MILLIONAIRE SHOW PLACES GOING OUT Trend Toward the “Model Village” Is Gaining. New York.—'Millionaire palaces,’ those resplendant show places which used to dot the suburban countryside in such profusion back in the old days of pre-depression prosperity, are go ing out of style, according to a sur | vey report just put out by the Amer ican Institute of Architects. Experts who participated in the survey envision the time when such symbols of wealth and social sta.d- | ing will ornament the American land- | scape no more. Indeed the report sug- | gests the possibility of the passing of | the personal suburban dwelling of | whatever size and cost in favor of | the “model village” or standardized bouse. | The report, prepared by Dr. Leices- | ter B. Holland, chief of the division of fine arts of the Library of Congress and chairman of the committee on preservation of historic buildings of | the American Institute of Architects, is described as an analysis of the role of architecture in the present art con. | sclousness of the social body. Waning Interest Noted. The waning interest of the wealthy : in large private houses is explained | by Doctor Holland as “largely due to an increase In mobility,” and fur | ther to the fact that the wealthy, In- stead of concentrating on a single es- tablishment, are now in the habit of maintaining two or more residences in different parts of the country o- | sven abroad. “It is to be expected that the effect of mobility will extend constantly down the scale of wealth,” says the report, “with a consequent tendency to lessened interest in the personal | suburban dwelling. The model vil lage or the standardized house may iv time replace it. There will prob- ably result an Increase in economy, possibly an Increase in beauty, but also a decrease in esthetic responsive. ness. For it is only the selective In- terest of the individual that makes for critical appreciation. “The city apartment building illus trates this reaction. Moder: apart. ments are architecturally far more interesting than the uniform rows of city houses they replace. But they have very little effect on the archi tectural consciousness of the commw- nity. Matter of Pride. “On the other hand, business buila ings, such as stores, offices and thea- ters, which a century ago were of almost no architectural consequence, | today have assumed prime impor nce. This change is due chiefly to e modern devotion to advertising in all commercial undertakings, though with this there enters an element of personal pride on the part of the merchant owners, “An early expression of just this combination of motives was P, T. Barnum's residence, Iranistan, at | Bridgeport, Conn., designed by a Lon- | don architect in fantastic Moorish | style and built regardless of expense within unobstructed view of the main | railroad line.” ‘The report shows that business dulldings have assumed first impor nce In American architecture. Gov- t architecture is “esthetical- | ly unimportant.” College architecture | tends toward “archaic theatricality,” while churches, libraries and other | cpitural foundations will rank at the end of another century as “the out- standing architectural examples of the day,” according to the report. Seminole Indians Cling to Ancient Folk Songs Wasbington.—A new kind of folk song has been recorded for posterity by Miss Frances Densmore, Smith- soplan Institution ethnologist, who recently returned to Washington with more than 200 phonograph records of songs of the Seminole Indians of the Worida Bverglades. Miss Densmore was told by the re | ticent Indian peoples that the Semi. nolés bad no songs. After a four | stay among them, however, slie discovered and recorded much of | an a native music, inole songs, she found, are | The Ser at two big annual feasts— corn dance in the summer and the ceremony preceding the hunting | season In the fall. Music also is used In treatment of the sick. Old Plainsman Plans to Ride Steer 1,000 Miles | Sewing: Neb.—Tom Rivington be Heves t the modern generation to have its knowledge of the West revived. This eighty-two-year-old veteran on the saddle and the range days pro- poses to help in the revival. He's sanning to straddle a steer next year and ride the “critter” from Gering to Ohicago—neariy 1,000 miles, Rivington, bowlegged from ridin, bronchos, believes If he gets a steer with a reasonable amount of meat he won't be such bad riding, The old plainsman proposes rt. finance his steer ride to Chicago by sale of pamphlets en route. He plans to start early enough so as to give him time to sell his literature. | Gourd Is Octogenarian Gurdon, Ark.