== Bellefonte, Pa., August 15, 1924, 5 IT RSS ATI “Ancient Egyptians Had Mummies at Their Revels It was not unusual in the ancient days of Egypt's splendor for the tombs of the kings to be re-entered after burial and the body carried out t6 have a part in some significant ritual. Death was a foremost thought in the Egyptian's mind, and his daily life was a continual preparation for the life hereafter. In the height of his revels he took pains to remind him- self of the sériousness of life and the omnipresence of death. He held great feasts where death was perhaps furthest from his mind of all subjects. But suddenly the musi¢ ceased, dancers slunk away te darkened corners, feasters sat back half-sobered while wine goblets re- mained untouched. From the far end of the hall came a somber procession; two or three slaves strained at heavy ropes which were attached to a cumberous sled- like affair. Borne along on this was a many-colored painted coffin, the mummy case of a dead Pharaoh that had been rifled from the tomb for the occasion. v Slowly the procession entered, passed on and disappeared while the guests looked on with staring eyes. After this sobering intermission the revelry was resumed, perhaps not as riotously as before the appearance of the mummy. Suspension Bridge Is Moved in One Piece When the suspension bridge which spans the Avon gorge was removed from its old job of spanning the Thames, it was taken to pieces and transported te Bristol bit by bit. But the new bridge at Harwich, in connec- ton with the train-ferry service to Zeebrugge, was transported from its original position at Southampton I pne piece, London Tit-Bits says. It was a bigger job than the trans- porting of Cleopatra's Needle from Egypt to the Thames embankment. Of course it would have been impossible had either of the towns been situated inland, but as both were on the coast it was possible to convey the bridge by water all the way. The simple plan was to lash two big barges together, float them under the bridge, and then lower it onto their decks. The bridge was thep towed to Harwich. The bridge was erected at South- ampton during the war. To take it to pieces and transport it to Harwich by land would have cost more than the structure was worth. Hence the determination to try to break a record by taking it from one town to the other in one piece. Liquid Light to Be Next The simple electric light switch by means of which a room can be flooded with brilliant light, or even a whole town illuminated in a moment, was a tremendous step in advance, but we are now promised a light which never goes out. There is rothing to pay, ex- cept the original cost of buying, say, half a pint of liquid light. This liquid light is poured into a sulb, and the resultant light is sald to be superior to electric or any other known light, except nature's own brand of daylight. This light, being, In fact, radio-active, will remain good for seven years or more, when the bulb may require refilling. It is claimed, also, that this liquid will eventually make coal and oil pow- er a thing of the past. If that is the case, the real abelition of smoke seems to be In sight, for, although electric as long as fuel is necessary for its power is smokeless, there will be smoke generation, Tries Out Cars on Roof An automobile factory at Lingotto, {taly, has upon its roof, more than 100 feet above the ground, a testing track which is 8,810 feet, or nearly three- fourths mile around. It is used for experimental purposes and for testing finished cars. The track, which sur- rounds four open courts, Is 75 feet wide, and the curves are banked 20 feet high, so that high speeds are pos- sible. Supplies of gasoline and oil are al ways at hand, and are pumped from underground tanks.—Compressed Air Magazine, Credit for Intention The old farmer had dropped a two- ghilling piece in the kirk plate instead of a penny, and, noticing his mistake, tackled the elder at the end of the service. “It wud be sacreeledge, Sandy, tae furt it oot noo,” he said. “Weel, I'll git credit for it in heav- en,” replied the farmer. “Na, na; ye'll only get credit for a penny, for that was a’ ye intendit tae pit in.” Fair Enough Judge—He says you drew a knife and started to carve him up. “Well, he blacked my eye, so 1 thought it was no more’n fair for him to furnish the raw meat to put on it!” ~Judge. How to Get There She—Ho% shall I go to work to be- come a star? He—Get the reviewers to praise you ta the skfes.—Boston Transcript. HH HHH THE MAPLE LEAF DOES GOOD WORK } By MARTHA WILLIAMS Hod AW IM SE (®. 