Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 07, 1928, Image 7

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warealic A acho,
—SrRO
- m—
Bellefonte, Pa., September 7, 1928. |
CT —————— SS
PRE-WAR.
(Continuted from page 2, Col. 6.) i
lations with his customers, knew his |
business intimately. I was catapult- |
ed into control of a big organization
1 knew nothing about. If it had been
smaller I might have had a chance.
It was that which gave me the idea of
starting small. 2 :
«I still think my original idea was
a good one—just a single shop. But
ideas grow fast. I began to think of
half a dozen shops, then a dozen.
Each in charge of an expert, selected
from Leicester's, who would own 2a
share in it, maintain close personal
relations with clerks and customers.
“I don’t,” commented Bettina, “see
anything wrong with that idea.”
The moonlight revealed his smile,
gallant yet a bit dry. “You might
ask your father his opinion of it, he
suggested. “And of my big idea—
which was that the shops could be
used as a cornerstone for a depart-
ment store which would eventually fill
the building I bought.”
Bettina glanced up at him. “Are
—you sorry now that you sold out?
she asked abruptly. :
“No,” he said deliberately. His
eyes met hers squarely, revealingly.
She did not speak or move. She
couldn’t. Then he himself broke the
spell. “I suspect,” he said, with a
glance at the luminous dial of his
wrist watch, “that it’s time I started
you homewards.”
The moon that rode over them as
the long-nosed roadster coursed back,
the throbbing motor, the rush of the
wind, were like subtle drugs. They
hardly spoke.
“Thank you,” said Peter when he
dropped her at the hotel.
“It’s I who should thank you,” she
protested. To which she added an im-
pulsive, “If you want to let me know,
some time, how things are coming, I'd
be interested, truly.” Which, from
Bettina, was a considerable admis-
sion. ;
It was almost eleven the next night
when her father returned. He was
tired, she knew. Even his eyes, smil-
ing at her, were weary. .
“What have you been up to while
I was gone?” he asked.
“I went for a ride with Peter—I |
mean Mr. Leicester, last night,” she!
confessed. “He told me a lot about |
his ideas and his shops.”
“Were you pledged to secrecy—or
may I share his rosy dream with
you?”
“They aren’t very rosy,” she ve-
torted. “He seems to think he may
have made a mistake. When I ask-
ed him why, he told me to ask you
why. [I'll tell you some time.”
He gave her a swift glance. “Tell
me now.”
He listened, without comment,
while Bettina repeated what Peter
had told her. Then, “A department
store—good Lord!” he said. :
He considered that a second, while
her eyes questioned his. :
“His ideas are going in opposite
directions,” he explained. “Take just
the shops. The basic idea seems to
tie them together, but they are not
homogeneous. Their appeal is limit- |
ed, too, for they do suggest exclusive- |
ness and expensive things. If he had,
instead of selling out, retained con-
trol of Leicester's and used its re-
sources to stock such shops, he——"
There he checked himself.
“But he didn’t,” he commented.
“And though the shops might make
profitable adjuncts to a down-town
department store, as the cornerstone
of an up-town department store
they’re pipe-dreams.”
“Then—then he will fail?”
tested Bettina.
His shrewd eyes read her face and
briefly something seemed to tighten
around his heart. But his voice re-
mained unchanged.
“A man may fail in the sense that
he goes broke,” he said, “but he is
still ‘alive, and if he is any good he
has learned something, acquired ex-
perience, which is the most valuable
capital a man can possess. Your
young friend might have invested nis
millions safely and yet been a failure
to my way of thinking—and yours
too, I suspect. He may lose them—
though I see no reason why he should
if he’ll listen to reason.”
“Would—would you talk to him?”
suggested Bettina eagerly. {
“Me? Good Lord! You forget
I’ve never even met him. He as much
as told the other stockholders he saw
no reason why he should talk to me.”
“I think hed love to just the
same,” persisted Bettina. “If you
only would—"
“Love it too?” he grimaced. “It
would be a waste of time, kitten.
He—" The sentence broke off there
as his eyes met hers. “Oh, all right,”
he surrendered. “But let’s not make.
it too formal. Why not just invite
him to dinner some night and see
what, if anything, he has to say for
himself 7”
“That’s my sweetheart,” paeaned
Bettina and kissed him swiftly.
But again his heart constricted.
This was Thursday, the seven-
teenth of March. To Bettina, consid-
ering the prospective dinner date, it
seemed that sometime during the
next week would be best, preferably
toward the last of the week.
But that night she dreamed of
Peter again. Almost a nightmare,
this time. He seemed to be in a great
building that was falling down on
him. Of course all dreams are silly.
Yet when she awoke from this Bet-
tina did not grin.. Or think, “Of all
men, him!”
Temperamental March was back on
the job this morning—the wind blew
chill from the east. But though the
sun wag still brilliant enough to dis-
sipate the mental miasmas that un-
pleasant dreams weave around the
moment of waking, Bettina’s persist-
ed through breakfast and thereafter.
“Perhaps,” she concluded, “if he
has no engagement for tonight——"
The telephone book gave his num-
pro-
' directions she started to give the taxi
| she assured herself—he did not refer
to study him and his methods.”
{ COW.
ber. Not of the shops but of his
apartment. But his phone did not
answer. Not at eleven, twelve-thir-
ty, two or four.
“] guess that settles it!” she an-
nounced.
Nevertheless, it didn’t! The young
psychologist could have told her that
it hadn’t.
“Pll take a taxi and drop in cn
Father,” she decided.
She believed that it was pure im-
pulse that caused her to change the
driver.
“He won't be there now, of course,”
to her father—“but it won’t do any
harm to stop a minute and see.”
The building which she had vision-
ed in her dream ag collapsing on Pe-
ter seemed reasonably proof against
any such gymnastics as the taxi paus-
ed before it. :
“Wait—I’ll be jut a second,” she
told the driver.
The arcade which ran through the
building was deserted, for Peter’s
crew had quit at five.
“Mr. Leicester?” repeated the lone
elevator operator. “I guess you'll
find him in the French shop.”
The little French shop presented an
inhospitable front, soft gray draper-
ies closing off show-window and
door. Bettina knocked.
So, curiously enough, did her heart.
The door opened. And there stood
Peter. Taken by surprise but with a
swift gladness in his eyes as he in-
vited her in.
“You’ve heard the news, I sup-
pose,” he said.
“News—what news?” asked Bet-
tina. Then, ignoring her own ques-
tion, added quickly, “Could you come
to dinner tonight? With Father and
me?”
“I’m sorry,” he replied, and his
voice was ever so sorry, “but I've got
another engagement. I promised Ma
and Jim I'd run down to the camp
tonight. They want to celebrate the
—the gift I told you about. I—could
you come?”
Bettina wavered. She wanted to,
somehow. Awfully! Yet: “I wanted
you to meet Father,” she protested.
6 »
“But I have met him. This morn-
ing. I thought that was why you
came. He's going to take over my
shops, as a part of Leicester’s.”
“You—you mean to say you've sold
them to him!” gasped Bettina.
“He has the habit of buying things,
you know,” Peter reminded her. “And ’
it struck me that these shops would
go better with Leicester’s resources |
behind them.”
“Why—that’ just what father |
said!” i
“Great minds!” he commented, with
a swift smile. “Anyway, I pointed
out that I had a good location for
what Leicester’s used to call the car-'
riage trade and 2 ;
“But—what are you going to do?”
“Learn the department store busi-
ness from the ground up—I’'m swap-!
ping the shops in for a block of stock.
Your father has promised to find me
a job. I don’t know just what and
I don’t care. It will give me a chance
He
paused, but Bettina, still bewildered
said nothing. “I suppose,” he re-
marked, “that it sounds as if I ate!
But—well, your father is ai
prince, Bet—I mean Miss West. He
can make crow taste like Vermont
turkey.” !
“Don’t you believe it!” Bettina as-'
sured him swiftly. “I’ve seen Father
make men he had no use for eat crow |
—and they knew it was crow. He |
must like you.”
“He did say I wasn’t as half-baked
as some of the other stockholders had
led him to think,” admitted Peter,
“or Sree?
“Half-baked!” echoed Bettina in-
dignantly. “Why, I think—"
There she checked herself quickly. |
As she should. Why should she tell |
him what she thought of him? Or he
be particularly interested?
Yet he was plainly. “What do you
think ?” he asked eagerly. |
“I—I think I'd better go,” murmur-
ed Bettina hastily. i
Nevertheless, she didn’t move. It!
was as if Peter’s eyes, besieging hers, |
held her prisoner. She evaded them |
desperately until, against her will, |
their glances met. Then: i
“Oh!” she breathed involuntarily— |
and was immediately silenced. !
The little shop from the rue de la
Paix might have been even smaller
without inconveniencing them. Al
telephone booth would have provid-
ed the space they needed as his arms
went swiftly around her and his lips
! discovered hers.
Presently, “I never dreamed I had
a chance,” he murmured huskily.
“You are so proud of your father and
his success that I thought that unless
a man was a regular ball of fire in
business——"
“I thought so myself,” she confess-
ed. But her eyes, meeting his, re-
moved any sting that might be in that '
even before she added, “But I'll bet |
youll be a ball of fire yet. Not that |t, place some object 25 feet ahead of |
it matters y i
They sprang apart hastily. The
door to the little shop had opened and
a voice was speaking.
“Say,” it demanded, “how aboat ;
that taxi?”
} FGiracious;® gasped, Bettinap “I'd
completely forgotten—"
She paused to blush to her charm-
ing ears as Peter quickly offered the
driver a bill.
The driver glanced at the bill and
automatically reached into his pocket
for change. And as automatically
withdrew his hand. He, ag the phrase
goes, knew his onions,
oT can’t break this,” he complain-
e
“Don’t bother to,” advised Peter
pointedly.
The driver grinned. “Much obliged,”
he said and, disciplining a desire to
wink, withdrew.
The wink, however, was only mo-
mentarily delayed. He tendered it
to the elevator man as he fluttered
the bill under the latter’s nose.
“See that?” he exulted. “Got it
from the guy in there—caught him
with a case of regular pre-war stuff
in his arms.”
About what these days passes for
love he was a cynic. Yet he did know
che real thing when he saw it. Pre-
HOW TO SOLVE A
EE tr rt tte ements
CROS8-WORD PUZZLE
When: the correct letters mre placed in the white spaces thins pussle will
spell words both vertically
. indicated by a number; which.
Thus No. 1 urider the
the white spaces up to the first black
and horizontally.
refers to the definition listed below the pussle.
column headed “horizontal” defines & word which will fill
The first letter in each word is
square to the right, and n number under
“yertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares to the next black one
below.
No letters go in the black spaces.
except proper Names. Abbreviations, slang,
All words used are dictionary words,
initials, technical terms and obso-
lete forms are indicated in the definitions,
CROSS-WORD
PUZZLE No. 1.
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7, 192%, Western Newspaper Unions
Horizontal. Vertical.
1—A sweetheart chosen on St. Val-
entine’'s day
8—Middle western state
9—Kind
11—Noise produced by seas on shor
12—Scamp .
14--''o cover with paper and tie
16—Unity
17-—Head of an abbey of monks
19—A man of rank
20—Part of “to be”
21—Single
22—Te¢ consume
24—Behold!
25—Plant whose fiber is used in
spinning
26—A snare
28 —Bound
29—To cook in oven
30—Point of compass.
33--To arrest
35—8Sun god
37—To regret
38—Name as 21 horizontal
39—-Right (abbr.)
| 40—Self
42—-To wed
44—Pastry
45—To harvest
47—Hu"aans
, 48—Border of an unplowed field
(dal. Eng.)
49—A bead of water
51—Fine particles of stone
62—Surprising
Solution will apvear in next
En
war stuff, he had called it. The stuff
that the little god, not so blind as he
seems, still manages to slip to his
customers. :
Two of whom, back in the little
: shop, were again occupying no mare ”
space than a phone booth would have
provided.: ;
For even modern love stories still
end that way.—Hearst’s Internation-
al Cosmopolitan.
Watch Your Headlights.
“Watch your headlights or the
State Road Patrolmen will nab you,”
is the warning of the Keystone Auto-
mobile Club, which announces an ia-
tensive drive will be made during the
summer in all parts of the State in
an effort to eliminate the glaring
headlights menace.
“We are advised,” says a state-
ment by the club, “that the State
Highway Patrol will pay more at-
tention than ever to glaring lights.
The danger of the blinding lights is
more real than many motorsts ap-
pear to appreciate, and the Depart-
ment of Highways is determined to
make the highways safe by forcing
car owners to keep their lights in
proper focus.
Hundreds of headlights focusing
stations have been appointed by the
State, and are to be at the service of
motorists day and night. If the car
owner is unable to make his own ad-
justments, he can have
properly adjusted at the stations, for
a nominal charge.
“Regardless of how the adjust-
ments are made, motorists should re-!
member that eternal vigilance is nec-
essary to keep lights from getting
out of focus. Frequent inspection 1s
necessary, because a set of lights may
be thrown out of focus by a bump or
a jar and unless the motorist is aler.
and watchful he may drive under con-
ditions that are a menace to other us-
ers of the road.
