. ——=————— & SAE Demorrii atc ~ Bellefonte, Pa., October 14, 1921. THE OLD FRONTIER. ean Adown the trail with the buffalo herds And the Lribes ol the warlike Sioux, Are the roundup ways of the cowboy dave And the old chuck wagon, (Gu. t The (rapper sleeps aud the packer’s gona With the coach and the bronco team, And the bunch grass range is growing , strange To the lonely campfire’s gleam. The trails are dimming among the hills; Old wallows on the piain Are leveled now by the nester's plow ; And there is no wagon wain, The bull t2am by old Time's corralled O’er custom’s sharp divide, And shades galore of thrilling lor2 In its deep’ning thickets hide, The trooper and the halfbreed scout, In a history-making mass, With the ploneer and the old frontias, Have sifted through the pass. But I'ika echoes of the life we {fnew A love that's deep ave strange Is camping ciose to the fading hos* As it crosses mem'ry’s range —Jrank B. Linderman is S3-tioner's Mag azine, NOVEL DOG-RACING DEVICE Scheme of Chicago Man Dres Away With Al! Possibility ot Crusty to the Rabbit To encourage the sport ef dog rec. ing, Owewu Smith, a Chicago tan, has hit upon the idea of prosiding a stuffed rabbit, which, Ly mcnanicoal means, caused to run erovinl an oval or circular (rack with a baxch of bow-wows in pursuit, A small car, driven by an electric motor, makes the circuit of the traek on rails. Outwardly froie it is ex- tended horizontally a long «test rod. which carries a rubber-tirel «heel: a little platform supportes above wheel. Upon the platliorn tened a stuffed rabbit, for ult. The dogs entered for the race are kept in a cage until the moment of the start. They are liberated after the rabbit has passed the cage-—thn: ie to say, when bunny has an allowaice of 20 yards or so—and then comes ihe 1 '. is ined anal (he Is. Ine . £7 badd Keeps Dogs “On the Hop.” test of canine speed, the winner be- ing the dog that passes under the wire first. It is not meant that the rabbit siail be caught, its speed being so adjusted us to enable it to keep ahead of its fastest pursuer, At the finish of the 1ace the car switched off onto a side track and into a little house, the doors of which close behind it. Thus bunny is saved from being mussed up and is good for the next contest on the program. The device is said to he a success, -- Milwaukee Sentinel. iN Pigeon Flies With Locomotive. The following story of a pigeon which pilois trains between More- cambe and Hillfield comes from Lauds, England. Flying quite near the cniine- ney stack on the windward side fo avoid the smoke, this intelligent winged escort rises when the train ap- ‘proaches a bridge, and then flies over; it has never been known to go under the bridge. When the train stops at a station, the bird circles around and alights near the engine; it takes wing again as soon as the conductor hlows his whistle. More less tame, the pigeon is unresponsive to tempting food offered by passengers or railway officials. Tt never fails to return home at night, om SN ng. | ad ~ oo or a Expert Walkers on Stilts. «Ihe department of Landes, in Gas cony, France is famous as ithe home of stiltwalking. Owing to the im- permeability of the sub-soil, low lying districts are converted into marshes, and shepherds and farmers have to spend the greater part of their lives on stilts. These are strapped to the leg below the knee, the foot resting in A stirrup five feet from the ground. A baker, of the Landes, walked on stilts from Paris to Moscow, 1.580 miles. in fifty-eight days in the spring of 1891, Dy por o- Jewish Records Buried. tm Lhe first ceremony of its kind in scotland has taken place in the Jew-' ish part of Piershill cemetery, Edin- burgh, where a large number of He- brew books, scrolls of the law, phylacteries, and utensils used in the synagogue were buried. The custom 1s observed to prevent misuse and for preservation, and was rendered nec- essary owing to the amalgamation of three Jewlsh synagogues. Relics ac- cumulated during a hundred years were contained in ten sacks, and were Jowered into a grave lined with hoards, Teeth of Elephants, Elephants have only eight teeth-- two below and two above, on each side. All baby elephants’ teeth fall out when the animal is about fourteen years old, when a new set grows. | 1 | dresses farnished to the Bureau of toad dart $10,000,000 AID ~ FOR VETERANS Red Cross Provides Friendly Service of Many Kinds to Army of Disabled. BULK OF WORK BY CHAPTERS ee 2,397 of These Are Helping Ex- Service Men Obtain Bene- fits U. S. Provides. One field of Red Cross service alone, that of assisting disabled veterans ef | the World War, entails expenditures $4,000,000 greater than the aggregate receipts of the Annual Roll Call of 1920, the American Red Cross an- nounces in a statement urging a wide- i | NOTES FROM STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH. | With inspectors at the York fair | this week, the Division of Restaurant | Hygiene, State Department of ! Health, nears the end of a strenuous { campaign to clean up eating and | drinking places at