Bellefonte, Pa., November 9, 1928. mas sss Your Health, The First Concern. The cause of such a pain is likely to be found at some distance from the back; in the tonsils, or tooth sockets, for instance. A person who really has kidney trouble, may not be conscious of any indication of it. If he waits for signs which he will recognize as danger signals it may be too late for him to avoid a wreck. I do not say that there are no sig- nals which he might, and perhaps should, recognize. I think he must ‘have had warnings. But most people do not pay much attention to these ‘warnings, for the simple reason that ‘they do not expect to be really well. They think that a certain impairment of health is the natural condition, es- pecially in middle life. People seem to be satisfied if they can say that they are in “pretty good health.” But we ought to get rid of this idea “pretty good health” is about all we can expect to have. You say, “of course, at my age I must ex- pect to have more or less trouble.” It is common even for a physician to say to a patient, “Well, for a person of your age, you are in as good shape as you could expect to be.” This is all wrong. You ought not passively to accept this dictum that at thirty-five you will show such and such physical deterioration; that at forty you must “expect” certain ail- ments, at fifty certain other axictions, and at seventy-five be on the brirk of the grave—if not already in it. _ There is no natural law necessitat- ing this program, or anything like it. Our bodies become diseased and grow old simply because of injuries to the cells of which they are composed. We pay little attention to these injuries unless they produce a condition that causes pain. Pain is almost the only danger sig- nal we recognize. Yet there may be serious internal disturbances which do not cause pain; at least, not enough pain to rouse us from our easy-going assumption that we are “as well as we can expect to be.” There are almost countless persons who know, or suspect, that they have diseased tonsils, or chronic infections of the nose and throat, or decayed teeth and infected tooth sockets. Yet they do not seem to know that these conditions are danger signals. It is not until they find that they are “get- ting rheumatic,” or that they have chronic headache, or that their heart is “going back on them,” that they stop, look, and listen. Perhaps you develop arthritis when you are forty. You regard the first acute signs of it as a danger signal, and are properly worried. But the chances are that the caution signal has been there for years, perhaps ever since you were a child. You may say that you did not know it was there. But you would have known, if you had received a thorough phys- ical examination of the whole body. There is really very little mystery about the cause of old age and death. We are lacking in knowledge of cer- tain factors which probably are at work, but it is easy to group the types of influences which are respon- sible for what we call “growing old.” Heredity plays its part, of course. Certain families show a lack of re- sistance to disease, an incapacity for life struggle. But if it is known that there is a susceptibility to a certain disease, measures can be taken to avoid it. . In this connection there is a cur- ious trait in many persons: They hate to have a medical man probe deeply into their physical condition for fear he will unearth some disease, or some threat of disease. They seem to think that “whatever you don’t know won't hurt you!” A good many people worry secret- yy over the fear, or the suspicion, that | they have some incipient disease. But | they won’t take steps to find out the | truth, because they say that if the! trouble is there they are better off | not to know it; and if it isn’t there then it won’t hurt them, anyway. This is strange reasoning. If the: trouble really exists, it probably will | yield to treatment. Almost certain- | ly their lives and usefulness can be prolonged. And if it isn’t there, they will be far better off to know it; for, ! although the imagined disease does | not hurt them, the fear and worry | will have bad effects. People need to be told that there are few chronic maladies—even those of a serious character which affect the heart, blood vessels, and kidneys —which cannot be held in check. The | discovery that you have these mala- | dies does not necessarily condemn you to an early death. Investigation has shown that a | large number of persons who were re- | fused by insurance companies, be- cause they were found to have just such physical impairments as I have mentioned, nevertheless lived far be- | yond the “expectation of life” to Wish they were supposed to be limit- | Aside from hereditary insufficien- | cies, infection is probably the great- | est factor in destroying the body. | When we talk of infection, the aver- | age person thinks of such things as small pox, typhoid fever, scarlet fev- | er, diphtheria, tuberculosis, and other epidemic diseases. It is these directly cause a good many deaths, And they indirectly cause other deaths because of conditions | which remain long after the initial attack. But there are other forms of infec- tion which pass unrecognized until a ! vast amount of damage is done. The , reassuring feature of the situation is | { true that | AMERICA FACES EAST. It’s the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. On Broadway and on State street; in Portland, Ore., in Portland, Maine, in Duluth, Minn.,, and in New Orleans the roar of traffic is hushed. In the factories and on the farms, men drop whatever tools of trade are in their hands and—America faces East! For this is Armistice day and all over the United States for the space of two minutes Americans pause in their every day tasks to pay reverent tribute to the dead. America faces East! And the thoughts of most of us, as we stand uncovered amid familiar surroundings, speed across the Atlantic to some hillside in France where the long rows of white crosses mark the last resting place of those whe brought about the mighty event which we cel- ebrate on November 11. It may be at Romagne-sous-Montfaucon, where began that “soul trying struggle of many weeks between the Argonne forest and the Meuse, which lasted until the hour when Germany cried ‘enough.’ ” Or it may be in Flanders field in Belgium or at Brookwood, England, for there, toc, these gleam- ing markers stand guard over the sleep of American soldiers. Armistice day is a day of remem- brance—a day to recall that breath- less moment nine years ago when a welcome message was flashed to the waiting world. The message con- tained the official news story sent out by the Associated Press, which read as follows: “Washington, Monday, Nov. 11, 2:48 a. m.—The armistice between ‘Germany, on one hand, and the allied governments and the United States, on the other, has been signed. “The State department announced at 2:45 o'clock this morning that Germany had signed. “The department’s announcement simply said: “The armistice has been signed.” “The World war will end this morn- ing at 6 o'clock, Washington time, 11 o’clock Paris time. “The armistice was signed by the German representatives at midnight. “This announcement was made by the State department at 2:50 o’clock this morning. “The announcement was made ver- bally by an official of the State de- partment in this form: “ ‘The armistice has been signed. It was signed at 5 o’clock a. m., Paris time (midnight eastern time) and hostilities will cease at 11 o’clock this morning, Paris time, (6 o’clock east- ern time). “The terms of the armistice will not be made public until later.” Armistice day is a day of remem- brance—not of the riotous scenes which took place and the mad frenzy of joy which possessed the whole na- tion on the morning of November 11, 1918, when America’s millions realiz- ed that it was “over over there,” not of the triumphal processions when the khaki-clad million returned home in 1919 and 1920. It is a day for re- membrance of those who did not re- turn, who were destined never to hear the cheers of the multitude nor to know whether or not they had died in vain—America’s war dead. From its first observance Armistice day has taken on its memorial signif- icance rather than that of a day of rejoicing. There have been few more solemn moments in the history of this country than on Armistice day, 1921, when they brought America’s Un- known Soldier back to his native land and buried him in Arlington. Though the thoughts of individual Americans may turn to some one cross in a French cemetery where lies a brother or a son or a husband, when the morn- ing of November 11 dawns, America as a whole faces East and the observ- ance of Armistice day centers around this national shrine, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. For here is the common symbol for us all. And on this day we remember the words of President Harding, uttered on that other armistice day: We do not know the eminence of his birth, but we do know the glory of his ! death. He died for his country, and ‘ greater devotion hath no man than i this. He died unquestioning, uncom- { plaining, with faith in his heart and hope on his lips, that his country should triumph and its civilization survive. As a typical soldier of this representative democracy, he fought ! and died, believing in the indisputable justice of his country’s cause. Sleeping in these hallowed grounds are thousands of Americans who have given their blood for the baptism of freedom and its maintenance, armed exponents of the nation’s conscience. It is better and nobler for their deeds. Burial here is rather more than a sign of the government’s favor; it is a suggestion of a tomb in the heart of the nation, sorrowing for its noble dead. Today’s ceremonies proclaim that the hero unknown is not unhonored. We gather him to the nation’s breast, within the shadow of the Capitol, of the towering shaft that honors Wash- ington, the great father, and the ex- quisite monument of Lincoln, the martyred savior. Here the inspira- tions of yesterday and the conscience of today forever unite to make the Republic worthy of his death for flag and country. : I speak not as a pacifist fearin war, but as one who loves justice an hates war. I speak as one who be- lieves the highest function of govern- ment is to give its citizens the se- curity of peace, the opportunity to achieve, and the pursuit of happiness. As we return this poor clay to its mother soil, garlanded by love and! covered with the decorations that only nations can bestow, I can sense the prayers of our people, of all peo- ples, that this Armistice day shall mark the beginning of a new and last- ing era of peace on earth, good will among men. Or we may remember that splen- did tribute, written by Frank M. O’Brien, which appeared in the New York Herald on November 11, 1921,‘ and which was awarded the Pulitzer prize for the best editorial article of the year. In it he spoke for ali Americans when he wrote of The Un- known Soldier. That ‘which takes place today at a symbol, a mystery and a tribute. It is an entombment only in the phys- ical sense. It is rather the enthrone- ment of Duty and Honor. This man who died for his country is the sym- bol of these qualities; a far more per- fect symbol than any man could be whose name and deeds we know. He represents more, really, than the un- identified