ERMANY HOLDS AVIATION MARKS as Two Records; U. 8, Britain and France Have One Each. »aris.—Despite the restrictions im- ied by the treaty of Versallles, jch were intended to cripple Ger- py’s air activities, Teuton airmen 7e passed the rest of the world in . pace for laurels. The annual re- t of the International Aeronautic jeration shows that Germany has en the lead in aerial progress and ds more records than any other na- a. ‘he federation’s report reveals that five major records of the world, land and sea planes and dirigibles, held as follows at the end of 1929: jpeed—Great Britain. JItitude—Germany. distance (nonstop)—France. Juration without refueling — QGer- ny. yuration with refueling — United tes. . : iermany’s recovery is all the more )arkable in that three years ago did not possess any of the world’s ords which were at that time di- ed between France and the United tes, [Italy has completely disap- red from the list after having held times the palms for speed and dis- ce. * Coste and Bellonte Record. .merica is fortunate to possess he: » record, for none of the European fons has ever disputed it. They e never attempted the spectacular and night flying for weeks neces- | y to better the mark of the St. | iis Robin. i | i | ‘he recent flight of Coste and Be.- te from Paris across the whole of | ope and Asia to Tzitsikar, in ‘Man- ria, wrested from Italy her remain- record. Previously Ferrarin and Prete were on the record book as . ders of the distance mark with Ir flight from [Italy to Brazil. lying Officer R. L. R. Atcherley or ate Britain has become the new ¢d king of the air in succession to h dasliing pilots as America’s Al liams, Italy’s Maj. Mario de Bern- | di ang Britain’s Flying Officer ghorn. tcherley flew as fast as a bullet win his world’s record, attaining 8 kilometers, roughly 338 miles an r, in a seaplace in the Schneider ) race, rance’s Adjutant Bonnet holds the | 1d’s speed record for land planes, ' te a bit under the mark set by British sea plane. The Bonnet ‘k is 448.17 - kilometers, approxi- ely 280 miles an hour, established [stres in December, 1924. Texas ‘Mark Stands. here is “fo competition “for lana 1es such as the Schneider cup for planes, and this may account for difference in the records. merica’s only record is still in the 1es of Reginald Robbins and James , ly, who stayed in the air over Fort rth in a monoplane for 172 hours minutes in May, 1929. The later formances which bettered that time e not been submitted to the fed- Jon for registering, so for the pres- the Texas record stands. he records Germany holds are for ‘ude, Willi Neuenhofen rising 12,- meters in a monoplane at Dessau May 26, 1929. and for nonrefueling stop duration, when Ristics and merman kept a Junkers aloft for ours 25 minutes in July, 1928. ermany has captured also every ortant gliding record in existence, holds, among others. three free oon records, altitude and distance, of them of long standing. The | ¢ Zeppelin brought her more hon- : in the world flight, but there is ‘ecognized record for this. 29 a Healthful Year Despite Flu Epidemic ew York.—In spite of the influenza lemic during the first three months he year, 1929 has been a healthy so far, statisticians of the Metio- tap Life Insurance company have ounced. At that the years 1928 and * made better health records from iary to September, the period -h has just been surveyed for the ent year. eart disease is still the leading se of death. Encouraging decreases rred in the tuberculosis and ma- ily death rates, while that for theria was the lowest recorded in history of the company. This is iidered due to the intensive anti- theria campaigns waged during nt years by va-ioug health depart. ts. wncer and diabetes showed in- sed death rates and the mortality automobile accidents increased by tenth over that of the same period 1928, tent-a-Gun Agency New Crime Service New York.—A pew wrinkle 1 crime was discovered by po ice recently—the gun garage. ‘here a revolver can be rented. sed for a “job” and returned small deposit is required. ith the understinding that art of the proceeds from the job” go to the renting agency. information of Value in Old-Time Scrapbooks Keeping a scrapbook. is nothing like as commion-as it once was, but still | a lot of folks cling to the old-time prac- tice of preserving newspaper clippings, bits of poetry and other items of in- terest in this way. How the scrap book hobby started no one appears to know, but for generations it has been customary to save things for ready ~eference. The time was when nearly every- body kept a scrapbcok, and no doubt many filled volumes could be- uncov- ered, hidden away among things sel- dom seen or used. The old-time scrapbook was called upon to settle many an argument, for often the scrapbook contained matter of a con- troversial nature. In the old days it was nothing uncommon for a public speaker to rum afoul of a chronic scrapbook keeper. Often the keeper of a scrapbook specialized In preserving matter of a certain kind, and the practice still is kept up. Scrapbooks of that type may be filled with a lot of valuable infor mation pertaining to 8 specific sub- ject. Often a scrapbook kept for a lifetime is an index to the character of the keeper, and in that way de- scendants have learned more of their ¢orebears.