UTHFUL DRIVERS MUST SHOW CARDS Very youthful drivers of motor rs in Pennsylvania are required to oduce operator's licenses, when en- untered by members of the State ghway Patrol, Commissioner Ben- min G. Eynon, announced. Eynon s turned over to Superintendent ilson C. Price of the Patrol a let- r from Dr. G. P. Willey, field psy- jatrist of the Welfare Depart- ent’s bureau of mental health, in zich Dr. Willey refers to unlicens- drivers of extreme youth. An examination of inmates of one the State’s correctional institu- ps has convinced Dr. Willey that en and boys of automobile larceny 'e usually mental defectives, con- ymed criminals, defective delin- ents or alcoholics. The majority " those he has examined have driv- \ motor cars for a long time, but ithout ever having been licensed. “Obviously,” he wrote Commis- oner Eynon, “the number of unli- mnsed drivers in the reformatory coup will be much higher than in \e institution who are just reaching 1 age when driving a motor car at- acts them, and because as a group ey are inclined to take chances ad run unreasonable risks without jought of the consequences. “Tt occurs to me—as it has un- subtedly occurred to you, that one the effective means of Jealing ith automobile larceny is to check p the young drivers frequently for censes. Another approach to this atter would be to insist that a arked car must be locked in some anner, since these boys tell me, al- 10st without exception, that they ave never attempted to appropriate machine which was adequately se- ured except in the course of break- 1g and entering a garage where nlocked cars were kept.” Of 69 inmates in the institution ex- mined the last few days in July a otal of 49 declare that they drive aotor cars and trucks, but do not old drivers’ cards. Of the 69 only 9 possess average intelligence, and ix of the 19 are dull [HROWS LIGHT ON AUTO INSPECTION Motorists are advised by the Key- tone Automobile Club that it is not ecessary to install “approved” rear amps on their cars if the present with a white light and show a red amps illuminate the license plate ight that can be seen at a distance f 500 feet. In the official inspection now un- jer way, many inspectors have taken he position, to the Club, ‘hat rear lights which are not on the State’s “approved” list must be re- moved before an inspection sticker an be issued. Numerous complaints were received by the Club from mo- -orists who said they had been driv- ng several years with the same lamps, without amy question of le- zality having been raised. ““We communicated with the Com- missioner of Motor Vehicles,” says a statement by the Club, “and learned that inspection stations ‘had been ad- vised that ‘no active enforcement is contemplated at this time’ on the ruling relating to “approved rear lights. The only requirements in- sisted upon are those above stated.“ Instructions of the Bureau of Mo- tor Vehicles to the ‘inspection sta- tions covering ‘this point are as fol- lows: «Careful attention should be given to headlamps, and ‘in checking rear lamps bear in mind ‘that rear lamps should be in such a position as toil- juminate the rear registration plate with a white Tight and show a red light to the rear. As to approved rear and signal lamps no active en- forcement is contemplated at this time, but these two requirements must be met and if mew equipment js needed replacements should be confined to those lamps listed as ap- proved.” e——— FORSEES COLDEST WINTER IN YEARS Major Charcot, French explorer, announces that the coldest winter ever is coming and advises every in- habitant to prepare his fur coat ear- ly. A most unusual movement of icebergs towards the south has been detected in the north which means that there will even be more shiver- ing in these parts thanthe winter of 1928. Good news, however, has come for the wine drinkers. The wine harvest is better in quantity and quality than that of normal years and this over- production will have its effect on prices which, it now appears, have been kept up by speculation. Now, it will be necessary to get rid of the old wine in order to make room for the new and already prices have come down as much as ten dol- jars a cask. The retailers will also be obliged to lower their prices, by at least a franc a quart. . 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 amusements. The oldest building of this kind in Rome was the Circus aximus. The circus in modern times, although haying the same name, really has little in common with the institution of classical Rome. The popularity of the circus in Eng- land may be traced to that kept by Philip Astley in London at the end of the Eighteenth century. Astley was followed sy Ducrow and later by Hengler & Sanger. In America a circus actor named Ricketts 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 Amburg, gave a wide popularity to the circus in the United States. —Subscribe for the Watchman. Odd House Constructed at Behest of “Spirits” The Palo Alto chamber of commerce gays: “The Winchester house, in this city. was built by Mrs. Winchester, the widow of the famous firearms man, who was a spiritualist. She