MILE-A-MINUTE MARTY GORE, ITE WELL You 0UGRT|WiY, How You Tax] ST LIKE A WOMAN / DoNT THE FIRST | To MAKE A NEW |PoLLY ANNE.” DON'T| YOU IKMOW THE USED (AR VALLES ATP DAY-OFF | YEARS RESoLuTION| “You WANT ME To : yi Xe mpd DECKE 2 [saad CHEVROLET CO. Know SS 9, LL ARE S0 GREAT THAT TH ; Sr J H TAA) More I3vY Ye ; Tf FRA MORE \ SAV / & ZL Ug ) SA : AX 1924 Ford Turing ..............$§ 15.00 1926 Chevrolet Truck open 1927 Buick Sedan Standard 1925 Ford coupe ........ ...$ 40.900 EXPresSs ...........coeens $ 150.00 SIX ......occcsmsirarererrrend $ 450.00 1926 Ford coupe .............§ 50.00 1928 Chevrolet Coach ......... $ 325.00 1929 Whippet Coupe ............§ 280.00 1929 Ford coupe Run less 1928 Chevrolet Sedan .......... 3 0.90 1927 Wisippet Sport Road- 3 150100 than 6000 mile ........ $ 350.00 e et Sedan ..... . SLOP ...oovrsriecinsney eevenes 150. 1929 Ford Roadster 1st 3 335,00 2 1929 Chevrolet Coaches 3 350.00 1924 Oldsmobile Coupe .....§ 125.00 PEE. rei scrnunid in Tn 2 1924 Oldsmobile Tou ...3 50.00 Residence of the Archbishop of Peru in Lima. 1926 Chevrolet Touring ....$ 60.00 1927 Chevrolet Sedan ....... $ 150.00 1928 Overland % En 1929 Model “A” Ford Ton 1925 Chevrolet Coupe .........§ 125.00 body Truck only....$ 40.00 (Prepared by the National Geographic showed that he could build a ciiy os Truck large sige! 1927 Chevrolet Roadster ..§ 140.00 1929 Stewart Cattle rack alee vasa ton. D. orn well as choose wisely its location, 1 BOX .....nriternd 325.00 1924 Chevrolet Roadster ..§ 25.00 THROK ..ocoemerinioninsiins $ 150.00 Mh, cap oF | e1Y, Ene, 3 | began his palace, selected a site 1927 Chevrolet Coupe .......$ 200.00 1926 40.00 1920 Vim 3 Ton Dump recent governmental change, 9 the cathedral, laid out the Plaza ds 2 1926 Chevrolet Sedans 1928 $ 200.00 (automatic) Truck..$ 150.00 a modern city, but it has not | 4,,4¢ and indicated broad highways ALR. oor 150.00 1927, $ 200.00 1927 - Pontiac Sport Road lost its reminders of the historic to the mountains and the sea alike as 1930 Chevrolet Coach 5 wire 1925 BLOF ...osrsverensrerecisssannnns $ 225.00 past and of Pizarro, the conqueror, |. iepy precaution. wheels ............connn 500.00 SIX ...ooooooreencrsrrnrensenns $ 250.00 1926 Oakland Sport Road- who founded it. x 1927 Chevrolet Touring ....$ 140.00 1924 60.00 FEED... cree cerns 300.00 On one side of the Plaza stands the stern old national palace, its lines as uncompromising and as firm as were the deeds and purposes of the man of blood and fron who planned it. As one faces the palace, the cathe gral and the archbishop's residence occupy the right side of the Plaza and the Arcade of the Scribes the left. What stories of men of action In ¢he joys of triumph and the sorrows of defeat, in the exultation of pomp and the dejections of disgrace, center there! Faith and treachery, honor and duplicity, courage and cowardice, applause and hatred—all the contrast. ing characteristics of human nature, all the quirks and turn of life's for tunes, run through the theme of Lima's life as the woof runs through the warp of a tapestry and give it both color and pattern. To the site of Lima, 385 years ago, .ame Francisco Pizarro, he who had been & foundling upon the steps of a church In the Spanish elty of Trujillo, then a humble hog herder in Estrema- dura, and later an illiterate adventurer at Panama. But finally he was the grim leader who deflected the course of history at Gallo, the triumphant conqueror who mastered the Inca war rlor host at Cajamarca, the modern Midas who made his ancient prototype turn over in an envious grave. And he was laden with the blood: stained treasure which Atahualpa paid for the freedom never received. Treasure Amassed by Pizarro. Gold! What uncounted gold he prought down to finance the building of his new capital! Had not the Inca monarch so desperately desired his Iiberty that he undertook to fill a room 22 by 17 feet with it, as high as he could reach? And had not Pizarro, smiling grimly, chalked his tiptoe reach at nine feet? And silver! Yes, the Inca had heen 50 eager to meet the highest dream of Pizarro's avarice that he offered two roomfuls of the white metal for good measure, Pizarro, Indeed, had exacted the greatest king's ransom in history. It was so much that even the humblest cavalier received $105,000 (in terms of American money) for his share in the exploits of Cajamarca, so time-dimmed records tell us, Quzco then, even ag Now, was No place for a capital of a country that needed contact with the sea. Tt Is far up in the bleak and frigid puna region, with an altitude of more than two miles and with mightiest ram- parts of the Andes isolating it from the