"Bellefonte, Pa., August 23, 1929. EE ——— RELIANCE. Not to the swift, the race; Not to the strong ,the fight; Not to the righteous, perfect grace; Not to the wise, the light. But often faltering feet Comes surest to the goal; And they who walk in darkness meet The sunrise of the soul. A thousand times by night The Syrian hosts have died; A thousand times the vanquished right Hath risen glorified. The trutth the wise men sought Was spoken by a child; The alabaster box was brought In trembling hands defiled. E Not from my torch, the gleam, But from the stars above; Not from my heart life's crystal stream, But from the depths of love. —————————————— PENNSYLVANIA BLUESTONE BECOMES POPULAR. In northeastern Pennsylvania, par- ticularly in Pike, Wayne, Susquehan- na, Bradford and Wyoming counties, bluestone has been quarried for flags and curbs for many years. In all the large towns in that area, from Sayre and Towanda to Honesdale, Hawley and Milford, flag walks are a noticeable feature of the streets. Hundreds of quarries were opened prior to 1900, many merely for the needs of a single farm, and some em- ploying as many as twenty-five men at a time. Twenty-five years ago the business was at its height. In 1904 the value of bluestone curbs produc- ed was $149,000, flags $216,000, and 7 es iii dian. | i shovel snow, | possessing more ingenuity than his PAYS WAYS WTIH HONEY. | Youths bent on an education, but lacking funds, work their way through college if the education means enough to them. They wash dishes, wait on table, run laundry routes, tend furnaces, cut grass, | and do a variety of chores about a college town. As a rule, this involves much time and labor, all aside from scholastic du- ties. Here and there a young man fellows creates for himself some novel form of employment which takes a minimum of time and yields a maximum of profit, such as locat- ing a spring in the woods and selling spring water under some trick brand name. That is, he uses his wits. But out at the Massachusetts Agri- cultural Collge, in Amherst, there is' a young professor in the entomology department whose brand of thinking in the selection of a means of work-| ing his way through college stands: in a class by itself. His name is Clayton L. Farrar, and the scheme he hit upon was raising honey bees. He not only paid his own way in, college, but assisted a brother to get | an education and came out with two | |or three thousand dollars in his pock- et. The best of it was that one af-| FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. “When you come to the Red Sea place in your life, Where in spite of all you can do, : There is no way 'round, there is no way back, There is no other way but through— Then trust in your God with a soul serene, "Till the dark and storm are gone, He will still the wind, he will calm the waves, When He says to your soul, “Go on.” — The sleeveless afternoon frock, iso cool and practical, lgoks particu- larly engaging if the arms are evenly tanned. ? —But the perfect foil for sun- touched skins is white, whether in | cotton or silk fabrics. Realizing this the smartest French couturies de- signed their best models for Summer in this color. : —“Furs preferred” might well be an appropriate title for a fashion stock that is due to enjoy a rise next sea- son. For it would seem that every house has included in its Autumn collection sumptuous coats and suits | Ternoon a week was about all the lavishly trimmed with ich furs. | | | { i for building purposes $287,000. In. 1906, the peak was reached with a value of $882,964 for all bluestone produced in the State. time the use of concrete began seri- ously to affect the bluestone industry and it decreased steadily until 1918 when the output sold for only $29, 434, From 1917 the output was annually, showing World War, but since 1922 there has been a fairly steady increase in pro- duction and in 1927, the latest year for which figures are available, the less than $100,000 bluestone output brought $209,000. | These facts were developed and made public recently by Secretary of In- ternal Affairs James F. Woodward. The present use of flagstone is not About that! to 1920 inclusive | too. i the effect of the, i | and family blessing, time he had to put into it. Mr. Farrar now has his 48 colo- | nies of bees scattered around the Gould orchards at Haydenville, some : 12 or 15 miles from Amherst. How he brought them there by truck, a | distance of nearly 1600 miles, is a! story in itself, for it probably sets up a record in bee transportation in this | or any other country. We will re- fer to it presently. Mr. Farrar is a native of Abilene, i Kansas. He was brought up on a farm and began his experience with | bees at an early age, for it was his job to take care of them. In this way he obtained a good practical | knowledge of bee behavior and learn- ! ed that with the proper care one | could make money with them. : Now the problem of higher edu- | cation in large families is one large- | ly of ways and means, and a stiff one at that. Furthermore. there was a brother who wanted to go to college : Young Clayton did quite a bit | matter, and one of pondering on the working around | day, when he was the hives, the solution came to him | in one of those swift inspirations. | The bees! How simple! He was! sure he could make a go of it. So in due season, in addition to the usual accompaniment of suitcase | Farrar set forth | for college accompanying a carload so much for public sidewalks as for the paving of terraces and paths in private grounds, landscape garden- ing and floors. 2 The principal centers of the blue- stone industry in Pennsylvania are at Meshoppen and Nicholson in Wyoming county, and in northern Pike county along the Lackawaxen and Delaware rivers. Henry W. Carson, of Slate Run, op- erates extenisve bluestone quarries at the Pine Creek station of that name, and told the editors of the Gazette on a visit there last spring that the shipments from his quar- ries had increased greatly over past years. —————— ee ——— PUNCTUATION. Punctuation consists in the proper placing of points and marks in writ- ten or printed language to represent correctly the meaning and proper pauses in a sentence. 1. It is used to end a declarative sen- tence; to mark initials and abbrevia- tions; to set off the side-head or a figure in the first line of a paragraph. 2. The comma indicates the smal- lest division of a sentence. used to set off any elements that cause a break in a sentence without adding any special meaning; to mark the elements of a sentence that are alike in form and value; to set off clauses out of their natural order; to separate words in ~ series; to mark the close of the complimentary sal- uation at the beginning of numerals and to introduce a brief quotation. 3. The colon is used to end a saluation at the beginning of a letter; to introduce the final clause of a compound sentence that summari- zes details; to mark the beginning of an extended quotaton; to separate the chapter number and and verse number in scripture reference. 4. The semi-colon is used to in- dicate greater breaks than are mark- ed by the comma; it is used between clauses not connected by a conjunc- tion in a short compound sentence; to introduce simple and informal ex- planations in compound sentences. 5. The exclamation point is used to indicate a sudden or emphatic ut- terance of feeling or surprise. It is also used ironically in a sentence be- ing placed in parenthesis or brackets. 6. The interrogation point is used to indicate a question or a sentence that expresses doubt. Mistakes that are made every da} in English. 1. Which is correct? My (elder,) (older) brother left for Germany. 2. Discriminate in the use of among and between. 4. In using A or An how do we decide which is correct? Do we say (a, an) historian, (a, an) elephant, (a, an) university? RHOADE ISLAND PASTOR ; jacent to a college and of bees. He raising establishment planted his little honey in a spot ad- at once set about the business of meeting the | | financial obligations of not only one, put two college educations, | But it was no fault of the bees. “and climatic conditions were for the brother had gone to another college. | Farrar not only tended the bees, | but boxed the honey himself and dis- tributed it with an old hired truck to the retail trade over quite a terri- | tory around the college. He did it all, even to making his own collec- | tions, and when the first year was | over he not only paid his own expen- ses, but had been able to give ma- | terial assistance to his brother. The second year was not so goo). | Soi such | i that the nectar-bearing plants had ! The period indicates a full stop. | | It is ELECTRIC METERS EASY | | | , appears to be at eleven, “makes both speed and | . EIGHT YEAR OLD BOY BARS SHORT SKIRTS. | ree. Warnings that wearers of trans- parent, sleeveless and short dresses | viston, will not be admitted to the interior Friday, of the church were read to large er gatherings attending services at St. Elizabeth's church by Rev. Dr. Francisco Vieira, the pastor. an off year, and when winter came around there was no honey stored up ' for the bees to live on. This meant that Farrar had to go out and buy | sugar and— sugar was high then— | to keep them going. ! In spite of this unprecedented drawback his inherent ability to per- severe and his determination to ac- | quire an education pulled him through to success i ————————— | TO READ AS A WATCH. Reading the electric meter is little more difficult than reading the time from a watch. The difference be- | tween a watch and an electric meter { is that the latter has two more’ hands and that each alternate hand | runs in the opposite direction. ‘ In the meter the dial on the right | is the units figure, the next to the’ left the tens, the third the hundreds and the fourth the thousands. If the first hand is at five and the sec- | ond hand between four and five the reading would be forty-five. If the first hand is at nine and the second hand between four and five the read- ing would be forty-nine. If the first hand is at nine, and the second hand ' almost nine. remember your watch analogy. If the minute hand on your watch is at eleven and the hour hand you would not say it was 11:55, but 10:55. So the reading of the meter with the dial hands in the last-mentioned po- sition, would not be 99, but 89. Sometimes customers say that the Company's meter reader has been careless. As a matter of fact, meter reading is a work in which practice accuracy. A tells him the story, just as a glance at your watch tells you the time. Even though an error in read- ing might be made one month the next month's reading rectifies it, since the meter registration is cum- ulative and the register hands are Jt Jenn: to zero when the meter is read. glance SHOT IN HEAD BY BROTHER. Paul Lamison, eight year old son of | Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lamison, of Or- | was shot in the head, last by his seven year old broth- | Gerald, and is now a patient in! the Lock Haven hospital where his condition is reported as serious. The brothers, with several other boys. | The raiment that a woman must y.4 peen out on a frog shooting ex- wear to the church, according to the pastor, must be as follows: Length of the dress or skirt must be below the knees, arms must be covered by sleeves extending at least below the elbows, and dress must be of such ma- terial or texture that averts trans- parentness. | | i | | 1 | pedition. Returning home Paul plac- ed his gun on the back porch. With | a boy's curiosity Gerald picked up | the ‘weapon and while handling it, it was accidentally discharged. The bane: lodged in the base of Paul's skull. And we do hear rumors that the fur trimmed dress is in for a revival. We are inclined to believe this, for recently, in the atelier of a well- known designer, we glimpsed a dress with a detachable fur trimmed cape. — Fur trimming used with discre- tion lends beauty and distinction to the garment it adorns, but when used on a three-quarter jacket is sometimes apt to overweight it, espe- cially if the fluffy type of furs is em- ployed. Therefore, flat furs such as galyak, both black and beige, and ermine will be much used. For longer coats flounce, fluffy furs, with a circular with fox in vari- ous shades to the fore, will be in evidence. _ Wire screens covered with cheesecloth are excellent for pantries and storerooms with windows near the ground, for they keep out dust, yet let in fresh air. — Bluish fruit stains which do not come out with boiling water, usual- ly give way to alternate applications of boiling water and a ten per cent solution of acetic acid applied with an eye dropper. —_ Although corn doesn’t mean quite as much to modern Americans as it did to those early pioneer fath- ers, it is still one of the most import- ant foods. In Winter or Summer, it occupies a distinctive position in every pantry. So suppose today I give you a few tested recipes and see if you like them, too! Let's start with Deviled Corn: Take 2 tablespoons butter or butter substitute, 2 tablespoons flour, 1% cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 1% tea- spoonful mustard, paprika, 2 cups corn pulp, 1 egg, 1 tablespoon Wor- cestershire sauce and crumbs. Make a sauce of the fat, flour and seasonings, add corn, egg slightly beaten and Worcestershire sauce. Pour intoa baking dish, cover with crumbs mixed with a little butter or butter substitute and bake until crumbs are brown. Have you ever tried nourishing Corn Oysters made with 2 cups corn pulp, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons butter or butter substi- tute, and salt and pepper? Grate the corn from the cob with a coarse greater. Beat the egg-yolkes and whites separately and add to the grated corn, with flour and but- ter, or butter substitute, salt and pepper. Drop the batter from a spoon into hot fat and fry light Reows: Drain on soft paper. Serve ot. n Corn with green peppers is ever so good. Use 3 cups cooked corn, 1 tablespoon of green peppers, chopped fine, 3 tablespoons butter and 4 tablespoons cream. Remove kernels from cob with sharp knife, put in a frying pan with butter, cream and the chopped pep- per. Let simmer slowly until liquid is almost absorbed. Corn Soup is one of the most de- licious and highly nutritious of the Summer soups. Use one pound of the lower ribs of beef. one quart of cold water, 2 sliced fresh tomatoes, 1 cup of corn, sliced from the cob; 1 tablespoon of butter, 1 tablespoon of four hours; then take out the corn salt and pepper to taste. Put the meat and water into a soup pot and, after it has cooked a bit, skim carefully. Then add the tomatoes and corncobs. Simmer for four hours; then take out the corn- cobs, and add the corn cut fine, salt and pepper to suit the taste, addin, the cayenne pepper, cook 15 minutes longer and then serve with slices of toast. If you like a leaflet on relishes, containing an excellent recipe for Corn Relish, just send a stamped- self-addressed enevlope, accompanied by your address to the Prudence | Penny Home Institute, No. 210 South street, and you shall have one im- mediately. . —Many houses are featuring in their new offerings hats trimmed with ostrich feathers, not the heavy plume, but thinned out feathers with uncurled fronds. Another symptom of our return to femininity. —Of course eat the lettuce, no matter how it is served, whether un- der a salad, as a garnish, or as 2a salad all by itself. I just can’t un- derstand how some people ever got this queer idea that it’s not good form to eat the lettuce leaves that form the foundation of such a salad as fruit salad or vegetable salad. — A A ——The biggest excursion to g0 out of Bellefonte this year was the one on Saturday night, when 118 tickets were sold at the Bellefonte depot for Atlantic City and 33 for Philadelphia. Returning the train reached Bellefonte at 1.25 o'clock on Monday morning. FARM NOTES. —It must be remembered that sweet clover is a biennial and if itis to be used for pasture, some should be sown each year. —Selection of seed corn in the field from healthy, vigorous plants, is the first step in the control of corn ear, stalk and root rots. —Save your seed corn for next year at husking time this fall. A small box on the side of the wagon makes a good place to put the field selected seed ears. —Rotating the hog lots and pas- tures so as to keep free from dis- ease and hog parasites will help swine growers to get the best and cheapest growth and gains from pigs. —Well-ripened squash or pump- kins may be kept the greater part of the winter if properly stored. dry. —Few farmers realize that nearly every municipality has a by-law which forbids the use of the high- way as pasture for animals on penal- ty of impounding, until some of their stock is hit. _ See that you have good viable and disease free seed for use next spring. Be sure that all seed is thoroughly dried and stored in a place where it will not get wet or be destroyed by rats and mice. __Sweet clover seed for spring seeding should be secured early sO that germination tests may be made and the need for scarification deter- mined. If it contains more than 50 per cent hard seed, scarification will be profitable. — Whenever a farmer begins ap- plying needed limestone and growing legumes in his regular rotation he not only is guaranteeing a higher av- erage yield in his succeeding grain crops, but also is dodging in a large measure, the bad weather jinx. —_One of the greatest problems in pork production is that of determin- ing the quality of grain to be fed during the summer to growing pigs. The most common practice is to lim- it the grain to the amount that will allow for a slow rate of growth, as it is assumed that with concentrates high in price the cost of grains on a full feed will not be economical. summer, pastures are a cheaper source of nutrients than are other feeds. More efficient use of pasture crops is made by hungry pigs than limiting the allowance of grain is logical if one of the main considerations is to get as high a return as possible per acre of pas- ture. consequently __ Pasture may be the determining factor in whether or not farmers make a profit from their hogs this season. Pasture is especially im- portant for young pigs. Experi- ments have shown that the average daily profit on young pigs grazing in forage is higher than on those confined to pens. Pigs on pasture need only half as much of the muscles and bone build- ing feeds such as tankage, skim milk, buttermilk, and oilmeals when they are in the dry hot” lot. Pas- ture crops are also rich in lime and phosphorus, the two minerals which are most likely to be lacking in the pig’s ration. They also furnish a green succulent feed. Pigs on pas- ture will get plenty of exercise and be under sanitary conditions. —The egg-eating habit is usually caused by the hens getting hold of a soft-shelled egg that happens to be dropped on the ground somewhere in plain sight. They get to rolling it about, finally breaking it, and the trouble has started. The next thing is to get it stopped. Sometimes it may be stopped by making a slight break in the side of an egg, running a part of the white and then insert- ing a good dose of cayenne pepper, closing the hole with adhesive tape or court-plaster. Drop this out among the guilty ones and see what they do with it and how it affects them. Another way is to heat an egg to the boiling point, crack ' silghtly and place out for them. | In case neither of these work, a i plan that will be effective is to puta | false bottom of burlap in your nest {box just a few inches from the real ' bottom, tacking it around the sides, .then cut a cross in the center of the | burlap large enough for the eggs to drop through. They will go down out ‘ of sight and trouble. It may be that at the start of this dirty work you may be able to locate one leader, and | | taking her out to herself the trouble !in the flock will be ended. If beetles yellow to copper in color and with 16 black spots on the wing covers are eating the beans, call them Mexican bean beetles. Such beetles resemble the insect commonly called “Lady Birds.” The eggs are yellow and are laid in mas- ses on the under side of the bean leaves. The larvae are spiny, slug- like creatures, yellow in color and about one-fourth inch long. These transform into pupae which may be recognized by their habit of hanging from the under sides of bean leaves. days. Bean leaves are skeetonized by the beetles; that is, the tissue is entirely eaten except the network of veins. Sections are eaten out of the pods, or pits may be eaten in their sur- faces. Where both beetles and larvae are feeding on jury may be so severe that the plants are often killed. Spraying or dusting the plants with a quickly acting arsenical is necessaary for control Caution must be exercised in applying the material because the foliage is sus- ceptible to arsenical injury. After by those having plenty of grain, ! the leaves, in-! i ! They will keep in either a basement | or above ground room, but should be | i | | | | i | | | i 1 | | In | | | | i | i i The adults emerge as pupae in 6 to 8 SG | picking the beans should be washed | | thoroughly. _ —— __—____ National Banks as Trust Companies HIS bank is equipped for the trans- T action of any business connected with banking. - An important part of bank- ing now, is the care of Trust funds and the settlement of estates. We have a Trust Department, and can act as Executor, Administrator or Trustee. We can assure a proper admin- istration of all Trust business. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. Wise Provision for Your Family HIS is an appropriate time for you to seriously consider making wise provision for any emergency that might occur to your family, should you be taken away. Have your lawyer draw your Will now and appoint this reli- able Bank your Trustee. Our Trust Officer will be glad to talk the matter over with you. THE HIRST NATIONAL BANK TATE COLLEGE, PA. R FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM PC Rt FCC RANA AA MEMBE Il is .... FOR THE. Ml in America That’s all! b 7 _— ; 3 3 See Them ) a iW in : i -7, 4 4 —- ° i ] J So Our Windows