Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 17, 1932, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Bellefonte, Pa., June 17, 1932.
— |
Your He alth
THE FIRST CONCERN.
i
|
i
i
i
i
f
|
High lights in the weekly bulletin |
of May 30 from the State Health
Department are:
One of the boys, Mike Basarab,
aged 17, in the State Sanitorium at
Cresson, won a prize of twenty dol-
lars offered by a Pennsylvania news-
paper for the best letter, setting
forth the outstanding issues in the
approaching presidential campaign.
Mike attended the sessions of the
.Sanitorium grammar school, gradu-
ating June 1931, Deciding to further
improve himself he is now taking a
course in shorthand and typewriting.
He read the offer in the newspaper
and decided to set forth his own
ideas of the issues before the Amer-
ican people at the present time. The
information from which he gained
his facts and opinions came to him
entirely through his daily reading.
Now that a satisfactory definition
has been approved by the Secretary
of Health for pasteurized A milk,
the Bureau of Milk Control has turn-
ed its attention to the establishment
of a like definition for “Grade A
Raw Milk.” A committee has been |
appointed to go into the matter very
thoroughly and assembled in Harris-
burg on June 14. It is expected
to prepare a definition that will be
established as a State standard for
“Grade A Raw Milk.” of the future.
+
Influenza went right to the frout
in the March mortality statistics. A
total of 735 lives were taken by this |
disease, which was greater than Feb-
and January combined. Noting |
this, it is not surprising to find that
| physical vigor,
| for one semester on probation.
ed . ]
Rule, State Superintendent of Pub-
lic Instruction, The date for the
new standards to become effective
has been moved up from September |
to June 1, 1932. |
Four general standards have been |
set up for admission to the teachers
colleges; general scholarship, char-
acter and personality, health and |
and a personal in-
terview with faculty members at the |
colleges or places designated by the!
presidents of the respective colleges. |
Dr. Rue says the new admission |
requirements will create a selective |
process by which it is hoped enroll- |
ments in the colleges will not only |
be limited, but that “they will bring
to the teaching service those young
men and women in the high schools |
vest qualified to prepare themselves
for teaching.”
Applicants whe rank in the upper:
half of their graduating class in high
school will be admitted on certificate |
without further evidence of general
scholarship. Those who do not rank
in the upper half may be admitted
on probation, provided they are rec-
ommended by their high school prin-
cipal as being able to do creditable
| college work; appraisal of the de-
tailed high school record must in-
dicate to admission authorities of |
the colleges that the candidate can
do satisfactory college work; also
a rating satisfactory to the institu-
tion is to be made on a scholastic
aptitude test administered at the!
college. Students who qualify under
| these regulations will be admitted’
At
the end of this time they must with-
draw from the college unless they
meet the required standard of
scholarship in at least nine semester
hours of work. |
The second entrance requirement
| to be met by all successful applicants |
the pneumonia death figures,
run very high for March.
diseases are so closely related in| by secon
their activity, that an increase ia) candidate's trustworthiness,
the rate of one is almost always ac- | tive, industry, social adaptability,
companied by an increase in the rate | personal appearance and sympathy.”
of the other. Pneumonia accounted’
for 1238 deaths in the month of have “health, physical vigor,
too | calls for “integrity and appropriate
than February. | successful performance of the duties
“The “King of all Killers,” diseas-| of a teacher, and absence of pre-
es of the heart, had more than 400 | disposition toward ill health as de-
These | persotialit as shown by an estimate |
i ry school officials of the |
Successful applicants also must
i emo- |
March, a 50 per cent increase over | tional stability, absence of physical |
January figures and a third more defects that would interfere with the |
deaths in advance of either of the
previous months,
The sanitary survey is emphasiz- |
EP Saaitation,”
munities. Among the important
of the program is the
very earnest solicitation c/ucern-|
‘ing the common house fly. The fly,
is to be (Swalied” on sight, aught
and dispatc ypes of traps,
ut more impo thin 2 Dat.
: Yeeding places are estroy
all unclean spots made sanitary, and |
homes are to be completely screen- |
«ed. It is a cold fact, admitted by |
cautious scientists that the fly is
‘the most dangerous animal on earth; |
is many times more dangerous to
“you and your children, than all the
man r:iting tigers of India or the)
poison us reptiles of the tropics and
has csused more sickness and death
‘than any other insect or animal]
.enemy of the human race.
The sanitary survey in Pennsyl-
vania will fail if it does not make
a clean sweep of every breeding
lace, garbage dump, manure heap
B other e location for the
rapid reproduction of the fly popula-
tion of a community.
Having determined by tests that
farming on the mountain top at the
.gite of the Cresson Sanitorium is
impractical it has been decided to
lant es of evergreen which will,
in ppg years, make this one of
the most beautiful sights along the
for rural com-!
rest trees have been planted.
program known as “Common | ph
termined by a medical examination |
at the college,” All applicants are
required to present a certificate of |
physical examination signed by a
ysician and must be prepared for
an additional medical examination
by the examining physician at the
college. Students with remedial de-
fects may be accepted on condition
that immediate treatment be under-
taken for the removal of these de-
ects.
The fourth of the series of new
entrance requirements calls for a
personal interview with an examin-
ing committee of the colleges with
“particular attention to personality,
speech habits, social presence, ex-
interests of the applicant
and promise of professional develop- |
ment.” The personal interview will |
Provide opportunity for the college
select those persons who give]
promise of becoming desirable teach- |
ers, and to take an inventory of the
personal characteristics of the appli-
cants who are admitted, making this
inventory available to instructors
and officers concerned with personal |
work in the college. The blank forms
to be used in determining qualifica-
tions are to be uniform for all the
fourteen State Teachers Colleges.
BONES OF PRISONERS FOUND
IN OLD DUNGEON AT DOVER
An ancient dungeon in which pris-
oners of earl ware were incar-
cerated, and in which many were left
to die, has been unearthed under the
old Kent county building on Dover
| overtopping brush from the individ-
ual trees usually will suffice.
| must be moved away from the barn
| corn, lima beans, cucumbers, melons
~~ FORD
TRUCK WEEK
This is an opportunity to see how the transportation needs of a new
business era have been met with new economy, performance, and reli-
ability in the new Ford trucks. Your Ford dealer is ready to give you
-_-
Body types to fit every hauling need. 50-horscpower 4-cylinder engine.
| New freely shackled semi-elliptic rear springs distribute load stresses.
Wide, deep, strong frame gives substantial support for bodies. 34 floating
type rear axle for heavy service. 4-speed transmission. Tubular steel
| coupling shaft with heavy duty universals at each end. New bi-partible
I * coupling and removable main cross member permit easy servicing of
New comfort and safety for
the driver. These features ard many others will convince you that the
| New Ford Trucks can save you money and give you added performance.
BEATTY MOTOR COMPANY Inc.
the complete story.
| ® ® ®
| clutch, transmission, and coupling shaft.
Bellefonte, Penna.
initia- |
r
FARM NOTES
| —Weeding out low-producing cows,
! always a desirable practice, is es-
| pecially important now. Such cows
destroy profits made by good cows,
Start the low producers to the
butcher without delay or dry them
off and fatten them on pasture for
sale or home butchering in the fall.
—Weed and bush growth that
over-tops and shades pines
and spruces should be cut or cleaned
away from the trees during the
late June or early July. Simply
tramping back or breaking off the
and harrowed in while in a fine pow-
dery condition. Hydrated lime and
limestone will do much more im-
mediate good if harrowed in before
rain, or even heavy dews which
make it run together or become
crusted or sticky.
—As a movement to return thou-
sands of unemployed men to the
farms gained momentum in West-
ern Pennsylvania today, reports
from other parts of the country in-
dicated a general back-to-the-land
trek is under way.
Throughout the middle West,
youths who a few years ago left the |
farms are retu to their homes, |
according to Wood Netherland at St.
Louis.
Pointing to the records of the
Federal Land Bank, Netherland add-
ed that more than 40 per cent of
farm sales du: the past year have
been to city folk.
A bill which would encourage a
national back-to-the-land movement
is now before the House, The pro-
calls for no appropriation but
authorizes various tal de-
| ts to aid city dwellers to
become farmers by a program to be
carried out with present facilities
and finances. The , sporjored by
tative Loring M. Black of
New York, has been reported favor-
ably by the House Committee on
—Manure on pasture will often
give as great return as anywhere.
Late spring and summer manure
and often there is no crop land
available on which to put it. Fifty
pounds of superphosphate on each
spreader load of manure will help
to bring in clover and increase
quality, quantity, and palatability
of the grazing.
—Replant missing hills of sweet
and squash early in order to have
all the crop mature at the same
time. Little thinning is required
with these crops where only good Labor,
seed is planted in a well-prepared Meanwhile, a group of prominent
soil. | Pittsburghers is attempting to b
- | about legislation in the State w.
—Careless handling of strawber- would provide for more than 300,000
ries at picking time and hauling to acres of state-owned land suitable
market always decreases the price for farming.
several cents a quart. | The law is to permit the unem-
-" | ployed families to settle on this land
—3e te the young cockerels and for the State to furnish each
and pullets as soon as their sex can family with about $1,500 worth of
highway. Already more than 3,000
young fo
be determined,
equipment. The loan could
The chicken farm and pig farm are Green.
‘ both successful euterprjzea. As a re-
sult of the proper feeding of the
chickens, there was a production of
30,000 dozen eggs and in the sum-
‘mer and. fall 4% ‘tons of dressed
chickens the Sanitorium
tables. The pig fall 0008 well. Dur-
i the last r were
rcasad, weighing ‘total of 40,000
pounds for the table,
The revelation recently made, that
5 per cent of all the high school
students tested at a prominent
P vania High School, were
actively tubercular, and that 37 per
cent responded positively to a tu-
berculin test, is food for thought for
all health workers, school executives
and parents in the Commonwealth,
Dovetailing this discovery into the |
recent announcement made by Dr.
Theodore B. Appel, Secretary of
Health, that “tuberculosis takes its
heaviest toll among those in the
most productive years cf life,” there
is added cause for very genuine con-
cern. The figures reveal that in 1931,
22 per cent of all deaths from tuber-
culosis occurred in the age group
. between 20 and 20 years.
At the time this announcement
was made, it was the cause of grave
concern. The most recent informa-
tiox on the subject showing the
tendency of our supposedly best
group of youth from a health stand-
point, to have tuberculosis, adds to
the gravity of the situation. The nat-
ural conclusion must be that tuber-
culosis having laid hold on the young
people of high school age, pursues
its ravages within the next few
years and claims the lives of many
before they reach the age of 30
years. Total deaths last year, be-
tween 20 and 29 years, were 1,250.
For those who did not show ac-
tive tuberculosis, but only the pres-
ence of the disease in quiescent
Between moldering brick walls
air, but constructed in such a man-
ner to exclude light, workmen dis-
| covered a number of skeletons,
| It is believed they are the bones
| of prisoners of the early Governors
| of ware—men who were “forgot-
ten” after the cell doors clanged
| behind them.
| The discovery was made by exca-
victors making ready for a new State
| building program at Dover.
| Early records of Kent gouty re-
| veal that on this site the jail
' was built in 1740. Old maps show
| the cells, designated as “offices,”
| laid out under the old county build-
i
| James Hamilton, then Governor of
| Delaware, and a number of citizens
| were designated as trustees and or-
| dered to sell the jail and purchase
| another lot for a new prison,
The building now being moved
was built on the brick walls of the
old dungeon.
SENSITIVE
A passenger on a tramcar noticed
that the conductor was behaving
strangely. At each stop he ran to
the front of the car and dangled a
piece of string in front of the driver,
who swore roundly. Finally the pas-
senger asked: “What's the idea of
this little game you're | laying with
the driver?”
“It's like this, sir, confided the
conductor. “My driver, 'e ain't got
no sense of humor, 'Is brother was
‘ung this morning.”
i
| form, care will be taken to avoid ex-
| cessive athletic and other activity,
| nutrition and rest will be adequately
| supervised, and danger may be
| avoided,
broken only by small slits to admit.
[9 between 1759 and 1763,
| farming
—— | be d over a 10 years’ period
—Orchard cover crops should be out of profits from the land.
| sown immediately. Legumes are con- | John M. Philips, former chairman
sidered best in most cases. Where of the State Board of Game Com-
legumes cannot be grown to ad-| missioners, is the original sponsor
vantage, millet, sudan grass, oats, of the plan.
and rye are better than no cover
crop at all. By seeding cover crops
in the peach and apple orchard now,
the cost of cultivating for the re-
mainder of the season is eliminated. |
—Thin vegetable plants as soon
as they show signs of being crowd-
ed and give the remaining plants a
—Exceilent results have been se-
cured at Cornell! University from a
new calf-feeding mixture. Only 325
unds of whole milk were dur-
the first 1% walks. Toe mixture
fed included pounds ground
yellow corn, 320 pounds of rolled
chance to mature. Onions, spinach, oats, 320 pounds of winter, wheat
and leaf lettuce thinnings can be bran, 5 Joduds dry skimmilk.
used for food. iy Ty
! gi The calves were fed this starter for
| —The bark slips easily in June | I at 16 weeks. THY. Nc then
and July. To gave une: ja Lik | ing 300 pounds each of yellow corn-
trees, trim and peel m, an ow | eal wheat
Sens LD SE ¢ Son and 185 pou da of i meal
up and e e nex tarte:
3p winter. Since the price of wood | The calf ds A a ra-
is low, thin out the poorer trees and | tion to 4 pounds. Hay was fed liber-
save the better ones for the future,
—Plant sup lementary crops to
help carry the dairy cows throu | HOW LONG WILL THE
the short pasture season, which is DEPRESSION LAST?
aiitogt jeviistle) 21 8 Jnte Fy A business depression started in—
such as oats and peas, corn, clover, 1857 and we 12 TOA.
or soybeans are suitable, or if good bi ud ae hed | wen
land is available, a fleld of sudan go, 4 jagted 22 months
will provide a lot of feed that
1893 and lasted 25 months.
the cows can harvest themselves. 1903 lasted 25 months.
1907 and lasted 12 months,
1914 and lasted 8 months.
1921 and lasted 14 months.
The men who emerged from those
cycles rich and successful were those
who took advantage of the know-
ledge that, when everybody was de-
pressed and devoid of confidence,
then was the time for action.
—Tomorrow’'s dairying depends on
today's calves. Raise calves from
the very best cows and from a sire
whose ancestry is known to be good.
Cows are potentially high producers
and good profit-makers onlv when
they carry the blood of good cows.
—Lime is much more efficient if
well spread and thoroughly mixed
with the soil. Burned lime should
be carefully slaked and then spread
—Leather will be stained if mud
is not promptly removed from shoes.
i ———— Th ta
FORD TRUCK WEEK JUNE 18 to 25 INCLUSIVE
pa IRE Spi va"
* _a
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Thomas Charlton to Gustave J.
TuHiek, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.;
Emma J. Schenck, et al, Adm, to
Elizabeth C .Barnhart, tract in How-
ard Twp.; $1800,
Elizabeth C. Barnhart to Joseph
F. Herr, et ux, tract in Howard
Twp.; $1800.
John E. Bressler to Dr. Peter L.
Swank, tract in Boalsburg; $1.00.
Howard E. Holtzworth, et ux, to
Forest F. Homan, et ux, tract in
Unionville; $600.
H. Laird Curtin, et ux, to William
B. Pletcher, et ux, tract in Howard
Howard H, Woleslagle, et ux, to
Andy Swabick, tract in Snow Shoe
Twp.; $1.
Andy Swabick to William D.
Gordon, Sec'y., tract in Snow Shoe
Twp.; $1.
F. Steele Heverly, et ux, to Har-
Het Poorman, tract in Spring Twp.;
Ida M. Groe, et al, to Kathleen
Hanock, tract in Snow Shoe; $1.
SAT
USE your telephone
to reach your friends,
10 help you shop, to
summon aid in case
of need.
As an everyday cone
venience the tele.
phone is well worth
its low cost—in
emergencies it is
priceless!
Lo THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PEANA.
Nonuser—3
Employers,
This Interests You
The Workman's Compensation
Law went into effect Jan. 1,
1016. It makes insurance com-
We specialise in plac.
insurance. We
ip pm a
It will be to your interest to
consult us before placing your
JOHN F. GRAY & SON
State College Bellefonte
Good Printing
A SPECIALTY
at the
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There of work, from
is mo
the “ to the fin.
ost
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney
. Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices BN
all courts. Office, room 12 Crider's
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney
gp rig REL i
to Oe pe
his care.
57-44
i?
for
M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney at
, and Justice of the Peace.
prompt atlen! tion. Offices on second floor
Temple Court. 49-5-1y
at Law.
and Ger
bk
G. RUNKLE.—
Consultation in
man. Office in
R. R. L. CAPERS.
OSTEOPATH.
Bellefonte
Crider's Ex. 68-11
Holmes Bide.
D. CASEB trist.—!
EER, Optome Regls-
tered and licensed by the
Ey , Slasses fitted. Sat-
isfaction
and lenses matched, beer vs
| High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 3!
from 2 to 8 p. m.
to 4:0 p. m. Bell
Fire Insurance :
20% Reduction
76-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. |
Bellefonte, Pa. J
IRA D. GARMAN
JEWZLER
1420 Chestnut Street
PHILADELPHIA
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum
74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry
FE
a's
Wagzers 10% uy 20a
agner’s %
Wagner's 32% Dairy
| Wagner's Pig Meal
Wagner's Mash - -
Wagner's Scratch Feed-
Ww gs Chick Feed - -
Wagner's Chick Starter and
Grower with Cod Liver Oil
Wagner's Horse Feed- -
Wagner's Winter Bran - - -
Wagner's Winter Middlings -
Wagner's Standard Chop - -
old
-
hi
Blatchford Calf Meal 25lbs -
Calf Meal Per H - -
skh Ehehka EhabREhF
:
3
8
E
75-1-1yr.
MODERN WOMEN
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
Cheerfullys: Promptly Furnish ed
SEhEEES