dead, for we cannot sepa- rate them spiritually from the war heroes whose names are written on their gravestones. He—this spirit whom we honor—stands for the un- selfishness of all. This, of all monuments to the dead, is lasting and immutable. So long as men revere the finer things of life the tomb of the nameless hero will remain a shrine. Nor, with the shifts of time and mind, can there be a changing of values. No historian shall rise to modify the virtues or the faults of the Soldier. He has an im- munity for which kings might pray. The years may bring erosion to the granite but not to the memory of the Unknown. It is a common weakness of human- ity to ask the question that can never be answered in this life. Probably none to whom the drama of the Un- known Soldier has appealed has not wondered who, in the sunshine of earth, was the protagonist of today’s ceremony. A logger from Penobscot? An orchardist from the Pacific coast? A well-driller from Texas? A ma- chinist from Connecticut? A lad who left his hoe to rust among the Mis- souri corn? A longshoreman from Hell’s Kitchen? Perhaps some youth from the tobacco fields, resting again in his own Virginia? All that the army tells us of him is that he died in battle. All that the heart tells is that some woman loved him. More than that no man shall learn. In this mystery, as in the riddle of the universe, the wise wonder; but they would not know. What were his dreams, his ambi- tions? Likely he shared those com- mon to the millions: a life of peace and honest struggle, with such small success as comes to most who try; and at the end the place on the hill- side among his fathers. Today to do honor at his last resting place come the greatest soldiers of the age; fam- ous statesmen from other continents the President, the high judges and the legislators of his own coun- try, and many men who, like himself, fought for the flag. At his bier will gather the most remarkable group which fate reserved for him is, in- stead of the narrow cell on the vil- lage hillside, one as lasting as that of Rameses and as inspiring as Na- poleon’s. It is a great religious ceremony, this burial today. The exaltation of the nameless bones would not be pos- sible except for Belief. Where were Duty and Honor, the well-springs of Victory, if mankind feared that death drew a black curtain behind which lay nothing but the dark? So all in whom the spark of hope has not died can well believe that we to whom the Soldier is a mystery are not a mystery to him. They can believe that the watchers at Arlington today are pot merely a few thousands of the living but the countless battalion of the de- parted. “Though he were dead, yet shall he live”—there is the promise to which men hold when everything of this earth has slipped away. All the impressive ritual of today would be a mockery if we did not be- lieve that, out in an infinity which astronomers cannot chart or mathe- maticians bound, the Unknown Sol- dier and all the glorious dead whom we honor in his dust are lookin down upon this little spinning ball, conscious of our reverence. And when noon strikes, signal for the moment of silent prayer, few of those who stand with bared head will lack con- Unknown Soldier and those who, like him, died for this Republic. Unknown, but not unknowing! Armistice day this year will have a greater significance than ever be- fore for the reason that among those who will join in its observance are 100,000 or more members of the American Legion, who crossed the Atlantic in September to attend the annual Legion convention in Paris. While they were there they adopted a resolution to have Armistice day made a national legal holiday. For although it is generally observed as a holiday in the United States, it has not yet been proclaimed as a nation- al legal holiday. The following States have made it a legal holiday by Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne- braska, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee Texas, Vermont, Virginia, an the territory of Hawaii. In e other States it is a legal holiday by Governor’s proclamation only. This “Second A. E. F.” is home now and its members are bringing with them the memories of their recent visit to those places where they made history nine and ten years ago. They're bringing, too, memories of their visit to the places where once they saw a hell of gunfire blast all signs of life from the earth, but where now green grass grows as a vivid background for the long rows of white crosses— in the Oise-Aisne, at St. Mihiel, in the Aisne-Marine, at the Somme and at Susesnes. And they remember reading on the crosses the name of some buddy, with whom they lived and laughed through it all until a burst of shrapnel signalled “partner- ly that Armistice day will take on a new meaning to them. What will that meaning be? A day of rejoicing that when others died they were spared. A day for envy of the peaceful sleep of those who hold the bivouac of the dead while they must face each day the trouble- some problems of modern life? Or will it be a day for seeing clearly the .uselessness of war and for a high re- | solve that “this must not be again.” ——The Watchman gives all the that they need not pass unrecognized. the National cemetery in Arlington is | news while it is news. viction that the rites at Arlington are ! viewed by other than mortal eyes. Only in that spirit may we honor the . 1926 Chevrolet Landau Sedan extra good shape Oh, Yes! LUMBER? 