Ialy Makes Good Use HE DISCOVERED |! mee i €© by D. J. Walsh.) ORIN struggled up the hil Could she make it? There was her car across the corner but that letter had to be mailed. was a very important letter and p striped @irmail box was just ead. Clutching tighter three pack- es, her favorite thin notebook and e bulky envelope, she tried to hurry ster. She must catch the car. It would ' ten minutes before there was an- her and she was hungry. She had en shopping and going back to that wyer's office after those papers ace one o'clock. Then suddenly all e stores had closed and she had car token and four cents in" her irse. \ She reached the box at last. One e on the car, her hands went up- ard. There were still three people get on. The flange of the mail- ot clanged as it fell shut. Now— aybe she could catch that car. A young man faced her, hat 1p ind. “But that is an airmail box,” he id quite reasonably, with a small jte of protest in his undeniably pleas- it voice, . In blank astonishment Lorin opped. Why, he did not look like— masher. Of course, she should be gry, only she hadn’t time. And he he looked mice! He stood squarely | ‘her way. «Is there anything about me,” she ymanded in her puzzlement, “to indi- ite that I couldn't mail an air tter?” “Then why didn’t you?’ His tone as only interested inquiry as she ied to edge around him. Lorin looked down. The air lette as in her hand. “Oh.” All tue assurance went ou * ber in a long gasp. “I've mailed yy note book!” She looked at him, : the mail box. “What can I do?” He stepped to the box, ren his nger down the schedule. “Tt says here that the next coilec on is at 7:10. We could wait. It’s guarter past six now.” “Rut I'm so bungry,” cried Lorin in _mnall, involuntary wail as her car ent past. Then she stoppe in hor ovr at what she had done. “1 was just going to suggest; this oks like a nice little place. Please, m hungry myself,” and he led her ondering at ber own docility, ‘ato je small corner restaurant und ty, me stairs to a balcony. “We're in luck. Here's a table ara window. We can watch that mail px from here.” He L-elped her out of er coat und held “her “chalr for her. The food was good. She couldn't elp eating. : “You've a great little town here,” e told her. “I'm just in from the ast. 1 like it already.” He smiled cross at her. ] “I don’t know what to think of my- elf”—she stirred uneasily—*I—1 ever—did anything like this before.” “Neither did 1.” He passed her the elery. “The stores were closed—1 couldn’t ash a check. That unlucky letter.” he laid it face up on the table. I wstn’t lose it. It's to my cousin le is selling some lots for mother.” ‘rom where it lay he could not help geing. “Mr. John Smith” in a busi- ess block in Baltimore. “May I take you home when we save here?’ he asked after a pause. “here was a queer little quirk to the orner of his mouth. “No.” She stiffened instantly. “rd like to very much,” he per- Isted quietly. “There is every reason thy 1 should.” “There isn’t a ghost of a reason,” he informed him uncompromisingly. I don’t even know your name. I sup- ose it’s only what I might expect fter what I've done.” She laid down er fork miserably. yo : “Please eat your dinner. My name,” e went on cheerfully, his eyes on he letter, “is—Mr. John Smith.” “H’m., Yes. Mine is Jane Brown.” the went on eating. | “Please, Miss Jane Brown—" “My mother,” she told him gloomily, would faint on the threshold,” | “Your mother would be glad to see Br, ning 3 MHF TN hair, Je’s early.” The mall truck was topping on the corner. “Sit still 1 go.” He snatched up the letter nd vanished down the stairway. Lorin leaned forward and saw him ietrieve her notebook. How strong ind sure he looked. ‘What fine poise p his whole figure, his well-shaped jead. Both he and the postman were aughing. . Then he was back. He laid the wtebook beside her plate. “Did you mail my letter?” “Qh, assuredly,” he laughed, “irrev- )eably—by the fastest air mall you pver saw in your life. I might say pstantaneously. Can’t you imagine ‘hat Mr. Jobn Smith has it in his pos- session this minute?” “You are too old—or too young— tor sueh flights of fancy,” she an- swered severely. “How did you get past the cashier?” I gave her a ten, a quarter and two génnies to hold. Then I got them when I came in.” He spread thew jut on the table, fingering the ten sxperimentally. “May I call a tax! for yon?” She shook her head. The meal gropreseed, ber thoughtful-- silence ‘they came out on the street, “that 1 won't be right on that car with you?” “] don’t. I'll just have to trust you. I really do thank you for the dinner and for being a gentleman SO far.” She looked squarely up into bis eyes. “You win,” he said softly and helped ‘her on the car. Then he stood pack watching her through the win- dows, his hat in his ‘hand. But when she got off at her own street a taxi was following. As ‘she turned up her own walk it stopped and footsteps hurried after her. On the steps she turned. “You promised—" “I didn’t