Tiemoreai aco, Bellefonte, Pa., August 31, 1928. a Your Health, The First Concern. “There are many people who have developed a hot-weather complex. Their minds are absolutely set to a discomforting existence so long as summer remains. They fret, they worry and they complain. They fre- quently run to the thermometer, and noticing a rise, promptly become hot- ter and more miserable. “While a hot, sticky atmosphere certainly is not as comfortable as a sharp, cool one, there is very little advantage in complaining about it. Why not make the best rather than the worst of it. Why not try to keep cool instead of deliberately getting hotter? “As a matter of fact, habits have much to do with keeping cool in sum- mer time. A bit of applied care, and a great deal less complaining will re- move much of the actual or imagined discomfort of the super-heated sea- son. “For example, there is the question of food. The body actually requires less nourishment in summer than during any other season of the year. The heat-producing foods should therefore be decidedly curtailed; these include starchy foods, sweets and meats. “It is positively surprising what a difference will be noted if the sum- mer diet is in the main reduced to wvegtables and fruit. This will in no case create a hardship. Moreover, a strict adherence to this rule will still permit the use of the heavier foods on the cool days which in Pennsylvania are mingled with the more torrid ones. “So here are the rules for hot weather living: — “1. Eat sparingly of meats, starchy foods and sweets—they are heat pro- ducers. “2, Exercise. (a long walk pref- erably) after sun-down. “3,” Avoid excessive exercise in the hot sun, particularly if over forty years of age. “4, Keep the alimentary tract open. “5, A daily bath. “6. And finally, but by no means the least important, banish the hot weather complex. “While following the above rules will not reduce the temperature out- side of you, it will reduce your hot attitude toward heat. Remember, it always pays, under all circumstances, to keep cool!” White bread, polished rice, white sugar, and other highly refined pro- ducts, are not poisonous. It is true that they have been largely deminera- lized and devitaminized, but they are still good fuel foods, and will not poi- son in the slightest degree, unless they are taken in such excess that not enough other foods which would sup- ply their deficiencies, could be taken. However, if liberal amounts of fruits and vegetables and the proper amounts of milk, meat and eggs are taken, there is no reason why those who like white bread and polished rice should not take them, if they want them. Another count against the excess consumption of white bread, polished rice and other purified products, is that they leave an acid ash. But for that matter, so do all grains, whole or refined. The diet should have a preponderance of the alkali-ash foods —fruits, nuts, milk and vegetables. It is better for children to have the whole grain breads and cereals, for they need so much energy or fuel food that it is wise to have this prin- ciple of their diet also contain the vitamines and mineral elements which they also need in great amounts. Many people who suffer from or- dinary constipation should also have the whole grain breads and cereals. Pernicious anemia, dread disease which destroys the vitally necessary red corpuscles of the blood ‘and leads to eventual death of those afflicted with it, has been brought finally under control. Hailed as a discovery of great im- portance, the specific substance which - halts destruction of red blood cor- puscles has been traced to two inter- nal animal organs—the liver and kidney. Reporting on the results of their experiments in feeding liver and kid- ney to scores of persons suffering with pernicious anemia, a group of physicians from eastern cities de- scribed to the 10,000 delegates and visitors in attendance at the conven- tion dramatic experiences in the use of the new treatment. Included among the physicians who are credit- ed with developing the new treatment were Dr. George H. Whipple, of Ro- chester, N.Y.; Dr.George R.Minot, of Boston; Dr. James H. Means, of Boston; Dr. Randolph West,of New York City; Dr. E. H. Heath, of Balti- more, and Dr. Thomag Ordway, of Al- bany, N. Y. The physicians reported that al- though the red blood corpuscles count of ‘patients had fallen to 1,000,- 000 per cubic millimeter or less, as compared with a normal count of 5,000,000, feeding of. liver as a promi- nent part of the daily diet quickly raised the red blood corpuscles count toward the normal level. The section on Pharmacclogy and therapeutics, before which the re- ports of liver treatment were read, was cautioned, however, that the treatment must be maintained, or the patient will suffer a relapse after re- covery has apparently been achieved. ——Subscribe for the Watchman. Decree of Authority Subject to Discount The late Leonard W. Wood was commiserated with by a reporter, one day in Washington, on the apparent neglect meted ous to him during the World war and on the harsh judgment that had been passed upon his admin- istration of the Philippines. General Wood changed the subject, but afterward, as the reporter was about to go, he told a story. “When we are judged,” he said, “we must consider our judges, We must judge our judges, so to speak. “Joe Childs, perhaps, was the great- est jockey in the world. He won al- most every big race; some of them he had won three or four times over: the king’s jockey, you know. “Well, during the war Joe enlisted in a cavalry regiment, and they sent | him to a riding school at the Curragh in Ireland to be trained. “When he mounted his horse at the Curragh school the riding master said to him: “‘Have you ever ridden before? “ ‘Yes, once or twice,’ said Joe. “Yes, said the riding master, with a disgusted laugh, ‘on a donkey at the zoo, I guess. Why, you've got the worst seat on a horse I ever saw in my life!” Electric Furnace One of Scientific Freaks When men can thrust their bare hands into an electric furnace that melts metal with ease, it would seem that there is such a thing as cold heat. White miee, too, will run about in this furnace without suffering any ill- effects, while an interior of a wireless valve can be heated to incandescence without heating the glass bulb itself. The secret is that the furnace heats only electrical conductors, being @ high-frequency inductance furnace. It is in the manufacture of wireless valves that one of the most interest- ing uses of this furnace is found. Just before the valve is sealed from the vacuum pump it is placed for a mo- ment within a high-frequency coil. The metal parts immediately become red hot and the bubbles of gas and vapor are boiled out. The valve is then sealed from the pump with the knowledge that the later heating of the valve by the filament will not cause further release of bubbles. Like Dynamite There is nothing that a man will not do for the woman he truly loves! There is a type of woman who knows this and who, after having won the devoted love of a man, proceeds to use that love as a mean of gaining her purely selfish ends. Many a woman of this type is hope- lessly extravagant. She knows that her husband will make any sacrifice to gratify even her slightest whim. But she often does not know that the very love which makes him spoil her will make him violently condemn her if she indulges in dangerous indiscretions. Love is somewhat like dynamite. It properly handled, it can serve the most useful of purposes. If treated carelessly, it can cause havoc and even death.—True Story Magazine. University Defined American Universities and Colleges says that in the United States a uni- versity is an institution of higher learning. comprising a college or col- leges of arts, literature and science— historically the first part of the Amer- ican university to come into exist- ence—and professional colleges or schools of law, medicine, theology, ete., and especially a graduate school of arts, literature and science. In ad- dition to schools and colleges de- voted to instruction and research, the university includes divisions of lab- oratories, libraries and museums, and sometimes & university press and research institutes. Not every institu- tion which calls itself a university measures up to this definition. Food Regquisites According to Prof. V. H. Mottram, an adult woman needs but 2,500 calo- ries a day. An aduit man engaged in sedentary occupation requires 3,000 calories daily. A man doing hard work should have 5,000 calories. The physiological reason given is that the feminine organization utilizes food more economically than man. A child’s food should not be proportioned ac: cording to his age, as he requires more than half the food of an adult. Beys and girls of fourteen are to be considered as adults in food ultiliza- tion, Care of Ferns Give your fern water only when you see the surface of the soil is dry. Then submerge pot in water for ten minutes. This will mean that every particle of soil in the pot is saturated. Whenever you water the roots spray the tops. Keep plant in a room where there is plenty of fresh air. Florists ventilate their fern houses twice each day. Set the fern outdoors whenever there is a warm rain, As soon as pos- sible set the plant on the shady side of your porch. Easily Pleased Rastus had gotten into the clutches of the law and was talking things over with his lawyer. “1 think,” said the attorney, “1 can set the jury to exonerate.” “Boss,” said Rastus, “Ah don't crave to be exonerated. Ah just wants te de let loose.” | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. | This learned I from the shadow of a tree | That to and fro did sway upon a wall; ' Qur shadow selves—our influence may fall Where we can never be. —Anna E. Hamilton. | —It would have been a pity if, at a ‘time when circular broadcloth skirts . were in vogue, the short fur jacket had not been revived to go with them. Happily, it has been, and Redfern , shows several examples in beaver and | golden seal which are most original iand attractive. For these, he has ‘adopted the quaint, semi-fitted, sin- | gle-breasted jacket, rounding up at ‘the front and, oddly enough, belted with suede leather. In beaver, with a swaying circular skirt of castor broadcloth to match, this makes a handsome outfit. | Coats have not fallen into definite ‘ categories as yet, though Jane Regny {repeats many times her straight "sports coat of basket weave or tweed or wool velour, made with separate belts, strap trimming, collar and | quits of a flat fur and lining of fur. | In accordance with her happy predi- {lection for double-service, reversible coats, these are made reversible so | that any one may wear either a sports coat of wool or fur. | —What a French dressmaker’s | prophesy will prove the greatest boon for making the plain woman smart {and attractive has just been evolved | by those astute psychologists, Merrs. Jean Patou, Lucien Le Leong, Paul Poiret and Molyneux. This is a decorative back for after- rnoon and evening frocks. Cascading | flowers, stunning jeweled trimming in ! smi-precious stones, infinite flounces, | panels and pleats and bows now trans- form the erstwhile neglected back in- {to a thing of beauty. Fashions for Autumn and Winter decree extreme simplicity, but all the ingenuity of the dress architects is employed in restoring the balance of smartness by a study of the back and its possibilities. Sports apparel fol- low the trend by having straps and geometrical designs in the back of sweaters. skirts, and M. Patou astonished his first night audience by an afternoon gown with a deep and narrow V-shap- ed split, also in the back. As backs grow in importance, the Rue de la Paix believes the effectiveness of fa- cial good looks will diminish. Stud- ied simplicity will characterize the smart woman, but she will produce the greatest effect when she turns around. Enormous bows have been added to the back of some formal frocks, and others are adorned with large enamelled or diamonded buckles. An- other treatment of the back consists in trimming it with tassels in red and blue beads in both diamonds and enamel. Beaded shoulder straps that i continue down the back of the dress in strings of colored beads also are seen. —Even in hats has the new ten- dency made itself apparent. Whether it’s the ubiquitous beret or poke-bon- net felt, stitching and trimming con- tinue to be seen either at the back or the side. A new and fashionable col- or, tilleul or linden yellowish green, just introduced, has been chosen by Reboux for several of her chic berets. These continue the choice of sev- eral smart American women. They are equally popular in velvet, chenille felt or satin, and in a variety of col- ors such as black-and-white, brown and beige and linden. The -cloche shape, so popular several seasons ago, is making efforts to return to fashion. The new cloche crown is higher, an the brim is yet sufficiently large to be undulating. The poke-bonnet, in its convention- al or modified form, still is being sponsored by Agnes. She has made several models in black felt, with tiny white grosgrain ribbon, with a dainty rosette of the same material in the front or at the side. —1It is easier to turn ugly elbows into pretty ones than to change any other part of the body. In five min- utes you can transform your elbows; and that very nearly means trans- forming your arms from ugly into pretty arms. Scrub them first with a hand brush, hot water and a good deal of soap. Then dry and rub them with cream. It should really be flesh-building cream, which the skin takes up, rath- er than cleansing or ordinary cream. But even this will do, for the skin is dry from the scrubbing and needs lubricating. The cream must be rubbed in thor- oughly and the surplus wiped off with soft tissue or an old cloth or a piece of absorbent cotton. This is if you are not going out and not wearing sleeves that cover the elbows, for instance, if this is a bedtime treatment. If you are going out, wash the cream off the elbows. You can remove almost all of it by an ordinary washing, leaving in the skin just enough to make it smooth looking. Or better yet, reverse the process, and rub cream into the elbows first, hot water and soap, rinse and dry them. This leaves them soft, clean and a fresh pink, and with most of the lines and wrinkles gone. But for real smoothness, follow this by rub- bing with vanishing cream or some good almond-oil emulsion such as is used for the hands, and by thick powdering. A vanishing cream is best, for it gets well into the pores, is usually mildly astringent, and won’t work out on the surface of the skin ag easily as a hand emulsion. Daily care means scrubbing, and rubbing with cream at bedtime to feed thin or dry or dirty-looking elbows. . —If you do not possess an old me- dium-sized powder puff, one of the thick kind, buy one for 10 cents. You will never be hunting bits of cloth again to clean your white shoes. Af- ter you dampen it, you saturate one side for one shoe and the other side for the other, and you can clean sev- eral pairs before you find another rag which is torn before the shoe is half cleaned. I've used mine two summers now, and it looks good for another Pleats are gathered at the back in j then wash them or scrub them with |? Oh, Yes! LUMBER? W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Call Bellefonte 432 T1-16-t¢ Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing year Whatever Jos Jour on it ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW sticks, and when dried will clean your shoes several times. Very economical. IRA D. GARMAN SLINy Bel POD RING.-cAltorRey oi s—— — : ELER 1 . Office, ro 101 South Eleventh St., Hachanre Souris, , Offit, 100m 13 Oriduy PHILADELPHIA. Fine Job Printing Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum Exclusive Emblem Jewelry 72-48-tf A SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE The=e is no style of work, from the cheapesC “Padger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, ana al! Prices consistent with the class of work Call on or communicate with this office Free Sik HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wo- men, guaranteed to wear months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A new FREE If they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP. KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate tention given all legal business em- trusteed to hiis care. Offices—No. 5, East High street. 57-44 J M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All pro- fessional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law, Con= sultation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 58-8 PHYSICIANS R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State Colle, Crider’'s Ex. 66-11 Holmes BIOE, W* GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his Tesiaunes D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced and leases matched. Casebeer Bldg., High St., Bellefonte, Pa. T1-22-t¢ VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State College, ever, day except Saturday, Bellefonte, in the Garbrick building op- posite the Court House, Wednesday after- noons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 430 p. m. Bell Phone 68-40 WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF WAYNE FEEDS IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES Wayne’s Egg Mash - $3.25 per H. Wayne’s Calf Meal - 4.25 per H. Wayne’s 32% Dairy Feed 3.10 per H. Wayne’s 24% Dairy Feed 2.80 per H. Wagner's 30% Dairy Feed 2.70 per H. Wagner's 22% Dairy Feed 2.50 per H. Wagner’s Pig Meal - 2.90 per II. Cotton Seed Meal, 43%, 3.50 per H. Oil Meal, 34% - - - 3.00 per H. Gluten feed, 23% - - 2.50 per H. Alfalfa - - -. . 2.25 per H. Tankage, 60% - - 4.25 per H. Meat Scrap, 45% - - 4.25 per H. Wagner's Egg Mash, Wagner's Scratch Feed, Cracked Corn, Chop, Bran, Middlings on Hand at All Times, at the Right Price. With the large crops of corn and oats let us grind your feed and make up your mixtures with cotton seed meal, oil meal, gluten and bran. We will do this at the small additional cost of 5 cents per hundred. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry TRY “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR 0. Y. Wageer & Co. In 68-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. TENDER, JUICY CHOPS The quality of chops you get from our butcher shop are the best the market affords. You will find them genuinely good and dependable not now and then, but every time. If it is not convenient to come and make your own selections of meat, simply phone what you want and we will select and deliver your order with the greatest care. Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. y A Restful Night ERIE Add enjoyment to your trip East or West, giving you a delightful break in your journey. C&B LINE STEAMERS Each Way Every Night Between Buffalo and Cleveland offer you unlimited facilities, including large, comfort- able staterooms that insure a long night's refreshing sleep. Luxurious cabins, wide decks, excellent dining room service, us at ts. A trip you will Connections at Cleveland for Lake Resorts, Detroit and Points West Daily Service May 1st to November 14th Leaving at 9:00 P. M.; Arriving at 7:30 A. M. Ask your ticket agent or tourist agency for tickets via C & B Line. New Low Fare $4.50 31% "Ri $8.50 AUTOS CARRIED $6.50 AND UP The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Com; ‘Wharves: So. Michigan Ave. Bridge, Buffalo, N. Y. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces CONANT AAA AAA Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished 66-15-tf. Employers This Interests You The Workman’s Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes insurance compul- sory. We specialize in placing such insurance. We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. State College Bellefonte.