—T.ouisville Courier-Journal. Old Structures High as Modern Skyscraper The skyscraper is probably our most striking achievement, says Emil Torch, professor of architecture. “Europeans are thrilled by its dar- ing fusion of art and science and by the unusual street effects, and sky- line created by these huge towerlike masses which rise here and there ee above our cities much as do the cathe : drals over the lower and more ever outlines of foreign towns. “It must not be assumed, however, ! ! that high buildings are of recent or ! American origin. “The Great pyramid of Egypt, built 4,500 years ago, was originally nearly 500 fect in height, sith a base 760 by T60 feei, covering 13 acres, or ap area equaling one-third that of the original campus of the University of Michigan. Its height equals that of a 45-story building. The interior of Beauvais cathedral is nearly 160 feet high; it is 450 feet to the top of the dome of St. Peter's in Rome, & maximum for masonry construction being reached at about 50) feet in the tow- ers of Cologne cathedral and in the Washington monument. Hoards Found by Soldiers Many hoards of ancient and mediev- al coins were found by soldiers dur- ing the World war while they were digging trenches. Not many years ago at- Brescello there was dug up 4 hoard - containing 80,000 pieces* of ‘gold, all dating between 46 and 38 B. C. Gold PARLIAMENT LOSES _ GIANT POLICEMAN Pavorite Retires After Twenty Years of Service. London.—This is a story about & big man with a big record, about weights, lengths, measures, parlia- mentary procedure and dignified phys- fcal scuffies in the house of commons, In brief, about George Fulcher, weight 204 pounds, twenty years a policemar in the palace of Westminster. Fulcher has retired. Fulcher not only was the most popular member of the parliamentary police staff. but also the most impressive. When he trod down the long medieval, dimly lighted corridors the whole British-em- pire, with the possible exception of Australia, knew about it. He was particularly useful in the event of an occasional row within the sacred precincts of the house. All Fulcher had to do was to walk right into the dozen or so rioters and It was then only a question of the old ir- resistible force against whatever ob- iect stood in the way. Fulcher knew hundreds, thousands, even, of M. P.s, for it must be re- called that Fulcher was a fixture in the house of comnions while M. P.g are not. But Stanley Baldwin prob- ably could tell you more about it. House of commons police have a bigger beat to cover than many of the metropolitan police out on the streets. They have two miles of cor- ridors to cover on each floor. [n some respects the house is like the Grand Central “station, There. are = shops: where one may “buy posfnl cards, There are innumerable restaurants for all manner of folk. There are vis- ftors’ restaurants, members’ restau- rants and employees’ restaurants. Then there are innumerable tea- rooms, and, in the words of a promli- nent lady M. P., all bad. All these things tend to make Fulcher yearn for his old job. Se much so that according to recent re- ports the former big man of the house has become a mere shadow of his former self and is said to weigh but a mere 280 pounds, having lost a full stone since he left the dignified por- tals of Westminster palace, Russia Plans System for Banking Salaries Moscow.—The wages of all workers and employees in the Soviet union | may soon be automatically deposited in savings banks to their accounts, to be drawn upon as needed. A project to that effect is now be- , mg worked out by the state planning coins are the most desired by numis- matists. because ‘gold shows no effect from burial’ in the earth, whereas sil- ver. especially if buried in volcanic soil. turns black or tends to mass or | shows a crystalline change that makes it brittle. Bronze tenls to oxidize or to become covered with an accretion of verdigris. Diamond Splitters The business of the diamond “split: ter” is a dying trade. By an intimate knowledge of the siene’s construction commission with every prospect of con- firmation by the council of people's commissars. . The -scheme is intended to encour- age thrift. Instead of urging the pop- ulation, as heretofore, to deposit sur- plus funds in the banks, the surplus will under the -new arrangement -re- main in the banks automativally. Incidentally it will greatly simplify che process of paying out wages. Every trust, co-operative, ete, will de- posit a lump sum in the savings banks which will at regular intervals trans- fer the necessary amounts to the ac- counts of wage earners. Millions of new savings accounts thus opened will also give the Soviet | government additional eapital for its | enormous industrial program. this person was enabled to split a dia ! mond as a preparation for economical