" Bellefonte, Pa., October 8, 1926. VIRGINIA BIG FACTOR IN U. S. OYSTER SUPPLY. At sunrise, September 15, more than 10,000 Virginians went to work on their task of supplying oysters to meet what probably is the keenest de- mand in American history. Virginia's oyster season opens officially on Sep- tember 15, there being a law prohibit- ing the removal of stock from the “rocks” before that time, but this year a number of shuckers who have their own beds were forced by the de- mand to start shucking and shipping as much as ten days in advance of the official opening of the season. Oystermen in Virginia think that two outstanding factors have contri- buted to the unusually keen demand for their stock this year. In the first place, they say, the national adver- tising campaign which was started last year has “pepped up” the Ameri- can appetite for bivalves; and in the second the Federal government’s cer- tification of wholesomeness which must be given before oysters from any source may go into interstate commerce has inspired in the people a degree of confidence which they nev- er had for any uncertified food. The public of this day, it is admitted, has come to demand pure food certifica- tion for all its food, even those kinds for which it has the greatest fondness. At any rate whatever the reason, oyster demands for the beginning of the present season, appear to be greater than ever before, and if cool weather begins early in the fall and continues through the winter the oys- termen confidently expect the best year of business they have ever had. Virginia’s natural oyster rocks, al- though much smaller than they used to be, still constitute the most im- portant source of this delicious and wholesome food to be found in Ameri- ca. There are thousands of acres of natural rock in the James, Rappahan- nock, York and Potomac rivers. Any citizen of Virginia may tong these. oysters during the season, and thous- ands of men make theid living by working on the public rocks, selling the large stock for shucking purposes, and the small stuff for replanting on private growing-beds. The State makes a practice of rent- ing ground to individuals for oyster planting purposes, charging only a nominal sum each year as rental. The public rocks, of course are never rented out, but are open to all persons alike. Shucking houses, purchasing their stock from the private beds, do busi- ness by removing the oysters from their shells and shipping them in re- frigerated containers to all parts of the country. There are in Virginia more than 800 shucking houses each employing from two or three up to a hundred or more shuckers. State and Federal bacteriologists, chemists and sanitary inspectors wend their way from one to another of these houses, making sure that the regulations are abided by. In this connection, it is interesting to note that sanitary re- quirements for oysters are much more rigorous than those for milk, fresh vegetables or any other food that is given public health certification. At a rough estimate oysters bring from $10,000,000 to $15,000,000 2 year into Virginia, including not only the shucked and shell stock sold directly for food, but also the seed stock ship- ped out of the State for replanting.— Exchange. Packaged Apples Must Conform to State Law. In order to protect consumers, as well as producers, shippers and deal- ers, the State has an apple packing law which applies to all apples packed in closed packages. The law provides that the name and address of the packer, the variety of apple, the size of package and the minimum size of fruit must be marked on the outside of the package. It fur- ther provides that the apples on the face of the package must be a fair representation of the fruit in the bal- ance of the package. The law is com- pulsory on all apples packed in close packages within the State. - : The law does not require the com- pulsory use of the standard apple grades, but all apple packers are en- couraged to use these grades as the basis for the grading of their output. These optional grades are the same as the federal grades, which have been adopted as the standard in most of the Eastern States. While the use of these standard grades is entirely vol- untary with the individual, packages of fruit marked with these standard grade terms must comply with the re- quirements for the particular grade of fruit marked on the package. The State Department of Agricul- ture of Harrisburg will be gald to fur- nish all interested parties with copies of the law and also the standard apple grades. Game Seasons. Harrisburg, Sept. 27.