(© by D. J. Walsh.) HEN Fanny Winn heard sounds of sobbing, and enter- ing her daughter's room found Helena on the bed in tears, she did not ask what was the matter; she knew. She merely sat down on the side of the bed and patted Helena’s thin young shoulders ! with a hand that hard work had thick- | . I'anny and Helena led the way. It ened. “There! There!” she soothed gently. ° Helena dug her feverish, wet face further in the pillow. “I'm ashamed of crying, but I can’t help it,” said said. “Mother, it Just seems ag if I couldn’t stand it not to be able to go on with school. If 1 could go to Normal two years 1 could teach! I—I can’t bear to go to work in the mill and then perhaps marry the way Catherine Scott did.” Fanny knew all about Catherine Scott. She tried to say cheerfully: “Qh, it wouldn't be as bad as that! You can save your money and g~ on studying after a year or two.” “1 could never catch up. Nobody ever does. Catherine didn't. There was a time when she wouldn't have ; looked at that fellow, but she lost her courage. And I'm no braver than she was to begin with.” Helena sat up and wiped her face, swallowing fur- ther sobs. “Mother, there’s no way out of it. Ill have to go to work. Father hasn't any money to help me with my education and you've done all you can. And—and I've Do faith in our gold mine.” Fanny was silent. She might have 4aid that she had long ago lost faith in the gold mine. That was when she was young and first married to Everet Winn. She had listened then entranced to stories of the wonderful gold mine which ° Everet had inherited from his father. Fveret’s father in turn had inherited it from his father, who had been a rover and adventurer. Everet’s father had always intended to work the won- derful mine, but somehow he had never found either the means or the ambition. Everet’s idea was to sell it outright. money advertising his claims but the Baby Giant found no buyer. It's local- ity was obscure, although Everet had certain papers to prove his ownership, and although his hair was growing gray and he had a daughter who wanted to go to college, he still ex- pected to derive a fortune from the gale of the fabulous mine. In the meantime Fanny had raisec chickens. taken boarders and rommers. turned every honest penny that was possible in order that her daughter might be fed and clothed and edu cated. While Everet followed indif- ferently a job that yielded an inade- quate income, Fanny had worked and worried and planned and prayed. But the time had come when she could do no more. She could not get the money necessary to send Helena to Normal for two years. “I've lost faith in the goid mine,” Aelena repeated dully and her mother in silence echoed that declaration. Fanny arose from the bed. “Now, you lie still, dear,” she said. “Pm going downstairs to work a bit | in my garden.” Fanny's garden was a great help to #ard keeping the family. Everet never touched it, but Helena assisted her mother. The girl sprang up now. “ll come, too,” she said. “I might 48 well be doing some good as lying here crying.” The two went downstairs and ou | | dilute mixture for such a long period, ! probably from the very beginning, that ‘an increase of the oxygen content, un- . less by the most gradual of steps and ' stages, would probably leave none of of doors together. The garden was be- bind the Winn house and considering the smallness of the space it occu- pied, it yielded wonderfully. When Orlando Winn built his house he had really covered all the ground he pos- sessed. It was a large, overtopping house with a great attic stuffed with all the castoff belongings of three gen- erations of Winns. had to buy any furniture; when she needed a chair or a table she went to the attic and got it. She had always wished that there had been less house than garden, for unless she kept boarders they used gnly a corner of the house, and a garden would have gone far toward supplying them with food. For some time Fanny had not been able to keep boarders, for over- work had affected her health. She had grown thin and nervous, As mother and daughter hoed and weeded the woman who had the day before moved into the house next door watched them from her side of the fence. She was young, she had come from a city and her husband was an expert worker at the mill; he earned probably more in one week than Ev- eret Winn had ever earned in any one month in his life. “Let's do something neighborly,” whispered Helena. “Let's offer that woman some radishes and lettuce.” “All right.” Fanny caught up a aandful of lettuce, Helena snatched another handful of crisp, rosy rad- ishes and they moved closer to the fence. “Wonldn't you like these for your supper?’ Fanny asked. “Things of this sort are never so good, I think, as when they're taken fresh from the ground.” “Why, thank you!” gmiled in surprise. used to such—such kindness. In the city one has no neighbors. Why, I didn’t know a single person in the apartment house where I lived.” “1 shouldn’t like that,” Fanny said, The womar “You see, I'm not . cheap. : interested in these things? Once it had lured. ; He had spent much honest | Fanny had never | radical modification of our breathing | apparatus to thrive with even twice "ag much oxygen as we normally get. and they leaned on the fence and be gan to get acquainted. “] think we're going to like the country very much,” Mrs. Knox sald, “except for one thing. I can’t find any furniture 1 want; we only brought what we had to have from the city, and the things they have in that little shop downtown look so shiny and I'm afraid we'll just have to live in a bare house until we can get to the city again.” “Oh, don’t do that!” cried Fanny. She found she liked this frank little * woman very much. “I'll lend you some things. Our house is stuffed with old furniture. But come up to our attle and I'll show you.” Mrs. Knox laid her radishes and let- tuce on the ground and followed as was close and hot in the attic and the light was dim, but Mrs. Knox had good eyes. She went straight to a forlorn-looking old dresser and laid her hand on it. Her manner grew suddenly curious and eager. “It—it is mahogany !” she exclaimed. She moved from one decrepit article to another. “And this—and this— why, Mrs. Winn! How fortunate yov are. You've got a gold mine here.” “A gold mine!” Fanny and Helena exchanged a stare. “A gold mine!” Helena repeated after her mother. “A gold mine, indeed! I know a man in the city who will buy every bit of this at a fabulous price. Youdon't want to give such stuff as this away You want to sell it.” “But it’s broken and rubbed!” “It can be made as good as new. Why, I've seen Mr. Mahin, that man I was telling you about, construct a whole console out of a few pieces of the original design—and sell it for ¢ thousand dollars.” “A thousand dollars!” gasped Fanny. “Oh, do you think you could get him The house is full of them. I want to send my daughter away to school and I can’t unless—” Her voice broke. “Pll write—no, I'll telephone to Mr. Mahin this very day,” promised Mrs Knox. The following day the furnitura maker arrived from the city. He bought every bit of old furniture fanny had in her house. “Well, it looks pretty empty,” Fanny said to Helena as after the furniture had been carted away in a big van she and Helena were looking about, “but you can buy more some day when you get to teaching.” “Mother! Two years at Normal without skimping on anything for me and two years of rest for you with money for everything; why, no gold | 37. Enough. (noeiic) i 53—Relative (abbr.) mine could do much better than that.” Fanny laughed. Need Be No Concern Felt for Air Supply Such as it is, no one has a real kick coming about the quantity of air that makes up our atmosphere. There's a lot of it any way we look at it. Elev- en and two-thirds trillions of pounds, if one wants the figures and knows how to string ‘em out in a row. There's so much of it that its mere weight presses down on each of us to the extent of some fourteen tons, and we never feel it. There is all the air likely to be needed for birds, air- planes and balloons, and when it moves about as a gentle zephyr or an unpleasantly rough tornado the sup- ply is not lessened. But when it comes to breathing it we have some- thing else to say. Normal air contains only about a ! cull fifth, 20.96 per cent, of oxygen, and it is the oxygen that keeps us alive and running. The nitrogen, which makes up the bulk of the re- . mainder, is a mere space filler and we breathe it in and out again because * we must in order to get our broker- age of oxygen. But we have been breathing this us surviving. We can use a little more oxygen in emergencies, such as ; when we have given a chap rather too much nitrous oxide or the like to put him to sleep, but we would need There is no prospect of any such nerease, however, and the probabili- ties are that any change would be in the reverse direction, which is com- | forting enough for the deep-breathing lads with the big chests.