The Philippine Prepated by National Geographic Soclety, Washington, D. C.)=—WNU Service. I'TH interest in miniature golf waning, enterprising mem- bers of the “play industry” in a western city substituted fishing poles for golf clubs, fish for golf balls, and transformed the dimin- utive golf courses into fishing ponds, tl.us ushering In the “pee wee fishing grounds.” Play knows neither geographical ooundary, nor historical limit. There was a law among the Persians by which all children were to be taught three things: horsemanship, shooting with the how, and telling the truth. Carthaginians and Phoenicians owed «omething of their maritime glory to 2 Jove of swimming, the sport by which they first mastered their fear of the sea. One wonders whether the more rapl¢ strides made In England to- ward the political emancipation of women may not be traceable to the ardor of British women for outdoor exercise and sports, Climate often determines the way a people play. It Is obvious that coast Ing Is popular in a zone where snow falls, and reasonable that those peo ples most generally proficient in swim. ming should be found in the equa- torial islands, where limpid waters in- vite surcease from the scorching sun; but less well known, perhaps, that ecard and board games developed in southern Asla, where zest for play Is Just as keen, but temperature damp- ens the ardor for exertion. To the Netherlands Is traced the origin of slit and skate which even yet have thelr work-a-day usé in flooded and frozen areas, but to the rest of the world they are playthings. Norway once had a regiment of skaters and Holland's soldiers were taught to drill and play on ice. " Just as the Individual adopts games which meets his bodily needs, so na- tional pastimes are modified to foster and fortify the peoples who play them. In the age of personal combat, there were men like Milo of Crotona, a veritable Samson, reputed to have been able to break a cord wound about his head by swelling the mus- cles; or Polydamas of Thessalia, sald to have siain an infuriated lion, and to hive been able to hold a chariot fn its’ Place while horses tugged at it. "Those were the times when boxing and wrestling, most ancient of sports, were in their heydey, though they were not always gentlemen's diver sions, reckoned by modern standards. Missle-Throwing Games. When missle-throwing became the technique of warfare the Ifallan city youth reduced stone-throwing to a fie art, and In winter made use. of snowballs on fete days. In Perugia as many as 2,000 would engage In this game. Defensive armor was worn but many fatalities resulted. Old English laws encouraged archery, and Charlemagne sought to popularize the sport. Play and love of competition bave often been the mother of inven- tion. The great automobile races have revOlutionized the automobile indus try. Benjamin Franklin, employing a boy's familiar plaything, “snatched from the clouds a secret that outdoes the pranks of a magic carpet. On the offfer hand invention made popular certain ways to play. For example the invention of the rubber bladder was a boon to the game of football and the gutta-percha hall added im- mensely to the popularity of golf. Theodore Roosevelt's influence Is generally accounted In social, political, economic and literary ilelds; yet time may show that one of the most pro- found lessons he Impréssed upon American people wag a deeper regard for healthful, vigorous, strenuous out- door sport, The story of how the weakling Roosevelt went to the open places of the West and played at broncho- busting and cattle-herding and later relaxed in African jungle from seven years in the hardest job In the world, is an oft-told tale. Such an uproot- ing of one's life, thanks to our na- tional parks, Is not necessary today. More und more it is the habit of young men and old to seek the health-giv- ing recreations to be had in Uncle Sam's matchless play piaces, Walking is one of the most health- ful and Mmvigorating “games” and 1s free to everyone. Yet it is much neg- lected by Americans, Perhaps the autc. mobile is to blame in some degree; but the fuct that walking Is delib- erite and lacking In that element so dear to tle American heart, competl- tion, also must be taken into account. To the seusoned pedestrian, “joy rid- | Slapping Game. ing” cannot compare with “joy walk ing.” : The Instinct Is Universal. Sports of a nation afford an almost invarible barometer of its progress in civilization. DBasebull is one of the most complicated and highly organized pastimes known to any people, It is a veritable instrument of the most delicate precision in the world of sport. A South Sea Islander no more could play it than he could operate a linotype machine or deftly handle the paper money in a bank teller's cage, Yet the instincts baseball satisfles— the zest of racing to a goal ahead of the ball, the deep satisfaction of di- verting a swiftly moving object to serve his own ends, the mere Impact of the speeding sphere against the