_mIIT Bellefonte, Pa, November 27, 1081. - PATIENTS TREATED AT CENTRE COUNTY HOSPITAL (Held over from last week.) Miss Mary A. Carpeneto, of Belle- fonte, became a surgical patient last Monday- Francis W. Anderson, of Miies- burg, a medical patient, was dis- charged on Monday of last week. John J. Sherry, of Mahanoy City, | a student at Penn State, was admit- ted on Monday of last week for surgical treatment. Mrs. William Hale, of Julian, be- ame a medical patient last Tues- day. Miss Margaret A. Singler, of Ty-! gone, was admitted last Tuesday for medical treatment and discharged on Thursday. Charles E. Rudy, of Pennsylvania Furnace, has been a surgical patient since last Friday. Mike A. Mills, of surgical patient, was last Tuesday. Mrs. Mayme Barr, of Patton town- ship, was discharged last Tuesday after having been a surgical patient. Miss Elizabeth L. Warner, of Strafford, a student at Penn State, was admitted last Wednesday for surgical treatment. Milly J. Whiteman, aged 3 years, of College township, was discharged on Wednesday after having under- gone surgical treatment. Miss Mary L. Yarnell, of Walker township, became a surgical patient Bast Wednesday. Jane Noll, 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Noll, of Spring #ownship, was discharged last Fri- alay after undergoing surgical treat- sment for a day. Miss Bertha W. Gregory, of State College, was admitted last Thursday as a surgical patient. Andrew Lentvorski, of Warrior's Maik, who had been a surgical pa- tient, was discharged on Friday. Miss Barbara Keeler, of Spring ‘township, was discharged last Fri- Bellefonte, a discharged «day after receiving medical treat- ment. Miss Sophrana Wands, of State “College, was discharged on Friday after having been a surgical patient. Mrs. Jacob Knisely and son, «day. After undergoing surgical treat- ment, Jacqueline M. Eversole, 2 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Eversole, of State College, was discharged on Saturday. Mrs. Sidney Wellar, of Bellefonte, was discharged on Saturday after ‘undergoing surgical treatment. Edward J. Immel, of Gregg town- ship, was discharged Mrs. R. H. Fishburn, of State Col- Rege, a medical patient, was dis- «charged Saturday. Miss Fiorence M. Volynch, Bellefonte, a surgical patient, clischarged on Saturday. Mrs. John Smay, of Union town. ship, after undergoing surgical treat- ament, was discharged on Saturday. Adolf Johansen, of Philadelphia, ‘who had been a surgical patient, was discharged on Saturday. Louise, 8 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Reed, of State Col'age, was discharged on Saturday after undergoing surgical treatment. Mrs. Nellie M. Soltis, of Clarence, ‘was discharged Saturday. She had been a surgical patient. Miss Irene M. Sinclair, of Snow Shoe, was admitted Saturday for medical treatment. of was ter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Neff, of College township, a surgical pa- Rient, was discharged on Sunday. Chester Dutton, of State College, underwent surgical treatment for a day, having been admitted on Sun- cay and discharged on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Hughes, of Bellefonte, are receiving congrat- ulations of their many friends on the birth of an infant daughter, at the hospital on Sunday. There were 34 patients in the hos- @ital at the beginning of the week. REATI. ESTATE TRANSFERS, Boyd R. Sholl, et ux, to John I. 8holl, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Paul T. Zimmerman to William T. Hubler, et ux, tract in Miles Twp.; 1. ~ H. E Dunlap, sheriff, to Catherine Armour, tract in Benner Twp.; $253.06. J. W. Henszey, et ux, to Paul J. Reber. et ux, tract in State College; 3. H. E. Dunlap, sheriff, to A. E. Qatbrick, tract in Bellefonte; §3- $300. Orvis Taylor, Kerstetter, tract in College Twp; 31. Elizabeth Homan to C. E. Musser, wt ux, tract in Penn Twp.; $135. James Harris, et ux, to Orlando W. Houtz, tract in Ferguson Twp.; 3750. Trustee of Madisonburg Knights | «of the Golden Eagle to Knights of “he Golden Eagle, Inc. tract in Miles “Twp.; $1. Rachael F. Meyer to C. A. Mor- /zan, et ux, tract in State College; $1,250. of Bellefonte, were discharged last Fri- on Saturday after having been a medical patient. | two people express a desire to meet each other. into a small John F. Myers, Adm. to Orvis "Taylor, et ‘ux, tract in College Twp.; et ux, to Chester! FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. | i DAILY THOUGHT 1 takes so little to make us sad; Just a slighting word or a doubting | | sneer, | Just a scornful smile on some lips held |" dear | | And our footsteps lag, though the goal i seemed near, ! | And we lose the courage and hope we ! had— So little it takes to make us sad. It takes so little to make us glad; Just a cheering clasp of a friendly hand, | Just a word from one who can under- stand And we lose the doubt and the fear we had, So