“Bellefonte, Pa, March 4th, 1927. HARI SINGH'S INDIAN REGIME SUCCESSFUL Was “Mr. A.” of Notorious Robinson Divorce Case Srinagar, India.—It is now a year gince his highness Maharajah of Kashmir, Sir Hari Singh—“Mr. A"— eame, to the throne. Ever since 1921 {he was president of the executive eouncil and had supported the cause of reform in every way. But since {the disclosure of the notorious Rob- dnson divorce case, he went into re- tirement for more than si~ months, undergoing religious penan e in or- [der to appease his rigidly orthodox uncle and his still more eccentric ¢' terle of old Hindu pundits. Many were the almost unheard of old and curious customs in this bor- der state of Kashmir, which had to be faced by the young maharajah. It may be interesting to note that on the death of his old uncle, the chief exec- utive office of the state issued a gen- eral order of “Bhadan,” or the shav- ing of the beard, the mustache and the head of every Hindu male over sixteen years of age on the tenth da- after the maharajah’s death. Disbands Swan Battalion. Then again among the various re sponsibilities which the maharajah in- herited was the special Swan battal- fon of 300 swans, absolutely white, headed by a creamy-colored one, a pet scheme of his old uncle, who believed them to be sacred birds belonging to Brahma, the creator of the Hindu trinity. They had a spetial guard with swans as their emblem and the whole battalion was taken to the royal tanks in the morning from the speclal inclosure in the maharajah’s palace and escorted back in the eve- ning. The roads on these occasions were closed to all traffic while the m- festic birds waddled forth, Sir Hari Singh wanted to get rid of the swans, but the pundits forbade It, saying that they were sacred. Sir Har] turned the tables on them nicely by making presents of them to all the old orthodox councilors of his uncle whe had taken prominent part in mak- ing him do penance for his sins In #ngiand. He sald that they were the custodians of the faith of his uncle and as a mark of royal favor he quiet- Ys distributed the swans amongst them, asking them to take special eare of the sacred birds. This re moved one of the stock attractions of Jammu, but decreased an enormous waste of palace money on the upkeep of the swans. One of the main departments of the state was forests. Kashmir is well known for its valuable forests, but the eld maharajah had given precious lit- tle attention to them. Under Sir Hari Singh the situation improved and by the ‘end of October, after a year of his rule, the department returns showed a profit of £300,000 instead of aniy $50.000, recorded in the year pre- vious, The Kashmir forest depart: ment controls about 10.000 square miles of jungle. or over 609.000.000 ‘Reres. .... - Stops Waste by Fire. » The villages used to burn large areas for making clearings to cultl- vate grass fodder. The new mahara- Jan introduced resin tapping as a new industry and instead of the 100 square miles of forest burnt by villagers the year previous there was not a single ‘square mile burnt during last year. The’ strengthening of the forest de- gartment has resulted in stopping all ‘smuggling and raiding and, with the ‘newly appointed staff of European of- ficers, It Is hoped that this will cease. These officers have been lent to the Kashmir state by the government of India and have been specially detalled for the purpose. The young maharajah has become are most popular figure In the state at the present time. Possessor of al- most unteld wealth. his highness Is the embodiment of simplicity. in his personal life. He is wearing white ‘homespun cloth called khaddar. so much favored by Mahatma Gandl. ‘He goes on observing all the old re tigious rites laid down by Hindulsm, with. punctilious regard for the old ¥ites and ceremonies. He went on a pligrimage on foot to the Shri Nathy’s cave In the United provinces accom- panied by a large retinue and thou- sands of pligrims and gave away val- uable presents, Including an all-gold coat studded with jewels valued at .qver £25,000, Baby Born on Liner to Have Free Ticket for Life New York.—Because Lydia Bellach, nine days old, was born at sea, she: will be permitted to make a round trip to Italy free of charge any time she ¢hooses, The child was born on the Qosulich liner Presidente Wilson, while her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bellach, were returning from a visit to Italy. When the vessel docked in ‘Brooklyn, Guiseppe Cosulich, New ‘York head of the line, presented the parents with a certificate entitling the child to free travel because, he sald, she was the first baby born on a Cosulich liner In 1927, Betting Tax Pays Liondon.—The betting tax which embe into force In England last No. | vember ylelded $1,680,000 for the first month NEW FUEL STATION FOR NORTH PACIFIC Stopover on “Great Circle” Route Provided. Tacoma, Wash.