Bellefonte, Pa., June 6, 1930. es ———————————————— TYPOSIUM. We'll begin with box; the plural is boxes, But the plural of ox should be oxen, not oxes. One fowl is goose, but two are geese, Yet the plural of mouse should never be meese, You may find a lone mouse, or a whole nest of mice, But the plural of house is houses, not if the plural of man is always called men, Why shouldn't the plural of pan be called pen? The cow in the plural may be called cows or kine; But a bow, if repeated, is never called bine; And the plural of vow is vows, vine. If I speak of a foot and you show me two feet And I gave you a boot, would a pair be called beet? one is a tooth and the whole set are teeth, Why shouldn't the plural of booth be beeth ? if the singular’s this, and the plural is these, Should the plural of kiss ever be written keese? ‘Then one may be that, and the two would be those, Yet hat in the plural would never be never If x3 hose. And the plural of cat is cots, and not cose, We speak of a brother, and also of brethren, But though we say mother, we never say methren. Then the masculine pronouns are he, his and him, But imagine the feminine she, shis and shim! So the English, agree, Is the funniest language you ever did see. I think you all will THE KEY. Mattie Driversat on a bench un- der the palmettos of Alicante fin- gering a solitary peseta in one of his pockets. It is common saying that no one can really starve in Spain, but Mattie hadan uncomfort- able suspicion that unless he could rub his one peseta into two and then those two into four, he was go- ing shortly to disapprove that say- ing. The sunlight sparkled on the sap- phire of the Mediterranean and made the stone pavements a blaze of gold; under the palmettos it was cool and pleasant; and on the land- ward side of this avenue the club and the restaurants deployed their invitations. It would have been so pleasant to have eaten his break- fast in one of them, and thereafter to have helped the sun down the sky with “discourse to each new- comer of the stirring and calamitous events which had hurled him out of Morocco and flung him up like a string of seaweed on the beach at Alicante, But Mattie Driver had just one peseta in his pocket, and no amount of turning and re-turning would make it into two. Another miracle, how- , ever, happened. . A voice spoke behind his back. “Hobre.” Mattie recognized the voice and his heart jumped. It might be that someone wanted him, after all He turned, however, without haste. ‘“‘Senor Fontana,” he said easily, “your duties are over?” Fontana, a semi-youthful clean- shaven man in dingy striped flannel trousers and more or less white canvas shoes with patent-leather tips, flourished a straw hat and sat down by his side. “For the moment —yes. the hour of luncheon.” Fontana was one of those curious nondescripts to be found at Spanish ports, a kind of waterside odd-jobs’ man. Mattie, when he had landed at Alicante from the little Almeria steamer at seven o'clock that morn- ing, had remarked him at once: and his knowledge of the world, helped by a facility quite Spanish to en- gage the most complete of strang- ers at once in intimate conversa- It is tion, had led him to expose his dis- ! tressful case and ask for of work which might offer. already was the reply. “Senor Driver, I have a friend who would esteem your help,” said Fontana. “He invites you to lunch with him so that you may talk over this little affair quietly.” Mattie Driver looked at the club. house. “No, “nor any job Here not there,” said Fontana, at fhe Reina Victoria. those places. The little affair is not, it is true, of great importance, but it is curious. Shall I lead the way?” He walked beneath the palmettos with Mattie at his heels until he reached a corner where a road joined the esplanade from the town behind. At this corner a small restaurant stood in a garden. “The food here is good,” said Fontana, and at this moment Mat- tie reecived his first impression that the little affair was certainly curious and might not be as unimportant as his genial friend was pretending. Fontana's friendliness did not sur- prise him in that country. Any Spaniard will go out of his way to do a stranger a good turn, so long as it does not actually cost him money. But just as they step- ped out from the avenue to cross to the garden restaurant Fontana laid a hand upon