Demovri Jaton Bellefonte, Pa., November 16, 1923. RE SI, AS TTS, HER ENGAGEMENT RING isn She tries to seem unconscious, But her glances cling To the hand on which she wears {t= Her engagement ring! Her eyes are pools of gladness, And her pulses sing, It’s a symbol of the future— Her engagement ring! The whiteness of its sparkle Is the soul she'll bring To the one who gave it to her— Her engagement ring! And the merry little flashes That the sunbeams fling When they hover there upon {it— Her engagement ring— Are the countless joys awaiting As the swift days wing When a band of gold she’ll wear witk Her engagement ring! —Detroit News. TENNYSON RUDE TO GUEST Invited One of His Admirers to Lunch eon and Then Refused to Talk to Her. Tennyson gained a reputation in his later years for rudeness. It was due perhaps to his dislike of intrusions upon his solitude. When the mood was upon him he was apt to disregard en- tirely the conventionalities. A neighbor of the poet laureate once asked if he might bring to Aldworth a woman who was visiting in his home, She was well known in society. It was carefully explained to Tennyson that the woman had a great admiration for the poet's works and desired very much to see him. Tennyson assented quite readily, telling the neighbor to bring her to luncheon and named the day. When the day arrived the poet had forgotten all about it and, as it chanced, was in one of his solitary moods. ‘The woman was introduced; Tenny- son bowed. Luncheon was announced and they went in; she sat next her host, who throughout the meal did not utter a word. At the end of it he re- tired In silence to his own room and the woman left the house, to which she had made her pilgrimage In hope and reverence, not having heard so much as the sound of the poet’s voice Kansas City Star, LEARNING SOMETHING His Wife—Here's the plumber’s bill for that little job. What do you think of it? Dr. Grabbit—I think, my dear, that in the medical profession the art of making charges is still in its Infancy. Good Old Walll scratch, scratch, scratch! The sound made by Convict 491 was parely audible, so carefully did he work. The stone wall of his cell was hard and resisting, but the blade was stout, and persistence might finally turn the trick. Scratch, scratch, scratch! He had been sent up for polygamy. By a strange coincidence all four of his wives had been large physically, with red hair—yes, sir, all four of them—and tempers to match. Scratch, scratch, scratch! Night after night he had workeu away ; suddenly he stopped with a low ery of triumph. He was convinced. “Good old wall!” he muttered. “It stands the test. They can't get at me.”"—Exchange. New Aerial Flivvers. An Ohio aeronautical engineer, it & #aid, has built a “bicycle-plane,” weigh- tng less than 100 pounds and operated by foot power, which has flown suc- cessfully at McCook field, Dayton. Even more remarkable is a Kkite-like glider, constructed in Europe. Al- though weighing only ten pounds and capable of being folded up and car- ried on the back, this airship is said to have remained in the air for al- most an hour on several occasions. — Popular Science Monthly. Institute for Breeding. An institute for the breeding of ani mals and one for the study of plant production have recently been com- pleted at the University of Goettin- gen, The next addition to this fast- growing university will be a depart- ment for the study of agricultural ma- chines, with an additional professor especially trained to take charge of the new field of work. Wise, “When do you expect to get into your new house?” “Well the builders promised it would be ready by November 1 but we have had experience enough not to expect to get into it before March.” Arctic Gymnasts. Teacher—Johnny, what can you tell J the north pole? Johnny—It's a pole sixteen feet In height, : Teacher—What about the climate? Johnny—The Eskimos climb It. A SE —— Vote for Taylor for Sheriff. COOLIDGE ASKS NATION TO OBSERVE “GOLDEN RULE SUNDAY” ON DEC. 2 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON who are in adversity. (privations of others, It 4s with a good deal of satisfuction that I commend your proposal to observe an: Inter- mational Golden Bule Dinner Sunday, on the second of December, 1923. I feel sure that this sugges tion will meet with very widespread spproval and will Pring more closely to mind the charitadle requirements of those who are prosperous to those It suggests not cnly & practical method for help, but ths highest expression of sympathy, by sharing for a time tbe Cordially yours, = The plarps for the observance of Golden Rule Sunday call upon the people of America to serve a menu in their homes similar to that served in the orphan- ages in the near east, the difference in cost of the orphanage menu and the ordinary meal to be contributed to orphanage work overseas. The observ- ance is very appropriately fixed for the Sunday following Thanksgiving. Having on Thursday partaken from well-laden tables as a token of rejoicing in the prosperity of America, it is fitting that on the following Sunday people give special consideration to the needs and distress of those who are less highly favored. REFUGEE MEAL FOR AMERIGANS Whole Country Asked to Adopt? Orphanage Menu for Just One Sunday Dinner. RELIEF HAS SAVED MILLION People of All Nations Will Figurative ly Gather Around Same Table ar Practical Sign of Sympathy With Near East Sufferers. How many comfortably fed, clothed and housed Americans will sit down to a Sunday dinner of rice, corn grits and soup—typical orphan fare-—on December 2, as a practical test of the golden rule? The question is asked today by Charles V. Vickrey, general secretary of Near East Relief, who is in charge of the plans for the general observ- ance throughout the United States of “Golden Rule Sunday.” In an inter- view, Mr. Vickrey said: “If American people will renounce for one meal the food they are accus- tomed to eat, and contribute the dif- ference in cost to the support of starv- ing children in the near east, the situ- ation in Greece, Armenia and Pales- tine will become infinitely more real to them. “l have recently returned from sev- eral months in those countries. Ameri- ca is a name to conjure with there. Bitter reproaches are heard against nearly every other country, but none against us. That is because people realize that Americans have gone to them with a helping hand and a square deal, rather than with the mailed fist. “America could well have afforded to have spent every penny of her re- lief funds as a long-sighted, cold-blood- ed business propasition. The good- will that has resulted from relief work in the near east is of incalcul- able value. When these orphans we are caring for today grow to man- hood, they will become the leaders of their nations and their eyes will turn toward America. “At least a million persons in the near east would not be alive today had it not been for American aid. Even today, 100,000 persons are being cared for day to day by the Near East Re- lief, mostly women and children who would probably perish in a few days or weeks if the work ceased. “Our workers are now concentrat- ing not only on the physical care of our 50,000 orphans, but on their in- dustrial training as well. At the age of 16, when a» orpha leaves our care, he is equipped to enter some useful trade or business. In Narazeth there are boys working in our carpen- ter shop a few feet from the spot where Christ toiled. In Macedonia, hundreds of Greek orphans are learn- ing farming in the atmosphere where Paul spent many years in establishing the first European churches. “Five dollars a month provides food and physical necessities for an or- phan, and $100 a year provides for his edacation as well. The observance of Golden Rule Sunday by a mil lion American families will provide enough funds for thousands of orphans. “When people break bread together, they become friends. On this Inter- national Golden Rule Sunday people of all nations figuratively willigather around the same table, partaking of the same food representing the menu which the unfortunate children of the near east hope, by the benevolence of the West, to eat 365 days in the year. But even this simple menu the or- phana cannot have unless the rest of the world practices the Golden Rule.” FOURTEEN NATIONS SUPPORT COOLIDGE European Countries Join Ameri- can President in Backing Golden Rule as Prac- tical Program. Geneva, Switzerland.—Officials of re lief organizations from fourteen Eurc- pean countries have asked their gov- ernments and peoples to join in a great international movement to save the destitute orphans and widowed mothers in those countries of the Near East that have suffered from recent wars. Dec. 2 has been set aside as “Golden Rule Sunday.” On that day people will be asked to observe the broad principle of the Golden Rule by fore- going their usual noonday meal and tating instead the frugal ration usually partaken of by the parentless children of Greece, Armenia and Palestine. The world’s people will then be asked to contribute the difference in the cost of the two meals to the prin- cipal relief organization in their coun- try, to be administered for the needy children. Notable people in Europe who will co-operate to give the day an inter- national aspect are King George of Greece, Prince Carl of Sweden, ex- Premier Clemenceau of France, M. Paul Hymans and Pr. Alice Masaryk. AMERICAN FOODS BEST SAYS FAMOUS DOCTOR Athens.—American standard food- stuffs are the best in the world, says Dr. Mabel Elliott, famous woman phy- sician, who for the past two vears has been medical director of American or- phanages in the Near East. From the standpoint of purity and high food value, she asserts that no European nation can compete with the United States, and for this reason she insists on American products in all orphan- ages and hospitals, in order to meet adequately the needs of undernour- ished children. Dr. Elliott's annual report, sum- ming up the results of the care of 50,000 children in orphanages as well as clinics for 50,000 additionad chil dren in refugee camps and homes, says: “Stable American foods are now the backbone of all our menus for re- building children who became weak and anaemic during the refugee ex- odus from Asia Minor. Our menus contain, not only bread made from American flour, and corn grits in por- ridge and stews, but also the liberal use of corn syrup, American con- densed milk and American cocoa and macaroni, thus making a balanced ration to meet all the scientific re- quirements as to relative food values, calories and vitamines. The favorite orphanage pudding is composed of corn grits with cocoa, sweetened with corn syrup, and made more nutritious and palatable by add- ing a sauce of American condensed milk. Such a pudding has a high food value and is very economical—no other equivalent food value could be obtained from other foods at twice the cost. Moreover, it is so palatable that children eat it eagerly several times a week, and never seem to tire of it. The American people, in pro- viding for these parentless children such pure and wholesome foods from their own tables, are certainly making a practical application of the golden rule.” Dr. Elliott has