" Bellefonte, Pa., October 12, 1923. REFORMING A LOAFING DRIVER . D. Norvell, Head of an Ohio Ice Company, Had Novel Method That Worked Well. ! Harry D. Norvell, who rose from an ice-wagon driver to the presidency of the biggest ice company in Ohio, chanced to notice that one of his driv- ers was neglecting his work loitering about a certain saloon, says Fred Kelly in The Nation’s Business. In- stead of sending for the man to come to the office, Norvell himself went to the saloon where the man was. He bought himself a drink and then hudged over alongside the driver, whom he engaged in conversation. “My name's Norvell,” he said. “I happen to be the general manager of the company you work for, and I wish you wouldn't drink while on duty. You see, all the time that you have during working hours you have already sold to me, and I have resold it te our cus- tomers. If you steal a little of it to loaf in here, it is just as dishonest as if you gave short measure of any other commodity.” Such was his argument—said in a pleasant way that barred antagonism, When he got through the driver was on his side. Nobody ever received a letter from Novell in which he designated himself the president of the company. I once asked him why he merely signed his name without a line below to Indicate his position. “Oh, the people who don’t know Norvell,” he chuckled, “can have the fun of wondering whether the letters are from the president of the company or from a barn boss.” BALKED AT PURPLE PRUNES Chinese Said His People Wouldn't Take “Death” Colored Package Offered by California. The following is the marketing ex- perience of the California prune grow- ers, says The Nation's Business. Prunes “go” with rice, and so the prune growers sent men to China to see whether a market could be created over there. The scouts reported that there were comparatively few among the 400,000,000 Chinese who could af- ford prunes, but that there were enough to justify the trial. “You will have to give away samples at first,” they said, “because the Chinese don’t know what California prunes are.” So small packages were prepared, with two or three prunes to a box. The prune-growers thought the very look of the package was appetizing. They called in a Chinese to see what he thought of the plan. And he threw up his hands in horror. “You can’t give those things away.” “Why?” “Because the prune on the cover of ghe package is purple. Don’t you know that purple is the color of old agé and death?” The prune growers hadn’t known, of course, but they profited by the advice and devised a new package. Supply and demand, it is clear, are not the only factors which govern value. A Woman's Way, A woman ran out of a house shout- mg “Fire!” A passer-by started at a gallop for the fire station, while a second pedestrian dashed into the hall and, being unable to see or smell smoke, turned to the gasping and ex- cited woman, and asked: “Where is the fire? I can’t see any signs of one.” “I—I didn’t mean fire! I—I meant murder!” she screamed. A policeman arrived at that moment, and demanded to know who was being murdered. “Oh, I didn’t mean murder,” walled the miserable woman, “but the biggest rat you ever set eyes on chased our eat across the kitchen just now? Elsphant Radle. Even elephants use wireless now. adays. A loud speaking receiving horn ‘was placed near a Jumbo in the Lon- don 500.to see how it would affect him, Ha listened to all the jazz mix-up with seeming unconcern. Then his Indian driver, speaking from the broadcasting station, uttered four orders: lie down, get up, salute, and pick up. The ele phant walked slowly towards the loud speaker. No doubt the order to get up when he was still standing, puzzled his massive intellect. A keeper who watched him thinks he would have obeyed if the orders had been re- peated. She Should Have. The actress had been happily man rled three times, but was compelled to sue her fourth for divorce. He had left the flat, also some old clothes and some of her old love letters. There she sat amid the litter and looked them over. “I rémsain, Mrs. John Flubdub.” Thus they were signed. She tossed the last one aside. “But I didn’t remain Mrs. John Flub- dub,” she sighed.—Rochester Demo- crat and Chronicle. Wholesome Curiosity. “Does your boy Josh intend to study faw?” “Yes,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “The traffic “cops keep him in touch with the court so much of the time he thinks he might just as well read up 50 As to have san intelligent interest in what's goin’ on.” Sr —————————— A ————— ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” MEXICO LIKES YANKEE GA. People of Neighboring Republic are Becoming More Sportsmanlike as a Consequence, T had been greatly impressed with what American sports are doing for young Mexico. American sports are common all over the republic now— basketball, baseball, volley ball, hand- ball, tennis and all the typical Ameri- can sports. Even the president has a handball court up at Chapultepec for his eight- een-year-old boy to play on. I asked him if he did not feel that these Ameri- can sports were going to teach his peo- ple how to “play the game.” In Mexico the minute a man is de- feated for office or the minute that a brother defeats him in debate or wins a girl from him, that Mexican wants to kill his opponent or start a revolu- tion. They have not learned to be what we Americans call “good sports.” American games are teaching them this spirit, says William I Stidger in the Outlook. After I had explained what I meant he admitted that my implications and deductions were true and that he had manifested his confidence in the ¥. M. C. A., which introduced these sports into Mexico, by giving that American Institution a government gift of 25,000 pesos. “what are your personal sports?” I asked him. “Billiards and poker,” he said, with a smile. LONDON LOSING ITS VOICE ~amous Old Street Cries of the Me tropolis Are Dying Out One After Another. Even in London, most conservative sf cities, one by one the famous old street cries are dying out. In Shakespeare's day the streets were musical with this chanting of tradesmen, calling their wares, each to his own particular lilting tune. The last to be heard in modern Lon- don is that of the lavender peddlers: “Sweet lavender, sweet lavender! “Won't you buy my sweet lavender? “Sixteen branches for a penny!” It’s stiil heard on the side streets, but its days are numbered. It's easier to walk to a drug store and get moth- balls. Just as the street cries are dying out, so also are the London flower girls—famous in song and story—dis- appearing. Once they were to be seen all over the city—these “girls” whose ages ranged from sixteen to sixty. Picadil- ly Circus has been their last strong- hold. But there are signs that they're being ousted even from this favored spot. Men, mostly ex-soldiers out of regular jobs, are now selling flowers. Man-Killing Horse. What is said to be the strangest nanslaughter case ever tried in the criminal courts of the United States is scheduled to be heard in Middle bury, Vt., in the near future. Wil. liam . fallock, a farmer, is to face a jury n the charge of being responsi ble for the death of A. W. Woodcock, an eighty-year-old neighbor. The de fendant is the owner of a stallion, which broke away and entered the yard of Woodcock, attacking and kill- ing him before any one could come to his aid. The state will contend that Hallock was directly responsible in that he was negligent in not keeping a vicious animal properly restrained. The horse was permitted the freedom of its own barnyard, it is said, but broke from the yard, trotted down the highway and entered the open gate of Woodcock’s place. It first attacked Floyd Woodcock and was beaten off with a pitchfork. It then approached the old man, striking him down with its hoofs, causing injurles which re- sulted in his death. Following Orders. He was on sentry duty for the first time. An officer approached. “Halt! Who goes there?’ he shouted. “Officer of the day.” And the officer continued on his rounds. But he hadn’t gone far when the sentry shouted again: “Halt! Who goes there?” The officer halted and looked back furiously. “What's the idea,” he snarled, “halt- ing me twice like this? What's the idea?” ! “Never you mind about the idea,” sald the sentry. “My orders is to call ‘Halt’ three times and then shoot!” A Novel Fruit. Satsuma, a variety of orange, is to ‘oe introduced to the New York pub- lie. It is not entirely novel, but has never been marketed under its, own name. A concerted attempt to special- ize in this variety is now under way In certain districts of southern Ala- bama, and arrangements have been made to handle it co-operatively in New York under the name of Sat suma, Analogous. “I asked my five-year-old youngster,’ writes P. W., “if he could tell me why the little hand of a watch goes faster than the big one.” His reply was, “I guess it’s for the same reason I have to run when I go walking with you, isn’t it, daddy?” That Vague Feeling. Mrs. A.—Did you ever have the feel- Ing that you had met a person before and perhaps had an unpleasant experi- ence in the dim past? Irs. B.—Yes, I sometimes have that feeling when hiring a cook.—Boston Transcript. Satie | Two Aes About By KATHLEEN THOMAS ©, 1923, by McClure NoWAPpor Syndieate) Six o'clock in the morning of the important day found most of Spots- ford Centre bustling about its busi- ness. Cook, the caterer, had long since been manipulating egg beaters and stove dampers with an expert hand, and the skeleton of a bride's cake already lay before him, even in its unadorned stata & compliment to the importance of tha wedding of a Spotsford to a Hart. A few doors down, and on the same side of Main street, a light was burn- ing in the back room of Perkins, the florist’s, and if one had been there to see, one might have glimpsed a bright head bending absorbed above an arm- ful of flower sprays scattered on the work-table. But of course it was six in the morning and there was no one to see, for all of Spotsford Centre that had not business of its own to be about was asleep uptown, and would be for hours. | Nor did it really matter. For though ' it would be, in our opinion, a shame to miss a sight of Shirley Carter's pro- file at any time, and particularly in the half-yellow light of the back shop that morning, unconsciously provoca- tive with its lips pursed over her work, there was no one uptown who would have spent a thought on the sight. Not any more. The time had been, of course, when Shirley’s slightest whim had motivated the whole uptown set, but that was before the administration changed, tariff jumped, and the bottom of the sugar market dropped, leaving Mr. Car- ter to die apologetically in the big Car- ter house, because there seemed to be nothing much else for him to do at his age and with his financial tangles. It is only in the movies and in story books of a kind that the friends of the ' unfortunate heroine who has lost her patrimony execute an “about face” and leave her to shift for herself, Such mercenary procedure is not true to hu- man nature, even of the most perverted sort, and certainly it would not be a natural act of the kindly people who had become Spotsford Centre's aris- tocracy by right of other things than money. It was Shirley Carter's own fault that she had been dropped by the up- town set, and she acknowledged the fact genexously. She had dropped out with studied purpose, after she had decided that one party dress such as she had always worn was scarcely worth a month's salary. Not that the party dress was essential to her play-’ ing about with her old friends, but it symbolized a great many things and which she could not now afford. Above everything, Shirley dreaded pity, and she did not intend to em- phasize her new estate by forcing too many comparisons. And Spotsford Centre once made to understand, had accepted her decision. This morning, bending over the bou- quet which she was fashioning, Shir- ley’s pride was stronger, and her heart more desolate than it had been before in the three long years. Her thoughts were full of the happiness of Mary Spotsford, who, at high noon, would be carrying this very bouquet up the flower-strewn aisle of the church, where Robert Hart would be waiting. ‘used all over the world. A look:ef pain which B06 Mary wince crossed the other girl's face, “Well,” Mary spoke again, “I have Snothe much harder, question. Do. you care enough for him to be very’ big, Shirley, to forget the hurt, and to even forget pride?” Shirley's only answer was made in a voice trembling with eagerness. “Oh! where Is he, Mary?" she cried. And then it was that two arms slipped about Shirley from behind, and a voice, dearly familiar, whispered things about their wedding day. . . and a fever. , . and blessed, Inti- mate words intended only for her ear. From which Shirley gathered that Raymond had been coming to her, all repentance, from Java, when a fever had stricken him and detained him until today—their wedding date! At the mention of the wedding, Mary appropriated Shirley with a knowing smile. “You'll have to get busy, Mn Groom,” she called to Raymond as she unfastened her friend’s apron, “and get the whole Perkins family down here. We'll need another bouquet, for we're going to have a double wedding, after all!” As Shirley let herself be led toward the door, she knew, gratefully, that Mary would take the details upon her capable self, Gown . . .vell. . . accessories . . . everything would be forthcoming in the five hours that remained. After three years of lonely independence, it was a comfort to be dependent, and no longer lonely. She looked back over her shoulder at Raymond, whose eyes were still fol- lowing her. Life had been swept clean of all anchorage when he had left but now he was back! SOUNDING SKY WITH BALLOON interesting Experiments Made to De- termine Temperature and Test Air Currents. Sixty years ago two men managed to rise in a balloon to a height of five miles above the earth's surface, and for many years that ascent remained a record, says the London Tit-Bits, In ‘those days -it. was taken for granted that the higher you went the colder it got, but nothing was known for certain until, in 19802, a French meteorologist began to experiment by sending up small balloons, to each of which was attached a self-registering themometer. Most of these were lost, but some were recovered, and the fact was re- vealed that in every case after six and a half miles the steady fall in tem- perature ceased abruptly. Indeed, a slight rise was often noticed above that height. Since then these small ballens sondes, as they are called, have been They are made of rubber and constructed so that when they burst they turn into parachutes, which bring the instru- ments intrusted to them safely back to earth. These balloons have been sent up to 46,000 feet. Pilot balloons, which are larger, and which are used for testing the air currents of the upper atmosphere, have been sent up to 82,000 feet, and have proved that at great altitudes there are winds blowing at 132 miles an hour—that is, faster than anything near the earth's surface. These little balloons are teaching us all sorts of interesting things about the top of the weather. Up to the present century we were able to study only the bottom of it. Her heart was glad for Mary, yet : she could not control the rush of feel- ing that was almost self-pity as she wondered if there was anyone in Spots- ford Centre besides herself who would remember today that three years ago she, Shirley, had been engaged to Ray- mond Hart, Robert’s brother, and that today’s ceremony was to have cele- brated two weddings instzad of one. ‘Raymond was another figure of the old life, as lost to her as her faiher, or her long summers in the Adirondacks, or her Paris hats priced in three fig- ures. Their quarrel had been unim- portant enough, save that it was sig- nificant of the misunderstanding be- tween them. What he did not see and she was too proud to explain to him was that the pity and sympathy mir rored in every friendly eye about her seemed to Shirley a reflection on the beloved father who had left her in such a predicament. So how, though he argue ever so heatedly, could she consent to an immediate marriage, as though there were no other course open tc her—as though she were cap- italizing Love? No, she would work, pay what she One odd fact is that the coldest re- ‘glons do not lie over the poles, but over the equator. The greatest degree of cold ever recorded—119 degrees be- low zero, Fahrenheit—was found at a height of twelve miles above equato rial Africa. : When the Kaiser Wore Kilts. A great many notables, fom Glad- stone to Balfour, from Fanny Kemble to Sarah Bernhardt, figure in the Countess of Jersey's sprightly remi- niscence of the Victorian epoch. As a daughter of Lord Leigh and the wife of Lord Jersey, she has known mest of the British nobility. When she was a child she shook hands with the duke of Wellington and was kissed by the young Queen Victoria. One of her girlhood memories is of the wedding of the prince of Wales in 1863, in con- nection with which she says: The present ex-kaiser,” then Prince ; William, aged four, came over with his parents for the wedding. He ap- peared at the ceremony in a Scottish suit, whereupon the German ladies re- , monstrated with his mother, saying ' they understood that he was to have could of the debts that she had in. !| WOR the uniform of a Prussian of- herited, and when the time came she would marry him as they had planned, | taking her place once more by right of ! her position as his wife. But Raymond Hart would have none of this, and had taken himself and his belongings to the Orient while Shirley learned with weary surprise that one lives on long after the heart has stopped caring from the sheer weari- ness of its ache. The door of Perkins’ opened, and Shirley, taken unaware, bent far over her work to hide her face and the look of naked misery which, she knew must be there. But if the woman noticed she made no sign. She came forward eagerly and buried her face happily in the flowers which Shirley still held. 1t | was Mary Spotsford. : There were tears on each girl’s lids as the two regarded each other. At length Mary spoke, gently, “Shiriev, I've slipped out on my own wedding morning to ask you a very personal question,” she said. And as the other looked startled, she went on. “Do you still love Raymond?” ficer. “I am very sorry,” replied his moth- er; “he had it on, but Beatrice sand | Leopold (the duke of Albany) thought that he looked so ridiculous with tails that they cut them off, and so we had to look about until we found an old Scottish suit of his uncle’s for him to i wear.” An early English protest against militarism !—Youth’s Companion, Didn't Dare. Rastus Jackson, a thoroughly mar- ried darky, was one day approached by a life insurance agent. “Better let me write you a policy, , Rastus,” suggested the agent. “No, sah,” declared Rastus emphat- ically, “Ah ain't any too safe at home az it is!”—Judge. Unavoidable Accident. Teacher—Who was that laughing aut loud? Jaséph—I was, ma'am. I was laugh. ing up my sleeve and didn’t know there was a hole In it. $00 $3.00 | Men’s : FEET hob] Work Shoes § ar} 1 iH . Ir Every pair guaranteed to be pl 1] 1) y solid leather, or a new pair Ic Lie 3] i ‘given in their stead....... i 3] 4 i i: =I] tic i Af 0 UC A i Up . ot Yeager's Shoe Store & et 1 r= THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN I: =] Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. RRR RR RR RRR Come the “Watchman” office for High Clogs iow work. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Visit this Store for we expect to make a specialty of Low Prices in all our departments. See our Ladies Dresses in Exclusive Styles, straight line models in Purest Twill, Canton Crepe and Satin Back ‘Crepe—specially priced at $15.00. Womens Coats ---the Newest Winter Models for all sizes, including stylish stouts---specially low priced. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.