—Prospects are good for a successful hunting sea- son this fall, according to reports re- ceived by the State game commission. The present summer has been excep- tionally good in providing for food for game and birds. The entire State has been closed this year for wild turkeys and Hun- garian quail. The season for ruffed grouse will extend from Nov. 1 to 13. Previously this had been a month. The season’s bag limit has been reduced from 15 to ten birds. Male ringneck pheasants are in season the same time as grouse. Rabbits and hares also have been reported plentiful with the season ex- tending only through the month of November. Deer can be killed from Dec. 1 to 15 and bear Nov. 10 to Dec. 15. —If you want quality job work it can be had at this office. MOST POWERFUL WORLD PERFUME. Musk is one product of world com- merce in which China practically en- joys a monopoly—not a large one, to be sure, since the annual output is at best only some $400,000 gold, but the product itself is worth many times its weight in silver, and for that matter, gold as well, in these days of high ex- change, says the Far Eastern Review, Chungking. About one-half of the total output stays in China and is used especially by the Cantonese in compounding pills that form the best-known remedy in the Chinese pharmacopaeia for Asia- tic cholera. The Chinese also use musk to keep moths out of furs and clothing, and as a perfume, the odor being quite popular in the better grades of perfumery. Practically all of China's musk comes from Tibet through the Szech- wan frontier, the chief markets being Sungpan and Tachienlu the former be- ing by far the more important. Some- times, when the road from Sungpan to Chengtu is unsafe, owing to ; brigands,. part of the musk will be i taken south and marketed in Teng- yuch to go to India. This’ happened to a considerable part of the output in 1915, when 6,890 ounces out of a total of 25,367 were so shipped. The value of the 1915 musk crop was $266,000 gold. In 1916 some 25,160 ounces, valued at $407,000 gold, were shipped. Because of its commanding position in the perfume industry France has been the largest purchaser of China's musk, the United States being second; but in 1915 the United States forged ahead and bought more than a quarter of the entire output. Good musk is bought for 10 times its weight in silver at Sungpan, and at Chungking for 18 to 25 times, so there is a heavy profit somewhere. Small supplies are brought out to various points along the Lungan road, where every coolie seems to have some about him, and the inns reek with the sick- ly smell. The musk is brought down in its pod, and the best kind is recog- nized by a nice brown color, and in its pure state by its overpowering stench; pods with grayish or dull-colored musk are rejected. It is retailed by one one-hundredth of an ounce, but it is adulterated more than any other article in the Chinese market. By far the largest herds of musk deer are to be found on the southern shores of the Koko-Nor, and the sup- ply of musk there (at T’aochou) is larger than the quantity that comes through Sungpan. In fact, great quantities of musk do not come to Sungpan at all, but are sent east to Yuchow, in Homan, where a fair is held in the ninth and tenth moons, many of the Sungpan traders visiting this place. At Tachienlu musk is the most valuable export, practically every hong reeking with it, and near- ly all the Tibetans who come from the far interior bring some with them. The price of medium there is 13 times | its weight in silver. Musk is a secretion of the male musk deer. Three kinds of musk are dis- tinguished in commerce, the most im- portant and valuable being the Chin- ese or Tongkin musk imported prin- cipally from Shanghai. It is put up in small tin-lined, silk-covered cad- dies, each containing from two :to three dozen pods: These are general- ly adulterated with dried blood, frag- ments of leather, leaden pellets, peas, etc., so that often little more than the smell of the original tennant of the pod remains. The Chinese pods vary greatly in value according to quality and genuineness. Some musk collect- ed from the Western Himalaya is ex- ported from India. It is much less prized than genuine Tongkin musk. The third variety, known as Kabar- ine or Siberian musk, is exported from Central Asia by way of Russia. It is in large pods, said to be yielded by a distinct species of deer, and is very inferior in point of odor. The musk deer has a wide distri- bution over the highlands of Central and Eastern Asia, including the great- er part of Southern Siberia, and ex- tends to Kashmir on the southwest and Cochin China on the southeast, always, however, at great elevations —being rarely found in summer be- low 800 feet above the sea level, and ranging as high as the limits of the thickets of birch, rhododendron, and ' juniper, among which it conceals it- | self in the daytime. It is a hardy, solitary, and retiring animal, chiefly nocturnal in its habits, and almost al- ways found alone, rarely in pairs, and never in herds. It is exceedingly ac- tive and sure-footed, having, perhaps, ! no equal in traversing rocks and pre- cipitous ground; and it feeds on moss, grass, and leaves of the plants which grow on the mountains among which it makes its home. Most of the animals of the group to which the musk deer belongs have some portion of the cutaneous sur- face peculiarly modified and provided ' with glands secreting some odorous and oleaginous substance specially characteristic of the species. The sit- uation of the specially modified por- tion of skin is extremely various, sometimes between the toes, as in sheep, sometimes on the faee. Owing to the great value of musk to the perfumer, the chemist early tried to solve the problem of making -it artificially, and finally one Baur ac- cidentally succeeded in imitating the odor in a compound made by linking the radicle of benzene and that of tertiary butyl alcohol. It is not a true musk, as the natural product belongs to quite a different class of chemical compounds. However, “Muc Baur,” as it was called in the trade, enjoyed great popularity and sold for $20 gold a pound as far back as 1900, the pro- duct so sold being adulterated with 19 times its weight of acetanalid. There are other artificial musks in the market now and the adulteration with inert chemicals has ceased. None of these, however, has the power that makes the product of Tibet so valua- ble, that of fixing the more fugitive floral odor and giving $he resulting perfume lasting qualities that are lacking in cheaper grades, whose odor is sweet when moist but vanishes as the solution dries. When the corr spell words both ve indicated by a nu black ome below. No letters tionary words, except proper HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ¥. letters are pluced In the white spaces this pussie will cally and horizontally. The z 1 r, which refers to the definition listed below the pussle. Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines m word which will fill the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a numbes under “vertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares to the mext go in the black spaces. All words used are : names. Abbraviations, slang, imitials, techmicaf terms and obsolete forms are indleated im the definitions. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 9. The first letter In each word is aloe ell established corporations are not seri- ously affected by death, and are the proper avenues through which es- I-~-A large bird 6—Used for smoking j1-—Not many j2—Lubricated 13—Used in boating {¢—Winner {7—Part of the area of a circle L0—Used to measure gas t1—Circles $3-—One of the articles 24 —~Dejected Y{8—An exclamation £9—A wriggly inhabitant of the sea Bf——Devoured 81—Recent 8¢-—Instrument used by doctors 87—PFear B9—A titled personage 40—Part of a ship 41—Attempt {2-—Maker 47—A fish 48—A South American snake 49—Existed 651—Thus 53—A tool 56—Like ST—A tree 59—A visitor 61—A foreign ruler 63—Smell 66—A small, sharp bit of metal 66—A popular modern invention 67-—The sewed edge of c¢luthing 69-—One who examines ore 90—Put together Nature Decreed No Monopely in Gems. Precious stones come from most out-of-the-way places, says a jeweler in the Cincinnati Enquirer. “The diamond comes from India, Brazil and South Africa. the diamond is nearly always water- clear in color, there are blue, green and yellow stones. a white topaz, which is always quite Although As distinct from | Sedr tion will appear in next issue water-clear in color, a yellow diamond | has just a faint yellow tinge in it." The ancient Greeks knew the stone, and because it could not be cut and carved in those days like other stones on account of its hardness they gave it the name of Adams. “The ruby, which is next in hard- ness and was used so lavishly in the crown jewels and regalia of the king of Burmah, now in the Indian section ‘of the Victoria and Albert museum, South Kensington, comes from Burma, . Ceylon, Mandalay, Afghanistan and Siam. There are also ruby mines in | Australia. “The spinel, whch is distinct from - the ruby proper, is a clear, bright red i with a bluish tone. The choicest ru- bies are those the color of pigeon’s . blood, which come from Burma. The | Indian ruby is lighter in color than , those from other places. Weight for weight the perfect ruby is of much higher value than the diamond, but , the stone is so full of flaws that it cannot be cut to the same advantage as the diamond. “The sapphire, which is of such a beautiful blue, comes from Burma, , Ceylon, Borneo and Australia. It is also found in Europe in the Rhine val- ley. The star sapphire, which is | rather lighter in color, comes from Brazil, as does also the white sap- phire. “The emerald is the most valuable | of the ‘beryl’ group, and comes from Colombia, in South America, India, New South Wales, Serbia and parts of Egypt. The earliest emeralds we know of were those that came from Celopatra’s mines in Egypt. The fin- est are those from Colombia where i the wonderful emeralds which so daz- zled the Spaniards on their conquest of Mexico were afterward found to have come; they have more flash and are of a richer and deeper color than those from other countries. “The aquamarine comes from the Ural mountains in Russia and also from Brazil; in color it ranges from a pale sea green to a bluey tinge. The morganite is more commonly known as the pink ‘beryl’ and comes from Madagascar; at its finest it is of a pinky mauve orchid tint. It was giv- en the name of ‘morganite’ on the oc- casion of the late J. P. Morgan giving to England the largest known speci- men. of it, which is now in the miner- al gallery of the Natural History museum, South Kensington.” Power From the Sea. The world’s industrial power of the future may be drawn from the heat of warm sea water. Already some scientists think they have found a way of utilizing this latent energy. The warm sea water will, they assert, evaporate carbon dioxide or ammonia. And the pressure thus obtained can be used in steam turbines to produce tremendous electric power. ! planting in Pennsylvania. The plant- 1—A preposition 2—A numeral 3—To tease 4—To make a noise like a dove 5—One who employs 6—Trials 7—A poem 8—Common name of a fur-bearing animal 9—The load of a ship 10—Otherwise 16—To grant 16—Large woody plants 18—Island near Greece 19—Movement of the ocean 20—Power of attraction 22—Keenest 25-—Work 26—Man’s name 27—Bend:- down 32—Organ of the body 33—Distorted 35—Regret 37—Part of a circle 42—A traveling star 43—To knock 44—A playing car@ 46—To be in debt 46—A line of mountains 48—Mouth of a bird 50—To stupefy 52—Found In a desert 64—Pertaining to the moon E5—Harmony 56—Refuse from a fire 68—Simple jokes 80—Reverberation 62—IKxist 64—Also 65—A rpareat 68—Myself 36—7Used In fishing 38—To court Solution to Cross-word puzzle No. 8. RIA H[1 |[RE|C PA S|EIDIAIT PIO|CIKIE O/AIREMBI|EINIE AT} u E D | |TICIH Ol JL E A(K|E NIE EINETHRIL/S VIAL EIN|U E EILIOIPE AT PIE|AT A TIR IM EASE T 1[LIO AICI TIT! GHITEIN E 1 EIGI| [RIABA VO D R N Cc r=|<{Mm m Om : [mio ‘5 } z m Z partment of Forests and Waters shows that more than 20,000,000 trees will be available for distribution this fall and next spring. This is more than twice the number that have ever been available at any time for re- forestation work. The Clearfield nurs- ery leads with more than 9% million trees. This is the largest number of trees that have ever been available for shipment in any nursery operated by the Department. The Mont Alto nurs- ery in Franklin county comes second, with almost 4 million trees, and the Rockview Nursery at the western penitentiary in Centre county is third with more than 2% million trees. The Greenwood nursery at Greenwood Furnace, Huntingdon county, will have more than 2 million trees and the forest tree nursery at the Hunting- don Reformatory will have almost 2 ! million trees. White pine leads among the trees that are available in the nurseries. Almost 6 million little white pine trees will be ready for shipment this fall and next spring. Scotch pine comes second with more than 4 mil- lion trees; red pine is third with al- most 4 million; and Norway spruce is fourth with more than 23 millions. More than one million each of pitch pine and European larch are ready for shipment. Among the other trees that will be shipped are red oak, black locust, yellow poplar, white ash, and American elm, Forestry officials predict that 1927 will be the big year for forest tree ing of the 20 million trees during this fall and next spring will mean the re- forestation of more than 20,000 acres of forest land. If given adequate pro- tection and good care these planted trees when mature will produce about 700,000,000 board feet of lumber which is urgently needed by the indus- tries and people of the State. mi ———— Lumbermen to Meet at State College. The Pennsylvania Forest Products Manufacturers’ Association will meet at the Pennsylvania State College Thursday, October 28th. Most of the forenoon will be devoted to business matters. During the remainder of the day there will be a speaking pro- gram featuring a talk on “Standard- ization of Fomest Products.” TTP Ca i ETP tates should be settled. ev or 3 el I 22 b - ? More and more thoughtful men are [I= 15" 76 7 Z realizing this and’ are making wills naming a 0 27 2 strong Bank as their Executors:. 23 7 26 25 This Bank, with its large surplus and i r 30 experienced officers, guarantees a proper ad- ST 152 533 36 157 [38 ministration of any trust fund. 11 I 0 ud | MM 42 143 44 45 46 147 Tiras 1 ag 50 1 . ; srs ites Ss lites The First National Bank 57 60 JE BELLEFONTE, PA. el 62 G3 [64 65 [lI [3 67 cg " _— ——— — oy 7 70 we e I ll ©“ (@©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. : Vertical, Theodore Roosevelt aid: “It pays to try to do things and not merely to have a soft, easy time.” This Bank finds that it pays to render prompt and efficient service to its patrons. It will pay you to transact your banking business here. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. 3 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM A Se A OS SAORI TT SR AAA ALN) <3 ARBAIZANARATS AARLRL FAAAAARTO ARAN AAA RAY GLABRA i i 20,000,000 Trees Will be Available for Distribution. An inventory of the forest tree nurseries operated by the State De- Lyon & Company New Fall Ready-to-Wear Just received a new line of Satin and Silk Crepe Dresses. All the new shades in Crackelhead Blue, Jungle Green, Chanel Red, Navy and Black —new Dolman Sleeves, new Neckline and new Skirt, at less than the cost of silks New Fall and Winter Coats for Stouts, Slender and Small Women—all New Color- ings, with Fur Collars and Cuffs—in Sport Models and others—at very low prices. Childrens Coats A fine line of Childrens Fur- Trimmed Coats from $4.00 up All the New Fall and Winter Shades in the famous Silver Star brand Silk Hosiery from 95c. up. : A new Fall line of Tapestry, Cretonnes and Draperies. New Curtains (Plain and Ruffled) in all the new weaves. Marquisettes and Scrims, plain and figured. ant sence Rugs, Carpets, Linoleums and WINDOW SHADES are here ready for the Fall House Cleaning. Lyon & Company