Cal, and Mattie Stanfield, of San- : $C TTS TuTRs suv ARTE | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. —-— | American Museum Gets ! nn Antonio, Texas. INDUSTRY SEES Sa of Bronze Age HOW DAILY THOUGHT | Russel Jack Hawes, of Crawford, John M. Hartswick, et al, to R. F. i i 'N. J.,, and Gladys Beatrice Weston, Jue naan loss Shon tne Weel War | of Port Matilda. was e 1088S --Newion , Baker, | George H. Stover, of Centre Hall, [Yu time Secretary of War. |and Margaret. L. Evey, of Pleasant | —Stand some rainy day at the e ibusiest corner in on Fifth | ulia Williams to Willis E. Wil- | Avenue and F second street in liams, tract in State College; $1. ‘New York—and watch umbrellas C:- Arthur Thomas to Harry E. and raincoats go by: i Here's what you'd find—if you ‘stood there for a while. No yellow oilsnins. No dull, drau, umnterest- ug gadineunts, as leaden as the skies. iusicad, Swart, trim, well-dressed || women who look as fachion-right as || when the sun shines. Raincoats as |! | smart as the dresses under them— | ‘1 | MODERN CHEMISTS MAKE USE OF THE CATALYST.-- When the chemist looks to the future use of catalysts he is not indulging in a dream, Many chemical processes now employ catalysts, These have simplified old manufacturing processes, and in many cases made possible processes which were previously impossible, The manufacture of sulphuric acid makes use of platinum as a catalyst, The reaction by which sulphur dioxide is changed to sulphur trioxide in the manufac- ture of sulphuric acid is a diffi- Stein, et ux, tract in State College; $1. willis E. Williams to Pilgrims Holiness church, tract in State Col- lege; $1,000. Albert N. Bierly to M. Irene Work- man, tract in Boggs Twp.; $725. Hester S. Christ to F. Ernest Whiting, tract in College Twp.; $1. More than 300 objects, many of them over five thousand years old, are on exhibition in the University of Pennsylvania museum. The finds, the majority of which date from the early Bronze age, were uncovered at Tepe Gawra, Mesopotamia. Some of the earliest pottery ever excavated in the Near East, a small copper frying pan, a cylinder seal of a goat done in a decidedly expres sionistic manner, an alabaster animal figurine, reminiscent of early Chinese jade work, and an exquisitely painted | clay chalice of about 3000 B. C., are ‘nciuded. * HOPEFUL SIGNS, BANKERS TOLD Leading Automobile Unit Ex- pects to Employ More Men This Winter Than Last MOTOR SUPPLY IN HANDS OF PUBLIC FALLING OFF BRRARRRRRRRR. Mauck, tract in Bellefonte; $375. of Downey, George H. Fancher, Twelve Million Years Loss Transports lor as good-looking as a fair weath- tion in Nation's Car Inventory Than Considered Normal, Manufac- turer Tells Financiers STIMATING that transportation in the form of automobiles now in the hands of the American public is twelve millfon “car-years” below normal, and that this deficit will eventually have to se made up, Richard H. Grant, vice president of the General Motors Cor- | soration, recently told the American Bankers Association convention that | smployment in his company may be greater this winter than last year. “Employment Juring the winte months is a very important thing” Mr. Grant said. “So far as our corpo ration is concerned, in November, De- tember, January and February we will be employing at least as many and probably more men than we did this past year.” In order to gauge the outlook fo. | aext year's market his corporation, he said, attempts to set up sales in- dices based on intensive scientific studies In addition to observation and common sense. “We are in the habit of lookin, apon an automobile not merely as an automobile but as transporation,” he said. “We figure each automobile produced as six years of transporta- tion. Then by following up records of production yearly, we get a graph which indicates what ought to be a normal inventory of transportation in the hands of the American people, and whether there are more or less miles than might be expected. According to our figures, there are about twelve million years less transportation in this inventory at the present time than has been considered normal since 1925. The Outlook for Business ~Consequently, if we retain the same purchasing power in this country, it is quite evident that on the first up- turn of business there will be a rush to replace that inventory. In develop ing this graph, it has come out very strongly that every third year is a blg automobile year. The biggest automobile year was 1929 when 4,100, 000 cars were produced for American consumption. This year the industry will produce somewhere between 1, $00,000 and 1,900,000 cars. As 1932 is three years after 1929, if economic con- ditions were normal we could be sure we would do a tremendous business, because the third year is the time when the bulk of the replacing takes place.” | He added that there are factors at work that make it uncertain how big the year will be, instancing that “money is being hoarded from lack of confidenec and this takes away some purchasing power that we would otherwise have, while family budgets are being cut on account of changes in income conditions, means that purchasing power for the automobile, like a good many other things, will be knocked down.” As a result, he said, it was necessary to measure what statistically would be a big year against a practical con- sideration of