Bowen Bellefonte, Pa., January 11, 1924. MAKES STUDY GF LAUGHTER Psychologist Declares That me Tell One’s Character by the Vowel He Uses. A well-known psychologist has heea making a study of laugbter, which he says differs in its indication of char- acter by its vowel sound. Those who laugh in “A,” he says, or make a sound like “A,” are loyal to their friends, frank in their speech, fond of bustle and movement and of versatile character. People who laugh in “ are sel- dom cheerful company because they are phlegmatic and melancholy. Most children laugh in “IL” and peo- ple who continue to laugh in “I” after they have grown to be men and women have childlike qualities. They are timid but affectionate, irresolute but candid and are always obliging and ready to work for others. They are apparently not very strong characters. People who laugh on the vowel “0” are often successful in life because they are not oversensitive. They do not worry about public opinion, and jeriticism slips off their backs like wa- {ter off a duck’s. They are generous, iself-confident and, in spite of their jpushfulpess, usually liked and trusted. ! Few people like laughers in “U." As ‘a matter of fact, these individuals are very sparing in their laughter. Life for them holds little of fun and mirth ~—London Tit-Bits. sar My TOLD FORTUNES IN COFFEE Magazine Printed in 1731 Tells of the “Famous Mrs. Cherry,” Seeress. Coffee has been put to many curious uses, according to William H. Ukers, author of “All About Coffee” (The Tea and Coffee Trade Journal com- ‘pany, New York), but none stranger than the one described in an account. ¥eprinted from an English magazine of 1731, of fortune-telling, or “divination” by coffee grounds. The fortune-teller, or “diviner,” de- scribed herself as “the famous Mrs. Cherry, the only gentlewoman truly learned in the occult science of toss- ing of coffee grounds, who has with uninterrupted success for some time past practiced to the general satisfac- tion of her female visitants. Her hours are after prayers are done at St. Pe- ter’s church, until dinner. (N. B.— She never requires more than one ounce of coffee from a single gentle- woman, and so proportioned for a sec- ond or third person, but not to exceed that number at any one time.) “If this one ounce of coffee repre- sented her payment for reading the future, the charge could not be con- sidered exorbitant,” comments Mor. Ukers. She seems to have had less regard for her own fortune than for those of her patrons. Not a Good Shot. The Business Girl's boss is a sales- man of nervous temperament, quick and energetic in his dictation and quite fond of high-sounding phrases. He has his fair share of slang and many a snappy sentence has she type- written that would make an English professor's hair (if he had any) stan? on end in horror. At times he mixes his metaphors, but the other day she got the best one yet, The boss was writing to the editor-in-chief of a large metropolitan daily complimenting him on his edi- torials, and telling him they were the only ones he (the boss) ever read con- sistently. It was a big compliment —the boss thought—and then he thought he'd cap the climax, so te speak, and he dictated: “In my opinion your editorials hit the bullseye squarely on the nose every time!”—New York’ Sun. Making the Goat Pay. Dutchman riding in a little cart drawn by a goat was stopped at a bridge by the toll keeper. “] got to pay toll?” said Hans, “Yes; 5 cents to cross the bridge. After an argument he paid the toll and went on. In the afternoon he came back again. Only this time he had the goat sitting in the cart and was drawing it himself, Out come the toil keeper. “Here, you know, you've got to pay 5 cents.” The Dutchman shook his head and, pointing to the goat, said: “Don’ talk to me—ask the driver.” Wanted All the Details. An officer told a story in the mess one night of his harpooning a gi- gantic sunfish off the Andamans. After some moments of frenzy, the un- fortunate fish set off at a prodigious speed and, before it succumbed, had towed the officer's boat twice round an islet of considerable size. At the close of this narrative there was silence for a few minutes, and then the colonel in a tone of quiet interest, asked: “Did it perspire much?” 8 Rather Seems So. They used to tell us long ago ‘We ought to practice saying no. You ask a girl for a kiss And she says no. You say to chap, “Will you buy this?” fe hands you no. I say, to these things giving heed, That yes men are our greatest need. a etait ‘ .r . “n 1 y —GSubscrive ior the “WatCasan, (WILD TURKEY LIKES TO SAlL Uses Wings More Than Is Supposed— Volpanes Down Mountain Slope at Express Train Speed. Wild turkeys use their wings more than is supposed; for going to and com- ing from the roost; when disturbed: often to come togevher from consider- able distances; when changing their feeding grounds, and sometimes they will fly into tall trees apparently just to spy out the land. In mountainous country turkeys do a good deal of sail- ing down long slopes. This wild vol- planing is a most beautiful and impres- sive flight downward and the rush of the wind through these makes a sound like a howling shrapnel. The speed is terrific, and it is checked by the birds gracefully swerving to one side ere they come to ground. On several occa- sions I have attempted to time such flight, having the birds in full view and knowing