——— = ‘Bellefonte, Pa., August 26, 1921. IN DEFENSE OF FANGLESS SNAKES. Animals of many kinds are protect- ed by law; but there are some humble creatures that have not come under the protecting wings of law—these creatures are the snakes. Their de- struction is tolerated. But why should the six hundred species of snakes found the world over suffer death penalty upon sight because about sixty species are poisonous? Why should the fifty species of snakes found within the limits of the United States suffer death penalty upon sight because four are venomous? Why should the glass-snake or joint-snake which in fact is not a snake but a liz- ard, suffer the fate of snakes? The reason for such ruthless killing is ig- norance. Gossip is a great factor in instilling an unwarrated hatred for snakes. Who, for instance, has not heard of the “hoop-snake?” But be assured, no snake ever rolls down a hill with its tail in its mouth or otherwise; and be assured no tree was ever killed by a snake. True, there is a snake commonly called “hoop-snake,” Abastor erythrogram- mus; it may be that on account of its terrible scientific name some folks would have it extinct. _ The spreading adder is likewise con- sidered a poisonous snake by people who know nothing about it. This snake is not poisonous, but it is the biggest bluff we know. When irri- tated it will hiss, spread its head a neck two or three inches, coil up, take an attitude for striking—and here the performance ends. It is perfectly harmless. When pressed further it will often turn over on its back and “play ’possum.” There are four poisonous groups of snakes within the boundaries of the United States; these are: the mocea- sin, rattler, copperhead, and harle- quin. All are easily distinguished by their large, broad heads, deep-set black eyes, small neck, stout bulky body, and short tail. gerous of these, we think, is the moc- casin, for it usually rests on branches of low trees and shrubs and strikes at a passing victim. However, it will re- frain from striking unless irritated and will give battle only when teased or frightened. The rattler comprises many species of which the diamond back is the most plentiful. It is dreaded by all, yet it is not the most venomous. Death from the rattler’s bite depends upon the activity of the snake, the: condition o7 the struck, and the spot affected by the poison. Besides this rattlers will give the tresspasser a warning. The cop- perhead is next in rank in regard to virulence . of poison. It is the most aggressive of our snakes. Fortunate- ly it is not found in Florida. There is also another species, a very beautiful snake, the harlequin or bead-snake. It is the least venomous of our poisonous snakes. Now having this in mind, count the number of persons you know of in the United States that have died from snake bite. If you know of one, you know of one more than I do. Yet a ruthless warfare is carried on against all snakes, and every creature that has the semblance of a snake, irrespective of its harmless and often beneficial | character.—Fr. Cyril, in St. Leo Ca- det. a HOW SOLDIER DEAD ARE SENT HOME, | Upon disinterment of a body in Eu- rope prior to shipment to this coun- | try the remains are carefully identi- | The body is | fied and records verified. then technically treated by expert embalmers in such a manner as con- forms to rigid sanitary laws. The remains are then wrapped in a linen sheet and medicated blanket and plac- | ed in a metalic container. A metal tag showing complete identification is fastened to the body. Then the re- mains are placed in this metal con- tainer the body being carefully sup- ported by cushioned pads which pre- vent it from shifting. The lid of this metal container is then hermetically sealed and it is then placed within the casket which is constructed of the fin- est kilned chestnut wood. An appropriate plate inscribed with the name and other data identifying the remains of the soldier contained therein is fastened to the casket. The casket is then placed in the strongly constructed shipping case which is properly marked and made ready for shipment. ‘Each operation incident to the disinterment and preparation for shipment of the body is carefully supervised. It is estimated that the total average weight of a casket when ready for shipment is from 500 to 700 pounds. oo Criminals Put to Death While They Sleep. As soon as Governor Eemmett Boyle signs the “humane death” bill