Bellefonte, Pa., January 16, 1919. ‘How Centre County May be a Banner | County in the Modern Health . Crusade Contest. Four banners will be awarded to the four counties in Pennsylvania making the best record in the Modern Health Crusade during the last half of the school year of 1919-1920. This announcement was made re- cently by the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis under whose auspices the Modern Health Crusade is conducted in Penn- Sfivania There are several hundred ousand school children in the State enrolled in the Crusade. This is a system of health education that se- cures and grips the interest of the child by having the boy and girl prac- tice simple health rules daily. For the purposes of the contest the. counties have been divided into four divisions, one banner going to each division. Those having a population up to 50,000 are in the first class; those from 50,000 to 100,000 are in the second; the ones from 100,000 to 200,- 000 are in the third and those above 200,000 are in the fourth. The counties are divided as . fol- lows: First class: Adams, Bedford, Cam- eron, Clarion, Clinton, Elk, Forest, Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Monroe, Montour, Perry, Pike, Potter, Snyder, Sullivan, Sus- quehanna, Tioga, Union, Warren, Wayne, Wyoming. v Second class: Armstrong, Beaver, Bradford, Bucks, Butler, Carbon, Centre, Clearfield, Columbia, Craw- ford, Cumberland, Franklin, Indiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, Lebanon, Lycom- ing, McKean, Mercer, Somerset and Venango. Third class: Blair, Cambria, Ches- ter, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Fay- ette, Lancaster, Lehigh, Montgomery, Northampton Northumberland, York and Washington. Fourth class: Berks, Lackawanna, Luzerne, Schuylkill and Westmore- lands. Records made by children in every kind of school, including public, pa- rochial and private, will be used. In the Modern Health Crusade records of excellence can be made in several | Y ways. The record to be used in awarding these banners will not be announced until the end of the con- test. This method is followed in or- der that one feature of the Crusade shall not be neglected and another emphasized in order to win the ban- ner. The awards will be based on some feature of the regular record the boys and girls make during the fif- teen weeks they do the Crusade chores. . ‘ ¢ Records made from the opening of school work after Christmas up to June 19th will be used. The awards will be made by July 15th. The ban- ners, suitably inscribed, will be placed in the custody of county school super- intendents in the counties winning, and during the next school year will be circulated among the schools that were enrolled in the Crusade. May Grow All Our Figs. It isnot improbable that this country try will soon produce all the figs it needs. This statement is made by the Chief ‘of the Bureau of Plant Indus- try, United States Department of Ag- riculture, in his report on the prog- ress of Smyrna fig culture in Califor- mia. Much of the success of this en- terprise has been due to the fact that the department has been able to main- tain a caprifig orchard at Loomis, from which caprifig s have been dis- tributed free to growers. Before this distribution was arranged for many Small growers of Smyrna figs became discouraged and some even dug up their orchards. The relationship be- tween these two varieties is that the Smyrna fig is fertilized by an insect which lives on the caprifig. When Smyrna figs and caprifigs are planted together the caprifigs do not bear enough fruits to caprify the crop properly until several years aftcr the trees begin to bear. lor this reason a young orchard is dependent.on im- porting the needed caprifigs during the first few years. It was to supply this need that the fig orchard at Loomis was leased by the department. y new varieties of caprifigs have been brought to light, some of them very important in commercial Smyr- na fig culture. Many thousands of seedling figs have been distributed to co-operators in the fig-growing re- gions of California, Arizona, and Tex- as, and some promising new varieties have been originated by a proper se- lection of male pollen. 