(® by D. J. Walsh.) INDY RAND heard a chicken squawk. Almost instantly a hawk whistled triumphantly. She leaped to the door. The children, Jack and Elsie, ran to her, screaming at the top of their voices: “He got It!” Against the blue afternoon sky sailed a great bird with a half-grown yellow ehicken clutched in his talons. “We were keeping watch, mother, honest!” Six-year-old Jack said ear- nestly. “But he just swooped right down!” “It wag the chicken with the droopy wing, mother!” sald five-year-old Elsie, half crying. “He'll be back after more,” Lindy sighed. She was almost overwhelmed by this new difficulty. A woman alone with two small children, she had to fight more than hawks. The hawk had perched on the branch of a tree within plain sight of the house and was coolly making a meal. When he had finished he came back for more. Round and round above the chicken yard he cir cled. Lindy watched him anxiously. She was desperate. Every chicken meant money. She needed money as never before. Suddenly she turned and went into the house. Her husband's shotgun rested upon wooden pegs against the kitchen wall. It had never been touched since the last time he put it there. It was loaded. Lindy knew how to shoot, although she had a hor- vor of firearms. She took the gun down and went out of doors again. “Mother; mother! The hawk! Look, the hawk!” shrieked Jack and Elsie. Lindy had a glimpse of gleaming wings, low to the ground. As the bird lifted into the air with another chicken in his talons she raised the gun to her shoulder and fired. The weapon kicked so violently that she was almost thrown over backward. “Mother! You got him!” shouted Jack. Breathless, shocked, Lindy saw the bird floundering before her. The shot had broken his wing. She laid down the gun, grabbed an empty chicken coop and put it over the bird. Down the dusty road frém town ¢ame a powerful car driven by the one person in the world whom Lindy feared and distrusted. This was Abe Akroyd, the man who had sold the place to her husband. Payment and interest were due that day, and she knew that Abe had come to see about it. The car stopped under the great spruce tree that shaded the shabby house and Abe stepped out. He was a heavily built man with a gray-bris- tled jaw and small hard eyes. He had a gold tooth that gleamed hugely when he spoke, Somehow in that mo- ment he made Lindy think of the hawk, potent, relentless, predatory But she had worsted the hawk. That knowledge gave her courage to face the man. “Well, Lindy, how are you com ing?” he began. “You know what day this is, I suppose?’ He took a small black book from his pocket and consulted it. “Payment and interest— $530.” “I can pay only the interest.” Lind, looked pleadingly into the coarse face. “My chickens came on slow. Tn the el now! I expected better than that of you, Lindy. You've had a whole year in which to get righted since John dled.” “A whole year!” ered. Abe consulted the book again ana shook his head. “Business is business. You know that, Lindy. I'd like to accommodate everybody. But if I begin with you the rest of em will be on my back. I've got a good bit of property trust ed out around the country. And I live by what folks owe me. I got to treat all alike; it don’t pay to get too soft- hearted.” “1 don’t expect anything but fan treatment, Mr. Akroyd. I am doing the best I can. A year isn’t very long for a woman that’s working alone with two small children to earn $500 or $600 outside her living expenses. All I ask is an extension of time. Mr Akroyd.” Abe squinted upward at the roof 0 the small house. A corner of the loosely shingled roof had blown off in a recent high wind. When Abe sold a piece of property he always demand ed that the buildings be kept in good condition. “That looks bad,” he commented. Lindy knew it. She bit her lips. “Lindy,” said Abe, putting the black book back into his pocket, “I'll tell you what you better do. You better give up this place and move into town. You'll find work there. You're never going to get this place paid for, that’s fair and square, Lindy.” Lindy went white. She clutched a: her throbbing throat. The place was home to her and the children; it had been John's home while he lived. He had brought her there a bride. They had planned to pay for it and im: prove it and continue there in their old age. She couldn't give it up. From her pocket she took a purse, opened it and with trembling fingers counted out $30 in worn bills. The interest. She held out the money to Abe, but he refused it with a gesture. “All or nothing, Lindy. 1 hate to do it, but I got to be firm. Ill pay Lindy’s lips quiv- you back cash for every cent due you The money will give you a start some where else. I'm: offered more for the place this minute than I asked when I sold it to John Rand. Ed Holmes wants it, Lindy, I can’t turn down » good cash offer for it, you know.” “Ed Holmes!” Lindy’s face was scarlet now. “I've seen him snooping ‘round on my hill yonder. 