| Bellefonte, Pa., August 7, 1981. ————— INVENTOR'S MEALS COOKED BY SUNLIGHT A West Elizabeth inventor has a pew device whereby sunlight cooks his meals. A sun-driven device gen- erates power that fries as tasty ham and eggs as is possible to conceive. It does every kind of cooking that an electric stove can produce. The inventor is William Snee, life- long West Elizabeth resident. He is the inventor of a hundred devices. Harnessing sun rays presents a particular appeal, it was pointed out. Families who bemoan high cost of fuel may be glad to know of the device. The sun-driven motor is simple. There are five pairs of pipes, each of small-size bore. They are con- pected by elbow joints. To these are attached a small dynamo and gen- erator. Bottled sunlight in the coils provides energy for the dynamo to operate. One can attach the electric plug and “tune in" on hot plate per- colator, toaster or any other device. One can attach the electric wash- ing machine, sweeper, or even hair- curling iron to the same dynamo. Power generated is the same asone gets at the electric outlets in one's own home. “There is no question as to the amount of power,” Snee said. You can get as much power as Niagara Falls.” Snee has been at work “harnessing the sun” for years. He noted the vast units of power wasted on days when others merely mop brows and say, “Whee. isn’t it hot?” The principle is one of compres- sion, he explains. “If I had a whole acre of coils I could get 5,000 horsepower of ener- gy. Sunlight so compressed has an on of 100 times. So I might have 100 acres of energy compressed into a single acre of tubes.” An interesting side of the sun- driven motor is that it will work with equal facility after sundown. Snee has been granted a govern- ment patent on a safety device for airplanes. The device is an automa- tic control, whereby the plane is kept at the altitude intended. UNGUARDED WATER MIGHT CARRY GERMS OF TYPHOID FEVER “Look out for typhoid fever,” warns Dr. J. Moore Campbell, chief of the division of communicable diseases, State Department of Health. “Remember what pened last year, during the drought, when ty- phoid fever jumped to ninety-nine cases in July over two hundred in August and to nearly four hundred in September” Dr Campbell said. “Somewhat similar conditions exist this year although in a lesser de- gree and it is to be hoped that our typhoid fever rate will be much low- er. However it is »p to the individ- ual to take care himself and to see to it that he drinks no water or milk until he is sure of its purity. Stay away from roadside wells and springs unless they bear the approv- al sign of the Department of Health. “It should be remembered by trav- elers, campers and persons on va- cations that many other States do pot have the same highway water supply service that exists in Penn- sylvania. Typhoid fever may be pick- ed up in any farm or small village | water supply taken from wells or springs that are not properly pro- tected.” ONLY POOR SPORTSMEN DIG OUT GROUNDHOGS “A hungry bear likes to dig a woodchuck from its den but it isn't a sportsmanlike proceeding for | Officials referred to the practice of Game Commission officials “hog hunters” who make no attempt | to shoot the animals but depend en- tirely upon digging them from their holes. Ability to kill them with a small calibre rifle is the boast of many sportsmen, some of whom use them for food. While the law does not protect the little animals at any season of the year Cemmission officials are anxious not to have them extermi- nated in sections where they can do no damage. ——————— A ————— AUTOMATIC MACHINE TEES UP GOLF BALLS A machine that automatically tees golf balls has an oval container, holding several balls, to which a movable spout is attached. Depress- ing a short lever with a club end causes the spout to drop, deposit- ing a ball on a rubber tee. When the ball is in position the spout out of the way. It is used on practice driving ranges, both indoors and outdoors. Since it can be load- | ed once for fifty drives there is no time lost in setting up balls for shots. GOVERNMENT NAMES 87 Thirty-seven medical examiners have been provided by the Depart- ment of Commerce for examination of airplane pilots in Pennsylvania. | The physicians are located in 22 various cities of the State. Embryo | aviators must be examined by one | the designated examiners, who are also authorized to issue student permits to those passing the exam- | | stand or kneel and clasp hands In of inations. TO HEAT CAR QUICKLY The amount of heat given out by an exhaust heater is directly depend- ent upon the voiume of hot gas) vapor passing through the coils. The | to get up heat quickly is | to climb a hill in high gear, being | careful not to drive so fast as to J best way to allow the car to roll to freely. | { i | i i | | | i i i | i bad been promoted to A class, first | Attitude Toward Time | at the same rate. Our attitude the thing that counts. If we busy, if we are happily concerned the affairs of life, we do not notice passing of time. It is then we say that it passes quickly. When we are | bored and discontented and gloomy, we think that