Bellefonte, Pa., July 13, 1928. = = THE DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. (Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) ister monopolies formed for the pur- pose of wringing from the necessaries of life an unrighteous profit. These combinations are often formed and conducted in violation of law, encour- aged, aided and abetted in their ac- tivities by a Republican administra- tion, and are driving all small trades peoples and small industrialists out of business. Competition is one of the most sacred, cherished and eco- nomic rights of the American people. We demand the strict enforcement of the anti-trust laws and the enactment of other laws, if necessary, to control this great menace to trade and com- merce, and thus to preserve the right of the small merchant and manufac- turer to earn a ligitimate profit from his business. . Dishonest business should be treat- ed without incluence at the National Capitol. Honest business, no matter what its size, need have no fears of a Democratic Administration. The Democratic party will over oppose il- legitimate and dishonest business. It will foster, promote and encourage all legitimate business enterprises. CANAL ZONE. : . ‘We favor the employment of Amer- jcan citizens in the operation and maintenance of the Panama Canal in all positions above the grade of mes- senger, and favor as liberal wages and conditions of employment as pre- ailed under previous Democratic ad- ministrations. . ALASKA-HAWAIL We favor the development of Alas- ka and Hawaii in the traditional American way, through self-govern- ment, We favor the appointments of only bonafide residents to office in the territories. We favor the extension and improvement of the mail, air mail, telegraph and radio, agricultur- . experimenting, highway construc- tion and other necessary Federal ac- tivities in the territories. Ce PHILIPPINES. The Filipino. people have succeeded in: maintaining a stable government and have thus fulfilled the only con- dition laid down by the Congress as a prerequisite to the granting of in- dependence. We declare that it is now our liberty and our duty to keep our promise to these people by grant- ing them immediately the independ- ence which they so honorably covet. PORTO RICO. ‘We favor granting to Porto Rico such territorial form of government as would meet the present economic conditions of the island, and provide for the aspirations of her people, with the view to ultimate statehood, ac- corded to all territories of the United States since the beginning of our Government, and we believe any of- ficials appointed to administer the government of such territories should be qualified by previous bonafide resi- dence therein. PUBLIC HEALTH. The Democratic Party recognizes that not only the productive wealth of the nation, but its contentment and happiness, depends upon the health of its citizens. It therefore pledges itself to enlarge the existing Bureau of Public Health and to do all things possible to stamp out com- municable and contagious diseases and to ascertain preventable means and remedies for those diseases, such as cancel, infantile paralysis and others, which heretofore have large- ly defied the skill of physicians. We pledge our: party to spare no means to lift the apprehension of diseases from the minds of our peo- i and to appropriate all moneys necessary thereto to carry out this pledge. FLOOD CONTROL. - Being deeply impressed by the terrible disasters from floods in the Mississippi Valley during 1927, we heartily endorse the Flood Control Act of last May, which recognizes that the flood waters of the Mississip- pi River and its tributaries constitute a national problem of the gravest character, and makes provision for some speedy and effective control, This measure is a continuation and expansion of the policy established by a Democratic Congress in 1917, in the act of that year for controlling floods on the Mississippi and Sacra- mento rivers. It is a great piece of constructive legislation, and we pledge our party to its vigorous and early enforcement. Wash Your Fruits. Only the scientists on the outer picket line, the farmers and garden- ers in the front trenches know the severity of the warfare that the human race is waging against the insects that threaten the health and wealth of man and also his food supply, declares Ernest S. Clowes in “Hygeia.” : This fight against the insect world is carried on by chemical war- fare, poisonous solids, liquids, and gases in huge quantities being used, so that there is some danger of the consumers being damaged in health if not killed outright by the very weéapons intended to protect them from their enemies. Unfortunately the insect does not eat all the poison that is sprayed on the fruit or vegetable. If the remainder is removed before the product is eaten there is no danger to man. Of course it takes so much more poison to kill a man than an insect that the small amount con- sumed in eating one apple or tomato is negligible. However, if the dose is repeated daily for years, it may be another story. This is epecially true because the poison most used, arsenic and lead, are poisons which the body cannot get rid of. The remedy lies in washing care- fully fruits and vegetables, since the use of these poisons cannot be elim- inated. FARM NOTES. Roosts or perches should be placed in the brooder houses by the time the birds are four weeks old. Pullets that are not crowded and are roost- ing early thrive better and will make’ better growth. The farmer who applies timely and thorough sprays consistently through- out the season is the one who har- vests a profitable crop. Quality pro- ducts pay the best. New fields of alfalfa should not be pastured. If the alfalfa has been seeded alone and the weeds become numerous, the field can be cut high when the alfalfa plants are just com- ing into bloom. Do not cut the alfalfa if there are only a few weeds. If high production is to be main- tained during the summer months the flock must consume large quantities of laying mash and be culled regular- ly every two weeks, Penn State poul- try specialists say. If you have good prospects for a ton litter and have not placed the lit- ter in nomination get in touch with the county agent at once. June 30 is the final date for enrolling your porkers this year. Help keep: Penn- sylvania first in ton litters by grow- ing one ycurself this year. Small patches of quack grass can be kilied by covering with roofing pa- per or by hoeing every time green spears of the grass appear. If pa- per is used weight it down with stones or other heavy objects to pre- vent the wind blowing it off. ; Birds in general are useful as well as beautiful. Without birds to keep the insect pests in check it would be more difficult to grow food. They al- so eat many weed seeds and so give a better chance for the planted seeds. The biological survey finds, however, that some birds are not beneficial and this branch of the United States De- partment of Agriculture studies the birds in order to be able to inform farmers and legislators as to their comparative merits. As a general rule, the birds that eat largely of insect foods—for ex- ample, the wren and the nighthawk— are particularly valuable. On the oth- er hand, the gray gorsheak and the briliantly colored painted bunting are valuable because they depend for a great part of their food on trouble- some weeds, such as the foxtail and pigeon grass seeds. The barn owl, like other owls, com- monly is shot on sight, but ought not to be, for it is one of the most serv- iceable birds in destroying small ro- dents, particularly the pocket gophers in the West. For its size, the house wren is one of the most effective bird enemies of the insects. Wrens usual- ly rear two broods of young each year and the parents keep busy from morning to night bringing food for the hungry young. The wren’s diet is almost exclusively animal, and a pair of wrens will account for an enormous number of insects in a sea- son. The boat-tailed grackle is one of the few birds that do more damage than good. It is fond of corn in al: stages, from the first ears to the rip- ened grain, destroys much rice, and gets most of its animal food from the small marine animals along the sea shore. America’s great holiday bird is get- ting ready to strut again in the Mid- dle West just as his proud ancestor did years ago, The wild gobbler was , once monarch of the feathered family : in the woods that stretched up and down the Mississippi valley. As he disappeared from the timber, turkeys were brought into the barnyard and an attempt was made to tame them so they could be handled as chickens | are today. : But disease drove them out. Then came the apparently erroneous theory that turkeys were delicate and could not be raised successfully unless they HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this pussle will spell words both vertieally and horizontally. The first letter in each word is imdieated by a number, which refers te the definition listed below the pussies Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which will ‘fll the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number ander “vertical” eo word which will fill the white squares to the next wlack ome below. No E18 30 1s Be Mack apmoes. All words uted oie tionary werds, except proper names. reviations, slang, initials, |terms and obsolete forms are indleated in the definitions CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1. Aluminum Company of on America 57% Bonds of 1952 11—Official assistants 13—A stone, usually in combination 16—A variant of intrust 17—Tending to amuse 19—The optic organ 20—More severe 21—A short sleep : 22—To prepare for publication 24—To affix one’s name 27—Hardy, perennial cereal grass 80—To wager : : 82—An underground worker 86—A bar used to pry with 88—To box ‘41—Form of verb to be ‘42—Cautious '483—A period of time 44—Enthusiasm '46—Canvas houses 47—To make lace by hand 48—A poem suited for music 50-—Color property of an object 62—Behind time 66—Wooden block on which shoes are formed 59—Respectful form of addzess 60—On each side of a fireplace 68—Indolent tumor of the skin 66—Recipient of a legacy .67—Mollusk with oval shell 69—Color between white and gray 170—One :- who bores i71—Lacteal fluid. '72—To duck or immerse \78—To prepare for publication Solution will appear in mext issue. Growth of Children Can’t Compare With That of the Lower Animals. Mothers. who are appalled at the bean-stalk speed with which children i seem to grow out of their clothes can {be thankful that little boys do not sprout up as fast as rabbits, cows and guinea pigs. Charts comparing the growth of i children with that of animals have been worked out by Dr. Samuel Brody | of the Missouri agricultural experi- ment station. Reporting his resuits in Science Magazine, Doctor Brody were given an open range where they ¢hows that a child between four and could get plently of exercise and catch grasshoppers and bugs. That theory has been disproved. It is now known that turkeys can be successfully raised in close con- fourteen years of age grows at the rate of only 10 per cent a year. Re- | duced to days, this means that in less | than four days the young animal gains as much as the child gains in a finement. This may clinge the entire ' vo... system so that in the future the lay- | ing, brooding and marketing season can be greatly lengthened. Turkeys may eventually be produced almost the year around an8l be brought in fresh from the farm every month in the year. Instead of turkey raisers marketing practically all of their sur- plus birds at Thanksgiving and at Christmas holiday seasons, as they do at the present time, they will be able to furnish fresh ones winter and summer. The production of squab turkeys, weighing from eight to ten pounds, on a year around basis may be de- veloped in the future. It is at least made possible through the use of ar- tificial incubators and brooders and the development of the confinement method of handling the birds. Breed- ers will have to change the laying habits of the turkey hen just as the poultrymen did with the chicken hen. . Farm machinery will deteriorate if it is left in the “great out-of-doors.” If it is properly housed, however, its life will be practically doubled. An implement shed either 16 or 24 feet wide will give proper protection to the farm machinery. The narrower width will accomodate one row of ma- chines; the wider one will provide space for two rows. If a pitched roof is placed over the shed, space directly under it can be utilized for storing light instruments if a board floor is first laid over the cross beams. By placing a six-inch concrete floor under the shed, the farmer can elimi- nate much of the difficulty of moving heavy machinery, such as tractors, hay loaders, or binders. The shed can be made practically fireproof by the use of concrete ma- sonry walls, and cement-asbestos for roofing. Permanent pastures produce profits and prosperity. Best results are obtained from lime that is applied in the fall. Trapping rats is effective, and both poisoning and trapping methods should be used. The juvenile period in man spreads | over an enormously long period of time compared with that in domestic animals Doctor Brody states. Children who have not grown fast between four and twelve years often shoot up rapidly between twelve and fifteen. This appears to be in the na- ture of compensatory growth for an earlier deficiency, Dector Brody con- cludes. Children who have grown not seem to have this acceleration in their teens. As It is in China. The China Christian Advocate re- ports this incident from the recent session of the Eastern Asia Central Conference at Shanghai: A very audible “smile” went through one corner of the room, fol- lowing the passage of a resolution that “when the time comes, the bish- ops from America shall be gradually eliminated.” A delegate suggested that “withdrawn” would be a word sounding better and meaning the same thing. It was substituted. A question arose as to the Chinese phrase used. This proved to be a close translation of “eliminated.” A Chinese scholar suggested another phrase and then one delegate laughed aloud. When asked the reason he re- plied, “In place of ‘eliminated’ they are going to subsitute ‘annihilated.’ ” No More 3% Tax on Autos. Through the concerted efforts at the National Headquarters in Wash- ington, D. C., the American Automo- bile Association has finally won its battle against the 3% excise tax on all pleasure cars. This means 3% less on the rice of your car right now, or a refund if the car was in stock, in transit, or in process of sale when the act was repealed May 29, 1928. The buying public will be saved $1,100,000,000 by the repeal of this act, which included tax on tires, parts, accessories, and new cars. ' 46—Fortune; city real estate 5—Autumn flower 6—Gentle; suave 7—Identical 8—Masculine possessive pronoun S— Employing 10—A pace 12—Clouded with dust 14—Pocketbook 16—An American humorist 18—Wagon for moving goods 28—Wrath 26—Neuter possessive pronoun 26—Astonish 28—Fill with joy 29—Where cakes are baked 80-—Bristle instruments or tools 81—To declaim or state dramatical: ly 88—Metal in native state 84—A meadow 86—Before (poetic) 87—A newt 89—Vegetable in a pod 40—A branch of learning; a boy's name 47—Non-alcoholié¢ beverage 49—Cessation of life ¢ b1—Pertaining to forearm bone 62—An untruth 58—A large, wild sheep of Asia p4—Combining form from Greek re- . lating to a gland 55—Members of a nomadic race 57—War weapon of middle ages 68—Decem F9—To close abruptly 61—Require 62—A high wind instrument of “ orchestra 64— Trim; tidy 66—To request et es —— 68—A shelter or protection Solution of Last Week’s Puzzle. 1 IN| TIO! S|T|OP TAR S ADEE BIAIS| | SERE|N|DIS | ISIOIGIAIM 1 TISER E S|1 |RIERE | [NICH 1|LIE N DIOIN|OIR H F EINIT 8 S| C|RIA|P TIOf 1 L A|TIO|R P ABIEIDES Y H 1 P NIE ——The Watchman gives all the news while it is news. more rapidly in earlier childhood d& CHICHESTER S PILLS [ “supreme auTHORITY” | | WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL | DICTIONARY . -~THE MERRIAM WEBSTER Because Hundreds of Supreme Court Judges concur in highest praise of the work as their Authority. | The Presidents of all leading Uni- # versities, Colleges, and Normal § Schools give their hearty indorse- fi ment. 5 All States that have adopted a large dictionary as standard have § selected Webster's New Interna- § tional. The Schoolbooks of the Country § adhere to the Merriam-Webster § system of diacritical marks. : The Government Printing Office at Washington uses it as authority. WRITE for a sample page of the New Words, specimen of Regular and India Papers, FREE. | BRAND. dies! Ask your fos, Pills and metallic om boxes, oslo with Blue ‘ Ribbon.’ OND BEAND P as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE 7 2 ” ‘ od PA F | 5 2 4 2 : 4 A 2 A 2 7 4 4 SE a i a cD 3 Q Q 2 Q Q $ 1$ : a re ©] 13 crate BY $ OLDERS of these bonds are advised fF $ | that certain numbers amounting to 19 0, 21 $ $20,000,000, have been called for payment on z 7 fas $ September 1, 1928. They may be converted | 7 0 31 $ now into uncalled bonds of the same 233 [34 56 wr 38 [29 [#0 $ company if desired. Please consult us. 1 21 1 43 3 : 4 44 46 | 47 $ ; ® e I 48 [49 50 |51 $ ; $ . . ois al 1 el) Od $ The First, National Bank 0 [62 le4 4 : : 2. $ BELLEFONTE, PA. 5 6 G G $ 3d TT TT] |: 1 72 , 3 : (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical. ON 1—Salilors 1—Source of lumber 5 : 0) 4—Upright pleces at side of open- 2—Classified 3 : : mE ais nee 5 :h ottaonta] ) : n: How Bravely They]Fought for Independence s we read of the deeds of our ancestors in the War of the Revolution, we agree that they were inspired to give their very best for a just cause. Let us ever perpetu- ate their blessed memory. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AE ER A A TET ANE A AN AE INANE ISAM J TCLLTUT © ITELTET 2 TELETTO [TETTTTONTLEIT © NUTT oO 4 ORR, IX / * 0, / 0% ® ® * XO 0, 0. 0 ($000, Nad * * 9, Sedledteodleddoddileddloiled * © 0 OO OOO 6 Oe o, 0, ho’ % 0, ooo * 9 * o 9, * @ 00.99, \/ * 9. 0 0? 9%, %0.0% 0% 0eleadeelecde * @. 90 $009, 7 $0.00.00, * / * 9, ® 9 (> $0, 9, * / * 7 * J * 9, * 7 * 7 * o 9 bo? %' Ood * A PALM BEACH A MOHAIR or TROPICAL WORSTED SUIT will do the trick. The Fauble Stores are showing the most complete assortment of these cool suits ever shown in Belleionte. PRICED HONESTLY A very little money will keep you cool and comfortable. LET US SHOW YOU. / 00.00.86 9.0. 0 0 0 $050 00% 06% %% 4% 9, % pi 0, 8..0, 0 0 0? %°%%%%% ®, FAUBLE'S 0. 0. 0.0 B08 00 0 HOO OOO bb CEXIXIXIX IX IRIN LX AXE X XA XG S 4 at as 5 ata t errr Or 4002000 00S a CITI IO OR EOI 0% 0% a et Oe Keep Cool and Comfortable @ ® o @ 00, COW) ®e &, oe? %%, > @, 0, 0. 0. 0 0 0 06 0.0 0% 00% 005 %% 9% 06% %% 2% % eieileided e 0.4%. 0% 06% 65% % ® 1906995 9 * ® o safes 00 0. 0, 0. 0. 0. 0 & 9 ($00 0.00,00,00,00,00,00° X Xa x 9, * 0, 0. 0. 0.0 0.0 0’ 96° %% 9% %° %*%' o 9% 0 0.0 8 0.0 96392 %% %* %' 0, 5, ®, 900% 96% 9, *_ 90 3 & * / .