1 don’t know what he's looking for. But he's going to keep off the premises as long as I occupy them or—or I'll drive him off with a shotgun!” “What's this?” Abe looked in aston ment at the palpitating little figure of the young woman. Lindy pointed toward the chicken coop within which the hawk was glow ering. “I just shot him,” she said. “Yes, mother did. too!” cried loya’ Jack. Abe looked at the hawk. which he hadn’t noticed before. ‘Guess I'll have to warn Ed to stay away,” he sald. Then as Lindy again held out the money to him pleadingly he turned from her and went to his car. Stepping in. he drove swiftly away. Weak and faint Lindy sat down on the doorstep. Abe had refused the in: terest. That meant he was deter- mined to get rid of her. He wanted to let Ed Holmes have the place. What did Ed want to for? What was he doing up there in that stone patch? “Jack and Elsie,” she called. “You stay here and watch the chickens. I'm going up on the hill for a little while.” She hadn’t been on the hill since John died. It was nothing but an old rock pile anyway: no good land. John had paid much more than the place was worth and now Abe Akroyd was squeezing her for the payments. She climbed up to where she had seen Ed Holmes a few days before. Just inside the woods she stopped aghast. Before her some freshly dug earth and chippings of rock. Rd Holmes had been digging into her land. What for? What did he hope +0 find in a barren place like this? Lindy ran all the way back to the house. Ten minutes later she was racing toward town, the twe children bob- bing on the back seat of the old flivver. Down Main street she drove, past all the lawyers’ offices until she came to a shabby house, where on the porch. sat an old man reading a big book. “Mr. White!” Lindy said, going up to him. “Youve read just about ev- erything. John always said you were the best informed man in these parts. I've got a mystery to solve. You know what my land is. You know what that hill back of the house is. What would a man like Ed Holmes 9nd there to interest him?” “Been snooping round there. he?” inquired the old man. has No White Man Carries Own Parcels in India Outside the bazaar in Calcutta you observe as you pass in, certain lean little men in. loin cloths, each having a large circular basket with twe handles. : One of them promptly follows you. padding along noiselessly with his bare feet, and you are half-way through the first alley before you be- come conscious of his presence. You tell him to go away. He does pot go. You try to shoo him, as you would an over-affectionate dog. Noth: ing doing. He is there to carry par cels for buyers in the bazaar, and It is not within the range of his under utemding to conceive of a foreign sahib, all done up in white clothes and shoes and pith helmet, to be anything olge than a prodigal buyer. So he abides with you, and when you have bought one small brass tea caddy and a carved box 3 by 4 inches. he insists on putting them into his basket. fo be taken home with you. After trotting around with you for an hour or so, and padding along with you to your hotel, where the pack ages are delivered to a house boy, he receives four annas—about 10 cents— qnd he is content. This system prevails throughout In dia. where no white man is expected to carry a bundle, however small The carrying of burdens is the duty of the menial classes, hence the firm- ness with which the earriers of the bazaars maintain their particular kind of special delivery.—From the Ocean Terry. Moral in This Short Story of Absent-Mindedness A Los Angeles real estate dealer, In addressing a group of salesmen said: “Explain all the documents and maxe the prospective customer read and understand them. Never let a man sign who doesn’t know exactly what he’s signing. Never let a cus tomer find himself in the position of the doctor I met on my last trip te Honolulu. “I've seen a good many changes, the man told me and added, ‘1 used to he a prosperous doctor but owing to one little slip, most of my patients have deserted me. “What was the slip? 1 inquired. «well, sir, replied the doctor, ‘in filling in a death certificate for a , patient who had died, I did not notice that the printed form had been al- tered, so 1 absent-mindedly signed | my name in the space headed ‘cause “Digging dirt, chipping off pieces of cock.” “Ed Holmes, you know, Lindy, has made a great study of the rocks here: abouts. He prides himself on being a genuine geologist. Yes, yes. Guess Ill go home with you, Lindy. and see what [I make out.” Back toward home raced Lindy with the one person she felt she could ab- solutely trust. She helped the old man up the hill; she boosted him up. He knelt down. He picked up a bit of rock. He held the specimen close to his eyes. The light and life of youth streamed Into his old face. “Blue granite!” he said. “Yes, yes. Lindy, don’t you breathe a word of | this to anyone. There's a plot on foot to rob you. But you'll fool ’em, Lindy. if you just keep your mouth shut.” ! lar, of death.”—Los Angeles Times. Peculiar Thing in Life If you choose to represent the vari- ous parts in life by holes upon the table, of different shapes—some circu- some triangular, some squars, some oblong—and the persons acting these parts by bits of wood of similar shapes, we shall generally find that the triangular person has got into the square hole, the oblong into the tri: angular and a square person has squeezed himself into the round hole. The officer and the office, the doer and the thing done. seldom fit so exactly that we can say they were almost made for each other.