Bewsraii Wald. ellefonte, Pa., April 27, 1923. THE BEST. Did you fail in the race? Did you faint in the spurt? Where the hot dust choked and burned? Did you breast the tape midst the flying dirt That the leader's spikes had spurned? Did you do your best— Oh, I know you lost. I know that your time was bad. But the game is not in the winning, lad, The best of it since the beginning, lad, Is in taking your licking and grinning, lad, If you gave them the best you had. Did your tackle fall short? Did the runner flash by With the score that won the game? Did you choke with the hurt and shame? If you did your best— Oh, I know your score; I followed you all the way through. And that is why I am saying, lad, That the best of the fight is the staying, cially keen blades and expert opera- tors, require the administration of chloroform. As nearly as can be determined, rub- bing and scratching the head was about the only anaesthetic known pre- vious to the christian era. The degree of annoyance caused by a small ob- ject like a hair, a grain of sand or a tiny splinter, depends entirely on the location. All men are not ticklish or hy- persensative at the same place. Some can be thrown into paroxysms by tick- ling the feet with a straw, othérs go into spasms if ‘a feather is drawn un- der their nose, while others almost take fits if tickled in the ribs. It is said that the most exquisitive- ly horrible torture practiced during the inquisition, was that of tickling the feet of sensitive heretics. Every nerve in the entire body was set on edge and made to dance at a madden- ing pace. This must have been the refinement of torture, indeed. In order to satisfy your curiosity on this score have your hands securely tied and your head held firm, while some one slowly, gently tickles your nose with a feather, or even a hair. You will soon conclude that death lad, would be preferable to a continuance And the best of all games is the playing, [of torture. It’s queer, nevertheless lad, true. If you give them the best in you. —Nelson Robins. EMBARRASSING, PETTY AND PAINFUL ANNOYANCE. By L. A. Miller. Why is it that a barber will scratch and rub your head for an hour and not touch the one particilar spot that itches? Science may dispel the mystery that hangs about a universe, and philoso- phy make plain the whys and where- fores of things in general, but neither of them appear to be equal to the emergency in this case. Rocks have testified to the age of man, and the growth-rings of heavy oaks and gi- ant redwoods, and gnarled and riven elms, told stories of aboriginal races, but all are silent as to a time when a barber scratched the place that itched. Sacred history ignores the barber entirely, and profane history treats not of his peculiar characteristics; his saving graces or his singular obtuse- ness. Did you ever observe what a deal of discomfort a very small thing may cause? A hair wafted from somewhere lights on your nose and begins to tickle. Both of your hands are full, as a matter of course, and you would just give anything to get at that hair. The more you think about it the more it tickles. You be- gin to get nervous, tears come into your eyes, your knees. tremble and vou feel that you must scratch: or die. Things like this are likely to occur when you are standing before the hy- menial altar, holding a baby for a long- winded parson to baptize, or when in .a position, that to move a muscle is to expose yourself to instant death or frightful peril. Flies light on your nose when you want to appear specially sober or while you are sitting for a photograph. | Gnats crawl into your ears when you are listening to something ni :e, or per- sist in roosting on your eyelashes just the moment when you want to see clearly. Dogs bark when it is most essential for them to keep quiet; cats waul and caterwaul just when the | world and its cares are fading from | your sight and memory; night-hawks | seream most ominously, and horned- owls hoo-hoo in doubly dismal tones when you are alone in the woods; and hornets invariably sting the day be- fore a picnic, or near the time you are expecting to see your sweetheart. The baby at the theatre is prompted to | Getting at, the Heart, of Things Busy men and women want to get to the heart of things quick- ly. Their time is too valuable to wade through pages of ad- vertising and meaningless phrases. cry during the most interesting part of the heroines confession, or just as the comedian reaches the point of his fresh joke. The fat man coughs as the prima donna twitters and warbles her sweetest, but is silent as the grave while the bass drum is having a set- to with the bull fiddle. The creature with the resonant nose selects the pre- cise time when the violin and flute are in the midst of the prettiest pas- sage in the symphony to blurt out a blast that startles the bassoon player. Haven’t you noticed that things happen in his odd and disagreeable way ? Haven’t you wondered why they should? Since there must be a good reason for everything, it is not enough to give the seeming mystery up or let it pass with an expression of disgust or a smile. The most probable, as well as phil- osophical explanation that can be giv- en for freaks of this kind is that they are more noticeable at such times. The fall of a pin during Quaker meet- ng will create a stir while repeated fds of heavy gavel on a resonant sldb of marble hardly produces an ap- preciable effect in a meeting of poli- ticians. . It depends ‘more upon the surroundings than on the thing that happens. A cat concert is rather delightful winder some circumstances, and often mot in the lesat disagreeable. The cry .of a baby would scarcely be noticed in a nursery, and a troublesome gnat would be unceremoniously brushed oft and forgotten at any other time than the particular one when they felt to be @m annoyance. The times when ‘they tickle and do not annoy are for- wotten, and only those remembered when they tickle and do annoy. This probably explains the seeming prversity of the barber in scratching every spot on your head except the one you most desire to have scratched, which did not itch, would have itched fully as much as the one he missed. Some barbers have a fashion of rub- bing all in one place, and that without regard to the comfort of their victim. Since the days of Sampson—and probably long before—most men have enjoyed having their heads gently scratched. There is something singu- larly soothing about it. Delilah evi- dently knew this when she scratched Samson’s head so divinely as to cause a sleep to fall upon him that a Philis- tine barber cut his hair without wak- ing him. Considering the tools with which those Pagan barbers worked. the operation must have been little less painful than the amputation of a leg or the extirpation of an ingrow- NEW WATER SYSTEM SERVES JERUSALEM. The pressure of an electric button put in motion the machinery bringing the waters of the pools of Solomon to the holy city. It is the consummation of years of work, involving a large outlay and much engineering skill. During the five years of the Eng- lish occupation and Zionist activity in Palestine doubtless more has been done to furnish the inhabitants water supply than was done during the cen- turies of Turkish occupation. The city had but one small foun- tain, so that in former times the peo- ple were almost entirely dependent upon cisterns, which were often so foul that outbreaks of typhoid and malaria were very common. The military administration under General Allenby discovered strong springs in the Judean hills south of Bethlehem, about seven miles south of Jerusalem, and by building a res- ervoir on a neighboring hill they were able to pump into this and then have the water flow into Jerusalem by gravity. This helped the situation and thousands of people daily visited the public hydrants for their water supply. But the long dry summer proved too heavy a tax upon even this sup- ply so that the engineers of the pub- lic works department turned their at- tention to three immense reservoirs a few miles south of Bethlehem, known as Solomon’s Pools. Although they bear the name of Israel’s great king they doubtless date from the Herodion period, but they were re- paired in the sixteenth century by the Sultan, Suliman the Magnificent, and possibly from that fact they derived their name.—Ex. a "His Saving Wit. + Not long ago a traveling salesman !saved his employers from sustaining a serious loss by his presence of mind. ,He was traveling for a London firm of diamond merchants and his business took him to a town in Yorkshire. He called at an inn for a drink. When he left he forgot his bag, con- | ‘in a small shack at the shore’s edge. taining some thousands of pounds’ worth of precious stones. On discovering his loss he returned, but the barman declared he had not seen the bag. “I would not have lost it for worlds,” said the traveler, “I am a surgeon and that bag contained phi- als of cholera microbes.” White and trembling the barman . pointed to the bag, which he had. se- creted behind the counter, and it was d at once by the quick-witted | Yon ax on y 9 an electric light standard, curved at 'the top over the curbstone. There is | one of these posts in the neighborhood of each pumping station. By this| traveler. y —Get your job work done here. Sprinkling a City Front with Salt Water. The Embarcadero, which runs the entire length of San Francisco’s water | tained by electrically operated ithe wall down to the water. front, is sprinkled with salt water ob- pumps at various points along the placed 1 Each of the pumps is housed shore. Its pipe bends through an opening in Access to the switch which controls the elec- tric pump is given by means of a win- dow six inches square. The driver of the sprinkler wagons has a key by means of which he can start and stop the pump. Thus the pump cannot be molested by unauthorized persons. The water lifted by this method final- ly emerges in the street through a pipe, having much the appearance of method of utilizing water from the bay, not only is considerable money saved, but the salty contents of the water serves the purpose of ridding 'the thoroughfare of flies and other | pestiferous insects. Children Cry for Fletcher's RRNA Be 4 ) CASTORIA NANNNN NINN The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of on the wrapper all these years ZT rr ust to protect the coming “7% generations. Dg not be deceived. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘‘Jusf-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and end er the health of Infants and Children—Experience agaipst Experiment. Never attempt to relieve your baby with a remedy that you would use for yourself. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Comfort—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of . In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. | i Put your Money and Securities in Bank There are still a good many people who keep rather large amounts of ‘money in the house. A dangerous practice. - It not only invites robbery—for such news gets abroad—but there is always the danger of loss from fire. Avoid these risks and put your money here—in a place of perfect safety. If yon have securities or valuable papers, get a Safe Deposit Box. The First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. Ee . Em A Good Watch or Diamond bought on our Easy Payment Plan, enables you to own Jewelry of value that you possibly could not pay for at one time. We would be glad to have you interview us in regard to this. No Added Charge for Payments F. P. Blair & Son, Jewelers and Optometrists Bellefonte, Pa. I = SASH | | { That is why thousands of professional men and women, edu- cators, business executives and others subscribe to The Ford International Weekly THE DEARBORN Independent It prints plain facts, gives a comprehensive outline of world events, and provokes independent thought. Join the rapidly growing family of Dearborn Independent read- ers today and you will never regret it. $1.50 pays for fifty-two issues delivered to your home each week. Leave your subscription with us. Beatty Motor Co. 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