Bellefonte, Pa., June 1, 1928 TRIBE'S REFUSE NNLY MONUMENT Find Kitchen Middens Left by Calusa Indians. Washington.—When the Calusa In- dians, who dominated southern Flor ida when the Spaniards landed, and who were reported to have grown rich on the shipwrecked gold of the Con- quistadores, became extinct, they left behind them as almost their sole mon- ument the refuse of the food they ate. Their principal diet was shellfish and the shells they threw out piled up into heaps thirty feet high and hur dreds of feet long. The Smithsonian institution’s re- cent expedition under Henry B. Col- lins, Jr., determined the point ahout which there had been some uncertain ty, that these shell heaps were really kitchen middens and not artificial structures- with some other signifi cance. The proof is that all the shell heaps Investigated were stratified with ashes, small animal bones and other refuse from the kitchen. The language of the Calusa, except for a few isolated words and place names, is lost, little or nothing is known of their beliefs, customs or ma- terial culture. Some mounds of soft beach material and loose sand do ex- ist, some of which were foundations for houses, and others burial mounds. Mr. Collins excavated several of these. ‘His most important find was of twen- ty-five well preserved skeletons in » single mound. : Most of the bodies had been folded with the knees to the chin and burial was very close together. The skele- tons were excellently preserved. The burials probably took place before the coming of the white man, since only one bone was found with any evi- dence of disease and the artifacts as sociated with the b Is were purely “of Dative origin. ie only objects in the way of mortuary offerings were —— = fr ———— ipleces of broken pottery placed | around the heads, an arrangement not known among other Indians. The mound contained no other artifacts. ‘Motor Police Seen fig as Most Efficient Swampscott, Mass.—The way to ef- deiency in the small town police de- partment lies through a completely motorized force, says Walter Fran- cis Reeves, chief of the Swampscott police, Chief Reeves is trying to put his idea into practice here and points out that the town’s force has shrunk from twenty-one patrolmen and offi- cers to fifteen men. With the de- crease and diminished expenses have come motor equipment, and, the chief asserts, a far more efficient police service. Reeves believes that every town in ¢he United States should motorize its force. His plan would banish the old time “sidewalk pounder” and would put all policemen except traffic men in well equipped vehicles. automobiles or motorcycles with sidecars. A criminal, he said, can keep tah on the old-time patrolman, but he cannot tell when the motor-mounted policeman may show up at any given spot. In suburban and thickly set- tled town districts alike, he says. po lice are needed who can be sum: moned at top speed. Asiatic Monkey Aids Yellow Fever Research New York.—Man’s study of yellow fever, the mysterious tropical disease that once took heavy toll in the west- ern hemisphere, has been expedited by the achievements of a little band of scientists now at work in West Africa. The yellow fever commission of the mternational health board, Rockefel ler foundation, has found an Asiatic monkey, similar to the familiar com: panion of the organ grinder, that is susceptible to the disease. Working with this primate, the commission has already made several important contributions to knowledge of the fever. The experts have been able to transmit the virus consistently to the monkey, known as Macacus Rhesus. both by inoculation and by the pri mary infective agent, the mosquito. It has been found that the serum from recovered cases of yellow fever will protect monkeys against virulent blood, an important discovery because French Houses Pretty but Not Comfortable Have you ever—but of course you have—raced down in a too swift train from Cherbourg to Paris, through the French countryside on a spring after- noon when all the apple trees in Nor- mandy are in full bloom? And through the trees you catch a glimpse of little old farmhouses that have stood there in she midst of their flowering or- chards for centuries? Enchanting, these little houses; but according to modern standards hardly comfortable, says Arts and Decorations. Once in- side, we should find the rooms too small and crowded; the windows too small to admit of proper ventilation; the kitchen antiquated, and the work done there made doubly difficult be- cause of lack of equipment. No, these little houses are lovely to look at; on a walking trip. if night came on too quickly, one might enjoy staying over night, perhaps, sharing a French sup- per with the farmer's household, en famille, gathered about the kitchen table: sleeping in one of the little rooms under the thatched roof, listen- ing to the sleepy chirp of birds in the long soft twilight. But to live in one of these houses—impossible. It re- mains for our own young country to combine much of the charm of these old Normandy farmhouses with Twen- tieth century comfort. Device Said to Be Superior to X-Ray Dr. Andre Tours, a Frenchman, has discovered a means of making the hu- man body transparent, so that all the organs will be seen working as in a mirror. The doctor has refused all financial assistance, and also an offer to go to the United States. He is de- termined that the first data shall b~ given to medical men of France. If flesh can be made transparent sO that the bones can be seen clearly by surgeons and osteopaths, X-rays will be dispensed with in locating internal troubles. The doctor in future will be able to see the trouble at once with- out diagnosing blindly. In cases of consumption and cancer the trans parency of flesh will be an enormou” boon to medical men. Doctor Tours claims that his dis covery will assist experts in tracing the eause of death where murder is suspected. The presence of poison will be easily detected, and in the case of shooting the exact course of a bul- let will be traced. Explained The newly appointed pastor of a negro church faced a packed audience when he arose to ‘deliver a sermon op the burning question: *Is There a Hell?” “Bredren,” he said, “de Lord made the world round like a ball.” . “Amen!” agreed the cengregation. “And the Lord made two axles fo Je world to go round on, one axle at the North pole and one axle at de Souf pole. : “And de Lord put a lot of oil ana Jrease in de center of de world so as to keep de axles well greased and oiled.” “Amen!” said the congregation. “And then a lot of sinners dug wells .n Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Louisiana. Oklahoma, Texas and Mexico and Russia. and steal de Lerd’s oil and grease, “And some day dey will have all ot de Lord's oil and grease, and dem axles is gonna git hot. And den, dat will be hell, bredren, dat will be hell.” —Prairie Farmer. Timber Loss by Insects The standing timber of the country suffers a serious loss by reason of the operations of various insects which either destroy the wood or damage fit to such an extent that it must be placed in a lower grade by the dealer The government agents have recently given this matter some investigation and an elaborate report has been pre pared advising growers and handlers how to cut down this loss. The prin- cipal damage comes under two types of defects, designated as wormholes, with no living worms or decay, and powder post. Powder post occurs only in the seasoned or partially sea- soned sapwood or heartwood. This type of injury is dangerous, since the grubs continue their destructive work in the wood and also infect other tim- ber near by. False Alarm Mr. Linkins, the junior member ot che firm, had a peculiarly irritating sneeze. It began with an elaborate and terrifying series of facial convui- sions, and ended with a most lame CATCH LIGHTNING, TO BREAK ATOMS May Present World With Mys- terious New Force. Berlin.—Like Benjamin Franklin, three young German scientists have gone fishing in the clouds to catch lightning and tame it. They hope to release atomic energy with the help of the terrifically high electrical voltage which they drag down from the thunderstorms in the skies with a huge wire net strung between the peaks of Mount Gen- eroso in Switzerland. So far, the only promising efforts to demolish the atom have been made by means of radium on a small scale. But the Germans will attempt demo- lition of the atom in a wholesale man- per, with the aid of 5,000,000 volts of electricity coaxed from the clouds. This audacious dream stands with- in a few months of realization, ac- cording to the belief of the young scientists, Doctors Lange, Brasch and Urban, all under thirty and students at the University of Berlin. If this be true, the young wizards may present the world with an im- measurably powerful and mysterious force, or ray, which will revolutior ‘ze things material. : These modern gods of thunder and lightning have searched out the lo- cality in the Swiss Alps visited most frequently by natural electrical din charges. Last summer, with the help of all the discoveries of learned scholars since the time of “Poor Richard” and his kite, the Germans found that 2, 000,000 volts could be controlled bv their method. Their “lightning tamer” was a fair- ly simple device, merely an enormous spread of wire mesh provided with bristling points. It was suspended on a cable between peaks with three sets of insulators and a complicated apparatus for measuring the current, From a tiny, lightning-proof hut, the young wizards watched as the lightning struck the points of the net again and They plan to return to the lonely hut on the rocky cliff to renew thelr experiments as soon as the snow melts. They are certain that they will be able to control 5,000,000 volts by improving their devices. Sword of De Soto’s Expedition Is Found | Carters, Ga.—Traces of Hernando De Soto's expedition through north Georgia were believed discovered near here, when a hilt, guard and part of a blade of an iron sword were un- earthed in an Indian mound by Dr. Warren K. Moorehead, head of the department of archeology of Phillips academy, Andover, Mass. The part of the sword was founa «mid a score of skeletons and cere- monial relies which Doctor Moorehead declared were of a pre-Columbian age, which he considered most significant. The sword was found beside the skeleton of a warrior and stuck straight up in the ground, where it probably had been placed after the brave had been buried, Doctor Moore- head said. This reiic of the white man’s invasion of north Georgia meas- from iron, a strong indication that it Moorehead declared. in addition to the sword, many “war points,” fine arrowheads used in Battle, were found at the right hand of the warrior, who was buried alone. At the feet lay a spade of delicate green granite, perforated and highly polished, which the Andover scientist said was a symbol! of the tribe's re- spect for its religion, as it was too frail for actual usage. The skegrton was found in what ap- parently had been a hut made of posts of cedar and pine that were in an ex- cellent state of preservation consider- ing the centuries they had been buried. Take Clerk’s Pants New York.—Solomon Weisman, a clerk in the Kaufman hat store, was held up recently in the store at the point of a revolver by two men who took $61 from the cash register and 2 watch valued at $50. Then, to prevent Weisman from following them, they took his trousers and fled. Prehistoric Survivor London.—The plesiosaurus, esti- mated by scientists’'to have lived one hundred million years ago, may not be extinct, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle thinks. He believes he saw one him- gelf off the coast of Aegina some i land, recently. | was lucky and became extremely in- ured about six inches and was made | Apparently There Is Much Virtue in Soap Kings are like other human beings. They need to be washed occasionally. Even when they exist only in bronze. King Henry VII bas his. tomb in Westminster abbey. Nobody ever paid any attention to the grave. The monu- ment was considered to be of no im- portance, historically or esthetically. From this opinion to the belief that King Henry VII did not amount to much as a monarch, was only a step. Somebody had the notion to clean the tomb a short time ago. The stone was scrubbed and the bronze polished up. Great Burprise. The sculpture was discovered to be the magnificent work of an Italian artist, Pietro Tor- regiano, of whom Kipling speaks in his novel, “Just So.” Since that time thousands of visitors to the abbey have asked to see the masterpiece. and . . book publishers report that there has been a sudden demand for works on Henry VIL Henry might be recognized, one of these days as a great king, thereby establishing that fame depended on a little bit of soap. —Pierre Van Paassen, in the Atlanta Constitution. Left Freak Songbird Guessing as to Class People who know Mr, Gatti-Casazza, director of the Metropolitan opera, know he has a positive talent for dealing with bores. Here is the new- est story they are telling in musics’ circles about him: One of his songbirds, a man not a bit lacking in self-assurance, hus a voice of peculiar range. He started as a tenor, changed his mind and reg- ister and warbled for a while as a baritone and then actually sang as a basso. One day he cornered the busy Mr. Gatti and edged him into an audi- tion chamber at the opera house. First he sang his tenor notes, then his bari- tone, then rendered a few bars basso profundo. After which he drew him- self up and with the utmost pride de manded : : “Tell me, am I a tenor, a baritone o* a basso?” “No!” roared Gatti, seizing his hat and leavin room.—New York Sun 2 "Chilly Forecast ii The ‘earth is growing in bulk on ac- count of the meteoric dust that falls on it. It has recently been estimated that 100 tons fall daily over the sur- face of the globe and that millions of years hence this will have increased the thickness of the earth consider- ably. This would have a tendency to bring us closer to the sun. But centrif- ugal force is augmented at the same time in greater proportion and coun- teracts this tendency; consequently the earth would be swept away from the sun, with the result that its dis- tance from that body would be con- siderably augmented. This is spoken of as having possibly happened to some of the larger, outer planets— notably Jupiter—in the remote past. Why Bishop Quit Betting That he spoke from experience when denouncing betting, was the declara- tion of Stirling Woolcombe, bishop of Whitby, at a meeting in York, Eng- “While at Oxford 1 terested,” he said. “My last bet was ' ten shillings on a five-to-one winner came from De Soto's band, Doctor | of the Chester, cup, yet my friend and ' I resolved after the race never to bet again, not because we had lost—we had won a considerable sum—but be- cause we were finding out that when betting enters into you it saps your highest interests. I believe it would have driven me to hell if I had gone on with it.” Odd Reason for Delay Mr. Jones rang the bell at the new doctor’s house. Usually he went to hie old family doctor, but the new man happened to live nearer and it was an urgent call. The doctor's wife answered the ring “You wish to see the doctor?” she said. “Couldn’t you come tomorrow morning?” “Why,” said Jones, “isn’t the doc tor in?” “Oh, yes, he’s in,” said the woman wistfally, “but you're his first patient, and I'd like you to come as a surprise for him tomorrow. You see, it’s his ‘birthday.” Ancient English Dance In the English morris dance, whick evolved from the sword dance, swords are discarded for sticks or handker- chiefs. The morris men, six in num- ber, are dressed in short trousers and jerkins adorned with bright-colored T= First National Bank of Bellefonte, is RRL RC CUE NUR ANS AAAS ACLIRUORI NSA RNY ) * 0, 7 * (Q) 9, * (a) Just In This Week ®. 0. 0 ® oO Properly Equipped equipped to properly care for business of any kind relating to banking. Commercial Banking Savings Department Foreign Exchange Travelers’ Checks Financial Information Trust Business, Administration of Es- tates. In any of these we can render efficient service. More and more each year the properly managed bank is supplanting the individual in the care of estates. The First, National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. Now and the Future OU highly regard your family’s welfare both now and in the future. Put your bequest in writing by making your will now and appointing the First National Bank as Executor or Trustee. Consult us about it freely. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM De 09 0. 0. 0. 0. 0s 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 O00 0000 00> Ooo, *0, 06% %6%%* %*% 90,00,00.90.9¢, CX XIXG XXX aX aXe aXe ald * * or eed 9, * * ® 006700 / * Ca) 7 * * @, 0, .0,.9..0..0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Xg Xa Xa Xa Xa Xa Xa Xa Xa Xa a0 * o, 9, 0% XO ® Worth ALL OF TEN DOLLARS 9 0, J 0 COR) bo? %° CQ) 9 * A Lucky Purchase For You @. 0. 0. 0. 0 ho? 6% %% 9% % 9, * 9, * @, 6, ©, 9% %' ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF SUITS PRICED $643.50 peesesgeegeseedess 9, £2 9, ot Ca) 9 99% 90, @,. 0. &, &, 0 %%% e CQ) * * / XO %' MORE. %0e%e® Jeeledledd 9, Ca) 7 0 ® ®, &, 9% 9. 9, 2 ¥% &, 0% % The maker needed the money. it indicates the possibility of treating | and impotent paroxysm that always | years ago. an 3 human patients in like manner. 2 disappointed the expectant observer. ribbons, gay rosettes, flowers and oo Not a suit 1n the lot that you can ** : “Your sneeze,” volunteered Mr. Jen- greenery. They wear a pad of bells & : . ; oe sins, senior partner, after watching sigh | on spel kuce. The dance jv paiglly duplicate under thirty dollars. Many & Fugeegeieeiofeinfoloiioleioloieleloleliiollol® | him through one of his performances, Air Mail S Bank done in the spring, especially during dt : $ w Against Buyi “is a regular circus.” Ir iviall Saves Dankers Whitsun week. Years ago the men | % of th em WO rth all of thi rty-five ** arns Against suymg “A circus? questioned Mr. Linkins. |%# Large Sums in Interest # | in it blackened their faces to disguise S$ oo “Yes,” was the rejoinder. “The per- themselves, which made them look 0% Seed Corn Carelessly dollars. i ¥ 3 i +4 5 % i By using the at ** op Seattle—By using the al like Moors, and this led to the dance | 9 h — - formance never comes up to the ad- 3 ; " 3 nding Viless Ge % | vance notices.” a Ee ee Tao being called Morisco, and later morris. & . 2 liable and can supply the kind # have been able to save thou- kt These won't last long. . Come % % Of seed he offers, extreme care Symbol of Good and Evil sands of dollars monthly in in. Only in Spots D0 fi b hi d * 4 should be exercised in purchas- : Bats are found in all parts of the terest, it was announced re Man is well on In the scientific plane & at once and Pro t y this wonder- 4 ing seed corn, the Department 4 | = o13 and, as might be expected from cently. All checks in excess of of thinking, but he is not scientific all $ . & oA A oh % | their powers of fiight, inhabit many |% $500 are sent by air mail and % | over and through and through, so to « ful opportunity. oh + gator vy Lays, there i remote islands, such as Bermuda and arrive at the Eastern terminus There are large areas in him o 3 4 are likely 0 re ery ndivid- New Zealand. They are absent, how- two days after mailing, or three thet:are primitive, ancient and medie- | ¢% ’ * * uals who Ww offer to sell 3 ever, from the coldest parts of the to four days sooner than by val; he walks about with vestigal and IT S AT CY % crossed seed at a high price world and are most numerous in east- fast train service. Return cred- atavistic mental as well as physical * oe * when the seed is lite more pro + |... tropics. In Chinese art the bat its are also hurried west by organs and processes. He carries in 4 : I ductive, 1 any, than ordinary 3 signifies ‘happiness; as the Chinese plane so that actual time for him not only the Twentieth century, | o% . > * seed corn. to of : % | character Fu, meaning bat, is ident! collection of large remittances but probably ail the centuries that & 9 > 4 - The supply ol superior crossed 3 cal in sound with the character Fu, is less than a week. Thus far have gone before, since the beginning 3S & * seed, $08 gepartient advises, is 3 meaning blessing. Among Bicols and currency shipments have mot of life. Consequently, he is Twentieth Kd & & comparatively small. % other Malays the bat {s the messen- been trusted to the air mail gentary only in'm spot of two.—Plaln | ¢Je ; k 90, ger of Asuamg, “God of Bvil.” Talk Magazine 0, » | 0. 0. 0.0.0 2 0s B00 0 0 0 0 0 00 Sridoedeideide dr ededoidridecdridodredoadoedrifoadredeaocdradeifoddedd b a a