passed recently by the Legislature, condemned criminals in Nevada will be put to death by lethal gas. Neva- da then will be the first State to choose this method of execution for its prisoners. In order to carry out such execu- tions a special cell must be built in the State penitentiary. A judge, when sen- tencing an offender to his death, will designate a certain week during which the penalty is to be paid. At the open- ing of the appointed week the prison- er will be lodged in the special cell, and the warden, with a physician and six reputable persons over twenty-one years of age, will administer the gas. So that death may be painless, the gas will be introduced into the cell, if pos- sible, while the prisoner is asleep. At present a condemned man may choose whether he shall be shot to death or hanged. “Why didn’t you stop when I sig- nalled you?” inquired the officer. “Well,” replied Mr. Chuggins, “it had taken me two hours to get this old flivver started, and it seemed a shame to stop her merely to avoid a little thing like being arrested.” The most dan- | the time of the year, | person ' PLANS CHURCH WITH THREE ALTARS ON TRACKS. A unique idea in church building is about to be tried out by James R. Mel- lon, a Pittsburgh millionaire, who plans to erect an edifice where all de- nominations can feel free to worship. The unusual feature of the project will be the revolving rostrum, which will carry three distinct pulpits, one each for Catholics, Episcopalians, and other Protestant denominations. The church will be located on the top of the Laurel Hill mountains, about seven miles from New Florence, in Westmoreland county. It will be built on Mr. Mellon’s country estate, which contains several thousand acres. : The locality is composed of moun- tain farms with families that have no chance to attend church. My. Mellon expects to begin erection of the church as soon as his architect has the plans ready. Imagine yourself sitting in a room 60 by 60 with seats; then, at one side in the middle is an opening about twenty feet wide where the pulpit should be. On the outside of this wali, but within the building is a railroad track with three altars, the same as three cars; the middle one would be Protestant, for any denomination, that is, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyter- ian, United Presbyterian, or the like. [ Should it be a day for the Catholics, i they too, would designate the time of | their service, this train would be mov- i ed along so that the Catholic altar “would come in front of this opening | where the altar shculd be. This altar ' has sliding doors which are locked up i by the Priest and opened when he | wishes to have services, and when his I service is over he locks his altar up ‘and goes away. What the Catholics ! desire is to have their own altar con- | secrated to their own use. There | seems to be no objection to preaching ! from their consecrated altar to their { members sitting in a public hall or | church. Then should the KEpiscopa- ! lians desire to have their services, { their car would be run to the opening land the Catholic car run into a room { which just fits it so that it would be | entirely isolated and taken care of un- til they wished to use it again. In | like manner, the Episcopal altar ! would have all the necessary equip- { ment and could be locked up and mov- {ed into a recess aftei being locked up. { But at all times, when neither the | Catholic or Episcopal services were | being held, the Protestant pulpit | would be visible in the church, where | Sunday school services, also preach- ling of any denomination, could take FLYING IS OLD FOR HAWIIANS. Honolulu, T. H., Aug. 20.— Thrills of flying were enjoyed by Hawiians centuries before aviation was invented, according to stories told by natives of today. Their ancestors got their aerial excitement by jump- ing off cliffs into the ocean in home- made “planes.” : They made a regular game of it, known as “lele pali” or “jumping from the cliff.” It was played up to a hundred years or so ago by natives who lived near groves of loulu palms near high cliffs overlooking the ocean. Details of the game have been ob- tained by William J. Coelho, a former newspaper editor now an officer of the Hale 0 na Alii Hawaii (House of Chiefs.) This is what he says of the vanished sport: The game was played with huge contrivances built of light but stout sticks and overwoven with loulu palm leaves. Several of these affairs were made ready, the Hawaiian “aviators” took their seats and were pushed over towering cliffs at the same time. The adventurer who remained longest in the air was the winner. Often through carelessness or ex- citement a “plane” would execute a centary airplanes. The only damage was the loss of the game. Old Hawaiians say that their flying men were exceptionally skiliful. The only means they had of guiding their nose dive similar to those of twentieth’ crude appliances was to shift their weight to maintain balance as they zigzagged down toward the sea. A fleet of outrigger canoes anchored offshore to pick up the sportsmen and retrieve the “planes.” Exceptionally daring Hawaiians often hopped off thousand foot cliffs on the mainland, it is said. Business will begin to expand by leaps and bounds when folly takes its final flight. Read these articles with care. Every Dollar yo The Watchman’s Spend in Bellefonte will ‘COME HOME TO BOOST” Buy-at-Home Campaign They may present something you hadn’t thought of before. Patronize the people whose ads appear here. They are your neighbors and will treat you right. The money you spend with them stays in cir- culation in Bellefonte. If You Buy Out, of Town and I Buy Out. of Town, What, will Become of Our Town ? Everything in Furniture. Phonographs and Records. NAGINEY’S Send Us Your Grocery Order Today It Will Pay You. CITY CASH GROCERY Allegheny St. The Latest in Dry Goods and Ladies’ and Misses Ready to Wear. HAZEL & CO. The Headquarters for Athletic Goods in Bellefonte. Smoker Sup- plies. Barber Shop in Connection. RUHL’S Under First Nat. Bank. place. Accommodations in this pulpit are to be provided for the Baptists, | and a small lake in front of the church | | building could be used if they desired | | baptisms. i The building would be of stone with | ‘windows of Gothic style set high in| the wall, secure against vandalism. | The church will be called the Church 2 oi the Wilderness. This name is giv- | ea on account of the remoteness of the | situation. There are thousands of | acres back of the church several miles | toward Johnstown, a region that has. no roads, just the primeval forest. The location is in the most historical part ‘of Westmoreland county and where the Indian troubles were the most se- | ‘vere fromi © 1758 to 1763. Located | along the Forbes route to the west | ! starting at Fort Ligonier then Fort Palmer, which is just opposite the site i of the church, were Finley’s Cabin, Fort Wallace, etc., on the trail into Pittsburgh. This valley was noted for | the nineteenth century.—Reformatoiy | | Record. BOALSBURG. The Boal troop returned from Mt. | | Gretna on Saturday. The corn looks fine and some of the farmers are cutting it. Alvah Johnstonbaugh made a bus- i ness trip to Harrisburg last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Wagner, of Altoona, were visitors in town last week. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hazel and baby Jane are visiting friends in New York State. Miss Edith Sankey, of Middleburg, | was a week-end guest at the home of Miss Sara J. Keller. Mr.. and Mrs. Ray Gilliland and children, of State College, were call- ers in town on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Stover re- turned Thursday from a visit with friends in western Pennsylvania. Mrs. Alice Magoffin, Miss Ellen Rhone, Austin Dale and daughters spent part of Friday in Bellefonte. John Fisher, of Bellefonte; William Fisher, of Sunbury, and Frank Fish- er, of Juniata, visited their mother, Mrs. Amanda Fisher, on Sunday, her birthday. Told the Truth. “Did she tell you the truth when you asked her how old she was?” “Oh, yes.” “What did she say?” “That it was none of my business.” its old furnaces in the beginning of | _ Our Grocery Line is always complete and we invite your pa- tronage. BROUSE’S High St. Willard is the Storage Battery of Serv- ice. Any make battery repair- ed and recharged. WITMER’'S { Studebaker Expert Repairing on All Makes of Cars. BEEZER’S GARAGE. The House of Service when it, Comes to Hardware THE POTTER-HOY Co. Our Meats are always fresh and wholesome Phone Your Order. ECKEL’S MARKET We Do Not Recommend Ford parts that are not genu- ine. Make our garage your headquarters, Ford owners. BEATTY MOTOR CO. BELLE Meade Sweets, Maillard and Louis Sherry Candies. THE MOTT DRUG Co. Gross Bros. Good Broom................ 68¢c 5 pounds Coffee....... seven 980 5 Soap....5. 0... saat ea SOC 3 Jersey Flake..... Sis 25¢ 1 Large can Peaches....... . 28¢ BELLEFONTE, PA. When Her Back Aches A Woman Finds All Her Eenergy and Ambition Slipping Away. Bellefonte women know how the aches and pains that often come when the kidneys fail make life a burden. Backache, hip pains, headaches, dizzy spells, distressing urinary troubles, are frequent indications of weak kid- neys and should be checked in time. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for the kid- neys only. They attack kidney dis- eases by striking at the cause. Here's proof of their merit in a Bellefonte woman’s words: Mrs. Edward Sunday, 244 Lamb St., says: “I have used Doan’s Kidney Pills when suffering from kidney trou- ble and have always been greatly ben- efitted by them. I can not speak too highly of Doan’s after what they have done for me.” : Price 60c, at =2!! dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Sunday had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 66-33 LAUDERBACH-ZERBY CO. Wholesale Grocers YOUR HOME OPTOMETRIST Fitting glasses for 15 years. Satisfaction guaranted. CASEBEER’S Registered Optometrist. The First National Bank invites your patronage. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BELLEFONTE. ‘| for a man to risk his future in one DEAD TGWN VERY | | be SELDOM RECOVERS Community That Is Not Prospe:- ous Cannot Attract Mw Residents. S UKE BIE CORPORATION People Are Stockholders and Wher They Spend Their Money Away From Home They Deplete Its Capital. (Copyright.) There is nothing deader than a dead town. Try as hard as it may to con- ceal the facts, the truth is written all over it so that he who runs may read. No camouflage of bluff and bluster can conceal the true situation from anyone who comes within the limits of the community. A dead town is dead and that’s all there is to it. The worst of it is that once a town dies it stays dead. There have becn exceptional cases in which dead towns have been revived, have taken on new life and prospered, but th=se are mere- ly the exceptions that prove the rule. The fact that a town can seldom “come back” is easily explained. The growing and prosperous town today is the one that can attract new resi- dents and new capital. It is one that can offer attractive inducements for the locatioz of new industries. The | dead town offers no attraction to out- pide capital. A man lovking for a place to launch a new business or a new location for an old industry, is not geing to pick out a dead town. | He is going to select a town in which money is plentiful, a town whose busi- ness men are progressive and whose residents, as a whole, are prosperous and contented. There are too many live and thriving towns.in the world that is dead. This is the reason that a town, once dead, almost always re- inains dead. 5 Town Like Corporation. There is just one thing, ordinarily, that kills a town in the first place and that is a lack of money. A town is just like a corporation and the money possessed by its inhabitants is its cap- ital. If this capital is depleted the town will fail just as the corporation, whose capital is depleted through poor management or other causes, fails. And just as the corporation which has once failed can seldom retrieve its lost fortunes, the town which has failed cannot often ‘come back.” The capital of a community is de- vleted when its money is spent away 0m aome in a way that brings no return benefit to the community. It takes no great amount of thought to » able to realize that the town, like | the individual, cannot last long if it tis paying out more money than it takes in. That does not mean that a i brosperous town is one in which the people do not spend any money. On the contrary, a prosperous town is one in which the people do spend mon- ey but it is one in which they spe: the money at home. As long as tle money is spent at home, the town gains by having it kept in circulation, but when it is spent away from home, either by being sent to the mail order houses or by shopping trips to other cities, the town’s capital is impaired to that extent and if enough money is spent away from home in that way, the town collapses and virtually goes into barkruptey just as does the cor- poratio® which dissipates its capital. The people of a community are apt to overlook the fact that they ard stockholders in their town and that their fortunes are bound up with those of the community as a whole. They do not realize that if their town fails they will fail with it, They—or many of them at least—send their money away to the mail order houses in thd great cities, without realizing that they are impairing the capital of their own corporation and that if enough of them pursue that course they will force their corporation into certain bankruptey. Merchants Not Only Ones Hurt. Many customers of mail order houses say that they are under no obligation to trade with their home merchants and this may be true. They overlook that facet that the business men of a town do much for their com- munity and are entitled, in return for what they do, to the support of the ‘people in the community, but leaving this out of consideration, they over- look the fact that they are bringing | about their own downfall when they drain their town of its money—its capital. The home merchant will not be the only one that will be hurt when the town “goes broke.” The merchant can reduce his stock and cut down his expenses and get along some way or he can sell out and move to some oth- er town which has not been so blind to its own welfare. It is the great body of the people of the community including all those who have sent their money away to other cities instead of spending it at home, that suffers most when the hard times come. The time for all the people to pull together for a live town is while the town is still live and not after it is dead, for when a town dies it is a long time dead—if not forever. Learns His Faults. A man never realizes how many faults he has until he gets morried— then hic wife tells him, Books, Stationery and Post Cards. | The Index Book Store Everything in Electric Sup- plies. THE ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. | i Firestone, Gates’ super tread and | Mohawk Tires. | Atlantic, Mobiloil, Soncco and Wa- | verly oils. : Mobiloil tractor oil a specialty. BELLEFONTE STEAM VULC. CO. | NEW GROCERY | A full line of groceries at reduced prices. | A full line of foreign and domestic fruits | in season. Klink’s bacon and ham, fresh | from the market. Cream cheese a specialty. With every 50c. purchase we give free a Soupen for Rogers silverware. em. High St., opposite P. R. R. Station. Suc- ALTERS & STOVER cessors to Sechler & Co. { The Variety Store SPIGELMYER & CO. When You Want Hardware of any description call and see us. We invite your patronage. BELLEFONTE HARDWARE CO. Everything in Hardware for Farm, Dairy and Home. GLENWOOD RANGES, SCHAEFFER'S Ask for | Special This Week 50 1b. Cotton Mattress, $10.75 50 1b. Cotton felt Mattress $13.75 BRACHBILL’S. This Market is now under New Manage- ment and we Solicit Your Patronage FRESH MEATS DAILY KLINE’S Formerly Lyon’s Market The Home of “Dutchess” Trousers, “LaSalle” Caps, “Monito” Hosiery. The Mens’ Shop WILLARD & SON HABERDASHERS. The Grocery Store of Wholesome Goods and Prompt Service HAZELS Shoes for the entire family at right prices YEAGER’'S The Rexall Store and that means quality. Special attention given to prescriptions. Runkle’s Drug Store The Home of the famous Butter Krust Bread. Confectionery and Baked Goods. The City Bakery Everything in Lumber, Sashes, Doors and Blinds. The Bellefonte Lumber Co. The Home of Hart, Schaff- ner and Marx Clothing for Men. Also a complete line of Men’s and Boy’s furnishings. MONTGOMERY & CO. The Edison is the peer of Phonographs. Come in and hear one today. Records, Pianos, Player- Pianos. GHEEN’S MUSIC STORE. We Are Still in the Hardware business at the old Stand. Every- thing complete always. OLEWINE’S Wholesale and Retail fruits and produce. A complete line of imported Ol- ive Oil. CARPENETO & CO. When In Town See the best in Motion Pictures at the Scenic. SCENIC THEATRE Weaver, Grocers Bellefonte, Pa. The Best in Dry Goods and Ladies Ready to Wear. : SCHLOW’S The Bellefonte Trust Co. Courtesy. Safety. Service. The Bellefonte Trust Co. COHEN’S Bring the boys and girls here for their school shoes—solid leather shoes only, at rock bottom prices. COHEN’S FREE! 30x301-2 Norwalk Cord TIRES. Find out particulars at WION GARAGE Clothing of the Best for men who are careful of ap- pearances. A full line of Men’s and Boy’s furnishings. SIM THE CLOTHIER The Watchman has always advised buying at home, and it buys at home itself. W. S. Katz DRY GOODS Ladies Ready to Wear Queen Quality Shoes for ‘Women : Regal Shoes for men We fit the Youngsters, too, MINGLE’S SHOE STORE.