pr —— Bruna Wald. “Bellefonte, Pa, November 5, 1926. Quail and Grouse are Pentiful in State. The best hunting in a quarter of a century in Pennsylvania during the coming months was predicted by sportsmen who met in Philadelphia at the convention of the 1zaak Walton League, Pennsylvania Division. There are more quail in Pennsyl- vania than at any time within the memory of the middle-aged hunter, they reported. Two hatchings were noted in the southern part of the State, and both came thru in fine shape. Even in the northern tier of counties quail are plentiful. In the grouse belt extending across the State from Elk county to Pike county, hunters predict a most favor- able season, though last year was most unsatisfactory. English phea- sants, too, they said, have increased rapidly during the last few years. RABBIT SEASON SHORTENED. The rabbit season, which this year has been shortened by two weeks, finds so many rabbits at large that no hardship will result from the limit- ed period, sportsmen said. Deer are very numerous, so much so that a rec- ord killing of legal bucks was fore- seen. : Changes in the hunting season will work to advantage, such as the short- ening of the rabbit season to end on November 30, as to big-game hunting and overlapping of the rabbit season on their hunting season has always been a source of annoyance. It will also conserve the stock and the Izaak Walton League, thru its membership, has issued requests to hunters not to overkill and always leave some rab- bits in the fields. The grouse season was reduced to two weeks instead of continuing thru November, because a canvas made of the grouse hunting districts revealed a decline in their numbers. Some sportsmen proposed closing the State entirely to grouse hunting for one or two years, but it is hoped that this can be avoided. However, the Izaak Walton League, which was the medium for dissemin- ating the results of its’ members sur- veys, view with alarm a decrease in the number of bear this season. They are not plentiful, and members fear for a closing of bear hunting in the State if preliminary reports prove correct. The third of the important changes to be made this year was the decision to close the State as a whole on certain varieties of game, instead of allowing certain counties to remain open. If the State is closed to bear shooting no exceptions will be made. WILD TURKEYS PROTECTED. For the first time in years quail, ringneck and other game may be hunted in every county in Pennsyl- vania. The Hungarian partridge and the wild turkey, however, are protect- ed this year, a measure intended to allow a natural increase in the stock. “Kill every fox and wildcat you run across,” the league has instructed its members. “They do more harm to the grouse than the guns.” ‘Use dogs to hunt and retrieve English pheasants, for they can carry a heavy load of shot and may be lost and die; and don’t forget, killing hen Dirds is illegal. Don’t overkill the rab- its. “The law against shooting baby bear will be strictly enforced, and since any bear under knee high is al- most certain to be a cub, the simplest rule to follow will be “Don’t shoot at any bear knee-high.” Larger bear are vearlings or full grown. “It is unlikely that there will be this year an extra season on doe deer, as in 1925.” eee fA emt. Mysteries Feund in Dead Letter Office. No place in the world, perhaps, holds as many unsolved mysteries in as many odd forms as does Uncle Sam's dead letter office in Washing- ton, says Popular Science Monthly. Not only is this mail morgue the final resting place for letters and par- cels that go astray because of faulty addresses, but it is also the repository for contraband goods, such as fire arms, alcohol and narcotics, as well as deadly bombs and infernal machines. There an ordinary package has been found to conceal enough dynamite to wreck a building. There, too, inno- cent-looking parcels have given up everything from a live snake or a poisonous tarantula to a flock of fleas. More than 60,000 carelessly ad- dressed letters arrive every day in this government morgue, which received 21,000,000 letters and 803,000 parcels ‘last year. In this number are 100,000 letters which have been mailed in en- -tirely blank envelopes, many contain- ing large sums of money. The cash found in misdirected mail - amounts to about $55,000 annually. : State Expenses Increase 200 Per Cent. The United States Department of ‘Commerce has just made public a report showing that the cost of State government in this country has in- «creased more than a billion dollars in the ten years since the United States entered the World War. In 1917 the 48 States expended $517,5038,220 for public purposes. In 1925 these States expended three times as much, $1,614,562,230. In only seventeen