Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 14, 1930, Image 7

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OST WHITE TRIBE : [Employment of Glaze | HEIR OF NAPOLEON ~~ {HOW FAST C00 To WoRDS.|
IS FOUND IN INDIA for Ornamentation Old | DISCOVERED IN PARIS any :
; % “Afiong a ‘race as “gifted as the hee THE MODERN HIAWATHA
; “= | Chinese, neither the spirit of inveu- ma He killed the noble Mudjokivis.
discovered in Jungle by Ruse | tiveness, which originates new objects | Teacher Is Daughter of Em- ord fe hin hgh Fae him mittens
sian Scientist. and processes of manufacture, nor ’s Son. euthem with Yher for. side using,
the love of adventure which by means perors Made nen Withithe Siz, Siterou side
Calcutta.—Doctor Jaroslav, a Rus. | Of travel buperts them from Bead Paris.—The granddaughter of Na- | Put the inside skin side outside;
ian scientist, who has recently re- | Were ener a olly absent, 2 hich of | Poleon Bonaparte, first emperor of | He to get the cold side outside,
arped from a& visit to the heart of the oie difficult ‘to prove to Ww ee oe France, bas been discov.red living in | Put the warm side fur side inside.
faria country in the jungle of In- ue two agencies 2hy a ~ ar | a tiny cottage, squeezed in among fac- That's why he put the fur side inside, PITTSBURGH dealer
ia, brings back the intelligence that | 2V€ ty owes its introduction. HOW- | 40 oq ong truck gardens, in a suburb Why he put the skin side outside, telephoned a farmer
long lost white race still exists ever, as regards glaze, importation of Paris, Why: he rurniedh then; jnsigé ouside Dunbar : $
mid the jungles of that section. from abroad does seem the most like- She is Madame Mesnard Leon, a Anonymous, Boar , Pennsylvania, offering to buy
Doctor Jaroslav is planning shortly ib flee Tne Bi very 8D | atired school teacher, credited with THE TREE TOAD seven steers at a very satisfactory price. The
o return to continue his investiga. I TeTors the Pyramids rose out being the only direct living descend: | A tree toad loved a she toad drawback was the long truck haul, made par-
ions As a result of his statements f th % OF the desert. & tovel ant of the famous Corsican. All Bona- | That lived up in a tree; ticularly difficult by a recent heavy snowfall.
cientists and students of history are | Of the sands of the desert, ¥ | parte princes alive today ure de |She was a three-toed tree toad, . ti the marke? f
sking if the Russian has come upop | turquoise glaze had been discovered | g.onded from Napoleons brothers. |But a two-toed toad was he. Learning that the dealer was in the et for
long lost white race. by fhe Bevplies Alums. Aa they Madame Leon is the daughter of the Tie Ci tree toad tried to win additional cattle, the farmer then telephoned his
If so, how long have they been ries later ¢ celebrated Count Leon, who was born | The she toad’s friendly nod; meighbo who pooled sufficient stock to warrant
here? What is their origin? Are Pharoah Akhnation gleamed like a of the Emperor Napoleon and Eleo- For the two-toed tree toad loved the shi . oy £ f the railroad.
hey descendants of Alexander's vet jewel against a cloudless horizon, the nore de la Plaigne. n ground : pping by reight rom nearest
ras, who entered India after their | lintel of its gates, he walls of Its | “uppe news of my father's birth was Bre a rn .
pparalleled succession of triumphs palaces, the pillars u Ls tewp oh © | received by Napoleon at Pultusk, Po- | fre couldn't please her whim:
ver the Perslans more than 2.000 Sormioes of its Fg 5 lug Wit He land, when he was preparing the cam: |, ner tree toad bower
ears ago? : fairylike ig ie of multi-colored | zon that culminated in the victory | with her V-toe power
Alexander the Great, king of Mace- | glazes. From an piaae Sen over | oe yviedland,” said Madame Leon in & |The she toad vetoed him.
on, in 327 B. O., invaded India. tle | Western Asia into the full pride of j oq jperview. “Napoleon was al- Anonymous. The Modern Farm Home
eached the Hydaspes, now known as
he Jelum, and there defeated and
ook prisoner Porus, an Indian king.
‘hence he penetrated as far as the
iarra, where his weary troops refused
0 proceed farther. Alexander was
hen forced to order the retreat, and
ailed down the Jelum with some of
is troops, while the remainder
aarched in two divisions along the
anks. So much is history.
A surmise, which almost amounts
o a certainty, suggests that a portion
f those troops which were marching
n the bank were so worn out and dis-
eartened that they took advantage
£ the temporary relaxation of discip-
ine caused by Alexander's absence to
lesert from the main column. They
hen settled in the pleasant land in
yhich they had found themselves.
It is the descendants of these men,
riven and harried from place to place
iy a succession of invaders, that
Yoctor Jaroslav contends he has found
n the Marias. They are one of the
post primitive peoples of India, whe
ave long been a source of study and
ewilderment to ethnologists.
3razil to Put Heavy
Tax on Talking Movies
Rio de Janeiro,—lmposition of pro-
ibitive taxes upon moving picture
hreaters showing foreign sound and
alking films is being sought by Bra-
ilian musicians, who are jobless as
. result of the talkies. A bill has
een presented to the board of coun-
ilmen of Rio de Janeiro providing a
ax of one conto (approximately $120)
er day each day that a talking film
a any language other than Portuguese
3 presented.
The musicians hope that such a tax
vill ‘make it necessary for theaters to
esume showing silent films and re-
ult in the music makers returning
o their places in the orchestra pit.
jnited States made movies would be
rincipally affected, since talkies from
ther countries have still to be heard
ere,
The campaign against the talkies
np Brazil has stirred public interest, |
lthough several prominent news.
apers, commenting editorially, have
Babylon, unless invented there in-
dependently, which is quite as likely.
While the baked clay of China was
still innocent of all luster, Assyrian
potentates decorated their architec-
ture with lions and griffins, stepping
out majestically in friezes of richly
colored glazed tiles. This resplend-
ent art was continued by the Persian
king of kings, by tbe Seleucids and
the Arsacids and beyond into the days
of Islam.—From “Porcelain Pagodas
and Palaces of Jade” by A. KE. Gran-
tham.
Holstein Cattle Winter
in Luxurious Quarters
Speaking of the winter care given
the famous Holstein cattle by the
dairymen of Friesland, Holland, the
National Geographic society says:
“Barn and dwelling are under one
roof, which rises high into the sky
in order to provide loft space for the
immense amount of hay needed as
cattle feed during the long winter.
The whole gives the appearance of a
one-story cottage pushed low into the
earth by weight of an immense pointed
roof, which reaches above the tops
of the tall trees lining the roadway.
“A hall separates the living quar-
ters of the farmer's family from
space set aside for cows, which as a
rule is the larger portion of the house.
Visitors testify that these barns are
spotless and odorless. Each stall is
sanded and has a window of its own,
inevitably decorated with a fresh
white window curtain. Every cow
has a bath daily and many of their
rails are tied up with ribbon.”
A Fair Cop
For years and years and years—
no. let us start again: For weary
hours the angler sat watching his
float. It never moved, save when a
ripple of the river made it tremble
and raised false hopes in his heart.
Then, with the snort of an enraged
bull and the foot-tread to match, the
village constable came to him.
“Fishing ain’t allowed in this pond,”
he snapped. “Beat it!”
The fisherman turned bored eyes to
him and jerked the hook out of the
ready thinking otf divorcing the child-
less Empress Josephine, so you cap
imagine what consequences the news
of my father’s birth might have had.
«But what could Napoleon do?
Nothing. Marriage with my grand-
mother was out of the question on
account of the political situation at
that time and the wars abroad. The
whole of France might have been
threatened.”
She then related that Napoleon be-
stowed the latter half of his name on
his child, calling him Count Leon.
The child grew up to play a colorful
role in the social world of that time
and gained a reputation as one of the
foremost duelists of France.
Madame Leon also revealed thai
her only son was killed in the World
war at Rheims in 1917 at the age of
twenty-one, This was the first indi
cation that a direct descendant of
Napoleon took part in the World war.
Madame Mesnard Leon had led a
quiet but comfortable life. Since 1923
she has lived at Stains, a suburb of
Paris, with her daughter, now- grown
into womanhood.
Sculptor Asks Burial
at Mill Montparnasse
Paris.—An old windmill of Mont
parnasse may become the final resting
place of Emile-Antoine Bourdelle, fa
mous k'rench sculptor, who died some
months ago.
A committee of artists is at present
investigating the suitability of the mill
as a tomb for one of France's greatest
sculptors of all time, following the re:
quest of his widow that he be interred
there. This was a wish that he had
often expressed to his friends, ex-
plaining that he wanted to be buried
in Montparnasse near the studio
where he achieved many of his best
works.
Centuries old, this mill is no longer
used te grind flour as in the middle of
the Eighteenth century when it was
the property of the Jesuit order. On
the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1762
the building changed hands and its
new owners converted part of it into
a bistrot where sparkling wines were
sold. Now it «is a mere storehouse
eee emer.
Doctor—*“Sit down sonny, you
have shown good manners long
enough.”
Small Boy—*“It ain’t good man-
ners, doctor, it’s a boil.”
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR CONGRESS
We are authorized to announce the
name of CHARLES P. LONG, Spring
Mills, Centre county, as a candidate for
the nomination for CONGRESS on the
Republican ticket at the May Primaries,
Tuesday, May -20th. He respectfully ap-
peals to the Republicans of the Twenty-
third congressional district, Centre
Clearfield, Cameron and M’'Kean coun-
ties, for their support and influence.
P. O. Address, Spring Mills, Pa.
FOR STATE SENATOR
We are authorized to announce th
name of Harry B. Scott, of ur
Pa., as a candidate for the nomination
for State Senator, representing the Thir-
ty-Fourth District, comprising Clearfield
and Centre counties, at the Primary Elec-
ion to hii ag Fo Tuesday, May 20th,
, subject to the rules
Republican party. Ss governing Hie
FOR STATE COMMITTEEMAN
We are authorized to announce the
name of Harry B. Scott of Philipsburg,
Penna., as a candidate for the election
for State Committeeman representing Cen-
tre county, at the Primary Election to be
held Tuesday, May 20th, 1930, subject to
the rules governing the Republican party.
We are authorized to announce the
candidacy of James H. Hugg of Philips-
burg Pa., as the Centre County Member
of the Rebublicah State Committee, sub-
ject to rules and regulations of the Pri-
mary Election to be held May 20, 1930.
CHAIRMAN COUNTY COMMITTEE
We are authorized to -announce the
name of Phil. D. Foster, of State College,
Pa., as a candidate for County Chairman
of the Republican party in Centre Coun-
ty, Pa., subject to the decision of the
voters of the party as expressed at the
primary to be held on May 20th, 1930.
Has « TELEPHONE
000. Of this amount $342,000 is surplus.
greater than the average.
A Bank’s Standing
here are three determining factors in a
Bank’s standing :
The Reputation of its Officers and Directors
Its Capital and Surplus
Its Resources
As to this Bank—the first of them will have to
take care of itself.
The second shows—Capital and Surplus $542,-
Much
The third shows Resources of $2,800,000.
Enough to insure the proper consideration of, and
ability to help, projects that promise to increase the
well-being of the community and the proper needs
of individuals.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BELLEFONTE, PA.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
XECUTORS NOTICE.—Letters testa-
mentary having been granted to the
undersigned on the estate of Min-
erva Tate, late of the township of Spring,
county of --Centre and State of Pennsyl-
vania, deceased, all persons knowing
themselves indebted to said estate are
directed to make payment of such indebt-
edness and those having claims should
present them, properly authenticated, for
payment.
SCOTT TATE
ALIVA HENDERSHOT
Execuiors o isang Tate, Dec’d.
is ellefonte, R. F. D., Pa.
William Groh Runkle, Atty., 2
Bellefonte, Pa. 76-8-6t
XECUTOR'S NOTICE.—The under-
Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work.
brown cold water on the project, as- and the great fapping arms which signed executrix of the estate of i
erting such attempts to discourage water. turned in the wind have been stripped Charles ©, Cochran, late of State College
rogress in the movie industry would | “I'm not fishing,” he replied, witn | op bi TS ouny, Fu hereny Toms = 3
e exceedingly harmful. weary sarcasm in his voice. “I'm In 1824 the ground around the miu Sst, to present them, properly authen- | fig =
<i oj 3 3 1ca ' Fe
Declaring the talkies have seriously | teaching this worm to swim.” beta the cometery of MODIDATIARE | hove I hatte re aE 21 Lf
njured dramatic art and threaten to “A-a-rh!” snorted the policeman | gnd the mill was used as a home for Bi Hales immediate settlement of such Sh Ue
upplant the national language, Flo-| triumphantly. “Then come along with | the grave digger. Since then many Tashisime MRS. MARY E. COCHRAN SA i:
iano de Goes, council member who | me. Bathing ain’t allowed in the pond | unsuccessful attempts have been made W. Harrison Walker, Atty. _ Executrix i= el
atroduced the bill, believes the only | without costumes, and he ain’t got | to convert it into a historical monu- Bellefonte, Pa. State Coltess ro in dr
gethod of combating what he terms one on!” ment under the care of city authori: me lah UE
“awil” i A 3 " 3 3 Ie =]
in “evil” is charging a very high ties. XECUTOR'S NOTICE, Letters testa | I Ie
ax. " EA a pon ae, estate of | [UE il
Wisdom o ntoninus . . Bellefo uise McManus, late of | I A
: 3 nte borough, d : ] i
American Bathing Suits For a man can lose neither the past Special Vaccine Cuts 3 been granted to the oe WIRE SR Ue
P lar A Itali nor the future; for how can one take Infagt Mortality in Two | {3555 ate Eyes Es LH ie
opu ar Among ltalians | from him that which is not his? So Paris.—A special vaccine, reducing DAsHant and those having claims Uc WE WANT YOU TO SEE THE 2
Washington. — One-piece bathing ; remember these two points: First | ie mortality among newly born Ir | Sar suthontionss. tor selacoenl, them, fi a
pits. American style, with suntan ' that each thing is of like form from | fants virtually 50 per cent, has been THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK SF Lit
acks, short trousers, and low cut | everlasting and comes round again in | ysed in 210,000 experimental cases | runes C. Furst BELLEFONTE, PA. |5R : : 9 an
ecks, will be the style at fashionable | its cycle and that it signifies not | since 1924, Dr. Albert Calmette told 2% C. Furst, AU, Elsctor LE =
talian beaches next summer, accord- | whether a man shall look upon the | the Academy of Science. = A : =)
ng to the Commerce department. (‘on- | same things for a hundred years or So successful have these trails beeu HERINE'S SALR~B) i vitrue of a =f Ee
uy Hush Miler 2 Milah sqporien to | two Bunjred: o for an infinity of time; | that Pasteur institute, of which Doc the Court of Yen of =r] os
e department that American bathing | second, that the longest lived and the | tor Calmette is subdirector, has cre | Centre County, to me directed, will be | Gf : i i
: ’ : exposed t b f 1 t we i
uvits came into vogue in Italy last shortest lived man, when they come | ated a special laboratory for its prep House in the Se ar the Cot Uc hat are Showing for Spring. They i
ear with a degree that took Italian | to die, lose one and the same thing.— | aration. It will be distributed free to FRIDAY, MARCH 28th 1930 Te are here and ready now Sn
panufacturers by surprise. Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (121-180 | physicians and midwives. The following property: Sh) ? i:
——— A. D.). “Meditations.” All that certain lot or plot of ground Uc 3
Scared Cats Saved : iy oe we Soy Aone Single. roof | qi Pe
» . house an e garage ereon iT
Winnetka, IIl.—With every fire rum Eight Mice Are Found Socted, slinate Jing 2nd being in the Si] ° ° He
1 this millionaire Chicago suburb cost- Craze for Hairdressing With Home in Radio S 0: CBO are ALY Op =
10 det | Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bound-
ag taxpayers $63 during the past year, In the early Righteenth century ed and described as follows, to-wit: ui J 0 d S, a S, ] S dg
Rahway, N. J.—Many things have
come out of radio sets, but Albert G
Avery got a mother mouse and a lit.
ter of seven young mice out of his.
Avery started to investigate a short
circuit in his set and found that it
resulted from the presence of two
dead mice which had been electrocut:
BEGINNING at the Northwesterly
corner of the intersection of West Beaver
Avenue and South Sparks Street; thence
Southerly along the line of West Beaver
Avenue one hundred feet more or less
to corner of premises now of G. D. Mor-
rison and Myrtle V. Morrison, his wife,
formerly Charles T. Schilling; thence
Northerly along line of premises of G.
