i in Private Ownership | Among our primitive ancestors | there were no such things as a will or i even inheritance by a limited pum- | Sree iuheritonss BY 4 A ing to inherit or to will All property | | was community property. When a | man dled he simply ceased to use the | _ | common property “pool,” and without | any formalities the surviving mem- | bers of the group continued to make | use of It. When private ownership of things and land came to be recognized, the governing unit—village, tribe or state | —found that it had to take some ac | Frwate O° n city or town the country round, In sunlight and in shade, re the scouring twins, the cook who grins, And the pancakes Auntie made. i ‘he salad oil time cannot spoil, And fountain pens by Scores; rime canned fish for all who wish, Polish for waxing floors. tion when a man died, leaving prop- | erty. If nothing were done, anyone | who happened to be near or strong | might seize the ownerless property, | even though he were a total stranger i to or even an enemy of its former owner. Tribal concepts of falr play came into operation, and it was rec- | ognized that the dead man's family | should have first claim tc his former belongings, From this developed the customs and laws of Inheritance which | have taken varied, and In some cases, | i ‘hen gum and jam and ham what am, With pickles crisp and green; i ‘he biscuits round, the cornmeal ground, | And Boston's famous bean. | ure family soap and cigaret dope, Carnish that lasts for years; jome-made bread, chickens milk-fed— It drives one quite to tears. ! do not like the colored signs, They don't appeal to me; .merica has scenery I'd really like to see! | very complex forms, in different parts | | of the world.—National Geographic | Society Bulletin. | —Anon. | ee eee Raisin Pie Only Thing VHY LEAVES CHANGE New Yorker Can’t Find COLOR IN EARLY AUTUMN Some people, it seems, are uever «What causes the leaves of trees satisfied. o change color in the fal?” is a The New Yorker, having been In \uestion frequently asked of the town four months, has already been gratified by the sight of a venerable gentleman with his whiskers caught ' in a subway door, but he says he | can't rest until he sees a passenger carry & bale of hay Into a subway | sar, | He's seen almost every other con- | ceivable package and bundle, including a dog measuring only half a head short- er than a Great Dane, carried in a | blanket. Just the other day he was one of the victims buffeted about by a large and energetic woman hurrying into a shuttle train at Times square with a pair of 10-foot wooden curtain poles. Another thing this insatiable New Yorker craves to find is raisin ple. He's tried no less than 33 eating | places, from coffee pots up in the gas- tronomic scale of excellence, and all he gets when he asks for his favorite | dessert 1s a negative headshake and a sad smile of pity.—~New York Sun. Secretary John W. Keller | xplains that there is yet much to je learned of leaf coloration. yopular conception that frost is yrincipally responsible for the color | hange is now largely discounted. | Trees, according to Keller, cease summer growth several weeks | jefore autumn approaches. The ipward flow of sap gradually stops. “he leaves have performed their luty; their vitality becomes lower nd they no longer waanufacture the reen coloring matter known as ‘hlorophyll. The amount of chloro- »hyll present in the leaves gradually ades away. the new and jcher hues come from has not been :ntirely ex] Some botanists «nd chemists declare that the colors re the result of mineral deposits vhich are absorbed by the fine root \airs in the ground and are carri 1p through the tree mto the leaves. Nith the fading of the green color- matter, the mineral deposits show up as yellow, reds and purples. Early frost turns many leaves yrown and causes them to fall be- ‘ore their autumnal colors appear. Any cause, such as fire or drought, vhich retards the vitality of the eaves brings on early browning. Nature has provided a means of liscarding the leaves after they have eased to work. At the base of Deputy Father of Observatory The entire fund for the construction of Lick observatory was given by | James Lick, an American philan- thropist, who was born at Fredericks burg, Pa., in 1796. Formerly a piano manufacturer in Philadelphia, Buenos Aires, Valparaiso and elsewhere, he settled In California in 1847, Invested | in real estate and made a fortune. In | 1874 he placed $3,000,000 in the hands | of seven trustees to be devoted to cer | tain specified public and charitable he leaf falls corky cells are formed )n either side of the point of sev- srance, So that when the stem yreaks the scar is already healed. There is a reason why, during jome years, the autumnal colora- jon of hills is more prilliant than juring others. Extended periods of irought and heat, such as occurred ast year, Keller pointed out, ap- sear to result in richer colors. The wutumna! effects in regions of high Jumidity cannot compare with the seauty of Pennsylvania's mountain- yus regions. MOVEMENTS OF EYE CAUSES CAR SICKNESS Physicians who have made a study | yf “car sickness" are inclined to jlace the responsibility for this malady on the mechanism of the in- -ernal ear and eyes. Susecptibility ‘o the affliction, which causes many sersons to suffer from dizziness and | Jausea while riding in fast-moving sehicles, seems to run in some fam- lies, according to the Scientific, American. In making a special study of the -elationship of the eyes to car sick- Dr. James E. Lebenson pro- juced the jerking of the eyes which | s known as optical n it the same time shanges that stomach. A cylinder marked in slack and white was revolved before the patient's eyes to produce ocular aystagmus, and water ‘was thrown into the ear t produce abyrinth or internal ear nystagmus. | At the same time the contractions »f the empty stomach were measur »d by the movements of an instru- ment connected with a balloon swal- iowa #54 Toi aimed rs storey | rows which are still far too numerous | or Le CE aaurbed| the dairy herds of the land. | 1sually avoid riding backward and | savor the front seat of a motor car where there is less jarring and where the view is less constricted. He | points out also that when the land traveler gazes at the scene hiseyes. slowly follow the objects in the pe, which appear to be mov- ng backward As these objects uses. Among his principal bequests | were those to the University of Call- fornia for the erection of an observa- tory and procuring a telescope supe- rior and larger than any constructed, for which $700,000 was given. How to Better Poor Posture Bodily poise is just as importaut as social poise to the really attractive woman. Poor posture will spoil the , effect of the most expensive gown, but if posture is poor, it's easy to im- | prove it, Kathleen Howard writes in Harper's Bazaar, “Here Is one way to do it” she writes. “Stand In front of your mir- | ror, without your clothes, and turn | sideways. You may see reflected a bad case of swayback. If you do. put | one hand below your waist on your | back and put the other In front, on your abdomen. Then roll the tip of your spine under and up, at the same time keeping your head well up. It really works." Huge Herd for Candy The production of milk which goes annually Into the milk chocolate Indus- try is no mean task. If the cows nec- | essary to yield the milk could be lined up and milked In one day there would | be 4,000,000 better-than-average cows in the line. The 40 firms turning out chocolate products last year consumed | 926,000,000 pounds of milk products, | which at 70 pounds per cow Is prob- | ably considerably above the average | because of the lower yields of scrub | Victorians Weren't So Prim The Victorians, who are accused of primness, had much all-round extrav- | agance. George Meredith was as per- verse and fanciful in prose as in | verse; indeed, more so. Diana of the | h Crossways seemed to sit not so much | pass out of the range of vision, the | return to their normal at the crossroads as in the heart of 2yea Hence the eyes are ol _os | the labyrinth; and the Egoist juggled king, and this causes many to much more deceptively than Juggling Nr that the eyes are responsible Jerry. Some of Browning's friends ‘or car sickness. complained that he was cryptic, not only In prose, but in private corre DEER REPORTED EATING | spondence.—G. K. Chesterton In the | THEMSELVES TO DEATH Ulustrated London News. { Literally the deer are eating them- selves to death. | Still worse, the State of Pennsy!- | sania is now approaching the point where it cannot raise young forests | n the more densely deer populated regions. This is why the game commission- | srs have thrown open the season on | female deer this rvinter. | Saving Her From Herself The late David Belasco, at a time gome years ago when Isadora Duncan was In hard luck, sid to a New York art critic: “Isadora, like all great artists, Is too generous. Her generosity Is prodi- gal, reckless and ruinous. I think I'll dress up as a beggar and call at her apartment, and what I collect may keep her till she gets another engage- ment."—Springfield Union. —A cloth dipped in turpentine will Sean the tiled hearth most beauti- fully. | —————————————————————— ag ot | | | seamen. | —Exchange, | first saw the light of day. Plimsoll Deserving of Title “Seamen’s Friend” By agreement among several of the more important maritime nations of the world, the Plimsoll line, marking the safe loading point for vessels, has come almost into universal use. It bas been the means of saving the lives of thousands of seamen. Before Sam- uel Plimsoll made his stand for hu- manity, seamen were at the mercy of scoundrelly owners who thought only in terms of insurance. No thought of | the men who would go down with thelr : ships stayed their hands. i Then came Samuel Plimsoll, “The Seamen's Friend.” He had been pros- | | perous; he had known disaster, From | | a position of affluence he had come to met seamen and heard their stories. He was roused to a great anger, and | common lodging houses. In them | | there aad then took an oath that he | would never rest until he had re-| vealed the villainy of the “ship-knack- | ers.” i He knew that before he could | achieve anything he had to get into | parliament. That meant money. Out | of the pit of poverty he climbed. He | was elected to parliament and devoted | | nis energies to the measure he had | suggested for saving the lives of the | in the face of violent oppo- | sition he prevailed and the meas- | | ure became a law requiring a mark on | the hull indicating the safety loading | line. | ee | Word “Camera” Derived From Renaissance Toy | The primitive Aryan root “kam" | meant “to bend,” and the Greek | | weamera,” derived from It, was used | to denote anything with an arched cover or roof. Hence came the Latin “camera,” meaning “a room,” and uiti- mately, through French, the English | “chamber.” A common toy of the rich | in Renaissance times was 2 dark room | letting in light only through a small | lens, which threw an inverted image of | the scene outside on the wall opposite it. ‘This was called a “camera ob- | scura” or “dark room.” The problem | for the inventors of photography was | to make permanent the image in the | | “eamera obscura”; hence the instru- | | ment with which they ultimately ac- complished it was called a “camera.” | ————————————— Scapegoats No one likes to be a scapegoat. is not natural or normal for anyone It | | to carry the burden of blame that | should be borne and faced by those | who deserve It. I am not sure it is not ethically | wrong for a person to suffer punish ment that some one else ought to suf- | fer. At least, it Isn't logical. The | guilty one, apparently, goes scot-free, | of punishment, he is more than likely to do wrong again. Sometimes we cannot avoid | and without the very definite discipline being | | a scapegoat. There are those who | be in a superior position to us, and who, | | to save their own skin, shift the blame for some mistake on to us. That is a cowardly business. It Is a mean trick to folst a failure on to some one who may not be in a position to hit back.— | ©xchange, Rise of Workhouse Boy When the visitor in Wales has seen | Its mines, mountains and music, he | goes to Denbigh, 26 miles from Ches- ter, to see at St. Asaph’s workhouse, the place where nearly a century ago a poverty child called John Rowlands To be born in a gloomy workhouse and reared therein, as a child, unloved and un- known, was not much promise for a | boy, but in later life he changed his pame to Henry M. Stanley and was the man who found David Livingstone in dark Africa—in its day the greatest Good Roads and Hotels Won Early Travelers “The commerce of with Philadelphia,” a Cincinnati corre spondent wrote to a Philadelphia pa- per 100 years ago, “has greatly in- creased during the present season. On conversing with many of our mer chants who have from the East we find that gearcely one In five of them went to Baltimore. The reasons are unanswerable. The Cum- beriznd rozd Is in & oct villainous siute. while the stage fare and the tavern fare are both much higher than on the road from pitt=hnreh to Phila- delphin, and not so «ood, The road from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, we are informed by a gentleman, a Mary- lander, who has just returned from the latter city, is in excellent order, the stage fare reduced, and the tav- ern fare cheap and good, and go great was the travel upon it, that, though four or five stages started from Phil- | adelphia every morning for Pitts burgh, he was obliged to secure & seat 8 week beforehand. In another year the Pennsylvania railroads and canals will have connected the Ohio river with Philadelphia and, when in- creasing trade of this river shall have once taken its course, it will be diffi- cult to divert to another.”"—Detrolt | News, Achievement in World Seldom Won by Haste | A doctor says, “The man who lives | longest is the man who never does | anything in a hurry,” This Is called | to the attention of speed maniacs. It | is undoubtedly true, also, that those | who proceed at a leisurely pace in all | things, secure a greater enjoyment out | of life. It is only the presence of peril | that requires haste. Precipitancy has | evil consequences, all the way from | dining to divorce; and the plaintive | cries of the unfortunate are usually | due to something they have done In | a hurry. The earth provides bounte- | ously, but not necessarily to the swift. | Even the fortunes, the greater ones, | are of slow accumulation in most | cases—sometimes piling up through | USEC the generations. The spiritual achievements are like- wise more the result of meditation and | contemplation than of any rapid-fire | thinking. Ruskin said, “All one's life | ts music if one touches the notes rightly. But there must be no hurry.” | An enforced rapid rate of movement | is a yoke. We are creatures of time, but we need not be its driven slaves.— St. Louls Globe-Democrat. ———————— Armadillo Common in Tropics The burrowing mammal known as | the armadillo is still quite common in | South and tropical America. But ike) J a lot of modern things they are of the miniature type. Thelr ancestors or cousins, however, were giants. These | big armored fellows apparently roamed over Florida some 40,000 years ago. | walter W. Holmes, field worker for | the American Museum of Natural His- | tory, recently discovered part of the | armor bones and teeth of one of these extinet armored beasts near Braden- ton, Fla. It 1s the first time such a specimen has been found, and has been named “Holmesina Septentrion- alis” In honor of the discoverer.— Pathfinder Magazine. | | i i | { 1 i | 1 i { i feat of the age. To become one of | the world's greatest travelers and ex- plorers was his destiny and Denbigh Guests Brought Coffins A custom of the Middle ages was re ferred to at a party to inma®®s of Nor- | wich (England) Great hospital, a hos- | tel for aged men and women. When i the inmates were admitted years ago, | each had to bring a coffin. It was found, however, that the coffin was | used as a cupboard In the cubicles, and when some of the old people died | the coffin was worn out. Nowadays, instead of a coffin, each man and wom- an takes in £1 to provide a shroud. Garfield Monument The Garfield monument occupies the highest spot in | in 1885 and dedicated in 1800. The monument is 180 feet high, the tower 50 feet in diameter. There are five panels on the outside depicting scenes from Garfield's life. The stained glass is an allegorical presentation of the funeral of Garfield. A second casket | contains the body of Mrs, Garfield, the | President's wife, who died in 1918. School Is 1,125 Years Old The “Gymnasium Carolinum,” of nigh school at Osnabruck, which was founded by Charlemagne, has celebrat- ed its one thousan: one hundred and twenty-fifth anniversary. It was giv- en the status of a university in 1630 by imperial and papal decree, but when the Swedes took Osnabruck three years later they drove out the Jesuits, who had charge of the insti- tution, and it again became a high school. | Lake View cemetery, | | Cleveland. It cost $225,000, was begun | is worth a visit for his sake and also | | for its own. i ————————————————— Double-Moated Castle Notwithstanding its rather remote position on the island of Jutland, in Denmark, on the banks of the Lim- fjord, Castle Spottrup has lured many | visitors to its walls of recent years. Although its age and builder have been forgotten, it has been there for many centuries, and Is one of the best dou- | ble-moated castles of Europe. Its di- | viding bulwark of earth on the eastern | side reaches almost to the eaves of | the structure, and with its grass-clad | rampants adds immensely to the im- pression one recelves of its ancient | formidable strength. It is only re stored In part, and the visitor can easily visualize its ancient extent and | ! form. i i { | i i i | i { i i i i i | i | Turks saw their first train. A special "train took 300 invited guests of the | state rallway administration to Sivas e————— Potential Sugar Crop | About 8,000,000 sugar maple trees in | the Dominion of Canada are tapped | annually and the maple sugar output for 1030 was valued at more than a million and a quarter dollars. The tree is mainly to be found In eastern Canada where there are approximately | 60,000,000 trees and fewer than one- quarter of this number are tapped so | that the potential output of this sec- tion is 50,000,000 pounds of sugar an i uually. | ————— Thousands See First Train When the Sharkishla-Sivas section the Ankara-Sivas railway, in Turkey, was officially opened thousands of for the opening ceremony. The ma- jority of the 35,000 gathered to see it pull in had never seen a locomotive and cars before. Bronze medals struck to commemorate the completion of the | line were given to the guests. —————— Disease in the Home When there is a communicable dls- ease in the home, the mother must substitute knowledge for superstition and enlightment for prejudice, in the opinion of Dr. W. W. Bauer, a Hygela Magazine author. She must therefore mingle with the respect she feels for her parents and grandparents a cer- tain skepticism toward their views and take only advice from the family phy- sician, SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY The Greatest Asset That a Bank Can Have is the confidence of the people with whom it transacts business. This confidence is based not only on the bank’s financial strength but on the character of its management. When people think of a bank, they often have in mind an individual, some one active in the conduct of its affairs, whom they feel they can trust. They know that capable, experienced man- agement is as importaut as financial strength. When the two are joined, as in this institution, confidence is inspired. : In the mind of the true banker, the interests of the bank and of the depositor, should have equal place. | i | | an THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | BELLEFONTE, PA. FEU IUC UE ! Baney’s Shoe Store § WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor ] 30 years in the Business 1 BUSH ARCADE BLOCK if BELLEFONTE, PA. * SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED Of Best Quality Z| 8 lL owest Prices Since 1915 CER RSE Back to the Prices of 1915 is what you will find at the Fauble Store! Buy Now! Your dollars never bought as good or as well tailored Suits and Overcoats as they will right now. Prices of 1915 prevail all over the Store. Let us show you! A. Fauble