SECOND SECTION NOW THAT the OPA has jellies on the point system--yoy ean't get into a jam without Government ab- proval, SPEAKING of OPA rulings the Dy-Dee Wash Co, of Louisville, Ky just got an okeh to buy a new truck | on the basis that diapers ure essen- tial. Are they kidding? EVERY policeman in the province of Mendoza, Argentina, has been or- dered to get the exact same haircut mustache and side-burns Mendoza Beaver fashion? HITLER is now making the great- est comeback in history-—his ret, eat from Russia ADD SQUELCHES: He's the kind of a guy who went 0 coliege—won an MM. A. and a B. A. but he's still Leing supporied by his P. A GAG OF WEEK: Customer I uve a Mustard plaster? gist vsorry no musturd shout mayonnaise? THE PRICE of steaks and fowl has gone up so high cheaper wo dress a chicken than to buy one FOLLOWING this week's election a candidate for office wired his cam- paign manager for resul's “The Best Man Won" he was advised Sort ol May Drug- how $ NA + | dition Che Centre Democral The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week | NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 62. Two Morrisdale Youths Injured In Auto Crash As Driver Falls Asleep Port Matilda Road .! Accident Occurs Early Sunday Morning on Near Philipsburg. Both Patients in Hospital Lyle Hub- Hubler, 17, Ji cajured at mo*uing when arivin enrcnw'e Two vouths ler, 18, and Leroy Morel R.D 1:60 o'clock Sunday the auto they were from Harrisburg, ran ofl three miles t of the Port Matilda road a tree near the Thomp ter it left the read and tically demolished The two young m-n to the Philipsburg Stace where it was said that 1 ws a possible fractured other probable Injuri was regarded cousins Wale were the rood on ' » wun ou farm Nas pra ens *nitipsbu Me n rushed were 1] | Hos pit Hubler lee and and his o« rather 1 t Vie n= had fallen been driv ny the Lyle Mrs and truck dr the that nrrabuably the asleep Leroy Hubler, Jr. was said to have his father's car when cecur His cousin 18. a of Mr. and Hubler, was with seriously injured ile Both families Creek road Irww'r of the accident red Huble: Wynne wis mor tudent on He i a along wi his Cousin ve a iver Deer TWO ACCIDENTS AT COLLEGE INTERSECTION BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER — ———— 11, 1943, RATAN NUMBER 45 Armistice aud = a, Bim | ser dy borg The intersection of College avenue Troop Movement Equals 12 World Tri ps For Every Person In Centre County rvicemen Are Getting Their First Ride on Pullman Cars. A Tremendous Transportation Problem all of Centre women world County's | children! Cars Taking 20608 men the and in sleeping i mendous undertaking, yet that Is actually about the size of the troop movement job reported today by The Pullman Company Since Pearl Harbor carried about 14,000,000 troop: tance more than 15 million pas- senger miles in its sleeping car: the company reports. These figures are sald to cover mass military ments alone, and do not include the heavy travel of furloughed men and others Pullman has a dis of move- — margin left for some of the conven- lences travelers enjoyed in peace time. Bervice today is wartime ser- vice, and by their understanding and tolerance of this fact, travelers can help us greatly in the performance of our vital job - — GIVES FAMOUS CANF by James Pol- Pennsyl A cane used Gov lock, who was executive from 1855 to 18! donated in a drive to p ing sticks for wounded learning to walk again af ing crutches The cane was of | be Random [tems ¢ AN APOLOGY : Today Is Armistice Day. What we had to say about the day in this space last week has been grossly misunderstood in some quarters, We have no quarrel with the men who did such a swell job of trimming the Germans World War I, and It Is entirely right the anniversary the ending of the conflict should eel those who won the ory. What we sought to point the incongruity hich had been defl- armis which pause war by ww forces.’ ing of the he soldiers who n lands We them the 0 home o ) BO {Oars p forgot that ir in that brated by 3 { Vice out SL Week of ending a war w t wilh vig! oried nitely means agreement of We forgot Armistice m were foreot forgo won an Lice a what filohting HENLN that EF 4 'nd of hard- of the lurked over live forever be. LO 80 many Ler name the mean any “Demand Recount Immediately, Wag. the reply a head injury b 0 {ar as ADD Descriptions: The difference gythorities knew his Injury paaween ammonia and pneumonia the former comes In bottles wi the latter comes in chests! IT'S SO crowded om Broadway ve mae Mill Worker Dies OVERHEARD in yesterday's rain Of Broken Neck “It's raining cats and dogs.” "Yeh Accident at Lock Haven Paper 1 just stepped into a poodle! NOW that Mill Proves Fatal, Sunday N.Y have Wardens are Edward McGill, 38, wives HARRY WINSTON, J on0,006. BE roo was caught in a moving belt while pot included working at the Lock Haven Paper oar operated mill Thursday night of last week, 43s E. Beaver avenue, Mr. Weaver,! Born Nashville. Tents ACCORDING to the National Pest died of a broken neck at Jefferson who was traveling east on College went to Williamsport where Association you can't eéatch a rat Hospital late Sunday afternoon. Ad-!gvenue attempted to make a left father owened an interest in without using beef. Hitler and Tojo mitted to the Lock Haven hospital tury into Shortledge when West Branch Bulletin and then be< |s are finding out the same thing! early Priday morning, following the struck near the door by Allwoerden’s came business manager Re Ci. | VICTOR MOORE claimed the Steident, be ae taken that evening: picycle coasting south 'zette and Bulletin wing the con- | other day that those Elevetor Shoes by fminiiance J detietton hoapital on Shortledge road. Police said that solidation the Bullets: With the that make you Taller Than She Is after x-rays chief m the bicycle's brakes falled williamsport Evening Bulletin, Hb iplant, when were bad for his heart. Seems he Jury the in the t5 hold at the intersection and that father then went west to Lock Hav- lear driven can’t stand the altitode neck, be Allwoerden struck the car w and Clinton Re- {struck fron Born in Lockport, the : siderable force. The rider was treat- publican paper his sons! fractures of both leg: THE difference between our boy and Mrs. Robert B. McGill, who ed by a State College phyvician for served as assistants him : : in the foxholes and the underminers now reside in Flemington, he had deep lacerations of the left jeg above Active in community " Kine in the coal holes is that while the worked at the paper mill for the the kne¢ and severe bruises of the gloe served as ass former are fighting to keen the wolf past 20 years. He was a member of shoulder and uppe body. He was secretary of the Board of MaAnag-rs away from their mothers the latter the Evangelical church and the later removed to the College infirme- of the Lock Haven Hospital, a trust! are striking to buy some new foxes Hope Hose Company and he and his ary Shortledge College in to the Lock Haven Exchang by Grover Rote of Dunns received it many I's ag Charles Corse Pollock road, State the scene of two autombie weekend accident at 5:40 p nesday involved L. C. Boerlin, o and Paul F 1. Mr. Boerlin east on Colles and was cident one Hubler, has hospital fous. His cousin, Leroy from Centre men from all are getting according the boys service country of like Many County parts of the their first Pullman {to George A. Kelly the company. Now most of them are making six or seven by Pull. man the intense training pro- gram of the armed ser sitates that many prior” embarkation abroad In Army believe comfort for the he declared ac 11t Ls last yes Wis he Wed- can omrued vv Veteran Editor, Lock Haven, Dies Galle, of Linden, R. D wh traveling aven attempted ja3 i —— William A. Kinsloe, 91, Co-Founder of Daily Newspaper m ¥ Serious Philipsburg police wa riges ile the cause but Motorist Held After Accident Mahaffey Man's Car Said to Have Struck And Killed Miner Wad unknown vires .nrecident ¢ { Vice-presicent iH Woman Is Found Dead On Farm Neighbors Find Sister Life. TREATMENT less, and Other, In- té Jé jured ¢ the setde ny of the accident nstrued tvins rip sincere for 0 Wis e ar as vices neces more points of to make turn into Bhortledge ieee road The operated wy the right rear fender ma or Was a left id moves r or OTe { 3 0 10Y following, collided with Boerlin the latter car “wung out Damage to hoth cars was estimated at about $20 At 1:30 p. m. Thursday H. Allwoerden, a "College who was injured when the bor while'cvele he was riding collided with immediately Mr al addit the in the members and military Pullman wn all all he said and Navy possible of the armed forces ity i about two-thirds itary man- | movements by ral motor sleeper Pullman is now carrying more than 800.000 troops every month in mass movements, | revealed by Mr Kelly, who pointed out that in ad- dition this heavy and steadily increasing military passenger bur- den. civilian travel itself is also at a record-breaking level. He believes that Pullman's passenger-mile vol- ume 1943 may exceed the 1942 alltime high of 19 billion by 30 or Gale un internment staged 8 ong other things Five Fed Lewisburg are 2 hunger strike because the prison officials insist on ng the prisoners’ mail. Pris- i the C. O's won't die of of the s————— A. Kinsloe wWiao regilations in lifted Alr Raid to thew dimout wonk been going wr hine as WW Lock the turn —— is bes | of | are tliilam 91 of Haven with his brother | was co-founder of the Express of K.: ing id y th learfield nit all by EL BL the back fore - the Lock Haven Express, m. Wednesday, Nov, 3 owed bi- 1043 Lock Haven Hospital a where was being treated by John A. Weaver, of {fractured hip, received in a fa A chance by Sunday afternoon death of aged woman and injury of her at farmhouse in West Pennshoro town. ship. Dauphin counts Miss Ada Ruth McElwee been dead “s it a week” and her Miss 8 1 McElwee, 68, had jured, summer least for was found visit a helghbor on Walter nner nman, died I n +f 4 IN ary disclosed influence of 1 the i in 1 he " fre: 1 a u a New York diamond for Docgers were ar SPY w Joseph 1 . Tosult of an 1 2:02 o'clock Cur- Oswald jan min- Ander- v lous sister their a; | is P o) outsiGe are feeding in e ] «0 v2 a8 tube 80 We dont tox 72, had thes his SUPPOSE f anyone the five death, and fc fe the Hie WE ang { killed » rister lain, in behind the days before Barah was tion, } a stroke lisle hospital admitted there The plight grieve much road the house § of two ely was walking along the high- about 400 feet west of Curwens. near Refraciories struck by the more percent Anderson. He was “The military and civilian rear suffered | ger burden of Pullman and the ral well as | roads today is so heavy.” Kelly said, that there unfortunately little home, at _ : ! g the : be per. guards which was Way for ville tha the 1d +f i _ ol General suffering from exhaus- why showed - evidentls he Was nd prot i ar { prob- t Ten vr Wo be passen- i ably phveiels ! a rai WAR'S END? Lewis urchased the ¢ on which V th and revealed ton of Mr ) LL se 1944 date of World War II concerned having your send it in Orvis Harvey 19 a eo te wo i or ni nie WOSINE Gre t interested merous other ) March Anderson. who was on his way Mahafley from Buffalo, was placed under arrest and held in the county to await a hearing jes iden Mrs of the two aged ma sisters was discovered Clarence Line, Carlisle neighbor, took milk to the home, I when she failed to notice the women | prediction put on record Shooting of Boy Was Accident] the put fog dass. Ms. Lice, | 0 this department bad Wa Allan $0 | e— - when 8 the R D 4 a insofar as 35 ” f your'e in get Fhad | fil ee of the Lock Haven State Teath- | \ ers’ College, and & member of the! YOUTH INJURED IN FALL for, theirs. o family resided at 113 East Water Primary In 1944 “On April 25th General Election November 7; National Offices on Ballot Pennsylvania's Primary Election next year will fall on April 25 and the general election on November 7, the 1844 election calandar drawn up by Charles M. Morrison, secretary of the Commonwealth shows. Jasuance of the calendar makes action possible on next year's cam- palgns. Voters will ballot on a pres ident, one U. S. senator, all U. 8 and state representatives, half the Senate membership, state auditor, and state treasurer. Le Other principal calendar dates are {where two dates are listed, the first refers to the primary and the second to the general election): First legal day to secure signa- tures on nomination petitions, Feb- ruary 5. Last day an elector may move from one election district to another in order to be eligible to vote, Feb- ruary 25 and September 7. Last day to register in Philadel- phia, March 4 and Sept. 16 Last day to change party enroll- ment before the primary and general elections in Philadelphia, March 4. Last day to secure signatures to nomination petitions and last day to file petitions, March 6. Pirst day to apply for military ballots, March 6 \ nd Sept. 18. Last day to withdraw- after filing nomination petitions, March 13. Last day to register except in Philadelphia, March 25 and Oct. 7 Last day to apply for military bal- lots, March 25 and Oct. 7. Last day to secure signatures on nomination papers and last day to file, April 5 change party enroli- Last day to ment” in Pittsburgh and Scranton, | April 8 and Oct. 21. Pirst day to register or change party enrollment after primary, May 1 ‘Last day for nominated candidates and political groups to file expense to ’ Sept. 4 Now to Boys Overseas The War Department advises that istreet. Surviving are his wile, the for- ‘mer Edna M Smith, and one son, Malcolm, at home; also his parents, a brother, Boyd of Buffalo, and a sister, Mrs. Russell Bubb, of Lock Haven Funeral the home i with the Rev. Fu town Methodist Interment will town cemetery ue held at 9-3 P30 PT at n ank Weller, Dunns pasto officiating Dunnse- be mace In HELD ON DRAFT CHARGES. Two men were held under ball for violations of the selective ser- vice laws after being brought before Commissioner W. N. C. Marsh at Lewisburg. Roy Fisher, 23, Lewis- bur, R D. 1, was held under $1000 bail for a further hearing Nov. 16, for failure to report to the Union county local draft board at Mifflin- burg. It was brought out that his mother had taken his draft notice and failed to tell him of it. Miles’ A. Yearick, 35, Milimont, R. D. 2. failed to appear at Mifflinburg when | called for induction He is a Jehovah | Witness and claims right of defer ment as a minister of the gosp~! Arrested by Marshal Blank, he was committed by Commissioner Marsh | to the Lycoming county jail to await trial i PUPILS SAFE IN FIRE The teacher, Miss Rose Pellerite, and 30 pupils escaped safely amd in good order when it was discovered one day last week that the Jefferson | School at Mock's Hill, Decatur town- | ship, was destroyed by fire. The fire | seems to have started where the furnace pipe went through the wall and entered the flue. The telephone cable leading to the school was dam- aged, a tree caught fire, as did the | grass surrounding the school. Last February the school caught fire and was badly damaged, and the furnish- ings were new since that time sim———_— A —_—————. {EACH MAN, POUND OF TURKEY { Each person in the armed services, | iat home and abroad, will have one potind of turkey for Thanksgiving dinner, the Office of Wir Informa- i tion reported this week. The OWI | explained that one pound is about the same as the best restaurants serve for Thanksgiving dinner “but possibly somewhat less” than a sol- dier wotlld have eaten at home in | pre-war days. i i i i i { i » BOY STEALS, BURNS CAR. A 16-year-old boy. on probation | at the time of the theft, set fire to! | a car he had stolen at Berwick, | | when it went down as a bridge col- lapsed under it, and he had to aban- don it. He was fearful that his fin- gerprints on the car might identify him as the thief. The owner of the! car was Joseph A. Glasser, of Still. | water, R. D. 1, who had parked the car while he was busy, —— and a lacerated scalp. The in- | were réceived when she fell in her hame, upsetting a kerosene | | Escaped- Kis-Lyn Boy Recapture Loganton Youth Located at Mill Hall By State Police Charles Herman, 18-year-old Log- anton youth, who escaped early last week from Kis<Lyn, in Luzerne county. was apprehended about 2 o'clock Saturday moming in Mill Hall by the State Pclce from the local barracks He was found on a side street, sleeping in an automobile which he stole at Hazelton. He was taken to the Lock Haven jall for the rest of the night and will await the arrival of officers from the institution in which he is an inmate, It is likely that & charge of larceny of an auto- mobile will be lodged against him by Hazelton authorities. The state police had also received a report that th®boy stole a few gal- ilons of gasoline in Clinton county the discovery of the bodies of a mar and a woman Thursday night in a | driving but they indicated that would not be pressed. ODD AND CURIOUS Probably Homesick Southern locomotive No. 5253 with- {his charge or a man aboard, rolled out of the Asheville, N. C.. ear shops recently and headed back toward Knoxville on the main line. Five miles later she coughed to a stop-—undamaged and no harm done. Railroaders, un. able to explain the locomotive’s an- tics, said they guessed it was home- sick Deer Chew Tobacco Deer in the mountains of east official board of the Trinity Meih- ladies? ehureh. Burviving vm are ‘daughter, Miss Edith MM Kinsloe with whom he lived niece, and several nephews Services were the Rev, GO. Cedi] ing a Friday with Weimer officiat. held 16th CHILD WELCOME Juttics Buck, 16, son of Mr. and I Mrs. Ernest Buck of Lock Haven, was Mrs. Ralph Salyards of Hollidavs- | burg. gave birth Sunday to her gix- teensth child--a nine pound son. Th father is 52. the mother #4 Find 2 Bodies In Roadside Cabin Po 1 L] ‘ Companion Died of As. phyxiation taken to the Lock Haven hospital after he was recovered from a 30- foot drop from the Castanea bridge into Bald Eagle creek. He Is being treated for 8 fractured arm and pose sible internal injuries. Officer Wil filam B. Ryan brought the boy to the hospital SUFFERS LEG FRACTURE Ward Huyler, 58, of Westfield, was removed 10 the Blossburg hospital on Priday after he fractured his left leg in two places in an accident with | some machinery at the Phillips Sta- tion on the highway outside Bloss- burg. He was working along the road when he was caught in the running machinery. Huyler's cone Lewistown Woman and Male| dition is reported as fair HURT BY COCONUT TREE Mrs. William Brewster of Wyalus- ing. has received word from her hus. Coroner Robert Ww. White of Mif- | band, who is in a hospital on an un- flin county on Friday issu tificate of accidental death roadside cabin two miles from Lew istown. He reported the pair were identi- fied as Joseph Francis Hale, 31, of West Fairview, Cumberland county. | and Bessie Morgan, 47, of Lewistown. | Death, the coroner added, was eqs. ed by asphyxiation from fumes of a gas heater in the cabin and said {there would be no inquest - Ee —— Information Wanted {out a ghost of a hand at the throttle | If any of our readers has know ledge of an old song requestsd in the foregoing letter, it will be greatly ‘appreciated by the undersigned who ‘writes as follows: Dear Editor: A number of us old timers are very anxious to get a copy ' Mr. Calderwood fali of the words and music of the old him. All efforts to rev | Dutch Railroad song that Prof. Low- of no avail, death fell Meyer used to sing at musical conventions over 50 years ago, I | i § Tennessee have taken to chewing pave been writing many letters all | { tobacco. “The deer are so bad they gver certain areas of Pennsylvania have already chewed up my tobacco for 5 few years and no one has a | complains. Hack Trees from Model T A Chicago car dealer answered an or and bought a Model T Ford, make of 1921. for the past 20 years, three men ‘spent four hours in clearing away trees and bushes. Whose Stogle Is This? Every morning when Mrs. Lester M. Boughter of Pottstown, opens her front door she finds a cigar butt it was raining wild pander A residents collected almost evidently To get the car out of the garage in which it had been stored {crop and started on the corn and I /oony, 1 was told that you printed it want you to come up here and do i, oor r some years Could {something about this” a farmer | yoo tet DP here r 3. get {a copy? who was the } f i of the ed a cer- | named South Pacific island, that he following | received serious injuri 3 1 conut tree fel es when a 00- 1 on the truck he was He can swallow only liquids a Heart Attack Is Fatal to Hunter Robert M. Calderwood, of Tyrone, died suddenly on Saturday after- while hunting in the vicinity of fronsville, just east of Tyrone, Mr. Calderwood, accompanied by his brother, Paul Calderwood, and Lewis McFalls, had been hunting along the hill adjacent to the rail- road tracks at Ironsville. Mr. Cald- erwood had just shot a rabbit and walking toward the rabbit when he suddenly fell over. Blair Keith, of Birmingham, who was on duty along the railroad tracks at the time, saw and went to ive him were being attributed to a heart attack. a MORE WOMEN THAN MEN Registrar William 8. Hoffman ane nounced yesterday the 1,765 women ienrolled at Pennsylvania State Gol We would like to find out the first time in the author, what was the history. Hoffman said the influx of correct Ytle of the song, and a copy | 700 freshmen, nore than 75 per cent usc, if it ever was copy- of them women, prought civilian en- lege outhumber the civilan men for institution's | righted, etc. Possibly if this letter rollment to approximately 3.000 and was printed in your paper, some one of your readers might help me out. CEPHAS BIERLY, 613 Fourth St. West Pittston, Pa. BANK HEAD IS CONSTABLE. Friends of John D. Meyer, presi- dent of the First National Bank of Tyrone, “inadvertently” elected him constable of the Fourth Ward, Tues- day's election returns showed. With ——d S PENN STATE'S FINE RECORD i i no regular candidate seeking that} reversed the civilian standing of the sexes of last summer when there were 1.587 men and 1.060 women. MAHAFFEY MAN HELD An————— Clearfield County Coroner Rules on Death of Ron- ald Hoover A verdict of accidental death was announced last Friday by Dr. E. 8 Erhard, Clearfield county coroner, in the fatal shooting Monday of Ronald | Hoover, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Har- vey Hoover, Bellefonte, by his bro- ther, Patrick, 4, while the two boys were visiting their grandmother, Mrs Jane Gliday, in Morrisdale Ronald, a grandson of Patrick Gil. ‘day, once president of the United {Mine Workers, died in the Benson Sanitarium, Philipsburg, Tuesday Coroner Erhard said a bullet from a | 22-calibre Spanish automatic, which {the younger child found in a drawer had passed through the boy's liver DROPS DEAD ON STREET While walking down Front street in Philipsburg on Saturday alter noon, James Verner Rae 70, was 'stricken With a heart attack of the Rite Style Shop a and col land died almost instantly. A phy- isician was summoned but the man {was dead before hig arrival. The de- joeased was a resident of the Clear- field county home, but he had not ibeen there for the past month and {had beeri visiting with friends at Berwindale. He had called on a doc- [tor in Houtzdale THERMOMETER BLOWS UP of injuries occurred Sunday in the Resigh garage, Duncansville R. D, Blair county. Faith Allison, 18, was standing near a thermometer when {it blew up. It exploded with consid- erable force and the solution scat- tered and some of it went in Miss Allison's eyes. Mercy hospital, Altoona, for treat. iment and unless the unexpected {happens nd serious results will fol- | low Just what caused the thermo- meter to blow up was unknown at (the hospital, but it was suggested {it might have become overheated. | i A Ss RAILROADER INJURED Victor MeCarrol, of Bayre, Lehigh Valley Railroad fireman, suffered a possible fracture of the back, when he struck the Packer avenue bridge BLOOD GIVEN BY 280 During the four-day visit of the in front | neighbors said is unable to talk and lapsed. He drew several dee) breaths) i rant ‘ i and had a pre-| noon, Nov. 1 at about 1:10 0'cIeK | coription in his pocket when he died.| A new style accident in the annals | She was rushed to summer house, summoned neighbor, Mrs Paul Raudabaugh, and then discovered Ada dead In a Ihedfoom of the {wo-story frame home State Police and the coroner were summoned, and they made one ex- haurtive investigation Coroner iHaegele sald Ada had died from natural causes, “about a week ago” {and that the sister thought Ada was sleeping. Then to top off the plight | Sarah suffered some kind of attack “about Thursday evening.” the cor- ioner said. and lay, in the unheated {summer kitchen. unable to summon help, since that time | The two sisters resided alone at ithe home for nearly 40 years, and {when friends attempted to provide aid for them when they began failing iin health, they resented the intrus. (jon, neighbors said. On repeated { attempts, friends tried to pursuade them to change their living habits The coroner said he found evidence in the home to indicate the two women had funds on deposit in a Carlisle bank, and were not desti- tute, although they lived frugally r SWELL SKIT: fooPunniest thing we've heard over the radio for many a day was an imitation during the weekend of a basso singing “I Love Life Heck of it is we heard only that skit and know what static what rogram was on gon’ m or » MISCELLANEOUS: Grouchy reader complains that Bellefonte high school students pay no attention to traffic lights and that he often has to sit through green light or two because he can't get a chance to drive through the solid lines of students going home from school Bellefonte couple has been working hard to get their children in a frame of mind to have thet tonsils removed. So well has the “build-up” succeeded that the young- sters last week wrote a “threatening” note: “When are we going to get our tonsils out? ELECTION: Last week's election again proved that the guy who gets the most votes wins. No matter what other con- (Continued on pope Two) it a + gy at 8 Porm Adviser i FARM QUESTION BOX ED W. MITCHELL Generel Bectric Station WGY | @Q~—Can ordinary dry beans {ground for hogfeed? | A—8tock do not like beans, and they should be ground or cooked be- fore they are fed, even to hogs Mixed with other grains, beans should not constitute over 10 to 15 per cent of the ration. Q —~How should butter be stored for winter use? A~Use pasteurized sweet cream and take extra care to Pave utensiis clean when you make the butter. Salt it well rather than store it as sweet butter, Try to churn at a fair- ly low temperature and work the butter only enough to get out all the be paper, pack in a crock and cover with strong brine one pound of salt to 1% or two quarts of water,’ weighted and stored In a cool place. Qs there a large breed of hens that lays white eggs? : on the use of concrete on the farm It will be along soon. For a water trough use four parts of sharp sand to one of cement, and if you can get some asphalt water-proofing ma- terial from your building supply dealer mix that in. Q ~8hould manure be plowed un- der in my garden this autumn or next spring? A.~-This fall, so that the bacteria will increase and do some work dur- ing that time and the plant food will become rotted and mixed with the soil. If the land slopes, piow ACTOS the side of the slope Q-~Where can I get information on a system of poultry farm book- ? A If you will write the Office of Publication, Roberts Hall, Comeil Agricultural Ooliege, Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y. and enclose 20 cents and ask for the "Account Book for Poultry,” 1 thing you will get just what you want. Q-~What is the best method of 1 i 51d
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers