SCENIC ne MAY 9-10-11 NATIONAL’S GIANT SPECIAL FIRST The “Big Parade” of the Sea Nightly at 6:15 15 and 35c. No Matinees Admission - Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. You Can sharpen your razor bladesin ten seconds if you use a Valet AutoStrop Razor—the only razor that sharpens its own blades. $1 up to $25. Es TIMES SQUARE \ NEW YORK CITY JUST OFF BROADWAY AT 10913 WEST 45 ST. Much £, Favored b traveling withouy gerne? — : ; Roo |i, ia, EE Send Postal For Rates 2G =i SE o and Booklet v) \ y - : ’ WON W. JOHNSON QUINN, President Bemorrai ican. Bellefonte, Pa., May 6, 1927. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Sallie F. Stephens to Farl H. Houtz, tract in State College; $1. Edward L. Orwick, Adm., to D. G. A. Harshbarger, et ux, tract in Tay- lor Twp.; $4,100. Hannah M. Gramley, Adm., to W. Iz Tressler, tract in Gregg Twp.; $3,- B. M. Porter, et ux, to J. Milo Camp- bell, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $425. Harold M. Kerstetter, et ux, to Phil- ip C. Barr, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $450. William Dickson to Flora Roach, tract in Rush Twp.; $1. John H. Holmes, et al, to Adeline E. Garner, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $900. Anne T. H. Henszey, et bar, to Al- umni Association of Alpha Sigma Phi Upsilon Chapter, tract in State Col- i lege; $1. | Kate E. Musser to Viola Byers, i ‘tract in Millheim; $1. | Josiah Pritchard, et ux, to George ; W. Miller, tract in Philipsburg; $40,- . 000. Michael J. Garman, et al, to Regina Hughes, tract in Rush Twp.; $1. Alma C. Haines to H. S. Confer, et ux, tract in Penn Twp.; $1. W. H. Stuart, et al, to Ella I.. Moth- ersbaugh, tract in Harris Twp.; $1. Flora A. Barefoot to Wm. F. Mac- Horran, tract in Centre Hall; $215. i __ Stuart J. Hoy, et ux, to John W. | Neese, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $1. C. E. McClellan, et ux, to Julia E. Maize, tract in Millheim; $1. Julia E. Maize, to C. E. McClellan, et ux, tract in Millheim; $1. John W. Neese, et ux, to Robert F. Hunter, tract in Spring Twp.; $1. E. R. Taylor, Sheriff, to James N. Nevel, tract in Worth Twp.; $920.10. Henry H. Clark, et ux, to Frank I. Shearer, tract in Liberty Twp.; $1. Bald Eagle, Nittany, Brush, and Penns Valley Turn Pike Road com- pany, to P. J. Meyers, tract in Mill- heim; $1. P. J. Meyers to S. P. Springer, tract in Penn Twp; $1. Harry McConigal, et ux, to Martha Shalick, tract in Rush Twp.; $200. Alma R. Leathers, et bar, to Earl M. Cartwright, tract in Howard; $2,800. George M. Domchak to Joseph Seong: et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to Moshannon | Rijonal Bank, tract in Worth Twp.; } ©.1. McQuigg, et ux, to Imperial Refining company, tract in Union- ville; $2,500. Harry A. Rossman, C. O. C.,, to Henry L. Nestlerode, tract in Liberty Twp.; $150. James G. Harpster et ux, to Clyde iy Fishburn, tract in State College; | Clyde W. Fishburn, et ux, to James G. Harpster, et ux, tract in Ferguson | Twp.; $1. | Bessie S. Price to Thomas F. Kes- singer, tract in Liberty Twp.; $1. | Ellis Freeman, et ux, to Austin C. : Lys, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; $10,- | | Mary Jane Bogle, et al, to Elnora . MacDonald, tract in Milesburg; $1. | Terrence H. Murray, et ux, to i Elnora MacDonald, tract in Miles- ; burg; $500. | Mary Gallo, et bar, to Joseph | Tekely: et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; | | Joseph M. Troy to John F. Troy, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; $1. | John Sike, et ux, to Ernest Rauter- back, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; $1,- J. O. Heverly, treasurer, to Roy Wilkinson, tract in Rush Twp.; $4.64. Roy Wilkinson, et ux, to George M. Hanes, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; Virginia Paul, et al, to Elizabeth 5 on, tract in Philipsburg; $1,- Conrad Miller, et ux, to Daniel A. Grove, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $100. Clara T. Bateson to William E. Brennan, et ux, tract in State Col- lege; $1. William E. Brennan, et ux, to Clara % Bateson, tract in State College; Hiram R. Grove, et ux, to John S. | Spearly, tract in Spring Twp.; $1. John L. Holmes, et al, to Homer A. Grubb, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $300. Homer A. Grubb, et ux, to Arthur V. Kunes, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1,200. S. M. Campbell, et ux, to S. W. Gramley, et ux, tract in Millheim; $1. E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to Citizens Business and Loan Association, tract in Rush Twp.; $200. Fred J. Beezer, et ux, to C. Homer Hess, tract in Rush Twp.; $800. John L. Holmes, et al, to E. H. Smeltzer, et ux, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $550. Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle. LOo|P FlAIN S|O/A|IRISEEO|RI|DIE|R SPARE E|A|R| EID EONEEY!1 [EL DEIV[I]A CIR AIBERSIE|ND THP|OD C SIA PIAIC| TEE | E|N|Di A|TIHES | INIA AID AR|TEROIVIA R{! Yi L TIE S|N|t R | [FIS FARM NOTES. .—Give the garden shallow cultiva- tion often enough to keep the weeds down and the soil loose. —Replant garden space with suec- cession crops as soon as it is made available by the harvesting of early vegetables. —Start cutting the grass before it gets too long. Clip it often during the heavy growing period. Short clippings will never have to be raked up. —Milk utensils should be sterilized. This not only kills bacteria and makes utensils sweet and wholesome but they also dry quickly, which prevents rusting. —During the spring months dairy cattle should be curried daily. This will help in removing the old hair and will keep the hide in a good healthy condition. —Have you provided the proper equipment and materials needed for insect and disease control? Do not wait until the pests begin their de- structive work to obtain the fighting apparatus. —Did you plant trees along streets, on school grounds, on eroded lands, or in open spaces in the woods during American Forest Week? If not, you may still do this important piece of service for mankind. —Dairy cattle, cows or young stock, should not be turned out to pasture until the ground is settled and the grass well-started. Better pastures all summer and much more feed all summer will be realized from later starting. —Fires have done more damage to forests than all other agencies com- bined. The menace can be stopped by the exercise of reasonable care on the part of those who use or travel through the woodlands. Prevent for- est fires. It pays! —Fire is the great enemy of the forest. It injures or destroys timber, kills the young trees, burns the plant food in the forest floor, causes the soil to wash, dries up the streams, runs out the game, and ruins the for- est camping places. —-Straw is a material which is very satisfactory for litter in the poultry house. It must not be musty or moldy. When used in the brooder house, it should always be cut in short lengths, about two inches long. Oat, rye, or wheat straw may be used. —Dairy cows should not be turned on pasture too early, say Pennsyl- vania State College dairy specialists. Give the grass a chance to get started and it will make much better pasture later. Early pasturing may impair the health and production of the cows, also. —When one must buy a milk pro- duct, it will be worth while to consid- er dried milk, either skim or butter- milk. One of these products can be mixed with the mash and is not so likely to attract flies as is liquid milk Keeping containers clean is one of the poultrymen’s problems. —Most bankers are much more willing to lend money on favorable terms to the farmer who can furnish a cleanclut statement of his net worth than to the farmer who never takes. an inventory and who never keeps records which are evidences of his business efficiency. - : —Last week, April 24 to 30, was American Forest week. We pay tri- bute to the trees which help to make our homes, give fuel to keep us warm, contribute the paper for our magazines, books, and newspapers, and provide many other things nec- essary in our daily lives. From baby- hood to old age we need timber and wood. —When the pigs are about two weeks old they will begin to crack some corn. Give them some to nib- ble on. Also let them share some of the brood sow’s slop and grain as soon as possible. Putting the little pigs on full feed at the earliest op- portunity permits them to grow and develop rapidly. Then they will not miss the sow at the weaning time. —America’s $10,000,000 national caterpillar, the European corn borer, is finding western Pennsylvania an unsafe place to live and rear its prog- eny. Farmers in the clean-up area have declared a relentless war on the foreign invader. Every fair day is being used advantageously in plowing under or burning all corn stalks, stubble, cobs and trash. State Col- lege Agricultural extension workers throughout the area are very optimis- tic about the results. They have car- ried on an extensive educational cam- paign which has reached every corn grower in the eight counties. The European corn borer knows he is in a fight. —While corn is the preferred host of the European corn borer in Ameri- ca and sustains more serious injury than any other plant attacked, a num- ber of field crops, weeds, and flower- ing plants are also susceptible, Penn- sylvania State College agricultural crop specialists point out. No severe economic injury to plants other than corn has occurred, and many of them serve primarily as shelter plants, rath- er than as the food plants; but the proximity of any of the more suscept- ible is a menace to corn in areas un- der control, since adult moths breed- ing in them may deposit their eggs on near-by corn. In New England a total of 224 species has been recorded as hosts of the corn borer. Not more than 38 of these are known to constitute real food plants for the insect. Among the plants subjected to quarantine in the east by the Federal Horticultural board, either because of susceptibil- ity or the likelihocd of their proving carriers, are: Corn and broom-corn, in- cluding all parts of the stalk, all sor- ghum, sudan grass, celery, green beans in the pod, beets with top, rhubarb, chrysanthemum, aster, cos- mos, zinnia, hollyhock, gladiolus, dah- lia, and oat and rye straw. Following the adoption of control measures and the enforcement of these quarantine regulations in New England during the past three years, there has been a noteworthy reduc- tion in infestation of most of the vegetables and flowers on the fore- going list. —Subscribe for ihe Watchman. The Mississippi Floods This appalling disaster has again proved that the Red Cross is the one great organization that can give immediate relief. Thousands of small farmers have lost their all. Everything they need to sustain life must be furnished at once. Belle-- fonte has already contributed thirteen hundred ($1,376.00) of the two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars that the district is asked to give. Checks sent to this Bank will be promptly acknowledged. The First National Bank Bellefonte, Penna. Simple Methods Are Best [jj ur Banking system is so simple v and our interest in our clients is so personal that the most inexperienced can bank with us with confidence and success. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. "MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM i a or ERA WD & ALN SAN LERRRRANR BUR AN AV AANA ORR AA AME A MANERA NANG RTL) SAL EAEH NNN Ve] AN Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. } | GOING-OUT-OF BUSINESS | SALE EVERYTHING SOLD AT GOST A FEW OF OUR MANY SPECIALS ARE: Cretonnes. 35c. val, 5 yds. for $1.00 Chenes ? All Silks, Taffetas, Crepe de $1.69 and Flat Crepes now . One lot Ladies’ Winter Coats, values up to $35, now . . . . 8 One lot Ladies’ Spring Coats, $50.00 values, BOW . ve One lot Dolls, while they last . 28¢ (ee \ } : Don’t fail to visit our huge sale and be convinced of our bargains. Lyon & Co. ww Ww $8.89 § $16.75 §