fami Denorvalic Wald “Bellefonte, Pa., February 25, 1921. GOETHE HERO OF ROMANCE Minor Love Affair That Figured in the Life of Germany's Most Famous Man of Letters. Goethe, famous man of letters, once foved a pretty little wife of a middle- aged merchant, Peter Anton Brentano, who sold cheese and herrings. Goethe, always careless of custom and tradition, went often to the Bren- tano home. It did not take him long to discover that the lovely Maximili- ane was extremely unhappy, and he did what he could to make her smile. He romped with her step-children, and he played a bass viol at family con- certs. Both were younger than Brentano, and both were palpably bored by his merchant friends and their talk of sales and profits. At first Brentano was delighted to have Goethe come to the house. His visits made Maximiliane happy, and that pleased the husband, who had grieved when he saw his wife smile so seldom. But he grew suspi- cious. He counseled Maximiliane to see Goethe less often, and there were violent scenes in the house- hold. Goethe sided with the young wife, and continued to call frequent- ly. Brentano could not conceal his wrath and his flaming jealousy. He upbraided thém, and there were “terrible moments.” Goethe finally rushed away in anger from the house, determined never to be em- broiled in such quarrels again. He plunged into the writing of “Wer- ther,” and Maximiliane passed out of his life. BIRD THAT LOCKS ITS NEST Central American Wren Takes Par- ticular Care That Its Eggs Shall Not Be Harmed. In Central America are many strange birds with stranger habits, but probably none is more interesting than a little brown wren which may be seen along the roadsides or on fences. This little bird, about the size of a canary, builds a nest out of all pro- portion to its apparent needs. He se- lects a small tree with horizontal branches growing close together. Across two of the branches he lays sticks fastened together with tough fiber until a platform about six feet fong by two feet wide is constructed. On the end of this platform nearest the tree trunk he then builds a huge dome-shaped nest a foot or so high, .with thick sides of interwoven thorns. ‘A: covered passageway is then made from the nest to the end of the plat- form in as crooked a manner as pos- sible. Across the outer end as well as at short intervals along the inside of this tunnel are placed cunning little fences of thorns, with just enough space for the owners to pass through. On going out this opening is closed ‘by the owner by placing thorns across the gateway, and thus the safety of eggs or young is assured. Use for Fire-Killed Timber. . Prejudice exists in certain quarters ‘against the use of timber cut from dead trees, and some purchase speci- fications insist that only timber cut from live trees will be acceptable. As a matter of fact when sound dead trees are sawed into lumber and the weath- ered or charred outside is cut away, there is no method known to the Unit- ed States forest products laboratory by which the lumber can be distin- guished from that cut from live trees, ‘except that the lumber from dead trees may be partly seasoned when sawed. All the information av ‘lable at the laboratory indicates that timber cut from insect or fire-killed trees is just as good for any structural purpose as that cut from live trees of similar quality, providing the wood has not been’, subsequently injured by decay or further insect attack. r Ben Franklin, Reformer. Like many of us today, Franklin was no churchgoer, but firmly be- lieved in the desirability of other peo- .ple’s attendance, at public worship. , In the goodness of his heart, however, he was desirous of making the Church of England's morning service less onerous to the faithful. So, while representing the Colonies in England, he proceeded to abridge the Book of "Common Prayer! He was assisted in the task by an English crony, the once notorious Lord De Spencer. * The whole episode reminds us of the day when, as a small boy, he sug- gested to his astonished parent that much time and trouble might be saved if grace were said over the whole family pork-barrel at once.—Asa Don Dickinson in the New York Times. Biblical Error. The following gem was sent to the London Morning Post by a corre- spondent, who says he had found it in a private letter written by Charles Dickens: “The story is about a little boy to whom the news had been bro- ken by his mother, that he was to have a French governess. Dickens tells it thus: ‘After leaning his plump little cheek against the window glass in a dreary little way for some minutes, he looked around and inquired in a gen- eral way. and not as if it had any spe- cial application, whether she didn't think “that ‘the tower of. Babel was a great mistake altogether.”'” Brain Is Frequently at Best During the Still, Quiet Hours of the Dark- ness. Many writers sleep with pencil and notebook under their pillows and a lamp at hand, so that they may dash off the thoughts that come to them in the watches of the night. There is about these thoughts a clarity that does not come with daytime thinking —a sureness of vision that approaches the clairvoyant. Misfortunes never loom so full or realistic as after mid- night; but joy and pleasure lose some- thing of their glamor, their evidence; doubt creeps in with them. A problem which we have wrestled in the daylight, weighing it with all our intelligence, is settled in a certain way, calmly and judiciously and after mature reflection. Our decision seems the right one. And then, suddenly, in the dead of the night, that self-same issue bobs up before our mental vi- sion, wakes us from a sound sleep and. settles itself in quite another way, in | one great flash. A strong white light | has been turned upon the brain and has revealed there a conclusion of which we had no inkling before. The processes of arriving at it are a closed chapter. The clairvoyant brain has registered a result only. And again and again it will be found to be the right, thie expedient solution. Memory, too, is peculiarly keen in | the silences between midnight and four | in the morning. All the cobweps have | been swept from the brain by the first hours of sleep; the body and nerve centers are singularly rested; there are no noises to disturb and some sub- conscious power is at work within us. | THAT LUCKY RABBITS FOOT Must Be Procured Only Under Certain Circumstances if the Charm | Is to Have Power. You have undoubtedly heard about wearing a rabbit's foot for luck. Do you know what is the significance of it, where it is to be carried, and why it is lucky? Well, here it is: “The rabbit’s foot is esteemed a powerful talisman to bring good for- tune to the wearer and protect him from all dangers,” says an authority. “As this belief is more or less common throughout the South it may be well to state how the charm is prepared. for the benefit of those who wish to | be put on the royal road to health. wealth and prosperity. “It must be the left hind foot of a graveyard rabbit, and that is one caught in a graveyard, although one captured under the gallows would probably answer as well. It must be taken at the midnight hour and the foot amputated. hollow stump in which water has col- | lected from recent rains. The foot is then dipped three times into this wa ter and the charm is complete. “Among the negroes and unedu- cated whites of the South the reputed possessor of. this potent talisman is at once feared and respected.” Silk Cultivation in China. - i That the secret of the silkworm was | jealously guarded is well known, and a tradition is told of a Chinese prin- “perform the proper rites in ‘his behalf cess who tried to import the insects into the country whither she was Zo- ing. Certainly it seems probable that silk making was known as long ago as 2800 B. C., when Emperor Chin Nong, to whom is ascribed the inven- | tion of the plow, is said to have bhe- ' gun the planting of mulberry trees, | and his successor, Hoan-ti, intrusted to his wife the investigation into the rearing of the silkworms, in the year 2602 B. C. Certainly her work was suc- | cessful, and her name to this day is held in high honor, an encouragement to those who, like Lui Tsu Si Ling Chi, | devote their time to the care of any form of investigation work. Inheritance of Insanity. According to Doctor Kener, director of ‘a large lunatic asylum in Rou- mania, insanity, when transmitted, oc- curs at an earlier age in each suc- cessive generation. Of 250 pairs of | parents, reports the Journal of the American Medical Association, and off- spring, 39 per cent of the offspring were found to have had their first at- | tack of insanity before the age of twenty-five, a considerable portion be- ' ing congenital imbeciles. Mothers transmitted much more frequently than fathers, and daughters are affected more often than sons; also the off- spring are affected at about half the age of the parent, being in most in- : stances either congenital imbeciles or cases of adolescent insanity. The World in Stone. At Swanage in England is a conven- tional representation conventional, that is, not in other respects, hewn from rock, and measures 11 feet in diameter, and weighs 40 tons. The history of this unique i of the globe— | in design, but | | 1 geo- | graphical record is interesting, for it | is the result of the successful building operations of two local men who mi- | grated to London, and amassed huge | fortunes, then returned to their na- | tive town and lavished decorations in, stone on every available part of Sw an-, ! age. | i He Explains. i “What was that pretty woman say ing to you, huh?” “She was telling me that she voted; for me, my dear. Nothing more.”— Louisville Courier-Journal. The foot must then | he carried secretly in the pocket until |, “by chance the owner happens upon a , of court. ‘with festivities that lasted a week and | his release by paying his brother $50,- "and took her with him. ' gatory after death, | come in contact | draughts, . be kept moist. for the globe is —— | CLARITY IN NIGHT THOUGHTS | "WOMAN BEGAN LONG DISPUTE Shakespeare-Bacon Controversy Had | Its Origin in Book Published by American Author. The long-drawn-out controversy over i I | ' | i | i the authorship of the Shakespearean | plays had its origin in a remrakable book written by an American woman, Delia Bacon, a native of Tallmadge, O., with a preface written by her friend, Nathaniel Hawthorne. She was a woman of intense application and capacity for esoteric study and her book was the product of a lifetime spent in the feverish pursuit of her hobby. Philosophy of the Plays of Shake- speare Unfolded,” copies of which are now rare, as it has long been out of print. The book is written in a very labori- ous style, difficult to read. Some of the sentences are three to four hun- dred words long, but the entire work shows evidences of intense study of the works of the poet and a masterly knowledge of the history of Shake- speare’s period. The intense obsession with she pursued her theories brought her life to a tragic end. vinced that Shakespeare's secret was Her book was entitled “The ; | impreguiable ¥ Cranean vitality and emerges ‘o whieh | MH ality and emerges upon tl Becoming con- | hidden in his tomb at Stratford, she . went to reside there to confirm her re- | searches. She was found one night at the tomb, muttering incoher- ently, and evidently making prepara- tions to open the tomb in search of of the poet, beneath the cryptic in- seription, “Good friend, for Jesus’ sake forbear to dig the bones inclosed here.” She was removed to an asylum. mid- | zonry + with CR iNGALLS’ TRIBUTE TO GRASS Beautiful Word Painting of Kans: Statesman That Is Reco in as a Classic. Lying in the sunshine among the buttercups and dandeiions of May, scarcely higher in intelligence than the minute fenants 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 hecomes the blanket of the dead. Grass is the forgiveness of Nature—her constant benediction. Fields trampied with battle, saturated with blood, torn with the ruts of cannon, grow green again with grass, and carnage is forgotten, Streets abandoned by traffic become grass-grown like rural lanes and are obliterated. Forests decay, harvests perish, flowers vanish, but grass is im- mortal. Beleaguered by the sullen hosts of winter, it withdraws into the fortress of its subter- irst solicitation of spring. Sown hy the winds, by the wandering birds. propagated by the subtle agricuimmere of the elements which are its minis. rers and servants, it softens the rude outline of the world. It bears no hla of bloom to charm the fragrance or splendor, Senses but irs * homely hue is more enhancing than the DAZZLED OLD LONDON TOWN Becky Wells, Beautiful Madcap, Well- Known Character During the Reign of George Ill. Becky Wells, beautiful English act- ress, journalist and author, was born in 1759, married at eighteen, and a few months later saw her husband de- sert her for her bridesmaid. She went to London and won success by her beauty when she went on the stage. She took up with Edward Top- ham, an eccentric, and they estab- lished a newspaper that thrived on scandal, : Becky took to wearing furs in sum- mer and muslins in winter, which per- i haps stamps her as a woman in ad- vance of her age. She hired hackney coaches to drive her to Oxford or Cambridge for her health, and her vagaries were the talk of the town. She imagined that she was irresisti- ble and took it into her head to in- fatuate George III, the dull king whose only redeeming virtue was his apparent faithfulness to his wife. She was thrown into jail by her creditors, and there she infatuated a Moor, son of the prime minister of Morocco, who, had been sent to prison for contempt They were wedded in jail which cost the bridegroom $2,500. Her husband, Joseph Sumbel, then secured 000 and he also paid Becky's, creditors Tricking Fate, : ; Every Hindoo must have a son to so that he may be released from pur- says Asia Maga- zine. Especially cursed, therefore, is he whose fate it is to be sonless. One such, a Brahmin, propitiated. the god Vishu and obtained a boon. He asked for a son, but, since a son was not in the man’s fate, 'Vishu refused. Twice this happened, but the third time the i. Brahmin asked that his merriments might be shared by gods and men alike. This "was granted. He then went home, locked his door and, with his wife, began to sing and dance. | Thereupon, all the gods and men, by the terms of the boon, were compelled “to sing and dance with him, and the business of the universe was brought to a standstill. “Stop,” begged the gods. “Only when you grant me a son,” answered the Brahmin. And he had his way. Plant Care. The room in which palms and gera- : niums are kept should not be allowed to get cooler than 40 or 45 degrees. . The palm should be placed in a part- ly shaded spot, but never where it may with gas or cold It should never be placed in the direct rays of the sun. The leaves should occasionally be sponged with fishoil soap and warm water. It should not be too well watered, and perfect drainage is necessary to suc- cessful culture. The geranium requires plenty of sunlight and its roots should It should be sprayed with tepid water occasionally