hee Two MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY APRIL 4, 1929 Paper Twine for Tying Sheep Fleeces ¢ Somerset County Sheep and 1 Growers’ Association have just ived their allotment of paper e. Growers who do net have suf- t paper twine to tie their fieeces ld make arrangements at once use: buyers always cut the price fleeces are not tied with paper e. The strands of sisal or simi- twines become mixed with the fibers and the refore makes a grade of cloth. Paper twine ves in the preparation of thé raw Farm Gardens ir. J. M. Huffington in charge of . garden extension, spent Tues- and Wednesday of the week in lo over matters pertaining to the uction of vegetables for the en- family. Vegetables from the e garden should supply the fam- with ‘greens during the entire e months of the year. The de- ktrations conducted last year seen by many good gardeners. Good Feeding of Ewes Aid to Fine Lamb Crop’ sure a profitable lamb crop by ng correctly the breeding ewes. ves that are suckling lambs, or will be, should receive a good ishing ration containing plenty of bin. Good, fresh corn silage, fed bmbination with clover hay, fur- bs a splendid roughage. th a roughage of this kind, each should get one pound a day of a mixture made up of 300 pounds ats, 100 pounds of shelled corn, punds of bran, and 50 pounds of eal. The amount of this grain re to be fed depends upon the of the breeding ewes, For ex- e, a big Hampshire ewe suckling lambs will require more feed a fine ‘wool ewe ‘mothering only amb. ; e general practice of feeding oats with a roughage that car- a high percentage of timothy is deplarable. such poor roughage, bran and ill add a fine source of protein to ation. pounds of cracked corn, 200 ds of oats, and 50 pounds of oil lambs be grown out to a desira- arket weight as soon as possible. Plant Soybeans for Emergency Hay Crop jrymen with poor prospects for nutritious roughage. will grow. : of acid soils. falfa in feeding value. it can be grown in any part o b fertility. : hay crop. ompartment of the drill Consider Market Needs In Growing Bush Fruit requirement for successful smal et favorites; consequently, selec ommercial varieties. ard kinds, new introductions an ies. Growers er all are of equal commercia ial possibilities. fing varieties are ble: raspberries—Cuthbert, Latham ewman. Farmer. ple raspberries—Columbian. -kbernies—Eldorado varieties, be, and Brant, should be planted ) get comparisons with the new bh rd varieties before making ex- ew plantings. Prepare Garden Soil Well for Production ] of the home gar- aximum yields aré ex- JUNTY AGENTS | application of at least 20 tons of | well-rotted animal manure per acre or { j | bY plowing under a green manuring LETTER * When forced to fit will be equivalent to its cost and ung lambs should be creep-fed as as they will eat grain, which ic bh they are about two weeks of For them a ration composed of It is always advisable that| Extensive Use of bd supply of leguminous hay still is found everywhere, serving as a a chance to provide their cows |beautiful transparent wrap, or casing, is the note of encouragement | mutton, nuts, pears, prunes, raisins, ied for those who have clover sweets, sausage, ete. damaged by winter-killing OT tory was erected at Buffalo, New have no clover seeding at all. ; farmers have soil of iG requirements that it must be at gi Sony satisfied before red the original Buffalo plant bbeans will rgrow under such |times its original capacity and sever- tions because they are more tol-|al million dollarsyis being spent in They are high in| building the second du Pont plant at in content, being about the same | (Qld Hickory, near Nashville. - Another ble feature of the soybean is trial chemical produet of first im- tate, providing the soil is of av- son is the variety recommended |*® ! r The rate of seeding [oil and odor-proof, this material pro- o bushels to the acre, using the |™% . ina) All | dition, any article wrapped in it. hould be inoculated so the beans tilize the nitrogen of the air. “SINGING FOOL” fing time is when the soil is nsylvania is characterized by a : The number of local marketing pros- such as few other states can th this unexcelled condition, the | Monday, and marketing has been met. |heart-appealing stories ever rdless of the potential producing |on the silver screen and this coupled r of the proposed small fruit | with the fact that such a star as Al Jol- ation site, the grower should |son should be playing the leading role, consider market prospects and with it his touching mammy songs makes select the varieties to be plant- All kinds of raspberries are not picture will remember it for a long time should be made from the lead- alogs list an endless number of | SINGER which really had the making must consider |ing the SINGING FOOL there was no ance or if they offer the same coming a dominating factor in the mo- ing the past few years there SIGNER been few displacements in the from their crude stage it was really the rf recommended bush fruits. The SINGING FOOL that put them where considered | they are today. k raspberries—Cumberland and such as Ontario, Garden soil can be improved by the Lime should be applied as needed and drainage provided where necessary. Cultural practices include careful plowing, thorough discing and har- | rowing and final smoothing. Heavy | soil should never be worked when it is wet. - Sufficient fertilizing also is essen- tial in good gardening. This can be1 accomplished by applying broadcast at least 1200 pounds per acre of a complete commercial fertilizer, with top-dressings of nitrate of soda or chicken manure in addition where needed. A fertilizer analyzing 4 per cent nitrogen, 12 per cent phosphorus, and 4 per cent potash is good on| heavy soils where manure also has] been applied. Without manure, on light soils, the formula may be 4-8-4 or 5-10-5. C. C. McDowell, County Agent. Mortgaging the Community, Detrimental Nothing can be more detrimental to a community’s progress and prosper- ity than a burden of bonded debt. Private citizens and industries alike are wary of any locality, no matter what its other advantages, that has a constantly increasing tax rate. Im- provements which require bond issues are liable to turn into white cle- phants. The debt often remains long after the improvement has been for- gotten. And a generation or more of taxpayers must pay for it. For every dollar borrowed on a five per cent serial bond issue running over 20 years over $1.50 must be paid back. If the issue runs 40 years over $2.00 must be returned. And at the end the community: has often paid out of all proportion to the value of the improvement gained. When practical the pay-as-you-go plan should be rigidly adhered to. When not practical, every voting citi- zen should consider if the improve- ment is necessary, or if iit will place a further serious burden on indus- tries and individuals, and if its bene- the interest that must be paid. Private citizens are careful about mortgaging their homes or borrowing money when twice as much must eventually be paid back. The same citizens should exercise the same care and thought before mortgaging the communities they live in. Cellophane Wraps Cellophane was first produced in America four years ago and now it for apples, candy, fish, ham, lamb, The first fac- York. Due to increasing use of the material in a variety of industries, is now producing annually more than four Cellophane is considered an indus- portance because it is the first mois- ture-proof, transparent wrapping ma- terial ever produced. Moisture, gas, tects indefinitely in its original con- COMING TO THE PAR-K THEATRE greatest singing, talking and sound picture that has been made is in Somerset next Wednesday. It of the most presented scheduled, to be run Tuesday and 1{is without question one it a sure bet that everyone who sees this -|to come. This is the second picture that stars Al Jolson, his first being THE JAZZ of the sound pictures, but after complet- 1 | stopping the talking pictures from be- tion picture world, so while the JAZZ advanced talking pictures And it is earnestly re- commended that you make seeing THE SINGING FOOL one of your worth- "| while duties next week. “Mother,” asked little Jack, “is it correct to say that you ‘water a horse’ when he is thirsty?” “Yes, dear,” replied his mother. “Well, then,” said Jack, picking up la saucer, “I'm going to milk the cat.” | —The Pathfinder. you'd kindly re- walnuts while Speaker—I wish frain from cracking I'm speaking. ‘was advancing, and it. was nearly time creasingly heavy fine each year for eS ES CECE EEOC, & » 3 Bobby’s Sister pt . : His Proxy % By DOROTHY DOUGLAS FECES ECCS S CE Coe oe (Copyright.) OBBY was struggling with a re- fractory tie and muttering strange sounds under his breath, for the hour when he should be arriving at the an- ual dinner—/that famous dinner which had been held every year for the past ten and for which there was an in- even a moment's tardiness, The other twelve men would be al- ready cooling their heels and wonder- ing whether Bobby Granville would appear or whether he would be fined ‘the one hundred dollars imposed on .any one of the thirteen friends who failed to appear for the annual dinner. The first year the fine for non- appearance was ten dollars and each year it jumped up another ten. In their early twenties, ten dollars had seemed a lot of money; now in their thirties, the hundred didn’t seem quite so bad—still it was enough to be there. Besides, the dinner was a grand and glorious’ affair and especial- ly as it was the only time during the entire year that some of the friends were able to enjoy a personal meeting. The telephone rang imperiously as Bobby was slipping into his immacu- ‘late dinner coat. A forceful word flew from Bobby's lips as he picked up the receiver. When he hung it up he looked de- jected. Seeing his sister Peggy flitting past his door—a billow of fluffy pink—he shouted to her. “Peggy—you've got to do me a fa- .yor tonight. The hospital's just called me up—urgent case—I must go. No time to get a substitute for the dinner and I can’t stand the racket just now ‘of that hundred-dollar fine. Hop into ‘your evening cloak and into a taxi, quick. You've got to be a sport and represent me at that dinner. Be a darling, Peg—they’re an awfully de- cent bunch of men—" “But, Bobby—it's a stag affair—I should be the only girl—" “Never mind—you can stay only for! “the soup or.fish and then retreat. I Just want you to.be my proxy—save the fine. Hustle—there’s a dear.” . So Peggy, her cheeks like crimson .roses and her eyes like stars, had rushed off to do her beloved brother’s ! bidding. , . She quaked inwardly as she neared ‘the doorway where she knew those twelve men would be gathered to wel- come Bobby; but outwardly she was the picture of feminine charm. When the door of the private din- ing room opened and the twelve men looked up expecting to see their. thir-, teenth member, theer was first a stunned silence, then a swift pushing back of chairs as they one and all rose. oy “I—I have come as Bobby Gran- ville’s representative,” she began halt- ingly and feeling the ordeal of so much admiration all at once a bit dis- concerting. “He suggested that I just sit down and—well—toy with the first course or two—then leave you—to en- joy your dinner in Eveless peace.” Even the married men of the twelve and those that were nearly in double harness realized the fact that Bobby Granville had played a rather mean trick on them all these years in hav- ing concealed a sister like this from them. John Manners felt it most keenly. He was about the only one of the bunch neither tied nor half tied to the matrimonial yoke. He felt he should like to shake Bobby into an explana- tion. He, John, had been circling the globe in search of just such a wonder woman as this sister of Bobby's and now she was going to be snatched from his grasp after the soup or fish course. “] say,” he cried loudly to the elev- en men—who were still wondering just how to arrange a somewhat delicate situation, but were all feeling a cer- tain desire to keep this vision in their midst; “couldn’t you chaps call up wives and near wives in a hurry and get them here for this dinner. Sprint out to the. telephone hooths and get busy and I'll speak to the waiters about doubling the places. What do you all say?’ “Great head—that’s what we all say,” came a quick response. Meantime, Peggy stood by and in- wardly laughed. Men were certainly amusing creatures. She felt glad that the particular man who had taken this matter in his own hands and was now having a heart-to-heart talk with the head waiter had time also for swift glances in her direction. It wasn’t until he saw the extra chairs being brought in and the table being drawn out to accommodate dou- ble the number it had been arranged for that he came to sit beside her. It was while a mass of pink flowers was being brought in to decorate the table—flowers that exactly matched the glorious pink of Peggy’s frock— that Bobby's sister realized how won- derfully thoughtful some men could be—in fact, John Manners. Would any other have-thought of such deli- cate flattery? And it wasn’t long—at least it didn’t seem but a moment to John and Peg- gy—before wives, fiances began troop- ing in to make the room merry and far more iovely to look upon. But John kept a close guard on Peggy and as a matter of fact Peggy didn’t mind in the least. refrain Guest—I will when you from cracking chestnuts. —The Pathfinder. ’ EARLY BIRD GETS RICH EGG RATION February. Chicks Should Make Rapid Growth. Leghorn .chicks hatched in Febru- ary should be fed rations that make for continual rapid growth, is the ad- vice