Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 18, 1931, Image 3

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    Bemocwaic Yate,
Bellefonte, Pa., September 18, 1931.
WAR VETERANS DYING
AT RATE OF 37 A DAY |
World War soldiers whose dis-
ability came directly or indirectly
from injury in combat are dying in
veteran's hospitals at the rate of 37
a day, a survey by the American
Legion discloses.
Each dying veteran leaves an
average of two children. In 1930
there were 200,000 orphans of the
World War scattered throughout
the United States, many of them in
need. Only 37,000 were getting any
kind of government aid.
Mrs. Wilma Hoyal, of Douglas,
Ariz., president of auxiliaries of the
Amercan Legion, who is now tour-
ing the Uniled States seeking bet-
ter treatment of disabled veterans’
thinks that the peak of veterans’
disability will not be reached for
another ten years.
“The veterans in the hospitals re-
ceive adequate treatments, so far as
I can observe,” she said. “But
there are thousands of men with
serious disability who can't be ac-
commodated in the hospitals.”
“As the war itself fades with the
years it is harder and harder for
the veteran with a disability that
was late in showing itself to prove
its connection with the war. That
is one of our hard problems.”
Mrs. Hoyal has been working on
the problem for nine years of afiil-
iation with the national auxiliary
organization and has seen it grow
greater as the years pass.
The first thing on the auxiliary’s
program as far as Mrs. Hoyal is
concerned is assisting the sabled
veterans. She thinks that in the
West, where they have less of the
fully developed community agencies
of relief that have become establish-
ed in the East, the legion and auxil.
iary feel the full weight of relief to
incapacitated men.
This is especially true in Arizona
she says, where 97 per cent of the
sick veterans are natives of other
States. Arizona's climate brings in
a larger problem with veterans than
any other State.
“RIGHT” RELIGION
WOULD END SLUMP
The right religious spirit would
lift the depression, Chaplain Ray-
mond C. Knox, of Columbia Univer
sity, declared in telling of the
growth in summer-session religious
activities.
“None of the larger national prob-
lems are insoluble,” Chaplain Knox
said. “The co-operative spirit of ap-
proach, coupled wh a clear-cut
ideal and a definite motive power
can effect a solution. Religion is
the motive power. With a genuine
ideal of service and a new spirit of
forgiveness, all peoples could work
harmoniously together for a com-
mon good. f course, this would
mean a willingness to forego some
personal advantage or gain. While
this may sound like idealism, there
is nothing more practical than an
ideal.”
All the courses, services and con-
ferences on religious topics at Co-
lumbia are designed to bring religion
into relationship with the life and
needs of men, women and the world
today, Chaplain Knox declared. He
asserted that there was a steady In-
crease in the number of those inter-
ested in religion.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS,
Robert W. Roan, et ux, to Egal T
Risan, et ux, tract in Bellefonte;
$8,000.
Arthur Ridgway, et ux, to Citi
zen's Building and Loan Asso. tract
in South Philipsburg; $1.
J. W. Henszey, et ux, to J. Eu-
gene Deitrich, et ux, tract in State
College; $8,500.
Centre County Farmer's
Asso. to Guy D. Stearns,
College Twp.; $400.
S. L. Fulton, et ux, to Chester L
Fulton, et ux, tract in Mileshurg;
$1.
Thomas B. Beaver, et ux. to Rob-
ert W. Roan, tract in Spring Twp.;
$1.
George ri. Shugerts to Roland C.
Young, tract in Harris Twp.; $150.
George E. Rider, et ux, to L. H.
Co-op
tract ip
Rider, et ux, tract in Ferguson
Twp.; $1.
John H. Cowher, et ux, to Anna
Steele, et bar, tract in Worth Twp.;
$1.
Fred J. Gearhart, et ux, to Wini-
fred H. Dodd, et bar, tract in Fer-
guson Twp.; $1,060.
Nora E. Spong, et bar, to Elsie R.
Neidig, et bar, tract in Boggs Twp.;
$1.
L. Frank Mayes, treasurer, to
Commissioners of Centre County.
tract in Haines Twp.; $3.18.
Reuben Caris, e. ux, to Harriet J
Ulrich, tract in Potter Twp.; $75.
H. Leigh Ebright, Adm. to Har-
riet J. Ulrich, tract in Potter Twp.
and Centre Hall; $1,425.
———_ A —————
—Chief Joseph of the Nez Perces
Indians once made a striking re-
sponse to a United States Commis-
sioner who had asked him whether
he did not want schools:
“No,” said the noble red man.
“Why do you not want schools?”
asked, the commissioner.
“They will teach us
churches.”
“Do you not want churches?”
to have
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
DAILY THOUGHT
| The common problem, yours, mine, every
i one's,
{Is not to fancy what were fair in life,
|Eroriaed it could be—but finding first
| What may be, then find how to make it
fair,
{Up to our mean.
| —Robert Browning.
—Women ussd to spend their
time thinking up new recipes for
pies and remedies for their ailing
children. Now they are entering
the field of invention in increasing!
(numbers, outside the home.
Models of some of these inven-
tions by women will be a feature,
this year of the Exposition of Wo-
men's Arts and Industries opening’
September 30 at the Hotel Astor,
New York. Mrs. Oliver Harriman, so-
| ciety matron, chairman, said.
Though only one patent in every
fifty is granted to a woman, Mrs.
Harriman points out that records of |
the Patent Office show more than
115,000 patents have been issued to
women. These records also show
a steady increase in the number of
women inventors during the last
fifteen years.
Beulah Louise Henry,
has forty-two inveutions, will ex-
hibit her latest device. It is an
atachable ribbon for any typewriter,
which makes five copies at a time
without carbon paper.
Her first invention was a collapsi-
ble umbrella. Others were a new
ice cream freezer, an advance on the
original model invented in 1843 by
Nancy Johnson; an electric fan
shield, a new pencil, combination
doll and radio receiving set, and a
clock device for teaching time to
children.
Another exhibitor will be Mrs.
Katharine Sunderland, who invented
a device to save wear on hosiery
and who has now invented a device
to relieve the pressure of the edge
of the shoe on the instep.
A new electric pressing iron will
be exhibited by Albertine Ruelland,
a former lady's maid, who saw the
need of designing an iron with
round edges and corners and a
swinging handle, ane Mrs. Eugene
Lamb Richards will exhibit her in-
vention, which is a remedy for un-
even lighting.
Mrs. Harriman said that, though
it is generally assumed that inven-
tions by women are largely restrict.
ed to household articles, it is proved
by the Patent Office records that
fewer than one-fourth are in this
field.
“The greater number
larger fields, of industrial arts,
transportation, and even agricul-
ture,” Mrs. Harriman said.
One of the most valuable of wo-
men's inventions is the Coston flare
light, burning like a red flare, which
is used hy the Coast Guard and
mariners all over the world for sig-
naling."
who now
are in the
—An inappropriate color scheme
will spoil the charm of good liaes
and masses in your house, Light
colors make a house seem larger,
while dark colors have the oppozite
effect. Cream, ivory yellow -and
‘white and the light buff shades ale
suitable for small houses. The
large house looks well in buff, gray
or green,
Dark colors make a house seen
gloomy and unfriendly. A light
trim will relieve this situation. ?°
Trees cast shadows and break up
w
the light which strikes a house. A
large house, if surrounded by trees,
may be painted a light color, with-
out seeming elephantine.
If the house is new and the lot
barren, all-white will make it look
unfinished and unsettled. A cheers
ful color with a trim tends to make
it blend with ils surroundings.
The color of the house should har-
monize with the color schemes of
neighboring houses. Otherwise it
will be a jarring note in the locality.
Vary the color schemes of nearby
houses, but choose as the main
color of yours a color which will
harmonize with those on either side
of it. This may be varied {o make
it individual without making it look
too different.
Shingled houses are usually stain-
ed rich, velvety silver gray, rose
brown, moss green or buff. Spanish
and Italian houses use vivid colors,
but they should not look bizarre. A
very small amount of bright color
is the rule for large masses.
—JIf you have spilled something
on your frock, remove the stain or
spot as soon as possible, as allow-
ing it to stay for a time only makes
it more difficult to remove. Anold
stain frequently combines with the
fiber and cannot be removed with-
out serious injury to the material.
—Peach Cobbler— 1 medium-sized
can peaches, sliced.
1 egg.
2-3 cupful sugar, granulated.
Bizcuit dough.
Beat the egg slightly and add to
it the sugar and mix well. Then add
the peaches and a teaspoonful of
butter, broken in small pieces. Place
in a well-buttered glass baking dish
and cover with biscuit dough.
—Carame! Tomatoes—Remove a
small slice from the stem end of
tomatoes (one for each person to
be served,) scoop out a bit of pulp
‘and place in shallow baking pan.
Fill cavities with sugar, place a
| generous piece of butter on each,
sprinkle the whole with salt and
‘bake in moderate oven until toma-
| toes are done, but still whole, keep-
|ing the bottom of pan covered with
water. When done place on thick
1 FARM NOTES.
To
wriggle of Wd
sen a
sion on the judge. Animals that
(res nd to the bidding of the ex-
' hibitor stand a better chance to
[alk off with ibe blue ribbon than
the sulky, balky creatures.
—Heifers on pasture should be
| watched carefully at this season. If
feed is short extra amounts should
‘be provided. This is sspecially im-
portant in the case of heifers due to
freshen this fall.
i
| —It will pay to prune the lower
‘branches of white and red pine trees
when they are not over four inches
(in diameter. Choose a good straight
pine every 15 to 20 feet in the
plantation and cut the limbs at one
operation. Continue pruning the
tree to a distance of 17 feet above
the ground, which will provide a 16-
foot log free from limbs and knots.
—Seed corn selected from the
standing stalks will yield better
than that picked from the wagon
box or crib. Field selection permits
the picker to observe the position of
the ear on the stalk, the size of the
plant, and other conditions of
growth.
—With adequate rainfall, soil con-
ditions are nearly ideal now for
tipping raspberry canes to supply
next year's plants. Use a short
handled hoe for this work, say
State College fruit specialists.
—To control stinking smut of
wheat clean seed should be planted.
If any traces of smut are found the
seed should be treated with two
and one-half ounces of copper car-
bonate dust per bushel after the
seed has been carefully cleaned.
—Growing chicks should be well
fed to insure healtn, protection
against disease, rapid, economicai
gains while they are young, and
quality flavor to the meat or broii-
ers and friers, says O. C. Ufford,
extension poultryman at the Colo-
rado Agricultural college.
A simple, economicar and effective
growing ration for the farm fiock
can be made, Ufford suggests, from
the following ingredients:
The scratch mixture may be
cracked corn of a size suitable foi
the chick, whole wheat or a mixture
of equal parts of these two grains.
A mash mixture may be com-
posed of the following feeds, he
says: Fine yellow cornmeal, 35
pounds; bran, 25 pounds; shorts, 25
pounds; meat meal or meat scrap,
10 pounds; bone meal, 4 pounds;
salt, 1 pound. Ground wheat may
be substituted for the bran and
shorts if desired.
When milk is available in any
form, it is profitable to feed it to
the flock, it is added.
“The mash should be kept in suit-
able, non-wasting feeders, allowing
the chicks free access to it at all
times,” the extension pcoultryman
says, ‘and feeding space should be
provided sc that at least one-fourth
of the flock can feex at one time.
“The grain. can he fed in hoppers,
morning or evening, in amounts that
the birds can clean up readily, or
fed in a litter of straw that should
he changed occasionally as a sani-
tary precaution.
“Green feed is a very important
part of the chick's diet. When a
green range, lawn ctlppings, alfalfa,
le{tuce or other greens are not
available, 5 to 10 pounds of alfalfa.
leaf meal should be added to each
100 pounds of the above mash mix-
ture.”
—T1he value of using pure-bred
dairy sires is indicated by the high
records made by some grade cows.
Oue of the highest testing cows
ever developed in the Cow Testing
Assocation of America was Aggie,
a Holstein grade cow owned by D.
W. Huenink, of Cedar Grove, Wis,
who had developed his herd through
cow testing association work and by
the use of purebred Holstein sires,
selecting his herd carefully on the
basis of production and profits. This
cow produced in 12 months some
20,082 pounds of milk and 8174
pounds of fat, equal to 1,022 pounds
of butter.