—Sydney Smith (1769-1845). “Sketches of Moral Philosophy.” Martyr to Science Dr. Auguste Marie of the Pasteur Institute died in a search for a serum | which would annihilate the bacillus For the second time that day Lindy | raced to town. It was near sunset when she located Abe Akroyd. Mr. White had lent her the money to make the last payment, and Abe reluctantly received it. Ed Holmes had not let Abe know why he wanted the Rand place. When ; he found out that he couldn’t have it he was furious, but not half so furl- ous as Abe himself. As for Lindy, who had outwitted them both and who found herself about to become a rich woman, she went home and commiserated with the captive hawk. “Keep up your courage, old boy,” she said. “Your wing is going to mend nicely. And then you'll be able to fly again. I owe you something and 1 always pay my debts.” Cruel Treatment of Insane Among many primitive races the in- sane oF feeble minded were looked upon as being specially loved of the gods and treated with gentleness. But the Nineteenth century occasionally chained them in dungeons, in the care of former convicts armed with whips and clubs; the Seventeenth burned them as witches. When George I[I1 of Englana went insane after the death of a favorite daughter in 1811 he was kept in a straitjacket most of the time and his feet were blistered to induce docility. A physician asking after the king's health when he was troublesome was told by the keeper. “Sir, we knock his majesty down as flat as a founder.”—Detroit News. Legends About Snakes According to Rev. H Seddall s book “Malta, Past and Present,” there are two or three species of snake on the island, but none of these is venomous as one undoubtedly was in the days of St. Paul. It is probably mere legend that venomous snakes taken to Malta lose their venom, just as It is legend that St. Patrick drove out all the snakes from Ireland. In con nection with the latter, scientists af firm that there is no evidence to show that snakes have ever existed in Ire land. : botulinus which produces the fatal disease known as botulism. While ex- perimenting, his left eye was touched by a drop of liquid containing bacilli botulini. Knowing that he was doomed, he set about recording a complete story of the progress of the disease. Within a fortnight after the accident, in his laboratory he dic- tated the last word. He was post- humously awarded the Medaille d’Honneur des Tpidemies, as a vic- tim of devotion to the cause of hu manity. Chinese Tit-Bit The Chinese regard as a delicacy the nest of the selangane or of re- lated species of swift or swiftlet of the Malay archipelago. [It has the shape and size of half a teacup is at- tached to the rock in the interior of a cave, and has the appearance of fibrous gelatine or isinglass. It Is composed of a mucilaginous substance secreted by special glands, and is not, ag was formerly thought, made from a glutinous seaweed. Considerable “Explanation” A brother and sister, six and four years of age, respectively, spent a con- siderable part of each day pla, 1g to- gether, One day their father found them sitting in little red chairs, rock- ing their dolls. He inquired of them what it was they were playing and they replied “Mothers,” explaining fur- ther that they were both “widows.” “How can that be?” asked the father. “Oh,” they said, “we're married to dead men,”—Pathfinder Magazine, Right-of-Way The movement to clear the tracks for genius brought a snort of derision from the famous California educator David Starr Jordan. “Genius,” he de- clared, “recognizes no obstacles. That is part of the genius. He who must have his way made smooth is but an ordinary mortal. “Looking back over a long period, it is my opinion that the world always turns aside to let any man pass who knows where he is going.” Marks Birthplace of Father of Locomotive At Wylain, on the north bank of the River Tyne, under the auspices of the Institutions of Shipbuilders and Me- chanical Engineers, a tablet commem=- orates the birthplace of a man who achieved the seemingly impossible, George Stephenson. the father of the steam locomotive engine. Past the front of his cottage, within a few vards of the door. heavily laden and tight trains of coal trucks pass today, as did the tiny chaldron wagons drawn by horses along plate-ways 150 years ago. The cottage itself is a two-sto- ried house. typical of many of those built years ago by the colliery owners for their employees. [t was divided into four rooms, in each of which a different family dwelt. The lower room at the western side of the cot. tage was the home of the Stephenson family, and it was in this room, which served for sleeping, eating and shel- ter, that George, the second son of a family of four boys and two girls, was born on June 9, 1781. “Old Bob.” George Stephenson’s father, was a Scotsman who crossed the border as a gentleman’s servant, and then mar. ried a local lassie, Mabel Carr. the daughter of a dyer. “Bob” found work as fireman of the pumping engine of the Wylam colliery at 12 shillings ($3) per week.