Bown ten Bellefonte, Pa., July 30, 1920. The Farmer. By Susan L. Harlacher. I sing the song of the plain folks, Of the toilers in the sun; Of those who work from the dawning ’Til after the day is done. It is they who feed the nations, Who garner the golden grain, Working thru’ heat of summer, Thru’ cold, and sleet, and rain. No tablet of fame is erected When their work on earth is done, And they're gathered to their fathers For the rest and crown they've won. A MODERN MONA LISA Although it was late, two urchins were already sprinting across the road to see what had happened, and Paul Loring knew that they were sure to be the forerunners of a crowd. With sudden decision he raised the uncon- scious girl in his arms and carried her to the car, laid her on the seat, started the engine again, and turned the car in the direction from which he had come. Presently, emerging into a quiet square, he stopped before one of those typical Bloomsbury houses—mostly boarding houses now—which were at one time the homes of merchant princes. Jumping out, he opened the front door with a latch-key, and, con- veying the still unconscious girl in- side, deposited her upon a leather-cov- ered couch in his study. Then he bounded upstairs, two steps at a time, to the drawing-room. A tall graceful woman looked up from a book she had been reading as he burst into the room. “Why, Paul!” she began in surprise. “Look here, Mother,” he said. “I nearly ran over a girl. She’s faint- ed and I've put her in the study. Do, for goodness’ sake come down and see if you can bring her to. Besides, Bradley sent me an urgent call and I must go.” Mrs. Loring followed her son down- stairs and began to do things a cap- able person is expected to do in such a crisis. She dispatched her son into the dining-room for brandy. When the young man came back with this, she was removing the girl’s hat with its costly osprey plumes. “I’d better loosen her clothes,” said Mrs. Loring presently. Still he lingered, which was fortun- ate, as he was able to hold the girl up while his mother wrestled with the mysterious back-fastenings of a flimsy georgette crepe creation. “You can lay her down now,” said Mrs. Loring when she had stripped this from the rounded, white shoulders and was beginning to undo more mysterious inner garments. Paul obeyed, but managed to snap a silken cord which hung around the girl’s neck. This was attached to a wash-leather bag. Paul’s clumsy hands had jerked the bag out and, in the unaccountable manner of inani- mate things, it flew across the room and, falling to the floor, burst open. “Oh, darn!” he said, going down on hands and knees to recover the valu- able rings and trinkets that were scattered round. Having replaced them in the bag and laid this on the table, he noticed that the girl was re- covering. His mother was speaking gently and stroking the girl’s hands. Under cover of the soothing murmur, he came close to the head of the couch and gazed down at the girl’s face. At that moment her eyelids fluttered and rose, and a pair of liquid eyes gazed straight up into his own. For a second eyes held eyes and then the girl slowly smiled. With that smile the color ebbed back into her face, and he found himself marveling at the delicate pink and white of her. Once more she smiled at him, with lips softly parted, and as she gazed into his eyes her own slowly closed with an effect of languorous content that set his pulses racing. “I think she’ll be all right now, Paul,” said his mother, and Loring started. A subtle exchange of mag- netism between himself and this girl had made him forget that the uni- verse held anything save the desire to gaze into swooning, wine-colored eyes. “You’d better go now, dear,” con- tinued the elder woman. “I know your business is urgent.” The young man made an impatient gesture. “Bradley must waix, Mother,” he said. There was a faint elusive half- smile on the girl’s lips that reminded him somehow of the Mona Lisa. He was certain it had not been there be- fore he spoke and yet—He lost track of his thought to watch with pulsating wistfulness for another revelation of the wonder of those eyes. They re- mained obstinately shut, but present- ly in a golden, vibrating voice, she spoke. “Where am 1?” “I—I nearly ran you down with my car. You fainted and I brought you here.” The girl placed her hand over her forhead and eyes as if trying to think. “I can’t remember,” she said. “Of course not,” soothed Mrs. Lor- ing. “You were unconscious when my son brought you here. You must rest on this couch for a little while and then, when you feel quite well, I'll send for a taxi and my maid shall see you home. We live in Poltimore Square. Is it far from your home? “I—I don’t know.” “What is your address?” persisted Paul’s mother gently. “I don’t know. Oh, don’t you un- derstand? I can’t remember—a sin- gle thing.” : Mrs. Loring looked at her son in consternation, but he was gazing fix- edly at the girl. “Never mind, my dear, don’t worry,” she told the latter. “You’ve had a shock, but it'll all come back to you presently. Can you remember your name?” The girl shook her head helplessly and gazed at the man with clinging, pitiful eyes that seemed to implore him to help her. wash-leather bag. other’s hands. thing to you?” : The girl examined the trinkets as if she had never seen them before. “Are these mine, then?” she asked. “Yes. By the way, I hope they're all there. Paul upset the bag just now.” The girl’s hands dropped listless- ly to her lap and her eyes dropped until the lashes showed strangly dark against the delicate skin. Two tears hung for a moment upon them and then rolled down her cheeks. “Oh, what shall I do?” she moaned. “Why can’t I remember?” “It’ll all come back presently,” promised the other woman with a confidence she was far from feeling. “The best thing you can do is to lie still and rest for a little while. Come Paul, I want you to telephone Dr. Grant while I rouse Butler and tell her to get the spare room ready.” Unwillingly enough, the young man followed his mother from the room. As soon as the door had shut upon them the girl sat up, no longer lan- guid and pitiful. Her first act was to examine the bag of trinkets for some- thing which, apparently, was not there. Then, remembering what Mrs. Loring had said about the bag hav- ing been upset, her gaze wandered round the room. A yellow glint in the far corner caught her eye. With a whispered exclamation, she rose from the couch and tiptoed across the room,-to pick up a narrow ring of plain gold. For a moment she stood fingering it and dreaming, with the cryptic, Mona Lisa smile again hovering about her lips; then, sudden- ly, she walked to the open window and threw it from her, far out into the night. ; “Really, Paul, the position is imi- possible. This girl has been here a fortnight and we are as far from finding out anything about her as we were in the beginning. It seems ridic- ulous that you, an expert in unravel- ing mysteries, should have been foiled by such a simple case as this.” The young man put down a book as his mother entered the study, and gaz- ed at her frowningly. “You don’t sound altogether hospit- able, Mother,” he said, “and con- sidering that my reckless driving is responsible for her loss of memory—" ‘“That’s a red herring, Paul. Can you honestly say that you have tried to find out who she is?” Loring laughed. “The expert investigator is at a dis- advantage when pitted against the in- stinct of even the most ordinary, ev- eryday, common or garden mother,” he remarked, apparently irrelevantly. “Then you haven’t?” “No, I haven't.” . In that moment, Mrs. Loring thank- ed Heaven that she had not voiced her mistrust of the stranger. “But, my dear, is this fair to Mel- isande herself ?” she asked, endeavor- ing to be tactful. “At present she shows no over- whelming desire to be informed on the subject,” he remarked dryly. Mrs. Loring metaphorically raised her eyes and hands to heaven. “But she may have parents, friends, relations—a- fiance who adores her.” Loring winced. “I rather think she is her own mis- tress,” he remarked presently. “There has been no inquiry at Scotland Yard and no one has inserted advertise- ments in any of the papers. A beau- tiful young woman with all the ap- pendages you suggest couldn’t disap- pear as completely as she has done, without raising an outery.” “Then, Paul,” said Mrs. Loring, for- getting, in her anxiety, to be tact- ful, “has it struck you that there may be another reason why there is no outcry? Has it occurred to you that she may be—worthless?” “Mother!” en “You know, Paul, you used to say that you required to know a great deal about the reputed honest man before you passed him as such, and that you never took anyone on trust.” “Ah, but she is different!” “Do you mean that you are pre- pared to take her on trust?” “Absolutely, Mother. I am cer- tain she is as pure and good as she is sweet and beautiful and I—I love her.” Mrs. Loring was stunned into si- lence. Paul Methodically placed a mark in his book, shut it, and return- ed it to its place on the shelves. Then after lingering a moment constrained- ly, he went upstairs to the drawing room. “Finished studying?” called a gold- en voice from one of the deep window recesses. He crossed the room and stood si- lently gazing down at the girl’s hon- ey-colored hair. “You have been a long time,” she said, and there was an exquisite elu- sive tenderness in her tone that made the words sound like a caress. “Have 1?” They smiled at each other. For a time there was silence. It seemed to Paul as if he could never withdraw his gaze from the clinging, ardent gaze of those wine-colored eyes. With an effort he broke the spell. “What are you reading?” She held up a sumptuous edition of “Pelleas and Melisande.” “This,” she said. “I wanted to know why you called me Melisande.” Again their glances met and linger- ed “How far have you read?” asked Paul huskily. ; “To where the king found her in the wood—just as you found me. And she had lost her crown—just as I have lost my past. Please tell me the rest,” she urged. : “The king placed her before him on his horse and rode away with her to his palace,” “Just as you did,” she said softly. And then—" : “And then the king made her his queen,” ; Again the glances of the two be- came entangled, and somehow, seek- ing each other blindly, their hands met. He was down on his knees be- side her now, his face very near hers. “Melisande, Melisande!” he cried. “Do you want me to find your lost crown?” “No, no!” she breathed. : “And will you be my queen?” Mrs. Loring suddenly thought of the | For answer she smiled silently and “This was round | gaz your neck,” she said placing it in the | their locked glances “Does it recall any- | unendurable. gazed at him till the poignancy of became almost With a moan he tore his gaze from hers and buried his face in the soft fragrance of her breast: The girl pressed him to her, then drew away and gazed past him brood- ingly, not seeing the thing upon | which her eyes rested. i “Afraid? Of what?” “Of my past. Of what you may learn some day.” “No, beloved. I know your crown was of pure gold. I know that your lost memories were pure and sweet.” For a space they clung together, and then Paul forced himself to speak again. “Yet I am afraid,” he said slowly. “Afraid lest in my selfishness I should be wronging you. Suppose, in that lost past, you had loved a man whom you would still love if the past came back to you. I have tortured myself by thinking that perhaps one of ve- rings The girl started. “Yes?” she cried, and the voice had an edge to it that sounded foreign to her honey-sweet personality. “I have thought that any ome of your rings might be an engagement | ring.” -S92 © apew pue ureSe paws yg ture as of breaking shackles. “If so, I repudiate it, as I repudiate ' eeverything that might come between us,” she said. “ Then you will marry me, belov- ' ed?” “Yes, heart’s dearest.” | Rapturously they exchanged kisses until, suddenly, Paul felt her clinging to him like a frightened child. “Let it be soon,” she cried. “Oh, Paul! Let it be soon, for fear some clutching hand should arise out of my past and tear us apart.” “Mr. Bradley would like you to come to the telephone, sir.” Loring hastily put down the letters he was cutting open, and rose from the breakfast table. “Excuse me for a moment, Melis- ande. I shan’t be long,” he said. i His wife sighed and drummed an! impatient foot on the floor until he | returned, when she greeted him with | a wonderful lighting-up of eyes and | face. | “Bradley accuses me of not doing | my share of the work,” he said al trifle ruefully, as he resumed his seat. | “Oh, Paul, how ridiculous!” i “It’s the truth, my dear. It’s been | so hard to tear myself away from you, | even for a short time, that I’ve left more and more to old Bradley, who, good fellow as he is, has at last kick- ed. He says he’s been working so hard for the last two years that he absolutely must have a rest, and I! must carry on alone for a bit.” “Paul!” i “It’s only fair, Melisande. I can’t | let him do all the work while I draw | half the money. By the way, he tells me he has written -a letter about a case. Now where the dickens— Ah | ves, this is his handwriting.” Loring picked up a letter as he spoke, and began to read, his brows gradually drawing together into a frown as he did so. “H’m! I shall have to run down into Hampshire after breakfast,” he said. “Where’s the time-table 7?” “Oh, Paul—not today ?” “Why not, dear?” “It’s our anniversary. Had you for- gotien? Just two years ago today you found me lying in the roadway.” “You have made me transcedently happy,” he said gazing tenderly into her eyes. “Do you know that, even vet, when I wake in the morning I am sometimes afraid to look lest I should find you gone and discover that our life together has been merely a wonderful dream?” “Then, Paul, don’t go today. Brad- ley can——" : But Loring shook his head. i “We'll keep our anniversary tomor- | row—or at least the first day I have free, beloved,” he corrected himself. “Tomorrow never comes,” she quot- ed petulantly. It grieved him to