The reader may ask what profit
such a cow would make over the or-
dinary cow. According to the ex-
tension service of the Holstein-
Friesian association the owner of
Aggie received $£2,18049 for her
milk in five years sold at butterfat
prices. Her feed cost during that
time was $952 and her average year-
ly profit above feed cost was
$245.85.
The high cow for milk production
in the Johnstown (Colo.) testing as-
sociation is Claria III, owned hy C.
W. Henry, a grade Holstein with a
record of 20,331 pounds of milk and
631.8 pounds of bhutterfat. The
high cow for butterfat in the Fort
Lupton association is a Guernsey
grade and the high milk producer
is a grade Holstein. Many of the
most profitable herds in the State
are grade herds, but are all headed
by pure-bred sires.—Charles L. Bray,
Colorda Agricultural College.
—The widest
use of electricity
REFORESTATION IS SLOW,
HARD FIGHT, STALEY SAYS
Only two generations of trees have
elapsed since the thirteen o
riginal
| colonies won thier fight for independ-
of these States
today
t upon lumber
i dependen
and other forest products from out-
side sources, it was pointed out this
week by Secretary Lewis E. Staley,
‘of the State Department of Forests
and Waters.
Pennsylvania at the time of the
Revolution was well wooded.
far the gene In of her virgin
| forests were s standing in 1775.
‘Relatively little of the original tim-
ber had been cut by the middle of
By away.
the last century. ring the next
fifty years, up to 1899, the lumber
cut grew steadily and rapid deple-
tion of forest resources was the or- |
der of the day. |
The lumber from Penn's Woods |
contributed to a far greater extent
‘than was generally appreciated to- |
day, Secre Staley said. But the
uncontrolled forest fires that follow- |
ed in the wake of ax and saw, re-
peatedly burning the naturally pro- |
ductive forest soils, deprived us of |
a forest independence which we oth- |
erwize might have enjoyed.
There are 18,000,000 acres of for- |
jest land in Pennsylvania, and had
this area been permitted to grow
timber crops without interruption, |
all of our present timber supplies |
could have been grown at home and |
Pennsylvania would have a lumber |
and wood business eight to ten |
(times as great as we now enjoy.
“The present lumber cut of Penn-
sylvania is little more than 300,000,-
000 hoard feet annually, as against |
a consumption fully seven times as
great,’ 'Staley said. “Six out of ev-
ery seven board feet we use are
i
im Of our total consumption
of wood, amounting to nearly
500, cords a year, three-fourths
comes in from outside the State.
Likewise, we import 60 per cent of
our railroad ties and more than half
of our mine timbers.
“The fight for forest independence
is a to retrieve heritage lost by
of abuse and neglect. Unlike
the fight of the colonists against
the mother country, it cannot be
won in e.ght years. And to win it
we raust ught on the side of Moth-
er Nature, from whom we took it
The time that will be re.
quired to put our forests in order
depends largely upon the effects put
forth by each and every forest land
owner to make every acre of land
| mbre productive.”
KILL FEWER DEER
TO PROTECT CROPS
The number of deer killed by
farmers to protect crops was eighty-
five fewer during August, 1931, than
during the same period last year,
Charles G. Stone, executive secre-
tary of the game commission an-
nounced. [Eighty-two deer were
killed during August, 1931, as com-
| pared with 167 during August, 1930.
The principal damage was to oats
and buckwheat, with less damage to
potatoes and garden produce. Prac-
tically all of the deer were retained
for food.
There has been little bear damage
so far this year, due principally to
the abundance of natural food.
Sometimes a bear will form an in-
dividual flesh-eating habit, Stone
said. The Game Commission re-
There has been little bear damage
during August, one from Elk coun-
ty, covering two catle, and another
from Lycoming, covering two lambs.
TELLS OF CAMPS
IN ADIRONDACKS
President George Harrison, of ths
Wellsboro Rotary Club, told mem-
| bers Monday noon about changes in
| the camping places through the
Adirondacks which had come with
the development of touring during
the last decade.
Where Harrison and the late Earl
Champaign camped at Point Com-
fort, near Gloversville, N. Y, 14
years ago, amid complete wilder-
ness, now are 90 fire places for
tourist campers, Harrison said. Fish
Creek , at Saranac Lake, N. Y,,
where . Harrison has spent vaca-
tions on several occasions, were 16
fire places but a few years age.
This summer, the speaker said,
of the camper’s ovens were ready
for use, and more were being built,
More than 200 camps were pitched
along the pond this year, he said.
Right of way timber, cut as New
York State builds highways thro
{the Adirondacks is hauled to
{camp for free fire wood, and gro-
| cery, meat and bakery wagons visit
leach camp once a day to provide
| supplies.
{ New York State's million and a
half acres of wild forest land, re-
served to the people by the State
constitution, are open to everyone,
Harrison stated. A majority of the
acreage is in virgin timbered sec-
tions, he declared.
The speaker compared the friead-
ly democratic camp life which he
noted on a trip to Yosemite Valley
some years ago, with the camp life
in the east, stating that eastern re-
serve seemd to be giving way to the
west's friendliness.
——Read the Watchman and get
all the news.
|]
\
a
oi
SC i
a
MRS. ELSIE N. LAUGHEAD,
Sherman Avenue, Washington, Pa.
OF. ;
chyentent.
COOKING with an electric range is so convenient . , . sometimes | wonder
how | managed without mine. | certainly spent much more time in the
kitchen, for every meal had to be watched in order to be sure of its success.
“Since owning an eleciric range, | rely almost entirely on the time and tem-
perature controls to do the watching for me. And | know | can depend on
them, too. As one litile instance, we're very fond of Walnut Kisses, which
require a very even, lew heat. I've never had a failure with them since
baking them electrically.
“I like the cleanliness and coolness of electric cooking, also. Had | but
realized sooner the many advantages which | now enjoy, | would never have
put ff buying as long as | did."
Zhi BoB tot
Special hifer Gives YOU These
Conveniences for only 99.50 down
.
Now you, too, can enjoy the luxury of electric
range use . . . our special offer makes it extremely
easy to own a new automatic electric range.
As low as $9.50 down... with monthly pay-
ments as little as $6.48! Your budget can easily
be arranged to bring one of these modern ranges
. + . with all its advantages . . . into your kitchen.
(Left) Partial view of the " Electrochef” Range. Finish,
sparkling white porcelain enamel. Four platform burners,
large oven, automatically controlled. See this and other
ranges on display at our local store.
made on any farm in England, and
possibly the world, is made on the
farm of a syndicate near East Grin-
stead. The farm, composed of 600
lase Matthews, electrical expert.
Each beehive on the farm has a
chamber electrically warmed and
lighted. Owing to this the bees be- |
gin work earlier in the year, and it
|1s reckoned that each hive produces
lan extra 17 pounds of honey each
“No, we do not want churches.” rounds of hot toast, garnish with a geason.
“Why do you not want churches?” spring of parsley and a slice of
“They will teach us to quarrel
about God, as the Catholic and Prot-
estants do on the Nez Perces Res-
ervation and at other places. We
do not want to learn that. We may
quarrel with men sometimes about
things on this earth but we never
quarrel about God. We do not
want to learn that.”
White man, Protestant or Roman
Catholic, Fundamentalist or Modern-
ist, consider the words of Chief
Joseph and be wise!
bacon and serve.
|
| —Old pieces of velvet are fine
| furniture polishers.
The grooming of horses and
{ponies on the farm is done by a
| wonderful electrical machine which
| brushes, currycombs and vacuum
cleans them. In the henhouse a
| special clock turns on first dim and
| —There is no economy in second- then bright lights in winter time,
class canned goods.
—Vinegar
| tea stains from
—Moistened
the fire out of an insect bite or burn.
china cups.
and salt will remove
baking soda will take
producing artifical sunrise an
or more before the real one takes
place. The result is increased egg
production.
Milking, incubation, hay-drying,
insect destruction and
plowing are
all done by electricity. a
acres, has been electrified by Bor-
with every
range
FRE
“*Wear=-Ever® Aluminum
Buy your electric range NOW, from us or any other dealer,
and this 3-piece $13.50 set... for electric "waterless
cooking” . . . will be given to you absolutely FREE.
Two Sauce Pans (2 and 3 quart) and one Steaming Skillet
(1014” diameter by 24” deep). All have black Glyptal
bottoms for quick heat absorption. ''Steam-Seal’ covers
and removable handles. ‘
~ West Penn EvLecTRIic Snops