Bellefonte, Pa., May 1, 1925. “CLEAN UP, PAINT UP, HEAR THE SLOGAN.” A Campaign song by a student of Bowen High school, Chicago. (Tune of “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp)” There's a civic league in town That has won a great renown By the war it’s going to wage upon the dirt. We will help along the work And our duty we'll not shirk And the whole town with our campaign. we will skirt. “Clean Up, Paint Up,” hear the slogan; Cheer up friends, we’re on our way, We will work with all our might Cleaning up all dirt in sight, Then with paint and brush we'll make the whole works gay. Now, this civie league in town, That has won such great renown, ‘Will begin to wage war upon the fly, So we'll help along the work, Go wherever he may lurk, ‘We can do what we set out to if we try. Swat! swat! swat! Oh, hear the slogan. Cheer up, friends, they'll soon be gone. We will work with all our might And kill every fly in sight, Soon there will not be a fly left in the town. All our windows we will scren And our yards we'll make so clean; ‘We will pull the weeds and burn up all the muss, And as through the town you ride You will point to it with pride And you'll have to own there are no flies on us. Paint and varnish! Make it classy, Don your overalls with us, With a ean of paint and brush We will do it with a rush And we'll make our town the beautiful- Ji-est! We will make some gardens fine, To be sure, that’s in our line, You will see our front yards blossom, sure as fate; With the hoe and spade and rake ‘Wondrous changes we shall make In the back yard, too, we'll sureiy take the cake. Dig! rake! hoe! your garden, brother, Bumper crops will soon appear, Cultivate them all they need, Kill the bugs and every weed, We'll reduce the cost of living, do not fear. Now you've heard what we're to do, We expect some help from you; Here's a job for every citizen. Put your shoulders to the wheel, Let us see your civic zeal, There is work for all the women and the men. Clean Up, Paint Up, show the neighbors, Don’t forget the Golden Rule; Let us work with all our might, Make the old town clean and bright. Then we'll celebrate the City Beautiful! " KEEP A STIFF UPPER LIP.” By Levi A. Miller. “Keep a stiff upper lip, my boy and youll get there,” said a successful Allegheny street merchant to his son, who was complaining of the tide set- ting against him. “It’s easy enough to come over that senseless saw, but what good is there in it? Anyway, of what use is a stiff upper lip?” “I can’t tell why, but I know a stiff upper lip is necessary to success in any business where effort is required.” The old gentleman did not know why a stiff upper lip helped a man in a pinch, but he knew that it did. There is a great deal in it; not in the lip especially, but it is indication of nerve reduced to the condition known as “grit.” Emetics, or other things that produce nausea, invariably cause paleness or trembling of the upper lip. Hemorrhages from the lungs or shortness of breath do the same, and 20 do pains in the heart. Ladies will notice that sick head- achés are invariably preceded by twitching or trembling of the lip. It is also noticeable in sickly or feverish children. The trembling or curling up of the lip so often experienced by sol- diers going into battle, or passing through exposed and dangerous posi- tions, are caused by reflex nervous action. The soldier was scared, as he naturally would be, and as he had a perfect right to be. The impression of fear was communicated from the brain to the sympathetic nervous sys- tem, and from that to the pneumo- gastric nerve. In many instances men would become deathly sick, vomit and lose -the ability to walk. These were generally accounted cowards, but they could not help it. There .was a man in my regiment who was an - honest, patriotic and faithful soldier, but he was never able to get into battle. At.the first sound of fighting on the front his lips would begin to tremble, the blood leave his head, his stomach turn wrong side up and his legs refuse to walk. So cha- grined was he at times that he ser- iously contemplated suicide. Finally his case became understood and he was assigned to special duty where he would not be exposed to such dangers as produced these bad results. There is no doubt that thousands of good, honest men were dis- graced, and some went home without honorable discharges, who were no more responsible for their inability to go into a fight than for the color of their hair or the size of their feet. It was all due to their peculiar nervous organizations. They could no more walk into a fight than if they had no legs; for what use are legs, without nerves? Sickness was not always character- istic of nervous inability to fight. The manifestation of fear may just as readily be produced through the lum- bar plexus, thereby affecting the knees, causing them to quake and tremble, and even to work backwards. There are cases on record of tempor- ary, and