i aE Aleworalicoal Bellefonte, Pa., September 19, 1919. USED DIAMONDS AS COUNTERS Miners Who Found Them in Brazil in 1726 Considered Them as Merely Pretty Pebbles. The news from Brazil that a large eompany has been formed to work the diamond mines of that country on 2 more scientific scale in an effort te make Brazil once more an important factor in supplying the world’s most popular gem, recalls one of history's richest jokes. Diamonds were first discovered in Brazil in 1725. But with their pockets full of diamonds, the discoverers were unaware for two years that they had made a discovery. Miners washing for gold in the Minas Geraes district picked up pretty peb- bles from time to time. They thought them worthless and used them for counters in their card games. If they had no money they gambled for the pebbles, winning or losing, in blissful ignorance, a king's ransom in diamonds on the turn of a card. A penniless adventurer drifted into the gold fields in 1727. Some of the miners staked him one evening to a handful of pebbles that he might sit in at a card game. The others played with listless interest, but the new- eomer played with care and skill. He had seen rough diamonds in India and knew what the pebbles were. As a result he won all the pebbles around the table. He did not remain in the fields to wash for gold, but next day hurried to Rio Janeiro and took ship for Lis- bon, where he sold his pebbles for a fortune and lived happily ever after. The rush of diamond hunters to Bra- zil which followed carried back to the miners in Minas Geraes the first inti- mation that they had been rich for two years without knowing it. NO REFUGE IN BANKRUPTCY In Olden Times Severe Penalties Were Meted Out to Men Unable to Pay Their Debts. A curious custom was prevalent in France during the sixteenth and sev- enteenth centuries. Anyone who found it necessary to liquidate his affairs was obliged to wear a green cap—a humility to himself and a warning to others. Those who made a hobby of getting rid of their indebtedness by way of the bankruptcy court should at all costs steer clear of China. Bank- rupteies are almost unknown in that ! country, as they entail immediate ex- ecution. A similar drastic punishment used to be meted out to delinquent in Japan. To come nearer home, one need only go back to a little before the Act of Union to find that debtcis in Scot- land were obliged to wear garments of diverse colors, a suit of gray and yellow being the most common. In Siam, a man unable to meet his liabilities was put in chains and com- pelled to work as a slave for his cred- itor. Should he escape, his wife, chil- dren, father or other relative were seized in his stead. At one time bankrupts were consid- | ered criminal offenders even in Eng- land. As a matter of fact, certain cases of fraudulent bankruptcy have incurred the death penalty in this country. Any concealment of books or the secreting of property by a debtor was so punished. Under this law a man called John Perrot was hanged in 1761.—London Tit-Bits. Tailoring Ancient Art. The art of tailoring, in the western hemisphere, appears to have originat- ed in connection with skin garments rather than those of cloth. In the North, throughout the reindeer and caribou area, well-tailored skin gar- ments were worn, completely cover- tng the body. The Eskimos and the caribou-hunting Indians cut out pieces of skin and fitted them together in intricate patterns like 2 modern tailor. The tailoring art probably began in . China, whence it spread to Europe, thence to the reindeer hunters in Si- beria and across from Asia into the ! new world. Along the Pacific coast the aboriginal Indians were but scant- ily clad and the natives of Patagonia usually wore only a breechcloth, al- though sometimes a capelike robe hanging from the shoulders was used. In Mexico and the Andes region where the art of weaving reacted its height, garments retained the angular form ir which they came from the loom. ft Reha Lord John Russell. | During the years of my uncle’s re- TRIAL CF THE EX-KAISER. There is no parallel in history to the trial of the ex-Kaiser, though for Englishmen the arraignment Charles I, 270 years ago, comes near- est to it. there was really no trial. Charles was adjudged by the remnant of the Com- mons guilty of treason for having lev- ied war against Parliament and the Kingdom of England. The judges re- fused to take any part in the proceed- ings, Charles refused to plead, and it was purely by an act of Parliament that he was condemned to die. Kings and Queens have been tried in their own country by their own sub- jects for breaches of the constitution- al law of those countries. But it has been reserved for William II, a fugi- tive in Holland, so to violate the laws of humanity, that the nations of the world call for his trial. The charges against the ex-Kaiser, which the fore- most lawyers will formulate into the mightiest indictment that the world has cver seen, are clear. Before the world the Kaiser stood as the repre- sentative of the German people, as their war lord. His musi be the re- punishment. with crimes against humanity and against the law of nations, on the ses, from the air and under the sea. But Mr. Lloyd George would seem to sug- gest that Wilhelm is only going to be tried for “breach of treaty.” That it will be assembled at the Old Bailey is unlikely. The largest court in that building becomes inconveinent- er more than an average public inter- est is being held. The Lord Chief Justice’s Court, at the Royal Courts of Justice, is an ample chamber. Rog- Court quite a convenient