AMERICA’S NATIONAL SHRINE MOUNT VERNON, HOME OF FIRST PRESIDENT RO Se) Mount Vernon illustrates clearly the Washington Great Military Genius In Soundness of Judg- ment No Other Com- mander His Equal. Nothing new can be said on Wash- ington’s character, statesmanship or patriotism. Noth- ing old can be sald on these subjects with much chance of being better phrased than Byron’s summary of him: The first, the last, the best, The Cincinnatus of the West, Whom envy dared mot hate; or Kipling’s more detailed presentment in “If” But in spite of all that has been written on the man, few students have taken Washington's full measure as a soldier, and fewer still realize how far he prefigured the scientific and Industrial age in which we are living today. The average person thinks of a great general as one who commands a great army. It would be possible to get farther from the truth than that, but not without prolonged effort. There is a point at which the mere size of an army taxes the genius of its com mander; but that point was not reached until the Twentieth century. Judged by the real test, that of achievement in proportion to means and obstacles, Washington is one of the four or five greatest commanders produced by the English-speaking race; probably the greatest. Greatly Handicapped. Consider his difficulties. To begin with, he was serving a revolutionary committee, not a real government ; and was not backed by any of the governmental powers which supported European commanders, The congress of that day could not levy taxes, could not enforce conscription, could not pay {ts men or provide supplies. The men were enlisted for varying terms, al- most always for short terms, The offi- cers had little training. The different colonies were unaccustomed to act to- gether. There was only the beginning of a national feeling and national consciousness, and the British, what- ever thelr weaknesses, had splendidly disciplined troops and held the sea. Yet, in the face of obstacles like ‘these, ‘Washington kept an army to- gether and made headway against the enemy until he could deal the finish- ing ‘blow at Yorktown. His Trenton campaign maneuvers were almost equally sa. The skill with which ‘he nalled .Olinton to New York while the Continental army was making its 400- | mile march to catch Cornwallis at Yorktown is fully equal to that by: which Napoleon caught General Maek 1 asleep at Ulm, No Errors Mar Record. On one point of military genius, in- | decd, Washington is superior even te the Corsican Caesar. who in all things else ranks at the head of the martial world. No man can put his fingers on any point in Washingten’s cam- | paigns and say: “Here this man made a serious mistake.” The soundness of his judgment was almost uncanny. Perhaps this judgment was due in some measure to the scientific quality | of his mind, His approach to science was more practical than that of Franklin, but equally zealous. Wash- ington conducted experiment after ex- periment in drainage, crop rotation, different methods of fertilizing. His notes on these matters are worthy of attention from agricultural colleges today. He berated Virginia's depend- ence on tobacco as bitterly as, more than a eentury later, Seaman Knapp lashed the dependence of the gulf states on cotton. Always seeking better and more economical methods of production, al- ways trying to utilize by-products, al- ways ready for a “flyer” in land, which was the Eighteenth century substitute for industrial promotion, Washington was startlingly modern in many as- pects of his mind, Where this mod- ernism fails, it might pay us to get closer to the Washingtonian viewpoint, even at the cost of being somewhat old fashioned, Ranks«With Noblest Thoroughly human, absolutely fear- less, conqueror of himself, we may put George Washington's record un- der the microscope of criticism and yet gay, with the English historian: “No nobler figure ever stoed in the forefront of a nation’s history.” : self-dependent life of a South-before- , the-war Virginia plantation. There are, besides the mansion, about thirty buildings on the estate, includ- ing the kitchen, the office, the garden- er's house, Lhe carpenter shop, the but- ler's house, the smokehouse, the spring- house, the milkhouse, the cornhouse, two houses for servants’ quarters, the shelter house in the deer park, two lodgehouses at the north gate, the pa- vilion at the wharf, seven cabins, two lodgehouses at the west gate, a coach- house and a barn. The mark of a dominant individual- ism is all over the place, as assertive and distinctive today as when Wash- ington took over the premises on the dently of hus hulf brother, Lawrence Washington,” in 1752, and began to tinker with the premises, up to his death 47 years afterward. Washing- ton was mole than a country gentle- man. He was lhe head of a household of about 150 negroes—all of whom he set free at his death—trained in the vari- ous occupations so necessary to the self-dependent estates of those days. Washington loved trees with a de- voted appreciation. He planted and cared for them. He laid out his grounds with expert judgment; those about the house were made in the form of a shield, the center of the shield being a smooth, treeless lawn. About this level greensward a background of trees and shrubbery was planted. Everything is as he left it—the open, grassy lawn at the front of the house and the furniture in the mansion, Two courteous gentlemen of the old school have the task of keeping green this