even of complete paralysis of the lower extremities through fear on entering battle. The most common symptom, how- ever, was the paleness and trembling The Edward Watkins Home at Millbrook Upturned by Storm Sunday, April 19. of the upper lip. It was a noticeable fact also, that thick or large lipped persons were troubled most in this way, while those with thin, well-form- ed lips were usually the last to show the symptoms, if they showed them at all. From time immemorial thin lips and nostrils have been regarded as signs of bravery and pluck. Such per- sons do not grow sick at the sight of a dead cat, or halt at the first little obstacle that rises in their path. Their lips remain stiff—that is, do not trem- ble or turn pale. Was the successful business man right in bidding his son keep a stiff upper lip? or would it have been near- er the thing to have said: “I perceive from the flexibility of your upper lip that you either have not nerve enough to do the business, or your nervous system is out of fix. Rest yourself a few days, eat sparingly of the plain- est food, and take a few nux pills. If your lip stiffens up under the treat- ment you may venture to go ahead, but if not you may as well seek em- ployment where a flexible lip is no detriment.” I know a young couple who were married less than a year ago; unfor- tunately they seem te agree to disa- gree on the most simple topics. He confesses that he was not honest with himself, nor with the girl whom he married. He tried to make himself appear really better than he was, in order to make a better impression cn her. She did the same thing; they all do. The trouble is that his wife has never fixed herself up specially to re- ceive him since they were married. And he never greets her half as affec- tionately now as before marriage; causing coldness. : Real Estate Transfers. S. D. Gettig, et ux, to Elizabeth men tract in College township; Lloyd L. Houtz, et ux to A. C. O’Neil, tract in College township; $1,270. Clara E. Bennett, et bar, to George mis, tract in Worth township; William R. Brachbill to the estate of John C. Brachbill, tract in Belle- fonte; $35. Marriage Licenses. Harry J. Bower and Martha S. A. Stover, Aaronsburg. William E. Parker and Beulah P. Hoar, Centre Hall. JULLLU UCU CU LE EEC RE TET CT VETTE II UTE COLA TEETER JULIO i I De ——— at! A | NESS = = TL counts. ~ THE GROWTH OF YOUR TELEPHONE SERVICE {i LESS than five years the cost of the telephone plant in Pennsylvania has increased from ninety-five to a hundred and ninety-five million. The doubling pi ocess has been your own—the public's! Your demand for the service; your investment of the neces- sary capital. | But mere size, in itself, is of no great importance. It is the increased scope and availability of the service that ! The twenty-five million to be spent for plant additions this year would be just a figure if it did not renresent over seventy thousand more telephones, and if it did not mean better service as well as more service. * The problems attending great telephone growth are many. Such is the character of the business, wherein no unit is self-contained, but each must be “connectible™ with any other on a few seconds’ notice, regardless of distance or the hands of the clock. And that the standards of your service, furnished by the telephone plant you have created, shall be continuously raised, despite the increasing complexities involved, is our principal and continuous purpose. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA von LI ALT Ip Cr’ £8 A The cost of the Bell Telephone plant in Pennsylvania has more than doubled in the last five years [SARIN INRRAIINIRESE] LLL UL CL ECE CLC ETE LCR LCE EE LLL O rE LA ALENT A I OO I OO CO TOT TIT I ITI = AF | 6 Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Special Sale Coats and Silk Dresses {="We have too many Summer Coats on hand, so will eat prices and Move them Quickly. : Polo Cloths (all lined) in Tan and Rust—val- Lot One ues up to $20.00 . . . . Sale price $10.00 In the new cloths—Rose, Lot Two French Tan and Rust, fur trimmed bottom, crepe lined ; also Coats that are not fur trimmed, in the new. bright colors (values up to $30.00)—spec- ial $18.00. . 1 lot of Silk Dresses Silk Dresses i, canton Crepe, Satin Back Crepe and Crepe de Chene; sizes from 16 to 40, all the new, bright colors. Also Cocoa Tan and Black—qualities up to $25.00; special price $12.50. . 1 lot Childrens Coats— Childrens Coats sizes 6 to 14—special price $4.98. All new colors again in Ladies Hosiery Silk Hose. . . Special 95 cts. S k Childrens Socks in sizes 7 to OCKS g % (solid colors only) 3 pairs 50¢. Childrens 3 Socks; solid colors and faney tops. from 25c. up. : A beautiful line Curtains and Dr aperies of Curtains in Panels Ruffled Edges and Marquisettes. New Cretonnes and Over-Drapes to match. WE INVITE INSPECTION Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. 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