- RI Dewalt Belefonte, Pa., July 30, 1926. Clever Police Work Credited to Italian For a moth to be convicted of mur- der seems incredible, but this actually happened. After giving a dinner party the Princess Caravella of Naples went to lie down in order to refresh her- self for a dance, and later was found shot through the heart. Suspicion pointed to her husband, who was known to be of a jealous disposition, and he was arrested. The fact that the pistol was found lying near the dead woman seemed incongruous, but the husband would probably have been convicted but for the shrewdness of Naples police officer. He found a huge moth lying on the floor by the bedside. A lighted candle had stood on the bedside table where the pistol lay, and the moth had been singed in the flame. He also found dust from the moth’s wings on the trigger of the pistol, which was also proved to work with exceptional ease, whilst the pistol lay in such a positior that it covered the woman's heart It was argued in court that the moth had burned its wings and had fallen on the table, where, writhing and fluttering, its wings had struck the trigger and the pistol had been fired. On this evidence the prince was acquitted. Music Shown to Have Odd Effect on Hai 4 all the violinists in the world as sembled together in one vast building, and they numbered, say, 100,000, it is probable that there weuld be but 100 among them with bald heads. But if the same number of brass instru. ment players were Inspected, bald heads would be as common as flies in summer time! If you doubt this, make a point ot observing the heads of the orchestras In the cinemas or theaters you patron- Scientists declare that the playing of stringed instruments induces hair growth. A series of éxperiments on the partly bald has proved that stringed music has power to raise a hairy crop! Cornet and horn players lose thei: aair early; theirs ifs the wrong sort of music from the hirsute point of view. The explanation advanced is that the physical strain of blowing affects the circulation and deprives the roots of the hair of their due sup- ply of blood. Playing Cards Known Since Earliest Ages Doctor Le Cour, delving in Cartha- genian ruins, says the ancients had a play similar to our card game. They used small tablets on which were painted figures. There is also men- tion in one of St. Augustine's works of cards that are used for gambling. 8till the playing cards we now use were invented in the Fourteenth cen- tury by a French painter named Ja- ques Gringonneur. It is said that he invented them to amuse the mad King Charles VI of France. The kings were David, Alexander, Caesar and Charles; the queens were Argine, Esther, Ju- dith and Pallas; the four knights, now called knaves and vulgarly “jacks,” were Ogier the Dane, Lancelot, La Hire and Hector de Garland, knights of old romance. The Cardmakers’ company was incorporated in 1629, and as early as the reign of James I cards were taxed. Probably the first game played in England was called “trump.” All the most important his- torical events have been at one time or another depicted on playing cards, and some of the packs are very rare and valuable.—Pierre Van Paassen, in the Atlanta Constitution. Blood Analysis Helps Doctor in Diagnosis The doctor who used to feel his patient’s pulse or gaze into a gaping mouth to determine the cause of ill ness nowadays takes a drop of blood to analyze. The guilt for much of human suffering has been traced to the germs, tiny but deadly, which force their entrance into the human body, and which can only be detected by svch analysis, * “Blood tests provide us with clews «0 an ever-growing number of ail- ments,” said a doctor to the writer. “It is being found, for instance, that eye complaints are often due to the absorption of germs which have af- fected other parts of the body, such a8 the tonsils. We can often detect them by testing the blood. “Many cases of illness are due to something taken in from without— usually microscopic germs. More and more of these germs are becoming known to ‘us every day. There is reason to believe that the origins of other diseases which are still un- known may be found in the same cause.” Grenade Duel Fails In Germany two university students, each seeking the hand of a comely girl In marriage, decided they would have to fight it out In a duel. They chose hand grenades as weapons, paced off the required distance and when the referee dropped the hand: kerchief they each threw. The gre nades went saljing through the alr but nothing happened. Two other grenades were offered them and these exploded, but only spattered mud on the duelists. They then decided to allow the girl to choose. a. a Ee Modern Dishes That Got Name From Latin Fricasse has usually been derived from the Latin word frigere (to fry) through the French frier, but it is thought more probable now that it is derived from the French fracasser, meaning to break into pieces or the Latin fricare, to rub. In French the word is used to Indi- cate any meat fried in a pan, but the English meaning is a dish made from cutting chickens, rabbits, and other small animals into pieces and cook- Ing them in a frying or