to keep ! the foliage bright and green and pre- vent dust from lodging on the leaves. Seeking a Paragon. “Here's an advertisement for a wife.” “She must be young, rich and beau- tiful, I suppose?” “No, but the requirements are al- most as hard to meet. The advertise- ment specifies that she must be ‘un- der forty, immune from the movies and house broken.” — Birmingham Age-Herald. Divergent Views. Girl (watching aeronaut)—Oh, I'd ! hate to be coming down with that parachute. Mere Man—I'd hate to be coming down without it—Chaparral. concealed manuscripts which she be- | Hy lieved had been interred with the body | 12 earth) or air. i vest fail for a stay in the Big Burg. or the rose. It yields no fru’ and vet should its ha» single year, famine would depopuiate the world.—Irom a “Collection James Ingalls.” THEY'LL GET YOU SOME WAY City Scalawags Hard to Beat, Accord- ing to Testimony of Visitor From Jimpson Junction. “If them infernal scalawags up there in Kay See can’t get you one way they will another!” disgruntledly asserted the gent from Jimpson Junc- tion, who was just back from a brief “Pretend to do vou a favor and then skin you alive! Tuther night in my room in the hotel I was ’'tending to my own business when a feller in the next room yelled what in all this and that was coming off. : “ ‘I'm nailing my clothes to the floor, of the Writings of John ! if it's any of your by-gosh business! I! hollered back. ‘I'm suit stole while I'm slumbering.’ “ ‘Why, you pea-green yokel! velled back, fire department goes roaring by in the middle of the night and you can't yank | 7 on your clothes and run after it? “‘By cripes! I hadn't thought of that!" says I. ‘I would be in a dickens of a fix. wouldn't I? TI claw my clothes: loose from’ the floor and run the visk of having wouldn't like fo miss a good fire. Much obliged to you, sir!’ ; “Well, T done so, and went to sleep and as far as I know the fire depart- ment never made a. run the whole night long. And next morning my ‘clothes were gone, and so was the fel- ler in the next room.’ Star. —Kansas City : Ribbon Fish’s Oddities. “The ribbon fishes.” said John T Nichols, head of the department of re cent fishes at the 'Muscum of Natural History, according to the New York Times, “are perhaps. the least. known of the larger marine species. They are elongate, flattened from side to side with a manelike fin on the back. Specimens are 15 to 20 feet long, he- ing from 10 to 12 inches deep, and about an inch or two broad at their thickest part. They have big eyes and small mouths.” : Very few specimens ever come to light and these are usually washed up on some shore or are found floating at the surface in a dead or dying con- dition. The larger ones are known to grow to be 20 feet or so in length and very likely attain a considerably greater size, but this is a matter of pure conjecture. Young individuals of some of the species but a few inches long are not rarely met with near the surface. Natal Superstition. Persons born between October 23 and November 22, when the sun is in Scorpio, have a courageous, loving d%position. Have natural dignity and great persuasive ability. Make friends readily. Have more power over minds of others than over their own impulses. They are aggressive and executive, and naturally fitted to oveiyee others. They are capable of great things if they can be induced to stay at one thing long enough—but are impatient of re- sults. They are well adapted for gov- ernment jobs. Unlucky Birthday. People born on Saturday (Saturn's day), will have much difficulty in ac- quiring money and will have to work hard. This may make them melan- choly and avaricious and inclined to run into debt. They should guard against carelessness in dress and the reading of evil books. They will be sub- ject to disease of legs and knees. They will have much luck in finding hidden treasure; will be apt to be uncomely and unpopular. And He Would Not Smile. “That head walter would smile and take your last dollar.” “Probably not. He wouldn't accept as little as a dollar under any circum- stances.” them stole, 1 | a tollable sound | sleeper, and don’t aim to have my best | f he “what will you do if the A) i go i fas ouz | Le dy Good other S For Good cloth is the first thing it takes to make good clothes. The next thing is skilled workmanship. Style experts design our models, and the best tailors in the land, working in clean, well-lit tailor shops, clothes we sell. make the When you buy our clothes you get quality, style, fit and VALUE. Dress better and you will do better. Try it and see. Wear our Good, “Nifty” Clothes Fauble’s 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 62-47 Studebaker SPECIAL SIX SERIES 20 Satisfying Performance Economy of Operation Power Durability True Value mses as— ie innaenstenns sys s $2250,00 SPECIAL BIX.....ecc000000000000e 178500 LIGHT BIX..ecc000000 1485.00 Cord Tires on all Models—Prices f. o. b. Factory—Subject te Change "BEEZER’S GARAGE ~ North Water St. ga BELLEFONTE SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS BIG SIX..... c8ssnecsecsne