Mattie’s arm and glanced swiftly up and down the road. “He has no doubt already ar- rived,” said Fontana, but Mattie was not at all deceived by that explanation. The glance of apprehension, the swift grip on his arm, now as ' | i i { You | would not be quiet at either of | swiftly relaxed, meant a fear lest they were being watched. Mattie was a man of an adventurous spirit and had he needed any other per- suasion than his poverty, he would have found it in Fontana's fear. He was still more thrilled when in a corner of the garden he was set face to face with a small, slen- der, elderly gentleman, scrupulously dressed, who wore a -little white pointed beard and a white mus. tache, and appraised him with eyes of steel. “Let me present you to each other,” said Fontana. “This is my friend Senor Juan Gomez, a mer. chant of Cordoba.” “Retired,” Gomez added. «Jt must be pleasant to be able to retire,” said Mattie Driver, with- out a hint of disbelief in the truth of Fontana’s description, : “On the other hand it must be still more pleasant to have youth,” | replied Senor Gomez, and upon this small exchange Fontana togk his leave. lunch with me, I hope,” said the! older man; and though the hors-d’ | oeuvres of black olives and sardines | and radishes in their little white | dishes, arranged on a tablecloth scrupulously clean, invited him ov- | erwhelmingly, Mattie sat down to! the meal in extreme discomfort. His clothes were not to blame. He had been careful to snatch the best of his wardrobe from the holo-! caust of his fortunes, and he sat in | a blue suit as neat as Senor Juan's. | No, it was the personality of his. host which sent little thrills of warning tingling along his nerves. | Juan Gomez, however, did not! approach his business until the luncheon was finished. He was the cultured host talking eaily of the great cities to which his business had carried him until the coffee was on the table and Mattie sat with a big cigar between his lips. Then he changed his note. They had the garden to them- selves. Gomez did not lower his voice, but he spoke abruptly and with an air of relief that all the preliminary banalities were at last at an end. “Fontana tells me, Senor Driver, that some reverse of fortune, such as may happen to any of us, has for the moment embarrassed you.” “Yes. Raisuli was my friend. With his surrender, I lost every- thing.” Mattie had been born a Laraish on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, of English parents long established there. He had never once been in England, though he had crossed many times to Spain. He was in some respects more like a Moor than an Englishman; he had a Moor’s cunning, a Moor’'s good humor, and at the age of seventeen when he found himself with a little money and no parents, he knew his world and its opportunities, At Al Kasr he became Raisuli’s agent, acquired flocks which were tended for him by Raisuli’s chiefs and was well on the way to a for- tune, when Abdel Krim from the Riff country upset Raisuli altogeth- er, and captured with him all his treasure and belongings. Mattie found himself in a day reduced to penury. A few weeks of vain effort to reestablish himself under the new rigid arrangements of the Spanish consumed the little store of actual money which he possessed. He had fled across the water to Spain had traveled from Algeciras to Malaga, from Malaga to Almeria, from Almeria to Alicante in search of a fresh opportunity, and had come in the ; thousand now for your | fifteen thousand when you hand me i the key.” now to his last peseta. i The merchant from Cordoba lis- tened to the story in silence. Then, | said ° leaning forward a little, he with a smile. | “Romance still lives, then, though we poor drab stay at homes see little of its color. So swift a rise to fortune!” “So still more swift a decline,” added Mattie ruefully. - “What you have once done, you can do again. Let us think of the swift rise, my friend.” Gomez's voice became silky, “Your methads must have been a little —shall we say? Informal.” “I had only one method,” answer- ed Mattie —“to keep my given word to the minute and in its ut- termost detail.” “Claro!” Juan Gomez agreed. “That is what I mean. For to keep your word thus with Mr. B. the landed sheik, Mr. X the Jewish trader might perhaps suffer.” Mattie thought over the problem. “Yes,” ‘he confessed, “I suppose I I was never much troubled by the woes of the X's.” Gomez smiled. “ We cannot af- ford to be. I asked you that ques- tion because in this little affair which I shall put before you, I Xr Mattie nodded his head, “That is understood, of course.” “Good! I shall ask you to return to Morocco, but to a safer district. You know, perhaps, the kasba of Taugirt 2” Mattie was startled. Atlas Mountains?” “Yes,” said Gomez. “In the “I know it.” “Perhaps, then, you know the Kaid of Taugirt himself?” “I do.” Juan Gomez laughed cheerfully, a curious tittering laugh. “I am lucky, my young friend. I had not hoped for such good fortune.” Mattie on the other hand frown. ed dismally. “Wait a moment, Senor Gomez!” he said abruptly. “I am not so sure of good fortune. For I gather that the Kaid of Taugirt is to be our Mr. X.” “That may be,” said Gomez simply. Mattie was torn in two. It was true that in the ordinary way of business he was not greatly trou- bled by minute scruples. But he liked the Kaid of ‘Taugirt infinitely more than this wicked old scoundrel from Cordoba. He had a pitcure of the kindly propose to be Mr. B and not Mr. | old gentleman keeping guard in his kasba with its turrets and its crene- lated walls over one of the passes of the Atlas, like some baron of old days. On the other hand he answer. had one peseta in his pocket only, and it would not turn into two. “What do you want me to do? | he asked sullenly. Gomez leaned forward and clap- ped him on the so serious, my young friend! high shoulder. “It is not No . ER plained the pass to which he had come, “And you want my key, Mattee?” The kaid did not wait for an He crossed the moonlit patio and lifted the key from its The light from the candles rippled along its stem and its wards until it seemed a thing alive. “Not a speck of rust. Not a flaw in its metal,” the old man continued. “Yet it has hung upon that pillar harm will be done to anyone—not | for three hundred and fifty years. even to Mr. X. Listen! There is a great key in the kasha of Tau- grit. It hangs on a nail, I think patio.” Mattie looked up swiftly. “It is , treasured ?”’ “It certainly will not be given to you.” “Therefore I must steal it.” “Let us say that you must not ask for it. Yet I want that key.” “Why ?” Juan Gomez raised his hands in of compliments, , amusement. “My young friend, con- | sider! “You will do me the honor to | SXPlanations, If I were prepared to give I should not have sought for a complete stranger down to his last peseta, to help me, Nor should I offer for this little service the high reward which I am willing to pay.” “How much is that?” said Mattie. “Twenty thousand pesetas. Five expenses, It was certainly a handsome sum for a little villainy. But Mattie had | a strong conviction that the villainy was really colossal. And not only colossal, but devious and subtle. He contemplated Senor Juan Gomez with respect—and with him requir- {ing considerable agility. Gomez took a note case from his pocket and counted out four notes of a thousand pesetas each and ten ; notes of one hundred. “Mr. B keeps his word,” he said with a laugh, as he pushed the notes across the table. Mattie could not resist them. ‘“T have to go from here to Casablanca to Marrakesh, from Mar- rakesh up into the Atlas. It will be four weeks before I bring back the—tribute from Mr. X, How shall I find you again.” “You will announce your arrival to Fontana,” said Gomez. He paid the bill and rose from his chair. “You will give me ten minutes, if you please.” There was a note of authority in his voice now as though he sopke to a servant. Mattie was not offended. He was suddenly afraid. It seemed to him that his whole body was just a house ringing with alarm Dells. More than the ten minutes had elapsed before he realized that he was smoking a good cigar in a pleasant garden. Mattie traveled by the Air Serv- ice the next morning from Alicante to Casablanca, and a week later with his mule train climbed up to the kasha of the Kaid of Taugirt. The kaid rode forward to meet him, seated on a high red saddle on a white mule. From afar he cried outin a voice of welcome, “Mattee!” and he led Mattie Driver through his court- yard into the hall. It was a place of tiles and painted pillars, and a fountain played in a marble basin. “I saw you from afar with the glasses you gave to me,” said the old gentleman, to whom in