fomm——— Bemaralic alcan, Sets Expanse No Bar to Butterfly’'s Flight Not many peop'e realize that some kinds of butterflies make enormous flights. It has been recently proved that these frail insects may journey thousands of miles, although why the» should move about in this way *¥ somewhat of a mystery. How the butterflies manage to cross miles of ocean is a matter which it is difficult to explain. It has been sug- gested they may have some way of resting on the water, although this has never been proved to be the case. Certain it is that when seftled in 2 locality, painted lady butterflies never | appear to make long flights and spend virtually all their time flitting from | one flower to another. Another point which has to be cleared up is whether after this tre- mendous migration the butterflies make any attempt at a return journey. If there should be a flight toward the south at the end of the summer, it is probable that the insects would be- long to a later generation than those that migrated In the spring. As is well known, the life of an individual | ‘butterfiy is short and in most cases does not extend to mere than a few weeks.—S. Leonard Bastin, in St. ‘Nicholas. Unable to Duplicate Paper Made Long Ago Who ever thought when some of the ‘bulky old volumes were published that in time the few blank pages in front and In back would be the most valu- ‘able part of the whole book? ‘That time seems to have arrived, for 4t 1s told that a distinguished British -etchersspends many of his spare hours gearcéhing through old book stores and ‘waste paper depositories for the mas- -8ive..and wholly unread volume of other: days. For years he has been tearing out the clean leaves to get pa- per that is paper, and is not an as- gembly of all sorts of modern make- shifts, which will disintegrate after » few years. The books, many of which are so «dry and ponderous that some of the leaves : remain uncut, can be bought for a few cents. The paper, it Is said, is not duplicated today, and, if fit ‘were, the price would be prohibitive Animals Get Good Food Old and wornout horses in London are bought by the managers of the ‘200, made fat and sleek, then slaugh- tered and fed to the animals, the num- ber of horses thus disposed of last year being 440. And the walrus col- ony must have codfish, so nearly five" ‘tons were fed to them, besides 40 tons of herring, while other articles of food for the animals included 14,000 tins of milk, 128 pounds of honey, 258 pounds of ants’ eggs, 77 pounds of meal ‘worms, 150 bunches of onions, 213,000 bananas, 343 gallons of fresh milk, the food bill for the year reaching $50.00” —Adventure Magazine. Sediment Carried to Sea Tt is generally believed that the amount of sediment carried down by the Mississippi river is greater than that of any other river in the United States. A vast amount of this sedi- ment is brought into the Mississippi by the Missouri. It is estimated that a flood of 500,000 cubic feet per second «carries into the Mississippi about 120 cubic yards of sediment per second, or more than 10,000,000 cubic yards per «day. It is estimated that 400,000,000 cubic yards per annum are carried ‘into the Mississippi from the Missouri and that approximately the same amount passes out into the gulf. Rainfall in Palestine Palestine is essentially an agricul- tural country. Its rainfall averages 21 inches a year, which is about as much as California receives. Palestine has really only two seasons in its year—a dry one, in the summer, and the rainy or winter season. The latter begins in October or November with the “early rain,” and thereafter rain is frequent, with occasional snow in the mountains, until February. In that month the planting takes place. Then, in March and April, the “later rains” occur and start the crops along. Making It Worse :. ladies’ ready-to-wear shop in which { was working was having its spring opening, There were many wax models * dressed up and standing around. * Crowds had been coming all afternoon. { was standing in back of a woman and i all of a sudden saw her bend forward. I thought it was one of the wax + models falling, so made a sudden grab rat her. My action was so abrupt, and 'I was so embarrassed, that I made it worse ‘by saying, “Oh, excuse me, I thought you were a dummy.”