Deora ens Bellefonte, Pa., May 7, 1926. INSECT PESTS BY SPRAYING. By Dr. 8. W. Fletcher, Head of the De- partment of Horticulture, State College. Stee is the art of con- CONTROL trolling injurious insects and diseases by covering the plant with certain chemicals that kill these pests. The chemicals may be applied with water, as in or- dinary spraying, or in powdered form, as in dusting. Spraying is the chief, but not the only means, of controlling pests. Sanitary measures help, such as prompt burning of the prunings, and plowing under leaves that are dis- eased, as with apple scab or mum- mied peaches that have rotted with the brown rot fungus. Open pruning makes conditions in the tree less fav- orable for disease. Much may be done in the selection of varieties that are least susceptible. The tilled or- chard is less liable to certain troubles than the sod orchard. Nevertheless, all orchards, both sod and cultivated, must be sprayed or dusted, in addi- tion to these other precautions. Should Know Their History. Spraying by rule of thumb seldom is satisfactory. The grower should know the pests he is spraying for and their life history. We spray to con- trol three types of pests: chewing in- sects, sucking insects and fungous disease. It is necessary to use a dif- ferent class of spray for each type of pest. ASR Chewing insects are those that bite the tissue of the leaf or fruit, and take it into the stomach. Examples are the potato bug, currant worm, tent caterpillar and codling moth which makes wormy apples. Chewing insects are controlled by spraying with a poison which the in- sect takes into its stomach with its food. Arsenic is used mostly, prin- cipally in the form of arsenate of lead. Formerly Paris green was used, but it is not as dependable as arsenate of lead. Sucking insects do not bite or chew their food, but suck up the juices of the plant thru a long, tube-like mouth part. This is thrust beneath the sur- face of the bark, leaf, or fruit, where no spray can be placed, hence spray- ing with arsenate of lead is useless against them, Examples are the com- mon plant lice, of many species, the scale insects which are merely plant lice covered with a shell and red bug. The sucking insects are controlled by spraying, not with a stomach poison, but with a penetrating caustic material that will kill them when it strikes their bodies, such as lime-sul- phur spray winter strength, oil sprays, soap sprays, and tobacco sprays. When tobacco is used in dust- ing, the insect is killed by suffocation or asphyxiation by the fumes of the nicotine. When to Apply Spray. In spraying for chewing insects, the spray may be applied before the pest appears, and the chemical will remain on the fruit or leaves for some time, until the insects begin to feed. In spraying for sucking in- sects, on the other hand, nothing will be accomplished unless the insects are present at the time the prey is ap- plied, since the spray kills by con- tact. Hence, the grower waits until tomcat Graduation Day is one of the Milestones in Life’s =r Graduation Day ealls for a GIFT, which during the passing years will be a reminder of old friends and of old times; a life-long § helper—and then handed down. he name of this firm assures dependability. The Boy or Girl Graduate possessing one of our beau- tiful Watches, Rings, or other piece of Jewelry, is assured many years of service and usefulness. F. P. Blair & Son JEWELERS....BELLEFONTE, PA. t7=" The Smallest Watch in the World will be on display in our window until Mondoy. Value $1,000.00. CIS the aphids have hatched, and are feed- ing on the opening buds, before he sprays for them. A fungous disease is a low form of plant life, not of insect life. It dif- fers from ordinary plants, chiefly in the fact that it contains no chlorophyl, or leaf green, the sole means by which a plant ean manufacture plant food. Hence it lives as a parasite on higher plants, which do have chlorophyl. The fungous disease propagates by means of a multitude of very minute seed bodies, called spores. seminated by the wind and other agencies. When they fall on the leaf, fruit or bark they germinate in the presence of moisture and tempera- ture, just like a seed, and send their roots called mycelium, down into the tissue of the plant, for the food ma- terial that the plant has made for it- self. Then It’s Too Late. and has sent its roots down into the host plant, no spray can kill it. The vulnerable point in the life history of a fungous disease is the spore. Ii can be killed before it germinates, usually with a spray containing cop- per, as in Bordeaux, or sulphur, as in lime-sulphur spray. Common exam- ples of fungous diseases are potato blight, apple scab, and brown rot of peaches, plumbs and cherries. Most of the common enemies of plants fall into one of these three classes, and can be controlled by spraying. A few serious troubles are not amenable to spraying treatment. Among these are the so-called “phys- iological” diseases, which, so far is now known, are not due to a distinct germ, as is the fungous disease. The “Baldwin spot,” or bitter pit, of ap- ples is an example. The fire blight of apples, pears and quinces, also, cannot be controlled by spraying, since the bacteria which cause this disease work beneath the bark, where no spray can reach them. We depend on resistant varieties, keeping the trees growing slowly, and cutting out the winter hold-over cankers, to control blight. The Aphids Are Coming. CCORDING to an intensive survey of conditions in southeastern Pennsylvania counties and reports from farmers in the State the eggs of green and grain aphids, usually so numerous on apple trees at this time of the year, are few in number this spring. It is expected that there will be no severe out-breaks of these twe species the coming summer. Green and grain aphids are not the ones which damage apples the most, however. The rosy aphis is the most injurious, according to G. F. McLeod, assistant extension entomol- ogist of the Pennsylvania State Coi- lege, and may be present even if few eggs of the other aphids are found. Experiences of a quarter of a century have shown this to be true. Fruit growers who desire to protect their fruit from the aphids may do so by putting nicotine in the lime-sul- phur-nicotine combination of the de- layed dormant spray if they are not using oil emulsion or oil sprays. If be kept for the rosy aphids. The en- tomologists say that if found, an ap- plication of nicotine in the pre-pink spray at the rate of one pint of nic- HOW TO SOLVE A tionary words, except proper names. These are dis- | After the spore has germinated, | the latter are used, close watch should | SS) _ fill the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under s“yertical” defines a word which will iy the white squares to the mext Black one below. No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are die- terms and obsolete forms are indicated in the definitions. otine to 100 gallons of water will end the insect’s existence. Two Engineering Feats Held Unique in History of Utilities Industry. Two feats recently recorded are said to be unique in the history of pubilc utility engineering. They were undertaken for the improvement of !gas and electric service, says the | Pennsylvania Public Service Inform- . ation Committee. The highest-powered submarine ca- | fj “ble ever built has been stretched un- |& der the Mississippi River at St. Louis. The cable is made up of three copper | conductors, carries 33,000 volts, is .nearly five inches in diameter, and “weighs twenty-five pounds to the , foot. It was laid from barges and ' anchored on the bottom to prevent || drift. It also had to be spliced in | ky mid-stream. 1 To make the splice the two ends | of the cable were stripped of all | {i ‘armor and insulation, the conductors | ¢ : were firmly connected and then wound "with tape. Over the joint a lead ‘sleeve was placed and filled with hot oil to boil out all air and moisture, and over this the armor was replaced and the cable sunk to the river bed. { The second triumph over the forces of nature took place in central New | York State where a gas main between Auburn and Geneva was laid under three streams and over a fourth. Trenches were dug for the six-inch main across the beds of the streams. The aerial main rests upon a steel bridge eighteen feet above the water and is carried on concrete piers. This is said to be the most skillfully laid pipe-line in the world. News that Really is Front-Page Stuff! Carrier Pigeon Halts for Warmth and Rest. Fighting the storm and doubtless carried off its course by the high wind prevailing recently, a carrier pigeon alighted exhausted on the win- dow sill of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Levegood, of Jersey Shore. Mrs. Levegood opened the window and the pigeon flew inside, grateful for the opportunity for rest and warmth. The pigeon, after having been fed by Mrs. Levegood, was ready to con- tinue its flight to an unknown des tination. Whither it came and whith- er bound was a mystery. A band on the right leg bore the following number AJ25C3140. Mrs. Levegood released the pigeon after keeping it in her home until it | [ had fully recovered from its battle | ff with the elements. othing less than a story announcing the repeal of the income tax will in- terest more {men than the news that the Griffon Clothes for Spring have arrived. Come in and see these finely tailored productions of the Griffon tailors—and see if you don’t agree with us as to the importance of their arrival. A. Fauble Solution to Cross-word Puzzle No. 6 CHAIR BA I|TIS R O|O/DEMCIA|R P iE DIO|RIMAINI TERB E SIAPENIEE/D|SERP EIN TRIAIPERANIDERF EAT S|TIEIA YIEIAIRINER | SteiouEuErELElElEl ElELELELSLEUSSUSLELCIEN ZL TAP VI 1 heartre aaat Uat ee er eee eR Tm = E|IL|T VIAIL| IID — EARS E/AJES| TOP Wi NJTRAPISHSIEA [E[DlO[R[A[T] | [ONJEIS! | RSW O|PEEDIRIOPEE L meveggerenly ¢ [yon & Company CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correet letters are placed in the white spaces this puzsle will spell words both vertieally and horisomtally, 1 indicated by a number, which refers to the defimiticn listed below the pussle, Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which willl ‘The first Jetter in each word is Abbreviations, slang, initials, technieal ‘May Specials CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1. xT : 7 In Every Department 2 3 |e 5 [6 [7 TI i wu The Choice of Apparel for:wear now 14 liShould be Governed byaswhat Iwill be é ee 17 z 1 EL» Practical for the Warmer Days. ; rtrd 2 122 MES An Exceptional Display J ome women are content to hide i 2 oe i Ready-to-Wear Departme : their jewels. 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Small Rug S, Hall Runners, 24—Enough (poetic) 18—Not distant 21—Sugarlike Ask your ticket agent or tourist agency for tickets via C & B Line. New Tourist Automobile Rate—$7.50, re? ; So . Sn fo fre selon pce hare ot 8—Froscrived course of food (pL) 31 Eatablisnea why Pasa: Window i Shades, Tapestry, Cretonnes 32-page booklet. Se Lh out ein TT umps 30 Motorist who hurries andi;Draperies at Special May Sale Prices. 8$2-—Management of domestic affairs 33—To arrest again 85—A trap 88—Hpiscopal (abbr.) 40—New Jersey city 43—Conjunction The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co. 44—Short sleep 46—Rends 37—Hours (abbr.) Your Rail Ticket is 47—Printing measures 89-—-Kind of rubber Good on our Steamers 48—Extent 41—To attempt 42—Bone 60—Arid 51—8elf 48—Writing implement 47-—8hield 49~—Ember §1-—Sea eagle 63—That man B4—Southern state (abbr.) 62—A supernatural being believed to warn a family of an approach- ing death b4—Flerce $8—That woman Lyon& Company §6—Flower golution will appear in next issue.