Demorvali, Watchman, — —— Bellefonte, Pa., April 29, 1927. Rome and It’s Wonders AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Ey Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D. Above ground Rome is a curious and wonderful city, a city so often de- molished and rebuilt that the foun- dations of the most ancient buildings are now found when excavated to be some forty feet below the general lev- el of the present city. Very interest- ing are the few fragments, of its an- cient architecture remaining, the Pan- theon once filled with Pagan Gods, the Colosseum in which gladiators fought not with gloves but weapons to the death, the arena in which the Christians were thrown to the tender mercies of the lion of Africa, the re- mains of the Mamertuiel prison in which Paul was chained to a Roman soldier yet taught liberty to mankind, the Roman Forum where Senators sat, Cicero orated, and Cataline de- fended himself and Caesar covered himself with his mantle as he exclaim- ed et te Brute! the Arch of Titus built by Jews spared from the distruction of Jerusalem on which is sculptured the only representation extant of the Ark of the Covenant, the aqueduct which stretches its dead body across the Campagna, the more modern Cath- edral of St. Peter, St. John Lateran with its Pilate’s Staircase whose mar- ble steps are worn deep by knees of ascending penitents, Santa Maria Maggirra a gem of unimagined ex- quisiteness, the Sistine Chapel with its last Judgment of Angelo and its chapters of Creation, the Vatican with its stanzas of Raphael, the castle of St. Angelo with its Sinister history, the Pincian Gardens, the Tarpeian Rock, Capitoline Hill, these and a thousand cbjects beside would take a volume to describe. But subterraneau Rome is yet more astonishing. Be- low her ancient streets in obscure vaults whose darkness is now lighted by naught but phosphorescent fires we peer about for the tokens of the « . . . primitive Christians who burrow- ed in these humid and gloomy caves of the earth and “kept the faith” which gave ‘vitality to the human conscience and enlightenment to the world. There remains only a memory of that upper population whose power once governed the world. Of the in- stitutions they organized we see but faint traces. Broken walls, a few arches, some columns, half legible in- scriptions, mutilated statues, things looking like the spoil of a terrible tempest, these are all that remain of the Caesars who conquered so many provinces. But beneath all the splen- dor and power of Pagan Rome lay the Catacombs. The only temple permitted to Christian worship entered like the dens of wild animals and peopled by some- humble sectarians, who possessed for their only power Prayer for their only victory martrdom. Oft- en tortured in the drunken orgies of the Capital, cast among the wild beasts of the Colosseum when appre- bended, burlesqued by Lucian, ridicul- ed by the most admired writers, with the whole power cf Rome arrayed against them, who would have dream- | | | ed of the final victory of these believ- | ers in the crucified Jesus. For arms they had the glad tidings of “peace on earth and good will to men,” for riches their faith, for power their resignation, for legions, the legions of martyrs, for property, the tombs. The Roman law protected before all the places of sepulture. The same Em- perors who persecuted the Christians as believers respected them as propri- etors. By means of this superstitious respect of Pagans for property the Christians obtained a home for their worship and a resting place for their dead entire in the sepultures. Thus dead and deposited their ashes in vases of marble or porphyry. But the Christians believing not only in the ! immortality of the soul but also in the | ! 1 | | resurrection of the body buried their | dead entire in the sepultures. the cities of the dead assumed propor- tions as colossal as the living and be- reath the palaces of Rome there soon extended. With streets CrOSSWays, squares stretching toward the four points of the horizon a city of the dead which notwithstanding quickened the new spirit destined to destroy Rome and to build on her ruins another civil- ization. About ‘four miles eastward of Rome between the via ‘appia 'and-the via. Ardeatine under heaps of all sorts of debris and close to cypress groves which deépén the melancholy of the landscape we descended into the Cat- acombs of San Sebastian and entered the immense labyrinths in which the primitive Christians hid themselves the sepulchral furrows in which were planted the first germs of the Chris. tian religion! Instinctively our imag- ination transported us to the ages of persecution. In the dark Caverns we seemed to hear the religious Psalmody half repressed by terror and to behold the arrival of those who brought the remains of the martyrs collected from the refuse of the