Bellefonte, Pa, December 11, 1981. —————— — LEFT HANDED CHILD PROBLEM NO LONGER Southpaws, leftys and persons who tilt to the larboard side are no long- er to be considered “left handed,” meaning awkward. Modern educators permit the child to use his left hand to hold pen, pencil, table knife or any of the oth- er things a child's hand holds. So the left-hander, once the bane of every teacher, is no longer a school problem, according to Dr. Martin Chwrowski, director of the Fanny Edel Falk Elementary School of the University of Pittsburgh. “There is no reason why the right should be used more than the left hand,” Dr. Chwrowski said. “To right-handed people it looks awkward to see a person using his left hand. But is it awkward? Cer- tainly not.” In the school of modern educa- tional tenets the child is instructed to use his right hand as far as pos- sible, unless he shows marked signs of being left-handed. “Up until a child is six years old we try to show him how to use his right hand, if it is not too great an adjustment for him to make,” Dr. Chwrowski said. “We only en- courage the use of the right hand because this is a right-handed world. Door knobs are so placed to facili- tate right-handed people. So are innumerable other things. But if he shows signs of being a person high- ly developed on the right side of his body, that is being a left-handed rson, then we want him to use his left hand.” “Stammering, shyness and innum- erable other things have come about when children have been forc- ed to employ the right hand in pref- erence to the left,” he said. They seem awkward, the educa- tor said, but that is only because right-handed people look at them from an angle of prejudiced tradi- tion. The very words, “left-hand- ed” connote a certain clumsiness. The French word “gauche” means left. But it means “awkward” in English. Sinister, a Latin word meaning left, has a derived meaning of which the connotation is evil, the tendency to disaster. There is no more reason why the left side should be associated with evil any more "than the right. But tradition has it so. A study of left and. right handed- pess was commenced some 30 years ‘ago by a psychologist, G. Stanley Hall, Chwrowski said. Researches | have been carried on by Dr. Samuel Orton, who has found that “handed- ness’ - left or right, is inherited. Handedness shows which side of the brain is best developed. If a per- son is right-handed, then the right side of his brain is the better de- veloped. If he is left-handed the op- posite is true.” A left-handed child forced to use - his right hand often reads words backwards, For instance he will read the word “saw” as ‘was” and “pot” as “ton.” In addition to be- ing an educational disadvantage it became a physical one and modern educators abandoned the attempt to form each child to a pattern. 3% —————————————————— IF CHILD DRIVERS CRASH, PARENTS PAY The Pennsylvania vehicle code makes a parent liable to damages who permits a child under 16 years of age to operate a motor vehicle and:injuries to another person re- sult, from an accident when the child HARD TIMES AHEAD | FORK THE MOVIE STARS wr | trom Eric M. Knights “Daily Film | we lake the following concern- about Gussip’ ing ine hard times that ure 1st upon Hollywood. The dawn comes for Hollywood, and it is the dawn of common sense. 1tnose great big salaries that sound LKe a vox-car number are going to be just memories soon, wila memo- ries that will be talked of just as’ we talk only haif-believingly today of the gold collections of rizarro. The first move comes from Warn- er Brothers-First National, which has made an announcement that has set California to trembling. The San Francisco earthquake was just a little fluctuation on a seismograph compared to this. The company will ask contract players to take from 20 to 30 per cent salary cuts. Along with the verbal notification went a little hint that the players who refused to agree might find themselves out in the cold when present contract dates are up. This studio has such stars as Richard Barthelmess, George Arkiss, Dorothy Mackaill, William Powell, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Bebe Daniels, Edward G. Robinson, Joe E. Brown and Winnie Lightner. Some of these persons draw as much as $350, 000 a year. Other players, of course, have pay checks starting at $100 a week and these have been asked, it is said, to take a 30 per cent cut. All non- union, noncontract players also get a cut this week. This looks like one of the health- jest moves the industry has made to date. This high-salary business has been a bugbear. The decision to cut by Warner may be followed by other companies. The producers will meet this week with Will H. Hays. Unofficially, it is said that they talk openly, but solve their problems separately. This sounds all right, but if they all agree in open tak that Lottie Gazink isn't worth more than $200,000 a year then they can proceed to keep that idea in separate procedure. Lottie may squawk, but what if no one listens to her? A combine? Don't ask me. It's a healthy move. Either that or some of the com- panies must cut down on the num- ber of films they have scheduled for production. They may do thisany- how--and close up a few theatres. In it all I wonder what Ruth Chatterton and William Powell think—having just left Paramount to go with Warner-First National being lured away, one supposes, by higher salaries and getting there just in time to get wne guillotine. However, there is alleviation for the stars in news from Moscow, which says that even the Soviet has laid off 22 per cent of the cinema workers. And Hollywood must re- member, too, that along with the cut in salaries Warner-First Na- tional studio cafeteria dropped the price of luncheons from 60 cents to 50 cents. > So the poor dears who only get $200,000 a year after the decrease can still live—they'll get along. WOMEN OVER 60 ARE LONDON MANNEQUINS Three ambitious women of sixty or more are studying to be manne- quins at a fashionable school in the West End of London. All are married and two are grandmothers. There is nothing surprising in this, because three grandmothers between the ages of 56 and 60 were the most admired mannequins at a recent big dress parade. Their services are so greatly sought after is driving, The same liability also 't).; jt is dijfficult for them to fit to a person not a parent who. allows a child less than sixteen to operate an automobile. “Children under sixteen may be safe drivers in the opinion of their parents but the law does not 80 Teé-,yiqnday, and have been busy ever gard, them.” ’ “Parental pride in the ince. y y e youngster's ability at the wheel can «quickly be turned imto parental re- morse. The law says that any owner of a motor vehicle who per- mits a child under the age of six- teen to operate a car is liable with such minor for any damages re- ‘sulting from an accident when the child was driving.” STUDENTS AT PENN STATE FBOM EVERY COUNTY. Every county in Pennsylvania. is ted in the student body of the Pennsylvania State College, ac-! cording to a recent compilation of the geographical distribution of stu-, dents. ~ Africa, -Burope, North and South America, the West Indies and 34 other States also are represented jnsthe student body of 4857 men and women, Almost all. of the 277 from other States are enrolled in advanc- ed courses in the graduate school. Centre county leads with the larg- | est number of students at Penn | State, a total of 486. Allegheny with 386 stands second, and Phila- delphia with 320 comes third. Oth- er. counties which send 100 or more students to their State College are Montgomery, Schuylkill and West- moreland. | Q. Are there many wild lions and tigers in the world? A. Lions were formerly much more widely, distributed than at present. They are found now throughout the continent if Africa, but have been exterminated in the more civilized | regions; in Asia their habitat ex- tends south from Mesopotamia and Persia, to India, but in India only near Kurraches. Tigers are widely distributed throughout Asia, being especially abundant in India, though absent from Ceylon, and also from the plateau of Tibet. — ———— ——————— Customer: You don't seem very | quick at fi ures, my boy. Newsboy: I'm out of practice, sir. | You see, most of my customers say, “Keep the change.” i all their engagments. “The women whose family has’ left home finds life rather dull” one of them explained. “I began as a mannequin after my sixtieth Naturally, women of my age don't want to see their frocks displayed on a young girl.” WILD LIFE VANISHING That the wild life of our land is rapidly vanishing we all know or ought to know. laws passed to conserve this wild life, the fo warring against it are threatening its extinction. De- forestation, pollution of waters, fire and the increase of hunters and fish- ermen backed, says the Nature Mag- azine, by traveling and killing have all con- tributed to this growing scarcity. Hope is expressed that the special Senate Committee on conservation of wild life will be able to check this rapid ce of the na- disap tion's undomesticated birds and beasts as well as its fish. This Committee reports, “While there has been a steady decrease of game and game fish there's,a corresponding increase in the number of hunters’ and fishermen. These are estimat- ed to number about 13,000,000." — Dumb Animals. RULES FOR SAFE DRIVING 1—Concentrate on driving. Most (accidents are the result of inatten- tion. 2—Drive with a fire grip on the wheel. 3—In traffic and at intersections hav. your ‘oot ready for the brake. 4—Don’'t pass on hills, curves, in- tersections or when another car is dangerously near. 5—Play. safe. use your horn. 6—Use intelligible hand signals. Your Stop light is not enough. 7--Govern your speed by the con- dition of the weather and the road. 8—-Don't endanger lives to ‘‘get even’ with another driver. 9—Obey traffic signals and the rules of the road. Never hesitate to 10—-Don't permit any one to touch | the wheel while under the influence or liquor. to f+ In spite of all the, improved machines for Abandoned Mine of the Kimberley Group. Prepared ny National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.)—WNXNU Service, ISCOVERY of new diamond deposits in Tanganyika has made the colony the focal point of enthusiastic pros geciors in search of the glittering gems, The African diamond industry Is miy slightly more than u half cen- tury old. Today the continent pro- duces nearly nine-tenths of the It was in 1870 that the windy, dust-swept region of Griqualand, South Africa, suddenly changed from No Man's Land to Ev- eryman’'s Land, when diamonds were discovered there. Later, it was an nexed to Cape Colony within such me- ticulously drawn boundaries that in- side one farmer's house the family dined In that colony and went to hed in the Orange [I'ree State, “Playing Jackstones with dia- agonds!” Somehow that electrifying aption was overlooked by news re porters in 1868, when, at Hopetown, wn the Orange river, the presence of diamonds in South Africa was sig- nitled hy a child, who wus discovered playing with a casually picked-up gem weighing 2134 carats, At once the South African diamond Lever was on. Ships lost their crews, overseas shopkeepers their clerks, po- lice forces their “bobbies,” the un- derworld its crooks; and perhaps the church lost a curate, and certainly Natal lost a budding cotton planter— he had once felt drawn to the min- istry—in the case of an invalidish young fellow named Cecil John Rhodes. All raked up the price to get them to Griqualund’s “desert of drought and diamonds.” Future Kimberley was soob a scene Jf canvas tents, of wagons converted nto huts, of prospectors sieving the diamondiferous emrth, and of “kopje- wallopers”—those who bought other men's finds on speculation—hurrying to and fro among the sorting tables, Also, there appeared the resource ul “I. D. B.” (illicit diamond buyer), who, co-operating with what might be described us the diamond-stealing in- dustry, smuggled out stones in con- travention to the law. Ntowing gems in elgurettes, pipes and hollow shoe- heels by no means exhausted his in- genuity. The hungry-dog trick—that is, feeding ® starved animal on meat containing diamonds and subsequent- ly retrieving them by cutting him open—was much In vogue. Controlling the Output. Unaer desert conditions, food was Jften more precious than “diamonds, and baths, if you could afford that luxury, were taken in imported soda water. Despite prophecies of a brief year's life for Kimberley, the first two decades showed a production of six tons of diamonds from the Griqua country. Indeed, by 1880 the possi- bility of South African stones swamp- ing the market was so apparent that fthodes and his group formed the price-and-output-controlling De Beers company. Moderp Kimberley abuts on a three- alleswide circle which contains, with. in barhed-wire barriers, mines, hous- ing “compounds” process sheds, com- puny ' stores, hospitals, public baths, and kitehens—in fact, everything nec- egsary to the Industry and its 5000 Bantu miners. These Bantu “boys” are voluntary .ecrnits, who mine for six months annually, returning to their Kkraals with the wherewithal for meeting (axes, for buying wives with lobola (cattle dowry), or for less serious In- vestments, such ag couceriinas and mouth organs. In “above ground” hours they are seen cooking their food, or purchasing at cost price at the stores, or depositing their wages with the company's savings. depart- ment, Often these deposits represent such considerable annual aggregates as £230,000 paid in by 12.000 miners. Each week In the Kimberley mines some 70.000 tons of “blue ground” (hard, diamondiferous earth) are masted out, crushed, fed into running water, rotated In steel drums, jiggled along in troughs, and washad across tablelike surfaces coated with pe- troleum jelly, The rotary process, by centrifugal force, separates the ground-up mass into different-sized units. The jiggling process washes away barren elements from the wa. ter-borne “concentrate,” of gravel like appearance; and, finally, the di- minished residue flows across the pe- troleum surfaces, to which only the dlamonde adhere. Not at All Exciting. Yet “diminished residue” is putting it but mildly, since these 70,000 tons world's supply. of blue ground will produce only about 1014 pounds of diamonds—say, | a ratio of 14,000,000 to 1. i We might address the cleanse, who, broad blade in hand, now and. | then scrapes off the diamondiferous petroleum and throws it into a vat of | boiling water. i “Scraping off millions of dollars |g worth of diamonds in this way, Isn't | it rather exciting?” t “Why, no,” he will probably au swer unemotionally—and everyone knows what familierity breeds—"it's about like handling mortar with a trowel.” | Inside the sorting room, to whiew | visitors are admitted after an eye has scrutinized them from behind a slid back panel, men were poking dia- monds through graduated holes in small screens to ascertain the stones’ diameters, On one table alone lay 18. 