’ Le Cid faster than the airplane. . of which he produced about a dozen. . curs the famous line, “When Greek wer Democrat Wala Bellefonte, Pa., November 21, 1919. CHEESE ENTITLED TO FAME Zraveler Asserts Product of Northern t France Has Any Like Edible 3 Beaten a Block. i If perchance we had fared into one ‘of tame. northeastern provinces of ‘France we were reasonably certain the meal would be rounded out with ‘helpings of a certain kind of cheese that is indigenous to those parts. It comes in a flat cake, which invariably is alt caved in and squashed out, as though the owner had sat upon it while ‘bringing it into the market in his two- sheeled cart. ' Likewise, when its temperature goes ‘op it becomes more of a liquid than n solid; &nd it has an aroma by vir- tue of which it secures the attention | and commands the respect of the mos! | casual passerby. [It is more than just cheese. ‘I should call it mother of ‘cheese. It is to other and lesser icheeses as civet cats are to canary birds—if you get what I mean; and in its company the most boisterous Brie or the most vociferous Camembert you ever saw becomes at once deaf and ‘dumb. i © Its flavor is wonderful. Mainly it is | found {on anciént Normandy; and | mong strangers eating it—or, when | 4t is in an especially fluid state, Urink- Ing it—comes under the head of out- | oor sports. But the natives take it | ght into the same house with them- selves.—Irvin S. Cobb, Dyening, Post. in Saturday | Bwiftly as Aviators Travel Through | J the Air, the Swallow Easily ¢ Outflies Them. ¢ Doubtless the swiftest passage over a long distance ever made by man was that of the daring aviators who flew from Newfoundland to Ireland. They traversed a space of 1,932 miles ‘in P72 minutes. That was at the rate of pearly, two miles a minute. To be pre- ps, it was a mile in 30.18 seconds. or a. much less distance a slightly higher speed was made by an army airplane between Boston and New York. ' The distance. of 175 miles was made in 83 minutes. That was a mile | 28.45 seconds, or more than 185 feet a second. ; That is rapid traveling. It'ig not, however the , wiftlest “aerial flight | known. A swallow could literally fly ! found, and round one of those air- planes when the latter was at top gpeed. Carefully conducted tests by a ! French scientist have demonstrated shat the speed of a swallow in full flight sometimes goes as high as 290 J fdet # second; or At the rate of a ile in 18 seconds, while the ordinary flight of n swallow is 210 feet a second or | : — nen 4 MAN MERELY POOR SECOND | | : Platinum Wonderful Metal. ¥ The American: Museum of Natural History has issued a bulletin giving many interesting facts relating “to platinum, one’ of the most striking of which ‘relates to its ductility. The | marvelous ductility of platinum may concelved when we consider that out of a single troy ounce of the metal it would be possible to make an al- most infinitely slender wire that would ! reach from Santiago, Chile, across the continent to Rio Janeiro, a distance of about 1,800 miles. To draw ouf .plat- foum Into so exceedin-ly fine a wire it {s covered with a thin layer of gold. This wire is drawn to the thinness of the former one, and the gold is dis- sdlved. A small section of this sec- ond wire is then given a coating of gold, redrawn and the gold covering dissolved. After this process has been pepeated several times the wire finally 8 still intact, but virtually invisible. England's “Mad Poet.” The name “Mad “Poet” was applied to Nathaniel Lee, an English dram- atist who was born in Hatfield in 1663. He was the son of a Presbyte- rian winister of Hertfordshire who conformed to the Reformation. He w#8 educated at Westminster school ~and@ Trinity college, Cambridge. For a time he was on the stage, but later . devoted himself to writing tragedies, > His first successful play was the “Ri- vat Queens” (1681), known afterwards as “Alexander the Great,” in which oc- _ Joined Greek then was the tug of war.” He collaborated with Dryden in “The Duke of Guise,” (1682). Lee became «insane ¥n 1684, and was confined in ‘the: asylum for five years, hence he was styled “The Mad Poet.” He died fn a fit of intoxication at London in 1692. ————————————— swift-Moving Creatures. Leaping on skis is doubtless the swiftest method of locomotion yet practiced by man. But even that is slow when compared with the speed of some other creatures. It surpasses the bare and the deer, and far out- distances the comparatively slow kan- garoo. But there is a jumping mouse in the African deserts which is cred- thly said to make eighty leaps a sec- ond, of 10 feet each. That means 800 feet a second, which is more than four times the speed of the airplane and three times that of a swallow. Nor fis | tumes that depart in main essentials ' maintaining their traditional charac- { among those whom the war has caused RESTORE CASINO AT OSTEND Famous Pleasure Resort, Devastated by Huns, Is Being Rapidly Put in Good Condition. After nearly five years of war Ostend Is resuming ordinary life, as far as pos- | sible under present conditions, with the reopening of the famous casino, | says the Pall Mall Gazette. } Less than twelve weeks ago, says & . Reuter telegram, the great salons of the casino were a scene of devastation and wanton destruction. Although oc- cupying so prominent a position on the sea front, the buildings themselves escaped the constant bombardment from sea and air that has transformed so many of the beautiful hotels and villas along the Digue into: heaps of rubble, and ‘the use of nine tons ot glass has repaired all the damage thus occasioned, but the Germans showed their usual thoroughness in gutting and defiling the salons themselves. Every stick of furniture was taken away, beautiful tapestries were slashed and torn by German bayonets and every mirror in the halls was removed, together with the copper candelabra in the salons and the beautiful copper staircase. Not content with robbery, the Ger- mans defiled the rooms in nameless ways and, in fact, left the whole place i in a state that would have shamed any ! animal inhabiting a stable. | February a miracle has been wrought But since and but for the fact ‘that some of the more valuable fittings are at present ! only temporarily replaced by imitation, | there will be no evidence of the war, | so far as the casino is concerned, when it reopens soon. RATHER OVERDID THE THING Friends of Candidate for Government Appointment Laid the Flattery on a Bit Thick. John L. McNabb, attoruey, tells this one on himself: “When I was a can- didate for United States district attor- pey in this district several years ago. | my friends procured documents and testimonials without number to sub: stantiate the desired appointment, and a book full of this eulogistic matter was forwarded to President Taft. An outsider reading the documents would have supposed I was a candidate for admission into the heavenly kingdom. so unreserved were the commendations. “Not long ago I met ex-President Taft while he was in this city. He | has a remarkable memory. Shaking me by the hand, he said: ‘When 1} finished reading the grandiloquent re ports in your favor some years ago 1 pictured to myself a man possessed with angels’ wings and fit to be the American ambassador extraordinary te : the heavenly kingdom. I supposed you were dead at the time, for the report. read like ‘an epitaph .on a tombstone.’ so remarkable were the testimonials of your friends in your behalf.’ "—San Francisco Chronicle, ! Question of Dress. Few of the picturesque tribal ces from the dress foupd convenient by western civilization have succeeded in ——1 gt teristics. The Roumanian people are to forsake a distinctive national male attire. This, in its main lines, re- called the costume of the Roman le- gionaries, which was adopted by the nation when Roumania formed the ! Roman Province of Dacia. It con- sisted of a short white tunic. “bag- | trousers” of white wool, and a curi- ously embroidered coat. Many of these garments were carried away as loot by invaders during the war, and the relief garments sent in from Franee. which are of more conventional de- sign, are expected to drive the national costume into disuse. Heavy demands. however, will doubtless be made upon it in the field of masquerade and musi- sal comedy. Skillful Job of Moving. A gas container 70 feet in diameter and 75 feet high, weighing 200 tons, was moved three miles recently at Portland, Ore. First it was raised 15 feet and loaded on rollers. Then it was ‘moved four blocks through the city streets and lowered 28 feet to a dock, whence it was moved upon a ! pair of barges. The barges were | towed three miles to a shipbuilding plant, where the tank was unloaded and raised 26 feet, moved across new- ly filled ground for a distance of 2,000 feet, crossing a railroad track, and placed on its new foundation. It took 71 days to complete the work. APPLIED THE WRONG COLOR Unfortunate Miscalculation of Indian apolis Young Lady Who Was Trying to Look Her Best. One particuiarly hot day a pretty North side girl. whose crowning glory is quite Titianly inclined, met a friend —a young man whom she had not seer recently—in Monument circle. At his suggestion they decided to take in the _ picture show and. incidentally, have ¢ little visit. Always solicitous about her appear: ! ‘ance, this afternoon she was excep: tionally so and fearful that her nose might, perhaps, be shiny. Wherefore on emerging from the theater, hastily opening her doritie box. gave her nose a surreptitious dab. Fortified with the thought that even if it was a hot day she was looking pretty fair, she couldn't account fot the very peculiar expression that she saw on his face as he turned to spesk to her in the iobby. After a minute of strained silence, he said: “What have you been doing to your face, Elise? Trying to match your nose to yout hair? It's a poor job if you did. Let's beat it back and you take a look in a mirror.” “Which same we did,” she said, when she told the story on herself. Said she: }, “I knew he'd tell it, so | thought | might as well tell it first, vou know I hadn't powdered :my nose, I'd rouged it—and abundantly, And it didn’t comé off ds easily as it went on, either.”—Indianapolis News. - American Buys Old Chapel. The Havas agency states that awn American has bought the Belle Croix chapel, on the heights of Villeneuve- les-Avignon, France, by the Chartreuse monks in the four teenth century. . The chapel, which contained some fine carving, has been carefully torn down and packed for transit to an un- known destination. Rastus’ Ambition. Visitor-—Rastus Johnson shiftless, isn’t ‘he? 3 Sambo—No, suh. Dat man am de most ambitious niggah what is. : Visitor—Ambitious? Sambo—Yes, suh.. He says he won't be ‘satisfied until his wife am doin’ all de washings in town.—Life. ~~ ‘ is very she | lagged a little behind her escort, and Of course | too. which was built’ ' summation of a great victory to pay i bre-et-Meuse which, though at first .on in May, 1917, has already overstay- is’ working ‘with a construction gang NATIONAL HEROES OF FRANCE Lazare Hoche and Ferdinand Foch Are Names to Be Forever Held in Grateful Memory. Marshal Foch is taking a particular satisfaction at this time of the’ con- homage to the fame of Lazare Hoche, the famous young general who escaped the Revolutionary guillotine eventual- ly to command that army of the Sam- disorganized, badly fed and badly equipped, performed the brilliant seven months’ campaign which established the reputation of French arms on both sides of the Rhine. To this day at Weissenthurm stands a monument to its memory and that of its brilliant young chief. No wonder Marshal Foch takes pleasure in recalling Lazare Hoche to his countrymen. Of Hoche it is said that he once proudly wrote to the minister for war of his day, “Je suis la patrie.” The French of the present century would throw up their hats at such a sentiment as en- thusiastically as the contemporaries of Hoche and Rouget de Lisle. With the great mass of them, though they do not perhaps express it so tersely, Foch fs “la patrie” in the sense that he cer- ‘tainly stands for them as “la Victoire” personified. Refuses to Leave Prison. A man sentenced to Sing Sing pris- ed his sentence more than seven months, and refuses fo go home. He building the new: prison, and the war- den says he does as much work as any four men. The pay allowed prisoners by the state amounts to 1% cents a day. This man was greatly relieved ‘ when he was told that the prison au- thorities would not shut off his pay to make. him apply for parole, whicl he has so far steadfastly refused to do. Firing While Submerged. Just as the war ended, the British navy had, ready to’ put into commis- sion, large ‘submarines which, among | ! other novel features, could fire’ sub- |g merged. They are armed with a 12- | | mid : : inch gun mounted so that it could fire with only its muzzle out of water. Thé submarine had to rise to the surface to reload; but the whole process éculd be executed in only half a minute. Attention! Every sack of GRO-ALL bears our trade mark— the Seal of Char- acter. Look for it when you buy fertilizer. . Thirty-four years of contin- ° uous yearly wth is indica- tive of the high quality product and excellent service rendered by Gettysburg, Pa. FERTILIZERS Make your farming operations more efficient with GRO-ALL Fertilizers. Every atom of plant, food becomes available under natural soil condi- tions. There is no waste. GRO-ALL Fertilizersare always in good mechanical condition—never hard ~ orlumpy. This means labor saved for the farmer, -.and labor saved is money earned. Feed your with liberal applications of GRO-ALL each year and harvest larger yields of improved quality. THE CENTRAL CHEMICAL COMPANY HAGERSTOWN, MARYLAND Every Empty ‘GRO-ALL Sack in Your Barn Means Dollars “in Your Pocket. Buy By This Trade Marg Baltimore, Md. Harvieonburg, Va. Agents of character wanted in all unoccupied territory even this amazing oreature the swiftest known, for the common flea has in nis leaping a velocity of 850 feet a second, which approximates ten miles a minute. UILT like a wagon. B rear wheels track. and rear axle. on. Chain Driven Exclusively. levers. SE rddtragrinsee received a carload of Conklin Wagons. Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Solid bottom bed with heavy cross pieces, Axles coupled together with angle steel reach ; No moving parts on rear axle. Positively not a worm or cog gear on the machine. Wide-tired wheels. The lightest, easiest running and most practical Spreader. All sizes and for all purposes. 62-47 and supported by full width of sides. coupled short, dividing load between front Ax'e not us~d as a bearing for gears to run Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store. Front and No clutch. Operated by only two Le That, Something” that kes you turn. around and take a second look . ata passerby’s s suit—is it in YOUR clothes?” It’s’ Ue rR own hard to define—but it is easily recognized. High Art, Clothes Made by Strouse & Brothers, Inc., Baltimore, Md. Si ERR — -— yim] Ii! “have that “something” —one look ed RL =e will tell you what we mean. . Fauble’s sr Soi St.. BELLEFONTE. Pa. el RRR LE . 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.