D. Morrison and Myrtle V. Morrison,
his wife, formerly Schillin, one hun-
nairdressing im France reached its
peak. Literally. Many court ladies
wore their hair piled so high that they
uns was to rescue scared cats, whila | could not sit im coaches but had to
he matter of extinguishing fires was | kneel or hold their heads out of the
hird. windows. It is said that in Paris in
1730 there were 1,200 hairdressers.
They were probably kept busy, since it
he chief occupation of the firemen
ras to rescue babies locked in bath-
ooms. The second largest number of
LUE
and everything that. well-dressed will
wear this Spring. We are anxious to
have you see what, we think is much the
LR
HHH HHH HHH ed by the bare wires. The mother and | (red feet to corner of prefuses previous:
of took an en 1 veyed E x - 2 = 2 il
f Ww B . puten sons Sn enlile dave eswate remaining five were comfortably set- Dara nT «>. I ne most, desirable showing of Stylish Men’s SH
oman Born in U. S. . ’ tled in a nest which she had made in |V. Morrison, his wife, thence Northeast- LE
‘Wear ever shown in Bellefonte.
erly along the last
premises, one
named Morrison
hundred feet line to
South Sparks Street; thence Southerly
along line of South Sparks Street one
it in the most elaborate fashion had
it done only about once a month.—
Detroit News.
t
Is to Be Naturalized the built-in speaker.
f
Nebraska City, Neb. — Mrs.
Seth
william Lutjemeyer was born in 3} IPLPLLIL IR II ILD a) hi Tost 19 ne place of beginning
Otoe county and has always re 3% $ . : 3 |, SAID Tol of Svound fTeMiE Go i
i : 1 :
© sided there, but at least five Cancer ef the Skin 3 Soviet Miners Burn & Beaver Avenue and extending 0% Wen Ue
. years must elapse before she Cancer of the skin grows slowly | & 4,000 Ikons at Meet & | 52m width alone So tor previous: e Ue
; becomes a citizen of the United and is not particularly malignant. It 2 oson —In a gigantic ant % | {Be Jundred bo Bisie MO neo Moderately Priced 2
| States. is possible to cure practically all Indl- | $ religious demonstration of 15, 3 |b Maretsom, Chis Jwiter 0" one Myre -
! @ y a ’ . :
na eres we ar, | Ee oe hein Dror | § 000 ssl uiivere In he disiies § |, S000, SO SET So and Quality Merchandise rh
: . ’ i'l 9 of Gorlovka, Don. basin, 4000 5 Soldss the property of Hafry L. Homan oy
{ become naturalized. William lic Health association, provided they 3 ikons were bacoen in a nage y Pe i at 1:35 o'clock P. Ue
; Vag passed py Srhuinations and in aid at an early stage of the dis- 2 honfire. The ikons were taken ? | i ar OF wg. P. JUNLAP, Sheriff M 9 x
; is now a y ease. 3 | Sheriff’ ) onte, If om j
a 2 E2en Tn he es 3 from numerous churches in the % i IE Sth. 1930 ne 75-10-3t an or Boy Wears It It S Here i
ap ame a cit. | & district, all of which were or : | red
f . . . >| {
{ With her marriage to an un Two Things to Prize § a i orp _ 3 et m————— a
i naturalized person, Mrs. Lutje An old job is like an old friend. | & om , | F >
/ J i er 1
: meyer lost her citizenship and We become so accustomed to it that [5 ar. ology x Free SILK HOSE ree £5
| must go through the formality we take its virtues as a matter of fact. | 4 fre to Joseph Stalin as general A 1 senders Knit Silk Hose for Wo- a e HE
i of becoming maturalized to re We overlook its real value and Its | ¥ _[.cretary of the Com 1st x men, guaranteed to wear six ] @ ie
¢ possibilitles for helpfulness. Treat | & Det y omnis | montns without runners, in _leg or Ic SH
t lightly neither an old friend nor an ' § pany. 1 FREE it they rat. Brice $1.00. © i EE il aiath op : bE
old job.—Grit. | $00rtrerttr ttt iiss | YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP LEE RR RRR RR