claimed the spirits told her she would not die as long as the sound of ham- mers was heard in her house, and as a result she kept building and build: ing and changing and, when the spirits told her, left off one section half fin- ished and started another. It is esti- mated that at least $1,000,000 was spent on the structure, and parts of it have not been explored. The house is some three stories high—that Is. it looks to be that—but there may be five in some parts where it is built in miniature sections. There are sev eral wings, and the architectural style Is largely that in fashion many years ago—very ornate and ugly. Only the best of material was used in the wood parts. and the furnishings, which have now been removed, were truly mag: nificent. One room, the one in which she communed with her spirit guide, was furnished and hung entirely In black velvet. Others were master pieces in satin, and there were closets full of the best linens, silks, etc., for the entertainment of her spirit guests. She lived alone with her niece and a purse and never had visitors. In the house itself there are staircases that lead to nowhere, ending in a blank wall. There are others that break oft and end some 6 feet deeper. There are rooms 1 foot wide, and there Is a tiny balcony with doors about 4 feet high leading to it. There are other staircases with 2-inch risers. Sur: rounding this curious house of a dingy color are tall cedar hedges and a noo descript garden.” Hard for Foreigners to Grasp Chinese Etiquette Social intercourse in China is so complicated that the traveler from other lands often finds himself baffled completely when he tries to follow its intricacies. Every action. every ges ture. every carefully worded phrase is replete with hidden meaning. For instance, it is wrong fo remove gour hat when entering a Chinese home. It is an insult equally as bad as if. in this country, one did aot remove one’s headgear. Again, you should never offer a Chinese your hand to shake. You must shake hands with yourself, both on arrival and departure. [f you are offered anything to drink, it is a breach of etiquette to touch it before the moment you are about to leave. You will notice that your host will pick a cake or choice biscuit and put it om your plate. [n return, you must pick the daintiest morsel from the dish of sweetmeats and place it on his plate. In doing so you pay him the greatest compliment. Sea Riddle Unanswered If you were plumbing the depths of the sea in the Amtarctic and gour sounding machine came to a sudden stop at about 1,000 fathoms and as suddenly started agaim and ran on another 1,000 fathoms er ee, what would be your explanation? Twice this has happened fm recent Antarctic exploration and the scien- tists who were present do met know how fo explain it. A very easy an swer would be that the sounding weight landed om a whale and then, falling off, resumed its boettemwanrd journey. But the trouble with this explana- tion is that 1,000 fathoms is pretty deep for a surface creature like a whale. Pressures are enormous down there. Sugar and Het Water I read the other day a most interest- ing article upon sugar and its value and more as a producer of energy. It appears that coaches who train ath- letes in universities are allowing their trainees more sugar. In coming in from a tennis match on a very hot day I have been astonished to find how quickly one can be refreshed by a cup of hot water in which three or four lumps of sugar have been dis- solved. It sounds like a dreadful com- bination to anyone not used to it, but its effect is felt almost instantly.— Helen Wills in the Saturday Evening Post. Saved Clay Pigeons A Richmond (Va.) sportsman re- turned from abroad and told of his visit to a clay pigeon shoot. Arriving at the traps he was surprised to see a great net spread above the ground at the far end of the field. Around the net stood a ring of boys. The mystery was solved with the first few shots. Nearly all the clay pigeons that the marksmen missed fell into the net unbroken. Those that missed the net were “caught on the wing” by traps to be shot over again. The shoot was in Scotland.—Indianapolis News. Birds That Cannot Walk All webers of the swallow family are distinguished by their small, weak feet which are used only for clinging and perching purposes. They cannot walk or hop on the ground. These birds spend more of their time on the wing than other birds and they feed chiefly on insects which they catch while in flight. Even water is scooped from ponds by the birds on the wing. Barn. swallows and purple martens are the most common species of this family in America. and how it is being appreciated mene the hoys and brought back to the’ —_— TO FIRST BASE (© by D. J. Walsh.) "AL JUSTICE Ilvoked around nervously and settled his slen- der little body into the tree : clotch more firmly. How had all these kids so suddenly found out that this was a good place to see the ball game? Most of them were about his own age, but they showed no friendliness after an indifferent glance toward him. Hal knew that he looked like a sissy, with his thick: lensed spectacles and his pale cheeks. But he didn’t feel like one. Not a bit. He loved baseball with a pas sion quite as ardent as thas of any vociferous corner-lot devotee. Hal couldn't play because of his eyes. His eyes seemed to shut him out from such a lot in this world. He could barely distinguish the pases. They were little white blurs fn the distance and the men on them just animated tour-pronged blotches, but he located first base and riveted his eyes on the spot. The radio an- pouncer, whom the boys could hear clearly, would tell when the Bayshore Cubs took the field and Hal would watch every move of the first base- man. The boy's heart swelled. He always forgot the hurt ef it when he could watch his father play. He became lost in a hero worship that left no room in his mind for pain or doubt. Partly, twelve-year-old Hal under- stood Lou Justice’s bitter disappoint- ment over his son. A man could hard- ly help resenting this timid, retiring child who sometimes visibly trembled when his father spoke to him, “He'll never even get to first base,” Justice had said bitterly and Hal had overheard him. The boy wanted So desperately to please him that from very self-consciousness he appeared more awkward and diffident than he really was. “Hey!” Hal's thoughts were inter- rupted by a freckled boy near him. “That's Lou Justice and he’s hit a three-bagger! Oo-00, watch it go 104 “He ain't gonna—yes, he is! No, he aint! Beany, quit your pinching my arm! He did! I told you so! Saw it fore the old announcer did, too.” “He brung in two men for the Cubs, <0! An’ just wait’ll he gets on first an’ begins clawin’ ‘em. down! The Bradenford Blues’ll wish they was home with mommer.” It proved to be the best game Hai had ever tried to see. He had a much petter idea of what was happening from the boys’ talk than from the an- nouncer’s words. Somebody produced a pair of field glasses and Hal got one brief glimpse of the game through them. It made him gasp. Gee! What he could see if he had a pair of those’ things! He began to see that his father wus a sort of hero with these boys and he quivered with pride. A brief dialogue toward the end of the game arrested his attention. The freckle faced boy demanded generally: “All 0’ you goin’ to the meetin’?’ A chorus of assent answered him and Hal asked: “What meeting?” The freckled boy glanced scornfully at him. “You mean you don’t know about the meetin’s Lou Justice holds after a game? He talks to us just ten minutes and we gotta be under fifteen, too. An' tonight he holds a meetin’ for them that’s older. My dad says it's a fine thing. He says Justice is a fine feller to want to help kids instead of runnin’ around in s-society.” For some reason this news of his father thrilled Hal even more than the game or the screeches of admira- tion from his companions. He would go along to the meeting. Maybe there’d he lots there .o he wouldn't be noticed. “It’s gonna be.” some one said, “in the Claybourne block—fourth floor. We gotta go up in elevators. Whoopee!” Hal had never seen so many boys all together in one place. The big hall was literally filled to the doors and still they kept coming. Pretty goon everybody was standing to make more room, and presently Hal saw his father on a platform well ahove them. so that every boy could see his face. Hal’s heart overflowed with pride. Tears streamed from his shining eyes. but nobody noticed. They stood wonderfully still, tha crowd of urchins, lstening to the slow, clear speech of the baseball player. He used words they under stood. He seemed to be talking to each one of them individually. Hal felt, in his own slender limbs, that he was stretching up to the stature of a man, for he was being talked to as if he were a man. There wasn’t a bit of condescension in the friendly voice. At the last Justice told them to let each one try to think of some- thing he could do before he went to bed that night that a good man would do—some little thing like holding the baby or getting in the wood or smiling at somebody you didn’t like much. As Hal sidled through the door he saw his father talking with some other men, though he turned to glance often and smile at the boys streaming past him. There were five elevators in the Claybourne building, four in the front and one at the back. A half dozen boys who knew of the existence of the rear elevator detached themselves from the mass waiting about the doors. Hal followed them. He wanted to get out of sight as soon as possible: The rear elevator proved to be out {. of order and a workman :at the open | shaft door warned the boys back. They retreated obediently along the corridor, but one of them turned when he saw the workman step out of sight. “I always did wanta look down 8 elevator shaft, an’ now’s my chance.” He sped back while the others watched him uncertainly. The thing all happened in a twin kling. ‘The running boy clutched the elevator door as he tried to stop and it slid forward, swinging him by his own momentum into the shaft. His clutch slipped but he caught hold again and hung with his bead just above the hall floor. Hal had started running as soon as he saw the boy lose his balance. “Quick!” he commanded with a squeak of pure terror for the victim. “I'll grab him an’ you grab me m It was done in a flash—five boys strung across the corridor floor, hold- ing In safety the sixth who was all put helpless with fright. A painter on a step ladder, who had seen the whole thing, now overcame his | paralysis und descended to drag the | child in the shaft to safety. One boy, , too frightened to obey Hal, had fled back to the assembly room sobbing, | and the rescuers had hardly got to | their feet when they were surrounded with men and the corridor was pack- ing with curious children. “] seen every bit of it!” the painter was explaining with awe in his voice. “] pever see anything in my life move so quick as that kid in glasses. Why, he was ten foot ahead of the one next after him and it’s God's own mercy that he weren't yanked into the shaft, too. He slid the last of the way on his front, just like he was making home base. Talk about your nerve!” Hal hung his head in embarrass. ment, wishing desperately that he could get out of that place. Lou Justice, his face first paling, then flushing, dropped a hand on the boy's shoulder. : “Hal.” “Do you know him?” asked one of the men in surprise. “My son,” answered Justice. Hal heard a snort of astonishment near him and saw the freckled boy, his head thrust forward under a man’s arm. “Why—why, he was with us today an’ he never said a word!” “Why — golly, kids ig failed him. They took a taxi home. It was growing dusk and Hal snuggled un- ashanied into the arm about him, “To think,” Lou Justice was scor- ing himself, “that he had te risk his life before I guessed his quality.” Aloud he said: “I guess you made first base, old man.” The boy's breath caught with pure happiness. After a time he asked: “Dad, did you ever look through field glasses? A kid up in that tree today had some and I could see everything just as plain ise The arm tightened and Lou Justice Language blush of shame. After this—binocu- lars and a grandstand seat. Yes, and the front row at the meetings. Color Given to Sea by 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- portance. For example, National Banks, in recent years, have been granted all the fiduciary powers of 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. was glad of the darkness that hid his | ARNE SR ER CC ER NERA RCC CALS SANNA A Responsibility and Permanence N addition to efficiency and ex- perience, this Bank has financial responsibility and permanence which are equally important factors in estate matters. A wise appoint- ment as your Executor or Trustee. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTE AES) J) : 0 [2] EIN SSSA SANTEINNNAN Various Skies and Floor What holiday maker has not no- ticed the color of the sea and mar- tomorrow? Why is it leaden-hued sometimes and slate-colored another | day? Water in vast bulk has, according to But | scientists, a natural blue eolor. its hue is controlled and modified by | the changing skies and the compo- sition of the sea floor. see a distinct color line, about a quar- ter of a mile from shore. water is greenish and that on the far ther side of the line blue. This is due to the depth and cha: acter of the sea bed. The sand near shore is yellow, and this gives a green: ish appearance to the water; the green becomes blue as the sea bed dips and the marine vegetation upon the bot- tom thickens. What part does the salt in the sea | play in determining the color? It is probable that it tends to intensify the blue. Both the Mediterranean and the Gulf stream, which flows like an indi- vidual sea in the Atlantic, are very salty and of a deep and beautiful blue in color. Off the coast of China the sea is quite yellow. This is because tons | and tons of yellow mud flow into fit continuously from the great rivers of China. So, too, with the Red sea. The pe culiar color is in this case the result of rotting vegetable matter in the wa- ter. A similar peculiarity is to be found in some South American waters. Why is the Black sea so named? Be- cause its waters are astonishingly dark —though not really black, but rather . purple in hue. There has never yet been any scientific explanation of this strange characteristic. The part played by the sky in de | termining the changing color of our coastal waters is easily understood. Clear blue skies lend the sea their beauty; and purple thunder clouds transfer their frown to the face of the waters.—London Answers, \ Meaning What? Ministers wives, knows, have a difficult lot in life, and | a particular lady’s lot so roused the sympathy of a friend that she re marked, “There ought to be a special place in heaven for ministers’ wives.” “Perhaps you're right,” responded the minister's wife, “but [ should rather | go with my husband.”—The Christian Register. veled at it? | Why is the sea blue today and green i 1 Looking out to sea, you sometimes | The nearer | 1 | ! i as everybody 5 This wee brought to the Fauble Store the Greatest Clothing “Oalues ever offered in Bellefonte. Suits and Overcoats that are at least fen 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.