Announcing the Opening of the Bellefonte Guernsey Farm GOLDEN GUERNSEY Milk and Cream STATE COLLEGE CREAMERY Butter, Cottage Cheese, Buttermilk Dressed Poultry and Selected Eggs hone PHILIP C. SHOEMAKER, Mgr mS ——————— Free Six HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wo- me guaran to wear six months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A mew pair FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER’S TINY BOOT SHOP. Demoreaii Watcpwan, Bellefonte, Pa., May 11, 1928 = = Highest Building in the World. The new Larkin Building in New York will the highest building in the world with 110 stories; the new Book Tower in Detroit second tallest with 85 floors; while the new projected La- bor Temple in Chicago seems destined to 75 floors. The highest building in the world at present is the Woolworth Building in New York with 60 floors; the second highes the Metropolitan Life Building with 50 floors; the third the Singer Building with 41 floors; the fourth and the fifth, the Broadway and 48th St. Building and the Banker’s Trust, each having 39 floors; the City Investing, and 178-180 East 48th Street Build- ing, each with 33 floors. These build- ings range in height from 487 feet to 792 feet. The Eiffel Tower, Paris; is 1,000 feet in height, but will be much shorter than the new Larkin Building now in the course of con- struction. MIF V7 ) AMERICAN Fence INSULATED AGAINST RUST 407 TO 1007 MORE ZINC At last—the perfect Farm Fence! A much thicker heavier coating of zinc, a much greater protection against the weather, a much greater life. 40% to 1002 more zinc —at NO EXTRA PRICE. Ask for American Zinc Insulated Fence; we have it in stock. Olewine’s Hardware Store BELLEFONTE NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OARDERS WANTED.—Women only. Elderly ladies preferred. Also, wash- ings done at home.—Mrs. W. Brown, Halfmoon Hill 17-1t* OR SALE.—A story and a half brick house, on the east side of Holmes street, State College. Inquire of the State Bank, Laurelton, Pa. 73-17-3t. the second and partial account of Dorsey Cronister, Guardian of Ad- lai Cronister, a weak-minded person, will be presented to the Court on May 23rd, 1928 and unless exceptions thereto are filed on or before May 19th, 1928, the same will be confirmed. S. CLAUDE HERR, Prothonotary. 74-16-4t. Ne. Second. ax is hereby given that DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.—Letters A of administrations having been is- sued to the undersigned upon the es- tate of Celia Archey Snyder, late of Fer- guson township, deceased, all persons knowing themselves indebted to said es- tate are requested to make prompt pay- ment, and those having claims against the same must present them, duly au- thenticated, for settlement. RALPH ILLINGWORTH, Administrator, Philipsburg, Pa. wm" N. B. Spangler, Attorney. 73-14-6t FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate 20% 71.286m J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent EE RE REO IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 101 South Eleventh St., PHILADELPHIA. Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 72-48-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry Your doctor knows - + + that whole wheat contains every element the human body needs, balanced in healthful proportion. Whole ~heat and whole milk—that’s the ideal food combination— but be sure the whole wheat is properly cooked for easy digestibility. Shredded Wheat is the whole wheat steam-cooked, shredded and thoroughly baked. Its crisp, crunchy, flavory shreds of whole wheat encourage thorough mastica- tion, and that means sound teeth and healthy gums. 12 large full-size bis- cuits (12 cuncey in every package, ready-cooked, ready-to-eat. Deli- cious for any meal * P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market YOUR MEAT MARKET— Practically “right around the cor- ner” from where you live! Be sure to include a visit here in your next shopping tour. We of- fer daily meats for every family menu. Young, tender pork; prime cuts of western beef; fresh-killed poultry—all are moderately priced to save you money. Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. EE ———— ful lake beaches, and so on. CHICAGO PLANS WORLD FAIR TO AID REPUTATION. Its civic name blemished by gang fighting, bombings, murders and crime in general, Chicago has conceived a plan to renovate its reputation with the World Fair here in 1933. Each of the 900,000 families that go to make up the city will be asked to contribute $5 to establish a fund fi- nancing the fair without aid from the State or Federal governments, so that every citizen may have an opportun- ity to aid in the reputation cleaning plan. With this fund, the World Fair committee plans to build impressive buildings and invent exhibits and en- tertainments which will bring thou- sands of persons from all parts of the country and world. When those thousands arrive there for the fair, the committee believes, they will discover that Chicago, after all, is a rather nice place, and the greater majority of the citizens law abiding. Long ago, when Chicago first broke into national print as something to be shuddered at; when the name of Chi- cago on a news story first began to evoke righteous chills down the spines of readers, leading citizens broke in- to a cold sweat. A wonderful city, they said, was losing millions of dollars in manu- facturing and trade, because its repu- tation kept people away. Why wouldn’t people come here and find out how bad the city was? But people preferred, in the main and especially if they were timid, to read the papers recounting the ex- ploits of the Genna brothers, and “Scarface” Al Capone, and to believe everything they heard. Among those who decried Chicago’s evil name were industrial leaders. Samuel Insull, utility magnate, and others cast about for a way to bring people here to see the beauties of the city. Those leaders conceived the idea of making the World Fair of 1933 the turning point in Chicago’s reputation. Rufus G. Dawes brother of the Vice President, is president of the Fair as- sociation. Insull is chairman of the finance committee. These two men with the aid of a large group of oth- er civic leaders are laying plans to beguile Fair visitors into becoming familiar with the city and its advan- tages as a residing place, Perhaps, it is admitted, no more people will be added to the city’s pop- ulation which already totals more than 4,000,000 but visitors are expect- ed to return to all parts of the coun- try, to their homes, and say: “This Chicago isn’t such a bad place. Now, they have beautiful bou- levards, marvelous buildings, wonder- I didn’t see any. signs of crime, and people seemed to be most comfortable despite all these gangsters I read about. Meanwhile, prominent citizens will exert their influence to see that the city is completely “cleaned up” long before the World Fair. More Maple Products for Pennsylva- nia, . While the controversy on eugenics and selective breeding as applied to human beings and animals continues to rage, the Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Forests and Waters is going quietly ahead with plans to apply the same principles to tree culture. Iin- provements in the sugar content of maple sap is one experiment upon which experts of the department are centering their attention and co-ope- rating with others who believe in the possibility. In the sugar cane and sugar beet industry the sugar content has been increased greatly by selective breed- ing and selection. Until the present time no effort has been made to ap- ply the same principles to sugar ma- ple trees. This project was conceived about two years ago in a conference be- tween Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, world famed pure food chemist, Dr. Edward Hart, professor emeritus of chemistry at Lafayette College, and State For- ester Joseph S. Illick. The sap of the sugar maple contains an average of about 3 per cent sugar but runs as low as 1 per cent and as high as 10 per cent. In Vermont, the leading maple sugar State, the Burlington Agricultural Experiment station has found a number of trees with 8.2 per cent cugar content. On the strength of these facts, Dr. Hart has arranged for Lafayette College to undertake an experiment for the purpose of pro- ducing a race of prize sugar maple trees. Following a survey of Pennsylva- nia for specimens of “sweet trees,” the seed from these trees will be planted and a committee comprising two chemists and a botanist selected to see that this experiment is carried forward to completion. Prof. J. H. Delong, assistant professor of chem- istry of Lafayette College, Easton, has agreed to make all the sugar de- terminations. He will need about four ounces of sap from each tree, which should be caught in a narrow necked bottle and securely corked and sent to him with an appropriate num- ber, so that if it is found a good source, it can be easily recognized. The tree should be labeled with the same number as the bottle. The Pennsylvania Department of Forests and Waters is co-operating in this experiment and district foresters throughout the State are locating ma- ple trees with a high sugar content. WORTH KNOWING. In one German electrical concern more than 100 blind people are em- ployed, while double that number are being trained. From the day of her marriage until the birth of her first-born the Turk- ish bride is supposed to speak to no one except her husband. One of the books in the British Mu- seum, said to be the largest book in the world, is so tall that a man can walk behind it without being seen. Goats ave perhaps the easiest of all animals to train, according to one ex- pert. A goat possesses the quality of being able to imitate human actions. .. HUNGARIAN GAME : BIRDS INCREASE. | Although far from their native ; haunts and facing conditions to which i they are unaccustomed, the Hungar- “ian partridge is beginning to thrive lin Pennsylvania. | A survey recently completed by the board of game commissioners showed liberated more than two years ago the birds have become acclimated and are increasing in numbers. In one county, where 216 were released, game protectors estimate there are 11200 birds. They range widely and some coveys haye been found as far as thirty miles from the point of or- iginal release. This European bird, which is larger than our bob white, prevailingly gray in color, and with a red-brown tail, was first released in 1925, when 3962 individuals, the sexes about evenly di- vided, were liberated in several of the less mountainous counties. A year later 1643 birds were liberated. The birds made the trans-oceanic trip in good condition and at the time of liberation were in sound health. The principal difficulty in holding the birds in captivity resulted from their tendency to spring violently against the wires or bars of their cages, thus injuring their heads and wings. Once a wound has opened other birds in the cage or crate often pecked at the wound so that infection semetimes de- veloped with fatal results. Birds were released only in locali- ties thought to be suitable for them. In Germany, Hungarian partridges thrive better in the lowlands, although in other parts of Europe and Oregon they thrive at various altitudes. In Pennsylvania the birds are faring best in more open regions and agricultural districts where they inhabit the fields and hilltops and where they find food of weedseeds and waste grain. In only one case have birds which were released disappeared. In all other cases the game protectors have close- ly observed and guarded the birds and have found that they are on the in- crease. The principal reason credited for the success of the Hungarian partridge in Pennsylvania is that birds were liberated in good sized coveys, not as individuals or isolated pairs. Unless these birds are liberated in coveys they do not thrive. So far game protectors have not had uniform success in feeding these birds during the winter, and the chief problems of the species seem to be concerned with satisfactorily weather- ing the cold season in the face of lack of food, and natural enemies with hich they are not yet well acquaint- ed. . em festa Colonial Prohibition Failed. Prohibition was first tried out in this country one hundred and ninety- three years ago. In 1773 the trustees of the colony of Georgia, without con- sultation or debate and acting on the grounds of public health, resolved to prohibit rum and brandy. Although not particularly drastic—neither beer nor wines were affected—this law was found difficult to enforce. It raised troublesome questions through its in- terference with the commerce of the other colonies, and after a trial of nine years its sponsors themselves at- tempted to have it repealed. But the King refused to permit the repeal of the act in question. The trustees discovered that it was easier to get a law on the books than to get it off once it was on. But they made no effort to see that i the act was enforced. Not only did | they wink at flagrant violations, but {the jury at Savannah ceased after | this to indict offenders. William Ste- phens, president of the colony, 1743- 51, viewed the situation complacently. In his own opinion less rum was con- sumed in the colony after its use was permitted than when it had to be ob- tained secretly. In a letter written to the trustees he says: ] “A beverage compounded of one part rum, three parts of water, and a little brown sugar is very fit to be taken at meals.”—R. W. Gordon, in Adventure Magazine. Urge Pre-College Test to Prove Char- acter Instead of Efficiency. A pre-college test for all high school students, to determine charac- ter, industry and seriousness, rather than mental efficiency and learning, was urged by Dr. Clarence Cook Lit- tle, the president of the University of Michigan, in an address here recent- ly. “At Michigan, we find that high school grades do not tell the story,” Dr. Little declared, “For instance, a girl came to us with an exceptionally poor high school record four years af- ter her graduation from high school. If we had judged her scholarship stan- dards we would have denied her ad- mission.” “We investigated her case and dis- covered that she had come to the United States from Poland, just a short time before she entered high school. Her lack of English had been responsible for her poor showing. In her four years out of school she had helped support her mother by work- ing on a Chicago daily newspaper, and thus was enabled to perfect her knowledge of English. She is now one of our most brilliant students.” PR— Static Has its Uses—Warns Electric Plant of Approaching Storms. Several electric power plants in Pennsylvania employ the principle of the ordinary radio to warn of ap- proaching storms and are thus given an opportunity of preparing for an increased lighting demand, says the Pennsylvania Public Service Informa- tion Committee. Static electricity, abhorred by radio fans, is utilized to ring an alarm. “Static” is gathered by an aerial and runs down through a device known as a “coherer,” which decreases resist- ance. A simple mechanism then al- lows the current to vibrate a bell. Warning is given the electric com- pany from one to two hours in ad- vance of the impending storm and permits the company to prepare am- ply for the increased lighting demand. that in the sections where they were |. P. R. R. Rights Do not delay presenting your Pennsylvania Railroad Warrant The Right expires May 31. They are valuable The First. National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | 3 AARC ANARLYS ARAARL FAAAMARI J ANANATD SARATOGA ANY a Ye SASS {i Soa Cefn th ERS NE SENS aaa et p-— Jflanaan 3 FOR REGULAR $30 and $35 SUITS SRR peti SAS 3k Sa FS of —- he SRE 1 Sn SR i! god SE Ne Bel ed es a eo What Gene Tunney said about “The Will to Win” €€ 0 NCE a boy has decided what he is best fitted for,” Tunney told his audience, “The will to win, when associated with natural qualifications cannot be defeated.” An account with us inspires the will to win. 8 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM The Biggest MEN’S and YOUNG MEN'S =) Suit Values © IN OUR STORE’S HISTORY Sh et SFISIFA] { 8 ps $22.50 EE EE Al |2 Jw 5 A All Models Every Stylish Shade ol ER Sh Sh The largest assortment == we have ever shown - - - Rare Don’t delay. Come early LIE] 51] and profit by what you Sr, I us will be sure to find here =a A. FAUBLE er =r It Fe 3) [Li ~<|R]— gl ji=igl