Bellefonte, Pa., February 23, 1923. DIVERGING THEORIES OF LIF. Question of Chance and Evolution Aoparently Will Long Be Matter of Discussion. Writing on the work of Jacques Y.oeb, the famous exponent of the me- chanical theory of life, in Harper's Magazine, Paul H. De Kruiff said: “It is constantly remarked by lay peo- ple of intelligence and by many biol- ogists that the apparently wonderful way in which animals are adapted to their environment is the best evidence of some purpose and design in nature. To Loeb, with his detached vision and his freedom from anthropomorphism, it is just as conceivable that nature is accidental and a pure matter of chance. It is possible that ‘these sur- vive who have the equipment—they did not acquire the equipment under the influence of environment, It is possible for forms with moderate disharmonies to survive, those with gross disharmonies do not exist. and we are not reminded of their possible existence." Nature, the master points out, is enormously wasteful. There are, for instance, a hundred mi'l‘on possible crosses of marine bony fish. Of these only ten thousand, or one- hundredth of 1 per cent, actually ex- ist. Hvery one will admit that this fact is a much better argument for planlessness than for design. For out of an almost :infinite number of combinations it would be strange if chance did not bring about the exist ence of a small number of {forms capable of survival” ‘NATION'S CEST TO FRANKLIN Outstanding Figure of the Revolution Should Never Be Forgotten by Any American. If a hundred professors of American history were asked what man, next to Washington, did most to launch the American republic ag an independent, self-moving nation, 99 of the answers would name Benjamin Franklin. But it is to be feared that the average stu- dent of history does not appreciate so well what this country owes to the memory of the author, statesman and philosopher who was born in Boston 217 years ago. For such, the best course ix not to plunge into historical discussion, but to get acquainted with Franklin, the man. The task, fortunately, is at once easy and delightful. His autobiog- raphy, with its shrewd wisdom, incis- fve wit, kindly humor and amazing SRANDEUR HARD TO PORTRAY; OLD SONGS BRING MEMORIZS frankness and Insight, 1g one of the most. readable hooks in the Inglish ‘language. Let the doubter read that. and a proper appraisal of Franklin is almost certain to follow. We do not underrate our friends, and there is something wrong with the person who does not count Franklin a friend ‘after perusing that memoir—Chicago Journal. Oldtime Beauty Hints. Some strange recipes for beauty are given by oldtime writers, “The eyes of pike powdered are wonderful in increasing beauty” naively suggests one author. In the South of England even today the eating of herrings’ brains is thought to improve the ap- pearance. The fat of the grayling mixed with honey and exposed for a day or two to the sun made a fine preparation for cleaning the skin. The fat of the lamprey, though this creature lucky, was efficaclous in smallpox sears, Wolverine would cure all skin troubles. (‘hinese have great Taith.in the medic- inal properties of water in which cockles have heen boiled and it is their favorite remedy for smallpox, One of the strangest remedies is at- tributed to the monks of the Tenth greas: century who are said to have pre- scribed ashes of burnt flies for the complexion. i Ancient Citadel! of Athens. The Acropolis of Athens was the an- ~cient citadel of Athens, sometimes «called . Cecropia, from. its reputed: founder, the mythical Cecrops. Tt was ! “pullt upon a rock 500 feet above the Attie plain. 'This eminence was 1,150 feet in length from east to west and 500 feet in width from north to south, and was accessible on the west side only, through the Propylaea or “En- trances” bullt by Pericles. Upon its summit were the world famous Parthe- non, sacred to Minerva, the Temple of Wingless Victory, the Erechtheum, and other structures. Between the Parthenon and the Frechtheum stood the colossal figure | of Minerva, the protlectress of the city, 70 feet In height. May Fast for Months. Beaded lizards live in dry places, hidden by day and become active in the evening, says the Detroit News. They lie asleep during the hottest part of the year. They eat frogs, worms, centipedes, ants and other in- sects, as well as the eggs of frogs, birds and other lizards. In good times the extra nourish- ment is stored up as fat in the tail. When food is scarce this fat can be absorbed and carried to the hungry cells through the blood, and thus the glla monster may go without other food for several months. ——The “Watchman” gives all the news while it is news. The ! ig otherwise considered un- removing t i “tracts mice and moles to it. Visitor Asserts View From Summit of | Andes Is Such as Aimost to Defy | Description. ! The view from the summit is mag: | nificent in whichever direction one turns, but it is rather more interesting | and varied toward the Pacitie. That | scean is not over a hundred miles in | a straight line from the crest of the divide, but all sight of it is cut oft by the intervening summits, The scenery in this, or any other part of the Andes, is on too vast and imposing a scale for a man to come to any adequate com- prehension of it, Still more hopeless is the possibility of conveying any ef- fective impression of it to others. You may think you can describe it until you try; then you find that you are but stringing meaningless adjectives and shopworn similes tqgether. At first you are Inclined to be disap- pointed at your impotency; then you begin to feel small and ashamed that vou should have presumed to attempt such a thing; finally, like a man cover- ing up traces of guilt, you hasten to tear up and burn what you have writ- ten before some one comes and finds what you have been doing. There are | some men who can draw better than! others word-plctures of these great manifestations of nature, just as some men can paint beiter pictures on can vas than ean others; but the best de scriptions are only sounding brass and | tinkling cymbal imitations of the un =peakable grandeur of the originals Personally T throw up my hands and call myself off at the outset.—Lewls R. Freeman in the (‘fornhill Magazine. PUTS NEW LIGHT ON HISTORY Discovery in Sweden Proves That Arts of Civilization Are Older Than Has Been Thought. A cloak of woolen cloth, believed to be 3,000 years old, has been found in a peat bog in Sweden. The slightly acid water of the peat formation acted i as a preservative, | This is the oldest complete garment | ever found In KEurope, though the | British museum has several bits of | cloth that are considered still older. | But 3,000 years is a fairly respectable | age. When that cloth was woven. ! Homer's father nr grandfather was a boy, playing In the streets of some Greek town. The Israelitish monarchy was not yet thought of—=Saul, its first king, probably was not yet born. Egypt. rich but defenseless, was verg- ing to decay; but the founding of Rome lay farther in the future than the landing of the Pilgrims now lies in the past. Through most of Iurope, bronze, - rather than ‘fron, was the chosen metal. ! Yet even in that mistily distant time, the northern barbarians either wove woolen cloaks for themselves or carried on trade enough to buy them from more advanced peoples, ol A good many of the arts of civiliza- tion date farther back than our grand- {athers dreamed, and were more wide- ly diffused, too g Transient Value, Purpose-novels, like advertisements, helong in the temporary department. As certain goods and wares go out of date, and the often eloquent announce- : ments that commended them suddenly disappear; even so the “burning ques- | tions” of the hour and age burn out, ! and the solutions of them presented in the form of fiction fall down with the other ashes. They have served their purpose, well or ill, and their transient importance is ended. What endures, if anything, is the human story vividly told, the human characters graphically depicted. These have a permanent value. These belong to literature. ! Here 1 would place “Adam Bede” and | “Silas Marner” and “The Mill on the Floss” and “Middlemarch,” because they deal with problems which never grow old; but not “Robert Elsmere,” hecause it deals chiefly with a defunct controversy in Biblical eriticism— Henry Van Dyke, in “Companionable Books.” Elevator Operator Scores. Elevator service at a Brooklyn gvmnasium largely patronized by fat business men is not always what the members think it should be. On the way to their volley ball games or set- ting-up exercises they frequently have to wait several minutes before the overworked operator descends with the “lift” to carry them to the gym- nasium floor. The elevator operator thinks much of hig patrons’ criticism is uncalled for. So when he was berated the other day for being tardy in answer- ing the lobby signals he told one of fhe grumblers: “The gymnasium is on ihe third | floor. You come here for exercise.! Instead of waiting for the elevator | | | why don't you walk up?” Natural Mouse Trap. In the Last Indies there grows a plant that eats mice! This plant has a very strong sweet odor which at- The little animals, attracted by the strong scent, run up the stalk of the plant right into the flower, from which there is no es. cape, as they are caught In a sticky substance, and are kept from backing out by down-pointing bristles which close around their victim, Digestive julces, like those found in the stomachs of animals, exude and the rodent is slowly consumed. It is rumored that this flesh-eating plant may be put to use as a mouse trap, ag it has an {rresistible attraction for rodents. Forgotten Tunes Often Rev. re Thoughts of Yesterday That Arc Reminiscent of Happiness. Songs come and go—have their little moments of popularity and are ther relegated to the dim recesses of mer ory. Occasionally one pops up its heal as it were from the grave, and toda) it is not unusual to hear a medley of old songs played or sung to much ain- plause in some cabaret. They bring their memories, these old songs—moon- lit nights and palm shaded corners iv dance roeins, an old romance. The other night the sentimental man was entertaining a friend. He put on a record, an old song from “Maritana.” “Ah,” he said, “what memories that brings back to me! Old days, oid friends—" His companion grunted: “All 1 asso ciate with that song,” he said pro saically, “is the bathroom and a dull razor. Always when I'm not getting 2 decent shave 1 somehow break int: “The Heart Bowed Down.” It's the best bathroom song I know." The sentimental one grinned sheep: ishly. “Come te think of it,” he agreed. “the first time 1 ever heard it was when I was a boy, and my father in the next room: warbled it, too. I—L" and here he blushed, “1 never heard the opera in my life."—New York Sui ee. LEAVES FICTION FAR BEHIND Action of Vigo Authorities in Dealing ‘Vith Treasure Ships Is Almost Beyond Belief. Perhaps the largest single treasure trove lies at the bottom of Vigo bay on the coast of Npain, carriers were sunk by the Seventeenth century and scattered ove the ocean's floor gold and silver esti mated at $100.000,000, So far it is all there, : The fleet of bullion carriers, con- voyed by a slightly larger fleet of men of war, set out from the coast of Mex- ico to carry the treasure to the coffers of Spain and sought refuge in Vigo bay from the approach of the larger British and Dutch fleet, There they planned to unload the treasure. But the customs officers had no in- structions to receive it. communicate with their superiors. admiral of the fleet argued, but the port officials were adamant. And while ‘ they debated the enemy ships sailed into the buy and settled the matter for all time by sinking the fleet, And what has fiction half so strange | as that? How to Torture Your Wife. A man whose wife was visiting rela- tives in another state was getting lonesome, but couldn't get her to cul short her visit and return home. He wrote her a letter almost every day. | pleading he was sick, that he couldn't get any good food. She wouldn't budge. Then he had an inspiration, a hunch some would call it, says Cap- per’s Weekly. Before the wife left home she had arranged to have twa rooms papered, and had ordered the paper, but was unable to get a work- man at the time she had to leave for the visit. The paper came while she was gone, [I'riend long letter to his wife, telling her the (the husband), didn't remember which paper was to go on which room. He had told the paperhanger to go ahead, however, to use such-and-such a paper (naming the dining room paper), on the front room, and the other paper (the front room paper), on the dining room. The missus reached home on the next train. Seller Takes No Chances. A guest at an up-state hotel re- cently, making a purchase at the cigar stand, noticed that the clerk bhe- fore ringing up the cash register laid the bill on the keys of the machine, says the New York Sun. Then hg pressed the correct button, made the change, handed it to the customer, and only then placed the bill in the proper compartment of the open drawer. “1 did ‘it to avoid disputes and mis: takes,” he said. “As long as the money is still lying on top of the keys there's no chance of my giving the customer short chanse by. mistake nor of his disputing the change he re- ceives and perhaps putting one over on me.” Cliff-Dwellers Inhabit Plains. Most of the mysterious ciiff-dwellers of Arizona lived on the level ground, as we do, and not like swallows in a cliff, Dr. Harold Sellers Colton told the American Society of Eeologists in Bos- ton recently. Tour kinds of pottery, indicating four kinds of cliff-dwellers, he said. have been found in the region of the San Francisco mountains, Whether these neighboring races lived at the same time and yet made such different pottery, or whether the four kinds of pottery represent differ- ent periods of time, Is yet to be dis- covered, This pottery is apparently distributed in the horizontal plane, each kind of pottery having its pariic- ular region. Thoughts During Danger. For ages persons who have recov- ered from great dangers have claimed that in a second all their lives flashed hefore them. Scientists now prove that these persons have not told the truth, Truthful persons who have been in great danger say that their thoughts are entirely on the danger and their minds have no chance to flash unless on things before their eyes. They must! The Here 17 bullion | Sritish and Dutch navies in the latter part of tit 1 Husband wrote an! , paperhanger had arrived, but that he’ Destruction of Records Has Made I? Impossible to Ascertain Definitely the Exact Number. The estimate of 2,200,000 as the to- tal of the Confederate army for the foar years of the war does not seem excessive or unreasonable repre- senting tue military strenzth of the 5.- 000,000 white population of the Con- federate states, aided by the 2,000,000 population of the sympathizing border states, and with an industrial army of 3,000,000 slaves, A. B. Casselman writes in Current History Magazine. The Southern estimate, or “legend,” as it has been aptly termed, of 600,000, has always seemed disproportionate. This estimate is of uncertain origin, and is not derived from any official source. It did not originate during the war, but after the war had ended, when the Confederates had lost thelr records and were without official data on which to support their assertions. No oflicial summary purporting to show the total number can be found in the official records. The captured rolls are incomplete and fragmentary. As an illustration, it has heen ascertained that approximately 1,000 names are missing from the captured rolls of a single regiment, the Sixtieth North Carolina. Rev. Dr. McKim, an ex-Con- federate officer and a writer on this subject, quotes a letter him from Col. Walter G. Taylor, Gen- eral Lee's adjutant general, saying: “I regret to have to say that I know of no reliable data in support of any precise number, and have always realized that it must ever he largely a matter of conjecture on our side)” In the absence of complete official records, the question still remains Jargely a matter of conjeciure, Neither the Confederate idea of 600,000 nor any later estimate can he accepted as finnl or as even approximately accu- rate, as APPARENTLY QUITE IN ORDER Snglish Actor's Witty Introduction of Two New Acquaintances Placed Correctly. Every book of reminiscences pub- lished nowadays which contains any- thing about the theater has at least one anecdote about the late Sir Her- bert Tree. The author of “The Nine- teen Hundreds,” who writes under the pseudonym Reginald Auberon, re- tails ene of Sir Herbert's spontaneous flashes to carry on the tradition. Ac- companied by Lady I'vee, he had gone down to the Palace theater to re- hearse a sketch, ahout the unfamiliar stage, feeling very bored and looking like a fish out | of water, a couple of ‘knockabout’ comedians who had just finished their ‘turn’ approached him. ‘Well met, Sir ‘Br? exclaimed the first one, slap: ping him heartily on the back. ‘Glad to welcome you ‘ere!’ ‘Oh, delighted!’ murmured Tree, vaguely, ‘This. is my mate, ‘Arry. continued the other. beckoning to his partner. ‘Pleased to meet you,” declared the second comedian. delivering an equally vigor- us slap on Tree's shoulder. ‘Welcome to the ’alls. The missus showing with | you? With a magnificent gesture, Tree signaled to his wife. ‘Maud,’ he said, ‘allow me to introduce my new friends. Lady Tree—the Two Smacks!” Get Your Share of Fruit. A great many persons regard fruit as a superfluity or a luxury; but, ac- cording to the New York state health commissioner, fruit should be part of our daily diet for several very good reasons. Many fruits contain certain salts of organic acids which have a stimulating effect upon the Kidneys, and some others are decidedly laxa- tive. Owing to their large content of water they are always cooling, and any digestive difficulties which may be encountered are generally due to eat- ing too much or too fast, er eating un- ripe or overripe fruit. Bananas have a high food content and a low cost. Fruit eating is goad exercise for the jaws and puts the teeth in good condi- tion. ~ Early Wood Carving. Wood carving was common in very early Egyptian sculpture. Some of the most realistic statues of the ancient empire were carved in wood, such as the so-cailed “Sheikh-el-beled” and his wife, and a number of others. Wood wis a convenient ground for polychro- matic decoration; that is, treating the carved figure with a thin coating of plaster upon which the artist has placed his colors, This was very pop- ular among Egyptian artists. In Greece wood carving probably was the earliest form of archaic senlp- ture. The late Greeks and Romans used it comparatively little, but among the most remarkable works of early Christian sculpture are the carved wooden doors of Santa Sabina, Rome, Football Then and Now. If you think that football is a rougher game now than it was in the past, read this paragraph written In 1582: “As concerning football playing. it may be cailed rather a friendly fight than a play of recreation; a bloody, murdering practice than a fellowly sport or pastime, For doth not every one lie in wait for his adversary, seek- ing to overthrow him and to pitch him on his nose, though it be upon hard stones, or what place soever it be he careth not, so he have him down? And he that can serve the most In this fashion he is counted the only fellow, and who but he.”—Boston Transcrint. received by | “As he wandered | Old Silverware, Tea Sets, Tableware, Etc. Old Clocks and Old Jewelry Made New Again At Very Conservative Prices... We will be very glad to furnish you an estimate for the work. F. P. Blair & Son, Jewelers and Optometrists Bellefo.ite, Pa. 61.22 tf A CT he Safe Deposit Box is more than a convenience. It is a safe-guard. It cannot be carried away; it cannot be opened without your consent; its con- tents are secure. Many of our patrons have had them here during the past They could not be in- duced to give them up. The charge per year is nominal. a fifteen years. ie ‘The First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 61-46 You Won't, Need be Told b ~ Just, See Them... 167 Pairs Men's “Walkover” Shoes and Oxfords | § The year’s accumulation of odds and ends—formerly priced from $8 lot, at to $12—assembled in one For One Week Only $4.95 | All “Walkovers” A. 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