Boworra Jada. Bellefonte, Pa., February 14, 1930. — [BIG ROCKET POISED FOR SKYWARD TRIP finventor Hopes Eventually to Reach Moon. Aver, Mass.—The big prother of the gky rocket with which you used to cel ebrate Fourth of July is poised here gor one of the most extraordinary flights in history. : ‘Some time in the not far distant future, if all goes well, this 12-foot 1 projectile will rise with incredi- speed from a tower at Camp Dev- on the outskirts of this quiet little n and nose its way skyward, seek- the secrets of altitudes never ched by a man-made device. "he rocket’s noisy zoom into space fl mark the latest step in a series unusual experiments started twenty rs ago by Dr. Robert H. Goddard. rk university scientist. Popular fancy has drawn a seem gly indelible halo of romance around Professor Goddard's rocket during the years that he has busied himself with ig work in the rather prosaic atmos: phere of a laboratory. To Record Air Data. Even his insistent declarations that fie has no lunar aspirations have failed ‘to destroy the general belief that he opes eventually to send his strange ‘contraption to the moon. Those who toy most fervently with this fascinating theory like to think at there will be a man inside the ge steel tube as it speeds over the £20,000 or more miles to its fanciful Wesfination. No one appears to have Wwiven much thought to the rather knot problem of how the man would get ack to earth, once he had completed dis journey. But Professor Goddard protests that the paramount object of his experi entation at present is to obtain ac curate data on meteorological condi- Hons at various altitudes. His big rocket is equipped with nu merous devices for recording such in gormation— devices which are intend ed to return to earth with the aid of mp parachute attachment. Test Rocket Noisy. Doctor Goddard has kept secret the exact method by which his projectile §s propelled. It is understood, how- ever, that the general idea is for a geries of timed explosions to speed the rocket on its way, with a fresh blast expediting its flight as the pow: er begins fo wane. At Auburn, near ‘Worcester, several months ago, Doctor Goddard shot a rocket skyward. The scientist ap: peared well pleased with the ouicome of the test flight but the attendant explosions alarmed residents of the countryside. It was suggested by the fearful that recording devices carried by the rocket, in returning to earth, might smite a native. Doctor Goddard ar- gued that the object which returned to the ground invariably landed only a short distance from the point from which the rocket had been oesed. Finally he compromised by transfer- ring his experimental staticn to Camp Devens. Company Plans to Get Lands for English Lads Sydney, N. 8. W.—A company is be- ing formed to provide a scheme of fand settlement for lads coming from England. It will have the title, Little Brother Farm Settlement Ltd, and the pros- pectus has been issued. The com- pany will acquire land within a rea. sonable distance of markets, suitable as a group settlement for intense cul- ture, upon which Little Brothers who have been in the Commonwealth for not less than three years, and are in possession of a banking eredit of not less than £200, may be settled under conditions to be determined by the poard of management. The scheme provides for the market: ing of vegetables, poultry, pigs, etc. Land acquired by gift or parchase will be divided into suitable farmlets up to 10 acres. No dividends exceeding 6 per cent will be paid. Seattle Stores Insects on Ice During Winter Seattle, Wash, — Putting insects away on ice is a new use of the mu nicipal cold storage plant here. To ' combat grasshoppers, caterpillars. erickets and moths, which annually .eause heavy losses to farms and or . ¢hards in the Northwest, wantes, gi . ant grasshoppers from interior China. ‘have been imported and are held dor .muant until spring, when they may be shipped and distributed in infected areas. "The mantis increases in size during its eating period of life until the aor- mal growth of about four inches long is attained. Then it lays eggs and dies. Police to Use Dictaphone to Block Cruelty Plea Budapest. — In order to forestall ¢laims of ill treatment by prisoners who, on being brought to trial after confessing their crimes to the police claim that confessions were extorted from them. the examination rooms of a number of Hungarian jails are to