time hangs heavily upor sur hands. And it does. The right attitude to the matter of time should be something different. | Time, and therefore experience, must come and go. Are we being intelligent | enough to utilize every second of time | in the best possible way, and are we directing our lives to the fullest possi- ble advantage as a result of the ex- perience? If we are not, we are not pushing on. Valuable days are pass ing, and people are suffering; some | physically, some mentally; many in both ways. There is no time to lose. If we are economists of time and ef- fort, as we should be, there is need for a closer and a more intelligent understanding and grasp of our jobs; pot only our personal tusk, but the business of caring for others. We must push on. There must be so faintheartedness, If we would lead, | there must be courage and determina- | tion.—Exchange. | fail to measure up to the test. Queer Designations Given Animal and Bird Groups | Perhaps the ingenuity of the sports- i oan Is nowhere better illustrated than | by the use to which he puts the Eng- | lish language In designating partic- | ular groups of animals. Here is a list | of terms which have been applied to the various classes: | A covey of partridges; a nide o sheasants; a wisp of snipe; a flight of doves or swallows; a muster of peacocks; a selge of herons; a build ing of rooks; a brood of grouse; a plump of wild fowl A stand of plovers; a watch 0 alghtingales; a clattering of choughs: | a flock of geese; a herd or bunch of cattle; a bevy of quails; a cast of hawks; a trip of dotterell; a swarm of bees; a school of whales. A shoal of herrings; a herd o swine; a skulk of foxes; a pack of wolves; a drove of oxen; a sounder | of hogs; a troop of monkeys; a pride | of ons; a sleuth of bears; a gang of olk. Steed on His Dignity Bill, aged six and one-half, came home to announce pridefully that he grade, and that he meant to be t best boy In the world and study like | everything. 5s : | Imagine, then, the surprise of hi» mother when the very next day she got a note from Bill's teacher saying | that Bill bad been astoundingly bad. Actually, be had flatly and persistently | refused to cut and paste and color pictures, “And you did It so beautifully ah Mast term,” said his mother. “What | ever possessed you to refuse?” “Sure I did it swell last term,” Bil agreed. “But you don't catch me do- Ing baby stuff like that now I'm grown | ap. What they've got to teach me Is reading and writing and arithmetic, or | ll walk out on 'em.”"—New York Sun. | | Koreuns themselves us well as other Co-Operative Farming In an arid country, so rocky that h compares favorably with the slope of the Rocky mountains, a rancher has tried to eke out a living for more than years. With him lives his hired w! bas been with him that of time also, One day a visi: asked the old rancher how he man- to pay the old hand his wages. “It’s this way,” said the rancher. hired him for two yegrs and gave him a mortgage on the ranch to guarantee his wages. At the end of twe years he got the ranch, and I went to work for him on the same terms, For 50 years the ranch has passed back and forth every two years and neither of us has drawn a cent of wages. So we made it pay.” i “ Youth Must Be Served A Pittsburg man addressing a local luncheon club the other day said the | eighty-one-year-old grandmother of the family lives at his home. Mot long ago, he related, she came | back from a shopping trip with a pack- | age and took it on up to her room. There was considerable curiosity as to what was In the package, but grand- ma seriously objects to being ques- tioned. A little later, however, she came down with another bundle, and handing It over to her daughter, re- marked: “There are all my old | nighties, get rid of them, for I've just | DOCTORS FOR AIR TESTS laid in a supply of siik pajamas that I sport from now on.”"—Cincinnat! En- quirer. African Form of Greeting Perhaps the nearest form to our | handsheke found in Africe today Is | the custom of the Hausas, a nation | numbering more than 6,000,000, living in northern Nigeria, The Hausamen much the same manner that we do, | only they do not shake them. Then | after holding hands for a few mo ments, with much feeling, they re | lease their hold, and each touches | his breast, and sometimes his fore. | head. This is repeated two or three times. They also clasp hands agnin when parting | will be struck by ightning in his home | goddess. Kilnuea Is merely a crater | ; pad been separated one hundred | sliding sideways toward the ground. | about | practically all fish swim: or drift down WHY =—-—mr== Many Men Fail to Make Good as Business Leaders Ambition and bard work are not suf- | ficient to make real business leaders. Ninety-nine out of a hundred average | business men never become leaders because they are unwilling to pay the penalties that leadership demands, ac cording to Owen D. Young. one of the foremost Industrial and financial fig: ures of the day, in an Interview in the American Magazine. “Lack of ambition—or lack of a sort of wishful thinking that often passes as ambition, Is rather rare. Most men honestly want places of power, but they refuse to believe that the price is so high,” Young continues. “There is nothing magical about leadership. But there are certain pen- altles attached to It. The average man has a sneaking notion that he | can get ahead just as fast and be com- fortable at the same time. He thinks, no doubt, that in his case it won't be necessary to pay the penalties—tha* he can beat the game. “By the penalties of responsibility I mean the hard driving, continuous work—the little dally sacrifices—the cournge to face facts, to make de cisions, to stand the gaff—the scourg: ing honesty of never fooling yourself about yourself. Even when human be ings do apprehend at least dimly, the real cost of leadership, too often they | If they had a big crisis to meet, on which | they knew thelr whole future would | | depend. they would meet it with | clenched fists and a high heart. Bui in the little daily demands—the things | they can do or duck—it Is here they | tail. If you see anyone shy away | from a task, however small, you may | be sure that you can't rely on him | qt the finish.” Why Use of Lightning Rods Is of Real Value While it is true that If lightning should strike a building equipped with lightning rods the lightning probably would run off rods without harming the building, the principal function of Benjamin Franklin's device, as stu dents of physics know, is to neutralize elouds charged with electricity. The reason for this lies in the be havior of tiny electrical charges called electrons, Caldwell & Curtis’ “Introduce tion to Science” points out. “Although most persons fear the lightning, there really is very little chance of being struck by It.” the book says. “It recently has been esti- mated that the chances that a person are only one in many millions.” Why Old Custom Prevails The custom of casting chelo berries into the crater of the volcano is a very anclent one in Hawall, The object is to propitiate the goddess Pele. The goddess Pele appears in various guises. Formerly it was believed that she would never allow the volcano to harm any Individuals, but the recent flows | of luva have shown this to be not true Red flags are often placed to mark the | boundaries of the village and a live | pig Is tied In front us a sacrifice to the | on the largest volcano in the world | though not the loftiest. | Why Korea Became “Chosen” “Korea” wus the name given to the country in northeastern Asie by for eigners, particularly Europeans. The Orientals preferred to call the coun try “Chosyon,” because that was the old native name. *Chosyon,” usually written “Chosen” In English, is from Chinese “Ch’ao Hsien.” It was nnt- ura. that the Japanese, after they took possession of the kingdom of Koren should have preferred to call it Chos en.—Pathfinder Magazine. Why Ne Lift on Wings When an airplane Is on a $0-degree banked turn in a vertical bank, there is no lift upward on the wing. There is a lift Inward toward the center of the circle, however, and this In part helps to counteract the force of gravity and prevents the plane from In other words, the plane travels | in a circle and is jammed against the air as if it were an auto mobile traveling about the inside of a racing bowl. i Why Insect le “Spider” The word “spider Is merely a cor rupted form of the noun “spinner.” which Is derived from an old Anglo Saxon verb “splunan,” meaning to spin. The spider was So called be cause it spins a weh.— Exchange. Why Named the Balkans The Balkan mountains huve given their name to the Balkan peninsula the area between the Black, Ageun and Adriatic seas, and this In turo has given its name to the countries into which It is divided. Why Fishes Face Currest The bureau of fisheries says that stream tall first. They face the cur rent in order to hold their position. Why Touch of Tinfoil Hurts Tinfoil coming in contact with the sold filling In a tooth causes a sharp pain because a slight electrical cur rent is thus generated. Why Jurors Were Summoned | Originally the jury of 12 neighbors | sux chosen because of thelr knew! | pdge of the accused. | says: | hour or two—consuming such tobac- | Cliristinas tree. Gorgeous Funeral Even for Lowliest Chinaman The Chinese pay their doctors not to cure their ills but to keep them well, because, though it is cheap for them to live, it is exceedingly expen sive to dle. Even the poorest and most | | i | i miserable coolie, who existed on a few cents a dey. attains dignity and | importance in death among his ances- | tor-worshing fellows. His family will | mortgage its income for years to give | him a funeral consistent with its ides of prestige. For the rich mandarin the final hon- | org are proportionately greater. And | to provide a fitting send-off to distin- | guished citizens the Nanking govern- ment has adopted a state burial law allowing $10,000 funeral expenses In meritorious cases. Often when a death occurs in China a necromancer Is | called In to arrange details and name | an auspicious day for interment, which may take place from one to five weeks | after death. During this period rel- atives and friends, in white mourning, | lament loudly in the death chamber. Buddhist and Taoist priests intone | prayers for the departed spirit. Can- dles burn. Blue, perfumed incense ar ~ends In clouds. On the day of burial a procession forms, made up partly of paid mourn- ers. It is led by musicians with drums, cymbals, fifes and flutes. Its || size and splendor depend on the amount of money the bereaved family can spend. Writer Advises Letting Young Authors Struggle | Rising young authors ought to strug- gle. It is the only way to prove they are good for anything. It is not wis dom to give a prize of $18,000 for a first novel. The book is written for | the prize, not as a talented emanatior | +hat could not be withheld. Prizes are now dangled everywhere by publishers for all sorts of literary output. Yet we know that the beat of all literature is that which bubbles out with no greedy eye on what is ts he paid for it. Not but that the seally precious should be rewarded as It deserves. While one may still feel a qualm that poor Milton got but £10 (wasn't It?) for “Paradise Lost,” he may rejoice that our modern authors live comfort- ably—many of them sfuently—on the product of their pens. No one be them wealth; but that wealth grudges or the hope of it, should not corrupt | | thelr literary integrity.—St. Lculs Globe-Democrat. Plymouth Rock Reunited The secretary of the Pilgrim soclety | of | : "In 1774 the Inhabitants Plymouth decided to remove the fo- mous, rock to Town square and estab- lish & shrine of liberty. When they attempted to raise It, however, It broke into two parts, one of which | was permitted to remain and the oth- | | er earried to its destination. It re- J | mained there until 1884, when it was | removed to the yard in front of Pil- } | grim hall, where it was surrounded by an iron fence. It so remained until 1880, when it was pemoved and placed on that part of the rock from which and six years before, and over which, The peristyle which now surrounds it was erected by the Soclety of Coloni Hi al Dames.” Smoking Throughout Sermon The question asked by the bishop of Ely whether listeners put out their pipes during the broadcasting of re- ligious services would not have trou- bled the clergy of past generations, writes a columnist in the Manchester (England) Guardian. In some of our parish churches smoking during the |} service used tc be so commonm that | pipe-racks and spittoons were provid- ed, and in Wales ax late as 1850 the start of the sermon was an accepted signal for the male members of the congregation to light up. Readers of “The Heart of Midlothian,” too, will remember an who smoked throughout the whole of the sermon—often a matter of an co as he could borrow from other worshipers. In his “A Systematic Dictionary of Nea Terms” C, Grand Plerre says on this subject: “Dead reckoning is the estimation of a vessel's position by means other than direct observations, when tliese are not feasible. Unlike all other marine uses of the word, dead, here, does not express anything inert or adverse. Formerly logs were loose ruled sheets of a prescribed narrow to admit the words ‘deduced latitude’ in full, the expression was abbreviated ‘ded. 1.’ and later short | ened to ‘ded’ which was corrupted to | ‘dead.’ "—Pathfinder Magazine. er— Origin of Christmas Tree important personage | meanwhile, an elaborate granite can- || opy may now be seen, in its original position, on the shore at Plymouth. | Business, as Some Economists See It Mr. Babson says: No depression lasts longer than it takes to wear out two pairs of shoes.” The Harvard Economic Service finds the foreign situation very serious, but points to the great activity in shoe manufacturing, and to the advance of 50% in the price of hides. While this is local, and may not per- sist, it gives point to Mr. Babson’s saying. The Anualist, while admitting that conditions abroad have not improved, says, “At home, on the contrary, various indices indicate a substantial up turn in business activity.” Commerce and Finance feels that pessimistic conditions which prevail over- seas, have been exaggerated; that, but for the fear of another war, we would probably find ourselves in the midst of the greatest business revival ever known. All the conditions for such a revival are | here. Cheap money, abundant credit, adequate | labor and an improved understanding of economic laws- And thus it goes. Mr. Babson was almost alone in publically pre- dicting the 1929 crash. Maybe he is right now. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. | form. The latitude column being too | 1 The Scandinavians of North Europe | | worshiped trees in thelr pre-Christian | days, the special deity of the North- | men sea-savages being called Ydrasil, or The Tree of Life, Their Tree of Life was adopted by | | Christian England as an emblem of | the Blessed Savior, and has been for centuries the center of the gift-be- Jif stowing at the hlessed season as a | jf In olden times it was placed on the rood screens, in the minstrel’'s gallery, or in the chancels of the chnreches Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years in the Business BELLEFONTE, PA. Our Entire Stock of Boys’ Wash Suits ON SALE AT ONE PRICE