“A good way to test your lights is
the car. If any main beam of light
strikes higher on this object than the
height of the center of the headlamp,
the lights need to be re-focused.”
| Pennsylvania Birds in Pen Sketches.
A handbook of Pennsylvania birds,
the only one of its kind ever publish-
ed for Pennsylvania, is now being
completed by Dr. George M. Sutton,
widely known ornithologist, artist,
naturalist-lecturer, and explorer. Dr.
Sutton is both author and illustrator
of this publication which will contain
a colored frontispiece and approxi-
mately 200 pen and ink drawings of
our native birds. In substance the
book deals with the life history of ov-
er 200 species of birds known to oc-
cur in the Commonwealth either as
residents or migrant. There will be
a complete description of the birds,
their song, habitat, nest and egg, and
range. Ranking as one of the fore-
most ornithologists in the United
States today, Dr. Sutton will place
the salient parts of his knowledge cf
the bird-world of the State in this
delightful treatise. The book will be
well bound, and is of convenient size
for field use. Attention is called to
the particular value of this work to
1—To cast a ballot
2—Reverential fear
3—Note of scale
4—Senseless to pain
5—Part of “to be”
6—At this time
7—Makes a mistake
8—Electrified particles
10—End piece
11—A riotous reveler
12—01d world wild goat witL
curved horns
13—Poetry maker
15—Revolted
17—Compendium of information on
a certain subject
18—Salilor
21—Having lived longer
23—Piece of furniture
26——Not many
27—To stroke gently
31—Amount
32—Palir of horses
33—A musical instrument
34—Some
36—O01d
39—Skin of a fruit
41—Rowing implements
43—To be at ease
44—Sharp pain
46—Cooking vessel
48—Hastened
50—Father
t1—Note of scale
issue.
an
Solution of Last Week’s Puzzle.
Oil:
Siu
PIL IA
UMP A
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A
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all nature-lovers, bird-students, and
particularly to present day school
teachers and their pupils. This pub-
lication is well adapted to use asa
text or reference book in any public
school.
Find State is Not Good Stolen Car
Market.
Pennsylvania is not a good market
for stolen cars, reports of the Penn-
sylvania highway department indicate.
The state highway patrol reports the
arrest of twenty-six persons in connec-
| tion with stolen cars in the month of
States were stolen in Pennsylvania
and recovered elsewhere. -
The state highway patrol, the
Pennsylvania state police and other
! agencies were responsible for recov-
lery of 74 cars in July with an es-
' timated value of $43,875. One of the
| principal means of detecting stolen
| cars is in checking title records of the
{ bureau of motor vehicles.
| 1228 a total of 627 cars were recov-
| grad with an estimated value of $345,-
| included in the list, which is liberally
, dotted with names of cars ranging in
| the $2,000 to $3,000 class.
According to July report, thirty-six
cars were abandoned by the thieves.
In twelve instances cars were found in
the possession of persons not the
rightful owners but not the thieves
{ themselves.
Nine Pennsylvania cars were
found in other States but Pennsylva-
nia recovered eleven cars from other
States.
—Adpvice is given by a writer in the
Nature Magazine, on how to grow
nice looking grass on your lawn.
Weeds are perhaps the greatest dif-
ficulty. And weeds, this writer says,
come largely from the weed seeds
mixed into poorly grown grass seed.
A test made of certain samples of
seed recently gathered showed 60,-
000 weed seeds per pound.
The best time to sow grass seed
is said to be in the fall and not the
spring. Householders in Bellefonte
should get ready to improve their
lawns this fall. And the best way to
encourage the grass to grow is to use
fertilizer. People can’t grow without
food, and the grass too must have its
dinner. :
——Subscribe for the Watchman.
Making Your Will
T is always better to consult a competent
lawyer in the important business of dis-
posing of your estate. And you will do well
to name this Bank as your Executor, thus
insuring prompt and competent settlement.
Drawing wills and settling estates is
not work for Amateurs.
The First. National Bank
BELLEFONTE, PA.
There 1s a Way
O make proper provision for
your family after you are
gone. Establish a trust fund
and make this Bank your Trustee —
then you are sure that your instruc-
tions will be executed as directed.
Consult us freely about this important
matter.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
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{ July. Twice ag many cars from oth
the lights | Stat as many cars from other |
During the first seven months of ;
All of the popular models are |
Stetson
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|
Hats
and
Griffon
Clothes
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Now Ready
Let. us show you the
Greatest Values in Bellefonte
“A. Fauble