zs Bw i lta. " Bellefonte, Pa., January 28, 1921. THEY ALL WERE AMERICANS tnteresting Observations on the Prod- uct of the Meiting Pot by Frederick Palmer. Where were the foreigners? 1 won- dered as I looked at the faces in the streets upon my return from Europe. The French, who had heard much of our polyglotry, asked this question when they saw our soldiers march- ing along the roads of France. In French eyes the men were all of the type American. Yet they included for- elgn born, as well as rons of every race in Europe, Frederick Palmer writes in Harper's. Are you Americans? their adopted country asked of them in those trying days. They gave their answer in sac- rifice at home and in battle. often fighting against an enemy of their own blood. Zalinskis, Einsteins, Schmidts, Bertellis, Katsanjans won the Distin- | guished Service Cross, thrilling our | pride with a new sense of nationalism. Had they now reverted to loyalty to the lands of their origin? If so, what had wrought the change in their hearts? To my fresh view all the people were distinctively Americans in garb and taste; in their complexion, which our climate so promptly affects; mn their brusque and frank civility, their intensity, their pleasures, and their restless motion. Later, as I became settled at home and more discerning, | I might note that this or that person was of Swedish. Italian, Hungarian or Slav stock. through the veneer, as 1 was told. ¢ of view, of the box. an ‘SOAP AND SOCKS IN SUMATRA a — Wearing of Hosiery Is an Indication That the Wearer Earns at Least $20 a Month. Soap and socks in Sumatra-~ten years ago the observant mind of a consulate representative of the United States in that island would have de- voted less thought to such matters, but now the internationalization of commerce gives soap and socks in Su- | matra their place in the sun. The natives, it appears from a recent con- sular report, are more and more tak- ing to wearing socks. Those sim- ple garments of extremities, one judges, are becoming an indication that the wearer earns at least $20 a month. American socks are well thought of, as are American soaps, put more socks and soaps from Amer- jca can be sold in Sumatra if the American dealers in these commodi- ties will give more thought to local taste in decorating the boxes or wrap- pers in which they go on sale in the bazaars. These buyers in Sumatra, like their soaps and socks done up in bright colored containers; in fact, they are inclined to judge the con- | tents by the beauty, from their point The picture of American manufacturing plant i leaves them cold. nor do they care i for a wrapper decorated with land- seape in colors. matter of hosiery, they like the box decorated with some brightly colored picture which catches the eye and ap- t . . , peals to the imagination by its *“hu- | man i interest.” (ne judges that il would be good policy for American { dealers in soaps and socks to discard Then I would see ! But aren't most of us—again, not a | new idea—who are “off the reserva- tion,” of foreign stock? My people | missed the Mayflower and came over | in 1636. descendants of the Pilgrims were more American than I was or than a dark I could not discern that the | Peculiar Sentiments Revealed in Re- eyed telephone gir! whose father was an Italian immigrant. Not even in the mean streets did I fiad patches. I saw no shriveling ba- | y vies 1 emaclated mothers’ chine ol! | for the 446 members of the reichstag lw 0, rs bread lines in the European sense, | was 26,017,590. 3 though conditions were bad enough | to be thrown out ran into the thou- | sands. i lot: standards which m v 1 » | 08s z ust over ou ' ity socialists this time, but unless | stag : 5 “everything is for the best in the best | ean get Westphalian ham that 1s from the point of view of desired ambition away from of worlds.” In place of saloons in stores and restaurants had appeared. How clean the restaurants were com- pared to those of the same class in Europe? How wholesome was their atmosphere! WAR ON DISEASE WORLD WAR Health Problems of the Remotest Land Is the Concern of All Peoples. The war against disease is a world war. Commerce carries dangerous in- fections, as well as goods and ideas. The health problems of the remotest land concern all peoples. More and more, nations are coming to recognize their interdependence in health as in industry, government, science, and cul- ture. There are even now foreshadow- ings of world-wide co-operation in com- ; ! never do mean streets and average streets, new | 2 ! their present containers and employ some of the artists who make covers for the popular magazines to design and paint them new ones particularly for the Sumatra market—Christian Science Monitor. ODDITIES OF GERMAN VOTE cent Balloting for Members of Reichstag. The total number of valid votes cast at the recent election in Germany The votes that had One woman wrote on her bal- “] am voting for you major- made in Westphalia from now on I'l it again.” Quite a few votes were cast for the kaiser on the ground that “if elected the humilia- bating the maladies which. have long | threatened humanity. campaign leaders are needed to extend the frontiers of medical science, to teach, to organize. to administer. Demonstrations are required to con- For this new | tion would serve him right.” One man from Magdeburg deposited in- stead of his ballot a five-mark nole without comment, ut the prize ballot came from Lin- den, It dos 2 piece of wrapping pa- per, on which was written “Isaiah 12 23.94" The verses read: “Show the things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ve are gods; yea, | do good or do evil, that we may be dismayed and behold it together. Be- hold, ve are of