more prosperous days Mattie had present- ed a fine binocular. “Now how can I serve you?” “I was in Marrakesh,” replied Mattie, “and I had a wish to see you again,” The kaid’s eyes narrowed and his face became a mask. But he ask- ed no further questions and busied himself with brewing tea. Mean- while Mattie’s eyes wandered around the court and in a little while he saw it—a shining key, like silver hanging from a nail against a pillar. “You will stay with me for a week,” said the kaid. “I will have a hunt for the third day.” But Mattie shook his head. “On the morning of the third day I must be on my way, to Marrakesh.” “It shall be as you wish,” said the kaid. “Meanwhile my house is yours Mattee—and all that it holds,” Mattee—and all that it holds.” At one o'clock in the morning on the second night of his visit, when the whole kasza slept, Mattie crep down into the patio. Through the open roof the moon- light poured down upon the tiles. The key gleamed upon the pillar like a jewel. Mattie lifted his hand to it, and a light suddenly shone behind him. Mattie turned silently and swiftly. An electric torch exposed him from head to foot, and concealed the man who held it. Then the light went out, and the old kaid spoke gently. “You too, Mattee? I told you that my house was yours and all that it holds. Why creep down the stairs, then, like a thief, in the middle of the night?” Mattie stood rooted to the ground in shame, while the kaid lighted the candles in a branched silver cande- labrum. “I wouldn't have had this hap- pen for worlds,” said Mattie slowly. “Yet it has happened,” answered Sid Mohammed-el Hati. “Let us talk.” He sat down cross legged upon a long cushion and beckoned to Mat- tie to sit beside him. Mattie, how- ever, stood in front of his host. “You too,” he quoted. “Then oth- ers have preceded me?” “One,” replied the kaid. “He came last year, and at this time. He was a stranger. He had a story that he was traveling to Tafilelt, He stayed one night. In the morn. ing my key was gone. I sent after him, not on the road to Tafilelt but on the road back to Marrakesh. In his luggage my key was found. He was ‘brought back to me. He was poor, it seemed. He had been offered “much money for my key. I let: him go. So you too, Mattee, are poor?” : Mattie nodded his. head, and ex- We call it the Key of Paradise. For it opens the door of my house in Spain.” _ Mattie Driver had expected this statement. Here and there about Morocco, in Rabat as in the Atlas, in Fez as in Marrakesh, in the houses of the nobles hung similar keys. Their ancestors, driven out by Ferdinand and Isabella had car- ried their house keys away with them against the time when they would fit them into locks again. Even now their descendants keep alive that faith. “Perhaps even I—” said the old kaid, and he broke off with a laugh. «But if so, the time must come soon, Mattee.” “And where is this house yours, Sid Mohammed-el Hati?” “At Elche.” Mattie drew a deep breath, He was thinking: “Yes, this is a big- ger piece of villainy than I dream- ed of. But I don’t understand it I think I am afraid.” Aloud he said: “Elche is that old Moorish town with its famous date palms thirty kilometers or so from Alicante.” “Yes,” said the kaid. “My house stands on the river bank in a great garden. I have never seen it.” “And who occupies it now?” “The Conde de Torrevieja.” With a cry Mattie sprang to his feet. “I was sure of it. Listen, Sid Mohammed- A man calling him self Juan Gomez, a merchant of Cordoba, hired me to steal your key. But I had® seen his picture in the newspaper El Liberal—and not over that name. But over what name I could not remember until now. He is the Conde de Torre- vieja. He wants the key which opens the house in which he lives during ' the summer—a second key—safein a castle of the Atlas Mountains, Why? He wants it secretly too. Why ?” “That, Mattee, you shall find out,” : said the old kaid slowly, “For I shall lend you my key. I ask you' to bring it back to me as clean and bright as it is now.” He was speaking a parable as | Mattie Driver well understood, and he held up the key for Mattie to! take. Mattie returned to Alicante and slipped quietly into the town one evening, with a week in hand, and betook himself to a hotel. He had still fifteen hundred pesetasleft and he was in no hurry to connect up with Fontana. “It strikes me,” he said to him- self, “that Mr. B. is giving me the baby to hold, and I should like to see what make of baby it is.” But Mattie had no luck. As he strolled under the palmettos in front of the club that very night, Fontana brushed past him and said in a low voice: “Follow !’ Reluctantly Mattie followed in his steps. In a dark square back of the espanade Fontana stopped. “You have been quick, my friend, and I hope successful?” he said. “Yes.” Fontana patted hmm on the back. “I knew, of course, that you had returned this evening, but I was afraid, since you were here a week before your time. You will be glad to have finished with the affair and to reecive your reward. You shall receive it tonight.” Fontana was all joviality and good will, but he allowed Mattie no time for deliberation. He hurried on with his instructions. It was something which Mattie was to fetch, he un- derstood. He did not want to know what it was. Heaven be thanked, he was not curious. The point was, Mattie had fetched it and the excellent Juan Gomez of was anxious to have it—was, indeed at this moment waiting for it at his house in Elche—oh, a mere hop, skip and a jump of thirty kilomet- | ers, an hour in a motor car—and it | was not yet eleven! “But I must go back to my hotel first to fetch—'' Mattie began, and was at once interrupted. “Yes, yes, no doubt. To fetch what you have to fetch! See how wonderfully everything agrees, While you fetch what you have to fetch, I will get a car and send it here to this quiet square. At one o'clock you will be back in your hotel, your mission accomplish- ed, and tomorrow you start life again a capitalist. Bravo!” Fontana shook Mattie warmly by ! the hand and added: “It will be best that the car should not go to the house. You have understood of course that Juan Gomez does not wish for the lime- light, the old fox.” With a chuckle he poked Mattie in the ribs.”You cannot mistake the house,” and he proceeded to give the same de- scription of the house at Elche which Mattie had already heard at the castle in the Atlas Mountains. “But by the time I arrive there, Gomez will be in bed,” Mattie ex- postulated. “He will be expecting you. I telephoned to him as soon as I knew of your return.” Without wait- ing for any further objections, Fon- tana disappeared. Mattie was all for running home to his hotel and putting his head under the bedclothes. But fifteen thousand pesetas were fifteen thou- sand pesetas. Moreover, he saw no reason why, if he failed Gomez, Gomez should not pay the governor of the town something, get him clapped into prison and kept there. He went to his hotel for the key. He was going to keep his word with Mr. B. But he meant also to keep it with Mr. X. That key must be; i countered the mirror. returned bright and clean to the Kaid of Taugirt. It was eleven o'clock when Mattie returned to the square. Every house was dark, the roadway de. | serted. But the lamps of a car were burning on the spot where he and Fontana had stood. “You are waiting for me? You know where to go?” “Elche,” said the driver. Mattie got in. The car ran paral- lel with the coast until the salt pans were reached, and at that point the engine sigpped. Mattie hoped that the damage was too im- portant for the chauffeur to repair, But in twenty minutes the car was ready again, and it ran so smoothly that Mattie suspected there never had been any damage at all. What if the accident were a trick to delay him, so that he might get to the house on the river bank at a moment exactly prear- ranged? Mattie was in the mood to turn back at all tosts when the car reached the outskirts of the village, swung to the left and stop- ped before a lane between hedges which ran down to the river bank. “It’s here, man,” said the chauf- feur. “You will wait for me,” said Mattie. The chauffeur extinguished the lamps as Mattie entered the lane. A hundred yards farther on Mattie came upon the house. At the side towards the river massive old date! palms stood up behind high garden walls. There was not a light in any of the windows, not a sound from any room. Mattie seemed to have come | to some forgotten mansion in a wilderness, Yet somewhere in its depths the disturbing Count of Torrevieja was waiting for him. “Well, the sooner I get it all over the better,” said Mattie, and taking the key from his pocket, he! searched the surface of the door