of the forty eight States was there sufficient revenue to meet all payments during the year, although the receipts were greatly in- creased. Receipts from gasoline tax were $87,353,194, and motor vehicle licenses amounted to $198,710,310, a total of $286,063,504. The expenditures for construction and maintenance of high- ways were approximately $625,700- 000. The assessed valuation of property in the forty-eight States amounted to $13%,184,483, The amount of general property taxes levied for State pur- poses was $369,368,631. ee——— ese. —Get your job work dome here. GREAT SOLDIER MEY DEATH LIKE CAESAF Wallenstein One of Great est Military Leaders The man who probably came near- er to making himself a Napoleon than any other in Europe, from the assassination of Caesar to the appear- ance of the Corsican, was Wallen- stein, whose tremendous influence made him an outstanding figure in his- tory. Just three centuries ago, in 1626, Wallensteln raised an army for the Holy Roman empire to oppose the Bohemians, after the latter had been augmented by the Danes and other northern Protestants. He smashed the forces opposed to him and drove them through Hungary. Then he drove north, clearing great sections of Germany, but was repulsed in an attempt to capture Stralsund on the Baltic. He had, however, been so tlroroughly victorious that his foes seemed conquered. But as so often happens, the triumph had been too complete. Wallenstein had been ar- rogant in his treatment of the princes for whom he was fighting and they suspected he planned to overthrow them and make himself a dictator over central and eastern Europe. They brought about his dismissal by Emperor Ferdinand. Gustavus Adolphus, who had made Sweden the master power of the North, then entered the arena and France was backing him with sub- sidies. The victors were suddenly put on the defensive by the march of the Swedes through Germany, while thelr allies, the Saxons, occupied Bohemia. The princes who had brought about Wallenstein’s fall had to implore him to rescue them. At first he declined. then consented when offered not only command over all the imperial armies but power over conquered territory greater than had ever been bestowed by a monarch. Wallenstein quickly pushed the Saxons out of Bohemia and overraa Saxony, Gustavus Adolphus had te march north to meet him and at Lut- zen, in 1632, the great armies met. The Swedes won the day, but the de- feat did not lessen Wallenstein's dreams. Plots and counter-plots thick- ened, until eight or nine of his offi- cers were bought and agreed to as- sassinate their leader. On a February night in 1834, at a banquet in one of Wallenstein’s castles, three of his fol- lowers were slain. The conspirators hurried to Wallenstein’s quarters and found him in bed. With his customary courage, he threw his arms outward, inviting the sword thrusts. The blade of an assassin went through his breast.—Boston Post. Posthumous Letters to Son When J. S. Stevenson, of Vineland, N. J., died recently he left in the custody of an unknown person a col- lection of letters to be mailed one each year to his son who will receive it on his birthday. The little bav is now five years old and it is planned that he will receive these letters writ- ten by his father until the year he marries, Each letter contains ad- vice suitable to the age of the boy the vear he receives it. In the first letter the boy is told that his father has gone to see “Sissie Ann,” a bahy sister who died some time ago. “Some day.” the father wrote, “you wiil come to see both of us.” “Daddy is proud of his Dickie boy,” the letter continued. “and knows that he will be good to his mother and take care of her always.”—Exchange. Treat Diseases of Aged hat the ills of the old need as much attention as those of the very voung Is the contention of the Czech medical faculty at Prague, where 2 clinic that treats exclusively the dis- eases of old age has recently been opened, according to advices received by the American Medical association. Prof. B. Tiselt of the medical faculty of the University of Prague, who is in charge of the clinic, stated im his introductory lecture that two groups of diseases would be studied, these that are peculiar to the old and those that present a different aspect when they occur during old age. This clinic is of particular interest to the repub- lic of Czechoslovakia on account of the system of old-age and invalidity insurance in effect July 1. To Get Data on Whales With the aid of an instrument }ate- ly devised, experts expect to learn more about whales and their habits. The contrivance is designed for firing darts, to which are attached silver- plated disks. These disks are four inches long and the darts two inches. The latter will be aimed at the blub- ber of the whale and will neither cause pain nor inconvenience. These identity disks will be carried on the steamer William Scoresby, the chief mission of which is to study whales. The date and circumstances under which each disk is used will be on the disk, and it will remain for those who kill the whales to make a report of the whales so marked. Belgian Sugar Guard Belgium, which protects her sugar industry by law, forbids the importa- tion, the manufacture and the trans- portation of saccharin and like prod- ucts. No dentifrices that contain sac- charin may be imported. Attempts have been made to induce the govern- ment to change the interpretation of the law so that tooth pastes, creams und lotions may be regarded as medl- cal articles. Dentifrices are now classed under the head of perfumery Politics in America Got Napoleon's “Goat” Napoleon had an unusually deep in- terest in world politics, extending pven to the internal politics of a re- mote section of the United States, it was revealed when Col. Duncan K, MacRae of North Carolina went to Paris as consul general more than a century ago. Napoleon was puzzled as to why the people in one part of a country embraced one party, while their neighbors held opposing views. In some manner he had learned that Edgecombe county, in North Carolina, was Democratic, while Pitt county embraced the Whig faith. Informed that Colonel MacRae was from ths* state, he said to his courtiers: . “Now, I will find out the riddle of North Carolina politics.” So he gave Colonel MacRae an extraordinary welcome and said to him: “I understand that the same river flows through the counties of Edge- combe and Pitt in North Carolina, that the people of both counties till the soil and own slaves. I am told that prac- tically all the people in Edgecombe county belong to the Democratic party, while most of the people of Pitt are Whigs. Why is it?” Any other person than Colonel Mac- Rae would have been flabbergasted, remarks the Raleigh News and Ob- server, but not so the eloquent colonel, known as North Carolina’s first ora- tor. Nobody knows the answer he made, but he was quick to give a rea- son that satisfied the monarch. Asbestos Long Known but Little Employed People of modern time are engaged .in a ceaseless search for ways to im- prove living conditions. Safety, com- fort and reduction of expense rank among the principal things to be con- sidered. Asbestos, a material known for centuries but put to use only a comparatively short time ago, has done as much or more toward the realization of these three fundamen- tals than any other one thing in its class. Traces of ‘its use have been found in ancient China, in Persia, by the early Greeks and Romans, and later, in about the sixteenth century, in the island of Guam, now a posses- sion of the United States. The sud- den emergence of asbestos, from the long period in which it was almost ‘entirely the subject of myths and leg- ends, or treated merely as a costly curio, into one of the world’s most im- portant minerals and industry's most important alds, is remarkable. Even electricity did not have quite so sud- ‘den a transformation, British Army Club the Union Jack club is a national institution of Great Britain where sol- diers, sailors and airmen can go when on leave or passing through London, a place where they may deposit their kits and valuables, where they may obtain at moderate charges good meals and comfortable bedrooms to them- Selves and where they find the usual amenities of a club, including library and writing room, billiard room, baths, barber shop and also & club shop In which articles of everyday use and almost everything that service men require may be purchased. The Union Jack club was erected by public sub- scription as a national memorial to those who had fallen in the South African war and other campaigns, and was opened on July 1, 1907, by his tate majesty, King Edward VIL Trust to Pictures in these days of hustle and bustle, nyper-activity and constant ‘*go,” there is one thing that every one can do to neutralize to some extent the restlessness that has invaded our life. That one thing is to surround oneself with beautiful and restful pictures. Pictures take the mind off the wor- risome, petty details that are so ir- ritating to the nervous system. A good-natured jolly Cavalier to look down on us understandingly from the wall, or a lovely Madonna to fill us with peace and contentment are like real companions and friends, and have an advantage that even the best friends do net have; they make no demands and expeet no favors; they are always equally dependable and ever ready te serve. Genius and Freedom Jenius can only breathe freely in an atmosphere of freedom. Persons of genius are more individual than other people, less capable, consequently, of fitting themselves, without hurtful compression, inte any of the small number of melds society provides in order to save its members the trouble of forming their own character. If, from timidity, they consent to be forced inte ome of these molds, society will be little the better for their gen- ius. If they are of strong character and break their fetters, they become a mark for the society which has not succeeded in reducing them to com- monplace, to be pointed out as erratic, much as if one should complain of the Niagara for not flowing smoothly like a Dutch canal.—John Stuart Mill, Trees Live Long fhomas Parr, who lived to be one aundred and fifty-two years old, Is credited with a record, but this lon- gevity, as well as that of all other members of the animal kingdom, is easily surpassed by those of the vege- table kingdom. The life of the great forest trees varies from 100 to as much as 5,000 years, says London Tit-Bits. Cypress trees are said to live for 350 vears, Ivy 450, chestnut 600, cedar 800, oak 1,000 to 1,500 years, yew 2,500 and the baobab tree 5,00) years. NAMES AND DOINGS INSCRIBED ON ROCK Proud Conquistadores Left? Record of Deeds. Abruptly ending a low mountain range and jutting out into a wind- swept valley like a bold promontory in a gray-green sea El Morro rock guards a vast, silent region in western New Mexico. Although it is the most precious cliff historically in the Unit- ed States and as a national monument is valued by the government, few people who make overland trips ever turn aside from the main highway in order to view its grandeur or to pon- der upon its significance. The rock’s perpendicular walls, like huge escarp- ments, tower 215 feet sheer from the valley’s floor and extend wedgelike for hundreds of feet back until they merge into the mountain chain. Their smooth, hard surface, pinkish-yellow in color, is ideal for inscriptions. Charles F. Lummis calls the rock the “stone autograph album.” Upon (ft, more than 200 years ago, the invading Spanish conquistadores carved their names and the dates of their visits. They called it El Morro, which means the castle, but the name by which it is known now is Inscription rock. With their sword points the Spaniards carved their names, not in fun, bu# as a record of their advent. Inscription rock is situated 35 miles east of the Indian pueblo of Zuni, about 50 miles southwest of Grants, N. M., which is on the transcontinen- tal highway, and is near the Mormon settlement of Ramah, The trail to it leads over the vast lava flow which es like a huge snake through that region, making difficult driving for au- tomobiles. The rock is on the historic trafl which extended from Zuni to the pueblos of the Rio Grande and the route which the conquistadores fol- towed in their quest for the seven cities of Cibola, the fabled story of which led to the discovery of New Mexico by the Spaniards in 1539. A few hundred feet back of the wedge- shaped front of the rock a prehistoric trail, with its separate footholds worn deep in the stone, leads to the top, where the remains of two pueblos may be seen. : The autographs, inscribed in quaint Spanish difficult to decipher, are found near the base of the rock. They eover many decades in time, from the invasion by Coronado’s men, the leader himself passing to the south of its location, down to the advent on September 17, 1849, of J. H. Simpson and R. H. Kern, an artist, who were probably the first Americans to visit the rock. One of the most important of the names is that of Juan de Onate, the founder of New Mexico. On a re- turn trip from San Gabriel, N. M,, to the Gulf of California he stopped at the rock and wrote these words in Spanish: “Passed by here to Com- mander Don Juan de Onate from the discovery of the sea of the south on the 16th of April, 1605." This was two years before the English settler on the east coast. Onate’s army con- sisted of two missionaries and thirty soldiers. Just Like a Man Frank L. Dame, president of the North American company, described what he considered the first case on record of a customer's paying a gas bill and immediately asking for a second one. The case was reported by the management of a North Amer- jean subsidiary, says a news story im the New York Times. “The bill I have just paid is rather iarge, and I would like a smaller one to take home to my wife,” ex- plained the customer. “The reason the bill T paid is so large is because while my wife was away last week I cooked a breakfast for myself. Then I went away for a business trip that lasted four days and when I returned I found the gas still burning. Now I must have a small bill to show her.” Famous Cattle Herd Only one herd now exists of the wild white cattle which roamed over Britain in Caesar’s days. There are only sixty of these beautiful beasts left, and their once vast range is the park of an earl's estate. They have been made familiar to most of wus through Landseer’s paintings, but “to goologists they are known as Bos pri- migenius, the most important of the three otherwise extinct breeds from which our domesticated cattle have gradually developed.” The “range” is now in Chillingham park, “away up in the north of Eng- land,” we learn.