instrument he controls, bagging the spheroid as it flies afield, the suspense of nine men as they await the batter's fate—ench and all find thelr counter- part in play as old as animals that | wilk on two feet and have enough gray matter atop their spinal columns to control nature's laws for their hu- man purposes, The foot-race was the most popula: of the 24 Olympian events. Romans | batted balls with the forearm swathed | with bandages, and the Gilbert is- landers wrap coconut shells with cord | go they will rebound to a blow from the open palm; Homer's princess of Phaeacia is represented In the Odys- sey as jumping to catch a ball tossed by her malds of honor; and the Chi- | nese had a game in which a suspended | ball was kept hurtling to and fro by blows from the players. Wrestling is much older than Greece, | as Indicated by bouts pictured op | tombs along the Nile. In Greece box- | ing fell into disfaver among the Spar- | taus for an unusual reason. The | Greeks had developed sportsmanlike | rules for the game, eliminating kick- ing, biting and ear pulling, and the bout closed when one hoxer admitted his defeat. Lycurgus held it improper for any Spartan to acknowledge de- | feat, even In a game. Boxing and wrestling have been popular sports in Japan for ages. Running, throwing, hitting and kics ing are the fundamental muscular op- | erations of America's characteristic | sports—baseball, football, tennis and | golf. The peoples of antiquity mani | fesied all these Instincts in cruder | form. Luzon hillmen, the Polynesians | and the Eskimo and Sumatra Islanders | had games played by kicking a ball. | Greeks played it, and the Roman game, | harpastum, derived its name from the Greek “I seize” which Is evidence | that carrying a ball was practised then, | In old England football was even rougher than most sports of those hardy times. James I thought it was “meeter for lanieing than making able | the user thereof.” Edward II frowned | upon it for its Interference with arch- ery and also because of the commo- | tion It aroused. In those times it | was played In the city streets. A writer of the Sixteenth century called it a “deviiish pastime” and charged It | with inciting “envy and sometimes | brawling murther and homicile.” Tennis Goes Far Back. One must also go back to the Greeks | and Romans for the origin of tennis. | In the Twelfth century a game with | ball and plaited gut bat was played | on horseback. Then came “La boude” | in which the horse was abandoned. Louis X died after excessive playing of the game, Henry VIII was a de votee of the game. Until the Six- teenth century the hand was used for | batting the ball, but soon the racket came into general use. If tennis Has a royal lineage, gon, which was later regarded as a rich | man's game had most plebelan be- | ginnings, Contrary to widespread be- | lief, it seems not to have originated in | Scotland, but in northern Europe. Ap- parently it was first played on Ice, being one of the winter sports adapted | to the physical geography of the Low countries, By the Fifteenth century golf had attained such vogue in Scot- land that it threatened the cherished archery, and it was classed with “fute- bull” and other “unprofitabil sportis” by James IV. America’s love of play Is a distine tive part of her Anglo-Saxon heritage. Where two or more English-speaking people get together, he it in Bagdad or Buenos Aires, their common tongue makes the point of contact, but It | generally is their love of active play that forms the tie that binds thelr | comradeship, l | guy, a fellow | never saw. | fourth Acquaintance on Train Wife’s Former Husband In a smoking compartment of the Twilight Limited, bound from Chicago to Detroit the other day, a Chicagoan and a Detroiter met and speedily be- came acquainted as people will on trains. Houser Massey, who is au- thority for the story and vouches for its truth, said the two men soon | reached the point where they were trading their opinions on life and liv ng. The Chicagoan was cynical about women, and said so. “You can't trust | ‘em,” he declared. “I was married once and my wife left me for another An expe- rience like that is enough to teach you | | mot to trust women again.” “Well, 1 don't feel that way,” said the Detroiter. “I'm married, have | | been married for several years, and | | my wife and I get along very well, ot course, she's an exceptional woman. She'll be at the station when we get to Detroit, and 1 want you to meet her. You'll see your ideas about wom- en are wrong.” Arriving here, the two acquaintances walked up to the waiting room togeih er. The Detroiter's wife rushed up to | greet him, stopped suddenly. Her face | paled. As she stopped, the Chicagoan flushed, muttered something about see- ing a friend across the way. grabbed his bag from the red cap and was ol. | The Detroiter didn't know that his | acquaintance of the train was his wife's former husband.