Bellefonte, Pa., September 7, 1923. A —— ERROR THAT WAS PITIFUL Little Wife Meant Well, but Dyed Hair Almost Meant Death of Her Husband's Love. He had gray hair and his wife was a little blonde, bobbed-hair person who looked scarcely more than a child. Again and again they were taken for father and daughter. She let her hair grow and then she, had it dyed gray. Her husband was horrified. Some- how his love seemed to have grown less. “I always used to think it hurt him awfully when I was taken for his daughter,” the little woman told the Woman. “But it seems he loved feel- ing that this young thing was the woman who had fallen for him. I'm going to do all I can about having the dye bleached out. You see, I've bobbgd my hair again—and as the new yellow hairs grow in his love seems to be coming back again. It's so hard to tell,” she ended. “I felt I was doing something so wonderful for him and it almost broke his heart !”—New York Sun. GOT THE MESSAGE TWISTED Carelessness of Telegraph Operator Made a Mixup of a Somewhat Amusing Character. An Inspector of railway property whose duties had taken him to Bridge- port, Conn,, discovered that the foun- dation under the local freighthouse needed repairs. Without delay he filed this dispatch to the New York office: “Foundation under freighthouse at Bridgeport unsafe—rush men at once.” In sending the message the operator on the New York wire apparently did not space the letters properly in the word “foundation” and also pressed too long to form the letter “t”; for this was the message received in New York: “Found a lion under freighthouse at Bridgeport unsafe—rush men at once.” The inspector was astonished a few hours later to see a special work train come into the yard with a flat car containing a large animal cage and also ten men expecting to have an exciting time catching a lion that they supposed had escaped from some pass- ing circus.—Youth’s Companion, Reader Has One Guess. Uncle John was an ardent supporter of the local football club. As a re- spected follower of the team he had his own private niche. Aunt Martha, long puzzled at. his regular absence from home on Saturday afternoons, decided to investigate. On the following Saturday Uncle John did not turn up in the stand alone, Aunt Martha was with him. “John,” she asked, soon after the game started, “what are those eleven fools in white doing?” “They are trying to put that bit of leather between those two posts there, my dear,” he replied. There was a short silence. “And what are those elevea other fools in red doing?” was her next question. “They are trying to prevent the other fellows from putting the ball be tween the posts, my dear.” Another silence. “And what are these other 20,000 fools doing?” was her next question. “They are all enjoying themselves except one, dear.”—London Answers. Mission House Made Memorial. The mission house at Kettering, Northamptonshire, = England,’ where William Carey on October 2, 1792, founded the first missionary society which is recognized as the basis of the modern missionary enterprise; was put up for sale, the owner having died and the estate thus having become purchasable for the first time since that memorable occasion. The pur- chase was made on behalf of the Bap- tist Laymen’s Missionary Movement of England. The property will not only be retained for the denomination as a historic memorial} but will probably be ase as a hostel for returned mission- aries. Mare Students Take to Classics. An’ increase in the study of the clas sics this year has been announced by New York university. There were 100 students of Latin a year ago, as com- pared with 128 this fall. The number of Greek students increased from 28 to 48. There has been an even more pronounced increase in the number of students of the romance languages, amounting to nearly. 75 ‘per ‘cent in’ fon or from 434 in 1921 ‘to 757 in Necessary Garden Equipment. The wisdom of Socrates, the strength of Hercules, the endurance of Atlas, the conquering power of Napoleon, the versatility of Leonardo da Vinci, the patience of Job, the optimism of Polly- ana—and the courage in the autumn to say, “Well, never mind, next year it will be a ‘garden—From Life. Concerning Plants. Plants with sweet-smelling flowers gre more common in dry, than:in moist climates. Thyme, sage, and lavender, for instance, bloom profusely on dry | uplands and fill" the air with thelr scent, but the wild flowers of low or. swampy ground @re seldom highly scented, and if Shey ¢ are their odors are. unpleasant. I: ' 870,000 rats were destroyed, it was | must be tetally blind, PLANT TREE IN RIGHT PLACE Much of Natural Beauty May Be Los’ If Proper Spot Has Not Been Selected. It is a beautiful thing to plant a tree, but it is doubly beautiful to plant the right tree in the right place. The deed loses half of its beauty when a tree is placed where it does not belong, and where it will be impossible for it to add to the joy and comfort of those who may be near it in future years. A tree placed in a location where it will be in the way, and where it cannot develop in accordance with its natural tendencies, is doomed to be a failure. The same is likely to be true of the tree that is planted with- out thought as to the variety that is best suited to the situation. It is the tree planting that involves thought and judgment that is the real blessing to humanity. The beautiful thing in the planting of the tree is the attitude of mind of the one who does it. Those who are to receive the benefits from the act appear long after the work is done; those who do the work are seldom di- rectly rewarded for the labor. When a person plants a tree, he is contrib- uting to the pleasure of generations to come, and if he plants the right tree in the right place he bestows a bless- ing upon others in the most unselfish manner. If, on the other uand, the wrong tree is planted, the future gen- erations cannot reap the full benefit of the work done years before by the well-meaning but uninformed tree planter, and the deed as measured by results becomes less beautiful. —INli- nois Arbor. Day Bulletin. OWES SPEECH TO WIRELESS Young English Woman, Dumb From Birth, Said to Have Become Nor mal After Treatment. nn A young woman, deaf and dumb from birth, the first patient to undergo treatment by a new wireless inven- tion, articulated several words in the presence of a crowded audience at the Royal Medical college, Epsom, Eng- land. Wireless, having brought hearing to the deaf, is now bringing speech te the dumb. This latest wonder is made possible by the invention of Mr. J. W. Theo- bald, a Sunbury garage owner, and a medical friend, Dr. Frank Thompson. The dumb patient puts on ear recelv- ers, and receives a lesson in phonet- fics with the sounds magnified till they are deafening to normal ears. Dr. Thompson prophesies that his first patient will soon be able to con- verse freely. A curious unexpected result has been that her deafness Iv also tending to disappear. “ww i ————————————————————— Molten Lava Welds Volcanoes. George Gillman read a paper before the Geographical society descriptive ! of an ascent a year ago of Kilimanjaro, | which he alluded to as Africa’s high- est mountain. The party which he! led were the first to ascend after the ! mountain had become British terri- | tory. From wherever across the sur-! rounding steppes one approached the isolated mountain mass two outstand- ing features impressed themselves at | once—the tremendous size, coupled | with great height, and the almost in- credible contrast between the tropical half desert below and the alpine des- ert above. Structurally, Kilimanjaro consisted of three single strato-volca- noes, each of which had had its own origin and history. Through mutual interbedding of the laval flows, how- aver, all three had grown into one solid complex strato-valcano, Fighting Insect Pests, A new method of control of “scrow- worms,” “wireworms” and sod web worms which attack tobacco and sim- ilar crops has been discovered by the tobacco insect laboratory of the Unit- ed States Department of Agriculture. It has been found that these worms are very greatly attracted to nitroben- zine, and by flavoring poison with this ~hemical a mortality of from 80 to 90 per cent of the larvae in heavily infest- ed fields is produced. These larvae are very important pests of tobacco and a large variety of other crops, and up to this time fall plowing and other Indirect methods were the only knowr ways of combating them, Women Lead in Fighting Rats. In a state-wide rat campaign con- ducted in Virginia early this year, when it was estimated that more than disclosed that women make as effec- tive leaders as men In this work, ac- cording to the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, When regarded according to the number of rat-tafls turned in for prizes, seven counties led. by women and three ‘led by men were the most successful. Fighting Forest Fires. The California district of the forest service, United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, has received $4,000 from the Automobile Club of Southern California for the develop ment of public camps in national for- ests. In addition, the automobile club. co-gperates. yery closely with the for- est service in fire-prevention work. Approved methods of preventing fires: are printed in the maps furnished by the club to tourists. Blind Persons Privileged. Blind persons who reside in On tarlo may travel free of charge on the: street cars of Toronto and environs Applicants for passes on this; account ' the summer. ‘STORY CALLS FOR AFFIDAVIT Yarn of South Carolina Man. Almos’ Too Much for Ordinary Reader to Believe. Representative James F. Byrnes, Democrat, of South Carolina, is not much of a fisherman, but he is fine on fish stories. In the cloak room of the house, members from various states were swapping yarns. “Talking about fishing,” said Mr. Byrnes, “there is one pool in a moun- tain stream near Tryon, N. C, I will always remember. I was in that part of the country one summer resting and rambling for my health and a good time. “lI saw a mountain man, with hook and line, make his way to the creek bank and commence to fish. With my glasses I could see that he had baited his hook with a tiny frog. For some time he fished, throwing the hook out, but he got no bite. Tiring of this, he stuck his pole in the bank, picked up a small rifle and went to shooting at tar- gets in the woods. Fearing a stray shot, I came out of hiding and ac- costed him. While we talked we heard a commotion near the fishing place. On looking that way we saw that the froggie had climbed up the line and was sitting on the end of the pole sing- ing, and brook trout were jumping out of the water trying to get him. “‘By George! there's my chance! said the fisherman, and he ran back and commenced to shoot the fish as they rose from the water. Late that afternoon, when I saw him again, he had a half bushel of trout he had shot.” That broke up the meeting.—Utica Globe. NO CHANCE TO GET AWAY As Clubman Mournfully Related, He Was Caught Whether He Was “Going or Coming.” President Walter C. Teagle of the Standard Oil company ¢f New Jersey said the other day in Washington: “The fable that my company runs chain stores and copper mines and restaurants and so on is so persistent, so indomitable, that it reminds me of a story. “If you do not want to marry her, why on earth did you propose to her?” said one clubman to another. “ ‘That's just it,’ said the other, ‘She proposed to me.’ “ ‘Why didn’t you have spunk enough to refuse her, then? “That’s just it. I couldn’t. She worded her proposal so cleverly, you see. She said, ‘Will you marry me? Have you any objection? Thus, wheth- er 1 said yes or no, she had me. She had me going and coming.’ “*Not at all’ said the first club- man, with a condescending laugh. ‘You should have observed a discreet si- lence.’ “Just what I did,’ said the other, ‘and she fell into my arms, murmur- i Ing that silence gave consent.’ ”—Los Angeles Times. Birds’ Working Hours. Some birds work almost all day in They clear the crops of insects. The thrush gets up at half-past two every morning. He falls to work at once, and does not stop until half-past nine at night—a clear 19 hours. Dur- ing that time he feeds his young 206 times. The blackbird starts work at the same hour as the thrush, but leaves off earlier. His whistle blows a. half past seven, and during his 17-hour day he sets about 100 meals before his family. The titmouse is up at three in the morning, and his stopping time is nine at night. A fast worker, he is said te feed his young 417 times a day. Educational “Movies.” When used in combination with other methods of presenting ideas, such as newspaper publicity, the spoken word, exhibits, slides, and printed bulletins, the United States Department of Agriculture has found that motion pictures constitute a val- uable addition to these extension agencies. The department maintains its own motion-picture lahoratory, where films are prepared to picturize improved agricultural practices, to warn about dangerous conditions or undesirable methods, or other- wise to acquaint those at a distance from the national eapital with the work of the department or its applice tion to farm life. Magellanic Clouds. Magellanic clouds are. two cloudy masses of light, oval in shape and un- equal in size, seen at night in the heavens, in the vicinity of the South pole. They are supposed to be nebu- lae, or dense aggregations of stgrs,’ so far distant as to give to the unaided eye the impression of cloud-like masses. They cover areas of about 42 and 10 square degrees respectively, and are so named in honor of Ferdi- nand Magellan, the great Portuguese navigator, who first ‘observed them in 1520, during his voyage around the world. Serbia Mas Pretty Custom. Oliver Semple’ Barton, who has been traveling ‘in ‘Europe studying national costumes, has gathered some very in- teresting material! “In Serbia’ he found Kitls walking dlong’ the streets with the names of thelr fiances embroidered on the fronts of thelr ‘aprons. The | engagement then’ becomes a public af- fair, and the news is proudly published by the young lady by the display of the | name, which'fs' written #o that all may gee. says Mr. Barton 'in The Mentor. FOUND HAPPINESS IN WORK Great’ Writers and With Much Wisdom in Refusing to “Rust Out.” Examples of long life accompanied by happiness in productive labor are oumerous, both in biography and in contemporary life, observes the York- shire Post. B. W. Leader died the other day in his ninety-third year, after joyously producing his type of beauty in landscape art almost to the last. Edison, our greatest contempo- rary inventor, passed recently his sev- enty-gsixth birthday. He was too busy to pause for congratulations, entirely happy in his research and experiment, finding the days too short for his ex- acting mind. The old classical apo- thegm which tells us that they die young whom the gods love, must be taken with the proverbial grain of