AL i A —— LE ————— 1 Demarraic Jato Bellefonte, Pa., January 25, 1929. STATE GAME COMMISSION DEFENDS DOE KILLING. Following is the report presented to Governor John S. Fisher by the Board of Game Commissioners on the 1928 Special Season for antlerless deer: My Dear Governor Fisher: The Board of Game Commission- ers wish to submit the following re- port on the 1928 deer season. This season was for antlerless deer only— our first such general season since 1907. Under the provision of Section 511 of the Game Code, this season was declared a Special season and those who hunted deer were required to pay an additional two dollars spe- cial license fee. During the season 25,097 legal and 1,593 illegal deer were taken. Of the illegal animals 354 were fawn does weighing under 50 Ibs., dressed. A survey of the season has revealed to us the following facts: : First, that there was no such im- mense slaughter of animals as we expected. We feel. of course, that not enough animals were removed to remedy conditions; but there are many hunters who thought they could ap- proach a doe as easily as they could a cow, who went home without even having had a shot at a deer. Second, that hunting accidents during this season were few, only three men kill- ed, and but twenty causalties among the deer hunters, a remarkably good record. Third, that young bucks are not producing good antlers probably as a result of over-abundance of ani- mals and consequent lack of need for sturdy implements of warfare. Fourth that the breeding period is so upset as a result of unbalanced sexes that fawns are produced too late in the season for them to compete with their elders in securing food during the winter. Fifth, that the kill of illegal deer was not great, in fact propor- tionately less than in the regular buck season. The Bureau of Animal Industry, interested in the deer herd partly because its presence in Pennsylvania may mean the development of an epidemic among our live stock, has been cooperating in a Study of the life history of these animals. In a recent field investigation they found | that an amazingly small number of | does were carrying fawns, even though the breeding season had sup-: posedly terminated. This field study ! revealed also the fact that over-! abundance of the animals is leading ! to poor development of antlers in! young bucks which may mean a grad- ual and dangerous lessening of hardi- hood in the race. We are attempting to manage Pennsylvania’s wild-life in a scienti- fic, business-like way. We feel that if the sport of hunting is to continue, our game must receive the same effi- cient, intelligent handling that is granted to our agricultural interests, or to our forests. We believe it nec- essary to reduce the deer herd to a size cominensurate with its natural | food supply; to bring into proper balance the sexes; to relieve widely property damage—in short, to so reg- i ulate our deer population and to so thoroughly understand the inter-re- | lationships of the animals with other wild life and with human beings as to permit us to insure good deer hunting for the coming decades. We have found our deer dificult to feed during winter wher food | problems are acute. We beliove that we can eventually produce more deer with a relatively small herd which | is constantly productive because the sexes are properly balanced, than with a large herd where there are too | many does, where the food supply is | not constant and where the animals ! are overcrowded. i We are not forgetful of the fact that Pennsylvania has won for her- | self an enviable reputation as a game ! State. We are convinced that the | continuation through the coming years of good deer hunting in Penn- | sylvania and the quality of the ani-. mals taken will prove the efficiency of the measures we have employed. Respectfully yours, ROSS L. LEFFLER, President Board of Game Cominissioners. Illegitimate Birth Rate 2.3 in State | is Slight Increase. During 1927, of the 210,360 live births reported in Pennsylvania, 4915 were illegitimate, a check completed today revealed. This is a rate of 2.3 per cent., and represents a slightly higher number of such births than has occurred in former years. In Philadelphia the percentage was 2.8 and in Pittsburgh 3.6. The rural areas average percentage was but 2.1. While the statisties of illegitimacy for this year by color and nativity of mothers are not yet available, the percentage of births out of wedlock during 1926 indicated that they oc- curred among foreign born whites at a rate of 6 per cent.; colored, 9.5 per cent., and native born white, 2.3 per cent. The most recent comparative sta- tistics available show that among States in the registration area Penn- sylvania was only slightly lower than the birth registration area as a whole The highest percentage of illegitimacy is found in the Southern States, due to the colored population, while the lowest ones were in the States of Wyoming and Utah. me ee—— fp reeeeees— Willie was dejectedly walking home from school, and his woebegone ap- perance attracted the attention of a kind-hearted old lady. “What is troubling you, my little man?” she asked. “Dyspepsia and rheumatism,” plied Willie. “Why, that’s absurb,” remarked the old lady. ‘How can that be?’ ‘Teacher kept me in after school be- re- cause I couldn't spell them,” was Willie’s dismal answer. Needlewomen in China Ply Trade in Street China is perhaps the only country in the world where one may have his gar- ments mended on the street while he waits, In nearly all the chief cities of the country native sewing women are to be seen seated on low stools, per- haps on the sidewalk, mending articles of masculine wearing apparel. The accomplishments of these street seamstresses are somewhat limited, thelr efforts with the needle being con- fired, as a rule, to “running.” Other branches of needlework are virtually unknown to them. As a consequence thelr efforts are better appreciated by natives than by foreign travelers. They are never short of patrons among the Chinese tradesmen, for these are often natives of other dis- tricts, and having come to the city to engage in business have no one to mend a rent for them. Their wives being left at home, they are glad to employ the street needlewomen. For this class of customers the skill of the itinerant sewing woman answers every purpose. Objected to Viewing What He Was Missing Vincent Shean, traveling correspond: ent for a number of magazines and 4 chain of newspapers, was commenting on prison life in different countries. “In China,” he says, “the tortures meted out to culprits for various of- fenses have made prompt execution almost welcome. Indeed, the execu- tioner is called ‘the messenger of mercy. Yet, I sometimes wonder if Oriental methods are not really more kind than these of the so-called re- formed penal institutions in America. “Once, 1 was talking to a convict in a large American city. I told him how it was in China. “Then give me China, instead of this, he declared. ‘Here 1 am, in for life, and once a week | have to go Into the prison movie the- ater and what do I see? Travel pic tures!” Masterpiece Ruined There is a legend to the effect that L.udo Vico II Moro, the husband of Beatrice I'Estro, commissioned Leo- nardo da Vinei to execute “The Last Supper” on the walls of the refectory of the convent of the Santa Mario della Crazle, in Milan. The commis- sion was given to the great artist al- most in the sense of an expiation of sin. Tt was occasioned by Ludo Vico's orief over the death of his young wife, whom he had treated unkindly. The painting 1s now practically wrecked, largely due to the fact that | the artist was experimenting in the media whieh he used. In Napoleon's day a door was cut in the wall be- neath the painting and a large por- rion of thie center of the mural was cpt away. Rea!m of Thought The term “trapscendentalism” is a vague one which was applied to the philosophy of the group of American writers which centered about Con- cord, Mass, between 1830 and 1880. Ralph Waldo Emerson was the best known of them, while Thoreau, Chan- i ning, Alcott and Margaret Fuller were other well-known members of the i eircle. The transcendental philos: phy might be briefly described as the be- lief that man reaches his fullest de- velopment by fixing his mind upon the highest and noblest elements in life and overlooking the mean and sordid phases. “As a man thinks, so is he.” The modern cult of the New Thought derives much of iis doctrine from transcendentalism. Swearing “By the Swan” From earliest times the swan has neen held in highest veneration. Poets have lyricised its grace and beauty, religions have used it as a symbol of both spirit and sex, painters have found it a challenge to their best efforts, and in England the early Christian kings required thut oaths he sworn on the swan as a sacred bird. As late as 1304 Edward 1 used this graceful creature to take a royal oath, having two of them brought be- fore him in a golden net. The Yankee ejaculation, “I swan!” is merely a shortened form of this oath which in its original form was “I swear by the swan.”—Detroit News. Bible in Cracker Box The British and Foreign Bible so- olety has published an important edi- tion of the Scriptures in the principal language of Uganda. The volume is very long in shape, but it is only three inches wide and about three inches thick. A peculiar reason occasioned the adoption of this form. In Central Af- rica the white ants and other insects rapidly destroy a book unless it is well protected. The representative of the society recommended that the edi- tion mentioned be issued In a form that would fit into the tin biscuit boxes which are used in Uganda. Each to His Own Work There must be work done by the arms, or none of us could live. There must be work done by the brains, or the life we get would not be worth having. And the same men cannot do both. There is rough work to be done, and rough men must do it; there fs gentle work to be done, and gentle wen must do it; and it is physically impossible that one class should do, or divide, the work of the other.—-Johp Ruskin, i Le . ' tered, Laughter Puts Joke on the Fault-Finder As long as life lasts, we shall find that troublesome, unpleasant person who seems incapable of saying a sip gle word without finding fault. And there's nothing to choose on this point between men and women. Some of the former can be really bad at the game, For, after all, it is a silly game, which may become a men- ace to our peace of mind. It seems to be an inseparable part of the mind of some folk—this fault- finding. Often it is based on mere nothings. There’s one thing these pernickety people don’t like. They hate you very badly if you laugh at them. It upsets their rhythm. And most of the fault- finders work to a rhythm, Put then off it and they are undone. Of course, says London Chronicle, there are more ways than one of laughing at them! You don’t need to laugh outright. A twinkle of the eye, a steady, amused look, a sly dig —metaphorically, of course, although a nice Eighteenth century one wouldn't be amiss sometimes—a bit of leg-pulling; any of these methods are warranted to disturb the lines of at- tack of these fault-finders. No, indeed; they can’t stand being laughed at. Seems Odd Method of Relaxing From Strain Many of the drivers of London busses, says an English paper, own small cars and motor cycles and get relaxation from handling busses by piloting the smaller vehicles in their ‘eisure time. In the same way it is easy to under- stand the benefits derived by, say the hushand of a mother of six in taking a bride of a month to tea, or the op- erator of a steam shovel digging in the children’s sand box with a tin shovel and pail, or an amateur mara- thon enthusiast running to and from business every day, or a wholesale florist picking daisies in an empty lot, or a bank teller matching pennies, or a big game hunter shooting flies with a rubber band, or a mail clerk playing post office, or a high diver jumping off curbstones, or an explorer searching for funny names in the phone hook, or an astronomer looking at germs through a reducing glass. Or writing a piece like this.—Kan- «as City Star. Beauty in Motion A symphony is beautiful or satisfy ine in its action, like changing winds and clouds of sound. It may be a vehicle of moving meaning, but hes ro unchanging stable quality, no statie bennty; because it has no static ex- istence. Action is its being. Likewise an epie poem moves and lives in ae- tion. The Odyssey has no moveless beauty, but the beauty of heroic and romantic action, Its words are winged. Even more palpably a drama is cen- focused action, an unpausing utterance. A lyric is a quick flow of feeling and perception.—Henry Os- born Taylor, in “Human Values and Yerities,” Lesson About Hats Fatlier didn’t like the hat she was wearing, and he didn’t hesitate to tell her so. That's a little freedom fa- thers often take. The interesting thing about it was that she changed the hat. A week afterward father took a ood look at a girl friend she brought home, and took a second look as if In admiration. “Say, Gladys,” said he, “1 like that aat that Myrtle is wearing. That's the kind of hat you ought to have.” “Yes,” said Gladys, scornfully, “that’s the same old hat you didn't like when 1 had it on,” Electric Lamp Progress In 1900 it was sald that the incan- descent lamp with carbon filament was so perfect a device that it could never be much improved. It was at about that date that industrial research wus inaugurated in the electrical industry. Since then the efliciency of the incan- descent lamp las been approximately quadrupled, and the great increase in the intensities of artificial lighting made possible by the cheaper light. The new applications created by the new lamps have had a far-reaching effect on our industrial prosperity. Various Summers “Indian summer” was first used dur- ing the last part of the Eighteenth century. In the next decade the term was supplanted by “second summer.” Indian summer became established about 20 years after its first appear- ance, which was in western Pennsyl- vania, and spread to New England by 1798, to New York by 1799, Canada by 1821 and England by 1830. Horace Walpole used the term in 1778, not in reference to America, but in relation to weather in the tropics, Child Reform After three years’ study of the treat: ment and training of child offenders in Scotland, a committee appointed by the secretary of state for Scotland has sub- mitted 214 recommendations for pre- ventlon and cure of crime among the young. Many of the ideas follow the trend of progressive social procedure in ether ~yoatries. Among them are the elimin~tion of the young as street tenders or employees of gambling re- sovis. pnd fucreased recreational fa: | toueh some charm cltftier, Tragedy and Comedy in Alchemists’ Dreams Tragedy in England, comedy in Ger- many ended the researches of alchem- ists for the means of turning baser metals into gold and silver. In Eng- land James Price claimed to have found a way of causing the conversion. He even demonstrated his experiment before a large group of celebrities, in- cluding King George III. When re- quested by the Royal academy, how- ever, to exhibit his method to them, he showed a disinclination to do so. Finally, however, he was persuaded. When only three members of the academy arrived on the day appointed, Price swallowed a quantity of the strongest poison known at that time and died. A contemporary theologian, named Semler, in Germany, placed a so-called panacea, the Salt of Life, in a jar with a stone. He later found flakes of gold on the stone. He entered into a series of debates with famous chemists of the day, but failed to convince them that he had analyzed the substance and found it to be gold. They analyzed some and found it to be a metal called “Dutch Metal.” Upon investigation it was found that a servant of Semler's placed the gold each day on the stone to please his master. In the servant's absence the wife purchased the cheap- er Dutch metal and spent the remain- der for brandy. Semler admitted his mistake and the matter was a standing joke for many years.—Detroit News. Artificial Silk Not Yet Near Perfection Although most artificial silk fabric is made of wood pulp, it can also be made from cabbages, bananas, or any other vegetable matter from which cel- lulose is obtained. People can usually tell the difference setween pure and artificial silk by squeezing it up in their hands. Real silk, unless weighted with chemicals. feels warm to the touch and will not crease. Artificial silk feels cold and slippery, besides being too lustrous. Its creasing propensity is one of the greatest problems for manufacturers, and many experiments are being tried to cope with the difficulty, and save women the trouble of having to iron an artificial silk frock each time it has been worn. Best Workers Spinsters and married men are the nest federal workers, bravely asserts Malcolm Kerlin, acting chief of the efficiency bureau which supervises rat- ings of government employees. The reason is that single young men and women think more about “dates” and personal beauty than they do of work, and the old bachelor, also lacking re- sponsibility, is continually wanting to «change his job. “The spinster,” says Kerlin, “moihers her job with utmost care and the married man drives on- ward with ambition for his family.” Kerlin fings that the best work In the government departments is done dur- ing the midforenoon hours,.—Path finder Magazine. Barred All Argument Many years ago there lived a wise man vemed Ptah Hetep. He was re garded as an ancient philosopher long before Tutankhamen was born. Some of Lis sayings or maxims are reported in a roll of 18 columns of Egyptian writing of the Twenty-fifth century B. C., which is preserved in the Louvre, and in one of his letters to his son, Ptah Hetep says: “Do not argue with your superiors: it does not do any good. Do pot argue with your equals: make a plain and courteous statement and content yourself with that. Do not argue with your inferiors: let them talk and they will make fools of themselves.” Some of It Available Sonny Bush, five years old, had been galloping wildly around the back yard with two neighborhood boys playing racehorse. On a turn of the track on the concrete driveway his foot slipped. Steed and rider both went down in a heap. No casualties resulted except a badly barked shin. Sonny, red and hot, ran in to mother for consolation. Mother holds the tear-stained, dushed face up to hers. “Oh, sonny, how I wish 1 had yom veautiful, clear skin.” “All right, mamma, go out and get it. It's out there on the driveway."— Kansas City Star. Flamingoes Are Queer Among the peculiarities of the flam- ingo are the great length of its legs and the formation of its bill, which is large and bent downwards at the mid- dle, It feeds on water weeds and small aquatic animals, and flies about in flocks, uttering a harsh cry like that of a goose. The flamingo is distributed over the w~armer regions of both hemispheres, occasionally being found as far north as the British isles and northern Ger- many. “Evil Eye” Feared fn Italy especially the evil eye has peen believed in and guarded against for centuries. It is known as “la jet- tatura,” and many persons were and still are known as “jettatori,” or pos- sessors of the evil eye, who have the quality of injuring all on whom they look, even against their own will, Those who meet them cross their fin- gers or make the sign of the cross or against the evil eye. a tS re pA ree ea A Corporate Executor W-.. should you intrust the estate that you have built up after years of work and self-denial, to incompetent hands. A banking institution with Trust powers and large resources, is better: qualified for this important work than any individual. The First.! National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. Be Sure to give Them A Place of Protection OUR valuables are worthy of a place of protection against loss from fire and theft. Come in now and select a Private Lock Box in our Safe Deposit Vault — the rental is only {$2.00 and up per year. E 4 : EC =} 7 : r ARS ENON STATE COLLEGE, PA. 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