mn Dewar; Wald. Bellefonte, Pa., July 23, 1926. PURE CARBONATED BEVERAGES STIMULATE OVERTAXED SYSTEM. Water Used with Fruit Juices is Reg- ulatory Type of Food, Hodgdon Says. By Dr. Daniel R. Hodgdon. Formerly president at Hahnneman Medical College and Hospital of Chi- cago, director Industrial Educational Bureau, president of College of Tech- nology and director of Technology, at Newark, director Newark Institute of Arts and Sciences and member of the faculty of New York University and New Jersey Normal School. Good carbonated beverages are in answer to the human system’s natur- al call for something cooling and sweet with a little “pep” after stren- uous exertion. To punctuate an even- ing’s dancing, for instance, with a drink or two of this kind is both log- ical and sensible. A man pitching ‘hay, relishes this kind of drink and it is better for him than ice water. A carbonated drink for the housewife, to break the morning’s work of iron- ing or any other hot and taxing work, serves a useful purpose. A cool drink soothes the spirit, ev- en though the cooling effect is only temporary; a sweet drink, with its carbohydrate content, supplies ener- .gy. Carbonated water in a drink pre- vents us from gulping down the cold ‘liquid too fast, as we usually do with ice water, and so we are protected from the danger which might come from chilling our stomachs too quick- ly after exertion. A carbonated drink is usually sip- ‘ped rot gulped, and so each mouth- ful ‘has a.chance to be raised to the temperature of the body before it is swallowed. At least, we cannot gulp the carbonated drink quite as fast as "we can ice water, no matter how hot and thirsty we are. FRUIT JUICES GOOD. The fruit juices which are a part «of many good carbonated beverages ‘have a toning effect upon the system as good fruit always has. Fruit juice is a regulartory food, necessary to health. Of course the genuine fruit Juice is used only in high-grade car- ‘bonated beverages, but of those which are not genuine fruit juices, there is little that can be favorably said. The ginger in good ginger. ale, and sarsaparilla of good quality, also have 2a toning effect, as well as being pleas- ant to the taste. The carbonated water used in car- bonated drinks is a regulatory type of food, of a different kind from fruit juices. The former by producing gas ‘breaks up hard lumps of food, and so assists digestion. If not taken in ex- cess, carbonated water and carbonated drinks, may be used to advantage for ‘this regulatory purpose. The popularity of “soft” or carbon- ated beverages during the heat of summer is due probably as much to the exhausting effect of heat, as to the demand for sémething cold. Ex- ‘haustion calls for energy, and the sweetness of “soft” drinks supplies energy. MUST WATCH CHILDREN. Carbonated beverages can be ap- proved for summer drinking, provided they are not indulged in to excess and providing they are of the prover quality. The temptation when we are hot, restless and uncomfortable, is to respond to every soda water sign thus overloading our stomachs with sweets and liquid. The consequent dullness which always follows over heating is, T suspect, a familar sensation to all of us. . Children especially, must be guard- ed against seeking a cure for summer restlessness through distending their stomachs with an excess of sweeten- ed carbonated drinks. I wonder, how- ever, whether we are not all to an ex- tent, “children” in this regard. A second warning which applies in the use of carbonated beverages is: “Beware of adulterated, unwhole- some products.” Those which contain imitation fruit juices, and, we mav assume other ingredients correspond- ingly cheap, are a hazard to health. It is not always possible to judge what one is getting at a soda fountain, but careful mothers will protect their families by dispensing soft drinks from the cooling plant of her own ice box with beverages that bear a reli- able label. CLEAN GLASS ESSENTIAL. It often happens that pernicious effects following a drink from some particular soda fountain are due not “to the drink itself, but not unsanitary container of the drink, and of the - glass in which it is served. Careless- ness and unsanitary conditions be- hind the counter of soda fountains is too common and should be eliminated. Bottled beverages, madg by a com- pany that is