Sunday Excursion 22. Atlantic City T $4: Philadelphia Trip S UNDAY AUGUST 19 SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Leave Saturday Night preceding excursion Standard Time Lv. Bellefonte . . 10.00 P.M. Returning, Lv. Atlantic City 4.30 P.M. North Philadelphia . 5.50 P. M. Passengers to Philadelphia will get exchange ticket from train con- ductor, which will be good for passage between North Philadel- phia and West Philadelphia or Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Railroad [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. f The Presidents of all leading Uni- § versities, Colleges, and Normal J Schools give their hearty indorse- fi ment. ; All States that have adopted a fi large dictionary as standard have #& selected Webster’s New Interna- § The Schoolbooks of the Country fi 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 CHICHESTER S PILLS IE DIAMOND BRAND. Ladies! Ask your Drugglst for Chi-ches-ter 8 Diamond Bran Pills in Red and Gold metallic "Fake so other. Bay of your ake no . Buy of you Prugsion Ask for ©! IES. ERS DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 28 known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE 8S —— Bea itd | Bellefonte, Pa., August 10, 1928. Rules Violated in Teaching Young | Aviators, | Violations of the provisions of the aeronautics act relating to the teach- ing of students to operate aircraft has been reported to the department of | internal affairs. These reports are now being checked through investiga- tors and, if verified, proceedings will be instituted by the department. i The student-pilot provision in the aeronautics act, which became effec- tive July 1, makes it unlawful for a student to take instructions in flying before he has submitted to a physi- cal examination and been granted a permit by the department of internal affairs. Attention also is being given to the class of pilots who are permitted, un- der the law, to instruct students. None but transport pilots may give ' such instructions, and their planes al- so must carry a license, issued by the department’s bureau of aeronautics. . One case is now under investigation | where students are alleged to have i been receiving instructions from un- licnsed pilots flying unlicensed planes. James F. Woodward, secretary of the department of internal affairs, and | chairman of the State Aeronautics . Commission, has directed that a thor- ' ough investigation of all complaints be made promptly and offenders sum- ‘ marily dealt with. | “In any cases,” said Woodward, pilots who are licensed in the trans- ‘ port class do not have a clear under- | standing of the law concerning the in- struction of student flyers. When | their attention has been called to the matter they have seen to it that the sudents take the neecssary physical test. There also have been cases where limited commercial, industrial and private pilots have not had a _ clear understanding of the air regu- lations. The error has been called to | their attention and they have ceased | their activities. It is those who un- ' derstand the regulations and have ig- ‘ nored them that the department will | proceed against.” Transport pilots carrying passen- ‘ gers for hire or reward are now be- ing licensed by the aeronautics bu- vreau. This class must not only carry a Pennsylvania license, but in addi- | tion have a certificate of public con- | venience, issued by the public service | commission. —“Well, George,” said a country | clergyman to an old man who sat by (the wayside breaking stones, “that | pile doesn’t seem to get any less.” No, wicar,” replied the old man, “them | stones is like the Ten Commandments; | yer can go on breakin’ ‘em, but yer | can’t get rid of ’em.” | a—————————————————— : —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” LET'S GO 100% STRONG FOR COLLEGE BOND ISSUE. Centre County Should Start Work Now to Help Her Big Institu- tion of Learning. Every vote to be cast in Centre county in November should be a “yes” to the proposal for a bond is- sue for new buildings at The Penn- sylvania State College. In proportion to her wealth and importance, the State of Pennsyl- vania has invested a smaller amount of public funds in her State College than any other State in the Union. This statement is one of many facts | concerning the Pennsylavnia State College that will be distributed to vot- ers of the State in an educational campaign which President Ralph D. Hetzel has announced will be conduct- ed on a state-wide basis up to the election on November 6, when voters will be asked to approve a bond issue amendment of $8,000,000 for State College buildings. Already under way, the educational campaign is headed by a special com- mittee of trustees under the leader- ship of Henry D. Brown, a Yale grad- uate and for many years a State Col- lege trustee, and E. S. Bayard, edi- tor of the National Stockman and Farmer. Financing is by prominent men and women of the State who are concerned with the advancement of public education, and by alumni and parents who have organized for the purpose. For years the need for expansion to meet demands made by the people has been felt keenly at the State Col- lege. Thousands of student appli- cants have been refused admission in the past ten years, and the valuable research and extension services of the college that reach every county and community in the State have been handicapped, all because building is so limited. The State College plea for build- ings through the bond issue method is to be based largely on the fact that this method will provide an immedi- ate and assured means fer the con- struction of buildings, resulting in economies that otherwise might not be available. A definite building pro- gram has been completed by trustees and in a period of years is an im- portant factor in efficiency, trustees declare. Hearty endorsement of the State College bond issue has come from more than a score of State-wide or- ganizations, including the State Grange, the State Education Associa- tion, and many farmer and industrial groups. Students and alumni are prepared to distribute information in every county, their goal being not less than a million favorable votes for the constitutional amendment. Visitor: “How does the land lie out this way?” Native: “It ain’t the land that lies; it’s the real estate agents.”—Good Hardware. (RPP ARE THE TOPIC OF THE DAY SE ETRE mn I D noi | Sev O you know that you can precisely adjust the Heat of any Gas Burner the way you want it and have a thousand different temperatures to choose from- from just a slow warming to the heat of a blow torch? If you buy your Stove, Water Heater, Radiantfire Refrigerator or any other Gas Appliance now, and make your “down payment”, your first install- ment payment will be due with your first gas bill, that is, after you have been using gas for a month entral Pennsylvania Gas Co. Give Reasons for Earlier Season to Shoot Cotton-Tails. In order that the reasons for the early season on cottontail rabbits for 1928 may be more generally under- stood by sportsmen, particularly those residing in the southern counties cf the State, the Board of Game Com- missioners announced today that an earlier season was provided to give sportsmen in the northern counties a little additional hunting, in view of the fact that weather conditions dur- ing November are not suitable for good rabbit hunting and since wood- cock have for the most part migrated to more southerly regions by the first of the month. Consequently, to be fair to the southern half of the State, it was felt advisable to extend the season from December 1 to 15, with a six-day-a- week hunting period, thus giving the southern counties an opportunity to hunt rabbits while weather conditions in the northern counties are unfavor- able. When the cold and snow set in rabbits hole-up during the day, and hunting them at such times is unsat- isfactory. Since the open season for small game begins on October 15, with a three-day-a week hunting period, this means that there will be only six legal hunting days during October as against a full fifteen days during December. Granting that the first three day week in October may be comparatively warm, at least in southern counties, it was pointed out that the latter part of the month is often virtually as cold as the first of November. The early season will permit sportsmen in northern counties to get a good bag, while hunters in the southern counties will have no trou- ble in getting their sport a little later in the fall. The commission feels that once these reasons are clearly under- stood the sportsmen protesting the early season in southern counties will be willing to cooperate to the fullest extent. Beggar School in Moscow Has 8000 Students. Moscow, Russia—Instruction in the science and technique of begging, given by the beggar’s union of Mos- cow, has produced such excellent re- sults that nearly all the members of the union flatly refuse to give up their profession for jobs, even when work is available. Their average income is from three to five rubles a day—much better pay than any unskilled job they might be offered. There are approximately 8,000 beggars in the city, of which 61.2 per cent. are professional, and the re- mainder forced into it by loss of jobs or property. The number is constantly increased by peasants who come into the city looking for work only to find that the labor market is over-supplied and there are no jobs. The union, however, doesn’t both- er with these casuals who would de- sert its ranks as soon as honest work is offered. It is composed of profession- als of all ages and degrees of profi- ciency. They divide the city into dis- tricts and each has his beat which he guards zealously against the infringe- ment of outsiders. The president and officers of the union are paid a per- centage of the members’ incomes, and their task is to raise the standards of the profession and protect it against amateurs. Special attention is given by the union to the instruction of blind beg- gars, children and cripples. They are taught to sing sob songs, to play a few tunes on a dilapidated instru- ment, and to make the most of physi- cal deformities. “What the properly- dressed beggar will wear” is given serious study. Even foreign languages are in- cluded in the curriculum so that chil- dren who beg in front of hotels and theatres can easily spot the foreign- ers and say, “Mister, please give mon- ey. 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 Pennsylavnia Public Service Infor- mation 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. The Federal Radio Commission has before it a petition to permit a radio call to be inscribed on the mark- er of a woman's grave. Mildred S. Lorenston operated Amateur Radio Station 1 AID in Providence, R. L, up to the time of her death last Au- gust. Inasmuch as she was very ac- tive in radio, it was decided that this call would not be assigned to any one else. Her sister has written to the commission requesting that the call letter be inscribed on the grave mark- er with commission authority. Solution of Last Week’s Puzzle. we The Central Pennsylvania Gas Co. = UDGING by the number of excavations leading into residences, the town is giving a cordial welcome to the Central Pennsyl- vania Gas Company. The company is to be complimented on the manner in which the work is being done, with the minimum of in- convenience both to the public and to the individual house owner. The First, National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. Why Take a Chance? HERE is no good reason why you should take a chance with your valuables. Keep them where they have the very best protection against loss from fire and theft. In our Safe Deposit Vault you can rent a Private Lock Box for $2.00 and up per year. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. 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