anim Bellefonte, Pa., July 3, 1925. PHILOSOPHY AND TACKS. By Levi A. Miller. My memory is growing a little treacherous; a few days ago my housekeeper asked me to bring some butter from the store when I went after my 2 p. m. mail. I forgot it. At 10 p. m. she asked me if I didn’t for- get something. “How about the but- ter?” I was shocked and went forth- with to the store. On arriving there I found only three of the principals of the Stores sight. The loungers and hangers-oh had retired to their homes, possibly on account of the excessive hot weather. I listened to what oc- curred to me to be a most interesting conversation. I concluded a little write-up of the same might interest the readers of the “Watchman” (the Democratic Bible), so here I embark. “What is home without a box of tacks,” murmured Sammy, as he ad- justed some bits of sticking plaster to his stiff and swollen fingers. “That’s the first purely philosoph- ical utterance I ever heard from you,” observed William H. Jr., extending his hand for a shake. “No you don’t, I'll take your word for it until my hammered fingers get well,” said Sammy. “Well, really, my boy, I am sorry for your fingers, but indeed I admire your philosophy,” continued Wm. Jr “How did you happen to strike the vein ?” “It was this way,” said Sammy sad- ly. “I had-seated myself on the bread box in lieu of a stepladder, (our neighbor having loaned his to the oth- er fellow), and I was in the act of tacking up that touching motto, ‘What is home without a mother,’ when I discovered I had no tacks; then it was that I warbled ‘what is home without a box of tacks?’ Yes, sir, I actually sang it gleefully and would have danced if it had not been for the uncertainty of my standing.” “Inductive philosophy; you will get there if you only keep it up,” exclaim- ed Wm. H. Jr., encouragingly. “But I don’t want to keep it up,” roared Sammy. “To the dogs with your inductive philosophy. Look at me! Do Ilook like a philosopher? Gaze upon these swollen fingers and think of two more carpets to: tack. Sce that branded knee; and it isn’t the trousers only that are abrased. Your philosophy may be deducted or induct- ed, or whatever you please; I want none of it, if it comes through such tribulations as these. However, what is home without a box of tacks?” “You have changed your tune re- cently,” suggested Abner. “Only a few days ago you were blowing about having bought a hatchet and saw, and a whole outfit of tools with which you were going to beat the carpenters, plumbers, and all sorts of jobbers.” “So I did, and that smashed finger is proof positive that I have a hatch- et; this ragged slash across my thumb settles the saw question; that hole in the heart of my hand establishes the fact that I have a brad-awl, and that tip end of my left finger, which I pick- ed out of the saw-dust and ashes, and is now held in place by sundry strips of plaster, ought to satisfy any one that I possess a chisel; a paring chis- el.” “Good, good!” interrupted Wm. H. Jr. “What's good?” roared Sammy. “Your philosophy,” replied Wm. H. Jr.,, cheerfully. “You prove every point as you go along.” “Qh, yes! I seal every one of them with my heart’s blood. Yes, indeed, I clinch everything, leave nothing ly- ing around loose; my wife Ruth wiil testify to this last item. Why, my dear Wm. H. Jr., I couldn’t sleep last night for thinking of these things. I thought, and thought, and thought, and at last went to sleep thinking.” “That’s right, my boy, that’s right. That is the way to become a philoso- pher. Don’t you see already that you are better informed on every day tcp- ics than you were? You now realize that there is another side even to car- pet-laying. Before, you only saw the side that men usually see, and you could not grasp the version of it given by your wife. That’s what it is to be a philosopher. There is always anoth- er aspect to a thing or event.” “So I find,” said Sammy mournful- ly. “I had been taught that there was no harm in cheating the plumber. While getting tools I got a few in his line, consisting mainly of a pair of pinchers and a soldering iron. My father-in-law has been at me ever since I got married to get one of these. He says no man can be a christian without a soldering iron, es- pecially in winter when pipes are given to bursting. I thought I could buy one now cheaper, but the man said it is an article that is never out of season.” “What do Abner. “Have