S————————————————————————————=———— pm U. S. Wealth 353 Billion. lars amounted to 72 per cent., the RECORDS OF CIVILIZED RACE | : — commission said, the real increase National wealth in 1922 was placed | would be 16 per cent., allowing for changes in purchasing power of the dollar and would compare with about 15 per cent. increase in population. at $353,000,000,000 and national in- come for 1923 at $70,000,000,000, in a special report by the Federal Trade Commission, made public on Tuesday in response to a Senate resolution. While the increase in wealth be- ween 1912 and 1922 measured in dol- —The “Watchman” is the best let- ter you can send a friend away from home. ——— Highest Quality Upholstery TUDEBAKER uses the finest grade of wool upholstery. Compare the depth of Studebaker cushions and seat backs with cars costing $1000 more. Inspect the interior workmanship. There are no cloth-head upholstery tacks, raw edges or cheap binding braid in Stude- baker interiors — “hand-tailored” for beautiful appearance. and, in addition: Finer Body Construction viv v Costly Alloy Steels vy YY v Completely Machined Crankshaft v wv Durable Finish vv wv v Heavy Steel Fenders vy. 9 v Pressed Steel Instrument Boar 1 (Wood Backed) vy Ww Fully Waterproofed Ignition yy Vv 9 Coincidental Lock and Automatic Spark YY. .Y v Most Powerful Car of Its Size and Weight yy Vw Oil Filter, Gasoline Strainer and Air Cleaner vy 9 v Full Equipment at One-Profit Price Beezer’s Garage BELLEFONTE, PA. } * Steamer * mobile Rate—$7.50, Send for free séctional puzzle chart of the Great Shi SSEEANDBEE" and 32-page booklet, The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co. Cleveland, Ohio Your Rail Ticket is Good on our Steamers . . A restful night on Lake Erie on one of the Great Ships of the © & B Line makes a pleasant break in your journey. A good bed in a clean, cool stateroom, a long, sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast in the morning, Steamers “SEEANDBEE”—*CITY OF ERIE”—“CITY OF BUFFALO” Daily May 1st to November 15th Leave Buffalo— 9:00 P; M. Easte IL land—9:00 P. M. iy Cleveland *7:00 A. M. “Standard Time Zaye Conlaad Tend A. Ww OF BUFFALO?” arrives 7:30 A. M. Connections for Cedar Point, Put-in-Bay, Toledo, Detroit and other ints, Ask your ticket agent or tourist agency for tickets via C & B Line. New Fourie: Four C & B Steamers in Daily Service Fare $5.50 Re POWER OF KING COTTON GROWING REG. dF -Night and Day Average Man Seldom Escapes Poten- tate’s Influence. Washington.—The serious predic- tion of chemists that within a few years we may order palatable “syn- thetic beefsteak” made from cotton- seed, fixes a royal personage more firmly on his throne—his majesty, Gossypium Hirsutum, otherwise known as King Cotton. Something of this Potentate’s power in the world is told in a bulletin from the Washington (D. C.) headquarters of the National Gen graphic society. “Night and day the average man seldom escapes the influence of King Cotton,” says the bulletin, “He sleeps between cotton sheets on a mattress stuffed with the fluffy white fibers. After he discards his cotton pajamas and takes his morning bath, he uses a Turkish towel made of cotton; he dons cotton underclothes ; and if it is Summer, he probably wears outer gar- ments at least partly made of cotton. The celluloid comb and brush which he uses in making his toilet, and even the handle of his toothbrush are prob- ably made from the same indispensa- ble fiber. Under Scepter in Home and Office. “Breakfast is not entirely cotton- less even though the table is spread with linen. If margarin is used in- stead of butter it is probably made largely from cotton-seed oil ; while the same oil or solid shortening made from it may be used in griddle cakes, biscuits or muffins. The morning pa- per, too, which Mr. Average Man thumbs through is dependent on cot- ton for the film from which its photo graphs were made. “If he motors to town, he rides on tires that could not be made so cheap and strong and durable except for their ‘carcasses’ of cotton fabric or cords. Perhaps the upholstery, the brake-linings, and even the lacquer finish on the car have drawn upon cotton as raw materials. Arrived at his office he makes use of cotton in some of his stationery, his telephone insulation, his typewriter