NE SET RR Bellefonte, Pa., October 12, 1917. NEW GOLD FIELDS IN RUSSIA Rich Platinum Deposits Have Recent- ly Been Found on Tributaries of the River Lena. As in everything else, the old regime of Russia had its strangle hold on the gold industry. Siberia and the Ural could be considered the classical parts of the world where deposits of precious minerals abound and under a free and progressive government they could easily lead all the other parts of the world. The Russian press is full of news items chronicling new discoveries ‘of gold and platinum deposits, as well as other rare metals. So from Krasnoyarsk, in Siberia, came the news that in the northern and southern Enisey mountain districts the gold seekers have lately washed gold to the amount of about 8,280 pounds. From the Lena, well known as a gold-bearing river, comes the word that new rich gold and platinum deposits were discovered on her tribu- taries, Wily and Markha. With the laying of the tracks of the Amur railroad there is almost a con- tinuous procession of discoveries of new deposits of precious metals, espe- cially on the rivers Burea and Khara; all the deposits are not far from the ‘new-laid tracks and offer all the op- portunities for a successful develop- ment of the newly discovered deposits. —Russian-American Journal of Com- merce. WHAT FAMILY SHOULD EARN Figures Given by Auditor Will Prove Interesting to Average Head of a Household. In a story printed in July American Magazine, an auditor says to a friend: «¢You admit that you, as a busi- ness, with your $1.60 cash, and your coal and your furniture, and your wife, and your children, are worth $259,000, and then you say $2.080 is enough in- come to expect from the lot! About eight-tenths of 1 per cent per annum! And they ought to bring you 4 per cent at least—$10,000. “Dix opened and closed the blue- covered document. “ ‘You mean—you mean I ought to be earning $10,000 a year? he faltered. “¢you and your family are one con- cern—one business” said Markley. ‘You are the business manager. Your assets are $250,000. If assets can't earn 4 per cent they are not worth having. It looks to me as if you had said to yourself: “I and my family are a one-horse concern; the family is no good, and I'm not much better. Tm the only decent asset and I'm cheap and my family is cheaper. I'm getting $2,080 a year, and I ought to be glad I'm getting it—I doubt if I'm worth it.”’” Speaking of Flags. A young man walked into the office of J. H. Houk, clerk of the Bartholo- mew circuit court and also clerk of the Bartholomew county exemption board. He asked whether he had been drawn in the draft and was shown that he would be among the first called up for examination. Then he called for a blank on which to file a claim for exemption. He said he would claim exemption because he is married. He has no children, but he believes his first duty is to support his wife. On each side of the front of the young man’s collar big American flags were pasted. “The next time a man comes in here with flags on his collar and says he is going to claim exemption,” declared Clerk Houk, “I am going to refuse to give him a blank until he hauls down his flags.”—Indianapolis News. Bomb Spares War Motto. One of the buildings wrecked in a recent enemy airplane raid on London was a branch office of a religious printing organization, which had its show window filled with illuminated mottos sold for wall decoration. The shop and its window was com- pletely wrecked, but one motto, pinned to a pillar which remained standing, stood out in striking promi- nence. It bore this verse from Mat- thew: “And ye shall hear of wars and ru- | mors of wars; see that ye be not troubled, for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.” Developing Human Powers. Great persons are such an asset to the world that it is strange the world | has not deliberately tried to cultivate | them, as it cultivates flowers and fruits, producing new and surprising varieties. Perhaps after this war, which we all hope is going to bring | such marvels in the way of compensa- | tion, it will bestir itself in this regard. | Making the world safe for democracy | may lead to the developing of the lat- | ent powers in humanity that offer the material for the highest kind of aris- tocracy and that make sure the con- tinuity of progress.—Exchange. | i | Hadn't Seen It All. “I'm so dissatisfied with my shabby | little home after seeing hers.” “Yes, but you saw only her house and furniture. You didn’t see the rest of the family.”—Life. J More Atrocity. | He—I see they are cutting down the | supply of gas in Germany. She—Isn’t it just awful? I suppose | they want to use more of it against the | allies’ soldiers in the trenches. VIRTUES OF FLANDERS MUD Many Men Have Saved Their Lives by Flopping Into It When Big Shells Come Their Way. Mud in Flanders is awful stuff, but it has its uses. Who that has tramped the three miles or so from the walls of ruined Ypres to the line that stretches from Hooge, in#front of Zillebeke, to Hill Sixty and beyond, has not blessed the mud? All across the muddy fields, slipping, sliding and plowing along, we used to follow no pathway, avoiding when possible fields where enemy shells were falling. Then came, soon- er or later, the inevitable droning, rushing sound, to grow into a shriek as a big Boche shell came over, writes Frederic Coleman in the Saturday Eve- ning Post. One was thankful for the mud, then, for the advice I will give to a man under such circumstances, unless his job is such that delay must be avoided, is to go down flop! quick! into the mud. The quicker and the more flop and the more mud the better. That is my way of looking at it. Once you are down all your worries are over. Let her come! If the shell lands on you there will not be enough of you left to do any worrying with. If it does not land on you the odds are over- whelmingly in favor of your escape from all injury. Many a lad has lain flat in the mud when a big “Black Maria” landed near and dug a hole into which you could put a couple of taxicabs, and never been a bit the worse for it. Yes, the mud has its uses. MISTAKEN FOR GRAND DUKE “God Forbid, | Am an Honest Man!” Replied Russian Army Leader, in Reply to Salutation. An amusing story is going the rounds in Petrograd just now concerning Gen- eral Brusiloff, who can be very direct and brusque in his manner when he chooses. The army leader happened to be in the capital on business—this was be- fore the revolution—and was mistaken by an officer passing for a certain grand duke of notoriously pro-German sympathy. Coming smartly to the salute, the officer, who probably, judging from his manner, had some petition for pre- ferment to present, led off with the re- mark: “Pardon me, sire, but I believe I am addressing the Grand Duke So-and- so?” “God forbid!” replied General Brus- iloff, “I am an honest man.” And saluting gravely in his turn he passed on. Politely Searched. A well-dressed man leaving a Wash- ington theater recently, absorbed in reflection on the performance he had just witnessed, noticed a crowd of theatergoers lingering at the entrance. The W. D. M. did not flatter himself that he was the center of attraction, although he had been somewhat prominent in his home town, and, glancing backward, saw a party leav- ing the theater, of which the president was the center. This was the cause of all the commotion. At this junc- ture the W. D. M. lost his equilibrium, stumbled and fell in a heap in the president’s path. An alert corps of ever-present secret-service men, in- stantly on the job, lifted the prostrate W. D. M. to his feet and courteously brushed him off, handing him his hat, cane and glasses. The W. D. M. later confessed to friends that he had a faint suspicion that in the brushing process he had been systematically and incidentally ‘frisked” for con- cealed weapons.—Indianapolis News. How Deaf Mutes Feel Music. According to teachers of deaf mutes, musical instruction is more important as an educational factor for the deaf child than it is for the hearing, says the Popular Science Monthly. The parts most sensitive to vibra- tions are the chest, head, lungs and feet. “An exciting feeling comes up through the floor,” is the way one deaf boy describes it. “Without music I would be lonesome,” wrote a little Italian deaf mute. “It gives me a strong shock through the feet to the head,” stated another. Others, wlren asked to explain their sensations, said : “J feel it in my temple and in my legs.” “I feel it through my whole body,” and «I feel it in my chest and lungs.” Ci He Picked Up a Living. Sir John Kirk, who recently cele- brated his fiftieth anniversary of work in connection with the Ragged School union, tells an amusing anecdote of how he once questioned a London waif whom he had befriended as to his method of earning a living. The young fellow’s reply was typical of the London street arab. “Well, guv’nor,” he said, “it’s like this. I picks strawberries in the sum- mer, I picks ’ops in the autumn. In the winter I picks pockets, and, as a rule, I'm pickin’ oakum for the rest of the year.” Korean Gods Under German Influence. . Koreans are great rumor mongers. Some stories they spread are fantas- tically absurd. One recently prevail- ing among the country people, because no rain fell for many days, was to the effect that the long drought was due to German influence with the gods, in revenge for the part Japan has taken in the war, says East and West News. Predictions of famige were current among the Korean farmers and recent heavy rainfall has not altogether re- moved the anxiety felt among that class | of people on the peninsula. CE ———————— in the HOOVER'S LATEST PLEA TO FARMERS: “HOGS, MORE HOGS AND STILL MORE HOGS” Deficiency in Fats How More Serious War Factor Than Bread Grain Situation—Tells Public Safety Men Pennsylvania Has the Best Organization Country. To the assembled representatives of the county organizations of the Com- mittee of Public Safety for the Com- moenwealth of Pennsylvania, in session at Philadelphia, Herbert C. Hoover, Federal Food Administrator, gave his latest and most important message to the people and more particularly the farmers of the United States. “Hogs, more hogs, and still more hogs,” is the slogan of his new ap- peal. Mr. Hoover's address came in the midst of a food supply conference, arranged by Howard Heinz, chairman of the Department of Food Supply. The attendance of Public Safety Com- mittee chairmen, food supply repre- sentatives, and executive secretaries numbered about 250 and came from practically every county in the state. Governor Brumbaugh, Lieutenant Governor McClain, Auditor General Snyder, George Wharton Pepper, E. T. Stotesbury, and many other men of prominence heard Mr. Hoover join in the assertion that in point of or. ganization and accomplishments Penn. sylvania’s Safety Committee had prov. ed to be the most efficient in the United States. A striking analysis of the food situ- ation was presented by Mr. Heinz, who, in his capacity as Federal Food Administrator for Pennsylvania, has a prominent part in the shaping of na- tional food programs. Mr. Heinz pictured the world meat supply as being short 115,000,000 meat animals, with a shortage of 7,000,000 meat animals in this country alone. The wheat situation is just as bad, he declared. Exemption, ie said, ma: apply to the physical side of the m'l tary problem, but there is no exemg tion for the food forces. Every o. must help in insuring supplies for cu own armies abroad and for our alie in the trendhes. Conservation and production are th problems to which Mr. Hoover gav special emphasis. He said: “Barly in the month of June, whe: I was asked to undertake this pa ticular task, I and the men whom assembled around me at the momen made a short survey of the situatiir by way of organization througacu the United States. We came earl to the state of Pennsylvania in ou wanderings, and after making a shor study of the organization of the state we determined that if we could annex the Committee of Public Safety to the Food Administration we wculd have no further anxiety as to Pennsylvania and also that we had settled the quz"- tion for tem per cent of the peopl of the United States. “We were in no uncertain mind a to that because of the character o' the organization and the way that it was completed. We were confiden that it was sound, sane and woul carry the mesage and carry out the work. ; “Qur first and most important prob: lem is production. Production and conservation are both impelled by the same cause, by the same food shor - age. Europe's Diminishing Production. “In addition to the maintenance of a normal supply, we have the very disastrous condition of continuously diminishing production. It is impossi- ble to take forty million men from productive labor and devote them to war without cutting into the vitals of food production itself. That deficiency has been contributed to by stoppage of cereals and the diminution of ani- mails, until on cereals alone this year’s roduction falls below last year’s by 25 million bushels. Therefore we have a load of over a billion and a uarter bushels of grain to preserve e normal food consumption of our allies. “This is a load that is beyond our capacity, beyond the combined capa- city of the United States and Canada. There is no way of meeting that situ- ation except that after we have ex- ported the last grain that we can ex- port, they must reduce their consump- tion to a point where the two ends meet. “It is physiologically possible to Te- duce the food consumption by forty per cent, but on the other hand, sol- diers in the trenches, men in the shops, working over-time, and mil- lions of women put to physical labor, actually require more food stuff than in times of peace. The net result is that all privation by the reduction of consumption operates upon the most helpless class in the community— that is the old and the women and the children. Farmers Should Right-About-Face. “The problem of animals is one that becomes a problem of practical char- ter to us this very day in the Unit- ed States. Europe with a shortage of fodder and a shortage of imports has first cut her fodder imports rather than her bread grains. The result has been the ruthless killing of animals and out of that has arisen an annual reduction in their animal products. The is burning the candle at both ends. “It means from the fat point of view that we must increase our fat imports into Europe. We may dimin- ish our meat imports for the moment; but when the war is over we will have a call upon us or upon our farmers for enormously increased animal pro- duction. “FKurope has practically always pro- duced her animal products. Compared to the total consumption she has im- ported a comparatively minor amount of fat products. But with diminished animals she will have less demand for fodder and therefore more particu- larly for the production of bread ains. “The people will of necessity turn their agriculture from the production of fodder to the production of bread, and we, in the meantime, must be prepared to take a like turn; in other words, we have exported in the main bread grain, whereas the demand upon us after the war will be for animal products. “Therefore, we must turn the face of our agriculture—we must turn the face of our farmer from the produc- tion of bread grains to the production of animals. This becomes not only a probiem of the future for the nation, but it also becomes an immediate roblem, and our immediate problem is acute. “ During the last year we have slaughtered in hogs alone a large per- centage of the hog population. In other words, whereas we annually slaughter something like 60 per cent of our total hog inhabitants, this year we have slaughtered over 100 per cent. If we take the three pre-war years as 100, we can see that during the last twelve months we have slaughtered 179 hogs, we have exported 215. “This means but one thing. It means that as we have increased our exports of animal products, largely pork products, from 500,000,000 pounds pre-war average to a 1,500,000, 000 pounds in the last twelve months, that we have over-exported the capaci- ty of this country. “Today about 60 per cent of the normal arrival of hogs is reaching the markets in this country, and we are faced with a shortage in fats, and we are faced with that shirtage at the very moment when we must be in- creasing our exports to our allies. “We are facing a large feed crop this year—a crop, in fact, as we calcu- late it, twenty-five per cent greater than the animals we have to eat it. We will, therefore, have a fairly low range of prices for food stuff, and we will with this situation, have a high range of prices in animals Therefore, it must be in the immediate interest of the farmers of this country to raise hogs, more hogs. and still more hogs. More Hogs Needed For Years Ahead. _ “And it ic not only an immediate interest, but it is an interest that will last, not only for the period of the war, but for many years to come, and the greatest help we can obtain from our farming population today, is to get a quick response in animal products. “I have believed that if we could go nrough the state of Pennsylvania, il the farmers of the state that this ountry should raise three more hogs 5 against one of last year, that is hree to one—if they will do that sort t work, it will be serving the country nd be a benefit. “The differemce between democracy nd autocracy is a question of whether yeople can be organized from the bot- om or from the top down. If, in >ur defense, it becomes necessary to Jeanie from the top down I trust we will do so. But the moment we have jone this, we will have undermined ‘he individual, and our own people are -educed to an autocracy. It is, fhere- ore, worth our while to make the ef- ort to carry this thing through on a volunteer basis.” ALLIES CANNOT WIN WITHOUT OUR AID ~od-Given Opportunity For Service Here, George Wharton Pepper Tells Safety Committee Men. Addressing the county representa- ives at the opening of the Public safety conference in Philadelphia George Wharton Pepper, chairman of the state committee, made a stirring appeal for efficient effort in every dis- trict. Mr. Pepper said: “The efficiency of the work that we are going to do for the cause of Pub- lic Safety in this commonwealth is going to depend almost entirely upon the appraisement which we as individ- uals make of the seriousness of the situation in which our country finds itself at the present time. “If a man believes that this war will be over in ninety days, if he be- lieves that it is going to end without serious inconvenience on our part; or, if not that, that at least at the first approach of our advance guard the kaiser is going to state his readiness to come down; if that is the state of mind of a man, I am quite sure that to him the Committee of Public Safety is a quite unnecessary organization; he is not going to spend much time or much energy in its service. “On the other hand, if a man has, as I have, a livisg and burning con- viction that we are in for a long and bloody fight, and that upon the issue of that conflict depends the very ex- istence of the idea of democracy in government among men—if that is the man’s conviction, then he will look upon the work of this Committee of Public Safety as a God-given op- portunity to express the patriotism that is welling inside of him. “It seems superabundantly clear that the allies cannot win this war except at the price of the life-blood of our mothers afad daughters. We must keep on because without our aid the allies cannot win the war, and unless this war is won by the allies the things that we stand for cannot sur- vive or prevail. “There are many of us, I know, who wish to God that we could exchange chairmanships and secretaryships for the more active service on the line; but if we can’t, if they won’t have us on any terms, at least let us consti- tute ourselves an effective support to those that do go to the front, and be the guardians and custodians of the homes that will be waiting for them when they come back. “I speak with a degree of intensity which only faintly indicates the way I feel about the matter. My convic- tions about it are so deep and so burning, and I seem to see the situ- ation so clearly, that I tremble when I ind so many of my fellow-citizens, even in this commonwealth, who do not seem to be aware of the predica- ment in which the world finds itself, and who are unwilling to make even slight sacrifices to the end that Amer- ican ideals in the end may be su- preme. “If we, my friends, of the Commit- tee of Public Safety of the common- wealth of Pennsylvania and its affiliat- ed organizations through the state—if we do not busy ourselves with the effective - organization of this com- monweailth so that we may adequately support the lads that go, and preserve the homes for those of them that wii come back, then we do not deserve tc be called Americans and we are n~ fit to be the representative of th Keystone state.” ! Bush House Block, - HAS NOT GONE UP IN PRICE EVERYTHING All the goods we advertise here are selling at prices prevailing this time last seascu. : shim a— MINCE MEAT. We are now making our MINCE MEAT and keeping it fully up to our usual high standard; nothing cut out or cut short and are selling it at our former price of 15 Cents Per Pound. Fine Celery, Oranges, Grape Fruit, Apricots, Peaches, Prunes, Spices, Breakfast Foods, Extracts, Baking Powders, Soda, Cornstarch. The whole line of Washing Powders, Starches, Blueing and many other articles are selling at the usual prices. COFFEES, TEAS AND RICE. On our Fine Coffees at 25¢, 28¢, 30¢c, 35c¢ and 40c, there has been no change in price on quality of goods and no change in the price of TEAS. Rice has not advanced in price and can be used largely as a substitute for potatoes. All of these goods are costing us more than formerly but we are doing our best to Hold Down the Lid on high prices, hoping for a more favorable market in the near future. LET US HAVE YOUR ORDER and we will give you FINE GROCERIES at reasonable prices and give you good service. SECHLER & COMPANY, 57-1 - - - Bellefonte, Pa. Shoes. SL Gen. I HAVE A FULL LINE OF LADIES SHOES to sell at $3.00. Made of Gun Metal and Cabaretta leather (Cabaretta meaning sheep skin). The styles are lace and button, high and low heels. Many of them are on the English walking shoe style. These shoes are not of a quality that I can conscientiously recom- ing $5.00 will not purchase a pair of Ladies Shoes made to-day, that is absolutely solid. - I have these shoes for the people that do not have the money to purchase a good pair. Yours for a square deal, YEAGER'S, The Shoe Store for the Poor Man. Bush Arcade Bldg. 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. Centre County Must Not be a Laggard. Centre County has a brilliant record for men sent to the front in the cause of a World Democracy. We must not permit this record to be denied because of our failure to provide our share of the funds to maintain them comfortably there. THE SECOND LIBERTY LOAN is now ready ror subscription. Centre county subscribed $600,000.00 of the First Loan and our duty will be to sub- scribe for approximately $800,0c0.00 of this Loan. Will You be One of the Subscribers ? A Government Bond is the safest investment you can make. : We will receive your subscriptions now. Two per cent. must be paid when application is made. 18 per cent. will be due about Nov. 15th and 40 per cent. on or about Dec. 14th and Jan. 15th. This Bank Offers Safety for your Savings and every possible service. ANNE NOAASS A A A CENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. mend to wear, for honestly speak-