{———— - —— - - : : ODD CHANGES MADE Bengrvlic atl BY MOTHER EARTH Bellefonte, Pa., October 16, 1925. GUNSTON HALL HOME OF GREAT AMERICAN Built by George Mason, Far- Seeing Statesman. In 1750, at a plantation in Maryland near the Potomac river, a wedding took place, and to it flocked the plant- ers and thelr ladles from miles around in Maryland and Virginia, writes Mary Mayo Crensham in St. Nicholas. Jt was the marriage of George Mason, fourth of the name in this country and scion of a very ancient family, to Anu Eilbeck, sixteen years old and already a great belle and beauty. Ma- son, then twenty-five years old, was described by a contemporary as “young, wealthy, handsome and tal- ented.” Soon after the wedding the young couple began to build their now fa- mous home, Gunston hall. It was named in honor of George Mason's an- «cestral home in England. They threw themselves whole-heartedly into the ‘task. Mason himself was the archi- tect. He had woodcarvers come over ifrom England, and for three years ‘these worked on the classic designs “which lend such charm ‘to the home, -and which have been copied by some «of America’s greatest architects. At ‘the end of this time the stately man- :glon was finished and a house-warm- ‘ing was held. Scores of guests came from miles around in their gilded -chariots and quaint coaches, or In ‘boats from the Maryland side. Two -of the nearest neighbors, Lord Fair- fax and George Washington, must ‘have been there to drink the health -0f the young pair—Washington then a tall young man eighteen years of ‘age. And we can imagine the pride of the slender young wife in her beauti- ‘ful new home, and seem to see her in ‘the soft candlelight dancing the min- uet or the Sir Roger de Coverley. Mason was destined to become one of the most famous statesmen of America. He lived at Gunston hall during the remainder of his life. John Este Cooke in his delightful history of Virginia has said: “Mason was called upon to drafy the Virginia bill of rights and consti- tution, and did so. The former is the most remarkable paper of the epoch, and was the foundation of the great American assertion of right. Jeffer- son went to it for the phrases and ex- ‘pressions of the Declaration, and it Temains the original chart by which free governments must steer their -course in all coming time.” All of it found its way Into the “Constitution of the United States, and the first ten amendments of the lat- ‘ter were taken bodily from the bill of rights. The year 1925 is the 200th anniver- sary of the birth of George Mason. ‘Proper observances are to be held on “October 26 at Gunston hall. But there is a perpetual memorial, not limited ‘by time, not temporary, but unceas- ‘ing, to this great man, in the country ‘he helped so much to found and in the reverent hearts of a whole people. No Eggs for the Band “Once on a western tour,” Mr. Damrosch relates, “we struck a town ‘where the hotel accommodation was very, very poor. A dozen members of ‘the orchestra had to put up in a hotel ‘where the rate was $1 a head for din- ner, bed and breaki'ast. It didn’t seem to be worth more, either. “When the men went down to the dining room for breakfast in the morning they were led to an untidy table by a frowzy maid. The maid was busy taking their orders when the proprietor put his head in at the door and called: “ ‘Lizzie, no eggs for the band!’ - “This speech,” Mr. Damrosch ended, “spread among the orchestra, and for the rest of the season, whenever some demand was made upon me that T couldn’t grant, the men would smile and shake their heads and repeat: * ‘Lizzie, no eggs for the band!" ” “Stinging Snake” a Myth The biological survey says that the “stinging snake” myth apparently orig- inated more than 200 years ago and is reported to have been first pub- lished in an old “Report to Lords Pro- prietors of the Carolinas.” John Clay- ton also mentions this myth in a letter to the Royal society of London In 1688. In the first mentioned report it is asserted that there lived In the Qarolinas a snake whose tall was a poisoned horn or spike. This account refers to the horn or stinging snake, which is harmless. The horn snake is bluish-black with a few red bars across the belly. The tail of this snake tapers to a fine point having the appearance of a horn or spike, but it is quite incapable of piercing or stinging anything. Reason for Joyfulness ‘The day seems to be arrived when there is really so much to make us think well of the destiny of mankind; such fair reason to rejoice in the mere fact of existence; so large a promise of ' ever-extending human knowledge and insight; such general softening of manners, spreading of intelligence and enlarging of average happiness, that it appears more. becoming for man, the chief at least of animals, to be singing with the lark in the iA than croaking with the frog in the swamp.