‘Bellefonte, Pa., September 28, 1923. BASKING SHARK NEVER BITES This May Have Been Fortunate for Men Who Caught Monster : Off Long Key." " The 40,000-pound sea monster caught off Long Key has been identi- fled as an Indo-Pacific basking shark by L. L. Mowbray, vice president of the New York aquarium. The bask- ing hark, Mr. Mowbray announces, is harmless when let alone. Permit him to bask placidly on the undulating bosom of the sea, and he bears no creature {ll will It is fortunate for those who go down to the sea in ships or down to the surf to swim that the creature is thus disposed. It required an all-day struggle and 50 shots from a high-pow- ered rifie to subdue him, once his wrath was stirred by the stab of a harpoon. He was 35 feet long, 28 feet in greatest circumference and had a tail span of 12 feet. Were such a creature of an aggres- sive nature the sea in his vicinity would be hardly safe for the average submarine, while pleasure hoats would afford no protection whatever from his fury, and if he used the waters of the North Atlantic coast as a basking ground surf bathing would soon be- come obsolete, Hitherto the children of the earth have found abundant reason for grati- tude that rattlesnakes cannot fly like hawks, or tigers run like antelopes, or houseflies sting like wasps. To this list of blessings we may now add the fact that basking sharks do not bite —New York Times, HEALTHY BABIES OF JAPAN They Seem to Have a Hard Time, Ao cording to Our Ideas, but Thrive Nevertheless. According to our.modern scientific ideas as to the careful treatment of babies, those of Japan would seem to have a hard time, and yet there are no healthier, nor fatter looking little mor- tals on the face of the earth. We im- sist on a fixed temperature, on steril- ized milk, on all sorts of improved things, while the Japanese baby gets a good dose of nature, and seems to thrive on it. It is dressed and un- dressed in a frigid temperature in winter, and in summer its tender little eyes are always exposed to the full glare of the sun, as it is carried on its mother’s back. It is to be feared, however, that this latter treatment often does affect the eyes of the chil- dren, though they get over it later in dife. At Nagasaki, among the women coalers who coal the ship, you may see many with habies on their backs. The mothers work all day in the rain or in the sun, or the snow, and there baby sleeps, indifferent .to everything, the top of its head alone visible, while the movements of the mother do not seem in the least hindered, and she as if the babies of this class were born stoics! : Modern Jerusalem. The ancient city of Jerusalem, where Christ did so many of his mighty works, now has a modern waterworks’ system. The reservoirs known as the Pools of Solomon were not really Solomon’s at all, but were made by Roman engineers. These have been cleaned out and their leaks stopped. Now two of them are at work again. They hold 40,000,000 gallons. The pools are supplied from a spring in a cavern called Bir Darash. A large quantity of gravel and stones has been removed, and the aqueduct and tunnels between the spring and the pools repaired; and Jerusalem has its up-to-date waterworks—a splendid triknte to the science of ancient Rome. For many years the origin of Jeru- salem’s water supply was a secret. Durthg the siege of Jerusalem the be- slegers were disappointed in their hope of the city surrendering through lack of water, Uncle Jasper. “Proverbs ain't always correct,” be- gan Uncle Jasper. “I'll cite you a case. Some years ago Rothschild de- cided to add to his collection of madBses and lichens from many parts of the world, but he wanted more. He wanted moss from the Urals, from the Arctic circle, from the tip end of Pata- gonia. He was ready to pay a good salary. And who did he employ to gather this moss? A rolling stone.”— Louisville Courier-Journal. Blue Law. ‘When they closed the bar on one #2 the transatlantic liners bound for the land of liberty one of the passen- gers protested. “Seems like you're closing up awful soon; how far are we from land, anyway?” “Just about three miles,” answered the steward politely. “Funny we can't see it!” “You could, if the water were clear enough.”—Los Angeles Times. No Trespassing. On e farm in South Georgia is post od this sign: “Trespaser’'s will be persekuted to the full extent of 2 mean mongral dorgs which ain't never been ovarly .. soshibil with strangers and 1 dubbel bariet shotgun which ain't loaded with no sofy pillers. Dam, if I ain't tired of this hel raisin’ on my proputy.”— Everybody's Magazine. ; —For all the news you should read the “Watchman.” $1ANU TORTURE FOR BEAUTY Many Paris Women Think Nothing of Having Their Noses Broken and Reset. S— Parisiennes are going to such lengths ‘to achieve beauty as quite to put in ithe shade the painful operation of “dimpling” (making 4 hole in the chin by means of a drugged needle). Many women think nothing of having their noses broken and reset in a dif- ferent shape, says a Paris correspon- dent. Others actually have the eye- brows moved upward or downward, as the fancy dictates. This necessitates a complete removal of the hair and either u false and forced growth in a different position or makeup. One beauty expert, who undertakes to change the form of a woman's lips, has performed many operations. His latest experiment is to make the upper lip turn up, giving it an alluring pout. To do this he stretches a thin hair from the upper lip to the tip of the nose. This effect, naturally, is limited to actresses, who use it on the stage only. Some fashionable women are being laughed at for their insistence on hav- ing their cosmetics flavored. One has her lip-rouge tasting of banana, sn edlaee HOW REED ACQUIRED TITLE Why Famous Speaker of House War Given Name “Czar’—Conduct Called “Russian.” Julius Chambers, at one time man- aging editor of the New York World, tells in his book, “News Hunting on Three Continents,” how Thomas B. Reed, one-time speaker of the house of representatives, acquired the title of “Czar.” When the house of the Fifty-first congress organized in December, 1889, with the narrow majority of 164 Re- publicans to 161 Democrats, Reed, of Maine, was elected speaker. He in- sisted upon a new code of house rules. The Democrats assisted in passing them, probably under the premonition that Reed would embarrass their op- ponents. And that was exactly what he did. One day the speaker insisted on counting a quorum by including all members present in the chamber, whether or not they answered to their names at roll-call. Several members denounced the arbitrary conduct as un- democratic, even Russian, in character. The next morning in the New York World appeared the words, “Czar Reed,” an inch high across the front page. : The words became indelibly en- graved upon American political his- tory. ibis p— Lincoln Was a Whittier. Whittling sticks and telling stories were Abraham Lincoln’s resources. Biswarck’'s wife, when Beethoven's “Moonlight” sonata was being played, noticed the first tear in his eye, and fe.t “He Is not so hard as he seems,” and “passionate, heroic music” made his recreations, side by side with hunt- ing in youth, long country drives in old age, conversation and his pipe. The Reform Earl Grey had a passion for dancing, and, as premier in the midst of a political crisis, cried out one right at 10 Downing street, “What would 1 pot give to dance like Taglioni!” er ————— Root Cause of Nearly Every War. During the World war a well-known french publicist was invited to al- dress a large audience of children from the elementary schools of an American city. Walking quickly onto the stage, he commenced speaking in his own tongue, and then smiling at the bewil- dered children, he said, in perfect Eng- lish: “You do not understand nie, do vou? There, my dear children, you have the roots cause of this and nearly every ether war. Only through a lack of proper understanding of the point o view of other nations are wars pos- sible"—Christian Science Monitor. eld “Santos” Coffee From Sao Paulo. It is against the law now to label as “Java” coffee that does not come from Java or Sumatra. Real Mocha is grown in Arabia, and after the coffee became well known and very popular some unscrupulous dealers applied this pame to coffee from other countries. Coffees frequently take their names from the ports from which they are shipped. The most widely used vark ety in this country is called “Santos, after a pert of Sao Paulo, the great coffee-producing state of Brazil. Volcanoes in United States. While there are no active volcanoes {n this country, there are a number of extinct or dormant volcanoes in the West. These include the San Fran- cisco mountwins of Arizona, Mt. Tay- lor in New Mexico, Mt. Shasta in California and the following peaks in the Cascade mountains: Pitt, Mazana, Union, Scott, Three Sisters, Jefferson, Hood, Adams, St. Helens, Rainier and Baker, The Spanish peaks of Colo rado are also the remains of ancient volcanoes. Most of these mountains have visible craters on their summits or on their sides. Origin of the Dollar. The dollar was Introduced into America by the West India trade be- fore the Revolution. The coinage act of the 2nd of April, 1792, legalized it and established it as a unit of Amer- fean currency. The inconvenience of the English system of money led con- gress in 1781 to instruct Robert Mor ris to devise a system of- national coinage, + H.s suggestions were not adopted, but those proposed by Jeffer- gon were approved.’ He proposed the dollar as a unit ‘to be equivalent te ~ae hundred cents. AVIARY IN CENTER OF CITY Every Variety of Bird Known in Cali. fornia Is Said to Be Found There. : An uninclosed aviary exists in the center of a thriving California city. One block from automobile row, where humming motors and clanging street cars make the life of pedestrians pre- carious, a family of feathered crea- tures live in perfect harmony. The rear yard of this unusual city home is covered with oak trees and shrubbery. An artificial stream runs through Its grounds. Birds of every variety known In California, including the timorous lit- tle wild quail that find a haven of safety in town, gather on a common feeding ground each morning. The timidity with which the quail enter the family feast is interesting, says Caroline Boone in Qur Dumb Animals. They arrive in pairs. If they were humans we would call them clannish or exclusive. The male quail gives the call to his mate for breakfast and if she fails to respond instantly he shows great impatience with her de liberate ways. After they have fin- ished their meal they adjourn in pairs to some low roof and apparently talk over the day’s program, Bluejays have proved the most avaricious, while the smaller bird fam- ily is meek and gracious. The trees and shrubbery are filled with the nests of the jays and the cry of the babies can be heard until their mouths are filled. A close study of the quail and the affection that they show for each other would lessen the desire of hunt- ers to slay these most appealing feathered friends. WATCH FOR BABY PLANETS Experts at the Naval Observatory Constantly at Work Taking Cal- culations and Photographs, Those who imagine that astronomy is a finished science will be astonished to learn that at the naval observatory there are dally calculations and photo- graphs taken of tiny planets whose number is not yet ascertained. These, called asteroids, spin about in our so- lar system like wee beads each in its own orbit, but follow in between the track of Mars and that of Jupiter. Studying these asteroids and dis covering new ones is the work of pho- tographic-telescopy. The finest In- struments are those in the possession of the naval observatory, and are the work of George Peters. In taking neg- atives there is a new exposure about once a minute, so that the course of the planet, or rather asteroid, Is plainly shown by successive negatives. These negatives are studied under a microscope and then compared with maps of the heavens. If any new lit- tle planet or asteroid appears, it is at once named by the discoverer. At present there are more than 700, but the number is increasing every year. Any day Uncle Sam is likely to catch a new one in his naval observatory net with its magnificent lens. Planet photography is now a specialty.— Washington Star. Buried Five Minutes, and Lives. Buried alive by a landslide fo: about five minutes, a laborer of Mitch- ell, S. D., though severely bruised and injured, lives to tell the tale. He was working in an eight-foot ditch in which water mains are being laid, when a landslide occurred in which he was caught. He called for help as the soft gravel pinned him down, but it was five minutes before he could be dug out. The gravel caught and pinned him in an ypright position and the dirt was pi three feet above his head. The landslide broke his shoyl- der, fractured his pelvis and dislocated his right hip, and his fellow laborers, in digging him out, made numerous bruises and wounds on his head, face and body with their sharp shovels. Feminine Ways Unfathomable. “I notice that many of the girls or cheir way to work carry their hats in their hands,” remarked Mr. Brown. “So I have noticed,” replied his friend. “Why is that?” “Well, the days are warm. And their hats, I take it, are more or less op- pressive,” carefully explained friend Jones. “In that case why do they not leave their hats at home and save ail the trouble of carrying them?” “Now, my friend, you are asking me to follow you into the realms of the unfathomable.” immense Ore Region in Brazil. One of the world’s greatest iron ore cegions is located In the inferior of Brazil. The ore-beds are pure and abundant and the only drawback to development lies in the lack of trans portation, The natives smelt the ore and fashion it into utensils and farm- ing implements by the crudest process known to medern man. With the abundant waterpower to develop cur- rent for electric furnaces, the econom- ic development of this area will soon be solved. Brazil now imports large quantities of iron and steel from other countries. The Addict. Among Jimmie Maiden's favorite stories is the one concerning two gentlemen who were getting acquaint: ed through the medium of casual con: versation, “Do you play goif¥ inquired ome of them. “No,” sald the other. "but I cent give it up.” HAVE PEST OF CATERPILLARS Myriads of the: Insects Strip Trees |n Bohemia—Peasants Carry Um brellas in Woods. Oscar John, a New York musician who returned recently from Czecho- Slovakia, said that the great forests of northern Bohemia were being de- stroyed by & caterpillar pest, accord ing to the New York Times. “The caterpillars in northern Bohe- mia,” said Mr. John, “originate in myriads from the black butterfly called the nonne, or nun in English, which lays its eggs on the ground in the for ests. Directly these Insects are hatched they swarm up the trees, sap- pin