- tance of about 200,000,000 miles, thus giving to light a velocity of 186,000 miles a second, which was accurately shown later by other experiments.— Exchange. ‘The Taste For Salt. Concerning the African craving for salt, Livingstone gives interesting tes- timony. Only the rich among Bak- wanis could afford to buy it. and the poor suffered from indigestion for lack of it. Native doctors accordingly made galt a usual ingredient of their medi- cine, and Livingstone successfully gave, sufferers teaspoonfuls of neat salt. But now comes a notable point. “Ei- ther milk or meat had the same effect, , though not so rapidly, as salt. Long afterward, when I was myself depriv- ' ed of salt for four months at two dis- tinct periods, I felt no desire for that condiment, but I was plagued by very great longing for the above articles of food. This continued as long as I was confined to an exclusively vegetable diet, and when I procured a meal of flesh, though boiled in perfectly fresh rain water, it tasted as pleasantly salt- ish as if slightly impregnated with that condiment.”—London Standard. Scar of Art Theft. There is a picture at Hampton court which bears witness to a theft that may be termed patriotic. This is Hol- bein’s “Field of the Cloth of Gold,” which after the downfall of Charles I. Cromwell proposed to sell. But when the would be purchaser came to in- spect it he discovered that the head of Henry VIII. had been cut from the canvas, He refused to buy the pie- ture, and it was preserved to the na- | ton. At the restoration a nobleman : confessed to having committed the crime for “love of art and country.” He returned the missing head, which now occupies its original position, the circle made by the knife in the canvas being still plainly visible. — London Chronicle. A Regiment of Wrestlers. Captain Holmes, a famous athlete in the Indian army, raised one of the finest regiments in the British service by the sporting method of challeng- ing all and sundry to wrestle. Those worsted were to enlist, and in a short | time the gallant captain was able tu show a collection of wrestling prizes | that were a credit alike to himself and the army.—London Opinion. Durability of Radium. Radium once extracted from the ores becomes available for continued use without appreciable loss and becomes a permanent addition to the needed supply. The same radium that is placed at humanity’s service today may be used by our children for many gen- erations. One. “There never was a woman who did not gab about her neighbors,” growled Mr. Gabb. . “Oh, yes, there was!” replied Mrs. Gabb. : “That’s right,” commented Mr. Gabb. “I forgot about Eve.”—C Cincinnati En- quirer. Tangible Asset. “] believe I'll promote a transporta- tion company.” “Land or water?” “The latter, I think. For the former I'd need rails and right of way, but in a water proposition I'll have an ocean to start with.”—Exchange. In Doubt. “Is that boy of yours learning to play the piano?” “I hope he is, but from the way 1t Sounds I don’t think so.”—Washington tar. : as We are very fond of reading others’ characters, but we do not like to be ‘read ourselves.—Rochefoucauld. | Don’t Wait. ; Don’t wait if you are showing symp- ' toms of “lung trouble,” but get a bottle _of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery | and begin its use. Where there is weak- ness, obstinate cough, or spitting of blood its remedial action is marvelous. Mr. Cornelius McCawley, of Leechburg, Arm- strong county, Pa, ' pints of blood at one time” to quote from | his letter. He was perfectly cured by the use of “Golden Medical Discovery.” When there is constipation the action of the “Discovery” is assisted by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Russian Ranks and Classes. [ There is no upper middle class in Russia; a family is either of the peas- antry—although this term has now a very wide inclusion—or of the aris- tocracy. And at court no one has precedence according to inherited rank, only according to official po- sition in the government. Hood's Sarsaparilla. Tone Up the Blood! HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA, A SPRING TONIC- | MEDICINE, IS NECESSARY Everybody is troubled at this season with loss of vitality, failure of appetite, that tired feeling, or with bilious turns, dull headaches, indigestion and other stomach troubles, or with pimples and other eruptions onthe face and body. The reason is that the blood is impure and im- poverished. Hood’s Sarsaparilla relieves all these ailments. Ask your druggist for this medicine and get it today. It is the old “had eighty-one | “hemorrhages, sometimes spitting five: Attorneys-at-Law. Coal and Wood. X «1E A. G. Morris, Jr. DEALER IN HIGH GRADE ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS AND CANNEL COAL! : Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw and Sand. ALSO FEDERAL STOCK AND POULTRY FOOD BOTH ‘PHONES. P.R.R. Depot. 58-23-1v Monev to Loan. KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law, Belle fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts Office- Room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y. B. SPANGLER.-Attornev-at-Law. Practices in all the Courts. Consultation in English or German. Office in Crider’s Exciiatige, Bellefonte, Pa. S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Temple Court, fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promotly. 40-46 H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or Germ M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices in all the courts. Consultation in English and German. _ Office south of court house. All professional business will receive prompt at- tention. 