Bellefonte, Pa., February 18, 1921. WHY SOME DYES ARE “FAST” Vegetable and Animal Compounds Su- perior to Any Products of the Chemist's Laboratory. Some dyes are “fast;” others fade either when the goods are washed or when they are exposed to the sunlight. The fastness or otherwise of a color depends upon the arrangement of the atoms that make up its molecules. If these be closely interwoven, neither light. nor water can separate them; but if they are loosely joined together light and water make them disinte- grate. Most of our modern dyes are derived from coal tar and consist of atoms of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and other elements. The vegetable dyes usually contain no other elements but carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. That is why, being so simple, such colors as logwood and natural indigo are the fastest of all. The few ani- mal dyes—cochineal, for example— are fast for the same reason. the so-called anilin dyes are the prod- uct of the chemist’s laboratory and are complex and loosely bound com- binations of the atoms of many ele- ments. There are acid dyes and al- kaline dyes, and before applying them to any stuff one must know whether the cells of this are acid or alkaline in reaction. likes repel. acid dyes for alkaline materials and alkaline dyes for acid materials. DECISION CUT LEGAL TANGLE Point Involved in English Lawsuit Seems Hardly Worth the Time and Money Expended. On the last day of the last month in the year 1809 a very curious legal | battle was fought between the English crown and a gentleman, lord of the manor of Holderness; it was a strug- gle for a cask of wine thrown upon the seashore on the coast of that par- ‘ticular manor. The lord’s bailiffs and the customs ‘officers both raced to the spot and the But | For opposites attract, | Therefcre we must USE | ‘at times millions of these a —————— EE .. ———————— COMBINE ART WITH “MOVIES” How City of Toledo, O., Attracts Children to Its Museum, for Educational Purposes. In order to attract the children of Toledo to that city’s museum of art the museum management offers its lit- tle visitors “story hours,” gallery talks, music hours, classes in pure and applied design and the educational motion picture. Interest in visits to the museum was first stimulated through the medium of an organized bird club. Thousands of children have also been brought to the museum during the last four years by means of the annual vegetable and flower shows in which the children have participated. “The Toledo museum was the first to include motion pictures in its edu- cational plan when, in the autumn of 1915, the necessary equipment was presented through the efforts of H. Y. Barnes, then assistant to the di- rector,” writes Eula Lee Anderson of Toledo. “This proved not only a fur- ther magnet to attract boys and girls to the museum but a further means of teaching art. During the first few years films dealing with travel, crafts and art were difficult to secure, yet by diligent search many fine things were made available, including the life of Palissy, the famous potter, and a beautiful hand-colored film showing the making of silk. “The policy of the museum is not to amuse by means of the film, but to educate the child along artistic lines, using only such productions as are of a distinctly cultural quality.” PLAGUE OF OLD EGYPT BACK Crops of Argentine Province De. stroyed by Locusts That Swarm in Uncounted Millions. Shades of the plagues of ancient Iigypt! Santa Fe province of the Argentine pow has complete faith in the biblical account of the scourge of locusts, for insects “cover the face of the earth.” They come suddenly and without warning, in great clouds, and settle down on the country. Then the ground resem- bles a great moving carpet. Little ' damage is done at first, though the contending parties each laid hold of | the cask. Then the officers decided to go back to the custom house for further instructions, and during their absence the bailiffs removed the cask to the cellar of the manor house. At the trial the arguments on both sides were very learned and exceed- ingly lengthy. The decision of the court was in favor of the lord on the grounds that no permit is required to remove spirits unless it has paid duty; that wine to be liable to duty must be imported; that wine cannot be im- ported by itself, but requires the agency of someone else to do it; that, therefore, wine wrecked, having come on shore by itself or without human volition or intention, was not import- ed, and was not subject to duty, and did not require a permit for its re- moval.