"Hellefonte, Pa., November 27, 1925. = “THE HOME TOWN PAPER. The little country paper From (he old home town Makes the city man smile When ii comes around. For h¢ lays: down the daily And irons out his frown, Wien he reads all the news \ From the old home town. No slanders or murders Are on the front page; No crimes or vulgarity, No passions or rage. But a mirror-like reflection Of. a peaceful, sleepy town, Is ‘stamped upon his memory, ° When the paper comes around. He. reads about a melon Grown by Farmer Hatch; Remembers he used to sneak them From the same melon patch. And Chen the paper pictures Big catches in the creek, Where he spent hours fishing ‘Féry Saturday in the week. Across his mind there flashes he combination train, And:he's standing at the depot A barefoot boy again. There sweeps across his memory That can never grow dim The old, pine spring board And the place he used to swim. You can talk about the daily ; The newsboys cry around, Datiit's punk beside the paper From the old home town. "THE MCCONNELL DARROW DE- BATE. The Scopes trial at Dayton, Tenn., brought #Clarence Darrow and his agnostic theories into such prominence that he came to be regarded as in some sense the spokesman of those who. deny or seriously question the ex- #stence of a creating and sovereign God, and who explain the universe and all that takes place within it as arr automotive mechanism, a machine without, known or knowable builder or operator, mere material and force without” divine or spiritual elements. “Inferesfed persons arranged for a Joint debate on this fundamental tine of faith in which Bishop Francis J. McConnell, of Pittsburgh, met Mr. Barrow. The newspaper accounts of the. debate, which attracted great at- tention in Chicago, where it took place, were so. inadequate that The Christian Advocate takes pleasure in reproduc- énig for its readers the report which Br. Dan B. Brummitt, editor of the Northwestern Christian Advocate, made for his paper. On Menday evening of last week M#. Clarence Darrow of Chicago, fam- ous.as an attorney as well as a stud- ent of humanity, debated with Bishop Erancis J. McConnell, of Pittsburgh, famous as a student of philosphy as well as bishop of the Methodist Epis- copal Church, the mechanistic theory of life. Mr. Darrow affirmed it; Bishop Mc- Connell denied it. : Ta a great audience in Sinai Tem- ple, Chicago, and to another in a near- _ by auditoriami which heard the pro- * eeedings by amplifier, Mr. Darrow first presented the case for the mech- anistic idea of the world and all that therein is. He spoke with little ef- fort, but also with almost no anima- tion.. In his opening speech he stuck closely to the biological argument, ignoring the mental and moral aspects of the subject, It seemed to some hearers that this was an attempt to “draw” his oppon- ent, to lure him into some exposed position from which in the second ad- dress he counid easily be driven. If it was anything of that sort, it failed. Bishop McConnell met Mr. Darrow on his own ground. He sought no shel- ter. . And he showed himself the more careful student of recent sientific thought, as well as much more skill- ful in relating its conclusions to his side. of the arguement. . Mr. Darrow seemed surprised. Here was a man who, though a Christian and 2n eeclesiastic, was quite content to.hold the debate within such limits as gave him ncne of the supports (and, of course, none of the handi- caps) of the professional defender of religion. In the second period of the debate, whien questions of philosphy had arisen, Bishop McConnell again show- ed. himself more at home than Mr. Darrow. Where the lawyer referred vaguely ‘to this or that philosphic posifion, the bishop named the men wha first presented it, and stated its content and significance in language brief but crystal-clear. The natural inclination of a Metho- aist hearer, to listen as a partisan may have been tempered by the discovery, early in the debate, that it would be quite safe to judge the merits of both speakers calmly. Certainly partisan interest was not necessary for enjoy- ment of the battle, if battle it was. In point of fact, before the evening was over, one listener found himself moved by a distinet feeling of sympa- thy for Mr. Darrow, who was evident- ly somewhat at a loss. He had come to debate with a Preacher, and found ‘himself confrented by an intellect as keen as his own, reinforced by a men- tal discipline much more rigorous than ‘he had susgected a preacher could en- «dure., Aud this preacher knew what swale, the thought-fashions of the world. He could discern when and -how one form of un-faith was being diaced by another. And when Mr. Darrow attemzied a hit of logomachy about a supposed endless series of su- .perior vntelligences, Bishop McCon- nel] ticketed it at once for what it was —a ohiild’s puzzle. While there was no decision, there was a result. Toward the close of the debate Mr. Darrow enunciated his crecd, sterile and me'ancholy.. Man is all machine; the machine just happen- «ed; it has neither design nor purpose; all human hopes are vain. And then ‘ke recited most impressively a sort of Jditany of agnosticism; he asked the great questions which the human spir- it is always asking; and confessed that for him there was one answer, the only possible answer: “I don’t know.” This gave Bishop McConnell his op- portunity. He showed that in the very act of denying freedom, choice, intelligence, Mr. Darrow had been compelled to use the vocabulary of free will, of choice, of intelligent mas- tery of facts. He had assumed that there was a distinction between truth and error, between fact and delusion. But in the very assumption he had abandoned the agnostic position. As Bishop McConnell said, amid great ap- plause, “For a man who knows as lit- tle as Mr. Darrow says he knows, he has been making some pretty strong assertions here tonight.” It was a pity that more Christians could not have heard this debate. The experience would have re-energized their faith. And it would have given them a new view of Clarence Darrow, He is thought of by many as a defiant and blatant atheist, who lives for the de- light of destroying all that is best and finest in human life. In all fairness to a man whose creed is at the farthest possible removed from our own, it should be said that he is no such monster as that would make him. He is a man of singularly unpretentious manner. It is no dis- credit to him that he tries to live up to his creed, and fails. He has a thousand interests which are incon- sistent with the mechanistic view of the world. As for Bishop McConnell, we are glad he did not think himself too good, or too busy, or too dignified to meet in debate the most celebrated “enemy” of religion in this country. In that great audience there were many who are far from the Christian position, or even the theistic position. But they went away with a new respect for the Christian church; and it is even pos- sible to say that some of them carried with them on their homeward way a bewildered sense that they must have been misinformed about those strange people, the Methodists!—The Chris- tian Advocate. Machine Exhibited Philadelphia. One of the voting machines that are used at the elections in New York was exhibited by the Women’s Democratic committee, at No. 1501 Spruce street, Philadelphia, last week. Thanks to that enterprising body of women, the voting machine was shown in that city for the first time. The machine has been used with great success in New York. It not only facilitates voting but also keeps an automatic count of the ballots while the voting goes on. It is possible to have the result of an election ten minutes after the polls have closed. Mrs. Edward McCollin, chairman of the Women’s Democratic committee, believes that the voting machine will be adopted eventually in her city. Aside from the interest all Pennsyl- vanians should have in this first step objective of purifying the ballot in the most corrupt voting centre of the State, Bellefonte has a peculiar inter- est of its own, for it was a Bellefonte man who invented the voting machine. The late J. Hile Meyers, of Roches- ter, N. Y., was the inventor and the present voting machine used in that State is merely a development of his original invention. Mr. Meyers and his family were long residents of Bellefonte where he was proprietor of the Bush house. An Honest in to Save a Million a Month. All you have to do, if you want fo be really wealthy, is double a penny each day for thirty days. At the expiration of this period you could purchase a big slice of Florida’s costly real estate, or put up enough cash to buy out a United States mint. According to a chart which a local statistic fan has prepared, one cent doubled every day for thirty days will increase to the amazing total of $10,- 734,418.23. There is no catch about this. The second day you would have Here's How {two cents but at the end of the fifth ‘day you would have thirty-two cents. At the end of ten days you would have saved $10.23 and at the end of twenty days you would have stored away $5,- 242.88. _ In twenty-five days your savings wonld amount to $167,772.15. Then on up the amount would climb to the grand total. No one has seen fit lo carry the figures beyond the thirty- day period, but at that rate one could become better than a billionaire in a matter of thirty-four days, while in two months one could corner the world money market, and have a leasehold on all the money to be pro- duced for the next hundred years, in- clusive or exclusive of the 1923 crop of German marks. Decline in Farms in Pennsylvania. The number of farms in Pennsyl- vania is decreasing at the rate of more than five-hundred a year, a prelimin- ary announcement of a farm census taken this year by the Department of Commerce shows. The census gives Pennsylvania 200,420 farms, a de- crease of 1,830 compared with 1920. The department considers a “farm” as all the land which is farmed di- rectly by one person, either by his own labor alone or with the assist- ance of members of his household er hired employes. When an owner has one or more tenants, renters or man- agers the land operated by each is considered a “farm.” The total number of farms in the United States is given as 6,372,608, a decrease of 74,735 within the five year period. This decrease is divided among 24 States, the remaining 24 showing increases. Reasons given for me of the de- creases were ravages of the boll wee- vil, migration of negro workers, suc- cession of dry seasons, conselidation 'of farms and a “general recession from the war ‘me exp ion in agri- culture.”—FExci age. —— {ot the Walchman if vou want the local news. HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the eorrect letters are placed in the white spaces this pussie words both vertically and horizontally. The first letter in each word eated by a number, which refers to the definition lsted below the No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word whieh white spaces up to the first black square te the right, “yertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares pussle. Thus will and a number under te the mext black ome below. No letters go im the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obsolete forms are indieated in the definitions. CROSS-WORD 23% sPUZZLENo. 3. 6 3 | 5 6 |20 49 59 (@®. 1925, Western Newspaper Union.) 2 2 17 # Px 40 44 4 8 Horizontal. 1—To sign illegally b—Weak 9—Uncle’'s wife 11—Profit 12—Note of scale 14—Part of day 16—Note of scale 17—To bring legal action against 19—Cries of sorrow 20—Head covering 21—Voleano 28—Sick 24—Vehicles 25—Earth’s path around sun 27—General appearance 29—Octave above treble staff 30—Friend (Fr.) 31—To throw out 33—Devoid of contents 35—Fast-running animal 36—Hastened 38—Pedal digits 41—Kicks a football 43—To lick up with the tongue 44—Part of “to be” 45—Tles 48—To make money 49—To stir up 40—Aged 47—Sun god §1—Periods of time 52—Outer garments Vertical. 1—Untrue 3—Chewing confection 4—FEnough (poetic) 5—Sport enthusiasts 6—Two-wheeled vehicle 2—Sun god 7—Indefinite article 8—Jumps 10—Characteristic 11—Liquid measure (pl.) 13—Motor 16—Nothing 16—Price for transportation 18—Infuriated 20—State house 22—More powerful 24—Made an encampment (sim. sp.) 26—Impersonal possessive pronoun 28—Leg of a pig 81—Snakelike fishes 82—To have faith in 38—To go within 34—Period of time 35—Small, embroidered linen piece 37—Insect 39—Boxes 41—Roasts, as a critic (cant) 42—Winter ground covering 45—Kind of pine 46—Man's “title 48—Mother 50—Note of scale Solution will appear in mext issue. FLAMING WATERS. | Almost eve one knows of the: geysers of Yellowstone Park; mud geysers, and those that spout forth | great columns of water and steam. '! But did you ever hear of a geyser with | roaring flames rising from the surface : of water that gurgles up from subter- ranean depths? In northwestern Washington near | the little town of Black Diamond, at | the edge of a densely wooded area, there is just such a geyser, and its operations are so spectacular that multitudes of wondering visitors are attracted. Like many other geysers, this one : operates intermittently; usually on a ! schedule of about seventy or eighty | minutes. While it is quiet, all that can be’ seen is & funnel-shaped hole in the rock, about eight feet wide at the top. and two feet at its neck, which is six feet below the ground surface. This hole leads to unknown cavernous re- gions. After the basin has been empty for i | slowly from the base, and in ten min- utes overflows. This water is cold and salty, has a distinct flavor of sulphur, and bubbles vigorously as it enters the hole. When a lighted match is thrown upon the surface of the pool, roaring flames dart high into the air, and the water is violently disturbed. For twenty minutes this perform- ance continues at its height, and then as the water gradually recedes during the next twenty minutes, the flames become less fierce, finally dying out with the disappearance of the water. The program is repeated at regular flames, it is only necessary that a match be thrown upon the water at each eruption. On the slope of a hill, 300 yards from the geyser, a small spring bub- bles up from the earth, leaving a presence of white sulphur. One needs but to toss a lighted match upon the spring to ignite the gas that escapes in bubbles at the water’s surfaces when whitish-yellow burning vigorously until fanned out or smothered. However, they can be instantly started again. On approaching these formations for the first time, the sight of flames apparently issuing from water is startling; and somehow, the fact that effect. Probably the spring and the geyser are connected at their source, gas. with more violence though, than in the case of the spring.