circus to deposit them in their tombs and raise altars whereon burned the mystic lamp. We took but little interest in the artis- tic controversies which the Catacomb have exeited among those learned in Archaeology. We did not see in the paintings inspirations of ancient art or of the new faith. We did not see the heaven that Ozinam saw in the eyes of the worshippers, nor the spir- ituality of the middle ages in the frescoes of the Catacombs. But pic- tured on fresco and sculptured on stone we did behold the first tentative efforts of the Christian imagination io Saghion its eoeeDtipns of jhe sun oring power of the gospel o e Son of God. Forms are con- tracted with grief and lips sigh with sorrowful desire. How long! How long! They seem to cry plain tively. And as if in answer we see de- picted on the walls the anchor as the symbol of hope, the crook of the good Thus | ' shepherd, the lamb resigned to the holocaust, the ship of the church de- fying all tempests, the mystic vine whose branches overshadow the world, the divine woman walking upon the water of the sea with her child in her arms, the star on her forehead, the supper a frugal meal and one nourish- ing to the soul, the resurrection of Lazarus coming forth from the sepul- cre, revivified by the divine word which fell upon his mouldering fiesh and awakened it to a new life as the gospel kindled anew the old world. The first thing that astonishes one on descending into the tombs is the gigantic labor of those who excavat- ed them without having either the mechanical or chemical means of our civilization. The galleries placed one above the other, there are as many as five stories of tombs, their disposi- tion preserving a careful regularity, reveals a perfectly conceived and ma- tured plan. Even the nature of the soil has received scientific attention. They have carefully avoided the chalky formations and all places that easily retain water or are subject to moisture. They have dug the tombs and temples in soft granular stone volcanic but consistent, stone forged by creative fires and suitable for dur- | able building. The monuments tell us that the circumstances of the church of the Catacombs were those of ex- treme poverty, oppression and danger. There is nothing to intimate a sense of wrong, nor a desire of vengeance against man nor a murmur against God. Here is a stone bearing the ex- pressive words “In the 5th, before the Kalends of November slept Gorgon- ius friend of all and enemy of none.” Another bears an epitaph that much disconcerts that dictum of Dr. John- son when he says thai matrimonial quarrels must come but it is well to defer as long as possible the first “Cecilius the husband to Cecelia Placedina, my wife of excellent nem- ory with whom I lived with never a quarrel. In Jesus Christ, Son of God, the Savior.” Such is the evidence that in the first centuries, the home had already felt the kindly influence of Love to Him in whom all the families of the earth are to be blessed. Standing before these toms and Th asking what do they reveal as to the spirit of the church in the first three centuries they seem to speak with silent eloquence of a community which dwelling amid the licentiousness of Pagan Rome and amid continual per- secution and danger had some how been brought under the influence of a spirit that shed on their komes a new tenderness, on their suffering a sense of triumph, on their relations with God, a strange confidence and giveness. Here is one Epitaph which breathes an exultant faith in relation with God a strange confidence and cheerful submission. Deserving cone having left your relations you will en- joy Immortality and Eternal life, “Al- bana wife, our Divine author gave you. A temporary rest is granted you bur- ied in peace. Placus her husband set up this.” Such was the belief of the early-ehristians. They laid down their dead knowing that the soul was living in peace and the body reposirg till the day of resurrection. And this faith of a resurrection made the meanest Christian at the bott)m of these cay- ens feel that he carried about with him a glory far above oll that the nroud city above could confer en her caiefest favorite, Caesar never dream. ed that the hand which wrote veni! vidi viei! would be lifted up and wave a palm on a brighter field. None of the Emperors ever cherished an ex- pectation that the brow thai were the imperial honors would shire here- after with a more illustrious crown, Put the unknown and unlettered Christian hiding in the depths of the Catacombs glowed with the convie- tion that his very ‘bedy was sacred and that wien all the dignitiex of Rome were laid low his nead now hid- den from the light wouic be lifted amid the radiance of the Celestian city. These meraorials «f the church of the Catazombs reveal that ihe Christians churcin of the first three centuries was one of extreme sim- plicity in spirit, doctrina, ministry and universal brothericod, with a happy trust in the mediation of ihe Son of God, with a ritual devoid of unitation, of sensuous Pagan ceremonial and with the calm hope that for the dead final peace was eternally sure. After gaz- ing upon that church that comes forth to meet us as it were in her grave clothes we ascended to the light of day with a feeling of adoration of that wise.and silent providence which has preserved through the ages this indubitable testimony of the structure and outlines of the primitive church. We may rejoice in the consangunity in the sense of our oneness with Christ’s earliest followers. Church of the Catacombs; thou art our church! Martyrs of the Catacombs! We are partners with you in the simplicity of Christ, your Lord is our Lord, your faith is our faith, your baptism is our baptism, your God is our God and your Father is our Father who is above all and through all and in us all. How to Use the Flag. Printed by request of Bellefonte Chapter D. AR. The Flag should be displayed only from sunrise to sunset. The Flag should be hoisted briskly and lowered slowly. The Flag should be displayed fiat whether indoors or out, when not on a staff, When displayed horizontally or ver- tically against a wall, the Union o1 blue field should be in the upper left hand corner. When draping of red, white and blue is desired, use bunting. When rosettes and festoons are wanted, use bunting—never the flag. The Flag should be displayed above and behind a speaker on a platform when hung flat. When on a staff it should be at the speaker’s right. The Flag should never be used to cover the speaker’s desk or to drape over the front of the platform. When unveiling a statue or monu- ment the flag should not be used as the covering for the statue or monu- ment. COOK FOREST PURCHASE AS STATE PARK BY LEGISLA- TURE ASSURED BY PASS- AGE OF BOTH HOUSES. Cook forest is now virtually a State park, the culmination of many years of hard work by a number of prom- inent citizens interested in the pres- ervation of this Last of the Giants of the Forest. All that remains to be done is for Governor John S. Fish- er to affix his signature to the bill ap- propriating $550,000 for the purchase of the tract. Monday night the bill passed the State Senate unanimously, the vote being 48 to 0. The bill was originally sponsored in the house by Represen- tative Charles F. Armstrong, of West- moreland county, and passed that body Wednesday of last week, after the Legislature had been shown moving pictures of the tract taken by the Cook Forest Association. The "bill was sponsored in the Senate by Richard S. Quigley, of Lock Haven. In speaking of the tract, the Pitts- burgh Sun of Tuesday has the fol- lowing to say, which, except for a few humorous passages, is fairly accur- ate: The measure provides for an ap- propriation which is to be added to a sum of approximately $100,000 which has been raised by the Cook Forest Association, an organization which has been working intensively for nearly three years to awaken pub- lic interest in the tract. The action taken by the Senate is the culmina- tion of a movement which started many years ago to acquire the Cook woods, by all edds the finest and larg- est stand of virgin timber, especially pine and hemlocks, in the east. Some of the trees were standing when Co- lumbus discovered America and are so great in their proportions as to be natual curiosities. Upon the signing of the bill by the Governor and the formal action of taking title to the 8,000 acres on which the forest stands the tract will become a State park of unique char- acter and greater proportions than | anything of the kind now existent. e aim is to preserve the forest which occupies portions of Clarion, Jefferson and Forest counties, for all time and for the use of all the people. Two great highway systems approach the tract, one from the east and the other from the west, and through it passes the Clarion river, a stream of great beauty. The picturesque old town of Cooksburg occupies a central location. During the last 18 months more than 25000 lovers of trees have visited the forest. Many of these stopped at the little inn maintained through the offices of the Cook For- est Association, for the convenience of the public. Pleas from every section of the State have reached members of the Legislature to have them vote for the bill. That their response was appre- ciated was witnessed Tuesday when letters, telegrams and personal con- gratulations were being showered on Senators and representatives, espe- cially those making the appropria- tions committees of the two branches. | While the bill reached the Legisla- | ture rather late in the session, but a few days in advance of the dead line for presentations, it has proven popular from the first. The work in its interest opened