Peworraly Wa Bellefonte, Pa. January 7, 1927. fm COMPANY PLANS 8-MILE BRIDGE ON CHESAPEAKE. Baltimore, Md.—Maryland’s agricul- turally rich eastern shore, with its canneries and oyster packing plants nearly fifty miles nearer Baltimore by highway and hence nearer the mar- kets of the world, would be one of the outstanding results of a proposed elght-mile bridge span across Chesa- peake bay. The span, which would be perhaps the longest of its kind in the world, also would make the highway distance from the southern half of Delaware less to Baltimore than to Philadelphia, its present normal market. Provided War department, congres- sional and other sanctions are forth- coming, the bridge will be started next spring by the Chesapeake Bay Bridge company, just chartered. The company, the first of many predecessors which have toyed with the dream of a bay span to distill a thirty-year bridge romance into hard facts, is prepared to spend $10,000,000 in construction work. The bridge would be operated on a toll basis. Previous groups, with the same ena in view, have dreamed dreams of tubes’ under the bay, rapid ferry and barge fleets and trolley car bridges at costs estimated from $1,000,000 to $20,000,000. The projected eight-mile span would oe from 20 to 27 feet wide, set on con- crete piling. It would be so placed that it would not interfere with ma- rine traffic to the capes, and two draws would permit passage of ves- sels to the Susquehanna river and the Delaware and Chesapeake canal. Erection of the bridge represents a difficult engineering feat. Ancient Clock Governs All Bank’s Activities Asbury Park, N. J.—The Merchants National bank here opens its doors in the morning, regulates all its activities and closes at night by a tall, mahogany clock brought from England 311 years ago, and acquired by the bank's pres- ident, Samuel Reeves, in 1913 for $21. Mr. Reeves sald he believed the cimepiece was at least 500 years old. It has no markings to Indicate Its age and birthplace. The clock was brought from London by Isaac Wood- ard in 1615 to Monmouth county, New Jersey. . When Charles Woodard, a descend: ant, died at the age of seventy in 1912, he willed the clock to a nephew, Dare Switchin of Aspury Park. -Switchin owed Mr. Reeves some money for some articles worth $21 and after keeping the clock for a year or so, decided to turn it over to his creditor in payment. tHohenzollern Name Still Frequently Seen Berlin.—Under the German repub- tlcan regime the Hohenzollerns have been in the discard nearly eight years, but the family name and the names of its members are still the most fse- quently encountered of any in Ger- many. They stare at one from the street corners and shop windows and are em- blazoned on the facades of ‘innumer- able buildings. That the German republican mind is pecoming impressed by this fact is in- dicated by a statistical exhibit which shows that of the 300 high schools of Prussia conducted under state author- ity 126 bear the name of one member or another of the Hohenzollern family. William I and William [I appear 25 times. Queen Victoria Louise 2¢ times and &mpress Augusta Victorian 19 times. . Eskimos Tune in Radio to Learn Day of Month New York.—Radio operators who keep two sets of batteries, one in the cook stove oven thawing out, while the ‘other, in use, is freezing, were de- scribed by Dr. William H. Easton, New York chief of the Westinghouse broad- casting system, in a talk on radio problems north of the Arctic circle, ‘Many Eskimos are radio funs,” he said, “and among them {is Pan-il-Pah, who was with Peary when Peary dis- .eovered the North pole.” Virtually the entire white population of North _Ameriea north of the Arctic circle is receiving personal messages regularly © by radio, he said. One of the uses of the radio, he said, is to inform inhabitants of sub-Polar ,zegions of the day of the month. The days being all “nights” in winter, the population sometimes gets as much as «wight days behind the calendar. Girls of Today Leave Lap Dogs to Old Maids Croydon, England. —Up-to-date girls favor larger dogs, like the Alsatian, believing they harmonize with fashion, but the old maids and elderly women still cling to lap dogs and the toy poodles, say judges of the Croydon dog show. The girl of today believes that her preference for the larger breed of dogs is an indication of independence and strength, the judges decreed after looking over the exhibits and their mistresses. One woman judge said: “Alsatians look, and semetimes are, fierce, but they harmonize with the present-day fads and styles and therefore are pop- ular.” ied. FORGETS CYNIC CODE; IS KILLED Beau Brummel Safe Cracker and Outlaw Among Out laws, Slain in Revenge. San Francisco.—Clyde Hilliard, Beau Brummel safe-cracker, outlaw among outlaws, and feared for his trigger- finger, lived by a strangely cynical code: “Never accept any man as your friend !” Forsaking that code Hilliard died recently, a bullet in his brain, fired by an unknown hand. With his death, San Francisco's underworld chortled. In the dank, smelly places where criminals planned and plied their trade there were smirks that bespoke a grim jest, For the underworld had won a long and cunning race with the police to “deal justice” to this self-styled lead- er of its realm. It had evened the score with Clyde Hilliard’s too-well-known automatic. Long ago the dapper “lady’s-man- crook” had set cold lead as the pen- alty for those who should seek to cross his path, and he paid the same price. They found his body, face down, in the dirt alongside the Skyline boule- vard, south of San Francisco, early on the morning of September 20. A bullet wound was in the back of his head. Clyde Hilliard had never had a chance. Half a mile distant, crawling on her hands and knees through the brush, blood streaming from a bullet wound in her temple, they found Gladys Fleming. Hilliard, disbeliever in men, was never without his “woman.” Identification of the two was not immediately established on the morn- ing of the crime, but when police had wiped aside the shroud of mystery they nodded knowingly. “Well, boys, the score’s tied!” sald one of them. Hilliard had gone the way he had sent Gene Bowen, ex-convict and member of the former's gang of mas- ter cracksmen, in a Green street apart- ment on the night of August 3. Gladys Fleming, by chance of fate, had taken the same medicine that Hilliard meted out to the dashing Dor- othy Wilson on the same night he killed Bowen—a bullet in the temple. Both women lived. Score Is Tied. So the score, in the main at least, was tied, so far as the underworld went. But this same underworld was now a good jump ahead of the police. True, long ago the police had cor- nered Jim Fleming, second husband of the wounded Gladys, and sent him away to the “big house” at San Quentin for the killing of a “copper,” but in this race to “get” Clyde Hil- liard the “element” had won—hands down. With a combination of hair dye, an alias and native cunning, Hilliard had slipped through the police net when it seemed that naught could save him. He had moved for a time in the circle that knew him best, undetect- He had played his game with the aifections of women, and well. 3ut Clyde Hilliard discounted fate, and once placed on the defensive, he forgot the code by which he had lived: “Never accept any man as your friend!” Then they “got him.” The murder of Gene Bowen and the shooting of Dorothy Wilson in the (ireen street apartment, police said, had been “plain slaughter.” The vie- tims never had a chance. [It was a, “falling out of thieves,” the detectives held, and later Mrs. Wilson bore them out. Hilliard, she said, had net liked Eugene Bowen's division of the spoils in a recent gem robbery. So he took his long-avowed method of settling ‘such disputes. Knocking at the door of the apartment in which Bowen and his sweetheart lived, he had spoken his greeting to the two within with a fusilade of pistol shots. Bowen fell dead. Dorothy Wilson, lapsing into a state of coma from the effects of her three wounds, was de- termined to ‘“get” Hilliard if it took her dying effort. Reaching a pencil and a piece of paper and dropping to the floor she scrawled: “Clyde done it—330 Post stre—" When the pelice came she was un- conscious. But they knew the rest of the unwritten story. Clyde Hilliard had “dene it.” Drag-Net Thrown Out. The drag-net was quickly thrown about the city and a systematic search of the underworld haunts was begun by the homicide squad. They found that Hilliard and a girl named “Gladys” had hastily left their apartment at No. 1635 Polk street, where they lived in luxury as Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bronson. Two days later Dorothy Wilson had sufficiently regained her strength to identify positively rogue’s gallery ple- tures of Hilliard as the slayer of Bowen. “And if you don't get him, we will!" she told the police. But Clyde Hilliard had not played his game so long for nothing, and he tocled both the police and the under world, Fooled thew anti the game Bd Man enev Uoand che threw caution to September. On the night of September 186, Charles Brown, dapper but gray of hair, and somewhat sour of disposi- tion, gave a “party” in a Sacramento street apartment. Liquor flowed free- ly and the general hilarity became ob- noxious to other tenants in the build- ing. The police were called when Brown’s nervous trigger finger let loose three shots through a door panel. Charles Brown and his six compan- fons—four of them women — were jailed. One of the women was named “Gladys Grayson.” “What's the charge?” Brown asked the desk sergeant. “Disturbing the peace,” was the an- swer, : “What’s the bail?” asked Brown. “Two hundred dollars apiece,” an- swered the sergeant. Charles Brown planked down $1,400 in currency on the sergeant’s desk. Five minutes later he and his com- panions walked out of the hall of jus- tice and disappeared into the right. That was the beginning of the end of Clyde Hilliard. Twelve hours later the police fingerprint system hs@ re- vealed that Charles Brown, released on bail for disturbing the peace, wes none other than Hilliard, long sought as the murderer of Bowen. It was the first clue the police had been given, but also it was the first clue that had come to the un-erweorld friends of Eugene Bowen and Dorothy Wilson. Knew “Water Was Hot.” Ailliard’s hand had been “tipped.” His new haunts, his new “make-up,” his new aliases—all had been bared. And the hunted slayer knew that “the water was hot.” Scarcely forty-eight hours later and his body had been found by the Sky- line boulevard, his wounded girl com- panion nearby. Two hastily filled suitcases found 500 yards away added to the story. The victim had been shot and hurled for dead from a speeding au- tomobile. Identification of Hilliard satisfied the police of the motive for the killing. It was revenge. But how did the underworld “get” the wary Hilliard? J Gladys Fleming, recovering from her wounds in the San Francisco hos- pital, reluctantly gave the answer days later, after hours of grilling. “Clyde forgot his code,” she said. “We knew we were in a dangerous position after our arrest in the Sac- ramento street apartment,” she told the officers. “Clyde knew he hadn't a minute to spare. So we planned a quick getaway to Los Angeles. “Just how to make the grade was ‘a tough one to figure out and Clyde seemed worried. “We were living in an apartment in the downtown district. Well, about two o'clock on the morning of Sep- tember 20 there came a rapping at the door. With his gun in his hand Clyde answered. “A man who seemed to be our friend declared the ‘bulls’ were on our trail and that we'd better sneak fast. He had a machine, he said, and would see that we got to Los An- geles. It was a stolen car, he said. “Clyde always maintained that no: man in the world was his friend. but this time he forgot his code. So we packed our grips and jumped into the man's car. We were headed for Los Angeles and when he took the Skyline boulevard it seemed reason- able enough. It was as we were rid- ing along that he made some pretense about engine trouble, stopped the car, whipped out a revolver and opened fire. Clyde fell first. Then he got me. He threw us out and disappeared.” Gene Bowen had been avenged. Refuses to Tell. Gladys Fleming, wife of a murderer, vonsort of another, has steadfastly re- fused to bare the identity of the man who killed Hilliard and shot her, al- though they are satisfied that she is aware of his identity. “Underworld ethics? fear!” said the officers. Hilliard’s death revealed the strange complexities of his nature. In the suitcase into which he had hurriedly thrown his belongings the peliee found mute evidence that the man he had been accused of killing was none the less his friend. In a double: backed picture frame they found twe No! Just pictures. One was of Hilliard, the other was of Eugene Bowen. Baek te back. Big Jim