Belletonte, Pa., July 20, 1917. | lishes the following account of the - | presentation of a flag to the West PRESENTATION OF FLAG. The ‘Watchman” cheerfully pub- | i ! | | | Virginia soldiers by a former Belle- | = | fonte lady and her daughter as taken One of the Stories as to How Base from a recent issue of a Ronceverte, Ball Originated. lion boys play base ball each year in the United States. England, and many v play the game in Japan, Porto Rico, Cuba, and Mexico, and we have, out- side of professional players, nine million boys who annually enjoy one of the oldest games known to man. Base ball is supposed to have had its origin in England and then to have been passed to the United States, but the game was long ago known to the American Indians, and before they played it, the sport was common In China and India. As the research of man into how ancient peoples lived and played progresses, we begin to feel with the prophet that “there is nothing new under the sun.” For with our own Cherokee In- dians, residents of this continent long before any white man ever saw the land, base ball was a popular game. It was played with goals and bases, and called for great skill in the hand- ling of the bail. So popular was the vigorous use of the ball (one of the best exercises any one can enjoy) with the Cherokees, they had a legend about it. The Cherokee story-tellers claimed that the moon is a ball which was thrown against the sky in a game a long time ago. They say two ball teams were playing against each oth- er. One of the teams had the best runners and had almost won the game, when the captain of the other team picked up the ball with his hand and tried to throw it to a goal. But it struck against the solid sky vault and was fastened there as a warning to all future players mever to try to cheat. Why a warning? The rules of base ball in the days of the beginning of the game forbade the ball ever being touched with the hand. This made the game more difficult than it is to- day. It was cheating ever to touch the ball with anything but the bat, the primitive bat much resembling a mod- ern tennis stick. The Cherokees say, when the moon grows pale and small, as it does after the full period, that it is because of sorrow for those on earth who indulge in cheating. The Chinese and East Indians played base ball all of a thousand years before the Christian era began. They used net bats, and the ball could not be touched with the hand. One day, as the legend runs, a favorite of a Chinese emperor was playing the game before his master and was very anxious to win. He was so anxious to be victor he grasped the ball in his hand when his opponent was not look- ing, and threw it toward the coveted goal. But the ball, so the legend says, was so angry at being used to cheat that it bounded back and struck the unfortunate favorite. He was struck so hard he was driven off the earth and became a lone star in the heavens. He gives forth light every night to warn | others who are tempted to cheat, of their possible fate. The interesting feature of these legends—one from our own land and one from distant China is the lesson they convey out of the early days of man; cheating in sport, or anything else is dishonorable and brings its own bitter punishment. Base ball is a delightful game. The game quickens the wits, hardens the body. But it is not worth the while, any more than any other sport, if foul play and cheating are permitted to enter into it. Honesty in sport is like honesty in work; it carries with it the conscicusness that you have done your best and if victory does not perch on your banner, you have fairly lost and can sincerely con- gratulate the winner.—Ex. Universal Training the Only Way. Would you trust an important mes- sage to a telegraph operator who first touched his finger to a key only the week before? Would you choose to operate on your limb or body a medic- al student in his Freshmen year? Would you want to ride on a railroad train behind an engineer who had pre- viously been only a chauffeur? Ordo your banking with a popcorn wagon? Not one of these possibilities is a bit more illogical or absurd than to ex- pect raw, untrained troops, in what- ever numbers, either to safeguard us against threatened invasion or defend us when one is made. These very words will be read by mere than one man who at some time was a victim on stagecoach or passenger train where a single bandit, armed only with a mask and revolver, held up and robbed the entire party, and simply because they were unprepared. It is not surprising that our people hesitated when universal military training was proposed. It seemed to savor too much of Prussianism to the Simor-pure American; and to the son born here of foreign parents it ap- peared as one of the chief reasons why his parents left their fatherland and crossed an ocean to find liberty. However, an unpleasant duty has rarely been fully met by volunteers— suppose only volunteers paid taxes, for instance! To rely on volunteers puts a penalty on patriotism and re- wards the unpatriotic; there is noth- ing fair or just in it. We are not a warlike people; we have no desire to add to our territory unless by friend- ly purchase; and it is hardly believa- ble that any Congress would declare war with an overwhelming majority of the people set against the under- taking. The training of our future armies should begin in the High school and continue until we have at all times at least 2,000,000 men ready for active service. I have no patience with the weak- lings who cry “disgrace to be draft- ed.” Is there any disgrace, or only honor, when, the family threatened by a madman, the father calls all his sons who are fit to come to his assistance in its defense? When Uncle Sam calls, all the boys should respond.— Mechanics Magazine. Add to this sever- ! al thousand who play it in Canada and | thousands who | about | W. Va., paper: Despite the cold and disagreeable i bly a thousand people, many of them ! from a distance, assembled at the camp of Co. E, of the West Virginia National Guard, to witness the pre- sentation and raising of a beautiful | flag presented to the company by Mrs. | George T. Brew in memory of her | brother, Lieut. George L. Jackson, of | Pennsylvania, who lost his life during the Spanish-American war. After the presentation address, delivered in | a pleasing way by Col. J. H. Crosier, | the national emblem was raised to the | top of the flag pole by Miss Janet | 1 | Brew, the daughter of the donor, amidst the bugle call and firing of | the salute. In accepting the flag on behalf of | the company, Captain White made a brief and graceful response, thanking the donor for her remembrance of the soldiers, and paid the citizens a de- served compliment for the manner in which the had been received since their arrival in camp. We give below Col. Crosier’s remarks: Capt. White and members of the company you command, a little less than twenty years ago a brave and gallant young man of the State of Pennsylvania, by the name of George L. Jackson, heeded the call of his country and as a first lieutenant of a Pennsylvania company enterea the Spanish-American war in whieh he lost his noble life. A sister and a niece, Mrs. George T. Brew and her daughter, Miss Janet Brew, now re- side in this city. These ladies, in memory of that deceased brother and uncle, and in honor of your company, have commissioned me to present to you a beautiful banner, bearing the stars and stripes, symbolizing not on- ly the grand fundamentals of civil and political life of American citizens, but the high esteem in which Ameri- can soldier boys are held by these fair donors. I am proud to be the medi- um through which this guerdon of military merit is placed in such trust- worthy hands. It is a gift which means something more than formal compliment. It means more than sim- ilar emblems of all other countries combined. It means an incentive to | that honorable ambition which should ever characterize an American citizen soldiery. I know full well that yourself and the soldier boys you command will re- ceive this souvenir in the spirit in which it is given, and that it will never be tarnished while in your cus- tody, except by the hand of time. Happy is the country whose citizens are good soldiers, and whose soldiers are good citizens! Such a country is impregnable! Even though all the trans-Atlantic monarchies were band- ed together against it; it would “langh a siege to scorn.” » Let us hope that the day is not far distant when the “Star Spangled Banner” will again peacefully wave over cur fair country. We have been | called a “nation of natural fighters,” | but whatever nay be our fighting ca- | pacities, thank "God, we are neither | quarrelsome nor blood-thirsty. Though | jealous of the honor of our country, ! both as soldiers and citizens, we all know and feel that it is far better for the “Stars and Stripes” to wave over us in the sunshine of peace, than in the smoke of battle. I sincerely hope that it may never be necessary for vou to unfurl this banner in the smoke of battle, but I have no doubt, if you do, you will wave it in the thickest of the fight. I now commit it to your keeping, and please accept it with the warm felicitations of all concerned in its presentation. { Chemical Wealth in Lake Waters. The most noted example of an in- land sea in the United States is the one in Utah. This lake contains prac- tically the same salts as occur in the waters of the ocean, only at a much highei degree of concentration. Further west in the States of Ore- gon and California, there are a num- ber of lakes of various sizes, contain- ing waters in some cases heavily charged with valuable salts readily recoverable. Especially noticeable among these are the Searles Lake, in the lower part of California; Owens Lake and Mono Lake, in the eastern part of California. These lake waters contain considerable quantities of so- dium carbonate, which is used in the households, as well as industries. The borax content of these waters is also considerable and offers a readily available source for this salt. Some potash is recovered, and a great quan- tity of common table salt is also ob- tainable from these lake waters. The origin of these salts is in many cases hard to trace. In some cases they are undoubtedly due to an arm of the ocean becoming land-locked and the water gradually evaporating, pro- ducing concentrated salt solutions, but since in some there are present salts which do not occur in the ocean waters, it has to be assumed that these salts have been leached out from the surroundings, in mest cases high mountain ranges. The war, with its accompanying high prices for chemicals, has brought these lake waters to the attention of the American Chemical society, and plants are already established and are being established on the edges of these lakes where, through solar evaporation, as well as artificially, va- rious salts are separated from each other and obtained in marketable con- dition. A remarkable incident with these waters is the fact that they seem to be continuously fed from subterrane- an sources, since they maintain prac- tically a uniform concentration of salt solutions. The natural evaporation, which takes place from the surface of the lakes during the hot, dry season, does not seem to materially vary the salt percentage in the lake waters. The waters of these lakes belong to the people of the United States, and whoever places a pipe line to the edge of the water and pumps the water out of them has the right to the salt con- inte of the same, without any further cost. Airmen’s Sensations in Battle. | of a second later. i Then an almost solid wall of air nearly threw me on “The most striking thing to me | my ‘beam ends,’ and I was really hard about being under gun fire in an ae- put to to get the reeling machine back roplane is the unreality of it,” said a | on an ‘even keel. For the next mile British aviator who has been flying in or two the air was like the water in Flanders since the outbreak of war. |the wake of a big side-wheeler—all The roar of your own engine drowns | chopped to pieces—and the machine i the sound of the guns on the earth, : rocked lil ingless tor lor ae ; and even the detonations of the shells | iy ae 2 3g The pi 8 hid It is said that more than eight mil- | weather of Sunday afternoon proba- Se a big | which do not burst very close at hand | turbed for some seconds after a big are rarely heard. Shrapnel bullets ftv | your astern told me the ‘42’ had come in a broad cone Sirah ahead—that { to earth.”—Lewis iis, in the same direction as that in} Popular Mechanics. { which the shell itself is moving—so AN i that practically the only shell that i ever does any harm to you is the one which bursts directly beneath your machine, and which, therefore, vou do not see explode. The littie puff balls | of smoke which blossom out around vou are perfectly harmless. At the worst a few of their spent bullets may shower back upon you, sometimes so gently that you can see, and even reach a hand and catch them. A shell | bursting even immediately over you !is not dangerous in itself, but rather ominous as indicating the Tact that the ‘Archies’ have you well ranged. The back kick from the shell-casing mighc stun you if it hit you on the head, but the chance of that is almost negligible. “Ordinary heavy artillery is rarely used against air craft, but occasional- ly one’s work takes him inte an air zone in which some of the big shells are traveling. This is cne of the most remarkable experiences that can fall to the lot of an airman; in fact, the weirdest sensations of my whole fly- ing experience ars connected with the occasion on which I blundered into the road of a passing ‘42. “As you doubtless know, the Ger- mans have used their 17-inch guns for the intermittent bombardment of Dunkirk, and other points 15 or 20 miles behind the lines, right down te the present time. Well, I was at an altitude of about 6,000 feet one dav, and climbing higher at an easy angle, when one of these big fellows, almost at the end of its long flight, came plowing along in the opposite direc- tion. First a dark little blur appear- ed in the air ahead, and at an angle of about 35 degrezs—a little steeper than the one at whick 1 was climbing —above me. coming right at me, and I swerved to the left in an instinctive effort to dodge the threatened blow. Then a sort of droning hum became audible, even above the roar of my engine, and | At first it seemed to be i I | i | R. Freeman, in More Than 3,500,000 Rotor Cars. In 1916 there were 1,067,332 more motor cars registered in the United States than in 1915. This was an in- crease of 43 per cent. The gross