Bowral Bellefonte, Pa., November 20, 1914, HIS CURIOUS FALL. | ———————— 1 It Wedged Him Head Down In a Slit In a Steep Cliff. f A personal experience of a highly sensational character is recorded by A. | H. Savage Landor in his book “Across | Unknown South America:” “The forest near the Secundury river | was at first overgrown with dense | vegetation that gave us a good deal of | work and extra exertion, but after that. when we got some distance from the water, the forest was fairly clean, | except of course for the fallen trees. | We found troublesome ravines of great | depth where streamlets had cut their | way through. | “In going down one of those difficult | ravines 1 had an accident that might | have been fatal. The ravine, the sides of which were almost vertical, was very narrow—only about ten metres across. We let ourselves down. hold: ing on to a liana. When we reached the bottom we found a tiny brook winding its way between great round boulders that left a space about two feet wide for the water. | began to climb the other side. and 1 had got to: a height of about thirty feet. In order to go up this steep incline I had set one foot against a small tree and I pulled myself up by a liana. Unluckily the liana suddenly gave way The weight of the load that 1 had on my shoulders made we lose my balance so that my body described a complete semicircle. 1 dropped down head first from that height on the rocks below. “Providence once more looked after me on that occasion On the flicht down | already imagined myself dead: but no—-my head entered the cavity between two great rocks. against which my shoulders and the load be came jammed. while my legs waved wildly in midair. | was forced so hard against the two side rocks that I could not possibly extricate myself It was only when Benedicto and the | new man came to my help and pulled | me out that we were able to resume | our journey | was much shaken anc! a good deal bruised. but otherwise none the worst for that unpleasant fall.” WEIRD DREAM STORY. The Startling Vision That Saved the Lite of Lady Vernon. The following dream story is told in “The Story of My Life,” by Augustus J. C. Hare. The story was told to Mr. Hare in Rome in 1870: “Lady Vernon dreamed that she saw | the butler. with a knife in one hand and a candle in the other, crossing the entrance hall, and she awoke with a great start. After awhile she com- posed herself to sleep again, and she dreamed--she dreamed that she saw the butler. with a knife in one hand | and a candle in the other, on the mid. dle of the staircase, and she awoke with a great shock. She got up. She thought she could not be quite well, and she took a little sai volatile. At | last she fell asleep again. and she dreamed—she dreamed that she saw the butler, with a knife in one hand and a candle in the other, standing at her bedroom door, and she awoke in a great terror. and she jumped out of bed. and she said, ‘I'll have an end of this; I'll have an end of these foolish imaginations.’ “And she rushed to the door and threw it wide open. And there just | outside stood the butler, with a knife in one hand and a candle in the other And when he suddenly saw Lady Ver non in her white nightdress. with her hair streaming down her back, he was so dreadfully frightened that he dropped the candle on the floor and rushed off down the staircase and off to the stables, where there was a horse ready saddled and bridled, on which he meant to have ridden away when he had murdered Lady Vernon. And he rode away without having murdered her at all. and he was never heard of again.” Clews to His Writing. Sometimes the worst of handwriting becomes intelligible when one grasps the rules, for a man’s script—particu- larly an author’s—is frequently made difficult, chiefly by his deliberate or unconscious inversion of the accepted rules of calligraphy. Henry Ward Beecher had a daughter who acted as copyist, and she read him with ease simply by remembering three princi ples—that in her father’s manuscript no dotted letter was meant for an “i.” no crossed letter stood for “t" and that no capital letter ever began a sentence. Two Bores. “Well, dear Emmi. do yon not think that there is a peculiar marriage state with our upeighbors? He is always traveling and leaves—ah-—-his poor wife alone. That must bore her terri bly, the poor woman!” “Well, it is just as one takes it. You are always at home: that is a still greater bore.” —Fliegende Blatter Easily Settled. “Pa. the doctor at the hospital said that he would have to have a lot of cuticle to cure Mamie's burns.” “Well, tell him to telephone to the nearest druggist for all he wants and charge it in the bill.” Baltimore Amer fean. Eo Drawing the Long Bow. Hokus—I once saw an Egyptian smoking an Egyptian cigarette. Pokus ~I'm a better liar than you are. | once saw a ‘Turk taking a Turkish bath.—Judge. THE FIRST TEACUPS. They Had No Handles, and Saucers Were Used as Covers. : In the middle of the seventeenth cen- tury tea was introduced into England, and with it caine the Chinese or *chi- na’ teacup. Strangely enough, the men who imported it from the orient did not themselves understand the method of its use. The, Chinese put a pinch of tea into a large cup without a handle, filled it | with boiling water and then inverted a saucer over the receptacle, within whose rim it closely fitted. The object was partly to retain the heat, but chiefly to prevent the escape of the fragrance of the herb, which the Chi- nese found most delicious. The infu- sion was permitted to stand for five minutes, when it was decanted into a second cup without a saucer and daintily sipped. John Bull, however, emphatically de clined to take his tea in Chinese fash- ion. He liked the appearance of the ornamental ware upon his table, but he insisted on placing the cup in the saucer, like a miniature flowerpot, and used it exclusively to drink from, pre- paring the beverage in a common in- stead of an individual receptacle. In course of time England began the manufacture of cups and saucers, and . pictures which have been preserved from the days of the Stuarts show big, flaring cups, four inches across the top, with saucers less than three inches in diameter. By degrees one dwindled and the other expanded, until in the middle of the nineteenth century the opposite extreme was reached, and fashionable tea services had cups only an inch and a half in diameter, accom- panied by five inch saucers. The handle of the teacup came from Mediterranean lands. Originally it was made of thick and strong earth- enware and applied to heavy jars and lamps. Its decorative possibilities pop- ularized it with Greek and Roman pot ters, who extended its use to small amphorae and flagons; but, as the word “amphora” indicates, the handle was double. Single handles crept into use by slow degrees and were probably ap- plied to drinking cups about the time that coffee came into vogue in south- ern Europe, the beverage being taken almost at the boiling point, so that some device for lifting the cup without burning the fingers was found desira ble.—London Tatler. A BRIDE FROM THE TOMB. Odd Romance of Benedello Marcello, the Venetian Composer. Benedello Marcello, one of the most famous Venetian composers, fell in love with a beautiful girl named Leo- nora Manfrotti, who married Paolo Seranzo, a Venetian noble. She died a short time after Ler marriage, a vie- tim to the harsh and jealous treatment of her husband. Her body was laid out in state in one of the churches, and her lover actually succeeded in stealing the corpse and conveying it to a ruined crypt in one of the islands, and here he sat day and night by his lost love. singing and playing to her, as though by the force of his art he could recall her to life. Leonora had a twin sister, Eliade, who was so like her that her closest friends could scarcely distinguish them, One day Eliade heard a singer in a gondola singing so exquisitely that she traced the gondola to the deserted fs- land, and there she learned later the fate of her sister’s corpse and the iden: tity of Marcello, Aided by a servant, Eliade substituted herself for her sis- ter’s body, and when Marcello returned and called Leonora to awake he did not ask in vain, for apparently she rose alive from the coffin. Marcello when he found out the delusion was quite satisfied and married Eliade, but his happiness was short lived, as he died a | few years afterward.—London Tele! graph. Damp Room Test. | To ascertain whether a room is damp or not place a weighed quantity of fresh lime in an open vessel in the room and leave it there for twenty- | four hours, carefully closing the win- dows and doors. At the end of the twenty-four hours reweigh the lime, and if the increase exceeds 1 per cent of the original weight it is not safe to live in the room. Silver Fox Fur. i The black silver fox fur is most val- uable when there is no silver in it— when it is a pure rich black through- out. A dressed skin of this sort aver- ages 30 by 10 inches and will easily bring $3,600. A good silvery skin. clear and pure in color, with bluish underwool, is worth about $2,000. Cheap Carpet Cleaner. “What can 1 use to clean carpets?” asked a correspondent who signed her- self, rather bashfully, “Young Bride.” “Have you tried your young hus. band?” replied the answers editor, who lost his position just a few hours after the reply appeared.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Getting It Right. “He's broke, and the girl he was en- paged to has dropped him.” “She dropped and broke him, eh?” “No. She broke and dropped him.”— Houston Post. Just a Hint. Mr. Staylate—Is that clock right? Miss De Pink (wearily)—I think it must need cleaning. It’s been two or three hours going that last hour.—New York Journal. Fortitude is a great help in distress. - «Plautus. WEIRD HOUSE WARMING. Bad For the Old and Helpless Natives In Dutch New Guinea. Concerning a peculiar custom discov- ered among the natives of Dutch New Guinea, this interesting description is given by A. F. R. Wollaston in the Geographical Journal: “On top of the first steep ridge we came to the first native dwelling that we had seen in the country. If was a rectangular wooden structure, raised on piles about five feet from the ground. A sloping ladder or two or three poles tied to- gether leads to a narrow platform. behind which is the living room about ten or twelve feet square. In the mid- dle of the floor is a square fireplace, | usually lined with sand or small, Stones. The walls are made of split poles placed closely together, and the roof is made of the leaves of pandanus ' or of a palm if any happen to grow in the neighborhood. There was a mys- tery about that first house which we were never able to solve. It was evi- dently quite newly built, a small clear- . ing had been made about it and a few banana and dracoenas recently planted. | “Outside the house were a number of men, women and