Deworeaic Wald, Bellefonte, Pa., January 29, 1926. ‘Mexican Couples Go in State to Wedding Ancient wedding customs are still observed by the Mexicans, ‘Their church weddings are always held in the morning. The bride and groom ride to the church in a closed carriage, with a footman and a driver in white trousers and correct English livery. The horses have docked tails and heavy white leather collars, besides white cockades streaming from their bridles. - The real picture, however, Is said to be inside the carriage, which Is completely lined with satin in a sort of tufted effect. The contracting parties git beside each other. The bride wears conventional white and the groom eve ning clothes. Directly opposite them fs a small child dressed in white vel: vet with the ring pillow on his lap. The wedding ceremony contains many picturesque symbols. The climax of the affair comes when the bride and groom are bound together with a heavy string. Immediately after the cere- mony the whole party goes to the phe tographer’s.—Pathfinder ‘Magazine. Mud’s Important. Part in Earth’s F Sihaiian Importance of mud and the part it played in the earth’s formation was the theme of a lecture by a noted Welsh geologist speaking on Welsh geology at Cardiff. He affirmed that mud was one of nature’s most impor- tant productions—a commodity with- out which man could not live. Changes in the earth’s crust had profoundly altered the muds which had been formed in past periods of the earth’s history. One of the most interesting of rocks produced by the alteration of mud was slate, and the slates for which - norih Wales was so famous were formed during a period when that part of the earth’s crust was In a condition of violent unrest, and some very anclent muds were intensely squeezed. The effect of the squeezing was to compress the mud and to twist ite particles round until ‘they all came to lle in the same relative direction like tc «= fragments of paper lying flat. The result of this, and other changes which ‘accompanied it, was to make it possible to split the rock Into thin sheets like cardboard. Liszt as Press Agent “Genius in the Digceding generation gam the bs in a ES As a gen- eral rule ‘perhaps: But there are “exe ceptions, Plerre Nan’ Paassen, writing in the Atlanta Constitution, contends. Consider the case of Liszt. When he first began to play in public he came to places where his fame had not pre- ceded him. One evening there were only a dozen persons in the auditori- um. Instead of playing, he invited them all to supper, where he treated them to truffles and game and cham- pagne and cognac and all the delica- tessen in season. Then he sat down at the piano and played for his guests for two hours, as only he could play. A few days later he announced an- other recital, in a larger hall. It was filled to capacity, but the audience was not invited to supper. As a press agent, evidently, Liszt could have given points to the best of our days. Best Basis for Love The more wheels there are in a watch, the more trouble they are to take care of. The movements of ex- altation which belong to genius are egotistic . by their very nature. A calm, clear mind, not subject to spasms and crises which are so often met with in creative or intensely per- ceptive natures, is the’ best basis for love or friendship. Observe, I am talking about minds. I won't say the more intellect, the less capacity for loving ; for that would do wrong to the understanding and reason; but, on the other hand, that the brain often runs away with the heart's best blood, which gives the world a few pages of wisdom or poetry, instead of making one other heart happy, I have no question.—Oliver Wendell Holmes. Funny Ambitions . The question in an English periodi- cal, “What would yo1 llke to be?’ brought out many clever and amusing answers. Here are a few of them: The sun, because it is always sure of a rise. The letter “f,” for then I should al- ways be in the midst of comfort, A shoeblack, because I should be con- tinually shining before my fellows. A man of forty with the ideals of twenty and the judgment of sixty, to make life worth living. A billiard ball, frequently kissed, carefully nursed when necessary, and not out of pocket even when in a hole. —Boston Transcript. Well Founded In the days of the old Cripple Creek a mining camp judge, upon finding the bad citizen of the camp hanging by the neck from a cottonwood, with his hands tied behind him, a six-gun in one hip pocket and $25.10 in the other, reached this decision: “If the co’t know itself, and the co’t think it do, it allow this hyar man came to death from some unknowed causes at the hands of persons un- knowed te this cot, and the co’t fines the corpse $25.10 for carrying con- cealed weapons.”—Everybody's Maga- gine Grand Ca anyon: Marvet of Peace and Beauty We did not expect to love the cun- yon. Friends had presaged a deep, overwhelming round of earth's side. Colored postals and railroad folders had prepared us for crudely hued lozenges on the precipitate walls, We expected neat, zebra stripes of vermil- ion, ochre and cobalt. Instead we looked into the beautiful soft gulch of the canyon and our hearts were won. The crisp Arizona morning was cupped there when we first beheld it—on the deep sunken plateau with its dotted firs, on the pale pastels of the irregular far walls. Truncated peaks wore crowns of melt- ed azure light and lower wreaths of faded geranium, The immense peace of the great jagged bowl played over us, an unplumbed, unfathomable man- tle of serenity, We saw colors change, the pinks grow dull, the soft bands of azure break up, and etherize in the full noon, then brood together as the lights lengthened, and set in colder strands of petunia blue. On the slab side of the river walls we saw the sweetest pearls cling and the gulf brim with frostier blues, until it lost them in dusk and night. Then on the brim in the high, clean wind we walked by that Invisible cavern, saw the stars, large, fringed and low, and knew that. vast as a familiar place where we could be at peace.—Christian Science Monitor. Ancient Industry Is That of Bread Baking Baking is probably the very oldest industry man engaged in. Wheat and barley, the oldest cereals known to have been found, together with the plowshare fashioned of wood and the stone hand mill consisting of a hol- lowed stone and a stone ball-shaped crusher, among the remains left by prehistoric man. The oldest bread was made in the form of cakes or fritters simply prepared by mixing wheat or barley to a batter with water and milk and baking these batter cakes of may- be the size and form of our present day griddle cakes on hot ashes or over red-hot coals, or a hot stone, which represented the first bread pan and oven combined. Salt was probably the only other ingredient used besides the milk and water, as there was no bak: ing powder and yeast was not used until brewing beer from germinated barley had become known. The Egyp tians had perfected both baking and brewing 1,500 years before.the begin- ning of the Christian era: Rubbing It In A well-known actress was _ appear: ing in a play with a certain actor who was noted for his irritability. He com- plained that “the woman continually laughed ‘at’ him’ ‘during one of his most important scenes, At last he wrote her a letter, in which he said: “1 am extremely sorry to tell you that it is impossible for me to make any effect in my scene if you persist in laughing at me on the stage. May I ask you to change your man- ner, as the scene is a most trying one?” To this the actress replied: “You are quite mistaken. I never laugh at you on the stage. I wait till T get home!” New One Here is a news item that someone in LoS Angzles can probably get away with—once, It was to blow out a match that John Helfetz speeded his automobile through North Broadway, Yonkers, at 85 miles an hour, “I had three girls in my car and one of them tried to light a cigarette,” he explained to the judge, adding: “I guess I'm a bit old-fashioned. I din’t want my girl to smoke, so I stepped on the gas. The breeze blew out every match she tried to light.” And the judge smilingly said that that was a new one and suspended sentence, Fox Changes Color ihe blue fox is a color phase of the Arctie, or white fox, which is circum- polar in range, being found particular- ly along the seacoast of Arctic and subarctic regions. Its normal winter coat is white, while the summer pelage is brown and tawny. The blue fox is dark bluish in winter and tends toward brownish in summer. There are inter- mediates in which the coat may be spotted blue and white, or the blue and white may be blended, producing a dingy or smoky-white appearance. Leading Languages french is possibly the simplest lan guage to learn. The German grammar Is extremely complicated and English pronunciation is difficult for certain foreigners. The English language also contains a great number of colloquial- isms used in everyday speech, which takes some time to acquire. All lan- guages do not contain the same num- ber of words. The English language contains approximately 700,000 words; German dictionaries contain about 800,000 words; French, 210,000 words, Fortune Close at Hand whatever is necessary for your im: provement, your enjoyment, your use- fulness, is close to you. Distance lends enchantment to the view, but when a man is wise he knows he is standing on enchanted ground. A man’s star is never in the sky. It Is in his beaiz. Your ship of gold Is not on the high seas; it is at the quay waiting to be unloaded and discharged. Your for- tune is not at the bottom of a rain- bow: it is at your feet.—W, L, Wat- kinson, Painless Surgery Has Made Rapid Advance The surgery of a century ago was a painful and almost brutal procedure, the Scientific American says. With the coming of antisepsis and later of asepsis, following the work of Lister and Pasteur, the mortality which re- sulted from surgery was greatly re- duced through the elimination of bac- terial Infection following operation, With the development of anesthesia, beginning with the work of Morton and Long on ether, and following with chloroform, nitrous oxid-oxygen gas, stovain and intraspinal anesthesia, the use 6f narcotics preliminary to opera- tion to reduce the patient’s sensibility and, more recently, the development of another gas anesthetic, ethylene, physicians have been able to work more slowly, more carefully and more accurately, extending surgical proce dures to organs heretofore unap- proachable by the surgeon's knife, theréby Saving many lives in condi- tions previously called inoperable. Moreover, continued study cf nerve routes and nerve paths, with the de- velopment of anesthetic substances which may be applied directly to nerves, permits effectively blocking the sense of pain which may proceed along the nerves to the brain. So-called local anesthesia with such drugs as procain and butyn enables surgeons to operate on patients who are fully ‘conscious and therefore are better able to resist the shock which may accompany ex tensive operative measures. Comes Under Head of “Better Left Unsaid” It was our first call on the new neighbors and Mr. B—— and 1 were engaged in a casual conversation about the peculiar names of certair dogs of the community. The women, who had been partles to our conversation in its beginning, it seems, had switched to the subject of their own names and those of their families, while we were still talking dogs, and when there came a moment of silence between Mr. B—— and me I heard the end of Mrs. B——'s re- mark about “Fanny.” Wishing to show my interest and having noted a rather disgusted inflection in my host- es§’ volece, I sald sympathetically, “Fanny, good Lord, who's dog’s that?” I never have been more embar- rassed in my life than when, after an awkward pause, my wife said: “Mrs. B——'s nanie is Fanny.”—Chicage Tribune, Faithful but Fractious Some of these young women treat ove as though it was a naughty boy «who should be made. to stand in a cor- ‘ner ‘except as a great ‘treat once in six weeks, . . . Women can be very. ‘tiresome.’ Wives can be’ Totoler- able.” England strewn with good men suffering from their wives’ virtues. It is damnable. When a woman is faithful te her hus- band she generally manages to take it out of him in some other way. The mere fact that she is faithful makes her think that she has a right to be —well, disagreeable. Fidelity can cause the devil of a lot of trouble in the home unless it is well managed. Fidelity needs just as much good man- agement as infidelity.—From “May Fair,” by Michael Arlen. ; The Safe Thrift Side ihe advice of the thrift editor ot che Tifton Gazette, given in rhyme, is to avoid getting “walioped by adversi- ty.” He says— “Who spends his income as it comes and saves no systematic sums may some day find bimself in dutch and need his money very much. “If you would prosper and progress and crown your future with success, adopt some systematic plan of banking all the cash you can. “The banks are here for you to use —by saving right you cannot lose; in fact, youre really bound to win—de- posit savings, and begin."—Atlanta Constitution. Secret of Scent decent is still in many respects an vnsolved mystery. We know that al- most every object gives out tiny par- ticles which produce the sensation of scent. But the size of these particles is minute beyond belief, for a grain of musk will scent a drawer for a generation without losing any weight. Again, why is it that on one day a . fox leaves a scent which hounds can follow at full speed, while on the next there is so little that the pack is ut- terly at loss? Scent does not depend upon the weather—that much we know. Old National Emblems Zrevious to the union of England and Scotland the shield of England was upheld by two lions. The shield of Scotland was upheld by two uni- corns. After the union the lion ep- peared on one side and the unicorn on the other. Before the union the Eng- lish shield contained three lions pas- sant (walking) on a field of gold. The Scotch shield contained the lion ram- pant (standing on its hind legs) on a field of gold. Old Egyptian Dolls Judging by findings amongst the wrappings of mummified infants, the favorite toys In ancient Egypt were dolls. Some have a grotesque appear- ance, but a common kind of doll con- sisted of a flat board—like a large, bowlless spoon—the round part palmt- ed or carved to represent a face. Legs were usually absent. Others are so small that they can be strung like big beads, on threads that make & mop of hale for the doll’s head. ‘and’ America are Couldn’t Really Call Inn Ancient Building We had paddled through Ghent’s complex waterways and were wonder- ing where we could leave our canoe in safety, when some raaing shells shot past, a boathouse pennant fluttered, and a cheery voice invited us to util- ize the Royal Club Nautique for as long as we wished. So we stored our canoe in the club's “garage,” then drove through the town to a quaint inn whose leaded panes looked out upon a row of shops built into the outer walls of a great Gothic church, Melville