Bemoreaic: jalan Bellefonte, Pa., November 29, 1929 )'WER HEATED HOUSES ARE NOT HEALTHFUL Dr. J. Bruce McCreary, deputy ecretary of health, has warned ouseholders against the dangers of ver-heating homes especially where hildren are involved. «All parents should endeavor to 1aintain an even temperature in heir homes during the winter 1onths which is represented by 68 y 72 degrees of heat,” Dr. McCreary aid. Provisions shoud be made or the admittance of outside air Iso. Homes that are warmed in ich a way that the same air is eated over and over again are 10st unhealthful as the constant :-heating devitalizes the oxygen »ntent so necessary for the human ystem. “The same principle applies to lothing of children. Young people j0uld be so clad that the heavier arments provided to protect them ‘om exposure while a play or when ving to and from school can be re- oved immediately when entering )e home. Moreover, children as well 3 grown-ups, should at all times be ressed according to the outside smperature rather than because the :ason suggests heavy clothing. here are many days in Pennsyl- inia when the apparel worn by iousands of people is entirely too :avy, thus causing imperceptible srspiration or noticeable perspira- on—an exceedingly dangerous con- tion when the cooling off process kes place. “The lack of proper attention to iese fundamental details often re- its in the lowered body resistance hich thus makes possible the suc- wssful onslaughts of infectious cold srms and communicable disease or- nisms. “Tt can be safely said that a large srcentage of the illnesses among \ildren, and not a few among the *own-ups, during the winter onths, is due to a failure on the irt of parents and others properly regulate housing and clothing nditions.” PORTANT POINTS FOR HUNTERS TO KNOW Hunters are reminded that the ason for ringnecked pheasants and ild turkeys closed on November 15. Iso, the season for woodcock and ilson snipe closed November 14 \der Federal and State regulations. Reports from the field indicate one the finest general hunting sea- ns the State has ever known. Par- wularly gratifying have been the vorable comments on the turkey ason. Bob-white quail, squirrels and rab- ts will continue in season until No- mber 30. Trappers should bear in mind that e muskrat season opens December this year instead of November 1 id continues until the last day of sbruary. ; Some newspapers have erroneous- printed the statement that there 11 also be an open season on fe- ale deer this year in conjunction th the regular buck season. This in error as male deer only with ro or more points to one antler ay be killed. As of November 15, 16 fatal and non-fatal hunting accidents have en authentically reported to the yard of Game Commissioners. At ist 759 of all of the accidents ve been inflicted by others. Only out 259% were self-inflicted. most these occurring when hunters opsed fences or slipped on rocks, d so forth. As of November 15 1928, 16 fatal and 116 non-fatal ac- jents were reported. For the en- 'e season during 1928, 45 fatal and 8 non-fatal accidents occurred. 1e records for accidents this season 's reached its highest peak. Even e deer season should not greatly large the present precentage for atistics have proved in past years at the greatest numbes of acci- nts always occur while hunting 1all game. rere Ameer ERD OF THREE HUNDRED DEER WILL BE TRAPPED From the Jos-Wyn Game Pre- rve, located in Clearfield and In- ana counties, near Glenn Campbell, veral hundred deer will be trap- d and shipped to Roosevelt Park, rio, and Clearwater, Florida, this I. To the former place 250 of the imals will be sent, and to Florida, . By clever means the deer will ambushed for capture so that no jury will befall them, people fa- {liar with the methods of such pro- dure to lead the work. The herds the antlered tribes have become > large to feed on the acreage of 2d in the Jos-Wyn park and a inning out is necessary to protect em. The number of deer in the rk at the present time is nearly thousand head and about four ves of land for each animal isre- jred to keep it conditioned. Ex-Senator and Mrs. J. O. Clark ve quit their summer home at Jos- Game preserve and moved to sir winter home in Glen Campbell, jere they will stay until after the ldays, when they will spend some pe in Florida as is their custom ch year. ————————— JYS GAME BIRDS FOR FUTURE RELEASE ‘Athough it is a line in which there e never any “fall bargains,” the ume Commission is in the midst of 2 purchase program which always ecedes the hunting season. Some the game and birds purchased al- iys are held until spring before gy are released so that they may eed under natural conditions and come accustomed to their new rroundings. Recent deliveries to the commis- m included 257 semi-wild turkeys; 0 Chinese and Mongolian ring- cked pheasants and 74 fox squir- is. FARM NOTES. quality or | —Bees not having good ample quantity of stored food should be fed sugar syrup before cold weather comes. —Apples keep best in a cool | moist, well-ventilated storage. While | it is difficult to secure optimum ! temperature without artificial re- frigeration, opening the storage! doors in the evening and closing ' them in the daytime will help low- er the temperature. —— { —Before placing orders for chicks consider the size of egg, shell tex- ture, and freedom from tint of eggs produced by the stock from which the chicks are hatched. Also take into account size of bird, freedom from disease. standard type and time required to reach maturity. —Cows are good or poor produc- ers according to their blood inherit- ance. Do not waste time raising heifer calves unless from good, high producing cows and from a sire that also is from high producing stock. — Sash greenhouses are being substituted more and more for the old fashioned hotbed in growing ear- ly plants. Better control of cordi- tions is possible in the greenhouse and it offers a good place to work in any kind of weather. —Penn State’s poultry short course, December 2 to 6, will give those who attend the latest infor- mation on poultry houses, manage ment, diseases, and nurition. Poul- trymen are invited to attend. — More than $200 in premiums will be awarded to exhibitors of veget- ables at the State Farm Products Show in Harrisburg next January. Lay aside your best specimens now. —If there is much pruning to be done, it is advisable to startin the fall and early winter on apples. — Give your fence posts a treat. Properly treated posts of nondurable species last from 15 to 20 years. —Soy Beans can be successfully grown on soil deficient in lime, a natural advantage over most le- gumes. —Not all plants need a “sweet” soil; some do better at a fairly high degree of acidity. It pays to know your plants. — Besides conserving moisture and keeping down weeds, cultivation tends to break up the harbors of mice, add plant food to the soil, and make more available the plant food already in the soil. It would be difficult to think of a better fertilizer than hen manure for a garden. It is best to apply it after the land is plowed. —Sudan grass belongs to the sorg- um family and for that reason is a hot weather plant. It should not be seeded till the ground is well warm- ed up. | —Prepare for the control of insects by having on hand spraying and dusting equipment together with such insecticides as arsenate of lead, nicotine dust, and nicotine sulphate. = —Probably there is no more com- mon or more serious parasite of do- mestic animals than the common roundworm of swine. These worms, says R. F. Bourne of the veterinary division, Colorado Agricultural col- lege, ordinarily occur in the small intestines but are frequently found invading the adjacent organs, par- ticularly the bile ducts of the liver. It is practically impossible to raise pigs free from worms in quarters which have been used for hog rais-' ing for years because the soil is pol- luted with millions of eggs passed by animals of previous years, each egg containing a live embryo ready to launch its attack when ingested by the young pig. Because of this: fact it is important that all farrow- ing pens be either located on clean ground or that they be thoroughly scrubbed with boiling water and lye. Ordinary antiseptics do no good in so far as destroying worm larvae is concerned. | Pigs born into a clean environ- ment and kept free from contact | with old infected pens escape the various hazards accompanying worm infestation. It is desirable to move! them from these clean pens into open fields or pastures wherever this is possible and to keep them | away from infected quarters until’ they are at least four or five months of age. A good deal can be accom- plished by ordinary sanitary mea- sures in removing the filth which ac- cumulates in hog pens and in the use of sanitary wallows. Removal of worms from adult pigs is best done by a qualified vet- erinarian since no simple treatment seems to be very effective. | The sure way to make money rais- ing pigs is to save them. Every lit- tle pig that is lost increases the cost of those saved. Very commonly one- third to one-half the pigs fa die before weaning time. A pig at farrowing time is worth or has cost approximately $3, and it pays well to keep as many of them alive as possible. Aim to be on hand when the sow farrows to see that every- thing goes well and that the little pigs get their first meal as soon as possible. Then, be sure they have a place to keep warm. Have a guard rail around the pen or a protected corner with most of the bedding in this protected place. —There are a good many persons working with turkeys in a small way who do not recognize one of the turkey’s natural food lines; they fail to remember, if they ever knew, that the turkey’s food in its wild state consisted chiefly of insects, beech- nuts, acorns, berries and so forth, with but lttle corn. Too much corn- meal for small turkeys tends to pack the crop and cause indigestion and liver trouble. —Subscribe for the Watchman. An army of land chief of staff mapping out a , engineers from condemning it. MARSHAL FORCES OF MEN AND MATERIAL FOR ROADS IN ’30 men greater than the entire National Guard of Pennsyl- vania and a mountain sufficient to tax war time railroad facilities are being mobilized by the Pennsylvania Department of Highways in prepa- ration for the 1930 construction sea- son. James Lyall Stuart, Secretary and Samuel Eckels, Chief Engineer, are acting as commanding general year’s campaign with over 1300 miles of highway construction, re- placement and resurfacing as the objective. The program is the greatest ever undertaken by a State highway or- ganization and greater than any at- tempted by any entire foreign na- tion. At least 15,000 men will be required but the problem of assur- ing a steady supply of materials for uninterrupted work is a matter of concern to highway officials, who are canvassing various industries of the State and preparing schedules of delivery. An estimate of stone and sand re- quirements indicates the need, of 4,000,000 tons of stone and 1,700 - 000 tons of sand, enough to load 114 - 000 railroad cars with 50 tons each. Adding the supply of cement and reinforcement steel, the total will call for about 1500 trains of 100 cars each. Arrangements are being made with quarries to have much of the material in storage ahead of time. By July 1 there should be at least 150,000 tons of stone and 85,000 tons of sand in advance of require- ment. The supply of steel and ce- ment is assured, if ordered by con- tractors sufficiently in advance of requirements. Peak construction next year is expected to pass all previous records with completed mileage each week of 50 to 60. Fortunately, the Depart- ment points out, few of the main arteries of travel will be affected and detours will be chiefly on the sec- ondary and connecting roads. Another problem is the storage of materials far enough in advance for laboratory tests. Samples of each lot must undergo rigid tests and the urgent need of the material will not deter the Department's test APPEALS TO NATION FOR DISABLED VETS An appeal to “leave nothing un- done” for the disabled veterans of the World War was issued by Wil- liam J. Murphy, national comman- der of the Disabled American Veter- ans. His statement, entitled “Armis- tice and Disabled, 1929” reads: “America’s disabled whose sight has been destroyed, reason dethron- ed limbs amputated lungs burned, heart weakened or otherwise maim- ed by the ravages of the World War, stand in salute to that gallant host $ ape— Just set the time and heat conirols ; a Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 43. LUMBER? w.r.shope Lumber Co. nett oT Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofir ¢, that laid or their lives on the| 5 ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW = sacrificial soil overseas in order that our Republic’s ideals should prevail “Out of a hundred million Amer- icans how many today realize that we are assured by the best medical minds that 17 more years—1947— must lapse before the peak is reach- ed in the number of World War men who are to be insane. “This is recalled on this anniver- sary of solemn rededication and glorious triumph merely to bring home the real post-war problem that will be with us through the generation.” r——— Anes ——— DEER FACE FOOD SHORTAGE IN PENNA. State and Federal officials have found that food conditions in several deer sections of the State will become serious soon, after they investigated the condition in Clinton county and Centre county sections and at the State College experimental feeding station. Dr. C. D. Marsh, of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry who is conducting an investigation of the food conditions for deer all over the Nation, says that Pennsyl- vania has a real problem in the feed- ing of deer. John J. Slatterbach, executive secretary of the Game Commission; W. B. Bell, of the United States Biological Survey; Vener Bailey, of the United States Biological Survey; Dr. C. D. Marsh, and Dr. Thomas E. Winecoff, in charge of research work for the State Game Commission, made the tour of the deer sections of the State. The committee discussed with: Professor Norman H. Stewart, of | Bucknell University, his progress, in the study of the nose fly in deer. In Clearfield county an entire day was spent in the forest. tions showed that the deer had al- ready eaten a great deal of their winter browse. A total of 107 deer were counted in 55 miles, two of which were bucks. The adult does, with four exceptions, were accom- panied by twin fawns. The deer in the vicinity of the State Game Refuge in Clinton coun- | ty were in good condition. A good supply of all kinds of food was available. Near the Centre County Game Refuge the food conditions were Observa- | | tianity. CHICHESTER S PILLS found serious. STATE COLLEGE COOKS ELECTRICALLY « « « here is why! LIPSTICK | (Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) | “Let me see, I'm dining with you. What would you like me to be this evening—the bad girl of the family | of just a quiet mouse? The point is I'll have to dress the part. One lives up to or down to one’s frock.” As he listened to her a great rev- elation came to Michael Brayde. He knew if she would marry him he could give up without repining his bungalow by a Nigerian river, and settle down to be a baronet on a dorset estate with an aparment in London to solve the monotony. He went over and took her in his arms. “I am very cross and battered and unpleasant and you are a darling and | the most adorable thing in the world,” | he told her, “but you will marry me —won’t you?