CR i aL ORE \ aa vy ) Bellefonte, Pa., July 18, 1930. I ———————————— USE AIRPLANE TO . KILL EAGLE FIOCK.' Using a swift training plane to “peat the birds at their own game,” a Texas flier and an expert marks- man recently annihilated in several | hours a flock of eagles which for a | year of more had menaced sheep in | the El Paso district. In so doing they not only solved one of the great | difficulties of the sheep growing in- dustry in the Lome Star State, put | at the same time developed a novel use for small aeroplanes. The story of the plane hunt, as told by R. P. Langford, manager of the R. and L. Airway and Gordon M. Porter, an El Paso newspaper man who witnessed the spectacular eagle hunt, has just reached the of- fices of the Consolidated Aircraft Corporation. According to these men, the eagles, some of them with a wing spread of nine feet, had evidently selected the sheep ranches near Paso asa choice spot for their pred- atory activities. Soaring lazily 1n wide circles, about 5,000 feet up, one of the huge birds would sudden- ly swoop to the ground. Others would follow and before ranchmen could do anything about it, several young lambs, worth $300, were car- ried off in this manner. In a single season stock valued at more than $2,000 was lost. Shotguns fired by watchmen were long ago proved worthless, as the eagles, guided by unerring instict, seemed to know how to keep out of range of such weapons, The situation had become serious, and the sheep growers were at their wits’ end. This was before Clarence E. Ro- bey, pilot, and H. S. Bernhardt, marksman, both of El Paso, Texas, took to the air in their Consolidated Fleet training plane and cleaned out the entire eagle flock. Using a plane that could out-climb, out maneuver and out-dive even these birds, the two men accomplished in a single day what the owner of the ranch had been unable to do in two years. Bernhardt, an [El Paso motorcy- cle patrolman, was selected to do the shooting because of his ability to fire accurately from any position. An automatic shotgun, using heavy buckshot, was the weapon decided upon. Early one morning, Robey and Bernhardt circled over the ranch for nearly an hour, flying at an altitude of more than 10,000 feet. Soon they saw an eagle circling lazily a few hundred feet below them and about a quarter of a mile away. Robey turned the plane to- ward the bird to bring shooting range. Just as Bernhardt was about to shoot, the bird as suddenly began to drop. It caught sight of a young lamb. Putting the plane into a power dive, the men and bird raced downward for thousands of feet, circling an swerving, the eagle with its eye on the sheep, the men watching the eagle. When the bird had come within a few hundred feet of the ground it stopped in its headlong drop. Robey jerked back on the stick and as he leveled off there were three quick reports from Bernhardt’s gun. The eagle dropped dead. Sometimes the program was var- ied, but with all the same result— a dead eagle. No one bird thus sighted escaped. A few of the eagles tried to fly away from the ship or dodge it, butin every case the plane was able to out-maneuver them. Once or twice Bernhardt tried shoot- ing over the top of the wing of the ship striking the bird from below. It worked once, but the bird came ‘so close to falling into the propellor it was decided best to shoot over the side and down. ’ At the end of eight hours of hard pad ut flying nine birds had been illed. MONTANA CLAIMS FIRST AERIAL SHEEP HERDER. First the name of Earl Vance was synonymous with aviation in Montana; then it became in the last few years associated with sheep raising, a ‘highly remunerative pur- suit with prevailing wool prices. Now the erstwhile Miles City (Mont.) pioneer pilot has brought his two loves together, and he is an aerial sheep herder. Vance in his idle moments runs the principal air taxi service there. He also owns several flocks of «“woolies.” But his sheep, as all good sheep do in the Rockies, have a habit of straying, so Earl hops in his singleseater biplane and goes a hunting. To date he has recaptured three recalcitrant bands of sheep that strayed from their grazing grounds. “They're the easiest things in the world to spot from the air,” re- marks Vance. “I don't know the special ba-ba of my bands, but if I see a bunch that is in a pocket of the mountains alone, I know darned well they are mine.” PENN STATE SENDS CATTLE TO CHINA. Penn State shipped a Holstein and two Jersey heifers to Lingnan Uni- versity at Canton, China, last week. For many years the college has been interested in the agricultural college at the Chinese institution. Two Penn State graduates are lo- cated at the school, G. V. Groff, a 1907 graduate, being dean and L. M. Zook, a 1929 graduate, serving as instructor. Dean R. L. Watts, of the Penn State School of Agriculture, long served as a trustee of the in- stitution and chapel offerings of Penn State students have gone to finance the work, —— | red umbrella—all to match. ‘ular conductor it within | —Rear the Watchman. CLOTHES OR HOME. «Forward ribbons,” said the motor- man. «Forward carpetsweepers,” said the conductor, and then they both grinned and the car slowed down at the corner for a good-looking young fellow in a smart