fun with it,” answered Wm. H, Jr. “That is about right,” said Sammy. you do with it,” asked “] had a picnic with mine today. It hapened to notice a little moisture on one of the lead water pipes, which aroused suspicion in my mind that there was a leak somewhere. A little investigation confirmed the suspicion. uth said it wasn’t worth bothering with, but I silenced her with the ‘stitch in time,” argument, and at it I went. In about two minutes I had all the solder off the joint and water was fizzing out at a dozen places and I was as wet as if I had a hose turned on me. The women folks had tubs and kettles and pans and buckets, and gum coats and oilcloth strewn around promiscuously, and holding their dresses as high as most of our girls now wear their every day frocks, as if the water were a foot deep.” “Why didn’t you solder it and stop the deluge?” asked Abner in amaze- ment. “That's what they were all’ asking at the time,” replied Sammy, appar- ently annoyed at the interruption. rrr ——————————————————————]—————————————— “Don’t mind him,” said Wm. H. Jr., tenderly, “there is no originality about him. His questions have all been asked before.” “I then bethought me that I had forgotten to use rosin. There was some about the house, but a state po- liceman couldn’t have found it, so I had to use sealing wax. It has some rosin in it you know. While hunting for this I had the sharp nosed iron down on the floor, as I am in the hab- it of doing with my hatchet and tack hammer. Presently the scrub woman came down the stairs, four steps at a jump, yelling that the house was on fire. I noticed a smell of strange smoke myself, and hastening to the kitchen, I found that the utensil which had been so highly recommended by the beloved father of my dear wife had burned a hole through her watey- proof and laid waste a section of car- pet as big as a man’s hand, and right in the middle of the pattern, so that it cannot be patched, and on account of the size of figure it will take a whole yard of stuff to make it look decent.” “Too bad,” sighed Abner. “Too bad!” snorted Sammy. “That’s nothing. Taking the alleged useful utensil out of the grate, I again tack- led the fizzing pipe. The second ap- plication induced the lead to leave the brass spigot, and then the water did fly. I threw the aforesaid useful uten- sis onto the table, grabbed the pipe and gave it a twist to divert the stream from the ceiling. It then struck the grate and sent out a show- er of ashes and live coals equal to the best efforts of Vesuvius. Then I tried to play up the torrent with my finger, which sent the water up my sleeve and down my back. By standing in a tub I was able to keep the flood with- in bounds, and thus checked the wholesale destruction that had been rampant for what seemed an age.” “I don’t see how you ever stood it,” said Abner. His tones were mellow with sympathy, and his whole visage was mantled with deepest commise.- ation. “How I stood it!” Great Scott, 1 had to stand it; that’s how I stood it,” roared Sammy, apparently in as much agony as if he were going through the ordeal again. “Is the fun still going on,” queried Wm. H. Jr.,, who like a true philoso- pher was more interested in the up- shot of the matter than in the details. “Oh, no!” replied Sammy, in a more cheerful vein. “Just as the second tub was about to flush over, and I was discussing the propriety of climbing into the kitchen sink in order to take advantage of the waste pipe, in get- ting rid of the water that was going up my sleeve and down my back, Ruth came in with a plumber. He ran down to the cellar and shut it off.” “Why in the name of sense didn’t you think of that?” exclaimed .\bnev in a loud, contemptuous tone. “That’s what I said to Ruth. I do believe she would have let me drown before such a simple idea as that would have gotten through her hair,” replied Sammy. “What are your deductions?” asked Wm. H. Jr. “Never try to beat the plumber,” replied Sammy with emphasis. “Shake!” exclaimed Wm. H. Jr. “Excuse me,” begged Sammy, “un- til I can answer the conundrum, ‘what is home without a box of tacks?’ ” SAD FOURTH FOR WASHINGTON. On the 4th day of July, 1754, Colo- nel George Washington surrendered an army. It was only a small army, but a fort went with it. He exper- ienced on this occasion his first.defeat in war, at the hands of the French. Although at that time only twenty- two years of age, he had been placed in command of a small bedy of troops which was marching toward Fort Da- quesne. At a point on the Mononga- hela river less than forty miles from his destination he heard of the ap- proach of a party of French and In- dians, sent to intercept him. Accord- ingly he fell back to the Great Mead- ows fifty miles from Cumberland, and hastily erected a stockade, which he called Fort Necessity. With the help of a friendly Indian sachem, Half King, he attacked the French in their camp at night, killing their commander, Jumonville, and tak- ing a number of prisoners. It was the first blood shed in the French and In- dian war. A few days later Fort Necessity was attacked by 1,600 Indians and French under De Villiers, and Wash- ington surrendered on honorable terms. This was on the morning of July 4. He marched out with his little army of 400 men, drums beating and flags flying, and he and his soldiers re- turned peaceably to their homes. Pollen of Showy Flowers Rarely Cause Hay-Fever. Hay-fever season will soon be here. Sneezing, reddening of the eyes, run- ning at the nose, and other symptoms of the well-known summer discomfort will appear. According to Dr. E. M. Gress, bot- anist of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, inoculation will go far toward reducing the susceptibility of persons who suffer every summer. He recommended the patients be inocu- lated with an extract of the substance from pollen which causes the irrita- tion to the nasal passages. The malady, said Dr. Gress, is caus- ed by the dust-like pollen grains of certain flowers. They are carried by the wind, and are not carried exten- sively to hay-fever victims by insects. Usually the damage is done by pol- len from the less conspicuous and the more common flowers and weeds. He listed Kentucky blue grass, timothy, red top and rag weed as the principai sources of the pollen that so greatly distresses some unfortunate persons every summer. These plants are com- mon on the average farm, and they grow unchecked in waste places and vacant lots. Lecturer—“What have any of you done to save our timber?” Voice from rear—“I shot a wood- pecker once.” . ADOPTING THE DECLARATION. Although the Fourth is the day that is celebrated by many as that on which the immortal Declaration of Indepen- dence was signed, sealed and promul- gated, as a matter of fact such is not true. The great document was read to the people on the Fourth after hav- ing been approved by Congress, but it was not signed on that day. The facts are these: On July 2 Jefferson presented for adoption the immortal Declaration after Congress had adopted a resolu- tion presented by Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia, which had been placed be- fore the body on Jurie 7, 1776. This resolution was as follows: Resolved, That these united col- onies are and of a right ought to be free and independent States; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is and ought to be totally dissolved. This resolution was debated for nearly a month, and, owing to the ab- sence of Lee, who had been called home, the defense of it fell on his col- league, Jefferson. It needed defense, for in that Congress were able men who opposed its passage and revolu- tion. Great therefore is America’s debt to Jefferson and Lee. On July 2 Lee’s resolution was adopted, and Jef- ferson’s draft of the Declaration was adopted on July 4, 1776. John Hancock, president of Con- gress, and Charles Thompson, its sce- retary, immediately signed the docu- ment and became thus the first official traitors from an English point of view. It was made public to the cit- izens by John Nixon, who read it to the citizens of Philadelphia in Inde- pendence square. On July 15 it was ordered to be engrossed, and on this being done it was ready for the sign- ers, who appended their names on August 2. Meanwhile there had been some changes in the personnel of Congress, and many of those who had taken part in the debate against its adoption were displaced, some of them at their own request, and others who had no connection with the historic discus- sion signed the document. For in- stance, John Dickinson, Edward Bid- dle, Thomas Willing and Charles Humphreys of Pennsylvania, fought the Declaration, and the Common- wealth sent Benjamin Franklin, Rob- ert Morris, George Ross and James Wilson to Congress in their places to sign the great paper. MOTOR CYCLES TO RACE IN ALTOONA