—Exchange. ———— Butchering Time is Here. Cold, frosty mornings and snow flakes in the air make us think of hog killing, buckwheat cakes and sausage. make the work easier and more suc- cess “i! Don’t have the hot. wate” oo than water that is too ecld. The hair is set by water that is too hot and at the ten neratur~ of the water hut be certain that it ic between 155 and thirty minutes, water appears, rises | intervals, and in order to start the white sediment clinging to the rocks , over which it flows, this indicating the ' flames will rise eighteen inches high, : the water is very cold heightens the | for the latter’s flames are likewise of : It issues in greater volume and Here are a few hints that may help | More poor scalds at bute .ering time ! are caused by water that ic too hot: Solution to Crossword Puzzle No. 2. 7) i EE ORB] _ Cc E(V[E[R[Y ARIE N[D[O[L|ABREIO|N] YIE[ TH LIO[OIN TIAlU RIAICIE E|GIAD| 110 AlB LIA AlLIL oS LIE] ARITISE ERT R AcisHiic/LIOjoBRUl IF VT]A I[ClA[LEEVIAIN] IN[TIC[HIE] D[1| VIER] NAY -{PlAIR FP T 160 degrees Fahrenheit. A good scald . has been assured when the dewelaws will snap off. The hog should not be left in the water long. Try dissolving a bar of soap or a tablespoon of lye in the barrel of water, this will cut i the dirt and scruff and result in a much cleaner carcass. Try the following recipe for sau- sage: 175 pounds of lean meat, 25 pounds fat, 2 pounds of salt, 2 ounces of fine sage, 1 ounce of ground nut- meg, 6 ounces of black pepper. | Cut the meat into small pieces; mix ‘and add the spices; then put through the grinder, using the small plate. Mix well to be sure that it is uniform- ly seasoned. Do not add water unless the sausage is to be stuffed in casings, in which case a small amount of water is needed. BOALSBURG. Austin Dale and daughters spent Saturday in Centre Hall. iJ. Elmer Campbell, of Linden Hall, | was in town on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kaup, of Al- toona, visited their mother, Mrs. Jo- anna Kaup, last week. Misses Daisy Rowe and Grace Bit- ner, and George Rowe, spent part of Sunday at Penn Hall. i Mrs. Della Isenberg went to Phila- delphia last week, to undergo treat- ment for serious eye trouble. Dr. and Mrs. George Hall returned to Wilmington, Del., on Friday, after . spending the summer at their home | on Main street. : Don’t wait for the solicitor to call but present your Red Cross dollar to Miss Anna Sweeney, receiver for the Boalsburg district. Mrs. Elmer Houtz and daughter Geraldine, of Bellefonte, visited at the home of Mrs. E. E. Brown and daugh- ters, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Houtz came up Sunday to accompany | them home. Gubernatorial Year Political Calendar. | May 18 will be the date of the ! spring primary, the law having fixed the third Tuesday of May as the date in gubernatorial years. The time for filing petitions will ex- pive forty days before the primary. The way the dates will fall next ear, means the latter part of Feb- ary and most of March will be very busy political times, for then the pe- titiens for the State, Senatorial, Con- | ressional and legislative nominations can only be remeved by shaving. Get | will be in order. a good dairy ‘Lormometer beifore Nov that the election is over, there starting the work aad a good scald is | will be © rush of questions as to re- practical’. assured. Don’t try to guess quiremenis for legislative candidates, | and seme have already been received from possible aspirants. Brothers of the Savior. According to the Bible, Jesus had four brothers—James, Joses, Simon and Jude, the last name being also called Judas. Smith in his notable Bible Uiefienaly avs Jesus had three sisters. The ipture merely men- tions the sisters of Jesus without giv- ing their number or names.—Ex. ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating Steam Pipeless Furnaces TONIGHT = Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headache relieve bilious attacks, tone an regulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. % Better Than Pills For Liver lis” Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully ana Promptly Furnished BELLEFONTE, PA. Lyon & Co. } Lyon & Co. Do Your Christmas Shopping Here Table Linens with Napkins to match—or separate Our Linen Damask, two yards wide—special price $1.60 per yard. All Linen Plain Damask, to make your Luncheon Sets, $2.75 per yard. All Linen Napkins (dinner size) from $5.50 per dozen up. Maderia Napkins (beautifully embroidered) only 50 cents a piece. Bordered Crepes and Serges 54 inch Bordered (All Wool) Silk Embroidered Dress Materials—the most wanted colors—from $3.00 per yard up, Coats and Dresses We are making Clearance Sale Prices on Ladies, Misses and Childrens Coats. and Silk Dresses must Stouts Coats and Dresses at Clearance Sale Frices Also all our Wool be sold now. Stylish Come in and See for Yourself these Values and Very Low Prices Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. What a Lot of Money Christmas Takes ecember fifth will be an interesting day for those who have Christmas savings accounts with us. The postman will leave letters for them con- taining checks with which to do their Christmas shop- ping. A little saved every week. How it mounts up —what a comfortable feeling it gives to have money ready for the inevitable expense. The Fund for 1926 Starts Now Let us Enroll You The First National Bark BELLEFONTE, PA.