rain coat, and shoes that the would undoubted- ly call “classy,” and a pretty girl in a red coat and a red hat and a Nice-looking young couple they were, Well dressed, prosperous good humored, smiling—I wondered why the motorman and the conduc- tor grinned when they saw them waiting for the car—and in the af- ternoon when I went home on the car I asked the conductor about it. You see, I've known that partic- for a good many years, and every once in a while he tells me the news about transfers | and wages and things—sometimes we even discuss the stock market or the newest form of some new re- ligion. Nice fellow the conductor—and in- | telligent—has a nice little wife and two children. He commutes to his | little home in the suburbs and he | carries a picture of his wife and! the two children in his pocket—a snapshot he took from the front of his little house one day. i He grinned again when I asked him about “forward ribbons.” «Oh well,” he said, I'm just kind | of old fashioned I guess, that's a nice young couple—they ride down to work with us every day. «He's in ribbons, and she’s in household goods. They have a couple | of furnished rooms down the street ' here, and sometimes when she’s been to the dentist or something and they don’t come together, she asks me if he’s been along yet. «Nice little thing, I'd like to see her in a home of her own, that’s all, but I guess she wouldn't care about that, she’s got to have clothes you know, and shoes—the right kind ~ and silk stockings, and, of course the young fellow can’t ‘buy them for her, so she keeps her job and they hurry home at night and buy chipped beef, and baked beans, Or codfish cakes, or potato salad, at the delicatessen run home, and make a pot of coffee—and that’s that. “At night they go to the pictures or window shopping—they seem to hate to stay at home, they're just like thousands of other young couples, I guess. «] went home the other night and told my wife I thought she ought to go to work and help make the last few payments on the house. : I knew ofa good job for her, I! said—say, I thought she was going ° to throw the coffee pot at me. «She had a good job when I mar- ried her, but she’s old-fashioned, too, and she’d rather have a home, and a couple of kids than the best job in the world. Not much class to her, I guess, nor to me, either. «Well, it’s a good thing we are | not all alike, isn’t it?” «Jt certainly is,” said I, and when | I walked down the street I kept) thinking of the conductor, and the little home he is buying and his | wife who hasn't ‘‘class” enough to | care much about clothes, and his | children and the new Airedale pup | somebody gave him the other i and the way the conductor looks when he tells you about them—dear me, I am afraid I am hopelessly old fashioned, too. Are you—by any chance? MOST EXECUTIONS OCCUR BEFORE SUNRISE. It is impossible to say just why dawn is the favorite time for exe- cutions. The custom of putting con- | demned persons to death early in the morning is very old and one writer suggests that it may be a survival of the practices of prehis- toric sunworshippers who offered human sacrifices at sunrise. An- other writer thinks the practice is of military origin. Persons con- demned to death in the army were shot as early as possible on the specified day, which was just as soon asit was light enough for the firing squad to see to take accurate aim. Be this as it may, there are several good reasons for following the prac- | tice at the present time. The day | on which an execution is to take | place is set by the court; the exact | hour is generally left to the discre- | tion of prison officials. Usually the | unpleasant task is performed when it will interfere least with the | routine of prison life, which is as early as possible in the day, when | the prisoners are in cells and most of them are asleep. A pending | execution depresses all the inmates of a prison and if the condemned | prisoner were electrocuted or hanged ' during the day or early in the night | the other prisoners might be incited | to a demonstration if not a riot. ! Where executions are public the | number of morbid spectators is re-: duced by having it at dawn, | i | MANY WILD DEER VISIT PENN STATE NATURE CAMP, | With the conclusion next week of | the first nature camp conducted by | the summer. session of the Penn- sylvania State College, the second | group of naturalists will move into the camp located in the Tussey mountains. Registrations are still being received for the second camp, according to Professor George R. Green, director of the camp, and there probably will be places avail- able for students until the opening day of the camp, July 16. The camp will continue until August 8. The present group have seen a | great many deer, Professor Green said, in addition to a number of | smaller animals. The deer seem | to be more numerous this year than in former seasons. The camp is lo- cated between two tracts of virgin forest, both public preserves, which makes for an abundance of wild life. | —_ Read the Watchman and get all the news. “| NEED 10,000 PILOTS ‘of military | cooperate intelligently with ground FOR MILITARY DUTY. For a major emergency the Unit- ed States should have 10,000 train- ed