BOWL. Fifty thousand cheering spectators who witnessed the spectacular speed duel at the famous Altoona speedway recently, when Peter DePaolo and ‘Tommy Milton battled for victory in the field of seventeen cars of the au- tomobile classic, on July Fourth will again see one of the supreme contests of the speed world when the leading motor cycle racers of the world meet in the national championship on the big bowl in Altoona. With a taste of the thrills of ex- treme speed on the giant mile-and-a- quarter oval, patrons at the track in Altoona from States all over the east- ern part of the country have request- ed tickets for the big Independence day classic of the twe-wheel mounts, the first revival of this sensational sport since the old Sheepshead Bay course. With thousands of motorists al- ready making arrangements to at- tend, the management reported that they had been requested to make pro- visions for close to 15,000 motorey- clists alone. These motorcycle clubs from all parts of the United States have made arrangements for going, some of them being forced to ride six days to reach there. Clubs from New Orleans, Dallas, Denver, DesMoines and others equally as far are coming 300 strong each. Representatives of the big motor- cycle factories in Altoona preparing their racing equipment for the big event declare that the sport-loving public will see thrills unknown in the east when the roaring midget motors careen in and out of the steeply pitched turns on the big board track, with the riders hurling them through gaps in the ranks with speed around 120 miles an hour. ree fp mr A Tribute to a Goced Tree. Ido love a good tree. There it stands: so strong and sturdy and yet so beautiful, a very type of the best sort of man. How proudly it lifts its bare head to the winter storms and with a full heart it rejoices when the spring has come again! How grand its voice is, too, when it talks with the wind; a thousand aeolian harps cannot equal the beauty of the sigh- ing of the great tree in leaf! All day it points to the sunshine and all night to the stars and thus, passionless, and yet full of life, it endures through the centuries, come storm, come shine, drawing its sustenance from the deep bosom of its mother, Earth, and, as the slow years roll by, learning the great mysteries of growth and decay. And so on and on through the gener- ations, outliving customs, individuals, dynasties—all save the landscape it adorns and human nature—till the ap- pointed day when the wind wins the long battle and rejoices over a re- claimed space, or decay puts the last stroke to his lingering work. Ah, one should always think twice before one cuts down a tree H. Rider Hag- gard. eee ple eee Be Sure of Binder. Is the binder in running order? Grain ripens fast when the days are hot and dry, and every kernel lost by cutting over-ripe grain is one less in the bin. It is a pleasure to know that the binder is ready to run from the start to finish of harvest, but repair parts often are slow in coming. Put them on early. sere ————— And how did you come to fall in the pond ? I didn’t come to fall in—I came to fish. CHINA’S DANGER POINT. A new Chinese “civil war” has mo- mentarily diverted interest from the anti-foreign movement centering in ‘Shanghai. But the fighting that has started around Canton is in reality of quite secondary importance as com- pared with the Communist-agitated strikes and disorders which threaten to dislocate the relations between the Chinese and the foreign element in several of the great trading centers. The Chinese seem to have lost the ability to settie any issue by means of war. A Chinese “civil war” has little more meaning than a fireworks dis- play. It makes a little difference in the long run which side wins, and the actual fighting is carried on along the lines of an American safety campaign. The art of not getting hurt has been highly developed by both soldiers and commanders. So long as the Chinese stick to war, the harm they can do is minimal. Ar anti-foreign movement is much more serious. A Chinese strike can be car- ried to a point of effectiveness possi- ble in no other part of the world. The Russian Communists realize this fact and are adapting their tac- tics accordingly. As an instance, they have promised to indemnify the fami- ly of every Chinese killed in strike- rioting at Shanghai. The first loyalty of a Chinese is to his family. If by getting himself killed he can bring two or three hundred dollars into the family exchequer, he feels in duty bound to go out and get killed. That more of them have not done so is probably due to doubt about the hon- esty of the Russian agitators. The Chinese himself is too fundamentally an honest creature not to recognize dishonesty when he sees it. The little “civil war” at Canton will not settle anything and is not likely to do much harm. A concerted anti- foreign movement might disrupt the life of the nation and involve far- reaching complications. It is in such a movement that real danger lies, and the Russians are making the most of it. ee A Free Scholarship in Music. Any ambitious young man or wom- an who is a reader of the “Watch- man’ may secure free instruction in music or elocution. The Ithaca Conservatory of Music, with the desire to stimulate the study of these arts, offers 100 scholarships valued from $80 to $600 each, to de- serving applicants from any State in the Union, and which will entitle them to instruction for the term of seven- teen weeks beginning with the open- ing of the school year, September 22, 1925, in any of the following depart- ments: Voice, violin, piano, composi- tion, elocution, band instruments and public school music. These scholar- ships are awarded upon competition which is open to any one desiting a musical or literary education. Any one wishing to enter the competition or desiring information should write to Mr. B. L. Johnson, secretary of the Ithaca Conservatory of Music, Ithaca, N. Y., before September 1, 1925. Miss Margaret Beezer, of Philips- burg, is a Centre countian who won a scholarship at Ithaca last year. Marriage Licenses. Amos Lee Powell, of East Orange, N. J., and Mary L. Boyd, of State Co!- lege. : Wilbur T. Gates and Evelyn J. Do- lan, Nittany. John P. Smith and Ethel May Kahl- mus, Bellefonte. Harry Warren Coder, of Williams- port, and Ethel N. Neff, of Howard. Charles A. Lucas and Rhea M. Lom- ison, Orviston. William M. Osman and Catharine P. Chandler, Bellefonte. Ford Lewis Stump and Thelma I Woomer, State College. Emanuel F. Fike, State College, and Adda C. Marshall, Bellefonte. ——-Get the Watchman if you want the local news. : BANKING IS Not, a Quick-Rich Business urplus is of slow growth. organized in 1863. This Bank was It now has, after 62 years, an earned surplus of $250,000.00. This represents earnings, after dividends of a little less than $4,000 per year. Its present earnings, in large measure, are due to this sur- plus, slowly accumulated during more than half a century. The First. Thought, of a Competent. Banker is NAY AY SV Secyrity--Not. Dividends Surplus Gives this Security TAT AT AT LAT LATVIA LV LT A AV AV VY CT AST A A das VA VAY The First National Bank B ELLEFONTE, PA. ACR SUS UERNRRNNR BNC ANRC RA AN RA A EAN RAN ) 8 o STABILITY § Fourth of July he Anniversary of this Great Event is always fittingly observed. All who lay claim to patriotism and public--spirtedness unite to laud and magnify the day. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Fittingly Observed NEE Ceiict dia sid ALA Leave Buffalo—_ 9:00 P. M. Arrive Cleveland *7:00 A. M. Ask your ticket agent or Automobile Rate—$7.50. | A restful night on Lake Erie | Makes a pleasant break in your journey. A good bed in a clean, cool stateroom, a long sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast in the morning. Steamers “SEEANDBEE”-“CITY OF ERIE”-*“CITY OF BUFFALO” Daily May Ist to November 15th Eastern Standard Time #Steamer “CITY OF BUFFALO?” arrives 7:30 A. M. Connections for Cedar Point, Put-in-Bay, Toledo, Detroit and oth 1 tourist agency for tickets via C&B De Porta Send for free sectional puzzle chart of the Great Ship “SEEANDBEE” and "OEE ANDBEE 224s beokist, Loh Stet, Cleveland & Buffalo Transit Co. A Breadth, 98 feet Cleveland, Ohio \"-«_6 inches. Fare, $5.50 [Ny X Your Rail Ticket is Leave Cleveland—9:00 P. M. Arrive Buffalo —*7:00 A. M, AANNNNAN AUN NANRANY AA hp Lh It will be a Real Dollar Day at Faubles Mens Dress Shirts $1.00—1gg. $1.50 value Boston Bags . . $1.00—iegular §1.50 * Boys Bloomers $1.00--]eg. $1.60 and §2 on every $5 Purchase made on this day. cludes everything in the storz---nothing reserved. Odds and Ends in Mens Under- | | wear, Union and Two-Piece | Suits at, . . . $1.00—values up {0 $2.50 cree in addition, we will allow a Discount, of $1.00 This in- iwilieakal DollarDay at F aubles I