— Demorvaic; Wald, — Bellefonte, Pa., September 30, 1921. KOREAN FOOTBALL 5697 B. C. wewuk kuk” That's just Korean for football, Antiquarians digging around the dusty wemes of old Japan came across document which seems to be the 'o- lice Gazette of B. C. 2697. The mole- skins of the day were made of s’lk. It was not uncommon to find a huge pansy across the back of a stalwart tackle. Stockings were silk, too, ail of variegated colors. The Big Bill Edwards of those days | was Emperor Cheng Ti of the Han dynasty. History relates that he tracked his team to the limit. Whether he showed the devotion of the modern college student who sells his furniture to bet on the game is not known. Wal- ter Camp was represented by Gen. Asukai Masatsune. He got out the original rule book and guide. Whether he also picked his own crowd for the All-Meongolian or net, histery does not say. At any event hea was the original eoach and probably won his shave of moral victories while the other teams got the. touchdow:.s. Football in those days was like yachting now. Only those in whose veins flowed the bluest blood could make the team. Nothing is known about the forma- - tions of that day. but we have a de- ~scription of the ball. It was round and stuffed with bair. “Goat’s hair” ‘gave it resiliency. The game seems to have been all kicking. Stage waits were as prevalent as in a corner lots ball game of today. So long winded were the protests that the attendants ised to serve tea to the players while a decision was being given. Unnecessary roughness was fre- quent, and when the game was played in the army as a military exercise, a famous generz! protested that it was too strenuous, and the contestants were forthwith equipped with fans. A fan in the hands of the umpire replaced the whistle of today, and we can im- agine him nearly waving his wrist off when things went wrong. No goa! posts as we knew them to- day existed. At one end of the field there was a cherry tree and at the other end an apple tree, which served as goals. The apple tree was the more popular, as a tally was signalized by a shower of fruit, at which the game was suspended while all contestants ate an apple. Once early in the spring when the goals were in bloom a half- hack of the Lu province team mistook the apple tree for the cherry and shot fosing the game for his team. ~He was “cussed out” quite heartily by the spec: tators in true Yankee style,—New York Mail. : Trecs for Future Generations Sometimes it is said that in certain European countries the law compels | the plaating of a tree for every tree | cut down, and it is urged that such a law should be enacted in different provinces of Canada. however, is only The expression, | metaphorical. What | liuropean countries do provide, is that | for every acre of forest cut down, in certain areas unsuitable for agricul- ' tieir uniforms and made off. ture, another crop of trees must be started by either natural or artificial methods of regeneration on that area. When forest trees are planted, the trees are set, say 2,000 to the acre, and when they are harvested, 60 or , 70 years later, they stand from 150 to to 200 to the acre. If they had been planted 200 to the acre they would have grown short and full of limbs | from useless for lumber. the ground up, and would be Planted thickly they reach upward for the light, mak- | trunks. The trees reach ing long, clean which never maturity are | thinned out either naturally or with | the ax, after they Lave served their purpose.—Montreal Herald. remarkable Beigian Gun. One of the most curious products of the Belgian gunmakers’ art, says Pop- ular Mechanics Magazine, is now i. the possession of a Colorado sports- man. This gun is remarkable for its arrangement of seven barrels in one, the composite tube with its cluster of parallel bores being about the size of a heavy-gauge shotgun barrel. Seven 22-caliber rifle cartridges are inserted in the breech openings, and fired sim- | ultaneously by a single firing pin and hammer. The shell ejector is a re- movable disk with seven holes, which swings back when the lock is opened. " “a Oak in Hall of Fame. ‘Before Basking Ridge, N. J. took its place in the world an oak stood ‘there. The people of this New Jersey ‘town can trace the tree's history for 400 years, but the church is only 200 vears old. It has just celebrated that event. Miss Margaret Hitch- cock of Morristown, and Mrs. Wil- liam D. Baneker of Basking Ridge nominate the tree for a place in the Hall of Fame which the American Forestry association is compiling of trees with a history. The tree has a circumference of 151% feet 6 feet above the ground. indian Chief Drives Auto. An Indian Chief, Tony Tommy, of the Florida Seminoles, who still wear the garb of their forefathers, is the tirst of his tribe to huy and operate his own automobile. After a course of instruction at a garage in Miami, the chief now rolls into town each aveek from his village, near Fort Lauderdale, at the wheel of his ma- «chine, but with a pair of horn-rim glasses as his only other concessior to the ways of the palefaces. “DEAD” SIX YEARS American Tells of Suffering in Mexican Salt Mines. oi wR & “yi = 1 i z Be Only Recently Gained Freedom, and Did Not Know Anything of the World War. The World war had been fought and won, and he did not know a word about it. He was Mate Maguire, ‘an engineer and graduate of tke Boston Institute of Technology, who for six years was a soldier of fortune in the rebel army of Mexico, and for five years and eight months a prisoner at hard labor in the Mexican salt mines, during which he never saw the light of day or a newspaper of any kind. Maguire reached Tacoma a short time ago after a thrilling escape from the mines, in which he had been con- demned to life imprisonment after his capture by the Mexican federals. He has just taken'a position in the county engineer's office in Tacoma, says a Ta- coma letter. Young and adventurous, Maguire joined a troop of men from the United States who were fighting under Ma- dera. He became second in command of all the troops and was part of the time directly under Villa. He was truly a soldier of fortune. jut one day Maguire and two other oflicers went into Chihuahua because they heard trouble was brewing there. They entered a cantina through =a rear entrance. Here they found sev- eral of Huerta's officers carousing. They had nothing to do but surrender to them. They were gagged, tied and taken 65 miles on horseback to the headquarters of a United States half- breed serving under Huerta. Here at a general court-martial they were sen- renced to life imprisonment in the sait mines of Chihuahua. “It was worse than a death sentence to us,” said Maguire. “We had heard ahout the conditions of the salt mines, where unbelievable conditions were ex- isting, and the workers were being just tortured to death. “We were dropped some 1,500 feet in the ground in a bucket. We felt az though we were being buried alive, and when at last I stepped into the mine, with its few dim candles, the famous lines, ‘All hope abandon, ye who enter here,’ entered my mind. It was just pure and simple hell. Rats, «ili monsters, scorpions, lizards, lice and other underground creatures were in the surroundings. Food consisted 450 1 of beans and flabby pancakes. the ball past his own goal, thereby i* “That we might get a little tobacco Sve sacrificed part of our meals. No n:edical aid of any sort was available, and the death rate ran about one pris- or.er a day. Their bodies lay uncov- ered for weeks sometimes. In all the iive and two-thirds years I was in there } never saw a newspaper or magazine. in faet, I didn’t know there was such a thing as the World war. “But fate at last favored us. The suards, we noted, were on a carousal that evening. When they came down the shaft we ended their careers with blews from huge stones. We donned I went toward the United States border, which was 139 miles north. and the other two officers went down south. “Well, now I am here, thank God! Anibition for adventure is wonderful, bar adventure itself of this sort is far from entertaining.” ~ Use of Peat as Fuel. The burning of peat has an indi- vidual as well as a national signifi- ° this | sunce. For instance, consider [rom Peter Christianson, professor of retallurgy in the school of mines at the University of Minnesota: “There is scarcely a farmer in the state of Minnesota, seutheastern, western and ncrthwestern portions, who could not make himself independent of a coal | supply for heating purposes by prepar- | ing and using peat from his own farm. : Incidentally, peat is found in sixty- | four of the eighty-six counties of the ! state. Other states have lots of it, too. | “All the man needs to do is to take | spade, cut the peat from his bog in | He can do it cheap- | blocks and dry it. er than he can pay $15 or $20 for coal, too, My father burned peat for vears here in Minneso*a and it made an excellent fire. Farmers are using it for fuel in some sections of the state, particularly those from the old countries, who are acquainted with its use. Valuable Invention. A naval invention first used during the war may revolutionize the task of the pilot. A cable seventeen miles in iength is now laid from Portsmouth harbor to the Warner light on the channel side of the Isle of Wight. The cable is charged with a high frequency current, by means of which a ship fitted with a receiving apparatus may locate its position and find its way. Such an invention, if adopted in all the more difficult ports of navigation routes, would not only add greatly to the safety of ships, but save much vaiuable time that is now lost.—Lon- don Daily Chronicle. Uninfluenced. “Does your wife influence vote?” “Not at all,” replted Mr. Meekton. “Henrietta wants me to vote accord- ing to ray own ideas; but it is re markable how thoroughly my views always coincide with hers after she has taken the trouble tc express them and to assure me-that she is perfestly willing to go on elucidating until 1 fully comprehend.” your except in the ! extreme | PROPER FOOD URGED ; AS TAX REDUCER. | School children must have the prop- "er food; the sort that will build men and women who in years to come will be able to take care of themselves, j hus reducing taxation by Jeducing ‘those who become public ward: That is the aim of the State Depart- ment of Health in Harrisburg. Dr. Edward Martin, the State Com- missioner of Health, is .asking pai- i ents of school children to feed them so i that good health may be maintained throughout their school days. Following is a list of the generally approved foods for school children, ' with suggestions for the school lunch, “prepared by the State Health Depart- ment: i BREAKFAKT { Cereal (oatmeal, cornmeal, rice, cream of wheat, shredded wheat, farina, corn flakes). - Milk or cocoa made with milk. Bread and butter (preferably whole- ‘ Wheat bread). : Egg or fruit (egg soft boiled or poach- ed); (stewed apples, peaches, apricots, prunes; oranges or grapefruit). LUNCH Vegetable soup, or cereal or egg. Milk. Bread and butter. Cooked fruit (apple sauce, baked or stew- ed apples). DINNER Meat or fish (about two ounces. fried). I'resh vegetable (spinach, chard, beet tops, greens, carrots, beets, boiled onions). Raw celery, cucumbers and corn should not be given until after the tenth year. Starchy vegetables (potatoes, sweet po- tatoes, rice, hominy. spaghetti, macaroni). Bread and butter. Dessert (rice, tapioca, bread pudding, cooked fruit. cornstarch pudding, gelatine, ice eream). Candy should be eaten immediately after meals. If the child is hungry after school give him bread and but- ter. Never give a child under twelve tea, coffee, mustard, catsup, pickles, pork, dried or salted meats, kidney, liver, game or rich pastries. Never Penn State’s Problem. “How long will this great State of Pennsylvania allow a thousand of its best boys and girls to knock in vain each year for admittance to its own State College?” This query was pre- sented by Judge H. Walton Mitchell, head of The Pennsylvania State Col- lege trustees, upon the occasion of the recent college opening. In the past three years Penn State has been una- ble to accommodate over 2500 young men residents of the State, due to lack of buildings, equipment and State funds for additional faculty members. The number turned away in that time is almost equal to the present capac- ity of the State’s institution of high- er learning. 2 ——The Lord’s prayer has been written on postage stamps and en- graved on other small surfaces, but it has remained for an eastern pheto-en- ‘coin. graving concern to imprint it on the face of a small type slug known among printers as an 18-point em- quad. This type is one-fourth of an inch square and, allowing for mar- gins all around, offers a space only 15-64 inch square for the somewhat lengthy writing. So accurate is the work that the tiny letters stand out clearly, and persons with good sight4 can read the text without the aid of a glass. . : Wong Health First, at Penn State. Every effort will be made this year to keep the students at The Pennsyl- vania State College in the best of health, according to the college offi- cials. Working on the principle that “Good brains need a sound body,” every able-bodied student will be re- quired to enter some kind of athletic sport or recreation. All new students will be given a thorough physical ex- amination immediately and corrective exercises assigned for those who need them. The college physician, health service staff and the department of physical education all combine in this very necessary work. Boy Didn’t Kick. “I’m sorry, young man,” said the druggist, as he eyed the small boy over the counter, “but I can only give you half as much castor oil for a dime as I used to.” “The boy blithely handed him the “I’m not kicking,” he remarked. “The stuff’s for me.”—Watchman-Ex- aminer. Real Estate Transfers. Nora W. Evey, et ux, to Anna R. Beamer, tract in Haines township; $335. W. D. Zerby, Admz., to J. K. Reish, et al, tract in Haines township; $185. J. K. Reish, et al, to Amie R. Ben- ner, tract in Hainesto wnship; $1. —Buy your own paper and read it. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. Most Ailments Due to One Thing That is, Impure, Impoverished, Devi- talized Blood. Probably 75 per cent. of the ail- ments of the human race are due to an abnormal condition of the blood,— thin, poor, anemic. 3 This fact and the further fact that Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies, enriches and revitalizes the blood, by creating a healthy appetite, aiding digestion, promoting assimilation and thereby securing in full all the benefits of com- plete nutrition, must impress the thoughtful with the wisdom of giving this great medicine a trial. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is greatest mer- it plus greatest economy, the most for the money: Get it. 66-38 7 , The Great Milton Fair MILTON, PENNA October 11, 12, 13, 14, 1921 Large and Elaborate Midway, A THE BIG FAIR OF Central Pennsylvauia The Best in Racing Fine Musical Program Plenty of Feature Free Acts. Dont Miss The Five Flying Herberts Emme) 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 the bank. Money which you wish to send with- in this city or to distant points is con- veyed by your check simply, safely and cheaply. The checking account is only one of the many mediums through which this bank serves its customers, There are many other ways in which we can be helpful to you and it weuld be our pleasure to serve you in any or all of them. CENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO 60-4 BELLEFONTE, PA. utton-Abramsen Engineermg Co. ~ Bellefonte Pennsylvania Our plant has been so busy for several years working on patented machines that we have given little thought to the vast amount of local business that must be procurable in this section. In consequence probably few persons feel that we want to bother with small jobs. Such is not the case. We do. We want to offer you the ad- vantage of every department of our plant: Draftsmen, engineers, machinists and foundry- men. While we make Straightening Machines, Power Hammers and Heavy Castings running into tons and tons we are just as anxious to make the little castings that you may need, even if they weigh but a few pounds. Stove Grates and Griddles, Basket Grates for fire places, Sled Soles, castings for Hay Lad- ders, Fly Wheels, Pulleys, Farm Machinery Castings and a thousand and one other little things in metal we can make for you cheaper and quicker than you can get them from the plants at which they were originally produced. We can repair farm machinery as well as any other kind. We can put that broken down gas-engine back to work for you and if you have any of these little jobs to be done, have them done now. It will help us to give our men stead- ier employment and insure you very prompt service. Don’t go miles away for what is lying right at your own front door. There is little in the line of machine and foundry work that we can’t do and we want you to feel that always our plant will appreciate and turn out promptly the small odd jobs as well as the larger ones you may call on us to do. We will give the small orders as careful attention as the large ones because we are equipped and anxious to do both. SUTTON-ABRAMSEN ENGINEERING CO. BELLEFONTE, PENNSYLVANIA.