important Washington memory {or the future inspection of all who love the cause of liberty and revere tha name of Washington. Greatness Far Above Any Human Frailties The great meaning of Washington is his noble and unselfish patriotism. The philosophy of Bacon is not viti- ated by the fact that he was “the meanest of mankind.” Daniel Web- ster’s oratory and Edgar Poe's poetry are far more important than the fact that the orator and the poet occasion- ally became inebriated. Abraham Lin- coln’s funny stories—and sometimes silly stories and perhaps even ques- tionable stories—are not the essential points of the emancipator’s life. Shakespeare's deer stealing is of no weight in our estimate of him as the world's greatest man of letters. Car- lyle’s sourness of temper and mean- ness to his wife does rot detract from Lis merit as essayist and historian. Even the frivelities and frailties of “Robbie” Burns fail to lessen poster- ity’s respect for the genius of the peasant poet. So it is with George Washington. Only small faults which were com- men to all gentlemen of his day are alleged against him; whether or not the allegations are true is a matter of supreme unimportance. What is important is that George Washington was gifted by mature to be the leader in one of the mest significant move- ments in the world history. These are the things that Americans should remember on the twenty-second day of February.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. FOR YOUNG AMERICA The figure of Washington remains vividly real and human in the minds of the American people. He is not a mere tradition. His peculiarities of character are intimately known. His words are currently quoted. His per- sonal appearance is familiar. He is, indeed, living “in the hearts of his countrymen.” And that is why on this annual occasion the country pauses te pay him the tribute of grat. itude and respect and devotion. ' | of blood and footprints at the edge nS ATER HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters arc spell words both vertieally and horizontally. fndicated by a number, which refers to hus No. 1 under fll the white spaces up to the first ‘under “vertical” defines a word which black one below. No letters go in the tionary words, except proper names. terms and obsolete forms are indicated CROSS-WORD (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. 1—Apartments of women in a Mo- hammedan house §—A musical instrument 9—A pronoun 10—Distinguished i2—A note of the musical scale 14—On the condition 15—A period 16—Noting motion toward 18—Spherical 20—One who rends 23—A falsehood 24—An interjection 25—An implement for sewing 28—To deprive of horns 81—A negative answer 32—A diphthong 22—Upon 83—Group of five 36—Alarms 39—Like 40—A grain 41—Abbreviation for the ‘state where the tall corn 42—Escorters 44—A collection of four 46—A printer's measure 47—A beverage 49—Same as 41 horizontal 50—East Indies (abbr.) 52—Pertaining to living organisms 65—A pronoun 56—A carousal grows” 67—Fear Solution will appear in next issue the column headed “horizontal” black square to the right, placed in the white spaces this puzzle will The first letter In each word is the definition listed below the puzzle. defines a word which will and a number will fill the white squares to the mext black spaces. All words used are diec- Abbreviations, slang, fnitials, technical in the definitions. PUZZLE No. 2. Vertical. 1—A pronoun 2—To pay back 3—A printer's measure 4—The center 5—Fondled 6—Within 7—Fasten 8§—From 9—An abnormal type 11—A negative answer 13—Garment to protect clothing 14—A pronoun 17—A conjunction 19—One alone 21—A genus of tropical plant 26—An age 27—A meadow 929—An elongated fish 30—An implement for rowing a boat 33—Cessation 34—Vibratory motion 35—The nature of a dose of medl- cine 36—Listen 37—Attract 38—A girl's name 43—A pronoun 45—Sun god . 48-—A note of the musical scale 51--A form of the verb “to be” 53— Prefix meaning again 54— An assimilated form of prefix Mn. 55— Doctor of medicine (abbr.) Are Interested in New Fish Harbor. Sportsmen (Continued from page 6, Col. 5.) fishway is thirty feet long and seven- teen wide, with a solid cement bot- tom. The flood spillway is twenty feet wide, reinforced with stone. Because there was no charge for the engineer- ing service, given by Thomas Morgan, of the Maderia-Hill Coal Company, and because much of the labor was performed by members of the asso- ciation, the cost was only about $2000. The expense fund was raised by an appropriation from the association treasury and through contribution from 115 individuals and business firms in the region. Black Moshannon derives its name from the color, or seeming color, of its waters. To peer into its depths the water looks black, and the bottom is of the same dingy color. How- ever, when dipped from the stream in a pail or drinking vessel, it appears to be entirely clear. Chemists who have made analysis of it say it is one of the purest streams in the State. It has its source in and treverses Rus township, the largest township in Cen- tre county. Much of the area is wild and unimproved land. No railroads are near the stream, but during the summer the dirt read, known as the old Bellefonte pike, is usually in good condition. The dam lies northeast of Philipsburg. The surrounding territory is ome of the best deer hunting grounds in central Pennsylvania, and. because of its iso- lation is the habitation of numerous beasts of prey. It is a favorite re- gion for trappers, who each year take numerous wildcats and foxes. The dam for several weeks has been frozen over and has a blanket of snow. An inspection the other day revealed a tragedy of the wilderness. A splotch of a water hole showed where a wild- ' cat, most ruthless of the killers, and probably frantic from hunger mad- ness as a result of the deep snow on tha ground, had pounced upon a young deer in search of water. A short dis- tance back in the undergrowth was found the remains of the carcass, dragged there by the savage beast to afford another meal. A pair of beavers have also made their home on the stream, and have gnawed off a number of partly grown trees with which to build their home. They feed upon the trees during the winter. These beavers were forward- ed during the summer by the State Game Commission to the keeper of | the Rush township game refuge, who had placed them on another stream. The locality apparently did not please them, possibly because of insufficient isolation. They moved. Their presence at Black Moshannon near the fish dam, was discovered by deer hunters early in the winter. It is expected to make the fish dam a recreation centre for all who care to visit the place. Anybody with a license will be allowed to fish there in season, and boating and swimming will be permitted. However, no mo- tor boats will be allowed on the dam. Motor boats are said to be destruc- tive to spawning beds and the engine exhaust frightens the trout. The founder of the State Centre Game, Fish and Forestry Association and one of its most active members | is Andrew G. Ericson, taxidermist and secretary of the body. The president Solution to Last Week's Puzzle. 'v[1]C[T[o/RIL [O|N|DI|OIN _[ABOMNL [AD/EINEROMY | NOT! I INJHOICITIRTR 1 YB O|CHRIE Ss ITIrlOID ABH ATE Y|O[UIR LIE|EIR[S| LBA RIO LLAMA R[O[T|O|R 1S 1ISEIENBSENIAPE cBRIEPEL TISIRPIEP HEBIA|LEBRO/E|REMP A El ABA DORERBE! nlupl1|TIYIREINIDIEIAR is Willis N. Zeitler whose untiring ef- forts in enrolling members has made the association one of the largest of its kind in the State. He is deeply interested in conservation and wildlife. burg, was the association’s first presi- | dent. He is now chairman of the fish | committee. | Harry B. Scott, of Philipsburg, | elected in November as State senator from the Centre-Clearfield district, is chairman of the game committee. He has been one of the association’s most aggressive members. J. Frank Kep- hart, devoted to both fishing and hunt- ing, is treasurer. Paul Harper, wide- ly known as an expert rifle shot, is as- sistant secretary. Among the members are other well known citizens of the region. Twe of its most active workers are former members of the Legislature, Philip E. Womelsdorff of Philipsburg, and Peter McDermott of Clearfield county. The latter is vice president of the organi- zation.—“Brookville Republican.” Humming Bird: wm cegard to the materials used by humming birds in constructing their nests, I wish to say that no hair or feathers are ever used. The nests are built of lichens and attached to the limb which is as nearly as possible the exact color of the lichens used, hence the difficulty in locating the nests of humming birds with the human eyes. The nest is never hidden but merely cunningly camouflaged. — Pathfinder Magazine. Prefers Prison | Miw:ukee.—Lonely outside prison walls Rifichael J. Harris is going to spend the rest of his life among his the old-timers inside. Pa- voted in 1018, he insisted upon return- ne “home.” Poerlends, | i Nearly 80,000 disabled veterans are assisted by the American Red Cross on an average every month. Care of the disabled veteran is a foremost responsibility of the Red Cross, in which the people can ehare by joining its ranks during the Tenth Annual Roll Call, November 11 to 25. Sr ——————————— The American Red Cross is the official agency of the United States for disaster relief at home or abroad. | Soin during the Tenth Annual Roll | Call from November 11 to 25 and share its services. Do Not Experiment CONSULT US ABOUT MAKING YOUR WILL Unless it’s provisions are very simple and clear you may make serious mis- takes. And do not delay. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA John W. Beals, burgess of Philips-! Sa Women’s Banks wo Banks in the United States, one in the middle west and the other in the south, are conducted exclusively by women and for women. Our Bank employs the efficient service of both sexes and its patrons are a multitude of satisfied men and women. : THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 2 STATE COLLEGE, PA. aE as VS SLA A ASNT) fs) SANTO ,ANAATG ARRAN DARARRAIO ARRAN i SASIAEANNNYE] MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM eee ———, oo ob be Or Oe One® o%e% o% P00 e% Peele ete ote oleate ado ade goede ed Sooleslesteedeedeeleateeleelrateataadealsate ale seniaeie a ere ogee +0 Ca 4 7 * Lyon&Co. Lyon & Co. C/ (LD) * Qe & % oe 3 3 0 %’ oe oe ° ° ° ° 3S % Avisit to this store during 3 % the month of February means a & % big saving to you. kA oo “ne oe 0 o% oo > & © SPECIAL REDUCTIONS oe oH ©, & | | 3 £ INEVERY DEPARTMENT & 0 ¢ & : & & All Winter Goods must go oo oe 4 regardless of cost this month. XS 3: : & & 4 > bee ot : & & Drastic reductions in Rugs, 3 oo oo ° ° $ % Linoleums and Window Shades. % oe o¢ ES o Oe NG NCS oe 2 If in need of Rugs or Carpets 5 ° eo o : < * don’t fail to visit our Carpet De- oe oe 3 *¢ partment. - oe & % == ¥ +0 0 s 3 Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. 3 P, Biot doi odo ob dso deeded