“Bellefnte, Pa., November 25, 1921. DRS RTa TF, RRS, (RJ MARY GRAHAM BONNER ire GOPYRIGHT §Y WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION sommes A UR BS NE WSR NW EH LITTLE ALLIGATORS. “There is nothing much nicer than food,” said the first little Alligator. “Nothing that I can think of,” said the second little Alligator. “Nothing that I can think of, either,” said the third little Alligator. “I love food,” said the fourth little Alligator. “So do I,” said the fifth little Alli- gator. | “It gives us strentgh,” said the sixth little Alligator. “More than that,” said the seventh little Alligator, “it gives us pleasure. That is mere important than anything else.” “Ah, yes,” said the eighth little Alli- gator, “but we must be strong so we will be able to eat lots of food. If we were delicate and feeble we would not be able to eat so much. So we must be strong, too.” The eight little Alligators were tak- ing a sun bath. They weren't really very little, but they were young alli- gators and they were going to grow to | be much bigger. “We have always been greedy,” said the first little Alligator. “Something like the pigs,” said the second little Alligator. “Food interests us more than any- thing,” said the third little Alligator. “And wny shouldn’t it?” asked the fourth little Alligator. “It is most in- teresting, most interesting.” “You're right,” said the fifth little Alligator. “You are absolutely right.” | “We have such strong jaws,” said the sixth little Alligator, “and they are 80 nice for crunching our food whole.” “We don’t eat daintily,” said the seventh little Alligator, “and it is bet- ter that way. For when we don’t eat daintily we don’t have to eat slowly. “And why should we do anything else but gobble our food? We aren't people who're supposed to eat nicely. No, we're Alligators and we aren't ! =gpposed to have beautiful manners. | “In fact, we hardly pay attention to enything anyone says, but we will al- ways pay attention to food.” “You've said a lot,” said the eighth little Alligator, “but everything you have said has been quite, quite true. I agree with every word of it.” “Ah,” said the first little Alligator, “we have good teeth. We don’t have to go to dentists, for our teeth are natucaily good.” i “Good teeth are a great help in eat- ing,” said the second little Alligator. “We eat more fish than anything else, now,” said the third little Alliga- tor, “but we will eat larger creatures before long.” “We enjoy frogs and insects, too,” ! said the fourth little Alligator. “But people needn't be afraid of us. We don’t want to eat them.” | “I'm sure they're grateful to us for not wanting to eat them,” said the fifth i | i | i | | | { | | i i i { t { “We Enjoy Frogs.” little Alligator, “though perhaps they are rather insulted that we don’t think they would be good to eat.” “Perhaps they are, I shouldn’t won- der at all,” said the sixth little Alliga- tor, “But no matter, whether they are or not,” said the seventh Vitle Alliga- tor. “We have far more important things to think of than that. We have square, handsome heads, and great, powerful jaws and good teeth, and we love to eat. All of those things are important.” “The Crocodile has a long and nar- row and sharp-pointed head,” said the eighth little Alligator, “and in that way people can always tell us apart. “Yes, that is the best way to tell us apart, by our heads. “Jt is the way most creatures are told apart. People look at the faces of their friends and then they see who they are. That is the way they do. Perhaps they copied us in that.” “Who knows whether they did or not?” asked the other little Alligators, “And who cares, really?’ they added. “Tt isn’t so important after ail.” Delbert of Soldier Stock. Delbert comes of soldier stock and though only five years old is ready to fight for what he wants. He pulled the eat’s tail one day and his father promised to punish him if he did such a thing again, A few days later his father, on returning from the day’s work, was confronted by Delbert with the announcement: “I pulled the cat’s tail and pow I want my punishment, 80 as to have it over with.” HOW MACHINE THAT PICKS OUT DIAMONDS CAME INTO USE. —When the laborers descend into the diamond mines at Kim- berley, they blast and pick out the hard diamondiferous earth and place it in wooden tubs that are hauled on stout wires to the surface, where the earth is spread over the ground to un- dergo. for several months, the softening influences of heat and cold. When it is soft enough it § is shoveled into the washing machines, where the dirt is sep- arated from the rough diamonds and other large mineral sub- stances. The mixture of miner- als remaining is known as “con- centrates.” It was formerly necessary to go carefully over these concen- trates to pick out the garnets and many other foreign sub- stances, until nothing remained but the rough diamonds. This was a slow and