" Bellefonte, Pa. December 1, 1922. FARM NOTES. —A thousand chickens, represent- ing the blue-bloods of the wyandotte breed in Pennsylvania will be shown in competition at the seventh annual State Farm Products show, in Harris- burg, the fourth week in January. It will be the first poultry show ever held in connection with the annual farm show and this feature alone is ex- pected to attract poultry fanciers from all parts of Pennsylvania. Each year a different breed of chick- ens will be selected for the poultry .show. A spacious room has been se- «cured in one of the two large show halls for the staging of the poultry show and prizes aggergating $1,500 will be awarded the winners. All six types of the wyandotte breed will be shown. The Pennsylvania Poultry Breeders’ Association is backing the show and will have active charge of the man- agement of the show which, however, will be a part of the general show. An unusual feature of the poultry show will be the fact that no admis- sion will be charged. Since the State Farm Products shows were started, seven years ago, no admission charges have been made and the show in its entirety is open to the public, without cost. _ Thirty thousand reduced fare cer- tificates have been sent the county agents of the State for distribution to the farmers and members of their families who will attend the show, the reduced fare rates having been grant- ed by every railroad in the State, east of Pitsburgh. The reduced rates are also effective in New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. —Recent changes in the regulations covering the quarantine and safety zone areas in the districts where the potato wart has been found, have tended to confuse the minds of some growers. The following explanation covers all the regulations that have been is- sued: I. Two Quarantines. There are two kinds of quarantines now in ex- istence (a) a drastic measure applying to all localities where wart has been found. For ordinary purposes all these towns and areas are often called the “Quarantine Area” to distinguish them from (b) which is a limited quarantine applied to certain agricul- tural sections adjacent to the main infected areas in the Anthracite coal region, and which have aptly been called the “Safety Zone.” II. Quarantine limits. The “Quar- antine Area” or area of close restric- tion includes the following: Luzerne county,—Hazle and Foster townships including the city of Hazle- ton and boroughs of Freeland, West Hazleton, Jeddo, and White Haven; the farm of Michael Becker in Butler township. Carbon county.—Banks and Lausan- ne townships in Carbon county, includ- ing the boroughs of Beaver Meadow and Mauch Chunk. Schuylkill county.—McAdoo, Hon- eybrook No. 1, Honeybrook No. 2, Sheppton, Oneida and Jackson. Lackawanna county.—The Third and Fourth wards of Moosic borough. Cambria county.—Dunlo, Llanfair, Lilly, Vintondale, Nant-v-glo, Beaver- dale, Lloydell and Onnalinda. Centre county.—Snow Shoe, Clar- ence and Newtown. Huntingdon county. — Woodvale, Robertsdale. Clearfield county.—Smiths Mills, Osceola. Armstrong county.—Yateboro and Rural Valley. The “Safety Zone” is made up as follows: The townships of Dennison, Butler, Sugar Loaf, and Black Creek, in Lu- zerne county: the townships of North Union, East Union, Mahanov, Delano, Klein and Rush. in Schuylkill county, and the townships of Packer and Le- high in Carbon county. III. Quarantine Area Regulations. The essence and purpose of the re- strictions lie in our hope of starving out the wart fungus in the soil by growing only immunes, and in the mean time preventing the disease from spreading to other places by po- tatoes and soil carrying materials tak- @n out of the Area. ‘Stripped to essentials and leaving out the permit system which is the only way in which the quarantine can be carried out in a legal wavy, the reg- ulations for the “Quarantine Area” require: (a) That all potatoes grown must be immunes. {b) _ Where seed is not saved from a previous immune crop a stock must be obtained from some source which the Department knows to be immune, ~and which contains no mixtures ¢ (which might not be immune). “(e) All potatoes which are not im- munes may be condemned to be de- stroyed bv the inspectors. This av- plies to single hills as well as to the whole planting. (d) TFxcept for potatoes merely passing through the area mo notaftoes may leave the area. This prohibition also applies to root crovs, vegetables, plants with soil abont the roots, or anv material which is likely to carry soil and thus spread this soil-borne dis- ease. (e) Mannre from sources not re- garded as dangerous -bv the Depart- ment mav he removed from the area to the Safety Zone under nermit dnr- ing Januarv. Febrmary, October, No- vember and December. TV. Safety Zone Reculations.