—M. IL. WW. in Chicago Tribune. Bismarck’s Interview fou recall that Bismarck lost his job as chancellor because he called Wilhelm down for talking too much. { was In a beer garden in Berlin. Saw Bismarck seated In solitary grandeur at another table, sipping a glass of beer. With Yankee temerity, I walked over and asked him for an interview. The old man looked at me angrily, rose In majestic wrath, drew ‘his military cloak around him and hissed as he stalked out: “I do not give Interviews. Ask the kaiser; he talks "— TilJam H. Crawford, Tibetan Church Music Charmed Sven Hedin Dr. Sven Hedin, the Swedish ex- | 1 i i 4 plorer, who was the first white man to penetrate into the interior of Tibet, i has excited the curiosity of musicians by his extravagant praise of the church music of that mysterious coun- ‘try. He claims that he has visited no fewer than 31 temples in the land . of the Grand Lama, and that he found . the music of the “temple service” to . be so beautiful that he was spiritual- : ly transported by it to regions super- nal. He writes: “All through Tibet | the life of these monks has appealed ; to me and filled me with delight be- . yond anything I can say. The most | delightful thing in all Tibet is the : church music. Fresh young voices, softened by thick, dark draperies along the front of an open gallery, i: pour forth their wonderful hymns, | full of peace and love and longhng. : Between whiles you hear the rumble ! of thunder of the bassoons and the { rhythmical clash of the cymbals; | then the flutes with their shrill mel- odles and the rolling drums, which ! echo through the high halls of the | temples. But the singing is by far the ! most beautiful ; it carries one up and ; away from the troubles of this earth.” ! —Plerre Van Paassen, in the Atlanta ~ Constitution. Long List of Injuries Result of Accidents Examples of disease resulting from particular accldental conditions most frequently found in the experiences of the compensation commission are accidents to the head or spine result- ing in epilepsy, nervous or mental disease, or insanity; serious fracture or shock resulting in traumatic pneu- monia ; severe trauma or severe burns or extreme exposure to cold and wet, resulting in nephritis; injuries to the eye resulting in cataract, detachment of the retina, optic atrophy, and nu- merous ‘other diseases of the eye; sprain or fracture or dislocation or blow resulting in arthritis, bursitis, cellulitis, synovitis, periostitis, osteo- myelitis, or tuberculosis of the hones: serious injury to the chest, with trau- matic pneumonia; injury with tuber: culosis of a bone or joint; Injury with severe Infection, or severe injury from Inhalation of gas resulting in tuber- culosls of the lungs. The Man Who Builds No man ever builds anything who doesn’t first rear a castle in the air— which 1s old stuff, of course, but no one ever builds a castle in the air save the optimists—which 1s a sapient amendment. Just think that over. No man ever gets anywhere, whether it be selling strawberries or building em- pires or peddling ice cream, unless he possesses that unconquerable mastery of his -own moods, that buoyant, san- guine assufance which makes him keen on believing that better things lie ahead. A famous New England merchant once sald: “Almost every man knows the things that must be done to get along in the world. Those who don't get along are the ones who refuse to do the things they know so well.”— William E. Telling, in the American Magazine. History of Locks The history of civilization could be written from a study of its locks and keys, for since the barred gate of Eden problems of inclusion and exclusion have concerned mankind. Egyptians and Greeks were adepts at lock-mak- Ing; the Spartans wrought an improve- ment of which the description is lost. It Is a historic fact that the downfall of the Roman empire gave a marked impetus to the manufacture of wards and bolts, for Rome had policed the world and thieves were encouraged by the disappearance of stromg-armed au- thority which they had feared. It fs singular, in view of the prevalence of padlocks in official employment today. that the derivation of the first syllable of the name is uncertain. Webster says that it may have meant a basket or pannier, Legion of Honor Origin The Legion or Honor, the famous Srench order, was instituted by Na- poleon Bonaparte when he was first consul, May 19, 1802. Although this order confers honors upon distin- guished civil servants of the state and eminent benefactors of humanity, it Is provided that three-fifths of alt the medals awarded must go te the offi- cers and men of the army and navy. During the World war thousands eof the medals of the legion were award- ed to soldiers and public servants. There are now five classes, the Grand cross being the highest. Many American and British citizens received the medal of the Legion of Honer, and immediately after the war it was also conferred upon the mili- tary leaders of the allies of France. Builders’ Device The principle of the entasis, which 18 a swelling or outward curve of