Chater writes in the Nations’ Geographic Magazine, The sight of people flocking to serv- fce, while others sipped drinks, got shaved or bought curios, all under the eaves of a sacred edifice, hinted that we were In an ancient quarter of the town. “Is this an old Inn?’ we inquired of our Flemish host. He was a singu- larly literal man. He replied gravely: “Not so very. Probably when built in the Thirteenth century it was some wealthy man’s home. In the Sixteenth century, about the time Albrecht Dur- er stopped here, it was the house of the Grocers’ guild. Later it was prl- vately owned for a couple or more centuries, No, as an inn I wouldn’ call it particularly old.” “ After that’ we reverentially used the doormat, and ~efrained from strikin® matches on the woodwork. Nature’s Lavish Gifts to Left-Handed Folks If you had lived at any time in the period 2500 B. C. to A. D. 1500, and had been left-handed, you would have been regarded as one highly favored by the gods and far superior to ordi- nary folk. If, of your own initiative, you had not seized on power, it would have been placed in your hands. But in all probability that would have been unnecesary, for all down the ages the left-handed have gone ahead and made a success of life. They've something that the right-handed haven't. The leading Pharoahs were left-handed ; so were the Caesars; so also Alexander the Great and Charlemagne, Whether Nature compensates the left-handed by endowing them with special talents is a matter of specula- tion. The fact, however, remains that the left-handed are, in brain power, far superior to the right-handed. A schoolteacher, through whose hands thousands of boys have passed, is em- phatic on that point. No left-handed boy Is, or could be, a fool is his dic- tum. Differences. in Heraldry. | in heraldry>“différences” or mHrks- the various of “cadency” indicate branches. of a family. During the. life: time of his father the eldest son bears a label, the second a crescent, the third a mullet, the fourth a marlet, the fifth an annulet, the sixth a fleur de lis, the seventh a rose, the eighth a cross moline, the ninth a double quatre foll. In “Hamlet” Ophelia says that both she and the queen are to wear rue, herself as the affianced bride of the eldest son of the late king, but the queen with a “difference,” indicative of the fact that, although she was Hamlet's mother, her status was that of her present husband, Claudius.— Detroit News. Modest Philanthropist A philanthropist, feeling that his end was approaching and not desiring any publicity for his kind acts, advertised fn the newspapers and offered a prize for the best hint of how to dispose of his property. Many replies were re- ceived, some sound and sensible, and others. wildly fantastic. Finally one came which suggested that he establish a fund to supply ice to dumb parrots. This delighted the philanthropist so that he lay back and laughed heartily, he caught his breath with difficulty and laughed again. In the midst of his mirth he burst a blood vessel and passed away, leaving his fortune to his heirs and nothing for the poor dumb parrots.—Kansas City Times. Sociology as a Study Soclology is the term applied by the philosopher, Comte, to the study of mankind in their social relations. It recommends the prevention of national wars by arbitration, and the settle- ment of the war of classes by boards of conciliation. The term sociology is Tegarded by some as equivalent to his- tory. The English philosopher, Her- bert Spencer, used the term in the titles of several of his greatest works, for instance, “The Study of Sociology,” published in 1872. Lee as Matchmaker General Lee played the part of fa- ¢herly matchmaker to many a pretty girl of his circle. In fact, he had al- ways liked that role. “Tell Miss—" he had written from Mexico, during the occupation, “she had better dismiss that young- divine and marry a soldier. There is some chance of the latter being shot, but it requires a particular dispensation of Providence to rid her of the former.” —S8cribner's Magazine, Some Family Buddy went to a dog show and came Aome all excited. Breeds meant noth- ing to him and blue ribbons less, but the puppies delighted him beyond measure, “Oh, mother!” he exclaimed. “I saw five puppies with their mother. Two of them were brothers and the other three were twin.” Have You seen the Suit and Overcoat Bargains in our windows ? ® The windows show unusual bargains— many of less than one-half their orig- inal price. ® It will pay you big to buy now— ® Let US Show You Xf Over 200 pairs Mens Work Shoes— #8 almost all of the Celebrated Lion a= Brand. Shoes that sold from $5 ~ to $6—all? at one price while they last--- er SR.08 EVERY PAIR GUARANTEED It's at. Fauble’s It’s Just, as we Say A. Fauble Lyon & Co. Lyi gto January Sale of All Winter Goods and Clean-Up of 0dds and Ends We have just finished inventory —and all Winter merchandise must go fast. Low prices will help to put them out. See Our Rummage Table GOOD PICKINGS THIS TIME Lyon & Co. ws Lyon & Co. re