—§ir Edwin Arnold, Some of Them Are Worry- ing Her Many Children. Queer things have been happening to Mother Earth of late. Her ague quakes probably have not been un- usual, though America is prone to think them so because 80 many have happened in this land. But a new shoal, with rock coming with- in a few fathoms of the surface, has been found in a region where the ocean was supposed to be 2,000 feet deep; a new island is being bufit by a volcano in the Mediterranean, and the Humboldt current that chills the west coast of South America even as the Gulf stream warms the west coast of northern Europe has ceased to flow. This last is by all odds the most amazing and important development recorded. The Humboldt current, coming out of the Antarctic ocean with the chill of ancient ice in its waves, and flowing up the west coast of South America to the neighborhood of the equator, has always kept low the temperature of the whole region. But that has not been its chief effect. Thanks to this drift of cold water, the ocean has been cooler than the land—therefore, winds setting land- ward got warmer as they went, and consequently were never chilled into rain, There are places on the coast of Peru where rain has not fallen for 50 years, but it has been coming In torrents this year. The cold current is gone, why or whither no one knows; wind blowing over the hot equatorial waters is chilled as it strikes the coast, and there has beer one thunderstorm after another. If this condition persists, a host of changes will result. The nitrate beds of northern Chile and southern Peru have been saved by the absence of rain. A dozen years like the present will wash most of the nitrates into the sea. A thousand miles of coast land Is now absolutely barren for lack of water. Rainfall like that prevail ing for the last six months would make it a garden. One can under- stand why special commissions are heading for South America to learn, if possible, what has become of the Humboldt current. Watch Growth of Embryo For the first time in history the development of the embryo of a warm- blooded animal has been carried on under such conditions that it can be watched continuously. This feat has been accomplished by two scientists at the University of Leyden, Drs. J. P. M. Vogelaar and J. B. van den Boo- gert, who have placed common hens’ eggs, with the shells removed, in small glass dishes in an incubator, and have succeeded in Keeping aliverphy growing for five days. Hith- erto the" only way in which such em- bryos could be studied has been by placing large numbers of eggs in the incubator and removing and opening By them one by one at intervals. this older method it has been possible o study closely spaced stages of de- ‘elopment, but not to observe the wrowth as a continuous process, now made possible by the new way. Stealing Peggy’s Act A man and his trained dog were apppearing at an Indianapolis vaude- ville theater. The dog's ability to count was being displayed and her master was selecting patrons in va- rious rows as subjects. He pointed to two very small chil- | dren on the front row and said: “Peggy, how many little boys are there in this row?” A hush fell over the audience as the dog prepared to tinkle a bell by way of answer. Then suddenly a shrill, childish voice piped out: “Hey! I'm not a little boy!” After the roar of laughter had sub- sided, Peggy was called on to distin- guish on her bell the number of little boys and little girls on the front row. Too Late! Too Late! “Years ago, when I considered my- self quite the debonair youth around the home town, I always raved at the shirt of those days that I had to pull over my head,” said a salesman in a Detroit hotel. “The operation mussed up my hair and I was forced to spend a lot of time recombing it. In later years, the now prevalent coatshirt came along, with all its virtues. But by the time it had arrived my dashing days had been curbed and I had lost most of my hair. grateful for the idea as I should be if the inventor had gone to work a few years before and turned out his prod-- uct when it would have saved me a lot of grief.” Setting the Date The stranger rushed up to the cor- ner, where a group of villagers were discussing things. He waited for no introductions or Invitation to speak, but burst forth with, “What's all the excitement about?’ The group of villagers eyed him In silence for a moment. Finally one native removed his pipe from his mouth, spat to lee- ward, anr replied, “’Bout a month ago.” . Didn’t Stop in Time A cshman in London made more than $1,000 by selling tickets for a fake concert, which he sald was to help crippled and aged cab drivers. Just as he was selling the last ticket he had printed in his fraud scheme the police arrested him. the embryo So I'm not quite as | ome below. HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this pussie will spell words both vertically and horizontally. The first letter in each word is indi- eated by a number, which refers to the definition lasted below the pussle. Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which will fll the white spaces up to the first black square te the right, and a number under “yerticnl” defines a word which will ill the white squares te the mext black No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obsolete forms are indieated in the definitions. CROSS-WORD PUZZLENo. 3. a 1—Possesses 4—To drink sparingly 7—Skating surface 8—To become vapid 10—Head piece 11—That thing 13—East Indian (abbr.) 14—Personal pronoun 16—Part of “to be” 17—River in Italy 18—Man’s title of address 19—Right (abbr.) 20—Confldence man 24—Self-destruction 27—To fasten with a knot 28—Twenty hundredweight 29—Torn cloth 81—Donkey 88—One of a series of ornaments in the shape of a frustum of a cone 84—Note of scale 36—Shoshonean Indian 87—Part of verb “to be” 39—Small (Scotch) 42—Conference with African natives 46—Storehouse of ammunition 49—Preposition 50—Printing measure 61—That is (abbr.) 83—Note of scale 86—Highway (abbr.) §6—Indefinite article §7—Devour 60—To arrest . 66—English (abbr.) | 58—F'ish eggs §8—Mother 82—Sesame 1 RP 4 |5 |6 TL 7 8 2 1 13 14 [iF 78 | 0 q 26 27 3 = 33 34 3 P72? 39 {0 43 48] Fs 54 56 158 60 [G1 ja) G3 (@, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical. 1—Strike 2—Indeflnite article 8—Master of a fishing vessel 4—Ghosts 6—Middlewestern state (abbr.) 8—To work at a trade 7—Overhasty in action 9—A baron 10—Belonging to that man 12—Part of the foot 13—Australian bird 15—Member of American Indian tribe 21—Preposition 22—Smallest state in union (abbr.) 23—Symmetrioal ) 24—Flexible knife for spreading drugs, eto. 28—Company (abbr.) 26—Preposition 80—Past time 82—Took a seat 34—Two or more 8$6—Perfume 87—Boy’s name 88—8Sun god 40-—Personal pronoun 41—1Indefinite article 48—Small particle 46—Long, narrow inlet 47—Native of Arabia 48—Permit §4—To consume 87—Unit of work 69—Note of scale 61—Prefilx meaning not 42—Equal 44—Finish Solution will appear in mext issue. | FARM NOTES. —Tulips, hyacinths, and any bulbs for winter forcing should be potted , during October and placed in a cool cellar. Allow several weeks before bringing out to the light. —Get the poultry flock into the lay- ing houses. If-any of these birds are sick, look for worms. In nine cases out of ten, say Pennsylvania State College poultrymen, that will be the trouble. —Dahlia bulbs should be dug and stored in a safe place as soon as it starts to freeze, or they will start new growth at once. Since this weakens them it should be avoided. Be sure the main stake is securely fastened to _each clump. | —Such action made it necessary for the Pennsylvania officials to es- tablish their quarantine. This State is an important market for Texas live stock and poultry products and likewise all rail transportation of these products to the important east- =. parksts must pass through the ate. —Weevils in grain show up badly { about this time of the year. All grain to be held in bins over the winter | should be fumigated with carbon bisulphide, say entomologists of the Pennsylvania State College. During fumigation hold the temperature above 60 degrees. At temperatures below this point the fumigation will be ineffective. —Ton litters, 400-bushel potato : crops, tested cows, ton geldings and , 1000-pound calves are all contribut- ing toward better agriculture. Penn- | sylvania farmers are pushing foward tin all of these practical methods of | producing more and better agri- ‘cultural products from fewer units or in a shorter time than by the old way. It is a good procession to join. Don’t follow; lead. | —Since the first outbreak, which { was reported in August, the disease : has occurred on a few adjoining ranch- "es but the State and Federal author- ities were making excellent progress . in the control work, until local inter- ! ests began to block the work and even ‘go so far as to secure a temporary { injunction against the authorities, ' preventing them from enforcing their quarantine and disposing of diseased animals. —1It is better to leave the cool crops like beets, carrots, celery, and cabbage in the field until danger of severe freezing approaches. If these crops are put in storage now, warm days in October are likely to make them heat and spoil. Keep such crops in the field as long as it is safe to do so, but do not get caught by a sudden freeze such as ruined much celery last season. Have a place all ready for storage of your latest vegetables and provide a handy covering for un- expected cold nights. —Pennsylvania is not taking any chances with the outbreak of foot and mouth disease in Texas. The quaran- possible carriers of the diseases from Texas into Pennsylvania, made effec- tive September 21, 1925, was prompt- ed by the indifference and the lack of cooperation of local interests in the , infected area with State and Federal authorities, and not by any serious ' spread of disease, Dr. T. E. Munce, tine against the movement of live | stock, live stock products and other Solution of Crossword puzzle No. 2. 1[S[H| R|S|O|N NUBGINIAIT DIGIERES!| | [T Alco ME ~ m mn m|o>E0|—|2/0/-4 OD» ORO Cl-EOmm|2 TEE REESE HEE S|A[S|H PIO | ERE ALILEE|T FH RIES Ell E3 mir > mom | FoEEEm O[=I0[=[D Director, Bureau of Animal Industry, State Department of Agriculture, ex- plains. ; —AIll goed dairymen of Centre county agree that successful feeding of dairy cows does not begin after a cow freshens. If a cow is to do her best and is to respond to good feeding . she must be put in good condition be- , fore freshening. Then, too, cows that | have the ability to give large amounts of milk often produce this milk at the . expense of certain materials in their ‘ bodies. If a cow is to come up to her normal production during her next milking period these materials must be stored back in her body. The time to do this is during the dry period which should last from 6 to 10 weeks. If a cow freshens in a thin condition or is given no rest period she will not produce her normal amount of milk. A cow that is fitted to a good work- ing condition soon pays for the feed she gets while dry and also pays a larger profit on the feed consumed while milking than the cow that fresh- ens in a thin condition. The fitting ration should vary somewhat from the regular feeding mixture. With alfalfa or clover hay and silage 200 lbs ground corn, 200 lbs ground oats, 100 lbs wheat bran, and 100 lbs linseed oil meal will make a good ration. If a poor grade of hay is being fed then equal parts of corn, oats, bran and oil meal should be used. If the ration proves a little iaxative, some of the oil meal can be omitted. The amount of these grain mix- tures to be fed will vary from five pounds per day or more, depending on the appetite and condition of the cow. The day previous to freshening this ration should be taken from the cow and she should be given a good bran mash. This will clean out her digestive tract and cool her system preparatory to freshening. Centre county dairymen often question whether finely ground alfalfa can take the place of wheat bran. In analysis, alfalfa meal runs about fifteen percent crude protein, seven percent is digestible true pro- tein and twenty-eight percent fiber, whereas wheat bran runs about six- teen percent crude protein, 10.8 per- cent digestible true protein, and 9.5 percent fiber. In feeding value, ground alfalfa meal is very similiar to wheat bran and can replace a portion of the wheat bran in most rations. It must be kept in mind, Lowever, that no matter what is doné to alfalfa it is still a roughage, i and in the grain mixture its use must be limited. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. October Specials in Every Department Ladies Coats Flare bottom, fur trimmed —in all the new shades, at REMARKABLY LOW PRICES. in Flannels and Ladies New Fall Dresses si. in ail the The new 54in. flannels, in all the high Sale prices $2.50 newest touches. shades, take 174 to 2 yards for a dress. and $3.00 per yard. Ladies and Children (in all colors) included in this sale, A New Line of Art Needle Work Luncheon Sets, Buffet Sets, Scarfs, Doilies, Towels, and many other stamped articles. : Childrens Heavy School Hose 25¢ .u Ladies Silk Hose Silk and Wool Mixed SOC. up Just Received A Large Assortment of 9x12 Rugs SPECIALLY LOW PRICED Sweaters for Men Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Quality Work orily done at the Watchman Printing House Bellefonte WEDNESDAY Oct.21 Moose Temple Theatre Tre Musical Comer OF THE SEASON He : one AND PRET DANIEL KUSELL Music oY T LYRICS BY Qn on WA) NEVILLE FEeson sh SAMMY LEE UMoR- : THE CHAOROS IS A WONDER Chicago Boston ‘‘Best Musical Comedy New York has seen in many moons.’ — Mail Orders Now....Seats Saturday Oct. 17th Prices—First Floor $2.00, $1.00; Balcony $1.50, $1.00, 50 cents—Plus Tax B00K BY SOLID YEAR ALBERT von TiLzER s | op DANCES STAGED BY 2 8 Weeks 18 Weeks 17 Phe : Allan Dale, N.Y. American. Dainty - - - Tuneful - - - Tantalizing \