children. the men occupied in cooking large quantities of yams and sweet potatoes and great lumps of pig’s flesh. We naturally supposed that it was a sort of house warming, as in one sense it turned out to he. The men shook their heads and pointed in a mysterious way to- ward the house and made the curious sign which they are accustomed to make when they talk of something dis- ] agreeable. Then they invited us to enter the house. where we found an old man sitting by the fire. He was diseased and decrepit. but appeared by no means likely to die. He took a keen interest in our appearance and enjoyed the tobacco which we gave him. | “When we returned five days later we found the place utterly deserted and the house a blackened heap of ashes, on the top floor of which were lying the charred remains of human ' bones. It was impossible for any one to say five days earlier that the old man was going to die—indeed. he must have lived for months or even years. What we may imagine to have hap- pened was this: That as he was un- | able to get about any longer and find his own food. his relations did not in- ! tend to support him and that the preparations we saw were really for | his funeral feast, but we were puzzled | by their having cremated him in a newly built house.” MADE HIMSELF SAFE. Young Bessemer Had a Cautious as | Well as an Inventive Head. | The most trivial incidents have often originated the fortunes of our richest men. Take, for example, the fortunes | made out of Bessemer steel. This' genius, young Bessemer, had some idea of making steel out of iron, but a poor, newly married young man has ! no means of experimenting on a large scale. The story 1 must tell as 1 heard it from an intimate friend of Bessemer and is a true tale. i After Bessemer had in his small lab. | oratory experimented with the metals and at last obtained the desired result by blowing air through melted iron he found in the bottom of the crucible a i little lump of the famous steel. Now | | i I i the question was how to make the dis- covery public. He put the lump of steel into his pocket and made his way | to Nasmyth of steam hammer fame. ! Placing the metal on Nasmyth’s desk, | he told him that he had made this ex- | traordinary discovery. which would; revolutionize the whole metal world. | Then came a little incident which shows what wonderful heads these ' Scotch financiers possess. What do’ you think Nasmyth said to his excited inventor? “Eh, mon, it's vary risky to show | your wonderful invention. The world | is vary dishonest.” | To which the aspiring inventor re- plied: “Right, Mr. Nasmyth. I just calcu- | lated who 1 was coming to see, 80 with | my last half crown 1 registered the | invention on my way.”—London Strand | Magazine. ——Have your Job Work done here. — Flour and Feed. Bilious people have a sorry time. Their lives are practically divided into three periods: The time when they are com- ing down with biliousness, the time when ; they are down, and the time when they are getting over the attack. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets relieve biliousness, and sick and bilious headaches, and they do not make victims of the pill habit. ——For high class Job ‘Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. Coal and Wood. A. G. Morris, Jr. DEALER IN HIGH GRADE ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS AND CANNEL COAT Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw and Sand. l $ ALSO FEDERAL STOCK AND POULTRY FOOD BOTH ’PHONES. LIME AND LIMESTONE. Meat Market. Attorneys-at-Law. (Get the Best Meats. i , thin Rode ir Agua LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE You save nothin, or gristly meats, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher t poorer meats are elsewhere. I always have — DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. Restaurant. ESTAURANT. Bell:fnte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where . Meals are Served at All Hours St . Cho, Roasts, sters on the RT I RT By wiches, Soups, and anythi le, can be had in a few minutes any time. In ad- dition I have a complete plant prepared to furnish Soft 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, 50-32-1y. High St.,, Bellefonte, Pa. Money to Loan. MZ 10 LOAN on good security and 0 ; houses io Yen). M. KPICHLING, Attorney-at-Law 51-14-1v. Bellefonte LIME. Lime and Limestone for all purposes. LIME. H-O Lime Put up in 40 to 50 Pound Paper Bags. 58-28-6m for use with drills or spreader, is the econom- ical form most careful farmers are using. High Calcium Central Pennsylvania I ime American Lime & Stone Company., Operations at Bellefonte, Tyrone, Union Furnace, Frankstown and Spring Meadows, Pa General Office: TYRONE, PA. tne soma ——— Groceries. Groceries. Fruits, Confectionery and FINE GROCERIES. The Finest Meadow Gold Brand Creamery Butter at 40c per pound. Large Spanish and home-grown Onions, sound and in good order. If you want a fine, sweet, juicy Ham, let us supply you. Oranges are a standard fruit for all seasons. The goods we are now receiving are the California Valen- cia variety, of excellent quality at 25c, 30c and 40c per dozen. Extra fancy large fruit at 50c and 60c per dozen. Bananas are also an all-year- round fruit. We give careful atten- tion to having nice, clean yellow fruit. When you want some nice, clean fruit send us your order and you will be pleased. Our Olives are large and of the very finest flavor at 40c per quart. Burnett's and Knight's Extracts, Crosse & Blackwell’s Table Vinegar in bottles. Durkee’s Salad Dressing. SECHLER & COMPANY, ‘Bush House Block, - - 571 +. mmm, Farm Implements. Buy some of our fine cheese and compare it with other goods. We have a fine grade of Olive Oil in tins of half pint, one pint and one quart size. But none of the oils in tin will compare in quality or body with our high grade Rae's Lucca Oil which comes only in glass of three sizes, at 30c, 50c and 90c per bottle. STIILL IN THE PRESERVING SEASON. We sell pure Spices by weight only—we keep no package Spices. We have a full strength pure Cider Vinegar and a White Vinegar of high grade, each one at 25c per gallon. You can depend on these goods being just what you want. New Evaporated Peaches, Apri- cots and prunes are just now ar- riving. We are up-to-date on all these items. Let us have your orders. Bellefonte, Pa. oom 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 place in the county where that extraor- ly fine ‘grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food ‘and feed of all kinds. of Grain bought at the office Flour for wheat. OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. MILL AT ROOPBSURG. The only dinari All kinds Xi 7-19 Farmers’ Supply Store, BELLEFONTE, PA. look it over—price is right. Scrap, SAR The Cow and Hen are Money Earners, The American Cow and Hen are money earners and the question is all in the balanced rations, that are required to bring out their productiveness. FEED THE COW ENSILAGE and use the Blizzard Ensilage Cutter for Silo filling. All Experimental Sta- tions use the Blizzard. Easy to operate and has a self feeder, making it ab- solutely safe for the operator. We have one here on our floor. Come in and THE NEW IDEA MANURE SPREADER is second to none and will do the work to your satisfaction. Wiard Walking and Sulkey Plows, Spring and Spike tooth Harrows, Single and Double Disc Harrows, Steel Land Rollers, Grain Drills, Galvanized Water Troughs, Cast Iron Hog Troughs—rat proof, any length, Galvanized Chain Pumps—good for all time, force and lift easy. Running Pumps carried in stock—put in the well and guaranteed. Cutting Boxes and Corn Crackers, Corn Shellers— both hand and power, Poultry Netting, Poultry Grit, Oyster Shells, Beef Alfalfa Meal and Charcoal—everything to make the hen profitable. BROOKVILLE WAGONS A SPECIALTY. Ladders—both single and extension, up to 40 feet, at the right price and will stand up to the State's carry 5 to 6 grades in stock to suit all customers and at prices as low as any tramp agent offers you as he says at cost. Look out for the runners who are selling at cost. JOHN .G. DUB for le picking. All kind of field SEED ‘Test. Don't ey about Fertilizers, we BS, BELLEFONTE, PA. KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law,Belle fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts Office. Room 18Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y. S B. SPANGLER.-Attorneyv-at-Law. Practices in all the Courts. Consultation in English or an. Office in Crider’s Ex Bellefonte, Pa. S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at W. ce in Temple Court, Belle- 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, floor. All kinds of legal busi J = to promptly. Consultation in English or German 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. y* KENNEDY POHNSTON—Attorney-at-law Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given all legal business entrusted to his care. 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 Su; W State College, Centre county, Pa. "Bifice at his residence. . Dentists. es— 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, 52-39 D H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office in the Bush Arcade elefonte. Pa. All mod- as years of exboronis. A er of eerie, ad and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y Plumbing. Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewe: , Or escaping g , you can’t have good Health. The air yon reathe is poisonous; your system becomes 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 ys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best Not acheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our ; Prices are lower than many who give you Ir, unsanitary work and the lowest grade of onan . For the Best Work trv : i Archibald Allison, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-14-1v. comnts. + Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. This Agency 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 BENEFITS: $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot, . 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 week, total disability, Pe mit 52 weeks) i 10 per week, partial disability, (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion Any person, male or female in referred vccupation, includi house eeping, over eighteen years of age (ri and physical condition mas insure under this poiicv. : Fire Insurance { invite your attention to my Fire Insui ance , the strongest and Most Ey Br of Solid Companies represen’ ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvan. H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa Fine Job Printing. FINE J OB PRINTING 0—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. ‘There is no le of work, from the Ta “Dodger” to the firiest BOOK WORK, tha: we can not ‘do in the most satis- a, and at Prices conaist- pple ly, Call on or communicate with this office