offeredsby the poultry department of the New Jersey Agricultural col- lege. Pullets from early hatched chicks cannot be expected to produce a prof- itable number of eggs during the sum- mer and fall, if their growth is stunt- ed in any ménner. Any good baby chick ration will prove satisfactory until the birds are eight or ten weeks old. After that date, the specialists advise that they be placed upon a ra- tion similar to a good laying ration, but containing a , larger amount of minerals. To have the bird come into production as.soon as possible and at the same time have her continue her body growth is the poultryman’s aim. No matter how. they are fed, Feb- ruary hatched birds can always be expected to go through a moult in the late fall. They can use this period for any increase in weight or growth that has not been accomplished pre- viously. One must remember that an early hatched bird is an entirely different individual from a late hatched bird. The later hatches should have a much slower development in order to pre- vent an early winter moult, but with the early hatched stock the aim is to get all of the eggs possible before the early winter moult. Feed Turkey Breeders : for Vigorous Poults Too much corn in the turkey's win- ter ration may make the brds too fat for the production of eggs of high hatchability. Some breeders feed 3 parts of oats to 1 of corn and find that the stock come through the win- ter in condition to produce pvigorous poults. + Equal parts of corn, wheat and oats make a good grain ration for turkey breeding stock. The ad- dition of cull vegetables, and alfalfa or clover is necessary until the turk- eys can forage in the spring. Before the turkey hens begin to lay, it often pays to give them a hopper of the same balanced laying mash which is used for the cliickens. Where they have had nothing but grain they may be reluctant to eat the mash but if it is kept before them, some of the mash will probably be eaten and fit will help to improve egg production and keep up the vigor of the turkey hens while they are laying. Keep a b hopper of oyster shells before the turkey hens to help in producing firm shells on the eggs and reduce break- age in the nests. Feeding the turkey ‘breeding stock on soil away from the chickens is a help in preventing blackhead and oth- er turkey diseases. Diseases are often spread through the medium of the droppings «which have contaminated the feed. Some losses may be pre- vented by feeding both. the grain and the mash in hoppers so that nome of the feed will touch soil which might be contaminated with disease. It pays to rid hens of worms. * *® * One water fountain is needed to each 25 chicks. * * * A hot, stuffy brooder house is as undesirable for chicks as it is for the attendant. * * * Cod liver oil isn’t just a fad. Tt helps to remedy the lack of sunshine and green feed at this time of year. * * * If there were losses from .bacillary white diarrhea last year it is not safe to use infertile eggs for the young poultry this spring unless the eggs are so well cooked or baked that all bacilli are destroyed. * * * Warm water is fine for hens in cold weather. tain will return several times its cost in eggs. » * * loft overhead will help. for a caretaker that they know well and are glad to see. * * * It is not considered good practice to take breeding cockerels from the same brood from which you get your pullets. - . * It is said that if alfalfa hay is used for hens’ nests and scattered around the chicken coops the chicken mites will beat a hasty retreat. * ok Protein derived from animal sources, such as meat products and milk, is of A safely-beated water foun- If the litter gets damp in a short time it means poor ventilation—and then there's danger of roup. A straw It pays to study your flock and make the birds like you. Doubters + 5 = may laugh, but hens will lay better tee. QOPYRIGHT BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION aommmmm THE GULLS’ SONG “Come Sea Gulls, and listen to the song,” said Mrs. Sea Gull, All the sea gulls came around and then they all rested on the top of the waves while Mrs. Sea Gull sang this song: Let's sing a song, a song As we fly, fly along. Let's wave to the people on boats, And sing for them shrieking notes, Let's whisper sweet words to the waves, And laugh when the old wind raves. We can fly o'er the sed, the wonderful sea, And so we should happy be, happy be. Oh, life can never be dull, When one is a strong sea gull! Mrs. Gull paused for a moment, and then she said: “Now, Sea Gulls, I will teach you the chorus, which we will always sing twice. Here it is: It’s joyous to fly In the air so high, And ‘tis wondrous bliss The great waves to Kiss. The sea gulls all sang this song un- til they knew it by heart, and every time they sang the verse they sang the chorus twice over. Then they followed the boats, and after a time. they left the boats, which were. going far across the ocean, as they wanted to go back to their coves St nrefee ls A . They Left the Boats. near the harbor where they would find delicious food which sea gulls love. And Mr. Sea*Gull told of the boats he had followed. He told of the food which had been given to him from some of these boats. He told of the adventures he had had, of the great wild storms on the gea through which he had lived. He told of boats he had seen rock and toss, he told of people to whom he had waved his wings as they waved their hands or arms or hand- kerchiefs to him. He said he wasn’t quite sure which were arms and which were hands and which were handkerchiefs, but any- way it was very nice to be waved to by the people who were on the boats. And all the little sea gulls listened to his adventures and hoped that they would have interesting adventures, too. And all, all the time, the sea gulls kept whispering secrets to the waves and the waves kept bubbling over with laughter, for some of the sea gulls were so merry and jolly and funny and gay. And the waves roared in their deep voices: : “Oh, sea gulls, we love you. Oh, sea gulls, we love you!” RIDDLES When is a ship like a floor? When she’s boarded. s = ® Why is the oyster the wisest of ani- mals? He keeps his mouth shut: = * When do you become a country of South America? When you are Chili = * #*® Why is an orange like a church steeple? Because we have a peel from it. *® - &* On what condition weculd women wear men’s clothes? 1f it were the fashion. * * * Why is a brave man like a tin soldier? Because he is a man of met- tle (metal). * ® * Why is the Fourth of July like an oyster stew? Because we enjoy it best with crackers. * ® * Why should a fainting woman have more than one doctor called? Because if she is not brought te (two) she will die. What is the difference between a new sponge and a fashionable man? If you well wet one it makes it swell. but if you well wet the other it takes all the swell out of him. * w *® What iz the difference between a man and a banana peel? Sometimes the man throws the banana peel into the gutter, and sometimes the banana peel throws the man into the gutter. Goldfish Is Defined The teacher had brought a glass bowl containing goldfish to school. “Now,” she said, “can anyone tell greater value to the hen than protein Her entrance to a stag dinner and also to love had been a simultaneous affair. from vegetable feeds, such as cotton i seed and linseed. | “It's a sardine that has got very rich.” me what a goldfish is?” “Yes, teacher,” replied a little girl. Certain Legumes . Improve Soils Cowpeas and Soy Beans as Effective Fertilizer as Manure. Anyone having ‘a tield which he is not going to use for producing a mar- ket crop this year might find it a good plan to improve the soil by sow- ing cowpeas or soy beans, suggests H. R, Cox, specialist in farm crops at the New Jersey State College of Agriculture, New Brunswick. It Is cheaper to grow these crops than to use ten tons of manure to the acre, and they are considered as being prac- tically as effective as this amount of manure if the right kind of fertilizer is used on the market crops of the following year. Soy Beans Cheaper. Soy beans are cheaper than cow- peas by about 50 or 75 cents a bushel. Soy beans are, therefore, a better crop to use for this purpose. In the case of sey beans it is desirable to inoculate if the field has never raised them before. One may buy commer- cial inoculants or he may use the “seed and soil” method. This method consists in mixing a bushel of slightly moistened seed with a quart of soil taken from a field which has raised soy beans successfully in recent years. Drill or Broadcast. Sqy beans or cowpeas should be drilled, but if a drill is not available, broadcasting by hand and harrowing will do. Five pecks to the acre drilled or six pecks broadcast by hand is a good rate of seeding. An appli- cation of a complete fertilizer high in phosphoric acid and potash and low in nitrogen may well be made at the rate of 300 to 400 pounds per acre. When the crop is beginning to mature, plow it under or disk it in and sow rye or rye and vetch as a winter cov- er crop. A surprising improvement in the fertility of the field will result. Labor Cost Is Big Item in Production of Milk In large herds labor is usually the second most important item in the cost of milk production,, From the keeping of cost accounts in many sec- tions of the country the amount of la- bor, required in caring for a cow has been found to range from 100 to 175 hours per year. Under average condi- tions the care of a cow for a year may be considered equivalent to about 15 days’ work. ' On general farms where only a few cows are kept no additional labor is hired for their care. The work is per- formed either by the farmer at the time of day when it does not inter- cows are cared for largely by the chil- school hours. adds to the farm income. the herd, portant. Sell Cream to Creamery houses cream more difficult. high. evaporates. the container. kept at lower temperatures. Allowing the cream to become rea than if it is cooled after each separa tion before adding to other cream selling very sour cream.—G. A. Will jams, Purdue university. BEODOE® Most wheat growers who use com fertilizer directly with the wheat. * 8 @ are so husky no abuse could kill them shelled eggs. ® * ® before disking spread the lime, * ¢ * farm near Petersboro, lished a record by pounds of milk and 819 pounds of but terfat in 305 days. * Ont., estab = =» alfalfa has can be grown Where soy beans ment station. terfat in the milk. fere with the field operations or the dern of the family before. and after Thus the keeping of a few cows provides employment for un- paid labor, contributes a considerable proportion of the family living and The amount of labor expended depends upon sev- eral factors, among which. the size of convenience of barn and milk house, distance from market, and cleanliness of milk produced, are im- Before It Is Real Sour Allowing cream to become real sour before delivering it to the creamery lowers the grade of butter made from the cream and makes the taking of an accurate sample for de- termining the butterfat content of the Cream is not pure butterfat. It con- tains moisture even when the test runs When the cream is exposed to a temperature of 70 degrees Fahren- heit or above, some of this moisture This lessens the weight and volume of the original sample of cream. It does not increase the orig- inal amount of butterfat which was in When a can is filled with cream which has thus parted with some of the water, it naturally brings a larger income than a similar amount sour may induce more variation in test There is mothing to be gained from Agricultural Hints : Calves are like human babies. Some while others must be handled like soft- A good time to lime the soil that: needs it is when preparing for the, corn crop. Plow down the clover and An eight-year-old Holstein cow at a: producing 19,669 winter-killed as a sub- | stitute for tbs wear, gay authorities at the Minnesota Agricultural Experi- | Soy beans increase but- | THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SPADE: Will the archaeological spade, Yet find the ark that Noah made? And if it be extant, The ark of the covenant? Will the stones from old Sinai, The original deealogue verify? Will the spade by turning sod, Locate the ancient Land of Nod? Will the Garden of the Gods, Yet be found ‘neath Eastern sods, Together with bona fide evidence, Of the Adamic residence? In the Euphrates valley, they say: Eight feet of silt and clay, Give evidence of a catastrophe, Such as the biblical flood would be. This is in corroboration, Of the Mosaic narration. Will the spade’s manirulation, Expose for veneration; Antedeluvian Mausoleums, Vast cities and coloseums? Will it, opportunity unfold, Joseph’s brethren to behold, In Egyptian sarcophagii, After millenniums have passed by? Already, the spade has wonders shown, Added much to the unknown, Ere the Adamic line began, Existent was civilized man. Marks of civilization Chaldean, African, American and European, Existent, long before men, Learned the use of pen, Have been brought to light, Now exposed to tourist’s sight. Let us hope, that all efforts of the spade, Which in futurity shall be made, Shall but be in substantiation, Of the scriptural narration. , JOHN P. VOGEL. March 20, 1929. Bankers Approve Service Charges Somerset County Association Pro- poses to Assess Delinquents on Overdue Notes. The Somerset County Bankers’ Asso- ciation held its quarterly business meet- ing at the Hite House at Stoyestown on Thursday nikht and approved the pro- posed assessment of the handling of past due notes. Delinquents will be assessed 50 cents for the first day’of delinquency and’ 25 