pe equipped with dictaphones. AMERICAN MAP | President Hoover Wants to Complete Big Task in Eighteen Years. Washington. — Recognizing the im- portance of accurate maps to engi- neers, President Hoover has an- nounced his intention of asking con- gress for funds to speed to completion the topographic mapping of the United States. Under his plan the job will be completed in eighteen years, instead of eighty-eight years, the time re- quired if the work proceeds no faster than its present rate. So far the undertaking is less than half done, and engineers have been urging the government to push the work more rapidly. Two agencies will carry out the project. The coast and geodetic survey will establish a sys- tem of triangulation controls. The geological survey, using this system as a framework, will then proceed with the topographical mapping of the country. Work of a Century. In the last 100 years the coast and geodetic survey has established a complete system of triangulation sta- tions along the Atlantic, the Gulf and the Pacific coasts. tend also up navigable rivers to the head of tidewater. In addition, thou- sands of stations have been estab- lished in other parts of the country and along the border between the United States and Canada. The work, however, has been proceeding slowly and a vast area still remains to he covered. In 1900 the coast and geodetic sur sey had completed only 7,000 miles of arc of the first order. Now, the total is 26,000 miles, and the engi- neers are adding to this at the rate of about 1,000 miles a year. The coast and geodetic survey has been follow- ing a plan which calls for arcs of first and second order triangulation throughout the country, the triangles being so spaced that no place in the country will be more than twenty-five miles from a 4iriangulation station. This will be brought about when 49, 000 miles of arcs are added to those now existing. The intermediate areas will be covered by third order trian gulation, or by traverse surveys by those who want to make detailed sur veys. charts or maps. Pick Central Point. Thirty years ago a central point was selected for making surveys and charts in the United States and con- tiguous waters. The station is known as Meade's ranch and is located about twelve miles north of Lucas, Kan. In 1912 the geodetic engineers of Canada and Mexico also adopted this as their initial station, so there is now a sin- gle central or initial surveying station for all of North America. Its use will preclude discrepancies in the charts and maps of territory close to the borders of either of the adjoin ing countries. Throughout the 100 years of its ex istence the coast and geodetic survey has endeavored to mark its triangula- lation stations in such a way that there would be no difficulty in finding them at any time in the future. It has not always been successful for nature and the works of man have destroyed some of the markers. Campers and others have occasionally taken them up in the hope of finding buried treas- ure nearby. Blocks of stone or masses of concrete were set up, often carrying the let ters “U. 8. C. 8.” Few people kuew just what the letters meant, or what the markers were for. For the past twenty years the survey has adopted a plan of putting a properly inscribed metal tablet into the stone or the con- crete at each triangulation station. This tablet tells the visitor that he may learn the signification of the sta- tion by writing to the director of the survey at Washington, In thus taking the public into its confidence the sur- vey has saved many of its markers from destruction. Value to Industries. “It is difficult to overestimate the value of a good topegraphic survey to the industries ‘of a nation,” says Dr. \illiam W. Bowie, chief of geod- esy in the coast-and geodetic survey. “It makes no difference whether the engineer is laying out a new highway, erecting a hydroelectric plant, drain- ing a swamp, extending canals from an irrigation reserveir or controlling /the flood waters of a river, he should have an accurate topographic map from which to scale distances and ! compute ‘slopes. Without such a map he is working with insufficient data, and his operations are likely to cost him far more money than would be expended had the topographic map been available. “The topographic map cannot be made true to scale and have its vari- ous topographic features placed in their proper geographic positions un- less the map is controlled by triangu- lation. “In the United States we have fo many years suffered from the lack of first order triangulation in our sur veying, mapping and charting, but this situation is greatly improved, and the situation in this country in the near future should be entirely satisfac tory.” The great arcs otf triangulation bear nearly the same relation to charts. maps and surveys that the steel framework bears to the individual parts of a building, such as the tloors. walls, windows and elevator shafts. WILL SPEED UP ii Such stations ex- ‘Without the steel framework ¢he building would not stand up; the framework is needed to hold the vari- ous parts of the building together, and to co-ordinate those parts. Fink- order triangulation has the SAL: function in the topographical mappiry | of the country. Important Benefits. The triangulation program will vield important benefits to individual states and other political subdivisions. For it will enable thein to accurately _e- termine the longitudes and latitude® by which to locate their boundaries, Many counties do not know their ox- act boundaries or area. A county in a southern state not long ago wanted to float a loan with New York bankers. When asked what the area of the county was, its ofiicials could not inform them, for the reascn that it had not been accurately mapped. So the New Yorkers had to make a survey of their own before they could make the required loan. Completion of the system of triangula- tion controls will remove such uncer- tainties. It will cost the coast and geodetic survey about $4,500,000 to complete its part of the work within the next tem vears. - If You Stutter Try Using Your Left Hand Los Angeles. Calif. —M-m-m-mayhe you s-s-s-stutter b-b-hecause you use your r-r-rright h-h-hand in-s-s-stead of vour l-1-1-left. Dr. Milton Metfessel, who is pro fessor of psychology at the Univer- sity of Southern California, has found that left-handed persons who have become accustomed to using their right hand often stutter. “If a person is physiologically lef handed—that is, born to use the left or because he has been forced to. the mental workings of the patient may be so disturbed as to make him stut- ter.” said Doctor Metfessel today. He added that some people are not really aware that they are physio- logically left-handed, though they seem to use the right easily. He has perfected tests which detect such cases, since he first must make sure whether or not a person has heen born left-handed. “Of course, all left-handed persons do not stutter,” said the professor, ¢and if left-handedness is the cause of their stuttering, it must be treated carefully to prevent a worse condi- tion.” [taly to Send Planes in Nonstop N. Y. Hop Rome.—The Italian government 18 preparing to send a fleet of ten mili- tary hydro-airplanes on a nonstop flight from Italy to New York next March. i a Crews of the ten great Savoia-Mar- cheti ships have been undergoing am intensive training for the transatlantie trip and several of them have under- taken flights for 40 consecutive hours over Lakes Garda and Barcciano. The air ministry, which is to direct che flight, has arranged for co-opera- tion with the navy and scout ships and destroyers will be stationed along the route ready to assist in the event of an emergency. Italo Balbo, air minister, will command the flight in person. The project will constitute the 1930 cruise of Italy’s aerial navy. In 1928 the air forces carried out an extensive flight over the western Mediterranean sea and northern Africa. This year the ships flew over the eastern Med- iterranean and Black sea. France in 5th Place in Europe’s Population Paris.—The government has pub- lished statistics which show that France, in 1789 the largest pation in the western world, has fallen to fifth place in Europe as a result of its de- creased birth rate. In 1789 Krance had 26,000,000 inhabitants; Russia, 25, 000,000 ; Austria, 18,000,000; England, 12,000,000, and Prussia, 6,000.000, At present France has 40,000,000; Italy, 41,000,000; Japan, 60,000,000; Germany, 64.000,000; the British empire, 73,000, 000; Russia, 115,000,000, and the United States, 118,000,000. Wedding Cake Weighing 200 Pounds Has 360 Eggs Buffalo, N. Y.—When Rose Ruddank was married recently to Charles Far- ber, her father, a baker, decided he'd let some one else bake the wedding cake and thus enjoy the occasion the more. And its lucky for him he did. Walter Cichocki, hired to do the job, turned out a cake weighing more than 200 pounds. It required 92 pounds of sugar, 36 pounds of butter, 360 eggs, 36 pounds of frosting sugar, and 26 pounds of flour. Swerving From Right Cause of Accidents Boston.—Failure to keep on the right side of the road when the moterist’s view is obstructed is the principal cause of auto mobile accidents, at least in Massachusetts. Out of a total of 3,556 accident cases studied, this factor prevailed in 1,084 in. stances. Other causes were listed as follows: Speeding. 069; drunken driving, 417; fail ure to keep right side of road when meeting vehicles, 408; reckless driving. 365; unlicensed driving. 232. HOO RE | hand, either because other people dn ! \ S Writer Gives Only First Hand Account of Russian Royal Tragedy. New York.—Gleb Botkin, son of the personal physician to the late Czar Nicholas of Russia, has written for the North American Review what he describes as the only first-hand ac count of the murder of the Russian royal family at Ekaterinburg, on the night of July 17, 1918, by a Bolshevik firing squad. Botkin’s story, he asserts, is the eye-witness version of the massacre told to him by the mysterious “Prin cess Anastasia” whose arrival in America two years ago created a sen- sation, which was heightened by the fact that she never gave public con firmation to the claims made by her friends that she was the youngest daughter of the czar and the only survivor of the massacre. “I not merely believe her to be Anas: tasia—1 know that she is,” declares Botkin, whose childhood was spent as a playmate of the czar's children, who accompanied the royal family on the first stage of its exile, and who, since his arrival in America in 1922 has made a livelihood as artist and au thor. His father was among those slain along with the czar, czarina, Prince Dolgoroukoff, and the grand duchesses. Saw Czar Shot Through Head. “She tells in detail of all the events preceding the shooting on the night of July 17, 1918,” he relates. “Her last recognition is that she saw the (‘ommisar Yourovsky shoot the em- | peror through the head. She herself hid behind her sister Olga. Then she heard Olga scream and lost con- sciousness. “She came to herself in a peasant cart, traveling along the highway with She was | {wo men and two women. covered with wounds and for a long time remained semi-conscious. it was explained to her that the two ing squad and accompanied the bodies of the victims to the forest. They no- ticed that Anastasia was alive and In the night preceding the cremation of the bodies, stole her and brought her to their farm. From there, taking along their mother and sister, they started on the same night in a cart in a southwestern direction. After weeks of weary travel they reached Rumania. “There Anastasia married one ot ner rescuers and gave birth to a son. Soon afterward her husband, Tchai- kowsky, was killed in the streets of Bucharest. Anastasia’s son was taken away from her and placed in an or- phan asylum where he is said to have died. Anastasia made her way to Germany, where she wanted to find her god-mother, Princess Irene of Prussia. Arrived in Berlin, she threw herself from a bridge In a fit of despair, but was rescued by the police. Since she refused to answer a single question, she was placed in an insane asylum. It was there that she was recognized by Russian visitors who had known her in childhood. They obtained her release from the asylum in 1922.” At the instigation of his sister wuo nad visited the young woman then known as Madame Tchaikowsky in Berlin, Botkin went abroad in 1928 and was instrumental in bringing Anastasia to New York. Leeds Oppose Her Fight for Fortune. Here she was received as the guest of Mrs. William B. Leeds, the former Princess Xenia of Greece, a distant cousin of the czar. But later, Botkin charges in the North American Re- view article, the Leeds took the side of other distant relatives who were claiming the considerable fortune left by the czar In England, Germany and Finland. «They readily admitted her identity,” ne says. “But somehow the policy of the imperial family prevailed. Anas- tagia was not to be officially acknowl- edged.” Anastasia left the Leeds’ Long Is- and estate suddenly, spent a short time in the tiny studio apartment of John R. Colter, New York newspaper man, then found haven for a year with friends in Garden City, L. L, relates Botkin. For the past year she has been living with Miss Annie Burr Jennings, a member of an old New York family, in her suburban home. Trick Watches Latest Fad Among Parisians Paris.