recently returned to America to arrange for the publica. tion of a book of her experiences un- der the title of “Beginning Again at Ararat.” | MISTAKES MADE BY POETS Blunders in Literature Are Not All Confined to the Living Authors. The blunders in literature are mot all confined to living authors. Milton's lines, “Thick as autumnal leaves that strew the brooks in Val- lombrosa,” are familiar to everyone, but, as a matter of fact, the Vallom- brosa forests are all of pine trees, so that there are no leaves, and pine nee- dles do not fall in the autumn, but to- wards spring. In “Comus” he writes: And in the violet embroidered vale Where the lovelorn nightingale Nightly to thee her sad song mourneth well. Unfortunately for the poet, the male nightingale alone sings and the female is voiceless. Another classic writer who allowed his meter to get the better of his sense was Pope, who wrote: When first young Maro, in his noble A work Bl: wiles immortal Rome de- signed. He had overlooked the fact that, if Rome was immortal, nothing could outlast it. But neither of these is any worse than the story of Pharaoh's daughter finding the infant Moses among the bulrushes on the banks of the Nile, As a matter of fact, bulrushes do not thrive in that part of the world, and there are none on the banks of the Nile. In his youthfulness may be found some excuse for Keats writing: Like stout Cortez, when, with eager He PIO the Pacific, Balboa discovered the Pacific, and not Cortez. VULCAN THE GOD OF FIRE Forger of Thunderbolts for Jupiter When Hurled by Mother From Olympus. Vulcan is in classic mythology the god of fire, the patron of blocksmiths and workers in metals, and the srmor- er of the gods. Jupiter and Juno, or, some accounts, of Juno alone. Owing to his weakness and lameness, be in- eurred the displeasure of his mother. and was cast by her from Olympus, After dwelling for nine years with Thetis and Eurynome in a grotto be- neath Oceanus, Vulcan returned to Olympus, but was cast out a second time for presuming to side with his mother in a quarrel between her and Jupiter, He fell. on the island of Lemnos and there set up his forges; but afterward removed them tc the volcanic islands of Lipari, near Sicily, where he forged the thunderbolts of Jupiter and other marvelous {mple- . ments, x Vulcan was sometimes called Mulci- ber and Lemnius.—Detroit News. Curious Things About Starfish. Legs on a starfish? At first you will gore than likely say not, but if you want to make certain put one in a pool of water and watch what hap- pens. Soon you will notice it scram- bling over stones and gliding up any rock that may happen to be in its way. This is the moment to snatch it up and have a look at the hundreds of little legs it keeps curled up inside, ready to poke out of holes in the skin when required. A starfish also has eyes in the tips of its rays, and one particular kind possesses eyelids which open and shut. Another curious fact about the star- fish is that if one of its rays is cut off another one will grow, and if the creature is cut completely In half, each half will throw out new rays, so that in a few weeks two starfishes appear instead of one, : Some starfish have a habit of break- Ing Into pieces of their own accord when alarmed. Even a shadow will cause them to give a shudder and break into bits. Most starfish have a curious habit of protecting their eggs. They heap them together in a small pile and then bend their rays downward so that they stand on thelr , tips and form a kind of cage or table, How to Test Fresh Eggs. The best test of all for the egg is its appearance after it is broken—if the white and yolk run together it is evi- dence that the egg is not strictly fresh, though no odor is perceptible. But that is too late to save money, if not to avert an actual catastrophe. One way to tell a newly laid egg is by the “glow” or “bloom” on the shell. This glow disappears after handling and on being exposed to the air for some time. Fresh eggs are full and rose-colored when held up to the light; large dark spots and shadows indicate decay. A cold-storage egg will be darker ind somewhat shrunken in appear- ance, If the egg when placed in a 10 cent solution of salt water sinks to the bottom it is to be considered perfectly fresh; if it remains im- mersed in the liquid, it is at least three days old; if it rises to the sur- face it is more than five days old. “In Shallows and in Miseries.” “Your spooners aren't all in the pul- »it and on the platform,” writes T. W. 0. “I read the other day of a man re- narking that another man who had nsulted him had made ar ‘unpollified iqualogy.’ And not long ago I myself n quoting Shakespeare's ‘There is a ide in the affairs of men,’ amused my slubmates by rendering the cencluding ines: ‘Omitted, all the voyage of their life # bound in millows and In shaseries.’" -Bostnn Transcrint. He was the sop of according to $3.00 $300 Men’s Work Shoes Every pair guaranteed to be solid leather, or a new pair given in their stead....... Yeager’'s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Specials Corsets Corselettes and Bandeaux Corsets Y from $1.50 up—Royal Worcester and Corselettes from $1.00 up. Bandeaux from 50c. up. Bon Ton. Ladies and Cldrens Coats See our : . Special La- dies Coats—quality of the $22.00—sale price $16.50. Fur Trimmed, in the New Browns, only $22.50; better qualities in the New Greys, Browns and Fine Silky Bolivias—up to $65.00. Childrens Coats in Brown, Camel and other shades—from $4.25 up. Furs Don’t miss the $9.98 Fur Neck Pieces—Black, Grey and Brown. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.