EE —— Er —— eeketny tdlt. Bellefonte, Pa ts 25, 1919. MAY HAVE BEEN ERICSSON’S Inisresting Speculation Arising From Discovery of Ancient Galleys Buried in Norway. A traveler in Norway has been look- ing at the two ancient ships, in one of which, though probably in néeiiher, Lief Ericsson may have reached = western worid five centuries Columbus. Nothing proves that either of them was Ericsson's galley; rei ing proves that it wasn’t. The ancieat pagan custom that buried the craft of the sea-hero preserved the gallers away in the soil of Norway, thanks to a covering of potter’s clay, and a twentieth century farmer recovered the second one. The savants looked | it over, and dated it from the ninth century, contemporary with the ad- venturous Ericsson, possibly his own ship. About seventy feet long, the! vessel is shaped not unlike a double- | pointed rowboat, flat and low, with forked uprights for 15 pairs of oars, and the conventional dragon carved on bow and stern. Under the floor are the compartments where the voyages doubtless stored their provisions. One can imagine the watcher at the prow, | the helmsman tugging at the tiller, the | galley master high in the poop beat- | ing with his great hammer the rhythm | for the thirty oarsmen. It is far more | difficult to imagine how they slept and ate in rough weather. > helices SYMBOL CF BRUTE FEROCITY | In All Ages the Tiger Has Been | Famed for Its Strength, Daring and Deep Cunning. It is said that the tiger has never | been made the basis of a royal emblem except by Tippoo, the famous sultan of | Mysore. Tippoo himself was as fero- | cious as a wild animal and kept peur) him a mechanical toy representing a | life-sized tiger worrying the bedy of | a British soldier. When the toy was | wound up the tiger growled and the! soldier groaned and Tippoo smiled. | It may be that the tiger, though the | ideal of brute symmetry and power, has never attained unto the dignity of a royal emblem for the reason that in every language the word for this ani- | mal is a synonym for stealthy, cruel, | strong-limbed ferocity. Nature has, made the tiger unequaled in the com- bination of speed, strength, cunning, ' daring and physical beauty. A tiger's first bounds are so rapid as to bring it alongside an antelope, and a blow. of its paw will stun a charging bull. It has been known to spring over a wall five feet high into a cattle pen and to jump back with a full-grown animal in its jaws. Sportsmen say! that they have known it to carry away the bait while they were putting up the shelters from which to shoot it.— New York Herald. No More “Lykerstanes.” “Lykerstanes,” or stones by the road- gide for resting coffins on while on . the way to the cemetery, are now | things of the past in Scotland. The : root of the word, which is the old Eng-, lish of Anglo-Saxon “lic,” means “a body corpse.” These lykerstanes were the equivalent of the lichgates, common in rural England. Many farms bear names after the ! famous stones, aithough the spell- | ing is changed somewhat, some being | called “Leckerstone” and “Liquorich.” ' One stone is still at Falkland, built into a walk and vuigarly known as “Liquorstone.” Two of the lykerstanes were formers ly in the parish of Addie, at the junc! tion of the road from the Den of Line dores to the churchyard, but they were removed about the beginning of the last century. They consisted of twe unhewn boulders of bluish stone, abou three feet high, and somewhatsquare on the sides and top. Daydreams. Dreams will at times reveal to us how little we have forgotten; but the value of dreams as a key to remem- brance is distorted and diminished by what seems their lack of selection. They blend the past with the present, or with sheer impossibility, in such a hopeless medley. At their best our dreams seem fan- tasies, based upon the real yet wander- ing from it witk erratic inconsequence, of which the possible meaning eludes us. And yet a dream sometimes will revive so much, with miracle as of resurrection. But it is in our day- dreams, when reason still retains the controlling hand, that we most surely touch the past; and daydreams are the poetry of memory, Chaucer. His best tales run on like one of our inland rivers, sometimes hastening a little and turning upon themselves in eddies that dimple without retarding the current; sometimes loitering smoothly, while here and‘there a quiet thought, a tender feeling, a pleasant image, a golden-hearted verse, opens quietly like a water-lily, to float on the surface without breaking it into a rip- ple. He prattles inadvertently away, and all the while, like the princess in the story, lets fall a pearl at every other word. If character may be divined from works, he was a good man, genial, sincere, hearty, temperate of mind, thoroughly humane, and friendly with God and maf.— Lowell, | the morning, Rufus?” Kisses and Beards. It is so easy to understand what the Americans say, because they talk so loud—it is not the same loudness as of the French, and one day I have laughed to hear in a 'bus how girls of the Y. M. C. A. have talked. There was one who was not at all pretty, ex- cept to be young, who has regarded a French gentleman who wore his beard long. “Look,” she said, “what a hor- rible beard. Imagine to be kissed by any one like that. Then they have both laughed. The other one has said then: “I sup- pose his grandfather wore his beard long, so he does the same,” and the first one has replied: “Yes, it is al- ways like that. What was good enough for your grandfather in France is good enough for you.” I was not angry to hear them speak so, because, you know, they were very ignorant. For me, I do not think that they have known very much the emo- tion of to be kissed, or they would have understood that it is not whether or not one has a beard that makes the difference.—London Bystander's Paris Letter. Why He Doesn't Hear It. «This is the fourth morning you've | been late, Rufus,” said the man to his | colored chauffeur. “Yes, sah,” ovahsleep myself, sah.” “Where's that clock I gave you?” “In m’ room, sah.” “Don’t you wind ii up?” “Oh, yes, sah. I winds it up, sah.” “And do you set the alarm?” “Ev'ry night, sah, I set de alarm, sah.” replied Rufus. “I did “But don't you hear the alarm in “No, sah. Dere’s de trouble, sah. Yer see, de blame thing goes off while | 'm asleep, sah.”—Yonkers Statesman. Hard Luck for Some One. The monthly assizes were in prog- ' ress at the mining camp of Howling ' Wolf, and the courthouse was crowded with a motley throng, who took a deep, if somewhat noisy, interest in all the proceedings. The uproar got worse and worse, and at last the judge could bear it no longer. An imposing figure, in a moth-eaten white wig, he rose to his feet and bel- lowed out: “Gentlemen, and also prisoner, 1 must insist on order in the court house. Here I've tried four cases a'- | ready, and haven't been able to hear a single word of the evidence.”—Peaxr- son’s Weekly, London. While Food Is Short. “'Tain’t manners you're eatin’,” said 3iss Brown. “No,” answered Miss Jones; ‘an’ wif fcod scaree Kke it is, 'tain’t goo! Judgment, cither.”— London Answer: to talk while Utilizing Apricot Pits. IF'rom the Popular Science Magazine. California has an annual by-product of 7000 tons of apricot pits, which were formerly sold to Germany and Denmark at $45 a ton. When the war closed this market, and the price dropped to $15, a California chemist bought a supply and started experi- menting. He is now marketing a sub- stitute for olive oil; a meal used in cooking; oil of apricot, known as bit- ter oil of almond; American blue, from which prussic acid can be made, and a number of other by-products, which give a total yield of more than $200 for a ton of apricots. No beer, no work. No work, no wife. No wife, no home. No home—iramp, tramp, tramp, the bums are marching!—Toledo Blade. Longest Day of His Life. A staff officer, noted for his jovial habits, determined to try the rare ex- ous liquors for a season. Late in the evening of the day when he started he met the staff surgeon, who was a theoretical temperance man. “Doctor,” said he, “they say that by abstinence from stimulating drinks a man’s days will be prolonged.” “There’s no doubt of it.” “That is my opinion,” said our col- onel, with a lonesome yawn. “I re- solved to drink nothing today, and it has been the longest day of my life.” —— There, little brewery, don’t you cry; you'll grind sausages by and by. —Memphis Commercial Appeal. 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