Financial Condition of the Poor Districts of Centre County. hen there is 80 much distress throughout the country it might be of in- ct financial condition of each poordistrict in the county, and the fol- lowing table, carefully compiled fromauditor's statements for 1931, shows the assessed valuation, millage, tax — ” "FOR AND ABO y DAILY THOUGHT Your cap is on crookit, In these times of depression, W —_—— ae | Your oelt is unhookit, terest to the public to know the exa Bellefon! May 19382. You may not be droomnk, : we: Ba. — But bejabbers you look it. collected, amount expended for Your Health | om ti irl Towiy wn mo THE FIRST CONCERN. Soon our “young America” will be| ob "OHO SOR 09 into fields of endeavor Bellefonte see snn 3 1 which shall spell success, I hope, for Senile Han ree. 3 3 /a2% all. To you who are donning caps| JOWAFC -:-:::-: 4S | and gowns and making ready for Milesburg ...... 3 99,24 | the exercises which shall mark the Mitlheim ....... 4 296,225 | closing of your school days, I wish | Port Matilda .... 0 122,024 | a world of happiness. : Philipsburg ..... 3 1,275,906 |® So. in view of this day, we have | S. Philipsburg , 10 47,388 | planned several menus which, we State College .. 3 2,325,288 | hope, shall do much toward the de-| Snow Shoe ..... 1 85,480 | lightful culmination of an already Unionville .... 1 San ‘The measles came to our town, perfect day, penfer vrevrwed b 425 Tommy got it first— —Platter Luncheon.—Fresh fruit oe ga : to333 They say he had it pretty bad | cup, jellied consomme, boiled lamb, Bums ig areas . soa 933 But, ‘course, ¥ had it worst. | chops, mint jelly, potatoes julienne, Solloe sessenes 067 ce, "Te eee , But my! We weren't sic: a hit, | asparagus Bub Wika Griwa utict seus Rh. i”, Shue Just full of fenuy spots | fait, coffee. | Gres... ..u. 3 525,692 pois A fool toys | — Luncheon M e n u.—Strawberry | Haines ...... 2% 37348 : . | cocktail, cold baked ham, latticed Half Moon ..... 0 206,759 The folks they were so good to us, | potatoes, tomato basket salad with | Harris ......... 1 309,632 The fathers unc the rauihors— ‘asparagus tips, hot biscuits, mer-| Howard ....... 10 156,187 That rather than be selfish kids | ingued cantaloupe, coffee. Huston ........ 6 81,155 We passed it to the others! | Fruit cup.—(Honey dew melon | Liberty ....... 10 216,367 cn ; | balls, diced pears and grapefruit, Marion ........ 3 203,067 GUARD AGAINST MEASLES | strawberry garnish) I Miles ... i.» 3 399,556 By. Dr. Morris Fishbeia | Chicken aspic in individual molds. | Patton ........ 4 189,324 At this season of the year meas'cs —Creamed mushrooms, fresh peas, Penn .......... 2 298,527 is usually epidemic in several parts ice box rolls, endive salad wtth roque- Potter ......... 4 585,057 of the United States. | fort cheese french dressing toasted Rush ......... 10 441,596 Authorities 11 New York State crackers, strawberry sherbet, lady Snow Shoe ..... 6 187,168 Department of Healh feel tnat ef- fingers, coffee. | Spring ......... 5 689,026 forts should be concentrated nol in| — | fio ar eminienine ’ 51848 TRIO + 4 0 0000s ’ jute. dttempis 30 stamp out Jilied consomme.—Soak one ta- | Walker . 2 404,069 the disease entirely, but on means | Walker ........ ' blespoonful of gelatin in a quarter) worth ...... .. 3 59.069 to prevent fatalties from the disease | W gar : LL | cupful of boiling water and stir un-| ; TTR during the first five years of life, I Total... .ecieennes $15,041,487 til dissolved. Add to one pint of Seventy-five per cent of all deaths, "oof stock that has been well | from measles occur in children un-| NOt Deel 2 OLY eid A der 3 years of age, and 90 per cent seasoned. When almost cold, ad ’ — EE . - - — in children under 5 years of age. In tablespoonful of chopped parsicy and remaining meat stock gelatin mix- fact, if a child contracts measles be- fore it is one year old, the chance of dying is 50 times greater than an attack of measles in a child be-| tween 5 and 15 years of age. | When measles appears in a com- | munity, parents should be warned of the danger and told to be exceed- chill. When chilled and jellied, beat slightly with a fork and serve in bouillon cups, Angel parfait. —Make a sirup of one-third of a cupful of sugar and four tablespoonfuls of water, cOOK- ing until it spins a thread. Beat ingly careful about naving their two egg whites stiff. Add sirup to children come in contact with those egg whites slowly beating until the with we Sischae ust’ Ge | mixture is very light. Chill, stirring us warned | occasionally. Whip one-half pint 0 | promptly to guard their children cream. Add flavoring, then fold in Bm ea | Es re ry ‘ous | may va y who have the disease or from the | marshmellows cut in pieces, chopped the DEvthits or sisters of the child | nuts, or a bit of pink or green color. w e disease. Tomato Baskets.