with the showing of a film to the members of the house and Senate. not had a serious setback. The support for the measure came from hunters, fishermen and plain lovers of the outdoors. Civie organ- izations said a kindly word and old lumbermen, anxious to see some real relic of Pennsylvania’s great woods preserved, added their voices. In- fluential members of the State's legis- lative body caught the spirit, with the result recorded Monday night. Officers and directors of the Cook Forest Association include Samuel Y. Ramage, Taylor Allderdice, George E. Benson, Thomas Liggett, Homer D. Williams, Henry M. Brackenridge, Howard H. McClintic, John M. Phil. lips, Arthur E. Braun, Frank L, Har- vey and others. Mr. Liggett, secre- tary of the organization, arranged for the presentation of the bill and a committee of prominent Pittsbu business men, including J. P. Nichol- son, appeared before a committee of the house two weeks dgo in connec- tion with the measure. While the primary aim has been to save the trees which could not be replaced at any cost there are many spots of rare scenic beauty which will be automatically acquired. The forest is a refuge for game of all kinds. Its floor is covered with the finest and rarest of mosses and in the glades are to be found practically every wild flower known in the State. Pennsylvana Dairymen to Meet at State College, May 6. The Pennsylvania Dairymen’s As- sociation will hold a meeting at State College, Pennsylvania, in the old chap- el on Friday evening, May 6, begin- ning promptly at 7 o'clock. An interesting program of timely subjects has been arranged and it is hoped that many dairymen from Cen- tre county will avail themselves of the opportunity of attending this meeting and visiting the College. On the day following, Saturday, May 7, occurs the Penn State dairy exposition an annual event staged by the dairy students of the College, This will include a. eattle show, Judging contest, fitting and showing contests and other interesting events. In ad- dition to the opportunity of seeing the show there will be an opportunity of joining a tour of some of the col ege departments and go over some of the field experimental plots. There will also be college athletic events in the latter part of the afternoon including a baseball game between Penn State and Syracuse University. The dairy students annual banquet will be held Saturday evening and visiting dairymen. are invited to stay over for this event. In case room | 000,000 reservations are desired notify R. H. Olmstead, 68 Dairy Building, State College, Pa. GER Since that time it has | CLASSIC. With a determination to again set a record for total entries in connec- tion with their June 11th classic, the Altoona Speedway Association recent- ly sent a representative to the West Coast to make a complete check-up of the available cars and drivers. Muy. L. E. Frey, vice president of the Al- toona Association was elected to rep- resent the management. Upon arrival at Los Angeles where the majority of , the drivers are preparing their cars for the hard season of racing, Mr. Frey immediately called a conference. Since the racing starts in earnest next month, it was desired to discuss many detailed matters, the outcome of which resulted in the speedway official securing a maximum roster of pros- pective drivers, It was the general concensus of opinion that the June 11th event, which represents the start of the sec- ond year of the present type racing motors, would be exceptionally fast, The development of the late motors has been most unuswal. This fact brought forth the stamp of approval of the qualification speed of 125 miles per hour for the June meeting here. It was learned at the meeting that several changes in the personnel would soon become effective. Those named in the contemplated rearrangement in- clude the following. Cliff Woodbury forms a new combination with Fred Comer, and enters a team for compe- tition. Harry Hartz, crowned champ- ion of the past season, will vie with Eddie Hearne 1923 champion in an ef- fort to attain team honors. It was an- nounced that Al Melcher wil drive his maiden race in Altoona, following the formation of recent partnership with Charles Haase. Louie Meyers as well as Tony Gulotta will be independent contestants. George Abell and Cliff Bergere are also listed among the late entries. Altoona will again provide four qual- ification days, in which to select 18 of the fastest starters from a possible field of twenty-five entries. ——— LL Some Cook Forest Facts. It is the outstanding remnant of 7500 acres. It is one of the very few places where the primeval white pines can be seen. No fire has been on the prop- erty. It has every species of tree, plant and wild life indigenous to its section. Pennsylvania cannot make a bet- ter investment than in the establish- ment of a State park at Cook