~~ A A EB I RA ER TR, Bellefonte, Pa., February 21, 1919. LO, THE POOR INDIAN! OF THE PAST. Canada Has Given Them Prosperity and Robbed Them of Romance. THING Winnipeg, Canada.—Canada has transformed its Indians. It has rob- bed them of romance, but it has given them prosperity. ; Eagle Feather, the old Chief, cranks his automobile in front of his farm- house. He climbs into the seat be- hind the wheel. “Come on, children,” he calls, “or you'll be late for school.” Five happy-faced youngsters romp out of doors, kiss their mamma good- bye on the front porch and the ma- chine purrs off along the road through the wheat fields and orchards for the little red schoolhouse. Old Eagle Feather drives back home and does a day's plowing. That’s the Canadian Indian today. Gone are the glories of the warpath, the paint and feathers, the yelling tri- umph of lifting scalps. You tell an Indian only by the color of his skin and his straight, black hair. Other- wise he is just iike ordinary country folks. . “Canada has solved its Indian prob- lems,” said William Graham, Commis- sioner of Indian Affairs of western Caiyda. “Canada has civilized him. “)he Canadian Indian today is an educated farmer. He is a Christian and goes to church regularly every Sunday—often drives there with his family in his automobile. His chil- dren go to school. He makes his liv- ing by cultivating the soil. He is as good a farmer as his white neighbors —sometimes a better one. Govern- ment agricultural experts visit him periodically. They teach him the lat- est scientific methods of cultivating the land. Many Indians are agrono- mists in the highest cultural sense. The new generation is keen to learn and progress and become the equal of the white men in every way. “The richness of Canadian soil has had much to do with changing the In- dians. They have seen their white neighbors taking fortunes out of the ground with a plow and it has encour- aged them to do likewise. Some of the Indians raise forty and fifty bush- els of wheat on their farms and have snug bank accounts. If Canada was not such a wonderful agricultural country training the Indian into the ways of civilization might have been more difficult.” The Commissioner said there was no foundation for the common belief that the Indians were gradually dying out. The Indian population of Cana- da has been increasing for the last ten years. Better living conditions, educa- tion and medical attention are account- able for this. There are 100,000 In- dians in Canada. Indians in western Canada put under cultivation 100,000 acres of land last year. They produc- ed 400,000 bushels of wheat. All the Indian reserves are self-supporting. Two thousand Indians enlisted in the Canadian army, went overseas and upheld their old warpath tradi- tions in the war against the Hun. TET IT WAS MADE IN PHILADELPHIA When he comes home wearing that distinguished Service Medal, distin- guished Service Cross or a medal awarded to sharpshooters you can tell him it was made in Philadelphia. Nearly every medal that the United States confers on the officers and en- listed men is made in the Philadelphia mint. For the War Department alone the mint is turning out forty types of ‘medals. Before Marshals Foch, Haig and Joffre and other distinguished Al- lied commanders received their badges of honor they were sent from that city to the War Department and aft- erward to the army headquarters abroad. The American Distinguished Service Medal was called by Marshal Foche the handsomest military deco- ration awarded. About five hundred of these medals of bronze and brilliant blue enamel are made every week in this city, and after they are received and approved by the War Department are shipped to the camps and army headquarters at home and abroad. About five hundred Distinguished Service Crosses are made in Philadel- phia every week. Nearly six thousand of these have gone from the Mint. The small squares of bronze are treat- ed rough. Under the die in a huge hydraulic press capable at the begin- ning of exerting one hundred pounds’ pressure the bit of metal is placed again and again untii at the last or tenth impression it receives 250 tons’ pressure. The piece of bronze, now stamped to conform with the design of the die, is taken to a machine where the work- men cut out the cross. The cross is received by workmen who made for it little bars, from which it is suspend- ed. Ribbons are attached, and the decoration is placed in a box ready for delivery. The United States Navy Medal of Honor and various kinds of medals which are awarded for sharpshooting marksmanship and other honors of seryige are manufactured at the Mint. “Fhe authorities at the Mint in ad- dition to manufacturing these medals are busy with orders for 10,000 Mexi- can Service medals, attractive bronze discs for men who were in the Vera Cruz expedition. Now that the Peace Conference at Paris has approved the award of a medal to every man who served in any of the Allied armies, the Phila- delphia Mint may be called on to man- ufacture medals by the million. ——The so-called daylight saving plan, which was put info effect last year for the first time and which met with complete, general approval, does not need any action by Congress or any other body to make it effective for this and succeeding years. The Act of Congress provides that the clocks were to be set ahead an hour on the last Sunday of March at 2a. m. last year “and each succeeding year.” The daylight saving plan therefore goes into effect automatically this year, MUSIC AUDITORIUMS IN MEM- ORY OF