the profile of the shaft of a column or pillar, is utilized to avoid appearance of concavity in its middle portion. In the finest examples of Greek Doric the swelling is a little below the middle point of the shaft, but never so great as to interfere with the steady diminu- tion of the shaft from the base up- ward, The entasis is designed partly to counteract the optical illusion which would cause the profiles of the shaft to appar curved:inward if they were bounded by straight lines. The entasis is almost invariably introduced in the spires of English churches. serve the warning by keeping to the under “vertical” defines a word which black one below. dictionary words, except proper names. Horizontal. 1—Remainder 6—To discover 10—Highest vcice in a quartet 11—Mother (coll.) 13—To accustom 16—Greek letter 17—At home 18—To turn aside 20—Purple precious stones : 22—Italian river 23—Special edition of a newspaper 24—To pilfer 25—Harbor 26—Point of compass 27—Hen's perch 31—Famous racing grounds in Eng- land 35—Warbler 36-—To unclose again 3T—Fleshy 38—To surpass 39—To wield diligently 42—A small gorge (chiefly in west- ern United States) 45-—Sign of the zodiac 46—To want 49—Part of “to be” 50—To overhear secretly 51—Boy’'s name 54—To affect with pain 55—Chopping tool 56—Landholder of Scotland 58—Pedal digit 59—sShallow vessel 61—Meadows 15—Axed 52—Furrow (arch.) R2—.OMmyerves HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are piaced in the white spaces this puzzle will spell words both vertically and horizontally. indicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the puzzle. Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which will fill the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number No letters go Im the bhinck spaces. terms and obsolete forms are indicaied in the definitions, CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 5. 6 WE) i920, Western Newspaper union. The first letter in each word is will fill the white squares to the next All words used are Abbreviations, slang, initinls, technical 5v 62 Vertical, 1—To put oneself at ease 2—To finish 3—Thus 4—A nutlike drupe (bot. term) 6—Quality of human experience which excites pity 6—Dirt 7—Preposition 8—Hard-shelled fruit 8—To hang in folds 11—Poetical meayure 12—Perhaps 14—Hard,-black wood (poet.) 20—Haughtiness 21—Pulpy part of a peach 27—-Circumference of & wheel 28—Unity 29—To place 80—To attempt 31—Part of “to be” 32—iender 34—Telephone (abbr.) 39—Fold of cloth ¢1—Swiss singing call 42—Young woman 44—Extremities of arm 46—Body of men 43—Biblical garden 53—To knot 57—Sun god 60—Of age (Latin abbr.) 10—Rent 33—Unclosed 40—A wound 43-—Ordinary 47—Irritatew 65—Consumed Solution will appear in mext issue. Many Motorists Don’t Know What the White Lines Mean. Solution to Cross-word Puzzle No. 4. The Motor Vehicle Act of Pennsyl- vania has been misconstrued by a number of motorists, Justice of the Peace and Constables, owing to the placing of 2 white line on the road by the State Highway Department. = | According to the Keystone Auto-' mobile Club this line is put down by the Highway Department wholly as a precautionary measure to guide mo- | torists around curves and to warn them of dangerous intersections. | Section XXV of the Motor Vehicle Act reads: The operator of any motor vehicle ' overtaking another vehicle shall pass | such vehicle on the left, but shall not attempt to pass any such vehicle at | intersecting highways, or at the cicss- ing of any railroad tracks at grade or at a sharp turn or curve, or on ap- proaching the crest of a hill where a full view of the highway ahead for a distance of two hundred feet is ob- structed. : In interpreting this act, certain con- stables have been making a practice of summoning motorists before Jus- tices of the Peace for its violation, if by chance the wheels of their car hap- pen to cross, by a few inches, the white line painted in the centre of the highway by the Highway Depart- ment, In a statement, an official of the club said: “White lines are painted on the State highways by the High- way Department at a great expense to them. They are put down to warn motorists of curves, hills and infer- sections. Careful motorists will ob- right of the curve and hill lines and slowing up at an intersection where so warned. It is not, however, a vio- lation to cross the line unless the op- erator of the motor vehicle attempts to do so in passing a motorist pro- ceeding in the same direction on a hill or curve where the view is obscured for two hunderd feet ahead. “The Keystone Automobile Club is strongly in favor of placing white lines on every hill, curve and inter- section in the State where it is