———————————————————. tic atcha, Bellefonte, Pa., October 9, 1981. Your Health Don't pass lightly over this col- umn and when you have finished , don't let Mrs. Fisher's thoughts on Eugenics and Race | | WASHINGTON FOUGHT HIS FIRST BATTLE ON PENNSYLVANIA SOIL. The Young Colonel Started the French and Indian War near Uniontown. “Fort Necessity” to be Restored and Made a National Shrine. Last Tuesday, the Acting Secretary of War, Honorable Fred H. Payne and the national director of the George Washington Bicentennial Commission, Congressman Sol Bloom, journeyed up from Washington toa point ten miles east of Uniontown and there, in a great open meadow, broke ground as a preliminary to the erection of a monument which the United States government will build on the site of George Washington's first battle. “Fort Ne- Betterment pass lightly out of your | cessity,” the young Washington call- mind. There is possibly not a ed it, and reader in this community who has dire necessity for he surely he regarded it asa was being not visited or heard about the calo- pressed hard by a force of French rimeter at State College as it has and Indians five times the size of long been considered the most in- his command. teresting research work being car- ried on there. adays strives ultry, even poss zinnias, dahlias, to raise blooded stock, Every farmer now-' When those two officials made that trip from Washington to break better and bigger to- ‘ground for the monument, they fol- etc., and, lowed, for most of the way, evolution into something better and route that young Colonel Washing- finer is the goal for everything but ton followed when he led his forces Better Blooded Children! Shouldn't | yp, from Virginia. With this dif- that be the most important prob- go ..nce however;.they went in six lem for this “cocky” American na- tion to attack; One hundred years of promiscuous breeding has brought —what? Let's try one years of wise selection! By Florence Fisher Parry Twenty grand, Top Flight, Gal- jant Fox, Princess Doreen, do these names mean anything to you? Did hundred through the woods and you think of them when you sat at | the Penn and watched that epic picture of the race track, “Sporting Blood?” I did. I thought of how they proved the case of Heredity. The Whitneys know all about hered- ity. So do all horse fanciers, and dog fanciers, and cattle fanciers. They hew close to the line when it comes to picking the forbears of their favorites. “Blood tells,” they could tell you. It was just one phase of social research which the Wickersham Commission neglected to report ade- juately when it gave its findings on the Crime situation tn the United States. I listened in on Sunday to a proadcast from Philadelphia, by Dr. John M. Fisher, on “Heredity, En- vironment and the Development of Character.” I couldn't get it down well, I wish I could have done 30. I should have liked to give you 3 literal report of what he said. Some of it could make scare-heads to tremble over! For it outlined pretty clearly just where we are jeading in our heedless disregard »f the fundamentl principles of bi. logy. He reminded us that we have nore money, more machinery, more novies, radios, autos and luxuries of Ww description than can be found rip the countries of Europe. We have more colleges, more stu- jents, more children without paren- al ce, more divorces, more tate and civic political debauchery, nore highway robberies, murders; ve boast more laws, courts and uries; and, correspondingly, we \ave more houses of correction, pris. ms and jails overfilled with social ferelicts than exist throughout Eng- and, France and Germany combin- d He reminded us that the insane nd hopelessly feeble-minded in pub- ic institutions in the United States wmtnumber the sick and injured in dl the hospitals of our country, wen without our reckoning with he hordes of the economically well- o-do in private sanitariums, and the aany thousands of the “better -rades” of delinquents who are at arge reproducing their kind. What accounts for the constantly aounting social depravity, lawless- ess and crimes of every description hat are afflicting the nation? Dr. ‘isher is ready with his answer: the eighties and nineties nd greater part of the present cen- ury, our legislative fathers permit. ed steamship companies, for pur- oses of realizing instant profit, to- ‘ether with corporations and heap labor agencies, to bring to ur shores the lowest denizens of outhern Europe; and the injection f the biologic inferiors of Europe onverted a controllable condition ito a malignant one. When our immigration laws were t their worst was when the dam- ge was started and is still piling Rired "of cone ‘of hia European of one riends, “Why, is it that Italy suf- ors less from high crimes than .merica, while so much of the riminality of our own country is e to many of your own ace?” The native replied, “We snd all of our criminals” Vvhat he could have said was, While you secure a limited num. er of our better stock, we send ou our feeble-minded who repro- uce their kind and infect your eople with their lowered heredity wough their inferior Rig How a good biologic inheritance ay be handed down through suc- sssive generations, and how, on the ther hand, it may be dissipated nd submerged by the same pro- »ss through contrasting matings, ilustrated by the Kilikak family ell known to all students of hered- More than 150 years ago, Martin ilikak, of excellent biologic back- round, married a woman of heroic acestry and superior endowment. total of 496 descendants of this ock have been traced. Among iem have been signers of the eclaration of Independence, univer- ity founders, doctors, lawyers, idges, educators, and other highly seful members of society, up to the resent day. There has been found ) trace of feeble-mindedness. hours, while it took Washington eight weeks to make his way over the mountains. The historical significance of the battle of Fort Necessity in 1754, or the Battle of Great Meadows as it is sometimes called, is very great. Voltaire says it was “the shot fired in the woods of America which set all Europe ablaze” for it was the be- ginning of the Seven Years War in Europe which rebuilt the map of the old world. It was also the beginning of the French and Indian War on this continent which ended by eliminat- ing the French as a colonizing in- fluence in North America and de- creed that the new nation should be Anglo-Saxon. It was the young George Wash- ington's first battle. Here he was sixty wilderness miles away from his base, but the courage and re- sourcefulness which he showed sc impressed the officers under him that one of them twenty years later nominated Washington before the Continental Congress to be Com- mander-in.Chief of the Revolution- ary army. The young Colonel Washington himself was so impressed by the importance of this battle, that he came back after the close of the war and bought the entire Great Meadows property of three hundred and thirty four acres and held it until his death, and disposed of it in his will as one of his prized pos- sessions. It is this same property, once owned by the Father of our Coun- try, which the State of Pennsylva- nia has recently purchased for the purpose of maintaining it as a State park. The central two acres, ou which Fort Necessity itself stood (and the outlines are still visible) have been acquired by the United States government and money has been appropriated by Congress to erect a monument there. It was al the ground-breaking for this monu- ment where the Acting Secretary of War officiated last Tuesday. The Pennsylvania Department of the American Legion has voted to provide the funds for restoring the old fort itself, to appear just as it did when Washington built it one hundred and seventy seven years ago. The Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution and other pa- triotic and fraternal organizations are aiding in other phases of the memorial. The school children in most of the counties of Western Pennsylvania are planning to give their small coins also to the crea: tion of a great patriotic shrine at Fort Necessity. This will be the only memorial of its kind to Washington and to the colonial period of our nation west of the Alleghenies and it is estimated that when the Fort Necessity mem: orial park is completed, it will at- tract about a million visitors a year, for it is on one of the most traveled highways in the country. On the other hand, this scion of good blood before his marriage to the woman of quality, had an affair with an attractive but feeble-mind- ed girl. The result was the sub- mergence of the superior male po- tentials by the dominating inferior- ity of the girl. For six successive generations this union produced feeble-minded and non-resisting pro- geny. A total of 480 descendants have been traced, 143 were known to be feeble-minded, 36 were illegiti- mate, 33 sexual perverts, 24 confirm ed alcoholics, three epileptics, three criminals, eight keepers of brothels, and 83 children so feeble that they died in infancy. Upon our choice of a partner may depend, therefore, the birth of a genius who may live to bless man- kind, or that of a future jail bird. Better citizens cannot be made with laws alone. Biologic knowl- edge, eugenic practices, will do far more to minister to and rehabilitate the citizens of this country, than all the social relief organizations, hos- pitals, asylums, charity and so-call- ed education can hope to do. Until that day comes, we need not be sur- prised at the contents of succeeding “Wickersham reports. the | ing importance of which it close to almost every citizen of the Commonwealth. The statement follows: - » “As the House committee on game, we are entrusted with a serious re- sposibility and a task of no small difficulty. | which there are