—Detroit I'ree Press, Death Adder Fourth in List of Deadly Snakes | The Australian death adder is said to have long borne an undeservedly bad name. People said the death ad- der was the most virulently poisonous | of Australian snakes. Now Mr. le Souef, director of the Sydney zoo, states that it is not nearly so fear- some as has been imagined. The av- erage farmer will say emphatically that the death adder is one of the most dangerous reptiles in the bush. At tlie week-end a man was bitten by one. The fact that the bite had little ill- effect on him prompted Iinquirers to | seck Mr. le Souef's opinion, Mr. le! Souef declared that he would have been surprised if the man had died, as he would rank the death adder as only | among Australia’s poisonous snakes. The most deadly is the tiger | snake, capable of killing a healthy man in 70 minutes. Next comes the brown snake, a potential killer In two hours. Then, says Mr. le Souef, the | black snake, which can make man des- perately sick for 12 to 24 hours, but gives him a chance of life. Then the death adder and other varieties, Sports Improve Posture While corrective exercises are [me portant for Improving poor posture, sports have been found even more | helpful, In the case of students at Harvard, it was found that of the freshmen who were obliged to take corrective exercises for poor posture those who took part In organized athletic sports during the subsequent three years showed much greater im- provement In posture than those who did not go in for sports, the latter showing little if any improvement, ac- cording to the Boston Herald. Traveling Cinemas Traveling moving picture shows are she latest cinematic development in| Soviet Russia. At present there are more than 1,200 such units traveling | from one village to another. The pop- | ularity of the exhibitions may be | Judged by their rapid growth in num- | ber during the past two years. At the ! of 1925 there were less than 400 | ing movies. This fignre rose in| - vel Tobe to 900, and for the present year it is planned to produce 2,000 pro- jectors.—Washington Star. t Do You Give? A New York vocational guidance ex- | pert advises people who are not happy | fii their jobs to Save their money until : they can make a change. She might | | say, too, that if people are not taking happiness out of their jobs they would | lo well fo see that they are putting into those jobs everything they have | to give. What you get out of your job | {a the way of contentment depends upon what you are willing to put into | it fn a day to day effort.—Grove Pat- | terson, In the Mobile Register. Lake's Depth Varies The depth of Lake Titicaca, the jargest lake in South America, in some places reaches 700 feet, but large por- | tions of it are shallow, and the shores, | especially in the south, are lined with | marshy tracts covered with reeds. The lake receives a number of streams from the surrounding mountains and discharges through the Desaguadero into Lake Aullagas, whose waters | Anally evaporate in the great salt marshes in the southern part of the closed basin, Man's Food Consumption A healthy man, with a normal ap | petite, who reaches seventy has eaten | 700 times his own weight, according | to the calculation of experts of the | faculty of Paris. They have figured | that in his span of seventy years the average man of 140 pounds would have | eaten 138 tons of bread, 15 tons of veg- | etables, 7 tons of meat or 13 whole | cows; 7 tons of fruit, 1,600 pounds of | eandy aud sugar, drunk 15,000 quarts of milk and 20,000 quarts of beer, In | Europe, or water. in America. | ’ Bloom of Rice Plant Varies in Localities Temperature plays an part in the flowering of the rice plant. Rice flowers are relatively inconspicu- ous, hut an official of the United | States Department of Agriculture, who works on the improvement of the rice crop, has studied the blooming habits of the plant in connection with the eross-breeding of varieties, The rice plant blooms suddenly and for only a short time. One ohserver noted 1 complete opening of the flower | : The blooming con- | tinued for only ahout two hours. Rice | in thirty seconds. fiowers are rarely onen before the sun has warmed the earth and air, and they close before the sun is far down. In the United States and in Japan the rice blooms later than in warmer areas, such as Java, India and the Philippine islands. In India, observ- ers say, rice will not bloom until the temperzture has reached 77 degrees Fahrenheit. But there the tempera- ture runs high as a rule and rice blooms most freely in the early morn- | ing hours soon after the dew evapo- | rates, and the flowers close before the | In California the max- | heat of noon. imum period of bloom is the two hours after noon. Rice has a complete flower, and usu- ally fertilizes itself. The pollen from the stamens fertilizes the stigma In the same plant, usually | before or at the time the flower opens. | Easy Way of Inducing Bees to Change Abode | Bees often take up their abode where they are not wanted, as in a cavity In a wall, them out is to put a