”~ - a Demoreaic atc Bellefonte, Pa., November 7, 1924. WHEN INDIAN FISHES ITS WORK, NOT SPOR? Naturally Lazy, He Uses the Sure and Simple Method. He kas three ways of doing it—with ® gill-nei, with a dip-net, and with & jgaff-hook. The familiar hook and line of the white man he scorns as Ibeing too slow and entailing too much hard work. What the Indian wants is the fish, He cares nothing about [the sport of the thing, nor the thrill ‘of landing a 12-poupd beauty with an |eight-onnce rod and a slender silk line; leave that to the crazy white man who has nothing else to do. The Indian wants the fish, and the easler {he can get them the better he likes !it, and the more time he has for sleep. | "His favorite way of catching salmon {is by the use of the gill-net, since this method leaves him the maximum amount of time for his previously men- itioned sleep. A gill-net is a straight |piece of netting about twelve feet long and five or six feet wide. One side has iwooden floats and the other heavy leaden weights, so it will hang per- |pendicular in the water. On either lend is a stone anchor to keep it istretched out. Setting the net is an easy process. He chooses an eddy or a deep pool in the river and floats by in his canoe, {with the net piled in the stern. Whea the proper spot is reached, he kicks jone of the anchors overboard. This |settles to the bottom of the river and {pulls the net out over the stern as the jcanee floats leisurely on. When all lthe net is out of the canoe, he kicks [the other anchor overboard and his ‘work is done. “*His labors over for the day, the Indian wends his home- ‘ward way and sinks into repose until the morrow, leaving the net to catch his meal, says Adventure Magazine. The water of the Nooksack river is never very clear; usually it is muddy. [This makes it hard for the salmon to ‘see, and thereby brings about their undoing. They swim around in the eddies and pools in search of food and, if a net is there, they are sure to run into it head-first in the course of a day or two. The meshes of the net are not gyite large enough to let an aver- age-sized salmon through. He gets half- way through, and then tries to back out. As he backs out, the meshes of the net catch under his gills and he stays there till the owner ot the net pulls him out. + Next day the Indian comes back in his canoe and pulls the net up, usu- ally finding four or five salmon in it. These he either takes home or hides under a log so he can tell his wife where to find them. With this supply of fish, he betakes himself to rest and does not stir abroad again for a week or so, or until such time as his larder is empty. Only Campfire Smoke At the recent state G. A. R. encamp- ment in Frankfort, the annual camp- fire was the big public event and cre- ated much interest. The meeting was held in Howard hall, the Frankfort High school gymnasium. One woman who lives a short dis tance from the hall did not attend. Her husband returned home about nine o'clock, while the gathering was still in session, and as he opened the front door, remarked: “I smell smoke, something must be burning.” His wife looked up from the book she was reading. “I've heen smell- ing that,” she said. And then a light spread over her face and with all se- riousness she said: “Oh, I know. It's ithe campfire.,”—Indianapolis News. Ancient Books Show Surgery an Old Art The practice of surgery goes back as far as the time when man first began to hurt himself or to be hurt by others. Medicine and surgery were flourishing in the Orient some four centuries B. C. Accounts in ancient books tell of more than a hundred instruments of steel, 14 varieties of bandages, splints made of bamboo, the sewing of cuts on the head and face; and there was even an operation for remaking the nose by using a piece of skin of the cheek for that purpose. So it would seem that the Hindu had a more thorough acquaintance with the science than one looking back over the faraway centuries would at first suspect. The figures of patients undergoing operations are carved on Egyptian monuments and among the antiquities of that people are such instruments as lancets, probes, knives and forceps. In passing it may be remarked that the latest centuries need not take credit to themselves for the invention of artificial teeth, for that triumph of the dentists’ art has been found in mummies. ? | The surgical skill of the Orient seems to have been bottled up for a time, or, at least it was in no hurry to cross over to Europe, where for a ong period the barber was the usugp surgeon. The lives of two of Eng- land’s greatest kings might have been saved for longer usefulness had a little ‘wisdom been shown in their treatment. enry V died of a malady which could have been cured by the knife; Rich- ard the Lion Hearted met his death from a wound in the shoulder caused by an arrow which an ignorant sur- geon aggravated by twisting about in [oe efforts to remove, thus inducing blood poison, ‘| for big-boat navigation meant as little MOTORS DISPLACE MULES ON CANAL Ancien? Craft Replaced by Self-Propelled Craft on New York Waterway. New York.