Bema atdwan. | HEALTH SCHOOL Bellefonte, Pa., July 23, 1920. World’s War Veterans to Meet at Richmond, Va. Thousands of Pennsylvania’s se- lected men already are planning their second drive on Richmond where the first annual reunion of the Eightieth, Blue Ridge, Division Veterans’ Asso- ciation is to be held September 4th through 6th. They will arrive in the Convention city, close to Camp Lec where the division was trained for its battle effectiveness overseas, three years, almost to the day, after the first groups of selected men from Vir- ginia, Pennsylvania and West Vir- ginia passed through to begin their period of army life. The Veteran’s Association of the Division, which made an enviable rec- ord for achievement against the Ger- mans, was formed while the men still were in France, and, since their re- turn to civil life, has grown to con- spicuous proportions. At present there are approximately seventeen thousand men on the membership rolls each of them having seen active ser- vice under Maj. Gen. Adelbert Cronk- hite, who is to attend the first re- union. Only former members of the division are eligible for membership, and it is expected that between six and eight thousand of these veterans will participate in the drive to Rich- mond for the first annual reunion. Extensive preparations are being made for the entertainment of the men and for affording them accom- modations at minimum rates while in the city. Business sessions, at which the association’s organization on a permanent basis is to be perfected, are to be short and snappy. _ Picnics and a big ball at one of the Richmond armories to afford the best which it is capable of producing, while mini- mum railroad rates and the billeting of visitors in specially arranged dor- mitories will reduce expenses to the lowest possible figure. Committees of the association, with those represent- ing the Richmond post, already are busily engaged in perfecting these de- tails. The men themselves now are voting on the advisability of parading over a short route, while a memorial service, at which United States Senat- or Carter Glass, of Virginia, who had a son with the Eightieth, is likely to be the principal speaker, will be a Sunday feature. Saturday evening, September 4, will be devoted to the reunion of smaller units within the division. The fact that the reunion dates have been chosen so as to include Labor Day is expected to make pos- sible the attendance of large numbers of veterans who otherwise might find it impossible to be present. This 1s a light season on the farms also, and few will be prevented from renewing acquaintances with billet and dug-out buddies because of work. Saturday is a half holiday and Sunday and Mon- day full holidays, so that the com- mittee in charge of arrangements be- lieves those attending from a distance will have to lose only a half day Saturday. R. Allen Ammons, 420 American Naional Bank Bldg., Richmond, Va., is chairman of the reunion commit- tee and inquiries should be addressed to him. Signs to be Posted Through State Forests. Hundreds of signs will be posted conspicuously through the State for- ests this summer by the Pennsylvania Department of Forestry, according to an announcement made by Gifford Pinchot, the State’s chief forester. The signs will be distributed along roads in all forests, and they will be large enough to be read easily by motorists traveling thirty miles an hour. White letters will be painted on a dark green background on heavy sheet iron. Two inscriptions will appear on the signs. One will read, “Pennsyl- vania State Forest. You Are Wel- come. Be Careful With Fire.” The other type of sign will read, “Care- lessness Destroyed This Forest. Be Careful With Fire.” The latter sign will be posted at areas that have been burned over by forest fires. The signs vary in size, ranging from 8 ft. by 9 ft., to 80 in. by 36 in. The largest signs will be distributed along the State highways through the forests, and the smaller signs will be placed along woods, roads and trails where fast travel is impossible. The letters will vary from 3 in. to 9 in. in height. ° Commissioner Pinchot has a three fold idea in placing the signs: They will inform the public when State forest land is reached; they will invite public use of the forests, and they will warn of dangers of forest fires. eee eee. Give Her Three Cheers. A lady received the following reply from a neighbor in answer to a ques- tion as to why she allowed her chil- dren and her husband to litter up ev- ery room in the house. The sentiment will find lodgment in the heart of ev- ery home-loving person in the land: “The marks of little muddy feet upon the floor can be more easily re- moved than the stains where the little feet go into the highways of sin. The prints of the little fingers upon the window panes cannot shut out the sunshine half so much as the shadows that darken the mother’s heart over the one who will be but a name in the coming years. “And if my John finds home a re- fuge from care and his greatest hap- piness within its four walls, he can put his boots in the rocking chair and hang his hat on the floor any day in the week. And if I can stand it and he enjoys it, I cannot see that it is anybody’s business.”—S. R. Bulletin. Graduated with “High” Honors. . A college senior class, in an exam- ination, were given this question: “What do you consider the greatest problem which confronts the college man just graduated?” “The income tax,” wrote one of the seniors, “which was graduated be- fore he was.”—Cartoon’s Magazine. Pennsylvania State Department of Health. Questions. 1. What is the first food that you should buy for children? 2. Why should you give children plenty of vegetables? 3. Why should children eat noth- ing between meals? THE MARKET BASKET “Everything’s so high,” complained Mrs. Thompson, “and my four never seem to get enough. They're as skin- ny as rails, too—well Ed's fat enough but Mr. Thompson says he hasn’t mus- cle and he’s sick half the time.” Mrs. Harris’ bright eyes travelled to her neighbor's market basket. “Maybe the children aren’t getting the right kind of food,” she suggested, as they left the market. “I always buy the hest there is,” turned Mrs, Thompson in slightly in- jured tones. But Mrs. Harris was de- termined to get a square deal for the hungry little Thompsons, if she could. | “Well,” she continued, “I've found that children have to have cortain kinds of food or they don’t thrive. There's milk”— “Eighteen cents a quart for some- thing to drink!” MADE BIG “BAG” OF GERMANS Raid of Doughboys Within Hun Lines One of the Most Brilliant Exploits of the War. It was the most audacious night hike of the great war. The infantry bri- gade of the Second division, Ameri- can army, was making it. Platoon after platoon of rain-soaked, mud- painted Yank doughboys, in columns of twos, marched silemtly straight through the strong German line, a distance of four miles—like a huge khaki-colored monster ready to spring at the throat of the German defense. They did. Joseph Mills Hanson, former Amer- ican field artillery officer, gives this graphic description in the Home Sec- tor, the ex-soldiers’ weekly conducted by the former editorial council of the Stars and Stripes, of how the midnight surprise experts of the A. E. F. floun- dered and struggled up the hill toward La Tuilerie farm on the night of No- vember 4, 1918, where German officers were living close to Beaumont, think- ing that the nearest American soldier was eight kilometers away. He says: “Silently the Americans, re. | panting from their long march, formed ‘and closed in upon the farm, as old Mosby’s men used to close in on some devoted federal outposts in Virginia, or | as George Rogers Clark's grim fron- ! tiersmen closed in on the British at their ball in the wilderness fort at Vincennes. “There was a pause as they crept up close. Then a sudden rush, a gust ' of cries, and through the doors and “But it’s the most important food in the world for children. It has more of | the different kinds of things that they | need than any other food. A quart of pound of meat or nine eggs, and think of the cost of those!” “Mine don’t care for it. tea and coffee better.” “And it’s so bad for them! don’t you try coloring their milk with a- little cocoa? And, of course, you They like { | windows they burst in. Knots of Ger- man officers, bending over maps and | dispatches, looked up in horror into the muzzles of rifles and the stern. milk las the same food value as a | White faces behind them; men curled ! up in blankets in the corners staggered to their feet and held their hands aloft. This sort of warfare had a tang of the . new-world daring in it that the dis- Why | ciples of Von Clausewitz and Luden- dorff could not comprehend. | German logic at naught, but they were san give it to them in soups and pud- | lings and on cereals and toast. Each of mine gets at least a pint a day in some form.” “What else do you give them?” Mrs. | esty’s trusty officers and men had been Thompson was getting interested. “Well, I make a point of having a green vegetable every day.” Mrs. Thompson's