FRENCH INDO- Throne Room Building of King of Cambodia at Pnompenh. (Prepared by the National Geographle Soclety, Washington, D. Cc.) RANCE has recently found it necessary to send a punitive ex- pedition across the border that lies between Indo-China and China because of the activities of Chinese Communists along the fron- tier. The expedition operated from Toug- king, northernmost of the French const. al colonies, but the step was taken as a protection for the whole of French Indo-China, that stretches from the gutheastern corner of Asia some S00 miles to the north and northwestward. It is a sizable empire which France controls there in Asia, either by out- right possession or protectorate— 265,000 square miles, an area almost exactly the size of the state of Texas. The region is, however, much closer to the equator than Texas, occupying a position corresponding to that of southern Mexico and Central America. Thus the French Asiatic empire is wholly within the tropics and In a vegion of heavy rainfall. units of French Asia are Cochin China, in the extreme south; Cam- podia, in the southwest; Annam, stretching along most of the eastern coast; Laos, inland and to the north- west; and Tongking, filling the north- ern end of the elongated territory and extending from the coast inland for 200 miles. Annam Is less completely under French control, officially, than any of the other states with which it is asso- ciated in the territorial group known as French Indo-China. It has its own emperor and is listed as a protector- ate. But Annam and the twelve mil- Hen people of Annamese blood really constitute the chief factor in this re- gion of French Influence. In few places are the old forms of oriental magnificence maintained as completely as In the Imperial establishment at Hue, the capital of Annam. Until recently the palace was forbidden ground, and it is still far from easy w obtain access. Inside the palace walls Is a rich- ness and an elaborateness seldom en- eountered outside fairy tales and the settings of extravagant stage presenta- tions. There are picturesque gardens; paved courts, where on occasion the ten thousand mandarins of Annam strike their foreheads in unison on the ground before the emperor; dim cor- ridors of countless columns with their huge perfume burners sending up con- tinual clouds of incense; and exquisite rooms of intricately wrought ceramics and gold and silver. Opening into the emperor's state rooms is the great Golden Door, through which, in addi- tion to the sovereign, only the extraor- dinary ambassadors may pass. Lavish festivals and displays take place within this fairyland of luxury. The most charming and characteristic, perhaps, are the children’s ballets, In which scores of dainty, costumed youngsters go through elaborate steps and postures with bright fans in their hands and a lighted colored lantern attached to each youthful shoulder. Hue Itself Not Beautiful. Outside the palace enclosure Hue ie less appealing. The “metropolitan area” of the city is in large part a collection of native villages clustered in the shadow of the great palace- citadel walls, Across the river is the French residency with Its Gailic- western atmosphere. For a long time Hue was little known, and as the seat of an important country its size was exaggerated. Its population is anly about 60,000. The town is in a tropical region In a latitude corresponding to the south- ern extremity of Mexico. It lies near the mid-point of the long double- curving coast of French Indo-China, a tew miles from the sea on the Hue river. Built on a flat, the city itself has little beauty of form or setting ; put it would be difficult to find in the tropics more beautiful environs than it possesses. Only a few miles away rive the mountains from which the Hue river flows, ar? even closer are lower wooded hills and valleys. Num- erous villages are all but hidden in s mantle of green: palms, bamboos, and scores of tropical vines and shrubs. Carefully kept paddy fields alternate with wild regions of under- bush, and scattered about the country- «de are innumerable graceful pagodas. The most remarkable feature of Hue are the famous tombs of the kings, which lie in the charming pine and panyan-covered valleys and hills a few alles from the city—true cities of the dead, far more attractive in setting than that of the living. For each de parted ruler of the past several cen- turies a large area has been devel- oped as a resting place and memorial for himself, his wives, children and servants. ‘These developed areas ure in two parts. One is a beautiful group of gardens, lakes, summer houses and a memorial hall. The lat- ter is fitted with the furniture from the departed emperor's apartments, The second part is a vast enclosure near-by, usually a series of terraces above the gardens, in some unmarked spot of which the body of the emperor lies. The reigning emperor visits each of these garden-tombs of his ancestors annually and makes obeisance to thelr spirits, The notable structures and gardens extend from the end of the Eight- eenth century to the present. The earlier of these are exceedingly ela- borate and have much in them to re- mind one of Fontainebleau and Ver- sailles. Cambodia's Capital. Strikingly different from Hue Is Pnompenh, capital of Cambodia. It lles on the route to the famous ruins of Angkor and is better known to tourists than some of the larger cap itals of Indo-China. The palace of the kings of Cam bodia is not elaborate. The royal dwelling place, In fact, is a series of rather modest buildings, not richly adorned without or within. Greatest of the palace sights is a life-size gold statue of Buddha in a room whose floor is of silver tiles. Five or six hundred female retainers occupy the royal colony, among whom are the dancing girls. golden gowns, royal jewels, and tiaras that resemble miniature carved steeples, have become famous for their charm and grace. Near-by is the Khmer museum with a collection of sculptured stones, im- plements of war and jewelry; the weather-beaten royal pagoda, and an ancient temple approached by a long flight of steps with a stone railing representing Naga, the sacred seven- headed cobra. Tails of the sacred reptile adorning the roofs of some of Pnompenh's buildings resemble crooked lightning rods on American farm houses, The one thoroughfare of Pnowmpent that has a right to be called an ave- nue leads from the palace to the pub- lic park. Two hotels bordering It offer excellent accommodations for a @nall Eastern city save for their or- chestras that dispense impossible noc- turnal jazz. The rest of the street Is cluttered up with open-front native shops, some of which make an attempt to duplicate French pastry. Now and then through a vacant space one gets a glimpse of a garden spot a block or two in the background where a French colonial official lives in a pala- tial home amid broad lawns and flowering trees. Hanoi, the “Paris of Asia.” The administrative center of all French Indo-China, and the capital as well of Tongking, Is Hanol which has been dubbed “the Paris of Asia.” It bears many of the earmarks of the European capital. A modern train brings you into a modern railway station at Hanol. There you may hali a shiny new French-made automobile with a French chauffeur. In a tour of the city you ride along wide streets and boulevards bearing French names and pass im- posing French buildings, and spacious parks where stroll French women and men: some of the latter dressed in the natty blue uniforms of the French army In the business district, Parisian gowns are displayed behind plate- glass show windows. French theater fronts blaze with gaudy signs to at- tract patrons. Paris-like sidewalk cafes invite passersby to imbibe their favorite beverage while melodious strains from a French orchestra filter through the open windows of a French restaurant. Now and then you bump over stree. car tracks. You notice the absence of peculiar oriental city odors because of Hanoi's modern sewage system; you feel free to drink the city water because of the excellent water supply system; and at night the streets are bathed in light from thousands of electric bulbs. The Botanical gardens and Zoological park are additional re- minders of the French capital about 7,000 miles away. The French quarter is furthest from the right bank of the Red river om which Hanoi lies about 30 miles from the sea. A lake, surrounded by promenades, separates this quarter from the native quarter which begins on the congested riverside. Once in- gide the narrow byways of the native quarter, it 1s easy to forget the west: | ernized portion of the ov They, in thelr HOW NATURE HAS ARRANGED TO DRAW BEES TO FLOWERS.— Nature has good reasons, recent English investigations indicate, for having provided most flow ers, both with bright colors and with pleasing smells. Visits by insects are necessary to the pol- lenation of most flowers and to the production of seeds. Some insects turn out to be attracted : by the flowers’ color; other In- # sects by the smells, Thus the $ flower has a chance of being # served by either or both of the , Insect groups. So reports G. Fox-Wilson, en tomologlist of the Royal Horti- : cultural gociety, who has been y counting the visits of bees and ; other insects to fruit trees. One « of the experiments was to tie ar 3 tificial apple flowers to the trees and see what the bees did about itt Most of them did nothing, ig 1 poring the Imitation flowers completely. Natural apple nec $ tar from a real flower was then placed at the bottom of the ar- 3 tificlal blossoms. Promptly the 4 pees visited these nectar-filled flowers precisely as though they 3 » o : ¥ ¥ < o * ¥ L o + - SRP PELEEELLEPEL PIERRE EIES were real ones. The evident conclusien is that * this kind of bees, mostly ordi- nary hive bees, were attracted by the odor of the nectar instead of the colors of the flower; a conclusion reinforced by the fact that these same kind of bees freely visit flowers from which the colored petals have been re . moved but which stiil contain the + odorous nectar. Other kinds of y bees, however, were found to visit artificial, nectarless flow- ers; apparently attracted by the colors. How “Meander” Has Come to Denote Wandering When you speak of a person who “meanders” you use 2a word coined from the name of an old river, In ancient times there was a celebrated river in Asia Minor which had no fewer than 600 turns and twists, Trav- elers who followed it went miles out of their way. only to find, when they reached one of the towns upon its banks, that they had made scarce ly any headway, for the river had only wandered up into a great loop and come down again quite close to the last town In which they had spent the night. The name of this river was Maeander, from which our word, meaning to wander aimlessly, is de- rived. How Soap Is Manufactured In the manufacture of soap, afte: the mass has been reduced to a semi-solid, the 1,000 pound cake of soap is forced through a framework across which are strung horizontal ly a number of fine plano wires ar ranged at a distance equal to the thickness of a cake of soap. Thus the soap Is cut Into horizontal slabs These are placed on another cutting machine which divides the slabs into long sticks, which are then cut into cakes on the same machine by Aan other cross motion, wires being em- ployed in both operations. The cakes after being dried in an air-chamber are stamped into the exact shape. The capacity of a stamping machine Is 100,000 cakes a day. The cakes are carefully inspected before being put into the boxes. How Static Gets Into Radio Static Is audlo-frequency-group oscil: lation discharge between clouds, or clouds and earth. It travels in all di- rections from disturbance. Static prob- . ably impresses its varying frequencies upon the electric waves carrying broadcast signals while they are pro ceeding from transmitting to receiving station, something like the mix-up of waves that would occur If one were to throw a large rock into a lake upon the surface of which there were pre: viously some moderate Waves. The latter would be broken up and changed fn shape, but their frequency would probably continue the same as before. Static waves will penetrate any sub- stance that radio waves can penetrate. ee —————— How “Poker” Got Name The game of poker is evidently an adaptation of the Persian game of AS nas, as it was originally played, with only 20 cards, dealt to four players, and went to the United States by way of New Orleans. Owing to its resemblance to the French game of poque and the German game of pochen, the French colonists called it “poque.” and this spelling was mispronounced by the English-speaking players as “po-que,” easily converted into “po- ker.” Early Railroads Cared Little for the Humble The shades of early third-class travelers ought to smile with satisfac- tion on hearing the report thac first class railway travel is “doomed.” The railways were planned for the wealthy. Down to 1845 the third-class passenger had no legal status at all, many com- panies refused to carry him at any price, while others put him in an open goods truck with movable seats placed across it and charged him 1% pence a mile for the privilege. He was conveyed with other un- clean animals by cattle-trains, he was shunted about in his bufferless box for hours, and when at last he reached his destination, covered with dust and cinders, it was to see a notice that “the company's servants are strictly ordered not to porter for wagon Das- sengers.” Third-class passengers, nevertheless, persisted in traveling. The companies introduced the “Stanhope.” This con- sisted of a box about 18 feet long, divided Into four compartments by two wooden bars crossing each other in the middle. There was a door to esch compartment, but no seats, 80 that the number of passengers it could contain depended upon the bulk of the “Stanhopers.” Usually 65 passengers were crowded Into a wagon l—Man- chester (Eng.) Guardian, Great Mission Pioneers Revered in California The mission of Cdrmel stands as & memorial to Father Ramon Mestres as well as to the great Padre Junipero Serra. Products of different epochs, Padre Serra and Father Mestres were both pioneers, the one in mission founding, the other in rebuilding. Per- haps it was partly due to the fact that Father Mestres’' birthplace in Spain was nearby that of Padre Serra that, finding himself pastor of San Carlos at Monterey, he was inspired with the zeal that restored the neighboring Carmel mission from the wreck into which neglect had let it fall. By this restoration Father Mestres served the traditions of his church and the wel- fare of the state to which he brought back the reminders of the great age of romance of early California. With every earmark of the aristo erat Father Mestres walked with hu- mility in the footsteps of his great predecessor. Passing on, he leaves a memory of character and achievement as his monument.—San Francisco Chroaicle. ——————— South American Languages Spanish is spoken in Mexico, Hon- duras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Panama, Salvador, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecua- dor, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay. Portuguese is n in Brazil In British Honduras English is the official language, but some Spanish is spoken in the interior and along the border of Mexico and Guatemala. On the north coast of Honduras English is spoken. English Is also spoken in Guatemaln, Panama, Salvador and Dutch Guiana. In British Guiana English is spoken exclusively. Dutch is spoken in Dutch Guiana, and French exclusively in French Guiana and to some extent In Salvador. In Ecuador Quichua is also spoken, and this and other native dialecta in Peru. $200.00 Paid For One Copper Cent J. D. Martin of Richmond, Va. is | the proud possessor of a check for $200,00 d him for an old copper cent. e Numismatic Company Dept. 650, Fort Worth, Texas, who purchased this penny from Mr. Martin, says there are numerous old. coins, bills and stamps in circula- | tion for which they will gladly pay big cash premiums, Sp that you will know the value of old coins and | stamps and what to watch for in your change, the Numismatic Com- pany will send for them, a large illustrated coin folder describing some of these wanted articles and the big profits to be made. this large folder so you can post yourself and know just what to look for. Remember that Mr. knowing the value of his penny meant a difference of $199.99 to him. Without knowing its value that penny might still be in circula- tion, passing through the hands of thousands until someone like Mr. Martin, who knows old coins, rec- ognized its value. It pays to be posted, Send 4c now for the illus- trated coin folder. You have noth- ing to lose, everything to gain. 76-3-1t Beezer Estate.....Meat Market ANY CUT YOU DESIRE In our meat market you will find all the choice cuts that can be had. We buy beefs in the original quar- ters and can serve you with the Our stock is tender and fresh. It is the best meat that money can buy. Our regular customers would not go elsewhere, We want to add your patronage to our steadily business. Market on the Diamond Telephone 666 Bellefonte, Penna. P. 1 TWO MORE PRISONERS only 4 cents to any reader of this paper who writes | Better write them today for Martin's =! | o'clock but were not to be foundat ESCAPE FROM ROCKVIEW. milking time, about five o'clock. | Shortly before noon, on Monday, Two prisoners made their escape | two suspicious looking men were from Rockview penitentiary some | seen in the vicinity of Warriorsmark time on Sunday afternoon. They | and penitentiary officials were noti- were Chester McCue, of Hunting- | fied, Deputy warden W. J. McFar- don county, serving a two to four land and two guards went to War- year sentence for assault and bat- riorsmark and found the men to be tery with intent to kill, and Theo- the two escaped prisoners. When dore Markcal, of Clearfield county, | they saw the deputy they made an doing a two to four year sentence ,g,rt to run away but were captur- for arson. Both men were employed at the creamery. They BI flere | ed about one o'clock and brought to at a check-up of prisoners at 2:30 the Centre county jail. Condensed Statement First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. December 31, 1930 Assels Time Loans and Investments - - Time Loans on Collateral - - - - - U. S. Bonds Circulation - - - Real Estate, Banking House, etc., - - £1,002,944.84 220,736.95 100,000.00 91,135.00 $1.504,816.79 Quick Assets U. S. and other marketable bonds $ 834,319.50 Demand Loans - - - 86.552.00 Cash and Reserve - . - - 246,460.01 1,167,331.51 $2,672,148.30 Liabilities Capital - - - - - $ 200,000.00 ' Surplus and Profits - - - 344,288.65 | Circulation - - - - 98,200.06 Dividends Unpaid - - - 10,018.00 Reserve for taxes and depreciation 13,000.00 Due Federal Reserve 50,000.00 Bank - - Deposits . . - - 1,956,641.65 $2,672,148.30 Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years in the Business BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY SPECIAL ORDERS taken ddvantage of the Overcoat 2 Slaughter now going ny on at the Fauble Store? Don’t, Miss It! i The Prices Make 1910 Prices oF Look High in Comparison it A. FAUBLE |