The annual commencement at the | to relate his most thrilling war expe rlence he smiled and said: | ity of the rich, the envy of the poor and | Law, Bellefonte, Pa all courts. . Office, room 18 | ELABORATE PROGRAM | a Lejeune Got “Thriller” | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN | ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Prue an | FOR COMMENCEMENT TIME | HOMESPUN After War Was Over | DAILY THOUGHT l= KLINE_ WOODRING.—Attorney #1 | AT STATE COLLEGE When General Lejeune was asked | ivy sip Ses Siete Tae . Tiatice a Bellefonte, Pa., May 27, 1932. —————————————————— Your Health i THE MOSQUITO The insect family, Culicidae, has been fuily considered in Bulletin 21 of tne State Department of Health, | Commonwea:th of Pennsylva-| nia, March 1911, but presentation | of the following metnods to prevent | development in the various stages | seems advisable in this Bulletin. i ‘I'ne campaign against mosquitoes should reaily ve begun in winter, as at this time the hivernating specics are found in houses. ‘thorough screening of the house with netting or wire screens having 18 to 20 meshes to the inch, wil keep the mosquitoes from getting indoors. Should mosquitoes get in through the opening of doors and windows, | or through impeifect screening or! absence of screens, their numbers can be reduced by the use of a pad-| dle made of an oolong sheet of wire | gauze, tacked onto a strip of wood | of suitable size to serve as a handle. Daily persistence in this practice will destroy them all. In order to .destroy them in the house, either in winter or in summer, the mixture of carbolic acid crystals and gum camphor which is described under the subject of the House Fly, will ‘be found effectual. In large cellars several portions’ should be prepared at the same time, | in order to secure equal distribution of the vapor and equal effect! throughout the cellar. ‘The smoke from smoldering pyrenthum paralyz- | es the insect but does not kill and | as the stupefied insects are difficult to find, this is but a palliative meas- .ure. The burning of jimson weed (stramonium) and saltpetre is rec-| ommended. The space to be rid of | ‘mosquitoes must be tightly closed so | that no fumes can escape for two “hours. Three parts of powdered jim- | son weed mixed with one part of | .altpetre is spread in a layer one- half inch thick, on a tin sufficiently | large to hold all the mixture neces-| sary or several tins may be SHO ed. The powder is then ligh in| several places and the fumes will | shortly penetrate the 1,000 cubic feet | of air space. The mosquitoes found on the ceil- of bed-rooms in the evening may quickly be killed by means of a shallow tin cup or jelly-glass cover- ‘nailed to the end of a stick and] moistened inside with kerosene. This is placed ler the mosquito which after the application of bituminous either falls into or flies against the| oo. i015 to our highways has caus- oil and is killed. i Mosquitoes may be repelled by the | burning of Chinese punk and by the | less desirable application of equal | of olive oil and oil of citronella | to head, face, hands and ankles every half hour or so. napthaline | or tar camphor in the pockets is al- | so of some use in keeping mosquitoes | from the person. In case one is bit- ten by mosquitoes the best antidotal | application is a diluted solution of | ‘amber water applied to the bite as soon as possible. However, the most satisfactory means of fighting these | insects are those directed to the de- struction of the larvae and abate- ment of the breeding places. Since the mosquito does not fly more than one-half mile from breeding-place and apparently only Tarly, 3a far as this, it is practically possible for any locality to free it- self by bringing about a crusade against the mosquito within its own territory and for one-half mile around the same. The transference of mosquitoes by winds over long distances may occur and can not be most extensive mosquito breeding areas in or around cities and towns or in a given locality, are so situated that in the course of local improve- & gc 53 8° fs Ii 3 = § g ; males when they alight to deposit eggs. Usually, an application should be made once each month, though its more frequent use may be advis- able under certain conditions. It is| ices. more evenly distributed if placed in | trained voice the water a short distance from the = shore line. if not at the bottom, may also be treated | with kerosene. All standing water should be similarly cared for. In order to more completely do Pennsylvania State College will be | held June 3rd to 6th, inclusive, and an elaborate program has been ar- ranged, as follows: FRIDAY, JUNE 3 12:00 Noon.—Trustee Election by Dele- gates—Luncheon and meeting, | Nittany Lion Inn | M.—"“The Nut Farm" —Penn | State Players, Auditorium : (Make Reservations) 9:30 P. M.