—When the New York state barge canal was completed for its full length in 1918 it was obvious that old methods of navigation would have to be replaced with something new, says the New York Times. The snub-nosed, mule-hauled wooden canal boats that for almost a century bad made up the argosy which brought the wealth of the inland to the sea- board and gave to New York its posi- tion of metropolis no longer would fill the bill, the story continues. Along with the old canal boat went the old-time canaler, who for years had made his leisurely way across the state, leaning against the tiller, smok- ing his pipe and looking out for “low bridge.” The two—the boat and the boatman—had served their time well; but now it became evident that both must pass into the discard. Neither the boat nor the boatman gave up easily. A lifetime of canaling was not lightly to be dropped. They strug- gled for existence; but the struggle was in vain. They could not adapt themselves to new conditions. Accustomed to the narrow Erie canal, with its towpath and mules, the old canaler could not get used to the wide reaches of the barge canal, the deep locks, the broad stretches of Oneida lake, where he sometimes went almost out of sight of land. He missed the mules. Slack-water navi- gation began to take on the charac- teristics of the sea. New, smart, craft began to appear, manned with new, smart young fellows. Their talk had the tang of salt water. They spoke in “pells,” “knots” and “fathoms.” They knew not “low bridge.” Tales of the sea began to get about the decks. In short, the period of transition had be- gun, It was evident that the wooden canal boat of the “roaring forties” could not survive. The only question was what sort of boat would take its place. New Type of Freighter Only in the last two years has this question been answered. Now, with large steel, self-propelled vessels, veritable motorships, capable of breasting the boisterous waters of the Great Lakes and the waves of the ocean, it becomes evident what sort of freighter will replace the traditional canal boat. The old-timers still fre- quent the canal, but grow fewer and fewer each year. They still make up tows that ply the Hudson and navi- gate the inland waterway to Buffalo and Montreal, but the barge canal is not the Erie canal, and the primitive boat is gradually dropping from sight. The new freighter did not leap from the brain of the marine architect at a single bound.. Rather, it has been a matter of evolution. You will bear in mind that, although the barge canal was completed for its full length in 1918, it was turned over to the War department in that year and continued to be operated by the Federal govern- ment during the war and in 1919 and 1920. There have been but three years in which commerce, unimpeded by subsidized traffic, could proceed to de- velop trade. Those years have seen surprising progress in boat building on this inland waterway. In the development of the type oi vessel best adapted to use on the barge canal the Standard Oil Com- pany of New York has made a valu- able contribution to commerce, ac- cording to naval architects. In com- mon with other shippers, the Standard Oil Company of New York was alive to the possibilities of developing busi- ness hy water, and as soon as the barge canal was finished in 1918 it put several towed barges on this canal. Five stages have marked the evolution that has gone on. Old Traditions Persisted. Although the new barge canal of tered wide possibilities, the mental habit of a century persisted. To boat- men and to boat builders a canal was a canal. To them a boat for use on 2 canal must be a canal boat. And of canal boats they knew but one sort— namely, the mule-hauled craft that came into-use in the days of De Witt Clinton. That the Erie canal had gone into the discard and been filled in meant nothing to them. That, in place of the old Erie canal, the Mohawk river had been dammed in a series of lakes to navigators as it still means to the general publie, The first stage in the evolution of the new freighter, therefore, was a close copy of the original canal boat. It was a craft about 75 feet long and approximately 22 feet wide. It was towed by a tug. From four to six of these boats could enter a lock at once. The Standard Oil Company of New York experimented with these towed barges in 1918, 1919 and 1920. Reaching the conclusion that the parge canal was a feasible method of transportation, the company in the win- ter of 1920 struck out boldly to de- velop a self-propelled vessel suitable to fts needs. That winter it built five identical boats, namely, the Buffalc So- cony, the Rochester, the Utica, the Albany and the Syracuse Socony. Each was about 150 feet long, 28 feet beam and had a loaded draft of about 9 feet. Hach had a 200-horse power gasoiine engine and pumping machinery, uiso driven by gas engines. The five