laborious opera- tion, but it was an essential part of the mining industry un- til it was superseded not so many years ago. Among the employees in the sorting room was a youth by the name of Kersten, who went quietly to work to find a way to separate the diamonds from other stones more quickly and ¢ more easily than could be done by the slow process of hand picking. He was not discour- aged by his many failures to $ find that way. 4 One day by the merest chance § the boy made the discovery he was seeking. A rough diamond and a garnet happened to be 2 lying on a small board on the bench where he was working. He raised one end of the board. The garnet slipped off, but the diamond remained. He found that there was a coating of grease on the board that had retained the diamond, but not the garnet. 4 The boy procured a wider board, coated the side of it with grease, and dumped a few hand- fuls of concentrates on it. Then he found that, by holding the board in a slightly inclined position and vibrating it, all the 2 HOW THE ROBIN AND ORIOLE BUILD THEIR NESTS. Any one can spend an idle half hour watching a bird at work on its nest, but if he is to learn correctly the bird’s methods from the beginning to the end of the process, he will need a great deal of patience and much skill and observation as well. Professor | gets down inside of it, pulls these ends Francis H. Herrick of Cleveland has | in, and weaves them into the nest fab- given accurate accounts of the way ric. The bird watched by Professor that certain well known birds carry on Herrick took about four and a half their building. days to finish her nest. Her move- The female robin does the work of ments were often too rapid to follow, building; the male keeps guard and and she chattered incessantly at her cheers his mate by singing. She car- work. Probably she enjoyed it as ries mud and stubble to the selected much as the male enjoyed his tuneful site, and moulds it into a cup by idleness. pressing the curve of her breast hard against the stuff she has gathered, while she scratches violently with her feet against the limb of the tree in the effort to increase the pressure. When she has firmly pressed down the nest material in one place, she rises, moves a little and proceeds to mould the next part of the nest-cup Thus she passes several times round the nest. Now follows the mysterious part of her conduct. When she brings the next load of material and moulds it into the nest, she goes through exact- ly the same process, but always circles the nest in the opposite direction. There is nothing about the appear- ance of the unfinished nest to show in which direction the robin last turn- ed; but she remembers, and by turn- ing in the opposite direction the next time, she produces in the end a nest- cup that is even and symmetrical. The oriole, on the other hand, is not | horse has been bred for speed the hen a molder or potter, but a weaver. | has been bred for egg production. Here again the female is the worker, | Within a few years this new blood line and the male merely oversees and en- | will bring into being very profitable courages the work. The oriole choos- | chickens. es the fork of a hanging branch and | A 200 egg a year hen used to be winds round the two twigs the ends | looked upon as a wonder, now it is of any long fibers she can find in the common. And there are still people neighborhood. The other ends of the who are satisfied with the mongrel fibers are allowed to hang loose. fowl and honestly believe that she fills Then she selects several other twigs the bill. When the 300 egg a year and fastens fibers to them in the same hen becomes numerous there will be way until the rim of the nest is out- mo over-production of eggs, as there lined. The weaving of other threads will still be plenty of poor laying into these is done by means of quick, hens in the country kept at a loss or shuttle-like movements of the bill. no profit. But taken in general a The bill thrusts the bit of string or gradual improvement in egg produc- grass through the mass of fibers, and tion among the wide-awake poultry- then catches either the same or a dif- men is sure to follow, now that a new ferent thread and pulls it back at a record has been set. of the bill the weaving is done, irreg- ularly, it is true, since it is not always the same fiber that is thrust and puil- ed, but very strongly, nevertheless. The ends of the long fibers that hang down remain undisturbed until the nest is well along; the oriole then NEW EGG RECORD SHOWS WONDERFUL EVOLUTION. Lady-Egg-a-Day, a Buff Orpington, has set a new world’s record by lay- ing 343 eggs, or an egg a day with- out a miss. Some hen, the people will say. But it’s the breeder back of it, scientific mating that produced this super hen. Previously a White Leg- horn held the record. It does not nec- essarily take a show bird to win-egg honors, but it does take a pure-bred