Sr * E—— Bellefonte, Pa. January 22, 1982. ———— —— ——— HOW MOTHER EARTH RECEIVES HEAT FROM SUN'S RAYS. — The earth's heat and light come from the sun's rays and not from the interior of the earth. The earth is dependent on the sun for both heat and light, and no form of life could exist if the influence of the sun were with- drawn. There are several rea- sons why high altitudes are cold- er than low ones, even though they are nearer the sun in the daytime. The air in high alti tudes is thinner, absorbing less heat from the direct rays of the sun because it has less carbon dioxide, water vapor and dust; being thinner, it is less effective In retaining the heat radiated from the earth below. The wind in high altitudes keeps the alr in contact with the heated moun- tain sides In constant motion, There are likely to be many cloudy days in mountainous re- gions and the clouds shelter the mountains frem the sun, The side of a mountain toward the equator may receive the sun's rays more perpendicularly than a flat surface and may become very hot in the daytime, cooling off rapidly at night. The side turned away from the equator receives the sun's rays more obliquely than a flat surface and for a much shorter time, This tends to reduce the average tem- perature of mountain regions, wn sbi oli . oo. SENSES AIRAR ARERR RRA. id . ststtanastsanatintetitsannens ’ Ic asssasvsnsausnnsnssas andl How Fishes Use Sense of Smell to Get Fooa The sense of smell is highly devel: .aped In fishes, and this sense prob. ‘ably plays the leading role in obtain- ing food. Scientists, however, have mot yet heen able to determine accu- rately the relative extent and intensity -of perception of the various sense or- ‘gans In fishes, “From what is known “at present,” says the United States “pureau of fisheries, “it is believed that the sense of smell, along with that of touch, plays a greater role in the life “of a fish, as far as obtaining its food is concerned, than that of sight. The sense of sight in fishes seems to be limited more to the perception of ~changing lights and shadows, since a fish will snap more quickly at a mov- Ing object.” There Is a common but ~erroneous notion that fishes smell with “their gills, They smell with their “mnoses.—Pathfinder Magazine, How Electric Current Acts Quoting from Thomson's “Outline or Acience”: “In itself an insulated con- “ductor carrying current is not danger- ‘ous. A bird may perch on it with im- munity, and men who repair the over. ‘head wires of tramways handie them safely with bare hands, because the ‘platforms on which they work are in- ‘wulated from the ground, But if n ‘person touches both the insulated con- ‘ductor and the earth or the other con- ‘ductor, he completes the circuit and “may be killed at once, In con- “tinueus-current circuits for trac- tion purposes It is usual to in- ‘sulate the positive conductor and use ‘the rails as the return or negative +zonductor.” How Neon Signs Are Made Neon is a colorless, inactive gas whieh occurs, in the atmosphere. Neon ‘Was the property of glowing with a ‘peculiar brilliant fiery-red tint when an electric current is passed through it in a near vacuum, For advertising purposes the gas is put into hollow ‘glass tubes, which are twisted by a combined heat and blowing process inte the required shapes to make script letters, The air Is removed by a vacuum pump. If a few drops of reury are inserted in the tube of meon, the light hecames a brilliant dlue. In a yellow-tinted tube it ap- pears green, A How Fog Can Be “Lifted” Is one of the motorist’'s worst “enem But by means of an at ‘®achment to the exhaust of a car, it “Bas now been found possible to create a rising current of heated air which Titerally lifts the fog for about 10 feet the front wheels, The process “is rapid enough to allow a forward “speed of ahout 15 miles per hour, no “matter how dense the fog may be. "This invention for dissolving fog can "be attached easily to the car, and is «ven simpler in operation than the or- «dinary windshield wiper, How to Test Water "Here is a simpie way to test the “purity of water: Put half a pint in a clean bottle, and add a few grains ‘of lump or loaf sugar. Make the bot- tie tight—a glass stopper Is preferred, ‘*Place the bottle in a warm, well lighted room. If it remains clear after an exposure of eight or ten days it is safe to use: but if it becomes turbid. 4t ts impure and unsafe to drink. How Patent Grant Operates A patem grant conveys to the owner of the patent the exclusive right to snake, use and sell, and to grant to -=mthers the right to make, use and sell ‘he thing patented within and through- ~gut some specified part of the United “States, for the term of 17 years, ———— A —————— —We will do your job work right SC EAA SAA ASA AAA AAA AEE A AAAS AAA AAAS AREAS ARAN LARA RAR RRR RRRR RRS RRR w HITS RAILROADS Bankers Association President Asks If Unfair Aid Is Given Motorized Transport— For Rail Mergers. NEY ORR. Pais treatment for the railroads in respact to highway | motor competition was called for by | Rome C. Stephenson, President Ameor- . ican Bankers Association, in a recent address here. He also strongly en- dorsed “sound economic railway con- ' solidation” and praised President Hoo- | | ver for his initiative in this respect. “I am very strongly of the opinion | that one of the measures which would help materially to put back business where it ought to be is the Eastern four-system plan of railroad consoli- | dation as announced recently follow- ing negotiations instituted by Presi- dent Hoover,” said Mr. Stephenson. “Its adoption by the Interstate Com- merce Commission would tend to stabi: lize the transportation industry, fa cilitate operation and exert a favorable influence on business in general. “It is a fact well known to busines. .eaders that our railroads are now fac. | ing a crisis. Not only do they need protective laws to meet competitive | situations arising from increased use of our highways and waterways by other carriers, but they need uniiica- tion such as the proposed four-system plan provides. Our President has acted wisely in assuming a leadership in this respect and his move deserves the support of every clear-thinking citizen.” Mr. Stephenson declared that th -ailroads have served this country ‘sc superlatively well that we are prone in our public affairs to overlook our de- pendence upon them and our obliga tions to them. The past, present and future progress of the United States is inseparably bound up with their wel fare. In neglecting just consideration for them we are even more neglectful of the public's best economic interests. A Question of Public interest “We are confronted with the ques tion as to how much more the public economic interest will stand an inva sion of the welfare of the railroads by forces and difficulties not of their own creating and not within the scope of their own unaided powers to combat,” said Mr. Stephenson, “I refer especially to new competitions that are undermin- ing the hard-earned position of the rail: roads, not only with the aid of natural economic forces but also through the aid of government policies which, posi- tively or negatively, tend to give these competitors undue advantages over the “It goes without saying that the rai roads have no right, nor claim any, so far as I have beep able to discern, to complain at legi competition in the fleld of transportation, for the pub- lic is entitled to the best possible trans- portation at the lowest practical cost. But equally does it go without saying that this cannot be fairly brought about by using, or by failing to use, the tax. ing powers of government to enable competitive methods of transportation to do things they could not otherwise do as unaided private enterprises, par- ticularly when such action impairs the invested rights held in good faith by great masses of our people in estab- lished enterprises that are serving the public well.” Mr. Stephenson said it was not hi purpose to argue against such com- petitive transportation as the highway passenger motorbus and motor truck as such, when conducted under proper conditions and in keeping with public welfare and benefit. He declared, how- ever, there is need for serious consid eration whether such competition is being developed under conditions that are unfair to the railroads, because either the outright or obscure aid of government policy is the deciding eco nomic factor in that competition. Would Investigate Bus Traffic Railroad rights of way, he declared. represent tremendous capital invest. ments, on which the railroads have also heavy current costs to meet. “They pay every day a million dollars in taxes and most of this is on their rights of way,” he sald. “Also they spend daily over two million dollars ad- ditional for the proper maintenance of way.” He asserted that the motor buses have not had to pay for their rights of way in any sense that the rail- roads paid for theirs. “They have simply taken possessio) Jf public highways built by public funds, both state and national,” he con- tinued, “and they have extensively made those highways vastly less com- fortable, less safe and less serviceable for private motorists and others who are contributing chiefly to their crea- tion and maintenance.” Mr. Stephenson declared that al. chese matters should be thoroughly in- quired into by competent public bodies, both state and national, with a view of determining the equities and basic public economic interests in- volved, “particularly in respect to their effects upon the nation’s railroads. “I venture to say,” he added, “tha. such inquiries would show whether it is to the public interest to let things remain as they are, whether the situa- tion calls for a new basis of motorbus and truck taxes to satisfy the equities of the case or whether it would call for such drastic action as the exclusion of this trafic from our public general highways, and the requirement that, even as the railways, it provide as a part of its own private capital invest- ment its own rights of way and for its own maintenance of way nut of operat. Ing income.” 1 i Aemains of a Ceiba Tree in Santo Domingo to Which Columbus Moored His Ships. {Preparsd by National Geographic Society, ashington, D. C.)—WNU Service. HE dark, unmarked Santo Do- mingo harbor into which Colum- | bus’ three diminutive vessels sailed in 1492 soon will be light- ed by a new lighthouse, a memorial to the Great Discoverer. Plans have already been chosen from those sub- mitted by architects representing the United States and several countries of Jurope, Although now modernized, Santo Domingo still retains much of its early Spanish aspect. “Oldest in the New world” and “First to be estab- lished by white men in America” are phrases of Inevitable recurrence in any descriptive list of the historic buildings and ruins of this ancient city. The early colonists built for the centuries, and many edifices dating from the Sixteenth century are still in use, The ministry of foreign affairs and sther departments of the Dominican government occupy the old colonial palace of government—a spacious structure that was venerable long be- fore the first buildings rose at James- town, Va, Surssounting a bluff which com- sands the entrance to the inner har- bor rises the ancient Tower of Homage. Unshaken through the centuries this ploneer outpost of New world con- quest seems to dream of the golden age when it guarded the key city of the far-flung empire of Spain in America. In the tower Is a small barred aper- .ure that sometimes is pointed out as the window of the cell in which Columbus was imprisoned before being sent back to Spain In chains—a state- ment that cannot be true, since Colum- bus’ imprisonment took place in 1500, when the city was situated on the op- posite bank of the Ozama river. The same hurricane that destroyed the home-bound fleet in 1502 so damaged the city that it was decided to re- build it on the higher western side of the Ozama, the site it now occupies. House of the Admiral. Of the buildings now in ruins one of the most interesting Is the castle of Diego Colon or House of the Ad- miral, the ancestral home of the (Columbus family in America. Its con- struction was begun in 1309, when Diego Columbus, second admiral and son of the discoverer, came to Santo Domingo as governor of the colony. The house was occupied by members of the Columbus family until the death of another Diego, great-grandson of. the discoverer and last of the direct line of his male descendants, Although the House of the Admiral aas been allowed to fall into ruins, with its destruction further hastened by the vandalism of treasure-seckers, it historic walls will bear mute testl- mony to its former magnificence, It was to this and other pretentious mansions of the city that the chron- icler Oviedo referred when in a letter to the king of Spain he sald that his Royal Highness often lodged in palaces far inferior to those of Santo Domingo, and added that he considered the city superior to any In Spain In its location, beauty and arrangement. Fifty years after Its founding, Santo Domingo had passed the apex of its first glory. Interest in the new colony was eclipsed by desire for fur- ther conquest, and its meteoric rise was almost equaled by the rapidity of its decline. From a goal, Santo Domingo became a base for expedi- tions farther westward. Cortez, Pizar- ro and Ponce de Leon were only a few of the gentlemen adventurers who sailed out of the mouth of the Ozama with their eyes strained for the glitter of gold on the western horizon. By 1586 the power of Santo Domin- 40 had so waned that the capital fell an easy prey to Sir Francis Drake, and a ransom was extorted by meth- ods smacking of the torture chamber, Each day proscribed buildings were demolished until abont a third of the city lay in ruins, ‘Then the citizens managed to scrape together a going- away present amounting to about $£30,- 000 with which Drake took his leave after hanging a few prominent citizens by way of valediction, Of less stern caliber were the war- ciors of the Admiral Penn expedition which in 1655 was sent to the island by Cromwell with the object of gain- ing permanent possession of the col- ony. Landing on the coast west of Santo Domingo city, the English forces were met by determined resist- ance in their advance on the eapital aad were soon glad to leave Hizpaniola | } i i i i i i i and regain some prestige by seizing the more defenseless colony of Jamaica. “Battle of the Crabs.” According to legend, the defenders of Santo Domingo were aided by strange allies, and along the beach near Jaina the site of the traditional “battle of crabs” is still pointed out. The story runs that the invading forces encamped here one night. With their nerves on edge from constant ambuscades and surprise attacks, they mistook the clattering of the large number of land crabs hereabout for | the hoof-beats of charging cavalry, and | they were soon retreating pell-mell, | Between 1730 and 1740 the popu lation of the eapital fell to about five hundred, but fifty years later it was again riding on one of its high tides of greatness us a Spanish colonial city, enly to be overtaken within a decade by another period of adver- sity. Now, after more than four cen turies of varying fortunes and despite siege, earthquake, and tropical hur- ricane, the brave old city stands de- flantly at the mouth of the Ozama— a little bewildered, perhaps, as If un- decided whether definitely to capitu- late to the march of modern progress ‘real cold weather occurs. or wait patiently a little longer for | galleons long overdue. | In the last thirty years the capita. | of the old town, One with a romantic turn of minu could wish that the streets In the old part of the city had been allowed to retain thelr original names, but these have nearly all been rechristened in honor of men and dates prominent in the history of the Republic. Of the old names, only the “Street of Isabel the Catholic” remains, and much of its romance is dispelled by the traffic po- licemen who briskly “shoo” automo- | biles along the narrow thoroughfares. Visitors may hunt a long time for a | FRENCH CATCH TROUT IN SWIMMING POOL. in a swimming pool oney and at is the latest winter indoor sport in Now is the time to You can fish all day for 12 cents —During 1932 thousands of fam- ilies again will rely on the home Trout garden to save them m the same time provide them with Paris. healthful food. plan the 1932 order to purchase seed more effi- garden. —When the ground has frozen several inches straw can be applied as a mulch to the strawberry bed for best results. The rows should be covered with 5 or 6 inches of wheat straw as soon as the first Two to three tons of straw per acre should be sufficient to give the plants prop- er insulation against alternate freez- ing and thawing during the winter. -This is a good time to recon- struct the producing units on the farm. The woodlot is included in this group. To sell the prize trees when prices are low is destructive. To remove the weeds and culls from the woods is constructive work. This will aid in’ developing more and better timber for the time when it will sell at a premium. --It is not advisable to hold eggs for hatching purposes more than 10 days before putting them in the in- cubator. —Sixty-six management demon- strations conducted in as many com- munities under the supervision of the State College extension service during the past year brought bet. ter mehods of handling sheep to the attention of 1506 Pennsylvania farm- ers. —San Juan National Forest offi- cials have discovered a new enemy of trees-—porcupines. The animals rub trees with their sharp quills, stripping a ring round them and causing them to “spike top,” or die at the top first. Forest Supervisor Andrew Hutton estimated porcupines have caused as much damage tc the timber during the last few years as that caused by fire. A campaign against them, he said, would be made this winter. —Treated with reasonable care the farm woodlot is a perpetual sort of | and timber, young ones spring milk-making grow. too, cattle get little nourishment in the woods and eventually will elim- inate natural regenera of the trees. Good woodland ent also directs natural thinning ge using the ax to eliminate not have the inherent characteristics necessary for the making of val- uable trees. The aim is to produce Constant replacement takes place i those trees which do | horse-drawn coche in which to drive | 109 trees to the acre which will be | about and view the city, but when one ' of the few left in commission finally is tracked down, they lack the moral courage to charter it for fear of being | thought eccentric—or worse. It just isn't done any more, Ashes of Columbus There. | The chlef pride of the Dominicans | is their faith that the ashes of Chris- | topher Columbus rest within thelr | cathedral at Santo Domingo. In 1795 | Spain, having ceded Santo Domingo to the French, removed what its offi- cials believed to be the ashes of the Great Discoverer to Havana. Upon the evacuation of Cuba by Spain in 1808, the Spanish government moved the Havana remains to Seville, Spain. But in 1877, while the Santo Domin- go cathedral was being remodeled, another vault containing a leaden casket was found. As soon as the casket surface appeared everything | was sealed, and in the afternoon the | ‘president and his cabinet, the mem- | bers of the diplomatic corps, the bishops | and Apostolic delegate, and many others assembled to witness the com- pletion of the excavation and the opening of the casket. Outside and inside were found in scriptions which bear alike the name and the titles of Christopher Colum- bus, All present, Including even the Spanish consul, joined in a notarial affidavit of the circumstances of the opening of the vault and casket and the description of their contents. The late American minister, Thomas C. Dawson, pronounced the evidence complete, and the late American secre- tary of state, Philander C. Knox, on his visit to Santo Domingo in 1912, declared that any impartial court would sustain the contention that all that is mortal of the Founder of the New World rests within the Cathedral at Santo Domingo. Charles G. Dawes, United States ambassador to Great Britain, while in Santo Domingo in 1929 as the head of a commission to work out a budget system for the Dominican government, made a study of the evidence and reached the same conclusion as Minister Dawson and Secretary Knox. | One of the most tragic experiences in the history of Santo Domingo oc- curred in the afternoon of September 8, 1020, when a hurricane swept over the capital. Outside the walls of the stricken city the devastation was prac. tically complete; inside the walls 70 per cent of the buildings were dam- aged and practically all of the 4000 smaller homes were destroyed, Up- wards of two thousand people were killed ana six thousand were injured. | ideal in shape, quality and kind for either use or sale. The favored trees are those which are straight, tall, sound, and of the kind growing the fastest and being he most val- {uable for use. As the farm woodland trees grow in size, the im operations 10 gradually repeated eliminate all t the choicest ones. To balance the improvement work in an average farm woodlot so that it can be fitted into the farm work schedule without interfering with other duties, many owners thin one- tenth of their wooded acreage each winter. ‘The sale of wood and tim- ber pays for the work. —Dairymen can cut feed costs by substituting wheat, barley, and oats for corn and feed in dairy rations, at present prices, and by | feeding a grain mixture with a pro- tein content that corresponds to the roughage fed, advises Prof. F. Morrison, head of the de animal husbandry at the New York State College of Agriculture. He suggests formulas for use with va- ar heavy, concentrated feed, it is best not to use more than 600 pounds of ground wheat per of dairy feed ! | ! garden on paper in and then put your catch on the scales and pay for it at the current ciently. Arrange fos inter-cropping market rate. Just for convenience, {and succession planting in the small there is a bar across one end of the hall. Isaac Walton never enjoyed such sport. The pool is stocked every morn- ing, but the fish are never fed, thus making them ravenously hungry and easy prey. The pool is stocked with trout, carp, pike and eels. There is only one rule and that is: “Catchers, keepers.” Floor-walkers keep moving around to see that the fishermen pay for their sport. It is forbidden to catch a dozen fish and then throw them back in to avoid buying them. Since there are no minnows, but only full-sized fish of a half pound or more, the place does a thriving business as a fish market. It isnot uncommon for a fisherman to leave with a string of a dozen bass. Landlady: “There is a hole burnt in this sofa cover, and I expect you to pay for it. New Lodger: “Certainly not. I don't smoke, so you can't blame me for it.” Landlady: “What impudence! You are the first lodger for three years who has refused to pay for that hole!” Home Each Week T was lonely on the farm now that winter had set- tled in. Mrs. Kemp would herself sometimes catch listening for footsteps. But no one came. Tom was back at his job in town. Jim was in col lege. And Sue, with her children, couldnt come home very often. Then one evening the telephone rang. It was 1 Jim. “Just wanted to chat,” he told his Mother. “How're you and Dad?” For several minutes fam- ily news and happy confi. dences flew back and forth between mother and son. The conversation ended, Mrs. Kemp turned from the telephone with eyes shining. “Dad,” she ex- claimed, “Jim gave me an 3 idea! Let's call up Tom and Sue. From now on I'm going to visit the children by telephone and not sit here alone!” The modern A SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE ihe Chanpest” “Bader” "ie ine. fn Employers, This Interests You pensation It will be to your interest to placing consult us before your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON State College Bellefonte eal | Ask Your Druggist for Particulars