Bellefonte, Pa., September 14, 1923. NEARS WR, ART TRULY IS A LANGUAGE Bears a Lesson and Charm for Even Those Not Versed in 4 Its Rules. Art, in its broad and permanent meaning, is a language—the language of sentiment, of character, of national impulse, of individual genius; and for this reason it bears a lesson, a charm, or a sanction to all—even those least versed in its rules and least alive to 1ts special triumphs, Sir Walter Scott was no amateur, yet, through his reverence for ancestry and his local attachments, portraiture and architec- ture had for him a romantic interest. Sydney Smith was impatient of gal- leries when he could talk with men and women, and made a practical joke of buying pictures; yet Newton and Leslie elicited his best humor, Tal- fourd cared little and knew less of the treasures of the Louvre, but lingered there because it had been his friedd Hazlitt’s Elysium. Indeed, there are constantly blended associations in the history of English authors and artists; Reynolds is identified with Johnson and Goldsmith, Smibert with Berkeley, Barry with Burke, Constable and Wilkie with Sir George Beaumont, Haydon with Wordsworth, Leslie with Irving; the painters depict their friends of the pen, the latter celebrate in verse or prose the artist's triumphs, and both intermingle thought and sym- pathy; and from this contact of select intelligences of diverse vocation has resulted the choicest wit and the most genial companionship, — Henry T, Tuckerman, NEGLECTING THEIR LANGUAGE Younger Chinese Since the Revolution Show a Preference for English and French, To judge from the numerous arti cles that are being written on China, its literature is not reaping great bene- fits from the revolution, In the first place, the Chinese language is be- Ing pushed more and more into the background. The younger generation no longer receives the training it once received in the Chinese “Classics,” and band in hand with this goes their preference for foreign languages— English primarily, and then French, with a little German. It is, of course, impossible for a country to build up a body of national literature in a for- eign language. Intellectually, how- ever, China is making reassuring prog- ress. Its three greatest political writers, all of whom have been active now for nearly a quarter of a century —Tschang-Schi-tung, Kang-Yu-wei, and Liang-Kitschao—are as active as ever in their efforts to save the nation from the fate of India or Burma or Korea or Egypt or Poland. Fine for the Youngsters. “Play as you enter” is the welcome sign on the sides of the “Jollytown” trolley cars in Baltimore, Md. where the traction company has set aside several cars for the children to play in. They are complete in every de- tail except that the power is turned off and they are anchored to the ground. Instead of the usual adver- tising cards, Mother Goose rhymes and pictures are displayed along the sides. The clanging gongs and the loud calling of imaginary and unheard- of street names afford noisy proof of the popularity of the play cars as the crews take them along fancied routes, Melting Sulphur. Sulphur is often used to anchor bolts in cement or stone floors, but as it catches fire so easily when melted over an open flame, its use is somewhat in- convenient. The difficulty can, how- ever, be avoided by first melting some lead, and then partly immersing the sulphur vessel in the molten lead. The sulphur will be melted in a short time, and there it will not catch fire, unless the temperature,of the lead is allowed to exceed 625 degrees Fahrenheit. All Balled Up. B. P. reports this spoonerism: “My brother works in a theater. He's a sheen sifter. I mean he seens shifts— that is, he's a sifter of sheens, a seener of shifts. Oh, hang it, he's a shiftery seener—a sheenery—a shift Seener—a shiffery—well, anyhow, my brother works in a theater.”—Boston Transcript, Autoboob Is a Child Killer, An autoboob is a person who drives an automobile without regard for the safety of other people. One of his worst traits is to drive recklessly in front of other cars and whiz past street intersections. He is a killer of children. He always looks where he should, but never sees what he should. Scarcely Complimentary. Some time ago a parson in an in- dustrial town arranged a special serv- ice for working men. The service was well attended and the preacher began his sermon with the remark: “Rarely indeed have 1 been privileged to address so many tons of soil.” A Line on Values. “Fifteen cents for a quart of black- berries?” | “Yes, mum.” | “Seems high.” | “Did you ever try picking a quart?” i “No, I never did.” “I advise you to try it.” MOTOR BUS GROWS POPULAR Hundred Electric Railway Companies Now Are Using It to Supple- ment Their Service. The motor bus grows in use. There are now, says Financial America, about 100 electric railway companies using motor buses. In a majority of these cases the motor bus is actually supplementing and adding to the sery- ice rendered. This list of 100 coni- panies are operating approximately 1,000 motor vehicles, practically all of the simgle deck 25-passenger or 14 to 18 passenger type. Most of the motor bus lines in the United States are operating on a ten- cent fare basis, and the opinion of electric railway officials is almost unanimous that a five-cent flare opera- tion will not prove profitable. The public demand a seat, more speed, greater comfort and appreciate the safety factor of loading at the curb, and up to the present have indicated a willingness to pay the ten-cent fare rate. The potential growth of this type of service is large. Already there are more than 40,000 motor vehicles in service in the United States carrying passengers over schedule territory (ex- clusive of taxicabs). The figures for Newark, N. J., are indicative of the possibilities. In 1916 there were 2,660,854 passengers carried by jitneys in Newark. Last year there were 76,375,000 passengers carried in mod- ern motor buses, and the figures for the last few months indicate a 1923 total in excess of 100,000,000 passen- gers. SPRAYING IS NOT HARMFUL There Is No Danger If Proper Methods of Eradicating Pests Are Used. A good many people have asked the Juestion, “Will fruits and vegetables which have been sprayed be dangerous to use?” It can be said that if they use the methods recommended for the differ- ent pests by the Department of Agri- culture and the experiment stations there will be no danger. Of course in some instances, simply because of heavy spraying or spraying late in the season, there may be comparatively large quantities of spray material stuck to the fruit and vegetables at harvest time, especially where such products are grown in a dry climate. When heavy coatings of spray mate- rial are found, washing and wiping will remove much or this, usually al- most all of it, and peeling will remove every bit. Considerable fear has been ex- pressed by some that spraying of fruits and vegetables might leave enough ar- senate of lead or copper on the sur face to be injurious to any one who might eat the fruit. Right in this line experiments have been undertaken by the United States Department of Agriculture to deter- mine whether there might be left on such fruits and vegetables which are sprayed enough chemicals of a pol- sonous nature to be injurious. Are Hiccups Rheumatism? That hiccups may be due to rheu- matism is the contention of Dr. Martin J. Chevers, a member of the British Medical association and a well-known Manchester physician. “I have never failed to cure the most obstinate case by a few doses of anfirheumatic medicine,” Doctor Chevers states in a letter to the Brit- ish Medical Journal. He admits that morphine may relieve the spasms, but adds that it does not go to the root of the cure. His suggestion is particularly timely in view of the reported “hiccup” epi- demic in France, which, it has been suggested, must mean that “hiccups” are infectious. One of the cures used in France is to apply severe’ pressure to the eyeballs. Adopted by Bluejackets. In the midst of the quaintness of old Stamboul—the Turkish quarter of Constantinople—stands one of the most interesting modern orphanages in the world—a home for child refu- gees from the burned city of Smyrna. It is supported by American sailors —the crew of the U. 8. S. Edsall, a de stroyer of Admiral Long's squadron. Twice each month, on the 15th and the 30th, when the crew is paid, each officer and man contributes his share to the support of the orphanage. It was through the efforts of Commander Halsey Powell of the Edsall that Smyr- na was evacuated without tremendous loss of life.—McClure’s Magazine for July. The Season Passes. The man looked forlorn at his lone ly table. After suitable deliberation the head waiter sauntered over. “Have you ordered, sir?” “I have.” “And what was your order, gir?’ “Oysters.” “Sorry, sir, but oysters are out of season.” “The waiter didn’t tell me that when I ordered them. But I suppose they were in season then.” Largest Thermometer. The largest thermometer in the world has been erected on the board. walk, near Michigan avenue, Atlantic City. It is 50 feet high, enabling promenaders a mile away to read the temperature. The mercury in the tube Is ten inches wide and Is operated by a system of small thermometers with electrical relays. Lights on the board indicate the temperature accu- rately and automatically. NEW GAUGE OF HORSEPOWER Method of Showing the Relation Be tween It and a Kilowatt Has Been Devised. More than 100 years ago James Watt took the strength of a “strong London draft-horse” as a unit of measurement to indicate the power of his steam engine. This unit, which was the amount of energy that would raise 33,000 pounds one foot in one minute, he called one horsepower. Electric motors, automobile engines and all other forms of energy-produc- Ing machinery have been measured in terms of Watt's horsepower ever since, says a bulletin of the New York State Committee of Public Utility. The “strong London draft-horse” is dead as Eohippus and his bones are dust, but his mighty thews have been so im- bedded in tradition that from that time to this no one has questioned the horsepower of a horse. Now the unit of measurement, orig- inally taken from a horse, is to be used to measure the strength of other horses, to determine, in terms of me- chanical horsepower, how strong they are. There has been designed a wagon, the wheels of which are geared to a hydraulic pump by means of which any required pull can be estab- lished and a uniform load resistance maintained. To this wagon will be harnessed various types of horses, from the lordly Percheron, weighing a full ton, to the 900-pound light-harness horse, and from the results there will be established a ratio between weight and strength similar to the tables for electric motors, shewing the number of horsepower delivered for every kilo- watt of energy consumed. BAKERS DROP LOTUS LEAVES Shanghai Government Forces Them to Use Waxed Paper for Wrap- ping Their Products. Shanghai bakers used to wrap thelr bread and cakes in nice green lotus leaves. But the days of this romantic. practice are gone forever. According to the new regulations covering bak- ery products, bread and other prod- ucts must be suitably wrapped in greaseproof or similar papers. The clause in the regulation covering this particular requirement quoted by As- sistant Trade Commissioner A. V. Smith in a report to the Department of Commerce, reads as follows: “That bread and bakery products shall, upon sale or when carried or handled for sale, or delivered in bas- kets, vehicles or otherwise, be suit- ably wrapped in greaseproof paper or other cleanly covering, in such man- ner as to completely protect the bread from dirt, dust and flies, or from harmful contact in handling.” Now Senate Lacks Octogenarian. The death of Senator William P. Dillingham of . Vermont removes from the senate rolls the last octogenarian. And on March 4, when congress ad- journed, there were three, Senator Page, also of Vermont, who was eighty last January, retired on that date. Knute Nelson of Minnesota, three weeks younger than Page, died in May on his way from Washington to his home. : And Dillingham, midway in his eightieth year, died early in July. Removal of these octogenarians from the senate leaves Francis E. Warren of Wyoming, now one month past sev- enty-nine, the oldest member. Next comes LeBaron Colt of Rhode Island, seventy-seven; then Albert B. Cum- mins of Iowa, a youngster of seventy- three, third; Lodge of Massachusetts, three months younger than Cummins, fourth. Denmark's Alphabetical War. There is a battle of the big and lt cle letters now raging in Denmark. ; The Danish language, like the Ger- man, has hitherto adhered to the Mid- dle-age practice of spelling its nouns with capital letters, but a progressive movement of growing strength de- mands the substitution of the little letters in conformity with English, French and other languages. The de- mand has aroused the fury of the con- servative elements. Now Minister of Education Appel has determined to introduce the smalls | letter practice in the schools. the Bolshevist reform of the Russian orthography and the Bulgarian changes, the big letter and the small letter have become symbols of political opinion. k Somewhat Mixed. The justice of the peace in a town m Ohio, in pursuance of his duties, had to hear and judge the cases that were brought before him and also to perform occasional marriage cere- monies. He found it difficult to dis- soclate the various functions of his office. Everything had gone smoothly un- til he had asked one bride: “Do you take this man to be your husband?” The bride nodded emphatically. “And you, accused,” said the jus- tice, turning to the bridegroom, “what have you to say in your defense?” Japanese Editors Poorly Paid. Japanese newspaper men work for small salaries, but efforts are being made by prosperous newspapers in Osaka to elevate the standard. The Osaka Mainichi, which has a daily circulation of about 800,000, has made substantial increase in its exist- Ing scale of salaries. Together with a bonus distributed twice a year, ac- tual pay is two to three times the specified salary. SEERA Bonin As in | FOSSILS FROM THE ICE AGE Czech Scientist Discovers Skeletons of Men, Women and Great Variety of Animals, Skeletons of prehistoric men and women from the ice ages, a mammoth, two lions, a hyena, a wolverine, five cave bears and at least sixty fossil beavers have been found in the vast _System of underground palaces formed by nature in the limestone rock of cen- tral Moravia now being explored by Dr. Karel Absolon, curator of the Brno museum of Czechoslovakia. Dr. Ales Hrdlicka of the United States Nation- ‘al museum, who is in Europe studying cave men for the United States Smith- sonian Institution, will report these dis- coveries in a communication to the next issue of Science. The skeletons of many of these mam- mals of the glacial period of the earth’s history are in an excellent state of preservation, he says. The cave bears’ rc ins are almost complete and will be n.ounted as a group in the Pro- vincial museum at Brno (Brunn), while the teeth and skulls of the beavers are | also considered of highest scientific | value. | The great subterranean halls, with | their numerous columns, stalactite and Stalagmite forms, are being energetical- ly explored and are said to rival in beauty the famous caverns in Virginia and Kentucky. HIS FIRST ATTEMPT AT WORK Curious Experience of College Studen? Who Was Trying to Earn Money for Expenses. Many students attending the univer sities of Indiana pay part of their college expenses by doing odd jobs. Several years ago a young man applied at the Y. M. C. A. employment office of one of the universities and asked for work. He was directed to the home of one of the professors. His first duty was to mop the kitchen floor. Mrs. H. supplied a mopstick, Some rags and a bucket. She was up- stairs sewing a few minutes later when he called, “What shall I do with the vater?” “Throw it out.” “But I can’t.” She came down to Investigate. She found the kitchen floor flooded and the new helper standing on a chair holding the dry rags and the empty bucket. He explained that he had never mopped a floor before, so he had filled the bucket with water about eight times and emp- tied it on the floor. The young man is now a practicing whysician in Indianapolis. Poetry as It Is Lived. In his “Human Traits and Their So cial Significance,” Irwin Edmar writes: | 2c “Men may first have come to speak poetry accidentally, for language arose, like other human habits, as a thing of use. But the charming and delightful expression of feelings and ideas came to be cherished in them- selves, so that what was first an acci- dent in man’s life has become a de- liberate practice, : “When this creation of beautiful ob- Jects, or the beautiful expression of feelings or ideas is intentional, we call it art. “In such intentional creation and cherishing of the beautiful, man’s life becomes enriched and emancipated. He learns not only to live, but to live beautifully.” The first poem may have been an accident, as Mr. Edman suggests, but more than one number in the latest lot can be reckoned among catastro phies. Wife Worse Than Expected. A darky who had recently married was asked by the farmer for whom he worked how he and his Mandy were getting along. “Not very well, boss. The fact is Mandy and me we’ve done pa’hted.” “Parted!” exclaimed the farmer. “Why, you were just married. You know, Sam, you can’t leave Mandy. She’s your wife and you took her for better or worse.” “That’s just it, boss,” said Sam. “I shore did tell that pahson that I took that gal for better or wus. But, boss dat gal is wus'n I took her to be.” | Young and Inexperienced. When I was a bride I went into a shop to purchase socks for my hus- band. I was young and unaccustomed to buying men’s wear, and was at a loss when the salesman inquired what size 1 wanted. I didn’t have the slightest idea, but suddenly I said, “I don't remember what size his socks are, but he wears & number fifteen collar.” The clerk and all other people In the shop burst out laughing.—Ex- change. A Helpful Hint. “I don’t know what in the thundera- tion is the matter with my wife!” grumbled Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “She's everlastingly asking me for money to buy a new dress with or a bunnit, or some such fool thing.” | “Mought try giving her a little money some time, and see if it would make a plumb fool of Ler,” suggested an acquaintance.—Kansas City Star. Alike in That Respect. A traveler in the West some years | 420 observed a well-executed portrait | on the wall of a dark room in a cab- In and asked whose picture it was. “That's my husband,” said the woman of the house, carelessly. “But it is hung with fatal effect,” urged the artist. “So was my husband,” snapped the woman, $3.00 $3.00 § ‘Men’s ! Work Shoes 2 A oF . Lt Every pair guaranteed to be 1 8 | Jt a o 3 solid leather, or a new pair Ic oh . . o Uf given in their stead....... ft = i A Ie IE AAAS APSA APPA x 3] d= Lit I: i Yeager's Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN ll BELLEFONTE, PA. gi Bush Arcade Building 58-27 RE LU Eo LUAU Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Fall and Winter Coats A large assortment of New Coats are here for the early buyer. All the New][Colors—Fur and Cloth trimmed; the New Side Fastenings. An excellent opportunity for the early{buyer, 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. oe 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. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.