First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. e are not only a National Bank doing what is called Commercial banking—receiving depos- its, paying checks, loaning money, etc.— We are also, in effect, a Savings Bank and a Trust Company. We have a savings department where you may start an account with a dollar, or even less, and watch it grow. We have a Trust Department that has the full powers of a Trust Company. And we are Ready to Serve you in Any Department First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 61-46 Foliar : NO Washington's Balance |’ RTT R I CTILZSTN henTone is undecided as to which course to pursue, he will find a calming example in Washing- ton’s balance—sanity and justice. 3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Savings Accounts THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK CAMMY MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM JT ) STATE COLLEGE, PA. ; 4 / Ras ISELIN CERNE Satha weed USt In.... hn The New Spring Top Coats are here. We are showing twenty dif- ferent styles. By far the Most Complete Assortment of Mens Spring Overcoats ever shown in Belle- fonte. Come in. Let us show you. You will be more than pleased. en rn ——— S A Z Price as Low as $20 A. Fauble Demorralic; adnan Bellefonte, Pa., February 20, 1925. Longfellow on the Links. I drove a golf ball into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where, For I alas, was short of sight And couldn’t follow it in its flight. I kicked my caddie into the air, He fell to earth, I know not where, For I deemed it a thing excedingly vile, That inferior caddie’s superior smile. Soon, soon after, I found the ball, It had hardly budged from the tee at all; And the caddie was standing sardonically grim— I had kicked my opponent instead of him. —Boston Transcript. VILLAGES FOUND UNATTRACT- IVE IN STUDY BY GOVERN- MENT. Nearly 20,000,000 people in the United States, or about one-fifth of the population, live in villages, and 30,000,000 farming people use these villages for purposes of business, ed- ucation, religion, health, and social well-being. Yet these centers of rural population are generally unattractive and often very ugly. Villages in oth- er countries are generally much su- perior to those of the United States in design, in the character of their streets and public buildings, and in their approaches and recreation spots. A start, however, has been made to- ward beautifying the American vil- lage. Some examples of leadership in this respect are recorded by the Depart- SAILORS HAVE FIRM BELIEF IN OMENS Deep Sea Seems to Breed Quaint Superstitions. There is no place in the world where superstition is so powerful as on the sea, R. Barry O’Brien, writing in the Washington Post, asserts. Let an absent-minded sailor whistle on board ship and his mates will curse him for bringing on a stiff hreeze when it is not wanted. But for a sailor to whistle when the ship is enveloped in dense fog is permissible, since the occult wind may disperse the very material fog. Until comparatively recently, under no circumstances, was a young steam- ship-trained helmsman allowed to mount the “weather side of the hridge.” This privilege was reserved for old shellbacks who had been seven times round Cape Horn. But as few sea- men can claim such distinction in these days of “iron ships and wooden 'men” the “leeside” igs now universally “used. ! Parsons are never popular afloat. , They are supposed to bring bad luck, ; and are therefore blamed by the crew i for any misfortune that occurs. Seamen no longer believe that rats i leave an ill-fated ship before she sails. | But they still regard the arrival of a corpse for shipment as a very bad omen, and I have known them to de sert sooner than sail with it. | Strangely enough, the extent of ment of Agriculture, which has been : their apprehension on this account va- studying the problem of village plan- ries with the social standing of the ning from the standpoint of its im- | deceased, the remains of a celebrity portance to the rural community and | particularly to the former. It is more as a buying than as a | selling place that the farmer makes use of the village. In marketing his | principal products he generally deals with some large distributing center. But he purchases his household sup- plies in the village. He goes there for amusement and - for social - purposes generally. His children often go to school there. An attractive village, says the department, is an important influence in stabilizing farm life and | in counteracting the attractions which cities have for the young people of | the farms. As the farmer’s chief point of contact with outside inter- ests, the village can make a big ¢on- | tribution to the happiness of farm life, being more unlucky than those of 2 humble citizen. : So strong was this superstition in bygone days that the packing case con- taining the casket had to be labeled and stowed as ordinary cargo. The luck of black cats is proverbial. But what is not so well known is the reason why seamen are so over-indulg- ent in them. This is to prevent their bringing ill-luck to the ship by rup ning away. During the war black cats were at a premium. With so much extra ton- nage afloat there was not enough te go around. { Sometimes a young midshipman would be sent ashore in search of one. even if it be considered from no other | And a certain youth, sooner than re- standpoint than the fact that it is the turn empty-handed, dyed the white place where the farmer spends a large ' patches of a black and white “stray” part of his income. | with ink. Where villages are being made more beautiful, the impetus has come ! Those Smart C hildren in nearly every case from local in-' | itiative. Villages that have well-plan- ined streets, attractive recreation | spots, and pleasing approaches are | nearly always indebted for these ad- | vantages to the energy and public | spirit of some small group of citizens. | Under such inspiration dump heaps {have been turned into garden spots, unsightly shacks and { stores have been torn down and re- placed by smart, substantial business | buildings, and extensive programs of i landscape gardening and tree plant- ing have been undertaken. Villages i} | that have embarked on this path are finding that beauty pays. It improves ! business. "ues, and has a powerful influence in . raising individual standards of efi- ‘ ciency and enterprise.. One good example of a village that ‘was not well planned originally but i that now has been transformed into | an exteremely pleasing place, is Wes- ! ton, Mass. Weston formerly had a !large swamp area in its center. This { has been drained, graded, seeded to grass, and planted to pine, fir and i chestnut trees. A new town hall and !a fire station have been built opposite the entrance to the common. Public | silanes are now centrally grouped. | Old, unsightly structures have been i torn down. The improvements were ! planned by a landscape architect. It took 25 years to put the plan through, but every one in Weston now believes { that the enterprise was worth the i time and money it cost. A village that was started with a ‘good plan and has realized it is Pat- | terson, California. This village and a ‘colony of irrigated farms, occupying 18,000 acres, were planned in 1910. . Roads leading to the village were | strategically located and planted with trees and shrubs. The village itself has eight streets radiating from a civ- ic center where the public buildings are located. In the last four years the | residents of the village have built a i public library, a community club | house, a concrete swimming pool, and i a grammar school, and have provided an automobile camp park. A town dump at Lewisburg, Pa., has become a scenic asset, through | the activities of women, who formed la civic club, launched civic improve- | ment propaganda, and accumulated funds for an improvement program. | Formerly the first impression a visit- .or got on arriving and the last one he took away with him on leaving was one of squalor, because the town dump lay across the main approach to the village. Today the land where the dump stood is the property of the civ- ic club. Old shacks have been remov- ed from it and refuse cleared away. It has been leveled and planted to grass, flowers and trees. It is span- ned by gravel walks and surrounded by ornamental lighting standards. Now the visitor enters the village through a green and smiling park. | Many other examples of effective village planning have been noted by the department’s investigators. Yet the idea that village planning is as necessary as city planning has taken root in comparatively few places. It has not the pressure behind it that brings results in crowded cities where congestion makes radical changes compulsory. The government points out, however, that village planning often means great savings to the com- munity; that it is never too early nor too late to begin it; and that the ex- pense is almost never prohibitive and is seldom a serious handicap. dilapidated | local business and attracts tourist It enhances real estate val- ! “My three-year-old nephew Anaxi- mander, hurried breathlessly into the living room where we were entertaln- ing the minister and his wife. “Mamma!” he cried without regara ' for consequences, “Bruvver’s gone and ' torn his rubber rompers and now you’ll ' have to vulcanize them.” : Little Willie, my eighteen-month-ola | cousin, was earnestly watching his "father (my uncle) repair his automo- bile. “What seems to be the matter?” he dnally asked his dad. : “I'm afraid the differential’'s gone wrong,” said his daddy, wiping the grease off his forehead with his $8 silk shirt. “Heck!” ejaculated Willie. “A fel- 1ow’s got to understand calculus to run a car these days!” Ermyntrude is a trifle precocious ana Yor that reason her parents temporize with her. At the dinner table the other night she brusquely asked her mother to pass the mustard. Mother smiled wearily and said ex- pectantly, “If you—?” Imagine our embarrassment when che little darling retorted, “If you know what’s good for you!”—Roswell J. Powers in Judge. Dead Spots at Sea While we have come to accept “dead { spots” on land, there is another form of “dead spot” to be found right in | mid-ocean, hundreds of miles from land, for which no adequate explana- | tion has yet been given, according to ' A. Dinsdale, member of the Radio So- | ciety of Great Britain. Some scien- | tists maintain that they are caused by large mineral deposits on the ocean floor, but this explanation hardly seems satisfactory, though it is true that such dead spots can also be over- come by increasing the wavelength for communication, There are several such spots in the different oceans, and they cause quite an amount of incon- venience to ships at times, although the study of them is interesting.—Sci- entific American. Something New in History She was proud of her kindergarten class and was anxious to show off the little ones to a number of visiting mothers. “Who discovered America?’ the ceacher asked. “Columbia,” shouted a little girl, ensily beating her classmates to the answer, Overlooking sent on: “And what was his first name?” “Hail,” was the quick reply that sem ¢cacher and mother into spasms of laughter. the error, the teache. Stars in Pairs There are many stars that are double, says Nature Magazine—that is, they are made up of stars revolv- ing around one another. Most of these pairs are of contrasting color, one blue and the other gold, or one red and the other green. Albireo is coungidered to be one of the finest of the pairs that are visible in small telescopes. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Sunshiny Weather brings your mind to our Sunshiny Bargains in all our New Spring Materials New Dress Weaves in Silk and Cotton—stripes in all the New Colors, with White and Dark Grounds. New Plaided Effects with the Hairline Plaids. English Broadcloth, Silk Bro- cades---all colors. New Spring Coats Spring Coats in all the New Colorings. Special... One lot of this season’s styles Silk and Woolen Dresses—values up $ 13 5 0 to $28.00—Sale price . . . . Winter Coats 50 Winter Coats in Ladies and Misses that must be sold now regardless of cost ---all this season’s styles. =~ Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. ——— $1.75....$1.75 Ladies’ Guaranteed Silk Hose These Hose are guaranteed not to develop a “runner” in the leg nor a hole in the heel or toe. If they do this you will be given a new pair free. We Have them in All Colors Yeager's Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.