Bellefonte, Pa., December 16, 1927. Has a Political Look. To the disinterested reader that story from Harrisburg about the State having lost $1,500,000 during the Pinchot administration through the unbusinesslike methods of the Department of Highways does mot ring true. We hold no particular brief for Gifford Pinchot, but every- body knows that in his four years as Governor he was most scrupulous in seeing that every dollar of the tax- payers’ money was honestly expended and that great results were ac- complished in pulling Pennsylvania out of the mud. Even according to the story itself there was no loss of $1,600,000, because nearly $1,000,000 seems to be involved in slow collec~ tions or in disputes between State officials and local authorities over the amounts to be apportioned in the building of good roads. When it is remembered that during the Pinchot term nearly $200,000,000 was expend- ed upon the highways the alleged losses complained of, which can prob- ably all be explained satisfactorily, seem rather picayunish. We fear that this is merely an opening wedge for the introduction of political methods into the Depart- ment of Highways. It was greatly to the credit of Governors Sproul and Pinchot that they revolutionized high- way work in this State, and that by the expenditure of several hundred millions of dollars they made the roads of Pennsylvania equal to those of any Commonwealth in the Union. This was accomplished by eliminating politics from the Highway depart- ment and by putting trained engineers and experts in charge of the wonder- ful improvements made. Governor Fisher cannot do better than to emu- late the example of his two immediate predecessors. If he permits factional politics to have a part in this depart- ment of his administration he will be laying up trouble for himself and great loss to the taxpayers of the tate. The new styles in ladies’ tan and grey arctics only $1.95—Yeager’s. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market YOUR CHRISTMAS TURKEY This is to call your attention to the fact that we have bought for hun- dreds of Christmas dinners the fin- est turkeys we could locate. We have them—plump and tender—in all weights, both gobblers and hens. We ask that you let us have your order as early as possible so that we can reserve for you the bird that will meet your needs. Telephone 450 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. EY SNS EE TT Ta EES : if . Used Car Bargains ¢ | Of is o It will be well worth your time to stop in i i and look over the line of used cars. Many very i i useful Bargains in Trucks and Passenger Cars. Ic SAISAL Lh SRLS 1. Small Down Payments. 2.—Monthly payments to meet your income. 3. A large per cent. off for cash. 4. Every car in fine running condition. oy SSS fs CA I= 1924 Durant Touring... Benois $ 80.00 oA I 1925 Chevrolet Tourings, two, at éach.....$190.00 =f] Oc 1927 Dodge Sedan (business) ........... $750.00 on Oc 1924 Chevrolet Tourings, two, at each.....$175.00 =] Ic 1923 Studebaker Light Sedan... $275.00 =n Oc 1928 Nash Sedan, four door... $525.00 oi Ie 1927 Chevrolet Truck, 13-ton $450.00 = 1925 Ford Coupe, Ruxteel Axle ......_.. $200.00 = 1926 Chevrolet Coupe, fully equipped... $475.00 =i u = 1926 Oldsmobile Sedan, Sport Model... __. $525.00 1926 Ford, four-door Sedan .........__.___._ $250.00 1923 Nash Touring > . $100.00 1924 Rickenbacker Touring .........___ .--$200.00 1924 Oldsmobile Twin “4-cyl.” weeee--$180.00 1923 Ford Roadster, two, at each... $ 80.00 Other cars in running condition as low as $25.00. Decker Chevrolet Co. BELLEFONTE, PA. Corner of High and Spring streets. Open Day and Night The Spirit of Christmas Is in the air. of Jewelry, Glassware, Clocks, Leatherware are lasting reminders of this most wonderful of all festive occasions. F. P. BLAIR & Son JEWELERS BELLEFONTE, PA. Our assortment of the beau- tiful is more complete than ever. : GIFTS Watches, Phone 405 gine Lamps, Silverware, Tableware, -~ A AN NAINA IAPS PPP PIPPI PPPS 1928 COLORS IN MOTOR TAGS ' Several States other than Pennsyl- vania will have blue numerals on the 1928 motor vehicle license Sete, but the background will be different, ac- cording to a list of color schemes of the various plates announced by the Pennsylvania motor federation. The other States having blue numerals are Montana, Maine and Missouri. Following a long established cus- tom the 1928 Pennsylvania plates will be a reverse of those in use this year and will have blue numerals on a background of gold. The color scheme of the plates of other States and of the provinces in the Dominion of Canada follows: Arkansas, black numerals and let- ters on orange background. Alabama, Federal yellow back- ground, black letters and numerals. Arizona, vermillion red numerals and letters on copper background. Connecticut, passenger—white' nu- merals and letters on blue back- ground; commercial—reverse. Colorado, black numerals and let- ters on salmon background. California, blue background, gold letters and numerals. District of Columbia, black numer- als on chrome yellow ground. Delaware, black numerals and let- ters on white background. Florida, maroon background, deep orange letters and numerals. Georgia, white numerals and let- ters on blue background. Illinois, white numerals and letters on maroon background. Iowa, black numerals and letters on white background. Idaho, green letters and numerals on light brown background. Indiana, white numerals and let- ters on maroon background. Kentucky, white numerals and let- ters on green background. Kansas, white background and dark blue letters and figures. Lousiana, minimum cars up to and including 22 horse power, blue num- erals and letter on white background. Maximum cars over and above 22 horse power, white letters and numer- als on dark blue background. Trucks, red numerals and letters on cream background. Dealer, white numerals and letters on black background. Trailer, black numerals and letters on orange background. Maryland, white numerals and let- ters on light blue background. Massachusetts, white numeralseand letters on green background. Montana, blue numerals and let- ters on bronze background. Michigan, green background, white numerals and letters. Minnesota, passenger—black num- erals and letters on drab background. Trucks and trailers, black numerals and letters on gold background. Deal- ers, white numerals and letters on maroon background. Tax exempt, lemon yellow numerals and letters on granite background. Mississippi, black background, and white letters and numerals. Maine, blue numerals and letters on pure white background. Missouri, blue numerals and letters on orange background. New Jersey, white numerals on Sky-biue ackground.. iol ew York, yellow numerals on black background. North Carolina, red numerals and letters on grey background. New Hampshire, white numerals and letters on green background. New Mexico, gold numerals and letters on New Mexico blue back- ground. | Nebraska, blue background with i white letters and numerals. | Nevada, red background with white letters. North Dakota, passenger — white Jetters and numerals with black back- ‘ground. Trucks, white letters and {numerals with green background. Oklahoma, black numerals and let- ters on yellow background. ! Ohio, dark blue background with { white numerals and letters. Oregon, black numerals and letters on a white background. Rhode Island, white numerals and letters on black background. South Carolina, yellow background and black letters and numerals. South Dakota, white numerals and letters on red background. Texas, white numerals and letters on green background. Tennessee, white numerals and let- ters on black background. Utah, black numerals and letters on Federal yellow background. Virginia, orange numerals and let- ters on black background. Vermont, green numerals and let- ters on gold background. Washington, orange background with black numerals and letters. West Virginia, green background with white letters and numerals. Wyoming, blue background, yellow letters and numerals. Wisconsin, orange background, black letters and numerals. Quebec, white numerals and let- ters on black background. British Columbia, orange numerals and letters on black background. Saskatchewan, white numerals and letters on emerald green background. Victoria, orange numerals and let- ters on black background. New Brunswick, white numerals and letters on maroon background. Ontario, black numerals and letters on yellow background. Manitoba, black numerals and let- ters on green background. Nova Scotia, orange-yellow back- ground, black figures and letters. Prince Edward Island, 1927-28— white letters and numerals on green background. The place to buy where you get full | value for your money.—West Co. 49-1t | Whales Nearly Extinct, State Bureau Warns. Solemn warning is given by the State department of fisheries that if the killing of north Pacific whales continues at the present rate, within a few years the earth’s largest animal will be extinct. | Each year whaling ships, equipped ; with the latest improved weapons and | appliances, search the Arctic for these denizens of the deep. The industry ment - which has likewise been abol- produces big revenue and unless an! international agreement limits or sus- pends for a period of years the hunt- ing of whales, nothing will stop the destruction. This season the catch of wales from the Alaskan coast stations is large and it is reported the mammals are easily taken. However, it is re- ported that every year the whales grow smaller, which, say authorities on the subject, is evidence that con- tinued hunting prevents the full de- velopment of the huge species and only the undersized ones are victims. a — or ———— OLD METHODS OF TORTURE DESCRIBED IN PRISON BOOK Horrid forms of torture once prac- ticed in the West Virginia peniten- tiary are described in “Work and Hope,” a prison publication, in com- paring the present humane methods to the punishment inflicted on pris- oners years ago. The publication stresses on the im- provement in prison management and the reformative methods brought about in the past twenty-five years. How prisoners were allowed out of the penitentiary only with “a ball and chain” is vividly described in the re- cent edition of “Work and Hope,” as compared with the way they are now trusted outside the prison gates alone. “To this little building (peniten- tiary) at one thme,” the magazine states, “all men convicted of felony in the state were sent, and more than a hundred men were therein confined; and when worked outside they were only allowed in stripes, ball and chains and strongly guarded. We now have many men, life-termers includ- ed, working on the outside, coming and going almost at will and it is very seldom that one of them causes any trouble, proving that the more trust placed in a man and the more like a human being he is treated the better he becomes and the further he can be trusted.” Speaking of the punishment in “old days,” the prison magazine says: No doubt it is hard for citizens of West Virginia to realize that men have been beaten to death or other- wise slaughtered, while undergoing brutal punishment in their State pris- on, yet such are the facts. “Since prisons were built, flogging has been a recognized form of pun- ishment for refractory prisoners. An instrument of torture which was once used in this prison, was a big strap about two inches wide, made of pieces of harness leather sewed together. When soaked in water over night, dipped in sand and vigorously applied to the bare flesh, caused most excru- ciating pain.” It is recorded here that women were paddled in this manner, also. The only difference being that the women were dressed in a very thin gown be- fore the paddling was administered. Other forms of punishment were grewsomely depicted such as the “water-cure,” “gagging and freezing.” “Underground dungeons in which men were alternately frozen and suf- focated, were also employed,” the magazine asserts. “Bucking and gag- ging was another dreadful punish- ished. * “This torture was inflicted usual- ly by handcuffing the prisoner, his hands slipped over the front of his knees, his mouth forced open and filled with a large piece of cork or wood and left in this position until life was almost extinet.” No Excuse for Being Bald, Hair Now Sewed Into Scalps. Science has now come forth with a method of putting hair on bald heads, even though they be as bald as billiard balls. The hair is “sown” into the scalp in much the same manner as young tomato plants are transplant- ed to the spring gardens. The first demonstration in this country of this latest scientific achievement was carried out recently when Professor Christian Askhaven of Oslo, Norway, sewed a patch of curly bronze hair into the head of Miss Peggie Tudor, who says she is a descendant of the noble English family of that name which figures so prominently in English history. The hair was sewn into a bald patch about the size of a quarter where the nat- ural hair had been killed by a beauty parlor accident. Professor Askhaven later explained the process of inserting this foreign hair into the scalp. After disinfecting and applying lo- cal anesthetics on the part of the scalp under treatment, he explained, two root ends of hair are fixed into a gold ring that is so small is scarcely can be seen with the naked eye. By means of a hollow needle the ring to which the hair is attached is then pressed into the hair canal down to the hair follicle, the needle is drawn back, and the ring to which the hair is fixed remains behind in the follicle. It does not irritate the skin, for it passes easily down the hair canal to the follicle, and it is only by means of its stringy nature that it holds the hair fast in the hair canal, In this way the hairs take a nat- ural position, they do not get tangled on being washed, it is easy for them to draw moisture and fat from the scalp and they are thereby kept sup- ple and strong. This sewed-in hair will stay in the head forever, the professor says, or at least for 2,000 years. Professor Askhaven said he has worked at his discovery for the past eighteen years, during which time he has covered many European domes with hair where once they were per- feetly bald. “That takes time,” he explained, “because only a small bald patch can be filled at one sewing. For a large head three months are required and perhaps 32,000 separate hairs are used.” Curly hair raises technical diffi- culties, the professor said. In cover- ing a bald spot he always starts along the edge of the natural hairs, so that the spot gradually grows smaller un- til it disappears. Velvet pumps for women—$2.85— at Yeager’s. Saving for 1928 Christmas Join the fortunate band to whom we mailed checks on December 3rd. A little sum every week that you will scarcely miss—a nice check at the end of the year that wiil pay your Holiday bills. Begin now to put money in your Bank Purse for next year. The First. National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. 2 < SLAIN XE NNN TT NSA SSNS Keep Your Valu- ables in Safety 2D) e rent Safe Deposit Boxes at very rea- sonable cost per year. ANNE ANNE BR Coot ooo] THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. E 7 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM B EN AN A Re ES CR RT A NT ERTS Ry DAMN RTIRNG BE SURE OF A MERRY CHRISTMAS BY JOINING ONE OR MORE OF THE FOL- LOWING CLASSES : CLASS 25 Members paying 25 cents a week for fifty weeks will recelve .............. 0.0000. 000 $12.50 CLASS 50 Members paying 50 cents a week for fifty weeks will Teceive ....0......cciiiiiinians $25.00 CLASS 160 Members paying $1.00 a week for fifty weeks Will veeeivVe. ..u.uv.vievitiin.iciiiana.y $50.00 CLASS 200 Members paying $2.00 a week for fifty weeks will receive .......... tants $100.00 CLASS 500 Members paying $5.00 a week for fifty weeks will receive ..... dobar ith bi inns $250.00 with three per cent. interest. added if all payments are made regularly or in advance Bellefonte Tryst. Co. Bellefonte, Pa. c 8 A Fi V% 7 Wi be a PRAIRIE) EA NGAUS (Ibi ,0)# hs a PAY CHRISTMAS CLUB HERE Perm J Tm £ - Sh | fr ~ Pik i @