ol EE ———— N lala cnrogeaitc Aiden. om STD mee _— Bellefonte, Pa., July 25, 1919. CHANGES MADE IN STATUTE BY | THE LAST LEGISLATURE. Harrisburg.—With the exception of | a change in the open season for wood- cock from October 20-November 30 to October 1-November 30, removing red | squirrels from the protected list, mak- ing the open season for blackbirds August 1-November 30, instead of | September 1-November 30, and de- creasing the season’s bag for rabbits | from sixty to forty and the daily bag | for woodcock from ten to six, the! closed season and the bag regulations | have been unaffected by the game | measures so far signed by the Gov- | ernor. | 1919-20 OPEN GAME SEASONS. : October 20 to November 30—Ruffed | grouse, Virginia quail, ringneck | pheasants, Hungarian quail, gray, | black and fox squirrels. | October 1 to November 30—Wood- | cock. November 15 to November 30— | Wild turkey. | August 1 to November 30—Black- | birds. | November 1 to December 15—Wild | rabbit and hare. i September 1 to December 31—Rac- coon. October 15 to December 15—Bear. | December 1 to December 15—Deer. | August 1 to November 30—Upland | or grass plover and blackbirds. i September 1 to November 30—Rail- coot, mudhen, reedbird, sandpiper, | tattler, curley, jacksnipe and shore | birds. | September 16 to January 31—Wa- | ter fowl. : BAG LIMITS. Woodcock, six per day. Wild turkey, one a‘season. | Ruffed grouse, four a day and twenty-four a season. Virginia quail, eight a day and | twenty-five a season. | Ringneck pheasants, four a day and | ten a season. Hungarian quail, four a day and ten a season. Rear, one a season. Squirrel, six a day and twenty a season. Wild rabbits, six a day and forty a season. Hare, three a day and fifteen a sea- son. Deer, one a season. . CHANGES IN FISH LAWS. The general amendment to the Fish Code passed in the closing days of the Legislature, has been approved by Governor Sproul and takes the size limit off the brook and brown trout and limits the bag to 25 in one day. The size limit and season are taken off yellow perch, and they may be taken by devices prescribed by the code. Provision is also made for issuance of special permits by the Commission- er of Fisheries for devices_other than seines for catching of fcod fish for certain periods. These special per- mits will be provided for by the De- partment of Fisheries as soon as pos- sible. The bill laso provides for the use of fines for violation of fish laws by the department, which has authority to make requisition for money as it is accumulated in the treasury. The Governor also signed the Non-Resi- dent Hunter’s License bill. It pro- vides a fee of $5 for such licenses. Can Make Joiners’ Work. Poor old Bill was a first rate wocd- worker, but old age crept upon him, and consequently unemployment. One day he applied for a job at a big es- tablishment, and was interviewed by the overseer, who was well known for his caustic utterances. “Well, what do you want?” “I want work,” replied the appli- { cant. “H’m! And what kind of work can you do?” “Well, sir, I can make all sorts of joiners’ work.” “Then walk right in and start at once! I've been trying for vears to make all sorts of joiners work in this place, and if you can get any work out of them the job’s yours!” Rains Cut Grape Crop. Egg Harbor City, N. J.—The grape crop in this vicinity, which ten days ago promised to be one of the heaviest in years, will be almost a complete failure, according to some of the growers. The dry weather during June caused the vines to stand splen- didly, but the constant heavy rains and dews during the past ten days have caused the rot to set in and al- ready three-fourths of the fruit is rotting away. Growers who were in a quandary over what to do with the expected heavy crop in view of the bone-dry law suddenly find there will be no cause to worry. Candy is very scarce in England. There is almost none at all for the little children in the poorer quarters of the city, and that which can be bought is awfully expensive. A sur- prise in the way of ice cream cones seemed too pathetic. They weremade in the accepted cone fashion, but the cone itself was not more than two and one-half inches high. It held just a dab of queer-looking frozen yellow stuff that was supposed to be ice cream. But you should have seen the joy on the faces of the two tiny chil- dren fortunate enough to be licking that cold sweet! Services for Dr. Anna Howard Shaw. Memorial services in honor of the | late Dr. Anna Howard Shaw will be held in the Academy of Music, Phila- delphia, on Sunday, November 9th, as a preliminary to the convention of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage association, which opens in the Belle- Vio Srratrerd; Monday, November 10th. A Frenchman learning English said to his tutor: “English is a queer language. What does this sen- tence mean: ‘Should Mr. Noble, who sits for this constituency, consent to | Wales. ITS GLORY ALL IN THE PAST