life as they climb up the trunk by eating all the green shoots and leaves. “On reaching the top the caterpil- lars swing by their own saliva across to the next tree and destroy it as they go down to the ground. Millions of these crawling pests make a miss when they are doing the aerial trapeze act and fall to the ground so thickly that it is just like rain. “Peasants walking through these dense forests have to canry great cot- ton umbrellas to prevent themselves from being smothered by the cater pillars, There are no picnics under the trees, because a soup basin would be filled up before there would be a chance to eat the contents. “The only thing that can be done with the trees after the caterpillars have finished with them is to cut down the dead trunks and saw them up into logs for firewood. “It gives one an uncanny feeling to walk through the great dark forests of northern Bohemia and hear the gloomy croak of the buzzgloak from the lofty branches of the trees and the pitter-patter of the caterpillar rain on the big umbrellas carried by the pear ants.” MOTOR CAR CAMPERS MANY They Are Doing Good Work Building Great Fraternity of Outdoor Sports Lovers, We have heard the lure of the out- doors preached as long as we can re member, says the Sportsman’s Digest, and while no one disputed the value of time spent close to nature, it re mains a fact that only since the motor car has come into universal use have appreciable increases been made in the number of people who spend a part of their spare time in the open. A few years ago the motor car camper was a rare specimen—a curi- osity that would attract attention at any cross roads. Today he is a fixture to be found on every highway and by- way of this broad land. Each season he is carrying more and more of his fellows out into the open, thus aiding, to a great extent, the purpose that the outdoor press has so long advo- cated. The camper is to be encouraged, for through him a great fraternity of out- door sports lovers is being built. The community which has not made pro- vision for the camper and is not ready to welcome him is far behind the times, not only in the way of failure to co-operate in a growing movement, but from a selfish standpoint also. The camper, depending on the treat- ment he receives, can become a great asset to a community. Yes, the camper is a fixture and it seems to be up to the various com- munities to receive him well and to send him on his way pleased with the courtesy shown him—an ardent boost- er for the communities which he has visited. Wilder Than the Animals. “With all our so-called wisdom ana svilization, we have not learned much about dress,” said one park bench phi- ‘losopher to another, wiping the per- spiration from his brow and from be- neath a wilted collar. “You're right,” said the other, his roving eye catching a glimpse of a feminine apparition as it flitted by, “some of the styles in women’s dress I've seen would make Mark Anthony weep.” “What I was about to say,” the other continued, “was that a swelter- ing day like this is no time for a coat.” He began to shed that part of his raiment. “Speaking of extremes, I Just passed a woman wearing a heavy cape. and furs about her neck. Even wild animals shed their fur in sum- mer time.” “The trouble is,” said the other, “some women are wilder than the ani- mals,”—Exchange. Effects Not Pleasant. An Evansville young woman, teach mg her first term at school, was not only impressed with the nobleness of her profession but had determined that all her friends should so be im- pressed. “Oh, it is wonderful work,” she said when at a friend’s home, “this teaching the young to shoot.” The friend pointed to her kitchen window, which had been broken ear lier in the day by a shot from a sling: shot, “Yes,” she agreed, “it is wonderful work, but you must make it still more wonderful by teaching them how to take poorer aim.”—Indianapolis News. Canada’s Urban Population, The population of Canada is abom squally divided between city dwellers and country dwellers. The total urban population is given as 4,362,773 and |! the total rural population 4,485,710. In Prince Edward Island and Sas katchewan the rural population fuss about 75 per cent of the whole. Work Shoes Every pair guaranteed to be solid leather, or a new pair given in their stead....... Yeager's Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. Come to the “Watéhiman® office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. : Lyon & Co. New Fall Coats Every Model is Correct...... and Every Price the Lowest, We ean give you any color Coat, with real Beaver or Beaverette Fur Collar and Cuffs. Black Martin trimmed and Self Cloth trimmed, sizes from 16 to 24—from $19.00 up. Childrens Coats A big assortment of Childrens Coats in white and all dark colors---sizes 1to14 Sweaters and Skirts New Fall Line of Sweaters, all colors, and new Skirts to match. See Our Washable Floor Rugs while they Last....... $1.00 Special Lyon & Co. ws Lyon & Co.