Bellefonte, Pa., December 2, 1927. EE ——————— THIRD DEATH ADDS TO KANAGA RIDDLE Kodiak, Alaska.—Do the deep sea- |P worn caves of lonely Kanaga island conceal strange animal-like men who venture out at low tide to prey on natives and white fox-farm attend- ants? For the third time in a year a Seattle man’s death adds to the north riddle. Thus far the toll of Kanaga includes T. Shruger, Tom Marrah and P. H. Munro. More than a score of Aleuts have fallen victims to some mysterious power at various times in recent years, yet there has been no witness of the terrible deeds committed nor has a clew to the malefactors been found. Fox-pelt poachers do prey among the fur islands, but they rare- ly molest the islanders, fearing dis- closure of their crimes. The Aleut natives are peaceful men, seldom per- turbed to the fighting point. Kanaga is the home just now of the largest blue fox farm in the world, The island lies near the tip of the Aleutian group, the relic of terrific submarine upheaval centuries ago. Besides Aleuts, there are a few persons descended from the Baranoff explorers and the Muscovian influence is shown in their mode of living—low- roofed stone houses with large fire- places where the fires seldom die down as a rule. Pelting of furs is the occupation, besides fishing and hunting. Day after day in autumn and win- ter Kanaga is veiled with dense fog; the furious sea beats the rocky shores, wearing deep caves far into the bowels of the sandstone formation. Some of the caves are a mile back with high vaulted ceilings. In these natural tombs Aleuts bore their dead, each body rolled in layer after layer of long seaweed or kelp. The dead were mummified and today are in a good state of preservation. In spring Kanaga casts off the drab clothing of winter. Lupines, lilies and wild celery transfer it into a great flower garden. Sea fowl by the million come to eat the wild rice and schools of fish. The towering cliffs are covered with spruce and there is a strange wild beauty all around. Wild and semidomesticated foxes overrun the land. Lured by the natural torpid sur- roundings, the Aleuts have become half-dazed, the white settlers morbid, until all move about as dead living people. In the mummy caves are found grotesque masks, ikons and oriental carvings. The beach receives a backwash from many shores. Drift- wood from Asia reaches Kanaga in terror and superstitions of the islanders. : Little wonder the stranger landi at Kanaga is held at a distance, an peering eyes watch from secret places until suspicion is overcome. : On Kanaga island it is said Irish turn into Russians, Russians become Chinese and all finally become queer, rimitive human beings, lacking am- bition and imbued with a curious de- sire to worship the mummies in the echoing caves of Neptune. ——— Gp ———— Grow Food Supplies for Zoo Denizens. Transportation of food to the ani- mals is quite a problem in any zoo, and at the National Zoological park at Washington an effort is being made to grow provender right on the spot. A large garden is operated not far from the pens and it supplies kale, spinach, lettuce, Swiss chard, beet tops and the like in huge quantities. Even the lawn clippings are fed to the ruminants and water fowl, and trimmings from trees—the leaves, bark and small twigs—are accepted greedily by the browsing animals. Recently an orchard was set out and it is expected that soon all the apples that can be used will be grown right in the park. Bird Societies. In nearly every country town peo- ple have bird clubs established and they have come to be useful inasmuch as children are allowed membership and through the efforts of the older people to train and teach them why bird protection is necessary when considering that birds protect the food that feeds the nation, they learn a useful lesson that will ever be brought into practice in their future lives. It would be a nice undertaking and a splendid development for our game protectors to get started. There is no doubt in the least that that venture would be a successful one. The reasons that many do not pro- tect wild game is because they are not educated to do so.—Osceola Leader. Feed for Wild Game Needed. On Tuesday the season for pheas- ants and turkeys came to a close. Perhaps a great many of the hunt- ers are not pleased with the short season., But as the saying goes, “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” The next thing the hunters should turn their attention to is the providing of feed for the remaining birds and animals. The proper feed for wild game is very scarce in the woods and the sooner this is realized and action taken in the direction of furnishing feed before the cold weath- er sets in the better will be the sup- ply of birds for the next season. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market 34-34 THAT LEG OF LAMB Buy one of our tender, juicy leg of lamb, have it cooked, not too much, cut it in thin slices at right angles with the bone, and you will have the most delicious “meat Gourse for dih- 1 ner you could wish to eat. And do not forget that cold roast lamb the next day or for supper makes an ideal dish. Stew, of course; for the end of it. Telephone 450 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. ie SNS ASS eo Torin L] ER Shion il HSRSA | | SEE TES Ta Soe 1923 Nash Sedan, four 1927 Chevrolet Truck, — od 1926 Chevrolet Coupe, SER Used Car Bargains It will be well worth your time to stop in and look over the line of used cars.” Many very useful Bargains in Trucks and Passenger Cars. 1. Small Down Payments. 2.—Monthly payments to meet your income. 3. A large per cent. off for cash. 4. Every car in fine running condition. 1924 Durant Touring . 1925 Chevrolet Tourings, two, at each......$190.00 1927 Dodge Sedan (business) 1924 Chevrolet Tourings, two, at each......$175.00 1923 Studebaker Light Sedan 1925 Ford Coupe, Ruxteel Axle 1926 Oldsmobile Sedan, Sport Model........ $525.00 1926 Ford, four-door Sedan SAS ARLE trnniiniienis 80.00 fo] SASH iene aiiess $275.00 2 door..." ..: $525.00 =n 3-ton.................. $450.00 =i aa $200.00 =n fully equipped......$475.00 Soa Is 1923 Nash Touring .............conen.... aan) $100.00 Oo 1924 Rickenbacker Touring .......... $200.00 T= Uo 1924 Oldsmobile Twin “4-cyl.” .......... $180.00 r= Io 1923 Ford Roadster, two, at each.............. $ 80.00 Ic - RSAC ea 1 ml Other cars in running condition as low as $25.00. Decker Chevrolet Co. BELLEFONTE, PA. Corner of High and Spring streets. Open Day and Night SEAS onan Phone 405 SRshsn od Hl pl a the my current, This adds to the © FARM CALENDAR. It is necessary to put off until spring the overhauling of the spray- er. On inclement days it should be taken apart, oiled and worn parts re- placed. Now that the frost hos killed the tops of cannas, gladioli, and other summer flowering stock, dig the bulbs and corms so that they can be stored for the winter. See that you have good viable and disease-free seed for use in the spring. Be sure that all seed is thor- oughly dried and stored in a place where it will not get wet or be de- stroyed by rats and mice. Many eggs are broken and cracked before the “shipper delivers them at the station. A recent survey showed an average of 7.5 eggs per case dam- aged when the eggs were delivered at the station by the shipper. A cow in thin condition cannot do her best at the milk pail. The time to put the flesh on a good producer is when she is standing dry. A cow needs a rest of 6 to 8 weeks before freshening and at that time she should be put in condition for her next milk- ing period, says Pennsylvania State College dairy specialists. Garden refuse infested with diseases and insects should be cleaned up and burned before winter comes. This practice will eliminate consider- able trouble with garden pests next year. ed with insects may be plowed un- der at this time or placed in a com- post pile to be used in the spring. The San Jose scale is very often brought in on nursery stock. This is a small flake-like scale. In taking a knife and lifting up this scale you will find a small yellow insect under- neath. Examination under a micro- scope will show that this insect has a sucking mouth part that it inserts into the tissues of the plant, and in this way obtains its food. One pair of these scales is capable in a year’s time, under favorable conditions, of multiplying into 10,000,000. If horses are lousy in the spring at shedding time it is more than likely they will go into the winter infested unless treated to eradicate the pests. When the animals shed their hair in the spring the lice seem to disappear, and the farmer is led to believe that his horses are free. Some of the lice usually remain on the animals during the entire summer, but not in suffi- cient numbers to cause annoyance or to be easily detected. The animals, therefore, usually go into the winter infested, and during cold weather lice increase very rapidly. Since the best remedies are liquid dips, which cannot safely be used on horses during cold weather, fall dip- ping should be practiced whenever horses have been lousy at shedding time in the spring, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Three kinds of parasites are common- ly found on the skin of the horse in the United States—lice, mange mites, and ticks. All three may be present on an animal at the same time. The lice can be eradicated by spraying or dipping the infested animals twice