approximately the distance covered. Unless my estimate was wholly wrong, turkeys can volplane down a two-mile mountain slope in a shade over a minute ‘and a half. An- other fly of about three miles, includ- ing a dip to a distant ridge, seemed to be made in three minutes flat. But such speed. under the circumstances. is not extraordinary when we remem- ber that a green-winged teal, along a straigh® river reach, has heen timed at 130 miles an hour, The speed of wilG things is at least one insurance policy they carry against extermination. The case of the wild turkey is excii- ing in its promise. Here is a great bird for long in many states on the verge of extinction, now coming back in all his regal stateliness Nor is the mere killing of him the only sport that i his return affords. His presence once more in our forests invests them with | the spirit of primeval wildness that no man wishes this country ever wholly to , lose.—Archibald Rutledge, in the New | York Independent. i ' EXCHANGED PIPES FOR LAND Three Hundred Were Part of the Price William Penn Paid for Tract in Seventeenth Century. Pipes in the Seventeenth century were largely made in Holland of pipe- i clay imported from England—to the . disgust and loss of English pipemakers. ‘In 1663 the company of tobacco-pipe- makers petitioned parliament to forbid ‘the export of tobacco pipe clay, since by the manufacture of pipes in Hol- land their trade was much damaged, The company’s request was granted, but in the next year it again found it ‘necessary to go to parliament, show- ing their threatened ruin because | cooks, bakers and ale-house keepers | and others made pipes, but so unskill- | fully that they were brought into dis- { esteem, and requesting that none be i allowed to follow the trade who had ! not been apprentices seven years. | During the latter part of the Seven- | teenth century English pipes were pre- i sented by colonists in America to the Indians. valuable as objects of barter or part- purchase value in exchange for land. In 1667 120 pipes and 100 jew’s-harps were given for a strip of country near Timber creek in New Jersey. William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, purchased a tract of land, and 300 pipes were included in the articles given in the exchange. The Rule. The toll-gate keeper in a certain section of Alabama is an aged darky, When, recently, a farmer of that dis- trict sought to pay toll by the offer of a dime, the coin was returned to him by the keeper with this state. ment: ‘“’Scuse me, boss, but I can’t take dis dime. It’s bent an’ de county's got a strict rule agin our takin’ mu- tilated coins.” “Indeed?” said the farmer, “Well, let me tell you that you gave me that very bent dime yourself in change yesterday !” “May be, may be,” murmured the old darky, “Dere ain’t no rule agin my handin’ out mutilated money. It's ! only agin my takin’ it.” A Monstrosity. A sportsman, being conceited about his fine figure, wore corsets to show it off. One morning, riding to the moors, he was thrown from his horse. A gamekeeper ran to render assistance. The first-aid man began to feel the fallen one all over to see if any bones were broken, and suddenly yelled out to a gillie: “Run for a doctor. Here's a man’s ribs runnin’ north and south, instead o' east and west.” An Official Criticism. The Movie Manager—Good morning, ma’am. I asked you to call because I wanted your opinion on some of my features. The New Censor—Weli, to begin with, your forehead is too low, your eyes are not mates, your nose is too big and bulbous, your mouth is too large and flabby and you've little or no chin. Otherwise they will do very well. Is that all? Pretty Soft, Eh? During a discussion at a meeting of ¢he historical society, upon the slight consideration attached to life by un- civilized nations, a speaker mentioned the extraordinary circumstance that in China if a man were condemned to death he could easily hire a substitute to die for him; and the debator went on, “I believe many poor fellows get their living by acting as substitntes.in Vithat way.” They subsequently became . uo l thd (USDANUST? “Wriei snimadverts on Mrs. Belmont's itumarks on Slavery of Married Lire. eee, mont, is a sort of slavery, and for that reason she would hesitate to recom- mend marriage to any girl. Why, not for the same reason hesitate to recom- mend marriage to any man? There are millions of average men in the world who are just about able to make ends meet, observes the Detroit Free Press. They are conscientious per- sons feeling the usual affection for their families and having a strong re- gard for the obligations which they as- sumed when. they married and became fathers. The result of these binding ties is that they work on year after year, paying the family bills, pinching a lit- tle sometimes off for life insurance, laying away to meet the cost of edu- cating their offspring, struggling to get ahead to buy a home, and at the end of the first 25 or 30 years of married life they frequently find themselves just about where they started in a financial way, and beyond their prime physically. They have, in a sense, been the slaves of marriage quite as much as their better halves, but it has not been observed that the outlook for hard work and small returns ever discour- ages tlie youth of either sex when marrying time comes. They seem to think the game is worth the candle and something over. Perhaps, notwith- standing Mrs. Belmont’s doubts, they are right about it. ROMANS USED SHORTHAND Quintus Ennius Devised a System of Abbreviated Writing Two Cen- turies Before Christ. Although shorthand is so widely used today, probably few people real- ize that, in a different form, it was popular in the days of ancient Rome. The first mention of an abbreviated system of writicg is made in connec- tion with the Roman poet Quintus En- nius, 200 B. C., who devised a scheme of 3,100 signs for his own use. Then we have Plutarch’s statement that Cicero’s famous oration in the Roman senate, in 63 B. C., was reported in shorthand. References to shorthand were made in the works of Cicero, Horace and Pliny, and the poet Ovid bears testi- mony to the fact that by means of these characters Caesar's political se- crets were borne far over land and sea. Evidence goes to show that the Sermon on the Mount was reported ir ' shorthand by St. Luke. The writing was scratched onto tah- i lets covered with a layer of wax. The | tablets were afterward fastened to- | gether at the corners by wire, thus forming a sort of book. Indian Canoe in Italy. The American Indian canoe, which for centuries has plied only the streams { and lakes of the North American con | tinent, has at last found its way to the " elassic “yellow Tiber.” Canoeing has hecome a favorite river sport of the Romans. On Sunday a dozen or more of the frail Indian craft can be seen in the yellow waters gliding along the shores in company with skiffs, shells, sculls and motorboats, The graceful Indian water conveyance has become so popular that an Italian firm has com- menced the manufacture of them. They took several American canoes as mod- els and then began turning them out by the scores. A canoe club also has been organized and many Americans have joined. Paddling to the perfec- tion of the Indians has not yet been achieved. The Romans make vain ef- fort to keep the cande headed straight, but a change of paddles is necessary after every few strokes. Strange Town of Midgets, A curious little town, in a pretty rural section of Germany not far from Berlin, has a population of 70 adults and a number of children, the entire population being made up of Lillipu- tians. The houses, shops and theaters are on such a diminutive scale that a person of average size would have dif- ficulty in entering. > They have a tiny fire department with hose wagon, hook ana ladder and a steam engine drawn by Shetland ponies. The policemen are scarcely larger than big dolls, and the postmis- tress, though sixty years old, is about the size of an eight-year-old child. Some of these little people earn a live- ti%ood by circus and stage exhibitions, but most of them are stay-at-homes, and excel in toy making. Ground lsn’t the Limit, A gentleman who considered sweep- ‘nig gowns insanitary for street use was having a tilt with a designer. “gowns,” growled he, “are now louening the sidewalk. I suppose you wave reached the limit and are satis fed.” “I'm satisfied,” stated the designer, ‘hier we have nevdr reached the limit n long gowns.” “Huh?” “We could: make the women wear thts.” Maybe It Was a Stand-Off, A country lad went to New York and ied to secure a job on the police force. He passed the physical tests, but the written examination gave him a little trouble. One question was: “A man buys an article for $12.25 and sells it for $9.75; does he gain or lose an the transaction?” Arter pondering over the question mir prurnd friend answered: “He gains hy oo ts BEL -oNes on the detlars™ Marriage, says Mrs, O. H. P. Bek FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. All nature is but art, unknown to thee, All chance, direction, which thou canst not see, All discord, harmony not understood, All partial evil, universal good; And, spite of pride—in erring spite, One thing is clear—whatever is, is right. reason’s “But no, madame; surely not blue! Blue is not worn this season! Mad- ame must chose a tone of brown or beige or tiens, a green. But surely not blue!” “Voila, madame, the newest coat. It is just created—madame will see it nowhere; it is utterly exclusive and distingue.” There, my friends! You may not have blue, because no one else is wearing it; and you must order a cer- tain coat because no one else has worn it. Your dressmaker will tell you both in the same hour with the same sincerity! Bare-backed we go into evening life this winter. Into the streets we go forth so purposely concealed that we resemble Arctic explorers. It is not easy to tell friend from foe. In days when Knights went abroad in armor it was the custom to lift the visor of the metal helmet when meet- ing a friend. Such was the origin of lifting the hat on the street to an ac- quaintance. Women may have to go back to these knightly days. It would save much annoyance and curiosity if we should life the visor of the cloche a bit as we entered the presence of those who are not reckoned foes. Is it a reversal in our minds as in clothes to the medieval that makes us determined to hide all clues to our identity during the day hours? Not content with the concealment given by the visored cloche, we add a scarf veil or possibly a lace masque across the eyes. In addition we wear the hide of every animal that goes to the traps or once went into the public garbage heap. And we use fur in such pro- fusion that distinguishing marks, such as eyes, nose, chin and hands are quite concealed. One must know us by our backs. There is no effort at concealment of that part of the anat- omy. In day hours our clothes hang close- | ly and limply against our bodies from neck to hem. Beltless, wrinkleless, without shred of ornamentation we turn our backs to the world. Some are good to look upon. Others need concealment. No one cares how many curves cavort in front, but not one must show in the back. What nature has left undone, cutters and corsets must do. r From Arctic explorers and visored knights, we turn into Orientals when ! the sun goes down. So sharp is the change one would think we had heard the wailing call from the muezzin towers and turned our faces toward Mecca. Not even a headdress con- ceals the shape of the shingled head. Gowns are lowered to show shoulders and a goodly portion of the spinal coi- umn. Arms are bare, except for slave bracelets, which continue in fashion, especially when worn above the elbow. There is little or no drapery to dis- guise the lines of the body. The Ori- ental slip is the ideal frock for even- ing gayety. The restaurant men in- sist that the madness for thinness is the cause of their diminishing re- ceipts, not prohibition. Interesting, don’t you think? Desire for exceptional slimness has brought into fashion the pinafore un- derslip of our grandmothers. Those who once traded well in petticoats and later deplorerd their disappearance have reason to rejoice. example, plus the persuasion of the fashion writers, made no impression upon the trades people who supply 1 our necessities. . The gradual acceptance of the cam- isole skirt came along with the eager acceptance of the pinafore underslip. Now we delight in both garments, putting the latter beneath our slender | chemise evening frocks and over the slightly boned girdle corsets. No matter what the shape of the evening frock, it is cut low in the back. In front it may rise to the col- larbone, which is an exceptional shap- ing, not wise for the majority. We have released ourselves from the thrall of the high evening gown. The harness of colored crystals once worn by the audaciously low frock is not revived. Whatever the depth of the decollettage, it leaves the back un- adorned. Not even the sunburn pow- der of last season serves as a cover- ing. The whiter we are, the better. Recommendations, I believe, are not necessary to “sell” you the semi- tailored, semi-coat dress of cloth, with its dainty lingerie collar and cuffs. It speaks for itself; practica- bility, all the essentials that make for this quality are in evidence at a glance, and best of all, here is a mod- el that is generally becoming, so ac- ceptable to all. No need either to speak of the pur- pose and the occasion for which this dress is ideally adapted, for it surely will look well at all times when a gen- eral utility dress is the correct mode. There is, without doubt, a very decid- ed need for such a dress when the school or college girl is enjoying her holiday vacation. The same is true of the one-piece slip over dress, with the lingerie col- lar and cuff accessories, carried out in a more tailored style by being devel- oped in linen and finished with a hem- stitched hem. And while we are talking about the present use of lingerie collar and cuff sets, it is well to know that indica- tions point to a more and more gen- eral acceptance of neckwear, and that, if there are gaps in the list of gifts for your friends, neckwear, when in style, is very much appreciated by those to whom you are privileged to give intimate personal gifts. Smart hats of the semi-turban or- der made of black satin are effective- ly trimmed with black monkey-fur fancies. No other ornamentation is employed. The square neckline is being enthu- siastically sponsored by Paris and is a pleasing change from the neck lines that have so long prevailed. ) The French adopted this form of undergarment when they discarded corsets, but their : AR SNNNEANNRNN ER VORA ON NAAN TOAR A AN RV CT A Point to be Considered HE EXISTENCE of the First National Bank is continuous—and this is an important point to consider when ap- pointing an Executor of your will. The individual Executor may die before the Esta te is settled. We cordially invite you to consult us about any trust matter. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM SE EE I I N ARRANGING your business for the coming year, your banking connec- tions should be given careful considera- There are many ways in which a bank can serve you. tion. 61-46 It Should Offer perfect security for your de- posites. It should be prepared at all times to lend you what is proper. It should feel the interest of a par-t- ner in any business you discuss with its officers, and these officers should have a broad knowledge of general Eoudiions so that their opinions have value. This bank offers the security of its large surplus and the lon gexperience of its officers as guarantees that your bank account will be perfectly safe- guarded and your interest carefully considered. Bellefonte, Pa. Il IHL The First National Bank Watch our Windows We Start January 5th with our Annual Mid- Winter Cleanup Sale of Suits and Overcoats, all Suits and Owvercoats Mens and Boys One-fourth Off The regular price Suits and Overcoats only at. this reduction— None Reserved They will show you the Biggest. Honest.--Saving Ever Offered you Watch Our Windows FAUBLES