~ Bellefonte, Pa., August 19, 1927. ARE PASSENGER PIGEONS RETURNING. By H. W. Lush, Galeton. How many men or women at, or about the age of 60, do not recall the days when in Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan and Canada, millions of wild or passenger pigeons swarmed over these States in such numbers that in many instances they covered the entire horizon. Then all seeming- ly seemed to have disappeared. Many theories were advanced, giv- ing the reason for believing they were right. One was, that a disease came upon them, making a complete exter- mination. Others claim they were disappointed many seasons in finding no beechnuts, or shack, as these nuts were commonly called, which diverted them to other countries. One writer says they came north too early one spring and after arriving in the lake country, on their way to Canada, were confronted with a terrible blizzard, so much snow having accompanied this zero blizzard they perished by the million. This writer stated he was a captain on a boat on Lake Erie and that throughout the entire day the water was blue with birds that had perished the day before. This blizzard having come so late in the spring and coming so severe and in a season when the birds were intent on nesting farther north it seemed to have exterminated them entirely. So seriously has the Government taken this, that for years a standing offer has been in vogue for $3,000 for a male and female passenger pigeon. Up to this date no birds of this specie have been delivered. The last time wild pigeons nested in this part of the State was the spring of 1882. For those not familiar with the stupendous proposition of what is known as a nesting place, I will give you the dimensions of the one last known of in this territory. These birds were coming here in streams for a week and the woods which they occupied started at a point on Crippen Run (near Germania Station). From there it took in Ly- man Run, Borbett, Cherry Springs, with a continuation over the Jersey Shore Turnpike to the very threshold of Coudersport. Hunters came from every point of the compass. They did not hunt them, they slashed, shot and did everything to exterminate these beautiful, prolific and valuable birds, which were never really appre- ciated until they were gone.” Some trees contained as many as 50 nests. In such cases trees were chopped down only to find a small number of squabs that were at an age fit to use, others were too young or there were eggs In process of hatching. This meant that 50 nests were destroyed in get- ting a limited number of marketable birds. They would in other cases bump the trees to jar the young out of their nests with the same result mentioned ahove or shot into nests with the object of getting the male or female on the nest hatching. It matters not what the cause of the disappearance of these birds may have been, there was no excuse for the pre- mediated, murderous assault upon them. Men left their farms. others their shops to go pigeon hunting, wagon loads were transported to ship- ping points for New York or other markets. All ended abandon their when birds forced to what were supposed to be civilized hunters, who were in reality uncivil- ized vandals. Now the writer does not wish to convey the impression that al who hunted were classed as heartless but the greater part of them were. which might be dangerously near un- amimous. Now as to the reappear- ance of the passenger pigeon—early in April the writer saw what at first looked like a pair of turtle doves. When they came nearer and not fly- ing higher than 50 or 0 feet, dis- covered they were wild pigeons, male and female. The former can be dis- tinguished by the length of the tail and also by a streamer feather on each side of the tail. The fact of hav- ing seen these birds was made known to Col. Henry W. Shoemaker, cele- brated historian of Pennsylvania. Later there apneared in the Williams- port Gazette & Bulletin an article written by the well known taxider- mist, Charles H. Eldon, of Williams- port, stating that he had seen a male wild pigeon on the road leading from the main highway from Jersey Shore to Lock Haven, to Woolrich; he said he was close to the bird and that it was a wild pigeon. So positive was he that he and the party with him, watched the place two or three days hoping it would return. In the meantime Col. Shoemaker wrote the writer that in traveling through a forest in Clearfield county he had seen a wild vigeon. These re- ports coming as they do, would tend to show that there is a sound basis for the fact that tbe return of these birds is not unfounded, and if the Government will make a special effort to protect passenger pigeons there is no doubt in the writer's mind they will sooner or later be } least in small numbers. Let all that are interested in wild life, make it a point to get interested in this matter and by combined effort we might get results, or at least help educate the public not to kill these birds when seen, but rather protect them. The passenger pigeon, after mating season, travel in pairs, male slightly larger than the female, color dark bluish drab with salmon colored downy feathers under the wings; always alert, looking for enemies and very handsome and clean cut. The female bird is the same color, but feathers in tail much shorter with no stream- ers in the tail as in that of the male. They lay two eggs which invariably hatch a male and a female. The time required for incubation is 17 days. They hatch two or three times during the season. The search for food, or in other words the distance they fiy to obtain food for themselves and with us, at | atchii rare already hatching grounds on | &.c 2 eady account of the murderous methods of | young takes in a radius of 100 miles or more, scarcely ever feeding near their nesting ground, which it is claimed they hold for the young birds after leaving the nest. They are ex- ceptionally swift on the wing; in nor- mal conditions of weather 60 miles per hour is very ordinary. In the thickest of nesting ground it is next to impossible to hear any- thing but the flutter of wings which becomes most deafening and at the nesting place little attention is paid to the hunter, while at any other time one could not get within rifle shot of them. Like bees at a hive, they are so busy at work that all danger is for- gotten. In fall, at the migrating sea- son, they travel in flocks of from one hundred to a thousand and in some cases flocks so large have descended on fields of buckwheat that in a few minutes they would devour every grain in the field if not disturbed. The great danger in the way of a return of these birds is the hawk and the hunter, many of the latter who like the moonshiners of the south, kill a stranger to ascertain whether he is a Government agent or not. So it is with some hunters, they kill the pigeon to see whether it is really a wild pigeon or not, but if all wild life leagues will make it a point to edu- cate the public, this in a great meas- ure can be forestalled.—In “Wells- boro Gazette.” Chemists Ward off Starvation With Their Discoveries. All fears that the civilized race will starve eventually through lack of fertilizers for food production, or ap- prehensions that gasoline supplies will give out with exhaustion of pe- troleum deposits, were cast aside by leading chemists of the world who are assembled on the campus of the Pennsylvania State College in attend- ance at the Institute of Chemistry being held there by the American Chemical Society. Food from the air, literally, and motor fuel from coal and gases, were shown to be actual facts in re- cent sessions of the Institute which concludes its month of chemical de- velopment discussions this week. No longer need the United States farmers depend upon Chili for ni- trates for fertilizer, for it is now be- ing manufactured right at home from air and water cheaper than it can be brought from South America; no longer need the crop growers depend upon Germany for potash, for depos- its have been found in Texas; and there is no further need for skimping on Georgia phosphate, for the govern- ment has located vast and almost un- limited deposits in Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and other western States, according to chemists visiting at State College. There will be sufficient of these three important fertilizers available in the United States to last almost indefinitely, the chemists declare. The manufacture of nitrates with nitrogen from the air has been developed to such high degree of perfection that so long as water power is available nitrates will be supplied in any desir- ed quantities. ~ And if food supplies ever do begin to decrease, the chemists are ready to put “synthetic” or artificial foods on the market, such as milk, and beef- steak substitute. But these will not come until natural food prices become so high that it will pay the chemists to manufacture artificial foods. Synthetic rubber, champhor and many other articles are possible of manu- facture, and artificial silk and wool on the market. The chemist has been hailed as a possible war preventor, for nations without certain necessary raw materials will be able in the future to manufacture them instead of fighting another na- tion for possession of natural resourc- es which they need but do not have in their own territory. Other developments during recent sessions at State College included the commercial develecpment of “dry ice” or solid carbon dioxide gas, with which ice cream can be shipped from coast to coast with only a few small Jumps to keep it far below the freez- ing point; that the United States bas a monopoly on fire proof helium gas which should develop airships as a safe and practicable means for air transportation during the next ten years; that “artificial rainbows” with the use of a spectroscope will rean better automobile engines for the future, capable of giving 30 to 50 miles on a gallon of fuel; and that Muscle Shoals power is too expensive to use in profitable manufacture of nitrate. Aree. Kill Horses for Insurance. Smothering horses to death in order to fraudulently collect insurance on the animals constitutes the founda- tion for an alleged horse killing ring of Garfield county, Nebraska, which farmers uncovered recently. Five men have been arrested in connection with the death of several horses on which insurance later was collected. A unique plan was pursued in col- lecting the insurance. Immediately after a thunderstorm the stock would be found dead, presumably struck by lightning. The plan followed in kill- ing the horses involved taking a large inner tube of an automobile tire, seal- ing an end and then drawing it over the head of the victim animal. According to one of the “inside” of the scheme, this procedure would smother the animal to death and the tube would be removed, leaving no mark. The men then would burn the animal with a blow torch to simulate lightning, later burning grass in the immediate vicinity, to make the evi- dence more realistic. The ring leader of the group, an in- vestigator said, was paying his ac- complice $5 each for a “job,” which included bunching several animals to- gether, preferably near a wire fence, to smother them to death and then ap- ply the toreh. Confessions are said to be in the hands of the Farmers’ Mutual Insur- ance Company, of Lincoln, Neb., which issued the policies.