boats piied the barge canal successfully during 1921 and 1922, go- ing not only to Buffalo but through Lake Champlain. The Buffalo Socony type marks the second stage in the evolution. It dem onstrated that the self-propelled craft is superior to the hauled barge in economy, in speed and in dispatch of deliveries. Because these five boats were a suc cess, the Standard Oil Company of New York considered the next step, namely, making larger boats. In the winter of 1922-23 the company’s ma- rine architects lengthened the five boats in the Buffalo fleet by inserting a 40-foot section amidships, making each of them 190 feet long. This added a carrying capacity of 112,000 more gal- lons to each boat. Experience in one season proved that it cost no more to operate the lengthened boat than it did when the craft had its original dimen- sions. This demonstrated the feasi- bility of using a still larger craft. The vear of 1923, therefore, marks the third stage in the evolution of the barge canal freight carrier. Largest Boat Launched in 1923. The fourth stage began in June, 1923, when the company’s largest boat yet was launched—the Troy Socony, 245 feet long, 37 feet 6 inches in the bear end 14 feet deep. Meantime so great was the success of water transport that a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Company of New York had been formed, called tke Standard Transportation company. It was the latter company that prepared the design for the Troy Socony, which was built in the winter of 1922-23 by the Sun Shipbuilding company of Ches ter, Pa. A year of operation had proved its efficiency, its owners assert. The boat has a carrying capacity of 571,848 gal- lons, beside its own fuel, amounting to 13,386 gallons. The Troy Socony is a twin-screw Diesel propelled ship. When her 14 tanks are filled, she draws 12 feet of water. In this vessel the modern motor ship is seen at a high state of perfection. The two Diesel engines develop about 300- horse power each. These engines drive two bronze propellers, and the ship, fully loaded, can make about nine knots. There are two cargo pumps, each of which is able te dis- charge the entire cargo in six hours. The pumps are operated by a separate 45-horse power Diesel engine. There are electric generating sets for light- Ing service and for operating the elec: tric steering gear and windlasses. The c¢)mfort of the crew, numbering 16, is provided in commodious quarters. In all the recent types of the Standard Transportation company’s fleet the pilot house and bridge are situate¢ amidships to give unrestricted viev of the vessel fore and aft. Can Operate at Sea. While the Troy Socony was designed to navigate the barge canal, she was constructed with a view to use on Long Island sound in the winter. In passing, it may be said that the seaworthy qual- ities of vessels of this type are shown in the fact that one boat went down the Atlantic coast, through the Pan- ama canal and up the Pacific coast. fighting a gale that wrecked larger ves- sels. However, the last word has not been zpoken in inland waterway navigation. The fifth stage in the evolution of the new vessel is now in process. It will result in the launching this season of elght additional vessels of the Troy So- cony type. except that they will be larger. Each of these vessels that are now suilding will be 260 feet long, 40 feet in the beam and 14 feet in depth of hold. They can carry 705,000 gallons aplece and will have 700-horse power in their propelling engines. ¥ach step in the evolution has seer greater departure from the canal boat style. In this final step the ship- builder has broken with tradition al- most entirely. He has produced a vessel not only with a sharp bow and a generally smart appearance, but has given to the eight new boats a sheer elevating the prow and stern higher: than the middle of the boat. This makes a better looking and more sea- worthy vessel. The Standard Trans- portation company is having five of the new boats built by the Sun Shipbuild- ing company at Chester, Pa., and three by the New York Shipbuilding cor- poration at Camden, N. J. Large though these eight vessels are they do not measure up to the capacity of the barge canal locks, which are 810 feet long and 44 feet wide. The eight newest vessels contain many re- finements not found in the others. They have electrical apparatus for operating the main cargo pumps, also a quarter-ton refrigerating plant. This is the fifth—and for the present final— step in the evolution of the type of boats best adapted for barge canal nav- igation. Practically the entire dis- tribution of Standard Oil products for New York state Is carried on now by water. The Standard Oil Company ef New York is not the only company that has large boats on the barge canal. There arc two lines from Duluth with boats ‘that successfully navigate the Great Lakes. under their own power and bring cargoes from Minnesota to New York. U.S. Seeks to Perfect Liquid Oxygen Cartridges ~ Washington.—Possibilities of devel- oping a successful cartridge Ingredient from the absorption of liquid oxygen are to be investigated by G. St. J. Perrott, associate physical chemist of the Department of the Interior, who has been detailed to observe methods emyloyed In the use of such oxygen explosives in a silver-lead mine near Pachuca, . Mex... The Pachuca mine, which -has used liquid oxygen for sev- eral years, is the only mine in North America employing the explosive iz dally blasting operations. WHAT SOLDIERS 2 ATE. Members of Pennsylvania’s Nation- al-Guard, who camped at Mt. Gretna this summer ate the product of 15 acres of potatoes based on the aver- age yield last year and more than four and one-half miles of frankfurters. The substance report of Major Leo A. Lutringer of the Quartermaster corps, disclosed that 10,387 pounds of frankfurters were consumed in the 108, 865 rations furnished. The “franks” were substituted this year for mutton, which formerly was on the ration list. The cost for each man’s mess was 42.4 cents a day, Adjutant General Frank D. Beary said, which he point- ed out included a full ration of fresh meat and fresh vegetables and one- third ration of canned vegetables dai- ly, as well as the one chicken dinner with ice cream and all the “trimmin’s” served each outfit. He declared the cost of mess was reduced by a careful inspection of all garbage without cut- ting the quality or quantity of food. Each day the menu for the men was inspected as well as the kitchen and the tableware. General Beary said: “This was done that the guards- men might be assured perfect clean- liness and balanced rations.” As a result of the cost of the mess and the varied menus, the United States War Department has requested cop- ies of the menus, in order to make a comparison with other camps. Real Estate Transfers. Bellefonte Trust Co., Exr., to Robert 3. Kinga, tract in Spring township; William H. Stuart, Admr., to Cal- BD D. Miller, tract in Rush township; int L. Hancock, et vir, et al, to Julia J. Ramiza, tract in Rush town- ship; $4,000. Robert Spicer to Lester E. Baird, tract in Spring township; $4,500. Jane V. Robb to Edgar Lloyd Rog- ers, tract in Walker township; $350. Methodist church, Port Matilda, to U. Scott Crain, tract in Worth town- ship; $2,300. W. F. Rich, et ux, to J. R. Daugh- enbaugh, tract in Howard; $1,175. B. Agnes Lose, et bar, to Arthur C. Dale, tract in Bellefonte; $250. Tillie Stonebraker, et bar, to J. Clyde Thomas, tract in Taylor town- ship; $50. J. D. Keller, et ux, to J. Mack Stew- art, tract in State College; $1. William Stine, et ux, to Louis Parsky, tract in Philipsburg; $1. John L. Holmes, et al, to Robert T. Hafer, tract in State College; $750. ~ Ollie G. Watson to George W. Holt, et al, tract in Boggs township; $100. J. E. Fleming to Edna Fleming, tract in State College; $400. TONIGHT TQMORROW ALRIGHT Be Well And Happy —and you have Nature's Ba Ei rab) sblets) a eamedy laxative, t the oe and rs bes Constipation, Biliousness, Sick Headaches. renewing that vigor and good feel. ing so necessary to being well and happy. Used for Over > Ro 30 Years Chips off the Old Ee NR JUNIORS===sLittle NRs The same NR —in one-third doses, candy-coated. For children and adults, . Sold By Your Druggist C. M. PARRISH BELLEFONTE, PA. CHICHESTER S 3 BSRLS Yew Woicls Mew Words ‘thousands of them spelled, pronounced.and defined in a few samples broadcast abreaction agrimotor hot pursuit Blue Cross mystery ship ¢ rotogravure junior college “ Esthonia askari Fascista altigraph cyper Riksdag Flag Day sippio Red Star mud gun sterol paravane ® Ruthene Swaraj . megabar‘} ¢ rollmop taiga plasmon § sugamo sokol shoneen psorosis soviet precool duvetyn realtor S.P.boat Czecho-Slovak camp-fire girl aerial cascade Air Council Devil Dog activation Federal Land Bank Is this Storehouse of Information Serving You? G.&C.MERRIAM CO eB BE PM ea yey Womens and Misses Coate A big collection of exclusive styles and the newest models. Coats fur-trim- med in light fur, brown and black. Cloth Coats with- out fur, in braided effects; also button-trimmed—in the new cloths and new colors. Prices Temptingly Low We have Coats to fit the junior (regular size) and have made special effort this season to fit the out-size. Silk and Wool Dresses You will be surprised to see the large assortment of Silk Dresses in all the new colors—Green, Brown, Tan, Hollywood, Black, Taupe. If you want a plain self-trimmed Dress we can show these. Or if you want the Bulgarian touches, beaded, or Roman colors, we have these—$14.98 up. Wool Dresses—A large line, all kinds, all colors; also a full assortment in silks and wool (extra sizes) at prices that can’t be matched. Art and Embroidery We can Give you Anything in the Stamped Linens Begin your Xmas Gifts Now « Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. $3.00 $3.00 Boys School Shoes Guaranteed to Wear or a New Pair Given Only $3.00 Store Open Thursday Afternoon Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.