total of registered cars, including commer- cial cars, was 3,512,996; the number of motorcycles registered was 250,820. The several States collected in regis- tration and license fees, including those of chauffeurs and operators, a total gross revenue of $25,865,396.75. | Of this amount 92 per cent. or $23,- 910,813, was applied directly to con- struction, improvement or mainte- ! nance of the public roads in 43 States, | according to figures compiled by the office of public roads of the United ! States Department of Agriculture, in | Circular 73, “Automobile Registra- | tions, Licenses and Revenues in the United States, 1916.” i The figures for 1916 correspond very closely with the annual percent- | age increase of motor car registration | of the last three years. This yearly | increase has averaged 40 per cent. in | the number of cars and 50 per cent. in | revenues. When viewed over a period of years, | the increase in motor car registration and gross revenue has been remarka- | ble. In 1906 the total State registra- | tions were approximately 48,000 cars, | on account of which several States ! collected in fees and licenses a total | gross revenue of about $190,000. Only | a small part of this was applied to | road work. In 1916 the $25,865,369.- | 75 collected formed nearly 9 per cent. | of the total rural road and bridge rev- enues of the States. | Recent years have shown an in- | creasing tendency to put the spending | of the motor car revenues directly in | the hands of the State highway de- | partments. Of the total amount ap- | plied to road work in 1916, 70 per | cent., or $16,411,520, was expended ! more or less directly under the con- | i { | 1 i { i i | | this sound increased during the two or | trol or supervision of the State high- three seconds that elapsed before the | way departments. big missile came even with and swept by me. It was probably several hun- dred yards away, at its nearest, but | the distance seemed less. “A few faint stirrings of air began to rock my machine even before the shell went by, but the full force of the ‘air wash’ was not felt for a fraction Only 13 States did | not exercise any direct control over the expending of the net automobile revenues. Several million acres of land in | California are shortly to be irrigated ! at a total cost of $10,000,000 or $15,- | 000,000. : 1 fread.) ERE stretched to fit.) MICHELI 8 Ways to Judge Tires How much does the tire weigh? ( Michelins weigh 12 to 15% more.) How thick is the tread? (The Michelin Universal has a double-thick How large is the traction surface ? (In the Michelin Universal three-quarters of the tread bears on the ground.) Does the inner tube fit naturally? (Michelin Tubes do, though other tubes are Is the price right? (Michelin Tires, though the besi you can buy af any figure, are moderate in price.) Organization behind the tire? ( Economical Efficiency is the Michelin watchword. ) Experacnce of the tire-maker ? Y (Cichelin invented the pneumatic automobile tire. ) P What do users gay ? i (Ask them and you will be convinced) GEO. A. BEEZER, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. (/ 3) Qa; 3 art STANDS FOR POWER. EFFICIENCY. Effective March 1st, Prices Advanced as Follows: FOURS. Touring from $ 940.00 to $ 985.00 Roadster 5 930.00 ‘985.00 Everyweather “1,140.00 *“ 1,185.00 Chassis i 850.00 ““ 885.00 North Water St. 61-tf. DURABILITY. SIXES. Touring from $1,180.00 toz$1,250.00 Roadster “1,170.00 41,250, Everyweather * 1,380.00 "1,450. Chassis “1,090.00 ::%1.150.00 Heaslet Victoria Top 1.450.00 :* 1,575.00 Exten. ** * 1,450.00 1,500.00 BELLEFONTE, PA. Honest Clothes Priced Honestly AT THE FAUBLE STORES. We will surely surprise and please you with the values we are showing. We will prove to you that The Best Clothes made in America are here, and our prices will positively show you a big saving. FAUBLE’ Allegheny St. " BELLEFONTE, PA. 58-4 LYON @ COMPANY. Lyon & Company’s July Clearances bring wonderful values. We still have a full line of colors in stripes and floral designs in voiles that we sold so fast at 10c. The bettter quality voiles that sold at 20 and 25 cents now must go at 14c. Everything in wash fabrics must be sold now at great reductions. ) CHILDREN’S HOSE. One lot of Mercerized Hose for infants in light blue, pink and sand shades, sizes, 4 1-2 to 6. included qualities 25 cents, our price 12 1-2c. Ladies’ Out Size Silk Hose. One lot of black Silk Hose, out size, regular values 90c, our price 350c. WHITE SALE. We are going to continue our White Sale of Under Muslins, Night Gowns, Drawers, Petticoats, Corset Covers, En- velope Chemise, Camisoles, at less than cost to make them. White Shoes. All our White Summer Shoes for Ladies and Children, in high and low, at less than cost to manufacture. Also Men’s Fine Dress and Work Shoes at greatly reduced prices. Come in and see what great bargains we have. Lyon & Co. -.. Beilefonte.