— These formerly reouired the growing of certain specified immune varieties anlv, the «eed to he obtained from an anthorized souree go as to insrre mnv- itv and immunity and to avoid mix- tures, The main infected aveas for- tnnately ave well isolated from onr 1avee farming districts excent for the adisrent agricultural valleys, and to avoid the real danger of asnread by wav of these valleys the Safety Zone was instituted. THEORY ADVANCED BY MANY What Might Be Called the Evolution of Evolution as Explained by John Burroughs. It is interesting to note that the doe- trine of evolution itself has undergone as complete an evolution as has any animal species with which it dews. We tind the germ of it, so to speak, 1n the early Greek philosophers and not much more. Crude, half-developed forms of it pe- gin to appear in the Eighteenth cen- tury of our era and become more and more developed in the Nineteenth, till they approximate completion in Dar- win. In Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1795, there are glimpses of the theory, but in Lamarck, near the beginning of the Nineteenth century, the theory is so fully developed that it anticipates Dar- win on many points; often full of crud- ities and absurdities, yet Lamarck hits the mark surprisingly often. In 1813 Dr. W. C. Wells, an English- man, read a paper before the Royal society in London that contains a pas- sage that might have come from the pages of Darwin. In the anonymous and famous volume called ‘“Vestiges of Creation,” published in 1844, the doctrine of the mutability of species is forcibly put. Then in Herbert Spen- cer in 1852 the evolution theory of de- velopment receives a fresh impetus, till it matures in the minds of Dar- win and Wallace in the late 50s. The inherent impulse toward development is also in Aristotle. It crops out again in Lamarck, but was repudiated by Darwin.—From ‘The Last Harvest,” by John Burroughs. AFTER A VISIT TO DENTIST Writer Recalls Some Impressions That Some of Us Can Shudderingiy Indorse. The only person who seems to pay any attention to the “smile” sign in a dentist's office is the dentist him- self. Oddly enough, dental chairs are de signed with a view to the patient’s comfort, You never realize what a big mouth you have till the dentist begins lay- ing his scaffolding in it. There is nothing so unnecessary as his preliminary announcement, “Now, this may hurt a little.” The first step in painless extraction is the injection of the anesthetic into the gums. The phrase, to take someone's head off, undoubtedly originated with a den- tist's efforts to get the better of a stubborn wisdom tooth. The sweetest words that ever fell on your ear are: “That will be all for today.” You never had so much fun with a glass of water before. Getting . outside, you feel stranger in the world. The worst pain of all comes when you get your bill.—Edmund J. Kiefer. in the New York Sun. eee like a Hailstones Formed During Heat. It is during summer-time that hail- stones occur most frequently. It is the heat of summer that gives rise to them, for they can be formed only in thundery weather, When there is thunder about there are always very strong upward draughts of air. As raindrops begin to fall they are caught by these cur- rents and carried to great heights, where they freeze solid. If they now fall to earth they arrive in the form of the small hailstones that are usu- ally seen. Sometimes, however, after falling through the clouds and receiv- ing a coating of moisture, they are carried up again by other currents. The moisture freezes upon them, in- creasing their size. The process may go on for some time, in which case the hailstone re- ceives coating after coating of ice un- til it becomes as large as a marble or even an egy. “ghished” the Tiger Away. It was a frequent occurrence for a tiger to carry off a Chinese coolie in the Malay peninsula, according to a traveler who spent some time in that country. These persons, he said, could seldom be brought to believe in the reality of dangers from animals that they looked on as only cats of abnormal dimensions. I saw this valor of ignorance tragically itlus trated one day when I toek some po- lice out to help me track a tiger re sponsible for the loss of many lives. From a too distant eminence we soon caught sight of a Chinaman slowly strolling along sucking a piece of sugarcane. Out sprang a tiger, but missed his mark, the back of the man’s head. Without any acceleration of pace, the coolie, merely withdrawing the cane from his mouth, waved at the tiger and “shished” him away. er ———————————————— Not the Same Poincare. There is growing up a distinct Ein stein tradition concerning the great mathematician’s habits and personal ity. The following is the latest addi tion to the collection: Einstein was walking bareheaded across Bavaria square in Benlin. One of his friends hailed him: “Well, what do you think of Poincare?’ “I think he is a very talented man.” “Yes, but what dar ing!” “The daring of genius.” “But what a frenzied fury against his an tagonist!” “Oh, no, not at all. You don’t know him.” “Well, but at least professor, you won't deny that his de termined enmity of Germany, and thai his megalomania—" ‘‘Oh,” said Ein stein, “you're talking about Raymond Poincare, the premier. I was thinking of Henri Poincare, the mathematician.” LANDED BEFORE COLUMBUS Every Reason to Believe That Lief Ericsson Was Real “Discoverer” of America. Who may have been the first dis. coverer of America no ene knows, but Leif Fricsson visited it over 400 years ahead of Columbus. A recent writer on this matter has said: “The evi- dence that Lief Ericsson came to the North American coast in the year 1000 and that he returned to Europe, making his discovery known to the world, is clearly authentic.” Ericsson is defended against the charge of be- ing a “barbarous Norse adventurer,” though he might have been all that, and also the discoverer of America. It is maintained that he represented the highest type of the Scandinavian civ- {lization of