Am Bema ald " Bellefonte, Pa., February 1, 1924, THE AMERICAN FLAG AND HOW IT SHOULD BE DISPLAYED. There is but one Federal statute which protects the flag throughout the country from desecration. This law provides that a trademark cannot be registered which consists of or com- prises the flag, coat-of-arms or other insignia of the United States or any simulation thereof. Congress has al- so enacted legislation providing cer- tain penalties for the desecration, mu- tilation or improper use of the flag within the Ditsrict of Columbia. In adopting the Flag code, at the Flag conference, emphasis was laid on the following suggestions for State legislation regarding the flag. “Based upon the opinion of the Su- preme court of the United States ren- dered by Justice John Marshall Har- lan, every State should enact adequate laws for the protection of the Nation- al flag. State flag laws should include the following: 1. That June 14th, Flag day, be set apart by proclamation of the Gov- ernor recommending that Flag day be observed by people generally by the display of the Flag of the United States and in such other ways as will be in harmony with the general char- acter of the day. 2. That the Flag of the United States be displayed on the main ad- ministration building of each public institution. 3. That the Flag of the United States with staff or flag pole be pro- vided for each school house and be displayed during school days either from a flag staff or in inclement weather within the school building. 4. That the Flag of the United States be displayed in every polling place. 5. That the use of the Flag of the United States as a receptacle for re- ceiving, holding, carrying or deliver- ing anything be prohibited. 6. That the use of the flag for ad- vertising purposes in any manner be prohibited. 7. That the penalty (fine or im- prisonment) be provided for public mutilation, abuse, or desecration of the Flag. The code recommends that bunting of the national colors should be used for covering speaker’s desks, draping over front of platform and for deco- ration in general. Bunting should be arranged with the blue above, the white in the middle and the red below. During the ceremony of hoisting or lowering the flag or when the flag is passing in review, the code recom- mends that all persons present should stand at attention facing the flag. Men’s headdress should be removed with the right hand and held at the right hand salute. Women should stand at attention, facing the flag, as the flag is passing in parade, salute by placing the right hand over the heart. If the National anthem is played and no flag is present, all stand at attention when uncovered and salute at the first note of the an- them, retaining the position until the last note of the anthem is played. If in civilian dress and covered, men should uncover and stand at attention, facing the music. Women should stand at attention and salute. The pledge of the Flag is as fol- lows: “I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States and to the Republic for which it stands, one Na- tion indivisible, with liberty and jus- tice for all.” “The Star Spangled Banner” is rec- ommended for universal recognition as the National anthem. The code rules for the proper man- ner of displaying the Flag are as follows: 1. The flag should be displayed from sunrise to sunset only or be- tween such hours as designated by proper authority on National and State holidays, and on historic and special occasion. The flag should al- ways be hoisted briskly and lowered slowly and ceremoniously. 2. When carried in a procession with another flag or flags the place of the Flag of the United States is on the right, that is, the flag’s own right, or when there is a line of other flags, the Flag of the United States may be in front of the centre of that line. 3. When displayed with another flag, against a wall from crossed staffs, the Flag of the United States should be on the right, the flag’s own right, and its staff should be in front of the staff of the other flag. 4, When a number of flags are grotiped and displayed from staffs the Flag of the United States should be in the center or at the highest point of the group. 5. When flags of States or cities or pennants of societies are flown on the same halyard with the Flag of the United States the Flag of the United States must always be at the peak. When flown from adjacent staffs the Flag of the United States should be hoisted first. No flag or pennant should be placed above or to the right of the Flag of the United | States. 6. When the flags of two or more nations are to be displayed they should be flown from separate staffs of the same height and the flags should be of equal size. Internation- al usage forbids the display of the flag of one nation above that of any og in time of peace. a staff projecting horizontally or at an angle from a window sill, balcony or front of building the union of the flag should go clear to the head of the staff unless the flag is at half-mast. 8. When the Flag of the United | States is displayed other than flown from a staff, it should be displayed flat, whether indoors or out, When displayed either horizontally or ver- tically against a wall, the union should be uppermost and to the flag’s right, that is, to the observer’s left. | When displayed in a window it should be displayed the same way, that is, with the union or blue field to the left of the observer in the street. When festoons or drapings of blue, white and red are desired, bunting should be used, but never the flag. 9.. When displayed over the middle of the street as between buildings, the Flag of’the United States should , be suspended vertically with the un-' ion to the north in an east and west | Coffee is “Servant of Mankind” When the flag is displayed from street or to the east in a north and south street. 10. When used on a speaker’s platform the flag should be displayed above and behind the speaker. It should never be used to cover the speaker’s desk nor drape over the front of the platform. right. 11. When used in unveiling a stat- ue or monument the flag should not be allowed to fall to the ground but should be carried aloft to wave out, forming a distinctive feature during the remainder of the ceremony. 12. When flown to half-staff the flag is first hoisted briskly to the peak and then lowered to the half-staff po- sition, but before lowering the flag for the day it is raised again to the peak. On Memorial day, May 30th, the flag is displayed at half-staff from sunrise until noon and at full staff from noon until sunset for the Nation lives and the flag is the sym- bol of the living Nation. 13. When used to cover a casket the flag should be placed so that the union is at the head and over the left shoulder. The flag should not be low- ered into the grave nor allowed to touch the ground. The casket should be carried foot first. ; , 14. When the flag is displayed in church it should be from a staff placed on the congregations right as they face the clergyman with the service flug, State flag or other flags on the left wall. If in the chancel the Flag of the United States should be placed on the clergyman’s right as he faces the congregation. 15. When the flag is in such a con- dition that it is no longer a fitting cast aside or used in any way that might be viewed as disrespectful to the National colors but should be de- blem representing our country. HELEN E. C. OVERTON, Regent Bellefonte D. A. R. MOVIES COMING SAYS SCIENTIST. London.—Ten years from now, per- haps years before that, people may sit in a hall in London and watch the inauguration of a new President in Washington, or folks in Washington or New York may assemble and wit- ness on the motion picture screen the coronation of an English King simul- taneously with the progress of the ceremony. That is just one of the wonders of television which Dr. Fournier D’Albe, noted British scientist and inventor, is willing to stake his professional reputation will be as common in the next decade as broadcasting by wire- less has become in the present day. Television, he predicts, will make it possible to display on a screen thous- RADIO SOON, pen in any part of the globe. “Within five to ten years from now,” Dr. D’Albe declared, “it is high- ly probable that we shall be able to sit in a hall in London and actually watch the Derby or the Varsity boat race, or a naval review or a prize fight in America; or, for that matter, a battle. I mean watch a moving pic- ture of any of these things on the screen at the moment they are hap- pening. “Then, perhaps a little later, will come exploration pictures. Explor- ers will carry television cameras with them. They will climb Mount Ever- ett, or penetrate to the North Pole, or stalk big game in Central Africa, or examine the floor of the ocean in sub- marines, and we—sitting in ordinary picture theatres hundreds or perhaps thousands of miles away—will accom- pany them step by step so far as vis- ion goes.” Dr. D’Albe, who is the inventor of the optophone, which enables the blind to read through their ears, and of the tonoscope, which renders speech legible to the deaf, is convinced that television will be accomplished dur- ing 1924. Early developments may be crude, he admits, but the fact of television—which means seeing by wireless—will be established. “As we know that wireless waves can be relayed almost indefinitely I seen no reason why in ten years’ time we should not be able to see what is happening on the other side of the globe,” Dr. D’Albe continued. “It is only a matter of effort in research, and if the public interest is there the effort will be there.” The advent of television has been brought appreciably nearer, according to Dr. D’Albe, by the progress made in the development of wireless receiv- ing sets. The chief asset of the prob- lem, he asserted, is not the sending, ‘but the receiving of the wireless waves necessary to instantaneous pho- tographic reproduction of distant events. Dr. D’Albe estimates that it is necessary to send 200,000 wireless signals per second in order to repro- duce a good wireless picture. “The trouble begins,” he said, “when you try to disentangle these signals as they pour in at the receiving end. “Many methods have been devised, but up until quite recently all were clumsy or costly. Simplification there * must be, and simplification is proceed- {ing at a very great pace. | “Remember every successive pic- ture has to be completed in one-twen- | tieth of a second. This means that the synchronization of sender and re- ceiver must be perfect. If the feeler, or tract, at one end is a thousandth of a second out in following the move- ments at the other end the conse- | quences to the picture are fatal. Despite the difficulties presented in working out so elaborate a problem Dr. D’Albe is certain it will be accom- plished within the next few months. He refused to predict that he would be the one to do it, declaring that “there are many competitors and the race is keen.” Bread for sandwiches should be cut in even slices, a quarter of an inch thick, and always cream the butter to be used, so as not to crumble the bread when spreading. FR SE — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” milk?” asks L. W. Lighty, farm ad- dicitis. Sold by all druggists. If flown from | staff it should be on the speaker’s emblem for display, it should not be stroyed as a whole, privately, prefer- ably by burning or by some other | method in harmony with the rever- ence and respect we owe to the em- | ands of miles away events that hap- | | Three Years’ Investigation Shows | Massachusetts Tech. Scientist Finds Beverage Gives Comfort and Inspiration “fYOI'FEE is a beverage which, properly prepared and right- ly used, gives comfort and inspira- tion, augments mental and physi- cal activities and may be regarded as the servant rather than the de- troyer of civilization.” Professor Samuel C. Prescott, of Massachusetts Institute of icchnology, after three years of scientific research on the subject, rakes this sweeping reply to those who have been attacking coifee. As head of the Department of Biolozy and Public Health of Mas- cache tts Tecch., Professor Prescott Ivd d rect supervision of the long siudv which cost $40,000 to make. I IT's purpose was to learn the truth abort the great American drink. | During the continuous experiments the entire laboratory was given over eXclusively to purposes of n"ne research and more than 194% reports were reviewed and toe sted, Great Benefactor ‘it may be stated,” Professor Presco.t stated, “that after weigh- ing the evidence a dispassionate evaluation of the data so compre- hensively surveyed has led to no conclusions that coffee is an inju- rious beverage for the great mass OFESSOR SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT Massachusetts Institute of Technology of human beings, but on the con- trary that the history of human ex- perience, as weil as the results of scientific experimentation, point to the fact that coffee is a beverage which properly prepared and right- fully used gives comfort and in- spiration, augments mental and physical activities, and may be re- ' garded as the servant rather than the destroyer of civilization. The time and place do not permit a re- ¢ital of the great mas erp.ec s of literature, music and art wh'ch have been produced under its be- neficent exhilaration or mor han a suggestion as to the place caTein containing beverages take in the dietary of the progressive nat.ons of the earth. “Coffee if properly prepared has a remarkable stimulating and fa- tigue relieving effect due to the action of the caffein which acts on the central nervous system. It promotes heart action, mildly in- creases the power to do muscular work and increases the power of concentration of mental effort, and therefore is an aid to sustained brain work. It has no depressing after effect. It is not habit form- ing and does not require continu- ally increasing quantities to give satisfactory stimulation.” FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. The habit of looking at the best side of {any event is worth far more than 1,000 1 | pounds a year.—Dr. Johnson. | It is reported that the Chinese in- ‘ fluence is strongly evidenced in the | new colors being developed for spring, | 1924, fashions. {| Already are there being shown i blouses of the tuck-in-at-the-waist va- riety. The first of these old-time fa- vorites will undoubtedly be much | worn at the winter resorts in the { Southland. { The circular handkerchief edged with 1&ce, or footing, and delicately | embroidered as a further embellish- ! ment, is a holiday novelty already | seen. | | i | Square and oblong veils of the dec- ! orative order are much in vogue; rib- | bonized or floss embroidery is the ac- | cepted mode of trimming, and two- | color effects as well as single-color ! veils are in good style. i The shops report the constantly in- ; creasing vogue of neckwear, and by ! spring, when new tailor-made suits rand dresses make their appearance, ithe neckwear vogue will surely be i well established. Silk or chiffon evening scarfs edged with ostrich of matching color serve as lovely accessories for evening and dance frocks. Knitted fabrics in wool and in silk are so varied and beautiful in color, design and texture that an entire wardrobe made of these interesting materials is a possible and desirable achievement. Cube and melon shaped beads in imitation of Chinese antique are stressed in necklaces, both long and of the choker variety. Beads of carved wood combined with galalith beads are used for long costume chains. Crystal, imitation jade, rock amber in a pleasing selection of colors are used for both the waist-length and the choker chains. Ear rings to match these various chains are considered necessary to complete the costume. It is very chie, for the moment, to match the color of your fur with shoes and gloves. If your costume is green with gray fur, gloves and shoes are gray; but, then, the hat should be black. In the recherche for ensemble | effects, in all-dipped-in-the-same-vat | effect must, just the same, be avoided. Tins and indeed all metal cooking ' utensils should be laid out to dry for | a while before putting away; and, by | the way, even the most careful of | cooks is apt to neglect her pot lids, yet these get caked and dusty just as do the pots to which they belong. A pot once burned on the bottom is ‘prone to let its contents stick and {burn again. Preserving kettles, for ‘instance, even with their enamel in- i teriors, should be carefully watched for the mischief once done, subse- quent preserves may burn at any | time. Enamel utensils are pretty and clean looking, but they are spoiled if chipped or scratched, for not only do they stain, but they crack and. break off if hard used. They should not be washed with soda nor should alumi- num pans. “Why do city people not use more AL viser of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. “It is a balanced food, containing the correct proportion of protein and energy. It is a very digestible food and the fat in milk is the easiest di- gested fat in all the dietary of many. It is rich in the needed minerals read- ily assimilable. For real complete nourishment there is no food like it. Biers is no waste as it is all digesti- e. “Milk is the cheapest food on the market when we consider all the nu- trients contained. A quart of 5 per cent. milk is worth as much as four- teen ounces of the best beef. The beef costs 30 cents and the milk less than half as much and why not use the milk ? its and now is a good time to quit them. Many dishes are served with a sugar sauce or brandy sauce so call- ed that would be much more palatable served with whole milk and a very lit- tle sugar. Milk as a sauce adds a complete food while sugar sauce gives nothing but energy. “We must get over the idea that milk is a beverage only. It is an un- surpassed beverage we admit, but it is a most valuable food and must be considered as such. “Learn once for all the real truth that when milk sours, it is not spoiled for food, but is improved. Sour milk is one of the best tonics. Thousands think highly of buttermilk, and sour milk is the same with the butterfat incorporated with it. “As the professional cooks and cook books increased, the proportion of milk consumption decreased and furthermore at the same time and in the same proportion the doctors in- creased. I am not a centenarian, but I well remember when practically everybody made one meal of the day on some form of baked or cooked corn meal with an abundance of whole miik and a little sugar. “I also know that at that time we had one doctor, physician they call him now, to cover a radius of ten miles and the poor fellow could hard- ly make a living because there was no one sick except when some epidemic like mumps or other infantile trouble struck the country. “Do you know that there is Life in milk? What is life? It is that which the Creator gives us and no man has defined it. But the scientific man has found life or the life principle in milk and he calls it vitamines. Vitamines are absolutely essential to the healthy body and by no food can you get this element in so perfect a form and con- dition as in whole milk. Does that explain why we now need and furnish a living and fortune to retire on to six doctors in a territory where one near- ly starved for want of patients? “If you eat and drink more milk you will be healthier and stronger and sweeter tempered.” Gas on Stomach May Cause. Appendicitis Constant gas causes inflammation which may involve the appendix. Sim- ple glycerine, buckthorn bark, ete., as mixed in Adlerika helps any case gas on the stomach in TEN minutes. Most medicines act only on lower bowel “but Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes all gas and poisons. stipation and tc guard against ag -6 | | i { I | | “We have formed a lot of bad hab- Excellent for obstinate con- (ARNT CE ANKESTOB VARI VOU AVA HORM AAA CORA MARAE AANA AAT The Cost 1s Small A Private Box in our Safe Deposit Vault rents for only $2.00 and up per year— and the security is just what you "desire— . protection from fire and theft. Why not reut a box now? THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK . STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM LT Een | E= = laa There are Still Some People who Keep their Money at Home he newspapers recently told of a robbery in which the robbers narrowly missed the hiding place of thousands of dollars, that the owner had concealed in hishouse. The next day he took it to a bank. What if they had found it? How foolish to take such risks when a good bank is near. The First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 61-46 The Fauble ~ Reduction Sale Positively Ends Saturday Feb. 2 GET BUSY CUCU SUSU cic eS Ue UEC