cents for each succeeding day. It is expected that the plan will be adopted at the next quarterly session of the bankers in June. Speakers at the meeting Thursday pointed out that ‘the service charge would not necessarily be made for the purpose of increased in- come, but principally to do away with the confusion and waste of time in handling delinquent papers. There are 31 banks included in the county asso- ciation and about 75 bankers were in attendance at Stoyestown. The officers of the bankers’ associa- tion are: President, A. J. Bantley, of Windber; First Vice President, R. H. Philson, of Meyersdale; Second Vice President, J. H. Fike, of Somerset; Secretary-Treasurer, L. G. Lichliter, of Jennertown. Fell From Top of Pole Wm. F. Barnhart, popularly known as “Pete” and who is employed by the Johnstown Telephone Company had the misfortune to come in contact with a live wire and was knocked from the top of the pole on which he was working, near Stoyestown, Wednesday morning. He was brough to the Community Hos- pital for examination and while the ex- tent of his injuries are not fully known he is not seriously injured. Community Hospital News Mrs. Thomas Craig, of Somerset, is in the hospital since March 27th for obser- vation and treatment. Dr. F. B. Shaf- fer is in attendance. Mr. John Hostetler, of Berlin, R. D. 1, employed by the Mountain Valley Coal Company, of Garrett, Pa., was ad- mitted to the hospital Friday, March the 29th for an X-Ray of the lateral spine. He returned home the same day. Mrs. S. A. Miller, of Somerset, gave birth to a baby girl, last Wednesday, March 27th. The baby is named Char- lette Mae. Dr. F. B. Shaffer was her physician. 1 | PLACE RED FLAGS ON : ROAD TO CENTRAL CITY - Red flags warning motorists to || drive cautiously have been placed by o | the State Highway Department on '| the new stretch of concrete road be- tween Reel’s Corners and Central City as the result of some of the | joints having been raised, due to the -i| warm weather. The raising of the mercial fertilizers commonly drill the |highway at the joints was caused by || frost getting underneath the concrete, resulting in an expansion when the || warm weather caused a thaw. , There is nothing serious wrong with the highway, according to announce- ;|ent by Division Engineer Wayne D. Meyers, in charge of the State High- way Department’s office at Hollidays- burg. Mr. Meyers stated that nature will take its course and these raised Joints will go back into place without the need of any repairs. Somebody quotes Mr. Hoover as stating that the Everglades are like the garden of Eden. But we are re- liably informed that Miami is a bet- ter place to raise Cain. ) Cop—Confound these pedestrians, anyway—you broke this one’s leg! Taxi Driver—Wot’ll we | Im ?—Judge. | —The Pathfinder. do—shoot 3 By AIL £6 IP LIKI come tor Aington sai¢ face clouded fiance, Pauli I have the 1 ing dates wi is is you are to tell me a * “Ashamed “I'm not in simply that all my bus ‘home, John, feel in a be “Yes, I'll rising abrup I'll ever fee come back.” “Just as yc stiffly as sh leave the rc As soon -door slam b Self face doy and burst in “He’s a b unreasonable to herself. Jast a litt changed anc through her other nature What have | ‘to know. N but 1 couldn’ after he ga necked Fd t given in.” Meanwhile ‘into his spor ing down t traffic cops a “I'm hang ‘to make up “She can’t me. No, no Neither o night, and e in terms not -entirely lack mon between ing when th a different p ed to give u ‘to maintain -appeared at Pauline met as if nothir avoided his downtown a ‘straight to ‘He tossed h cigarette anc ‘paper, ' but | type for the “ish face ‘tha him. “Comq ‘but always’ from him. | his arm or bh “in the’ twin] suddenly an reach up an on the cheel again. “D—n it and leaving. When her no attention —merely Ww: walked. He he had been: coming out ‘attracted his ‘proached he “high pitched of a girl. “Stop! Y screamed. been flirting Ht ves, * John’s blo he recogniz fiancee, then up the’ fron into the | Pauline was a huge, well- “her wrists ir ‘turned’ red | lunged -at t clenched fist rious rage gripping him “John, ar Pauline, rus “Me crazy harshly. *. “But this ting up,” here's the be See, we're r make it a s “why I woulc she went on. . An uproar in the room ‘ticed before. ‘swarming wi ‘ridiculous ' tl getting hyste “He thoug good acting! out!” : Suddenly dike a little “You're al said, “but I 1 because. he thought 1 Ww He felt Pa the room. street. Ther “Forgive I “I've been fo to keep ano long as I live He was s what was g¢ his arms tis this time Pa half way.