ET ————————————————————————————————— Bellefonte, Pa.,, November 9, 1928. DON'TS FOR HUNTERS. Don’t forget to place your resident hunter’s license certificate in your hunting clothes before you leave home. Be sure to countersign your license certificate. Your license is not good until it’s signed. Don’t fail while hunting to wear Jour license tag in the middle of the ack on the outer scribed by law. : Don’t hunt on some other fellow’s license. The fellow who loans you his license is, as well as yourself, violat- ing the law, and the penalty is $20.00 apiece. Don’t exceed the bag game mammals and fellow who exceeds the bag limits is cheating his fellow sportsmen; he is ' taking an ungentlemanly advantage of the hunter who plays fair. * Don’t forget to respect the farm- ers’ rights. Secure permission to | hunt. Stay off posted land unless you have permission. Don’t carry off personal property on land where you are privileged to hunt. Hunters who fill their coats with apples, turnips, corn and nuts, without permission, do not help the farmer-hunter problem, Don’t forget to secure the license number of the hunter who destroys personal property or one who com- mits larceny of the farmer's Crops. Turn this number in to your nearest game protector. Be sure to get the county number at the top as well as the license number at the bottom of the tag. If you can’t secure either, then if the hunter has an automobile get his automobile license number. ' Don’t enter primary or auxiliary game refuges with dog or gun. These limits on ‘ the Pennsylvania department of high- "autumn and winter months?” garment as pre- ; Brakes, which must measure up to a I maximum at all times, will be espe- e birds. The | sanctuaries belong to the sportsmen and are used to propagate large and i small game. Land adjacent to the | refuges, however, is open to legalized hunters in season. Don’t shoot within 150 yards of oc- £¥pied buildings. It’s against the aw. Don’t hunt in crowds, and thereby avoid accidents. More than 70 per cent. of the fatal and non-fatal acci- dents last year occurred while gun- ners were hunting small game. Don’t take a loaded shot gun into an automobile with you. Remove the shells first. Don’t climb over a fence with a loaded shot gun; remove the shells from the chambers and then get over, or lay the gun on the ground. Never pull a gun through the fence after you. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. , Don’t shoot promiscuously while in the fields or woods; and never use a live tree as a target. Target prac- tice, unless you have a substantial barracks constructed, is a menace to human life. Don’t gun on Mondays, and Wednesdays, beginning October 15th until and including November 80th, for woodcock, grouse, ringneck pheasants, quail, bobwhite, black and gray squirrels and wild turkeys. Don’t forget that the season for raccoon opens October 15th and ends on November 30th, with hunting six days a week. Don’t forget that the woodcock sea- son opens October 18th, week end hunting only, and that federal regu- lations close the season November 14th. Don’t shoot ringneck hens. Look for the long tail, the white collar, or the green head. Don’t shoot ruffed grouse or wild turkeys before sunrise or after sun- set. Other .small game aside from woodcock and wild waterfowl may be shot from one-half hour before sun- rise to one-half hour after sunset. Don’t forget that blackbirds are protected this season. Protection of blackbirds was effected to save the song and insectivorous birds, because it was found that many hunters who went out, ostensibly to shoot black- birds, killed protected birds. Don’t shoot a baby bear; they're protected. Bear season opens Novem- ber 1st, with week-end hunting to and including November 30th. Then six days a week beginning December 1st, ending December 15th. Don’t shoot a fawn. Get one of the big, barren does. Antlerless deer, only, are legal this season. When this year’s deer season is over the sexes will be better balanced than they have been for years. Don’t forget to look closely before shooting at an antlerless deer. When the brush cracks be sure your quarry is a doe. Unless you're ‘careful you may kill a man! Fire, the merciless, insatiable de- stroyer, may wipe out in an hour what | nature has taken years, perhaps cen- turies, to build. Pennsylvania’s hunt- ers must be careful with fire. The season promises to be a rela- tively dry one, so the damage from fire is imminent. Fire destroys not only game food and cover, but it ex- terminates the game itself. Areas | which have been laid waste by fire | may lie useless for years—scarred, ugly, devoid of all life. Forest