fowl. The common barn yard fowl would take many years of breeding to evolve only a fair egg producer. Producing a new world champion egg-laying hen is a real achievement. i A world-champion boxer may attract i more attention but this new mark for | egg production shows progress, some- sesame Children Cry for Fletcher’s concentrates except the dia- 2 | monds moved to the lower end | and fell off. while the diamonds remained in place. Then the boy invented a ma- ¢ chine by which his discovery might be utilized. Considerable ¢ study was required to perfect it, but at last the machine was completed, and the diamond ¢ magnates were invited to wit- § ness the new method of separat- ing diamonds from the rest of the concentrates. The invention was an entire success. A more simple and | complete device for saving time, labor, and loss of diamonds could not be imagined. The § | 1 | 1 | | | entire work is now done by ma- chinery, hand-picking has been wholly superseded, and both the inventor and the mine owners have profited handsomely by the labor-saving machine.— $ Christian Science World. TRACED TO PRIMITIVE DAYS i | How the Word “Score” Came Into |! General Use as Indicating a Token of Reckoning. mn | “The days of our age are three- | gcore years and ten,” said the Psalm- ist, showing that our forefathers reck- | oned by vows, a system of keeping | account of figures based probably in | its original form upon the Pratee of counting upon the fingers and toes. The word “score” itself comes from the Anglo-Saxon, being nothing more | than the word “scoren,” which is the ! past participle of ‘“sceran”’—meaning | to cut. It indicated a notch or incision | made upon a tally-stick for the pur- | pose of keeping a record of financial transactions. The “score-mark” was the twentieth | notch upon these primitive “account books”—a cut which was longer and deeper than the others. Hence the expression, “to pay off old scores,” means not only the repayment of old debts, but the revenging of grievances which have cut deep and left a last- ing impression. It is for the same reason, that of reckoning, that we speak of the “score” of a game—meaning the rec- ord of the points made—and the | “geore” or musical record of an opera. —London Tit-Bits. How Power ls Derived From Sun. A practical demonstration of the possibility of running a steam en- gine with heat derived directly from sunshine has been made in California. The rays of the sun are focused upon | a beller by means of a radiator 85 feet in diameter, composed of 1,788 small mirrors which are so adjusted that they all concentrate the sunlight upon a single central point. The heat developed is sufficient to melt copper, and a wooden pole thrust into the focus bursts inte flame at once. The | steam from the suspended boiler is | carried to the engine through a flex- ible tube. An energy of 15 horse pow- er is developed, and used to pump | water for irrigation. The reflector is mounted like an astronomical tele- | scope, and kept facing the sun by a | driving clock.—Christian Science | Monitor. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- ZT sonal supervision since its infancy. o “Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and * Just-as-good”? are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. Never attempt to relieve your baby with a remedy that you would use for yourself, i: ® oie - bed What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natusal sleep. The Children’s Comfort—The Mothes’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAYs & or Over 30 Year The Kind You Have 0 BoP. THE CENTAUR SEE NEW YORK en, Cara oa a NEW AND ATTRACTIVE NOVELTIES AND LAMPS ----- ARRIVING DAILY .-=--- F. P. Blair & Son, Jewelers and Optometrists Bellefonte, Pa. 64-22-tf point a little farther along. Thus by | a very rapid alternate thrust and pull |: thing realized. The same as the race | Shoes. Shoes. ee La a a = gl] ge 3 : Half-Price lc il = Sale on SHOES! § : Sale on | F LS i Lo iL 5 We purchased One Thousand and Three gd Pairs of Shoes at a BIG REDUCTION IN [5 ff PRICE. ue gt | = Men’s, Women’s, Boy’s, Girl’s and Chil- dren’s black and tan dress shoes, work shoes, Joel Li [ro oS el all sizes oi : =1] Ic This lot of shoes are now on sale, dis- oh played on tables and racks. The prices run = 5 From $3.00 to $4.00, nothing over $4.00. rid i You can find plenty of shoes worth $8.00 ir oh or;more. oh i; : fl AE se Sale will last until shoes are sold. AA oi Le r= nant LE EIUE] = 1 COME! SRSA =o i i Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Ue RR, Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. — Come to the “Watchman” fice for High Class Job work. Lyon & Ca. Lyon & Co. It, is none too early to start, Your Christmas Shopping If you desire to make practical Qifts our Store abounds with them and we will be pleased to serve you. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.