SE —— Bruorwaiatdan —Facing a billion dollar deficit’ for this year the United States treas- | ury will sing to the cotk-eyed world: | God Save the Great Engineer. —Sunday base-ball has been kill- ed thrice this session in the Legisla- ture. It's the cat with nine lives! and is right back for another slay- ing. —The surest way to hold your job in times like these is to give loyal- | ty and the equivalent in work for every dollar your employer gives you, —We are not as much interested in | the fact that President Hoover gave | a rubber cigar to the Untiedt boy's father as we are in knowing who gave it to Herb. —By the way, who do you suppose has the soldiers’ bonus money by this time and where is the prosper- ity that the payments were sup-| posed to produce? : —We've been stopped four times within a month by ubiquitous patrol- men. Why they are pickin’ on us we don't know, but things that are picked too much are apt to get sore. | —Times are hard, but whe thinks | of hard times on circus days? With | Mother's day, two circus days and Memorial day all scheduled for this month May ought to be quite an] eventful one for both old and young. | —The United States Supreme Court has ruled that New York has a right to share the water of the Delaware with Pennsylvania and New Jersey. They must be reform- ing in New York. We didn't know they cared enough about water to go to law over it. —Bellefonte has lost a loyal son. y/ » VOL. 76. RIL WEATHER SUMMARY SHOWS NORMAL RAINFALL. The month of April, noted for showers and the real beginning of spring, was normal this year in most respects. The monthly mean temperature was 45.7 degrees, almost the same as last year. In 1929 it was three degrees higher. The monthly mean temperature for 12 years of record for April in Bellefonte.—1901 to 1912 inclusive,—was 50.9 degrees or, as usual, about 3 degrees higher than the average of 3 years of record at the airport. The highest temper- ature this year was 76 degrees the 13th and the lowest 24 degrees on the 12th, making an absolute range of 52 degrees. The greatest range in temperature for any day was 47 degrees on the 13th and the least was 6 degrees on the 23rd. The coldest day was the 23rd, with a mean temperature of 34 degrees, the 20th was warmest, with a mean temperature of 62 degrees. There were 14 days during which the tem- perature was 32 degrees or less. During the 3 years of record at the present location of the weather | | bureau station, the highest tempera- | on BELLEFONTE, PA. Milk Production Has Man Worries for Farmers | Because of the prolonged depression in business there has been a consequent falling off in the consumption of milk and its by-products. The result has been an unusual tightening up on the strictures regu- lating the conditions under which dairymen must proceed in the hous- ing and care of their herds and conditioning of the milk for shipment to the receiving stations. During the time when there was a strong market for milk there was no “hair splitting” on this matter. Lately, however, inspectors have been rigidly enforcing the rule to the nth degree, in some in- | stances almost to the point of ridiculousness. This sudden severity of inspection is apparently not so much to effect better quality milk as it is to furnish excuse to disqualify the output and save the re- ceiving stations the embarrassment of admitting that they cannot handle what is being offered them. While everyone is concerned about the quality of milk that comes into his or her home it seems strange to the average producer that milk that was acceptable in December is taboo in April, Farmers have been put to considerable expense in white washing barns, con- creting stables, building milk houses, providing for cooling and cleans- ing apparatus, and what not. In some instances, because of failures of the roughage crops dur- ing the past season, they have been compelled to buy practically all the feed that their herds consume. With the monthly milk check falling off, either because of low fat content or low grades as to con- dition, there is very little net between the monthly check and the monthly feed bill. In consequence few of them are in financial posi- tion to undertake the expense that is involved in carrying out the conditions laid down by inspectors who have suddenly become so hyper-critical. It is an unfortunate situation. For a decade those who beat their breasts and shout their concern for the welfare of the farmer Beoddy evening and Jee 3 niche ut 33 a Jecords for Ste Cor | have been telling him that his only financial salvation lies in his BL oe gh in 1915 peta in 1925, gg dairy herd. Naturally the farmer has followed the suggestion to the P n, true, know | grees again ? point where the dairy business is apparently over done and now the town better or whose life has been in 1888 and 1902. The lowest tem- All the while the farmer has been subjected to the most rigid more to its credit. He is gone, but perature of record for April at State) 0." ‘Nothing has been taken on faith from him. On the Wg Hove the iwemory of 4 vourteous, OSIg® wig 1 Segree shove amy in| other hand he has delivered his milk and had to accept the returns as unobtrusive gentleman to cherish. to 1927 inclusive, the minimum tem.| © Weight, fat-content and quality without any other satisfaction —When Governor Pinchot comes perature reached 20 degrees or lessin than the knowledge that if he didn't he could “like it or he could up here to ask Centre county what April, but of all these the lowest | lump it” it is going to do to Semator Scottif | wo. 1x qecrees. No records of high | Lately it has been discovered that some milk receiving stations he doesn’t roll over and jump through | .,4 1, temperatures in Bellefonte | Dave not been as fair with their patrons as they might have been every time the Governor cracks the |, . oo anie. and the Department of Agriculture has inaugurated a belated move- whip we hope some-one in his audi- The total monthly precipitation | ment to make the gander eat the sauce that he thought good for the ence asks him why it 1s any more |... 3g inches, of which 0.39 inch| 8°0se only. : : Decessary for the Senator to stickto| Loy from melted snow. The great- | The discovery during recent months of irregularities in several the terms of his “satisfactory talk” ...° 0 ..¢ of precipitation in 24 Plants buying milk from farmers on the butterfat basis, has prompted than it is for the Governor to stick |, =... 0.0 198 inches on the 22nd A the Department to inaugurate a thorough going check-up on the 1o.blp promise. to reduce automeile |, i" gary, The total snowfall was methods of testing and the performance of testers in milk plants senses. . 3.9 inches and the greatest amount| throughout the Commonwealth. 5s —Mr. Thomas L. Chadbourne's in 24 hours was 2.4 inches on the | There are over 1300 milk plants receiving stations in Pennsylva- picture was on the front pages of 6th and 7th. At the Airport, in| Dia and a large proportion of these pay for milk and cream on the all the : Mr. | April, . 1929, the... sot OrInt: DAME, <= SEE io Lo RO Re Oi a —_— ERE Ee i vga J Sy “It is obvious,” officials point out, “that a great injustice can be ican banker and because he happened depression. Right in this column we said the very same thing four weeks ago and no one paid any at- tention to it at all, —Maybe it was only accident that Governor Pinchot's visit here was timed for circus day. The Governor just loves the ballyhoo and he'll be stealing all the thunder he can from exh § g g ; § ESSERE Hl 25% escape the conclusion that Prohibi- tion is riding for a fall. And for the very same reason that the li- censed liquor traffic was thrown. "The arrogance of the liquor inter- ests precipitated the Prohibition movement. Flushed with victory Prohibitionists have gone too far and their fanaticism is just as re- pellant to the masses of people who are neither wet victions attend the same church and when their minister takes sides in a political campaign some of them are bound to be offended. It would measureable amount of precipitation, 0.01 inch or more,—and 16 days with a trace or more. The mean monthly relative humidity was 679% | of the possible. The mean monthiy | cloudiness, during daylight hours, was 60% of the possible, with 11 clear days, 4 partly cloudy and 15 cloudy. Light fog occurred on the 1st to 5th inclusive and on the 7th. | Heavy frost occurred on the 24th and 30th, but no damage was re- ported to growing vegetation in the vicinity‘ of the station. The prevailing wind was from the southwest, with a maximum of 40 miles per hour from the southwest on the 26th for a period of 5 minutes or more. Gusts of one minute or more duration, attaining a velocity of 46 miles per hour, occurred at the same time, The corrected, mean monthly, sea- level barometric pressure was 30.02 inches; the highest was 30.54 inches on the 12th and the lowest 28.20 inches on the 1st, or a range of 1.34 inches. No thunder storms ocurred during the month, which is unusual, and particularly so considering the amount of precipitation which occur- red. In 1930 there were three thun- derstorms, the earliest occurring on the 13th of the month. These data considered in con- junction with records of adjacent lo- calities, covering a period of several years, form an interesting ccmpari- son. The joint average of 12 years of record of precipitation, made by Mr. ‘Kurtz, in Bellefonte, from 1901 to 1912 inclusive, and 7 record at the Western Penitentiary from 1916 to 1923.—(record for 1921 missing) —is 4.01 inches for April, At Flem- ing the average precipitaiton in April for the years 1859 to 1867 inclusive was 4.29 inches. The average of 42 years record of precipitation at State College;—1888 to 1929 inclu- sive, is 8.49 inches. The records for State College are of course the more dependable because of continuity and duration, but it must not be inferred that the amount of precipitation at or near Bellefonte is the same. Dif- ferences in elevation, location in a valley with mountain ridges closely adjacent, and other factors, influence precipitation to the extent that we probably have actually more than at State College, which has a more open the contribution of thun- derstorms alone excepted. The month of April is, in this lo- cality, almost invariably the last month in the spring during which snow occurs, and on the average, about one year in three, there is no snow or only a trace. Occasionally, however, there has been snow in May. worked on the dairy industry by incorrect tests. Thus, under-reading the test, a small fraction of one per ceut means a loss of eight to ten cents per hundred pounds of milk to the producer.” “Every effort is being made to cooperate with the producers’ ONE NEVER CAN TELL associations whereby any suspected irregularities may be brought to the attention of the Department. The dairy experts will then make prompt investigations’ and where unlawful activities are discovered prosecutions will be instituted accordingly. Always it is easy to hit a man when he is down, so that now— est years that the industry has known in Centre county is perhaps the logical time to put them on the rack and force conditions on them that in some details are of questionable benefit to anyone. | | the law has imposed upon were; 22 inches in April, 1918, in Bellefonte, 17 inches at Center Hall in 1918 and 20.5 inches at State Col- lege in 1894. In April, 1918 also, there was 14.8 inches at State Col- lege. It should be noted that none of these records include measurements for April, 1928, which probably ex- ceed all others. H. J. PARKER, Meteorologist ——Senator Fess will continue as chairman of the Republican National committee for two reasons. First no- body else would have the job and changing too frequently excites dis- trust, ——“Indefinite postponement does not mean a thing to the House of Representatives in Harrisburg. Par- liamentary law has no significance if it runs counter to the wishes of the Governor. —It's like “bearding the lion in his den.” Mr. Pinchot will make his first attack on the Public Service Commission in chairman Alney's home town. barns and milk houses, it is State Department of nest For years the farmers have had to blindly accept every handicap more exquisite than realization will be unless we carry one with us. ——Drunken drivers killed three NO. 19. WHOSE LITTLE GIRL IS IN THE HOSPITAL i BY JOHN M. FLEMING | “My daddy ain't had no work for |a long time” The speaker was a little girl of |seven. She was recovering from an |attack of pneumonia in the Centre | County hospital, She had been there | almost two weeks. It would te nec- |essary for her to remain another | fortnight before her recovery would | be complete. Her surroundings were ideal. The room was spotlessly clean. A screen shaded the pale blue eyes from the rays of the morning sun but did not obstruct the view of (the town and the mountains in the background. A nurse brought in a of chocolate milk and the | mouth of the little girl with four | front teeth missing did not allow the fluid to stop running through the | glass straw till the last drop had | disappeared and nothing remained but the ice. She was a charity patient. | Depression had taken its toll and the | Centre County hospital had come to | the rescue. | During the year ending December | 31, 1930, three hundred and thirty- | four patients were treated who did ‘not have the funds necessary to pay i E -3 3 8 8 five modern machines have been add- greatly aided in raising the standard of the institution. Two sun lamps have been added to the equipment and are for the use of the people of the county at a small cost. 4135 tests were made in the laboratory during. ment served 69,302 meals. 408 X-Ray pictures were taken. The laboratory and X-Ray departments are open for the use of the public at the minim i want to be in. Fate, however, plays peculiar tricks and it may be neces- sary for us to become patients. Man- Brown tells of a boy with whom talked in State College during the drives in some previous i g : FEIEEEIERE ChE g g : 3 E : 8 —Senator Smoot thinks the Grundy tariff law is beneficent legis- lation. But he also thinks that polyg- amy is a normal form of society. ——Hoover's proposal to cut arma- ments as a remedy for industrial stagnation is simply another way for “passing the buck,” —— A 8 a prohibition crusader Governor Pinchot is enlarging his area of activities so as to include the whole country. ——Ghandi star it is pants as having become a to be hoped he will part of his raiment. "| Heights, N. Y., had checked out ed in the laboratory which have the past year. The dietary depart- | The hospital is the last place We | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE | —Amelia Streussing and her husband, | Raymond, have filed suit for $25,000 | damages against the G. C. Murphy Com- | pany store at Jeannette. Mrs, Streussing | claims she was injured when she fell | on the oiled floor of the store, last Feb ruary 16. —The Allegheny Gas company drill |ed in its second producing well in the | Tioga county gas field in Farmington | township last Friday afternoon at a | depth of 4096 feet. The well came in | with an open flow estimated at 25,000, | 000 cubic feet daily. This well is about 11000 feet from the discovery well which | marked the field in September, 1930. —Two confidence men alleged to have | swindled $550 from Steve Matusky, 49, | farmer, of near Uniontown are being | sought by police. The men gave Matus- ky a package purporting to be $5.000 as hiz share in a Texas oil well in ex- | change for the man's savings. When !the strangers left Matusky found he had received three $1 bills and a roll: of newspaper clippings. —Michael Evanchick, 15, and Benjamin Rodkey, 16, both of Coalport, are being held in the Cambria county jail charged | with robbing the Fallen Timber post of- fice on Saturday night. According to | state police, the boys have confessed the | robbery, which netted them about $100 in postal funds and some groceries from the | store of Perry E. Glass, who is also post- master at Fallen Timber. | —The Scranton Republican, oldest daily | published in Scranton, has announced the | appointment of former Congressman Lau- | rence H. Watres as president of the Scran- | ton Republican Publishing company. He | succeeds his father, Colonel L. A. Wat- | res, who is retiring because of pressure | trom other business. Lieutenant Colonel Watres, in addition to becoming presi- | dent of the publishing company, will be editor-in-chief. —~Worried over $2,000, all the money he had, having been stolen from him on his wedding day, Joseph Janowski, 89 years old, of Mahanoy city, attempted to take his own life. Standing on the edge of 75-foot mine hole he shot himself head with a revolver and rolled bottom of the hole, say. now in the Locust tain hospi Shenandoah in a serious condition, his prospective bride iz almost broken. —wW. T. Feaser, hotel porter burg, made himself $10 the other He was cleaning a room from which Mrs, E. E. Huber, of Jackson Epes esff in g few minutes earlier. He found a : : ; “Here's Beit i : g ; tt cia L that Arizona, claimants for the rewards amounting to $3,200, intended entering suit for the money. Seven residents of to the reward. . —Another record went: the -way -of all . records last Friday. It was broken. At least Pittsburgh police claim it was. boys helped | themselves to 15 dozen ice cream ples, | from an ice cream company's truck. Fif- is | teen minutes later, after the driver dis- | covered the pies to be among the miss- |ing and notified police, patrolman Arthur | Baker found the four on the roof of a | nearby house. Eight dozen of the pies had been eaten, he said, and the boys | were still going strong. —Mrs. B. Wayne Simcox, 74, of Sun- | bury, was burned from head to foot on Monday, and died in the hospital soon after. She was alone in her kitchen and dropped a newspaper into the range. A sudden spurt of flame fired her dress. Ray Walling, a neighbor, rushed into the home and found the woman standing at the kitchen sink attempting to smother her flaming garb with water. He was burned about the hands. Mrs. Simcox's death ended a life of sorrow. Several years ago two of her children were drowned in the Susquehanna River. —Dr. 8S. Paul Taylor, 45, of Altoona, saved his own life early on Sunday, when he participated in two automobile mis- the way to Wilmington, Del., ol 11 if : i i H 2 3 g jee ; 4 EE + TIE ils