cutting. and when tis was done suc- cessfully a consider dle saving on la bor and material resulted. At one time every establishment where diamonds were cut had one of these experts. but modern methods have dispensed with the hand-splitting . operations. and while there are several diamond cut- ting plants in New York there are but three splitters and there is not work enough for this trio. : Comfort in the Desert A train ride through some of the southwestern country. often very un- pleasant on account of the intense heat, is to be made n.ore tolerable by the use of railroad coaches that have heen made heatproof to a consider- able degree. A special window glass is made use of which cuts off much of the heat of the sunshine. It also cuts off some of the light, but in this open country there will be sufficient for all purposes. The woodwork of the car is also treated to resist the action of heat. Radium Minerals The principal minerals containing the uranium and therefore radium are pitchblende. carnotite and autunite. The first of these consists of the oxide of uranium, more or less pure, and it ig found principally in Czechoslovakia and in the Belgian Kongo. The second is a vanadate of uranium and potas slum, It is mined in Colorado, Ctah and Australia. The third is a phos phate of uranium and calcium and Is mined in Portugal and the United States. Phone’s Importance What would this nation be without the telephone? We enjor its maxi- mum development here. Tus time-sav- ing resulting from its use !s so great that it cannot be figured. It is one of the chief reasons why the United States, one of the largest nations in territory, but with only 110,000,000 population. can show such record. breaking achievements and develop ment in all sections--there is no iso- lation.—St. Louis County Messenger. Perhaps Here's Where Modernist Art Started Carlsbad, N. M.—A painted grotto, colorful as an Indian blanket has just been found in the Guadalupe moun- tains, New Mexico. A race, extinct 40 centuries ago, used this huge niche in the canyon wall for a living room. In the half-light were discerned a strange medley of paintings—red. vel low. white, black—along the wall for 80 feet. Both the side and a portion of the ceiling are covered. A 40-foot serpent was outlined in =n series of small white triangles stretched horizontally, other large snakes, in solid yellow, run from floor to ceiling. Paintings of other similar reptiles appear to have been started, but left unfinished. Flat blocks ‘of rocks, the size of a billiard table, lie along the floor; corn was ground on these. Paris to Name Street for Ambassador Herrick Paris.—*“To recall to future genera- tions the gratitude they owe Amerie ca’'s great ambassador,” a new street in Paris is soon to be named Herrick. It is the extension of Avenue Victor Emmanuel II, Courcelles, and promises to be a. smart shopping and residence thoroughfare. A project to raise & monument of Ambassador Myron T. Herrick some- where in the middle of the street is before the council. Largest English Lifeboat to Aid Channel Planes Hampton-on-Thames, England. — fngland’s new lifeboat, considered the largest in the world, which was re- cently launched here i8 now stationed at Dover to assist Channel planes. The lifeboat is the first specificaly adapted to help airpianes coming down at sea. The craft has a speed of about 18 knots. Anything te Oblige! Bnfleld, England.—Charles Collings, sixty-three, struck by & skidding aute- mobile, was knocked into the fromt vard of a doctor, who treated him for a fractured leg. . on —— - pe through to Rue de Nature Gave. Great Auk No Method of Defense ~The’ Great” Auk or -gare-fowl was ‘the only bird" In the“northern hemis- phere that could not fly. In general 2a it resembled the penguin. was about as large as a goose, was black on its head and back and white beneath. Its legs were very far back so it stood almost upright, having, on land, the appearance of sitting on its tail. Tt ranged from the Bay of Bis- cay to Greenland and was found in reatest numbers on certain rocky is- ands near Iceland and Newfoundland. It was quite helpless against enemies ‘on land and was killed largely for the sake of its feathers. The last known example was killed In 1844. [ts eggs are highly valued by collectors, some- times bringing as high as $1,500. There are only about seventy exam- ples krfown. The great auk was the biggest of a large family in the spe cles, ccmprising guillemots or murres _snd puffins. They breed in vast mixed communities on cliff ledges from Greenland, Iceland and Spitzbergen to the St. Lawrence, Maine and north- western Europe. They lay a large blotched egg pointed at one end 80 it tends to roll in a circle, thus not eulling from the ledge. Bilingualism in Africa Amusing to Americans One of the first features to strike an American visitor to South Africa is the country's bilingualism. As he steps off the boat at Cape Town he is confronted by the double admonition, “No Smoking—Nie Rook Nie.” Walk- ing up Adderley street, principal thor- “oughfare of ‘the