71-16-tf W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing Call Bellefonte 432 Belief In Horseshoe As Lucky. Ick almost universally for many cen- ries. Almost everyone at some time has Ancient mythology credited the found a horseshoe. And almost ev- | horseshoe with threefold powers of eryone who found one has either | the saintly halo. It was made of proudly hung it up or tucked it away | iron, a metal of unusual strength, and for safe keeping. its relation to the horse, a favored What then could be more appro- | animal, gave it extraordinary power. priate than to use the horseshoe as a beautiful door knocker to adorn the —A nearby radio supply store tells entrance of your home? Or to use it! us of a woman who came in Saying as a door stop, or book ends, or as an that her room was very stuffy an ash tray for your living room? | that she wished to buy one of those The horseshoe has been accepted radio fans that she had heard so much and recognized as a symbol of good about.—The Outlook. Take no chances on food : Make sure of the package SHREDDED ounces 1 full-size biscuits As Made in Shredded Wheat Factories for 34 Years It isso easy to serve for any meal, and 80 tasty and nourishing—on the table in a jiffy—no kitchen work. that America has seen. And the tomb | 5 <. Reconditioned... USED CARS AT Decker Chevrolet Company Cars cannot be matched elsewhere for running condition and low price. Just the Car for the sportsman and family. Down-payment very low: monthly payments very small. If by cash you get a big discount. Ask for a demonstration to be convinced that you are getting a bargain. Listed below are the Cars that carry an “O.K.” That Count. 1927 Chrysler Sedan all new tires 1926 Chevrolet Sedan fully equipped 1927 Chevrolet Landau Sedan fully equipped 1926 Chevrolet Touring runs like new $159.00 "130.00 145.00 64.00 140.00 60.00 94.00 1925 Ford 2-door Sedan very good condition 1923 Oakland Sport Touring curtains like new 1926 Chevrolet + Ton Panel Body Truck extra good value to the Farmers, Merchants, Huckster and Butcher 1923 Chevrolet Sedan all 31x4.40 Tires 1925 Chevrolet Coach extra good condition 1925 Chrysler Coupe cannot be compared of its type on the market 130.00 44.00 110.00 with another car 160.00 1926 Ford Roadster all Balloon tires, where needed we 64.00 legislative enactment: Alabama, Ari- '¢ zona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, ship dissolved,” it’s more than like- | .have a steel box at the same price 1925 Ford Coupe 5 wire wheels and balloon tires, extra good condition at a very low cost - - Cleveland Touring not a blemish all good tires not a thing to be condemned on this car 1927 Ford Ton Truck, Ruxsteel Axle 6 tires like new, truck is in perfect running condition “try it” 1926 Chevrolet Ton Truck reconditioned thoroughly, re- painted, “Quality at low cost” - 1925 Ford Ton Truck Steel Cab and Body very low cost absolutely ready for service - ow 40.00 1924 2-Chevrolet Tourings, each 50.00 We have other Cars not listed from $8 to $50 72.00 -70.00 100.00 120.00 | t i DECKER CHEVROLET CO. | Spring and High Sts. Phone Bell 405 Bellefonte, Pa i YOUR THANKSGIVING BIRD We have the Thanksgiving turkey you want. It is a bird! It has youth and the weight to meet your requirements. Drop in our butcher shop right away and select yours from among the many we have for other customers who depend upon us for their choice turkeys, fowl and meat cuts. Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. P.L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts. Office, room 18 Cridez’s Exchange. 61-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at= Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business em- trusteed to hiis care. Offices—No. 5, East High street. 57-44 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, Com= sultation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 58-6 PHYSICIANS R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte Crider’'s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. 8S. GLENN, M. D.,, Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his Tesigeten, 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. 71-22-t¢ VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday, Bellefonte, in the Garbrick building op- posite the Court House, Wednesday after- noons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays © a. m. to 430 p. m. Bell Phone -40 FEEDS! We have taken on the line of Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds Together with a full line of our own feeds. Purina Cow Chow, 34% $3.10 per H. ‘ Purina Cow Chow, 24% 2.80 per H. Wayne Dairy feed, 32% 3.10 per H. Wayne Dairy feed, 24% 2.80 per H. Wayne Egg Mash - 3.25 per H. Wayne Calf Meal - 4.25 per H. Wagner's Pig Pig Meal 2.80 per H. Wagner’s Egg Mash - 2.80 per H. Wagner's Dairy Feed 22% 2.50 per H. ‘We can make you up a mixture of Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten Pood 2nd Bran. Protein 30%, $2.80 per H. Oil Meal, 34% - - - $3.10 per H. Cotton Seed, 43% - - 3.10 per H. Gluten Feed, 23% - 2.50 per H. Fine ground Alfalfa - 2.25 per H. Orbico 30-30, Mineral, Fish, and Meat - - 4.25 per H. Orbico Mineral - - 2.75 per H. Meat Meal, 45% - - 4.25perH. Tankage, 60% - - 4.25 per H. We have a full line of scratch feeds, mixed and pure corn chop, bran, mid- dlings of the best quality on hands at the right prices. Let us sell you your Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten and Bran to go with your own feed. We will mix ' same for five cents per H. We will deliver all feeds for $2.00 per ton extra. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry | | | i TRY “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR C.Y. Wagner & Co. ne | 86-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Sor Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces ROIS SS SPSS PSE 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-t£. State College -.