that time which had risen above the decadent Roman culture of southern Europe. The Sagas sav that Ericsson was a large, powerful man of most imposing bearing, “a man of sagacity and just in all things.” Be- fore his discovery of America he had been converted to the Christian faith, | and had been commissioned by King Olaf to proclaim the faith to the people of Greenland, which the Scandinavians had settled a considerable period be- fore that time. It is quite reasonable to believe that the Norsemen who had settled In Greenland had made voy- ages to America in advance of nrics- son, ONE OF EARLIEST OF ARTS Embroidery With the Needle Has Been Practiced as Far Back as History Records. Embroidery is the art of ornament- ing cloth and other materials with the needle. Most of the embroideries made today are usually copies of the an- cient ones. Embroidery is believed to have been applied to skins almost as soon as needle and thong were first employed to join pieces of skins together into garments. In Lapland the natives em- broider their reindeer-skin clothing with a needle of reindeer bone, using reindeer sinew and applique of strips of hide. Travelers say that in Central Africa, among the primitive tribes there, the girls embroider skins with figures of flowers and animals, supplementing the effect with shells and feathers. Among the ancient Greek textiles exhumed from Crimean graves are both tapestries and embroideries now preserved in the Hermitage at Petro- grad. One of the embroideries is at- tributed to the Fourth century, B. GC, and is in colored wools on wool. Colonists Suffered Cold. The houses of the early colonists in America were not proof against the bitter cold of winter. One volume tells of icy blasts that blew down Cotton Mather’s great chimney so fiercely that this noted divine record- ed the fact in his diary. He speaks of a “great Fire that the Juices forced out at the end of short billets of wood by the heat of the flame on which they were laid, yet froze into ice on their coming ont.” Judge Sewell wrote 20 years later: “An Extraor- dinary Cold Storm of Wind and Snow. Bread was frozen at the Lord’s Table. Even though it was so Cold yet John Tuckerman was baptized. At 6 o'clock my ink freezes so that I can hardly write by a good fire in my wives Chamber.” Cotton Mather tells in his pompous fashion of a cold win- ter’'s day four years later: “is dreadful cold, my ink glass in my standish is froze and splitt in my very stove. My ink in my pen suf- fers a congelation.” Old Flour Makes Best Bread. Flour (according to scientists) im- proves with age, the older flour pro- ¢acing a larger and finer loaf. Freshly milled flours do not produce the best of which they are capable. A great advance was made in the milling art by the introduction of a method for treating flour in the mill whereby such freshly milled flour at once took eon the properties of a properly aged flour, so that the flour could then go to the consumer in eondition to render at once its highest baking value. This state of affairs is brought about in flour by treating it with chlorine, and the gen- eral result is known as “maturing”— i, e., the general effect of “maturing” flour—a whitening effect, together with greatly improved baking qualities. The yellow coloring matter of flour is carotin, which is also what gives car- rets their color. Chlorine oxidizes the carotin, which then loses its color. A Word in Extenuation. A man who had several times sought the help of his minister to secure em- ployment was lounging near a railway station as the pastor was hurrying to cateh a train, “Iixcuse me, sir,” said the unem- ployed in a trembling voice. “So you are out of work again,” said the minister severely. “It seems to me you get tired of a new employer very quickly.” “Don’t misunderstand me, sir,” nleaded the man. “It can never be truthfully said that I get tired first.” Sad Memories. “Ah,” sighed the serious-faced pas- senger, “how little we know of the fu- ture and what it has in store for us.” “That’s true,” another passenger sald. “Little did I think when some 30 years ago I carved my initials on the desk in the old country school that I would some day grow up and fail to become famous” | FIRST COUNTY FAIR AT JUNEAU | SHOWS POSSIBILITIES OF ALASKA. | “The First Country Fair of South- | eastern Alaska,” held in Juneau dur- ing the last week in September, was successful in- demonstrating that that | section of the territory has import- | ant possibilities in the way of agricul- | tural development. Although Haines | strawberries and Skagway celery have ! enjoyed, for several years, at least lo- i cal fame for their excellent qualities, many still think that successful farm- ing is not possible in southeastern Alaska. The “country fair” has done much to remove this erroneous belief and to arouse new interests. While hereto- fore it has been the accepted opinion that this section of the territory must depend entirely on its mining, fishing and timber for future development and growth of population, it now has been demonstrated that an abundance of nearly all agricultural crops can be produced for home use, with some to spare for export. It has been estimated that Alaska i imports from the United States an- i nually more than $1,000,000 worth of farm products, which can be grown at home and be of better quality. Ju- neau is elated over the success of the fair and is forming