—because you don’t mind taking your color from the man you're with and this I assure you is | a fast color, guaranteed fadeless and sunproof and all the rest of it. And I'm going to kiss you to death and if you take away my kisses with cleansing cream I shall only beat ! you and kiss you all over again.” She let him take her in his arms and turn her face gently to the ex- act angle for kisses, and said after a while: “Michael darling, couldn't we go to a grillroom and dine just as we are, because I'm finding this par- ticular frock awfully easy to live up to.”—Hearst’'s International Cosmo- politan. § | | CHURCH ALTARS The altars of the early Christian churches faced the east. The princi- pal entrance tothe church faced the west. There is a tradition to the ef- fect that the altar was so placed in | order that the priest could face the | direction from which came Chris- i 1 { | | — The Watchman gives all the news worth reading, all the time. | Eiri a on Eo ith ue Ribbon. a — ®) SREY Take ne oer OIL-ONES TER § OND BRAND P for 85 > years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE pad You're free for the afternoon: Electric cooking makes it no more work to get dinner than to assemble the raw ingredients and place them in the oven. Then a simple adjustment of the time and heat controls . .. and you don’t need to go near the kitchen until time to serve the meal. Your range automatically does all the watching and tending from turning on the current at the set time to turning it off at the set temperature. There’s no responsibility or uncertainty for you. You can go shopping, go visiting, take a nap or read a new magazine with- out a moment’s thought of dinner. And when you serve it, your family will say that they never tasted more delicious food. For all the rich flavor is retained in the closely sealed oven. Everything is beautifully browned and even cheaper cuts of meat are juicy and tender. What is more, you can figure about twenty per cent less shrinkage ... and a real saving on your food budget. Cook electrically for economy! WEST PENN POWER CO ! C 'C KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in courts. Office, room 18 Criders Bx. KENNEDY JOFNSTON = attormay cut. Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt tion given all legal business entrusted to his care. Offices—No. 5, East High street. Hr-44 M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y RUNKLE.— Attorney-at-L a w, lish and Ger- G. Consultation in man. Office in Bellefonte, Pa. rider's Ww R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. PHYSICIANS . GLENN, M. D,, and GE ll" Sin te county, Pa. Office at his Toslages. Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. 66-11 D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.— tered and licensed by the Re. es , glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames ~ placed and lenses matched. Casebeer Bl: Lae St., Bellefonte, Pa. 1 VA B. ROAN, tometrist, Licensed by the State Sone , State College: State Holmes 3 tonte, "Th ‘the. Carbrick, bullding €, ar the Court House, Wednesda Sebo y afternoons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Bell Phone. 68-40 FEEDS! a— We have taken on the line of Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds Purina Dairy, 34% - $3.10perH Purina Dairy, 24% 2.80 per H Wayne Dairy, 32% - 800perH Wayne Dairy, 24% - 2. 15perH Wayne Egg Mash _ - 8.35perH Wayne Calf Meal - 425perH Wayne Horse feed - 260perH Wagner’s Dairy, 32% - 280perH Wagner's Dairy, 20% - - 2.50 per H Wagner's Dairy, 169%, - 2.30 per H Wagner's Pig Meal - 2.90 per H Wagner's Egg Mash with Buttermilk - - 8.00perH We are using Molasses in all of our feeds. Cotton Seed Meal - . 2.80perH Oil Meal - - - 820perH Gluten Feed - s 2.60 per H Alfalfa Meal - - 225perH Meat Scrap, 45% -. - 4.00perH Tankage, 609% - 4.25 per H Buttermilk Z - 10.00 per H Oyster Shell > 1.10 per H - - % 1.10 per H We deliver at a charge of $1.00 per ton extra. When You Want Good Bread or Pastry Flour USE 3 “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR C.Y. Wagner & Co. ine 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating . Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces FPS API Full Line of Pipe and Fit- - tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished. . 0-15-t2.