Bruen Naa. Bellefonte, Pa., April 26, 1929. “e——— GOVERNOR ASKS OBSERVANCE OF CHILD HEALTH DAY MAY 1. Governor John S. Fisher has issued a statement asking proper considera- tion of the growing importance of May 1 now designated thraughout the United States as Child Health Day. The Governor pointed out that each succeeding year witnesses definite progress in physical betterment of the people of Pennsylvania but as- serted that “We still know far better than we do,” urging no cessation in efforts to establish good health rec- ords. The Governor's statement in full was as follows: “The approach of the Sixth Annual Celebration of May Day Child Health Day is a signal for again calling the attention of citizens of our Common- wealth to the growing importance of this yearly awakening of interest in and practical work for Health, es- pecially of young children. “The States of this nation are now united in following the lead of the Congress and of President Hoover; for both have let it be known that all agencies and organizations may fit- tingly join in arousing all the people to more and more effort for the pro- tection and development of the well- being of the nation’s children. “Bach year now witnesses definite progress in health matters in this Commonwealth. 1928 saw a still fur- ther reduction in deaths from typhoid fever, tuberculosis, respitory diseases, enteric diseases, diphtheria and scar- let fever. Especially should attention be called to a distinct drop in the ma- ternal death rate. “There were also, in the past year, many more defect corrections in school children than in any previous year. More school nurses are at work giving their invaluable help. Many more of the little army of a million and a half pre-school children were started on the path to better physical condition for entering school. “There is nothing to be more high- ly prized than healthy children, and the need for better understanding of their care and protection must be more fully realized. At every danger point the hazards of life must be cut down. Our goal is still far off. Not yet are all general living conditions improving; not yet is all water safe, all milk pure. “We still know far better than we do. “Let every agency whether. g®v- ernmental or private whether educa- tional, social or religious increase its zeal, enlarge its ambitions, and so make May Day better Child Health Day than ever.” MANY CONVENTIONS | COMING TO STATE COLLEGE. | More conventions and meetings of prominent organizations and societies will be held on the campus of the Pennsylvania State College this year than ever before, according to E. K.' Hibsham, assistant to the president of the colleeg in charge of public re- lations. Sixteen dates have been set for various meetings of organizations, including several national groups, which will bring thousands of visitors to the college. For the second consecutive time State College has been selected as the meeting place for the National Oil and Gas Power conference which will be held there this year from June 24 to 27. The American Society of Re- | frigeration Engineers will also meet there this year from June 19 to 22. Other meetings scheduled to be held at the college are: the Industrial con- ference of the School of Engineering, May 16, 17 and 18; Young Club Lead- ers, June 17 to 22; Young Farmers’ Week, June 18 to 20; Farmers’ Day, June 20 to 21; Young Peoples Branch of the W. C. T. U., June 24 to 29; State supervising principals, August 8 to 10; Grange Lecturers, August 12 to 15. Mrs. Anna Botsford Comstock, known as the “mother of nature study” is one of a number of promi- nent naturalists and authors who have been engaged as special lectur- ers for the nature camps to be held from June 27 to July 18 and from July 17 to August 7. Mrs. Comstock will spend a week in each camp where she will give two lectures or nature readings each day. Others who have been engaged as special lecturers for the camps are: Earnest Thompson Seton, naturalist, lecturer and author; Dr. W. Elmer Ekblaw, associate professor of geog-' raphy, Clark University, and editor of Economic Geography, who was geologist and botanist with the Mac- Millan-Crockerland Arctic expedition from 1913 to 1917; Dr. Albert F. | Ganier, naturalist and ornithologist (who was formerly curator for the Tennessee Ornithological Society and past president of both the Wilson Ornithological Club and the Tennes- see Academy of Science; Dr. George M. Sutton, director of education and research and State Game Commis- sioner of Pennslyvania who was for- merly ornithologist for the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh; and Mary Jane Cooper, supervisor of nature study, | Johnstown. ! PURCHASING QUAIL. It will be interesting to the sports- men to learn that while the Game Commission’s original order for quail from Mexico could not be supplied due to the heaviest drought in that section for twen.y years, 5,000 birds were finally secured from Texas and shipments have already started. ~ Now is the time to fix up your MODEL T FORD RIGHT now, after winter lay-ups and winter driving, is the time to go over your Model T and find out just what it needs in the way of replacement parts and adjustments. For a very small cost, you may be able to protect and maintain your investment in the car and get thousands of miles of additional service. To help you get the fullest use from your car, the Ford Motor Company is still devoting a considerable section of its plants to the manufacture of Model T parts and will continue to do so as long as they are needed by Ford owners. These parts are quickly available through Ford deal ers in every section of the country. Note the low prices in the partial list given below: Pistonandpin - - =- « =- =« « « = « 8140 Connecting rod - - - - - - - - - - 60 Crankshaft = « « eo vv is 2: eo o's ow 10.00 Cylinder head - - - - ie =» - - - - 6.00 Cylinder - + « os. as 8a o «a <:.« « 2000 Time gear - “ - “ lee “en. - 75 “Time gear cover « alilyl gl glial y ei 1.00 Crapkease = =: =.» ‘oa ‘ai a a: wie" + 13,00 Magneto coil assembl o “eliiwii ww wine et a 5.00 Flywheel - . - ss « 9 oo « «' « «1300 “Transmission gear shaft owl 4 mel wo. 65 “Transmission cover - « . se eww Lo. 6.00 Clutch pedal - -. -. =. . . . . . . 65 ‘Steering gear assembly (less wheel and bracket) - - 8.50 Starter drive - + + + 2. «2. + + 4.25 Generator - =~ = i= =i « + 2 + « + 12.50 Battery « vv wields el ee PF ew 50 Carburetor - = = ‘sf «' '« a so oo oo = 3.00 Vaporizer assembly (with fittings) - -. - - = 9.00 Rear axle shaft - - el ee... ee 1.75 Differential drive gear - = te o 9. vl Wtf, 3.00 Universal joint assembly = « +» - = =. =. =. 2.50 Drive shaft pinion - + + « + « =. - = 1.50 \ Front axle = . - + de +s ee ee 9.00 VSpindle connecting rod - - - - - - . = 1.75 Front radius rod - “ls ee ee LA 1.80 Rear spring - - - a. go. - 6.00 Radiator—Iess shell (1917-23) -. . - . =. = 15.00 Radiatgr—Iess shell (1923-27) . =. = wo. - 14.00 Hood (1917-1923) «= a ohgind, utial iia wifi 6.50 Hood (1926-27) black - - - =. =. =. . = 7.00 Gasoline tank - a ee ei, olay 6.00 Front fenders (1917-1925) each - =. > 4.00 Front fenders (1926-1927) each - . - ¢ a - 5.00 Rear fenders (1922.1925) each - - =. = =. =. 3.75 Rear fenders (1926-1927) each - - . . . - 4.00 Running board - - - > . . . . . 1.25 Horn (battery type) - wie pH Gi, Bnpe yo 1.50 Headlamp assembly (1915-26) pair - - =. . 5.50 Touring car top (1915-25) complete - - - . . 27.00 Touring car top ((1926-27) complete, includes curtains and curtainrods - - - - - - . 35.00 These prices are for parts only, but the charge for labor is equally low. It is billed at a flat rate so you may know in advance what the job will cost. Forp MOTOR COMPANY Valley. | there one summer, and mostly it Took Soda 20 Years ———— —S DEATH VALLEY A FIERY FURNACE. Four thousand feet below Ryan, ' Cal., which clings to a mountainside honeycombed with mines, is Death Automobiles and motor busses this month wind down the 15-mile length of Furnace Creek wash, from Ryan ! to the valley floor, carrying hundreds of tourists from California and the East to explore the vast, mysterious color-filled and aminous sink. ! The motor caravans will continue throughout April. On the first day of May all this life and movement, so foreign to Death Valley, will cease. The luxurious hotels there and at furnace Creek, on the valley floor, will close. The heat will come. ’ One man, perhaps, will remain at Furnace Creek ranch, which today shows as a solitary patch of green in the great panorama which unfolds below Ryan to the north and west. The writer talked with the man who held solitary dominion over all Death Valley last summer; the care- taker at Furnace Creek ranch. “No, I won't stay there this sum- mer,” he assured me, and added, with a touch of grave naivete: “It’s too hot. i “The thermometer went up to 138 stays between 120 and 130. “A man can hardly stand it, you know. When the night wind sets in from either end of the valley, north or south, it seems like it’s going to kill you. Its a great, hot, alkaline ! blast, and you can’t get out of it. The heat and the wind, and the ter- | rible loneliness, is more than I want to go through again. I'm leaving this summer. 