—Edinburgh Scotsman. Found He Had Financed Small “Deal” in Rabbit Some Saturdays ago a small boy asked his father for a quarter to buy a rabbit. On being satisfied that hut was being fixed up in which to keep the rabbit, and being also a be. liever in the civilizing influence on boys of keeping pets. dad gave him a guarter. The following Saturday a secona youngster came on the same errand, and obtained a quarter. It happened to be a large family, and not wish. ing to display any favoritism. dad eventually gave a quarter to each of his children for the purchase of a rabbit. One day he went out to see all these rabbits and was surprised to find only one! He inquired of his children what they had all done with their quarters. Each declared that he or she had bought a rabbit. “Well, where are they then?” he demanded. “Why. dad,” cxplained one of hia youngsters, “it was the same rabbit; we bought it from each other.”—Ex- change. Forest “Conversations” A well-known western Canadian guide, born and bred in the great wide open, has given some intelligent ob- servation of the ways of the four-foot- ed inhabitants of the woods, and he sincerely believes that the lower ani- mals have a for of communicating with each other that cannot be ex- plained at present. He believes that radio will eventually solve the ques- tion and be the means of interpreting the animal messages, and he hopes tc prove shortly that animals utilize wave lengths outside of the range of the human ear. The cow moose will leave her calf or deer her fawn and tell it in animal language not to stray and the little fellow never disobeys its parent. Also the youngster can in some way communicate with its moth- er in time of Janger without uttering a sound or leaving the spot. On Diet to Conquer Air “Live on air to conquer ihe air, was the slogan of a certain school of flying originating with the Taolsts of China and also followed by air-minded ancients of early India. This school believed that levitation could be brought about if starvation of suffi- cient length to lighten the body were practiced rigidly, says Dr. Berthold Laufer, curator of anthology in the Field Museum of Natural History at Chicago, in his book, “The Prehistory of Aviation.” The application of in- ternal remedies to fly was also a Taoist idea. A “flying elixir,” com- pounded by T'ao Hung-king, physician of the Fifth century, consisted of mixed gold, cinnebar, azurite and sulphur. Spruce Spikes as Rivals The spruce tree has a penchant for symmetrical lines which causes it to go through an unusual contest if, by some mishap, the topmost spike is broken off. When this happens all of the spikes leading out to the side from the joint at which the upstanding spike was attached begin to curve upward. This continues for some time with each apparently endeavoring to be the “king branch.” Eventually one at- tains this rank, and the others almost fmmediately begin to droop and re- sume their former lateral positions. Who's to Blame? A leading medical journal announces that Americans are morbid over vita. mines, periodic medical examina- tions, dietetic systems, roughage, thereapeutic dogmas and health “jams,” and figuratively calls them a “lotta bunk.” Well, who started us that way if it wasn’t the medicos?— Louisville Courier-Journal. Consider the Minutes Minutes are given us to use. Every man gets exactly the same number. How we employ them determines largely our success or failure in life Remember, therefore, that he who “kills time” often. murders oppor- tunity. —Grit. : Banking Banking has become a varied occupation. The early banks did little more than receive money on deposit, pay it out on checks, and lend to borrowers. These duties, while still the chief functions of a bank, now are supplanted by many others of im- i portance. For example, National Banks, in recent years, have been granted all the fiduciary powers of i a Trust Company, and can act as Executor, Admin- istrator or Trustee. More and more the public is becoming financially interested in our great indus- tries, in public utilities and carriers, through the ownership of stock in these corporations. Today expert knowledge is necesary to the prop- er settlement of an estate. We advise everyone to make a Will, and to name a proper bank as Execu- tor. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. mS ——— RCC LR CCC CE CORR EA MAA) RONEN) In Our Modern : Vault N our modern Safe Deposit Vault you have the strongest protec- tion against loss from fire and theft. Why not avail yourself of this safety for your valuables. Private Lock Boxes rent for $2.00 and up per year. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. 3 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM a RR TE TC CR NE A AA A A EE EE Se EE EET, This week brought to the Fauble Store the Greatest Clothing ‘Oalues ever offered in Bellefonte. Suits and Overcoats that are at least ten dollars un- der the regular price. We want you to see them--- the saving is so big that you will realize it at a glance. Don’t wait. Come at once and profit by what we know are the biggest bargains in the store’s history.