' atcha, "Bellefonte, Pa., August 1, 1919. ROOTS OF GRASS AS FOOD: WHAT HOWARD HEINZ FOUND IN ARMENIA. Howard Heinz, who, since his la- bors as the Pennsylvania State Food Administrator ceased, has been head of the American Relief Administra- tion’s mission in Constantinople, is now in Paris with Mrs. Heinz, prepar- atory to returning to America within the next two weeks. While in Paris Mr. Heinz gave out the following report on conditions in the Caucasus, where he made an ex- tensive survey the latter part of April of the food conditions for Mr. Hoover. “The starvation and misery which I witnessed in this region beggar all description,” said Mr. Heinz. “The people were literally dying from lack of food and from disease caused by malnutrition. There were 500,000 refugees who were in need of food and of these, the estimate that 200,- 000 to 250,000 were at the starvation point was a reasonable one. I obtain- ed my figures from the British, who were in occupancy in this territory, from members of the Near East com- mittee, and from the Armenians themselves. “The lack of food among the Ar- menians was so serious that the wom- en actually went into the fields and obtained grass roots, which they cooked into a kind of broth and serv- ed as boiled greens, occasionally get- ting a bit of rice to mix with it. This constituted the principal diet of many. The little children naturally got the worst of this situation because they could not eat such material, and it was among the children that the death rate was the highest. “Jt was difficult to make compari- sons as to the degree of destitution and distress in different districts or towns, but I think the worst situation that came to my knowledge was In Igdir, where there was a larger pro- portion of sickness and a higher death rate than either Erivan or Alezan- dropol. . “Regarding reports of cannibalism, which have come out of this district from time to time, I have been forced against my will to believe these re- ports to be true. a ; “Typhus has been epidemic during the winter and had taken away thous- ands, but with the moderation of the weather it decreased. Cholera ‘was making its appearance, however, and the outlook was threatenting. “Very few crops had been planted in the district, partly because of the lack of agricultural implements, but mainly because of lack of seed. Ar- menia is both a winter and spring wheat country, some of the land ly- ing high and some low. Some seed had recently been obtained from the British and there will be a harvest if | the weather conditions permit, but it | will be very far below normal, I fear, | and entirely inadequate to the needs of the country. ' “Unquestionably most cf these peo- | ple have to be fed for another year. Many of them, as you doubtless un- | derstood, are refugees from Turkey | and these all desire to get back to their homes and till the land they have left; but when they get back I | am sure, from what i kaow of condi- | tions, that they will find very little. | The Turk has despoiled everything: | and they will have nothing on which to commence, neither houses, furnish- | ings, nor tools and implements.” | Since Mr. Heinz made this survey ! of conditions in the Caucasus they ! have been very much improved by the | food that the American Relief Admin- istration has sent to the suffering people there. The American Relief | Administration withdrew its helping hand on June 30, however, and from now on the entire relief of this region | is in the hands of the Far East com- mittee. Mr. Heinz’s work as head of the American Relief Mission in the Bal- | kans has been noteworthy. Braving pestilence, insanitary conditions, and many minor inconveniences and hard- ships of traveling, due to the chaos in which the war left this region, he made an extensive survey of the ter- ritory in order to estimate for Mr. Hoover the requirements of the peo- ple for relief, and in order, also, to open up channels of communication with the outside world so that the re- lief supplies of the American Relief Administration could be poured into the places where the need was the most dire. Army Will Sell Its Excess Horseshoes. Washington.—The War Department may be unwilling to aid the Ameri- can housewife in her fight with the cost of food by placing on the market its 400,000,000 cans of vegetables, $100,000,000 worth of canned meats and its millions of pounds of sugar, all of which have been declared sur- plus supplies, but it showed a few days ago that it is ready to co-ope- rate in other respects to bring down the cost of living. The director of sales in the depart- ment’s surplus property division an- nounced that he is offering for sale approximately 1,099,500 pounds of horse shoes "and 894,000 pounds of mule shoes. No mention was made in the an- nouncement of any agreements with horse and mule shoe producers who might be fearful of such action “preaking the market,” as was the case with the canners and packers. Insects Force Pork Up. According to tests made by the United States Department of Agricui- ture at Beltsville, Md., reports of which have been received at Univer- sity farm, lice add a cent a pound to the cost of pork production. Two lots of hogs of ten each as nearly equal as to the quality of the animals as possi- ble were used in the