rr ————————— "Bellefonte, Pa., September 26, 1924. Shakespeare House Is Restored With Stucco Restoration of a building at Strat- ford-on-Avon, recently carried out by the new owners, will preserve a struc- ture closely identified with the life of William Shakespeare, according te a writer in Concrete. The author points out that the enterprise answers in a way a questign asked by Shakespeare in one of his plays, when he inquires a8 te what evil endure “against the tooth of time and razure ef oblivion.” “Judith Shakespeare, daughter of William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway, after her marriage to Thomas Quiney, vinter, lived for thirty-six years in a house at 1 High ‘Street, Stratford-on-Avon,” says the article in Concrete. “This house was an Elizabethan dwelling, half-tim- bered, with overhung eaves and gables and the usual face of oak and plaster. “Barly in the last century an at- tempt was made to ‘restore’ it but the result was very unsatisfactory. It was recently rescued from its state of conspicuous ugliness by W. H. Smith & Son, book sellers, and the present tenants of the premises. The restoration was carried out with port- land cement stucco, with remarkably pleasing results. “The house of Judith Shakespeare is owned by the Stratford-on-Avon cor- poration, and forms part of the Guild estate. Half of the rent of the build- ing goes to the King Edward school, as it did in the days when Shake- speare was a schoolboy there.” German Tried Suicide Vainly in Various Ways A young man with the talent of a «at for remaining alive was tried in Hamburg, Germany, for attempted murder and suicide. : At twenty-one he had found his mar rlage a failure and he determined to end his life. Accordingly he threw himself in front of an underground train, which passed over him without hurting even a hair of his head. He then went home and shot his wife. He saw the blood gush from her head, pointed the revolver at his own forehead and pulled the trigger. The revolver did not go off, and he therefore went out of the room, which was on the fifth floor of a house, threw himself over the balustrade, and land- ed, safe and sound, if a little breath- less, on the ground floor. He was able to go on foot to the police station with the policeman who just at that moment had arrived to arrest him. His wife’s wound proved merely skin deep, and the Hamburg court, which was impressed by the story of his vitality, says the Cincinnati En- quirer, let him off with three months’ imprisonment for carrying firearms without a license. How Barrie “Began” An English paper recently printed the following story of how James M. Barrie “began.” A keen young editor eager to make his magazine immortal and so contin- ually on the lookout for new contribu- tors, saw a series of anonymous let- ters from a schoolboy in an evening paper. They were racy to a degree, so he unearthed the author and bade him appear in the editorial sanctum. Next morning 1 young Scot walked in, fresh from a sojourn in Notting- ham, where he had been “London cor- respondent” of a local rag. He was pale, reticent, nervous and shy, but willingly agreed to try his hand at the fresh series suggested to him by one he regarded as at the top of the lad- der. This young author, “dewy from his native heather,” was an obscure writer of the name of Barrie.—San Francisco Argonaut. Offended Potentate Lord Castletown, who has recently published his reminiscences in “Ego,” spent some time in Teheran, and he tells how he was received in audience by the shah of Persia, who said he contemplated coming to England, and inquired if there were any elephants there, as he wanted to shoot one. ‘When eventually he did come to Eng- land he was taken to the Tower of London. He was greatly interested in the old block and ax, and said he wanted to see someone beheaded. On being told there was nobody ready at the moment, he promptly offered one of his own retinue, and was very an- noyed when the officials refused his request. Chief Canadian Wood Yellow birch (Betula lutea) is the most important hardwood of Canada. It is found from the maritime prov- inces to the east end of Lake Superior and reappears along the international boundary from the west end of Lake Superior to the Lake of the Woods. It is found on good sites throughout the lower Laurentian type of forest. It is used extensively for flooring and cabi- net work. Art in Shoe Shines A Paris bootblack now uses a palette when shining women’s shoes. The Pa- risian woman's shoes vary go much in color that he found it often difficult to get the right hue of cream to match. 