for the keyhole. The door was a massive barrier of walnut wood and bolts and bars, and hung upon hinges which would stop a battering-ram, Yet as Mattie touched it, it swung open noiseless- ly. And it opened upon a cavern ‘of blackness. Mattie drew back with a gasp. He was little now thoroughly frightened. Why was the house in darkness when he was expected? ; What trick was being played on him by that old spider of a A Por- revieja ? He stepped cautiously across the . threshold and closed the door be- hind him. Then he waited and he listened. The house was as still as tomb. But at last far away he saw a single perpendicular thread of faint light, as though a door stood just ajar. He moved cautiously across the floor and came at last to the door. It opened inwards and at the corner of a room. He bent his head forward and listened. @He heard nothing—not even a sound of breathing. The lighted room seemed as empty as this black cavern of a hall. Mattie opened the door wide, with an eye upon the crack at the hinges, lest anyone should be con- cealed behind the panels. But that space was empty; so was the room itself—as far as he could see. But it was a bedroom with a four-poster bed round which the curtains were drawn, as though . someone slept a -there—or as though someone watch- ed there, holding his breath, Mattie’s eyes wandered to a long cheval glass which stood opposite 'him in a recess by the bed and be- | came fixed in a stare. He shivered as he looked. It seemed to him that all the ice in the world was trickling down his spine and he felt his hair lift upon his head. He saw himself and behind him, to the left of the door, the dress- ing table and upon the dressing table the solitary candle which lighted the room. It gleamed like a star in the depths of the mirror and threw its pale radiance down upon a litter of broken jewel cases and fragments of jewels: here a chain from which a pendant had been wrenched, there a gold setting from which the stones had been roughly forced. There had been a robbery in the ; house that night. That was why he Europe have established had found the door open. The thief had escaped that way. Then—then what lay hidden behind the curtains | of the bed? Mattie was drawn across the room as a needle is drawn by a magnet. He pulled one of the curtains aside and dropped it again, and stood holding his breath. There was someone there—in the bed—asleep. Yes—no doubt asleep. But the bedclothes were drawn over the sleeper’s head and there was no stir, no rise and fall, asthere must be if the sleeper breathed at all Whoever lay in that bed was dead. Mattie approached the head of the bed and his eyes once more en- They met in the mirror another pair of eyes. The Count of Torrevieja, late Juan Gomez, merchant of Cordoba, was standing in the doorway, a smile of satisfaction upon his lips, a glit. tering sword in his hand, As Mattie turned, the count rais- ed his voice in a scream. “Murder! Help, Romero, Felipe! Hurry!” and as he screamed, he sprang toward | Mattie. Mattie had no weapon, but as: the point of that glittering sword darted toward his breast, he swung the curtain of the bed and caught it in the folds. Already in the rooms above a clamor arose; there was a rushing of feet. Before Torrevieja could disengage his sword, Mattie’s hand with the heavy key struck twice at Tor- revieja’s head; at his second blow the Spaniard fell. Mattie leaped across him as he lay. Candles gleamed upon the stair- way as he raced across the hall He reached the door. Once more it swung inward without noise. In a second he was outside. He drew the door to, as the shout resounded through the hall. J He had a moment while the ser- SE — ! vant rushed into the bedroom. Mat- | tie fitted the key into the lock and locked the door. Then he took the ‘key out again and san. For a while the house was still. | Then the cries, the shouts, broke out again and lignts leaped from { window to window. Mattie reached {the mouth of the lane, His motor {car had gone. In a few wilautes that door would | be opened; ieja’s men would : spread over we Country; the whole district would be assed in pursuit of him. Mattie ran and ran. Months afterwards a haggard, bearded man dragged himself up to the kasbad of Taugrit and was ad- mitted to the presense of the kaid. From his ragged clothing, he drew a shining key. “There