tests. The two lots were managed and fed in the same way except that one lot was treated for the prevention of lice. In the other the lice were allowed to have their way. At the end of the fattening period it was found that the hogs infested with lice cost a cent a pound more to fatten than those which were not. I EE EE RRA VILLAGE INNS IN JAPAN. With the advent of the “modern ho- tel” in Japan the old inns, or rest- houses, have been to a large extent relegated to obscurity, but some still survive in parts where European trav- elers seldom penetrate. The kind of welcome accorded to visitors in one of the village inns is very far removed from western ideas of hospitality. Here is the interesting experience of a traveler as related in “The Caterer and Housekeepers’ Gazette:” “As soon as I arrived I was con- ducted by the polite hostess into the chief guestroom, which looked out up- on the cool orchard of a temple. “Cushions were brought in, and bright-kimonas. I took off my dusty English clothes, and put on first the lower kimona, made of cotton, and then the gaudy silk one, bright with the colors of the hotel, which its guests display during their stay as openly as an English cricketer his club blazer. “The room, like all Japanese rooms, was bare except for a single decora- tion. There is always a special cor- ner for the room’s ornament, which is sometimes a vase of flowers, some- times a piece of china, sometimes | simply a painting upon silk or a wood- cut. The subjects are not seldom ! such as bring a blush to the European | cheek, but they have no such effect on the Japanese, who seem more con- cerned with the arrangement than the subject of the ornaments. There are strict rules for decoration; it is laid | down, for example, that flowers of different colors should not be mixed in one vase. | “At length, because I was famish- | ing, a low table and a brazier were brought in and set in front of me and my cushions. : “Every time I thought I had finish- ed, the hostess or one of the maids would trip in with another tray- of dishes and put them before me on the table. Had I not been able to use chopsticks before, I should certainly have become expert by the end of that long meal. “A little while after the meal—for it did end at last—I was told that the bath was ready. I was taken to the open courtyard and introduced to the arrangements there. “Two huge barrels were sunk in the earth, one filled with hot, the other with cold water. There was a thin screen on two sides—not against pry- ing eyes, but simply to keep off the wind. Indeed, as I began to take off my kimonas an interested audience of both sexes turned to watch me. This was unpleasant, and I did my best to dodge their gaze behind the screen. “I might have saved myself the trouble. A moment later, in reply to the calls of the innkeeper and his wife, their daughter came up hastily to bathe me, as her duty was. She was not in the least embarrassed— and I soon had other things to worry me, for when, at the young lady’s di- rection, I let myself down into the hot tub I discovered that, in the usual Japanese fashion, the heat of the wa- ter in it was not less than 115 degrees Fahrenheit. “Up to my neck in that hot bath I suffered exquisite torture, which turn- on the still hotter kettle lying on the bottom of the tub. The inkeeper’s daughter pulled me out, red as a lob- ster and very nearly boiled. She dropped me, more dead than alive, in- to the cold tub, pulled me out again, and dried me. “Then she bowed politely, and left me to return to my room.” Flowers of ‘the States. Nearly all of the States have adopted an official flower says the American Forestry Association of Washington, D. C., and in those that have not the question is up for discus- sion. The flowers by States follow: Arizona, Giant Cactus. Arkansas, Apple Blossom. California, Golden Poppy. Colorado, Blue Columbine. Connecticut, Mountain Laurel. Delaware, Peach Blossom. Florida, Orange Blossom. Georgia, Cherokee Rose. Idaho, Syringa. Illinois, Violet. Indiana, Carnation. Iowa, Wild Rose. Kansas, Sun Flower. Kentucky, Trumpet Vine. Louisiana, Magnolia. Maine, Pine Cone and Tassel. Massachusetts, Mayflower. Michigan, Apple Blossom. Montana, Bitter Root. Nebraska, Goldenrod. Nevada, Sage Brush. New Mexico, Cactus. New York, Rose. North Carolina, Daisy. North Dakota, Wild Prairie Rose. Ohio, Scarlet Carnation. Oklahoma, Mistletoe. Oregon, Oregon Grape. Rhode Island, Violet. South Dakota, Pasque Flower. Texas, Blue Bonnet. Utah, Sego Lily. Washington, Rhododendron. Wyoming, Indian Paint Brush. West Virginia, Indian Paint Brush. Wisconsin, Violet. ——They are all good enough, but the “Watchman” is always the best. Sorry She Missed It. A young woman on being introduc- ed to Sir Robert Ball, expressed her regret that she had missed his lecture the evening before. “Qh, I don’t think it would have in- terested you,” said Sir Robert; “it was all about sun spots.” “Was it really ?” she replied. “Then it would have greatly interested me, for betwwen you and me, Sir Robert, I have been a martyr to freckles all my life.” AS Were a jelly to “jel Thousands of womea are finding the ideal preserving syrup is a blend of 3 Karo (Red Label) with 4 sugar— instead of all sugar. Preserving done this way is always uniform—jelly that really “jells”—jam that is neither EJ I. © Ox ahs ZS fa = YVR LL) you ever disappointed with your Home-made Preserves? Even the best recipe can’t make allowances for the way sugar will harden into candy—or for the failure of 9» ° too syrupy nor too thick. It gives you preserves with the natural fresh fruit flavor. This fine, clear Karo Syrup has a natural affinity for the juices of the fruit. It blends the fruit with the sugar— makes your syrup rich and heavy, and holds jams and jellies firm and mellow, with not the slightest tendency to “candy” in the glass. For Cooking, Baking and Candy Making Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. In all cooking and baking recipes use Karo instead of sugar. It is sweet, of delicate flavor, and brings out the natural flavor of the food. : 'n Tes & , LC LC a lll i — —————— a — Homebound Exodus to Take 40,000 Pittsburgh Workers. Pittsburgh.—Forty thousand for- eigners, drawn from the iron, steel, coal and glass industries of the Pitts- ' burgh district, have made application | I ed to complete agony when I stepped! for accommodations on steamers sail- ing for Europe. Of these fully 10,000 will leave the Beaver Valley district, where many thousands of foreigners are emplayed in the big steel works at Midland, Woodlawn, Ambridge and the industrial concerns in Beaver, Rochester and other Ohio river towns. |: Approximately 30,000 from the Mo- nongahela Valley, the Allegheny Val- ley and the Youghiogheny Valley dis- tricts are seeking passports and transportation to their native lands on the Continent. The major portion of these immigrants are Italians, Aus- trians, Hungarians, Poles, Jugo-Slavs, Zecho-Slovaks and Rumanians. From the coal mining districts comes the incessant wail for miners; the coke regions about Uniontown and Connellsville are daily calling on the big labor bureaus here for men; Monongahela, Charleroi, McKeesport and other big manufacturing towns in the Monongahela Valley are scouring the district for help; in fact, the clamor has become so great that many of the largest manufacturing concerns here have sent agents into other sections of the country in an ef- fort to round up men. Added to the man-power problem is the gradually increasing demand for steel, iron, coal, glass and prod- ucts peculiar to the Pittsburgh dis- trict and there is no attempt among the large industrial concerns to hide the fact that they soon will be push- ed to their limit to care for the orders on hand without thought of any that may come to this district in the near future. As a matter of fact, few big man- ufacturing concerns know just how long they will be able to find sufficient labor. With the present exodus grad- ually gaining impetus, many of the largest concerns may find it impossi- ble to operate within the next sixty days. Few if any of the thousands of foreigners going to Europe are will- ing to say when they will return to the United States. “FALL SUITS $80.” Mills Three Months Behind, Says Cincinnati Tailor. Cincinnati.—“Owing to the scarcity of woolens, lack of skilled tailors, short hours on which mills and tailors are working, the prices of clothing will be the highest the world ever has known next year,” is the prediction made by Harry Smith, local tailor. “Mills now are three months be- hind on samples for the coming year. Even in London the price of a suit will be $75 this fall, and Eastern tail- ors estimate that they will be forced to charge between $80 and $100 for their suits.” FREE Easy to follow. The Corn Produ somely CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. NATIONAL STARCH CO., Sales Representative 135 South Second Street Use % Karo and'2 sugar Makes orice preserves. red Jams, ellies illustrated—and it's free. A book of sixty-eight pages that gives you the best recipes for sure results in preserving. cts Cook Book is hand- Write us today for it. P. O. Box 161, New York City Philadelphia, Pa. E— —p gi @ a (CRYSTAL WHITE) Te —- { { OFFICIALLY —QOVER=— LAER — Stan EIS EERE HE almanacs advise that summer will be over September 21st. Think of it! Over two solid months of hot weather ahead. Take our advice, approved by sensible men—let us fit you out with our hot weather clothes. Why endure discomfort .when at exceptionally low prices you may be both coolly and eonomically clad in any one of our wide assortment of HIGH-ART CLOTHES Made by Strouse & Brothers, Inc., Baltimore, Md. Sms SUE for hot weather wear? Banish those ideas of ill-fitting makeshifts. Light as these clothes are, their unusual tailoring gives them the lasting quality of style peculiar to heavier clothes. Eman- cipate yourself today! A RL LTR SRERERL RSs FAUBLE'S ws Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. Your Banker The institution with which you main- tain banking relations can be of service to you in many ways. The Centre County Banking Co. does not consider that its service to its pa- trons ceases with the safeguarding of their funds. It keeps in personal touch with all of them in such a way as ‘to be of assistance very often when other matters develop affecting their interest. It Invites You to Take Advantage of Its Unusual Service. 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. PAAAAAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANT ANNAN NAAN