—Kansas City Times. Gentle Hint They sat together on the pier, look- ing across the bay at the white-winged yachts. “Sweet!” he whispered. these people a nuisance?” “Pity there are so many of them.” “Wouldn't it be divine to be on an island, with the blue sky overhead, feathered songsters in the woods. a carpet of ferns for our feet, just you and I?” “Nobody else?” “Why, who else would we need, dearest?” “Well, *Orace,” she said, “I wouldn't mind one man with an ice cream stall. I could just do with a raspberry and vanilla.”—London Tit-Bits. Their Mistake Another wedding anniversary had arrived but the June bride of 20 years ago was determined not to mention the date and see whether her husband would remember the event. As he was preparing to leave for his work the complacent husband remarked: “I'll be home early this evening and we'll go out and: celebrate our mistake of 20 years ago todav.” “Aren't all : pb—Doctor of ‘ing to age and sex. i ranges from small : markings, HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this pussle will spell words hoth vertically indicated by a number, which refers to and horizontally. The first letter in each word is the definition listed below the puszie. Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which will fil the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under éyertical” defines a word which will all the white squares to the next black one below. No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obso- lete forms are indicated in the definitions, CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1. 2 [3 4 [5 [6 [7 8 [9 [10 11 12 13 Miz 5 16 17 | 18 129 20 21 23 24 [MMiz25 26 2.7 |28 29 30 iP 3 33 34 35 36 59 1] 43 44 | Who Compose The Army of Savings Bank Depositors? F it those who do not pay their bills? Those who buy things they do not need? Those who mortgage future earnings for un- necessary purchases? We think not. Rather those who are mindful of the future. Who prepare now, for thel inevitable hour when their earning power will end. Who are willing to forgo present enjoyment for future comfort. Who know that there are many accidents in life that can only be relieved by money. It is the prudent saver, not the reckless spender who keeps business going. The First. National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. 45 4 47 4 branes 49 Il 50 51 52 53 54 55 (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical. 1—Sack 1—Part of a harness 4—Toy wagons 2—Extent 8—Nequest 8—Venetian boat 11—Golf club 13—Piece of neckwear 14—Building lot 15—Doctrine 17—A knight-errant 19—Turkish town in Asia Minor 21—Stream 23—Musteline mammal 26—Boy's nickname 27—Night birds 29—-To pierce, as with an animal's horn 81—Note of scale 32—Serpent 83—Buffalo 84—Vehicle 35—Preposition 36—Misplaces 37—To check 38—Also 89—Number below ten 41—Intoxicating liquor 43—Sylvan deity (myth) 46—Breakfast food 47—Body of soldiers 49—Period of time (pl.) 50—Circumference of a wheel 64—To go In sacred theology (abbr.) b—Preposition 6—To tear 7—To rip 8—Helped 9—To mix, as dough 10—Knowledge 12—Cattle of the ox kind (pl) 14—Conserves 16—Explosive 18—Kind of cloth 20—A shield 22—Kind of bird 24—Flowers 26-—Meadow bird (pl) 28—Conquered 30—Same as 24 vertical 31—Distant 33—Same as 41 horizontal 84—Vailley with high steep sides (pl) 36—Appears 87—Measure of length in metric system (var. sp.) 38—Sum 40—Large tub 41—Uncovcered 42—To merit 44—Base 45—Over (poetic) 46—Lighted 48— Public works dept. (abbr.) 51—This person Solution will appear In next issue. ae s BRONZE TURKEYS BEST LIKED. | The bronze turkey holds the place of honor gmong its tribe. It is a cross between the wild and the tame Its beautiful, rich plumage and its size have come from its wild progenitors. To maintain these de- sirable qualities crosses are continu- ally made. In this way the mammoth size has been gained. Their stand- ard weight ranges from 16 to 36 pounds, according to age and sex. Probably more of this variety is a ground of black, blazoned or shaded with bronze. This shading is rich and glowing, and when the sun’s rays are reflected from these colors they shine turkey. like polished steel. ; The Narragansett turkeys are next in size to the bronze. They are of black ground color, each feather end- ing with a band of steel gray, edged with black. This imparts a grayish cast to the entire surface plumage. Mixed with this is the finish of me- tallic black and bronze luster. The standard weights of this va- riety are, for males, from 24 to 30 pounds; for females, from 12 to 18 piunds, Some old males of both this and the bronze variety weigh over 40 pounds. The buff turkey is not generally known throughout the country. In many localities