49-5-1y* KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given al legal business entrusted to his care. Offi- ces—No. 5 East High street. 57-44. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul- tation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 58-5 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and S State College, Centre county, Pa. "Bifice at his residence. 3541 a ER SR ES SR Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D. D. S,, office next door to Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, : Pa. Gas administered for painless extract. ing teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices reasonable. D¥ H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office in the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All mod- ern electric a liances used. Has had years of experience. work of Superior quality and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at all times the following brands of high grade flour: WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The only place in the county where that extraor- dinarily fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food and feed of all kinds. All kinds of Grain bought at the offi exchanged for wheat. RERt at theofice. Flowr Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, Oysters on the half shell or in any style desired, Sand- wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can be had in a few minutes any time. In ad- dition I have a complete plant prepared to furnish Soft Dri in bottles such as POPS, SODAS, SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener- ally all of which are manufactured out of the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C. MOERSCHBACHER, High St., Bellefonte, Pa. a Meat Market. (Get the Best Meats. 50-32-1y. cm You save Tothing by buying poor, thin or gristly meats. [use only the LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are elsewhere. I always have — DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, EY MY.SHOR BELLEFONTE. PA. P. L. BEEZER, 4719 MILL AT ROOPBSURG. High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. Groceries. Groceries. Fruits, Confectionery and FINE GROCERIES. White Almedia Grapes, Florida and Naval Oranges, Lemons, Ba- nanas, all in good order and free of frost. Large Spanish and home-grown Onions, sound and in good order. Fine Popping Corn, on the ear or shelled; this goods will pop. We have revised the prices downward on our Beans; come in and see the fine stock and present prices. If you want a fine, sweet, juicy Ham, let us supply you. The Finest Meadow Gold Brand Creamery Butter at 40c per pound. Sweet, Dill and Sour Pickles; our Olives by the quart are very fine. Fine weather yet for using Mince Meat. Nothing else will compare with what we make at 15c a pound. SOME SEASONABLE GOODS. Spinach 10 and 15c a can; Rheu- barb, Jersey packed, sanitary cans, 10c a can; Pumpkin 10 and 15c a can; all large No. 3 cans. Fine Golden New Orleans Mo- lasses, by the quart or gallon. We have some fine Marketing and Clothes Baskets ready for the spring trade. We are still handling the fine . German Kraut. In order to meet the demand for small quantity, we have some packed in half-gallon Mason Jars at 25c a jar. Bush House Block, =. LIME RT AND LIMESTONE. SECHLER & COMPANY, 57.1. = -. » Bellefonte, Pa. LIME. Lime and Limestone for all purposes. H-O Lime Put up in 40 to 50 Pound Paper Bags. LIME. for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- 2 ical form most careful farmers are using. High Calcium Central Pennsylvania Lime American Lime & Stone Company., & © Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown snd Spring Meadows, Pa ; General Office: TYRONE, PA. reliable medicine that has stood the test Plumbing. for forty years,—that makes pure, rich blood—that strengthens every organ and ONEY TO LOAN on good security and builds up the whole system. It isthe all- houses to rent. G d H 1th the-year-round blood-purifier and health- J. M. KEICHLINE, 00 ca giver. Nothing else actslike it, for noth- Attorney-at-Law, ing else is like it; so be sure to get 51-14-1y. Bellefonte Pa. and : s. : 59-14 Good Plumbing Restaurant. GO TOGETHER. Flour and Feed. ESTAURANT. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewe , Or escal gas. you can’t have good Health. The air you reathe is poisonous; your system mes poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is 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 the finest material, our Prices are lower than many who give you poor, unsanitary work and the lowest grade of firishings. For the Best Work try Archibald Allison, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-14-1v. Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. This Agengy represents the largest Fire Insurance Companies in the World. —— NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY week, total disability, Der Josh oka) Ginenity 10 disability, week, partial Pinot 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion. Any person, male or femal aged male or female engaged in 2 Fire Insurance { invite your attention to my Fire Insur-. ance , the strongest and Most Ex tensive of Solid Companies represent ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. iat BOOK WORK, at we can not do in the most satis- There is no cheapest manner, and at. Prices consist. ent with the class of work. Call on or