the curtailment of ex- penditures which is going on and de termine how big the year will be under these circumstances. which again | In addition there are numerous oth- er animal figurines and amulets, & complete cosmetic set of the period, a mold for casting bronze objects and « stone palette for mixing paints. The unusual nature of some of the finds, together with the fact that they are remarkably well preserved, makes the collection of particular interest, according to Dr. Ephraim A. Speiser. “Both the seal of the goat and anoth- er stamped seal of about 3570 B. C, the latter which portrays an ibex. show a sense of design that might al- most be called modernistic,” Doctor Spelser stated, “while the frying pan constitutes a particularly valuable diz covery because It still retuins its orig inal handle, a very unusual occur rence. “particular interest is attached aise (0 the pottery, for It precedes the bronze work in age, and points to a time In the history of Tepe Gawra when a state of comparative leisure existed. This leisure subsequently was driven out by the advent of metal. for the coming of bronze accelerated the mode of living, and the painted pottery gave way to things of a more utilitarian nature.” Authority on Spelling of Geographical Names The federal department which Is he final authority on the spelling of | geographical names is the United | States Geographic board. As far as Is | practicable, the United States Post Of- fice department accepts the decisions of this board in all its official spell- Ings. In the case of Pittsburgh, Pa. the board was first asked to pass on the correct spelling in 1801, at which time it decided in favor of the spell- ing “Pittsburg.” This decision, how- ever, met with a great deal of opposi- tion among citizens generally in Pitts. burgh, and in 1911 the board consent- ed to reconsider the case, One of the deciding factors in the final decision wns the “original seal of the Borough of Pittsburgh,” which was struck In 1704, and which was brought forward us evidence. The Geographic board's final decision in 1911 reversed the orig- inal decision and established Pitts. burgh as the official spelling of the name of this city. Moss Rose Legend According to German tradition, the legend of the moss rose is as follows: “Once upon a time an angel, having a mission of love to suffering humanity, came down on earth. He was much grieved at all the sin and misery he saw and at all the evil things he heard. Jeing tired, he sought a place to rest, but as it fared with his master, so it fared with him, there was no room for him, and no one would give him shelter. At last he lay down under the shade of a rose and slept until! the rising sun awoke him, Before winging his flight heavenward he ad- dressed the rose and said that, as it had given him shelter which man de nied, it should receive an enduring token of his love, and so, leaf by leaf, and twig by twig, the soft moss grew ' around the stem, and there it is to- “From a long haul standpoint, Te | gardless of how many automobiles are sold in 1932, we are storing up a big business for the future,” Mr. Grant said. “There will be fewer automobiles sold in 1831 than will go to the scrap heap. With 12,000,000 car-years out of the inventory, nine percent more gasoline was used up to August 1, 1931, than was used in 1930. With fewer automobiles, the people must have been running them faster and longer to consume the additional gaso- line. This means that we have some 22,000,000 people working hard to make a fine business for our industry when there is an economic recovery. No False Optimism 4 am not attempting to create an, false optimism—1 am not speaking without a statistical backgrouand. Us ing the best sense we can, we have drawn conclusions from the figures we have, and | am willing to make the | from the Great Fire of London, statement that as far as the conduct of our business for the first half of 1932 1s concerned, we shall set the indices somewhat higher than the ac tualities of 1931. We are willing tc set our advertising budgets and our | selling expense on that kind of indices With economic conditions as they are and since the obsolescence is so great sales, we figure that the first half of 1932 must necessarily be better thay was the first half of 1931." Bankers Help Seven banks of Kennebec County, Maine, cooperated with the couaty grange, farm bureau, and local cream: ery, in financing the publication of a day, a cradle in which the new-horn rose may lie, a proof of God's power and love,” Electric Pipeless Organ Capt. Richard Ranger of trans oceanic radiophotograph fame invent- ed the electric pipeless organ. It Is both pipeless and reedless and re- sponds to a series of electrical switches, tone generators and ampii- filers when its standard pipe organ keys are played by an organist. The | sounds are generated in groups, each | group consisting of a series of alterna- tors in simple ratio, controlled by one motor. Each tone is amplified and | transmitted to the speaker when the | corresponding musical key is de | pressed, Fire Insurance Beginning Fire insurance may be said to date in 10666. Several companies were formed | during the remainder of the Seven. | teenth century and at the beginning | of the Eighteenth century, some of which still exist. In the United States, | the first fire insurance company to be | established was the Philadelphia Con- tributionship, which was organized on April 13, 1752, This company was pat- | terned in many respects after the and we have sunk so low in this year's Hand-in-Hand of London, which was established toward the close of the Seventeenth century, Mother Knew One day Ted accompanied his moth: er and little sister to a downtown store and a salesman started a con versation, “How old is your sister,” he asked?Y . ing on the electrical aspects of the cult reaction to carry on, But it is easily carried out in the presence of platinum, Catalysts also play an im- portant role in the hydrogena- tion of fats by the addition of hydrogen. But under normal conditions oils will not react with hydrogen. Nickel, how- ever, is the catalyst in this case. In the presence of nickel the oils and hydrogen react to form solid fats, Other processes in which ca- talysts are used include the manufacture of ammonia, syn- thetic wood alcohol and acetic acid, _-aew Cee EEE EAE EAA EAA AERA A AR AAAREAL RRR RRBRBRCRATRRBRRARR SA NANA R ARSE AAA ERA RRRAR RAR RRR RRB RRR RR BRR RRR Hecrsssssssssssssnssnnnnes How City of Portland Was Named by Chance The name of Portland, Ore., was de- elded by flipping a coin, Although a cabin or two had been previcusly built on the site, the founding of the pres- ent city of Portland dates from 1843, when William Overton and Amos L. Lovejoy, ascending the Willamette river in a canoe on their way from Fort Vancouver on the Columbia to Oregon City, selected the site as an | ideal location for a town. Soon after the tract was acquired Overton sold his interest to Francis W. Pettygrove. In 1884 the land was surveyed, the boundaries determined and the first log house built, and the following year a portion of the tract was laid off into streets, blocks and lots. When the problem of naming the embryo city came up Pettygrove, who was a native of Maine, wanted to call it Portland, while Lovejoy, who was a native of Massachusetts, favored Bos- ton. The two New England real es. tate men finally decided to settle the matter by tossing a penny—heads, Portland, and tails, Boston, Heads won and the city was named Portland. | How Student Made Discovery The principle of the selectiv : irradi ation of food was discovered by a | voung student of electrical engineer- | ing at the University of Cincinnati, named George Sperti, He was work- production of ultra-viclet rays. His interest was diverted to the effects of these rays on living substances, and he interested President Herman Schneider of the university in installing a bio- physical laboratory. The foundation ' of their research was the application of the quantum theory of physics to organic matter, A large sum of money has been paid for patents on the dis- covery, Professor Sperti, at thirty, is director of the Basic Science Research | laboratory, The University of Cin- cinnati and the General Foods cor- poration, which acquired the patents, | have organized a joint holding com- | pany, and a new laboratory is to he erected at the university from funds accruing to it from the discovery. a sa— { How to Silver Mirror | Make first solution by boiling eight ounces distilled water and adding twelve grains each of silver nitrate | and Rochelle salts: allow to boil six or seven minutes, then cool and filter, | Make second solution by dissolving nineteen grains of silver nitrate in a! little distilled water, then adding sev- | eral drops of 26. deg. ammonia until | solution clears; then sixteen grains more of silver nitrate, stirring well. Add balance of eight ounces distilled water and filter, Clean the glass for | mirror with ammonia and wipe with wet chamois, Take half and half of the solutions, stirring well, and pour on the middle of the glass, It will | spread over the surface and precipl- | tate the silver, | How Quakes Affect Earth The surface of the earth is variously | affected by an earthquake. In some of the greatest earthquakes, there are | no features more remarkable than the | dislocation of the crust. The dis-| placement along the fault may be | mainly horizontal, mainly vertical, or | partly vertical and partly horizontal, In a few earthquakes, such as that at | Messina In 1908, the movement takes | the form of a warping of the crust, | no actual fault being visible on the | surface, When the movement Is hori- | zontal, the fault may appear as a | erack or fissure, or may he revealed | by the severing of roads, fences, etc., | the ends of which may be separated | by several feet. | How to Stop Coughs A teaspoonful of glycerin in a glass | f cold milk will stop that irritating | cough that attacks you when you lie | down at night. Take a few sips at a | rime until relief is obtained. | How Icebergs Are Formed When a glacier reaches the sea the | ‘trast with her raincoat. lare turning out sweaters, | hats, belts, afghans and dozens of other things as fast as their nee- cut out for him this year. sportswear makers. | put crocheted yokes on some of her | appeared. gan to boom and were worn by all | the fashionables who winter on the | French Riviera and summer at Jean ‘de Luz on the Bay of Biscay. | those Victorian revivals we're hear- !ly nothing is more feminine than hands plying knitting needles. | clipping it at both sides to hold it | mold. | cellent main luncheon or supper dish. tablespoons melted butter, 1 tea- er topcoat. . Coats of waterproofed fabrics— wools or silks—and of smartly col- ored rubber, designed with intent to | be becoming as well as protective. Obviously there's a definite desire on the part of the fashionable wom- an to make a costume out of her rain accessories. Her umbrella matches or makes a pleasant con- Rubber and galoshes blend, too. Even when they don’t wear rain- coats, women are tying up their umbrella colors with their costume. Many of them match—a brown um- brella with a brown costume—a red one with a red costume. Really, if you plan your rainy day costumes carefully, there's no rea- son why you shouldn't be just as glad on a rainy day as on a sunny! one to run into the friend you haven't seen for 10 years! —Television picture of the modern, fashionable home this winter— A cozy fire snapping in the grate. Young husband, feet on the fender, reading the even paper. Tabby cat playing with a ball of yarn on the rug. |as she knits. Certainly the fireside industries have come back in fashion with a vengeance. Making things at home is “the thing to do,”” and women are doing it. Those who can knit and crochet scarfs, dles can click. And those who can't are learning how! But it isn't only the women who are knitting. School and college girls, too. Many a girl in her teens is wearing a jumper or hat knit or crocheted by her own hands. Santa Claus certainly has his work If the good old saint knows his fashions, he'll equip Mrs. Santa and all little ones with needles right now. | For he's going to have thousands of requests for hand-knitted or cro- cheted presents. The fashion all started with Paris Schiaparelli dresses. Then crocheted Hand-made sweaters be- Perhaps it's just another one of ing so much about—like leg o' mut- ton sleeves, basques and bustles. Perhaps it's an outgrowth of the fashion for femininity. For certain- Scarfs are smart not because of the weather but because of them- selves. Because they do things to a costume. Exciting, different things. They give it a smart touch of color. They give it the fashionable higher neckline effect. They offer endless chance to vary it's looks. It isn't so much what you wear as how you wear it. Except that you must choose your scarf colors carefully to go into your planned costume color scheme. Newest scarfs are short. If a scarf is long, it's fastened down some way so the ends don't fly. Tucked under the belt, perhaps, or held down at the sides with clips. What are the smart ways to wear them ? Because you can't just throw a scarf around your neck and expect it to look swank. with an air. Ascot cravat style is one way. Rather close about the neck and double knotted at the side. And that's new. For variety, knot the scarf at the center front. With a slightly longer scarf, let it follow the neckline or your dress, in place and knotting it loosely in front. It makes a neat finish and is particularly effective with a V- neckline. —Frozen Cranberries.— Four cups cranberries, 2'4 cups boiling water. Wash and pick over berries. Cook in boiling water until skins burst. Add sugar and cook 10 minutes longer. Skim as scum rises. Rub through a colander and turn into Pack in equal parts of ice and salt and let stand three hours. —Chestnuts are with meat either as a stuffing or as a vegetable. ‘The raw starch in chestnuts is difficult to digest. Roasted or boiled, comes more digestible. —Potato nut balls make an ex- Four medium sized potatoes, 2 spoon salt, milk, 1 cup nut meats, 2 eggs. Scrub potatoes and boil until ten- der. Peel and mash. Add melted butter, salt and enough milk to make moist. Beat well one half nut meats and one egg weil beaten. Shape into small balls, roll Young wife, in her smart | Victorian-lixe basque dress, rocking Wheat Is Going Up! also cotton and oil. There is some improve- ment in steel production. The skies are clearing. Gradually a better tone in business, a more con- fident feeling is showing itself. It needs only a little push to start things going. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. the | It has tobe worn exceedingly starchy and are appropriately served | the starch be-. and add t gl! LR o Fo ILI UC UC ' ¢ Jo WE FIT THE FEET COMFORT GUARANTEED. Jj | It AJ c : 2 i Baney’s Shoe Store § I WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor | if 80 years in the Business if = BUSH ARCADE BLOCK 5 2 BELLEFONTE, PA. Te SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED Sg Never in all the years that. we have been selling clothes has there been atime when so little money would buy so much. Better Cloth, Better Tailoring, Better Trimmings. Men's Clothes are Better in every way and prices are as low you enjoyed back in 1915. That’s why we say: Buy Now! and Buy at. booklet, entitled, “The Agricultural Situation in Kennebec County.” It presents in a concise manner the farm resources id practices of the county, with sugge tions for improvement. | | end of it flows slowly into the water. | in remaining nuts finely chopped, | | From time to time pieces break off |dip in egg slightly beaten and roll | - Fayble’s “I don’t know,” Ted replied, and turning to his mother, said: “Mother, do you know how old sis ter is?" She did. and float away. These are called Ice- again in nuts. Bake on a buttered | bergs, | baking sheet in a hot oven until | delicately brown. Serve with curly | endive dipped in French dressing.