it is almost unknown. The standard calls for a pure buff color throughout, but this shade of coloring is seldom seen. As bred for market these turkeys are of a red- dish buff or light chestnut color mix- ed with white and some dark shad- ings. They are highly valued in some localities for their quick growth and for their attractiveness when dressed. Their average weight is several pounds less than that of the Narra- gansett. The slate turkey might be called a blue turkey. They about average in size with the buffs and blacks. They range from 10 to 26 pounds, accord- e black color spots to larger but the less of this the better for exhibition purposes. It { might be surmised that the slate tur- key originated from a cross of white and black turkeys. In America the white turkey is called the white Holland turkey. The reason for this is not apparent, though some think it is so called be- cause it originally came from Hol- land. White turkeys were formerly quite delicate and rather small, but | now are more generally developed. The standard of weight is less for the whites than for other varieties. They range from 10 pounds for young hens to 26 pounds for old toms. In color of plumage they should be white throughout (except that each has a, black beard on the breast), with’ shanks and toes pinkish white. Passing the Buck i A teacher in a local Sunday school wanted to reprove a small boy. { “Johnnie,” she said, quite solemn- ly, “I'm afraid I shall never meet you in the better land.” Johnnie gave her a look of aston- ishment. i “Why, teacher,” he said, “whatever ! have you been doing now?” Solution of Last Week's Puzzle. J|A[PEIS | i E NEW POSTAGE STAMPS TO COMMEMORATE AIR MEN Postmaster General New has given orders for issuance of a new two- cent stamp and a five-cent commem- orative stamp in connection with the International Civil Aeronautics Con- ference to be held here Dec. 12, 13 and 14. He directed also that a spe- cial postoffice station be established in the building of the United States Chamber of Commerce, where the meetings will be held. A special can- celing machine with a new steel die will be used there. The new stamps are to be the same shape and size as the special delivery stamp. The two-cent stamp will be printed in red ink and the five-cent stamp in blue ink. At the top is a dark border panel with wording “U. S. Postage” in white Roman lettering; a small seroll is at each end, and un- der the panel in small architectural Roman lettering are the words “In- ternational Civil Aeronautics Confer- ence.” On either side of the stamp are narrow border panels; within the borders are shown, on the left the Washi n Monument and on the right the United States Capitol; in the centre is a picture of the Wright aeroplane as first shown by fhe Wright brothers at Fort Myer, a. In the lower right and left corners "are rectangular shields with numer- al two (2) in each. A ribbon appears between the numerals and below the aeroplane with the dates “December 12, 13, 14, 1928,” and under the rib- bon is a base panel with the word “cents” in white Roman lettering. The 5-cent United States postage stamp is similar with the exception of the Wright aeroplane being replaced by a globe showing the eastern and western continents, and a modern monoplane flying across it. The num- eral “5” appears in place of “2.” The new stamps will first be plac- ed on sale Dec. 12, at the Washing- ton, D. C., postoffice, and for the benefit of stamp collectors and deal- ers they will also be placed on sale the same date at the Philatelic Agen- cy, Division of Stamps, Postoffice De- partment. —Mother (coming upon her daugh- ter downstairs): How is it I find you sitting in the dark with this man? Daughter: It must be your insom- nia, Mummy.—Answers. RRS SLE CERCA AANA AA For Your Convenience and Comfort UR banking quarters are carefully designed and arranged for your con- venience and comfort. We want to make your banking transactions pleas- ant and satisfactory and we invite you to use our facilities. | THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 6 E pl Z | ° 7 The most wonderful Men’s and Young Men’s Suits we have ever shown. Suits that are regularly sold at $32.50 to $35.00. The materials are strictly all wool and the tailoring all handwork. They are in every new and popular color and ma- terial— blues, greys, tans, brown and the new Oxford. They should be seen to be appreciated. See them,—you will marvel at the won- derful values, the low price.—a positive saving of not less than $10.00 Do you think it worth while? FAUBLE’S