nothing and your work of naught; an abomination is he that chooseth you.” PRODUCE NEW LIQUID FUEL Spirit Known as “Natalite,” Made ia Papua, Put on Market Cheaper Than Gasoline. The rivers in the sngar-growing dis- | ¢ricts of Ausirnlin will run less SWE! - vince communities and nations that | diseases can be controlled and even J eradicated. The Rockefeller Founda- | tion, enlisted for this world-wide cam- paign against disease, is co-operating with many agencies in five continents, is fostering the growth of internation- al confidence and good will, and is seeking the fulfillment of its chartered purpose—*“to promote the well-being of mankind throughout the world.” ee ———————————————————— Fuel Oil for Railroads. The great scarcity of coal has caus- ed the Paris, Lyons, and Mediterra- | nean Railway company to transform some of its motive power from coal to fuel oil consumption, which is about to be followed by the Chemin | de Fer de I'Etat, or state-owned rail- way, and engines at its shops at Sain- tes are now undergoing changes for experimental purposes. Much atten- tion is being directed to the announce- ment that the first-named railway company is planning to equip 200 lo- comotives for fuel oil and install nu- merous storage reservoirs of from 40 to 100 tons’ capacity at various points on its lines.—Scientific American. Census Involves Much Work, The 110,000,000 cards needed to rec- ord the population of the United States in the new census made a stack more than ten miles high. With- out machinery it would be almost im- possible to manage a census nowadays. It took seven years to complete and publish the census of 1890, and nine years to complete the census of 1880. By means of electrical mechanism which punches something like 4,000,000 cards a day, the cards are now sorted and tabulated in weeks instead of years. The device also saves expense and eliminates error, An Obligation. “Do you intend to vote at the com- ing election?” “Yes,” replied Miss Cayenne. “And I shall wear my handsomest costume. Having secured the right to vote, every woman should feel it her patri- otic duty to make it fashionable ?%0 do 80.” | ly new that the government has re: moved tire excise duty of a shilling « eullon. which has made unprofitabie the local manufacture of industrial alcohol. Every year, so writes a cor- respondent of the London Times Trade Supplement from Sydney, hun- dreds of thousands of gallons of molasses have been run into those | rivers because there was no profit in using the molasses to make alcohol; but the removal of the duty comes ag an important part of the movement now under way to replace petrol with industrial alcohol and thus make Aus- tralin able to produce her own liquid {uel. One immediate result has been the formation in Australia of an impor tant company to manufacture indus- trial alcohol: and one future result seems to be that Australians who now speak of petrol will eventually say “patalite” In Natal a patent spirit which has been given this new name is already being marketed at a price Jower than petrol, and the making of this liquid fuel is about to be under- taken on a large scale in Papua, where plants and trees have been discovered that are expected to yield about 73 gallons a ton. A hundred square miles of country have been reserved on which some 5,500,000 gallons of natal- ite a year are considered a reasonable beginning with the likelihood of in- sarticularly in the | Ris Ee PAINTED IN FIVE MINUTES London Newspaper Tells of Meritori- { cus Pictures Made Quickly by i Traveling Artist. Wile great painters have spent weeks—perhaps months—on a simple | study. a young artist is turning ont de- | lighttui views of the gea and country in rive minutes, says London Answers. ! impossible as this sounds, it is a fact. and the artist = question is Al- bert Cronkshaw of danchester. It was an extremely dull day, with dark clouds overhead, when a crowd of holiday makers stopped to watch a smart looking man, mounted on a plat- form. transforming a plain piece of canvas into a marvelou§ scene of beau- ty. Every one forgot the dark, gloomy atmosphere as they were transported, first, 10 a beautiful spot in North Wales. and then to a picturesque cas tle. And it was all done in 10 min- utes. They were pictures to be proud of, too. painted with taste and an eye to the artistic. As fast as they were painted so were they sold to the ad- miring audience. {There is no doubt that there wiil be | a great demand for “rapid” artists in | the near future, when we get some of | | 1 | those promised houses built, and un | doubted!ly the economical housewife will be on the lookout for good, cheap pictures (o beautify the walls of her domain, She need search no further than the traveling artist, who will comn- plete a picture in five minutes and charge less for it than almost any art denler. . Here. too. is an opportunity for any discharged soldiers who are artistical- ly inclined. In a neat little hand book issued by the traveling painter they will find all the businesslike methods explained clearly and simply. It is a really useful short cut to rapid paint- ing. Slowing Down Production. “How do you like the new hired man?’ ade 1 like him first rate,” replied Farm- or Corntossel. “But I've got my donbts about whether we can afford to keep him. He talks so interestin’ about political economy and things that everybody wants to quit work an’ listen.” Funeral Arrangements. ; Teacher—What is the presidentia: sucession law, John? John—the presidential succession ww provides that if both president and vice president die the cabinet members will follow in suocession.