days between treatments. Mange is one of the most injurious skin diseases that affect horses. Four or more djppings at intervals of from five to seven days usually eradicate the most common form of the disease. Lime sulphur and nicotine dips are suitable for controlling mange. Many different kinds of ticks affect horses. The spinose ear tick is nreva- lent on horses in the southwest and causes serious damage. The ticks en- ter the ears of animals, where they may be destroyed by a mixture of two parts pine tar and one part cotton- seed oil injected into the ear canal. Complete instructions as to the various dips and remedies suitable for eradicating these three parasites of horses may be had by writing to the Bureau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington. To learn exactly to what extent certain birds are aids to agriculture and to determine whether their good qualities overbalance the evil they do, the biological survey of the United States Department of Agriculture has for many years been making scientific studies of their food habits. All that can be learned out-of-doors by watch- ing the birds is valuable, but the sure way of finding out what a bird eats is to examine the contents of its stomach and to identify what is found. W. L. McAtee, a biologist in the bureau, describes the method of ex- amining the stomach content of a bird. “It consists of washing all ma- 5 | terial into a white-lines tray, sepa- rating the larger particles on white blotters, catching the more finely ground food on a bolting cloth, trans- ferring this to blotters, and finally identifying the component parts of the whole under a microscope. Identi- fication is facilitated by compariscs with collections of seeds, fruit, in- sects, snails, and bones of birds, mam- mals, reptiles, and amphibians; in fact, of all classes of objects eaten by birds. A card prepared for each stomach contains a full inventory of food items and their relative per- centages by bulk, and when a suffi- cient number of these index cards have been accumulated for any species of bird the percentages of the prin- cipal items of food for each month are calculated, and the average for the season or year is taken. These are the figures quoted in official re- ports on food of birds. From the percentages and the economic value of the food items the utility of the bird can be closely estimated.” It is on the basis of such informa- tion that the biological survey has been able to combat prejudices against certain birds, such as hawks and owls. The sharp-shinned, Cooper, and duck hawks feed largely on birds and are injurious. The great horned owl gets only poultry that is improperly exposed at night, but is otherwise beneficial. The remaining species of hawks and owls, more than fifty in ‘all, have chiefly useful habits. They ; feed on a great variety of rodents and "have a tremendous effect in controll- ing the number of these pests. The Refuse not diseased or infest- | pe with an" interval of from 14 to 16 : barn owl is one of the most useful of birds. Large percentages of mice, rats, and pocket gophers are noted on the feeding cards, showing that the barn owl is constantly doing work of great value to agriculture. Owls as a group have long been persecuted by man, but never has persecution been more unjust. When their num- bers are greatly reduced in any com- munity farmers will be forcibly re- minded of the fact by a great increase in the number of destructive rdoents. WHAT IS YOUR FEAR BOGY? Not so very long ago there were monarchs who lived in constant fear of being poisoned. They never par- took of food until their cooks or oth- some of it. rulers, even in recent times, notably of the late Czar Nicholas of Russia and the Sultan of Turkey. Most people would say that life un- der such conditions would hardly be worth living. Yet there are few among the great mass of mankind to- day who do not live in the constant shadow of some kind of fear. People do not know just what they are afraid of, but they are afraid of something. They have a foreboding of impending evil, a sense of something hanging over them, a vague dread of some coming calamity that they can’t es- cape. You will hear them say: “Well I'm sure something is going to hap- n. I don’t know just what it is, but I feel it very strongly. I don’t know whether it’s death, sickness, or an accident in the family, but some- thing bad is coming.” 1 have a friend who has always lived under the shadow of fear, who is always and forever predicting trouble ahead. I rarely meet him that he does not see some impending catas- trophe just in front of us; we are on the toboggan slide headed toward de- struction; we are going to have hard times, worse failures than we have ever had before. We'll see bread lines and soup kitchens before spring. The Bolshevik philosophy is going to spread over the entire world; labor is going to seize capital, and this will mean chaos and ruin. On the per- sonal side he is afraid that his health will fail, and that his wife may meet with an accident; that his children will go wrong and disappoint him. In short, there is nothing in the cate- gory of human ills that he does not anticipate. 1 have known this man for many years and few, if any, of the dire things he has predicted have ever come to pass. Are we not all, in some degree, like him? Almost everyone I know is worrying about something, anticipat- ing some evil or misfortune. It is estimated that there are more than 5,000 different kinds of fear. In fact fear, in all its different phases of expression, such as worry, anxiety, anger, jealousy, superstition, intol- erance, greed and avarice, is darken- ing and crippling the lives of most of us. Fear:is the greatest enemy of the human race. It has robbed men of more happiness and efficiency, has made more men cowards, more people failures or mediocrities, caused more crimes and suicides than any- Fthing else Yet this Fear devil, with all its attendant worries and evils, is the greatest delusion ever conjured up by the mind of man. Fear is nothing but a bogy of the imagination, as unsub- stantial as a soap bubble or a child’s toy balloon. No matter how dreadful the face it wears it collapses at the first touch of courage and common sense. But in spite of this the ma- jority of us travel from the cradle to the grave, suffering, harassed, or driven to desperation through fear of something or other, ill health, acci- dent, poverty, failure—in nine cases out of ten, something that never hap- pens. If we would only utilize the energy and vitality we now waste in worry- ing, what marvels we would accom- plish! Quit worrying and work. Fretting and fuming over what is passed and cannot be helped, or anticipating ills that may never come will do nothing but drain your mental and physical forces, waste your vitality, and de- stroy your possibilities of growth and happiness.—O. S. Marden, in Success. Dogs Live in Luxury. The dog team that aroused the at- tention of the world in 1925 when, it made a dash to diphtheria stricken, Nome, Alaska, with anti-toxin, is en- joying the comforts of a hotel in a Cleveland zoo. Balto and his seven teammates of the heroic dash through ice and snow, have forgotten their early privations in walks through the zoo park with school children, showers, and steam heat when the weather gets chilly. On Saturday morning, the huskies, Balto, the exalted; Fox, Sye, Billie, Tillie, Old Moctoc and Alaska Slim go for a walk in the park with school children. Three times a day they have their ears sprayed to discourage flies from using them as a landing field, and at night they step under a specially-built shower in their ken- nel for an evening bath. The kennel is steam heated, and is fitted out in a way that would give credit to the most careful handler of dogs. These facts were brought to the attention of the public recently when complaints were made that the dogs were being mistreated. Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle. [e] s [0lDjmI 2 m|o]rm| £ A V] O) 5 i> 2-25 [MEILE er trusted servants had first eaten This was true of some | Christmas 1928. Eire that, during the past year, put aside each week a little money for Christ mas praises our Christmas Club. ~ Next week we shall hand checks, amounting to a good deal of money, to a lot of people who look ahead—who will not be bothered this year about holiday expenses. It is easy to save a little at a time—and even twenty five cents each week will produce a com- fortable check at the end of the year. Let us enroll you for what you think you can save. The First. National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. a — ZA ET TE ER IIIT, On Thanks } giving Day e all have much for which to be thankful and as we enumerate our blessings, we note the pros- perity of both our Country and home. We are thankful that the people have made such progress in things that count for their good. | 4 8 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. JEWELRY of the less expensive kind, in im- ported Russian and French designs. Spar-tie 1) RL kB 8 Th o 29°, Q EN LT) (LLY TY SA 4 ft 1X, v TLC Jade and Topaz in Necklaces, Bracelets, Brooches and Ear Rings. F.P.Blair & Son JEWELERS Bellefonte, Penna. TIMES Se NEW YORK CITY JUST OFF BROADWAY AT 10913 WEST 454 ST..’ \ Much F traveling wie ed by wo Without escorg ) Rooms $2.50 with Bath $3.00, Send Postal For Rates and Booklet W. JOHNSON QUINN, President,