Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 03, 1930, Image 7

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    Bellefonte, Pa., January 8, 1930
FARM NOTES.
—Taking evergreen trees and
rubs from land that does not be-
ng to the ome who helps himself
an offense carrying a penalty of
5 and cost of prosecution for each
ee or shrub or part of a tree or
rub removed. It costs less to buy
e Christmas decorations.
— Dairy cows differ in their abil-
7 to pay the farmer good prices for |
s grain and hay crops. Low-pro-
icing cows should be culled out to
crease the value of the herd as a
arket for feeds consumed, say
ate College dairy specialists,
—Honey producers will share a
ize fund of $232.50 at the coming
ate Farm Products Show in Har-
sburg. Awards will be made for
mb and extracted honey, culinary
|
oducts in which honey is substi- |
ted for sugar, and honey candies,
_ Mulch paper is said to be
orth-while for certain early crops
high market value and in some
yme gardens where it is desired
. eliminate cultivation and toutil- pgpyjy EFONE
s space to the best advantage.
— Short coursesin agriculture and
\iry manufacturing will open at
e Pennsylvania State College,
inuary 2, 1930. They occur at a
me when work on some farms
not pressing, so furnish ambi-
sus young folks an opportunity to
prove their knowledge of
iltural information. Apply at
ice to the Dean, School of Agri-
ilture, State College, Pa, for ad-
ission.
—To keep house plants in a
salthy condition it is necessary to
udy their requirements. Avoid
1derwatering or overheating and
-aughts. Give sufficient light and
:casional doses of plant food, and
:ep foliage clean.
— Farms have become smaller in
snnsylvania during the past two
:nerations, according to the State
epartment of Agriculture, but the
naller farm produces more of the
‘incipal field crops than the larger
rm of the past. :
The average farm in this State
about 20 acres smaller than that
* 1870.
The State produces wheat today
the rate of about 112 bushels,
>tatoes at the rate of about 129
1shels, and feed crops at about
i4 bushels, per farm. The figures
r the year 1870 are only: wheat,
1 bushels; potatoes, 70 bushels;
ed crops, 674 bushels per farm.
The larger number of bushels to
farm is being produced now on
1e acre less than in 1870.
The amount of crops grown on
{ ge farm has increased 12
and the increase has been
ed with only an increase
ent in the acreage devot-
e Crops.
In times past many people felt
at turkeys could not be raised in
ynfinement but that they should
we a large area over which to
\nge. This contention has chang- pegdquarters for the Harrisburg
1 now, however, and in several zone.
calities turkeys have been raised Each of the zone headquarters can :
. confinement with a
success.
The Minnesota and Nebraska ex-
sriment stations have been among
ie leaders in investigational work
turkey production, in recent
ars, with some such work being
)ne at other experiment stations
various parts of the country. At
th of the stations mentioned it
as found that better results
yuld be secured if the poults were
ised in confinement than if they
allowed to range over a large
the method once followed in
production, either on a small
e scale, are no doubt inter-
§ in the practices to be adhered
) this method of turkey raising.
The United States Department of
griculture has found that turkey
-oductnon has declined consistent-
since 1890, in the face of an in-
ease in the production of all oth-
- lines of poultry and live stock.
nis decrease in production cannot
» attributed to a decrease in de-
and, for the demand has always
tceeded the production,or at least,
ere has never been a surplus of
irkys on the market with which
» contend.
This decline in turkey production
in be explained almost altogether
7 the fact that farmers have al-
ays felt that turkeys should have
alimited range. Because of fol-
wing this mehtod of production
ie turkeys came in contact with
ie chicken yards, to the detriment
‘the turkey business. The dis-
se problem among turkeys which
yme in contact with chickens is
‘eat enough that it has tended to
it down on production among
rmers and farmers’ wives who
gve, in the past raised turkeys
ad’ chickens together on the same
inge.
In the Nebraska investigation it
as found that the old method of
ising the turkeys on the open
.nge with natural hatching and
‘0oding by turkey hens was not
coessful. On the other hand, ar-
ficial brooding and hatching, by
eans of which feed and environ-
ent could be kept under the com
ol of the producer, was found
, yield very good results.
— Watch young and delicate birds
sry closely as they are most sus-
ptible to the deadly roup germs.
ne same is true of fowls suffer-
g from common cold or catarrh.
ge throat and nasal passages, be-
g already sore and inflamed, are
sily infected. Sick birds should
ways be isolated. They can
uch more effectively treated when
way. from the flock and they can-
»t contaminate the healthier ones
the disease should prove to be
mtagious,
—The Aylesbury
om the Vale of
duck comes
i
i
i
Aylesbury, from the body.
LOCK HAVEN
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1 HANOVER 2
.
—How police units of the State are linked by telephone typewriters. A vast network of wires, connecting police de-
partments in nearly 100 cities and towns, provides
mission of police information throughout the State.
an incredibly speedy and efficient communication system for the trans
There are four zones, Philadelphia,
Wyoming (Luzerne county),
Harrisburg and Pittsburgh, from which radiate channels to the outlying points. Each headquarters unit sends messages to
the points within its zone (the boundaries of which
system. Main headquarters are at Harrisburg.
fonte on Monday, December 23rd.
are shown by the heavy broken lines) and to other points in the
The new police inter-communication system began to operate in Belle-
IS A LINK |
IN UNIQUE POLICE CHAIN
With the inauguration on Monday,
December 23, of the State Police
telephone typewriter service, Belle-
fonte and 94 other cities and towns
in Pnnsylvania were linked together
as units in one of the most perfectly
coordinated communication systems
in the world.
From main headquarters, located
in the capitol building at Harris-
burg, a message to the effect that
the service had been placed in oper-
ation was flashed to all points in the
State-wide police system. Distribu-
tion of the first routine messages
was begun an instant later, and thus
actual establishment of the system
had been completed.
The service represents the cumu-
lative achievement of the State Po-
lice, the Pennsylvania Police Chief's
Association and others, who for sev-
eral years have been cooperating in
the preparation of plans for the es-
tablishment of a communication
system to expedite the transmission
of vital information to assist in the
capture of criminals and the supres-
sion of crime,
The system, installed by the Bell
Telephone Company of Pennsylvania,
represents the most extensive pro-
ject of its kind in the country. It
is served by more than 3400 miles of
telephone circuits.
Commenting on the service, Major
Lynn C. Adams, Superintendent of
the State Police, said:
“To obtain the maximum operating
efficiency, the State has been divided
into four zones, namely Harrisburg,
Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and Wyom-
ing (Anthracite Section), with send-
ing and receiving machines at each
oint.
The central bureau, with respon-
sibility for the operation of the serv-
ice, has been establihed in State
Police Headquarter at Harrisburg,
where two combination sending and
receiving machines, and three addi-
tional receiving machines have been
installed. This bureau also serves as
great deal rangmit simultaneously messages to
the receiving stations within its di-
vison and also to the central bureau
at Harrisburg.
Likewise, the central bureau can
send messages to its own territory.
to the other zone headquarters, and,
when necessary, to all receiving sta-
tions in the State, In this way,
nearly 100 points can receive mes-
sages at the same time.
The sending machines are equip-
ped with a keyboard similar to that
of a standard typewriter. When they
are connected with receiving ma-
chines, any message typed by the
operator is received aid printed im-
mediately by the distant rceiving ap-
paratus,
The complete list of cities and
towns in the Hariisburg zone fol-
lows: Lock Haven, Williamsport,
Mansfield, Harrisburg. Carlisle
Chambersburg, Bedford, Lewistown,
Mount Union, Huntingdon, Altoona,
Tyrone, Clearfield, Bellefonte, Leb-
anon, Columbia, Lancaster, York,
Hanover, Gettysburg, Somerset.
Johnstown, Ebensburg, DuBois,
Ridgway, Emporium, Kane, Brad-
ford, Warren, Corry and Galeton.
{
DENIED INDIANS.
Rolling back the pages of his-
tory 134 years, Attorney General
Hamilton Ward has just decided
the Cayuga Indians, now living on
a reservation near Grand River, |
Canada, cannot come back to New
York State.
The Cayugas claim that under
the treaty of 1795 they are the
lawful owners of hundreds of acres
of land valued at millions of dollars
in the central part of the State
near Cayuga Lake,
Four of the Cayuga chiefs
cently presented their claims
Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt,
"“We no happy where we live
now and we want to come back
and live in this State or else have
State pay us for land we own un-
der, old. treaty,” ome of the chiefs
told Governor Roosevelt in broken
English.
The Governor turned the case
over to Attorney General Ward.
After a careful investigation of the
claims of the Cayugas, Ward an-
swered: :
«1 must answer on behalf of this
State that we deem accounts be-
tween you and us arising out of
the treaty you mentioned, to be
completely paid and settled.”
The Cayuga Indians, was explain-
ed, were bitterly opposed to the
signing of the treaty of 1795.
RICH LAND CLAIM IS :
re-
to
which fact it derives its, name. Itis
the market duck of England. It
has long body, deep. keel, and legs,
placed. a little behind the center of
; mi patron, when
deals out the justice.
it. would only mean the mumblings
HALF-BREED
(Continued from page 6, Col. 4.)