ribbons, his window cords, his shades, and prob ably in numerous other ways. “Mrs. Average Woman leans even more heavily on the royal and potent Gossypium Hirsutum. The shelves of her linen closet are stacked high with white cotton goods used in bed and bath rooms. In her clothes closets hang dress after dress of the same material, while her: dresser drawers are filed with cotton garments. Her dishes. are dried on cotton dish cloths, her laundry (itself largely cotton) hangs on cotton lines, she darns and mends with cotton thread, and retires for the night to sleep in and between and upon cotton. “From where does this Indispensa- ble cotton come? “Most of it from American cotton fields of the South and Southwest. Crop Worth a Billion. “The little plants which will supply the great American cotton crop of 1926 (‘great’ because even in poor years American cotton 1s seldom worth less than a billion dollars) are growing in rows three to four feet apart. They are planted rather thick- ly; but when they are several inches tall the farmers and their laborers go along the rows with hoes chopping out surplus seedlings, and incidental- ly, weeds and grass, leaving the plants from 12 to 18 inches apart. 4 “After this most of the cultivation is given with broad shallow plows and riding cultivators. Under the warmth of the Southern spring and summer the plants grow rapidly. When they reach maturity each is virtually a sturdy little tree three to four feet high, its branches touching those of its neighbors In its row and almost meeting the branches from plants rows on either side. : “Cotton-picking time is as much a nature-marked season In the South as is the overflow of the Nile in Egypt or the appearance of the summer sun In the Arctic. The work appeals to the Southern negro. Industries lose their employees, housewives thelr maids, when the late summer exodus to the cotton fields begins. Many of the pickers camp out for weeks near the fields in which they work and look “upon the outing as a sort of holiday. Even children and aged persons take part in the work, dragging their ean- vas sacks behind them. “Approximately two-thirds by weight of ‘seed cotton™—the cotton as it comes from the bolls—is seed, one- third lint or fiber. The latter adheres tightly to the seed, growing out from all parts of it in tiny white hairs. To separate lint from seed the seed cot- ton must be passed through a ‘gin.’ Numerous whirling saws tear the fiber from the seeds. The latter drop into chutes which carry them to huge gray-green piles in the seed room. The lint passes on belt conveyors In a broad endless stream to the presses where it is squeezed into bales welgh- ing approximately 500 pounds. “Until after the Civil war the value of cotton seed was not recognized. Millions of tons were burnt, thrown aside to rot, or shoveled into rivers. Now the seed from between three and four bales of cotton are worth as much as a bale of the fiber. “The United States is the world’s greatest cotton producer, furnishing more than half of the total crop, usual- ly from 10,000,000 ‘to 16,000,000 bales. A single state, Texas, produces: about “one-third of "the American crop, or about one-sixth of the world crop.” OF 4,000 YEARS AGO FOUND Hurri, Hitherto Unknown, Sought In Vain to Prevent Rise of Capitalism. Philadelphia.—Records of an an- clent race, whose clvilization vied with that of the Hittites and Egyp- tlans as they lived in the shadow of the Tower of Babel, were revealed by speakers before the American Orien- tal society. Dr. E. A. Speiser and Prof. Edward Chiera of the University of Pennsyl- vania made the report after a year of study of a thousand clay tablets uncovered in southern Mesopotamia. The race, sald to have existed 4,000 Years ago, heretofore, had been un- known to archeologists. It is known as the Hurrl, and the translation of the tablets was etpected by the sav- ants attending the meeting to add a new page to ancient history. “This race,” sald Doctor Spelser, “had a law against the direct sale of land. However, much as they tried to legislate against the growth of a cap- ftalistic class, the effort failed. Land owners adopted those whose land they wished to obtain. As a result huge land tracts were under one family’s Jurisdiction. A man had a perfect right to