—European watch manu: tacturers have gone modern and this year's watches look like anything but a watch. The smartest boulevard shops show watches with only four hours indicated—3, 6, 9, and 12. You have to guess the rest. There is another without hands. When you want to know what time it is you press a button and the dial lights up with lighted hands pointing directly to the hour. ‘There are watches hidden in cufflinks, in women’s necklaces, and in a leather strap no wider than a shoestring. It seems. however, the smaller they are the higher they come. AW MURDER OF CZAR'S FAMILY ........ Later | ‘This Interests You men were among the Bolshevik shoot- | i | i + i 1 | | i | | | 1 i FEED | | t to Market changes: : ; per 100lb Quaker Chick Starter ...... 4.50 Quaker scratch feed ............ 2.40 Quaker Full-O-Pep egg mash 3.50 Quaker 209, dairy ration... 2.50 Quaker 24% dairy ration........ 2.65 Quaker calf meal..................... 4.50 Quaker sugared Schumacker.. 2.30 Wayne All Mash Starter .... 4.00 Wayne Calf Meal... 4.25 Wayne 329 dairy ration.......... 2.80 Wayne 249, dairy ration... 2.65 Wayne 209, dairy ration... 2.50 Wayne egg mash... <3.25 Wayne 189, pig meal... 3.00 Wate 28% hog meal............. 3.25 D yde’s calf meal... ........... 5.00 , ean oh nada 1.80 0 you nick imiddlings LL 2.30 , ! B. middlings .......... 2.00 your chin wher ih 25d Oats Chop... 2.00 1 i racked corn ....i...... 2.25 } ii rhos EC 2.25 you shave 6 ax meal ............ bane. 2.40 . ’ Linseed oil meal -................ 3.00 dark mornings: , Cotton seed meal.........0 on... 2.70 Gluten feed ................L.. 2.50 - pha meal: li 2.25 : eef scrap or meat meal. ...... 4.00 3 hoe. tankage Ce Livetiinnnhds 2.70 $ Sc? just get d yster shells ........ 1.00 . Mica spar grit... 1.50 good big bulk Sack salt... 1.00 ommon Fine Salt... 185 Quaker oat meal....................... 3.25 for the bathroom Menhaden 559 fish meal ...... 4.00 | . Bone meal x al ln Ba 8.25 light fixture and Charcoal! ............: 3.00" 3 4 Dried buttermilk .. 9.50 / Dried skim milk oo. 900 you! sings you Pratt’s poultry worm powder.. 10.00 Pratt’s poultry regulator... 9.00 sh ave on the Cod Liver Oil cans gal i180 . Cod Liver Oil bulk gal 1.30 gloomiest day . Orders for one ton or more de- | | | | i { | i | i livered without extra charge. We make no charge for mixing your rations. Your Orders have our careful attention. A. F. HOCKMAN Feed store—23 West Bishop Street Phone 93-J Phone 2324 Mill—Hecla Park, Pa. 75-2tf. will be appreciated and WEST PENN POWER CO Employers, The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan, 1916. ing such insurance, Reduce Insurance rates, It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance, JOHN F. GRAY & SON State College Bellefonte It makes insurance com- pulsory. We specialize in plac- We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which BETTER LIGHT means EASIER SHAVING CHICHESTER S PIL DIAMOND B nd, 1, Ladies! Ask your I) Ohl.ches-ter s Diamon: rR) Pills in Red and Gold metallic X28, ed with Bar of rour u Ask for I E.ONEST PUSIcS BRAND PILLS, { known as Best, Safast, Always R years SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWI —— Subscribe for the Watchmw 5S [IQ ® LIVESTOCK dealer telephoned a farmer near Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, and offered what then was a though he was looking Remembering several quality calves for sale, by telephone and with the broker. high price for five calves, al- for a larger shipment. neighbors who had good the farmer bought nine closed an advantageous deal The whole transaction was completed in lees than an hour, The Modern Farm Home oe) pas « TELEPHONE SL) Baney’s oh oh I Ie [5 SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY COMFORT GUARANTEED Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 30 years in the Business BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED p Ua red WHO IS YOUR BUTCHER? ame Your guests will want to ask thi question when they have onc tasted our delicious lamb; and you may be sure that steaks veal, roasts, and . other item: from our establishment are just as good and tender. Telephone $67 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Marke