other par with a gravy, Molasses came through many medi- ums from the Latin mellaceus, mean- ing honey-like, which is derived fron mel, honey. Mushrooms get their name from the same source as moss. Custard was a corruption of a mid- dle-English word meaning a pie or tart, and was allied to the modern French word croustade of the same meaning. All these words came fror the Latin crusta, meaning a crust. Salad literally means salted, and is a direct descendant of the Latin word sal, or salt. The use of salad to mean the greens from which or on which a salad mixture is placed is one of only recent origin. The Italian insalata and the Spanish salada, mean- ing salad in those languages, actually mean salted. Tomato is a word of Mexlcan deri- vation from tomatl, the native name in that country for the vegetable. The original tomato was the “love apple” [ a Bright Children Fail to Develop in Ability Children who are mental giants at ten years old, are, as a rule, no bet- ter at tests of musical sensitiveness than quite ordinary children of ‘their age. This is shown by experiments with a group of superior children, con- ducted by Dr, Leta S. Hollingworth o* Columbia university. Results of the experiments report- ed in the Journal of Educational Psy- chology, indicate that superior chil- dren as a group make somewhat bet- ter ratings in their judgments of time than other children of their age, bu* not in other musical tests, The children were tested on pitch, time, consonance and tonal memory. Since the brilliant children as a group were larger than unselected children of the same age, it had been expected that they might excel in such tests because of the advanced development of the anatomical struc- tures involved in making musical Judgments. This was not, however. found to be the case.—Science Serv ice Bulletin. Fiction and Frying Pans If the stories of Brillat-Savarin, which it is proposed to publish in com- memoration of "his centenary, reveai their author to the world as a suec- cessful writer of fiction as well as a gastronomer, he may perhaps he re- garded as repaying the interest which some famous novelists have taken in matters of the table. Balzac took a keen interest in cookery, as befitted a man of gigantic appetite. So also did George Sand, whose cookery must have been pretty good, since it was reputed to be as exciting as her ro- mances. Joseph Conrad, as he ad- mitted in connection with a cookbook written by Mrs. Conrad, gave a high place in his esteem to the culinary arts, while George Meredith left so book of cookery recipes in his own handwriting which figured in a book- seller’s catalogue some years ago and may possibly yet appear in print.-- Manchester Guardian. | Socrates in Art The British museum has recently come into possession of a statuette. eleven inches high and in very good condition, that is considered by arche- ologists to be almost certainly a por- trait of Socrates as he walked and talked in the streets of Athens. It portrays the familiar coarse face, the rough beard and the snub nose, but the result is not grotesque and there can be no doubt as to the intelligence of the sculptured figure. The statu ette is supposed to date from a pe- riod about a century later than Soe- rates. If so, it is the earllest por trait of him, for all the other busts in existence belong to the Roman pe- riod.—London Post. What She Wanted to Know Mandy, black and ponderous, has trouble with her teeth and was look- ing over some dental plates. “Could Ah eat wid ’'em as good as Ah used to eat wid mah own?” she asked. “Oh, to be sure,” replied the den tist. “These plates are so scientifi- cally fabricated that mastication is facilitated to a degree equal to, if not exceeding, Nature's own product.” “Yassuh, yassuh,” from Mandy, stil) unconvinced, “put what Ah wants ta kuow is kin you chew wid ’em as well as wid you’ own ?”—Pittsburgh Chron- icle-Telegraph. Wheelbarrow Long in Use The wheelbarrow is a geod illustra tien of the old adage of familiarity breeding contempt, at least indiffer- ence. We are so used to having one around the place that a few of us stop to wonder when and where this useful article was invented. Its be- ginning is lost in antiquity, for thou- sands of years ago it was known to the Chirese, who put it to good use. The moder, steel, perfectly balanced vehicle is but an improved edition nf s crude idea of ages ago. on Child Training Gay, light-hearted and debonair though Robert Louis Stevenson was during most of his life, he held views on the training of children that, com- ing from him, seem astonishingly se- vere. Mr. Lloyd Osbourne, his step- son, writing in Scribner's Magazine, described a conversation that occurred when he and Stevenson, then thirty- two years old and in poor health, were sojourning at Davos in the Swiss Alps. One conversation I heard him have with a visitor at the chalet, says Mr. Osbourne, impressed me deeply. The visitor was a fussy, officious person, who after many preambles ventured to criticize Stevenson for the way he was bringing me up. R. L. S., who was the most reasonable of men in an argument, and almost over-ready tr admit any points against himself, sur prised me by his unshaken stand “Of course I let him read anything he wants,” he said. “And if he hears things you say he shouldn't, I am glad of it. A child should early gain some perception of what the world is really like—its baseness, its treach- eries, its thinly veneered brutalities; he should learn to judge people and discount human frailty and weakness and be in some degree prepared and armed for taking his part later in the battle of life. I have no patience Great Writer's Ideas I ! | with this fairy-tale training that makes ignorance a virtue. That was how I was brought up, and no one will ever | know except myself the bitter misery | it cost me.”—Youth’s Companion. Visiting Pest Bane of Busy Office Man The “just-a-minute” man is a prod- uct of modern times, and is in no way related to the Minute Man of Revolu- tionary days. He is the worst pest with whom Detroiters high in public office and business life have to deal He always appears to be in a hurry. He dashes into the outer office of his victim, pulls out his watch, and breathlessly asks the secretary if he can see Mr. So-and-so for “just a min- ute.” He is often successful in gain- ing admittance, and he usually stays about 30 minutes, or until long after he has worn out his welcome. The “just-a-minute” man is legion. His visits sometimes take up several hours a day of one busy man’s time. One business man admitted he could dispense with his secretary if it were not for the “just-a-minute” man. The Secretary's chief duty is to intercept the pest and learn his business.—De- troit News. Monk That Made History Peter the Hermit was a monk of Amiens, the famous preacher of the Crusades and primarily responsible for one of the most gigantic religious movements the world ever saw. - Lit- tle is known of his life until 1095 (he was born in 1050), when he preached the necessity of a crusade to wrest the Holy land from the infidel. He rode about France on a mule, exhort- ing the populace to follow him. In 1006 he set out toward Palestine with some thirty thousand followers, most- ly of the poorer classes. The undlis- ciplined army straggled on through Europe, but after crossing the Bos- porus into Asia Minor it proved so unruly that Peter left it and joined the army of Godfrey de Bouillon. He had a part in the capture of Jeru- salem, and in July, 1099, preached on the Mount of Olives.—Kansas City Star. Rabbits as Swimmers An investigating naturalist reports chat rabbits are good swimmers and have a very real fondness for the wa- ter and the sport they find in a good swim. He says he has been hidden in the woods and watched rabbits run on a high bank and dive far out in the water, swimming about and shak- ing the water from their eyes, in a human fashion, then shaking the wa- ter out of their furry coats after the swim, exactly as a dog does. Prior to that discovery he had known rab- bits to take to the water when pur- sued by a dog, but had not known they | chose the water for sport when they had a day off from play and relax- ation—Ohio State Journal Equal to the Occasion frequently, during the dinner, the old sea captain had strained the credulity of the guests, but by the ex- ercise of his ready wit, had evaded a number of culs de sac. The supreme test came while he was describing a voyage in the South seas. “Crossing along one morning,” he began, “we passed an island that was positively red with lobsters.” “But,” sald one of the guests, with unconcealed amusement, “lobsters are not red un- til boiled.” “Of course not,” replied the old salt, undaunted, “but this was a volcanic island dotted with hot springs and geysers.” The Bright Iliad There are few books which are fit to be remembered in our wisest hours, but the Iliad is brightest in the se- renest days, and embodies still all the sunlight that fell on Asfa Minor. No modern Joy or ecstacy of ours can lower its height, or dim its lustre, but there it lies in the east of literature, as It were the earliest and latest production. . . . The rays of Greek poetry struggle down to us, and mingle with the sunbeams of the re- cent day. The statue of Memnon is cast down, but the shaft of the Iliad still meets the sun In his rising, — Thoreau, RR Grocer’s Son: “What is that?” “Cheep, cheep.” “Well, a duck told me what kind of a doctor your father is. Quack! quack!”—The Progressive Grocer. The Parents. ; Doctor’s daughter: “A little bird told me what kind of a store your father runs.” The Most Wonderful Book in the World ORE than nine million Bibles were sold or distributed in 1925. : Would you not love to have companion volumes to help you discover the treasures in that Wonderful Book? SWEDENBORG [1688-1772] lained the Bible's practical application to daily life; how it Fr the life ohn what the Bible parables mean when spiritually interpreted. His theological works—as issued by himself — have been pub- lished by the Houghton Mifflin Co. in most modern transla tion from the original Latin, in the Rotch Edition of 32 volumes. The first twenty give the spiritual sense of Genesis and Exodus as understood in Heaven; and volumes 26, 27, 28 give likewise the spiritual sense of the Book of Revelation. Volume 29, Marriage Love, views from the union of the Divine Loveand the Divine Wisdom the Law of Sex throughoutall crea- tion. It shows the crown and jewel of the Christian Religion, the union of one with one only. Price $2.00. Volumes 30, 31, 32, contain a full statement of the True Christian Religion as revealed from Heaven. $3.00 the set. The whole 32 volumes in half-morocco at $125; in buckram, $40. tree SW CET) Pte The following are the best introductory books to the Revela- tions of SwepeNBORG. They are in large print, bound in buck- ram, and contain from 260 to 485 pages. TITLES PRICB HEAVEN AND HELL from things heard and seen $1.25 Angelic Wisdom Concerning— THE DIVINE PROVIDENCE, which governs the Universe and the Heavens and the Hells, and the least as well as the greatest mm { mm {mn { mn {cn {cm { mn {cn € mn { mm { crm. | sem {mn {mn { mn. {ss {sm {en (svn sn sn. em { sv { smn, sm {se CC A TT Te Te = === pe ee Ree ef Pe of all things in creation; and in the everyday life of man. $1.23 THE DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM, the profoundest Bot publi in Latin a Arte dn 1763 long mith hide ch i in Latin at : 8 hy the Soul and the Body" first published in Latin at London 1769. - $1.25 Price of all three at one time, including postage $2.78 — er CED Petree Who Was Swedenborg? Emanuel Swedenborg, the son of a bishop, was the great Swedish scientist, philo- theologian, whose caused Emerson to term him the mastodon EE er oo Dre roden . pp hss nt, he — — Demme Ome Deemer eee meee ee eee ee ee ee Re ee) Ss on miner , astronomy, is life search was for the human soul. How his spiritual senses were obened, s 5 ke n the life ee nei Send orders or inquiries to B. A. WHITTEMORE, Agent 135 Bowpomn Street, Boston 9, Mass. Ager’ wedenborg sent for 10 cents; Heaven and Hell in paper covers go life of Segenbard sat postpuid fox 10¢ 10 cents; or all three for 40 cents. het be tt bd er nt pe ed Te Ee I lm (mt mn { {en mn mn {mn cs € mn {mn § cm, cm | mm tn (n(n sn { an { sn { nn € sm { sm { |S) me wn sn | ye | we) | Wn |, SW) | So SS |S WW) oy in | oe No. 111-A TWO WATCHES *+-one you must have: the other you cannot convensently do without The pocket watch is the one timepiece you cannot dispense with. With the vest, the combination of watch and chain provides an essential touch of dignity to-your attire which nothing else can supply. But every man can easily afford two watches, A good watch costs no more than a suit of clothes. It gives you many years of service. And style and convenience both demand the strap watch as an additional timepiece, Whether it is a strap or a pocket watch that you are now about to buy, it is important that you consider the quality of the case as well as the movement. Insist on the celebrated Wads- worth Case—your assurance ¢f correct style, finest materials, and exquisite workmanship, F. P. Blair & Son Jewelers and Silversmiths..... Bellefonte, Penna. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts. - Office, room 18 Crider’s Exchange. - bl-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business en- trusted to his care. Offices—No. High street. 5, East 57-44 M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law and Justice >f the Peace. All pro- fessional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE. — Attorney-at-Law. Consultation in English and Ger- man. Office in Criders Exchan e, Bellefonte, Pa. y 58.5 EE ————— | PHYSICIANS D R. R. L. CAPERS, — OSTEOPATH. 5 Bellefonte State College Crider’'s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- 55-41 Optometrist, Regis- licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg., High St., Bellefonte, Pa. T1-22-tf VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday. Belle- fonte, rooms 14 and 15 Temple Court, Wednesday. afternoons and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4.30 p. m. Bell Phones. 68-40 Feeds We Keep a Full Line of Feeds in Stock Try Our Dairy Mixtures —22% protein; made of all Clean, Pure Feeds— $46.00 per Ton We manufacture a Poultry Mash good as any that you can buy, $2.90 per hundred. dence. D. CASEBEER, tered and Purina Cow Chow .......... $52.00 per tem Oil Meal, 34 per cent. protein, 54.00 « « Cotton Seed, 43 pr. ct. prot., 50.00 « « Gluten, 23 per cent. protein, 48.00 « Alfalfa Meal ................. 4500 « « Bran ....... Sars Sern sinas ceo 8400 « w Middlings ............00000.. 36.00 « « (These Prices are at the MilL) $2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery. We are discontinuing the stora; of wheat. After July 1st, 1926, all wheat must be sold when delivered to our mill. . ; 0. Y. Wagoer & Go. Ir 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating -Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces “a ENA ASS NOS Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully anda Promptly Furnished 66-15-tf. Fine Job Printing A SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office This Interests You The Workman’s Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes insurance compul- sory, We specialize in placing such insurance. n= We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. Bellefonte 43-18-1yr. State College