reliable, are to be pre- ferred. And the menace of the dirty glass can be avoided by providing one’s own glass, at home. It seems hardly believable that there are so many people who are so careless of their health, as to buy «drink ‘at nondescript street-corner fountains. It seems astonishing that people should give so little thought to ‘their most precious posseasion, their “health. ; People must learn to inspect brands and labels more carefully than they do, if they wish to safeguard their physical well-being. Some progress is evident in this respect, but is not universal enough. Carbonated bever- ages are only of many foods which are good when they are made with the right ingredients, and very, very ‘bad, when they are made from cheap ingredients. The secret of choice be- tween the two is the label of the re- liable manufacturer. Few persons can be as deter- mined as a woman who has decided to wash her hair and a man who has made up his mind to go fishing. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. en DAILY THOUGHT. What do we know of the world, as we grow so old and wise? Do the years, that still the heart-beats quicken the drowsy eyes? At twenty we thought we knew it, the world, then at our feet; We thought we had found its bitter, we knew we had found its sweet. Now at forty and fifty, what do we make of the world? —SilL SIMPLE DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING A LAVENDER BAG. Cut out a small muslin bag, and on the front half paint three sprigs of lavender with the stalks uppermost. First paint the stalks and put mauve dashes each side for the flow- ers and touch them, when dry, with white here and there. Sew the bag together, hemming the top. Fill with lavender and tie the neck with mauve ribbon. If the stalks are not painted upper- most the flowers will be hidden when the bag is tied. No, we are not yet over the top coat—by top coat is meant the sepa- rate and tailored garment which, in different guises, has haunted smart society for many a moon. For a long time the fashionable emphasis was placed on that derogative of the Prince of Wales overcoat. This spring we encounter some totally new forms. One of these is the wider top coat. The other is the three-quarter top coat launched by Jenny this spring and shown today by some of the smartest specialty shops. The top coat of this latter variety may be of any number of fabrics and it may be worn either separately, or as part of the ensemble. A smart creation of green duvetyn with a belt- ed back with a dark blue flower stuck in its mannish rever—and, by the way, the bloom of this color is one of the newest fancies in boutonnieres —is made to wear over a frock of light gray crepe. HOW TO FORGET YOU ARE TIRED. There’s a special treatment that you can do in a few moments, about fif- -teen to be exact, which will bring the blood to the face in a marvelously youth-giving fashion and lift the dol- drums of tiredness. You begin this treatment with a thorough cleansing of the face, with the special cleanser you use or a smooth, delicious cold- cream. Then a dash of skin tonic to freshen it, and then you spread all over the face and neck a delightful, rejuvenating ointment, which in five or ten minutes makes your face feel as though it had been stimulated to new life! Leave this ointment on as long as you conveniently can, ten minutes at least, unless your skin is of the super- sensitive kind, and lie down, relaxing for those ten minutes, if possible. Then remove the ointment with cold- cream or a cleanser, mold in a gener- ous quantity of skin food (it will soothe the skin), close the pores with an astringent or a quick dash of ice, and put on your protective cream. A special protective cream for a dry skin and a special lotion for an oily skin, besides a list of excellsnt protective creams which will give your face the dewy, misty appearance of a skin not robbed of its natural oils! The oily skin, which half through the evening is annoyingly shiny, will be helped materially by a lotion which is an astringent as well, while the dry, sensitive skin will remain much move fresh and alive if you feed it with a protective cream which has just a little more oil than the cream which should be used for an average skin. There are two other treatments for freshening the face for evening. One is a facial pack, which takes from twenty minutes to half an hour to ap- ply and which draws out the lines of tiredness and fatigue from the face until it becomes as glowingly rosy as the freshest of young pink skins. After this treatment you feed the tissues with a muscle oil and skin food as you do after the other treatment, then tone it with an astringent and protect it with finishing cream. Rest while you have the pack on the face if vou possibly can. The other treatment is simpler than these described, though effective to § the nth degree. It is the application of an anti-wrinkle cream after the | face has been cleansed and stimulated | with an astringent and fwenty min- utes or half an hour’s rest while the | cream does its particular work. A suitable drain to carry off rain or melted snow is almost an essential for a porch with a solid concrete brick | or wood railing. Then, too; the washing of a porch | is made much easier when there is a drain from the waste water and one | does not have to mop it up and return it to the bucket. In fact, if the porch | is provided with a drain one can use the ordinary garden hose and wash it just like a sidewalk. We have found that the best and most efficient drain can be construct- ed easily in the following manner: Frame up the porch joists in the usual way, then cut in headers be- tween the outside joist and the one next to it, then head across again be- tween the headers, leaving about two «inches between this header and the outside joist. This leaves a place for the surplus water to drip down the front porch joist. where the ground will easily take care of any amount of water as would naturally fall in such a place. CHEESE AND CELERY SALAD. Select firm, crisp, tender celery and choose the stalks which have deep grooves. Cut into inch pieces and fill with seasoned cream cheese to which chopped onion, green pepper and nuts have been added. Heap a half dozen of these filled stalks on lettuce and serve with a French dressing. This same method may be used for longer stalks and serve them as a salad accompaniment. HOT HAM AND TOMATO SANDWICHES. Saute thin slices of lean ham very quickly in a frying pan. Peel and slice thin some ripe tomatoes. Have ready slices of white bread cut one- fourth inch thick and lightly toasted. Thus No. 1 under the column headed Dlack ome below. tionary words, except proper names. -— CROSS-WORD HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE When the correct letiers are placed in the white spaces this puzzle will spell words both vertically and horizontally. indicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the pussie. fill the white spaces up to the first black square to the right, and a number under “vertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares to the mext No letters go in the black spaces. All words used are die- terms and obsolete forms are indicated in the definitions. The first letter in each word is “horizontal” defines a word which will Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical PUZZLE No. 1. 1—Metal cylinder spirally grooved 8—Essential oil of roses 11—Justice of the peace 12—Critical moments (pl.) 14—Twofold 16—Reply 18—Before 19—Rapturous excitement 22—Wrath 23—Male deer 25—Instruct 26—Cut with short strokes of scis- sors 27—Ovens for burning brick 29—Part of the body 30—Ingenious 31—Compass point 82—Smallest imaginable portion of matter 34—Very black 36—Suffix used to form adverbs 37—Any open space 38—Homeless street wanderer 39—In contact with the upper side of 41—Inland body of water 43—An entrance 44—Like 483—Part of the face 50—Shell blqwn as a horn b2—Grating of parallel bar 53—Parsonage 55—A roster 56—Atmosphere 5T—Honest 59—Gift of money to a servant 80—Fastened with a nail 46—Fray 64—South American wooly animal 67—To live 68—Large garden flower Solution will appear in next swe Spread toast with salad dressing, eew- | er with ham, then a slice of tomato | and spread with salad dressing and | chopped lettuce leaves. Cover with toast spread on one side with salad dressing. Cut into triangles and gar- nish with sliced pickle. Serve with coffee. TONIGHT — Tomorrow Alright} NR Tablets stop sick headaches, relieve bilious attacks, tone an | regulate the eliminative organs, §: make you feel fine. | # Better Than Pills For Liver lis” ~~ The Season’s Delicacy POULTRY Dinner That’s the thing that appeals to both young and old when tired and hungry.. Our Meats are Always Just Right—whether beef, veal, pork, mut- ton, lamb or fowl. Seasoned in our own big refrigerator, they go to our customers in prime condition.—Clean, Sanitary, Wholesome. Orders by telephone always receive prompt attention. Telephone 450 P. L. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. TB BE: +5 6 [7 [819 [7 7] 12 13 3 ss (TIE 77 19 20 2 22 23 “4 25 6 [27 2 29 30 37 IF 33 3435 36 I 37 38 [397140 [TI 41 42 43 4445 46 ll | 48 [49 50 51 52 53 $4 55 56 [57 58 [TT 59 60 6/ 62 3 64 65 6 6T |é8 (©. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical, 62—Composed of eight 66—Stick fast i 1—Shrill, prolonged cry 2—Young bear 3—Vex 4—Construct 5—Personal pronoun 6—Army corps (abbr.) 7—Rubbish 8—Very small 9—Beast of burden 10—To wind again 11—S8ally of troops 13—Literary composition published in parts in successive issues of a periodical 14—Articles of office furniture 15—Celestial body 1T—Answer 20—Fissure 21—Perfection 24—Knotty 26—Member of legislative body 28—Take feloniously 30—Type of Greek architecture 33--Shade tree 36—Not wholesome or good 39—Large musical instrument 40—Pertaining to the nostrils 41—Brilliant impetuos rush 43—Altar end of a church 44—Agile 46—Outward form 47—Having the vigor of manhood 49—Lineal measure 51—An officer empowered to admin- ister oaths 53—King of the golden touch b4—Wear away 5T—Prefix meaning half 58—Imitate 63—Number 65-—Town highway (abbr.) 66—Prefix meaning “to” 61—Slack Solution to Cross-word. Puzzle No. 4 S[PURIN J[i Y cllP EAL HATIEN _[o/slp1[L{LlowWSlB[E “RE[SLAIRISIA|L[L inj Ew Slim EINJllP|R[C[D S|AMO|A UR[T LEA ER[A FILA AGENT D/ojoRMT O/NIE [G[O[S rIOWH BA R/C EMEWE ADH] | IN[DE[RISHEN/A| GEM I INDI o/AMI | Sw siPlAIN[S Dairymen---Notice A special sale of Mayer's Dairy Feed—a Ready- Mixed Ration, 22% protein $40.00 per Ton Delivery Charge $2 oo per Load Frank M. Mayer BELLEFONTE, PA. 71-11-tf Insurance Fire Automobile Accident Tornado Compensation Boiler Burglary Plate Glass Employers’ Liability Bonds of All Kinds Hugh M. Quigley Successor to H. E. FENLON Temple Court BELLEFONTE, PA 71-18-tf ESTER S PILLS ME DIAMOND BRAND, CHICHE Ladies! Ask your Dru Ohl-ches-ter a no other.” Buy of Draft Fink Shien 34-34 Fears. as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Give the “Piano the Same Protection that Preserves the ‘Oiolin People of intelligence readily see that it is both economy and the height of musical taste to save the life and tone of their grand pianos with a ~ Brey Invisible Inner Cover —of special dust and damp-prooof material. sults. Strings, Sounding-Board Varnish, Tone, stay fresh and new. Fifteen years of astonishing re- Sounding-Board, Action, Felts and A startling revelation to grand piano owners. Send for full particulars and facts on correct care of the piano. 71-27-3t CLARENCE BREY, (are of Watchman Office Watch Cur Windows It will mean a Saving of Many Dollars to You. Watch Our Windows .....AND SEE..... FAUBLE’S “Monument Place” MILESBURG, Cozy, Electrically Equipped Tea Room Soon PENNA. Drinks and Ice Cream. Prices are our motto. We Independent, Imperial Penna. Oils—Free Crank Case Service and WALTER A. HUGG 71-27tf andwiches and Salads—Home-Made Pies and Beans—Cold Service, Sanitation and Moderate Cream, 5c.—you can take right along in the car with you. Watch for the Sign “EATS” MARTHA N. KREAMER Proprietors serve the Little Dixie Cup Ice and Atlantic Gas—Mobile and Comfort Station. clean stateroom arriving in the morning, res hours at famous Cedar Point or Put-in-Bay islands. Stop-over privileges. Tourist Automobile Rate—$7.50 and up. Fare to Cleveland $5.50; to SS A Refreshing Night’s Ride on Lake Erie ‘Take a palatial C & B Steamer from Buffalo to Cleveland and enjoy a cool, Tour Cleveland. Spend a day © 1 our Steamer “GOODTIME®” with several A fascinating round trip day excursion through the beautiful Lake Erie Leave Buffalo any night at 9:00 p. m.; arriving in Cleveland at 7:00 a. m. Eastern Standard Time) Ask vour ticket agent or tourist agency for tickets via C & B Line. New Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. ted by the break in your journey. summer resorts. Cedar Point $6.50 The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Company a river Bultato, New York” Four C & B Steamers in Daily Service