Bellefonte, Pa., October 9, 1925. EE A ATU, ee eee etree THAT MOTOR CAR OF YOURS. NEW BRAKES DEPENDABLE. A car with first class four-wheel brak:s should stop quickest during the last few feet of the stop. There is no sudden jolt when the brakes are first applied, but this should not be taken as an indication that the car may not stop in time to avoid an ac- cident. TIGHTER WHEN HOTTER. In hot weather the devices which control the rebound of your springs may need a tighter adjustment. Heat expands parts, a fact which not mere- ly affects the adjustment with some devices but makes for too free action of the control mechanism. One type of spring control uses a steel cable, instead of a strap, to attach the spring to the coil. If this lengthens a little, due to expansion, the car will be likely to bound too much. In another pop- ular device there are two small inter- acting members in the center of the coil which are inclined to work too freely in hot weather. Another de- vice uses graphite inserts to lubricate the brakes of the coils, tighter adjust- ment being recommended to offer this freer action in hot weather. | VALUE OF PAINTED TIRES. Painting the exposed side of the tires with preservative blackening is ‘more than a matter of protecting the tires against the elements and the hazards of scraping against the curb. When tires are changed around, the outside will be labeled. This is neces- sary in order to avoid the mistake of replacing a tire so as to cause it to roll in the opposite direction, a prac- tice that injures the tread. RUSHING THE DELIVERY. Every now and again some car buy- er has an early share of trouble sim- ply because he insists upon suc prompt delivery that, after taking the vehicle off the freight car, the dealer does not have the opportunity to check up on some of the details.” The own- er, eager to get away ona trip, hard- ly gives the dealer a chance to fill it up with gas, oil and water. Later on the engine becomes overheated be- cause no one has had a chance to dis- cover that the timing was set late at the factory in order to prevent em- ployees from running the car too fast when it is unloaded. ' SUMMER FAN TROUBLE. This is the time of year you are likely to labor in vain to keep the fan oing. You think the belt is slipping, ut the chances are ten to one that the fan bearing i8 dry, or that, in forgel- ting to lubricate it properly, the bear- ing is damaged. GREASE IN TRANSMISSION. Whether your transmission needs grease or not usually can be deter- mined by the sound of the gears when meshed for second. A comparatively dry transmission will be quiet if the gears are on high. In high the drive is direct and if there is enough lubri- cant to keep the transmission bear- ings cool, the gear box will run quiet- ly. It is true that while the gears are in high the counter shaft gear re- volves, but they revolve free. Even the gear of the countershaft which meshes with the clutch gear is not un- der any pressure. HARMFUL TO CLUTCH. The practice of racing the engine and then letting in the clutch will re- sult in serious damage to the rear end and force the clutch plates to slip and burn. Coasting down a steep hill and suddenly letting in the clutch, in or- der to permit the engine to help slow down the car, it just as harmful. The thing to do after coasting is to speed up the engine before clutching. —Ull man Feature Service. : PLAN MEMORIAL . IN HILLS OF DAKOTA. A national shrine modeled from one of nature’s vagaries, and situated in the beautiful Black hills of South Da- kota, is the vision of Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor, and a group of South Da- kota residents who view the Black hills as the greatest undeveloped won- derland in the United States. The shrine would be a monument of Washington and Lincoln, standing side by side, their figures carved from a huge needle-like piece of granite which towers 200 feet above its im- mediate base. Borglum has long held this vision. He expects soon to visit South Dako- ta to discuss details for raising the $1,000,000 necessary to its comple- tion. In the Black hills there is a group of rocks that rise perpendicularly as high as a fifteen or more story build- ing. The rocks are known as the Needles. One of these has withstood the elements more than its neighbors and there remains a wide base from which there ascends a shaft tapering almost to a point. This shaft rises to a height great- er than any elevation east of the Rockies except Mount Harney, itself in the Black hills. Situated among virtual mountains of red, purple and gold, their slopes dottcd with towering pines, the pro- posed memorial rock may be seen for miles before the long, slowly ascend- ing trail finally brings the visitor within its shadow. Here Borglum found a setting for a national memorial. With the advice of several South Dakota residents, Borglum chose as the characters for this memorial Washington and Lincoln, two out- standing figures in American history, whom he knew would appeal to the patriotism of every corner of the United States. Information reaching supporters of the memorial in this State indicates that the financial problem will be met. Several wealthy persons have listen- ed sympathetically to the plan, and it is understood one New York muti- millionaire virtually - has agreed to finance the project single-handed.— Exchange. —1If you don’t find it in the “Watch- man” it isn’t worth reading. | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGET. To learn how to wait is the great secret of success.—De Maistre. Time to think of the evening frock. Almost any moment a formal occasion is likely to pop up that will demand it. And then you will be wise if you choose a white embroidered one, for they are particularly numerous this season. Although some are of white panne velvet, they are usually made of tulle, chiffon or crepe georgette, and are worn on matching fourreaus, al- though several have slips in some con- trasting color, such as blue or green under pink. The beaded dresses take the straight or princess silhouette. And if you want to forego white, but still keep to the decoration, there are fascinating dyed and metal lace frocks, embroidered all over. You may be a slim, young thing, though, who is tired of that up-and- down line. Then go back to the very bouffante type, and have a wide skirt with apron, flounce, gathers, petals, whatever appeals to your fancy. Or you might enjoy the idea of making yourself look taller by having panels or points longer than the dress itself. There is, last but not at all least, that important color consideration, if you don’t want to employ flesh pink or white. You should have the advan- tage of knowing that the ultra-smart in shades are mauve, cyclamen, rese- da-green, blue and black: As has been hinted before, two colors are frequent- ly combined, in one way or another, blue and pink cr black and white, It’s been rumored abroad, and now is a very definite fact, that the fur- lined coat is going to be most modern and smart. And very often it will be of the type “pour le sport,” with a pleasant raglan effect carried out in cloth or thick woolen fabric. Since the ensemble has got our mind into the habit of finishing a costume, it be- hooves us to suggest a dress of kasha, jersey or cloth, straight as to skirt, h | for this good-looking coat. Said dress may be straight as to skirt and trim- med with embroidery and scarf-collar; or it may cling to the favorite jumper idea, with skirt very wide and finely gathered or shaped. But one French model, with the gay name of Patinage, refuses the idea of any material but velvet for itself, and so it has a skirt of green velvet with a striped velvet jumper. Trimming is wearing a happy smile these days. So much has been said about it, it’s been favored so highly, that the simple-minded thing is all set up about it. But really, when it ap- pears in the guise of gold and silver embroideries, applications of suede, either painted or embroidered, or fur borders, its charm cannot be resisted. Then the largest feather in its cap is the fact that aristocratic sleeves, so often favoring strict severity in the past, are leaning toward trimming at the bottom, even though they are still plain in shape, either straight and tight or very slightly bouffant. The dressier coats are either made in figured crepe, of which there is a great and fascinating quantity, or vel- vet. An attractive French one, of the first-named material, is extremely tight at the normal waist, and wide in the skirt, trimmed with a small bolero and fur collar which forms reveres. Another model is in black silk velvet trimmed with brown fox fur, not as high-waisted as the other, and with a muchly gathered skirt. And then a beautifully pleasing evening wrap is fashioned of red velvet, embroidered with black flowers. It is of the Prin- cess shape, excellent in cut. —The fur jaquette is often noted despite the seeming supremacy in fashion favor of the full-length coat, but the newest jaquettes are longer and more elaborate in design than those of other seasons and more ex- tensively trimmed, embroidery on kid being often a featured decoration. Bands of printed crepe on a blouse dress of plain silk crepe, cut on Chi- nese lines and having a wrap-around skirt, give a pleasing suggestion of the costume of the Chinese woman, while embodying all the practical re- quirements of our new modern dress. Ensemble costumes of silk crepe or satin combined with velvet or velvet- een and fur-trimmed are noticeable among the dressy models of this mode; the coats are always of the velvet or velveteen; the dresses, however, while made usually of the silk fabric, are sometimes developed by the aid of the coat material in combination with the dress fabric. Fox, lynx, squirrel and leopard are the furs most generally used for trim- ming, which feature is rather strict- ly confined to collar and cuffs. Seal combined with leopard—that is, a seal coat with collar and cuffs and pockets of leopard—is a new and de- cidedly smart fur coat combination, and dyed squirrel banding a coat of matching brown caracul is still anoth- er, while mink skins diagonally placed make for a most luxurious wrap. The vogue of black continues to in- crease, and the all-black dress of vel- vet, crepe, or crepe satin is more and more in evidence, and especially the rather severely tailored effects, coat dresses with fitted wrist-length sleeves, notched collars and actual but- ton-hole front closings. Every woman planning new addi- tions to her fall wardrobe should bear in mind that the most popular day- time fabrics at present are velvet crepe satin, crepe de chine, rep and kasha, As for colors, there is a broad lee- way in black, dark green, blue-green, faded blue, red, coral and reddish or violet brown, with some beige -and brown from which to choose. When Cutting Silk.—The soft sur- face, the green of four or five yards of crepe de chine, and you, pattern in hand, confronted by same. Do not cut until you haye strengthened the ma- terial for each piece of the pattern with a layer of newspaper. It takes such a little time to pin the slippery silk to this, and your finished work will be so much more accurate and better cut. | were better bred than the others, al- FARM NOTES. —While picking fruit the grower should observe what kinds of insects are bothering the trees. During the winter plans and preparations can be made to resist their attacks next year. —Don’t dig cesspools. Build septic tanks. 45 Keystone counties have a total of 62 forms that are being used by farmers in building sanitation sys- tems. Ask your county agent about the form in your county. —Considerable trouble is being ex- perienced with potato stem borers. The only practical way to take care of them is by cleaning up and burning the tops as soon as the potatoes are dug. This will insure a greater amount of protection as the possibili- ty of infestation will be lessened. —Whit grubs and sod worms inflict considerable damage to crops which follow sod lands. In order to prevent serious damage to next year’s crops says county agent, R. C. Blaney, late fall or early spring plowing, followed by thorough cultivation should be praec- ticed. These operations will turn up the hibernating forms of these pests. —Cows that are to freshen next month should have some grain now. When the cow freshens she cannot be put on full feed immediately. Usuai- ly it is four weeks before she can be fed all the grain she needs, depending upon the condition of her udder. Dur- ing that time the cow must draw up- on her body reserves. Feeding grain before freshening builds up the re- serve, —That farm power and labor cost too much is the conclusion reached by agricultural engineers of The Penn- sylvania State College. Under the leadership of R. U. Blasingame, head of the college farm machinery de- partment, part of the 1800 acers of college farm land will be devoted to an experiment to reduce these costs. So far as is known The Pennsyl- vania State College is the first agri- cultural experiment station to put aside part of its farm for power farm- ing expermints with a research engineer devoting full time to the work. H. B. Josephson, a graduate of Saskatchewan University and the Iowa State College, is in active charge. A four-year rotation of corn, oats, wheat, and hay will be used in the ex- periments. “With power and labor constituting 65 per cent of the cost of producing corn crops, we felt that some means should be employed to decrease this burden,” says Blasingame. “Figures collected on 116 farms in Lancaster county in 1923 gave that average. Interest, depreciation, taxes, insur- ance, seed, fertilizer, marketing, and profit composed the other 35 per cent.” It is hoped that a substantial reduc- tion will be obtained by means of the plans used in the experiments. —It cost $35.70 to care for a brood sow raising an average of 7.4 pigs in the spring of 1925, information gath- ered in Lancaster county by farm management extension specialists of The Pennsylvania State College shows. Records on 21 sows on eight farms raising a total of 156 pigs were sum- marized in reaching this conclusion. According - to Earl - L.- Moffitt, in charge of this work for the College, the cost was divided as follows: Feed, $25.16; labor, 17.1 hours; $5.13, bed- ding; $1.03 breeding fees; $2.13 pas- ture; 10c. cash expense 34c.; depreia- tion on buildings and equipment 74c.; interest $2.98, a total of $36.70. One dollar was allowed for the value of the manure, leaving a net cost of $35.- 70 for maintaining the average sow for six months. During the past spring the average number of sows on these farms was 2.6 per farm, the lowest in four years. The average number of pigs farrowed was 8.6 per sow and the average num- ber raised 7.4 per sow. This was an average of 87.7 per cent. of the num- ber farrowed, the best record in the past four years. The pigs weighed 30 pounds each at weaning time, and the average cost per pig up to that point was $4.80, or 16 cents per pound. Corn and other feeds during the six months covered by these records were especially high priced. —Watch the pay envelope your cow brings in if it’s bigger returns you are after, the Blue Valley Creamery Institute advises the enterprising Pennsylvania dairy farmer. To find out the wages exactly per hour that each cow is paying for the labor and care expended on her, it is merely necessary to deduct the total expend- itures from the total receipts of each cow and divide the difference by the number of hours of labor expended on her during the year. On one of four neighboring farms where careful records had been kept it was brought to light that not only did ‘the farmer receive no wages for the time spent on his cows but that it actually cost him 12.7 cents an hour each to have them hang around his place. In the other three instanc- es, the farmers were paid at the rate of 6.4, 42.1, and 48.8 cents per hour for the time and labor spent on each of their cows. The two lots of cows bringing home fattest pay envelopes though the right kind of feed and better care would have done much toward making the others profitable employes. The amount of butterfat produced annually by each of the cows was found to have a direct re- lation to the number of hours of labor and care which they received, in each instance the animals with better care producing the greatest in- come, It is a costly error for the farmer who uses family labor to assume that whatever the cow produces is all to the good, according to the Institute. He should not be satisfied until his careful record keeping indicates that he is receiving at least current wages for his efforts. The record will furth- er point out to him the unprofitable members of his herd and these he should aim to replace with animals that will produce on an average of 250 to 3825 pounds of butterfat each year. With the non-producers cut out and the good stock left put on balanced rations and given proper care, there will be no reason why the farmer should not receive a full pay Snvelope from each cow in his dairy erd. MEDICAL. Back Lame and Achy? The Advice of this Bellefonte Resident Should Help You to Get Well. Do you suffer nagging backache ? Feel dizzy, nervous and depressed ? Are the kidney secretions irregu- lar; breaking your rest? Likely your kidneys are at fault. Weak kidneys give warning. You have backache; rheumatic twinges. You feel weak, tired, all worn-out. Heed the warning. Don’t delay! Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diu- retic to the kidneys. Your neighbors recommend Doan’s. Here is a Bellefonte case. C. E. Hartman, manager Weis Store, 118 E. Logan St., says: “Morn- ings the muscles in my back ' were lame and drawn. When I stood a long time I had a severe ache across my kidneys. My kidneys were weak too, and I'had to get up quite a bit at night to pass the secretions. Any lit- tle work tired me and toward the end of the day I was so worn out, I hard- ly felt like moving. I used Doan’s Pills and three boxes, from the Mott Drug Co., cured me.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 70-40 —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Radio Sale & Supply Co. Authorized Radiola Distributors R. J. GREEN, Licensed C. 0. BELLEFONTE, PA. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. IT ISN'T A HOME WITHOUT A TELEPHONE THE first thing a new subscriber does is call up all his (or her) friends and “IV e have a Telephone now.” Wouldn't you be proud to be listed among the 600,000 most progressive homes in Pennsylvania? A Telephone puts your home in this preferred class. At Fauble’s....The Clothmg Surprise Suits and Overcoats $25.00 ...... $10 Under Price Now-- Now --Now =———SEE THEM—— CLC igen] A.Fauble LIC UCL Ahh