Bemorralic {aidan ~~ Bellefonte, Pa., March 31, 1916. LIGHT'S EFFECTS ON GERMS ‘While It Kills Some, It Transforms Others Into Creatures of a Different Species. If sunlight destroys bacteria, it is also the active agent in multiplying their species. Such, at least, is the obvious deduction which science is drawing from a recent experiment of Mme. Victor Henry, and it is one that opens up an entirely new field to the bacteriologists. She had occasion recently to ex- pose some germs of anthrax to the rays from a mercury vapor lamp. As she expected, the treatment proved fatal to most of the subject, but a few of them survived. The astonishing feature in the case was that the survivors had undergone a radical transformation. They were no longer thin and threadlike. They had become spherical, or nearly so, true cocci, in fact. At the same time, they were radically different from all known spores. What is more, upon cultivation they did not return to their original form, and when injected into animals pro- duced an entirely new disease. Mme. Henry is forced to the conclu- sion that she has developed an entire- ly new bacterial family, and reasoning from her experience believes that she has hit upon the means by which such families have multiplied. It is her opinion that after long exposure to sunlight, a germ, if not destroyed, un- dergoes a radical change in form and nature, thus becoming the root of an entirely new species. ARE USING ROMAN WEAPONS Soldiers of Today Employ Almost a Duplicate of Sword Used by Caesar's Legionaries. If one of Caesar’s legionaries who fell in the “pacification” of Gaul could be waked from his long sleep and placed in the trenches, he would find one or two familiar things, even if he failed to recognize the landscape. The appalling racket, the bursting shells, the spectacle of men struck down by invisible agencies of death— these would be new and awesome. But the helmet would have a rather famil- iar feeling on his brows, and if he took part in a charge he would show himself a most efficient man with the “trench knife.” For this new weapon is just the old Roman broadsword revived and brought down to date. The blade is a bit shorter than tnat to which the legionary was accustomed—15 inches instead of 18. But the point and edge are keen, the steel is good, the hilt is plain, and the injunction to “thrust at the face” is as sound as ever. With this accustomed weapon in his grip and a cloak over his arm in lieu of shield, Caius of the Tenth legion would be a nasty warrior to meet on the chalk knolls of Champagne. To Reform Thermometer. A sign of progress is a bill intro duced by a Pacific coast representa. | tive to substitute the Centigrade for the Fahrenheit thermometer in gov- ernment publications. When Gabrie? Daniel Fahrenheit nearly 200 years | ago devised the scale which bears his | name 32 degrees below the freezing | point was the lowest temperature he ! knew, so he called it zero. But his graduation has been displaced in the ! scientific world almost as completely as his idea of the extreme of cold. Scientists everywhere use the Centi- grade scale, and the Fahrenheit is in popular use in English-speaking countries only. The Centigrade thermometer is graduated in a simple and rational way, the freezing point being marked zero and the boiling point 100. The movement for reform of the thermom- eter ought to go hand-in-hand with the propaganda for universal adoption of the metric system of weights and measures and for uniform decimal re- lations of coinage in all nations.— Newark Evening News. His Shaves Stopped Alimony. Unable, he claims, to pay the ali- ‘mony awarded his wife because of ex- penses attached to daily shaves, at- ‘tending the movies nightly and other ‘more or less princely luxuries, George Lawson was arrested by Detective Barnshaw on a bench warrant issued by Vice Chancellor Leaming and sent to the county jail on contempt pro- ceedings. When his wife brought action for di- vorce some time ago Lawson strenu- ously objected to the amount of ali- mony imposed by the vice chancellor, declaring that he was unable to pay, as he required the ministrations of a barber daily and a seat at the movies to settle his nerves after a day of toil. The vice chancellor told him to buy a safety razor and drop the show pas- sion.—Atlantic City dispatch Philadel- phia Record. SUFFRAGE AMENDMENT WINS Oklahoma House Passes Resolution, Which Now Goes to Senate. Oklahoma City, Okla.