forest. It will earn millions of dollars and ‘much of health, education and pleas- ure for her people. California and Florida each earns approximately five hundred millions of dollars per annum from the tour- ist trade. Cook forest will bring mil- | lions of dollars into Pennsylvania { which would never be here if it were | destroyed. As an evidence of its growing popularity twenty-five to | thirty thousand people visited Cook | { forest during the season of 1926. Western Pennsylvania gives large jury. It is fitting that the Legislature should supplement the contributions “of the people with a sum sufficient to make of Cook forest a State park for . the use of all. Well directed outdoor recreation , today means less sickness, crime and | State activitity and expense for hos- { | pitals and courts tomorrow. The “No - i Trespass” sign and polluted waters { have made it difficult for the indus- trial population to find recreational areas. Cook forest is the most con- | venient opportunity for several mil- | lions of people. State parks are a necessity—not a luxury. As our leisure time increas- es and our life becomes more artifi- cial, they are a matter of vital import- ance. rr — esses e— Superstitions. Many entertaining explanations tions that affect us. Even though the number thirteen has been accounted | potent of ill since the ‘days of ancient | Babylon, its modern significance is as- | sociated with the fact that at the last ! Supper, thirteen were at the table. | There is 2 tradition to the effect that the last one seated was Judas Iscariot, ‘although no one of the four Gospels mentions this detail. The fear of thirteen at the table remains one of the strongest common superstitions. Friday is an unlucky day to being a thing; so runs the ancient injunc- tion. Has the ill luck anything to do with the fact that the Crucifixion oc- curred on a Friday? It probably has. Fear of the day, however, did not pre- vent Columbus from sailing on Fri- day; it did not keep land from being sighted on Friday, or prevent the Pilgrims from entering the harbor of Provincetown on Friday. We take it as a matter of course that when a per- son sneezes, we should say “God Bless You.” But the fact is, this phrase was part of a prayer instituted in the pon- tificate of St. Gregory the Great, at a time when the air was filled with such astringent substance that those who sneezed died instantly. Some people are confident that the reason why the aspen leaf quivers so is be- cause the Cross was made from its wood.—From Everybody's Magazine. ——————— Ap ———————————— Ninety Million for Roads. During the next two years Pennsyl- vania’s motor vehicles and operator’s registration fees will total approxi» mately $50,000,000. The State will re- ceive approximately $7,000,000 in fed- eral aid. State Treasurer Samuel S. Lewis estimated the gasoline tax at $21,000,000. The new 1 cent tax on gasoline would bring this up to $30,- 500,000. Local authorities and miscel- laneous collections will bring in $4,- 000,000 or $5,080,000 additional. The total, therefore is greater than $90,- ,000. cent is available for road work except the sum needed for interest and sinking fund on the two bond issues. - RA———— as ‘MAN Y ENTRANTS FOR ALTOONA PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FUND | “Penn’s Woods,” and contains about | financial support to the State treas- | have been offered of certain supersti- | NINE MILLION. Will H. Hays, in a statement today on the progress of the campaign un- der his direction by the Presbyterian Church, U. 8. A., for $15,000,000 for pensions for its old and disabled min- isters, announced two gifts of $100,000 each and declared that causese of Christianity “furnish the most satis- fying opportunity today for generous giving by the very wealthy of the na- tion.” A woman walked into the office of Andrew W. Mellon, treasurer of the pension fund, recently, and placed $100,000 in gift-edged securities on the desk with the annoucement that it was her gift to the fund, while a northwestern lumberman has pledged $100,000, Mr. Hayes said. At the re- . quest of the donors, their names were not revealed. Mr. Hayes announced the total to date in the campaign as $9,200,000 as the result of completed campaigns east of Illinois, with drives in 14 States from Illinois to California now getting under way, the entire national campaign being scheduled to end about the middle of May. “There has been an inspiring re- sponse to this call of the Church,” continued the statement. “Some East- ern sections still are short of their quotas, but we are confident that the thousands of gifts from the rank and file of Presbyterians will inspire the very wealthy to even more generous giving and that before the final report ; is made every Presbytery will have met its obligation. “We have received a number of large gifts in addition to