salt. Wordsworth in all his verses breathed the atmosphere of contentment and Joy, and survived until he was a hap- py octogenarian, glad in himself and gladdened by his countless admirers. Tennyson reached eighty-three, borne along as on the crest of a flowing wave of joy, the beating of which can be felt in all his work, even to his rhyth- mic swan’s song of “The Pilot.” Car- Iyle died at eighty-six, and, although lone and sad in his closing years, he owed his longevity very largely to the joy he had cultivated in his work for fifty productive years. Sir James Bar- rie, in his Inimitable rectorial address, recently spoke the truth when he said that Carlyle’s misery was an illusion to Carlyle himself and a myth in bi- ography. He was happy in his work with a glow of joy that counteracted the pains of his nervous dyspepsia, and nursed his inherited vitality into con- tinuous strength. MIXED IN HIS METAPHORS Of Course Brown Fully Understood What He Meant to Say, but He Blundered. Re ——— Mr. Brown was calling on an old | fl friend. “I declare,” he remarked to his friend's wife, “it quite cures me of’ homesickness to drop in here and see a litt'e of your home life—er—er— not that your home life is anything but the—what I mean to say is that it makes me all the fonder of my own home—or rather, that, on the homeo- pathic principle, a hai» of the dog that bit you-—which isn’t, of course, what 1 mean. But when a man is lonely he can enjoy the society of al- most anybody—" “Sir!” said the lady, icily. “Il mean,” returned Mr. Brown, as he mopped the perspiration from his face, “that, be it ever £0 humble—no. no, yours is not that—but there’s no place like one’s own—but, I mean— well. T must be going! Good day !”— T.ondon Tit-Bits. Stockmen Fight Pests. Stockmen in the Canadian river dis- triet in Texas have shown themselves increasingly in accord with the poi- soning methods advocated by the bio- logical survey of the United States Department of Agriculture for the ex- termination of predatory animals, par- ticularly coyotes. In one district, poi- soning operations have resulted in a kill estimated as between 75 and 90 per cent of the coyotes over an area of 2,202 square miles. A border strip five miles wide, and including approxi- mately 1,200 square miles, was poi- soned, with a resultant kill of 25 per cent of the coyotes. In coyote poison- ing operations stockmen do not usually spend time hunting dead animals be- yond the point where they are con- vinced of the effectiveness of the meth- od. © It is considered more profitable to devote as much tlme and energy as possible to covering a wider territory . with poison’ baits. Woman Pirate Achieves Fame. There recently appeared on the river at Hong-Kong, much to the alarm of ship owners and thelr crews, a woman pirate, who has already taken a heavy toll of loot from vessels. Nothing is known of her, except the fact that she speaks English, wears a serge cos- tume and Wellington boots, and car- ries a wicked-looking revolver, with which she compels her victims to sur- render. Under her are a score or more Chinese brigands, who, although they are cut-throats and robbers, obey her implicitly. Wanted Story With a Purpose. Billy had fallen and hurt himself, and I called him to me saying: “Don’t cry, Billy. Come here, and I'll tell you a story.” He stopped sobbing, and came. “Tell me what kind of a story you want,” I sald. “Well,” he sald with a sigh, “tell me one that will make my thinks glad again.”—Exchange, A Bad Blunder. A certain church society visits the hospitals: of its city, and the other night the society had supper; in the Sunday school room. before leaving on its mission of mercy. At the conclu- sion of the meal Brother Miller sald: “Now: that we have eaten supper, let’s go to the home for incurables. The ladies haven't spoken to him since.—Kansas. City Star. ; Increased Use of Tobacco. Smoking is on: the: increase in the United States. There was a jump of 156: per: cent in’ the: value of cigars and cigarettes from 1914 to 1921, and’ of: | b Lyon & Co. this 4 per cent was from 1019 te 1921 The ‘value in. 1014 ‘was $814,884,000; 1919; $778,602,000, ‘and: 1021; $606, 749,000. Inventors Acted | All Misses and Growing Girls Three-Quarter Length Socks Reduced to 25 Cents These Socks are all Good Quality and this is a Wonderful Reduction All Sizes Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Tos & Co. je & Co. Fall and Winter Coats A large assortment of New Coats are here for the early buyer. All the Newj[Colors—Fur and Cloth trimmed; the New Side Fastenings. An excellent opportunity for the . earlygbuyer, at special low prices. Silk and Wool Dresses One lot of Dresses, all sizes. Colors Navy, Brown and Black ; values up to $28.00—closing out at $10.00. Sweaters See our tables of Sweaters, all sizes and colors. Prices less than cost. Shoes... Shoes School Shoes that will give good wear for boys and girls. Mens Shoes for work and dress. Womens High and Low Shoes, Black and Cordovan—prices the lowest.