Beni itd. ~ Bellefonte, Pa., >a., January 14, 1927. NATION'S CHILDREN BEHAVING BETTER Marked Decrease in Delin- quency Is Observed. Washington.—*In response to many requests,” Secretary of Labor Davis in his annual report for the fiscal year of 1926. states that “the children’s bu- reau has just assembled such informa- tion as can be secured from the annual reports of Juvenile courts, and reports of the bureau of census with reference to the trend in juvenile delinquency. A study of this material indicates (1) that the present condition of the Ju- venile court statistics is unsatisfac- tory and (2) that according to the evi- ‘dence available juvenile delinquency has decreased. “Lack of unifermity in methods of compiling statistics used In the courts and marked variations in inclusions and methods of presentation make the statistics practically valueless for pur- poses of comparing delinquency rates in one city with those of other cities. The fact that for only 14 cities of 100, 000 population and over in the United States can information be obtained on which delinquency rates can be com- puted over a period of years indicates the woeful inadequacy of statistical material regarding the work of an in- stitution as important as the Juvenile court. Figures for Fourteen Cities, “The figures for these 14 widely separated cities—Boston, Buffalo, Chi- cago, Detroit, Minneapolis, New Or- leans, New York, Philadelphia, Provi- dence, Richmond, Rochester, St. Louis, Seattle, Washington—covering in most instances the 10-year period from 1915 to 1924, doubtless indicate the trend in juvenile delinquency. That 9 of the 14 show a decrease in the de- linquency rate (i. e., the number of cases of delinquency per 1,000 children of the delinquency age fixed by the Juvenile court law) furnishes a strong presumption that sensational state- ments regarding increase of juvenile crime do not have a basis in fact. “Moreover, much more reliable fig ares as to. commitments to institu- tions, based on census reports cover- ing the entire country, indicate a de- cline in the number of delinquent chil- dren committed to Institutions, if growth in population be taken into consideration, and reveal no signifi cant increase in the numbers com- mitted for the more serious offenses— homicide, robbery and t.rglary. Ac- cording to the census reports, the age of icommitment to penal iastitutions has not decreased, as has frequently been asserted. Plan for Reporting Published. “The plan for reporting of Juvenile court statistics of delinquency and neglect: on which the children’s bureau has been at work for some years was published during the year as a bulle- tin entitled ‘Juvenile Court Statistics.’ This bulletin contains an introductory statement of the purpose of Juvenile court statistics and the methods by which they may be obtained and a description of the plan proposed Ly the children’s bureau, with outlines of the statistical ‘cards to be ‘used and the tables to be compiled. } “In the. preparation of the plan the aureau . bad the co-operation of the committee on records and statistics of ‘the National Probation association and of others who are familiar with statis- tical problems of the courts. . “A representative of the burean is 20w visiting courts and state depart ments having supervisory authority ar power to require reports from Juve- nile courts, and is working out with these courts and departments the niethods by which the plan may be made to fit in with present systems af recording, filing and summarizing the data called for. The co-operation of: a number of courts and state de- partments has already been assured.” Steals His Own House; Makes Police History t.os Angeles.—Detective Lieutenants ©urry and Bradley of the Lincoln Heights station went gunning for plumbing fixture thieves and assert they discovered “a new one for the book” in the person of a man who pur- lpined his own house. Lheir search led them to Wilmar, where the detectives arrested A. C. Carlander and his cousin, Rudolph Carlander, after, they assert, the men admitted having stolen various sinks, heaters, bath tubs and other plumbing fixtupes with which thelr Wilmar homes: were fitted. “And: on, the way in,” Curry sald, 4A. O. admitted he had moved the house we found him in ten miles from the 800 block on Bullard avenue, where he had erected it, to 2939 Gladys avenue, Wilmar, after he had decided he couldn't make scheduled payments on it when they fell due. We understand he has made several payments on the land.” The prisoners were locked up In the Jincoln Heights station on burglary charges in connection with the assert- &d stolen plumbing fixtures. Finds Diabetes Cure Phiiadelphia.—A discovery for the treatment of diabetes as important as that of insulin, is announced by Dr. Pavid: Biesman, head of the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania. Details are withheld. GANDER TRAILED T0 FAR ALBERTA Texas Breeder Trails Big Halfbreed Goose All the Way to Canada. Dimmit, Texas.—Trailing a half- breed gander from its birthplace near Dimmit all the way to Canada in a futile effort to learn its fate and to be informed later that the fowl was the victim of a sportsman’s gun in far off Alberta was one of the expe- riences of Edwin Ramey, farmer and ranchman of this section, in his worl of domesticating wild geese. It is by permission of the United States government that Ramey keeps wild ge>se on his ranch for the pur: pose of conducting experiments in crossing them with tame geese and of studying their characteristics. He has been devoting much time to this work for the last 14 years. He has made a specialty of experimenting with the Canadian ring neck wild goose, and he usually has quite a flock of these birds upon his ranch. Raises Giant Ganders. .n the spring of 1923 Ramey suc- ceeded in mating one of his domestic geese with a big Canadian gander. As a result of this mating he raised a half-breed gander of great size. In the following spring this gander began te manifest the wild strain that was in his blood. He would poise in his short flights over the ranch and seem to listen for the call out of the un- known North. Then one morning a flock of wild geese came up from the South and set- tled down upon one of the ranch ponds to feed. In this flock was a trim, beautiful young goose. The half- breed gander picked up his wings and went over for a visit. He must have fallen in love at first sight, for when the flock gave wing for the far North a few hours later this wild gander held an outpost position with his newly won mate by his side. Seeks Missing Bird. The departure of the half-breea gander with the wild flock was wit nessed by Mr. Ramey. To him it was not entirely unexpected, but he want- ed to find out more about the habits of the fugitive and to bring him back to the ranch if he could find him, so late in the summer of that year he and Mrs. Ramey went to Alberta and made inquiries of many sportsmen and others if they had seen anything of a gander of unusual size and beauty. Nothing came of this visit, but the sad news of the tragic death of the gander came to Ramey recently. He received a letter from James H. Dow- dell, president of the Penn Mines Limited, Edmonton, Alta., stating that he had killed this gander. Mr. Dow: dell’s letter said: k “While hunting geese near Lake Minitou, on the border of Saskatch ewan and Alberta, I shot a goose with a tag on its leg bearing your name and address. This goose was the leader of the flock and the largest one we got. I am sending inclosed a small snapshot with the goose and tag to be seen on the left, marked ‘X. IT will send the thg if you wish it. = We got geese, ducks. chickens and Hungarian partridges:” tow to Make Fortune: Plant Black Walnuts \Washington.—Planting a bushel of olack walnuts this full the Agriculture department declared, would make a «ood investment for farmers in upland and hill sections of the South, the Ohio river basin and the central Mis sissippi valley. Walnut. one of the. finest cabinet woods known, is worth abeut $200 a thousand feet and a bushel of nuts, of which there is a large crop this year, numbers about 1,500. Planted in idle corners, waste strips and along fence rows, a bushel in time should return a huge profit. Mountain Hermit at 83 Learns to Read Bible Asheville, N. C.—After living for 83 gears without being able to read, Brig man Keith has learned the mysteries of the printed word. Three years ago Keith, whe makes nis home in a mountain cabin near here, decided that if he was ever go- ing to learn te read he had better be- gin. Now he has achieved counsider- able suecess. His reading is confined largely to aewspapers and the Bible. ip Him the Prize as Cheekiest Person Buenos Aires.—Juan Marti- nez gave a display of sheer “cheek” here recently that must stand unrivaled. Twenty-five years ago he deserted his wife in the greatest state of indi- gence to pursue the charms of another lady. The wife went to work, and even succeeded in amassing a small capital. A short time ago she died end then the errgut spouse appeared upon the scene and demanded his share of the estate. But even the highest court he appealed to ruled against ; ANCIENT CULTURE FOUND IN ALASKA Attributed to Indians and Eskimos. Washington.—*“The ancient inhabi- tants of the Bering sea coasts and islands, who developed the ‘fossil ivory culture,’ reached a degree of indus- trial differentiation and art so high that we have nothing to compare with them In America except among the more highly developed tribes of the northwest coast and those of dlexico, Yucatan and Peru.” That is one of the conclusions reached by Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, anthropologist of the Smith- sonian institution, as a result of his exploration of Alaska last summer for the bureau of American ethnology. “We cannot be sure yet who these people were,” sald Doctor Hrdlicka, “though it is probable that they were the ancestors of the present Eskimo or Indian or both. However, there seems to be a distinction between their art and that of the Eskimo of today. The outstanding characteris- tic of the former is their mastery of form and line in curves; of the pres- ent-day