those men- tioned. Among them are three for $200,000 each, one for $150,000, four for $100,000 each. one for $60,- 000, four for $50,000 each, two for | $50,000 each, two for $37,500 each, two for $30,000 each and nine for $25,000 each, Many of these gifts have come as memorials to the dead of the doners. “An unprecedented spirit of unity has been created in our Church . through this campaign. Individual | differences of theology have been for- gotten, Presbyteries that were disor- ganized have become solidified, Churches that were weak have become strong as a result of the joining of ‘all of our sinews in one common cause, and this unity and response at- tests that, after all, the spirit of Christianity still predominates in this { country and rises above all theories of ' theology. { “Such a condition should prove in- | spirational to those able to give large- «ly through showing that the causes of | Christianity furnish the most satisfy- | , ing opportunity today for generous ‘giving by the very wealthy. With the knowledge that in helping this cause, the case of the ministry itself and of Christianity itself, is being helped, and that those with none-too full pockets have reached deeply in making their gifts, a feeling of satis- other giving comes to the man who contributes largely of his worldy pos- sessions to this cause.” i While Mr. Hayes himself has never discussed the subject, it became known recently through his associates that he had had his entire worldly posses- sions appraised and had pledged 10 per cent. of the total to the fund. Few Have Ever Found Humming Birds’ Nests. Comparatively few people ever have the pleasure ot peeping into a hum- ming bird’s nest, to behold two tiny | eggs like round white beans, or to see two birdlets which somewhat re- semble little beetles. i In the first place, the nest is so ‘small and so resembles the surround- ing shrubbery that it is easily over- looked. Then too it is so cleverly hidden by its wise builders and so | disguised in its constructien as to | require an experienced eye to dis- : cover it. Built of soft, pliant hairs and ‘adorned with bits of moss and feath- ers, it forms a downy, cuplike, se- | cluded home. The fairy hummer of Cuba, the smallest of all the hum- ming birds, builds a nest so tiny that it can be covered completely with a ‘copper cent. Its eggs look like two little pearls. - " species of which have been classified, iis distinctly American. In the main, 'it is a tropical bird, as fewer than 20 species are found in the United States. The one known to residents of | States east of the Mississippi is the beautiful ruby throat. Audubon called humming birds “glittering fragments of the rainbow,” so gorgeous are they in color. 70 Rockview Inmates Complete Stud- ies in College Course. Seventy inmates at Rockview pen- itentiary, on Tuesday night, received special certificates from the engi- neering estension department of the Pennsylvania State College at exer- cises marking the close of the night school educational classes conducted for them by the college. Most of the seven hundred prisoners attended the exercises. The principal address was given by Mrs. E. Grace McCauley, secretary of the State Department of Welfare, Certificates were presented by Professor J. O. Keller, head of the extension department. ed classes two nights a week during the winter months at Rockview for the past four years. Upwards of 100 prisoners have enrolled each year for courses ranging from reading and writing to automobile mechanics, busi- ness English and blueprint reading. Ten different courses were given this year. Professor Keller has many let- ters from former inmates who have obtained good positions following their release, and they attribute their suc- cess to the Penn State course. Pro- fessor F. L. Hendrick has had charge ‘of the instruction for the past three years. A ——— pr —— ——The “Watchman” is the most readable paper published. Try it. ee u faction not likely to be found in any , y ? | The humming bird, more than 500 The college department has conduct- SE A HAIR OF THE DOG. “A hair of the dog that bit you” is in many parts of the country some- thing more than a handy metaphor signifying that that which caused the evil will work the cure. If one will take the trouble to investigate he will be surprised how widespread is still the belie? That the 7 effects of a og bite may be cure y applying to the wound “a hair of the do Rnd this superstition exists not only in this country but in many others, being as widespread in locality as it is ancient in origin. It has its genesis in the old old belief in sympathetic magic—the close connection which the ancients conceived to exist between a person and anything closely related to him or constructed in a resemblance of him and still more closely, naturally, between a man and any part of him which might become severed from his person—such as the hair or nails es- pecially, living and growing parts of his bodily structure. Thus the hair came to be regarded, | even when cut off, as still, in reality ‘a fragment of its former wearer and, logically what a man’s hair was to a {man a dog’s hair was to a dog. Now the spital of a man, or of any other , animal belongs peculiarly to, in one sense is a part of, the man or other animal which secretes it. Therefore, if bitten by a dog apply to the wound a hair of the said dog and the spital ‘of the dog, with all its properties for evil, will be attracted, naturally, to its homogenous part, the hair, and not (injure the alien body into which it has | been injected. That's the way the an- ‘cients reasoned it out. Modern man | does not reason it out at all, but still ‘practices his sympathetic magic with a hair of the dog that bit him, | Electric Power on Farm Displacing Muscle as Rural Service Expands. | Two years ago no orthodox electri- : cal man would have dared to prophesy ithe general electrification of Ameri- can farms. So rapidly is power devel- opment progressing, however, that an authority on farm electrification re- cently stated that within ten years 1,000,000 American farms will be sup- plied with service from central power Systems, according to Guy E. Tripp, chairman of the board of the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Company. “Give the farmer electric power at a reasonable cost and he can relieve himself and his family of a large part of their burden of labor, increase his productiveness and improve his stand- lard of living,” declares Mr. Tripp, who is quoted by the Pennsylvania Public Service Information Committee. “This is of foremost importance be- cause people will be loath to leave the city so long as it offers superior liv- ing conditions. But interconnection, the automobile, radio and other devel- ments are gradually reducing the dis- parity between city and rural life. “The farmer of yesterday was a , muscle, a swinger of the scythe. The farmer of today is becoming compe- | tent to carry on one of the most high- ly technical professions in the world. The farmer of tomorrow will have at his disposal the same facilities and resources as the industrial worker; and if he is equally progressive he will bring agriculture back into step with industry.” ey One Ear te be Seen this Season. Ears of the lady of fashion in 1927 again will retreat into obscurity with tre passing of the boyish bob. So, at least, has decreed the Ameri- i can Master Hair Dressers’ Association .in convention assemblad. | Further hints to a beauty a la 1927 , mode were given by Miss Alice F. Ry- ‘an, vice president of the American i Beauty Schools’ Association. | The bob will be cut longer, she said. i The newest is the “arf and oi” in | Which the hair is drawn back severely lon one side of the head so as to ex- ' pose one ear, and on the oiher side is. arranged so that the ear is covered and the hair curves out of the eyes. For evening dress women will wear long hair made of hair pieces the | construction of which is said to have ‘reached such a stage of development that they cannot be detected from reak hair, Rouge will ‘be deep orange hue, eye- | brows will not be so thin, and finger | nails will be polished with peal finish. { Charles Nessler, president of the | Hairdressers’ Association, gave some | statistics in beauty upkeep. There are , 30,000 hair dressing and beauty par- ‘lors in the United States he said, and i last year 60,000,000 women spent a | total "of $300,000,000 for beauty culo | ture. } Recovering Lost Radium. Six thousand dollars worth of ra- dium, a few specks in a tiny tube, were lost in a hospital. It was recov- ered by means of an electroscope. If an electroscope is brought near a bit of radium, the pieces of gold-leaf will instantly disclose the fact by coming together. When the electroscope was set up in the hospital mentioned, in the room where the radium was used on the patient, the instrument failell to register. The radium was not in the room. Perhaps the nurse had mix- ed the tiny tube in the bandages, and thrown it into the furnace. The ashes. from the furnace were examined and sure enough’ the electroscope vespond- ed instantly. ' The fused tube which contained the radium was found; but radium will not burn. The ashes were taken to a laboratory, and by careful treatment every possible milligam of the precious substance was recovered. Out of $6,000 werth only $210 was fin- ally lost.—Reformatory Record. The No Furs League. Register your protest aginst the further use of the non-killing steel trap, by subscrbing to the following and sending, your name to Our Dumb Animals, Boston, Mass.: Henceforth, as a protest against the crueity involved in the capture of fur. bearing animals by the steel trap, ¥ will wear no furs,