—Fraternity Dances SATURDAY, JUNE 4,— ALUMNI DAY | P. Alumni Registration—All Day—Old Main | 9:00 A. M.—Alumni Golf Tournament, College Course i 10:00 A. Varsity), Beaver Field i 10:30 A. M. Annual Meeting—Alumni | Council, Little Theatre—0 1d | Main 11:00 A. M.—Alumni Election of Trust- | ees, 2083 Old Main 12:00 Noon.—Alumni Luncheon McAllister | Hall 2:00 P. M.—Meeting of the College Board of Trustees, Board room, | Old Main i M.—Baseball—Bucknell, Beaver | Field | M.—"We The People’'—By the Penn State Thespians, Auditor- | ium (Make Reservations) P. M.—Fraternity Dances Class Reunions—All Day SUNDAY, JUNE 5 i A. M.—Alumni Breakfast, Nittany | Lion Inn i M. Baccalaureate Sermon, Audi- | torium i Dr. Joseph R. Sizoo, Pastor of | the New York Avenue Presby- terian Church, Washington, D. C M.—Concert by the Blue Band, | 2:30 P. 6:00 P. $:30 9:30 4:00 P. 7:00 Open Air Theatre—Front Cam- | pus i Class Reunions—All Day MONDAY, JUNE 6 A. M.—Senior Class Day Exercises, | Auditorium | M.—School Reception to Seniors | and Parents | 12:16 P. M.—Senate Luncheon to Trustees | and Commencement Speaker, | Nittany Lion Inn | 3:15 P. M.—Commencement Procession (Forms in front of College Li- brary and marches to Recrea- tion Hall) M.—Commencement Exercises, Recreation Hall | Address—Dr. John H. McCrack- | en, Associate Director, American | Council on Education, Washing- ton, D. C. . M.—Joint Concert—Penn State Glee Club and College Sym- phony Orchestra, Auditorium (Make Reservations) M. to i0:45 P. M.—Commence- ment Reception, Recreation Hall (Alumni, Faculty, Seniors and Guests 10:45 P. M. to 2: A. M.—Commencement Recreation Hall 9:00 10:45 A. | 10:00 P. SPEED WASTES MATERIAL ON NEWLY OILED ROAD M.—Lacrosse Game (Alumni vs. | . | actual purchase and sale both of com- “Excessive immediately i ed considerable loss to the depart- ment for years t”” 8S. S. Lewis, | secretary of highways, states, “and | I will immediately take steps (0 overcome this loss.” During 1931 a system of warning | users of the highways that oil | would be applied to certain high- | ways within a limited time was in- augurated by Secretary Lewis. The warned in advance avoided a great many sections immediately af- | ter the oil had been placed Many careless motorists, however, contin- | ued to drive these sections at ex- cessive speeds with the result that bituminous materials and chips were thrown from the road and many other cars were discolored and dent- ed by these materials flying from the road. Secretary Lewis stated that he intends to erect barricades at the tions and warn of opera motorists that they must slow down while traveling those segtions of the road which have been oiled. i If the highway department is un-, this loss | disregard successful in eliminating and motorists continue these instructions it may be neces- sary to block off the road entirely causing lengthy detours in many in- stances, “I believe that a large percentage of the motorists will be leased to accede to our requests that they slow down while over the sec- tions which have been immediately oiled,” Lewis said. COLLEGE WILL BE HOST TO FARMERS JUNE NINTH New and interesting developments bearing upon and home making, will be displayed to farmers and their families when meet Pennsylvania State ege, pulse appreciating this innovation of June 9, for the annual group, numbers, plano-accordion selections, and com- edy features will be furnished in the evening by the Pnnsylvania Railroad Altoona works male chorus of e——— the cooperation of every household- er must be en and tenants completely with | material that mosquitoes will be ef- | fectively kept from getting at the away with the mosquito breeding | standing water. 50 | | geacoast. They are landlocked people. "ETHICS OF BANKING * By MELVIN A. TRAYLOR President First National Bank, Chicago | with the lust of We must not take unfair advantage of our competitors. It is entirely proper for us by legitimate | means to obtain all | the business that' we can, but in doing | so we ought to do nothing that will injure our competi: | tors and that will | Melvin A. Traylor in any way aid to | destroy the confidence which the banks | must repose in each other and which the community at large must repose in | the banks as a whole if we are going | to thrive, and remember always we cannot thrive separately. We shall esther all thrive together or all suffer disaster. * %® * Sentiment in Banking No sentiment in banking? Will you | recall just one day's activity at your | desk—what were the problems you considered? Did they apply solely to, the cold-blooded conduct of the affairs | of your bank, weighing, measuring, | analyzing, valuing securities, extend- ing credit, driving the best bargains | possible, having in mind only the mate- i rial return from your day's labor? Cer- | tainly such is not the case. I recall | many days—happy days, too—in my experience in a very small country bank, in which I am sure not one-tenth of my time was given to the real con- sideration of the financial returns to my institution, . Open Markets 1 believe in an open market for the | modities and securities. But so long as the actual rate for credit in this country swings up and down according to the demand for funds for specula- tive purposes, little influenced by cen- tral or other banking policy, then | something is wrong somewhere. More- over, it business is influenced—as is almost universally charged —by the state of public mind; and If the state of public mind Is influenced, as in re cent years it most certainly has been, to run the scale from extreme optimism to extreme pessimism according to the characters on a ticker tape, then some- thing is wrong with the public mind, or the conduct of the forces back of the tape. Those responsible must pro- vide the answer fren Cs a——— A ————— Doors in Ancient Times Judging by lack of doors in the great temples of Nineveh, Babylon and Ephesus, also the Parthenon, there is an impression that all the buildings of ancient Greece and Rome were door- less. In Pompeli and the Lateran ba- silica, as well as several of the tem- ples, is proof, however, that single doors, double doors, and even sliding doors were used In these early times. But it is true that skins, linen veils, tapestries, and silk curtains protected the doorways of many dwelings then as they still do in some parts of the East to Insure privacy for the inhabi- tants, Burying Ground for Pets A beautiful plot of ground near Murphy, N. C., 1s dotted with compar- atively expensive marble and granite tombstones to mark the final resting place of animal and bird pets of res- idents ‘n this vicinity during the last forty years. Among the inmates are owls, cats, monkeys, dogs, squirrels, parrots, bantams and a peacock. Many of the graves are dotted with two mounds, telling the story of the Ina- bility of one mate to live long without the other. ——————— Star Nearest the Earth The nearest fixed star is Alpha Cen tauri, whose estimated distance is 25, 000,000,000,000 miles. At the rate of 186,400 miles a second its light re- quires four years and 128 days to reach the earth, while sound would take more than 8,000,000 years. It is sald that an express train trom the star and moving uninterrupt- edly at a uniform velocity of 37 miles an hour, would not reach the earth in less than 75,000,000 years. ———————————— Queen “Pretty Thing” Found Dr. Selim Hassan found in the new ly discovered fourth pyramid at Gizeh, Egypt, the funeral chamber of “Pret- ty Thing” She is believed to have been the wife of the Pharaoh Khafra, the fourth king of the fourth dynasty, who ruled from 2867 to 2811 B. C. Investigations revealed an opening to the tomb large enough to enable a man to enter, and that robbers had removed all of the queen's mummy except the head. Land-Locked Nations There are 15 nations which have ne become wholly insular in thelr thinking and living. They have not before them that boundless, living, restless, ever-changing immensity, sym- bolized by the sea, to touch their souls adventure, the lure magic of aflen They of the unknown, the shoves. “It did not come in the war, but after it, when the troops of occupa- | tion were passing through Belgium, We were given a wonderful reception and in one city I was on the platform and had to make a speech. When I had finished our chaplain arose and to my amazement and horror an- pounced that Mlle. Clementine, the famous dancer who was traveling with me, would entertain with some of her inimitable dances. “And how she danced, while I sat there in horror, knowing that my rep =tation was ruined beyond repair. “Imagine, then, my relief when, | at the end of the dance, Mlle Clemen- tine removed a very pretentious wig and I recognized the close-cropped black head and smiling countenance of my very masculine soldler-cook and the chaplain explained the joke to the qudience, “««Ah'" I exclaimed jumping to my feet, “if he only could cook as well gs he dances war would almost he 8 | pleasure.’ ” Big Surprise in Store for That Unknown Girl A Cleveland girl on her vacation, and traveling on the railroad for the first time In her life, was startled when the waiter in the dining car re marked : “You haven't ridden with us lately, nave you?” She didn’t bother to tell him he haa (he wrong person, He continued: “what has become of that girl thay ased to travel with you?” “Oh,” said the imaginative Cleve | @nd girl, “haven't you heard? Why, she went to Europe and married an English nobleman with millions.” “Why.” he returned, “I thought she ~as married already!” “She was,” the girl returned, glibly, ‘hut her husband eloped with a movie actress, so she divorced him.” And she calmly ordered dessert, ana gave herself up to pleasant reflections as to what would happen when the unknown girl boarded the train one of these days.—Oleveland Plain Dealer. Record Group of Statesmen Elson says: “An abler body ot statesmen has not assembled in mod- ern times than that which made our Constitution in 1787, nor has any as- sembly met with truer motives, or pro- duced a grander result. The whole number of delegates was 55, and there was scarcely a man among them who had not been distinguished In the state or in the field, who had not been a governor, a member of congress, or A commander In the army. A few had served in the Stamp Act congress In 1765, others had set their names to the Immortal Declaration in 1776, and one had framed the plan of union at Albany in 1754. Could these men have looked Into the future they would have seen two of their own number become Presidents of the United Stites, one a Vice President and many others foreign ministers, members of the Supreme court, cabinet officials and United States senators.” Nearest Planet The relative sizes and distances ot the planets have been explained by Sir Norman Lockyer by analogy. Tn accordance with this, the Sun Is a globe 2 feet In diameter; Mercury, a grain of mustard seed, 164 feet away; Venus, a pea In an orbit of 284 feet; the Earth, a pea, 430 feet diatant; Mars, a pin-head, 654 feet away; Ju- piter, an orange, at a distance of half a mile; Saturn, a smaller orange, four-fifths of a mile away; Uranus, a small plum, one and a half miles away, and Neptune, a larger plum at a distance of two and a half miles.— Literary Digest. Bugle Old Instrument The origin of the bugle, In common with that of the hunting horn, is of the remotest antiquity, writes Willlam C. White, United States army band leader, Sixteenth Infantry, In the United States Recruiting News, Tubas, horns, cornets and bugles have as com- mon archetype the horn of the ram, bull or other animal, whose form was copled and modified in bronze, wood, brass and silver. Of all these instru- ments, the bugle has In the highest retained the acoustic proper- ties and the characteristic scale of the prototype, and Is stiil put to the orig- inal use for giving military signals. Soldiers Refused Votes Many of the soldiers of the Revolu tionary army never cast a ballot In the Republic they had helped estab- lish, because of property qualifica- tions required for voting. New York's constitution permitted no man to vote for governor who did not own land worth $500 free of debt. In 1800 Tammany ball bought land for mem- bers to enable them to qualify for voting. The organization obtained a majority in the common council In this manner. —————— Regret The man of regrets Is almost in- variably a fellow of flimsy texture, | Continually bemoaning the fact that he has done the wrong thing, he shuffies through lfe a sad and pa- thetle performer, His hopes are al ways empty. His cup of sorrow is ever full. Its ingredients are spilt milk and tears.—Kansas City Times. | the greed of the merchants.—Ignace | | Paderewski, pianist and ex-premier of Poland. | —Good news for warm weather. | Jos Tor ! | Not man-short—as it was when | | boyish dresses were the fashion. Just | short enough to make neat rolls or | | Bat. curls iR the back. Neater, simpler coiffures are the | thing. Loose, blowy crirls straggling | down at the nape of the neck are, | out. But just what to do with hair? Well, listen to Theodore, coiffure to | many New York fashionables (and | Helen Chandler and Claudette Col-/ pert when they're in town). “Cut the back to about an inch | or at most an inch and a half long," | | says he. (That's long enough for the | | new, flat, PSeUlt pel curls that | Paris and Ina re are wearing or | | for a soft upturned roll. | | “Keep the waves soft and flat to | the head,” he'll go on. (And usually | | that means the much neglected busi- | | ness of thinning-out underneath.) “And, of course,” he'll tell you, | “hair must be arranged particularly | | well on the left side since most hats | tilt to the right.” If you have a piquant Helen | Chandler kind of face, perhaps, like | her, you'll want your ears to show. — | According to Theodore, she likes her coiffure changed often but al-| ways wants her ears exposed. Claudette Colbert, on the other | hand, has the same coiffure week | after week,—two deep dips on the | right and one to the left. i i Simple coiffures are best unless | you have plenty of time (and mon- ey) to spend on hair dressing. But for special occasions the sculptured | | curls plastered close to the head are smart. Or a whole line of soft little | curls running straight up the back | of the head. If your features are regular | enough and not too round, hair | brushed straight and smoothly back | with just the ends curled up is new | and different. Carole Lombard wears | hers that way. A bang is a new- | fashioned idea lots of girls are tak- | ing to when they have too high | foreheads. It's newer than the usual | dipped wave, There was a prediction last year ‘by one of the best known furriers in Paris that the animal kingdom | was going to be skinned in a big | way for the winter of 1932, begin- | ning about October. “As a matter of | fact,” says this authority, “the need | for economizing has proved to many | women that a fur coat which, if | cared for properly, will last some- | times as long as six years is a much | wiser investment than the cloth coat | fur-trimmed which supplanted the | fur coat for a few seasons, but which is seldom good for more than two years at best. Furthermore, | when a fur coat is no longer wear- able as a long coat, it can be made i Blatchford Calf Meal 25lbs into a jacket or else can be used as |, =o Calf Meal Per H - Wayne Egg Mash Oil Meal Ho - - Cotton Seed 43%- - 1 | trimming, so that from every stand- | point it is both practical and eco- | nomical. —While the printed chiffon frock for afternoon and evening during the warm months has always been | a classic, the ubiquituous cotton has | invaded this field and we frequently | see in the smart shops the light- | weight printed cottons used in place | of chiffon. | -—One of the accessory points | stressed in the mid-season collection | in Paris was the tie-up between the hat band and belt on summer sport | | dresses. While the idea is not new, | | the material employed is. A number |of the important houses showed velvet belts and hat bands with linen or pique dresses, and this is a new novel fashion touch. Black velvet on white dresses and hats appeared to be the most popular, and we can look for this new com- bination of both color and mater- jal for sport in our own summer fashions. —The knitted wool jumper, the one that's just about ideal for golf when worn with a flannel skirt—can be had in solid colors or many col- ors. Plaid or str wools of t, loose weaves, featuring the bright Algerian shades of red, blue, green and yellow, make any costume as gay as you like it. — While most jumpers either don't fasten at all or fasten straight in the front, some of them close way over at the left side. Some others are made like a man's waist- coat, in double-breasted effect, end- ing in points below the waist. Some have round neck or square instead of the usual V-shape. And some are quite detailed, like the jumper originated by Goupy, the Paris couturier. This is an especially good type of jumper to choose if you're planning any kind of boat trip. It's a little warmer and more protective than the others. It's of flannel with con- trasting belt. You'll find these jumpers useful, too, if you go in for riding or for camping or any sport where you wear trousers or breeches. They look fine, pulled over the tailored shirt and snugly belted. —1 wish that I recipe when somebod ways of using had had this asked me for cake some cup sugar, grated and 2 cups milk. into a baking pan. | oven until firm in center, a few times to prevent raisins. Serve hot or cold cream or any preferred sauce. —Tie a little how of bright-color- er ribbon on the handles of the scisscis and they can be quickly found in the sewing basket. | the ‘Wagner's Horse Feed- Wagner’ Soy Gluten Feed- Fine Ground Meat Scrap 45% Tankage- - Fish Meal- Fine Stock Salt Oyster Shell and make u| an Seed Meal, Alfalfa, Bran, Midds and OY C.Y. Wagner & Co. KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney si I on piven al legal San: ane | tfusted to his care. 0 5 East Hight street 57-44 M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney at Law A and Justice of the Peace. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE.—, Consultation in Office in W. ons Bellefonte, Pa. Bellefonte Crider's Ex. | D. CASEBEER, Optometrist. tered and licensed by the Eyes examined, glasses fitted. isfaction guaranteed. Frames and lenses matched, Casebeer High St., Bellefonte, Pa. —Regis- State. Sat- - VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, by the State Board. State fonte io 2 Garbelek in Court House, Wed from 2 to 8 p. m. and to 4:00 p. m. Bell Ph Saturday, Licensed 20% Reduction 76-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. Bellefonte, Pa. IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 1420 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry per 100 Wagner's 165, Dairy Feed - Wagner's 20 Dairy Feed - Wagner's 32% Dairy Feed - Wagner's Winter Bran s Winter Middlings Wagner's Standard Chop Bean Meal- Alfalfa Meal E .. Let us grind your Corn Ofl Meal, i if CELLBBEREE EER BERS EROERERY We will make delivery ontwo toa orders. All accounts must be paid in 30 Interest charged over Sur Best ‘ana Gold MOD NEED NG Inc Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies Ail Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfullyss: Promptly Furnished