basket contained nothing green. “Spinach?” “Spinach is fine. atables are—spinach, chard, cabbage, oeet greens, lettuce. All the leafy veg- But all green | vegetables have minerals which are rood for the blood and help make good teeth and bones. Onions boiled are splendid and are usually rather cheap. Besides there are beets, carrots and string beans. Celery and asparagus are all right, but’ they contain less nourishment than the others and are usually expensive anyway.” “What about potatoes?” “Children ought to have them. They are a starchy food, like bread and ce- reals, and even better for children than bread. ‘I bake them in order to save their mineral. I have a cooked cereal every morning, too—a package of cat meal costs less and has about eight times as much nourishment as the same sized package of dry cereal, hesides having iron in it.” (Mrs. Thompson looked guiltily at her two packages of ready to eat cereal). “Don’t you give them any meat?” “Yes, a little. Either meat or fish or eggs—they are all growth foods, like milk. Meat wouldn’t be necessary if they drank more milk, and it would be cheaper to get the milk for them, hut we have meat on the table and the children like it, so I give them some. I don’t let them have fried meat or sausage or pork—they're toc indigestible.” “Children always want sweet things, and I suppose that’s bad for them.” obliged to yield to it. La Tuilerie farm, a German headquarters, four miles from the front, had been throt- tled by a hand reaching out of the darkness. Many of his imperial maj- made prisoners in a flash, though un- fortunately two generals made their es- cape by darting out of back doors.” Memorial Cottages. The number of lives the war took has not been adequately reckoned. The number of families it broke up is like- wise uncounted. Yet right after it we have a greater shortage of housing than ever. connection in a letter to the London Spectator, evidently from one of the sufferers of the war. It contains a sug- gestion which may or may not be new in this country. : The writer calls attention to an article in the London Chronicle tell- ing of the building of 120 cottages for | ex-service men in Westmoreland. called war memorial cottages. It is not clear to him whether these were built by public or private funds, but never mind that. “Would it be pos- sible,” he asks, “for individuals to do likewise? What more practical me- morial of any fallen hero than to pro- vide a home for a disabled soldier or sailor or for his widow and children?” Though our war widows and or- phans and our disabled soldiers are few compared with the losses of Great Britain, we have need enough for more houses, and the memorial cottage idea is not a bad one. How She Knew. A Hoosier school teacher received a very indignant note from one of her patrons, demanding that she stop some boys from annoying her tiny daughter . on the way home from school. Imme- “Oh, no, a little does no harm if given at the end of a meal. I make custards and rice puddings for them, or we have stewed or fresh fruit or a . few pieces of candy for dessert. Ice cream is all right, and, of course, a treat. And I don’t let them eat sweet things, or anything else, between meals. food at the table. “Maybe that’s wley my children are I don’t have pies or rich cake. | It | spoils their appetite for wholesome |! diately after she had read the note the teacher began an investigation. She asked the little girl, “How do these boys annoy you?” “Why, they talk awful about me and to me,” explained the youngster. “They cuss me and say terrible things.” “But how do you know they are cursing and the things are really ter- | rible?” persisted Miss Teacher. i never hungry when they sit down at ‘tha table. But don’t you ever give them an apple or an orange or a ba- ! nana?’ “Yes indeed, at meals. has his fruit juice or stewed apples or prune pulp. The others have all kinds of cooked fruit, and oranges and Even she was stunned by the wee child’s answer, “Because,” she rea- soned, “they are just like the things my papa says when he gets mad at my ' mama.” The baby . apples and peaches when they’re ripe. : I'm careful to see that they have some fruit every day. I don’t give them bananas, though, unless they're very ripe,” noticing Mrs. Thompson's bunch of pale yellow ones. “The brown skinned ones are more digestible and cheaper, too.” “Your children do look so healthy, and I dan’t believe it costs a bit more.” “It doesn’t, if you buy carefully. 1 don’t buy fancy package goods. I buy in bulk whenever IT can, and I make sure of the things that are necessary.” “It’s hard te make children eat what’s good for them.” “Yes, but they're hungrier at meal time if they are out of doors a lot, and have nothing to fill up on between meals. Maybe you could get them in- terested, too, in watching their weight go up.” “I'm going to try,” said Mrs. Thomp- son, as they reached her front deor. “I may be over for another lesson.” “Any time,” laughed her friend. “Mr. Harris says that I'll get every- body down on me if I don’t stop tell- ing them what they ought to eat. But we've been so much better and hap: pier ourselves since we had a sensible tet that I want everybody to try It.” Difference in Situations. Away out in a remote and Snow- drifted draw, separated from the herd, an old cow stands between a fir tree and a bowlder, her calf behind her, desperately defending it against a ring of wolves capable of playing a wait- ing game through the long night. This is a scene common enough in the West, about which artists painted vivid pictures and authors wrote stir- ring stories, mighty good press-agent material for the department of agri- culture’s predatory animal campaign. But who would write a thrilling story or paint a picture about a prairie dog running out of its hole and filling its stomach with grama grass?—Ex- change. A Speedy Mete. “Hallo” came the female voice over the telephone. “Is that the gas com- pany?” “Yes, madam!” replied the clerk, “I want to know when the entries for the autumn handicaps close.” “The autumn handicaps?” said the startled clerk. “This is the gas com- pany's office.” he replied clearly. “That's right,” said the unseen lady. “I want to know when the et.- tries for the autumn races close, as I'd like to enter my gas meter, '— Philadelphia Inquirer. It set | There is interest in this | HE JUST WANTED TO KNOW Possible Explanation for Nonappear- ance of Watch Had Suddenly Dzwned on Simple Farmer. Supt. J. E. Oursler of the Carnegie Steel company has established a cost- price store for his 12,500 workmen, thus circumventing the local profiteer. One of the local profiteers asked Mr. Oursler if he would not shut up the cost-price store, as it was interfering with the other stores’ profits, but Mr. Oursler answered : “Will T shut up our cost-price store, eh? Well, that is about the naivest question I ever heard. Yes, it’s as naive a question as the young farmer’s.” “The young farmer’s?” said the prof- iteer. “A young Pike county farmer,” ex- plained Mr. Ousler, “stalked up to the inquiry office in a Pittsburgh station and asked: “ ‘This here’s the inquiry office, ain’t it? “‘Sure is,’ said the capable young clerk. “ ‘Wall, said the Pike county farm- er, ‘about eight hours ago a gazabo took my new watch down the street to get my name engraved on it free gratis so’s it wouldn't get lost, and I'm kind of tired of waitin’, so what I want to inquire is—is there onrest in the engravin’ trade, and are all the Pittsburgh engravers out on strike or sump’n’?”’ NO INSURANCE ON HAPPINESS Lloyds Refuses to Take the Risk That Seems to Be Involved in In. ternational Marriages. SR About the only thing the Lloyds will not insure is happiness to follow an | international marriage. While some | American women who wedded repre- | sentatives of the nobility of the old world found happiness, a vastly larger number found failure to be their por- tion. The honeymoon trail of these internationalists shows many ship- wrecks. As a rule the representative | of the nobility seeks a mate among | the wealthy who have unsatisfied so- | | i cial ambitions. Given these condi- tions, the chance for presentation at i court, the glamour of a title, the ex- | clusiveness of social relations with | the titled great, cause many a young | woman to forget prudence and have | made many fathers and mothers will- ing to approve a heavy bet on a slim chance. The long string of women who have come back across. the Atlantic broken ! hearted and slim of purse since Nel- ! lie Grant made her unhappy alliance ' has taught little wisdom to those who “are courted by the titled but ofttimes . penniless nobility.—Ohio State Jour- | nal. War Disability. | medical science with having accom- { plished wonders during the late war | in eradicating or reducing diseases { that have previously ravaged fighting | armies, it maintains that disabilities | resulting from the war are due in more | cases to disease than to wounds. Fig- | ures compiled by the English ministry i of pensions show that of all the pen- | sions granted down to Septembér 1, 1918, 58 per cent were on account of disease. Tuberculosis and chest com- plaints were responsible for 11.2 per | cent, rheumatism for 6.5 per cent and i heart disease for 9.9 per cent. Only | incomplete figures are available con- | cerning American experience, but of I 7,710 cases dealt with by the federal [board of vocation up to January 31, 1 1919, by far the greater portion were | due to disease.—Youth’s Companion. Penitentiary Farm’s Success. Included in the report of the gov- -ernor of the Edmonton, Alberta (Can- ada), penitentiary to the superintend- ent of penitentiaries is an interesting paragraph dealing with the farm operations carried on at the peniten- tiary as well as its mining operations. { Some 70 acres were under cultivation during the past year and were farmed with gratifying results. From this small acreage, after buying a tractor and stubble plow at a cost of $1,314, “we show a net profit of $4,191.17. From 9% acres of wheat we thrashed 45 bushels to the acre, and from 11 acres of potatoes we sold 3,500 bushels. Our oats yielded 85 bushels to the acre, and the amount of small vegetables was exceptionally good. Our intensive farming has been very profitable.” Hawaii Led in Prohibition. Historians of the Hawaiian islands assert. that an Hawaiian monarchy was the first government in the world to put absolute prohibition into effect. Kamehameha the Great, first king of United Hawaii, in 1795, after having conquered all the other islands, issued an edict imposing prohibition. Its pen- alties were drastic. An offender was stripped of his property, real and per- sonal, and was driven from his village clad only in a loin cloth. In later years foreign nations forced liquor on the Hawaiians and its sale was general in the islands until the great war, when, with the opening of the army training camps on the is- lands, prohibition went into effect. Why Hair Nets Are Dear. The hair net business of Chefoo, China, is in a state of chaos owing to complications caused by buyers from Shanghai going directly to the makers in the region of Chingchowfu and thus competing with the firms with which these had contracts. Consequently the price has increased about 300 per cent. Although Modern Medicine credits Shoes. The Very Best for ten Dollars $10.00 Before you make an error and pay $3 to $5 more for ladies’ Pumps, Oxfords and Ties look over our line and see just what we can give you in value for Ten Dollars. Ladies’ Black and Tan Suede Oxfords, the i very best quality - $10.00 © Ladies’ Russia Calf Oxfords, Military heels (Trostells Russia) - - $10.00 Patent Colt and Dull Kid One Eye- let Ties (Hand Turned) $10.00 Vici Kid Oxfords, High and Low Heels (Hand Sewed) - $10.00 Ladies’ Ladies’ In fact there is nothing in ladies Oxfords or Pumps that we ‘cannot furnish for $10.00. This is our highest price shoe, but it will purchase the very best. Yeager’'s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. ElUEUELUELELEU ELIE lel ELE El ELE ELE LELlEL Mi2ni2N2Mi2N2N=aN=NU= MUS MUS NHS USN el Hel le et The) Hed He] Ue Ue] led Ue] ted lest 1 Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Clearance Sale of All Summer Merchandise July sales mean this season’s wear of summer goods at wholesale price, and some merchandise less than cost. There are many ways of buying merchandise. You will find it helpful in comparing prices and buying the merchanglise which appeals to y ou from the standpoint of prices and quality. (Clearance Sale of Silks All colors of 36-inch figured Foulards that sold at $3.00 per yard, sale price $1.98. : A large assortment of Silk Poplins, 36 inches wide; regular price $2.00, sale price $1.35. Clearance sale price on Messalines, Georgettes, Taffetas, Satins, Pussy Willow Silks in plain colors, figured, stripes and checks, Voiles, Flaxons, Ginghams, etc. We are crowded for space and can not enumerate everything marked down to sell QUICKLY. Coats, Suits and Separate Skirts This department must be the big saving for all customers. We are getting ready for fall stocks, and Spring and Summer Suits, Coats and Skirts must go now Clearance Sale Prices will do the selling quickly. SPECIALS! One lot of Children’s Socks, Black, White and Blue, 3 pairs for $.55. One lot of Ladies’ White Shoes, must go quick, only $1.75. White Voile}Waists, all sizes, price $3.00, clear- ance sale $1.98. TABLE DAMASK at less than wholesale price today. MEN’S SHOES in dress and work styles at Clear- ance Sale prices. We extend a cordial invitation to examine our qualities and see our prices. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co.