Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 15, 1926, Image 7

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    Help the Good Trees.
The farm woodland will be improv-
ed by the removal of trees which have
been overtopped by others and have
had their growth stunted; «diseased
trees, or those seriously injured or ex-
tremely liable to injury by insect at-
tacks, as chestnut in the region sub-
ject to blight, or birch in the gipsy-
oe
ene
BS
eee
—
moth area; badly fire-scarred trees;
trees of the less valuable species; the
crooked, large-crowned, or short-bod-
ied trees, which will not make good
lumber and which are crowding or
overtopping others; slow-growing
trees which are crowding fast-grow-
ing kinds of equal value; sound dead
trees, both standing and down.
REE
Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson
uring the time of these three great Presidents the
best brains—both financial and in the realms of
statesmanship—were developing an elastic form of
banking to facilitate credit and so unify the bank-
ing power of this mighty country so that either the
great producer in the city or the small business man
in the country could benefit by this unified reservoir of
credit.
The result was what we know as the Federal Reserve
System.
The system always stands ready to lend the
member Banks for legitimate business expansion.
Hence the members can have the comfortable know-
ledge that when you, the individual—our patron-—come
to us with your proper needs we can alwaye take care
of you by borrowing at the Federal Reserve Bank.
Americans may well pride themselves on having a
central banking system as splendid as any of the long
established European systems.
The First National Bank
BELLEFONTE,
PA.
Everlasting Individual Crypt
buy anything better than the Automatic Sealing Concrete Burial Vault.
It is made of the finest materials and workmanship ; glazed inside and out with
a permanent water-proof treatment.
It is beautiful and dignified in appear-
ance—seals automatically, and is proof against all elements of destruction.
71-38tf
No matter how much you wish to invest
in a permanent burial vault, you cannot
Manufactured by DUNLAP BROTHERS, Bellefonte, Pa.
enjoyment.
QQ
TOR) CIT
Upon the return of Columbus to
Spain after his first voyage to America,
he was said “to enjoy the state of
honor to which he came.”
carefully and deposit your savings with
us you also will come to a state of real
3 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts
| THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
If you save
A AN ATS A SS SATE AANA)
CAMMMAEN MY MA VCIARS SR
LAAN SS SEAS ARSTET NS SN TARR META NEL ACTON ARARTOTIRR LL SOR SS ASAT SRA SARA)
Announcement
the Largest and Most Attractive
$1.50 Sale
and General All-Store Sale we have ever conducted,
IS NOW ON AT OUR STORE.
COME IN
PF. P. Blair & Son
JEWELERS
BELLEFONTE, PA.
"Bellefonte, Pa., October 15, 1926.
SUNRISE.
(Continued from page 2, Col 6.)
back-fire was coming till it was all
around you. Who is here with you?”
“Nobody but Dave,” Arthur told
her. “He came after me, too.”
“Dave!” she said, quickly. “Dave
here?”
“Yes, Shalmir,” David said. He
tried to keep his voice steady. It was
hard for him to see her standing there
so white— so nearly exhausted. “We
must take you back,” he said. “You
can’t stand this!”
She put out her hand to the Indian.
“Yes,” she said, “We'd better go.”
So they crawled back, stumbled
back through that shaft—the shored
timbers, water oozing out, fire-ball
eyes of frightened, slinking animals,
little parts of rock and mud breaking,
falling. But at last it was over—at
last they stood on the Crow’s Foot
again, out under heavy, smoky . sky,
on smoldering earth, skeleton now, of
a forest. Below them was black
waste—and above, going on, going up,
a wind of flame straight over Silver
Gully! Arthur was yellow with the
sight of it, weak, staring as if his
mind were half gone! Sonia was
shivering, crying, but she had made
no sound. She had not let Shalmir
know.
It was still night, but barer, gray-
er, the cold weight of a sunless dawn.
They stood there silent; there was
nothing to say, somehow. They
stumbled on till they came to the road
—got off of that seared, burned
ground.