—4 firm tomatoes, | If a child 5 years of age or under 1 large green pepper. 1 can aspara-| develops Teves, SBNUNE, Le of | gus tips or Oquivaient in fresh cook- | nose, 8 ed asparagus, ressing, ho BO be ut Io bod i cut the peppers into slices, cross- | y wise, to form ri one-quarter inch called at once, and the child should | jn width. Scald oe prey chill | be kept strictly isolated until the and cut in halves crosswise. Place diagnosis is certain. lon lettuce leaves with cut side up. | maintenance of the poor, Etc., in each district in the county. Tax Institutional Outdoor Administration Total Floating Paid Relief Relief Costs Expended Indebtedness 6171 80 1039 02 3868 56 1502 25 6409 83 *1617 94 454 41 156 47 86 40 BR 242 87. 036 62 572 56 561 38 101 60 1235 54 297 74 473 98 93 50 567 48 1184 90 279 86 525 00 35 00 839 886 rr pn 111 72 nn 11:72 3827 171 877 84 3884 08 659 70 5421 60 473 88 100 00 23 85 94 94 218 79 8S, 1162 61 274 30 78 12 15 00 367 42 — 341 92 nw @w 271 20 50 00 321 20 EE 698 00 BR 632 42 18 91 6561 34 1738 85 949 59 1024 09 134 52 2108 20 — 118 690 353 30 724 07 1222 63 2300 00 1801 15 214 95 169 83 417 67 147 76 735 26 398 64 2714 00 635 54 3110 71 331 16 4077 41 1500 00 712 54 156 61 667 0S 88 00 911 69 1058 35 872 26 255 63 571 61 293 1% 1120 29 rn 1577 08 2227 94 172 40 2400 34 *458 00 946 72 595 75 457 26 180 0Q 1233 01 *1545 47 — 127 00 366 73 15 00 508 73 *111 00 200 62 441 39 702 52 229 74 1373 65 rem 1242 25 679 29 1198 16 90 75 1968 20 —— 486 93 156 00 262 08 137 00 655 03 778 30 2163 67 572 56 16563 59 105 10 2331 25 780 00 609 20 156 47 622 88 19 60 798 95 Ri 1198 67 286 43 507 69 109 60 903 72 7 29 3268 71 285 96 80 00 692 67 10 00 597 09 76 45 401 98 208 83 887 26 *275 07 2340 223 748 24 1467 57 180 00 2395 81 4415 96 1358 58 4330 48 900 00 6588 02 4864 22 1123 00 458 98 1942 34 433 48 2834 80 3445 13 1326 177 3612 93 489 70 5429 40 me 409 34 rs 181 40 67 37 248 17 *377 117 223 12 221 14 338 32 381 81 941 27 2577 TO 1212 21 Re 2039 14 86 00 2135 14 BE 177 21 66 00 127 30 90 00 283 30 150 00 — $13,618 29 $39,858 08 $8,744 50 $62,220 87 *Balance | ture over the whole. Chill. !{ Srawberry Sherbet.—Cover a pint | box of strawberries which have been | washed, drained and hulled, with a | half cupful of sugar and a few | grains of salt. Allow them to stand for two hours, then mash with | wooden potato masher and set aside. Soak one and one-half teaspoonfuls of gelatin in two tablespoonfuls of cold water and dissolve over hot water. Add to it one and one-half cupfuls of rich milk, then add the strawberries rubbed through a coarse sieve. Freeze inanice cream freezer or in a mechanical refrigerator. --Brigh colored jumpers are in fashion, worn with all kinds of sports costumes. They're short, ending just below the waistline or even right at the waistline, sometimes. Most of them are sleeveless, let- ting tanned arms or the contrast- ing sleeve of the dress show. Some have short cap sleeves. A small few have long sleeves. They're smartest over white, nat- urally, because with white they make the sharpest color contrast. But over pastels, too, good color combinaions can be made that cer- tainly make anybody stand out from | the crowd. Most of the jumpers you'll see this year are of flannel or jersey and quite simply made—with V neck- lines and belted at the waist. Some of them slip over the head, some fasten down like a cardigan sweater. But there are other types more unusual and just as able, fashion- “How's your wife coming alo with her driving, Joe?” ne “Oh, she took a turn for the worse last week.” _| Lay four or five asparagus tips side | The laws of most States and munic by side in the center of each toma- | to half. Cut pepper rings and place | across the top of the asparagus, so that the ends meet the sides of the | tomato basket. Serve ice cold with French dressing. This is sufficient | ipalities now demand that the child | be successfully vaccinated against smallpox before it is ‘permitted 0) enter school. There is plenty of evi- dence from all over the world to indicate that smallpox vaccinaion ac- | tually protects agdinst the disease. Millions of people have been suc-| cessfully vaccinated without harm. | Nowadays the child should, also be given the benefit of immumzation t diphtheria with toxin-anti- toxin or with toxid. Here also millions of children have had the prevenlon without harm, and the scientific rec- ords show definitely that the death rates and the amount of illness from | diphtheria are steadily decreasing. | Today these are the two methods of inoculation against disease which | are fully established and whch may well be recommended as routine for every child. | There are other methods which are sometimes used in the preven- tion of serious epidemics. The in- oculation against scarlet fever has been proved to he practicable. How- ever, epidemics of scarlet fever are infrequent and inoculation is not rcommended unless special danger exists. We have learned to protect chil- dren against many infections by making inspections and by putting the child with an infectious disease out of ciruclation. In most good schools children | with coughs, colds and sneezing are promptly sent home. A child with | fever has no business in school. The appearance of any unusual eruption | on the skin should cause the mother to seek promptly the attention of a| physician so that a proper diagnosis | i for eight persons. | flavoring to which one tablespoonful | | stand for ten minutes. Meringued Cantaloupe.—Wash, cut | in half and scoop out cantaloupe and | cut into small pieces, together with one orange, banana, pear and peach. Cover with non.alcoholic sherry of sugar and one-half teaspoonful of salt have been added and let] Drain and | stuff mellon with this mixture. Cov-| er with meringue made by adding one tablespoonful of sugar to a stiffly beaten egg white and brown in slow oven (300 degrees). It may | be served on crushed ice. | Chicken Aspic.—2 tablespoonfuls gelatin, 4 cupful cold water, 1 pint | celery—cut in small pieces. 1% | pints well-seasoned meat stock. 1 pint chicken—cut in small pieces. Soak the gelatin in cold water. Heat the stock to boiling point. Add soaked gelatin, remove from fire and stir until gelatin is dissolved. Strain, Rinse mold in cold water, pour in enough of the stock and gelatin mixture to fill mold one- quarter inch indepth. Chill and when set, arrange design, using hard-cook- ed eggs, pimiento, green pepper, etc. Cover this with a little of the the s that average Here’s actual proof that you are | Losing money by not having Frigidaire savings effected by Frigidaire. Many users report 90 os —enough to buy all this food stock gelatin and chill again until If you have any doubts about whether you $9.96 a month through quantity buying, no design, BB jet. Mi celery and Shidk- ought to buy an electric ,or what spoilage and economy of operation. en an ; a Be erie hy od a i Ca LGR our ye make you { it The y acca Gus Spring Nor is that all. We will use your own iig- some of the numerous complications will see one of the most interesti ting exhibitions ures to show you exactly how much you can that render scarlet fever so sanger- ever held in our display room. You will see a ous and fatal may develop and create Tr : : home . welcome an opportuni may be made and other children a critical situation. The throat in- convincing demonstration of the many ways We will aios + ean r protected. | lammation may spread to the ears, in which Frigidaire pays for itself. And you © tell you t the new a SCARLET 3 | often involving the mastoid, or to will see the amazing result of a recent genuine Frigidaire, with all that it offers in RLET FEVER the nasal sinuses. The glands of the : A surplus power, greater freezing capacity and By Dr, Copeland | neck may become involved, A very mmong Frigidaire ; Frat with absoliite’ : . be had for Scarlet fever is prevalent. On this | fequent complication is an attack of its amazing economy of operation, Frigidaire solute (ability, can now account it is important for parents acute Bright's disease, To avoid these actually saves these users an average as little as $149.50 completely installed. to acquaint themselves with the untoward results the diet of the - : : prevention and symptoms of the patient should be bland, consisting | disease. y of milk, with the exclusion | Scarlet fever, or scarletina, is an| of meat and meat soups. | } a acute contagious and infectious| The disease is communicated from | disease. While no age is exempt the sick to the well through secre- . from the infection, about 90 per | tionsof the mouth, nose and discharg- : cent of the cases occur in children from 1 to 15 years of age, The dig- | ease quickly develops after exposure may be as short as one day, or it may take about a week. 1 In ing, headache and general ness, with severe sore throat, are] ing ears as well as by direct contact with the patient. It is barely pos- gible that scales from the peeling | to the fever. The incubation period skin are dangerous and health de- children, fever, nausea, vomit- all discharges have been s uneasi- | Prvention of the spread of scarlet partments quarantine the patient until ation is completed and a AISA FAIRE 3B COMPL Ww mes RLINE OOD RING. M Ww, , . all Office, Pn 1 Crider's 61-1 KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney at . Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all 1 business en- to his care. o 6 Butt Hight street 57-44 J M. CHLINE.—Attorney at Law . All prompt R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. | fever depends largely upon the care- the first symptoms noted. Occasion- | ful inspection of school children, ex- ally a convulsion may usher in the cluding all those who show suspi- attack. | clous symptoms. Various tests and The eruption appears from 12 to protective inoculations have been 36 hours after the initial symptoms. | used but their action is not always It is usually first seen in the nack | devoid of unpleasant reactions. “The and upper part of the chest, in the “Shick test” has been used to de- form of a uniform red flush. When | termine the susceptibility of chi’- viewed closely it discloses minute dren to the disease. In asylums and spots of a darker hue. This eruption | institutions where there is danger gradually fades, beginning on the of an epidemic, these particulars third or fourth day, and by the end have met with considerable success. of the week has almost disappeared. Mild cases of scarlet fever may Then follows a period of desquama- pass unnoticed and prove the source tion, or peeling, which may continue | of an epidemic of considerable extent. for from four to six weeks. During | Hence it is important that no symp- this time it is very important to|tom indicating the possible presence EASY TERMS IF YOU WISH RE WEST PENN ELECTRIC SHOP WEST PENN POWER COMPANY, Beliefonte, Pa R."C. WITMER ELECTRIC STORE, Bellefonte, Pa KEEFER HARDWARE COMPANY, State College, Pa guard against chilling. Otherwise of the aisease be overlooked. Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. State Coll 66-11 Holmes Bl D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced and lenses matched, Casebeer dg. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-238 from 2 to 8 p. m. to 4:00 p. m. Bell Ph 20% Reduction 76-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. Bellefonte, Pa. ? nn IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 1420 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jowelry nm tm btm, FEEDS! per 100 lbs. Wagner's 169% Dairy Feed 125 Wagner's 20g; Dairy Feed - 1.30 Wagner's 329% Dairy Feed - 145 Wagner's Pig Meal - - - - 160 Wagner's Egg Mash - - - - 175 Wagner's Scratch Feed- - - 125 Wagner's Chick Feed - - - 1.80 Wagner's Chick Starter and Grower with Cod Liver Oil 2.00 s Horse Feed- - 126 Wagner's Winter Bran - - 110 's Winter Middlings - 1.20 Wagner's Standard Chop - - 120 Blatchford Calf Meal 25lbs - 1.26 Wayne Calf Meal Per H - - 3.50 Wayne Egg Mash - ~- - - 2.10 Oil Meal S19. - - - 2.00 Cotton Seed 43%- - - 1.40 Soy Bean Meal- - - 1.60 Gluten Feed- - - - 1.40 Fine Ground Alfalfa Meal - 225 Meat Scrap 45% - =. = 200 Tankage- - - - 2.75 Fish Meal- - - - 2.75 Fine Stock Salt - - - - - 100 Oyster Shell =- =» -» - - - 1.00 Let us grind your Corn and Oats and make up your Feed, with Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Gluten, Alfalfa, Bran, Midds and Molasses. We will make delivery ontwo ton All accounts must be paid in 30 jaya, Interest charged over that If you want bread and gustry’uss Oue Batt u3g'Gold Cy C.V. Wagner & Co. Inc BELLEFONTE, PA. 75-1-1yr. MODERN WOMEN NEED NOT SUFFER monthly pain and delay dus RE sista EF Foldb (Hy 1¥ JHB y i Saas Caldwell & Son 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