—A gourd eighty-two years old still is in use at Mrs T, Mathis’ home. It is employed as a coffee receptacle and was the prop erty of her grandfather. | Amulet High in Favor | law | the limitations of mankind's With Ancient Peoples The most familiar of ancient “charms” are perhaps the amulets | worn generally for luck and certain ones more specificelly as a charm against disease, accidents or misfor- tune. They go back to the early Chal | deans, Egyptians, Greeks and Romans. The idea of suspension is connected ' with the word amulet, its origin trac ing back through the Latin to the Arable, meaning a pendant, Edan Wright tells us, in the Chicago Eve ning Post, And having provided themselves with an amulet for safety's sake, the ancients sought to care for their ani mals in the same manner. The horse, of course, being the swiftest means of making a journey, was very impor tant, and it was a bold traveler, indeed, who undertook a trip without seeing to it that his horse's trappings car- ried the requisite amount of amulets | to afford ample protection for beast and man. There were brass amulets for the horse's forehead, ears, breas’ and shoulders. Early settlers in this country hung witch balls in their windows which were supposed to keep away the evil spirits and witches. We can't vouch | for their efficacy as charms, but most of them were certainly charming af- fairs, of glass, some colored, others wlain. Canada’s Buffalo Herds Acquired From America Legend has it that the buffalo owes its present existence to a quarrel between two Indians, father and son. in-law, in 1873, says an article in the Los Angeles Times, The son-in- left the paternal tepee, fled northward to Saskatchewan from his | home at Flathead reservation, Mon- tana. But his longing for home was too great. He decided to return. On the way he found a small herd of the fast-disappearing buffalo. He sorted out four calves. These he led home, They brought him once more in the family circle, for the father-in-law was happy with Hunting Dog's gift. The four calves grew and bred under the care of the priests of St. Ignatius mission, Soon there was a small | herd, too large for the priests to handle. Came Pablo, the Mexican halfbreed, and bought 10 of the ani- mals for $250 each. He led them home, where he bred them till they became the herd which he sold to the Canadian government at a price per head similar to what he paid for | the first 10. The United States gov- ernment did not want them, for he offered them In 1908. Canada took | them, and now has the greatest buf- falo herds in the world, totaling | more than 20,000 animals, Nature's Heating System We hear a lot about central heat | ing in homes, says a traveler, but | New Zealand can boast that the land itself is centrally heated over a wide | area, with boiling springs, hot gey- | sers spurting high in the air, and | cavities full of boiling mud that! heaves and works in a sinister way. You may see the houses of the Maorls perched over the edges of the hot lakes, observe the Maori mothers cooking their dinners in a steam hole, or the boys enjoying a bath in the hot water nature pro vides. The thermal region is indeed unique, and it is possible to find lakes where one side is ice cold and | the other nearly boiling owing to the | hot springs. i Biblical Mystery | Lamuel, or Lemuel ag it is some tmes spelled, is the name of a king mentioned in Preverbs 31:1 and 4. That chapter begins: “The words of | King Lamuel. The vision wherewith his mother instructed him.” The | name occurs again in the fourth verse: | “give not to kings, O Lamuel, give not wine to kings. . .” Chastity and temperance are the themes of the dis. | course that follows. Nothing else | whatever is known of King Lamuel. Some Bible commentators believe that he was an ancient king of Massa, a small kingdom somewhere in Arabia, although that Is mere speculation, | Massa Is mentioned in Genesis as be ing one of the sons of Ishmael.—Path- finder Magazine. Colors’ Meanings Different authorities ascribe vari | ous meanings to the colors. In the mural decorations of the Library of | Congress, red is used as a light of poetry; orange, of excellence; yel- | | low, of creation; green, of research; blue, of truth; indigo, of science. Other symbols often given are as fol- | i lows: black, grief, death or evil; white, purity, truth or hope; re courage or love; blue, loyalty, truth or | faith; gold, gioty or power; silver, | purity or chastity; purple, royalty or | Justice; green, youth, immortality or gladness; violet, penitence; yellow, Jealousy, inconstancy. World's “Deserts” : Strictly speaking, only dry lands are considered as deserts, It is there that | the ghosts of buried civilizations walk and the traveler comes upon ruins of | great dead cities, as in the Sahara. | But if we add to the hot deserts the | cold deserts of the Arctic and Antare- tic we see in even more startling terms habitat. | The polar ice-caps are the truest Ges erts of all, tor they support no life | whatever, unless of a microscopic sort. The Arabian desert or the Sahara | teems with living things.—New York Times. | | evade—death and ' RIVIERA GAMBLERS SIGHT PROSPERITY Build New Casinos for the Expected Rush. Paris.—In adversity the baccaret | « . . He had little pain, and it stopped Tolstoy Evidently Was No “Hero” to His Wife July 23, 1897 . . . Again Lev Niko- | laevich (Tolstoy) was ill all night, | toward morning. He had esten pota- | toes the day before, and had drunk | kvas, In spite of his indigestion. . . . barons of the golden sands of the French and Italian Riveria are pre- paring for prosperity just around the ~orher, The gambling casinos are having the worst season they have had since Considering his intelligence, his greed and his Ignorance in matters of dier | wre quite extraordinary. September 4, 1807. . . . Lev Niko- ' laevich wnites everywhere and al- | the war. Little white five franc chips | are used where formerly hardened plungers fingered only the 1,000 franc red chips. Yet the barons have found the hundreds of millions nec- essary to build three new gambling valaces, There are at present £2 gambling, casinos along the 100-mile strip from San Remo to Hyeres, as well as three race courses where plungers and bookmakers swarm. The combined “hese 22 casinos is 32,000. , capacity of the gambling tables o* In good years the tables have beew | populated from noon until dawn with as many as 500,000 gamblers trying their luck at one of the 800 tables during a day. At the present time it | is no rare sight to see two croupierr and only one gambler. For the happy days to come, how- ever, the barons are making ready. | At Monte Carlo a new $4,000,000 ca- sino is being built In the shadow of | the famed oid casino on the rock. Monte Carlo Is so small that you can walk is length In five minutes, yet it has three casinos already and & fourth under way. The new one i will be called the International Sport- | ing club and will be the most luxu- | rious gambling place in the world. Baccaret players will tread on rare oriental carpets, the walls will glitter | with real gold and the ceiling will be movable and open to the sky. Another luxurious “sporting club also is being built slong the Crois- ette at Cannes. The only sports will he indoor sports—poker, bridge, bhac- caret and chemin de fer. This will put one new palace on each side of i ways about brotherly love. It always | puzzles me when 1 read it or hear it. All hig life from morning till night he has absolutely nothing to do with his fellow mortals. He gets up in the morning and drinks coffee, and goes out for a walk or a bath without having seen anybody, then he settles down to work; later he goes out on his bicycle, or for another bath: then he has his dinner or plays tennis or goes down stairs to read. He spends the evening in hig own room, and only after supper does he spend a little time with us, reading newspapers or illustrated magazines. And this regular and egotistical life goes on day after day, without love for anyone, and without any inter- est In all the joys and sorrows of his | near ones.—From the Diary of Sophie Andreyevna Tolstoy, Thief Delivered Into Hands of His Enemies Not so long ago ome of the most daring burglars in London was work- ing confidently and leisurely at the | task of opening a safe in a room at the top of a building, when something | in the atmosphere caused him to sniff, | Instantly he sprang to his feet and ran | to the door. When he opened it a great volume of smoke poured in, Then he realized that he was trapped | in a burning building, and that to save his life he must shout for help. the £5,000,000 gambling factory which | Frank Jay Gould built at Nice. World Is Now Inhabited by Two Billion People | | | agined, but, as a facetious lawyer re- | 2) | marked later, while they put the fire UL | out they put the burglar in—for five | Washington.—The world is inhabit. | ed by approximately two billion peo- ple, or 39.2 persons for every square mile of land on the earth, according N. H., was the outgrowth of Joshua to Commerce department figures com- | Moor’s Indian Charity school opened | piled for 1929, Only official statistical publications, | of the 103 countries surveyed were was collected in Great Britain and | ] used by the department in the first | placed in trust. With the endow | | E | compilation of this kind ever made. A ment Doctor Wheelock decided to ex- Data gathered Indicated that fe males greatly throughout the world. Fifty-one out | . of every 100 persons in the United | States are, however, males, The United States, with a land ares. = to Lord Dartmouth, who was head of of 2,878,776 square miles and an esti- mated population of more than 124. 000,000, has a density of 41.7 persons per square mile. Alaska has the smallest density of any country list- ed, with 0.1 per cent. Town in New England Votes to Pass Up Tax Orleans, Vt—The fellow who said there were two things one couldn't taxes—was only | half right. This village of 1,300 inhabitants has roted to make no tax levy for 1982, Orleans thus becoming the only tax- less community in New England. With a balance of $12,000 In the treasury, town officials figured there was enough to carry on for another year without burdening the citizens. Das been recorded in any year. Seek Divorce; Not Wed Vancouver, Wash.—When Waltex and Pearl Priddy sought a divorce they discovered they never were le- gally married. They Immediately ob- tained a license and were married. Girls! You're Doomed After You Reach 27 San Francisco.