promise anything.” “My mother—" «] told you your mother would be glad to see me! The front door opened. Her mother .fell on his neck. “Oh, John. 1 got your telegram about four o'clock and 1 knew that Lorin had mailed the letter to you. Whatever shall we do? I can’t im- agine—Lorin, did you mail the let- ter? 1 thought—" John pulled Lorin through the doorway. Then he fished the letter out of his pocket, ran his finger un- der the flap. “Yes,” he said, “we mailed it.” Lichtenstein One of Europe's Toy Kingdoms A comic opera kingdom, where goose girls drive snowy geese through wind- ing lanes, and turreted castles top massive hills, has broken into print again through the announcement of the engagement of its ruler, Prince Franz, to a Viennese woman. Engage- ment announcements are not always of international interest, but Lichten- stein is famous as one of Europe's four toy independent states; San Ma- rino, Andorra and Monaco. Lichten- stein is next to the largest with its overwhelming area of 65 square miles: “A visit to Lichtenstein in its jew- ol-like setting in the eastern alps be- tween Austria and Switzerland, is like a journey into the past,” says a bul- letin from the headquarters of the National Geographic society. “Elec- tric lights and other modern improve- ments do not detract from the pic- turesqueness of the countryside, with its wayside shrines and tall crucifixes or the famous castle, Burg Vaduz, the home of Prince Franz, with its gabled towers and mullioned windows. “rhe winding roads that travel ths small country’s mountain sides are traversed as often by long strings of cattle or huge wagons loaded with hay as they are by tourisis’ automobiles,” the bulletin continues. “Agriculture is the chief Industry of Lichtenstein’s 10,000 population and scenes such as those that inspired Millet’s famous pie- ture, ‘The ‘Angelus’ are common throughout_the countryside. The farm-- houses are either natural color wood structures that merge into the colors of the landscape or small, cheerful stucco affairs that resemble the Swiss chalets across the border. Hay is stored in wooden huts, whose roofs are kept on Dy large stones placed an them. «Until the Seventeenth century Ro monsch, a language derived from the Latin, was spoken by the now German- speaking Lichtensteiners. The old language still persists in some of the place names like Samina, Gavadura or | the capital, Vaduz. «yaduz is the fairy-tale capital or 4 story-book land. The old castle looks like a medieval robber baron’s stronghold as it tops a hill overlook- ing the town. It has been restored in a Sixteenth-century style of architec- ture and the illusion of medieval life is helped every summer when the Lichtensteiners, dressed in raiment of ancient styles, put on old plays there depicting the lives and loves of the minnesingers, the famous bards of the Middle ages.” P Circus Old Institution The circus may be traced back to Roman times. At that time it was a building for the exhibition of horses and chariot races and other amuse- ments. The oldest building of this kind in Rome was the Circus Maxi- mus. The circus in modern times, al- though having the same name, really has little in common with the Institu- tion of classical Rome. The popular- ity of the eircus in England may be traced to that kept by Philip Astley B on gi the epg of the Eighteenth RIAN als vy olor ip Bv crow and ger. In America a circus actor named Rick- etts is said to have performed before George Washington in 1780, and in the first half of the Nineteenth cen- tury the establishments of Purdy, Welch and company, and of Van Am- burg, gave a wide popularity to the circus in the United States. California Forests It is generally conceded by those who know that the tree growths of California just north of San Fran- cisco are the world’s greatest, al- though there are many other beautl- ful forests. The mild climate, heavy rainfall ana generally humid atmospheric condl- tions that prevail along the coast have resulted in the production of a for- est that is more wonderful in the density of its growth and the majesty of its development than is to be found anywhere else. The sequoias of California are the glants of the vegetable kingdom. The Douglas firs, Sitka spruces and the glant arbor vitae (Western red oa dars) of Oregon and Washington are second In- size only to the sequolas, oa * ——— — — Clan abs 8 One after another the great water falls of the Alps and Apennines have been placed in subjugation by Italy, their water guided into huge, high pressure conduits and forced to turn giant turbines, writes Henry Kit tredge Norton in World's Work. Before the World war these turbines were already producing two billion kilowatt hours per year; during the and the need for power, this capacity was increased by another billion kilo- watts. After the post-war turbulence had settled down into the Fascist regime, a new impetus was given to of 1926 the actual consumption bad reached 7,500,000,000 kilowatt hourr per annum. Since then §t has continued to mount. More than 7,000 of aly’s 8, 000 communes are now supplied with electrical energy. The per capita con- sumption runs close to 200 kilowatt hours. As was to be expected under the circumstances, by far the greater por- tion of Italy's electrical energy is used in turning the wheels of her factories. Lighting is a secondary consideration. Sixty per cent of Italy’s electrical energy is used for motor power; 15 per cent for light and heat; 14 per cent in the metallurgical and chemical in- dustries, and the remaining 11 per cent for the electrified railways. Old Inscription Shows “Horse Age” Beginning To the learned, century-old Academy | of Inscriptions of Paris, Professor ! Hrozny, of Prague, has communicated ! his long-expected translation of what | ig perhaps the most ancient Hittite | inscripticn. It is the first in any lan- ! guage that became European and was cut in the rock of Asia Minor not far | from what is now Angora, the new , capital of Turkey. | The value of the inscription—what | we might call its curiosity—is that it gives the date very nearly when tame | | | | i 1 horses first appeared so far to the west. It was the beginning of the Horse age in civilization and is of melancholy interest to us who, 4,000 years later, are careering with our au- tomobiles into the Hocseless age. | It was supposed that horses were. _ first brought to Egypt, mother of Civ- ilization, about 1,500 years before Christ by the Cassites from Babylon. That was some 500 years after Abra- j ham passed through the Hittite peo- ples on his way from Ur of the Baby- fonian Chaldees to the Promised land. --Boston Globe. Zinc in Industry Starting with the Nineteenth cen- tury the increase in the use of zinc was decidedly accelerated. During the first decade the production was esti- mated at 6,000 tons. In the fifth dec - ace the output had. jumped to 367.000 tons, and for the half century the total was 635,000 tons. The output of the second half century reached the amazing total of 12,100,000 tons. or an increase of 1,800 per cent. The acceleration has continued, and Ia the year 1927 the output was 1,444, 000 tons, a total equal to the produc- tion of the first 60 years of the Nine- teenth century. Nearly one-third of the entire world’s output of zinc has been pro- duced in the United States. Wee Kathryn Lois, age five, has a “‘calory-counting mother” who quite often “slips,” and has not yet at- ! tained her goal of a “perfect 38.” . Kathryn Lois has heard much talk about foods that make one fat. One night mashed potatoes were served at dinner. Kathryn Lois | pushed her plate back and said, be § | don’t believe I want any potatoes.” | “Why, what's the matter, Kathryn?’ asked her father, “Better eat your po- tatoes like a good girl; they will help you grow up big and strong.” { “That's just it,” retorted this mod- ern miss, “I don’t ever want to get to be as fat as mother.” Mother is ‘counting calories in earnest 1I—Indianapolis News. i | | Starting Early | The Homestead Brown—I shall do just as I like. If { want to smoke in the drawing room, I shall smoke in the drawing room. AR *s that! @ Brown (warming up)—What’s more, the carpet is good enough ash-tray for me. Quite good enough. So please understand in future! Silence. Brown (continuing)—And if you think I'm going to spend the whole afternoon standing about loaded up with parcels, you've made a mighty big. ... a Problem : been deaf? ab How long had his wife Expressed An Irishman entered his local post office and told the young woman be- hind the counter that he wanted to forward an express letter. He placed the usual fee on the coun- ter, but was informed that an addi- tional sixpence would be required as the addressee lived some considerable distance outside the delivery area. The Irishman seemed rather pus vled at this request, but after a me- ment’s hesitation, ventured: “Well, you let the letter go as it i». { don’t want to pay the extra sixpence, to go to the office and collect It." war, because of the shortage of coal electrical development, and by the end but OI'\l write to them an’ tell them | facing his amused ome across. the od { ; : | “How do you know,” he asked as of Vast Water. Powe * WHAT WATER IS ‘Timid Man. London.—Any schoolboy fresh from his first chemistry lesson, will tell you that water is H20—a statement, _ by the way, with which ‘modern ‘scl- | entists do not altogether agree. Not everybody, however, can say who first made that stupendous fact known te the world. It was a millionaire bachelor. Hen ‘ ry Cavendish by nume, nephew of one - of the dukes of Devonshire. ‘He was so shy that he’kept many of his discov- eries secret lest ‘he should become fa- mous, and they were only unearthed after his death; so shy that if he ever caught sight of one of his own wom- an servants, she had to pack her bag and leave that day. He was so shy that when his banker came to tell him he had $400,000 in his account— and wasn’t that rather a lot to lle idle?—he sent the man of business away, told him to do what be liked with it, but said he would close his account if they ever bothered him again. He was so shy, says the London Mail, that having a wonderful iibrars of books he was quite willing to lend he took a separate house in Soho. so that borrowers need never disturb his studies. Whenever he took out a book himself he always signed for it like any stranger. Not only did he tell how water I» made. He was one of the first to dis- cover that heat is not a substance but a state; one of the first to measure the density of the earth; a pioneer of electricity, an astronomer, a geolo- gist. Rustics at Clapham, where he had his country seat, peeped through his windows and saw, instead of furni- ture, a laboratory and a forge. They thought he was either a wizard or a madman; but he was merely a genius, Air Post Office Designed to Sort 250,000 Letters Seattle, Wash.—When the govern- ment desires to move all first-class mail by air, especially designed planes will be available for such service. A fully equipped airplane on display in a local plant will carry three tons of mail, or a quarter million letters, at 135 miles an hour. Eighteen-passenger transports bull for use on the transcontinental air route this summer are so constructed that they can be quickly transformed into mail planes. Sorting tables and sacks can be placed around the cabin for the distribution of mail en route. as is done on mail trains. These cabins are 19% feet long, more than six feet high and five and one-half feet wide. ! .These newer planes have a wins span’ of 80 feet and a length over all of 55 feet. Letter clerks will have their meals aboard the planes in well equipped buffets electrically heated. Each plane is provided with a fully equipped lavatory with hot and cold water. Large, unobstructed windows of non-shatterable gluss give excellent vision. Instruments mounted over the sorting tables would tell the clerks how fast they are flying and how much time they have to distribute mail for various cities en route. Numerous applications for airplanc mail clerk jobs are on file with the Post Office department, it was an- nounced here. | Towns’ Names on Roofs Guide Distance Flyers ‘Washington.—Remarkable progress in the movement to have name signs painted on the roofs of prominent buildings of towns throughout the country was reported by W. Irving Glover, second assistant postmaster general in charge of air mail, on his return from an inspection trip over the air mail lines. The campaign was started by the Daniel Guggenheim Fund for the Pro- motion of Aeronautics and postmas- ters have been ‘enlisted to further the movement. Mr. Glover said he was surprised with the results already ac- complished. He said the people in the West were more interested in the air mail than those in the East. Four Finnish Spies Go to Prison in Russia Leningrad. — Four men, charged with espionage on Soviet soil in be- half of Finland, have pleaded guilty in a military trial here. They were sentenced to eight years of imprison- ment and confiscation of all their properties. The self-confessed spies are Yalmar Lempianen, Edward Ves- terinin, Solomen Uttu and Uri Reiman. DOA DO Sun and Tape ‘Brand’ Bathers in Virginia Richmond, Va.—The vogue for suntan here has brought the “prand.® A “brand” is easily acquired with a few strips of ad- the swimming pool. It consists of shaping the de- sired design or Initials from the tape, applying them to the skin and stepping into the sunshine. ‘The space covered by the tape remains white and is easily seen when the tape 1s removed. Greek letter fraternity “brands” ap- pear to be the most popular. English Genius World's Most "WAGES IGH wages depend on large output. : Loafing on the job ends in unemploy- ment. The man who does only one half of what he is capable of doing is a poor economist. He thinks he is cheating his employer but he is also cheating him- self. He never gets ahead. Wages in the United States are higher than anywhere else. Why? Because the output is greater. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. RR CSE SA A A i] IANA SANTO RE A AN A ie] AAR O WARRANT BANNAN O RUC ES A How Will They Invest Your Life Insurance? A 47 NSS SL TEI A NN NTO INN ANN NG) HIS is a question which many men may be thinking about right now. Better put it in Trust with this Bank as Trustee, and know that it will have safe investment and be paid as instructed. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Pa SS SN NN EINER ERAN DS (2 hesive tape and an afternoon at & | | We are ready with the greatest showing of New Clothing for Men | | and Boys in the store’s his- tory. | Stetson and Mallory Hats Nottingham and Griffon Clothes for Men and Young§Men “Sonny Boy” Suits for the Boys Walkover Shoes for Men all priced at a saving for you and with the purpose of mak- ing this store the Leading Ji Men's Store in Central Penn- fii sylvania. A. auble