__ Bellefonte, Pa., May 16, 1919. WAS SHIPS HAVEN Lough Swilley of Tie of Great Value to Allied Fleets. Deep-Water Inlet Formed Break in Towering Rocks That Form the Coast Line of North Donegal, on the Irish Coast. The destroyer guard is gone from Lough Swilley. The Yankee ships nc longer round the grim black heights of Knockalla. The hamlets of Bun- crana and Letterkenny have settled back into the undisturbed quiet of the north Donegal peasant towns. Before the war Lough Swilley was little known to the outside world, ob- serves the Kansas City Times. Few ships ever entered between the for- bidding walls of granite that rise on either side of the inlet. But the war made it a haven for merchant ships. a base for destroyers, and the only home the wandering trawler fleet of that section of the sea ever had. The “lough” is pronounced as though spelled 1-0-k-h. It is the Irish cousin of the Scottish “loch,” and a not far distant relative of the English “lake.” Sheer and sinister rise the cliffs of north Donegal. They form one of the most forbidding coast lines anywhere in the world. To the steamer tor- pedoed off this coast there was little hope, for there was no chance there to beach a vessel. When the big 14,000- ton Flavia was hit off the Donegal coast last August she stayed up three hours, but was lost because she could not limp the 50 miles or so to a spot where there was a break in those dark walls of stone. Lough Swilley is such a break in the towering rocks of the coast line. It is a narrow inlet of water running back into County Donegal some thirty miles. And it is deep enough all the way for ships of heavy draught. It was of incalculable value to the allied fleets and merchant shipping during the war, because it offered alike 8 haven and well-placed base for oper- ations against the marauding subma- rines that slipped around the coast of Scotland. Past Bloody Foreland and Tory is- land, where the legendary Fomorian pirates made their haven, swung the convoys on their way to Londonderry. Belfast and Glasgow. And there, toc. was a favorite hunting ground of the U-boats. A seemingly perpetual mist and thick rain hung over the sea there- abouts, periscopes were difficult to glimpse, and the course of the mer- chant squadrons was constricted and easy to follow. So it came to be that many destroyers and trawlers gath- ered in the vicinity of Lough Swilley. And Buncrana and Letterkenny form- ed an acquaintance with the oriter world. They are tiny villages of thatched cottages, with a white, high-steepled church in each, and they are indescrib- ably behind in the march of the ages. But they are proud of their history. and the old patriarchs between puffs of their dudheens will tell one that the story of Donegal begins with Con- all Noigiallach, the son of Niall Noig- all himself. And beyond that Irish his- tory fades away into the haze of time. Reviving Heraldry. In the use of devices and weapons that linked the great war with the wars of preceding centuries, the adop- tion of a kind of heraldry by the airmen revived also the individuality of medieval shields - and banners. Sometimes this heraldry turned out to be a mistaken symbolism, as in the case of the German aviator who em- blazoned his fighting plane with a Ba- varian lion in pursuit of a French cock. The emblems varied according to taste; an Indian shooting an arrow. the flying stork, the Indian head with which Lufbery decorated his machine; the winged serpent, an ancient token of wisdom and speed; a dove, and a comet. In an older time such insignia would, no doubt, have become heredi- tary. In the twentieth century they served simply to express the brave gayety and humor of youth. Artificiality Fled. The long line of limousines whirling down the avenue to modistes and aft- ernoon teas stopped short as a tall po liceman signaled for a right of way. Under his care a stalwart lad in khaki escorted his little gray-haired mother, timorously glancing from side to side. to safety and the other side of the street. In the foremost car sat a beautiful woman in the sunny thirties, finished like the car in which she sat in every detail. The last touch that marked the lady, of elegant leisure was the perky little Pekinese she held tucked away under her arm. And then she who watched saw the mon- daine, her eyes on the boy, wipe her eyes with a half apologetic brush ao her handkerchief, dropping her toy as rg! feeling wiped out artificiality. New York Sun. Some More to Worry About. Smith—Did you ever stop to think that this national prohibition will be an awful blow to Uncle Sam’s ship- building program? Smythe—Howzat? Smith—Can yov :ragine the sweet young daughter of the secretary of the interior christening a new ship with & bottle of Bevo?—Indianapolis Star. BALM FOR THE DISHWASHER According to Writer, Happy Is the Man Allowed to Help in Cleansing the Table Utensils. We have never held with those who think dishwashing a dreary and sor- did task, according to Collier's. Give us plenty of hot water, plenty of some abrasive soap and a couple of clean cloths and we will tackle the debris of the evening meal with keen enjoyment. After a long day at the office it is delightful to steep one’s hands in hot dishwater (which acts as an excellent febrifuge for the brain and a tonic for weariness of the body) and pass through the puri- fying and homely gestures of ablu- tion and wiping. These simple tasks of the hand always induce a pleasant and domestic train of thought. We know one poet, and not such a bad |™ poet either, who always says he can write his best lyrics after a bout with the evening dishes. And no manicu- rist ever gives so pink and charming a glow to the hands as a half-hour with the dishpan. How many husbands, we wonder, have learned the first rule of the dish- washer’s technique? You must have plenty of hot water, but always use cold water on any utensils where eggs have been broken. Heat hardens the yolk, and boiling water poured upon an egg-smeared plate will so solidify and solder the juices that it will take sandpaper to remove them. If any husband shouM ever protest against being asked to wash the dishes let his wife refer him to Il Kings. 21:13. AVENGED HIS POISONED PET Mean Way in Which Owner of Ma. rauding Cat Got Even With Its Executioner. A member of a certain national or- ganization was laughing over certain attacks on the Institution. “These attacks,” he said, “are clever ~—clever but crooked. They bring a story to my mind. “A man owned a big black cat that used to sneak off to the butcher's and steal- meat. The butcher warned the man to keep his thieving cat at home, but no attention was paid to the warn- ing, and so finally the butcher de clared: “If that pesky cat steals any more of my stock I'll poison it. “Well, a few days later the cat made off with a leg of lamb, and the butcher, true to his word, sprinkled bits of poisoned steak about. The next morning the black cat lay cold and stiff hefore its master’s door. “The cat's owner waited till butcher shop was crowded with saus age buyers. Then he tucked the corpse under his arm and strode in through the crowd. ‘Here you are. John, he sald. slamming the dead cat down on the meat block, beside the sausage ma- chine. ‘Here you are. That makes 78. I'll fetch in the 22 others in the course of the day.” Restoring Mesopotamia. Under British occupation the fertile regions of Mesopoiamia are being re- stored to productivity, for which this region was celebrated in Biblical days. This is disclosed in official dispatches received at Washington from Bagdad. Under Turkish rule in some places nothing was produced. The British authorities, to save a large part of the population from star- vation and to provide work, immedi- ately set about, as soon as the Turks were driven out, to construct canals for irrigation and to encourage the population to plan for the next har vest. An Arabian labor corps was or- ganized locally and three Indian labor corps were employed. As a result a new irrigation cana! has been opened .t Mansarich, sev- enty miles northeast of Bagdad on the Diala river, by which 300,000 acres already are being irrigated. The King Charles Statue. King Charles I may now breathe freely once more. Workmen have tak- en away the sandbags and scaffolding of the statue of King Charles I in Trafalgar square. This is the first time the head of the Stuarts has been permitted to breathe freely for many months. All sorts of speculations have been rife as to the reason for the ex- tensive protection that has been ac- corded this statue, one of them being that there was a Jacobite at the office of works. The pronable reason, how- ever, is the undeni~ble beauty of the statue.—London Mail. Identification No. 1. When a soldier gets his identification disk handed to him and it runs up to 317,541 or 2,783,596—or some such colossal number, he begins to medi- tate briefly on the subject of who has No. 1. The Stars and Stripes answers his query with the information that in the infancy of the A. E. F., No. 1 was as- signed to Sergt. Arthur B. Crean of the medical department. Where and what he is now is not vouchsafed, but by this time he may be a lieutenant colonel. Another Star Shell. By the invention of a new “star” shell the night fighting efficiency of thie navy will be increased at least 25 per cent, the war department has said in an oficial statement. The shell is suitable for guns of from three to five- inch caliber. Its value lies in the fact that its increased illuminating power tay be used without betraying the po- sition of the craft using it.