—Girls who wait until they are past twenty-seven to marry are likely to remain spinsters for the rest of their lives. That is the theory of Caven- dish Moxon, M. A., consulting psychologist, who has made a study of marriage here for the last ten years, “Between the ages of twenty- two and twenty-seven, a girl is at her best,” he sald. “She reaches the full bloom In physical and mental development, She can choose her husband from the group of men between the ages of twenty-eight and thirty-three, the usual marrying period for men. “If she waits until after twen- ty-seven she is apt to find the man of her own age or s few years older already married. As a rule, younger men will not be interested in her.” Moxon said he belleved the un- derlying cause for unhappiness in modern marriage is the tend- ency of the times for individual. ization. “Marriage Is easy when every- body has the same tastes, man- pers and beliefs,” he said. “It becomes dangerous for the eman- clpated woman and Individualized man of today. A hunt for per fection is a hunt for the impos- sible.” | i outnumber Walia), tit English students. The institution | i i i | i i i | bordered canals, busy with barges | make himself conspicuous to them. | In the book of the bishop of Durham. | | stantly expanding, extending itself or | Oitions on the earth improve?—Ex- | | change. { gardens and parks and brilliant flow- There was no convenient skylight or any other way of escape, and conse- quently the man who had the very | best of reasons for avoiding the police | was compelled to do all he could to | It | serious as the trapped crook had im- | years, Old American College Dartmouth college, at Hanover, | by Rev. Eleazer Wheelock at Leban- | on, Conn, in 1754. A sum of £10,000 | tend the sphere of his work and ad- | moved to Hanover in 1785. In| e charter the name of Dartmouth | be was adopted as a compliment | the board of trustees in England, and | took a great interest In the Institu- | tion. Cancer Scourge The statement was made at a meet- Ing of the American Society ‘or the Control of Cancer that there were more than 360,000 persons in this coun- try suffering from the dread disease. At the beginning of the century, can- cer ranked sixth as a cause of death In the United States. By 1920 it had | risen to fourth place, and to second | place in 1927, a place it still holds. In| 1820 71,756 persons died of cancer. Since then there has been a steady in- | crease until in 1029, the last figures available, the number of deaths from cancer reached 111,562. No decrease Ancient Greeks Knew Coal Some 300 years B. C. Theophrastus, | famed Greek orator and philosopher, | 1 wrote about coal in the following lan- Ji “Those substances that are i guage: called coals and are broken for use are earthly, but they kindle and burn || like wooden coals.” The coal he re- fers to was found in certain localities In Greece. The first written receipt for cos] in England was given by the | Abby of Petersboro in 852 A. D. and | was for 12 cartloads of coal. Among | the other “firsts” was an account ot | the mining of coal in 1180, recorded | | Might Coax Them Back | The theory that the universe is con- exploding has had apparent confirma- | tion in discoveries at Mount Wilson | observatory that immense nebulae or | star clusters in distant space seem to | be rushing away from the earth at | tremendous speeds, reaching a masxi- | mum of 12,500 miles an hour. But | have the astronomers considered the possibility that these star clusters might slacken their pace or even re- verse their movements as soon as con Beautiful Holland Urban Holland %Yas many unique | characteristics. The famous tree- and crossed by draw or swing- bridges, are most interesting. Quaint gabled roofs surmount the narrow orick houses. Chimes ring out gaily In churches and public buildings. Dutch cleanliness is proverbial. All houses are washed and scrubbed and polished inside and out once a week. Holland is also justly famous for its ers, well planied and tended. i | SLIGHT WARNING GIVEN OF DEADLY POISON GAS dde po | of the greatest dangers of modern | lite. The gas, given off by almost | all forms of combustion, smell and gives no ordinary warn- | ing, ‘noted which may be valuable. ing and hardening of the small ar- teries which one can feel heating In | the temples; second, there is often a un ie patient should be kept absolutely quiet untii ° is complete. Artificial res- piration is necessary if breathing has ceased, but the most important thing is the prompt use of a modern - inhalation apparatus using oxygen . and a little carben dioxide. has no but two symptoms have been First, there may be a slight swell- | | i i | Tax On Bank Checks Beginning Tuesday, June 21st, a federal tax of two cents will be placed on all checks drawn on banks. No stamps will be furnished, and the amount of tax will be added to each check by the bank on which it is drawn. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years In the Business BUSH AROADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED Comfort-plus Suits for the Hottest Days Here’s summer comfort expressed not only in coolness of body but in peace of mind. Suits that are smart in appearance and perfect in fit. Tailored of materials that are the delight of connoisseurs and the despair of imitators and priced from $12.00 to $16.50