ad- visable to «de so. In fact it was through the suggestion of the club that the State Highway Department first used this safety measure of painting white lines in the center of highways.” College Helps Reformatery. Vocational instructors at the Penn- sylvania. Industrial Reformatory at Huntingdon have enrolled in a ped- agogy class organized hy the teacher training extension department of the Pennsylvania State College. Profes- sor W. P. Loomis, head of the college department, on a visit to the Reform- atory launched the course and will visit there at regular intervals throughout the winter to conduct a course of training for 28 men engag- ed as instructors of the boys at the Reformatory. Great interest has been shown in the course, and General Superintendent J. W. Herron believes that the resulting effect on the effi- ciency of the Reformatory training will be highly beneficial to the boys sent there. . iness to print all the news that's fit ‘shocks back about fifteen or twenty —The “Watchman” makes it a bus- | to print. It’s a home paper. 1AILIS NTERA F o lsF Flo[O] 0 Announce Summer School. Announcement of July 5 as the reg- istration date for the seventeenth an- nual Summer Session at the Penn- sylvania State College has been made by Dean Will Grant Chambers, di- rector of the session and dean of the School of Education. The session will continue for six weeks, closing on August 14, following the usual mid-summer commencement exercises. The many special features of the Penn State summer schools of recent years will be continued this year. These include the Institute of French educa- tion, physical education courses, teach- er training courses and many other aids to help the public school teach- ers of the State advance their stand- ing through collegiate studies. Saving Accounts for U. S. in 1925 Pass 24 Billions, America’s savings in 1925 amount- ed to $24,157,909,000 according to the Savings Bank Journal. That sum was deposited to the credit of 45,561,916 persons at the close of the year. The amount cre- dited to each individual is more than $520. The Middle Atlantic States lead with $9,795,074,000 the East Central States are second with $5,716,799,000 and the New England States third with $3,897,791,000.—Exchange. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating By Hot Water Vapor Steam Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished 68-15-12 A Cheap Watch is Made Only to Sell You A Good Watch is Honestly Made to Serve You Let, Us be Your Watch Counsellors F. P. Blair & Son JEWELERS....BELLEFONTE, PA. mz Z|=0|0 DMOZ | >IS|»|r D> mo mm B A R D S E E D(>MO CMI DCT OTM 0|>|v|p/Sim ZERO mMO|— New Snow Fences to Line Highways. The State Highway Department has purchased 500,000 feet of new snow fence to protect Pennsylvania high- ways from drifting snow. The new fence, which comes in huge rolls, when set up looks like the old-fash- ioned “slat fence.” It is strung along the highways and attached to iron posts for supports. The new type costs about one-third less than the old style lateral snow breakers. When the winter season is over the new type of fence can be rolled up and conveniently stored in sheds, whereas it is necessary to let the old type of snow breakers remain in position all the year around or take it down piece by piece. Last winter highway foremen and engineers made notes of the spoty where snow was most likely to drift along highways, and the new fence is being strung up at those points. Farmers having corn fields along highways who leave corn shocks out all winter have been asked to set the feet from the highway to act as a snow breaker, and many farmers are complying with this request. —Read the “Watchman” and get the cream of the news. Tomorrow = Alright R { A vegetable aperien * tone and wv to he i SN minative improves the abge’ “tite, relieves “. Headache. and Bil- “lousness, corrects NR JUNIORS—Little Nis One-third the regulardose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults, SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST C. M. PARRISH, ranklin said : do it today. 5 A CR CO ATE XY TSA) TST | worth two tomorrows.” If you have something to do tomorrow Come in and open an account with us now. 3 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | STATE COLLEGE, PA. Jf N MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 7 “One today is 4% IY india nterntiatmeeehrcl id eu AAA ACI AE LAAN] Sh Q La A eS INS SAS NN ANN NEI NS DENSA REINS MAN ANAM SY LEIA A RAN AN) Who will Manage Your Estate? hie his is an important question. One that you should answer now, by making a Will and naming this Bank as your Executor. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA.