| PERFECT ATTENDANCE Bellefonte, Pa., March 7, 1930 NARY BIRD “FARM” HAS 500 SONGSTERS.. rd lovers have a treat in store them if they have not already ted the “canary farm” of Mrs. lip A. Meishel, of 319 East aple street, Ebensburg. Mrs, shel has gone into the canary jness on a large scale and has ut 500 birds housed ina building ecially erected for the purpose. bout 450 young birds were rais- this year and Mrs. Meishel ex- ts to raise at least 1,000 next r ..Hatching was started last ruary and continued until June for the coming year the hatch- will start this December and be tinued until June. The present ipment of 83 breeding cages will increased to 150 and the larger aber of birds hatched will also uire additional training cages | more flight cages. sanary birds are not hatched in 1bators but in the old-fashioned y “under the hen.” The mother j “sets” about 13 days until the ch and the little birds require ut 21 days after that before they able to leave the nest. In five six weeks they are able to take e of themselves. They then “go ay to school” for a few weeks, eiving their musical education in training cages. Some birds learn jing earlier than others but they ally graduate within a few sks. They then are placed in the ht cages, ich are large enough w jle freedom of nd Cinnamon BiSfie expects to specialize White Border Fancy, two rs of this variety being now on . way here from Canada. Last week Mrs. Meishel shipped ne beautiful young fellows to New 'sey and also made a shipment to ‘sey Shore, Pa. She is receiving merous orders both local and m a distance, The yellower the d is, the better, the experts say, ij close inspection of the groups ‘prises one to note what a large centage of the birds are almost re yellow. and what a merry crowd they ;, too, all singing at once, not al- ys in harmony but filling the room th an alluring medley as only 500 1ary birds in action at one time 3. Fhe man was worrying. ‘Tell me about it,” said his pal. et it off your chest.” ‘1 wish I could,” groaned the er “Ive got ‘Marguerite ta-tooed re, and the girl I'm engaged to irry is named Helen. TO WAGE NEW WAR ON ALL ILLITERACY. - Each member of the committee on illiteracy for the State of Pennsy:- vania appointed by Superintendent of Education Dr. Keith with the advice of Governor Fisher, has re- ceived a letter from Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior and chairman of the National Ad- visory Committee on Illiteracy, ask- ing that he act with and be a part of the national committee in the intensive drive that is being put into the campaign against illiteracy before the taking of the census which begins in April. This action on the part of Secre- tary Wilbur marks an additional step in the campaign against illiter- acy, Secretary Wilbur asks further that the State Superintendent, Dr. Keith, give him permission to com- municate with all county superin- tendents in the State, to offer to them the facilities of the Nation- al Committee and the information and methods of procedure it has developed. The National Advisory Committee on Illiteracy has made a careful study of the campaigns against illiteracy waged in many States and makes the lessons learn- ed in those campaigns available to whoever would like to use them. It has, as a result of its studies, prepared and published a manual of 24 lessons, the completing of which will enable the average illiterate to read and write. This has already been demonstrated in several States. The manual will be furnished by the National Committee to any local organization at the mere cost of printing or a single copy will be furnished without charge and can then be printed locally. According to the census figures five million adults in the United States are illiterate. One out of every fourteen people of voting age cannot read the warning sign on a poisoned well; cannot read “Do Not Smoke, Explosives near;” can- not read “Danger, Live Wire.” One out of every ten people over 21 can- not write. The percentage of illit- eracy in our country is greater than that ian England, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, Denmark, and Japan. FAMOUS SONG NOT BURNS’ Although the words of the song “Auld Lang Syne” appear in Burns’ works, he himself, admits that he wrote only the second and’ third stanzas. A song of the same title can be traced to the latter part of 1600. In a letter to George Thom- son, September, 1793, Burns says “One song more I have done, “Oula Lang Syne.” The air is but mediocre but the following song, the old song of the olden times, and which has never been in print nor even manuscript until I took it down from an old man’s singing, is enough to recommend any air.” SEND PARCELS “SPECIAL DELIVERY” AND SAVE TIME Special delivery and special hand- ling mail other than first class shall be sacked separately from other second, third and fourth class mails and be given the same dispatch and handling in closed pouch trains asis accorded pouches of letters, and when dispatched on P. R. R. trains will be handled in postal cars as far as practicable. will make up a direct sack in every case where there are two or more rcels the size of an ordinary shoe | x or larger, addressed to the same post office. Where direct sacks of daily papers are made up in a post | office or an R. P. O. train and the quantity of special delivery or special handling parcels is not suf- ficient to warrant a direct sack for those offices, the special delivery and special handling packages may be included in the direct sacks of daily papers. At the smaller offices where the quantity is sufficient to warrant directs and the character of the par- cels is such as not to injure first class matter, they should be pouch- ed with letter mail. It will be noted from the above instructions that special delivery and special handling parcels are to be handled the same as first class mail while in transit and in addition to this the special delivery parcels will be specially delivered at the office of destination. The special delivery and also the the special handling fees are very moderate for the service rendered. Send your next parcel special deliv- ery or special handling and note the saving in time. MILLIONAIRE ENDOWS CEMETERY FOR PETS. The city of Indianapolis soon will have one of the first complete ani- mal cemeteries in the United States under provisions of the will of Leo Kahn, President of the American Sanitary Lock corporation, who left an estate of from $500,000 to $1,- 000,000 to establish the cemetery and to build a home and hospital for friendless dogs, cats, horses and other animals. The idea was suggested by Mrs. Castle McLaughlin, of Chicago. Burial lots will be sold but a portion will be reserved as a “pot- ters field” for animals owned by poor persons. A farm will be bought for the hospital and ceme- tery site. Persons of means who send pets for treatment will pay, but homeless and friendless animals will be cared for without cost at the hospital. Wife—“I see by this paper that in certain parts of India a wife can be bought for two dollars. Isn't that perfectly awful?” Husband—“Well, I don’t know! A good wife would be worth that.” H you often said, “I don’t mind cooking; BELLEFONTE COOKS ELECTRICALLY e « « here is why! Cook with the cleanest fuel . . . electricity! There’s no soot, smudge, or dirt from this new fuel. You mmm All post offices | but oh, how I hate the clean- ing up !”’ Hasn’t the thought of a big stack of blackened cooking utensils out in the kitchen sometimes taken away your appetite for din- ner? You’ll never have to scour another smoked-up kettle or pan if you cook electrically. can actually take a utensil direct from the range . . . rub a clean towel over it. . . and there will not be a smudge on the snowy cloth. What’s more, your kitchen walls and ceiling and curtains stay clean longer than ever before, sav- ing you endless hard work. Cook electrically for economy! WEST PENN POWER CO MANY FAMOUS TREES : IN PENNA:.-FORESTS. State-wide interest continues in un- usual trees of Pennsylvania, notable for their great size, historic associa- tions, or other unique features, State Forester Joseph S. Illick, said today. + Trees of magnificent proportions were abundant in the original for- | ests of Pennsylvania but after the clear cutting practice in our big days of lumbering, few forest giants remained. Even if single specimens had been saved from the axe, they {would likely have been thrown by the wind. Individual big trees that have grown up through the centur- ies under the protective influence of their neighbors, do not develop the stalwart qualities that enable them to go it alone, Suddenly deprived of the collective support of their forest associates, they fall easy prey to wind and storm. Thus it is that the most out- standing sepcimens reported since the Department of Forests and Wa- ters began its search for -the big trees of Pennsylvania, have been those which developed in the open country intsead of under forest con- ditions. Others are trees that stood on the edge of previous clear- ings, and avoided in later lumber- ing operations because their limby crowns developed under semi-open conditions, rendered them unfit for the sawmill. Still others are trees | which are known to have been planted: + The largest cottonwood in Penn- sylvania is believed to be a planted tree, standing on the Bachman farm along the highway between | Soudersburg and Paradise, Lancaster county. It is reported that an ear- lier owner of the property brought back a cutting, used during the morning as a cane, from which this tree has grown. It is 225 feet in circumference at breast height. (4.5 feet above the ground) is al- ways used as a comparison since some trees develop an unusual flare at the base, out of other propor- tions to their actual size. Not only the largest, but one of the most historic horse chestnuts in Pennsylvania, has grown from a seeding presented by George Wash- ington to General Brown of Revolu- tionary fame, who planted it in front of his home near Bath, North- ampton county, the property now belonging to the Bath-Portland Ge- ment Company. Before one of the main branches was broken off on January 17, 1921, this tree was 70 feet high, and at breast height was more than 17 feet around. Four large sassafras trees, rare giants for this species in Pennsyl- vania, stand along the Baltimore Pike one mile east of Wawa, Dela- ware county. They average about 3 feet in diameter at breast height. So accustomed are Pennsylvanians to this species as a small tree or shrub, of fence rows and old fields, that it is difficult to convince them these trees are sassafras. Probably none of the big trees excite such continued curiosity as do these. While the dense condition of the original forests produced taller trees ‘than we now have, the most mas- sive tree in Pennsylvania is a syca- more about four miles south of Lancaster between the Lincoln Highway and Marietta turnpike. The diameter is 22 feet, height over 100 feet, and branch spread 140 fee. Its three main branches are 70, 72 and 84 feet long. Two others of the biggest big trees discovered are an English wal- nut in Berks county, between Spies Church and Friedensburg, reputed to be the largest in America, and Pennsylvania’s biggest oak, near Neff’s Mills, Huntingdon county. The | Forest Tllick on June 9, 1923. | I EE AEE STATE COLLEGE HAS OWN “LITTLE PARIS.” With a faculty which included the mantinee of the Parisian stage; the preceptor in French to the fam- ily of the former German Kaiser, five ‘other Frenchmen and headed by Frederic Ernst, formerly a jour- nalist in Paris, the Pennsylvania State College is ready to establish ! a little Paris of its own this sum- mer. The faculty this year is one of the strongest ever assembled for the = institute. Headed by Frederic ‘Ernst, now professor of French at New York University, it includes Georges Vitray of the Theatre Pi- galle, Paris, where he has also serv- ed as professor of diction instructors who in teaching lecturer, and six are actively engaged Cons, formerly employed at the Lycee in Berlin and as French tutor to the family of the Kaiser, and now head of the Romance language de- partment at Swarthmore; Osmond T. Robert, chairman of the French Department at Smith; Rene Guiet and Jeanne Guiet, professors at Smith College; Paul Blanchet, Penn State; and F. M. Dumont, New York University. WE TALK FASTER. According to the observation of a well-known stenographic expert, with the passage of 20 years there is an increase in speech at the rate of ten words per minute. People read more, see more, do more and are better educated than they were in the past and it has resulted in quicker thinking and talking. Radio may jack the speed up even more. When radio was first used in reporting people began to say that it wouldn't be long until the short- hand reporter would be out of business. However, it has proved exactly otherwise. In the last Presidential campaign many news- papers used the radio in getting speeches. : Kitty—‘“Jack says he can read me like a book.” Phillis—*“Perhaps he means, dear, that you are a very plain type.” latter tree was discovered by State : | J and dramatic art since 1922, as visiting | their native language. They are Louis PENN STATE COLLEGE HIGH IN PENNSYLVANIA. submitted to the De- of Public Instruction The Pennsylvania State marked the 75th anniversary of Reports partment show that during the school year [signing of its institutional "charter 1928-1929, 189,819 pupils were per- [on February 22, Governor James fect in attendance in the public | Pollock having affixed his signature to the document on which the lege birthday in 1855. With that charter the first successful educational terprise to endure which taught schools of Pennsylvania. Of these pupils 84,988 had been perfect in attendance during some preceding year or years. This rep- resents a slight decrease in at- tendance during the preceding year. It is considered a good achievement, however, because records in the State Department of Health show that there were considerably more cases of the common communicable diseases such as measles and chick- en pox during the preceding year. The number of deaths from influ- enza alone during the past year were 2.35 or approximately 2 1.3 times the number that occurred dur- ing the preceding year, while the number of deaths from this disease during January, 1929, were 9.68 or almost ten times the num- ber occurring as a result of the From that same movement in which to-day are proximately half of the receiving higher education country. Lincoln's signature Grant Act, coming to the in the ideal of higher public education all the people, and enabled it ed the intersectional strife. CHARTER 75 YEARS OLD. College the col- was founded on Washington's was launched €n- the agricultural and mechanical sciences. grew the Morrill Land Grant Act of Com- gress, the foundation of the colleges enrolled ap- students in this Land early years of the Civil War, saved the for to survive the lean years that follow- disease during January, 1928. On an average, 100 of every 1000 pupils enrolled in the public schools were neither ahsent nor tardy dur- ing the entire term. men, guaranteed to months without runners holes in heels FREE {if they wear in leg or toe. A mew fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER’S TINY BOOT SHOP Mrs. Alden—“Do you ever flatter your husband?” Mrs, Brearly—“Yes, I sometimes ask his advice about things.” Free SILK HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for wo E— | A Bank’s Standing here are three determining factors in a Bank’s standing : The Reputation of its Officers and Directors Its Capital and Surplus Its Resources As to this Bank—the first of them will have to take care of itself. The second shows—Capital and Surplus $542,- 000. Of this amount $342,000 is surplus. Much greater than the average. The third shows Resources of $2,800,000. Enough to insure the proper consideration of, and ability to help, projects that promise to increase the | well-being of the community and the proper needs | of individuals. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. Spring Clothes are Ready Me and young men will find the most complete showing of New Spring Suits and Top Coats ever shown in Bellefonte. large and varied; the styles are so de- The selection is so Je! CHL sirable, and the patterns so attractive that we feel certain we can please you. = I a Prices are lower—much lower— SSR =] TS than they have been for many years. ak We know we can be of real serv- SASH ice to you. = LAER 1 I RSA £ SRSA LE x o S ® ISAS PARE Cl ER RRR