Miguel will find peace.’
I wonder if he ever did. For it
was not written that any of us
should learn, although once it was
given me to look behind the veil
That came a year later, when the
power of Miguel and his desert
band was at its height.
Alone as usual, I had been riding
the foothill ranges and had stopped
to let my horse drink at a half-
dry buffalo wallow. My thoughts
must have been far away, for, as I
gathered in the reins, I found my-
self looking down at a ragged
Mexican covering me with an auto-
matic. Beside him stood a comrade.
The latter, with many apologies,
bound my wrists behind me.
From somewhere back in the
mesquite they led two horses and
together we headed south. An
hour's =zigzagging brought us to
the base of a limestone cliff where
two tents were pitched by a little
stream. The place had the air of
being a temporary camp. At an
order from the Mexican behind me
I dismounted and turned to look
into the blue eyes of my former
sheep herder.
Miguel stared in sudden astonish-
ment, then whipping out a knife
he cut the thongs at my wrists,
‘Senor, before Our Lady I am
sorry, Those men did not know.
You are not hurt?”
I rubbed my wrists. “Not hurt,
But you seek novel means of in-
viting guests.”
“I had no thought it would ever
be you, See, I am desolate that
this should be. But my men bring
in any horseman who rides the
desert hills. It is from them we
learn of the soldiers and sometimes
we hold them for ransom. But
Dios, that has nothing to do with
you who are my friend. See, you are
And I shall ride with |
Only let us talk for a while.” |
free
you.
The years had added strength to
his dark face, Also they had touch-
ed with suffering these perplexed
eyes. Yes. Perplexed still. But as
we talked I saw that life out here
had given him freedom and a half-
forgetfulness of his bruised youth
and of Lolita’s treachery.
I think, too, the memory of her
vanished radiance must have borne
him somber company, She must
have been in his thoughts always.
That last talk—I remember it al-
most word for word.
“There is freedom here,’ he had
said, “and I do not ask for more.
Always the world has taken from
me and I have no place in it. Once
life gave me a great love, but so
short a time—then it took that love
away. Freedom I have, but I have
bought that at a price, patron, and
when that is gone, Miguel is done.
Not overmuch do I love life and still
less do I understand its ways. They
are not my ways. But out here is
freedom and a kind of peace.”
So after all it was, perhaps, only
half-heartedly I performed my duty
to society by urging Miguel to re-
turn. I offered to make intercession
for him. “Not always can you live
this life of the hunted. Some day—"
“Si, si. Some day, patron, a lit-
tle Mexican soldier looks down his
rifle barrel. A bullet strikes, and so
Miguel is done. Perhaps, But if I
knew it would be a month from this
day, I should never return. Law
and justice, these are good things,
it happens to be
yourself who writes the law and
But for me
to go.
of strange old men over dusty books
and wise, cruel sayings, And at the
end long days where there is nei-
ther sunshine nor freedom—not
even a price.
“No, Senor, not while I remember
the grim walls of the prison near
Santa Fe. Out here I am the law
and IT have the sunshine and the
wind in my face. And the stars,
“How should I go back and for
what should I go back, Senor?
What is there for Miguel the “breed,”
in Verde? It is for the Miguels of
the world that the good God made
the desert. No, men have taken
away my youth, my trust—and Lo-
lita, too, they have taken. So I
have no truce to make with them,
or with men’s ways. And even if
they should offer me freedom, what
would freedom back there be worth?
“Jt was out here I. first learned
at Lolita’s lips how sweet life might
be even for me, Out here I can
forget to hate. And the memory of
bitter days is not so keen out here.
No, Senor, mi patron, it is kindly
meant what you say, but T stay
where T have been happy. out on. the
desert. Dios mio,” he cried, and all
the heartbreaks of a tortured soul |
entered’ his voice, “it was a black
dav when the big red’ gfitingo look-
ed ‘into my mother's eyes.”
And so I departed: He rode with
me awhile. A silent:ride, for some-
how we knew, both of us, it was the
end. At the edge of the mesquite he
stopped.
“Often I think of you and of the
times we sat by my fire. I asked
you mally dark questions. It be-
comes a little clearer now that not
for such as I are the laws of life
and man, I have been set as a
yours. Always
with hatred and blow by blow. Al-
ways my back to the wall.
die like that.
it all T pity a little those men of the
cities who go about their selling and
feel too much sorrow for Miguel—
whatever comes,” -
I understood.
hunted outlaw Miguel.
feel pity alone.
hand.