fairs. House Bill No. 937, enacted by the ' yecent Legislature, gives this Divis- jon ample authority to compel medic- | al examination of all food and drink handlers in the State; the use of hot water and soap for washing dishes sanitary condition of places where food or drink is served. Mr. John M. Delaney, chief of the Division of Restaurant Hygiene, re- ports that as many as 1100 food hand- lers at one fair were visited by in- spectors from his Division, and that at all fairs held during the season | there was only one instance where an inspector met with refusal the law. Mr. Delaney says, “The re- appearance of the inspector flanked by two state policemen was all that was necessary. The required certifi- cates from physicians were immedi- ately forthcoming, and- a general clean-up of eating places was made.” Dr. Mary Riggs Noble, the recent- | the non-denominational and interna- tional medical college at Ludhiana, India. During the war Dr. Noble was with the National Board of the Y. W. C. A., serving as a social morality | lecturer throughout the south and to obey i derived from Hood's ! middle west. For the past year she has been associate director of the Di- vision of Child Health, working with Dr. Ellen C. Potter, who resigned to assume the position of director, Di- vision of Child Welfare, under the De- . partment of Public Welfare. and cooking utensils; and a general ! | | ! | | | | | | | pase alone would Scrofula Most Progressive Now. Sudden changes of weather are especial- ly trying, and probably to none more sO than to the serofulons and consumptive. The progress of serofula during a nor- mal antumn is commonly great. It is probable that few people ever think of secrofula—its bunches, eruptions, and wasting of the body— without thinking of the benefit many suilerers from it have Sarsaparilla, whose sneeess in the treatment of this one dis- be enough to make it what it is, one of the most famous medi- ¢ines in the world. There is probably not a city or town whers Hood's Sarsaparilla has not proved its merit in more homes than one, in ar- ROBBING BABY’S MILK. Milk fed to babies and young chil- | dren in hospitals and other institu- tions was frequently pasteurized by ' slow heating to the boiling point. The method is alleged to be open to criti- cism. Recent experiments with , young rats have shown that when fed on milk thus treated they grow at ‘only about half the normal rate. This seems to be due to the fact that with slow heating the milk loses a large part of its calcium salts, which settles to the bottom and along the sides of the container in the form 'of an insoluble precipitate. These salts are very necessary for growth and especially for the building of | bones. They are mainly phosphate of | calcium, which is the stuff bones are ‘made of. Unsweetened evaporated ' milk when tried on young rats gave | similar unfavorable results, and for a | like reason. The above mentioned inference was confirmed by adding calcium phos- | phate to the slowly heated milk, which | then proved productive of rat growth ‘at a normal and satisfactory rate. | The same favorable result was ob- | tained when scrapings from the sides i and bottom of the container weie AR MEDICAL. Household Cares Tax the Women of Bellefonte the Same as Elsewhere. Hard to attend to household duties. With a constantly aching back. A woman should not have a bad back, f And she seldom would if the kid- neys were well. Doan’s Kidney Pills are endorsed by thousands. Have been used in kidney trouble over 50 years. Ask your neighbor. Read what this Bellefonte woman says: Mrs. J. T. Gordon, 130 E. Beaver St., says: “My trouble was a dull, constant backache which kept me in misery. Mornings I was so sore and lame I dreaded to begin my house- work, for it was a burden. Doan’s Kidney Pills, bought at Parrish’s Drug Store restored my kidneys to a normal condition. I have had no re- turn of kidney disorder.” After four years, Mrs. Gordon said: “1 gladly confirm my previous state- ment as I certainly have found Doan’s to be all that is claimed for them. . yp i hin abt ly appointed director of the Division resting and completely eradicating serof- | added. i > 1 spread increase in Joes at he of AH Health, State Department of ula. which is almost as erious amd as | It was found that young rats fed Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me, for Annual Roll Call, November 11 fo 28. Health, is well qualified for the im- much to be feared as its near relative, — | on milk brought quickly to boiling which 1 am very thankful.” At the present time National Head- quarters and the nation-wide chain of Chapters of the Red Cross is spend- ing approximately $10,000,060 annual- ly for the relief of disabled ex-service ' men and their families, while the ag- gregate receipts from last year's Roll Call were approximately $6,000,000. It is in the 2,289 of the 3,600 Ned service of that Division. Dr. ho is a graduate of Colorade he Woman’s College, of gave ten years’ service and vice principal of portant Noble, w College, and t Philadelphia, as gynecologist consumption. Hood's Pills, the eathartic to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla, in cases where one is 1 necessary. are gentle in action and thor- ough in elect. 6-10 point grew normally. They gained | weight nearly as fast on undiluted condensed milk, because it retains its \ calcium salts, holding them in suspen- | sion. Foster-Milburn 66-40 60c, at all dealers. Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Cross Chapters which still are helping | solve the veteran’s problem of adjust. ing himself to a normal civilian status that the greater part of the cost of this service is bogie. Of the total sum | spent for veterans’ relief last year, National Headquarters expended a to- } tal of more than £2 (00,000, while the ! remaining disbursement of approxi- mately $7,000,000 represents the con- + tribution of Chapters in this country- | wide effort to assist the Government in providing the aid sorely needed by these men and their families, a —- - er = ing Problem problem of the disabled is ever-expanding and probably will not reach the peak be- fore 1925, is the assertion of well-in- formed Government officials and that 2.397 Red Cross Chapters regard it as their most important work is evi- | dence that the expansion is in nowise An Ever Expand That service the man | confined to a particular section but is, on the cantrary, nation-wide. At the end of the fiscal year, June 30, 1921, i there were 26,200 disabled service men iin the 1,692 United States Public Health Service, Contract and Govern- | ment Hospitals and Soldiers Homes, | number .nereasing at a rate of 1.000 a month. ; Thofsands of these men receiving medical treatment, compensation and vocational training ment today, obtain them Chapter. is from the Govern- | started their efforts to through the Red Cross | The Chapter, acting as the disabled man's agent in claims against | the Government, informs the man as to the procedure necessary to gain for | him that which is provided him by Federal statute, His applications for compensation, medical treatment and tra‘ning are properly filed with the aid of the Red Cross (Chapter. Many Forms of Assistance If there is delay before the man’s claim is acted upon, the Red Cross Chapter lends the man money to meet the hmperative needs of himself and his dependents. Most vital to the man’s gaining full benefit from the Government's care {8 keeping his mind free from worry about | his home. Keeping the veteran's fam- | fly from hardship of every kind and : informing him of its welfare is an other province of the Chapter. Free from fear on this score, the man's re- covery and advancement usually Is rapid. | ivery month during the last year, ! the American Red Cross has given ! service of one kind or another to an | average of 129,215 former service men : and their. familles. An indication of | the extent of the faith reposed in the Red Cross Chapter is to be found in the fact that there were 358,544 re- quests: for friendly aid in the solution pf personal problems. 8 Werkers in Hospitals While the man prior to entering Government care deals largely with the Chapter, afterward he comes info eon- tact with the service provided by Na- tional Headquarters. There are 448 ed Cross workers in the United Sates Public Health Service and con- tract hospitals end other institutions i in which these men are being cared | for. whose duty Is to provide for his | recreation, help him with his compen «ution claims, keep him in touch with his family; in short, meeting his every need outside of that provided by the Giovernment. While these are a few of the responsibilities of the National Organization, they are by no means all. Among other Red Cross accom- plishments for the year are: } ; ¢ i | | | T Le pa en Se debutante’s smile CLOTHES of DISTINCTION Style creations as attractive as a Wherever men of substantial position gather, Alco Clothes play a distinctive role. dignified, quiet way they serve to emphasize the personality of the wearer These suits and overcoats will sh last minute of wear. Their styles are as persuasive as “Please’’—their quality as un- yielding as “No !”—their tailoring can be equaled. but seldom is. you forget—money back if you are not satisfied. Alco Suits In thelr ow their worth trom the minute you try them on to the Alco Clothes are worthy of the painstaking efforts expended in their making. And lest OYercoats Ulsters and ulsterettes—belted or plain. Dignified Chesterfields. A va- riety of other models in all of the It handled 70,732 allotment and al- lowance claims. It delivered through its Chapter or- ganization 63,6556 allotment checks to veterans who had moved from the ad- Single or double breasted, in blue, grays and browns, striped and mix- tures. For the ultra-fashionable or popular shades. $30 to $45 conservative dresser. War Risk Insurance. 530 to 545 It provided a special fund of $10,000 for medical assistance to men under vocational training. It made 32,405 loans totaling $450,000 to men taking vocational training, of which 83 per cent has been repaid.