ocean, So to the site of Lima Plzarre came to bulld his capital. The one-time swineherd had lived to be the first great city planuer of the antipodes, Nor have four centuries sufficed to re- veal a better site than he selected for the capital of Peru. San Lorenzo thrusts its island heights boldly out of the sea, shutting out the long Pacific rollers and making a good harbor hard by, on a coast pecul- jarly lacking in safe havens for ships. San Cristobal as boldly rears its great head out of the plain and makes a magnificent sentinel for the city that pestles beneath its shadows. The al- luvial valley round about drinks iu the water of the Rimac and flows with the milk and honey of truck and market garden products, Though midway between the tropic of Capricorn and the equator, the climate has few of the attributes of the Torrid Zone; for the cold brought up out of the Antarctic regions and delivered there by the great Hum- bodlt current tempers the heat of constal Peru in the same way that the heat brought out of the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico by the Gulf stream tempers the cold breath of Great Brit- aln and Ireland. So the mighty curtain of the Cordil- eras shuts out the hot, humid rains His grizzled warriors laid aside pov. der and Toledo blade, helmet and breastplate, to take up hammer, saw, and trowel. The Conqueror literally poured his wealth into the embellish ment of his young capital, his joy and his pride; and “with splendor of edi- fices and pomp of gardens” it marched forward toward completion, drenched with the sweat and blood of thousands of Indian captives, As we sit in the Plaza and wale. the Sunday morning worshipers leav. ing the cathedral, memory harks back to that other Sunday in 1541 when the implacable Rada and his devoted hand swept across it to make Pizzaro pu) a dramatic price for his pert'dy toward Almagro, and to press to his lips the bitter cup of death which he had so remorselessly forced both Almagro and Atahaulpa to drink to Its ni most dregs. We leave the Plaza and go into th. cathedral, It is a magnificent struc ture, much larger than Pizarro bullt,| but still not so grand as the one) erected during the early years of the viceregal regime and destroyed hy the | great earthquake that wiped out Cal-| lao, the near-by seaport. The high altar Is of massive silve, contruction, containing, it is asserted, some of the very white metal with which Atahualpa vainly sought to buy his liberty. In the Chapel of the Virgin is a celebrated image presented by Emperor Charles V of Spain, and in the Chapel Arcedlano an original painting attributed to Murillo, repre | senting Jesus and Veronica. Here rests a glass-and-marble eu ket which is most Interesting of all. for it contains the half-mummy, half skeleton reputed to he the remains of the great Conqueror. Ancient and Modern Mingled. Leaving the cathedral, we stroll ou. along the splendid concrete boulevard that leads up from Magdalena. Pre Inca ruins, busy cigarette factories, and fine modern residences share ifs horders, Perhaps It was along this very hign way that the first viceroy, Blasco | Nunez, made his triumphal entry, sent by his king to compose the internecine struggle that followed the fall of Pizarro, Everywhere one goes about old Lim. there are scenes reminiscent of those tremendous years of the regime of the PPizarros: but, except for the casket in the cathedral, the city seems not to have done either the elder Francisco or the younger Gonzalo the slightest honor. What a contrast there is between Lima's latest thirteen years and that stirring first thirfeen! A new era has | dawned, and » modern city not only Is rising around the old Lima, but even | the old city itself, with all of its near- | ly four centuries of existence, Is com- bining successfully the ancient and the modern. The keynote of the new develop ment Is the fine new avenue leadiug from the old city to the suburbs. Un- til a few weeks ago It was named | “Avenida Leguin,” for the man has held the presidency for more than a decade. Since Leguin's deposition, however, the boulevard has heen re- named “Avenida Arequipa.” Along the Main Avenue. The traveler might compure it with one of those heautiful boulevards that extend from Washington to its neigh- boring communities. It parking throughout much of its length, ample walks, innumerable park benches, and a lighting system that is the last word in illumination engi neering. As one drives duwn this delightfu, thoroughfare, over to the right is the Country club, a mugnificent structure with environing golf links, polo fields, tennis courts, and swimming pool— like a bit of Westchester county dropped down in Peru. And what a site for the outdoor life of the elite of the capital it is! Away has certain | Fg DECKER CHEVROLET CO. Phone 405 ...... BELLEFONTE, PA. ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSILS NOT DANGEROUS. From time to time the Department of Health reecives letters expressing the fear that the use of aluminum cooking vessels are a menace to health. In a recent number of the Health Bulletin of the Department of Public Health, State of Victoria, Australia, Park Rowan, M. D., D. P. H, gives an excellent review of the pertinent literature on this subject. Aluminum is present in practically every plant, some plants containing large amounts, the ash of maize, for example, containing 12 per cent of aluminum, his report says. No ill effects are observed when even large amounts of aluminum are fed to experimental animals. Chittenden, Taylor and Long found no influence on health by the administration to humans of 150 milligrams of alumium compounds with food daily for several months. Industrial surveys have failed to de- tect specific trouble among the workers in the aluminum industry. Cushing states that even the largest quantities of alum ingested are fol- lowed only by gastric symptoms and inflammation and long use does not elicit symptoms of chronic poison- ing: Flynn and Inoue found no evidence to support the alleged dan- gers of aluminum cooking vessels. No anemia or destruction of blood cells was observed. These authors state that there is no scientific evidence of any chronic poisoning taking place from food cooked in aluminum vessels. Experiments conducted in the Lancet laboratories showed that there was no evidence that in ordi. nary cooking aluminum isso strong- ly attacked as to produce objection- able amounts of soluble salts. In no case was more than a mere trece of aluminum found in subsequent analysis. Even if such corrosion is considerable, it is insignificant since the product of corrosion would con- sist only of that which is a common constituent of almost every ordinary food, as well as of drinking water. Our Trust Department it serves? Has it financial strength ? Has it intelligence and experience, with competent legal advice ? | Is it prompt and efficient in its service ? Has it a sympathetic attitude toward those We think we can answer, yes, to all these questions THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. > adhd bos Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 30 years in the Business BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED ing cows and several hogs. Calling his neighbors who had telephones, the farmer asked them te come at once to help save his endangered live- stock. The neighbors began arriving with their pitchforks within a few minutes, and their com- bined efforts succeeded in digging out the cows and hogs without the loss of one. After the Most. Successful of All Our Anniversary Sales of the region beyond, while the moun- Good meat requires careful se- we find we have exactly 29 Men’s Winter Overcoats 4 tain ramparts and the cold current join forces to form vaporous clouds that screen the city from a too-ardent sun. City of the Kings Founded. Epiphany Sunday in the year 17535 dawned, and amid the reverent re joicings of that sacred day Pizarro announced the site and christened his capital-to-be Cludad de los Reyes, City of the Kings, the reference being to the three Wise Men of the East, a suggestion that still finds perpetuation in the flag of Lima. Pizzaro, the one-time founding to the south rises Morro Solar, cross- and-chapel-crowned, mounting per- petual guard over the Brighton of the west coast, Chorrillos. Beyond stands the hold series of ridges that borders the fertile valley of the Lurin. T'o the west the broad Pacific dashes | its white-erowned rollers upon the level hence and San Lorenzo adds a glorious figure to the marine view, To the east the rocky billows of the mighty Cordilleras rise, each succes- sive crest above its predecessor, until at last, in the blue of the distance and thie azure of the sky,” earth and alr vay melt Into one, lection, We save you this by selecting the meats we offer for your approval with the utmost care. Whatever kind you like best will be sure to meet your when it's bought here. Our stock is replenished fresh daily. Market on the Diamond Telephone 666 Bellefonte, Penna. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market left. To make our clean-up of Men’s Overcoats complete we are pricing these 29 Coats at such ex- tremely low prices that we know a couple days sell- ing will find them all gone. See Our Windows for the Coats and Prices A. FAUBLE