DEAD. Of the multitudinous suggestions flying about these days for memorials of war service, none is more reasona- ble than that which looks toward the building of great music auditoriums. When everything is said and done, it really was remarkable how much the singing of patriotic music in com- munity aided us in our scamper of preparation for the war. The spirit desired was born. We sang, and our nerves tingled, and determination flushed in us. Such music may not have been the noblest technical plan, but it did its work. That splendid permanent halls for music should be erected in memory of the deeds of our various bodies of sol- diery, therefore, seems not unfitting. Practically every State, every munic- ipality, in the country is going to do something. San Francisco, Milwau- kee and Syracuse, in particular, so far, are agitating for music auditor- iums. In a smaller way, Pueblo, Col., is going to install a pipe organ, in memory of the Pueblo county dead, in the new City Hall. As the city nearest to us, Syracuse is of interest, with its very large pro- ject. The hall contemplated there is expected to cost more than a million dollars, and will be a great civic cen- tre. In addressing the Syracuse Cham- ber of Commerce and congratulating them upon the progressive attitude of their city, John C. Freund, president of the Music Alliance, said: “No more fitting memorial can be given to those who have died for the cause than these structures. The day of triumphal arches, statues and fountains is passing. Our time de- mands that which is vital, that which gives service, that which is distinctly human in its touch and in its appeal.” If, for instance, the setting apart of the week surrounding Washing- ton’s Birthday for a big annual “sing” is to go through, the use of such great memorial music halls would aid ma- terially in the celebration. This year the week from February 16 to February 22 is being observed in this fashion. Wonders of Trinidad. “A wonderfully momentous place is Trinidad,” said Charles R. Toothaker, curator of the Philadelphia Museums. “Trinidad is 2000 miles south of New York. It is smaller than the State of Delaware, having an area of about 1755 square miles, yet there are many miles of unexplored and unused land. “Some of the largest cocoa indus- tries in the world are in Trinidad, the annual production being 60,000,000 pounds or more, representing an av- erage valuation of $67,000,000. Next to that comes sugar, the total being $2,500,000 worth in a fair year. Oth- er agricultural enterprises are the oroduction of rubber, bananas, cocoa- nuts and other tropical fruits. The production of rubber has grown very greatly. The rubber industry in Trin- idad is just beginning, but it is begin- ning in the right way. “Trinidad is better known for the production of asphalt than for any- thing else. It has one of the most curious lakes in the world—a lake of pitch. You can go on that lake, walk over it, and even pick up the pitch and scarcely soil your hand. It is a very peculiar kind of pitch. “Geologically considered, Trinidad is part of the South American main- land. It is not regarded as one of the Antilles, being an island by itself. The exploitation of its asphalt depos- its is very largely a Philadelphia en- terprise. A law of Trinidad says the deposits must be worked by British capitalists. There is a company or- ganized under the laws of Great Brit- ain, with offices in London, the New Trinidad Asphalt company of London, but when you come down to the final analysis it is a Philadelphia concern, after all. “There are about 300,000 inhabit- ants, of whom nearly 200,000 are Hin- doos, 80,000 negroes and 20,000 whites.” Woman’s Eye for Color, The entrance of chemically trained men into the army munition plants and dye industries of the United States has created a labor shortage in the laboratories of the commercial chemist. To meet this contingency, women are being pressed into service as laboratory assistants. The type of work for which the women are fitted appears to be routine determinations, such as silicon, evolution sulphur and color carbon. At one leading plant all tests are run in duplicate until suf- ficient confidence can be placed in the ability of the women to do accurate work. By observing the results of nu- merous duplicate determinations which have extended over a period of several months it appears that the new co-workers are extremely accu- rate in the use of the analytical bal- ance. The same applies to filtering and titration. The results obtained for color carbon were fully as good. In titration work the women are able to distinguish the end points with case. This is equally true in match- ing colors. Their work is character- ized by neatness and order.—Ameri- can Exporter. Regulations to End First of March. Washington.—The last of the war- time coal regulations of the Fuel Ad- ministration still in force will be sus- pended March 1, if the present com- paratively mild weather continues, said an announcement by Fuel Admin- istrator Garfield. These prohibit the shipment of coal for reconsignment and require all shippers of coal mov- ing to tidewater at New York, Phila- delphia, Baltimore and Hampton Roads, to consign such shipments to the Tidewater Coal exchange. Suspensions of the requirements compelling shippers to operate through the Tidewater exchange, the announcement said, will not affect the continued operation of this exchange through any voluntary arrangements made by shippers and the railroad ad- ministration. It also was announced that the Fu- el Administration would retain a skeleton organization “ready for ex- Coal pansion for any emergency.” np RAISED OWN CORN. How American Boys in France Got Delicacy. You should have seen the soldiers raising garden truck for Christmas. The climate of France was strange to them, as was the soil, and some of the vegetables that please the French palate, according to Sterling Heilig in an exchange. But the American buddies tock up winter trucking with a will. Nobody ever raised green corn down there in winter. “Nor in summer, very much, either,” answered the buddies. A few natives used to raise it to sell to Americans of Paris, but they had never tried to eat it, though they raised much yellow corn for meal and fodder. Last summer the doughboys in certain hospital truck farm dis- tricts resolved to have the real thing. At Bordeaux, where they were par- ticularly successful, roasting ears were furnished to the private car of Secre- tary Baker when he made his trip to France. And it was from the secre- tary of war's recommendations. they say that the great American truck farm movement in France quit Red Cross swaddling clothes and became general- 1zed from fighting front to resting rear. In the south of France winter is a good deal like summer, and they raise almost anything. Heroes of Si. Mi. hiel were Letting that they would have green corn for Christmas—and the French natives bet against then. Most of the gardeners were conva- lescents, wounded at St. Mihiel, and hungry for the fresh green things they expected to eat presently. Only those who have been deprived of green stuff so long that they shy at tne sight of a tin can are able to appreciate the value of these real war gardens. For, the fighting over, eating goes on, and, when rutabagas that father used to feed to the cows cost 40 cents a pound, the food problem is clearly stated to every man in the army. The surgeons say the convalescent heroes of Chateau Thierry and St. Mi- hiel need the garden work as much as they need the garden truck. Get the man out, even for half a day, in the light work of truck farming. and you get him out of himself—and away from sitting around hospitals, listening to wounds being dressed and troubles talked over. High British and Aus- tralian neurosis authorities agree, ab- solutely, that working the soil will work more cures than anv other treat- ment. In the army farming in France many see a forerunner of what will happen when Uncle Sam gives little govern- ment farms to his veterans on their re- turn. “We find that the American truck farmer,” says a worker, “after he has talked a little with French truckers and has the lay of the land, turns out better than the Frenchman—by up-to- date methods. Side by side. the little American truck farms in France are superior to truck farms under French gardeners in the suburbs of French cities. It is absolutely demonstrated.” Animals Fear Airships. All animals are terrified by airships. Partridge, quail and other game birds crouch and hide, while domestic fowl utter leud warning notes the instant they perceive the monstrous bird of prey. 2 The Swedish aeronaut, Van Hoffken, while sailing at a moderate elevation, observed that elk, foxes, hares and other wild animals fled at his ap- proach, and that the dogs ran, howling, Into the houses. While the Zeppelin III was going from Dusseldorf to Essen the aero- nauts on board noted that horses and cattle galloped frantically over the fields on catching sight of the air- ship. » Preserving French Treasures. Lille is no exception to the rule that every French center of population has its museum and every such museum has in it something of unique interest. The Palais des Beaux Arts there con- tained before the war the well-known “Tete de Cire,” or rather, head of a girl, in terra cotta and wax, which tra- dition had ascribed to many artists but without any assurance as to the attributions. The wax head was re- moved from the museum to a place of safety before the Teutonic invaders entered the city early in the war. Considerable Kicking. My brother, who was a private at Camp Hancock, was told to harness a team of mules and go several miles out of camp for some hay for the horses. He had never had any experi- ence in doing farm work, but he sa- luted and went about the task. We knew not how he succeeded, excepting In his next letter he informed us that by night the mules had kicked a per- fectly good government harness to leathery ribbons.—Exchange. Hopeful. “Gadspur looks more cheerful these days than I have seen him in a long time.” “Yes,” poor fellow, I hate to disillu- sion him, so I avoid him as much as possible.” “What do you mean?” “He thinks because the war is over the cost of living will soon come down and he will be able to live on his salary again.” Little Rivers Important. In his war ode Dr, van Dyke re- mains loyal to “little rivers.” In his book, “Little Rivers,” he has already made little rivers as Interesting as the little drops of water that make the mighty ocean. Freedom begins at the source. FOUND OLD INDIAN VILLAGE. Interesting Relics, Believed to Be Cen- turies Old, Recently Unearthed in New York State. Relics of an Indian village, said to have its origin as early as 1575, have been discovered in Clason Point, the Bronx, according to an announcement made by the Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. The discov- ery was made by Alan B. Skinner, ar- cheologist of the foundation. The dis- covery is regarded as a very impor- tant one by the members of the foun- dation. Research establishes that the village was probably inhabited by na- tives of the Siwanoy tribe, known to very early settlers as “Snakeskins.” The research, made through the kindness of a trustee of the founda- tion, has established to the satisfac- tion of the board that the tract re- mained in possession of its Indian in- habitants until 1625, when it was pur- chased by Robert Cornell, an English- man. Cornell's family was later mas- sacred by the barbarian tribe. During the attack he managed to make his escape on a Dutch ship. Mr. Skinner was making a pleasure trip through Clason Point, which is somewhat of a summer resort, last July. He noticed very large oyster shells on a mound of sand and recog- nized them as Indian boundary line markings. He obtained permission from the owner of the land to make a search of the ground. To the sur- prise of the searchers, relics of Indian life were unearthed. Costumes, heads, cooking utensils and a complete hair dress of the Siwanoy tribe were dis- covered. Seventy lodge sites, contain- ing hundreds of Indian implements and tools, were also dug up. The collection contained crude har- poons, fishhooks, carved tortoise-shell cups, hodkins and decorated pottery. Hundreds of pipes and a beautiful mold jar were discovered intact, and all are being preserved for public ex- hibition when the museum open i. This history speaks of the Siwanoy practice of digging sand holes and placing large quantities of food and other of- ferings to the “Great Snake.” It was announced at the museum that the relics will be placed on exhibition at the opening of the exhibit. Opportunity Missed. For several years it had been my custom to make a visit on Thanks- giving afternoon at the home of my most particular friend. ‘This last Thanksgiving I missed, as the family was to attend the community singing at 4 p. m. A few days after little Katherine dropped in to see me and asked “Why didn’t you come to see us on Thanksgiving?” “Well,” I replied, “you were not at home in the afternoon.” She then asked: “Why didn’t you come earlier? Why not come for din- ner?” “But,” I jokingly replied, “you didn’t ask me!” “Well,” she replied thoughtfully, *I1 think if you had come early and hung around they'd have asked you !”—Chi- cago Tribune. . Awaiting Instructions. In a letter received from a cousin of mine, who is a lieutenant in the aviation service, he tells of the follow- ing incident that happened tw a cadet fiyer at Kelly field: The cadet was making his first solo flight and had been flying around the towers where the instructors sit and observe the movements of the solo flyers, when he was seen throwing something out of his plane. He had thrown his shoe out with a note tied to it saying that his “gun” or gas throttle was jammed, and he didn’t know what to do. He flew around the towers ten times be- fore he realized that he had a mag- neto switch on his plane that would shut off the ignition and thus stop the engine. He finally landed with a dandy “thump.”—Chicago Tribune. Conscience. It was plain to be seen that Arthur, eight years old, had something on his mind. It was something that con- cerned Christmas and his neighbor, Jimmy, Finally he said to his mother: “I guess I'll give Jimmy his knife for Christmas.” “Have you Jimmy's knife?” mother inquired. “Yes, I found it a long time ago. He thinks it’s lost. But findin’s keep- in’s, you know.” The mother made no comment, for she knew something else was coming. And then her son said: “I might as well give it to him. I can’t use it cause he’s with me all the time.” the Wheat Production. Mean wheat production per acre in the 15 years, 1899-1913, was 42.5 bush- els in Denmark, 85.4 bushels in Ire- land, 35.1 bushels in Belgium, 31.5 bushels in Great Britain, 29.7 bushels in Germany, 20.2 bushels in France, 19.1 bushels in Austria, 18.1 bushels in Hungary, 16.7 bushels in Roumania, and 14.1 bushels in the United States. Bushels of measure are taken for Den- mark, France, Great Britain, Ireland and Roumania; of 60 pounds for the other countries. Family Prayers. Nursie—James, did you know the angels have sent you another little brother? James—Oh, bother; just ziff I don’t have enough folks to pray for every night as it is. His Species. “Jims is a conceited man. He hon- estly believes he is the flower of his family.” “Well, he is their poppy, isn't he?” Big, Bona Fide Reductions ....on all.... Men’s Overcoats sees@bs.... Fauble’s It will be Worth your While See Us ET Ve TT a Ta Te Te Ar LL UU FAUBLE’S ss Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, Pa. Dairy Feed The same energy and money is expended in feed- ing inferior Dairy Feeds as is expended in feeding your Milk Cows a Good, Wholesome BALANCED RATION. The difference is in production. Our Dairy Feed is 100 per cent. pure ; is composed of Cotton Seed Meal, Wheat Bran, Alfalfa Meal, Gluten Feed, Molasses, Fine Ground Oats, Etc., Etc. ; is high in Protein, isa GUARANTEED MILK PRODUCER and at the RIGHT PRICE. Ryde’s Calf Meal A substitute for milk ; better for calves and pigs and not nearly as expensive. Every pound makes one gallon good, rich milk substitute. Beef Scrap, 55 per cent. Protein Brookville Wagons, “New Idea” Manure Spreaders Pumps, Gasoline Engines, Roofing, Etc., Etc. Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store 62-47 DUNLOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS WILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING 3-4 Ton for Light Hauling Big Truck for Heavy Loads “Greatest Distance for Least Cost” GEORGE A. BEEZER, BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR.