Demon fap. Bellefonte, Pa., January 21, 1927. Life, with Miss Laurie is One Continu- ous Tea Party. Many people in this section have been interested in the work Miss Bertha A. Laurie has been doing in the West Side Y. M. C. A. since she returned from service overseas with the A. E. F. : It will be recalled that Miss Laurie is a daughter of the late Dr. Wm. Laurie, so many years the revered pastor of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church and that she had been employ- ed in the First National bank of this place for several years before the out- break of the war. Soon after the out- break she voluntered for service as a Y worker and went abroad in 1918. Upon her return she was asked to inaugurate an idea in Y. M. C. A. work engendered by the service of that organization. in the fields. In other words it was felt that a. wo- man’s touch in the Association might give it a bit of home atmosphere that it had always been lacking and seemed very desirable. Accordingly a “home room” was opened in the largest Y in the city of New York and Miss Laurie and her co-worker abroad, Miss Ann Watt, of Harrisburg, were asked to try the experiment. She has been there ever since and an idea of what she has accomplished and how she does it can be had from the fol- lowing very interesting story, which we have taken from the New York Sun of recent date. It was tea hour at the West Side Y. M. C. A, 318 West Fifty-seventh street. Every evening from 5 to 6:3C tea is served in the home room, and if you think men are not quite as fond of their five o’clock tea as women you should be there on the stroke of 6:30 when there’s a rush of late comers fearful lest they miss the cup that cheers. Miss Bertha Laurie sat on a sofa surrounded by a flock of young men, each wanting help, for it was a few days to Christmas, and the young men at the “Y” are many miles from home as a rule, without feminine judg- ment to guide them in choice of gifts. “Evenin’, Miss Laurie. Going shop- pin’ to-morrow ? I want to send a gift home to mother. Thought maybe you'd like to pick out something for me.” The boy spoke with a Southern accent. He was from Georgia. “Qh, Miss Laurie,” exclaimed a blushing youth, “do you know where I can get an engagement ring where they won’t gyp me? Sure—I'm going to give it to the girl for Christmas. She’s a wonder, Miss Laurie—great big blue eyes, hair like gold, and”—- “Miss Laurie, Jack up in 321 has the grip. Wants to know if you'll come up and see him.” 5 Bra They kept Miss Laurie busy jotting down things to be remembered in a little note book, while on the other side of the room was her assistant, Mrs. Frank Baldwin, apparently just as busy. There were 150 men in the room, drinking tea, serving, chatting, playing chess or reading. It looked like a big family reunion, entirely masculine save for Miss Laurie and Mrs. Baldwin. Miss Laurie, officially known as hostess, has been big sister to the boys in this home room of the West Side Branch for the past seven years. After the war was over and men be- gan to return it became apparent that they needed a woman as hostess. The West Side “Y” then hit on the plan of getting one of the women who had seen service in the “Y” huts dur- ing the war. Miss Laurie was asked to take the post. She had seen ser- vice in Bar le Duc, Is sur Tille and in Germany with the army of occupa- tion. “We must get some one with ex- perience,” said the directors. They wanted to try the experiment to see if the feminine influence would work as well in civies as it did in war New York was the best place in the country to try it out, because to New York come all nationalities and all classes, passing through the West Side Branch of the. “Y” at the rate of 600 a day. ; That the plan has been successful is evidenced by the fact that during her services as “Y” hostess Miss Laurie has served tea to 50,000 young men u year from all parts of the world. License Applications Sent Out. The Department of Highways an- nounces that 1,700,000 application forms for renewal of operator’s li- censes have just been mailed to per- sons who held 1926 operators’ licenses. All drivers’ licenses expire at mid- night February 28th, W. H. Connell, engineering executive and acting sec- retary of highways, said. Motor ve- hicle operators are urged to mail back the filled out form and the license fee at once. It is important that opera- tors send checks, money orders, or drafts and not cash. Licensed operators for the year 1926, who have changed their address since obtaining a 1926 operator’s li- cense, should inform the bureau of motor vehicles of the change in their address, since the 1927 applications probably will not be forwarded from the old address. In writing to the bureau concerning a change of ad- dress, use form 1122, obtainable at all offices of the Department of High- ways, or give the name, old and new address and the record number, which is shown on the left of every 1926 operator's license, immediately above the name and address of the driver. A licensed operator who has not changed his address and does not re- ceive the renewal form by January 8th should write to the bureau of mo- tor vehicles before January 16th. Anyone who held a 1925 operator’s license and who has not yet applied for operator’s license for 1926, and who will desire operator’s license for 1927, should make application for the 1926 operator’s license at once; other- wise, he will be unable to obtain oper- ator’s license for 1927 without obtain- ing certificate of learner’s permit and suceessfully undergoing examination. Drivers’ FARM NOTES. —Get home-grown clover seed if | you possibly can this year. —When spring plowing is done, be sure it is done early, just as early as possible in the spring. —Some farmers still follow the practice of piling manure in the fields, which is certainly bad. —The disk plow is particularly adapted for nearly all types of deep plowing, that is, from 8 to 18 inches. —Crop rotation is nearly as effec tive in increasing soil productivity as the use of manure and commercial fer- tilizers. —During 1925 farm wages were the hightest since 1920, and three times what they were at the close of the Civil war. —Too much water is as bad as too little in the fields. Plants are like people—they need a drink occasional- ly, but they can be drowned. —Sudan grass makes a hay of about the same analysis as timothy, and hence greatly inferior to the legume hays for feeding to cattle or sheep. —Winter is the best time to apply lime to the soil. This is particularly true when lime is to be applied to pas- ture lands or wherever there is an established stand of a grass crop. —Now is the time to plan any change in flower borders and shrub plantings. These can all be worked out on paper and ordered now so thut the work will not be delayed in the spring. —Get the county agricultural agent to help plan the drainage system for the wet spots in that otherwise goed field. He can help make up a bill of tile, too. Do not buy tile until you know the sizes needed. —A splendid indoor plant box may be developed by planting ordinary Wandering Jew and, as it grows long, cutting off the shoots and sticking them in soil to root; say Pennsylvania State College landscape specialists. —Send to the Agricultural Publi- cations Office at State College, Pa., for a list of available bulletins and cir- culars that you can read during the winter evenings in preparation for a more efficient year on the farm. —There are about four thousand feet of 4-inch tile, or the mixed equiv- alent, in a car. Get your neighbors to help fill out the car if necessary. Get the Y-branch connections in the car. Use mostly 4-inch tile for branches. —A reliable local nurseryman is the best source of nursery stock. The first cost of good trees is comparative- ly slight; the final cost of poor trees is bankrupting. But only No. 1. trees one or two years old—never. three, and in case of peach never two years old. —1In the bearing apple tree remem- her that it is the plump, well-nourished bud which produces blossoms and fruit. Secure such buds for next year by a careful thinning out of the ends of the branches which will insure plen- ty of sunlight and plant food reach- ing the buds on the remaining twigs. —Next week the eleventh annual State Farm Products Show will be held in Harrisburg. This is the show window of Pennsylvania agriculture. Probably the largest show of its kind, it will bring together in the capital city the choicest products of field, flock, and farm factory to be reviewed by thousands of progressive Pennsyl- vanians. —Whether artificial lights should be used on breeding stock is an impor- tant question, since the condition of the breeding stock determines the con- tinued success or failure of a poul- try plant. As far as lights are con- cerned, it seems safe to use them for a period not longer than 30 days be- fore the eggs are used for hatching on breeders that have had a good rest. —The need of the Mexican army for horses has stimulated a demand for medium-weight animals of from 950 to 1,200 pounds that are straight of coler and preferably broken to halter and saddle. According to John H. Huff, representative of the packers and stock yards administration of the United States Department of Agricul- ture, many green horses are being bought up by dealers and speculators at Fort Worth, Texas, and are being “halterbroke,” since the requirement to lead is a big factor in selling the animals. Animals that are only “halterbroke” will command a premium over the ab- solutely green kinds, and the dealers are getting paid for what the producer might have done with much less risk and with greater ease. Most of these horses are strong and fat and are bound to put up a pretty good fight before being broken to lead. The op- eration requires considerable time and energy on the part of the dealers and rarely fails to skin up the animal. “The point is,” says Mr. Huff, “that if the young colt in first hands was ‘halterbroke’ at weaning time or as soon thereafter as possible, the ani- mal, even though never handled again before reaching maturity, would never forget its lesson. A desirable fea- ture of halterbreaking the colt or yearling is that they are lighter in weight than they ever will be again and therefore more easily handled. They are less likely to injure them- selves when young. Another good fea- ture is that when the colt reaches the age to be broken for saddle or work a good half of the job is done, due to the early halter training. “The day of hapnazard horse pro- duction is past, and there is no reason why the horse raiser of today cannot receive firsthand mighty close to real horse values through a little prepara- tion of the colt.” HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this puzszie will spell words both vertically and horizontally, The first letter in each word is fndicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the puzzle. Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” definés a word which will fill the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under “vertical” defines a word which black ome below. No letters go in the tlomary words, except proper names. will fill the white squares to the next black spaces. All words used are dic- Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obsolete forms are indicated Im the definitions. CROSS-WGRD PUZZLE No. 2. ECENTLY Judge Elbert H. Gary, head of the United States Steel Corporation, transferred the site of his Fifth Avenue Home, in New York City, to a National Bank with trust powers in trust for his family. This is a “Voluntary Trust” operation at once. It insures an income to his family under all cir- cumstances. This act of Judge Gary, who personifies the soundest business methods, should convince men and women, who wish to conserve their Estates while living, that it can best be done through a Strong and Properly Managed Bank. We are prepared for such duties. The First National Bank Bellefonte, Penna. i | 3 4 5 6 7 18 9 [10 0 JiR 13 14 | ie 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 ?8 29 30 3 2 13 349 35 [36 37 38 99 [40 41 IRE 43 44 45 [46 47 48 [M49 50 51 52 53 [MMs4 55 56 57 58 59 60 el 62 [e3 eq 6 G6 67 68 3 (©. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical. l—Entangle 3—A creed 6—Held as an opinion 7—Consume 9—Devoured 11—Exist 13—An insect 15—Dried grass 16—A note in the major diatonic scale 17—Unwell 19—A deep sea fish 22—A marsh 23—Regulated nourishment 26—Goes about aimlessly 26—Eager 27—To pour 29—A decade 30—Inclination 31—A masculine pronoun 82—Fresh 38—Pointed missiles 39—An exclamation 41—Evil 43—An African antelope 44—Nickname of popular governor 45—A snake-like fish 47—What we are all trying to com- bat (abbr.) 49--A long cut 51—Motive 52—Open-leaved cabbage (pl.) 54—To stake 56—A unit of superficial measure 57—Hires 59—0Of no account 60—Exists 81—Wrath 62—To be indisposed 83—Company (abbr.) 64—Put down 66—A craft 67—Meager 68—A unit of electrical resistance 69-—KEscape 1—Bitterly bigoted 2—To grant temporary use of 3—Neuter pronoun 4—Mother 5—Head over a body of men 6—To bring into line 8—A minute particle 10—Not that 12—A select circle of people 14—Higher 16—Dirtien 18—Sediment 20—A great deal 21—A female fowl 22—Balance (abbr.) 24—Capable of being held 26—A pipe or reed 28—Table lands 30—Cautions 33—A little tight mass 34—An ugly female 36—A greasy substance 40—Perceives by the ear 42—Brilliancy 44—The top story of a house 46—To Increase laboriously 47—A witch 48—A support 50—A hotel 51—Navigates 52—A joint of the leg 53—Wither b5—A funeral address 57—Former 58—A build‘ng location 65—A preposition 66—Part of the verb “be” 31—Shade Solution will appear in next isswe. SINGING WOMEN. (Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) make no difference, Vinie, what a wo- man sings so long as she sings.” Standing alone, Tilly Rudd waved her apron at the handkerchief fluttei- ing from her husband’s new car—her stingy, sung-over, tractable husband’s | new car. “Pa,” said Elvina when she no long- er could see her stepmother, “let’s sing, like she wants us to. What ¢'n you sing?” “Me, Vinie? tune.” “How's it go?” “I ain’t sung it in years, Vinie, but it goes like this. Le’s see, now.” He cleared his throat mightily. “Like this: “ ‘Ninety-nine bottles a-hangin’ on the wall, Ninety-nine bottles a-hangin’ on the wall! . If one o’these bottles a-hangin’ should fall, There’d be ninety-eight bottles a- hangin’ on the wall! “ ‘Ninety-eight bottles a-hangin’ on the wall,—" “Ninety-eight bottles a-hangin’ on the wall!” chimed in Elvina bravely. For she was just a little girl, going away from home, and she really want- ed to cry. But she sang, bless her life, she sang! And so did Cephas Rudd, however it may have sounded to the birds. Singing women put songs in the hearts of all who know them.—By Dorothy Miller. I dunno only one Dry Air Kills House Plants. Is the potted plant which friend husband or Mrs. Jones gave you for Christmas slowly dying in spite of all your care? Most of them do, according to John P. Habermehl, Philadelphia authority on flower culture. He said yesterday that few Christmas plants survive the winter. . Dry air, not neglect, usually is the cause of the unnecessary and prema- ture deaths. The remedy is simple —see that some of the water you have been wasting on the plant roots is converted into room moisture. “A plant feeds as much from the leaf as its does from the root,” Mr. Habermehl explained. “I have seen some plants that were almost swim- ming at the root, but the air was so dry the leaf could get no nourishment from the atmosphere. The root was not able to generate the water and send it to the leaf quickly enough to keep it alive. “An example is the orchid. This flower is a parasite, the small seeds attaching themselves to the bark of trees. They get all the moisture they need from surrounding air, and thrive on it. “Plants have pores just as a per- son has, When dust and dirt settles on them, and are not removed, they can’t get water. They are clogged to the state where they slowly but sure- ly starve to death. A very good ex- ample of this fact is the hydrangea. At the seashore one sees them burst- ing into bloom and flowering beauti- fully. They have huge balls of blos- som. If they were placed in a dry spot, a city such as Philadelphia, they Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle, NE/WSIP| APE A L E m OIC» EET ir ZEr|oh|2 Dm/vlo => mSEm-—Em~ClD | Dm |0[< [3m Tv Vv o E E oO A T »n2—-0> 22> >im » v0 => TE» 00> #20 m<| dm mi» Bm |®[>| 0 O[0 VOERZ (> |= (>|=f|=— [] ERR ELS r4p.d m= E could not possibly reach the same stage of perfection.” “The arid breath of the house sucks every bit of loose water from the leaves of the plants. The roots do their best to provide more water from the soil, but cannot. The plant does not have the good fortune to possess an internal mechanism regulating its { amount of perspiration, and the out- ; side air will have only a small amount {of the moisture that cold air will , maintain as a vapor. | “Too much water on the roots of ‘flowers is just as bad as too much food { for humans. Summer is much better | for growing things than winter. In { summer we leave our houses open for i the outside air to get in; we do not ‘ heat it to such a temperature that all the water is taken out of it, and plants can get as much nourishment as they need. A plant will also grow better In a pot instead of a tub, because dirt is kept sweet. If it is continually watered, without drainage, the soil will get sour.” ! Real Estate Transfers. Clarence E. Musser, et ux, to Frank E. Boyer, tract in Haines Twp.; $400. Herbert Showers to Ward M. Show- ers, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $1. William A. Neese, et ux, to E. H. Smeltzer, tract in Gregg Twp.; $1. E. H. Smeltzer, et ux, to William A. Neese, et ux, tract in Gregg Twp.; $1. David C. Grove, et ux, to Tobias Plozner, et ux, tract in Benner Twp.; $5,000. Lillian J. Kenneley to Alfred A. Barger, tract in Gregg Twp.; $1. Ivan Walker, trustee, to D. A. Grove. et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $5,- James M. Stere, et ux, to James M. Stere, et ux, tract in Union Twp.; 31. _ Austin L. Johnson, et ux, to Chris- tina Rishel, tract in State College; $10,000. R. H. Zettle, et ux, to John H. Wagner, tract in Potter Twp.; $175. John H. Wagner, et ux, to Ira Au- man, tract in Potter Twp.; $1,975. Michael F. Hazel, et ux, to Ella i Haller, et bar, tract in Spring Twp.; $1,150. - Sarah E. Bloom, et al, Exec, to John H. Strouse, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $500. Augustina Hindle, et bar, to E. Steele Stonebraker, tract in Rush Twp. $175. through the pot, which is porous, the | (2) ~ Financial Foundation If successful building requires an adequate financial foundation as well as an architectural founda- SITE OTERO MN RB 0) A tion. This Bank is the place to start your financial foundation. ANEINNG ¢ \ Sie IL + VA em ema’ ani. $4. 22 WA ANE 3 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts © THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | STATE COLLEGE, PA. IN Z CAMA EAN IVAN A A NC NOR CRT AM) J oF Qa MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM CN NE A EI EE a EI A Ee A TES SEAS 0) LYON and COMPANY AFTER INVENTORY (Clearance Sale Every article in our store priced with utter disregard of cost. The rar= bargains we are offering in this sale are too wonderful to be missed. Our rummage tab'e and racks speak for themselves. : Drastic reductions in all ladies’ and children’s Coats and Dresses. Every Coat must go during this clearance sale. 50% discount on all Shoes, men’s, ladies’ and children’s high and low Shoes. Special low prices on all Blankets and Com- fortables. One lot of Men’s Gloves, value 75c. to $1.00, sale price 39c. One rack of Ladies’ and Children’s Coats at $4.75 This Table is loaded with Rare Bargains you can’t afford to miss. After inventory all short lengths in piece goods, all the odds in curtains and underwear, every department adds some- thing to this table and the prices are so low that you must come early to get the choice. LYON and COMPANY : RUMMAGE TABLE ny