— ‘Boys’ Life. Rules for “Knights” of the Road. | What should a driver do? The rules are very simple: Keep to the right of the road. Slow down at crossings. Signal for a stop or turn to the cars behind by holding out the left hand. Apply brakes slowly. Change speed rates slowly. Drive carefully. i Be prepared to help any motorist in | trouble in roads distant from garages. | Be prepared to give pedestrians | “lifts” on country roads. Stop car and engine when meeting drovers with sheep, swine or cattle on country roads. Park only at side of roads, leaving | fair way. : When buying produce in the coun- try park alongside road, not on road. | . When parking at night leave warn- ing lights. Have headlight dimmers and use them when meeting and passing other motorists at night. When picnicking, do not trespass to gather wild flowers, tree branches, blossoms, fruit or shrubs. When picnicking, carefully put out picnic fires. : When picnicking, clean up thor- oughiy, removing from sight all cans, papers and rubbish. . Give all vehicles, especially loaded trucks, a good half of the road. Take hills on the right side of the road. Go over the crest carefully. Shoes. Avoid coasting or speeding around ' curves at foot of hills. Be courteous to pedestrians. not drive your car at them full tilt and laugh when they jump. Do not splash water on them as they stand at cross- ings or near curbs, waiting for you w pass. : Avoid street cars carefully at stops. Learn and follow the local" traffic rules, speed limits and driving ordi- nances. These are made for the com- mon good of all drivers, including yourself, and of all: pedestrians. With these practices universally fol- lowed by drivers, motoring will main- tain its safety, its freedom, its stand- ing and its favorable acceptance by the community. Five years ago such suggestions as these were unnecessa- ry. Today, when each’ eleventh per- son owns a car, it is vitally necessary to have drivers recall the: days of chivalry. Crowded and still more crowded streets and roads have pro- duced a nation-wide problem, whose simplest solution is a return to the courtesy of the days when knighthood flowered. : The automobile is too vital to the nation, too mich a part of the blood and bone of the country’s economic life to have its use curtailed through the failure of its usérs to follow the rules of simple courtesy and safety. -- meee ern be — “How do pou like that typist. I sent you? Is she accurate and care- ful enough for you?” “No doubt of her being careful enough,” was the reply. “She stops and asks me how to spell every word.”—Houston Post. in this city or and cheaply. them. 60-4 Handling Your Funds. A Business Manager who disburses funds at your direction, a secretary { who keeps your accounts, a sleepless sentinel guarding your funds, a car- rier who delivers to all corners of the country—all these and many other of- fices are performed by Money which you wish to send with- to distant points is con- veyed by your check simply, The checking account is only one of the many mediums through which this bank serves its customers. many other ways in which we can be helpful to you and it would be our pleasure to serve you in any or all of CENTRE COUNTY BANKING C0 BELLEFONTE, PA. the bank. safely There are Do | Yeager’s Shoe Store Just a Suggestion There is not any gift which would be appreciated more than a dressy pair of shoes or a pair of comfy bedroom slippers . . . . . . . We Have the Best . Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN ‘Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. creasing the output to at least 18,- | 000,000 gallons when a system of re- planting the land has been put in operation. The plan goes further, and will seek to engage farmers to co- operate by raising crops of sorghum, | with an estimated yield of 80 gallons of industrial alcohol to the ton, for a share in the profits. rei Washing Machine Activity. Next to the automobile manufactur- ers. the makers of washing machines are now the greatest consumers of cop- | per. The utility companies, which in normal times are large users of cop- per. cannot buy much now heeaguse they can't get the monev Pn wash- ing machines are heine tt mt hy thousands in an «fe the chortace of lahor =n nters Iarente inte the most $F the of wnshing + Letz Feed Mills Sharples Cream Separators Sharples Milking Machines (Electric and Line Machines) Chicken, Dairy and Horse Feed Calf Meal { Dubbs’ Implement and Feed Store BELLEFONTE, Pa er AAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAAAAAAAAAAAAS NS Lyon & Co. ~~ Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME. : January Clearance and White Sale Our White Sale is now on in ful swing, values and Reductions Extraordinary. 36 inch unbleached Musling, NOW. .....c.ievenruruencennceeceens .12¢ 36 inch Heavier and Better Qualities in Bleached and Unbleached Mus- Hug. oui .aaud vih ia TH CC vate sia aay a se 15¢ 45 x 86 Pillow Cases... ..eeeeeesennnns SB oii, Eh, Coats and Suits Ladies’ and Misses Winter Coats and Suits at Prices that will Mean Quick Selling. Ladies’ Suits, Black, Navy, Reindeer and Copenhagen at..... $19.50 Ladies’ Coats, all Sizes, all Colors, that sold from $35.00 to $65.00, $15.00 to $39.50 yd sas esas ssid s escent everest res. Special Lots On lot of Men’s handsome Silk Neck Ties, value ranging from $1.50 to $3.50, we are making quick selling price at 98¢ Turkish Towels 10 dozen All White, Very Heavy Turkish Towels, size 22x44, 8bc., our .. 50c sees sssssscnnse cree essere New Spring Dress Goods All the new styles, large assortment Dress Voiles, small and large de- signs, the regular 85¢ quality, during the sale..... «..30c Better quality, beautiful colorings, value $1.75, during the sale. .$1.25 Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME