EER ; A Ts ssc —— ma RE i 1 NPE nngers are nus affected whenever an D Goods, Etc. : «ae | VICTORY GOES TO PLODDER | RADIUM AS CANCER CURE | attempt is made to knit, there is no od RE i -interference with other varieties of ~~ 3 “Exceptional” Youngsters Nearly Al- Is Especially Useful in Healing Super | finger movement.” RR a SCORE Bellefonte, Pa., September 24, 1915. Forty Years in Stock. The latest coincidence which has Just come to my knowledge (writes a correspondent) befell an elderly gen- tleman well known in literary circles. Wishing to refer to a book he had used in his schooldays, he visited the ‘second-hand shop in Charing Cross road which specializes in this class of work. On inquiry he found they had one copy of the volume in stock. When he opened it he found on the front page his own name written there well over forty years ago.—Pall Mall ‘Gazette. : The End of it All. Measuring things by dollars, by hours, by pounds and yardsticks, meas- ures everything accurately enough ex- cept the one thing we wish to meas- ure, which is a man’s soul. We are producing the material things of life faster, more cheaply, more shoddily, but it is open to question whether we are producing happier men and wom- en, and that is what we are striving to do at the end of it all. There's a Difference. An enterprising gentleman of the breezy West, who superintends the “railroad eating house” in his town, has recently hung out a sign that fur- nishes considerable amusement to those who pass by, says Lipipncott’s. it reads: “Pies like mother used to make, five cents; pies like mother used to try to make, ten cents.” We Think So, Too. “Charles, you're spending too much money this year. Too many dances, too many clothes, too many taxies, too many—" “Well, father, I'll tell you how I look at it. It seems to me that every family ought to be able to support one gentleman.” — Cornell Widow. : First Patent for Plow. The first patent for a plow is said to have been obtained by Joseph Fol- jamb in 1730. His invention was close- ly followed by other plow makers, and he struck the same practical idea that has been so elaborated in the soil-turning instrument of today. Too Tame to Hunt. In Scituate a fox which had been released as game for the hunters proved too tame. It refused to run from the dog that was released against it, but ran up to one of the hunters, ‘who took pity on it and picked it up.— Boston Globe. To Remove Wet Ink Stains. Rub with a piece of ripe tomato and then rinse well in cold water. Wash and boil, or put a little red ink on the mark and wash. The acid dissolves the iron in the ink and sets free the tanning or coloring matter, which will boil out. When You Sponge Clothes. The troublesome rings which often appear on clothes after they have been sponged with gasoline or naphtha can be avoided by adding a couple of ta- blespoonfuls of table salt to the cleans- ing fluid. In British Law. Should the eaves of a man’s house project over his neighbor’s land, the latter may pull them down at once, ac- cording to British law, unless they have so projected for 20 years. Pests Always With Us. “When a large crowd is trying to get out of a hall,” sighs a Central Branch editor, “did you ever notice how the ones in the doorway like to visit ?’—Kansas City Star. Notorious and Notable. You can become notorious by a sin- ‘gle act of conspicuous folly. You can become notable only by continued achievement of exceptional usefulness. Ore Advantage of Wealth. If a man has a fair wad of money, ‘the folks will denounce him, but they “will usually call him mister, if not col- «onel.—Houston Post. if Society. ' ‘Society is like a burning house; a lot of people want to rush into it whether or not there is anybody they know inside. Lack of Perspective. Do not buy an adding machine to reckon up the profits of a peanut stand.—Youth’s Companion. Weaving in China. Weaving was practiced in China more than a thousand years before it was known in Europe. Time to Look Out. It’s time to look out when a busi- ness will not bear looking into. And a Bad One. The man who takes himself too se- riously soon becomes a joke. ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN ways Cease to Be Prodigies When They Grow Up. Have you ever noticed how few “smart” people amount to anything? The “slick” individuals you meet—they do not seem to get anywhere. The fakers are the “smartest” people on earth, but you have never known one to get very far on the road to success. Take the “smart” girl. She seems to know everything on earth. She dresses a little louder than other girls. She always manages to wear something that is “chic.” She has the boys hang- ing around her in groups. She talks in terms that the plainer girl cannot understand; but later on in life she will be found putting up a terrific fight against time while the girl who was not nearly so smart is occupying a position of dignity and joy at the head of a sensible home. And as for the smart boy—the one who “gets by” in a manner the other boys cannot understand, and who may for the time being be envied by the other boys because of his foppish man- ners—he doesn’t become the head of a prosperous business. It is the plod: der that seems to get there in the end —the boy who doesn’t Probably not 1 per cent of the sue- cessful men in the world today gave any evidence of having great ability when they were “kids.” The prodigies do not make good. The ‘exceptional’ youngster in school seldom conquers after he has entered real life; but the plain fellow of common sense, slow to learn, slow to become en- thused, slow to make companions and slow to give them up—the fellow who sticks to a job until it is finished, that is the fellow who in after life rules and regulates the affairs of this little green ball.—Dayton News. DRAWBACKS TO NEW IDEA Cutting Down of Hours of Sleep Will Be Sure to Meet With Much Opposition. A specialist who has pursued his studies with devotion, announces that mind and body that may be thrown off completely through gradual relinquish- ment. It is his view that the average man may add 20 years to his conscious existence by disposing of his sleep habit. The cult has progressed to the extent that many men are now in a way to eliminate their hours of repose, with some show of success, but there is vast complaint from their families during the preliminary stages of the cure. The man who has been sleeping eight hours is not enabled to shade the interval of rest to four hours without seriously disturbing his household. One who retires at midnight and arises at four o’clock in the morning awakens other inmates of his home, both on retiring and arising. There is some inherent de- fect in human nature that leads one to go blundering about a house, knock- ing over chairs and shaking down the furnace, when he should be preserv- ing a deep silence. For this reason the home treatment of the sleep habit i8 not likely to be popular. What should be done, for the protection of normal humans, is to hive the sleep- habit patients in barracks where they may strangle sleep at will without disturbing others. To curious stran- gers the barracks would be a show place, where the lights would be al- ways shining like beacons and where the activities of life might proceed as at noon. There is some demur to the sleep treatment for the reason that it adds one meal a day to the requirements of the patient—a re- quirement that is practically prohibi- tive to many. Stomach Ache. Segmentary neurosis is the predis- posing cause of disease belonging to the class of the paroxysmal spasmodic disorders associated with the mus: culature of the alimentary canal. In members of this class seizures occur in connection with food taking and gastro-oesophageal hypertonus; they also occur from mental and emotion- al excitement, and from muscular ef- fort; in them both visceral and parie- tal layers of muscles are engaged in spasm. Consequently they resemble the anginal seizure in other features besides that of predisposing cause. A neurosis attended by intercostal hy- peralgesia ensues when dendritic fibers belonging to the affected cen- ter traverse pressure zones of hyper- plasias, aneurisms, new growths and pericardial and pleuritic adhesions. Hence these diseases, as well as gas- tric disorders, may be regarded as potential remote causes of anginal pains and seizures.—H. Walter Verdun in the Lancet. Odd Fishes. It 1s said that at one time the Ice- landers taught tame bears to jump into the sea and catch seals. In China birds do equally well, for at a signal they dive into the lakes and bring up large fish grasped in their bills. In Greece the fishermen use branches of pine steeped in pitch and lighted; the inhabitants of Amorgos used cypress- leaved cedar, which served, when light- ed, as a lure; and the Chinese fish 1n the night with white-painted boards placed 1n a manner to reflect the rays of the moon upon the water. These attract the fish to the boat, when the men cast a large net and seldom fail to draw out considerable quantities. An- chovies are fished for in a similiar man- ner. “catch on” . quite so rapidly as the smart boy. ! sleep is a mere habit of the human ficial Cancers of Skin and Other Cases. + Of 746 cases of cancer treated in the Radium Institute of London last year there were 69 apparent cures, while 328 were reported improved. ‘Many of the cases came to the atten- tion of the institute in too advanced a stage to be remedied. The comparatively new curative known as radium is especially useful in dealing with superficial cancers of the skin and with cases that are not easily operable. Conveniently handled, it gets at growths which cannot be .reached by means of the X-rays. Be- cause the patient can take radium in the mouth, cancer of the mouth, or palate, for instance, can be readily dealt with by radium. Those birthmarks commonly known as “port wine stains” seem to be ef- fectively treated with radium. A por- ter suffering from this disfigurement had repeatedly been refused employ- ment. He went to the institute and after a time the mark was entirely eradicated. More Oil Wells in Argentina. Nine new wells are now producing total number of wells 23. These wells, it is calculated, should give a total monthly production of 12,000 tons, for which the state expects to receive about $955,000 during the year. Up to December 31 last proceeds of sales had brought in $340,000. Even assum: ing that the results anticipated above are realized during the current year, the supply will be inadequate to justi fy many big firms in adopting oil fuel instead of coal, unless they can make formal contracts for the quantities they require. In the meantime, the ‘Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products company finds a more than ready mar- ket to absorb its large shipments, amounting to 10,000 to 16,000 tons monthly. ; Caricature. Mrs. O, H. P. Belmont, the suffragist leader, was praising in New York the recruiting work of the English suffra- gists. “Englishmen now,’ she said, ‘have a better understanding of their suffra- gist sisters. The average English- “Knitters’ Neuritis.” Too much wartime knitting and sew- ing is responsible for the appearance in England of a malady which may be compared with writers’ cramp or ten- nis elbow. The physicians call it “knitters’ neuritis.” The only treat: ment is to give up knitting indefi- nitely. ; “When any untrained set of muscles is suddenly called upon to repeat in- definitely a complex and unaccus tomed sequence of movements,” says a London physician, “a spasmodic paralysis is very likely to develop. Knitters’ neuritis begins with the worker feeling that the usual wrist and finger movements cannot be fol lowed with the customary ease. Then the muscles get stiff, and in the later stage develop a spasmodic cramp as soon as the knitting needles are taken into the fingers. Although the is well illustrated in an anecdote. “ ‘Dear me, said one woman to an- other, ‘here's a wife just been arrested for horsewhipping her husband in a public theater! ] “ ‘Quite right, the other woman, a suffragist answered firmly. ‘Quite right, too, to arrest her. These pain- ful duties should never be performed in public, but only on the sacred pri- vacy of the home ” | Finger-Print Love. “Why do you think you’ll be happy if you marry that young man, daugh- ter?” asked the father. “Because, father, we've had our fing- er-pricts examined and they almost match,’ was the sweet young thing's reply. ’ CASTORIA. CASTORIA. Children AAW The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his pers sonal supervision since its infancy. Tir Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good ’’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAYs Bears the Signature of a In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, 59-20-e.0.w Announcement. The Farmers Supply Store We are Headquarters for the Dollyless Electric Washing Machines ‘Weard Reversible Sulky Riding Plows and Walking Plows, Disc Harrows, Spring-tooth Harrows, Spike-tooth Lever Harrows, Land Rollers; g-Hole Spring Brake Fertilizer Grain Drill—and the price is $70. POTATO DIGGERS, Brookville Wagons—all sizes in stock. Buggies and Buggy Poles, Manure Spreaders, Galvanized Water Troughs, Cast Iron Hog and Poultry Troughs, Galvanized Stock Chain Pumps, Force and Lift Pumps for any depth of wells, Extension and Step Ladders, Poultry Supplies and All Kinds of Field Seeds.. Nitrate of Soda and Fertilizer for all crops, carried at my ware- house where you can get it when you are ready to use it. Soliciting a share of your wants, I am respectfully yours, JOHN G. DUBBS, 60-14-tf. Both Phones "Bellefonte, Pa. in the Argentina oil fields, making the |- man’s idea of a suffragist in the past | LYON & COMPANY. COATS and SUITS A showing and sale that cannot be equaled in this town. New Fall Suits in poplins, serges and mannish effects; strictly first-class tailoring; that are as good in quality and style as others are asking $15. Our price $10 and $12.50 A splendid assortment in fur, braid and vel- vet trimmed Suits, the quality and style we guarantee as good as any $20 and $22 suit. Our special price $15 Our line of $20 Suits will only be appreciated when seen. The quality and style speak for" themselves. A still higher grade of Suits; everything of the best; we are sure you will not see this kind anywhere for less than $30 to $35; our price $25 Our line of Fall and Winter Coats we guaran- tee to be the best in quality and workman- ship. Styles that are bought to suit the most fastidious. We have made special prices for early buyers. The $10 and $12 kind now at $8 and the range goes up to $30, which means a big saving on every garment. Come in and see our Coats and Suits and we know you cannot resist buying. Lyon & Co. ... Bellefonte The Centre County Banking Company. “STOP, LOOK, LISTEN” A Lawyer received $10,000 for suggesting these words to a railroad. The sign, “Stop, Look, Lis- ten!” saved the road many thousands of dollars in damages. It’sa good sign. It’s worth $10,000. Wise people are often warned by a similar sign on the road of extravagance. They stop in time. How about yourself? Think this over seriously. A bank account is the Best Kind of Security at any time. If you haven't a bank account now, start one at once. Any account, however small you are able to begin with, will be welcomed and carefully conserved at THE CENTRE COUNTY BANK, 56-6 BELLEFONTE PA. Groceries. Groceries. FOOD SUPPLIES We have just received a shipment of new caught Blue Back Mackerel, messed and boneless ; Canned Salmon and Tuna Fish are both very satisfactory hot weather goods. Our brands will fully satisfy your desire. Our fancy new American Cheese are now at their very finest. you want the highest quality, give us your order. Asparagus tips, new pack, Nabob brand, just received at roc per can. Elite brands, large can, fancy, at 25c. We have a blend of TEA that has proved very satisfactory for making iced tea and for regular use at 6oc per pound. The new crop of California Summer Valenica Oranges are now just at their best. We have fancy stock at 25¢, 30c, g40c, 50c and 6oc a dozen. Also fancy California Lemons. Our Sliced Dried Beef is all full slices, cut only from the tender part of the meat. Comes in clean wax paper envelopes. Some- thing new and desirable. We take special care in the selection of Bananas and can give you fancy fruit. MEADOW GOLD BRAND CREAMERY BUTTER Is a Strictly Fancy Grade. We get it in frequent orders so that you can de- pend on it having that New Sweet Flavor. Try it and be convinced. SECHLER & COMPANY, If Bush House Block, - - 57-1 - - - Bellefonte, Pa.