—Perry County Democrat. EXTINCTION OF EIDER DUCK BLOCKED BY LAW Staging a Comeback Under Canadian Protection. Washington.—Eider ducks, in the shadow of extinction, are doing a comeback, thanks to the protection of the Canadian government, according to the American Nature association. This is the duck that plucks down from her breast to keep her young warm. Arthur Newton Pack, associate edi- tor of Nature Magazine, informed Vin- cent Massey, Canadiar minister, he had received a telegram fom Howard H. Cleaves of the association at Wolf- bay, Que., reporting on his investiga- tion. The telegram from Cleaves says: “Eider ducks numerous along Ca- nadian Labrador coast due to excel- lent protection by the government. I have seen more than 2,000 breeding birds in ten days’ cruising. Hundreds of them in each of four sanctuaries cited to date. From one hilltop I saw 75. Nesting birds flew up on all side” Icebergs Don't Bother Then Despite lingering snow banks and passing icebergs, some eiders have hatched. This fine bird is making wonderful recovery from shadow of extinction ang with good weather there will be a large increase this year.” “This is certainly good news,” Pack wrote to Minister Massey, “and on be- half of the thousands of members of the American Nature association I want to thank the Canadian govern- ment. “Eider ducks on the great breeding grounds in Labrador were nearing ex- tinction because of constant collection of eggs and killing of adult birds for their feathers and down. Before 1870 vessels were fitted out in New England for this purpose. “When there were young in the aests the old birds were molting their flight quills and unable to fly. Men surrounded, drove them together and killed them with clubs, leaving the helpless young to perish. All this for feathers alone, for the birds had no food value. Import Eiderdown. “I'or a number of years this went on until the birds were so reduced as to make feather hunting unprofitable. During this time and ever since egg- ers, fishermen and settlers have de- stroyed both birds and eggs until the vast eider nurseries are a mere mem- ory and we are importing our eider- down from the more humane people of the Old world. “In Norway and Iceland, where these birds are protected, they be- come almost as tame as domesticated fowls, nesting places are made in the turf or among stones and some of them even nest on the sod roofs of houses. Actor, Telepathist, Reads Court’s Mind New York.—With absolutely nothing up his sleeve and no confederates in the house, Joseph Dunninger, a vaude- ville mind reader, told Magistrate Ma- crery in raflic court that the magis- trate was going to sentence him to pay £5 or spend two days in jail for parking on West Forty-seventh street during the theater hour. Ile was right. The magistrate, not above conduct- | mg a scientific experiment to liven the tedium of the Traffic court, de- cided that he would give his public a demonstration as to whether a mind reader is or isn't. “You are thinking, ‘Don’t park your ¢ar near theaters in the rush hour,” the telepathic parker tobd the magis- trate. “What is the sentence I am about 70 give you?’ he inquired, as if he were asking Dunninger what is the number of the gentleman's gold watch and is the little lady going to marry the young man she is keeping com pany with. Will you concentrate, please?” “I"ive dollars or two days in jail,” quoth the mind reader mournfully. British Service Men Make Cloth for Frocks f.ondon.—Disabled former service men are engaged in decorating fine cloth for rest gowns, day frecks and evening gowns. Princess Mary has bought three dress lengths of the decorated cloth known as “painted fabric.” One is of the seft blue inlet with lav- ender panels, having a hyacinth and lavender crocus border painted up from the hem of the skirt. Another dress length is in rose pink with a medieval painted design. Princess Mary also bought an apricet-colored shawl with the same type of work. Turkish Dogs Spend Summer on Boats Scutari, Turkey.—In Turkish vil- lages along the Bosporus a dog’s life is that of a sailor. When a village becomes ‘“over- hounded” with street dogs the village fathers, loath to kill, as the Koran dic- tates kindness to animals, charter a ferry boat and ship a load of dog derelicts across the straits to some village on the opposite shore. The villngers on the other side ferry them back, adding a quota of their own. The original exporters retaliate, and thus a game of battledore and shuttle- ces yearly between Europe cock w end Asia, tance. usually consist of colored dust, vol- HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this puzzle will spell words both vertically and horizontally. The first letter in each word Is 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 an {the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under “yertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares to the next black one below. No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, | except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obso- | lete forms are indicated in the definitions. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1. 3 |4 51 5 (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. 1—Fat 5—Separated 9—Kind of fuel used in British Isles 11—One of Adam’s sons (Bib.) 12-——That thing '14—Part of a gun 18—Note of scale 17-—Condensed vapor 19—River of England 20—Beverage 21—Makes a mistake 23—Before (poetic) 24—Only i25—Peppermint candies 27—Salute of guns /29—Born 830—TIs owing 31—One who acts for another 133—To be mentally perturbed ,35—To state 36—Boy’s name |38—One who regulates his attitude | toward a person according to | the latter's station in society | 40—Conjunction 41—Chalirs 43—To bring suit 44—Half an em 45—Stinging insects 47—Sun god 43—Helps |49—Part of a track {61—Oklahoma city 62—Boasts Vertical. 2—Preposition 4—To separate 1—Conceit 3—Encountered 5—To encourage 6—Preflx meaning through 7—Boy’s name 8—String 10—Becomes weary 11—Girl’s name 15—German (abbr.) 16—Storage place for silage 18—Clothes washing accessory 20—Rules 22—A gibe 24—Disparages 26—Number under twelve 28—Fuss 31—River in England 32—Rows 33—~Colorless fluid 34—Personal possessive pronoun : 13—Semester 36—Concerning 37—Hastened 39—Nib of a bird (pl.) 41—Beverage 42—To knife 45—Belonging to him 46—Man’s title 48—Boy’'s name 50—Note of scale Solution will appear in next issue. Queer Things From the Sky. No belief is more firmly fixed than that frogs, small fish, snakes, angle- worms, turtles, insects and other small creatures are drawn up into the clouds by the sun and later rained down upon the earth. Any thinking man knows that the sun, which can . not vaporize the salt in the ocean and | carry it into the clouds, cannot pick | up small animals and hold them float- ing in the atmosphere. The presence of these creatures on the ground im- mediately after a shower is probably ! due to one of two reasons. In the case of frogs, worms, turtles and in- sects, they were probably there before the rain and the downpour stimulated them into activity. In the case of fish and some other ! creatures it is quite possible, scien- ! tists explain, for a waterspout of sy- clonic whirlwind to scoop up a pond and it’s contents and deposit it at a distant point, just as it will carry pebbles and pieces of wood a long dis- So-called “blood showers” canic ash or plant pollen in the rain- drops.—The Pathfinder. Prepares Book on Europe. Publication of the 1927 edition of his “Satchel Guide to Europe” has | just been announced by Dr. W. D. Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle. Cc SEEDEEZENS PAR A X A Rigg oO CIRIAITIER|I |[FIOR KEES IEASR | BEHE PAIRESE RA OT E BOOK Oo SIK| | PESAIDAGHO|I |LESA IINITIEIRES|T|I NG NEE X A TI IDEEH | BS EM | R T Crockett, head of the Latin depart- ment at the Pennsylvania State Col- lege, and one of the best posted Americans on European travel. The book, which is published by Houghton Mifflin Company, is the 47th annual editien, and is being used by hundreds of Americans traveling this summer in Europe. An outstanding addition | this year is a chapter on travel by "air which Dr. Crockett declares to be “convenient, comfortable and safe.” ——The Watchman publishes news when it is news. Read it. Faulty Elimination Should Be Corrected—Good Elimination Is Essential to Good Health. F you would be well, see to your elimination. Faulty kidney ac- tion permits toxic material to re- main in the blood and upset the whole system. Then, one is apt to have a tired, languid feeling and, sometimes, a toxic backache or head- ache, and often some irregularity of secretions, such as scanty-or burn- ing passages. More and more people are acclaiming the value of Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in this condition. For more than forty years Doan’s have been winning favor the country over. Ask your neighbor! DOAN’ PILLS 60c Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. ¥. Meats, Whether they be fresh, smoked or the cold-ready to serve—products, are always the choicest when they are purchased at our Market. We buy nothing but prime stock on the hoof, kill and re- frigerate it ourselves and we know it is good because we have had years of experience in handling meat products. sacs an, Orders by telephone always receive prompt attention. Telephone 450 P. L. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. 34-34 Insurance i FIRE LIFE ACCIDENT AUTOMOBILE WINDSTORM BURGLARY PLATE GLASS LIABILITY OF ALL KINDS SURETY BONDS EXECUTED Hugh M. Quigley Successor to H. E. FENLON Temple Court, Bellefonte, Penna. 71-33-tf CHICHESTER S PILLS Ladies! Ask your Druggist foe- Chi-ches-ter s Diamond Bran Pills in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. Take no other. Buy of you Druggist. Ask for LONER ER DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE SE ° (77 I ance, yet which is OTHERS buying Shoes for their children of school age ask for and have a right to expect foot- wear that is neat and dressy in appear- so well constructed that it will give long service. Bush Arcade Bellefonte, Pa. We Ask you to Put Our School Shoes to this Test