Eskimo it is the geometric de- sign, with the drawings and carving of animals in their natural form. No Charje in Inhabitants. “This might indicate that some oth- er people were responsible for the older culture. But when we examine the skeletal remains there is no indi- cation that any other people except Eskimo and Indian lived in these re- gions at any period thus far repre sented in the collections. “The area over which evidences of the old culture are found is very ex- tensive, Traces of it are found far down the American coasts. But it is not certain that it was actually prac- ticed evervwhere along these coasfs, In these parts of the world one of the most striking phenomenons is the evi- dence of extensive trade carried on in implements and other cultural objects, There is. for example, on the Kobuk river a mountain called Jade moun- tain. It was early known to the In- dians and the Eskimo of the river and its green stone was made into adzes, drills. knives, lamps and other objects. Though this is the sole source of the green stone, objects made of it occur all the way from Barrow and Point Hope to Seward peninsula, the Asiatic coast, the Diomedes, the St. Lawrence, and down to Nunivak island. Find Objects of Ivory. “Similarly one finds the highly dec- Jrated objects of now fossil ivory on the Diomedes, the St. Lawrence, the Asiatic coast, Seward peninsula, and from Barrow again down to Nunivak island and possibly much farther. The designs seem to connect with the characteristic art of the northwest coast. The indications would seem to point to the old ivory cult having been central in northwestern Asia whence it spread by trading along the American coasts.” The Alaskan Eskimo, according. to Doctor Hrdlicka's conclusions from a study of the skeletal material coliect- ed. Is by no means the highly differ- entiated Rskimo of Labrador and Greenland. He often appreaches, oc- ensionally to the point of identity, on the one hand the Asiatic and Mongo: ‘SHAKER SECT I¢ FAST VANISHING Once Powerful Community Victim of Unscrupulous Exploitation. New Lebanon, N. Y.—Fantastic re- ligious dogmas that forbade marriage, insisted on absolute separation of the sexes and on equality of inheritance have thinned the ranks of a once powerful sect, the Shakers. Only a handful remain here at New Lebanon, where the ruling body of Shaker elders once held forth, direct- ing the destinies of flourishing Shak- er communities along the eastern sea- board whose membership numbered thousands, Only a single Shaker colony remains at Lebanon, Ohio, at one time a stronghold of the sect. Other colo- nies still extant but in pitiful contrast to their former condition may be found at East Canterbury, N. H., and Pittsfield, Mass. History of Sect Strange. Annals of the sect are strong and colorful. Under the leadership of James and Jane Wardleigh, in 1747, a group of Quakers, whose religious fervor caused them to twitch and tremble during services, separated from the main body and founded what they termed the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Ap- pearance. The term Shaker, first ap: plied in derision by scoffers, was later accepted proudly by the brethren. Dancing with which the Shakers accompany their religious rites is de- scribed as a picturesque ceremony. At the community house of worship, after exhortation by the elders, the males of the congregation would form ranks In a half circle, according to size and age, facing the women who were ar- ranged likewise, At a signal the choir would sing while the ranks moved up and down, swinging arms in rhythm, rising on tiptoe and shaking or swaying from side to side. Shakers contributed much to Amer- lca’s trade in the early days. Pos- sessing a reputation for prophecy and religious foresight, the Shaker com- munities drew Into the fold the resi- dents of surrounding neighborhoods who at that time were willing to give up their worldly belongings and live a life of celibacy. The community became not only self-sustaining but wealthy. Shrewd ‘Shaker farmers bought the best and richest lands for the communities, the Shaker workshops humming at broom and furniture making, their machin- ists invented the buzz-saw, ang money rolled in on the simple people. Their furniture and other products became famous for soundness and appearance. Exploited by Unscrupulous. Exploited by unscrupulous leaders, the strength of the Shaker colonses was dissipated as their wealth grew. Religious fervor no longer flourished, the binding tie that held all in the community was broken, the socialistic loid types of people and on the other ; the American Indian, more particular Iv those of Alaska and the northwest eoust. “With the evidence now in our nands there can be no longer any hes- itation,” concludes Doctor Hrdlicka, “in believing that the Eskimo and In- diun originally were not any two dis- tinct races nor even widely distinct and far away types. but that if we contd go a little back in time they wonld be found te be like two neigh- woring fingers of one hand. both pro- ceeding from ‘the same palm, or source.” Farther exploration in the Far North. Doetor Hrdlicka is convinced, wil] be relatively simple and in a few years is bound to bring far-reaching conclusions. “Up Salt Creek” Born in Clay’s Campaign Shepherdsville. Ky. — “Up Salt reek” has long been a popular ex- pression with a mooted origin, but Dr. G. ©. Crist, grandson of Gen. Henry Crist, Kentucky congressman, traces the phrase to a campaign of Henry Clay for the presidency. The Sunday before the election, the local legend goes, Clay was far down the Ohio river and hired a boatman to row him te Louisville. Clay's oppo- nents bribed the boatman, and when the skiff bearing Clay reached the mouth of Salt river the boatman quiet- ly slipped into the smaller stream, his passenger being unaware of the move. After the votes were in some one asked as to Clay's whereabouts. “He's gone up Salt creek,” was the reply. The phrase Is a popular figure of speech to denote dismay or defeat. Make Cattle Immune London.—Cattle have been made im- - mune from tuberculosis by a Swiss biologist, Dr. Henry Spahlinger. The principle is described in a dispatch to the Daily Mail as the same as vac- sination against smallpox. Wove Her Own Shroud Evening Shade, Ark.—In cloth woven oy hand from threads she herself had spun fifty years ago, relatives wrapped the hody of Mrs. Paralee M. Stovall, who (Hed here at the age of ninety- seven principle of equal distribution aban- doned. Shaker evangelists began to en- counter difficulty in gaining converts. With the promise of abundance no longer held out, people were skepti- cal of Shaker doctrines. The simple faith of itself possessed ne common appeal, and thus the sect dwindled away. Americans Hold Vigil on Peak for Science Cape Town, Union of South Africa.— Two Americans have begun a tonely thrée-year vigil on a mountain peak near here with a view to studying sun spots in the interest of better weather forecasting. Supplied with an immense amount of astronomical apparatus, F. Greely and W. Hoover took up their abode on the peak, a mile high, where the at- mosphere is clear of dust and there is little rain to interfere with their ob- servations. They have a wireless set and can listen in on the radio concerts at Jo: hannesburg and Cape Town. The observations are being carried on under the direction of the Smith- sonian institution in connection with similar observations in Chile and Cali- fornia. Tide Reveals Old Ships Constantinople.—Five ancient ves. sels, 400 years old. were brought to light by an unprecedented low tide following the recent hurricane on the Baltic coast. | OPPRRROCRRRERRRRRRORERE®® Poor Scotsman Finds He's Heir to Fortune London. — While playing a melodeon on the streets of Kirk- caldy, Scotland, to pick up a few pennies, and his only daugh- ter was being cared for in a children’s home, Andrew Hil- lock, a widower, fifty-eight, was told that he had inherited a for- tune worth more than a million dollars through the death of his great-uncle, Andrew Hillock, in Australia nearly a year before. Hillock and his daughter recent- ly left for Australia to view the extensive sheep ranches, fruit farms and a mansion surround- ed by thousands of acres of fer- tile lands that now are his. 0.0,00/0,00,00000, aon. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN The Candidate is around Mitting the Voter, who is Receiving Gobs of At tention for a Change. After Election he Will Tell the Voter Go Take a Gal- lop for Himself, but Right Now the Candidate will Promise Anything. We'd Hate to be a Candidate and Promise Things We Couldn't Deliver. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN ARLES GUGHROE Behold the Classy Loafer with a Fu- migating Fag pasted to his Lower Lip, waiting for a Good Job to Turn Up, when he is going to Blow this Hick Town. As he Nonchalantly Poses against the Cigar Case, trying to Look like Clarence X. Marshmallow but re- sembling Charlie Chaplin more, he's one reason for the H. C. of L. san Faulty Elimination Should Be Corrected—Good Elimination Is Essential to Good Health. F you would be well, see to your elimination. Faulty kidney ac- tion permits toxic material to re- main in the blood and upset the whole system. Then, one is apt to have a tired, languid feeling and, sometimes, a toxic backache or head- ache, and often some irregularity of secretions, such as scanty or burn- ing passages. More and more people are acclaiming the value of Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in this condition. For more than forty years Doan’s have been winning favor the country over. Ask your neighbor! DOAN’ PILLS 60c Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y. 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. I. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. 34-34 CHICHESTER S PILLS Ask your His d aod a 3 = All Suits |-3 THE MOST DRASTIC CLEARANCE REDUCTIONS , =r ON—— Suits & Overcoats Ever Offered in Bellefonte All Overcoats in our entire store are offered for quick selling at Off THE REGULAR PRICE. None reserved. Our entire stock of SUITS and on the block. Don’t miss it. OVERCOATS is Watch our windows A. FAUBLE