one for the purpose. Some suggest that the ex-Kaiser mav be arraigned in Westminster Hall, where Charles I and Warren Hastings both faced their judges. But sponsibility, and his, if convicted, the | Where will this great tribunal sit?! | wherever Wilhelm II could be charged, as the | representative of the German nation, | er Casement was tried there for trea- . son, and suitable alterations made the | Vil ithelm II may be put to trial, however appalling the charges on which he is indicted, there is one | thing that he may be assured of, he of | will get a fair trial, with all the pub- 3 : icity of an English court. On that occasion, however, | i German jurists, however, contend that it would be against all establish- ed law and justice to try William of Hohenzollern before a court the Judges of which were composed sole- ly of entente lawyers, as these would not only be the Judges, but the accus- ers at the same time. In which case an unbiased, unprejudiced trial, so they argue, could hardly be expected. Incidentally, a petition signed by 2,- 000,000 Germans has been presented to the German government in defense of the ex-Kaiser, besides one sent by hundreds of thousands of federated clubwomen, and, to top it ail, Prince Henry of Prussia, the ex-Kaiser’s brother, has sent a personal letter to his cousin, King George of Iingland, offering his word and substantial proof that the ex-Kaiser was not re- sponsible for starting the war. All he asks is to be permitted to demon- strate this before the public by irre- futable evidence. This, the adds, does not mean that he would ask for mercy. All he demands is justice and a fair and squarc deal, in which, if not granted now, facts of the war would be written. 1 hear that, although King George ! and Prince Henry were fast friends ' before the war and the Prince a fre- | quent and well-liked guest in London, there is to be no action taken. He was president of the British Automobile : Association, : U : erandson of Queen Victoria, as King! ly small when a criminal trial of rath- | George also is. Ti 3 oe y= : of rath- | nwembered that this Prussian Prince, and, of course, t may also be re- in 1902, paid an extended visit to this country, where he was exceptionally well received and entertained. —By Flaneue. A Mystery Solved. Hor eyes were red and she exnrlain- ed that she had been to a wedding. “I always ery more at a wedding than I do at a funeral—it’s so much more uncertain.” ; . i Prinee | history | | would bear him out whenever the true | iz a! Scot Found Mustard Gas. London.—Mustard gas, said ¥. E. Kellaway, deputy minister of muni- tions, at a dinner of British chemists, was the discovery of a Scottish chem- ist named Guthrie. “It was offered to the British gov- ernment some considerable time be- fore it was used by Germany,” he ry authorities. After the attacks on Arras, British chemists commenced experimental work, and Sir William Pope, working in the Cambridge lab- i oratories, was able to develop Guth- rie’s simple and direct process into a practical proposition for making the same materials which the Germans were producing by long and laborious methods. “As a result, at the time of the i armistice we had completely outstrip- ped Germany in this particular means | of warfare, and had the war contin- | ued Germany would have been in the i spring of this year drenched and al- most drowned with her own gas.” l “The first mustard gas shells sent | | to the front,” said Mr. Kellaway, “in- | volved among the munition workers | | at home one casualty for every pine i tis! impossible to pay too high a tribute to the persistence and devotion of the ; workers en- rounds delivered to the troops. chemists and munition gaged in these operations.” The Psychology of It. bors?” “All right. was to borrow our lawn mower.” “Have they returned it?” it. Then they’ll be careful not to use it early in the morning or at any hour when it would attract my atten- tion unduly.” Use for I'at Ones. __“And that stout What is he doing?” “Oh, he’s a hammock tester.” son of wvours. For high class Job Work come to the “Watchman” Office. sturdiness. tirement I was much more in his com- : pany than had been possible when I was a schoolboy and he was foreign secretary or prime minister. Pem- broke lodge became to me a second home; and I have no happier memory than of hours spent there by the side of one who had played bat, trap and ball with Charles Fox; had been trav- eling companion of Lord Holland; had corresponded with Tom Moore, de- bated with Francis Jeffrey, and dined with Doctor Parr; had visited Mel- | rose abbey in the company of Sir Wal- | ter Scott, and criticized the acting of Mrs. Siddons; had conversed with Na- poleon in his seclusion at Elba, and had ridden with the duke of Welling- ton along the lines of Torres Vedras. —G. W. BE. Russell. ———They are all good enough, but §“ the “Watchman” is always the best. Many Extra Miles We can show you—and prove to you— that there is a genuine money saving in the use of United States Tires. The extra miles they give mean just so many extra dollars counted in real money. And there are further actual economies in the saving of gas, oil, repairs and depreciation. * The reason of all this is in the tires them- selves—their liveliness, ruggedness and There are five United States Tires—a type * for every make of car. United States Tires are Good Tires We know United States Tires are Good Tires. P. H. McG ARVEY, Bellefonte, 'HUBLER BROS., State College. ‘That's why we sell them. J. H. BANEY, Howard. Pa. J. 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