i ns —————————— rr —— co m————c—— i : What happened to your watch to-day? Why, nothing at all, you will say. You didn’t drop or jar it, and it kept just as good time as ever. Yet, something has happened to it. Every twenty-four hours the oil in your watch avangrates just a little more, becomes a ti“ more gummy; tiny particles of dirt sift into the delicate mechanism, even through the most tightly fitting case, and eventually the timekeeping performance of the watch 'is impaired. ‘Be fair to your watch. Have it cleaned, oiled, and adjusted at least once a year and avoid heavier repairs later. Experts in our Service Department will do this for you at moderate cost. And while you're considering the care of your watch, be sure it’s thoroughly up-to- date in style—dressed in one of the cele- brated Wadsworth Cases, that set the fash ion for watches today. Give a New Model Watch to the Boy or Girl Graduate F. P. Blair & Son JEWELERS....BELLEFONTE, PA. Tee ee ae ae a m— Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work" S—— Ea rr an Siri ng ent § WZ Coming to Bellefonte Friday, May 23 ONLY BIG 5 RING «... CIRCUS COMING... RISTY BROS syldibiicll SHOWS | 1250 People — 500 Horses — 50 Cages Animals f° 50 Lions — 2 Cars of Elephants and Camels 5 Bands — 2 Calliopes — 2 Complete Electric Light Systems — 30 Double Length Steel Cars 6-Pole Big Top 5 Mammoth Rings — A : Bellefonte, Pa.,, May 21, 1926. AR What Will a Motor Trip to Florida Cost? One veteran tourist, a writer and newspaper man, who toured to Flor- ida last winter, kept a careful account of the expenses of himself, his wife and eight-year-old daughter, and found that on a 1,500-mile trip from Pittsburgh to Jacksonville his ex- penses totaled an average of $22.50 a week for the three. He had no auto repairs, and this figure made no allowance for depreciation of his car and camping equipment, but simply covered all actual expenditures in cash. The writer of this article has usually found that about five dollars a day each for himself and compan- ion would cover all cash expenditures en tour. One can go much higher, as did the lady who traveled to Florida in a camping Pullman car-body with a woman friend and was served by a chauffeur and a colored chef. She and her friend slept in the car and the chef and chauffeur in sleeping-bags underneath the car-body.". A majority of the tourist camps make a small charge, usually twenty- five cents or thirty-five cents a day and a dollar or a dollar and a half a week, for the car and its occupants. The custodian of the De Land camp last winter interviewed the occupants of four hundred cars and found that their expenses while in camp averag- ed a dollar and a half a day for each person. And what of the roads to Florida. There are many, some twenty at least, from the East, from the Central States and from the West. Of course these are not all equally good as motorways. Some, notably those near the Atlantic coast, have in places on- ly an earth surface, and after the Autumn rains their mud is a serious obstacle to be reckoned with. The ef- fort is now being made to improve those doubtful routes so as to make them all-weather roads, and already these highways are much better than formerly. There has recently been a wonderful era of road-building in the Southern States. Not all have done as well as North Carolina with its $65,000,000 road-building cam- paign, but all have been waking up to the truth that tourists are sedu- lously avoiding regions that have muddy highways in favor of sections that offer the attraction of all-weath- . ler roads.—From The Delineator for February. Uniform Traffic Code is Adopted for National Use. A uniform traffic code for the guid- ance of motorists and pedestrians throughout the country was adopted at the concluding session of the sec- ond’ national conference on street and highway safety. The -eode-embraces-three legislative proposals which would govern issu- ance of motor vehicle registration cards, certificates of title and oper- ation of vehicles on highways. Governor Winant, of New Hamp- shire, urged the approximately one thousand delegates to the conference, including representatives of forty- six Governors to take the initiative in placing the recommendations be- fore the varous States and municipal- ities. Secretary Hoover, in a closing ad- dress warned that if progress is to be made, centralized government should be discouraged in favor of govern- ment “by stimulation of the local community to its responsibility and the education of the local community to intelligent action.” He stated the work of the conference, if universal- ly adopted undoubtedly, would result in diminution of the traffic laws. The conference recommended that pedestrians as well as motorists be required to obey traffic rules and to pay fines for infractions. It also pro- posed creation of a general committee by Secretary Hoover to co-ordinate the activities of all the eight com- mittees of the conference. As the safety conference came to a close, motor club executives of the American Automobile Association be- gan a session to consider safety, uni- formity and tourist problems. Publishing Telephone Book One of Penna. Bell Co’s. Big Jobs. Compiling # publishing and distri- buting Bell Telephone Directories to the 960,000 subscribers in Pennsyl- vania is one of the biggest circula- tion jobs in the country, remarks the Pennsylvania Public Service Inform- ation Committee. Approximately 1,400,000 copies of each issue are printed. The largest directory issued by the Bell company of Pennsylvania is the Philadelphia directory which contains 400,000 list- ings, has 1,264 pages, and weighs about four and one-half pounds. The Towanda directory is the smallest and contains 8,500 listings, has sixty- six pages, and weighs about four ounces. The last directory issued, for the fall of 1925, required the use of 2,- 500,000 pounds or 1,250 tons of paper, eight tons of glue, fifteen tons of ink, and 2,500 yards of cheesecloth for printing and binding. Unsalaried Weed and Bug Killers. No farmer should object to pheas- ants on his farm. The birds feed mostly on insects and weed seeds. A recent careful analysis of the crop of a pheasant shot in an Oregon wheat field showed insects, a fat slug, weed seeds and not a single grain of wheat. The gain of having these birds by the tens or hundreds of thousands, and letting them serve as unsalaried weed and insect killers, would more than overbalance any damage to crops due to the hunters. And the hunters pay the birds costs, out of their annual licenses.—The Manufac- turers. Ye Drastic War in Opium to be Made by Japan. . Tokyo.—The Japanese government has appointed a commission with For- eign Minister Shidehara as chairman for the purpose of an inquiry and to originate new laws for the complete abolition of opium derivatives in Ja- pan and its possessions. The commission, which consists of representatives of all ministers, hopes to go even further than the Geneva convention in prosecuting all Japan- ese engaging in the traffic abroad. It may organize a government monopoly in Japan, Korea and Kwangtung province in Tokyo, as was done in Formosa. The commission intends to take the most stringent measures to obliterate illegal traffic in opium. Would Save the Hawk. In some of the States there is a bounty on hawks. It is ill-judged leg- islation, not to call it by a harsher name. Nearly all of the American hawks are benefical. There are only two members of the great hawk fam- ily which are almost always criminal- ly inclined and which are likely to be found in any numbers in the United States. These two birds of bad hab- its are the sharp-shinned and the Cooper hawks. The goshawk also is a bad actor, but he is not abundant enough in the United States at any season to cause much alarm.’ All the other hawks should be allowed to live. They do good work every day.—Chi- cago Evening Post. Chalmoogra Oil Leprosy Cure. ~ Chalmoogra oil, the modern rem- edy for leprosy, was known hundreds of years ago, but its use was not gen- eral because of its unpleasantness, according to Dr. Ruth Stone Alvarez, bacteriologist of the University of California, who has made a study of the history of leprosy. She found that Buddhist monks about the year 1500 knew of a treat- ment. Records set down in that age showed that improvements in patients suffering from the disease were seen after they chewed the seeds from Which chalmoogra oil is now extract- e —————————— New Value to Alder. Alder, which is much used as a wood in making furniture in those sections where it grows on a com- mercial scale, may have another value far exceeding that for furniture. It is now believed that the little nodules or “bumps” on the roots of alder have nitrogen . fixation properties. The German chemists have been working on that theory and American uni- versities have been attempting to prove it with some degree of success. | If it is true, the alder having the ability to take nitrogen direct from the air would be a great soil builder. Electric Cars for Mass Transporta- . : tion. 5.7 : There is $6,000,000,000 of capital invested in electric railroads. For mass transportation nothing has yet been devised like the electric cars running on rails, nor is there likeli- hood of any adequate substitute be- ing found. Electric railways which are correctly advanced and whose management is progressive and alive to the demands of the communities they serve have a great era of pros- perity ahead of them. 1,500 Pick Strawberries in Carolina Fruit Belt. Approximately 1,500 mobilized strawberry pickers are busy in the strawberry fields of eastern North Carolina’s fruit belt. The berries are ripening fast, and picking is in full blast in most places, Frank D. Grist, Commissioner of La- bor and Printing, said. It is conserv- | atively estimated that more than 1,- 500 carloads of strawberries will be shipped from North Carolina this séa- son. Who Pays Here? If Wall Street is a barometer as it usually is, then the mail-order houses are piling up healthy profits. A share of Sears Roebuck now pays $6 dividend per year, yet the stock this year has sold for as much as $233 a share. In 1924 it sold as low as $79 per share. Montgomery Ward at present pays no dividend, yet on November 13th, the stock sold for $82.50 a share. In 1924 it sold as low as $21.75 a share. Riceless Day. The Chinese are now conducting a campaign that is very much different than anything we have ever seen in this country. We are used to all sorts of campaigns to promote the eating of certain foods, but in China they are now conducting a campaign to get people not to eat rice. This is necessary, says the Progressive Groc- er, because the heavy rice consump- tion usually leads to famine at the end of the year. Radios on Farms. In 1923 there were 2,500 radios on farms. In 1925 the number increas- ed to 550,000. Furthermore, the farmer is not a buyer of cheap sats. In 1923 the average price paid was $175. In 1925 the highprice sets were still the best sellers to farmers, says Good Hardware. Sets selling from $125 to $400 were better sellers than the $100 sets. “Eight” Lucky in Japan. In Japan the telephone number “eight” is considered the luckiest number and the subscriber who holds it pays $5600 each year for the privi- lege. Numbers “forty-two” and “forty- nine” are believed to ‘be unlucky and are usually assigned to ‘police sta- ons. — this Bank your Executor—and also place, in our hands as Trustee, the proceeds of your life insurance ?—under terms that will safe- guard the principal and provide for a proper income. Ih II: You Considered Our Suggestion that you make It is an Important Matter and Worthy of Serious Thought The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. man RCN SS SC TOAST ERTS EA SNR ANVANAA VAN AMV EAN) / SEAS SRN CR ARN ATE NTE NNN oa pe Check Crosses Sea In the Air ALR NCILFSTN n April 20th, 1926, a check was sent by radio from London to New York, for $1,000. It was received in 20 minutes and was readily credited by the Bankers’ Trust Company of New York. How useful the radio is proving its service to be. We invite your Checking Account and offer you excellent facilities. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM LCCC D en Raa a ESS CIA ANCES SA ERMA AAA) V RSC LEI SLE LE SUNNUR TON NRA VHA RIAA RRA LUE AAAS A AMG) QQ SR Ay SA GALL AEN NN NU ANY Vo I Lyon & Company Summer Wants mie We have just received a big assortment of Hot W eather stutfs—Peter Pan Prints (guaranteed fast colors), Soisettes, Polka-Dotted Voiles (large, me- dium and small dots), Printed Pongees, Figured | Crepes, All Silk Crepe de Chiene (in variegated stripes, flowered, and all the new plain shades), Rayons in plain colors, stripes, checks and figured. Still a good assortment of these wonderfully cheap All Silk Dresses. Silk Dresses All sizes, all colors, and stylish stout models. Rayon Dresses We can fit the small woman regular size and stouts, in Children’s Coats from 2 years up to 14. Summer Coats light and dark colors. Prices the lowest. Our line of Rugs is all new. Rug S and beautiful colors combined. for the economical buyer. White Oxfords 5 ou tals of hie Misses. ‘The prices are less than wholesale. Choice designs Prices are right Liyon & Company