4n the fall of 1917 the fig insect was established in some old seedling caprifig trees in Brunswick, Ga., and since then a number of caprifig treis have been similarly treated. The re- sult is that it has been possible to caprify and bring into bearing many sterile. Smyrna fig trees growing in the southwestern States. Some of these trees bear a very high grade of fruit, promising for use as fresh fruit or for canning. It is still doubtful whether figs can be grown in the southeastern United States to advan- tage in a commercial way, but it is a matter of much interest and of some economic significance that many old sterile fig trees in this region are re- ally Smyrna seedlings. Approximate- ly half of the trees are Smyrna figs, and the others are caprifig varieties. Same to You. *Sure,” said Patrick, rubbing his head with delight at the prospect of a present. “I always mane to do me duty.” - “I believe you,” replied his employ- er, “and therefore I shall make you a present of all you have stolen from me during the year.” “Thanks, yer honor,” replied Pat; “and may all your friends and ac- graintances trate you as liberally.”— ouston Post. —— “When I sing, the tears come into my eyes. What can Ido for this?” “Stuff cotton in your ears.”—- Winter Rations for Cows are Sug- gested by Dairy Experts. Suggestions which may help far- mers in lowering the cost of milk pro- ! duction, are offered by the dairy ex- ' tension service of The Pennsylvania | State College. Based on lowest pos- sible cost per unit of protein and en- ergy, several rations have been work- ed out, due consideration being given to palatability, bulk, variety and physiological effect. = When the roughage consists of hay, or hay and stover and silage, no legume being used, any one of the following three grain mixtures will be found satisfac- tory: (1) one part corn-and-cob meal, one part wheat bran, two parts cottonseed meal and two parts linseed meal; (2) equal parts of wheat bran, cottonseed meal and linseed meal; (3) two parts wheat bran, one part glu- ten feed, two parts cottonseed meal and two parts linseed meal. These three rations are also good for late spring, and summer pasture. If the roughage used is half legumes, such as clover of alfalfa and silage, or mix- ed or clover hay and stover, any of the following three grain mixtures will make a balanced ration: (1) equal parts corn-and-cob meal, wheat bran, cottonseed meal and linseed meal; (2) equal parts ground oats, wheat bran, cottonseed meal and lin- seed meal; (3) three parts wheat bran, two parts hominy feed, three parts cottonseed meal and two parts linseed meal. If the roughage is en- tirely legumious, such as clover or al- falfa hay, three other rations of grain are suggested: (1) two parts corn- and-cob meal, one part ground oats and one part gluten feed; (2) two and one-half parts corn-and-cob meal, and one part each of wheat bran and gluten feed; (3) five parts corn-and- cob meal, four parts ground oats, one part cottonseed meal and one part lin- seed meal. This last group is also recommended as a grain mixture to be used with early spring pasture. In addition to all the roughage a cow will eat, a Jersey or Guernsey should receive one pound of grain for each 3% to 4 pounds of milk; a Hol- stein, Ayreshire or Shorthorn should get a pound of grain for each 4} pounds of milk. : Cost of Sickness. It is computed that the average in- habitant of the United States is on the sick list for nine days during each ear, making a total of approximate- ly 900,000,000 days, or nearly 2,500,- 000 years of illness for the entire population each year. The ‘cost of this aggregate of illness, for doctors and medicine alone, will run some- thing over $1 per day per person, and amounts, therefore, to at least $1,- 000,000,000 per year. Besides the direct expense involved, there is an enormous industrial loss occasioned by illness. If but one- third of the total number of persons ill arc earners, averaging $3 per day, the time lost amounts to another $1,000,000,000 ‘ per year. This indus- trial loss is, of course, shared by al} the people, so that even if an individ- ual has not himself been ill a single per yeat, and another $10 for each member of his family. The person who is an average earner and who is [ill the ‘average number of days, pays for his illness $9 for doctors and med- icine, $27 for time lost, and $10 as his share of the industrial loss, or a total of $46 per year. At least one-half of this illness is preventible through reasonable pre- cautions, these precautions including the abstaining from harmful self-in- dulgence, and another 25 per cent. or more could be prevented by improved working conditions and the enforce- ment of more rigid sanitary regula- tions. A vast number of illnesses and deaths originate in dirt, pure and simple, in homes that are, superficial- ly, kept fairly “clean.” The cure is in a wider spread of simple sanitary cducation. Of all persons now alive in the United States; 10,000,000 will die of tuberculosis, and another 10,- 000,000 of pneumonia. In each in- stance, intelligent care of the health and reasonable precautions would save at least half of these who are otherwise condemned. Rabbits Supply Fur. Rabbits, through a great agricul- tural misfortune “to ‘' Australia and New Zealand, fetch to those Common- wealths a very considerable annual revenue from the sale of their pelts. The latter furnish the bulk of the commercial material for felt hats, and are largely used for fashionable furs. There is hardly any fur in the mar- ket that is not imitated by the skill- ful preparation of rabbit skins, the art having attained so high a perfec- feit even seal, otter and ermine. Two New Vegetables. Two new vegetables have been dis- covered at the Missouri botanical gar- den at St. Louis, Mo., it is announced by Dr. George T. Moore, director of the garden. One has been named the “arracacha,” and the other the “dasheen.” Both resemble the potato. tion that they are made to" counter-- day, illness costs him, indirectly, $10 | ' Co-operation in Potato Spraying is Profitable. That co-operative potato spraying is profitable in Pennsylvania is shown by Dr. E. L. Nixon, plant pathologist at The Pennsylvania State College who gives the following figures from the co-operative spraying demonstra- tions which were carried out in this State last year. Eleven organizations in six counties sprayed 1018 acres at an average cost per acre of $9.65, which includes man and horse labor materials and depreciation on the ma- chine. The average gain in yield per acre from spraying was 37.6 bushels. Sprayed potatoes averaged 191.7 hushels per acre, while unsprayed ones in the same fields yielded 154.1 bushels. The greatest gain was 61.5 bushels per acre at a cost of only $8.45; the lowest was 18.8 bushels at a cost of $8.03. Five such demonstrations were con- ducted in York county, two in North- | ampton county; and one each in Pot- | ter, Lehigh, Carbon and Berks coun- ties. Each organization employed a | student from The Pennsylvania State ! College to do the work. From 8 to 22 farmers were represented in the asso- | ciations, the average number being ! 12.6 and the average number of acres ! per demonstration being 92.5. The larger the number of growers co-op- | erating the smaller should be the to-' tal acreage sprayed because of time : spent in moving the machine from one farm to another and in mixing a! greater number of stock solutions. It | has been found wise for each group to elect their own officers and to han-' dle the purchasing and financial mat- ters through them. Under this co-operative plan, each grower secures disease and insect con- trol at minimum cost and with little labor or trouble on his part. Interest in the use of better seed and in the importance of disease control is stim- ulated. However, each farmer must wait his turn, which may be undesir-: able sometimes because of weather or disease conditions in his field. , Couldr’t Get Em. A small Williamsport boy recently helped his mother peel potatoes. When | she inspected his work she found the eyes of the tubers had not been prop- erly removed. “Why, Billie,” she reported, “you have not cut the eyes out of the pota- toes you peeled.” “Well, mother, I just can’t help it,” wailed Billy. “Their eyes were so far back in their heads 1 couldn’t get em. Those Girls! “Tell me just what sort of a man your fiance is.” i “Oh, he’s everything that’s nice.” “I'm so glad. You know I have al- ways said that people should marry their opposites.” ! fault. . ered very poor that does not own at |ffj 2,000. Dogs in Red Cross Relief. In its task of relieving suffering throughout the world, the Red Cross has had frequent occasion to rely on the sagacity and loyalty of dogs. In the mountainous regions of Bohemia, dogs are used to transport goods, be- ing harnessed to small carts like the chiens de trait of Belgium. In carry- ing the food and clothing and medi- cines into those almost accessible mountain villages where the suffer- ing was so intense, the Red Cross workers made frequent use of these carts. In America, too, dogs are used. Last winter, when the epidemic of in- fluenza was at its height, word came to the Red Cross Chapter at Anchor- age, Alaska, that an entire village of Indians was down with the flu. But the village was fifty miles from a railroad. To reach it, the party of seven Red Cross workers who went to the rescue were obliged, after leaving the railroad, to cover these fifty miles by dog team. When they arrived, the situation was very serious. Of a hun- dred Indians, fifty were sick and nine- teen were dead. The relief party set to work, established a hospital, fed and cared for the sufferers. Only five more lives were lost—thanks to the dogs. Recently, Captain Howard Arm- strong, of Buffalo, was in charge of a trainload of Red Cross supplies bound to relieve the serious condition of the hospitals in Budapest. One night, while in the yards of Zurich, in Switzerland, Captain Armstrong was patroling the Red Cross train. A Swiss police dog was performing the | same duty for the government. In, the darkness it was impossible to dis- | tinguish the American uniform, and | the guard in charge of the dog, seeing a shadowy figure near the train, or- dered his dog into action. Captain Armstrong was attacked and after a sharp scuffle, during which he was bitten several times, managed to get his raincoat over the dog’s head and shouted to the guard to call him off. | This was an instance where the Red Cross did not profit by the dog’s loy- alty, but it was not the animal’s It seldom is. He simply obeyed orders; the mistake was his master’s.—W. R. B. We Advise that. you buy your next, Spring or Win- ter Suit, and Over- coat, Now Secu ELUE LUE USUSUSUcUcuelEUS UES eUclUeElE iani=2ni2nianani=2n2n=nan2n=an2nan2n=s 222 nani Ni ni= Niani=ri=n It will mean a Big Saving RERER EREREAET An Independent Wife, Flatbush—And your wife writes to you on postal cards? Bensonhurst—Oh, yes. “I shouldn’t think you’d allow her to do so.” “Oh, she’s very independent. She doesn’t seem to care who knows what she says.”—Yonkers Statesman. ——A family in Lapland is consid- | least 25 reindeer. A few of the wealthier Lapps own as many as Fauble’s mma LA 7” QNNNEIIIEINWN CAST Zn ARR NNR ahhh The Kind You Have Always in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per- IIe ©. Allow no one to deccive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. neither Opjum, Morphing mor other narcotic substance. Its age is'its guarantée. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; therefrom, and by regulating the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAYs Bears the Signature of Children Cry for Fletcher's SIU NEUE OO In Use For Over 30 Year The Kind You Have Always Bought rife CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY, aaa Do You Have a Bank Account’? If you don’t you are depriving yourself of the advantages that the splendid banking in- stitutions of Centre County offer you. ,Any one of them will open an account with you for what might appear to you as only a trifling deposit, because bankers know that small deposits often grow to become large ones, as people discover what saving means to. them. There is a lot in that old song about - a little bit added to what you've got makes a little bit more. - And when you put a little bit in the bapk in- variably you commence to get interested in seeing it grow. : The Centre County Bank at Bellefonte will be glad to open-an account with you to prove how easy and beneficial to you'it is" to save. aT Aad Bought, and which has been supervision since its infancy. and‘ Just-as-good ”* "are ‘but It is pleasant. It contains allaying Feverishness arising the Stomach and Bowels, aids Mother’s Friend. 60-4 INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS rear wheels track. and rear axle. on. Chain-Driven Exclusively. Boston Transcript. Axles coupled together with angle steel reach ; coupled short, dividing load between front Be like a wagon. Solid bottom bed with heavy cross pieces, and supported by full width of sides. Front and Wide-tired wheels. No moving parts on rear axle. Axle not used as a bearing for gears to run Positively not a worm or cog gear on the machine. levers. The lightest, easiest running and most practical Spreader. tr Just received a carload of Conklin Wagons. All sizes and for all purposes. 62-47 Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store. WILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING 3-4 Ton for Light Hauling Big Truck for Heavy Loads “Greatest Distance for Least Cost” GEORGE A. BEEZER, BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR. No clutch. Operated by only two