Demareaic Alcan, Bellefonte, Pa., September 1, 1922. seman THE FOXY GAMBLER. By L. A. Miller. Some play for gain; to pass the time, oth- ers play For nothing; both to play the feol, I say; Nor time nor coin I'll lose, or idly spend; Who gets by play, proves loser in the end. Heath’s Clarestella. Somehow, there is a fascination about gambling that is perfectly irre- sistible to many. It becomes their ruling passion and usually ends in ru- in. Drunkenness, rowdyism and general wickedness are associated with gamb- ling, especially when cards, dice and similar devices are used. This is true in a measure, but does not apply to all phases of gambling, because pro- fessional gamblers, as a rule, are gen- tlemanly in appearance, strictly sober, the soul of honor in personal matters, and unselfish. This may seem like giving very good characters to very bad men. If it does it is the fault of the facts, for it is well known that the head men in the profession as a rule do not drink and their words are as good as their notes. These men make gambling their business, and do not want to be held responsible for the conduct of their patrons. They say that they take a man’s money with his consent; after giving them a chance to take theirs. It is simply a game of chance, and if the people want to play it profession- al gamblers offer them the opportuni- ty. They argue, and with a good deal of force, too, that their business is no less respectable than that of the sa- loon keeper. His patrons are, if in any degree different, worse than gam- blers. He takes their money and gives them in return that which is worse than nothing, and offers them no op- portunity to get even; yet the saloon- keeper occupies a higher plane in so- cial life than the gambler. It is probable that the saloon keep- er gets some of his respectability from the manufacturers and wholesale deal- ers in liquors, who are generally wealthy and influential, both in church and State. The gambler has no back- ground of this kind to soften his odious features. Were all those who play in games of chance grouped un- der the general head, “gamblers,” as all who handle intoxicating drinks are called “liquor dealers,” there would be some show for the despised portion of the profession. A man of passable appearance can get along almost anywhere as a “liquor dealer,” but the lines of an elegant looking, amiable, cultivated man are narrowed almost to the minimum if he is known to be a gam- bler. This is another evidence that there is something in the name, and it also shows that the masses do not care to look into the merits of things before condemning or endorsing them. One sin is winked at, another endorsed and another tabooed, just as they hap- pen to strike the public. ever thus, and ever thus it probably will be. It is not the intention to defend the gambler against the charge of being a nuisance and a curse to any communi- ty, but merely to call attention to the fact that he is no worse than others who enjoy the reputation of being more respectable and more trustwor- thy. It is true that he feeds and thrives upon the hard-earned or ill- gotten gains of the dissipated, reck- less and immoral, but in that he does no more than many others. It is wrong, very wrong, for him to do so, but in point of fact no worse than for any other person to take them with- out giving a fair equivalent. That which encourages idleness tends to de- prave the mind and impair the man- liness in man is bad and ought to be fought down as though it were a pesti- lence. Pestilence it is, in fact. What can be more ruinous to a community than a disposition on the part of the young to be idle? What greater ca- lamity could befall the morals of a community than wide-spread deprav- ity and what could strike the State with more paralyzing effect than a general decadence in manliness? There seems to be an inborn desire in man to get something for nothing. That this is wrong in principle is clearly shown in nature, as all of its laws, great or small, are based on the principle that there must be causes tor al effects. This applies to all phases of life from the microbe to the elephant; man is not an exception, as some would like to believe. Even the sloth that so much loves to sleep, and so despises exertion or activity, is compelled to quit its quiet, cozy retreat and bestir itself in quest of food. Man alone, of all the animals, hopes to be able to live without work. He is continually on the alert for the chance to profit by the labor of some one else. Why should he be so disposed? There seems to be no other reason than that this is one of his depraved tastes. These were given him that he might have something upon which to exer- cise his will and show his ability as a free agent. No Flies in Alaska. Everybody knows that mosquitoes are a frightful pest in Alaska; but it is news to learn that houseflies do not exist there. This interesting fact was definitely ascertained by Dr. J. M. Aldrich, of the United States National Museum, in the course of a recent expedition which he made for the purpose o studying Alaskan insects. : He found two entirely new species of mosquitoes. Horse flies were abun- dant everywhere. But there were no houseflies. In vain did he explore grocery stores, restaurants, canneries, garbage dumps and other likely plac- es for them. : The fact is that the housefly is by origin a tropical insect. It cannot en- dure cold weather. In temperate lati- tudes a few houseflies manage to live over the winter in heated houses— enough of them, that is to say, to start a fresh crop in the following spring. It has. been. | f | to ask in regard to fractions,” said a WHO DWELT HERE BEFORE THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS? There is a widespread and generally accepted belief that grains of corn found in the prehistoric cliff-dwellings of the Southwest will sprout if plant- ed. Recently Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, chief of the Bureau of American Eth- nology, thought he would try this out with some seed corn which he found in a cliff-house in Southern New Mex- ico. There was a lot of it, on the cob, in a stone-walled chamber which had evidently served the purpose of a granary. He planted some hundreds of the grains, but they refused to ger- minate. They were some centuries too old—presumably dating back to a period long before Columbus landed. The Bureau of Ethnology, by the way, is most anxious to secure the preservation of the great Cahokia Mound, near St. Louis, which it re- gards as comparable to the Egyptian pyramyds in archeological interest. It is the largest earthwork in the United States—100 feet high, 1080 feet long and 710 feet wide—and covers sixteen acres. Rising in the midst of a level plain, and rectangular in form (its sides facing the four cardinal points), it is wholly of artificial construction. This earthwork, the greatest monu- ment left behind by the prehistoric mound builders, was formerly sur- | STATE HEALTH INSPECTORS rounded by about seventy lesser mounds, some of feet high. Some of them were rec- | tangular and others circular. They have been mostly destroyed by the! plow. In earlier days there was near the city of St. Louis an ancient mound of | oval shape, 319 feet long and 158 feet | wide. The city crept over it, and in 1869 it was destroyed. Inside of it | was found a burial chamber seventy feet long, originally built of logs, over which earth was thrown. The cham- ber contained human remains in the last stages of decay, together with vast quantities of shell beads and oth- er articles. The labor required in the building of these mounds must have been ener- mous, and it is manifest that ancient- ly the neighborhood was the gather- ing place of a numerous people. But who were they? A lost and vanished race that preceded the Indians, or the ancestors of our present-day aborig- ines? Such mounds are scattered by thousands all over the United States —though no group of them is compar- able in importance to that of Cahokia and another presently to be mention- ed, in Wisconsin. In a group of mounds near Chilli- cothe, Ohio, hundreds of skeletons were found wearing copper masks. The Indians long before Columbus came knew how to obtain copper by building a fire about a piece of rock containing the metal and pouring wa- ter upon the hot stone, thus casuing it to split in fragments. Many of the mounds in the Wiscon- ; sin group, above mentioned, represent lizards, birds and other animals. Hun- dreds of them are in bluffs overlook- ing the Mississippi river, and there! are hundreds more across the river in Iowa. They are supposed to be em- blematic-and to-stand for the “totems” of different clans. Thus the bear clan built mounds in the shape of a bear, the snake clan chose the form of a serpent, and so on. Some of these mounds were sites for council-houses. | The biggest and most celébrated | snake mound is in Licking county, | Ohio. | | i i BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS. What is your favorite book ? “Little Women,” Louisa May Alcott’s story of | childhood life in New England, heads | the list of twenty-five “best books” for | country school children in the first to | eighth grades, as chosen by the Amer- ican Library Association and the Na- tional Educational Association. “Alice in Wonderland” comes sec- ond; “Robinson Crusoe,” third; “Tom Sawyer,” fourth, and “Treasure Is- land,” was fifth. The remainder of the list follows: Nicolay, “Boy’s Life of Abraham Lin- coln;” Kipling, “Jungle Book;” An- dersen, “Fairy Tales;” “Aesops Fa- bles;” Pyle, “Merry Adventures of Robin Hood;” Lamb, “Tales from Shakespeare;” Malory, “Boy’s King Arthur;” Van Loon, “Story of Man- kind;” Wiggin, “Rebecca of Sunney- brook Farm;” Stevenson, Burton E., “Home Book of Verse for Young | Folks;” Dickens, “Christmas Carol;” | Irving, “Rip Van Winkle;” “Mother | Goose;” Dodge, “Hans Brinker;” | Hagedorn, “Boy’s Life of Theodore | Roosevelt;” Hawthorne, “Wonder Book;” Sexton, “Wild Animals I Have Known,” and the “Arabian Knights.” mr eet. Senator Stanley quotes—he does not make himself responsible for the figures—the statement that 15, 000,000 persons in this country are living on taxes. Two tax-payers sup- port one tax eater. The figures may be high, but the number of persons supported by the Federal and local governments are enormous and the Senator is quite right in saying that it is due to the extension of the gov- ernment in every direction. We are becoming a bureaucracy. We are governed by commissions. We are | putting on the government a lot of duties that we should perform our- selves, or that ought not to be per- formed at all, and of course we have to pay roundly for it. President Hard- ing and Governor Miller, of New York, | have recently emphasized this. Suitable Answer. “Now, boys, I have a few questions teacher. “Suppose I have a piece of beefsteak, and cut it into sixteen piec- es, what would those pieces be call- ed?” “Sixteenths,” answered one boy after meditating a moment. “Very good. And when the six- teenths were cut in half, what would they be?” There was silence in the class; but presently a little boy at the bottom put up his hand. “Do you know, Johnny?” “Hash!” answered Johnny confi- which were forty |= dently. BUSY IN MINERS CAMPS. Fifteen cases of typhoid fever have developed in miners camp No. 2, lo- cated near Palmer’s mines, German township, Fayette county. State Health Department nurses have been sent to the camp and the county med- ical director, Dr. O. R. Altman, is giv- ing these people medical attention. 124 people are living in this camp and at the time of the first inspection by sanitary engineers of the State Health Department, on July 28th, water and sewerage conditions were found to be bad. Water had to be car- ried from two springs in a nearby village, and as the springs had been condemned by the department engi- neers, the people were told to boil it. A follow-up inspection on August 1st found conditions better, yet a few days later typhoid was upon them and as most of the cases were walking about when the Health Department people got there, it is believed that | before the outbreak can be stopped | other cases will develop incident to in- fection dating back a week or more. The foreigner does not become “sick in bed” until he is no longer able to stand up, Sanitary engineers of the depart- ment have inspected 70 camps occu- pied by families of 621 miners, total- ing 8704 individuals. In 41 camps the water supply was bad; in 50 the | sewage disposal inadequate, and in 2 there were general unsanitary condi- tions. In every instance the labor leaders are helping to secure good wa- ter and proper sewage disposal. In addition to the organized camps there are single families here and there living in pitched tents, and min- ers who own their own homes take other families in, producing serious overcrowding. The State Health Commissioner says the people living in tents are better off. They, at least get plenty of fresh air and it is pos- sible for sanitary officers to keep a close watch for the appearance of sickness. Doctors Lead in Suicides. Physicians head the list of suicides for 1921 in the United States, among all the professions, according to a ta- ble published in the current issue of the New York Medical Week. The number of doctors whe committed su- icide in 1921 is given as 86. Judges are second, with a total of 57, follow- ed by 37 bank presidents. Twenty- one clergymen killed themselves, 10 editors, 7 mayors and 7 members of Legislatures. The writer considers these figures an indication that the occupational strain is greater in the medical pro- fession than in any other. THE log-cabined, snake-fenced, corn-shocked farm of the pio- AC neer has been replaced by farming on a more permanent, more profit- able basis. Well-appointed homes, concrete fence posts and concrete barns and silos spell prosperity and comfort. Bankers today acknowledge the financial assets in proper farm Your building material dealer has largely influenced this change. He can advise you wisely on your future building, can give you plans that mean greater pros- is years of experience are part of the materials he sells you. For over a quarter century he has known Atlas Portland Cement, “the Standard by which all other makes are measured.” and hel, perity. The Atlas Portland Cement Co. Sale: 3 New York — Ges Ofc = Philad elphia Mills:—Northampton, Pa. Hudson, N. Y.— Leeds, Ala. “The Standard by which are measured” all other Makes » pel & PORTLAND © ATLAS HTT pes | t | Hundreds of livery costs desired. Buy a Jord | ES TRU [TE of users in practically every line of business are cutting haulage and de- One-ton Trucks. Let us show you why and how. No obligation. Terms if Beatty Motor Co, BELLEFONTE, PA. F.O.B. DETROIT ny, Thousands with Ford SILK HOSE Ladies’ $2.50 black and tan Pure Silk Hose re- duced to $1.50 Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. EXCEPTIONAL Money Saving Opportunity Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. We are selling all merchandise now at strtling low prices. CHILDREN’S SCHOOL DRESSES. One lot of Gingham Dresses, sizes 6 to 12, worth $3.00 to $3.50, now $1.25 to $1.75 LADIES’ SUMMER VESTS. Swiss lisle ribbed Vests, small sizes only, values 35¢. to 50c. now 20c. LADIES’ GINGHAM DRESSES. In checks and stripes that sold at $3.50 and $3.75 now $2.50. SWEATERS. Slip over Sweaters, all colors, all wool, now $2.50 to $3.50. COTTON DRESS GOODS. 36-inch Percales, light and dark, 18c. All colors Dress Ginghams, 25c. WOOL DRESS GOODS. All the new weaves and colors in the sport cloths, Tweeds, Homespun and Diagonals, 58-inch wide, $2.50 and $3.50 per yard. SERGES. All wool Serges, all colors, from $1.00 up. NEW FALL COATS AND SUITS. We are showing advance styles in the new mod- els Coat and Suits, at wonderful low prices. SHOES. Shoes for men, women and children. See our line of School Shoes for Boys and Girls. Ladies’ new tan Sport Oxfords, that are worth $7.00, now $5.00. Mens dress and work Shoes in this money saving sale. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.