eity, he is told to “Keep to the left—Links houden.” If he wants to mail a letter back home he must by a “stamp—poseel,” and if he buys more than one stamp he will find that while one is inscribed “South Africa,” the next Is marked “Suid- afrika.” At the railroad station he will find that the name of the city Is given as Cape Town and Kaapstad. and the dining cars are labeled “Dining car— Eetsaloon” on a railroad known both as South African railways and Suid Afrigannse Spoorweg. And so on. BEv- ery official or semiofficial netice in the union is printed in two languages —English and Afrikaans. Meanwhile the Englishman grumbles about hav ing to pay extra taxes to meet the cost of reprinting notices in Afrikaans, and the Dutchman wonders why the ex: pense of using English as well as his own language should be tolerated. Thunderstorms The thunderstorm is owing to the rapid vertical convection of air con- taining a large amount of water vapor. The lower air must, therefore, be rath- er warm, say 70 degrees F. or over, else it would not.carry the requisite ~amount of water vapor, and’ the tem- perature must -decrense rather rapidly with increase of height, else there ~would be hut little or no convection, Now, inthe summer. time. the humid- ity in Oregon and Washington is rath. er low. Hence thunderstorms gener ally are improbable. In the winter time. when most of the rains come, the surface commonly Is too cool to set up vigorous vertical convection. Hence thunderstorms are not likely. Thunderstorms are not frequent in Oregon and Washinzton any time of the yesr. Thunderstorms occur very {nfrequently in California. ————————————— Scientific Fishing The fisherman of today writes “Looker-cn” in the London Daily Chronicle, is something of a scientist when compared with his prototype of a few decades ago, for he now carries a thermometer when going to fish. It has been proved that certain fish fre- quent waters of a particular temper ature, hence if the nature of the wa: ter is known preparations can be made most suited to the kind of catch that is expected. Cod, for example, have a preference for water of 62 degrees, and from near the coasts of Newfound land and Labrador, where the water is of this temperature, enormous quanti- tles of these fish have been caught. Telephone Courtesy A western hospital has made itselt known as a “friendly place.” largely through its attention to telephone calls. Superintendents know how many calls come in each day and how anxious most of the people are who make inquiry concerning some relative or friend. This hospital has realized that this is the time to treat people the most carefully in order to make a good impression.—The Modern Hos pital, Chicago. IL Imposing Title Titles of early American text books were not composed with the thought of brevity uppermost in the mind of the composer. it would appear from: the title given an Finglish reader of 1841, which was: “Elegant Selections in Prose and Poetry Designed to Im prove the Highest Class of Learners in Reading to Establish a Taste for Just and Accurate Composition, and to Promote the Interests of Piety and Virtue’ —Detroit News. Farm Life of Other Days A pleasant picture of American rural life as reported In the Farm Journal of November, 1879: “The tobacco has all been gathereo In and the farmers are busy cutting corn and seeding. Their wives are making pumpkin pies. The big boys are after the girls, The little boys are after the muskrsts.” - ¢ Our Trust Department pg, HILE the Trust Department of this VY bank is separate from the commercial department, all the resources of the institution, amounting to more than two and one-half million dollars, safeguard those who intrust such business to us. As Executor, Administrator or Trustee, we can assure proper service, acting always under competent legal advice; which, joined with our long experience, makes us feel confi- dent of the proper administration of any Trust business given us. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. AA) ) “Make a Will Day” CE RTE RT uring National*ThriftiWeek January 21st is “Make QyWill Day.” Yes, I it is important to make your Will Appoint this Bank your Executor or Trustee, and know that your instructions will be properly executed. TE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. XQ MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Seemm—eeeTo STOTT SONIC] WN NAAN now before you forget it. RRS CRC CRU RSAC ARAN RN LBNL NNN Vig A Bumped att RNAS SEARRARN y ] EL oSh Se] UES we FAUBLE’S Amazing Reductions on | All Winter Overcoats fla [ : ore i= RRR a1 yun ot Watch Our Windows They will Tell the Story = kf = Slane All four will display Winter Overcoats at Ie prices that will pay you BIG to even an- =f) ticipate your next Winter Overcoat needs. We are determined not to carry over a single Overcoat. The prices we have Toil placed on them is for quick selling. One ie week should find every coat disposed of. = Watch our windows, and profit by this 3 unprecedented opportunity to save. " ia . oe i > or > pe oy fo = [e! ded. iy! § le