so many divergent |and conflicting opinions. Our Penn- | sylvania wild life has become a mat- | ter of very real importance and in- | timately touckes the imagination and | the recreational activities of every | citizen, man, woman and child; near- |ly everyone has some pet theory or game game administration; this primary consid eration should never be overlooked. quite supervision, the present supply may | ihe gradually and substantially |sire to see put into practice and throughout favorable game areas is which they fondly believe would the constant problem which will re. | prove their wisdom and capacity to guire the best thought and sincere | propagate, ‘our wild animals and birds. maintain and conserve cooperation of all parties concern i i in | S¥'p | | * | vania, be | Friday, deep seated conviction that they de- | creased; equitable distrib ution 2:00 o'clock P. 3 i | “Now therefore, be it resolved, by | “Many estimable persons become the game committee of the House, obsessed with a notion that this or session of 1931, General Assembly of | that thing is radically wrong; that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, | this or that remedy and should be put into prac- tice forthwith; the customary pana- | cea “There ought to be a law” sug- | i | gests itself, and soon another game bill is introduced. Each session we (are flooded with a number of new | bills widely divergent in character, | often conflicting in terms, and us- {ually inconsistent in purpose with | regretable lack of knowledge on the is the true and only that this preamble and resolution be printed as a public document of edu- | tp, | five an cational value and economic service, in such numbers as may be required ! distances, for state-wide circulation to schools, sportsmen’s organizations and Granges, to all members of the As- sembly and other interested parties, | under supervision of the secretary of | this committee. | the game code; often they betray a | part of the farmers, and in all too | many instances would, if enacted, do more harm than “It is unfortunate and a burden of expense on the Commonwealth, that so much of the time and activ- ity of this committee and of the | business sessions of the Assembly | should be taken up in the considera- tion and disposal of bills which ob- viously could not and should not be enacted. With a view towards eliminating so much lost motion, to reduce the number of useless and unwise bills introduced, and to con- serve the time and efforts of this committee, it seems to us appro- priate that we should undertake, by means of a resolution to be adopted by this committee and to be gener- ally circulated and given statewide publicity as a matter of oublic in- formation and of decided education- al value, to bring about a better more efficient cooperation among and between the public, the game commission and the Legislature. “We appeal to the people of State, sportsmen, nature-lovers, and all who are interested in conserva- tion and the propagation and main- tenance of our wild life, whenever they observe faults or defects in local application of the game code, or an apparent need for supplemen- tary laws, to ever bear in mind that conditions vary widely in dif- ferent sections of the State, and what you might justifiably regard as desirable and beneficial in your own locality, might be wholly inappro- priate and harmful in other dis- trictss In a great State such as Pennsylvania, highly industrialized, with extensive and productive agri. cultural interests spread over much of the State, with great urban cen- ters, and thousands of busy and thriving cities and towns, yet hav- ing millions of acres of forests and waters, wild lands, much of it com- paratively sterile and unfitted for cultivation, with mountains and plains, with wide differences in cli- matic conditions, it is obvious that uniform laws and regulations, rigid- ly Sopher, could not possibly be equally satisfactory and beneficial to all parts of the State. There must be a considerable range of flexibility, as every reasonable person will free- ly admit. “Recognizing this condition, the State Legislautre has sought to pro- vide a solution of the difficulty by what seems the only practical meth- od, which is to delegate certain dis- cretionary powers to the State game commission so that this commission might modify or suspend certain provisions of the game code in townships or counties where condi- tions appeared to require it. Suc- cessful game administration on so vast a scale as in the great State of Pennsylvania is a highly special- ized undertaking, and, as in all human activities, some mistakes are unavoidable; but with an attitude of reasonable patience on the part of the public, with the patriotic cooper- ation of interested sportsmen, all mistakes of omission or commission will speedily become apparent and quickly be corrected. “On the whole, the present game code has proven to be the best piece of constructive legislation ever yet devised for the welfare and prop- agation of wild life and to pro- mote recreational sports in m civilized areas. Of course, it is reasonable to expect that some modifications, eliminations’ or addi. tions will become advisable from time to time, but these should be carefully considered, thoroughly dis- cussed, nd enacted only after cool and deliberate reflection. “We urge that sportsmen and cit- izens interested in our wild life who have grievances, or who have con- structive proposals to present, to first enlist the support of local sporstmen, and then take tHe mat- ter up direct with the game com- mission before appealing to the Leg- islature. “We counsel the game commis- sion to use every effort to work in the fullest harmony with sporstmen, particularly in the game areas where public opinion is most apt to be formed from experience and per- sonal observation and therefore like- ly to be dependable and useful. “Regarding the State as a whole, “Unanimously adopted by the game committee of the House of Representatives May 26, 1931.” a ——— A ————_ 700 FRESHMEN START EDUCATION “A LA MODE.” More than 700 especially selected brece “smartest freshmen” were ordered lowance of six per cent. to meet to hear President Robert Maynard Hutchins outline the new system of education at Chicago Uni- versity. The command was, it was said, about the only “order” these ‘“smart- est freshmen” are likely to receive during the first year of their col- lege careers. When the youths have been told what they are to do, the rest will be almost entirely up to them, accord- ing to Hutchins’ new plan. They will go to class when they feel like it, read books that interest them, confer with professo they like, and, in fact, if to do so, go about the coming educated in a revolutionary as to uninitiated es being and easy.” There is, a “catch” for the man who appear to rather s to help get an education, but not one cent to force one”— | 3, that is, in short, the plan of the youthful president. The system is based primarily on a theory that an in t, ambi- tious youth wants to be educated and that it is useless to try to force learning on him if his thoughts | r4j run entirely to other things. TO PIPE COAL AND SAVE TRANSPORTATION Lehigh Navigation Coal company engineers are experimenting with transportation of pulverized anthra- cite by pipe line ad a means of re- ducing transportation costs. Reports of the experiments show that the have developed a method of pulverizing smaller sizes of anthracite, moving the product in a semi-liquid state through a pipe line for a considerable distance and drying it at its destination. The method is expected to reduce materially the delivery price of coal. Good Printing. A SPECIALTY at the WAL. HMAN OFFICE a host Sa at Te Nina BOOK WORK we ean mot do fn the Call on or communicate i p Employers, This Interests You Workman's Jan, It , specialize in such insurance, We recommend Safe Guards Insurance rates, interest placiog | HE foe ih Fim. will consult Insurance, JOHN He h i Oollege { ! | | | | —Real estate consisting house and double house a Estate of Margare: The FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Bellefonte, 76-20-3t Sr A AT IR 07 Rn RTA Trustees’ Sale of Valuable Real Estate. By virtue of an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, Penn- the Moshannon National Bank Bltpabuiss. Pa., Trustee under mort- e the Highland Clay Products ompany, will expose to public sale at front entrance of the Court House Bellefonte, Centre County, Peénnsyl- on October 23, 1931, at the following describ- property :— ALL those two certain tracts of land situate in the Township of Rush, Coun- ty of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, ed. | bounded and described as follows: — BEGINNING at an iron railroad track in the line of a warrant in the name of Joseph Turner, thence by land of Joseph Turner, North eighty- four degrees thirty- eight minutes West, fifty-one hundredths rods to a stake on the bank of Moshannon Creek; ence down and bounded and the same thereby, the six Jollowitg namely, No six degrees East thirty-six and ninety-seven une dredths rods to a stake; North nine de- grees West fifteen and ninety-four hun- redths rods to a stake; North one de- | | gree fifty minutes West, hundredths rods North eight degrees thirty twenty-seven to stake; a min- !utes East nine and fourteen hundredths rods to a stake; North thirty-six de- grees, twent minutes East five and thirty-eight hundredths rods to a stake; and North sixty-six degrees fifty min. utes East, nine and twelve hundredths rods to a post in stomes in the line of | land warranted to Stephen Kingston; and thence by land of Stephen Kingston South five degrees fifty-six minutes West eighty-one and seven-tenth rcds to the of beginning; containing three seventy-nine perches, and the al- or roads, &c. Which said tract of land was surveyed on the twenty-second @ay of July, 47m in pursuance of a warrant dated the 20th day of June, 1921, granted to John Kyler, and recorded in the place for recording of deeds for Centre County in Deed Book Vol. 126 page 331, where reference thereto being had will more fully and at large appear. 2. BEGINNING at a point in the cen- tre of branch railroad as now located and running to Kelly mine tipple and on line of right of way of Pennsylvania Division of the N. Y. C. Railroad; thence by line of said right of way North 45 Jninutes West 82.6 feet to a t on line of y mine tipple; ds and along said degrees 33 minutes West 464 feet; y said lands and along said railroad by a twelve de, curve 500 feet to point of beginning, containing 148 acres and 145 perches, and being rt of a larger tract of land convey: unto the grantor by Walter C Stephens, Executor of the te of O. L. Schoonover, deceased, by deed dated April 19th, 1807, and recorded | County, in Deed Book EXCEPTING AND RESERVING Parcel No. 2, nevertheless, all the coal, fire clay and other minerals, oil and fas in and under the said premises, with right to recover the damages to the ages to any buildi or erected upon th Ja mises caused surface of sf e surface of said sald and of any and of the e fire clay and other minerals, oil and in and under said premises wherein coal, fire clay minerals are owned by the Orrin L. Schoonover Es- tate assigns, is hereby 22prealy Wilved BY 1h: and frames in thls con, unto the said n at Moshannon and run parallel to New York Central right of the same premises which Win- burne Fire Brick Company by deed dat- ed February 7, 1925, ny onded in the Recorder's office for County of Centre in Deed Book Vol, 135 page S55. con. ucts Com- veyed to Highland Clay pany. T with all and singular, the buil ngs, ways, waters, water (SSurats ings, consti gagor's i incidental iafients, premises; and. appurtenances buildings, equipment and improvements that may hereafter be acquired by the Being the premises described in the aforesaid, recorded in Centre County in Mortgage Book 52 page 678. Sale of seid premises shall be made bidder and of the mort. thereto. to the highest responsibe such sale shall be subject to confirma- tion the Court. t shall be made in full u confirmation, except that the Trus may require such amount as it shall deem , but not exceeding two thousand ( .00 Dollars, to be paid on the day of sale, For the further terms and conditions of sale and for further particulars with rospective purchasers ns interested are referred to er of sale entered in Centre ber Ry 981 PE 2 4g the , , In , Or Trustee or its Attorneys. MOSHANNON NATIONAL BANK OF PHILIPSBURG, PA. Arnold & Smith, Attys. Trustee Clearfield, Pa. y 76-38-4t 1 in near a eleven and | ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW WOODRING.—Attorney at KLINE Law, Bellefonte, Pa. in all courts. Office, room 18 Crider -ly KENNEDY J ~Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all entrusted to his care, 0. High 57-44 J M. EEICHLING -Altorugy 3 Lax and Justice of the pro biineas wil recelve of Temple Court. ey R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. State C Holmes Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. 66-11 | | D. CASEBEER, tometrist,—. | tered and li by the RE. | , glasses fitted. | isfaction guajan . Frames re and lenses matched, Casebeer Bt . High St., Bellefonte, Pa. de. 1-22-28 i i i | VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State Coll Saturday, font: lo Garbrick. building opposite | fonte, in 0 the Court House, Wed Rtternoons {from 2 to 8 p.m. and Sa 9 am [to 4:00 p.m. Bell Phone 63-40 | c— . FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% | 133 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent CHICHESTER S PILLS i | Wayne Feeds SP per 100M. Wagner's 329% Dairy Feed - 1.56 Wagner's 209% Dairy Feed - 140 Wagner's 16% Feed - 1.35 Wagner's Scratch - = 1.50 Wagner's Mash . - - 180 Wagner's Meal «- = « 175 Wagner's Horse Feed - - - 140 Wagner's Wintsr Bran - = 1.00 Wagner's Winter - 1Llv Wagner's Standard Mixed Chop 1.40 Blachford Calf Meal 251d - 1.25 Wayne Calf Meal - - . - 350 Wayne Mash - - - - 210 Oil Meal 34% = = = = = 180 Cotton Seed Meal 43% - - 170 Soy Bean Oil Meal - = = 170 Gluten Feed 23% - - - - 150 Fine Ground Alfalfa Meal - 2.25 Meat Sc ®%% - - - - 250 T! « = = = = 275 Fish Meal 56% =~ - - - 3.25 Milk Dried -—-- - 4.00 Fine Stock Salt - « - - . 100 Round Grit - - - - - - 130 Oyster Shell . - - - - - 100 Lime Grit = = = = = - = 100 Bone Meal - = = «= . = = 275 Let us grind your Corn and Oats hia Seat 1 Tan Given oil Alfalfa, Bran, and We will make delivery on two tom orders. All accounts must be paid in 30 days. Interest charged over that time. If you want good bread and and Gold Coin Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully asd Promptly Furnished dil. GOA