“Bellefonte, Pa., November 28, 1919. ONE OF THE GIRLS OF THE PERIOD. She lies abed in the morning, until nearly the hour of noon, "Phen comes down snapping and snarling because she was called too soon. Her hair is still in the papers, her cheeks all dabbled with paint, Remains of her last night's blushes before she intended to faint. She dotes upon men unshaven, and men with ‘flowing hair’, She's eloquent over mustaches, they give such a foreign air. She talks of Italian music and falls in love with the moon, And if but a mouse should meet her, sinks away in a swoon. she Her feet are so very little, her hands are so very white, Her jewels so very heavy, and her head is so very light. Her color is made of cosmetics, this she never will own; Her body’s made mostly of cotton, heart is made ‘wholly of stone. though her She falls in love with a fellow, who swells with a foreign air; He marries her for her money-—she mar- ries him for his hair; One of the very best matches—both well suited in life, She's got a fool for a husband, and he's got a fool for a wife.” are AMBITION AND ABILITY. Ralph Long lacked two essentials to success—ambition and business ability. At least his fiance, Esther Remington, said he didn’t have them. And those two essentials were among the things she admired most in men. “How do you ever expect to get married on $18 a week?” she wanted to know when they had their “final reckoning” on the night he asked his employer for a $2 raise and was told “the firm can’t afford it; besides you're not worth it.” “It can’t be done,” Esther went on, jabbing a loose pin back into the fluf- fy red hair. “If old Wilber won’t give you a raise, why don’t you dig out and try New York? Cut loose from this dead town, Ralph, and show them Rhat you're made of in a regular city. “You've been holding down that of- fice job in Wilber’s canning factory five years for that same measly $18 a week, and if you’d had any ambition you would be manager by this time or you wouldn’t be there at all.” Ralph remonstrated. He had work- ed hard, but simply had been unable to “make the grade,” he asserted. “This is a pretty good job, anyhow,” he said, “and I might not be able to get anywhere in a big town.” Esther’s attractive red lips curved downward in disgust, and she forth- with severed relations. There was no ring to hand back, because he had not been able to procure one, but she let him know in words that could not be misinterpreted that their engagement was a thing of the past. “You can keep your ‘good job’ for ten years more if you like,” she said, “but I'm going to the big town my- self, and I'm going to make good in a regular position.” She resigned her place as sales- woman in Boorbon’s department store, and a week later carried a handbag and a suitcase to the rail- road station, resolved to bid Brown City good-bye forever. Ralph was there to see her off and to ascertain if her decision was irrevocable. “Come on, Es, forget that big talk and settle down here,” he pleaded. “Never,” was her reply, a steely glitter in her blue eyes. “It’s all over between us, Ralph. I like you; in fact I'm very fond of you, but I must for- get you, because my husband must be a man who has enough ambition and ability to get to the front in the busi- ness world.” He set his lips firmly and shook hands with her and went back to his desk in the canning factory, but made a miserable failure of his work that afternoon and for several days there- after. He did a deal of serious think- ing, and his jaw seemed to become firmer and a resolute light shone from his gray eyes. Things went wrong with Esther. She arrived in New York with thirty dollars in money and a fortune in am- bition. In one month the thirty dol- lars had dwindled and the fortune was ebbing. Although she answered every “help wanted” advertisement that seemed to fit her abilities even remotely, she could not find work. Either she was too late with her application or she lacked training for the job. Thus, at the end of a month’s weary search, Esther was in dire straits. Before long, however, fortune fa- vored her. The goddess didn’t smile at her, but she did lend a helping hand, and Esther obtained work in a laundry—sorting dirty clothes. She kept this job a month in lieu of something better, and lived from hand to mouth on $6 a week, eating cold food in her dingy room in a dilapidat- td house on a dismal street. Then something better turned up. It was $56 a week, with meals thrown in, as waitress in a restaurant, where the food was given a liberal coat of grease to make it slip down easily, instead of being cooked. Esther was allowed to keep all her tips, but the tips were ingratiating smirks from the male gluttons and an occasional cold “thank you” or “pleasant day” from the feminine diners. If Esther had been able to save enough money to pay her fare back to Brown City she would have been tempted to return. Every night when she crawled be- tween the torn sheets on the 2x4 bed she visioned the clean, shady old town where she had grown up, and she longed for a glimpse of Boorbon’s store and all her former associates there. At the end of two years, after sur- viving a variety of jobs, Esther held down a portion of the floor behind a drygoods counter in the Climax five and ten cent store, and every Satur- day night she went out of the place with $9 in her pocket. Twice she asked for a raise, and twice she was refused. . : One Friday evening, discouraged, heartsick, hungry, Esther walked across Seventh avenue, near Square, immersed in thought. Her gaze fixed on an approaching automo- bile, she was struck by a big touring car coming from the opposite direc- tion. She was knocked off her feet, but was not seriously injured. The car stopped, and a young man, clad in a plain brown suit got out, picked Esther up in his arms and got in beside her and drove away. She was somewhat dazed and did not recognize the driver until they had gone several blocks. time she was coming to her senses of the man beside her. “Can it be you, Ralph Long?” she exclaimed, incredulously. He smiled and extended an arm to indicate he was about to turn a corner. as they went up Broadway. “Why—why—what are you here in New York?” she stammered. “I'm driving this car,” he replied, as he threw out the clutch and eased the machine through a traffic conges- tion. “I left Brown City soon after I’m driving this car.” scorn that might have been in her tone two years ago was strangely lacking. “Where are you taking me?” she presently inquired. “Dinner,” he said briefly. “The owner of the car won't care if I keep it out awhile. During the meal she told her story without reserve, and he listened with grava interest. “That’s the way it is,” when she had finished. to tell you,Ralph, that I was all wrong and I'm sorry I didn’t marry you. If you—you—if you think you care for me still and want me now you can have me. With your wages and mine we”ll be able to get along.” “Of course I want you,” he declar- ed. “But my ‘wages’ will support us. Anyhow, you've lost your job,’ she said puzzled. _ “I mean that you're fired from your job at the five and ten,” he announc- ward. “You see I happen to be gen- eral manager of the Climax.”—By R. Ray Baker. AMERICAN RED CROS MERRY CHRISTMAS 9 Le Pennsylvania Figures and Facts. 10,000 persons die annually in Pennsylvania of tuberculosis. disease. matic medical treatment. attention. tuberculosis unknown to health au- thorities were rejected for army serv- ice. : SCHOOL MEDICAL INSPECTIONS. Approximately 70 per cent. of the State’s school children show physical defects. 451,000 were found suffering from some defect. corrections were obtained. 4. Defectives tabulated: Teeth, 55 per cent.; tonsils, 25.8 per cent.; eyes, 17.6 per cent.; breathing, 5 per cent. NEED OF HEALTH EDUCATION. State, county and city authorities fighting the white plague. cannot do all. Their work will be a success only as public opinion is en- lightened. Tuberculosis is a prevent- able disease. There are two great means of fighting it, to discover the disease in its early stages and to in- duce people to observe better health habits so that fewer wiil contract it. If mere persons can be trained to see the vital need of more sunshine and fresh air and eating properly and to have themselves examined at regular intervals vastly decreased numbers will become tuberculosis victims. A scourge of four thousand years could be conquered in the rising generation. Private health agencies, such as the Pennsylvania Society for the Preven- tion of Tuberculosis, find their chief work in educational propaganda. Their efforts are fully endorsed by the | State Health Department. National and State Health authorities have asked private health agencies to en- large their program next year. THE CHILDREN’S SEAL. The Red Cross seal of 1919 has a particular appeal for children. Santa Claus, printed in red with white i fringes on his outfit, and a white beard, stands with a full pack at the top of a chimney ready to descend. The child knows what it means when Santa Claus comes down the chimney. The seal is a link in the work of train- its. It has been proven that a large percentage cf children become infect- ed with the germs of tuberculosis and unless they are taught to make and keep themselves strong and healthy many of them will die befare attain- ing manhood and womanhood. So the Chirstmas seal of 1919 is a gift of a “Healthy and a Happy New Year” in a real measure. N Not the Extreme Type. “Do you approve of the V-necked gown?” “If it is a lower case ‘v.”” Probably. “Lately my husband has taken to walkng in his sleep.” “The high car fares, I suppose.” Times | placed her in the front seat. Thenhe ! By that! and she gazed in wonder at the face “It can be—and it is,” he affirmed, doing i you did—to niake good. And now : “Oh, a chauffeur!” she said, but the : “And I want | | “What do you mean?” she asked, | { ed as he blew a smoke ring ceiling- | 75,000 to 100,000 others have the ! Not over 25,000 of these get syste- At least 50,000 receive no medical 9,000 Pennsylvania men who had | Figures for 1916-17 are as follows: i 1. There were examined 628,000 . pupils. 2. 177,000 were found normal; 3. Approximately 24 per cent. of are doing much excellent work in But they ing children toward better health hab- ! Poor East Side Churches Have Much Better Attendance Than Old | Trinity, the World’s . Wealthiest Parish. | | ! | The children of the poor are better Sunday School scholars than the song | and daughters of the rich, surveys of over ew York City parishes of the 100 York Cit shes of th Episcopal Church indicate. The surveys which are a part of the Church’s Nation-Wide Campaign to be waged Sunday, December 7, for a min- imum of $32,000,000 from Esnicopal- ians only, dzveloded that children are neglecting Sunday School; and that of those who do go, the childro of the , Foor show to mch better advantage i thando those of tae rich. tld Trimty at Broadway znd Wall { Llrest, rated the wealthiest individual parizhin the wold, with rezlty invest- ments of over $20,000.00, reported a Sunday School er+ollrent of ory, 100 ‘CHILDREN OF THE RICH SUNDAY SCHOOL SLACKERS a | © Thelittle son of poverty is a regular attendant at Grace Chapel, East Side, N. Y. The son of wealth is not so regular i geen at Sunday School. ly children to over 1,000 communicants. Grace Church with a budget in 1918 of $390,041.83 reported an equally small percentage. : A few blocks away where children throng the tenament houses of the lower East-Side, little Grace Church Chapel has a Sunday School of 450. St. tholomew’s Church at Fiftieth Street and Park Avenue, a mecca of faghionables has only a five per cent. Suaday School enrollment. Well-to-do St. Iz1at1:8’ parish at Fast End Ave- nue and 8 ‘th Street, has only thirty- seven children in its Sunday School compare with 600 communicants. : Rehabilitation of its Sunday Schoois is one of the purposes of the Episcopal Church’s Nation-Wide Campaign. ) ETE REPORT OF GROUP 3. Savings Division—Third Federal Re- serve District. The following is a report of the , counties comprising Group 3 of the . Savings Division of the Third Feder- : al Reserve District, for the week end- : ing November 21st, 1919: i Col. 1, name of county. : Col. 2, per capita of county. i Col. 3, standing of each county as com- pared with other counties in the Hast- i ern District of Pennsylvania (48 in | number.) : ! i Union Re a, a Ae $3.01 : . 4 63 7 % 8 ! 9 CAMETON ....v. cession avin 35 12 MeResn: cc... cci vind ciivnin, 1.26 14 Lycoming ........ ie neives 1.23 16 Potter .... 7 23 Bedford ..... 04 25 Mifflin ...... 90 27 Huntingdon ..............0..050 85 30 Clearfield: .................0 00 a1 44 CAMBDEIA. vovs vives so rsminsvnsvsnenis 43 46 Per capita of the Third Federal Pistrict 5.0 000, JA LL, 91 Per capita of the Eastern Dist. Of PR ie sian 92 Per capita of United States.... 141 ! Per capita of Group 3.......... 1.42 The proceedings of the Educational Congress which was held at Harris- burg during the week of the 17th of November, under the direction of the Department of Public Instruction, and at the call of Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, have been prepared by Prof. Eugene schools, and are herewith enclosed. It might be of interest to note the words of Cardinal Mercier, Premier of Belgium, who won the hearts of all Americans during his recent visit here. The Patriarch of the “little land of thrift and courage” wrote the Philadelphia chairman of the Savings Organization as follows: “I fully appreciate the importance of the effort which the United States government is making, with a view to establishing in the minds of the peo- ple of your country the necessity of Thrift. I am the more able to express an opinion on the subject, that my think I may say this without boast- ing. There is no doubt that the sav- ings of the Belgium workmen enabled ' them to tide over the worst and most H. Weik, principal of the Bellefonte | own people in Belgium are among | the most thrifty in the world and I | difficult months of the war at the be- ginning, before the magnificent gen- erosity of the American people was able to afford practical relief every- where. There is no doubt, also, that habits of thrift teach men the value of money and serve to familiarize them with a sense of responsibility, and this in turn makes for Law and Order.” Americans must get back to care- ful spending, intellige~t saving, and regular investment in Government se- curities if we are going to allow de- mand to catch up to the supply. Mr. Lloyd, the Director of the Sav- ings Division of this District, empha- sized, a few days ago, that the thrift and systematic savings movement is a concrete illustration of the perma- nence of the Government Savings Stamps and Certificates, which bear 4.27 per cent. interest, cannot depre- ciate like bonds, and which can be bought in units of from 25 cents to $1000.00. “No longer,” said Mr. ! Lloyd, “do we talk ‘War Stamps.’ | These are Peace Stamps and they will | come out just the same during 1920 | as they did in 1918. The 1920 series | will be on sale January 1st, at $4.12 | for every $5.00 stamps, and like all _ other issues will increase a cent each month in value until January 1st, 1925, it will be worth $5.00. Respectfully submitted, | W. HARRISON WALKER, Chairman Group 3 Savings Division Third Federal Reserve District. Bellefonte, Pa., November 25th, 1919. Here’s a Rare Character. She was evidently a young woman of extremely sensitive conscience, for when they were passing a news stand and her escort paused momentarily to glance at the headlines, she exclaim- ed “Mercy, do you do that? The big headlines are the most saleable part of those papers, and you are taking them for nothing. I'd as soon think of grabbing an apple or a pear as I went by a fruit stand.” A Little More Jazz! The minister was getting things warmed up for a revival. “Lord, bless us right now and send down Thy pow- er!” he pleaded. “Atta boy,” encouraged a returned A. E. F. veteran, “make it snappy!” | —Cartoons Magazine. Designing Woman. \ Newlywed—You never call me pet names now unless you want some- thing. Before we married it was dif- | ferent. Mrs. Newlywed—Oh no, it wasn’t. Before marriags I called you pet names because I wanted you. Bock—My wife contradicts me con | tinually. | Peck—My wife acts as if my ideas weren't worth discussing. | 1 i WITTY JIBES AT MARRIAGE Writers of All Ages Seem to Have Considered Matrimony as a Sub- ject for Humor. Some of the pithiest and most amus- ing humor has centered about matri- mony, William Huntington Wright says in San Francisco Chronicle. From Balzac’s exhaustive treatise, Physiology of Marriage,” to Dryden’s trivial As for women, though we scorn and flout ’ m, We may live with, but cannot live with- out 'em. we find an almost limitless range of observations — tragic and farcical, crabbed and good natured, contemptu- ous and mellow, brutal and senti- mental. The definition of marriage has par- : ticularly appealed to the humorists. Petit-Senn has summed it up thus: “Marriage is a port in the storm, but more often a storm in the port;” while Edmond About uses another and more violent metaphor. Says this gentle- man: “Marriage is in life like a duel in the midst of battle.” Beaumarchais, l | | | i | on the other hand, is milder, but equal- ly as cynical. He remarks that “of all serious things marriage is the most ludicrous.” Balzac, who really never married, but who had much to say on the subject, puts it in this terse man- ner: “Marriage is a fight to the death.” La Rochefoucauld, the greatest of the with the extremists and remarks: “There are good marriages, but there ' are no delicious ones.” How different is this esthetic viewpoint to the petu- lant observation of Sulpice Guillaume Gavarni, who says: “When a man says he has a wife it means that a wife has him.” FEW WOMEN POSSESS GENIUS italian Scientist Cites History of the World in Support of Asserticn He Makes. In the history of genius, women have but a small place, declares Cesare Lombroso, professor of legal medicine, University of Turin. His researches, he asserts, have convinced him that women of genius are rare ex- ceptions in the world. It is an old ob- servation, he says, that while thou- sands of women for every hundred men apply themselves to music, there has never been a single great woman composer. Out of 600 wom- en doctors in the United States not one has ever made any discovery of importance, and with few ex- ceptions the same may be said of other countries. Even John Stuart Mill, who was very partial to the cause of women, confessed that they lacked originality. Even the few who emerge have, says Professor Lombroso, something virile about them. As Goncourt said, there are no women of genius ; the women of genius are men. Women never created a new religion, nor were they ever at the hedd of great political, artistic or scientific movements. women have stood in the way of all progressive movements. Like chil- dren, he says, they are notoriously misoneistic; they preserve ancient habits and customs and religions. If You Are Ambitious. I have noticed that men who have climbed to great heights, as a rule, have chosen the job which held the larger future, regardless of what it might give in immediate returns. It was not the large salary they were after, but the larger opportunity. It was the job which gave promise of the greatest future that they wanted, not a “soft snap” with easy money and no future. Many vocations which pay the most money at first have the least future in them. If you must make sacrifices make them when you are first starting out in life. You will find it easier than to make them later. What you need at the outset is, the most of all, the biggest opportunity for growth and development, the job that has the larger possible future in it. If you are ambitious, you won't look for a “soft snap” and “easy money”— Orison Swett Marden in The New Suc- cess. A Lighted Pencil. A clever little invention for report- ers or anyone who wishes to take notes at a lecture or jot things down where the light is poor is a pencil with an electrical torch attachment. A tiny flashlight battery is attached to it by a length of thin wire and the bat- tery thus remains in the pocket when the pencil is in use. The bulb is just back of the lead and the switch is op- erated by the movement of the fore- finger while writing in an entirely nat- ural manner. Also the attachment may be moved along the pencil to al- low for sharpening, or it can be changed from one pencil to another, and the tiny lights in the reflector throw’a strong enough glow for what- ever is written to be seen distinctly. Advance (Female) Australia! Australian women are also going ahead, remarks a writer in the Lon- don Evening News. They have in- duced the attorney general of New South Wales to introduce a bill to make them eligible for election or ap- pointment as members of either of the houses of parliament, for election as lord mayor or alderman, for appoint- ment as a special magistrate or a jus- tice of peace, for admission to prac- tice as a barrister or solicitor of the supreme court of New South Wales, or to practice as a conveyancer, Professor Lombroso says | . are called, . there are few duplicates. WHERE FOSSIL BONES ABOUND Corner of Nebraska Long Famous for Its Skeletons of Queer Prehis- toric Animals. Where do the museums of the coun- try get their strange and curious skele- tons of prehistoric antmais? If a skele- ! ton is a “dinohyus” or a ‘“moropus,” “The | one may be quite sure that it came from the farm of James Henry Cook in the northwest corner of Nebraska; and the chances gre almost equally good if the specimen happens to be a saber-toothed cat or a many-toed horse, or almost any of those queer animals, that belong to the early Miocene period, says R. P. Crawford, in an article in Popular Science Magazine. Most ranchmen and farmers are quite content to raise the ordinary sort of stock, but here is a ranch that is most widely known because of its output of prehistoric animals. For more than a decade paleontologists from the great universities and museums of this coun- try have made regular trips to these fossil quarries. The Cook farm and ranch, located close to the Wyom'ng line, comprise some 15,000 acres. On the eastern edge of the ranch the Niobrara river has laid bare two hills, from both of which scores and scores of fossil skele- tons have been quarried. In the suni- mer it is no uncommon occurrence for representatives of half a dozen easterit institutions to pitch camp near these . hills and spend several months digging French epigrammatists, compromises ' out the fossil bones which, when worked over in the museum, form the queer-looking skeletons. WHERE THE ROMANS BUILT Site of Old City of Cirta, Italy, De- scribed as Place of Mourn- i ] ful Grandeur. : — 4 The site on which the city of Cirtd stands rises sharply from the south to the nerth. It is a terrible height. © Looking up from the littl: footpath running round the gorge at a distance of a few hundred yards from the bottom, the great rock looms up like a most tragic fate. The mournful grandeur of the place is in keeping with the character of Masinissa and other stern and savage chieftains ant! the uncompromising times in which they lived. . . The gorge of the Rummel is nar- row, rarely more than some hundred yards across, and straight. Frag: ments of Roman ruins still cling to its precipitous sides wherever lodgment can be found. Along the north side the water has burrowed deep down through a series of caverns until it reaches the Kasba. The Romans took advantage of the natural arch thus formed at the angle of the two sides, using the arch as its foundation to erect a magnificent bridge, known here, as were the bridges at Toledo, the Calceus Herculis near Biskra, and elsewhere, .as “El Kantara,” the Bridge. Its ruins still remain.— Cyril Fletcher Grant, in “Twixt Sand and Sea.” Distinctive Cries Among Animals. If a complete list could be made of the distinctive names by which thé noises produced by birds and beasis it would be found that This may ! be judged even by the most common. The horse neighs, the sheep bleats, the cow lows, the pig grunts and squeals, the turkey gobbles, the hen i cackles, the cock crows, the goose hisses, the duck quacks, the cat mews, the dog barks, the wolf howls, the lion roars, the bull bellows, the sparrow chirps, the pigeon coos, the frog croaks, the rook caws, the . monkey 'chatters, the elephant trum- pets, the camel grunts, the stag calls. the rabbit screams—only when wounded—the donkey brays, the bee hums, the fly buzzes, the grasshop- per chirrups, the swallow twitters, the chick peeps, the hound bays and the ow! hoots. Be Master of Yourself. To be able to keep cool when all the world goes mad shows mental grasp and genuine bighess. This grows with the years. It becomes a part of the nature, Newly dubbed aristocracies and the victims of sudden wealth usu- ally betray their plebeian origin by their cultivated show of authority. Where the blood tells it rises with might to occasions, but seldom allows itself "to get ruffled without occasion. And what a spectacle one can make of himself by getting all stewed about nothing or losing his temper on some little thing that approximates the zero mark. ‘The really big character is slow to anger and irritates little dubs by his superior calm control. At the same time the exhibition of mastery challenges the secret admiration of all. Mean Man. “Why is Mrs. Gadder going home to her mother?” “She told Mr. Gadder she would like to take a little trip next summer— one that wouldn't cost more than $500.” “And what did Gadder say?” “The heartless brute replied: ‘I see by the papers that the trolley car serv- ice is going to be improved.”—Birming- ham Age-Herald. All His Worldly Goods. “Was your wife pleased with your raise in salary?’ asked White. “I haven't told her yet, but she will be when she knows it,” answered Brown. “How is it that you haven't told her?” “Well, IT thought I would enjoy it myself a little while first.”