—Chicago Journal. Trees Look Like Ostrich Tips. Forestry associations in thé East have developed the habit of touring the national parks and national for- ests of the West, and are bringing back many interesting feature pictures as well as technical data. Among the photographs in New York Forestry is the ostrich tree of Monterey, Cal. As a matter of fact it would be quite as easy and far more correct to say trees in this case, for the cele- Argentinians find it Inconvenient to have locusts throughout their houecs, but as the insects move through the country, they dig small holes and lay their eggs. Soon the larvae are hatched, and at that time, before they can flv, they are destructive. By the time they are ready to leave, every living thing in their path is destroyed. Eventually they fly away to parts un- known, and the farmers have to start their crops over again. Squads of lo- cust destroyers, like fire-fighting units, are maintained by the government to combat the pest, and ranchers are also responsible for fighting them. Their efforts are almost unavailing, how- ever, because of the myriads of the Insects. Dodged Seven Years’ Bad Luck. “Traffic gets held up in queer ways,” . said a patrolman at Forty-second ! street and Fifth avenue. brated Ostrich tree of California is really two which wind and weather have inter- laced so that their foliage seems al- most one, These California ostrich trees are vanguards of a gréve of picturesque, storm-beaten cypresses not so very far from the city of Monterey. All aside from the freak pair, which resemble a huge ostrich, stalking ’long shore, they would well repay any tree-lov- ‘er's visiting. Paderewski’'s Descent in Life. Jo Davidson, the sculptor, who re- cently returned to the United States after many months in Europe, where many great men posad for him, relates the following passage between Cle- menceau and Paderewski, which, Da- vidson says, occurred in his presence: “Clemenceau is a gruff old sort of fellow,” Davidson relates. “He was receiving Ignace Paderewski, “fAre you Paderewski, the great pi- anist? he asked. “ ‘Yes,’ replied the artist, bowing. “*And you have just been elected premier of Poland? “Again Paderewski bowed and an- swered in the affirmative. “Clemenceau looked at him a mo- ment and then shook his head sadly, saying: ‘My God, what a come down!” Preserving the Salmon. Completion of an improved $40,000 salmon hatchery at Madison, Conn. for restocking eastern streams with the valuable food fish that disap- peared from that region practically a century ago, is awakening renewed interest in the cause of that early de- pletion, according to Popular Me- chanics Magazine. The too common censtruction of dams without proper fish ladders, blocking the seasonal as- cent of the salmon from the sea, ex- plains t¢he impending loss of this great natural resource, a condition often technically difficult of correc- tion because many of the streams are not listed as navigable waters. trees—coast = cypresses, | “It was only just the other day that we had a block- ade that tied things up for half an hour. I noticed a young woman pound- ing something against the curb. Look- ed funny to me and I couldn't fig- ure out what it was. People passing by started to run, looked again, and crowded around her. I headed for the middle of the bunch and saw she had busted open her package and was breaking a lot of mirrors on the side- walk, one by one. “What's all this about?” I asks. “Oh, mister officer,” she says, “I broke a mirror a while ago, and if I ' don’t break seven more right quick I'll have seven years’ bad luck. By rights they should be broken all at once, but ' 1 could only do one at a time. And now, please, won't you help me get out of the crowd ?’—From a New York Letter to the Pittsburgh Dispatch. improving Indian Pottery. The Hopi Indians of the Southwest have always been famous for their pot- tery, in the manufacture of which (though unacquainted with the pot- ter's wheel) they were skilled even in prehistoric times. There is a considerable market for their pots, which are quaintly and at- tractively decorated in black and colors. The United States bureau of standards is trying to help them by suggesting improved processes, and re- cently it has shown them how to make from cheap material a black stain much superior to the one at present used by the Indians. They have shown themselves glad enough to accept the help offered and it may be that we shall yet learn of useful suggestions to the Navajos in the line of blanket making and the production of silver ornaments. ; Fire-Proofing Cotton. A process has been devised for treating baled cotton with a chemical compound which renders it flame and spark proof and at the same time ap- parently provides an inch or two of sotton In condition to aid in rapid drying without deterioration in case # bale is exposed to weather. On an average, 20,000 bales of cotton are de- | effect when dry, causcs rapld deterior- stroyed by fire before the-crop is mar- | keted and most of this loss can be traced to flash or spark fire, Cotton stored in suitable warehouses would be evidence of a progressive step, for there is probably no crop of so great value that is treated with so little thought?.l consideration.—Scientific Americar ALMOST LOST BIG DISCOVERY Predatory Bird Carried Off Pod Con- taining Precious Seed That Pro- duced Burbank Potatoes. | en | Luther Burbank recently told Colo- ! rado potato men a story of his discov- ery of the world-famous Burbank po- tato, which has only recently come to light. While Burbank was experi- menting with potatoes about twenty years ago he noticed in his patch one plant which held one particularly : promising pod of seeds. To his prac- | ticed eye these seeds and the plant | which bore them would contain the germ of a new and. excellent potato. If he had thought it necessary he would have put a watchman over this one small seed ball. As it developed later, the money that would have been required for a watchman would have been but a minute drop of silver in the ocean of gold which this one pod was destined to produce. Every morning Burbank would go to the patch to see how the pod was faring, and often during each day he would look at the plant to discover the time when the pod could be picked. One morning he went into the patch and the pod was gone. With the help of workmen he searched for it. Final- ly, after hunting fer hours, 20 feet away from the plant, in the midst of other plants, the pod was found. “I think a bird must have picked it off and tried to carry it away,” Mr. ' Burbank to!« ithe Colorado potato men. “Anyhow, thcie it lay, and I picked it up and planted the seeds, and that’s how we have Burbank potatoes to- day.” HAD NO ANSWER TO THAT Georgia Man’s Assertion Concerning Watermelons Left Upholder of In- diana Product Gasping. Harry Grimsley, a Terre Haute Ro- tary club man, comes from Georgia ! and is still in love with his native state. He boasts of its wonders, and the last time he discoursed on it, was telling of the wonderful bargains he got in watermelons. “Why, we got the very biggest ones for only five cents,” he said. “But they aren’t so big as the ones | we have up here,” persisted one of his listeners. “Why, out on my farm we : had some half as big around as half the top of this table, We didn’t eat any | of it except the core, and yet the whole family had enough of it and | more.” “Down there,” drawled Mr. Grims- ley in his most southern drawl, “we never eat nearer than two feet of the rind of the melon and yet there's always more than enough for a fam- fly in one melon.”—Indianapolis News. Sacred Mohammedan Rock. A report on the Dome of the Rock of Jerusalem is shortly to be pub- lished and will be of great interest to the Mohammedan world. It may not . be generally known that this place is the third in sanctity of all the sanctu- aries of Islan, and indeed for a short period it actually formed the Kibla toward which all Moslems prostrated themselves in prayer. Among the more important religious | associations of this rock we may men- tion it was here that David and Solo- mon were called to repentance, and on account of a vision David chose this site for his temple. From this same spot Mohammed ascended to the seventh heaven after his night journey from Mecca, and lastly it is to be the scene of the Great Judgment. The historical associations are not less striking and such famous names as Omar Abdel-Malek, Saladin and Sulei- man are all connected with the rock. Self-Luminous Animals. Not less than 36 different. orders of animals are self-luminous, we are told by the new work of E. Newton Har- vey on “The Nature of Animal Light.” These include many forms of pro- tozoa, hydroids, jellyfish, bryozoa, | polychaete and oligochaete worms, brittle stars, crustacea, myriopods, in- sects, mollusks, primitive chordates and fishes. None of the luminous spe- cies inhabit fresh water, all being terrestrial or marine. The luminosity is sometimes shown by both larvae and adults, and in a few instances by eggs. In experiments made, two sub- stances have been isolated—luciferase, an enzyme, and luciferin, a proteid— and the light appears to result from bringing these together in the pres- ence of oxygen and water. Recovered Coin After Fifty Years. Fifty years ago when the founda- tions were being laid for the 1Vash- ington statue in front of Independence hall, in Philadelphia, John Nash, then a policeman, threw a 2-cent piece into the hole being dug for the founda- tions. Recently when some changes were being made to the statue, Nash recalled the incident and stirred up the dirt and uncovered the coin. It will be hung in Independence hall. Incidentally, Mr. Nash recalled that £ cents had a buying capacity at that time treble that of today. Smoke Injures Galvanized (con. Galvanized iron has been found by a German chemist to be unsuitable for roofing much exposed. to smoke,- Sulphur dioxide, though having little ation in presence of moisture, and a. |. mixture of sulphur and carbon diox- ide is very corrosive, though moist carbon dioxide alone has slight ac- tion. The microscope shows in the corrode . ° 2lvanized iron minute cavi- ties «o- sulphate contain. x ‘erric oxide, due to galvanic acon or actual solution of the zinc coating. i “geodes.” PURSUED BY GHOSTLY SHIP Tradition of Modern Flying Dutchman That Massachusetts Fishermen Firmly Believe In. The burial of John Winters, recalled to old-time fishermen a tradition of a modern Flying Dutchman with its ghostly crew that was believed to roam the seas in pursuit of a ship that bad sent them to the bottom, relates a correspondent from Gloucester. Win- ters was the last survivor of the crew of the Gloucester schooner, Charles Haskell, which in a storm in March, 1869, ran down and sank a Salem schooner and its entire crew on Georges fishing banks. He died at the Fishermen’s Snug Harbor in his eighty-second year, repeating almost to the last the tale of the ghost ship supposed to have pursued the Has- kell throughout its career as a fish- erman. Once off Eastern point, at the en- irance of Gloucester harbor, Winters said, a schooner ran down the wind, hove alongside the Haskell, and its phantom crew climbed the rigging, de- claring themselves the ghosts of the Salem fishermen. Winters and others of the Haskell’'s crew refused to fish in the ship again and a new crew was taken on. These returned with a similar story of ghost- ly visitations at sea, tock their dun- nage bags and quit. Another and still a fourth crew were shipped, but each came to port with a renewal of the story of a ship shrouded in white and a specter crew, and the Haskell was hauled up, unable to get men. It fin- ished its seagoing as a sand freighter, and the Salem ship was not heard of again, URUGUAY RICH IN AMETHYSTS Gems Found in “Goedes,” Which Is Nature's Way of Storing Precious Stones for Posterity. The northwestern part of Uruguay is a newly discovered field for the pro- duction of amethysts, which occur in The geodes, so plentiful that they are picked up in the fields, are carried on mule-back or in carts to the nearest railway station and shipped in barrels to Salto, whence they are transported by river boat to Montevideo. : Naturally, it will be asked, What Is a geode? Originally, it was a hole in rock. Water percolating through the rock deposited silica, making a lining for the cavity. The lining grew thick- er and thicker, and after a long time, if the rock were breken nr "weath- ered” to pieces, a hard nodule would drop out. The nodule is a geode; and if, as sometimes happens, the silica has formed crystals inside of it,- colored by metallic salts, the goede is a little jewel box containing ame- thysts. A beautiful statuette, eight inches high, of a woman dancing, has re- cently been placed in the Morgan Gem hall of the American Museum of Nat- ural History, in New York city. It is carved out of a perfect block of translucent sapphire (blue quartz) from Uruguay. Climate and Agriculture. The surprising idea that an arid climate is the most favorable for ag- riculture is explained by a report on the Columbia Basin Irrigation Project in the state of Washington. In such a climate plant growth is stimulated by almost continuous sunshine, there is no night chilling of the soil following cloudy days, and crops are harvested promptly without spoilage by rain, the products being greatly improved and the harvesting cost lessened. The chief advantage of all, however, is control of the water, which by arti- ficial irrigation can be supplied at the best time and in the quantities needed by the crops. The scant rainfall of the Columbia basin area has been a preparation for the new method, for the moisture has not been sufficient to leach away the stored plantfood, but there has been drainage enough to prevent the accumulation of alkali salts, the most soluble of the earth's constituents. A Mastered Fear. Government officers in India com- pile queer statistics. For example, they have recently reported that In 1919 the persons who came to their death by snake bite numbered 20,273, and that, in the same 12 months, 58,416 snakes were killed. Further, there is the record of 1,162 deaths by tigers, 469 by leopards, 294 by wolves, 201 by wild boars, 185 by crocodiles, 118 by bears, 60 by elephants and 33 by hyenas. Whatever may be the fear of wild animals among human beings ic does not seem ever to have deterred settlement in new lands or persuad- ed people against living, as they have in India for centuries, as the neigh- hers of poisonous: serpents and ravish- ing animals.—Tocledo Blade. Good Reason. Grandmother had been talking to four-year-old Mary Ellen about be- coming angry so easily. After the lit- tle girl had listened a few minutes ghe thought it time to tell of some of her good qualities, so she said: “Yes- terday my dolly got stepped on-and broken and I didn’t cry a bit or scold anybody.” “vphat (wads fine,” approved grand- other very much pleased. A little later she happened to re- “member the incident and turned to Mary BI 1: “Who stepped on your dolly vesierday?” she asked, And back came the enlightening an- gwer: “Why. 1 did, grandma.”—Ex- change, $298 $2.98 $2.98 On sale NOW at, Yeager’s Shoe Store 200 Pairs Children’s Shoes —sizes from 6 to 2. These shoes have been sold in the last year at prices as highfas $5.00. The lot includes Misses’ good quality Vici Kid and Youths’ High Top Genuine Elk Shoes, with buckle tops. They are Real Bargains and you will miss 1t if you do not get in on this sale Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building BELLEFONTE, PA. 58-27 Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. smo — somes Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME. SPRING STYLES We have just opened the largest line of Spring and Summer Dress Goods in Cotton, Wool and Silk. Cotton Dress Goods as low as 25c¢. a yard In Voiles we are showing a wonderful line of dark and light grounds—all the new Georg- ette designs. In Silks we are showing all the new weaves at prices that will be pleasing to all. Handsome Spring Coats and Suits A wonderful line of Spring Coats and Suits now on display for Easter at very reasonable prices. Come in early and select your gar- ment while the choice is good. Sweeping Clearance Sale All Winter Coats and Suits at less than cost in order that they are not carried over. All must be sold now at less than manufac- turer’s cost of today’s low prices. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME Pro ru a a a a an a a i a an a An SE An Ah SR Sn A SD ED ES El A SL SIT. RARITIES OT NN NN NN NN WN YY YY NY NN YY YvYYY WW WW WH OOOO OOOO OOO OOOO OOOO OOOWO OOOO