+! seed CNET, ~ Bellefonte, Pa. Octolhr 3, 1919, EARTHS IN SOLAR SYSTEM {Thousands of Asteroids, Mostly Small, Known to Be Swinging Around the Sun. Swinging around the sun between the planets Mars and Jupiter there are more than a thousand little earths, ranging in diameter from three to 485 miles. These are known as the aster- oids, and although they pursue their individual ways in the solar system much like our own globe they are too small to support any sort of life, being unable to hold an atmosphere. From time to time new asteroids are discovered, not by astronomers pa- tiently peering at the heavens through a telescope, but by means of the photo- graphic plate. A thousand have al- ready beengfound, but it is likely that thousands of smaller asteroids remain to be discovered. The four largest asteroids, Ceres, Pallas, Vesta and Juno, are respec- tively 485, 304, 243 and 118 miles in diameter. A few more asteroids may exceed 100 miles in diameter, but the great majority are simply huge rocks five miles or less in diameter. Unlike the major planets, the asteroids are not spheres, but simply jagged rocks, huge mountains hurtling through space, whirling round and round on their axis as they journey about the sun. Possibly, as some have suggested, they may be the larger fragments of periodic comets of unusual size that have in the course of ages been shorn of their appendages. MANIFOLD USES OF THE OX Animal May With Truth Be Said to Be Most Useful of All the Domestic Animals. Of all our domestic animals the ox is certainly the most useful, writes Henri Fabre in Our Humble Helpers. During its lifetime it draws the cart in mountainous regions and works at the plow in the tillage of the fields; furthermore, the cow furnishes milk in abundance. Given over to the butcher, the animal becomes a source of manifold products, each part of its body having a value of its own. The fiesh is highly nutritious; the skin is meade into leather for harness and shoes; the hair furnishes stuffing for saddles; the tallow serves for making candles and soap; the bones, half cal- cined, give a kind of charcoal or bone black used especially for refining sugar and making it perfectly white; this charcoal, after thus being used; is a very rich agricultural fertilizer; heated in water to a high temperature, the same bone yields the blue used by carpenters; the largest and thickest bones go to the turner’s shop, where they are manufactured into buttons and other small objects, the horns are fashioned by the maker of small wares into snuff boxes and powder boxes; the blood is used concurrently with the bone of black in refining sugar; the intestines cured, twisted, and dried, are made into strings for musical in- struments; finally, the gall is fre- quently turned to account by dyers and cleaners in cleaning fabrics and par- tially restoring their original luster. Curious Clubs. The recent announcement tnat an English “Bald-Headed Men’s club” had just met—the first time since 1916, owing to the war—serves to recall one or two odd clubs. “The Fat Man’s club,” for instance, was known to exist in Paris in 1897. Its heaviest member turned the scale at 336 pounds and the chief qualifica- tion for membership was to weigh at feast 220 pounds. About this time there also met in New York the “Society of the Pointed Beards”—a most exclusive club. No one was eligible unless he had a care- fully cultivated beard of natural growth and terminating in one sym- metrical peint half an inch from the apex of the chin. . At two club dinners in 1898 even the celery was Kkerved with its leaves trimmed to a point. " erm Thomas a Kempis. “Here in the service of the Lord Thomas a Kempis lived and wrote “The Imitation of Christ,” are the words that appear on the foot of the monument to the author recently erected at Zwolle. In a gentle spot, surrounded by ancient oaks and firs, and with shrubbery around, this mon- ument stands on a hill which was presented for the purpose by the van Royen family. The monument is in the shape of a cross with the mono- gram of Christ and the symbols of the four evangelists. The inscription on the main part is “In Cruce Calus.” Many subscriptions were received for the monument as soon as the plan was suggested in 1916. Queen Wilhelmina was among those who gave. Coating Iron With Lead. Lead as a substitute for tin as a coating for sheet iron, iron wire and wire gauze was strongly advocated at the Buffalo meeting of the American Chemical society by Charles Basker- ville, who exhibited some specimens of a process worked out by him. Iron shingles, so treated, have been exposed to the weather in a roof test for two years and eleven months and show no signs of rust. They may be bent without cracking the coating and exposing the iron. Chicken wire so ' greated is quite as good as the galvan- §zed and cheaper to produce, GATHER STRAW FLOWERS. If you are fortunate enough to have any straw flowers in your garden do gather some—not all in the garden, but some and take them into the house to add one cheerful note to the cold, dreary months to come. if you did not plant any Heilchrys- um Monstrosum, which is the rather long, tedius name by which the hota- ' nists know them, purchase a few seed hext spring and sow in rather rich soil in some sunny portion of the gar- den, and then you can forget them. They take care of themselves and in August develop those queer gay, rather prim, little posies. One thing stray flowers demand is room. Leave at least 12 to 14 inch- es space each way. They have no especial insect ene- my, so do not need special care. They are quite hardy annuals, so do not have to be planted each year. The texture of the stems and little petals are unlike that of any other plant. They resemble straw. Pick them in mid-day and tie them in a loose bunch and hang them in some dry, sunny spot. You pick them just as the petals are unfolding. Do not wait until they open, else the color will be more or less faded. When they are open arrange them in a gray, deep blue, dull orange or green pottery jar. They will be love- ly and you will be glad you have them. They will retain their beauty the entire winter and give just the touch of color that you need to add an atmosphere of joyousness to that somber corner. A bed of straw flowers presents a : “Dolly Vardon” effect. When you pick them select colors that will har- monize best with the color of vour bowl. If in your garden you have more than you need give your neigh- bor some. She will love them just as surely as you do, and take a few to the invalid you visit. They will be a suggestion of the lovely months of summer during all the long cold win- ter. Was Thinking of Him. Newpop (walking the floor at 2 p. m).