TRAVELS T0 EUROPE 1) ETRIGITY PUMPS WATER, MAKES HENS LAY, Ao CACO NEE" MILKS COWS AND SAWS WOOD ON NATION'S FARMS Boy, Fourteen, Well Satis- fied With Trip Abroad. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Herbert Avram, fourteen-year-old adventurer, who got to Paris on a nickel and a lot of self- reliance, although Colonel Lingbergh needed an airplane and some letters of introduction for the same trip, re- turned the other day on the La Savoie, the ship on which he stowed away ir a stateroom. Herbert returned as a third-class passenger. But even then he had the run of the ship, as he was the only We Have Set Apart a Space for the Custody and Care of Wills To are many advantages in surround- ing such an important document with the safeguards we offer. one in that class, and had the priv- ileges of cabin passengers. The French line had decided to treat him as a third-class tourist and had billed his father for $175, half fare for the round trip. Despite the bill, Morris Avram, an inventor of Manhattan, was not at the pier to greet his globe-trotting off spring. At this Herbert was visibly downcast. Herbert admitted that he expected a licking. A friend of the family, Alexander O'Hara, took him home in a taxicab. Mum Regarding Trip. Herbert would not discuss the trip. On the eastward passage the boy was a general favorite with the passen- gers, who raised a purse for him, but he has refused to let any glamor be built up around him. To most ques- tions he answered, “Bunk,” although he was not asked about the skyline or American women. He denied that he went to see Lindbergh, saying he went “just for the trip.” He did have one regret. He was Jorry he had not taken his five-year- wold brother along. “My father expected me to take care of him at home,” he said. “If I had taken him along things might have worked out smoother.” Would Not Have Him Jailed. Edme Vasco, purser of the La Sa voie, said the French line did not like to turn over boys of Herbert's age to the police. The usual passport re- quirements were waived and he was placed in the custody of his two sis- ters, Marguerite and Violet, students in Paris, who cared for him until the ship was ready to make the return voyage. And he came back with more clothe: than he left, his sisters having out- fitted him with a bathrobe, pajamas and two fresh shirts, which he carried in a small black bag. Whether or not he still had his nickel could not be learned. To Applaud or Not to Applaud Stirs Musicians London.—To be applauded or not to be applauded. That is the question which is agitating London's music world today. There are two hostile camps. One nolds that a real masterpiece, such as an opera or a brilliant pianoforte sclo by Paderewski, should be re- ceived with a solemn hush. And the other thinks that approval should be “signified in the usual manner.” So far the loud applauders seem to oe victorious, if the opinions of such as Sir Thomas Beecham, the conduc: tor, and Sir Landon Ronald, the com- poser and conductor, can be taken. «1 wish people were more demon- strative,” said Beecham. “Nowadays, as a rule, we applaud either in the wrong place or not at all. Concert audiences sometimes choose the worst possible moment for their applause— before the piece has ended, for in- stance. As long as the applause is in the right place, the more of it the better.” “It’s all nonsense,” said Ronald, 4artists love applause. That’s a thing that troubles an artist whem he is making a record for the phenograph. He sings into a trumpet—he puts his heart and soul into it—and at the end there is just dead silence. It seems almost unnatural.” One Auto in U. S. for Every Five Citizens Washington.—The United States has one automebile in operation for each five of its citizens, the automobile division of the Department of Com- merce announces, basing its figures en a recent survey. Statistics for the world as a whole showed 27,650,267 machines in opera- tion at the beginning of the year, or one for each sixty-six of the popula tion, in Canada and Hawali there is one machine to each eleven of population while New Zealand has one to twelve, Australia and Denmark one to seven- teen, Great Britain one to forty-three. Argentine one to forty-five, and France one to forty-six. 1t was estimated that 95 per cent of all the automobiles operating fin the world are of American origin. though a considerable proportion of them were assembled in foreig branches of American factories. Seek Beetle Parasites for Planters in Hawai: Honolulu, T. H—F. C. Hadden of the Hawalian Sugar Planters’ asso ciation is now on his way to Formosa to collect parasites te control the Japanese beetle. The beetle, which is an epidemic to southern China, fs kept in check in Formosa by natural enemies. It is honed that introduction of the Formosan parasite inte Hawaii will help control the pest here. and shearing sheep. SPEED ESSENTIAL FOR +RESERVING Housewives Will Find That Use of Pectin Will Hasten Pro- cess of Jelly Makig Speed, the great American char- acteristic, should be applied by every housewife to her annual canning and preserving, according to the home service department of the American Gas Association, says the Pennsyl- vania Public Service Information Committee. ! “In order to have jams and jellies of the best quality it is still necessary to subject the fruits and vegetables to long and slow boiling,” says the Association. “However, in jelly-mak- ing, the process may be shortened considerably by the use of commer- cial pectin. Time, fuel and effort will be saved, while the flavor of the fin- ished product will not be altered. “Pectin in certain definite propor- tion and strength is needed if the jelly is to ‘set.’ Since the ripening of fruits lowers the native pectin content, the tendency has been to use fruit not too ripe, and then to boil away the juice in order to concen- | trate the pectin. “With commercial pectin, riper fruit may be used, which is usually less expensive. Less sugar is also needed, and there is no need for in- tensive boiling away of the juices. In addition, with the commercial prod- uct it is possible to make jelly from many fruits which it has been impos- sible to utilize up to now.” “Gob” of Uncertain Origin The derivation of the word “gob,” applied to sailors, is uncertain. Some authorities say that it comes from the Chinese; others, that the word was adopted from England. “Gob” in provincial English means a “coast guardsman,” probably from the fact that the seamen were accustomed to chew tobacco, since “gob” in English also means a “little lump or piece, or a mouthful.” Earliest Magazines The American Library association says: “It is said that the first mag- azine that really deserved the name was the Athenian Gazette, which ap- peared in London in 1691. Gentle- man’s Magazine, starting in 1731, is the real beginning of the monthly magazine such as we know it in re- cent years.” Hawaiian Product The evergreen blackberry came to Oregon from the Hawaiian islands, whence it is believed to have been carried from other islands of the South seas. It is said that one of the Fiji islands is so covered with this shrub as to make an impenetra- ble thicket. Material for Gas Bags Bilk, cotton and linen are the tex- tiles extensively used in the manu- facture of gas bags for balloons and airships, but all of these materials re- quire the addition of a gas-holding treatment, such as varnish, India rub- ber, goldbeater’s skin and so-called “dopes.” Waterfall’s Energy The naval observatory says that the energy of a waterfall comes from the clouds in the form of rain or snow and these clouds are caused by evap- oration which is the’result of the sun's energy acting in the form of heat on the surface of oceans, lakes, etc. Ambassadors Defined Ambassadors are ordinary when they reside permanently at a foreign court; or extraordinary when sent on a special occasion. They are general- ly ordinary in talent and extraordi- nary in expenses, ignorance and pre- sumption.—Samuel Johnson. a In addition to the work performed in the picture above, electricity is proving itself a valuable servant in many other directions in rural homes. Among the tasks it accomplishes cheaply and efficiently are refrigerating, lighting, cooking, washing, churning butter, separating cream, shelling corn 2 ANCIENT BURIAL | CUSTOMS CITED Excavations Near Wisconsin River Reveal Them. Sheboygan, Wis.—~Excavation of In- dian mounds near Black river is un- der way at present, with archeologists from the Milwaukee museum and the Wisconsin Archeological society in charge of the work. Study of the bones already un- earthed shows that the Indians buried there are either of a tribe which did not use the “cradle board,” or are of Indians who lived there before the method of carrying babies strapped to a board which was carried on the mother’s back, came into general usage. This last theory is most favored by the archeologists, for there are very few dishes and ornaments buried with the bodies, leading to the belief that the burials took place before the cus- tom of placing such articles in the graves became common. One of the mounds already excas vated has revealed the skeleton of at body buried in the flesh, while an- other is that of a “pack” burial, where bones of others, previously dead. have | been disinterred, bundled together. and buried with the body of another per- Son. The latter, it is thought, may have resulted when all but the head of a fumily died first, were buried and dug up again to be re-buried with the last of the group. The mounds excavated so far are of the efligy type, being built in the shape of animals. City Gave Name to Hats Leghorn hats take their name from Leghorn, an important seaport of Italy and a strong naval station, 15 miles south of Pisa. Leghorn, with a popu- lation of 100,000, exports straw hats, silks, wines and dried fruits. : Constitution’s Timbers fhe Century Biographical Encyclo- pedia says that the timber used in building the Constitution (“Old Iron- sides”) came from Cumberland island. near the northern coast of Florida. There Are Such it is easy enough to be grouchy when things aren’t coming your way, but the prize old growl is the man who «will howl when everything's go- ing 0. K.—Winnipeg Tribune. Truly an Abnormality from an exchange: “Daniel coming anscathed out of the fiery furnace was an abnormality.” It was all of that, seeing that what he had entered was a lion’s den.—Boston Transcript. Where Aliens Take Jobs Almost half the foreign workers who come to this country enter mechanical and manufacturing pursuits, while less than 15 per cent go on farms. Tender Sprinters Countless thousands, including men women and children, and tiny babes in arms, raced across the field.—San Francisco Chronicle. Uses for Whalebone Whalebone, once used so much in che making of corsets, is now mainly employed as bristles in hair and other brushes Origin of Window Window comes from a Norse word .neaning wind-eye, unglazed windows being originally nething more than air holes. Angel Voices Los Angeles not only speaks for it- self; it shouts.—Woman’s Home Com- panion, Pc ia ma BE WASTING OF WATER IS ACTUAL MENAGE Supply Companies Warn Public to Avoid Excessive Sprink- ling and to Stop Leaks At this season of the year the water company men begin to watch the consumption of water more closely, remarks the Pennsylvania Public Service Information Commit- tee. The danger of an extra dry summer and consequent drought is always present. Inspectors are sent out from water companies to keep a strict watch on the use of water for sprinkling pur- poses. With the advent of spring both the amateur gardener and the home owner who has a lawn are firm- ly resolved that garden and lawn must be kept in better condition thap in previous years. Automatic sprinkers have been found to be particularly wasteful be- cause they are often left in operation in one spot for many hours. It is in order to protect the public from such water waste that inspectors try to educate home owners to co-operate with the water companies to cut down : the consumption. BELL SYSTEM HAS 12,816,000 PHONES Fiftieth Anniversary Reveals Company Operates 998,330 in Pennsylvania At the end of 1926, which year marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Bell Telephone, the Bell System in the United States had in operation 12,816,000 telephones, according to the Pennsylvania Public Service In- formation Committee. Connected with that system were 4,758,000 other tele- phones, giving the nation a compre- hensive communication system of 17, 674,000 telephones. Service in the Bell System is ren- dered through 5998 central offices and requires the use of more than 61, 000,000 miles of wire, more than ninety per cent of which is in cables. The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania at the end of 1926 was operating 998,830 telephones with a total of 3,955,862 miles of wire, of which 8,789,125 miles, or ninety-four per cent, was in cables. Havoc by Shipworms Mollusks, of which there are sev- eral hundred species at present known, include some of the best friends of man, like the oyster and clam, and some of his worst enemies. The dam- age done in the United States alone by shipworms annually is estimated to reach $10,000,000. English Cathedral City Rochester is a cathedral city o. Kent, England, on the right bank of the Medway. It really forms ont large town together with Chatham ané Strood. Charles Dickens, who livel at Gad’s Hill, three miles from Roch ester, frequently introduces the cit) into his novels. Camphor-Yielding Bug Possibility of a camphor bug indus try similar to that of raising silk worms is seen following the discovery recently by an English naturalist oi a small insect that yields a milky fluid having the properties'of camphor. The new drug producer was found in Sumatra. Almost Universal Belief The belief that animals containet within their bodies stones endowed with magical properties is one that is common to almost every race and civi lization, and refers to a large variet} of creatures, says a geologist writing in the Popular Pictorial Magazine. [a h There will be no charge for this service. The First, National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. AA NAN MERRRARVR BRASOV NNT HOAR RARE ANVIL UR A AAV AVA Ne) Q Your Family's Future ive due diligence and thought to the future of your family. Have your Will written now and ap- point therein this Bank your Executor or Trustee — assuring faithfulness to duty and utmost care in the execution of your instructions. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM (ols SNe SE TRNAS AAA) 4