; x at Meurorealic Hea, Bellefonte, Pa., December 10, 1920. MOTHER EARTH CHOSE WELL Old Lady’s Dzcision on Green for a Coiering Much More Than Accidental. Why did Mother Earth choose 8 dress in green? The earth was not always green. Scientists say that ence it was as naked as the moon; but there came a day when the weather | .grew cool enough to demand clothing, | and at that time, no doubt, this mater- nal planet began to look about to choose a color scheme for her dress. Why she chose green is not gn rec- ord, but that she chose it with her whole heart every pleasant place of creation testifies. Scientists explain that this is merely | a natural phenomenon, the color beiu. .chlorophyl pigment, turned green by \action of the sun. But why it did not turn blue or red or black, no scientist knows. About all that Mother arth wanted a green dress, and she got it. Green is a restful color. Ocualists say that of all colors green is the most friendly to the optic nerve. in lands where cternal snows or eternal white sands flash up their glaring re flections, men have to shade their eyes or go blind. But grzen never bothers the eye. One can stare a forest in the face all day with lmpunity. Nature's greens never Sot on your nerves, and they never guarreied with any other of nature's coiors and tints. The professional mixer of paint: knows fierce color discord can easily be created by a niisplacing of green. Dut nature never misplaces it. Even blue stands without tying, cheel by cheei with nature's greens. Lark- spurs and lobelias go quietly arm in arm with their respective foliage. A rose of any tint or color is best set off by a green rose leaf. Every spring or fall color, pale er florid, will shade that they can say is! pleasantly info green on the very same leaf. Imagine the grass of the field and the leaves of the forest created blue, or magenta, or scarlet, instead of green! Some speculative scientists ‘think the foliage of the planet Mars is red, and that the people there are seeing red continually. —TLouisville Courier-Journal. ee ret 2 ee HELPED BY ROYAL FRIENDS Musicians cf Od Days Found Valuabl Patrons Among Those in the {tigh Places. Many a funous Muropean musical gonius has been liberally supported at ene time or another during his career “hy “the great,” many musicians being connected with royal courts especially 1g the dads when there were many 1it- the princes. Joseph Haydn for 23 years directed and conposed for the private certs of the princes of .kisterhazy, dur- ing which pxifoad he created most of his Lest rhinapsodies. Beethoven had his life mide easier Archduke Rudolph and Lobhowitz, Ccon- for him by the Prinees Lich and These three nebles were his truest \ gamirers mm i day when musicians ee- eupicd a and were ren yerdinnte social position, dod nove or less as the ., of the fmnty that supported vassals them. On asked to hoprevise cratic gather: but the cone Beethoven was hefore an aristo- fle began playing, tion in the salon con- tinued. In Li anger seethoven arose, oxeclaimed forcefully though: fudely : “Fo such pias | play no more!” and dashed cut of the room. anyone who has read his Lis remember, was one occasion hig Mozart, tory of music kicked downstairs hy an upstart serv- ant of ihe Archbishop [Hieronymus who was for many years his patron. will Lake That Has a Crust of Salt. Going throuzh the weird region of Death valley, in California, travelers jooking from their perch upon a hitl- side where & wide view is commanded, may see what appears to be a lake of ice gleaming in the sunlight. . chance HEALTH SCHOLL Pennsylvania State Department of al. Questions. 1. How is Rabies contracted? 1. How should a dog bite be treated? 3. "What should be done with a dog suspected of I.abies? RABIES OR HYDROPHOBIA Almost every one knows the story | of the heroie blacksmith, who, to sie | the village children fought and killed the “Mad Dog* with his bare hands. Severely bitten in the struggle, to pro- tect others from injury in case mad- ness should come upon him, with his own hands he riveted the iron band around ankle and forged the ¢hain which bound him to his anvil “ia ils Grateful neighbors brought him food and stayed te keep him com- pany during the uncertain hours and days which must pass until his fate | ota showed a large female would Le known. When his wounds | re; i The one woman candi- nealed rapidly, they wanted to file | the Favmer-Labor ticket— ! off his shackles. bul the brave smith | was defeated, refused. Soon he noticed a numbness | of hix limbs and tingling sensations. | It wax difficult for him to swallow, then came thirst-—unendurable thirst | ——that could not be assuaged, for even b the of water was sufficient to cause violent spasms of the muscles of the throat. Hence the name. “ily drophobia”—*“fear of water” Gener | al convulsions followed, which were | succeeded and unconsei- | ousness, and so he died. A few generations later came announcement from the laboratory of the areat French Scientist Pasteur, ihat Rabies or Flxdrophobia was pre ventable. Rabies is not conveyed from! one person fo another but is always sight | by paralysis the the result of infection {rem a lower | animal, uspally the dog. although it may be traasmitied by horses, cows, cats, goats or other animals. | The virus of the disease is found in the saliva and is often present sev- eral days or a week before the animal | oxhibits signs of “Madness.” Infec- tion is usually caused by the bite of a rabid animal, but it may be induced by the mere licking of a hand pon which there is a break in the skin. { Persons have been known to con- | tract the disease by scratching their | hands on the teeth of horses or cattle | they were drenching from some sup.’ posed other ailment. i The disease seldom makes Its ap. pearance before {hree weeks and some : times as much as three months or more elapse hefore it is manifest. One day last stmamer Jimmy Downs, 10 years old, ran crying to his mother, “A dog bit me.” Dr. Carson enlarged the wound, which was in the hand. ‘n order to make it bleed fieely, washed it out well and enuterized it. : “What becante of the dog?” he asked | The dog has been shot,” said Jim my's father. “Too bad, it was not cautured alive” “Why captured?” ! “Because in a few Lave kuawn definite’: t1 WAR Te mist be sent davs we shontd whether or Now Payers Tran dou rahi Voger } his to (hae Agtie Inthe tory and the “Neori holdies™ (the con tain signs of rabies) which are J { Jaw ds early | paralyzed and often | hangs down, giving the animal the ap- pearance of having a bone in hig | throat ; while the saliva is virulent anl. | mals are dull, listless and Mn The first change uoticed in 1 dos affected with the fiiious type of Ral ies, is usually resi!-ssness and a dif in his di sition. An a'Tec- : 1ibit surlines: op an ill-natured dog t:.anifest a sudden fondness for his raster by frequent attempts to lick ais hands and face. The saliva is virulent at this stage. Beware of restless and unduly affec. tionate dogs, especially if you know they have been bitten, Later they appear to become deliri- nus, biting at imaginary things. and darting in fear from commonplace objects; soon they begin to bite and snap at other animals; they run aim- lessly for long distances biting and snapping at every thing in their way, They drip saliva, Hut do not always froth at the mouth. The Board of Poo: Directors are re- quired by law to furnish Pasteur treatment free, for persons unable to pay for it. it for two years all dogs In the United Ste.tes were required by law, to be muzzled, Hydrophobla would disap- ear from this country as it has from angland, where such law exlsts. to important offices. I rr mie i A een, — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” WOMEN CANDIDATES. Complete information on the wom- en’s vote and how it affected the re- cent election is still fragmentary. A few scattered items, however, are ob- tainable. Though Colorado went Republican, Miss Inez Lewis Johnson, a Democrat, was elected county superintendent of #1 Paso county. Another victory which the women claim was the elec- tion of Judge Ben Lindsay, who was returned to the Juvenile Court—the only Democrat elected in Denver. Five women were elected to the Jow- er House of the Connecticut Legisla- ture. They are four Republicans and a Democrat. The largest woman vote in the his- tory of Kansas was reported. Miss Lorraine Wooster was re-elected as J : : State Superintendent of Public In- struction. It has been asserted that the vote for Miss Wooster showed ap- | proval of her stand against cigarette smoking in the schools, and the effi- ciency of the teaching force under her administration. Four women, three Republicans and a Democrat, were elected to the Kansas Legislature. In Louisiana Miss Edith Brown Dai- ley was elected to the State Constitu- tional Convention, and Mrs. A. E. Baumgarden to the New Orleans school board. emo elected. Miss Jessie Doe, a Republi- can, was another successful candidate. ro : : To the New Jersey Legislature will | go Mrs. Margaret B. Laird and Mrs. a Jenniz Van Ness, both Republicans, and both prominent suflragists. : Ohio counties elected three women Miss Mary K. dovey was chosen Prosecuting Atler i ney of Hocking county, defeating her | Democratic opponent by 170 votes. Miss Florence E. Allen was. elected Common Pleas Judge in Cuyahoga county, the largest county in Ohio, de- | feating the other candidate by more than 11,900 votes. Mrs. Abbie Nye i Norton was elected Piobate Judge in Lake county. Women candidates for & few minor ! offices in South Dakota were success ful. its ran ten women for the | Legislature. Only | § Mary "arnum, was | Natural Thermometer. It was a wonderful sapphire, so it is said, that led the celebrated Doctor Sorby to the discovery of the nature of the liquid sometimes found iw- closed in the cavities of crystals. tube-shaped cavity, a quarter of an inch long and an eighteenth of an inch in diameter, which was so regular in its bore that it served, by means of the liguid partially filling it, for a thermometer. The contained liquid half-filled the bore at 50 degrees F. and completely filled it at 80 degrees. A study of the rate of expansion of the liquid led to the conclusion that it must be carbonic acid. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN This Guilible Gink has been Monkey- ing with an Ouija Board until he’s Seared himself Plum Stiff. Ain't science Wonderful when any Common Dub can buy a 98c weeja board at the Corner Drug Store and hold Heart- mo-Heart confabs with Celebrities like william Shakespeare, Cleopatra and Gyp the Blood? Net Confents 15 Fiuid Draohm vice 1 EAC ess Us ANA AR IAO: - 7 0 | ALeoHOLS PE A i! AVegefablerepara 4 | similating theFood by Rogala) ] | {ing the Stomachs and Bavels 3 INFANTS 81180 : Thereby Promoting Digestion Cheerfulness and Rest.Confatts neither Opium, MO! Mineral, NoT NARGOTIG, ee 3 Recipe af GRADE SAMUEL PTOTERD Pumpkin Seed 3 Aerirtl Salts wo : BE st hef ful Remedy for | Gonstipayon and Diarrhoea; and Feverishness | Loss OF S% : | resiriting terefronininfancy ] ignatareof | LAS iE FacSinite | ug GexTAUR COMPANE JO Exact Copy of Wrapper. Handling Your Funds. A Business Manager who disburses funds at your direction, a secretary who keeps your accounts, a sleepless sentinel guarding rier who delivers to all corners of the country-—all these and many other of- GASTORI For Infants and Children. | Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of Thirty Years ASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NCU? YORK CITY. your funds, a car- fices are performed by the bank. Money which you wish to send with- in this city or to distant points is con- veyed by your check simply, safely and cheaply. The checking account is only one of the many mediums through. which this bank serves its customers. many other ways There are in which we can be helpful to you and it would be our pleasure to serve you in any or all of them. CENTRE COUNTY BANKING Co 60-4 boo or oT a nad BELLEFONTE; PA. The gem in question contained a EEE SEE EEE Only thirteen more shopping days until Christmas, and we are still Taking Our Medicine 4 ly ; msl 77 ging, IN i lh i if it’s for man or boy your dollars will do almost double duty here Fauble’s Letz Feed Mills Sharples Cream Separators Sharples Milking Machines (Electric and Line Machines) Chicken, Dairy and Horse Feed Calf Meal Dubbs’ Implement and ‘Feed Store BELLEFONTE, Pa MT i 7 hE : 2 8 {efi j = Ed 3 SPECIAL SIX SERIES 20 Satisfying Performance Economy of Operation Power Durability True Value BIG SIX..vrinccrsantsrcsssse sees: $3250.00 SPROTAL BEX. ..o.oeesrnrernueses, ATES00 ) LIGHT 8IX....scitaevsssnesssenes 1455.00 g Cord Tires on all Models—Prices f. 0. b. Factory—Subject to Change BEEZER’S GARAGE ‘North Water St. 30 BELLEFONTE CAAA UIA SSIS SPSS SPSS S ASSASINS IAI