—For the first time in the history of transpacific shipping vessels of American steamship lines will be enabled to make a stopover along the “Great Circle” route to Ja- pan and China by the establishment of a fueling station on Kiska island, s* the end of the long Aleutian chain. One of the paramount advantages of a fueling station about half way across the ocean is the conservation of space for cargo. During recent months the American line vessels have carried capacity loads and cargo offer- ings have been refused because of the necessity of reserving ample storage for the enormous quantity of fuel re. quired in the eleven to fourteen-day trip of constant steaming. When the fueling facilities on Kiska island are feasible the big ships need carry only enough coal and oll tr reach the reserve supply there. The United States navy has held a claim on Kiska island for many years for its fueling and naval advantages in case of war. In the case of its being used soon in peaceful vocations excel- lent quality of coal and possibly crude oil may be found near Anchorage, Alaska, It is also known that coal exists on the island itself as well ar on others of the Aleutian chain. Out on the end of the Aleutian is- lands is Attu, the farthest west of the North American continent. When the summer's sun has set on Attu it is rising on the coast of Maine. Near- by is Kiska island, potential nava’ base and mid-pacific fueling station. As a further aid to navigation it is planned to establish on Kiska a gizan- tic radio station located in a strategic position to be in communication with shipping in all parts of the north Pacific, Mary, ‘Champ’ Mouser, Has Post With U. S. ‘Washington.—There is a cat called Mary, whose white coat bears unmis- takable evidence that her vague an- cestry includes at least one member of the tortoise shell persuasion. She Is not a large cat, but she is, certain- ly, a feminist and occupies a position of trust and importance in the na- tion's government. Aary prefers to work at night and sleep in the daytime. Her post of duty is that section of the extensive capitol basement which lies directly beneath the celebrated dome—the hub of one of the main wheels in the gov- ernmental machinery. There the rats are plentiful and Mary does well, earn- ing not only a good living but a rep- utation as a good mouser. Jther cats have similar assignments in different parts of the old basement, but Mary seems to have the most notable record. Considering the age of the basement and the number of holes and crannies that offer harbor to rats, David Lynn, architect of the capitol, sees little likelihood that the staff of mousers will have a chance for some time to become lazy through lack of work, —ounterfeiter’s Error Produces a $15 Biil Chicago.—Alfred Jones, a skillfu! engraver and printer, turned out such perfect imitations of whisky and other labels that he even drank part of the contents of a bottle bearing one of his own labels and spent several painful days recovering. Then, when he emerged from the nospital he purchased a few blank plates and some suitable chisels and went to work on another project. Two weeks ago the Department ot Justice became aware that somebody was issuing counterfeit paper currency and secret service men traced it to Jones, who had made the fatal error -of passing one of his new bills on his landlady. “Why did you make a $15 bill?” in- quired the chief of staff. “Typographical error,” Jones, as he was led away. tended to make a $25 bill.” said Mr. “lI in- New Machine Extracts Oil From Shale and Sand Nashington.—A process which ex- racts usable petroleum products from oil shale rock, oil-soaked sands. and surface bitumen has been devised by two engineers of the bureau of mines, C. P. Bowie and J. M. Gavin. The process may be of great economic value in the future, the bureau de- clares, because it will enable the pro- duction of lubricants and fuel in the United States long after the present liquid and freely flowing deposits of pil have been exhausted. Farmers to Tame Wild Berries of Far West Woodlawn, Wash.—Blueberries and their cousins, the huckle- berries, growing wild in the West for ages past, have suc- cumbed to the farmer mission- aries, and next will appear on the markets as cultivated fruits. Demonstrations and experiments have shown these forest vines do much better under cultivation, fertilizing and tying to trellis work, The ple lovers may ex- pect to greet bigger and better blueberries under crust, LUMBERMEN FINDING THAT FORESTRY PAYS Hard-Headed Business Mep Follow Lead of U. S. Washington.—The illusion of inex- haustible virgin forests has spent it- self and in the lumber business for- estry has come to be the economic competitor of transportation, says W. B. Greely, chief of the United States forest service. As long as cheap virgin stumpage was at hand within a reasonable dis- tance of the lumber and paper mar- kets there was no place for systematic timber growing in the economic scheme of things, the forestry expert declares in the annual report of the Smithsonian institution for 1925 just issued. Once the cost of transport- ing lumber from the nearest forest ex- ceeds the cost of growing it at home, hard-headed business men realize that forestry pays. Forest conservation in the United: States has up to the present time been largely a matter of public ownership of timberland and public policies | based on foresight of coming national | necessity, Mr. Greely says. Now, how- ever, it is percolating down into the counting house and directors’ boars rooms. Must Provide New Supply. As the timber shortage grows more critical the wood-using industries reec- ognize the alternatives they face of. either providing future raw materis’ or going out of existence, “Undoubtedly we must and will learn to use less wood,” continues Mr. Greely. “Steel, cement and slap prod- ucts have been substituted for con- struction lumber, and coal, oil and electricity are replacing it for fuel. But as these substitutions increase new uses for wood like that in the rayon textile industry are constantly being evolved out of the chemistry laboratory and the range of such wood-using products continues tr widen.” : Careful conservation of the timber we already have, elimination of for- est wasi. to the last foot and gener- ous growing of new trees point the way to the solution of our forest pro* lem, declares the expert, A research institution that has for its object the detailed study of all the known insect carriers of disease is a new project In sclence. A pro- posal of such a beneficent foundation has been made by Dr. L, O. Howard. chief of the United States bureau of entomology. Not only the insects of bad reputa- tions of long standing, like the anoph- eles mosquito associated with malaria, but the close relatives of all the dis- ease-bearing species should be studied in a.well-equipped service “by. compe-, tent men untrammeled. in their work and assisted to the limit of their ne- cessities in a financial way,” declare Doctor Howard. Organic chemistry as an aid to the entomologist in deallng with the in- sect pest problem was stressed by the well-known sclentist In his report. Knowledge" of the chemistry of the physiological changes that insects un- dergo is essential, he stated. Study ! of the chemistry of the plants on which they feed would help to give a clearer understanding of what there is about certain plants that attracts certain insects. Such problems would have a very Important bearing ece aomically on many crop pests. Annihilation of injurious insects hy poison gas is another phase of chem- istry along the lines of which Doctor Howard believes valuable progres may be made in the future. : “We must look to the chemist.” he declared, “for the development of the most perfect insecticide, which must be a cheap compound that will at once stimulate plant life and deter o destroy insects.” Reports Cannibal Butterflies. Cannibal butterflies and caterpll- lars that give off electric shocks are among the phenomena of nature de- seribed by Dr. Austin H. Clark of the United States National museum in the report of the institution. Certain butterflies found in the Ori. «nt and in our own New England re. verse the usual vegetation habits of their kind and feed on plant lice and mealy bugs during the larval stage, says Doctor Clark. Little butterflies of the kind known as hairstreaks carry this practice to the point of at- tacking their own species during the helpless state of transition from the larva into pupa. Before the pupa case is hardened preparatory for the dor- mant period during the winter the in- seet is practically at the mercy of its fellows, who frequently fall upon it and devour it. The “electric” caterpillars were found in Nigeria feeding on mistletoe flowers. While handling them the col. lector experienced nn tingling sensa- tion distinctly resembling an electric shock, exnlained Doctor Clark, though the insects had no bristles or other protrusions that would cause irrita- tion, Save the birds if you would save che erone is the keynote of a report | hy W 1 MrAtee of the United States mrvey, { hioloo! their favorite 2 | jal © n is based on findings ac fom extensive surveys of bv experts throughout the "~ns in Cavalry n There are now 25 full dn the first squadron ‘ry. stationed at Fort 1 post from which cav- A dave onerated against VALUABLE FURS FROM FAR NORTH Season in Alaska Is Reported to Be Goed. Seattle, Wash.—Smelling of the wil- derness and the smoke of trappers’ cabins, large bales of valuable furs’ are arriving here from the far North- west to a reception by greedy fur buyers, representing a pelt-hungry market in New York and London. There are thousands of mink, musk- rat and ermine; large numbers of ot- ter, lynx and beaver; fewer marten and wolf, with a heavy sprinkling of the various-hued foxes. Trappers report a good season in Alaska, Yukon territory and northwest Canada. Fur bearers increased the last year at an amazing rate because of the abundance of hares, birds and other natural food sources. The trapping season is about one- third over In Alaska and the Yukon country, while in the Arctic reaches it has just begun. Prices for all kinds of fur are steady with a tendency upward as is Justified by the quality of the offer- ings. Practically all the furs shipped here are dispatched at once to east- ern manufacturing centers for imme- diate use. The amount of furs on hand in apparel shops in New York is the smallest in years, due to the heavy demand for garments s» adorned. The Seattle fur exchange held its monthly fur sale recently, at which time the largest collection of north- west and Siberian furs ever assembled here was sold. The value of the pelts ran close to $1,000,000. This winter, declare fur buyers, the quality of peltries is far above the average. There is no slowing down in the de- mand for furs, so dealers expect higher prices in retail centers, South African Observer Finds Year’s First Comet Cambridge, Mass.—The first comet of 1927 was found by an amateur as- tronomer in South Africa on the eve of the first anniversary of his discov- ery of the second comet of 1926. Ac- cording to advices reaching Dr, Har- low Shapley, director of the Harvard college observatory here, from the In- ternational Bureau of Astronomical Telegrams of Copenhagen, Denmark, the amateur, Blathwayt by name, picked up a ninth magnitude comet on Thursday, January 13. It was on January 16, 1926, that he discovered the first comet, which was named after him. Vhen he located the new visitor ~arly on the morning of January 13, it was In the constellation of Scorpio, which can be seen low in the south- eastern sky just before sunrise at this time of year, Astronomically its po- sition at the time of discovery is expressed as 15 hours 44 minutes right ascension, and 29 degrees 46 minutes south declination. It was moving to the southeast, which makes it still lower in the sky for American observ- ers, so probably no observers in north- ern countries will be able to see it at all. At Braamfontein, near Johannes. | burg, where the discoverer is located. however, it is now almost directly overhead at sunrise, and though it is too faint to be seen except with u telescope, it will probably be observed by other observatories in the south ern hemisphere. Bees Bring Wealth Out of Vast Swamp Vayeross, Ga.—Though never fully .xplored by man, Okefenokee swamp, known to the Indians as the land of trembling earth, has been encom- passed by an industry of 400,000,000 tiny workers. The last link of a 200-mile chain o: Aehives has just been completed within the 600 square miles of spongy land, located in southern Georgia and northern Florida. Abounding in thou- sands of flowers, gall berries, tupelo and black gums and red bays, the swamp now supplies a large part of the honey in eastern and southern markets. Besides the treacherous earth, the veekeepers have other obstacles. Bears have learned to protect them- selves from the bees while satisfying their appetite for honey. After smear- ing their bodles with rosin fresh from pine trees, the bears wallow in mud, giving themselves an armor the bees cannot penetrate. Try This Puzzler; It’s Too Much for Arkansas Little Rock, Ark.—Persons now in the employ of the state evidently are not mathemati- clans or technically minded per- sons, according to Governor Martineau, who has a problem on his hands that nobody has been able to solve. A Craighead county farmer wrote him to find out how much corn he bas in his crib. He evi- dently belleved that the gov- ernor was the man to apply to, for he recited that he wanted an answer “under the Arkansas law.” The dimensions of the crib which Is full of corn in the husk, are: Length, 40 feet; width at bot- tom, 10 feet; width at top, 11 feet 9 inches; depth of corn, 61% feet, State Forests Visited by Many Last Year. Harrisburg.-——Almost one miliion people visited the Pennsylvania State forests during 1926, according to a report issued today by the State De- partment of Forests and Waters. This is the largest number of forest users since the State began to handle forest land thirty years ago. The Moshan- non forest district, comprising the State-owned lands in Clearfield and Centre counties, led in the number of forest visitors with 200,500. The Lo- gan forest district, including a con- siderable part of the Seven Mountain section of Pennsylvania, came second with 159,250 State forest users. Hunters made up the bulk of the forest users. The official report shows that last year an army of 215- 700 enjoyed the sport of hunting on the State-owned lands. Among the other forest users were 34,825 fish- ermen, 111,800 users of public camp and 135,900 visitors to the State for- est parks.. There are now 1636 permanent camp sites on the State forest lands. The Delaware forest district, com- prising the State-owned land in Mon- roe and Pike counties, came first with a total of 378 leased camp sites. These camp sites are leased at an annual rental ranging from $7 to $15. The total income during 1926 from the rental of camp sites or the State for- ests was $14,598.10, of which $13,281.- 10 was deposited in the State school fund. There are now 1,131,786 acres in the State forests of Pennsylavnia. They are located chiefly in the moun- tainous parts of the State where the hunting, fishing and camping are at their best. Many permanent im- provements are added to the State forests each year. Forestry officials predict that during 1927 the visitors to the State-owned forest lands will exceed the million mark. Jack Rabbits Pest in Western States. Colby, Kans.—Jack rabbits are the worst pest in Western Kansas, and are giving the county authorities much trouble, even engaging the at- tention of the Kansas Supreme Court. A law requiring counties to pay a 5 cent bounty for each pair of jack rab- bits’ ears is emptying the treasuries of several counties. Thomas county has been slow to make payments, and William A. Smith, attorney-general, has petitioned the Supreme Court for a writ of mandam- us to compel the county to pay for all rabbit ears presented by hunters. A survey made by the Federal gov- ernment shows that there are 250 jack rabbits on every 640 acre-tract in nothwest Kansas, and it is estimated that these 250 rabbits will consume as much pasturage as 25 sheep. In December last, Grant county, near the Colorado line, paid $1,690 for 38,800 pairs of rabbit ears, and other counties are showing an equally alarming record. | = - I — ON ALL Winter Overcoats Men's or Boys Keep Eliminative System Active Good HealthRequiresGood Elimination NE can’t feel well when there is a retention of polsonous waste in the blood. This is cahed a toxic condition, and is apt to make one tired, dull and languid. Other symp- toms are sometimes toxic backaches and headaches. That the kidneys are not functioning properly is often shown by scanty or burning passage of secretions. Many people have learned the value of Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, when the kidneys seem functionally inactive. Every- where one finds enthusiastic Doan’s users. Ask your neighbor! DOA N’ PILLS 60c Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Fosker-Milburn Co.. Mfe. Chem.. Buffalo. N. Y. west. 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. 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