1924, McCiure Newspaper Syndicate.) A red leaf, pure flame-scarlet, cir cled softly down upon Elspeth's bare head, making an enchanting harmony of color against her cloud of wavy golden-chestnut hair — her greatest tharm. Otherwise she was no more than wholesomely pretty. She knew it —sighing over the fact. What chance had she against the tropic beauty of Valetta, glowing and velvet, dark as late red roses? Steadfastly she asked of Fate the question. As steadfastly came the answer: none at all. Leigh Granville was Beauty’s vowed fknight, withal rich, well-born, dowered with eerie charm. “I want you, Elspeth! Come} Quick!” Valetta called imperiously from an upper window. The Sidney house, her grandmother's, stood cheek by jowl with the prim Ross cottage. Blspeth threaded the boundary shrubs, her head so high, so level, that the maple gift lay undisturbed—thus she came, flame-crowned, face to face with Leigh, newly dismounted at the lawn gate. One glance—he had laid hands upon her shoulders, turned her to face him, and was laughing down at her. “At last! Trapped at last. Always knew you were a beauty, but too con- trary to show it—" “I see! You've got a crazy fit!” Els peth flung back at him. “I’m just the same as yesterday.” “Shame on you for a fibber!” Leigh admonished. “Let me show you—con- found you to your face with your face.” As he spoke he drew her to- ward the ramshackle fountain, whose basin yet maintained a mirror sem- blance. “Look! If after this you dare not to wear scarlet I'll have you sent to a nunnery for keeps.” “Why, how nice!” Elspeth retorted. “Anything for a quiet life—" “Elspeth! I called you!” shrilled high above them. Leigh raised tranquil eyes to her, saying: “Did you? But you know I was Johnny-on-the-spot! Of course she can’t leave me.” “Unless she comes I can’t go with sou to the Bromley dance tonight,” Valetta almost shrieked. “The new frock I ordered is such a mess I won't be seen in it.” “Be seen without it—and put out all eyes,” Leigh commented. “That is, unless Elspeth will wear red leaves— and nothing else.” “Stop such disgraceful talk, young man! I aim to keep respectable com- pany, or none,” Granny Sidney chuckled from the side porch. Rising sixty, she kept her head, eke her fig- ure, and a wit so pretty it had more than once made Valetta fume. “Run along heme now,” she added to Leigh, “so I can find out if there's anything wrong with Valetta’s frock-—or only her disposition.” It turned out both needed adjust: ment. Valetta was even more jeal- ous than her Spanish coloring war- ranted—she had called Elspeth first out of sheer impertinence, but to find that thus she had thrown her in Leigh’s way was intolerable, especially since she had seen and heard what passed. Elspeth her rival! Impossi- ble, she would have said an hour earlier. Now she was raging. Leigh seemed to her the fit reward of pa- tience, She had played with other men years and years; he had all she sought in a husband—money, brains, position, inborn leadership. As his wife she would queen it in any company. Hate hot and fluid as lava filled her neart. She wanfed to fly at Elspeth’s throat as she sat stitching deftly at the misfit frock. What right had she to put on that magic maple leaf? She lay face down for hours, racking her brain, her lava-wrath the while hardening into desperate purpose. After the hardening she slept soundly for an hour, and woke refreshed, also nerved for anything. Nerve was need- ed. She slipped shadow-silent to the dim library, where a silver traveling flask—her grandfather’s—remained as he had left it long years before. Opened, it gave out aroma bespeaking its age and era. Time had shrunken and strengthened the liquor within. Smiling craftily, she hid it, smiling fearfully she dropped Into it something even more potent, then crept back up- stairs to perfect every detail of her mad plan. It was too mad to fail—she meant to make Leigh drink the drugged liquor till he was quite as mad, else unconscious, then she would take the wheel and drive like the wind—any- where away from all her world. Stop- ping presently at some remote inn, she would beg shelter for her husband, suddenly ill. When Leigh came to him- self she would be sitting In watch, eager to confess, to show him where love for’aim had led her—and threaten to kill herself unless he agreed to marry her in the next town. Spolled and cynical he might be, yet still he had a soit heart. Then, too, there was his vanity. All would, all must, be well. A triumphant home-coming after the sensation of the running away ‘would make a beautiful climax. ‘Writhing betwixt hope and fear, she made "covert preparations, then flung herself down to wait the interminable bour before dressing for the dance. Valetta For ten minutes time trotted hard withal for her, then out in front came a throaty shout, throatier laughter, bellowed greetings, and resounding back-slapping. ' Valetta knew their meaning. One person only in all the world could thus make of his arrival 8 noisy solemnity. Andrew McDuff, the one man she had never been able to whistle down the wind, had found and followed her. “Run right down—unless you want me to come fetch you,” he roared up the stairway. Valetta went, like some- thing hypnotized. When she had been kissed three times, slapped on either cheek, and hugged till she cried with pain, Andrew explained: “Honey, I've got to go cross the big pond—you like that sort of foolishness, so I've come to take you with me. Hustle and pack —J1 want to catch the midnight train back. Say, can I scare up help—a best man, a parson and a bridesmaid for you?” “You surely can,” Leigh sald heart- fly. “Here am I, aching to do my darndest. Matrimony is, I hear, con- tagious. I want to start a wave that will sweep the country.” : And that was that—and all of i How We Get That Way! Show Wrong Interes: Sister had been up late the night before, and when the alarm cloek rang at six-forty-five she snuggled down for those ten extra minutes that would in the end mean hurry—hurry—hurry. But the fates were against her. For just as her chin got well into the cov- ers, the front-door bell went buzz-buzz. Of course she knew it was the lady in the apartment across the hall. No one else sounded the bell in that per- emptory yet apologetic manner. So she got up, shivering, and put down the window, pulled on her wrapper and undid the lock. “Oh, I'm so ashamé&d to disturb you at this hour!” came a piercing whisper. “Come in,” said Sister, as cordially as if her hair were not still up in tight kids. “No,” hissed the other, standing jus. so that the door could not be closed and a chilly draft played around Sis- ter’'s ankles; “no, thank you; I can't possibly come in. I only wanted to ask you if your heat was on.” Sister felt as if the heat had neve: been less on, but she managed to answer calmly that she'd see. At that moment the household cat came out. Sister had turned to feel of the near- est radiator, the forbidden door was wide open, and Alley popped through. That meant a quarter of an hour's search, and the clock ticked on. Fin- ally Alley was caught, Neighbor brought inside the door, and Sister turned again to the steam-heat sys- tem. No, she said, it wasn’t on yet. “What time is it, do you think ?—ah, { mustn’t keep you,” was the lady’s next move. “Five minutes past seven, you say? That can’t be right, do you think? I feel as if it must be later. But would ycu mind seeing if the other radiators are warm? Ours are stone cold. T suspect the janitor of being lazy!” The others weren't on, either. The fady was jubilant. She had proved the management in the wrong. How do we get that way? By being ¢0 much more Interested in what ought to be than in what is, that we are almost glad when it isn’t! (®, 1924, by the Eastment Syndicate.) Turning Back Ventilated sandals, the kind worn aniversally at the dawn of clviliza- tion, are recommended by a Wood- ward avenue shoe dealer as a solu- tion of prevailing foot ailments. “If everyone wore sandals,” the dealer said, “there would be no need for corrective appliances designed to re- lieve fallen arches and other concomit- ants of modern footwear. Not only that, but the human race would be decidedly better off. Much money would be’ saved. Walking, an exer- cise that is sadly neglected, would be popular because it would be painless.” —Detroit News. No Heat From Firefly A scientist who has experimentetw with problems of light production in- forms us that the firefly gives off no heat which can be detected. An in- finitesimal degree of heat must be pro- duced by combustion and there can be no combustion without heat. The firefly simply has, as a light produc ing machine, a much higher efficiency than any machine man has been able to make. It shows what enermous possibilities of improvement there are in our own methods of light produc- tion.— Washington Star. Chamois Skin Demand There has been an increase in the production of chamois skins in the Niort district of France. The esti- mated production of 1928 was 125,000 dozen skins, compared with 120,000 in 1022. The local glove industry ab- sorbed the major part of the produc- tion, and there has béen a marked in- crease in the shipments to the United States, which took 10,953 dozen cha- mois skins, valued at $235,820, in 1928, as compared with 2,888 dozen skins, valued at $68,172 in 1922, and 5,062 dozen skins, valued at $77,099, in 1921. Read the “Personals” Andy McClure, a cook in a lumber camp at Astoria, Ore., let his eyes fall on the “personal” column of a metro- politan newspaper the other day and read a few words asking for the where- abouts of McClure himself. The “per- sonal” was inserted by Ed Wakefield, who had borrowed $10 from McClure, and wanted to pay it back but couldn’t locate his erstwhile friend. Beef for 5,000 People Roasted by Electricity A new and unusual application of electric heating was made recently when electrically barbecued beef was served to five thousand people at the annual reund up and celebration at Ephrata, Washington. We learn from Electrical World that four steers weighing about two thousand pounds each were dressed and prepared for the barbecue and roasted in a large electrically-heated pit built especially for the occasion. The improvised oven was 32 feet long, 4 feet wide and 6 feet deep. Twelve heating elements each of 3 kilowatt capacity and con- sisting of about 150 feet of No. 14 iron wire were placed one foot above the bottom of the pit. Sheet-iron heat de- flectors were placed one foot above the heating elements, and a foot and a half above the deflectors were placed iron bars to hold the beef. Thermostatic control was provided tr maintain an even heat in the pit. The meat was first roasted at 2 tem- perature of 550 degrees for two hours. The heat was then reduced to 350 de- grees and maintained at this point for four hours. For the next six hours the temperature ranged from 250 de- grees to 300 degrees. At midnight the meat had been roasting for twelve hours, and the temperature was then reduced to 200 degrees and held there for twelve hours until the time of the barbecue. Albumen From the Lupin Seed Makes Good Food Not only in the Mediterranean re &lon, but also along the western coast of America there grow freely tall, handsome spikes of blue-white or yel- low flowers that form entrancing bits of color in the landscape during the season for blossoming, and are not in- frequently used as a garden flower. It is the lupin, which belongs to the family of leguminous vegetables to which mankind owes so much, and which includes beans and peas as well as peanuts. As in other members of the family che fruit of the lupin consists of seed-bearing pods, but no attempt has been made to use them either for for- age or for human food until recently. It is now announced that by a German process, the Pohl method of extraction, said to be quite inexpensive, the seeds can be made to yield an uncommonly high percentage of albumen, which, added to rye or other flour, makes an extremely nutritious food. This new bread is likewise admi- sably fitted to form part of a diet of certain (presumably diabetic) pa- tients because of the small amount of starch it contains.—Literary Digest. What She Was After Mrs. Skiffington, during the course of an afternoon call on Mrs. Biffing- ton, sought the latter's advice as to applying for divorce. “Well,” sald Mrs. Biffington, upon the conclusion of her friend's lengthy recital of her woes, “you have had your marital troubles just like the rest of us; but really, dear, to judge from what you have told me, I am not at all sure that you would be justified in taking this step. You have ro other grounds for seeking a divorce, have you?” Mrs. Skiffington hesitated a moment, md then added: “To tell the truth, in addition to what I have just sald, I have a brother who is a lawyer and I am very anxious to give him some- thing to do.”—Farm Life. Competent Guide A group of motorists from Washing. con got lost in Druid Hill park in Bal- timore. They were trying to make the Pimlico racetrack, which is situated just on the edge of the Maryland me- tropolis. So they hafled a policeman. “Can you tell us how to get to the acetrack?” The officer was deliberate in his re oly. “Do you see that gent on the cor aer,” he asked, “the one with the seedy suit, the form sheet sticking out of his pocket, and his shoes run down at the heel?” “Yes, we see him.” “Follow him.”—Louisville Courier Journal. Ingenious Diving Suit Improvising a diving apparatus from an old household hot-water tank, fifteen years of rubber tubing, 8,length of heavy chain and a discarded beer pump, Walter Merwin of Perth “*Am- boy, N. J, has become a successful commercial diver, according to Popu- ular Science Monthly. Merwin is the submarine member ot a firm that salvages metal junk from vessels about to be scrapped. He as- serts he can make deep dives with his homemade suit, and that the outfit is perfectly safe. She Had Heard Comments At a private entertainment a guest had just risen from the piano. “Would you like to be able to sing and play as I do, dear?” she asked a five-year-old miss. “No, ma'am.” “And why not?” “’Cause,” explained the little girl, “I wouldn't like to have people say such horrid things about me.” No Babies Wanted The small girl met the doctor near her home, “You brought a little baby next door, didn’t you?” she inquired. “Yes,” he answered; “shall I bring one to your house?” “No, thanks,” came the prompt re ply. “Why, we've scarcely time evea to wash the dog.” {Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. -August Sales- Will mean greater reductions in every de- partment. An excellent opportunity to choose from an entire Stock of Summer Materials. Voilles, crepes, lawns, at ridiculously low prices. Children’s rompers, creepers, dresses and boys’ suits—all sizes, specially priced at 98c¢ Our Self Reducing All Rubber Corset, Price, $8.50. Come expecting to find the most marvel- ous values you have ever seen—you will not be disappointed. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Prices Reduced at, Yeagers We have made a Very Liberal Reduc- tion on the price of Ladies Pumps and Sandals. This season’s goods—not old styles. $8 Pumps and Sandals now $4.85 Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.