little it takes to make us glad. —West Penn Life. —If you're disappointed in the fit of your new fall dresses—if they don't look as smooth as your fash- |jon-knowing eyes tell you they should be (even over that brand new corset)— i Look to your lingerie. It's al- most as disastrous to wear last fall's lingerie with this fall's dresse as it is to wear last fall's corset. Whereas last year's dresses were bloused above the waist, this year's |fit the figure quite closely. The line through the bodice and waist is bound to make wrinkles and bunches under the closer fitting dress. So the new lingerte is cut to fit like the new dresses—smooth and sleek through the bodice. Hips are smoother and narrower, too, and skirts straighter. So in the new lingerie lots of the fullness ‘has been taken out between the waist and the knees. Not so much ballet skirt effect. In order to get the smoothest pos- sible fitting with still enough room and “give” for perfect comfort, the newest lingerie has taken a tip from Vionnet, the French dress- maker, famous for her diagonal line costumes. New chemises, slips and panties are cut on the bias and seamed diagonally. They hug the outlines of the figure almost as close as your own skin. And without the use of elastic or draw-strings, eith- er. Fewer of the new panties have the elastic run through the band in the back. More of them are made with flat yoke all around or flat waistbands. Some of the fulness has been left out below the yoke, too, so they hang straighter—more in line with the straighter skirts of dresses. Some of the very newest panties,’ in fact, have no fullness in them at were molded to it. There's a new kind of bloomer out that's entirely minus elastic. The yoke has been widened and extend- ed over the hips and a flat side open- ing takes the place of the usual elastic. Chemises and slips are designed much the same through the waist- | section, with V-shaped cutting and | seaming. And here are a few other points to remember when you buy your new supply: The deep-colored lace of a sea- son or two ago isn't as fashionable now. Lace trimmed lingerie is still in fashion, but it's trimmed with more delicately colored lace. Irish lace edgings are many of the newest pieces. And don't forget this: that with the very sheer woolens so fashion- able in fall dresses, the colors of slips are apt to show through. So match your slip to your dress. seen on —In making an introduction al- ways spedk aistinctly so that both | parcies may understand each other's names. A skilled hostess will con- |trive that new acquaintances start | their acquaintance on an easy foot- ing. ‘The proper acknowledgement for ‘an introduction is by a few words, a smile or a pleasant look; if a man, out-of-doors, by raising his hat. By a shake of the hand, if near enough; (a bow, if he is in some place where . | moving is not easy, as at a table or Helen V. Neff, 11 year old daugh-| when seated’ in Y theatre. If a ‘hand is offered it should be taken. Introductions are necessary when When a stranger comes community. When a man and woman who are going in- to dinner together do not happen to have met before. When a small | company is assembled for dinner or luncheon. When four are to play bridge together or when two are to be partners in any sort of game. When a person talking to an ac- quaintance is joined by another, they should be introduced. ‘from waste materials. all but fit the thigh as though they || thoroughly cleaned up, paying cial attention to the FARM NUTES. Sows bred to farrow spring lit- ters should be fed a well-balanced of one-half pound condition at farrowing A —Culling should be a continuous process, starting at the time chicks | o¢ pis rsonal experiences with are received from the hatchery and both or VET oe reader to | deciae for himself. extending over the entire laying per- iod. — Principal defects of eggs deliv- ered to candling stations which ma- i | ration, with protein from an animal | ning, the fox, famous since Biblical NATIVE CUNNING OF FOXES AND WOLVES Which is superior in wit and cun- | | source, such as tankage or fishmeal. | times, or the wolf, who was known A liberat amount is needed so that | weil in the days of ancient Rome | the sows will average a daily gain | and, no doubt, and be in good | tory? l time. | | mineral mixture also should be used. |),,g.mooted question, Jonn A. Hope, even earlier in his- While not pretending to settie the in an article published in the Amer- ican Forests ana Forest Lite, tells sir. Hope has known the fox | since boynvod and the timber woul ‘tor some forty years in the rorests ‘and mountains or both, terially affect their sales value are|,. g,vs are gifted with a more dirt, yellow yolks, murky white, shrinkage, heat, looseness and poor shells. —The price of soybean meal is now on a comparable basis with lin- seed oilmeal and cottonseed meal. en and cattle feeders who usually use either linseed or cotton- seed in their feeding program will be doing service to the soybean ‘growers if they will substitute soy- p bean meal for the other protein con- centrates during the fall and win- ter. Careful tests have proved that soybean meal is equal in feeding value to either linseed or cottonseed meal. —Bees need food in the fall for two reasons. First, it supplies them with suffi- cient food to carry them over the cold months of winter and spring. Second, fall feeding gives the bees a purely heat producing food free of food used during the winter to produce heat is about 15 pounds for each colony. A much larger amount | is consumed in brood rearing in the spring. Each colony should have at least 45 pounds of honey for winter food and for brood rearing, Ross says. All colonies having of honey. Sugar syrup is the rec- ommended food. --In the case of :wine, the sys- tem worked out for saving lives of young pigs is simple in practice, and many farmers are rais- ing a proportion of pigs farrowed far above the average. The far- rowing pen should be thoroughly cleaned and scrubbed to remove all worm eggs that may be present. The roundworm of swine is a para- site that has caused very heavy osses, The sow should then be spe- udder to re- move all worm eggs. Within ten days after farrowing the sow and pigs are removed to a field sown to forage crops and not pastured to swine since it was sown. The pigs are provided with a good supply of water and kept in this field for at least four months, after whidh time they are reasonably safe from se- vere or injurious worm infestation. Experience shows that these mea- sures also help to prevent bullnose, mange, dietary deficiencies, choiera, and other ailments to a large ex- tent, as might be expected from cleanliness, the separation of young animals from groups mals and their infected surround- ings. Safe and adequate food and water supplies and the necessary shelter and shade also contribute to thriftiness and rapid growth. ~—On some dairy farms spring lit- ters of pigs are turned into corn- fields where they may help them- selves to as much corn as they want. Other dairymen who also raise swine could well consider the economies in this practice. One can make mistakes in hog- ging down corn. It is not good economy to turn a few hogs into a large field of corn. They will get too much of it on the ground and not clean it up. Small fields or fenced of portions of large fields are bet- er. One can waste corn in another way by not having the proper pro- tein supplement available. It takes ‘too much corn for 100 pounds gain in this way. A simple mineral mix- ture is also helpful in reducing the feed for 100 pounds gain. —Farmers of Canada and the United States are being urged to co-operate to check a threatened grasshopper plague in 1932, using man-made devices to destroy the millions of eggs. A rainy season would keep down the pests to nor- mal, it is asserted, but preventive ‘work is advocated. —A bread cloth tends to dry out | the bread when placed in bread box over it as it absorbs the moisture from the bread. Bread keeps fresh longer in an airtight box or can | with no paper or cloth. —To recurl an ostrich feather have a tea kettle full of boiling wa- ter and shake the feather vigorously | through the escaping steam, being careful not to get it too damp. | Then take a silver fruit knife and, beginning with the feathers nearest the quill, take a small bunch be- | tween the thumb and the forefinger and draw it gently over the blade | of the knife. | —To run a curtain on one of the hollow brass rods in common use thrust a shell hairpin into the rod and you will be delighted with the result. The curtain slips on easily without tearing. —Chocolate Glaze. Put two squares of chocolate into a double saucepan. | When it is melted remove it from | the fire and stir into it half a cup- ful of hot water. Return to the | fire, stir it until the sugar is dis- solved and continue to cook it with- out stirring until a little dropped in | water can be taken up and rolled | between the fingers like a soft ball. Pour it over the top of the cake. Two methods have been suggest- ed. One is to plow the land so deep that eggs now being laid in the ground will not hatch. The other is to cultivate the surface of the ground late in the fall so as to ex- pose and destroy the eggs. Eggs are now being laid in mil- The amount ' less should be, fed until they have that amount or the equivalent of seven full frames | And a fox will not hesitate to run | along tracks by snowshoes or prints the | acute.y intelligent cunning in self- preservation than any other species of wild life, with the exception of | the brown Asiatic rat. | Each animal, however, depends for | safety upon widely divergent phases of woods strategy, Mr. Hope points out, and the individual must judge for himself in which phase of wood- craft the most cunning is displayed under all conditions, toward first rize. “A wolf invariably fights shy of | steel traps, dead falls, poisoned bait and other instruments set for his capture, and generally successfully,” | Mr. Hope states, “even though no | human taint be present. Nor will | he, as a rule, cross or.run along a | snowshoe trail made by a human, | even when this trail cuts between | him and a previous kill he is anx- 'ious to dine off in the dark hours. Knowing that this track is foreign to his territory, his native cunning comes into play. He is seldom seen in the daytime and a sixth sense seems to warn him aiways of unseen danger. “I have seen scores of foxes by daylight,” Mr. Hope continues, “and have even picked off many with a rifle, without their seeing me or even knowing whence death came. The fox I have caught within twen- ty hours in steel traps set with bare hands and covered with dry grass, moss, or earth, in temperate weather—no bait used. The same conditions apply to poisoned bait. made by boots.” On the other hand, it is endurance to evade capture, and if in danger of capture at the end of a run, will turn and fight with savage courage. Few dogs, in a no-quar- ter fight, come off victorious. The fox, instead of depending upon speed and endurance relies upon its wits. | “From the moment a dog picks up its scent,” Mr. Hope writes, “the fox utilizes every bit of cover on its run for life, to twist and turn, out- flank and break back, head for a lake or river, paddling miles up and down stream, if necessary, to throw hounds off its scent—and do it suc-| cessfully nine times out of ten. It will dodge into badger earths and burrows, caves and hollow trees and even jump into the limbs of thickly branched trees, springing from one branch to another. Overhauled, it, too, will fight hard for its life, but being smaller than any domestic | dog as fast as itself, it is invariably of older ani- | | | Damascus, the killed.” Q. What is the oldest city in the world ? | A. It is generally supposed that chief city of Syria, is the oldest city in the world. It has been estimated that 8,000,- 000 automobiles on the roads of the United States are worth not more than $25 each. rr — —To remove onion odor from hands rub them with a stalk of cel- ery and it will be entirely removed. lions upon millions, Almost the entire area today, from | the Rockies to the Great Lakes, and | from the north Saskatchewan river to the praires of the southwest | United States has become fertile breeding ground for hoppers and! locusts. In some of the country districts this year visitation of the insects has been so heavy that they have plugged up radiators of motor cars driving through. | —During the autumn months a small strip of garden can be plowed or spaded for the first early spring planting of spinach, onion sets, let- tuce, and other cool crops. Turn under manure if available and leave in the rough over winter. Rake the seedbed smooth before planting. | especially important when milk prices are low. The ration should be carefully balanced and fed strict- | ly in accordance with the amount of milk produced. Carelessness in feeding increases milk production costs. | | Sensational Discovery, 666 Salve A Doctor’s Prescription for Treating Colds Externally Everybody Using It---Telling Their Friends $5,000 Cash Prizes for Best Answers “Why You Prefer 666 Salve for Colds” The Answer Is Easy After You Have Tried It Ask Your Druggist, First Prize $500.00; Next twenty Prizes $50.00 each; Prizes $5.00 each. awarded. Rules: Write on your letter contain no more than ten Prizes $100.00 each; Next Next forty Prizes $25.00 each; Next one hundred Prizes $10.00 each; Next one hundred In case of a tie identical Prizes will be | one side of paper only. Let fifty words. Tear off Top of 666 Salve Carton and mail with letter to 668 Salve Con- test, Jacksonville, Florida. All letters must be In by mid- Your Druggist will have list of night, January 31, 1932. winners by February 15th. 666 Liquid or Tablets with 666 Salve Makes a | | | | | Complete Internal and External Treatment. | i 81%) pointed | out, a wolf depends von speed and —Careful feeding of dairy cows is | 175 In our issue of Sept. 4th we made appeal to 775 of our sub- scribers who were in arrears at that time. Since then 168 have respond- ed, and to them we make grate- ful acknowledgment of their promptness in coming to relief of the financial strain we are under. We are still hoping that the remaining 607 are not going to fail us. By the way: If you have any printing jobs. Anything, large or small in the line of com- mercial printing, we would like to do it for you. There is always one cer- tainty about job printing done at this office. at prices no higher than are It is well done, and often paid for work that is not so good. The Democratic Watchman ——————