kill his slaves, suffering no consequences whatever.” The tablets, the translation of which has just been completed, cover a period of five generations in one family. Report of the discovery of two burial tablets, tending to bear out the traditional story of the burial of the bodies of Peter and Paul by Orientals on the Appian Way, near Rome, as related In the apocryphal writings, was made by Prof. Romaine Newbold. The tablets, he said, bearing Ara- malic Inscriptions, were found in the Church of San Sebastian, on the Via Appia, about three miles from Rome. They are declared to be the first in- scriptions in Aramaic found In Italy, and prove, he believes, there were Orientals in Ttaly during the First century of the Christian era. Excavators found the tablets buried 80 feet deep. Translation revealed that they were placed there by an Oriental slave woman named Pecora, who buried her master and mistress there and who erected the tablets as grave markers. The master and mis- tress of this slave, Professor Newbold believes, were early Christians of the so-called Gnostic sect which tried to gain control of the Roman church. Professor Newbold said the earliest date on which the burial of Peter and Paul by Orientals Is recorded is around 258 A. D. and that the tradi- tion has been accepted by the Roman Catholic church. Latin inscriptions Invoking the blessings of Peter and Paul by the earlier Christians of the Third and Fourth centuries have been found frequently. None of them, how- ever, attests to the presence of Orien- tals. Afrleepefefefeffeeffeefmlefpeieieededele Secretary of Labor Is Listed as a “Fruitarian” Secretary of Labor Davis is listed as a “fruitarian,” as he lunches on apples, bananas and other fresh “fruits, munching them on his way back to his desk after a noontime stroll. In this photograph the secre- tary was caught in the act of buying his lunch at a corner fruit wagon, Call Moose, Deer Pests, So Many in North Woods 8t. Paul, Minn.—Moose and deer 40 thick and se tame that they are & nuisance to his reconnaissance crew, were seen by A. B. Pimpley, state chief of fire suppression, while on a six weeks’ stay in the Canadian border country of Minnesota. “We saw scores of moose and signs of many more,” said Mr. Pimpley. “If anyone thinks the king of the forest is fading In Minnesota, he should visit this part of the big woods. The deer were running in groups as high as ten. Both moose and deer were very tame.” The expedition was conducted by * the forestry ‘service to obtain data on . statecowned timber, Notes ‘were made on locations for lake shore homesites and tourist camps and the conditions were studied from a fire hazard angle. "I'he crew worked in the térritory about “twenty-five ‘miles’ morth of Grand’ Marais, Highway Guide We have for distribution Rand, McNally Official Highway Guides, in convenient form. Call soon for a copy, as they are fast going out. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. ® 7 Memorial Day |: IS AN OCCASION / : or decorating the graves of our I : soldiers and sailors who fought so ¢ [5 3 well for their Country and their ; ] fellowmen. Upon their graves we ; : place the choicest flowers as a token a : of respect. 4b : | | THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK {| : STATE COLLEGE, PA. py MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM EAN SN SS ES EC ERS SER nT aD) Lyoné& Company Summer Wants ohio We have just received a big assortment of Hot Weather stuffs—Peter Pan Prints (guaranteed fast colors), Soisettes, Polka-Dotted Voiles (large, me- dium and small dots), Printed Pongees, Figured Crepes, All Silk Crepe de Chiene (in variegated stripes, flowered, and all the new plain shades), Rayons in plain colors, stripes, checks and figured. Still a good assortment of these wonderfully cheap All Silk Dresses. Silk Dresses All sizes, all colors, and stylish stout models. Rayon Dresses We can fit the small woman Summer Coats regular size and stouts, in light and dark colors. Children’s Coats from 2 years up to 14. Prices the lowest. Our line of Rugs is all new. Rug S and beautiful colors combined. for the economical buyer. See our table of White White Oxfords Oxfords in Ladies and Misses. The prices are less than wholesale. Choice designs Prices are right Lyon & Company