an association to make it an annual event. i Southeastern Alaska is that portion of the coast section extending from Portland Canal on the south to the in- ternational boundary line on the north and to the one hundred and forty-first , meridian where it joins the main ter- ritory. This “panhandle of Alaska,” as it often is called, is almost entirely within the Tongass national forest re- serve, and for this reason, many have been deterred from investigating the possibilities of farming. Neverthe- less, homes have been established throughout the entire region and the soil has responded in a satisfactory way. The exhibits at the fair consisted largely of vegetables grown in the temperate zone, of a quality that would bear comparison with those of any section of the United States. From Ketchikan to Skagway and Haines, from Sitka to Glacier Bay, every settlement and hamlet made a creditable showing, the standard of which was so nearly uniform that the judges had much difficulty in awarding prizes. | One of the most interesting exhib- ‘its was the apples grown near Haines “in the Chilkat River Valley. Farmers from Strawberry Point, in the Glacier Bay section, displayed fine oats and | barley; also timothy and red clover— all of good growth and excellent qual- (ity. A small group of farmers, estab- lished in this section, also is engaged in dairying and stock-raising. Other attractions at the fair were exhibits of native handwork and pho- tographs of Alaskan scenery, the most ‘notable of these being the small collection of Merrill water colors. Field Agents on Sheep Claims. There are eleven field agents in Pennsylvania, and the remarkable in- formation gathered from their reports is that a large portion of their time is spent upon the settlement of sheep claims, for sheep killed, maimed and injured by dogs. It is almost incon- ceivable that any citizen of Pennsyl- vania would neglect or fail to co-ope- erate with the department in its en- deavor to augment the number of sheep raised in the State. Once a dog gets into a flock of sheep, even though they may be only chased and frightened, that flock of sheep is done for—it had better be gotten rid of. Therefore it behooves every good citizen to see to it, so far as possible, that the root of the evil is gotten out, namely, by looking after the dogs which get the sheep. Some farmers declare that they have gone entirely out of the sheep- raising end of farming for the reason that the number of sheep-killing dogs is increasing so rapidly that it is no longer a profitable business. We should, therefore, see to it that we protect our sheep industry to the ut- most. The Ruling Passion. Six men, sole survivors of a wreck, were cast upon a desert island where they abode for some months, till a man-of-war took them off. In his log the captain of the warship noted the racial characteristics of the six thus: The two Irishmen had fought every day for the whole time of their so- journ. The two Englishmen had not spoken Daily Motor Express BETWEEN Bellefonte and State College We Make a Specialty of Moving Furniture, Trunks & Baggage “SERVICE AND RIGHT PRICE” Anthracite Coal at Retail Pittsburgh Coal Wholesale and Retall A. L. PETERS GENERAL DRAYING STATE COLLEGE, PA. Bell Phone No. 487-R-13. Commercial Phone No. 48-7. Terms Cash. 66-50-t1 to each other because they had not been properly introduced. The two Scots had started a Cale- donian society. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. The Economy of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Appeals to every family in these days. From no other medicine can you get so much real medicinal effect as from this. It is a highly concentrated extract of several valuable medicinal ingredients, pure and wholesome. The dose is small, only a teaspoonful three times a day. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a wonderful tonic medicine for the blood, stom- ach, liver and kidneys, prompt in giv- ing relief. It is pleasant to take, agreeable to the stomach, gives a thrill of new life. Why not try it? 67-35 Fine Job Printing 0—A SPECIALTY—o AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no atyle of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. ce) on or communicate with this office. CHICHESTER S PILLS TIE DIAMOND BRAND. Ladies! Ask your D: st for- Chl.chester 8 Diamond PAN ¥ Red and Gold metallic ed with Blue Ribbon. boxes, seal Take no other. Buy of Druggist. "Ask for OIL IOI ESTER § — HS OND BRAND PILLS, for 285 ° years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Nash Leads the World in Motor Car Value Reduced Price Nash Four Carriole $1275 Nash Carrioles. Here they are—a limited number of the popular while they're on our floor. Inspect the array of strik- ing closed car features offered at practically an open car price. You'll find a beautiful all-metal body, with upholstery of the finest grade taupe-toned wool cloth. You'll note See them ventilator windows. sold. FOURS and SIXES f. o. b. Factory A New Shipment! The Wonderful Nash Carriole headlamps of the new barreled style, silvered door handles, a new-type and adjustable And you’ll be impressed with the touch of sport model dash that 1s achieved by swinging the car low to theroad. Don’t wait. Come in immediately —before our allotment is Reduced Prices Range from $915 to $2190, £. o. b. Factory WION GARAGE, - - WILLIS E WION, "NASH Bellefonte Pa. Proprietor.