2 “Sure, someone will have to stay. There are cows there, and the ranch must be kept up for the folks who will come to Furnace Creek Inn and Ryan again in the fall. “The cows seem to stand the heat all right. It kills dogs and cats, though, and humans barely survive it? The valley at this time of the year is pleasant in the extreme. The at- mosphere is bright and clear, the days warm and nights crisply cool. Only for the past two years has Death Valley really been added to the accessible scenic attractions of the West. Prior to that time, when the Pacific Coast Borax Co. was op- erating its mines at Ryan, trouble enough was encountered in caring for the miners and furnishing them with food and water without encour- aging tourists to wander in, become lost and necessitate weary, desperate | rescue parties. The mines have not been operating ! | this year and last, however, a depos- | it of borax having been discovered in the Mojave Desert closer tor Los An- geles that will care for the world’s needs for the next 200 years, with the ore now in sight. Since then, the State has built au- tomobile roads into and across the valley, the Automobile Club of South- ern California has placed hundreds of direction, warning and “water” signs, and the versatile borax corporation has built two fine hotels. Death Valley itself, at this time of the year, is almost past descrip- tion. There is, perhaps, nothing in the world quite like it. From Dante’s View, a precipitous cliff in the Funeral Mountains a half dozen miles from Ryan, the highest and lowest points in the western hemisphere are visible. Death Yalley lies a mile directly below, vague in the heat waves, its floor 310 feet below sea level. To the northwest is Mount Whitney, towering two and a half miles in the air. The effect of a great, shallow river ticularly vivid from Dante’s View. This phantom of water in a seared and terrible land lured hundreds to death in the early days of California. The river in reality, is a white sweep or borax and salt. The cliffs of the Panamints to the west and the Funeral range on the east are fantastically eroded, and of vivid hues of red, gold and gray. Water does exist on the valley floor, but it is salt water; peculiar pools like volcanic eruptions in the rugged, snow-like salt sink. This salt is known to extend to a depth of 1,000 feet, which is as far as it has been tested. NATIONAL EGG WEEK SET FOR MAY 1 TO 7 National Egg week will be observed May 1 to 7 under the auspices of the National Poultry council, according to an announcement by Professor H. C. Knandel, head of the poultry department at the Pennsylvania State College. This is the fourth year that this national celebration has been staged. Poultry farmers, distributors, store- keepers, consumers, scientists, edu- cators, and organization workers will participate in the activities of the week. Plans have been laid by state committees in every State to develop a strong program of benefit to the consuming public. Knandel declared. Attention will be called to the value of eggs through press notices, radio messages, appropriate advertising, posters and stickers, exhibits, pa- rades and menus. A great many interesting, instruc- tive miscellaneous stunts are being planned in many sections of the country in the nature of demonstra- tions by home economics workers, and community contests, such as egg | hunts and races, in which the chil- dren can take an active part. “Twenty years ago poultry was a sadly neglected sideline on the aver- age farm,” said Professor Knandal. “Today the poultry industry is sixth from the top of our more valuable agricultural products, corn, cotton, hay, and forage and swine. There are now over four million hens on American farms.” A ——— nese. —=Subscribe for the Watchman. sweeping through the valley is par-{’ Oh, Yes! LUMBER? 71-18-t W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing Call Bellefonte 432 STORM LOSSES ARE ! DEDUCTIBLE FROM TAX Losses caused by storms and other “acts of God” may be deducted from income tax returns, the United States board of tax appeals ruled in a deci- sion of far-reaching consequence. Under this decision millions of dol- lars damage caused by the storms in Florida and flood damage in the Mis- sissippi Valley and the New England States in the last few years, ap- parently may be deducted in report- ing income by tax payers. A decision was rendered on an ap- peal brought by Mrs. Mary Cheny FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% 73-3 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent aS 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 pair FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP. ————————————————— . ree i ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all ! courts. Office, room 18 Crider’'s Ex- change. KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt atten- tion given all legal business entrusted to his care. Offices—No. East High . street. 57-44 | Y M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney-at-Law and | Justice of the Peace. All professional Offices on second floor of Temple » business will receive prompt attention. Court. 49-5-1y : G. RUNKLE.— Attorney-at-Lia w, Consultation in English and Ger- man. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa. 58-5 Davis, whose country estate at Grey- stone Farm, Dover, Delaware, was visited by a violent storm in 1921. | Empl oy er S for Gas—Stops Now “For 20 years I took soda for indi- gestion and stomach gas. One bottle The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes insurance compulsory. of Adierika brought me complete We specialize in placing such in- relief.”—John B. Hardy. surance. We ins ants and Adlerika relieves gas and sour recommend Accident Prevention stomach at once. Acting on BOTH Safe Guards which Reduce Insur- upper and lower bowels, it removes ance rates. old waste matter you never thought was in your system. Let Adlerika give your stomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel! Overcomes constipation. Zel- lers Drug Store. It will be to your interest to con- sult us before placing your Insur- ance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. State College This Interests You Bellefonte | PHYSICIANS S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his Tesidence, R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State College Crider’'s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg., heh St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22=tf VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed E by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday, Belle- fonte, in the Garbrick building opposite | the Court House, Wednesday afternoons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 Sum to 4:30 p. m. Bell Phone. Fine Job Printing 4 SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There Is ne style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WOIK that we can not de In the mest sat- {sfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of werk. Call en er communicate with this : Sunday Excursions 23 Round Trip SUNDAY, MAY 5 Direct to Pennsylvania Station, 7th Avenue and 32d Street Special Through Train Leave Saturday Night preceding Excursion FEEDS! We have taken on the line of Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds TELEPHONE and Save Time! office. Standard Tuls Purina Cow Chow, 34% $3.30 per H. einai» inl. Ba Purina Cow Chow, 24% 3.00 per H. Lv. Unionville - - 8.15 P.M. § | CHICHESTER S PILLS Purina Calf Meal - 5.50 per H. Lv. Bellefonte - - 9.10 P. M. @ | prises Iv. Mi Hau i 10.00 F M. : La Draggist ie Wayne Dairy, 329, - 2.90 per HL. Returning, leaves New York, Penna. Peete nd old metalic Wayne Dairy, 24% - 2.70 per H. Sta., 5.10 P. M. Newark (Market i rp a oe ith fi Ribbon. Wayne Egg Mash - 825perH Street) 533 P. MI. iI = Druggit AEer OLS ES ren o Wayne Calf Meal - 4.25perH. ennsylvania RailroadQ yon us Best, Safest Alvays Rennie | Wayne All mash starter 1% perkt. | SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE | Wayne All mash grower 3.60 per Wagner's Pig Meal - 2.80per H. apps : . : Wagner's Egg mash ~ - 2.80 per H. Wagner's egg mash wi buttermilk - - 8.00 per HL. Wagner’s Dairy, 22% 2.50 per H. Qil Meal - - - 8.30 per H. N..d new parts for your al . - Flax Meal - - 2.40 per HL. farming machinery . . . or Cigton feed - - ZibbecH. ° ° ° 9 Meat meal - - 4.00 per H. | repair service in a hurry? Tankage, 60%, - - A425perH. Fine Stock Salt - 1.20 per H. I We have a full line of poultry and stock feeds on hand at all times at the right prices. Let us grind your corn and oats and sell you the high protein feeds and make up your own mixtures. We charge nothing for mixing. We deliver at a charge of $1.00 per ton extra. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry TRY “OUR BEST” OR Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 30 years in the Business BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED “GOLD COIN” FLOUR C.Y. Wagner & Co. in 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating THE MEAL STARTS RIGHT and ends right when the meat course is, right. And it is sure to be right every time if you depend on us. We handle only the very choicest meats, the kinds that you'll enjoy to the last morsel. Tender and juicy, and kept fresh and sweet by modern refrigera- tion, our meats always satisfy. Try us today. Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces AOE AAI Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully snd Promptly Furnished P.L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market OBIGEE.