“Arthur, you’re safe now,” Shalmir
said, weary, struggling for words.
“You and Sonia go on to the village.”
Arthur, David, and Sonia. stood as-
tonished. There had been no word—-
no movement to betray that Sonia was
with them! Arthur tried to ask Shal-
mir what she meant—what she was
saying. She recalled to him the night
she had sent him after the book, and
he had come back with no book but
with an odd perfume clinging to him—
when Jenson had come—and David
had tried to make it seem right.
“I knew you hadn’t been to Jenson’s
that night,” she said; “and the night
you told me you went to bed early—
you didn’t. I knew that because David
kept me so insistently from calling
you. Then the day of the dance at the
Country Club I found who the per-
fume belonged to. And that night,
when we found you at home in your
evening clothes, of course I knew you
and she had been right there together
all evening—just where I had been.
She told him she had tried to for-
give him as long as she had thought
she loved him. “But to-night,” she
said, “when you came to meet me at
Car Cabin with that fragrance of
Sonia all around you again, I sudden-
ly knew I'd expected to find her—I’d
hoped to find her—so I could be free
of you. So you and Sonia go down to
the village. I’m too tired to say any-
more. David, will you—take me
home?”
David caught her as she almost
swayed—took her up in his arms, and
strode down that road with her. Then
suddenly he kissed her—kissed her
lips—
“Must I wait any longer to tell you
I love you,” he said, “when I've loved
you so much—so long ?”
There was just one minute of si-
lence then, as suddenly as he had kiss-
ed her, she flung her face back in his
arms to that dead sky—
“David!” she cried—a little sob of
ecstasy. “What have you brought to
me! David, I see the sunrise! Have
you given me your sight!”
“Sweetheart, I hope so!” he said—:
his voice breaking too, “for I never
saw sunrise, till you gave me yours!”
—By Dixie Willson.
reese pele ee—
Knickers Are to be Worn Only for
Outdoor Sport.
Wearing of oxford bags, knickers
or plus fours except in the interests
of outdoor sport will now be regard-
ed in much the same light as donning
a crimson tie with green polka dots, a
brown derby and colored spats with
the formal evening “soup and fish”
attire. :
This was the edict issued by the
style committee of the National Asso-
ciation of Retail Clothiers and Fur-
nishers in convention in Philadelphia
this week, where commandments as to
what the well-dressed man may wear
are being created by style experts
who have already turned “thumbs
down” on many of the prevailing cos-
tumes commonly known as “collegi-
ate.”
A violation of the rules set down by
the experts, will stamp the offender
as a person lacking in the rudiments
of good taste.
The hat, too, is being included, and
it is specifically set forth that the
derby must be worn only with black
shoes. The same applies to a gray
soft hat. A brown hat must always
accompany tan shoes. A derby hat
with a soft collar might safely be re-
garded as an “atrocity,” the com-
mittee decided, and the soft collar is
still to be regarded as “expressing
negligee.” A white waistcoat may be
worn only with formal evening dress.
e———————————
Affect Flowers;
Prices to Jump.
Frosts Perfume
Grasse, France.—The price of per-
fume is destined to mount. Grasse,
the perfume center of Europe, with 29
distilleries, will run short of 600,000
pounds of petals this year as a result
of the late frosts and inclement
weather which destroyed a fifth of the
Riviera flower crop.
Manufacturers say this shortage
will cause at least a 25 per cent. in-
crease in the cost of French perfumes.
The flower-growers, through their
co-operative society, are able to force
the distilleries to pay their prices.
Rose leaves are now quoted at the
equivalent of ten cents a pound, and
orange flowers sell for fifteen cents.
The - Possibilities and Dangers of
Beauty Operations.
I have had a large experience with
men and women who were anxious to
have some visible defect corrected—
ears, nose, scars, deformities of the
eyelids, drooping cheeks, double chins,
too large or too small breasts, fat on
the abdomen, masses of fat about the
feet and ankles. Many of these in-
dividuals mentally exaggerate their
deformities. They are willing to suf-
fer pain and prolonged discomfort,
some one else’s money in exorbitant
fees for treatments. Their mental
twist makes them easy prey to dis-
honest individuals in or out of the
medical profession who will promise
to correct their deformity. It makes
no difference how it is done—whether
by plastic surgery, injections with
paraffin (a very dangerous procedure
no matter how skillfully done,) mas-
sage and bandaging, or elastic rubber
supports.
Another remarkable fact about this
group of deluded people who desire
beauty treatment is that they are sat-
isfied with the results for only a short
time. Then their fixed idea returns.
Either they become dissatisfied with
the correction of the deformity, or
they find other deformities which
they wish corrected. So the too thin
and the too fat, and the chronic dys-
peptic, and the headache group, those
with corns, women with hair on their
faces and men with none on their
scalps march from one beauty parlor
to another, swayed by every bit of ad-
vice the wind blows past them.
If plastic surgery is to be perform-
ed, or if you wish advice as to wheth-
er a deformity can be corrected, or as
to whether you are over or under
weight, you should go to those mem-
bers of the medical profession who are
specially educated to give advice and
to treat such things.
The first part of the good advice
from surgeons who have had a large
experience in the removal of fat is,
consult the best physician in your
neighborhood, because, in the great
majority of instances, before any
masses of fat are removed there
should be a thorough physical exam-
ination and a systematic general
weight reduction by diet, exercise and
massage under medical direction and
supervision.
There are various reasons for this.
Not all fat people are good subjects
for general anesthesia, and the wound
made by an operation is very likely
to give trouble. Many fat people have
diabetes, a fact which would be over-
looked unless there were an examin-
ation of the blood to find out the ex-
act amount of sugar. Again, fat peo-
ple often have bad heart muscles.
Unless an operation of any kind is ab-
solutely necessary, it is always best
to postpone it for a course in weight
reduction and heart tonics.—From De-
lineator for October.
Nearly 6500 Buses are Now Being
Operated in U. S. by 334 Trac-
tion Cos.
Electric railway companies are
rapidly taking over the bus lines of
the country. Three hundred and
thirty-four electric railway companies
are now operating approximately 6-
500 buses. Five years ago only seven-
ty-five buses were being operated by
street railways in the United States.
Careful study of bus operation re-
veals some interesting figures. The
outstanding facts are that it costs
more per passenger to carry bus
riders, the depreciation is greater on
buses than on street cars, and that
buses cannot be operated on street car
fares.
Electric railway men agree gen-
erally that the place for the bus is
supplemental to the street car. They
are doing fine work in de luxe serv-
ice and in outlying sections of cities
that are not densely enough popu-
lated to warrant building a car line.
To Save Chickens from Crows.
In his monthly news service for
August, Edward Howe Forbush, di-
rector of ornithology for Massachu-
setts, reports a simple device for pro-
tecting chickens from crows, which is
said by an observer to have been tried
with excellent results. A few bricks
were soaked in kerosene and then
placed on the chicken range, about
four or five bricks to the acre. The
crows seemed to avoid these bricks.
If there is anything in this it might
be tried for a cornfield.—Our Dumb
Animals.
remem peste
Pennsylvania Automobile Increase
Said to be 110,000.
The Pennsylvania highways today
are traversed by 110,000 more State
licensed passenger automobiles than
they were at this time last year, ac-
cording to a report made public by
the State Department of Highways.
The department has issued 1,222,349
licenses so far in 1926, compared with
1,112,650 licenses issued for the first
eight months of 1925.
The number of trucks in use also is
running far ahead of last year.
. —Any person found guilty of throw-
ing glass or other sharp substances
upon highways in New Jersey is sub-
ject to a fine and $100 to $500.
Solution to Cross-word puzzle No. 9.
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SAVED
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gl $10.00.
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They are at Faubles
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You will Know Why we
Boast. About, these Suits
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See the Assortment
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AND NOTE THE VALUES
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