—A joint reso- lution authorizing the submission of a female suffrage amendment to the state constitution was adopted by the Oklahoma House of Representatives. The vote was 42 to 15. Should the resolution be adopted by the Senate the amendment would be submitted to the electorate in August. MOUSE BITE KILLS BABY Slight Wound Infects Washington, D. C., Infant With Blood Poisoning— Coroner Warns People. There are occasional instances where rodents, both the house rat and mouse, have been known to invade the bed or crib occupied by young chil- dren, especially infants when left alone sleeping. Such an incident is recorded in the death of William Web- ster Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Jackson of Washington, whose death is reported in the vital statistics as due to a virulent blood poisoning from the infection of a mouse bite on the child’s neck. One night while the infant, only two weeks old, was sleeping in his crib be- side his mother’s bed a mouse crawled into the crib and, biting the baby on the neck, inflicted what was then thought to have been an insignificant wound. A simple application was made to the scratch or wound inflicted by the little rodent, and nothing more was thought of it for the time being. However, the bite resulted in an in- fection which spread so rapidly that physicians found it impossible to save the child’s life. A high fever dovel- oped, ana the child died. Coroner J. Ramsay Nevitt, who in- vestigated the case, is satisfied that the child’s death was directly trace- able to the bite of the mouse. In com- menting upon the case he said: “It is a fact widely known among medical men that rats and mice carry ! disease, and householders should make every effort to rid their houses of them as a matter of personal and public protection. Cats, likewise, are a men- ace to public health, carrying germs of disease to a marked degree. The extermination of rats and mice should be undertaken by the local and public health service.” OUR GREAT . NEW INDUSTRY An Unprecedented Demand for High Explosives Develrped Trade in Benzol and Toluol. In response to the "nprecedented de- mand for high explosives a new indus- try, the recovery of ben~zol and toluol, suddenly sprang into existence in the United States in 1915 Benzol ard toluol, indispensable ; :w materials from which explosives, dyestuffs and other chemical products are manufae- tured, are oils similar to gasoline in appearence and smell and are present in the gas that is driven off from coal when it is made into coke. Before the European war the demand in the Uni- ted states for these products was so small and the price so low that but one company engaged in coke-making sought to recover them on a large scale, ! land and Imperator. Tied Brousett to his home. Late in 1914 the price of ben- zol, and particularly toluol, rose to | such a point that many other com- | panies began to build plants to recover | man who talks, but he has a playful these oils, which were then being burned with the gas, and by the end of 1915 there were 19 new plants for benzol recovery in operation and oth- ers in course of erection. It is esti- mated that between 8,000,000 and 9,- 000,000 tons of coal were carbonized in the ovens that furnished the gas from which the oils were recovered. Small But Useful Dynamo. Farmers and others living on the banks of small streams are showing much interest in the new invention of A. G. Watkins of Philadelphia, which is a small waterpower plant floating on the surface of the stream. This generates sufficient power to operate a small dynamo, which will supply | the current to light a modern house of moderate size, or do other useful chores around the farm or suburban residence. The plant consists of two triangular floats secured together so that there is a gradually narrowing channel between them. The broad end of this is turned upstream and the narrow end is equipped with a water wheel. The water enters the large opening, and in passing out acts on the wheel, which is in turn geared to a small dynamo. Origin of Britain's Broad Arrow. Now that the broad arrow is so fre- quently seen on military stores and vehicles it is interesting to recall that we owe this as the government mark to Henry Sidney, master of the ord- nance (created earl of Rommey in 1691), who, finding that the govern- ment had no distinguishing mark to enable them to identify its property, caused it to be marked with his arms, the “Pheen,” or “Broad Arrow,” which has ever since been so used.— London Globe. Silk Culture in Colombia. The government of Colombia has just made an appropriation of $10,000 annually for the encouragement of silk culture in the republic. Experiments are to be made with native plants to see if they can be used in the indus- try in place of mulberry plants. Silk- spinning machinery imported into Co- lombia will be exempt from duty for ten years. Monkey Made Happy. Hoolock, a lonesome monkey in the Central park zoo, New York, was mis- erable until the curator conceived the idea of taking phonographic records of his whining chatter. Now Hoolock listens to his own talk, thinks he has a companion and is perfectly happy. Angler's Lucky Day. Mrs. John Roberts, while fishing from the municipal pier at Hermosa Beach, Cal., caught five different kinds of fish on five hooks at the same time. The fish were mackerel, bass, jack smelt, yellow fin and barracuda. HAWSERS OF VAST STRENGTH Monster Steamers Use Steel Ropes Which It Would Seem Could With- stand Any Power. Afier laborious attempts to tow the Thessaloniki into port the Greek liner Patris arrived at New York and her captain reported that three heavy steel hawsers had parted during the effort to save the disabled ship. The lines that parted were 4%%-inch hawsers, which means that a strain of 31 tons, or 62,000 pounds, had been exerted be- fore the break. In general towing and lighter ship work a three-inch steel hawser is the usual line used. This consists of six steel wire strands tightly wound on ‘a central hemp which is soaked in oil, giving a certain pliability. This sort of hawser is also used by some of the steamship lines for permanent moor- ings. The breaking point of the three- inch steel line is about 23 tons. Its cost is 29 cents a foot. The largest of steel towing lines is the one six inches in circumference, the breaking strain of which is 54 tons, or 108,000 pounds. Because of the weight of this line and the difficulty of handling it the 41-inch hawser is the one mostly used for heavy towing. In bulk the biggest hawsers used in an American port were those on the Hamburg-American liners Vater- For permanent moorings these great liners used 24- inch hemp hawsers besides smaller lines of steel wire and hemp. MADE A QUICK RECOVERY Elevator Man Fainted When Leg Was Crushed, but Soon Got Back on Job—It Was Cork. When the doors of the service ele- vator at the Alexandria closed unex- pectedly just as Joe Brousett was starting the machine it jammed his leg, mashing it fearfully. Brousett fainted. Fortunately the elevator stopped without dragging him. “Doc” Bassett, superintendent of service, called an ambulance and hur- He ap- peared dazed. A physician was called. Mr. Bassett returned to the hotel and put a new man on the elevator. Three hours later he entered the elevator and was astounded to see Brousett operating it. For a moment he thought it was a ghost, but Brou- sett assured him that everything was all right. “You see, that was a cork leg that got smashed,” he said. “The accident brought back so vividly my original accident that I fainted and only came to by the time J reached home. Then I put ci: my reserve leg and came back t> work.”—Los Angeles Times. Grand Duke's Playful Way. The Grand Duke Nicholas is not a way with him at times, according to the story told by Julius West in “Sol- diers of the Czar.” Some time ago, during ean inspection, the grand duke was standing next to the emperor, a few yards away frcm a group of gen- erals. He ordered General Russky, then in command of the forces in that region, to step forward. The grand duke next ordered a private soldier to | come forward and hack off the gen- eral’s epaulettes. “We can imagine,” says Mr. West, “the dismay of the other generals as the soldier obeyed. “‘Now cut mine off,” was the next order. The soldier did so. ‘Now put them on his shoulders.” ” It was the grand duke’s playful little way of promoting Russky to the rank of adjutant general, the highest in the Russian army. New Indigestible Dish. Did you ever eat a knish? No. Then you have missed a good attack of indigestion and perhaps the under- taker. A knish is something like a dumpling, only infinitely more so. It is made up of dough, chopped pota- toes, onions, cheese, kashe, butter, eggs “and other cereals,” weighs a ton or less and costs five cents, nor- mally. Since it became a war baby it costs four cents under certain con- ditions. It is the great piece de re- sistance on New York's eastside. Ev- ery store sells knishs, and the com- petition is so great that some of the merchants are giving coupons to buy- ers. A certain number of these cou- pons entitles the holder to a certificate and a hack. to Bellevue with tan knishes. Gains Four Pounds in Three Hours. Raymond Tilton, twenty-one years old, performed the unusual feat of gaining four pounds of weight in less than three hours in order to become a soldier in the United States army, reports the Cincinnati Chronicle. Til- ton, whose parents live in Richmond, Ky., desired to join the infantry, and he tipped the scale at 123 pounds, being three pounds shy. He was no- tified that the government is strict in regard to this matter, and was told to return when he acquired the neces- sary avoirdupois. Tilton invested in a 35-cent meal and imbibed freely of water. Then it was found that he had gained four pounds, one more than the government required. He was accepted. What We Wish to Know. An aged Frenchman, who has worked out a system for forecasting the weather, claims we are to have a succession of twenty-six very se- vere winters, commencing with the present one. If he can tell us how long the European war is to last, how- ever, it will be of greater interest.— Oshkosh Northwestern. " § i LED LTR HHT Foregone Conclusion. Teacher—If a farmer sold 1,479 bush- els of wheat for $1.17 a bushel what would he get? Boy—An automobile.— Philadelphia Bulletin. Trouble teaches men how much there is in manhood.—Beecher. Plumbing. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewe , Or escaping as, you can’t have good Health. The air you reathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’sthe only kind you ought to have. Wedon't trustthis 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 T, unsanitary work and the lowest grade of finishings. For the Best Work trv Archibald Allison, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. rn Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flou Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at all times the following brands of high grade flour: WHITE STAR 3 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 be secured. Also International Stock F om, See and feed of all kinds. od All kinds of Grain bought at the office Flour xchanged for wheat. : OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. 7-19 MILL AT ROOPSBURG. N1Give the {Children their 1Chance Can’t expect the children to stand high in their classes unless they get their lessons done properly. And they can’t do night study without proper light. The best light to study by is that which beams from a Rayo Lamp filled with slow-burning Atlantic Rayolight Oil. It gleams soft, white and mellow — doesn’t flicker. It's a wonderful light for studying. Won’t strain the children’s eyes and so they study the better. And they learn the quicker. And you'll sew with less effort, and father will enjoy his paper the more if you keep the house generously lighted with Rayo Lamps. Rayo Lamps are handsome —add to the appearance of any room. They're easily cleaned and last a lifetime. Your dealer can show“ you a full assortment of Rayo Lamps priced from $1.50 up. But to get the best light from a Rayo Lamp, you should burn ATLANTIC That's the kerosene that neither smokes nor smells, that burns brightly and yields a great heat, but always at a low cost; use it in every lamp in the house, in your heaters and in your oil stoves. Atlantic Rayolight Oil is the one kerosene you can ask for by name —that never varies in guality. And so it is especially desirable for domestic purposes —for polishing furniture, for keeping away moths, for removing rust and the many other uses hundreds of housewives tell us they have found for it. Ask your dealer for ATLANTIC RAYOLIGHT OIL by name, you can buy it at any store that displays the sign: —costs no more than the unknown kind ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh Compare this issue of the “Watchman” with other county papers, and note the difference. Dry Goods, Etc. LYON & COMPANY. Rugs and Other Floor Coverings. We have just opened a new Rug Department, com- prising a large assortment of new patterns and color- ings. These were purchased some months ago and we can save you 4c per cent. on the price quoted to-day. We have Axminster, Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels Rugs, Room Size, Hall Runners & small Rugs to match. i Special Sale of Matting Rugs. To introduce our new Rug Department we will sell a Matting Rug, assorted colors, for a short time only, 36x72, value $1.00, saleprice . . . . . 75 cents. Included in this special price sale are Rag Carpets, all- wool and part wool Ingrain Carpets, Linoleums and Mattings. Make this Rug Sale your benefit, and give our new Rug Department a look over. EASTER OPENING of Ready-to-Wear Garments. Ladies’ shades. and Misses’ Coats and Suits in all the new All the new spring shades in Waists :—Georgette, Crepe, Crepe de La Vogue style speaks for itself. Chine, Pussy Willow, Taffeta, and a large assortment in White Waists. Lids for Kids. See our line of Children’s Spring and Summer Hats. Prices special for early buyers. Lyon & Co. ... Bellefonte so