Fleming, second husband of Hilliard’s wounded consort, ap- praised of the shooting, in his cell at San Quentin, enjoyed his own inward chuckle at the gunman's fate, and bared his reasons for it. “Hilliard was a crook ameng crooks,” he said. “He was a robber of robbers, and he plied a rotten trade with a high hand.” Who fired the bullet that wrote *“finis” on the last chapter of Clyde Hilliard's life even the police do not expect to discover. The underworld will never tell. Gladvs Fleming will never tell, Dor- othy Wilson received the news of the slaying of Clyde Hilliard with an un- suppressed smile, “Well, Gene still has his friends, I see!” she sald. The Wilson woman has declared, however, that she is “going straight.” The law never did have much suec- cess with Clyde Hilllard. Seven times between 1913 and 1925 he had heen jailed in connection with as many robberies, burglaries and safe crack- ‘ngs. But the underworld “king” al- caves had uncanny luck. His record hows nothing more than a scatterlag amber of county jall sentences. Hunter Rides Deer Two Miles in Bush Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.—To ride two miles through the bush on a deer’s back is the thrill- ing experience narrated by Eu- gene Guzzo, 582 Albert street, West, who has just returned from a hunt at Goulais bay. “We were walking along a trail not far from Goulais bay, Guzzo said, “when we saw a deer lying under a tree. At first we thought it was dead. On going close to it, it did not stir, and then we decided to roll it over. “I got hold of it by the horns. Immediately the deer jumped up, with me on top as though I was riding horseback. The deer gave me a merry ride for two miles.” ® CCOOOEOOPROEPROROLOERERREEE®E. ANGIENT MAPS HOBBY OF NOTED MAMITOBAN SAVANT in His Mammoth Collection Is the First in Which the Discoveries of Columbus Appear. Winnipeg, Man.—Not to be outdone py St. John’s college here, which boasts of a collection of ancient books, many of them dating back to 1500, Dr. Charles N. Bell claims to have the most complete set of ancient maps outside the walls of a historical mu- seum. Doctor Bell's collection of maps has a continent-wide distinction, ore of Labrador having been consulted by authorities In connection with the privy council hearing in London con- cerning the ownership of that bleak country. : Perhaps the most curious map in the collection is a reproduction of the first map of the world in which Amer- ica is represented. This map, drafted by the old Spanish cartographer, Juan de la Cosa, in 1500, eight years after Columbus discovered the New world, is a remarkable reproduction. It {is in sections, upon which an attempt was made to represent forests, beasts, birds, boats, etc., in order that It might be a compendium of general description as well as a chart of dis- tance and locality. The oldest original map in the col- lection is an Ortelius of 1570, repre- senting the earth. The existence of the north and south continents of America was then known, of course, but cartographers were a little vague about the shape of South America. In the old Ortelius map it is shaped and tinted like an orange. Dolphins sport in mid-Atlantic, with here and there a caravel; all the physical fea- tures are named in Latin. Coming down the centuries, there are, to mention only a few: An origi: nal map illustrating Capt. John Monck’s voyage to the Hudson bay in 1619-20; a “Map or General Carte of the World,” drafted in 1669 and dedicated to King Charles II; a “Map of the North Pole and Parts Adjoin- ing,” drawn In 1680, dedicated to the Earl of Plymouth; maps of the Great lakes and Michilimackinac forts, 1744. Doctor Preferred Sleep to Treating Snake Bite Jalcutta.—A Parsi doctor, whose al- leged negligence resulted in the death of a nine-year-old Hindu boy from the effects of snake bite, was severely cen- sured by a Bombay jury. Evidence was given to the effeet that the boy was bitten by a black cobra and was taken at night to the Haftkine institute, Parel, where a Par- si doetor said it was not a case of snake bite, despite the protests of the bey’s relatives, who said they had seen the cobra near the boy and had killed it. The doctor then asked them why they had not brought the snake. They promised to do so the next day. The doctor, it is alleged, then asked the party to go to sleep and himself set the example. The relatives, how- ever, being frightened, took the boy to another hospital, where, although he was attended to at once, he died. Med- ical evidence showed that death was due to poisoning by snake bite. The jury, returning’ a verdict ac- cording, was unanimously of the opin- ion that the doctor had been grossly negligent in the discharge of his duty and desired that his conduct should be brought to the notice of the govern- ment. Sisters Wed Brothers; Two Pastors for Service New York.—Cupid worked over- ¢ime at his knot-tying job at six o'clock in Essex Fells, N. J. In St. Peter's church two clergymen simul- taneously married two daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lee Stuart to two sons of Mrs. William Sayre, all of Essex Fells. Everything about the weddings was in duplicate; there were two sets of bridesmaids, two best men, two maids of honor and two tables at the postnuptial supper. The brides, the Misses Anne Morson and Lee Stuart, are daughters of Francis Lee Stuart, formerly chief en- gineer of the Erie rallread and a con- sulting engineer of the Hudson river bridge. The Stuarts are Southerners by descent, but have lived in Essex Fells many years. have been close friends of the Stuarts many years. William Sayre, the grandfather of the bridegrooms, was president of the Lehigh Valley rail- road. The Sayre family SHORT SMILES Good Indication “Do you think Alice likes me?” “Sure her folks are knocking you all the. time.” Taking No Chances “Hazel is so jealous.” “Yes, she won’t introduce Harold to her own sister.” Cause “I fee! dizzy, John.” “I told you not to. get those water waves in your hair.” Love’s Argument “But I told you I don’t love you.” “Well, experience is the best teach- er.” Too Much “Do you play golf?” “Just enough to explain the game to those who wish to learn.” Terrible! Harold—So you went swimming. Got wet, eh? Mae—Yes, it rained. Needs It Hub—What on earth do you want a larger allowance for? Wife—I'm saving up for a divorce. A Good Lead Kitty—And you let him kiss you? Betty—Let him? Great heavens, I had to help him! Keen Observer Country Youth—Yep, my father raises mules. City Girl—So I notice. A Hint “Does your sister swim, Harold?” “Depends on who's with her, Mr. Shye.” Outside the Pale “Why do you snub Mrs. Soandso?”’ “She doesn’t move in our radio set.” —Louisville Courier-Journal. Help “Does your daughter help any with the housework?” “She washes her dog.” Relaxing Phyllis—I'm too nervous to dance. Jack—Well, then let's charleston. Easy to End “But, doctor, I can’t give up smok- ing.” “All right. Give up $5 and I'll call it square.” THE MOST DRASTIC CLEARANCE REDUCTIONS [3 \ x } [i \ [i \ [ [} € [3 % h} [ A \ [i [i \ \ \ x ; rte CO JN] rere x Li } X 3 \ X x [ x \ X \ \ \ \ [ \ \ 3 \ te [3 0} X ? \ : x 1} Suits & Overcoats Ever Offered in Bellefonte All Suits All Overcoats i } in our entire store are offered for quick selling at |-3 on the block. Don’t miss it. None reserved. Our entire stock of SUITS and OVERCOATS is Watch our windows A. FAUBLE Overdoing? Hurry, Worry and Overwork Bring Heavy Strain. ODERN life throws a heavy burden on our bodily ma- chinery. The eliminative organs, es- pecially the kidneys, are apt to be- come sluggish. Retention of excess uric acid and other poisonous waste often gives rise to a dull, languid feeling and, sometimes, toxic back- aches and headaches. That the kid- neys are not functioning perfectly is often shown by burning or scanty passage of secretions. More and more people are learning to assist their kidneys by the occasional use of Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diu- retic. Ask your neighbor! DOAN’ PILLS 60c Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. ¥. Meats, Whether they be fresh, smoked or the cold-ready to serve—products, are always the choicest when they are purchased at our Market. We buy nothing but prime stock on the hoof, kill and re- frigerate it ourselves and we know it is good because we have had years of experience in handling meat products. Orders by telephone always receive prompt attention. Telephone 450 P. L. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. 34-34 Ask for IAMOND BRAND P] for is as SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERTWNERE H i THE REGULAR PRICE.