is, however, some rust upon it,” said Mattie. “It is the blood of the worst scoundrel I ever met. I wouldthat I had hit harder and killed.” “Mattee, explain this to me!” said the kaid, as he hung the key once more upon its nail in the patio Mattie Driver told his story, and at the end produced a clipping from ¢ Spanish newspaper. It is now certain that the mur. der and attempted robbery of the Condesa de Torrevieja must be classed among the unsolved mysteries of crime. It is thought that the murderer must have hidden him | se in the house during the day but the police have no clue to hi: identity, and the fact that he hac not the time to take any of the Condesa’s jewelry with him make: his discovery now almost impossible { The count, who was prostrated b} grief, intends to travel for a year iHe, of course, inherited all th (wealth of his Argentine wife. i Mattie read the extract to Si -Mohammed-el Hati and then re sumed: | “Torrevieja meant of course (kill me there and them with hi (sword. If his men had taken m | prisoner, I should not have been i | any better case. For who woul | have believed my story? i “I was caught in the room wit] a key of the house in my pocket ;and the countess’ jewels in a bay {and the countess murdered in he , bed. But since I got away, th jcount will not speak of that key He has all he wants, you see, “If I were sought out and brough to trial and told my story, i would not save me, but here an there his enemies might begin t talk; there would come a shadoy over his name. So he leaves m |alone. But I wish that I ha struck harder with your key.” The kaid looked up at his “Mattee, we are in God's said he. —Hearst’s Cosmopolitan. key hands, Internations | AMERICA LEADS IN CHILD STUDY, EXPERT CLAIMS America is more than 20 year ;ahead of Europe in its applicatio ‘of child psychology, according t | Justin Brierly, of Columbia unive: sity, expert on child psychology Brierly visited his home recenti after making a study of condition {in orphanages, day nurseries, an (institutions for dependent childre in foreign countries. { Brierly’s report, which will ¥ submitted to Columbia universit; the League of Nations, and th child labor bureau of America, ir cluded studies made in various ir i stitutions in England, German; France, Sweden, Italy, Ireland, Sco land, and Wales. i While mental or psychology tesi are applied to the subnormal chil in many institutions in Europ , Brierly said that no mental or em , tional tests were given to norm | children. | “Such tests are common in ot public schools,” he said. “We hax long considered the emotional ar the mental tests absolutely necessar for the welfare of the normal chil In Europe the opinion is just tt opposite.” He said he found only two psych: logical clinics in London and tht they were on a trial basis, compa ed with hundreds in America. | Lack of finances was his explan: tion of this slow progress. . Virtually all the countries juveni courts, patterned after the o Judge Ben Lindsey first establish in Denver, Brierly said. ——————— eee ——— STATE FOR MILK LAW CONTRO | Ralph E. Irwin, chief of tI _buerau of milk control, announc: that nine milk districts have nc i been established in Pennsylvania f ithe purpose of adopting proper co | trol methods in conformity with tl milk law passed at the last gener | assembly. These districts with ‘resident inspector are as follow | Harriburg, Norristown, Forty-fo !Pttsburgh, Ebensburg, Lewisbur | Towanda, Meadville and Indiana. addition there are three supervisi inspectors working from the cent: i office in Harrisburg. “The object of these resident i :Spectors” Irwin said, “is to assu iclean safe milk to Pennsylvani: | population. These men will assi | the milk distributors in complyis with the law by handling . applic tions, making surveys and holdi examinations for approved inspe | tors.” ! DIVIDE PLAN TO EXTERMINATE SHEEP.KILLING DOG Members of the Indiana She and Wool Growers’ Association, In have declared war on the do which attack their flocks. At recent association meeting, farme { who suffered losses purchased rif to use in the defense of their shes reports W. B. Connell, sheep a wool extension specialist State College. The association whi has pooled 250,000 pounds co-ope! tively in the past ten years me fall will hold a ram sale at India: Last fall 34 rams were sold at , average price of $40.20.