see her mouth drooping at the corners and he tried : when he left her to kiss away her disappointment. Throughout the journey Loring brooded, as was his custom when alone upon his happiness. How won- ' derful Melisande was! And how won- derfully she loved and compelled him to love her! Still meditating, he arrived some | two hours later at the gates of Selsted Hall, buried deep in beechwoods and larch trees. “Home of the Lennox-Foxes since! the days of Good Queen Bess, and all | that, I suppose,” he mused. “But why, I wonder, are the blinds all down? Has there been a death in the house 7” The suggestion of gloom contrasted with his mood unpleasantly. A foot- man with a crepe band round his arm | admitted Loring and took him at once | i into the presence of a tragic little old man dressed in black. “Mr. Loring, I had a daughter,” be- | gan Sir Lennox-Foxe bitterly. Loring thought he understood. “I saw that this was a house of mourning. I'm very sorry,” he said simply. “This house is in morning today for her mother,” blazed the other fierce- ly. “She—my daughter Pamela, died i | i \ to me four years ago, when she left | the house with her lover, taking her mother’s jewels with her,” The old man paused for a moment, | struggling to regain his self-control, “For two years after she left us, I had her watched, and then—she com- pletely disappeared. trace her have failed. But she must be found! I understand that your reputation is world-wide and I believe that you, if anyone, can find her. I will pay you any money you care to ask.” He turned to a safe, and, unlocking it, took from it a bulky portfolio. “There,” he said, placing it in Lor- ing’s hands, “you will find every scrap of information likely to be of use— the girl’s description, a lock of her hair, an account of her two years of disgraceful adventure after she left home. the description of her mother’s jewels—everything, up to the time, two years ago today, when she dis- appeared utterly. I shall be glad now if you will come with me.” Wonderingly, Loring followed his | in the coffin. him of somebody; he could not think | of whom. almost happy. is suffering as she deserves to suffer.” b | ing. “How salemn you are! All efforts to | guide upstairs to a state bedroom, where, in her coffin, lay the earthly remains of Ladv Lennox-Foxe. Lor- ing saw, lying there, an old lady of unbelievable fragility from whose face death had smoothed all wrinkles and signs of sorrow. Her hair, he noticed, was as white as the linen sur- rounding it. “This,” said the bereaved husband tonelessly, indicating the still figure “is the work of my daughter. “The day we discovered her flight,” he continued, “Death laid his hand on my wife. For fone years she has been slowly dying and I—I have stayed my hand for her sake. “Now I have something else to show you,” he continued grimly, and again Loring followed him. He conducted to a picture gallery in the Elizabethan wing where before T a painting in.oils of a comely, middle- aged woman with fair hair and a gracious smile, Sir Lennox-Foxe stopped. “That was my wife five years ago,” he said. “Do you wonder that I want to find the murderess, that I want to make her suffer?” “No,” answered Loring. He was, indeed shocked at the dif- ference in appearance between the pictured woman and the pitiful mask The portrait reminded “It’s little enough I can do, after all,” the old man said drearily. “But when she is found I shall charge her with the theft of her mother’s jewels and prosecute her with the full vigor of the law. For such time as she is in the place of shame with her fellow- criminals, I shall be almost content— I shall know that she He moved along a few paces to where hung a drapery. Abruptly pulling this aside, he revealed anoth- er painting in oils. “Look well at this picture,” he said. “There she is—wanton, murderess, and thief. Look well, so that you will know her when you meet her.” Loring looked. In the silence a sunbeam moved downward, like a pointing finger, illuminating with slow inevitableness the pictured face of his wife. When Loring returned home that afternoon, he found Melisande, dream- ing in his study. “Oh, Paul,” she cried joyously. “I didn’t expect you for hours.” He stood regarding her with no re- flection of her joy on his face.’ “Why, dearest!” she said, laugh- I don’t believe you even realize that I’m here. Your mind is following up clues in some old dry-as-dust case.” His eyes dripped before hers and mechanically he laid a portfolio on the table. “What’s that?” she asked, darting at it like an eager bird. “Don’t!” he cried sharply. “You needn’t have been so afraid of my seeing it,” she remarked, with adorable playfulness. “I don’t sup- pose I should have understood. You seem to forget that I'm the youngest wife in the world—only two years old today.” At that he turned and stared at her, then crushed her to him, pressing pas- sionate kisses upon her eyes and hair. “Yes, yes,” he cried brokenly, “you came to me, newborn, two years ago.” “Paul,” she said anxiously, disen- gaging herself, “is there anything the matter? You're somehow—different.” “Am I dearest?” he asked, with a return to his natural manner. “Per- haps it’s because I have work to do. Now will you run upstairs, like a good girl, and leave me to do it?” Reluctantly, she obeyed and, after locking the door, Paul Loring set to work to burn the portfolio and its contents.—By Katherine Harrington in Hearst’s Magazine. Pennsylvanians Named. Three Pennsylvanians have been named on the National Advisory coun- cil of the Modern Health Crusade, a movement in the schools. They are Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, State Super- itendent of Schools; Dr. Charles J. Hatfield, a prominent Philadelphian who is managing director of the Na- tional Tuberculosis Association; and Mrs. Frederic Schoff, of Philadelphia, president of the National Congress of Mothers and Parent-Teacher Associa- tions. President Wilson has endorsed the crusade in these words: “To the 35000 young Health Crusaders of the District of Columbia and to the 6,000, 000 Health Crusaders in the United States: “It is deeply gratifying to me, as it must be to every patriotic citizen, to know that the children of the country are striving so earnestly to cooperate in building up the health of the na- tion. It is my earnest hope that ev- ery boy and girl will continue the good work until the 20,000,000 school children of the United States are united in the one great cause of bet- ter health for the children.” The National Congress of Mothers and Parent-teacher Associations has jadopted a resolution endorsing the | [Modern Health Crusade and urging ‘all of its local organizations to make the crusade a part of their program for community betterment. i | Industrial Accidents in Pennsylvania. Industrial accidents killed 1,297 Pennsylvania workers during the first six months of this year, according to figures announced by Clifford B. Con- nelley, commissioner of the Depart- ment of Labor and Industry. During | the same period, 95,5640 persons were injured in the industries of this State. Since January 1 Pennsylvania work- men lost 359 eyes, at a workmen's compensation of $484,952. During the first half of 1920, the following losses of limbs were suffered at the | compensation cost indicated: 162 at $92,664. reau, so far this year has paid com- pensation awards totalling $83,404,435. In June, industrial accidents injured 14,994 workmen and 242 of them died as a result of their hurts. The | record of disabling accidents for June |is approximately 1,400 more than I May. . | hands, at $288,945; 72 feet, at $108,- | 350; 34 arms, at $70,731, and 48 legs ! The Workmen’s Compensation Bu- | “Blue Grass.” Among the most famous passages in the writings of the late Senator John J. Ingalls is his tribute to grass. Next in importance to the divine profusion of water, light and air, those three great physical facts which render existence possible, may be reck- i oned the universal beneficence of | grass. Exaggerated by tropical heats | and vapors to the gigantic cane con- | gested with its saccharine secretion, or dwarfed by Polar regions to the fibrous hair of northern solitudes, em- | bracing between these extremes the | maize with its resolute pennons, the | rice plant of southern swamps, the wheat, rye, barley, oats and other cer- | eals, no less than the humble verdure of hillside, pasture and prairie in the emperate zone, grass is the most widely distributed of all vegetable Le- ings, and is at once a type of our life and the emblem of our mortality. Lying in the sunshine among the but- : tercups and dandelions of May, scarce- ly higher in intelligence than the minute tenants of that mimic wilder- ness, our earliest recollections are of grass; and when the fitful fever is ended and the foolish wrangle of the market and forum is closed, grass heals over the scar which our descent into the bosom of the earth has made and the carpet of the infant becomes the blanket of the dead. Grass is the forgiveness of nature— her constant benediction. Fields tram- pled with battle, saturated with blood- —~torn with the rust of cannon, grow green again with grass and carnage is forgotten. Streets abandoned by traf- fic become grass grown like rural lanes and are obliterated. Forests de- cay, harvests perish, flowers vanish, ut grass is immortal. Beleagued by the seven hosts of winter, it with- draws into the impregnable fortress of its subterranean vitality and emerges upon the first solicitation of spring. Sown by the winds, by wan- dering birds, propagated by the subtle horticulture of the elements which are its ministers and servants, it softens the nude world. Its tenacious fibers ‘hold the earth in its place and prevent its sol- | uble components from washing into the wasting sea. It invades the soli- tude of deserts, climbs the inacces- sible slopes and forbidding pinnacles of mountains, modifies climates and determines the history, character and destiny of nations. Unobtrusive and patient, it has immortal vigor and ag- gression. Banished from the thor- oughfare and the field, it bides its time to return, and when vigilance 1s relaxed, or the dynasty has perished, it silently resumes the throne from which it has been expelled, but which it never abdicates. It bears no blaz- onry of bloom to charm the senses with fragrance and splendor, but its homely hue is more enchanting than the lily or the rose. It yields no fruit in earth or air, and yet should its harvest fail for a single year, famine would depopulate the world. One grass differs from another grass in glory. One is vulgar and another patrician. There are grades in its vegetable nobility. Some vari- ties are useful. Some are beautiful. Others combine utility and ornament. The sour, reedy herbage of the swamps is base-horn. *Fimothy and clover are a degree higher in the sc- cial scale. But the king, is blue grass. Why it is called blue, save that it is most vividly and intensely green, is inexplicable; but had its unknown priest baptised it with all the hues ° the prism, he would not have changed its hereditary title to im- perial superiority over all its hum- bler kin. Weeds and Hay Fever. Interesting observations made by Dr. William Sheppegrell, president of the American Hay Fever Prevention association, are reported in a paper published by him. As a result of a weed-cutting campaign carried out in New Orleans in the Spring of 1916 the number of hay fever cases was reduced to less than 50 per cent. of the usual prevalence. The “cold storage” treatment of the disease, in which practically all ventilation is ex- cluded in order to insure the absence of atmospheric pollen, is said to af- ford only transient relief, while the low temperature is likely to cause bronchitis. The effects of an abund- ant rain on hay fever patients is beneficial because the rain not only washes the pollen out of the air, but also permanently removes its toxic qualities, so that it is harmless when again blown into the air after the rain is over. This has been proved by laboratory experiments, in which pollen, after submersion in water, was inhaled’ by hay fever subjects with- out any apparent effect. New Windpipe for Man Gassed at ! Chateau Thierry. A marine gassed at Chateau Thierry was brought to the Jefferson Hospit- al in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, for an operation in which surgeons will give him an artificial section to his windpipe. He is Roscoe Rodgers, Healing Springs, Ala., formerly a member of the Sixth Regiment. After being gass- ‘ed he lay on the battlefield two days. When he reached a hospital it was found the poison had eaten away a long section of his windpipe. He was sent home and first operated upon at a hospital at Biltmore, N. C. The dis- eased tissue was cut away and an aluminum tube set in through which he could breathe. Two weeks ago the tube clogged and army doctors in Washington de- cided another operation was impera- tive. Dr. Chavalier Jackson, of Jef- ferson, was chosen to perform the delicate operation. On account of the patient’s condition only local anes- thetics will be used.—Ex. | No Style to Them. Mrs. Warbucks (trying to select a gift for her son)—Why, all of these fiddles look alike to me! Salesman—But they differ greatly in tone, madam, to say nothing of price. Mrs. Warbucks—Oh, hang the tone and price! Haven't you something in a period design ?—Buffalo Express. outline of the | | Women Voters May Keep Secret of Their Exact Age. Harrisburg, Pa.—Unless some un- sympathetic registration boards desire | to make the election laws a shade ' stricter than they really were intend- led to be, Pennsylvania women, when | they qualify as voters, will be saved from giving away the secret of their exact ages. That is the opinion of { state officials who went over the ques- tion today. One of the requirements neces- sary to qualify as a voter in the first second and third class cities is that they be personally registered on fixed days every two years. There is a | long list of questions to be answered, one of which requires the telling of the “approximate” age. Among the other questions asked are the name, ‘addresses, occupation, length of resi- dence, height, approximate weight and color, but there is not a word about date of birth. i _ Under the term “approximate” age : Pennsylvania women will have a sub- ‘ terfuge. Their sisters in boroughs ‘and townships who do not have to : bother with personal registrations are not in danger of revealing their age, as the only thing they have to do is ! to convince the assessor that they are i more than twenty-one years old and ‘have lived in the district for two years. George D. Thorn, chief of the Bu- reau of elections in the State Depart- ment, said that he did not think that the women would be embarrass- ed by registration boards demanding their exact age under the wording of the law. “Who is going to dispute with any woman what her approximate age is?” asked Mr. Thorn. He recalled a practice of former Representative Marlin E. Olmstead, of this city, who, whenever he registered, stated to the board gave his correct age. Regis- tration that he was “over fifty,” but never boards always marked the con- gressman at “over fifty.” Women may do likewise, Mr. Thorn said. | Fires Cause Heavy Loss in State. _ Harrisburg, July—Reports of fires in Pennsylvania during the first three months of 1920 which have been filed with the Bureau of Fire protection in the Department of State Police show that outside of Philadelphia and Pitts- burgh there has been a total of 1656 fires causing an estimated loss to the owners of building and property of $3,760,605. The reports made to the State Bu- reau come through its agents in every county of the State and are made after the insurance adjustments are cover- ed and there is little chance of inac- curacies on the estimated damages that the flames have created. On most occasions hasty estimates of fire losses are never borne out by final ‘adjustments, but the State waits for its reports until insurance adjusters say what the real damage was, or make estimates where no insurance is carrizad. 12,862 During 1919 there were fires in the State outside of Pitts- burgh and Philadelphia and the total . estimated loss was $17,742,241. The ‘most fires occurred in January with a total of 1265 but during March there were 1257 conflagrations caus- !ing the highest total monthly loss of the year of $2,249,269. The lowest | number of fires to occur on any single i month last year was in May with i 760. All records show that there are fewer fires during the summer months. The records for® this year show a great improvement throughout the State against the fire menace, there | being but 597 fires reported in Janu- ary, 505 in February and 554 in March. The losses have been little more than half of those the first three months in 1919. JACKSONVILLE. . Miss Frances Spencer, of Chicago, is spending a few days with friends hereabouts. Miss Anna. Spigelmyer spent Sun- day with the Misses Martha, Ethel and Florence Neff. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Armstrong, of Zion, were over Sunday guests at the home of County Commissioner George M. Harter. Mrs. Walter Daley, of Altoona, and Miss Hope Strunk, of State College, were week-end visitors at the George Ertley home. S. Yearick and family, of Philadel- phia, are visiting friends in this vi- cinity, Mrs. Yearick’s former home. They drove here in their big, new car and found the trip delightful. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Thiel and daughter, Doris, who formerly lived in this vicinity, attended the festival held here last Saturday evening and had a pleasant time meeting their many old friends. Many other people from a distance were here for the festival, which proved a decided success. The Howard band furnished the music and quite a nice sum of mon- ey was realized. MEDICAL. The Proper Course Information of Priceless Value to Every Bellefonte Citizen. How to act in an emergency is knowledge of inestimable worth, and this is particularly true of the diseases and ills of the human body. If you suffer with kidney backache, urinary disorders, or any form of kidney trouble, the advice contained in the following statement should add a valuable asset to your store of knowl- edge. What could be more convinc- ing proof of the efficiency of Doan’s Kidney Pills than the statement ef a Bellefonte citizen who used them and who publicly tells of the benefit de- rived ? Mrs. L. A. Hill, E. Bishop St., says: “I am bothered by backache ocasional- ly, but I keep Doan’s Kidney Pills in the house and the benefit I derive from their use is very gratifying.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that Mrs. Hill had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 65-30. So’