————————————————————— eee Chairman Legge of the Federal "arm Board says bluntly to the armers: Cut your acreage 10 per ent, or we quit. It the Farm Board quit and umped its holdings of a hundred aillion bushels of grain on the mar- et distress would turn into disaster. Suppose the farmers reduce their creage (controlable) by 10 per ent, and bad weather cuts the ield per acre (uncontrolable) by 0 or 20 or 50 per cent.—where 7ll the farmers be then? The farmer's expenses have treb- »d in the last few years. He pays, ollectively, more than a billion dol- ars a year for implements and sachinery made by industry. His efficiency as a producer has screased: acreage per man, 48 per ent.; production in dollars per man, 19 per cent, (authority of Profes- or F. B. Mumford, Missouri Col- ge of Agriculture.) His marketing methods have been eveloped to a point where reduc- ions incost of marketing are al- scsi impossible. What does the farmer want? He rants a higher price for his product. What did Congress try to do for im? To help him, without increas- ag the cost of food to the consum- ri What does Mr. Leggee urge? Re- action of acreage, to lessen supply nd increase demand. There is an obvious incongruity in his chain. From the producer's point of view fr. Leggee’s argument is fallacious. there are substitutes for wheat to /hich consumers will resort rather han pay higher prices. They grn to other cereals; to increased se of potatoes and rice. To reduce the chaos of factors nd opinions to order would keep py student busy for a lifetime. hose who offer snap solutions are ff the mark. The act of Congress by which the ‘arm Board was set up tried to ef- sect an economic revolution at a ingle stroke. The export debenture iscarded. That plan took into account the inherited and fundamental belief of he farmer,” as a Western dairy- ian expresses it, “that large crops re a blessing.” Such a belief can- ot be wiped out by an act of Con. Tess. The debenture plan aimed specifi- ally at assistance to the producer f a surplus exportable crop, per- sitting him to draw on the United tates Treasury for half the amount f money that would have to be aid for a similar shipment coming 1 plan was This plan was direct, specific, In- jvidual; no more paternalistic than he import duty enjoyed by indus- ry. Chairman Legge has a giant's 5b on his hands. Of course we rish him success; but he is under handicap through the very na- are of the task set up for him by ‘ongress and the President—the ask of achieving an economic rev- lution in a hurry.—Philadelphia tecord. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Jacob Winklebleck, et ux, to Wil- am Burd, tract in Miles Twp. 3,600. J. S. Burd, Adm, to Doyle W. jest, et ux, tract in Haines Twp.; 1,695. W. W. Phelps, et ux, to J. Munson «ce, tract in Rush Twp.; $8,500. Alfred P. Krape, et al, to Wil am W. Kerlin, tract in Potter ‘wp. ; $3,000. . W. H. Ertle, et ux, to John G. feyer, et al, tract in Penn Twp.; 2,325. Miles Decker to C. F. Clevenstine, ract in Walker Twp.; $1. . ' Farmers National Bank and ‘rust company to Nora M. Orn- orf, tract in Haines Twp.; $5,240. J. W. Henszey, et ux, to Chi Ipsilon Asso. Inc, tract in State ‘ollege; $1. Charles W. Heverly, et al, to fargaret Schenck, tract in Liberty ‘wp.; $400. “Levi S. Wolford, et ux, to teorge A. Corman, tract in Miles ‘wp.; $780. | Emma C. Corman, Exec., to jeorge A. Corman, tract in Miles 'wp.; $243. Warren F. Stover et al, Exec, to seorge A. Corman, tract in Miles ‘wp.; $50. WwW. W. R. Harper, 100. Mary A. Rogers, et bar, to Lois i. Kurtz, tract in Bellefonte; $9000. American Butler, et al, to Bur- ine Butler, tract in Liberty Twp; 1000. Fortney E. Butler, Adm. to L. feson Shellenberger, et ux, tract a Liberty Twp.; $196. C. W. Swartz, et al, to Milton Nine, tract in Potter Twp.; $6,350. F. V. O. Houseman, et ux, to da L. Vonada, tract in Millheim, 10. Rose Gillette, et al, to Wilson avis, et ux, tract in Snow Shoe ‘wp.; $750. John Kachik, et ux, to Steve {achik, et ux, tract in Snow Shoe ‘wp.; $1,000. First National Bank to Sarah B. Phelps, et ux, to Paul tract in Philipsburg; villiams, tract in State College; 6,250. Chemical Lime Co, to Chemical ime Co. Inc, tract in Benner ‘wp.; $1. Centre County Lime Co. to ‘hemical Lime Co., Inc. tract in Jenner Twp.; $1. English Law Demanded Sunday holiday makers and trippers will be interested to know that a stat- utory liw in England years ago pro- hibited such frivolity, says the London Daily Mail. The Aet of Uniformity, 1002, ‘requires: All" persons, except those dissenting from the worship or doctrines of the Church of England ‘and usually attending some place of worship not belonging to the Church of England, are, if they have no law- ful or reasonable excuse for absence, to endeavor to attend their parish chureh - or accustomed chapel, or, it reasonably prevented from so doing, some other place where the divine service of the ‘Chureh of England is performed; on all’ Sundays and other days ordained and used to be kept a8 holy days, and te abide there orderly and soberly during the time of com- mon prayer, preaching, or other di- vine service there performed. Fail ure to observe this law renders the offending “parishioner or inhabitant of a parish” who Is not legally ex- empt from attendance at divine serv- ice on Sundays and holy days “liable in proceedings taken against him im the ecclesiastical courts to be cen- sured for the effense, admonished as to his attendance In the future, and to be condemned im the costs of the proceedings.” J Ancient Builders’ Idea of Humor Quite Modern The builders of the old churches in England were not so serious but that they now and then perpetrated a joke, even In stone. On more than one of their ereations they carved in relief a scene representing a monk preach- ing solemnly to a flock of geese. The same humerous spirit is sometimes to be detected in the domestie architec ture of early times. Just upon the boundaries of Bed- fordshire and Hertfordshire forwerly stood an old rambling farmhouse. The living-room was long and low, and on the center beam that went across the celling was inscribed this legend: “If you are cold, go to Hertfordshire.” This seemingly inhospitable invita- tion was explained by the fact that one-half of the room was in one coun- ty and one-half in the other. “The fire place was In Hertfordshire. Disdainful of Physicians Disraell affected to regard all doe tors with a sovereign disdain, writes a columnist in the Manchester Guardl- an. “Gull is all froth and words,” he declared at seventy-three. “They are all alike. First of all they throw it on the weather; then there must be a change of scene; so Sir W. Jenner, after blundering and plundering in the usual way, sent me to Bournemouth, and Gull wants to send me to Ems; I should like to send both of them to Jericho,” And Joseph Chamberlain's insistence that. to go up to bed and to come down again constituted exercise enough for any man must have beep a sore trial to his doctors. Afraid of Life “You're not afraid of life, are you?’ she asks him, and Finch is startled in- to truth. “Yes, I am. I'm awfully afraid of it.” She reared her head from the pil- low. “Afraid of life. What nonsense, . . . I won't have it. You mustn't be afraid of life. Take it by the horns. Take it by the tail. Grasp it where the hair is short. Make it afraid of you, That's the way [ did. Do you think I'd bave been talking to you this night—if I'd been afraid of life? Look at this nose of mine. These eyes. Do they look afraid of life? And my mouth—when my teeth are In—it's not afraid elther.”—Kansas City Star. Sunrise on the Moon The transition from night to day on the moon is very rapid, for the moon has no atmosphere; no rosy tints paint its mountain tops at dawn. There are no graduations between darkness and night, no twilight with color-tinted clouds. Before the sun comes there is blank, black darkness, deeper and blacker than anything ex- perienced on our earth. As the sun- shine moves across its surface the first peaks to catch its rays stand sud- denly out, fully defined in a harsh, untempered glare and In sharp con- trast to the dense blackness of the nearby terrain, where it is still night Food Requirements According to Prof. V. H. Mottram, an adult woman needs but 2,500 cal- ories a day. An adult man engaged in sedentary occupation requires 3,000 calories daily. A man doing hard work should have 5,000 calories. The physi. ological reason given is that the feml- nine organism utilizes food more eco- nomically than mam, A child's food should not be proportioned according to his age, as he requires more than half the food of an adult. Boys and girls of fourteen are to be considered as adults in food utilization. Sanity in the Madhouse I should imagine that a madhouse would be an excellent place to be sane in. I'd a long sight rather live in a nice, quiet, secluded madhouse than in intellectual clubs full of un- intellectual people, all chattering non- sense about the newest book of philos- ophy; or in some of those earnest, el- bowing sort of Movements that want you to go in for Service and help to take away somebody else’s toys.—From “The Poet and the Lunatics,” by @ K, Chesterton, ; Jumpin’ on the bus . Minimum of Waste in Sardine-Canning Plant In a Down East sardige canning fac tory the only thing that is wasted ie the odor. That may not be a dead loss, for there are persons who as- sert they like the smell of a sardine factory. The scales are sold to the manufacturers of artificial pearls. The fish meal is in demand in Ger many and in this eountry. The waste oil is collected and utilized in the pre- duction of paints and varnishes. Even the tin euttings from the cans are baled and shipped to England for reprocessing into new sheets of the wetal. roe ; Down East sardines are sent to 96 different countries. In Java, when | representatives sought a new market, the natives would have nothing to do with the “little fishes bolled in oil.” Two hundred free cases were offered if the prospective customers would place a 1,000 case order. At last the deal was made. The sardines were heaped high on trucks, together with a band of native musicians, taken from bazaar to bazaar, and sold. Thus introduced, there was no further diffi- culty in adding Java to the list of sar dine eonsumers.—~New York Times. Hard to Grasp Facts of the Stellar System At first the brain reels a little in the attempt to grasp the facts of the stellar system, even explained with the lucidity and exactness of which Sir James Jeans is a master. From the vast extensions of the sky he car- ries us Into the inmost recesses of the atom, where the electron whirls around its perpetual circuit several thousand million times every second. These numbers, says the London Spectator, are but dazzle painting, and it is simpler to say that the electron travels as far in a second as our latest seaplane travels in an hour. Sir James Jeans has a happy fertility in such comparisons, and forcibly strikes the imagination when he tells us that If the carbon atom were magnified to the size of Waterloo sta- tion, its electrons would. be repre sented by six wasps flying round in the vast vacuity. All the rest is emptiness; and so in the celestial spaces it is Immense odds against any given spot being occupled. “We live in a gossamer universe; pattern, plan and design are there in abundance, but solid substance is rare.” One of Life's Tragedies They sat gazing Into each other's eyes. At last he slipped from the sofa and, kneeling at her feet, gave uiter- ance to the sweeping thoughts that were swelling up his mind. “Darling,” he said, “sometimes 1! think how lucky I was to be born in the same century as you, to have met you. It seems as If Fate had Intend: ed us for each other since the begin- ning of time, and that at last the great design has been completed in our love. It has been Fate, my dearest, Fate.” “ave,” she replied, a‘ little wistful- ly, “it was fate all right. Your fate. If I hedna trippit over your fate And they pondered over the tragedy of might have beens.—London Tit-Bite. Paper Barometer Henley's Twentieth Century Book of Recipes publishes the following method of making a paper barometer: Saturate white blotting paper with the following liquid and then hang up te ary: Cobalt chloride, 1 ounce; sodium chloride, 3% ounce; calcium chloride, 75 grains; acacia, 3§ ounce; water # ounces. The amount of moisture in the air is roughly indicated by the changing color of the paper, rose red Indicating rain; pale red, very moist; bluish red, moist; lavender blue, nearly dry; blue, very dry. Unfortunate Early Savant Henry, Marquis of Villena, a Cas tilian savant in the reign of John II, studied astronomy so diligently that he lost all run of his worldly affairs and caused a wit of his day to com- ment sarcastically: “He knew much of heaven and nothing of earth.” His blind neglect of his financial concerns cost him all his possessions and reduced him to extreme penury in his last years. He was suspected of necromancy, and at his death in 1834 the king's ecclesiastical agent threw more than a hundred of his precious books into the flames.—De- troit News. Concerning the Law The true view, as I submit, is that the law is what the judges declare; that statutes, precedents, the opinions of learned experts, customs, and morality are the sourcgs of the law; that back of everything lie the opin- fons of the ruling spirits of the com munity ; who have the power to close any of these sources; but that as long as they do not interfere, the judges, in establishing law, have recourse to these sources.—John Chipman Gray. Do Bees Know Beekeeper? One often hears the statement that vees know their master. This Is not true. During the working season a bee .ives for only about six weeks, two of which are spent in the hive, It is hardly likely that = beekeeper would examine a hive frequently enough ‘0 hecome %nown to such short-lived creatures even if they head the ability to distinguish between dif- ferent hun an belnge. represent the PATIENTS TREATED AT CENTRE COUNTY HOSPITAL. Mrs. Basil Frank, of State Col- lege, was admitted for surgical treatment on Monday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. John Leathers, of Bellefonte R. F. D,, are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a daughter, born at the hospital on Monday of last week. Ralph Stam, nine-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Clyde Stam, of Pine Grove Mills, became a medical pa- tient on Monday of last week. Mrs. Vivian Buckwalter, of Cen. tre Hall, was discharged on Monday of last week, after undergoing medi- cal treatment for two days. Mrs. Thomas = Shaughnessy, of Bellefonte, was discharged on Mon- day - of last week after undergoing surgical treatment for fifteen days. Miss Betty Edmiston, ten-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Edmiston, of Bellefonte, was admit- ted on Tuesday of last week for medical treatment. Miss Eva Grove, of Bellefonte, was admitted on Tuesday of last week for medical treatment and discharged on Thursday. Mrs. Charles Smith, of Jersey Shore, a medical patient for fifteen days, was discharged on Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Florence Stiffler, of Cherry Tree, a surgical patient for three days, was discharged on Tuesday of last week. Alfred Collier, of Nittany, was dis- charged on Tuesday of last week, after undergoing medical treat- ment for two months. : Roland Ickoff, of Bellefonte, a medical patient for eleven weeks, was discharged on Tuesday of last week. Miss Mary E. Swartz, of Belle- fonte, became a surgical patient on Wednesday of last week and was dischargéd on Friday. Charles Gault, of Harrisburg, was admitted on Wednesday of last week for surgical treatment, Roy McClintic, of Linden Hall, be- came a medical patient on Wednes- day of last week. Mrs. Helen Harvey, of State Col- lege, was admitted on Wednesday of last week for surgical treatment. Florence E. Sawers, thirteen-year old daughter of Mrs. Maude Sawers, of Bellefonte, was admitted on Wed- nesday of last week for medical treatment. Leonard Smeltzer, of Bellefonte R. D. 2, a surgical patient for sixteen days, the result of an auto- mobile accident, was discharged on Wednesday of last week. Miss Marguerite Lambert, Bellefonte, became a surgical tient last Thursday. Mrs. Boyd Weaver, of State Col- lege, was admitted last Thursday for surgical treatment and was dis- charged on Friday. ~ Mrs. Elvina Rockey and infant daughter; of Linden Hall, were dis- charged last Thursday. Miss Dora Neidigh, of State Col- lege, was admitted on last Thursday for surgical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. William Scheckenger, of State College, are the proud parents of a son, born on Friday, whom they have named William, Jr, Mrs. Clara Horner, of Graysville, became a surgical patient last Thursday. Mrs. Hazel Swartz, of State Col- lege, was admitted on Friday for medical treatment. Mrs. Marcella Woodring, of Miles- burg, became a surgical patient on Saturday. Charles Wensel, of Port Maitlida, a surgical patient, was discharged on Saturday. Mrs. Ralph Williams, of State College, a surgical patient for a month, was discharged on Saturday. Miss Marian Stiffler, seven-year- old daughter of Mrs. Florence Stif- fler, of Port Matilda, was discharged on Saturday after undergoing surgi- cal treatment. Mrs. Wilbert Heffner, of Pine Grove Mills, became a medical pa- tient on Sunday. There were thirty-four patients in of pa- the hospital at the beginning of this ! i week. COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM FOR TEACHER'S COLLEGE. At a faculty meeting last week at State Teachers College at Lock Haven, the commencement speakers who are to represent the different groups graduating from the College this year were selected, Miss Eliza--| beth S. Kittelberger, of Curwens- ville; primary group; Miss Puckey, of Altoona, was selected to intermediate group; and Mr. Samuel M. Long, of Liber- ty, Tioga county, was selected to represent the four-year high school college group. Commencement week begins on Friday, May twenty-third, with the Junior class play; Alumni day on Saturday, may twenty-fourth; bac- calaureate services on Sunday, May twenty-fifth; class day exercise on Monday, May twenty-sixth; closing with the commencement program on Tuesday, May twenty-seventh. A —————————— A ————————— ——Francis E. Prey, of Jersey Shore, a former teacher in the Belle- fonte High school, has filed nomina- tion papers in Harrisburg as a candi- date for Congress from the Luzerne county district. Mr. Prey was a teacher in the Wilkes-Barre High school for four years before moving to Jersey Shore. emmm——————— —QGet your job work dome here. FARMER was awakened , one night by the reflec. tion of light on the . He ran to the win. dow in time to see the tail light of a retreating truck and in a glance saw that his barn doors were open. bi Too late to pursue, the farmer telephoned his Jwghbors and the sheriff. It was not more than an hour before the truck was halted and its occupants captured. They had attempted to steal thirty bu of wheat, harness, and a variety of farm implements. an 4 Nt $/. The Modern Farm Home os/ Has «a TELEPHONE Bank Account, with the maintenance of A a proper balance not only gives one money in hand for present needs, but what is much more valuable, ‘establishes a certain credit with the Bank. The banker knows this, and prospect- ive borrowers who tell him they have no bank account, show a lack of business sense, and are at a disadvantage. There are few people, who at one time or another, do not have to borrow— often the need is urgent. Relations with a strong Bank will al- ways help. The account may be small, but it puts one on better terms with those from whom one wishes to borrow. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. CL Men's Suits{that, we stand back of —as low as $18.50. It’s the Fau- ble Store that, tells you this. We also show better suits priced from $22.50 and upwards, that we, the Fauble Store, say to you: These are America’s Best Clothes priced to show a saving of from Marion | [I : $5.00 to $10.00. A look will prove this to you beyond a doubt. Will you let, us show you ? Faybles = bh nd? engl od Tom gimme fg) om he ELIE] HE | 4 | we | =0 ELEN IL CUE SRE Er = L IE SLIT ld