Passage cf Time Has Left Quaint Old Welsh Town of Kidwelly Far Behind. Kidwelly is a quaint old town In It is a dreamy little commu- nity set in snugly between broad marshes and Carmarthen bay, and di- vided by a curving river with an un- pronounceable Welsh name. Old Kid- welly lives largely in the past. It has been the scene of battles and sieges. It has a castle whose turrets and round towers still. stand bravely, their age kindly hidden by the vines that enfold them. It pretends to remember well the oc- caslon of the Welsh princess who stormed the town at the head of her army. It tells the story proudly, a | little sadly at the end, for the warrior princess was executed by her enemies. It is a dusty, unromantic climb to the battlements, but the view from the castle top is worth the trip. The quaint, tumbledown houses at the foot of the walls are a mere skeleton of the old town as it was in its prime. Be | yond them are marshy fields rolling ° away to the next village. Far below is the river once thronged with ships of trade that long ago deserted it for richer ports. Its streets are almost | empty, and its old-fashioned residents, primly oblivious to new improvements and styles of architecture, testify loud- ly to its age. TRIPS MADE BY MAYFLOWER Famous Vessel Continued Voyages Long After That One of So Much Historical Interest. There is matter of interest to May- flower descendants, and Americans in general, in the recent discovery of let- ters written some 250 years ago by John Eliot, the “Apostle to the In- dlans,” to his friend, Rev. Joseph Han- mer of Barnstaple, England. By these old letters it appears that the May- flower continued making trips to Amer- ica, and that very many Americans nowadays might justly claim that their forbears crossed in that famous W@s- sel, although pot mentioned in Gov- ernor Bradstreet's passenger list. The Eliot letters, however, do not name subsequent passengers, although they indicate a billf-lading showing that the Mayflower continued in the ship- | Ding trade with New England and was bringing ovef merchandise 30 years and more a; the landing of the Pil- grims. Inci ly the humorists who have often asked how so much ancient furniture could have come over in the Mayflower are answered by the his- toric fact that the good ship kept coming and going.—Christlan Science Monitor. Salzburg. Salzburg lies on both sides of the Salzach river, hemmed in on either bend by precipitous mountains. A large fortress overlooks it on the south, from the summit of a perpen- dicular rock, against which the houses in that part of the city are built. The streets are narrow and crooked, but the newer part contains many open squares adorned with handsome foun- tains. The variety of costume among the people is very interesting. The in- habitants of the salt district have a peculiar dress; the women wear round fur caps, with little wings of gauze at the side. I saw other women with headdresses of gold or silver filigree, something in shape like a Roman hel- met, with a projection at the back of the head, a foot long. The most interesting objects in Salz- burg to us were the house of Mozart, in which the composer was born, and the monument lately erected to him.— Bayard Taylor. Great American Historian. In 1796, on the 4th of May, William Frescott, the historian, was born at Salem, Mass. When Prescott entered the field of world history America had vet to make her mark in that line. Her historians had been imitative of the European writers or hopelessly: in- ferior. Prescott’s work was accorded im- mediate recognition in Europe and he was recognized as being the highest in rank of all American historians. His best-known works are the “History of the Conquest of Peru” and the “Hlis- tory of the Conquest of Mexico.” He died at Boston on the 29th of January, 1859. By-Products. . These are substances or results ob- tained collaterally or incidentally in the operation of a specific process, or the manufacture of something else. In hunting game fgr food the hide and feathers are byproducts. In ginning cotton the cottonseed is a by-product which for many years was regarded as a waste. Now it is used in the making of cottonseed oil. In the manufacture of lumber, sawdust is a by-product; | coke is a by-product in the manufac- | ture of gas, but not the only one in | the process. —————————— Remember in hot weather, that the first great need of animals is wa- ter. : *G (NSURE AGAINST POVERTY | Writer Is Confident That a Practical : Scheme Will Be Worked Out Before Many Years. Sickness is an insurable risk and there is no doubt that some very com- prehensive and acceptable scheme of insurance against it will yet be worked | ont. Whether, in the United States, ! it will be a compulsory, state-managed scheme is by no means so certain. But | the more that subject is agitated the | faster sickness loss will be reduced, | for agitation will direct attention to | public health, and means that are | tried and proved will be more exten- | sively employed to prevent sickness. Steady, intelligent public attention | is what the whole problem of poverty | needs. There is no doubt that a | great part of it is preventable. The | poor, it is true, we have always with us. Time was when we had always | had slavery and smallpox with us. | Now out of half a million persons one | person dies annually of smallpox in | the United States. Time was when | slavery and smallpox were generally taken as a matter of course. As soon | as they ceased being taken as a mat- ter of ‘course they were put into the way of practically disappearing—not | by any magle formula but by tireless, | sure-footed, practical-minded effort. At length we have the means of re- ducing poverty to its practical, irre- ducible minimum. It is only very re- cently, as history runs, that we have had those means. But now we have the wealth—not enough wealth for a limousine and a grand piano to every inhabitant and a four-hour workday ; but enough for the essentials of decent physical existence to every family. We have the social and industrial or- ganization and the body of scientific knowledge. Poverty Is a social loss and a social danger. We can take out an insurance policy against it.—Will Payne, in Saturday Evening Post. —————————————— Worse. “That youngster of mine: keeps in- terrupting me when I'm talking.” “You're lucky! My one year old keeps interrupting me when I'm sleeping.” Will Help Pay for Tools. “Is your husband having any luck with his garden?” “Oh, yes. He got a sunstroke and collected $200 from a health insur- ance.” Has Hopes. «] want to get some pictures tak- en,” said the politician. “Cabinet, sir?” “Perhaps so, if Burleson gets fired.” stand again and run he will in all probability have a walkover?’ D . ral & | and Preserves To the Woman Who “Never Has Any Luck Putting Up Fruitand Berries” How even a Be- ginner can be Sure of Perfect Results in Mak- ing Jams, Jellies accomplish. of sugar alone. By this method you can always have the finest, most delicious jams, geod clear jellies, and preserves with a rich, heavy syrup. Karo is a fine, clear syrup, with a natural affinity for the fruit juices. It blends the fruit with the sugar, doing away with one of the great difficulties of putting up fruit at home, and just abcut cutting the work in half. You can depend on it that fruit put up by this method will never grow tough or “candy” in the glass. For Cooking, Baking and Candy Making Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. In all cocking and baking recipes us Karo instead of It is sweet, of delicate flavor, and brings out the natural flavor of the food. sugar. Gecod home preserving is now easy to Even the housewife who “never has any luck” with all sugar pre- serving can put up fruit perfectly if she will first make her preserving syrup with 14 Karo (Red Label) and 1; sugar—instead i IEEE SE EEE EUEUELELEL CCUG Shoes. Yeager's Shoe Store Pumps and Oxfords $5.00 $6.00 = Before you purchase your Low Shoes, call and see what we have to offer for $5 and $6. Patent Colt and Vici Kid Pumps, French heels with Aluminum heel plates. Our $6 Pumps and Oxfords we guaran- tee to be just as good as shoes can be made, nothing could be made of a better quality, hand sewed, long arch counters that keep them from spreading at the top. We have many bargains to offer on all kinds of summer shoes. Call And See Ee [= | sd E ’ Yeager’s Shoe Store fg THE SHOE STORE POR THE POOR MAN =H Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. = fi if] Se Li ERS mma | ; JULY REDUCTIONS FREE free — write us today for it. CZ PRODUCTS REFINING CO., P. O. Box 167, Ne» York City NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY Sales Representative 135 South Sscond Street Use ¥2 Karo § red label andih ar fect 1 _ jams * ilies Makes The experienced housewife as well as the be- ginner will find unusual interest in thz new sixty-eight page Corn Products Cook Book. Beautifully illus- trated — and suggestions galore for preserving, etc. Philadelphia, Pa. It is q preserves. ad (CRvsTAL WHITE) We are having a series of Summer Clearance Sales. The money saved on these sales will astonish all buyers. Just a, few prices that will tell you not to wait too long. Silk Crepes and Marquisettes Dress Goods One lot of figured Poplins, In silk Crepe de Chine we have blue, pink and yellow. In Marquisette we have black lavender and blue. These silk fabrics must 50¢ be sold at Ladies’ Skirts In black and white and colored checks; all sizes up to 30; values $5.00. 3 50 Special Price ® white grounds, all colors; fig- ured Voiles in all colors, and 25¢. Dress Ginghams, all at : ; Silk Pongee Figured and Striped Silk Pongee; Regular Price $1.25. JULY 75¢ SALE PRICE Ladies’ Coats and Suits Every Suit and Coat in this de- partment must be sold regardless of cost to make room for winter stock. Lyon & Co. =» Lyon & Co. = IrtR mri San E Bata oF am———