“Adios, Senor.”
“Adios, Miguel.”
And just before a clump of mes-
quite hid him from me, he turned
and lifted his sombrero in farewell.
After that events moved swiftly.
Out in the foothills near Verde, north
of the line, a rancher was found
robbed and murdered. Now nei-
ther then nor later did there exista
| single clue linking the deed with
| Miguel's band. I'd stake a hundred
I could not
Then he touched my
thing apart by my people and by !
I answered hatred
“Eh, Senor, it comes to me I shall
But sometimes with
buying and growing old and dis- |
trusting and fearing—at least I have
escaped that, compadre, so do not
Yes, even for this
| head of cattle that he had nothing
| to do with it,
Just the same someone had to pay.
So it came about that a squadron of
| cavalry from the fort and two hun-
| dred rurales joined forces
| Miguel down.
| Weeks passed while they combed
to hunt
| desert and foothills and laid elabor- |
| ate ambushes at every water hole.
No news came and I began to hope
| that Miguel had hidden himself for
| all time. And something of this hope
| IT had voiced to the little padre as
‘we sat before the shapel one night
in early June.
As I stopped to light a cigaret we
| heard from dowm ‘the’ street the
barking of a dozen ‘dogs, then the
low stamp of many horses and the
rattle of steel on steel, 'I saw the
padre stiffen; - It was the return of
the soldiers;
The captain halted before me,
“Well?” I asked.
“Well, there was nothing yellow
about that herder of yours,” he
laughed. “He held us single-handed
in the month of a canyon while his
gang cleared out. Then I got a
detachment in behind him and be-
fore we opened fire I called on him
to throw down his arms and come
out and take his medicine.
“You know, that ‘breed’ just
laughed, Just laughed and walked
out to meet us with guns blazing in
both hands. The boys crumpled him
with a hail of lead and I rode up to
him. The smile was gone, but the
eyes had a look of surprise, a kind
of—oh, wonder, Well, it’s good to
be back in God’s country.”
Then he barked an order and the
column pounded by.
The padre’s eyes had sought the.
crucifix above the chapel door. With
fingers that trembled, the little man
of God traced the outline of the
Cross. -
“Pax,” he murmured brokenly.
“Pax.” ’
Yes, Peace to his life-weary soul.
—_From Hearst’s International Cos-
mopolitan.
100,000 SLEEP ON
: TRAINS EACH NIGHT.
One hundred thousand
sleep on railroad trains
United States every night.
equal to one third of the popula-
tion of this country use sleeping
cars every year.
These figures were revealed by
James Keeley, assistant to the
President of the Pullman company.
To accommodate the ever growing
number of sleepers, the company
persons
in the
A total
‘now has 9,000 cars in use, he
stated.
“The American traveler enjoys
the utmost luxury and satisfac-
tion.” Keeley said,
“With about 35,000,000 guests
every year the Pullman Company
is a veritable hotel. We have on
hand between 8,000,000 and 9,000-
000 household supplies
towels, pillow slips,
blankets.”
CHLOROFORM USED TO
KEEP CHICKS QUIET.
Keeping abreast of the trend for
improvement in every activity,
chicken thieves - have been using
: chloroform to. simplify. and remove
. the. -hazard from their chosen pur-
suit, ° / ok
The favorite method seems. to
{ be to" stick a spray through a
crack in the chicken house wall. A
few" shots from’ it’ lulls’ thé chickens
sheets and
gently: into an unconscious ‘and
squawkless state and they fall to
the floor. The rest is easy.
Our Trust Department
HILE the Trust Department of this
bank is separate from the commercial
department, all the resources of the
institution, amounting to more than two and
one-half million dollars, safeguard those who
intrust such business to us.
As Executor, Administrator or Trustee,
we can assure proper service, acting always
under competent legal advice; which, joined
with our long experience, makes us feel confi-
dent of the proper administration of any Trust
business given us.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BELLEFONTE, PA.
THE
New Year
Resolution
ER)
OD
resolve to save some part of
my income today so as to be
sure to have money in the Bank
for tomorrow—at a time when I may
NEED it. Your account is invited.
|
8 per cent. Interest Paid on Savings Accounts
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
LR Ey I RE CE ERAN A A AN
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Warm Work Clothes
Priced Very Low
A real opportunity to buy your
heavy clothing needs for the bal-
ance of the winterland early spring
at, savings well above the ordina-
ry.
Come in,—the hand of welcome
and the guarantee of contentment
with what, you buy in the Fauble
Stores is assured you throughout
the New Year
A. Fauble.
AA
including. . Uc
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