—Literary Digest. Advancement in Peru The minister of public works has been authorized to build in Lima, Peru, quarters for laborers and to ex- propriate the necessary land. The project involves the erection of 1,000 houses, to be turned over, upon com- pletion, to the poorer class of labor- ers with families. The hoyses are to be provided with the latest sanitary and plumbing arrangements. The proj- ect also includes the building of schools, a church, plazas and play grounds for the children. American Idea in Germany In Germany the American idea ou establishing summer schools in the universities and colleges is taking hold, with the result that a German institute for foreigners has been es- tablished at the University of Berlin The courses will be given in the sum: mer months and will embrace the con ventional academic studies, and in ad dition sociology, economy and social history. Graduates may work for their higher degrees at the Institute. Wet Weather Will Retard Woods Fires. Harrisburg, Pa.—Although the worst season for forest fires in the fall of the year has not been reached, | officials of the State Department of , Forests and Waters believe that the ! wet season will enable them to set a | low record for forest fire destruction during this season. Statisticians of the department re- cently worked out a five-year average by months to show the probable oc- curence of fires. The average for September is sixty-three. Last year forty-four were reported for that Tonih. This year there were only 0. October, as a rule, a bad month for forest firse, yet so far this year none has been reported. Although only ten were reported last October, the five-year average, because of the large number in former years, was 228. November records were higher than October’s and if the rainy weather does not continue, the fire fighting forces will be instructed to concen- trate their efforts to prevent blazes during next month. The five-year average for November was 274. Last year only seventy-seven reported, but in November, 1924, there were 639. April is the worst month of the year for forest fires, the five-year average being 1187. January is at the bottom of the list with an average of only thirteen. eee ee fp eee. The Watchman publishes news when it is news. Read it. Keep Fit! Good HealthRequires Good Elimination O be well, you must keep the blood stream free from impur- ities, If the kidneys lag, allowing body poisons to accumulate, a toxic condition is created. One is apt to feel dull, languid, tired and achy. A nagging backache is sometimes a symptom, with drowsy headaches and dizzy spells. That the kidneys are not functioning properly is often shown by burning or scanty passage of secretions. If you have reason to suspect improper kidney function- ing, try Doan’s Pills—a tested stimulant diuretic. Users praise them throughout the United States. Ask your neighbor! ’ PILLS DOAN'’S “& Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. ¥. C THE DIAMOND BRAND, S Ladles! Ask your Druggist for Chl.ches-ter 8 Diamond Bran lls in Red and Gold metallic 5, ch 18 Sh Be ND) no 1.) ot. "Ask for OIL. OER. TAOS D BRAND PILLS, io 58 known as Best, Safest, Always Rellable years as SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE pTosossas amos Your Suit Should Say Good Style Clothes will Faubl to perfection. Better ones up to $37.50. All Sold with Our Guarantee LET US SHOW YOU Faubles you money at the same time. as low as $25, that are All-Wool. Dairymen---Notice A special sale of Mayer's Dairy Feed—a Ready- Mixed Ration, 22% protein $40.00 per Ton Delivery Charge $2.00 per Load Frank M. Mayer BELLEFONTE, PA. 71-11-t£ fil Kinds of Fruit Trees Strawberry Plants Berries and Vines Cut Flowers, Potted Plants 15,000 Perennials in 45 different va- rieties ready to plant now. Come out and see our green houses on Half-Moon Hill Artistic Funeral Work 10,000 BULBS HYACINTHS, TULIPS, Etc. Direct from the Growers in Holland. Just arrived. Big Bulbs for indoor forcing and Garden, HALF MOON GARDENS Charles Tabel, Proprietor Bellefonte Pa Phone 139-J 71-39-3t We Deliver Insurance Fire... Automobile ALL OTHER LINES Bonds of All Kinds Hugh M. Quigley Successor to H. E. FENLON Temple Court BELLEFONTE, PA. 71-33-tf these Things for You Prosperity Dignity Taste do all of these for you and save 2-Pants Suits Tailored