—Mary, how can you lie there sleeping without a single thought of me. Mrs. N.—You do me aa injustice, dear. At that very moment 1 was thinking how hard it would be for you if the baby had been born twins. The season for home canning and drying does not end with sum- | mer or early autumn. Many things may be canned or dried in October and November. Among these are turnips, spinach, squash, pumpkin, carrots, parsnips. cabbage. celery, bests, late corn, kale, chard, salsify and tomatoes. For high class job work come to the “Watchman” office. $ COURT HOUSE NEWS ¢ INNA CINS INSTA I SNAP REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS, J. W. Weaver, et ux, to Tresciz Fink, tract in Huston township; $2560. D. F. Runkle to M. A. Miller, tract in Huston township; $3800. Moshannon National bank to W. Alfred Svotts, tract in South Philips- burg; $400. Edward S. Bullock. et ux, to Geo. G. Fink, tract in Worth township: $3100. John S. Beals to John Varner. et al, tract in South Philipsburg; $400. Grace M. Troy, et bar, to B. W. Deitz, tract in Worth township; $3100. Elizabeth J. Erb to William Aus- tin, tract in Philipsburg; $800. .Elizabeth J. Erb to Louis Finberg, tract in Philipsburg; $500. Joseph C. Foreman Sr., to Samuel Foreman, tract in Rush township; $1. Susannah Hayes’ Admr. to Philin E. Womelsdorf, tract in South Phil- ipsburg; $260. W. T. Bair, et ux, to Mary Alice Snyder, tract in South Philipsburg; | $750. Bellefonte Cemetery Association to ar L. Steele, tract in Bellefont:; 40. Philipsburg Realty Co. to John Gallo, tract in Philipsburg; $205. Louisa H. Atherton to Roy Wilkin- son, tract in Philipsburg; $3500. G. W. Zettle to Ella M., Zettle, tract in Boggs township; $1. Susan Hamer, et al, to John Litke, tract in Philipsburg; $1000. Breeze M. Benner to State College School Board, tract in State College; $800. X C. D. Houtz, et ux. to Williams, tract in College township; $400. D. L. Leitzel, et ux, to M. I. Foi- cey, tract in Philipsburg; $1. RMinnie Fi. Charles A. Dunlap, et ux, to Edwin | Butterworth & Sons, tract in South Philipsburg; $10,000. Ella Jane Walters, et al, to Miriam Copelin, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Cranberry Crop Large. Washington. — Cranberries for sauce “trimmin’s” at the Thanksgiv- ing, Christmas and New Year dinner feasts ought to be cheaper this year than they were last, although labor conditions may force growers to de- mand prices higher than the average. This year’s crop of cranberries, ac- cording to the September forecast of the Department of Agriculture, will . be about 637,000 barrels, as against 350,000 barrels last year. Cold Day for Him. “So Jim married a cold million, eh?” “Colder than he thought. His wife freezes on to every cent of it.” i | husky fellow. See the big Nobs The ‘Nobby’ is a big rough The tire they are all talking about. | A great road gripper — a sure slipper. Makes casier driving. More | enough non-skidder and non. riding and easier safety, more com- fort—more mileage. ‘Nobby’ is a United States Tire, —whicrk means none better. Just right for our roads, United States Tires are Good Tires 3 — | gu i i ‘We kn why we sell them. ow United St.ates Tires are GOOD Tires, That)’s 'P. H. McGARVEY. Bellefoute. | HUBLER BROS. State College. J. HH. BANEY. Howard. J. HARRIS CLARK, Blanchard UILT like a wagon. B rear wheels track. and rear axle. on. Chain-Driven Exclusively. levers. t=" Just received a carload of Conklin Wagons Axles coupled together with angle steel reach ; Wide-tired wheels Positively not a worm or cog gear on the machine. The lightest, easiest running and most practical Spreader. . All sizes and for all purposes. 62-47 Solid bottom bed with heavy cross pieces, and supported by full width of sides. No moving paris on rear axle. Ax'e Dubbs’ Front and coupled short, dividing load between front not used as a bearing for gears to run No clutch. Operated by only two Implement and Seed Store. LELUEEeuUcueIEn Ele aeUEUEURURuE Ue] He] Bel le] Ue] Bel BN Ue U2 US NU U2 NS NISN2 2 N22 n= n=2 flan n=2ri=nlarn [EEUU USUSUER Ue He he Hel Ue] Ue Ue Be UST U2 N22 Ue NSIS TUS 2 Store EEL cUelUEUEUELUEUElUEN Ue Ue NUS NIL MSN NUNS U2 US U2 will be Closed Tomorrow EUSUSUEUel Suc EUS SUE Sil2N2n2nar Si Saturday, Oct. 4 CECE Ue ee EEL ELEUSUEE0 HS UNIS TANS 2NISN2 N22 22ST Until 6 p. m. Jewish Holiday Your Banker The institution with which you main- tain banking relations can be of service to ycu in many ways. The Centre County Banking Co. does not consider that its service to its pa- trons ceases with the safeguarding of their funds. It keeps in personal touch with all of them in such a way as to be of assistance very often when other matters develop affecting their interest. It Invites You to Take Advantage of Its Unusual Service. 60-4 INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS WILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING 3-4 Ton for Light Hauling Big Truck for Heavy Loads “Greatest Distance for Least Cost” GEORGE A. BEEZER, BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR.