En ———— cost IE Et Co, dos coms \ ! Good ges for Lire; Bo Women Surely Have Keen Es : PIPPI IIL atch, ri ut the Be : N. : ~~ a ne to think hat Sense of Money Values From the Pennsylvania Department of i —— i — Ew — Did you ever stop to wn If the average woman were without Health. “Bellefonte, Pa., September 19, 1924. Thirteen-Month Calendar Advocated by Scientists. New York, Sept. 6.—Changing the number of months in the year from 12 to 13, of 28 days each and making the extra day a holiday, is one of the most important steps to be consider- ed at the meeting of the International Goedetic and Geophysical Union, which will meet soon in Madrid. So declared Dr. Henry Cox, senor mete- orologist and distant forecaster for the United States Weather Bureau at Chicago, just before he sailed on the Belgenland. The question, said Dr. Cox, will be taken up by the astronomical division of the conference. If the plan favored by the scientists is adopted, the months will be four weeks each, the first will always fall on Sunday, while: Saturdays will always conclude the week, falling on the 7th, 14th, 21st and 28th. The extra day which comes each year will be regarded as a float- ing day, but will be called “New Year’s Eve.” A strong advocate of this change is Professor Charles F. Marvin, head of the United States Weather Bureau. It also has the tentative approval of the Catholic and Episcopal churches, said Dr. Cox, who added that the change will not only not interfere with church calendars, but make for a per- manent Easter. ; The leading weather man of the world will attend the conference in Madrid, which will be opened by King Alfonso, of Spain. Dr. Cox expressed the belief that the 13-month calendar should be ap- proved also by business men, who could, with complete accuracy, com- pare their business of one period with another. Real Estate Transfers. Johnstown realty company to Beth- lehem Steel realty company, tract in Centre county, et al; $45,000.35. Midvale realty company to Bethle- hem Steel realty company, tract in Centre county, et al; $1. Adam B. Krumrine, et al, to bor- ough of State College, tract in College township; $600. S. David Slagle, et ux, to B. Corde- Ii2 Reiser, tract in State College; $1,- 500. 1. G. Gordon Foster, et al, to Pearl R. Morgan, tract in State College; $700. Frederick Zettle to L. C. Snyder, tract in Gregg township; $1. G. M. Nearhood, et ux, to Edward M. VanSant, et ux, tract in State Col- lege; $6,480. . . Keystone Auto Gas and Oil Service company to C. R. Armstrong, tract in Beilefonte; $4,293. Charles Dale, et ux, to R. J. Wit- mer, et ux, tract in Harris township; $4,100. Clara Heisler to Charles E. Wetzel, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $6,650. Justus C. Leathers, et ux, to Toner Juke tract in Howard township; $1,- Western Maryland Dairy Inc., to Sheftield Farm company, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Solving a Problem. A Scottish laird used to get befud- dled every Saturday night, says an English periodical. Then with his servant, Saunders, in the same condi- tion, he would mount his horse and set off for the castle. While fording the stream one night the laird fell into the water. He got to his feet and sputtered: “Saunders, mon, some- thing fell off. Did ye noo hear the splash 7” “Thot I did,” admitted Saunders, and he climbed into the water up to his waist. Of course he soon found his master. “Why, laird, it’s your- self,” he said. “No, no, Saunders” insisted the laird stoutly. “It can’t be me, for here J am.” Saunders helped the laird to mount again, but in the darkness faced him the wrong way round. “Thank ye, mon; now give me the reins. Saunders fumbled around the horse, finally got hold of its tail, and cried in a shocked voice: “Laird, laird, it was the nag’s head that fell off. There’s nothing left but: the mane.” The Modern Farmer Makes Out Best. This is a good year to show that ‘the farmer who follqws modern meth- ods is the one who makes out the best in the end, says Dean R. L. Watts, dean of the school of agriculture at The Pennsylvania State College, and director of the Pennsylvania agricul- tural experiment station. He adds that Pennsylvania farmers are much better off than their middle western brethren this year, and that in this section the farmer’s dollar is steadily increasing in purchase value. Grading and packing the farm, truck and orchard products and their proper marketing form the big prob- lems for Pennsylvania tillers of the soil, Dean Watts contends. The col- lege through starting extension and resident instruction in agricultural economics, is doing all it can to help farmers with their phase. Orders are Orders. The German soldier does exactly what he is told to do and no more. An officer was drilling recruits and had just given them the order, “Quick March,” when he noticed his sweet- heart coming across the square. For- getting all about the recruits, he en- tered into conversation with the girl and walked away with her. Six days later the same officer was walking down the main street of the same town when he saw some tattered and tired soldiers approaching him. One of the soldiers recognizing him, went up to him and saluting said: “Please sir, what about a halt?” —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” kind of a woman your wife would have been If you had not asked her to marry you? Or did you ever imagine what type of man your husband would have been if you had not ar swered “Yes”? Have you ever crushed any ambi- tion, chased away any talents or driven inspiration from your household? What have you done to increase or de- velop your life partner's talents? Whether you are aware. of it or not, you have either brought out the best side of this partner's life or buried a! that was good in him or her. A good many of us possess two sides. There are more Doctor Jekylls and Mr. Hydes in the world than we realize. How frequently your opinion of a man and some one else's do not tally! You will often say: “I cen’t see how Brown tolerates Jones; he's the meanest man in the world!” And yet Brown has found the better side af Jones. Have you found the better side of your husband or wife? Have you done anything to bring that better side to the front?—Chicago Journal. China Had Great Ruler in CR’in Shih Huang Fifty miles south of the Chinese city of Peking has been discovered the walls of an anclent city, which flourished over 2,000 years ago. The walls embrace greater area than the walls of Peking and lle burled at an average depth of four feet. Late in the Second century B. C., there arose a king in the then comparatively small China who compared favorably with Alexander in conquests and empire building and whose empire lasted al- most until the present day. This was Ch'in Shih Huang, or Shih Huang TI (“The First Emperor”), whose rule ending in 209 B. C., marks the close of the feudal period and the beginning of the empire in Chinese history. Shih Huang Ti subdued the feudal princes, built the famed great Chinese wall and successfully defended the country against the Tartars from the north, standardized money, transportation, writing and other things which aided centralization, and destroyed as much of the ancient classics and traditions as possible, with the idea that the history of the Chinese empire should begin with his reign. Guiana Blow Gun Perhaps the most elaborate form ot blowgun is that made by the Indians of the Guianas. It consists of an inner tube fashioned from a certain palm which grows very thin and straight. The pithy center and the knots are gnocked out with a hardwood stick, and the bore, about one-half inch in diameter, is ground to a machine fin- ish with a rough leaf which cuts like sandpaper. This barrel is then in- closed for protection in an outer cas- ing made of two lengths of hardwood grooved down the center, glued to- gether and bound with ornamental cane and beadwork, says the Detroit News. A lip piece of carved wood is care fully fitted, and sights are added— actual front and rear sights, the latter open, the lower jaw and canine teeth of some small jungle cat—and the weapon is then a completed zarabalan, a field piace of some eight to ten or twelve feet in length, according to the available length of the original inner tube. Joke on Archeologists Fossils of prehistoric animals which lived during the great Ice age are found in certain layers of blue clay in Tennessee. Man, It has been claimed, arrived on the scene thousands of years after these blue clay deposits were made. Recently, however, geolo- gists working near the site of an old Indian earthwork found some of this same sort of blue clay. Underneath this clay were human bones. The dis- covery was exciting—the geological evidence seemed to place the first Tennesseeans back with Ice age fos- sills. Then some kill-joy in the party discovered that the Indians had evi- dently transported this clay from some distance and packed it down into flat layers resembling geological strata. Valuable Black Walnut A number of native black-walnuu trees have been discovered whose nuts possess superior cracking qualities. By means of scions or buds from the original trees, these are being propa- gated in greater numbers each year, since the value of the nut crop is thereby greatly enhanced and the tim- ber is of the same high quality as that of other walnut trees. Stocks of these selected trees are available in limited numbers from the owners and make possible the growing of valuable nut trees about the home or In nut orchards, says the American Forestry association. Forced to Beg Off An indefatigable traveler, arriving in New York, did not go to the palatial caravansary he usually patronized but street. But the very next day he bumped into the manager of the down- to-the-minute hostelry where he bad always stopped and where he was known so well. “Why, Mr. Blank,” was the shockea «Lreeting, “in New York and not stop- ping with us?” “It's this way, old fellow,” explained Blank contritely. “I'm too tired this trip to live up to the unparalleled service you give.” Ta at put up in an obscure hotel on a slide | a sense of money values, as charged by a budget expert, the average Amer- ican family would have less money in the bank than it has. Eliminating the girl who lives at home and can spend her earnings for pretty things, and whose extravagance is one of the manifestations of her youth, it would have. been fairer to say the average housewife of America has a very keen appreciation of the value of money and how hard it is for the husband to earn it. It Is probably quite true that women do not budget their expenses; neither did the great United States government until a few years ago. If the budget expert would go into the stores patronized by the wives of wage earners and note with what care and anxiety the customers spend their money and how anxious they are to get full value, she might revise her judgment a bit. With due respect to the paragraphers, the women are shrewd buyers. The hardly saved dol- lars which bulk so large in savings fund reports and bank deposits are where they are because the women of the country have put them there, often against the will of their husbands. The average man is a much swifter spender than a woman, and despite the jokes of the paragraphers and comic artists, all women do not throw away money on innumerable hats and gowns. The budget expert did less than justice to her own sex when she criticized their financial acumen.— Philadelphia Bulletin, lavanese Houses by No Means Things of Beauty The clay walls which surround a Balinese farm in Java are usually two or three meters high. Very often they rest upon a foundation of stones and are covered with a heavy layer of rushes which are to protect them from destructive tropical rains. A door in the wall is closed at night with wood- en or bamboo planks, the Detroit News states. The walls around farms of ‘“poeng- gavas” or district mayors, are usually built of more substantial material. The same is true of the homes of Balinese princes. Yet while these latter houses may be elaborately dec- orated they resemble the more humble dwellings in that they are exceedingly filthy. The numerous members of the family — parents, brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, married or unmar- ried—live in a single house. The pigs, dogs and goats found on every Balinese farm are kept in a separate hut. The loan huts are usu- ally built upon wooden elevations and are exceedingly ugly and ungainly. On each farm one will also fina bamboo baskets to house the fowls. Words We Have Clipped A few years ago a music-hall come dian made a great hit by clipping fa- miliar words, and we still hear him imitated in colloquial conversation, London Tit-Bits says. People say “lm poss” for impossible, “biz” for busi- ness and “pash” for passion. But such clipped words are not ces- tined to appear in any dictionary, and we must go back much farther in the history of words to find that when we say: “He led the van,” we mean the “vanguard”; when we speak of a pair of van horses, we mean “cervan”; when we retire to the “drawing room,” we ought to say the with-drawing room; when we talk of a “hobby” we refer to riding a “hobby-horse”; when we talk of sport we mean ‘“disport,” of “tending” we mean “attending,” or a “cute” lawyer we mean acute, and of a “still” we mean a distillery. Refuge in Silence Mrs. Scrubbs, whose highly colored imagination was well known in her neighborhood, was called as a witnecs in a damage suit.’ “The evidsnce which you will give to ¢he court shall be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth,” said the clerk. “Yes,” quavered Mrs. Scrubbs, now ¢horoughly frightened and unable to think of one word of the story she had resolved to tell—a story in which she was the hercine. “Well,” asked the judge, “what have pou got to say about the case?” “Well, judge,” she replied, “with the {imitations I've just had put on me, I don’t think I've anything at all to say I” : Fair Enough Rents were exceedingly high in than part of the city in which the young couple felt they had to live. After looking at apartment after apartment they began to get discouraged. At length, after looking at ome thai just suited them, they exppessed in- dignation when the agent told them the rent would be $150 a month. “I can't ask less, because of the view,” the agent sald. “Well, I'll tell you what we'll do,” the young husband replied, “You knock off $50 a month and we'll sign a con- tract never to look at the view.” Circles Around Moon Circles around the moon are cause by moisture in the atmosphere, It frequently happens that the sunlight reflected from the moon to the earth fs so refracted by the atmospheric moisture that a ring or circle is formed. The more moisture there 19 in the atmosphere the smaller the circle will appear. The form and size of the ring will depend entirely upon the particular condition and quantity of moisture in the air. Many children are referred to State Chest’ Clinics as being suspected of having pulmonary tuberculosis in its early stages. Tuberculosis is infectious and com- municable. When a tuberculosis indi- vidual coughs, tubercle germs may be thrown out in the droplets of the ac- companying spray. A child in such an atmosphere is liable to inhale these germs, or it may be that they fall and accumulate on the food which he eats. Under such conditions the risk of in- fection is great. Kissing and fond- ling of children by tuberculosis adults increase the likelihood of infection. The danger of contact with tubercu- lous patients cannot be overestimated, especially when the contacts are chil- dren, ignorant and incapable of pro- tecting themselves from overwhelm- ing exposure. Children suspected of having tuber- culosis are frequently under-nourish- ed and pale, with soft and poorly de- veloped muscles and little fat beneath the skin. They are 7 to 25 per cent. or more under the average weight for a child of the same height and sex. The majority of such children present the picture of extreme fatigue; many are so tired that they cannot stand straight. They assume a character- istic posture with head bent forward, rounded shoulders, flat chests, hol- lows beneath their collar bones, pro- truding abdomens and a tendency to rest chiefly on one leg while standing. Frequently they have colds and show little resistance to disease. In school they may be one to three grades be- low the average for their age. The beginning of impaired health and mal- nutrition often dates from either measles, whooping cough or pneumo- nia—a very significant fact. All parents are urged to have their children given a thorough physical ex- amination by their physician three times a year. Malnutrition can be prevented and cured by following the physician’s advice as to care, correc- tion of defects, daily routine and diet. Fatigue can be overcome by prevent- ing strenuous exercise, an hour’s rest in bed during the day and nine hours’ sleep at night. Poor posture can be corrected readily by training. Malnutrition and fatigue are strong factors in lowering resistance, prepar- ing for and developing active tuber- culosis in the presence of exposure to the disease. The State chest clinic, in Bellefonte, is held every Tuesday afternoon in the W. C. T. U. room, Petrikin hall, and is conducted by Dr. David Dale, assisted by the State Health Depart- ment nurse, Miss Campbell. Exam- inations are free. Chivalry. “What’s the matter, Captain?” ask- ed an excited passenger. “Is the ship in danger?” “In danger?” shouted the chief of- ficer of the boat, “we’ve been captur- ed by pirates and they are going to make all of us walk the plank. Run below—quick, my man— and warn the other passengers!” The man rushed below and a few minutes later the captain was startled to hear him shouting: “Women and children first!” he was screaming, “women and children first!’ TONIGHT - Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headaches relieve bilious at one an fegulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. 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If you have not been saving in the past, do not despair, but start right now to build a re- serve fund with the First National Bank that will act as a buffer in any time of need. 3% Interest Paid on Savings Accounts THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. 7 AMMAN ANNAN MEARRARTR AARON RANAR ACA AANA VE RAV AORN ©) QQ MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM NEALE EASES AENEAN ANCHO CIN Holmes & Edwards Silverware Reinforced at Points of Hardest Wear : re =P - OLMESEEDWARDS ¢ SUPER PLATEINLAID &” Without doubt the Very Finest Silver Plated Flat Ware ever manufactured F. P. BLAIR & SON Jewelers and Optometrists BELLEFONTE, PA.