fires can be prevented. Cam fires can be thoroughly extinguished. Burning cigarettes can be ground in- to the damp soil or thrown into the water. Only criminal carelessness, as a rule, is responsible for the start- ing of forest fires. The greatest single reason for the | success of Pennsylvania as a Game State is that our wooded mountains furnish an ideal home for game. So long as these mountains can furnish food and cover, game life will con- tinue to be abundant. Let fire de- stroy our woodlands and the game will disappear. : Tuesdays A Scotchman and his wife went in- to a restaurant. Both ordered sand- wiches. After receiving them the waitress noticed that the lady was not eating. She went over and asked her if there was anything wrong with the food. “Oh! No.” “Well, why aren't you eating then?” “Why, my husband is using the teeth.” TE 1 NEGLECT IS GREATEST DANGER TO MOTORISTS. Unless the family car, the firm's truck and the business coupe have re- ceived their share of attention, fall house cleaning has not been a success, ways declared today in a bulletin. “Folks clean their cellars and many of them swept out and painted up the garage during Fire Prevention Week. Why not give the car a little thought- ful consideration so it will be ready to meet the unusual conditions Suring e bulletin asks. Heavy fogs are characteristic of these fall evenings and in some of the mountain communities ice may be ex- pected at any time. Windshield wip- ers should be oiled and adjusted to in- sure their operation when needed. cially vital to safety while driving if subject to such conditions. A general “going over” would be very timely to any car, after the rig- orous uses during the summer months. It is nothing more than nec- | essary precaution to check up the! various features and mechanisms. | Many truck owners completely ig- ! nore the lights on a truck because | summer days are long and they sel- | dom have occasion to use the lights. | From neglect and disuse the lighting | equipment becomes out of adjust- | ment, lenses are cracked, bulb fila- | ments are damaged and the entire : unit becomes dust covered. Dust | creeps into the tiny crevices and fil-' ters inside the lamp so that only a | feeble ray reaches the outside if the lamp works at all. i The vehicle code requires lights to be in good order at all times, whether | they are used or not, as long as the ' vehicle is being operated on high- | ways. The department warns that it | is not so much the illegal phase of the neglect as the fact that many lights : are not working when they are most needed and vehicles are operated des- pite the fact. Heavy traffic conditions of the sum- mer are more than parallel in winter by peculiar atmospheric changes and the sudden shifting of weather. The sudden changes find the motorist un- : prepared, without chains or other vital needs and accidents are the re- sult. Most accidents at any time can be avoided. Steering in a heavy wind is hard work but it is positively dang- erous if the steering mechanism is not in good condition, the bulletin asserts. Many people believe that head- lights must be used only at night. This is no longer the case, for the law requires them to be lighted any time conditions warrant and sensible mo- | torists will light them even before the need arises, to protect themselves. These little attentions are the work of only a few moments but they may save years of someone’s life. The old , quotation is still fitting, “For want of a nail a shoe was lost; for want of a | shoe a horse was lost; for want of a! horse a kingdom was lost.” “Don’t forget the little things that cause big accidents,” the bulletin urges. i ANNIVERSARIES OF THE WEEK November 8 —John Milton, author of “L’Allegro,” dies, 1674. | November 10—Last spike driven in| Canadian Pacific Rail- | way, 1885. | To take his place among the great pro-! phets, Mohammed born, 570. Martin Luther first sees the light, 14883. A lovable and unpracti- cal author, Oliver Gold- smith born, 1728. Henry Van Dyke born, 1852. November 11—Thomas Bailey Ald- rich born, 1836. Armistice D a y—the first one, in 1918. November 13—Saint Augustine born, 354. Robert Louis Stevenson born, 1850. SELF-RESPECT 1. Keep yourself in good physical condition by eating and sleeping reg- ularly and by taking plenty of exer- cise. 2. Keep yourself clean by frequent bathing. There is no excuse for an unclean body. 8. Manicure your nails and keep them neat and clean. 4. Dress modestly, and do not try to attract attention by extreme styles. 5. High school is not the place for a display of powder and rouge. Diseased Rabbits Might Infect Hu- mans, Hunters and others who dress wild rabbits are warned to use special care in order to avoid the possibility of contracting tularemia. This disease, according to the communicable disease division, is a discovery of recent years, and is occasioned by the germ entering the system through a scratch or open sore. Indications of this dis- ease will be noticed in the rabbit’s liver, where white spots will show in case of infection. All wild rabbits should be thoroughly cooked before being eaten, irrespective of any sus- picion of tularemia. The English Language. There are more than 200,000 use- less words in the English language, and just as many wrong ways of us- ing the useful ones.—Cincinnati En- quirer. Jim: —*“What’s come over you, Bill ? You don’t look as well dressed as you used to.” Bill:—“That’s funny; they're the same clothes.” Mr. Dale (in history) “Now prove that the earth is round.” Lank:—“I never said it was.” ! lined boxes sunk in the floor. FIND UNKNOWN SCRIPT IN ORKNEY ISLANDS Cravestone Inscription Is in Strange Alphabet. London.—An inscription in a hith- erto unknown alphabet and a double burial in circumstances strongly sug- gesting human sacrifice have been added tc discoveries made during the excavation of the prehistoric Plot village at Skara Brae, on the south- ern shore of the Bay of Skail in the Orkney islands. This village is de- clared to be the most important arche- ological discovery in western Europe in recent years. V. Gordon Childe, professor of archeology in Edinburgh university, has now given out more details of what was found in the most interest- ing of the six huts so far unearthed. “The whole hut has been laid bare,” he writes, “in the same condition in which its inhabitants left it at the moment, presumably, of hasty evacu- ation. The floor is littered with scraps of bones and broken pottery, together with ornaments and tools. Cooking pots containing bonés stood in the corners and beside the hearth. There was a little hoard of amulet of beads in a cell in the rear wall. Moreover, mainly domestic fixtures being made of stone still survived. Limpets Were Staple Food “In the center one saw from the doorway a hearth inclosed by stone slabs set on edge. Immediately be- hind stood a stone block that may have served as a seat or a pillar base. Built against the rear wali in the center was a two-storied erection of stone slabs, reseinbling a dresser. “To the right was u group of shite It has been suggested that they were filled with sea water and used as a recep tacle for limpets. Certainly those shelifish were a staple article of food. and the joints of the boxes seem care fuily ecalked with clay, “Along the side walls were in- closures resembling pigsties made of great stone slabs set on edge. “Shinilar structures had been noted in huts previously excavated. But our hut presents two unique features. In the floor of the sty on the right a grave had been dug. In the tomb { lay two skeletons in a contracted po- ; sition, the legs doubled up. Beyond limpet shells, flint flakes and a couple of stone knives, no funeral offering accompanies the bodies. Ciffers From Runiec. “The cover stone of the grave is built into the wall in such a way that . it is clear that the burial was con- temporary with the foundation of the hut. I believe the skeletons belong to human victims sacrificed to confer stability upon the walls, a practice reported among many primitive peo- ples today. “Yet startling was an observation made upon the great stone slab that forms the front walls of the sty in- closing the grave. Its upper edge fis carved with markings too regular and deep to be accidental and yet it is not merely decorative. We had previ- ously found a stone carved with a geometrical pattern in one of the un- derground streets, and a former ex- cavation had brought to light a Rune. “But the new marks are neither merely ornamental nor belong to the ordinary Runic alphabet. They must be assigned provisionally to an un- known script and surely constitute an inscription that probably relates to the grewsome relies reposing beneath the wall behind.” Reindeer Herders Vie in Designing Brands Juneau, Alaska.—Round-up days in the old West are recalled as rein- deer herders vie with each other over the designing of brands for their deer. Under a new law in Alaska all reindeer must be branded on the right hip in much the same manner as cat- tle in Western states are marked. One high school boy at Nome has been drawing monograms and designs for native herders and charging $5 each for them. Many Eskimo herders are adept at making brand marks and utilize the animal and natural life about them in the designing, such as seal, birds, bear, fish, flowers and various leaves. All brands must be filed with the secretary of the terri- tory here and each one registered with the owner's name, Man Wears Same Pair of Shoes for 36 Years Oklahoma City. Okla.—Thirty-six years with the same pair of shoes is the record on which Christ Moeller, eighty-six, says he will stand. “They are the most comfortable shoes I ever have had,” Moeller insists. The shoes are made of wood, 6 by 14 inches. They can be used for Lcwse slippers, work shoes, and Sunday shoes, the wearer says, Not in Market Ben Alder, England.—Lady Houston has been obliged to announce that sbe is not in the market for a hus- baud. Ever since she voluntarily paid $2,500,000 in death taxes on the estate of her husband, Sir Robert Houston multimillionaire shipowner, she has received dozens of offers of marriage. Shades in Currency Dublin.—Orange and green curren- cy notes, authorized by the Free State government, are now in elrculation. The pound note is green, the ten shilling erange. BLACK CAT BRINGS LUCK TO FRIEND Act of Rescue Results in $7,000 Catch. Wildwood, N. J.—The tradition of bad luck which has been woven about the black cat was destroyed recently, at least for Capt. Hilding Peterson of the fishing schooner Clifton. As the result of his kindness to a stowaway black eat, in prohibiting his crew from throwing it overboard to prevent a jinx, the captain is $7,000 richer than when he put out from Wildwood Gubles, When demands came from the fore- castle to toss the cat overboard, Cap- tain Peterson refused and shared his eabin with it. At dawn during the skipper’s watch the cat followed him to the deck and sprang to the riging, clawing its way upward to the empty crow’s nest where a lookout had not yet been stationed. The captain climbed the ratlines to its rescue and from the high place saw a large area of the sea broken by baby mackerel trying to escape the attack of a school of bluefish. Dories were lowered quickly, encir- cling the entire school with seine, and three hours later the Clifton sailed into Cold Spring Harbor, the deck waist deep in bluefish. Captain Peter- Son was at the wheel, a black cat perched on his shoulder. The catch, the record of the season, filled more than 400 barrels and brought $7,000 at the docks. The crew raised a fund to buy the cat, now the pet of the ship, a silk cushion, several cases of condensed milk and plenty of can openers, Experts Report U. S. Free of Dengue F ever Washington.—Except for sporadic cases, the United States has been practically free since 1922 from dengne fever, the disease which has swept over Athens and Piraes in the last few weeks. Official reports received by the pub- lic health service indicate that almost the entire population of those historie centers has been affected by the epi- demic, and some idea of the general misery it has caused is undoubtedly ‘possessed by thousands im this coun try who passed through the last Amer- ican outbreak six years ago in Texas, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi. The disease is one which seldom ends fatally, but once it starts spread ing it attacks large numbers of per- sons. The victims are incapacitated for varying periods, and, as in sea- sickness, their suffering is of an ex- ceptionally dispiriting nature, It is known in this country as “breakbone fever” owing to the deep- rooted aches which are its principal symptoms. Vacuum Sweepers No Worry to Corn Raisers Oklahoma City, Okla.—Broomcorn producers, watching with increasing alarm the sale of modern houseclean- ing equipment, may not have as much cause f apprehension as the com- blexion of current market conditions indicat federal investigators be- ‘lieve. In answer to queries from Olla- homa, where 50 per cent of the Amer- ican broom-corn crop is produced, G. A. Collier of the government market news service says that in relation to average consumption there is scarce- ly more than a month's supply of broomcorn carried over from 1927 and that pessimism is caused largely by the fact that dealers have a quantity : of high-priced stock on hand. The weather last year, he says, caused a decline in production and manufacturers bought brush at a rela- tively high price. There was no cor- responding rise in price of brooms, A Family Affair Maryville, Tenn.-—A double wed- ding in which four first cousins par- ticipated was celebrated here when Nellie and Beulah Gourley. sisters, married Fate and Isaac Gourley, brothers. The father of the girls is a brother of the boys’ father, 23 Ounce Baby Liverpool.—A raby weighing only twenty-three ounces was born at the Maternity hospital, Belled Buzzard Tragic Symbol Seen in Georgia Sparta, Ga.— The famous “belled buzzard” or at least one of the species upon which some- one has attached a bell, was seen by several workmen on the roof of Drummers’ Home hotel here recently. The workmen said the buzzard flew low over the roof, before seeing them, and they could plainly see the ; small bell attached to the buz- zard’s neck by a small leather collar and could hear the tinkle of the bell. Buzzards with this distinguishing mark on them are seen and reported here occa- sionally but it is not known whether they are all the same bird or not. Among the superstitions the appearance of a belled buzzard over a community is believed to forecast a tragedy. Numerous writers, among them Irvin 8. Cobb, have made the belled vul- ture the subject for fiction themes, SLEEP ALL NIGHT NOW hem, Pa., says: “I will tell or write how I nights with Lithiated Buchu ( Formula). and feeling fine.” 1 as epsom salts do on bowels. Drives out foreign deposits and lessens ex- cessive acidity. This relieves the irri- tation that causes getting up nights. The tablets cost 2 cents each at all drug stores, Keller Laboratory, Me- chanicsburg, Ohio or locally at Par- rish’s Drug Store. A. C. Smith, 41 W. Broad, Bethle- was relieved of getting up > Keller Now I get up refreshed It acts on bladder 73-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% aan a Le, Free sik HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wo- men, guaranteed to wear six months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A new palr FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP. Fine Job Printing |; A SPECIALTY ¢ at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There is mo style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office. This Interests You State College Employers POPPI TTT TTT WPAN IIIT III The Workman’s Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes insurance compulsory. We specialize in placing such in- surance. We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insur- ance rates. SPIT T TT La a a oe a a o ao o 4 It will be to your interest to con- sult us before placing your Insur- ance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. Bellefonte CHICHES Dry Cleaned? The only difference between a brand new suit and one that has been dry cleaned by us is the difference be- tween $1.75 and whatever you usually pay for a new suit. Try Us and See Phone 362-R Stickler & Koons 8 West Bishop St. Cleaners - - Dyers - - Tailors Hat Renovators TER S PILLS Ask your Dragelot anid on, X28, with Bl BY Dracein “tt ior ONEONTA TER OND BRAND lin > years known as Best, Safast, Always SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Every purchaser of a new Ford is entitled to Free Inspection Service for the first 1500 miles THE modern automobile is a finely built picce of ma- chinery and it will stand a lot of abuse. Considering the work it does, it gives sur- prisingly little trouble. But there isn’t a car made that will not run better and longer if given proper care. The first few hundred miles are especially impor- tant because that is when the mechanism of your car is being broken in. Proper aitention during this period will lengthen is life and prevent unnecessary trouble later on. We are pariicularly inter- csted in this matter because we believe it is our daty not only tc make a goed auto- mobile, but to help the owner get the greatest pos- sible use over the longest period of time at a mini- mum of trouble and expense. With this in view, the cutire Ford dealer organ- ization has been specially trained and equipped to ser- vice the new Model A car. Furthermore, we have in- structed every Ford dealer to give the following Free, Inspection Service at 500, 1000 and 1500 miles: Check battery Check generator charging rate Check distributor adjustment Check carburcior adjustment Check lights Check brakes Check shock absorber adjust- ment Check tire inflation Check: steering gear Change engine oil Lubricate chassis No charge is made for labor or materials incidental to this service, except, of course, where repairs are necessary through accident, misuse or neglect. The only charge is for new oil. See your Ford dealer, therefore, and get this Free Inspection of your new car at 500, 1000 and 1500 miles. Find out, too, how little it will cost to have your car given a thorough going- over at regular periods thereafter, A checking-up by experi- enced mechanics, together with oiling and greasing every 500 miles, will add months and years to the life of your car and mean more economical and plea- surable motoring every mile you drive. FORD MOTOR COMPANY