300° carats-weight of gems, worth ap. | proximately a million dollars. Feel ing as dizzy as Ali Baba in the treas | ure cave, one asks tremulously of a sorter: “Putting millions of dollars’ wortu | of diamonds through screen holes. isn't it a bit thrilling?” { “Oh, no,” he answers, suppressing, ! a yawn-—again that familiarity com- Amos plex—aus he popped a one-inch dia. mond through the screen, “it's about + hs 4 like shelling peas.” I'S Kimberley town itself is as simpie | and homelike a place as you'd find in © the suburban area of some American | eity. It has produced nearly $1,300, 000,000 worth of diamonds in half a century. It's dificult to see how the | city could adequately have expressed its wealth production save by pav-| ing Its main street with gems; but J ingtruth it bas been its fate to have, || v created fortunes that tog often flit. ted from South Africa to the attrac tions In London and Paris, i Al Yet there was an exception. af Cecil | a feast one Kimberley digger, Rhodes, could amass a fortune, yel; scorn to use it In the common way. Great wealth constitutes a trust, to be administered in the wider interests of humanity—such was his view, And , 35 that he did, according to his lights, within South Africa and for the Brit. ish empire, You may strike Lis trail along th. - 3S \ twisting street—Iit follows the route , = of bygone diggers’ footpaths from , claim to clalm--that leads you to the | long-abandoned “New Rush” mine, |, Here is the vast, extinct crater, al- 8 most a mile around and a quarter of | § a mile deep, that once spewed dia monds into Europe's capitals; and |S here, too, If you've eyes to see them, $ swarm’ old-time miners’ ghosts, with’ avid eyes and avaricious hands, sift- '§ ing the earth and clawing at fortune.’ § Tomorrow, for them, the fleshpots of’ Paris and London! Many Used in Industry, t Not. all diamonds. are destined to. 8 shine forth from jewelry that adorns men and women. More than balf the , world's production of the stones, in | 3 8 R 0) el ‘ quantity, is used in industry. Some _ form bearings for watches, chrono- meters, electric meters, and other ac- curate instruments and laboratory ap- | paratus. Some, In which tapered holes | are drilled, are used for drawing fine ' wire . of platinum, silver, gold, and | rare metals. Other industria), uses for diamonc. | similar hard tools for lathe work; engraving! points; and as cutting edges for rock T 'e are ag drills for glass, porcelain, and ? : substances; turning- { Ry ] vt 0 tl lJ purposes only the less nearly perfect and less valuable stones are used. | ‘ The United States Is the world's | § greatest diamond consuming country. & Normally it absorbs nearly the equiv- | alent of the entire South African out- ' & ¥ put. If all the diamonds produced in \'§ the. world in 1929 could have been | ) combined Into a single cube it would | have been five and a half feet across '¥§ euch fage—n crystal block as tall as K ¥ the average man and weighing more | '@% than a ton .and a half, If the rough ! stones have been brought together and ' dumped into bushel baskets would have filled two dozens of them, heaped up. In recent luvial diamond deposits, Until this change in mining methods came about, | the greater part of the dinmonds had | : been mined for decades by laborious | digging to great depths in the “pipes” | '@ Then came the | slow work of separating the stones v of extinet volennoes, from earth and rock, they ‘8 1 wi ’ a a 9 years a wealth of th, = gems has been literally scooped up '¥ from the earth in the regions of al- § .] A ¥ time in the store’s history. drilling and sawing. For industriai | 3% your opportunity. Don’t miss it. # shdba nse welovy Cost, Values, Profit and the Depression all were forgotten when the doors opened Saturday on the Fauble Store’s 45th Anniversary Sale. The crowd that rushed in our store swept us off our feet. Our greatly increased sales force was unable to take care of the crowd. The patrons knew they could depend on a few dollars doing the work that took many a year ago. They knew that the A high standard of merchandise 3 would remain the same. They J knew the reductions were real . and honest, and they came to profit by this unusual oppor- % tunity to save. 5 We are going to keep this big # opportunity open until Christmas 4 Eve. We are making it possible 2 for the most meagre income to ; keep that wonderful Christmas # ‘spirit alive this year, of all years. Our celebrated Birthday Sale : 3 is the outstanding merchandis- j ing event in Central Penna. We # want you to come here expecting i to find only the best of every- # thing—priced lower than at any # It's the store’s Birthday. It’s wee IT'S AT.....