military pilots upon whom it could call for immediate service, in the opinion of Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet, chief of the army air corps. Of this number there should be 2,500 in actual service in th2 regular army, he believes. In testifying before a subcommit- tee of the house appropriations com- mittee during consideration of the War Department appropriations bill. General Fechet declared that there are only 4,000 first class pilots in . the country who are fit for military service without special training. These men are in the army and na- vy air services or are kept in con- tinuous training through the re- serve system. There are 1,064 re- serve pilots ready for emergency duty, he said . i The ordinary commercial pilot who has had no military training is not available for emergency duty, General Fechet pointed out. Before he can be used he must be given a general military training. Many commercial flyers never can be qualified as military pilots because they fail to possess qualifications which a fighting pilot must have, but which are not required for or- | dinary flying. The military pilot must fly in- | stinctively and not mechanically, he . declared. He must be able to fly , tight, close formations and to carry | out his work without endangering i the other men. “Some men,” said the air corps chief, “cannot fly that way, because they just absolutely cannot fly close. Their nervous makeup prevents them from doing it. Others, when they are close, are so occupied in watch- ing the other ships that they make poor formation flyers.” In addition the miltary pilot must know the use of machine guns, the | use of bomb sights and the drop- ping of bombs, aerial photography and observation work. He must have military training, ground work on engines and instruments and navigation. He must know enough tactics and operation to forces. Many .commercial pilots would require from two to eight months training to become good ' military pilots, Genral Fechet es- ' timated. PREDICTS COLLAPSE OF STONE MEMORIAL. Samuel H. Venable, former owner of Stone Mountain, issued a warn- ing that Stone Mountain, the South’s unfinished Confederate Memorial, was doomed to fall and smash. He said a rift in the stone behind the . massive sculpture of General Robert E. Lee's horse would ultimately _ cause the work to collapse. Oh, Yes! LU 71-16-tf BER? Call Bellefonte 432 W. R. SHOPE Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing mm CONTROL OF APHIDS ON MAPLE SUGAR SEASON WAS ABOVE AVERAGE. The maple syrup and sugar season Many housewives have asked the in Pennsylvania this year was one county agent for methods of con- of the best in the past decade, ac- | trolling aphids or plant lice which cording to the Federal State crop |.re quite numerous this year on reporting service, Pennsylvania de- | roses, indoor plants and garden partment of agriculture. plants. These common pests may The season opened in January and | be recognized and controlled as fol- continued an average of 4.7 weeks 10WS: Aphids or plant lice are small, compared with the usually short | soft bodied, sucking insects which season Of 2.6 weeks last year. range .in color from a yellowish Weather conditions were rather | Breen through green to black. favorable throughout and exception- | Winged and wingless forms often ally good in March in most locali-| work on plants at the same time. ties. The a u Faused by 0. 565, | Withdrawing of plan ces whic Bosse Siler of is 3 fa pea as: 10 usually result in a deformation of 1929 but more than twice as much | the p sugar and almost three times as | much syrup was made. According | to the official estimates, 87,000 | pounds of sugar and 224,000 gallons | of syrup were made. In terms of | sugar, the total production this | ear amounted to 1,879,000 ds ! Sompared with 723,000 Tig | nicotine sulphate and one cup pant 1929. The average production per | of hydrated lime should be add tree this season—3.333 pounds—is to two quarts of water for spray- ing. The amount of nicotine us one of the highest on record in the however, should be increased in or- Commnwealth and exceeds that of | der to take care of the more resist- any other State for the present year. | Production per tree in other States {ant forms Which SOIeti 68 Wig is as follows: Massachusetts, 2.80 | Pe2% Time ness © application . Js pounds; New York, 2.60; New Hamp- important. ntrol measures sho shire, 2.35; Ohio, 2.47; Wisconsin, start as soon as the aphids appear. 2.27; Michigan, 2.61. Several treatments may be Teces- Since there was little rain or sary, especially if lice are very snow during the season, the sap abundant. Nicotine applications will was reported as very good and the be most effective if made when the quality of the product was placed daily temperature’s average is above at 96 compared with 92 a year ago. 70 degrees fahrenheit. Prices reported for sugar were | ——— higher this year than last but last READY MADE HOME SATISFIES BEAVER. year’s crop of syrup, despite the lower quality, sold at about six cents more per gallon. This year, Frank P. Plessinger, a surveyor for the Game Commission, has re- ported a colony of beavers in Wyom- sugar averaged 33 cents per pound and syrup $2.08 per gallon, the re- ing county which apparently found a ready made home and dam for port indicated. Pennsylvania now stands fifth in their use. The new colony was found in production of maple products being Stony Brook using a flat rock about outranked, in order named, by Ver- mont, New York, Ohio, and Michi- gan. 20 feet in diameter asa shelter. The rck is tilted against the bank, pro- viding ‘the under wave entrance which the beavers demand. The depth of water at the place made a dam unnecessary. the plants may ed. Leaves Spraying with Nicotine sulphate (black leaf 40) is effective against these pests. One teaspoonful of The average salary of a Congrega- tional minister in New Hampshire is $1,599 a year. “Why don’t they (ministers) save something for a rainy day?” a la once saidto The beaver colony is subsisting on a minister's wife. ‘““My goodness, the aspen growing nearby. deacon!” she replied. “In the min- __Subscribe for the Watchman. I. ister’s family it rains every day. free wheeling is here! You don't have to touch the clutch, 12S TITRA Ef i ) Hi Wl 7 i 0 NL Free Wheeling—the greatest of Stude- baker’s many impressive contributions to the industry’s progress! Studebaker is the first American car to offer free wheeling. Like many marvelous engineering advances, free wheeling is simplicity itself. Imagine a car in which you don’t have to touch the clutch, except to start or back up! Think of being able to shift from high to second at forty . . . fifty miles per hour, and never touch the clutch! Consider the satisfaction of enjoying these motoring marvelsina seasoned champion Eight, with a saving of 12 per cent on gas, 20 per centon oil—even more World Champion PRESIDENT EIGHT excep! fo sfarf or back up! in heavy traffic! Consider, too, theeconomy of less carbon, less strain and wear on engine, transmission and all driving units! You literally glide along. Your car momentum never forces your engine — there is no sensation of “piling up” when you decelerate. Your car is surprisingly quiet in every speed . . . uncannily silent when you're free wheeling. Almost incredible as these statements may seem to you, a drive in the New Series Studebaker President or Com: mander Eight will prove them to you. We promise you the thrill of your life. NEW SERIES World Famous COMMANDER EIGHT Now 122 horsepower, 130-inchand 1 36-inch wheelbases Now 101 horsepower, 124-inch wheelbase $1850 to $2600 at the factory $1585 to 1785 at the factory Other Studebaker models now as low as $795 at the factory GEORGE A. Breon’s Garage, Millheim, Pa.l STUDEBAKER EIGHTS ne N Loo eries BEEZER, Bellefonte, Pa. Keller's Service Station, StateiCollege, Pa. ROSES AND VEGETABLES. 1 | | art of the plant attacked. When : | the insects occur in large numbers | be entirely destroy-' that are attacked curl or become discolored and drop. | oC ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts. Office, room 18 Crider'’s Ex- change. Bi-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON, —AH -at- Law, Bellefonte, P: ot atten. a. Prompt tion given all business entrusted to his care. No. 5, East Ba Eo M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple oot .— Attorney-at-L a w, G. RUNKLE Consultation ae Zhglish and Ger- man. ce in s Bxshalin; Bellefonte, Pa. ~ PHYSICIANS S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residence. R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. State 66-11 Holmes D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames placed and lenses matched. Casebeer Bic: , High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 1-23-t VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, yy De Se Bara, State ve ay except Saturday, in the Zarbrick building opposite the Court House, Wednesday afternoons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Bell Phone. an-40 FEEDS! Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds > per 100lb. Wagners 16% Dairy - $2.00 Wagner's 209 Dairy - 2.20 Wagner's 329% Dairy - 2.50 Wagners’'s Egg mash - 2.70 Wagner's Pig meal - 2.70 Wagner's Scratch feed - 2.20 Wagner's Med. Scratch feed - 2.40 Wagner's Chick feed - 2.50 Wagner's Horse feed with molas- ses - - - 5 Wagner's Winter bran - 1.50 Wagner's winter Middlings - 1.70 Wayne 329% Dairy - 2.70 Wayne 249% Dairy - 2.45 Wayne Egg Mash - - 3.00 Wayne calf meal - 4.25 Wayne all mash starter - 8.90 Wayne all mash grower - 3.40 Purina 349% Dairy - 2.80 Purina 249 Dairy - 2.60 Oil meal - - - 2.80 Cotton Seed meal - 2.50, Gluten feed - - - 2.40 Hominy feed - - 2.00 Fine ground Alfalfa meal - 2.25 Meat Scrap 45% - - 4.00 Tankage 60% - - 4.00 Fish meal - - - 4.00 Salt fine - - - 1.20 Oyster shell - - - 1.00 Grit -- ‘- 1.00 Feeding Molasses 1.75 per H Cow Spray = ie 1.50 per G Let us grind your corn and oats and make up your Feeds with Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Alfalfa Meal, Gluten Feed and Bran Molas- ses. We will make delivery of two ton lots. ‘No charge, When You Want Good Bread or Pastry Flour USE “OUR BEST” OR «GOLD COIN” FLOUR C.Y. Wagner & Co. inc BELLEFONTE, PA, 75-1-1yr. —— Cn —— Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces PINAL AS ESAS SAAS Full Line of Pipe and Fit-- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully ana Promptly Furnished 08-105-tt.