80 on his palette he puts a number of different creams and combines them in varying proportions according to the tone of the shoes with which he has to deal, Major's Man Knew How to Deal With Scorpion The major acquired a body servant named Garvino while we were soalk- ing up malaria in the hills back of Santiago. One day the major was stung by a large scorpion—stung through his leather legging at that. Major Latimer was probably one of the world’s greatest technicians in the art of profanity. He tore loose with his entire vocabulary when the virus of the scorpion made itself felt. Then he concluded he was going to die, as wany other scorpion stingees had. Garvino dug around till he found another scorpion, He broke the crit- ter in two, tore off the major's legging, rolled up his pants and drawers and applied the raw end of half the brok- en scorpion to the spot on the ma- Jor's leg where the sting had entered, writes Leo P. Cook in Adventure Mag- azine. The pain ceased Immediately and the major felt no further discom- fort. Thereafter we knew how to treat a scorpion sting. This may be old stuff, Another little trick of Garvino was to catch a scorpion, hold it by the head from beneath with thumb and finger, and with his other hand tear out the muscle that actuated the scor- pion’s sting. You know the scorpion must flip his tail up over his head to strike. After Garvino had performed this operation the scorpion was help- less to sting, though his locomotion was not interfered with. Writing on Pinhead No Longer Novelty Wandering about town one might get the idea that America had de- veloped a new industry—that of en- graving the Lord's prayer on pinheads. The impression is strengthened if one takes to visiting the regions in which sideshows flourish, near town or along the rustic routes of the traveling shows. Considering that the man who en graved the prayer on a pin a few years ago was reported to have gone blind and insane as a result of his three years of application, one might almost pause to ask if all this pin en- graving were not dangerous. There is no fear, however; the engraved pin business has been placed on a safe and sane basis, remarks the New York Times. The original pin was all that has been said for it. On a disk forty- seven one-thousandths of an inch in di- ameter there were engraved 65 words with 254 letters, and nearly 2,000 lines had to be cut in doing it. The original might conceivably have got lost in a day as I was going out I stopped and sewing basket and gone the way of all pins. But a die was made of it —no inconsiderable job in itself—and the market is now supplied from the die. Legend of Pontius Pilate Among the Swiss Alps is a mountain named after Pontius Pilate. Country people say that it is haunted by Pi- late’s ghost. According to legendary lore it appears that after the Cruci- fixion Pontius Pilate fell from imperial favor and killed himself in prison, whereupon his body was cast into the Tiber, which immediately rose and almost burst its banks. The body was takeil to a lonely pool at the top of the mountain which now bears its name near Lucerne. According to another version Pilate retired there during his lifetime and was thrown into the pool by the Wandering Jew. In any case his presence caused terrible trouble, avalanches and floods devastating the district amid a thunderous noise in the recesses of the moantains. In the Six- teenth century the ghost was finally laid, and a procession went up every year, headed by the vicar of Lucerne, to cast stones into the pool. Gehenna Place of Horror The word Gehenna is translated “hell” in the Bible. Gehenna, strictly speaking, was the valley of Hinnom, @ deep narrow glen south of Jerusalem, where, after Ahaz introduced the wor- ship of fire gods, the Sun, Baal and Moloch, the Jews, under Manasseh, made their children pass through the fire and offered them as burnt offer- ings, “So Josiah defiled the valley making it a receptable of carcasses and criminals’ corpses, in which worms were continually gendering.” A per- petual fire was kept burning to con- sume this putrefying matter; hence it became the image of that awful place where gll that are unfit for the holy eity are supposed to be cast out. Hidden Love Messages There have always been parents and guardians to hinder and thwart the hapless lover, and many girls have been obliged to resort to methods of deception. ~ The simplest means ever employee was to write the love messages with fresh milk instead of ink. On the re- ceipt of a blank sheet of paper, all the recipient needed to do was to sprinkle it with soot or charcoal, The grit stuck to the lines traced by the pen.—Exchange. Study Woods Again When iron ships came into use the study of woods began to decline and the decline was steady until recently when the United States Department of Agriculture placed wood upon a foot- ing of a “principal product.” Galileo, upon his visit to the arsenal in Venice, which ‘visit had much to do with his law upon the resistance of solid bodies, was one of the first eminent students of woods. Leonardo da Vinci was an other “Fairy Mus:c” May Not Be Mere Imagination Stories of fairy music in the forest, of haunted waterfalls, and mermaids singing near the seashore, long thought mere figments of the imagi- nation, may have a sound basis in fact. In an issue of Science, Dr. Al- exander Forbes of the Harvard medi- cal school reports numerous cases in which trees seem to have separated discordant shouts and noises and giv- *n back echoes in musical tones. “In every case,” he says, “the source of the sound—waves on a beach, roar or a river, exhaust of motor boat or discordant human voices—was one in which many pitches were present. Something in the surroundings, usual- ly trees, must have separated the sounds according to pitch, placing those of one pitch in one place and those of another pitch elsewhere. In this respect the phenomenon appears analogous to that of white light being broken up into pure spectral colors by a prism.” This reflection of absorption of sound waves of different pitches, Doc- tor Forbes explains, is only rarely ob- served. Sometimes the phenomenon is distinct and clear in.one spot, yet a few paces backward or forward onls the ordinary noises are heard. The frequent association of trees with these musical echoes is thought to be due to the lack of uniformity they present as a reflecting surface for the sounds. Each tree apparently sends back part of the sound, and this i reflection is boken up into innumer- able parts on account of the varying element of distance. Boy Was Right There After Job He Wanted He was a clean-cut, wide-awake young chap and he wanted a job. “I have nothing at present,” said the corporation manager, “but leave your name and if anything turns up you will be notified.” “May I ask if you have made the same promise to many others,” said the applicant. “Yes, quite a few,” was the repiy. The boy grinned and remarking that it was no monopoly he went out. A few days later a young man was needed in a hurry and seven tele- grams were dispatched to seven wait- ing applicants. Hardly had these left the secretary’s office when in walked Johnny on the Spot, holding his tele- gram. “How in the world did you get it? gasped the executive. “Well, sir,” he answered, “the othe: got a job as errand boy. I thought it would be a good plan to be where I could get the news quicker than the others.” “You'll do!” said the manager.— Boston Transcript. k Observant Japanese Lady A Japanese woman has given to a newspaper her reasons for always ap- plying the feminine gender to ships, motors, trains, etc.:. “Yes, they call ‘she’ for many becauses: They wear jackets’ with yokes, pins, hangers, straps, shields, stays. They have apron, also cap. They have not only shoes but have pumps. Also hose and drag train behind; behind time all time. They attract men with puffs and mufflers. Some time they foam— refuse to work when at such time they should be switched. They need guid- ing—it always require man manager. They require man to feed them. When abuse are given they quickly make scrap. They are steadier when coupled up, but my cousin say they h—Il of ex- pense.” Franklin Set Style When Eighteenth-century Paris was still wearing the picturesque three- cornered hat Benjamin Franklin came to represent the new republic of the United States, wearing on his head a queer thing derived from the steeple crowns of the Puritan Pilgrim fathers. Paris copied it and turned it into the cylinder which Christendom has worn ever since, says the Detroit News. in the Eighteenth century when par tisans of France and of Russia were fighting it out in Sweden the French faction wore hats, the Russians caps. The Middle ages, as a familiar ballad reminds us, knew a Pilgrim by his “cockle hat.” Lamb’s Merry Jest One of Lamb's jobs on the Morniny Post was to supply half a dozen jokes a day, for which Dan Stuart paid him 6 pence each, and held him well paid. 8ix fresh-baked jests a day is a tall order. The fashion of flesh-colored stockings for the women proved a tol- erable help in time of trouble, and Lamb boasts justifiably of his master- piece, inspired by pink stockings. He wrote that “Modesty, taking her final leave of mortals, her last blush was visible in her ascent to the heavens by the tract of the glowing instep.”— Manchester Guardian. “Little Rock” The principal ®eity of Arkansas de rived its name (originally “Le Petit Roche” and “The Little Rock”) from the rocky peninsula in the Arkansas, distinguished from the “Big Rock," the site of the army post, Fort Logan H. Roots, one mile west of the eity, The hig rock is said to have been first discovered and named “Le Rocher Francais” in 1822 by Sieur Bernard de la Harpe, who was In search of ap emerald mountain; the little rock fsx now used as an abutment for = all way bridge. How Sturgeon Invented - the Electro-Magnet A hundred years ago the electro magnet was born. Its inventor was William Sturgeon, a soldier at Wool- wich, near London. As a lad he fol- lowed his father's trade as a shoe- maker, and he never regretted it, for shoemaking taught him to use his eyes and fingers with uncommon power. In hours of leisure he was fond of experiment. He noticed that soft iron was magnetic only while in contact with a steel magnet. When he severed them the soft iron in- stantly lost its attraction. It occurred to him to place a core of soft iron within an electric coil. At once that core became a magnet of uncommon strength. When he broke the current the magnetism of the soft iron van- ished. He created the electro-mag net. The American physicist, Joseph Henry, greatly improved the device of Sturgeon. That inventor had wound only one coil of copper wire around his iron core, using varnish on the iron as a means of insulation. Henry surrounded the coil core with several close coils covered with silk thread, obtaining a much more powerful magnet than that of Sturgeon. From the very beginning of telegraphy the electro-magnet has been the very heart of the apparatus. A momen- tary current is received from a dis- tant station in a coil of copper wire; that instant its soft iron core becomes a magnet, and in attracting its arma- ture gives a signal. In telephones as well as in tele graphs, in dynamos and motors, in automatic printers and a host of other inventions, electro-magnets command motion and rest instantly, strongly and dependably. Seeing by Wireless Is Near, Says a Scientist Edmund Edward Fournier-d’Albe, in- ventor of the eoptophone, which en- ables the blind to read through their ears, and the tonosccpe, which makes speech intelligible to the deaf, has added his prophecy to those of other scientists who recently have forecast the early achievement of television— seeing by wireless. Dr. Fournier-d’Albe consented to be quoted as saying: “I believe television will be accom plished this year. I'll stake my whole scientific reputation on it—I’m certain of it.” He envisages a time a few years hence, says the New York World, when explorers equipped with tele- vision cameras will make possible the projection on moving-picture screens in European and American cities the scenes attending their climbs, say of Mount Everest, or their polar explor- ations, or even the examination of the ocean’s floor by means of submarines. Doctor Fournier-d’Albe is credited with sending the first photograph by radio. Got His Advance Tip A man who was in the habit of din Ing regularly at a certain restaurant said to the waiter, “John, instead of tipping you every day, I'm going to give it to you in a lump sum at the end of every month.” “Thank you, sir,” replied the waiter, “but I wonder if you'd mind paying me in advance?” “Well, it’s rather strange,” re marked the patron. ‘However, here's five shillings. I suppose you are in want of money, or is it that you dis- trust me?” “Oh, no, sir,” smiled ping the money in his pocket. I'm leaving here today.” One of Many Probably there isn’t a physician whe doesn’t have a few charity patients as well as those who can, and do, pay their bills, and one of these gave a good laugh to the attending nurses at the hospital. “I’m very grateful for what you have done for me, doctor,” said the woman, adding, “I pray for you every night!” “Why, that’s very: nice of you to think of me like that, Mrs. Blank,” said the doctor, highly gratified. “Lord, sir, it ain’t a bit of trouble,” replied the woman affably. “It ain't a bit of trouble to put your name in along with the others.” John, slip “Only Wanted to Know The wife of a certain bishop had given a long and sympathetic ad- dress to a number of women from the east end of London on the ques- tion of making the life of the home happy and peaceful—especially peace- ful. After the address one of the wom én was overheard while making this remark: “All very well, but why didn’t she go Into detail? For Instance, I should like to know what she dces when her old man comes home drunk.” Test for Eggs Mrs. Newbride (telephoning): “I'm -afrald you sent me ducks’ eggs this mormng ir-tead of hens’ eggs. Grocer— i jucks’ eggs, ma'am! I don" keep ducks’ eggs. Mrs, Newybride—But I tested them. I dropped them in water and they floated. Correct Teacher—Give fo one year the number of tons of coal shipped out of the United States? Smarty—1492, none. Like Toast “Mamma,” sald the little boy whe hnd been sent to dry a towel before the fre, “is it done when it is brown?" Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Special Prices on early buying of the New Winter Coats for Ladies, Misses and Children. SEE OUR Fur Trimmed Coats siws $20 Childrens Coats from $4.25 up Bobbed Hair Sweaters The newest style in Sweaters. We are showing Powder Blue, Silver, Rust and other new colors, from $5.00 up. New Dress Goods in all novel Checks and Plaids; Flan- nels and Broadcloths in new shades— Burgundy, Russian Red, Shutter-Green, Navy and Brown. Also the new Ottoman Weaves. See the New Styles—and the Prices will be Temptingly Low Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. ma mn 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 — F* i now $4.85 Pumps and Sandals Yeager's Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. REE ERE EL EU ELE UE EL Ee EE