bee “escape” over the entrance to the cavity, so the bees can get out but not in. A cone of | wire cloth about 8 inches high with a hole at the apex just large enough for one bee to pass through will serve as an escape. A regular hive should be placed beside the entrance for the re turn of the escaped bees. The queen remains in the old cavity and goes on laying eggs, but as the colony is quick: ly reduced In size the quantity of the | brood decreases. The younger bees | leave the cavity and join the bees in | the hive. A new queen should be giv- en to the bees In the hive as soon as possible, After about four weeks, remove the bee escape and make as large a hole [ Es as possible at the entrance of the cuav- ity. The bees will go in for the honey and carry it to the hive. For this method to work successfully it Is nec- essary that the bees have only one exit from the cavity.—United States Department of Agriculture. First American Flag A standard with 13 alternate blue |¥ and silver stripes, carried by the Phii- | adelphia Troop of Light Horse In 1775, is the first known attempt to provide a national fla on January a flag consisting of 13 alternate white and red stripes with the crosses of St. | George and St. Andrew in a blue deld in the upper left-hand corner. Under various designations, this was em- ployed until displaced by the Stars and Stripes, adopted by the Continen- tal congress, June 14, 1777. His Way “Don't you sometimes get lost in the | woods when you go out possum hunt- | ing and get separated from your brothers?” asked a motorist in the Rumpus Ridge region. “Nope!” replied young Banty, son o. Gap Johnson. “When I don't know whur I'm at and there hain't nobody aroiind to ask I just pick out the way | I know leads toward home and turn right around and go the other way; that always fotches me home by the shortest trail.”—Kanpsas City Star. Canadian Timber It 1s estimated by the Dominion for- est service that the only economic use for three-eighths of the land area of | Canada lies In the growing of trees. | This vast area of territory, while in- capable of successful agricultural pro- Hig duction, is, if permanently dedicated, protected and managed, sulted to the production of a timber crop which would guarantee for all time the sup- ply of raw material for Canada’s wood- using {ndustries.— Natural Resources § Bulletin, ———————— London's Pall Mall The average American and Cana dian tourist may have difficulty In rec- ognizing Pall Mall, as the “Pell Mell.” | to which the London policeman directs | him, when he asks for the famous | street. It was named after the French game Pallle-malil, On this street were the homes of De- foe of Robinson Crusoe fame, Swift of Gulliver's Travels, Sterne of the “Sentimental Journey,” and Gibbon, the historian. Boiling Water Waier boils at 212 degrees F. Av 115 degrees a person finds water almost too hot to hold his hand In it. and larvae by being dipped for 10 sec- onds in water heated to 140 degrees F. Care, however, must bé exercised to have and keep the water at this or a greater temperature, Larvae and eggs in flannel dipped for 10 seconds in water heated only to 122 degrees F, remain unaffected. important | It “breeds true,” | and there is little cross-fertilization. | A good way to get | At Cambridge, Mass, | 1776, General Washing- | ton, acting on his own initiative, raised | which was first | played here In the days of Charles I. | Fabrics | that will not be injured by water can | be freed of living clothes moth eggs | | ——Along about the middle of | York and brought pack to Centre (last July two men, T. H. Andrews county last week. Three cases had ‘and S. A. Whorley, of York, visited | been entered against him throughs | State College and collected various | justice of the peace L J. Dreese. sums of money from merchatns for 'On Friday Andrews settled all the printing their advertisements on |cases against him, paying the costs, menus they were going to print for a total of over $100, and making" use in that town. Time passed | restitution of the money collected. ‘but the menus never showed up and | He was then discharged. | the merchants finally got tired wait- ling and made information against ‘the men. Andrews was located in — Subscribe for the Watchman. SAVINGS ACCOUNTS eports show a large increase in sales of merchandise, which shows that the Amer- ican people do not deny themselves what they want. But reports also show a large increase and steady growth in Savings Bank Deposits; a good sign. Sensible people do not deny themselves proper comforts, but sensible people also desire to have an anchor to winward in the shape of a Savings Account in a good Bank. ————————————————— | THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | BELLEFONTE, PA. f | & Baney’s Shoe Store 80 years in the Business PUSH ARCADE BLOCK i i —— a Buy Now! | Never in all the years that. we bave If 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. | | | | | | =A That's why we say: Buy Now! and Buy at.