—Navy Life Magazine. the | you in many ways. trons ceases with the funds. very often when o of Its Unusual every family ough car. human life. You We solicit your ord while production is Cars tain banking relations can be of service to The Centre County Banking Co. does not consider that its service to its pa- safeguarding of their It keeps in personal touch with all of them in such a way as to be of assistance ther matters develop affecting their interest. It Invites You to Take Advantage Service. Ford THE UNIVERSAL CAR Ford cars have become such a world utility that it would almost seem as if t to have its Ford Runabout, Touring Car, Coupe, Sedan, (the two latter have enclosed bodies), and the Truck Chassis, have really become a part and parcel of want one because its service will be profitable for you. er at once because limited, it will be first come, first supplied. BEATTY MOTOR CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. Trucks Tractors farming at all. We aim to carry a full ply them. A Full Line of Agricul den Tools, Etc. LET US KNOW 62-47 Farmers---Gardeners---Truckers year planting the same land and dribbling a little cheap fertilizer in the furrow, merely to get a little/more out of the land than he puts in, is not The man who is not improving the land is going backward. Land must be improved in cultivation or lose its fertility. Good Fertilizers will produce desired results. We have them for every use. T MAN who is [content to go along year after line of FIELD SEEDS: Our seeds are the, BEST we can BUY! SPRAYING MATERIAL for Every Pest and Blight as well as the spraying machinery with which to ap- tural Implements, Gar- Special Feeds; Roofing Etc. YOUR WANTS Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store DUNLOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. AARAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAAAAAAAANS EH, Using Hydrometer. i$ is advisable to see to this every few Shoes. Shoes. Experienced motorists who really Sy pen INE Soma on: the take care of their cars find that un- | winter, once every week or two will STI Io ee Te TE Ta Te [oe less their storage batteries are tested | doubtless answer. The level of the “= regularly battery repairs and replace- | solution in the cells should be kept Tc A ments soon become an expensive habit | about one-half above the top of the | [OE Ue which could easily have been avoided. | plates. Si ie 3 Boery moseriss Shovla have a hy- i = ) 2 rometer, and shou test his bat- Mi L tery every week according to the di- Might Have Been Expected. on) fic rections which accompany the instru- “Young Gotrox complains that his Le 4 : ment. When the battery tests appre- | wife has commenced to kick over the | [5 = ciably below .1250 it is an indication | {1000s already.” 1 L that it needs charging. The engine “H ' ’ h UG = should then be run with the gears in | umph! at’s what comes of Ll Uo neutral till the hydrometer shows a | marrying a skirt dancer. Sf] Tc Teading of Doe dians .1250. 5 I he i p————— = i est shows e battery to be below i Ll 1200, it is too far discharged to be! Agrees With Ralph, oi r= ed by this Lasiment and should “Dis worl’ means a heap t° some 55 Ic e taken at once to a service station. ’ TE Equal in importance to regularity in fail Piflowsphized Shirenst BE SH in testing is the necessity for adding dis- | 2° ista Imerson sad, ye gat Jong f= = tilled water to each cell of the battery | Very well widout it befo’ we were i= Uo whenever it is needed. In summer | bon.” i . . . Tc peri A Beautiful Spring Display of g8 l 1 1 Tc SH 5 Fine Pum i 1 1 Fme Pumps and Oxfords Your Banker 5; A : fe FOR WOMEN Ne The institution with which you main- i YOU will need a pair of Oxfords or ES) =~ Oc Pumps for Spring. Our line is complete. oh All the new styles: Patent Kid, Vici Kid all the shades of Tan, all the new lasts I and heels, all sizes and widths iL We have made a special effort to get ; all the styles in large sizes, so that the Ic large woman with a large foot can secure just as good looking shoes as the dainty Ue miss. La an Come and examine our line before i you purchase your Spring Shoes ] i i 2 Yeager's Shoe Store i THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN ra Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE. PA. fr a — Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Special Prices for May We expect to make this the banner month by re- ducing the prices on all wanted merchandise. COTNeR Georgette Waists Voile Waists from 98c. to $2.50. Tub Silk Waists now $2. Georgette Crepc Waists $5 to $7. Wash Goods One lot of fine Plaid and Stripe Ginghams, reg- ular 55¢. quality, while they last 25c. Light and dark 36-inch Percales, best Bini only, 25¢c. ake Fine white Lawns, 50c. quality, while iiep last 5 Silk and Cotton Crepe de Chine, 36-inch only, Cc. Dolmans Capes Coats Suits We never had as big a season in this depart- ment, and we are stronger than ever. We are re- plenishing every week. Rugs and Carpets All sizes in Rugs. Tapestry, Velvet, Wilton, Axminster and Rag Kugs—the best values and low- est prices. Rag and Ingrain Carpets at less than cost of manufacture. Shoes Shoes Men’s, women’s and children’s Shoes at prices that will suit the moderate purse. Lyon & Co. «» Lyon & Co.