Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 23, 1928, Image 3

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    BonciYsm
Bellefonte, Pa., November 23, 1928.
Your Health,
The First Concern.
i
i
|
In one large industrial concern,’
where several hundred people were
examined under the system of Life
Extension Institute, the management
said that the whole procedure was
justified by the rescue of one individ- |
ual from a state of mental and phys-
ical depression into which he had |
gradually drifted without there being |
any underlying important physical de- |
fect. This man was discovered to be
healthy. He had absolutely no ex-|
cuse for being otherwise. The re- |
sult was a benefit not only to that.
one man, but to the whole office. |
Overwork, either physical or men-
tal, sometimes causes a breakdown |
in health. But in the vast majority |
of cases where overwork seems to be |
the cause, there is some underlying !
physical condition which is actually |
responsible. A thorough examination |
will reveal this condition, if it exists, !
and the person will not be compelled |
to give up the inestimable blessing of |
work. |
Many of the diseases which cause |
death at thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, and |
even later, are preventable, or at
least can be deferred. Comparatively |
few diseases come like a clap of |
thunder out of a clear sky. The ap-,
proach of the storm is generally her- |
alded in various ways. And in the
case of these physical storms, they
can often be averted by taking ad-!
vance measures. Don’t wait for the |
storm to break. Don’t delay until}
the wreck is just ahead. Have a!
search made now for danger signals, |
or even for small caution signals. |
Don’t deride these signals as being |
of no consequence. Even the more
serious chronic diseases of degenera- |
tion can be held in check and need
not condemn you to an early death if |
you will get yourself carefully ex-
amined at regular intervals, correct
our defects and adjust your living
abits in acordance with your physi-
cal equipment.
HEALTH HINTS.
Lack of vigorous outdoor cxercise,
insufficient intake of water, the eat-
ing of soft cooked foods, a concen-
trated meat diet, lack of cellulose or
waste material in the diet, and ne- |
glect of the bowel function, are the
chief causes of constipation.
The right amount of water taken
at proper times is one of the greatest
preventives of constipation. Excess |
of water should not be drunk by the
feeble or by those suffering from!
heart trouble or dropsy. But water
taken rather freely when the stom- |
ach contains no food, especially be-'
fore breakfast, is essential for good
digestive functioning. |
There is no more reason why a man |
should go to bed with his business:
clothes on. There are people who
immediately start to think out knotty
problems as soon as their heads
strike the pillow. |
As a rule light sleepers should
avoid drinking water or other fluids
several hours before retiring in order |
that mesages from the bladder may |
not prove disturbing. Tea and
coffee should be left alone by restless
sleepers; tobacco is also harmful.
The reading of exciting, morbid
books, or the witnessing of morbid,
sensational plays or moving pictures,
should be avoided. Pleasing, gentle,
hopeful thoughts and a serene men- !
tal atmosphere should be cultivated,
anger and irritation avoided. Fresh
air in the bedroom is most important.
Deep breathing is also helpful. :
There are few people in this civil-
ized age who are at all times free
from symptoms of neurasthenia. To
prevent the occurrense and especially
the recurrence of such states is just
as much a part of preventive medi- |
To the
first half-million
new
Ford owners
TO THE half-million men
and women who have re-
ceived new Fords in the last
eleven months, there is no
need to dwell on the per-
formance of the car.
You have tested its speed
on the open road. In traffic
you have noted its quick ac-
celeration and the safety of
its brakes. You know how
it climbs the hills. On long
trips and over rough
stretches you have come to
appreciate its easy - riding
comfort. Continuous driv-
ing has proved its economy
of operation and low cost
of up-keep.
This is an invitation to
you to take full advantage
of the service facilities of
the Ford dealer organiza-
tion so that you may con-
tinue to enjoy many thou-
sands of miles of carefree,
economical motoring.
The point is this. You
have a great car in the new
Ford. It is simple in design,
constructed of the best ma-
terials and machined with
unusual! accuracy. It is so
well-made, in fact,
that it requires sur-
prisingly little
RADIO BEACONS WILL
MAKE FLYING SAFER.
Confidence that the radio beacon
will inaugurate an epoch of safe and
regular flying by aircraft is express-
ed in a research narrative prepared
for the Engineering Foundation by
the United States Bureau of Stand-
ards.
Aeronautical engineers at the gov-
ernment’s scientific laboratory .ex-
pressed the belief that at last science
has solved the problem of fog flying
and landing that within a few years
sufficient aids to navigation will have
been established on the recognized
commercial airways to end the prob-
ability of flyers getting lost.
“With the beacon stations in ope-
ration throughout the country, air-
planes in flight will always have bea-
con signals available to keep them
constantly informed as to their loca-
tions,” said the narrative. “Indeed,
when a pilot leaves his regular course,
either accidentally or to avoid a
stormy area, the radio shows him the
way back.”
The bureau pointed out that it is
ForD MOTOR
cine as the destruction of the house- impossible to exaggerate the solitude
fly and the prevention of typhoid. In and helplessness of an airplane flying
this preventive work, both sides of the in the dense fog. Deprived of all land-
individual must be given thorough marks, under incessant strain to
study. Bad mental habits should be main equilibrium and direction, the
corrected, and above all, a thorough aviator must abandon dependence up-
search made for bodily defects or in- | on his senses and navigate by his in-
fections. | struments. It is contrary to human
For all practical purposes, the instinct to throw overboard the tes-
world is as we view it with the mind. | timony of the senses and stake life on
The mind is the place we really live | an instrument, the bureau remarking
in. We should do our best to set it | “not every pilot can do it.”
in order, and if order will not come, | “One instrument tells the pilot his
seek for the physical or psychic in- | elevation, another whether he is turn-
fluence that is causing the disorder. ing or flying straight away, and his
The human body is doing some compass indicates his general direc-
work all the time, even in sleep, in | tion,” the bureau said. “They do not
sickness, and when resting. Heart, | tell him if he is drifting sidewise, due
muscles and lungs are always “on the | to a cross wind, nor at what speed he
job.” An engine has to be built and
repaired, to be stoked, to be oiled and
regulated. It is the same with the
human body.
Let meal time be a time of good
cheer. It is no time to discuss trou-
bles. Do not worry about your food,
or anything else. Bring no grouch to
the dinner table.
Grey hair is caused by loss of pig-
ment and the presence of air bubbles
that occupy spaces in the hair. There
is no cure; the best preventive is gen-
eral care of the scalp as above out-
lined and general personal hygiene.
Heredity is a factor in both baldness
and gray hair.
If you have a skin eruption “and
simple cleaniness and hygiene do not |
cure it, get yourself examined, but
do not experiment with remedies that
may do more harm than good. Each
case must be judged on its merits
and there is no magic remedy, in-
ternal or external, that will cure all
skin affections.
For average people one or two
lasses of water at meals is a health-
practice. If only one glass is tak-
en at meals, one should be taken be-
tween meals, so that about six glasses
are taken daily as an average.—From
Life Extension Institute, Inc.
is traveling because the wind may
slow him down or speed him up.
What ‘instrument flying’ has lacked
is supplied by the radio beacon.
“The beacon system will render its
greatest service on fixed commercial
airways. With the radio beacon made
practical and dependable, air route
operations enter into a new era of
regularity and safety. Most trips
formerly omitted, or undertaken only
at a great risk, can be confidently
made.
“Occasional fog over the landing
field itself is the chief remaining ob-
stacle.”
The commerce department expects
to install the new radio aids during
the next two years. Required equip-
ment on airplanes is reduced to a
short pole antenna and a receiving
set weighing a few pounds. All of
the expensive and powerful apparat-
us necess is on the ground, main-
tained by the government.
The radio beacons operate in the
frequency band 285 to 315 kilocycles,
and the telephone stations in the band
816 to 350 kilocycles. These were
allocated to air service by the 1927
| International Radio Convention. For
the present the beacons are adjusted
| to the frequency of 290 kilocycles, and
attention. Yet that doesn’t
mean it should be neglected.
Like every other fine piece
of machinery, it will serve
you better and longer if
given proper care.
One of the best ways to
do this is to take your car
to the Ford dealer every 500
miles for oiling and greas-
ing and a checking-up of
the little things that have
such a great bearing on long
life and continuously good
performance.
Such an inspection may
mean a great deal to your
car. To you it means thou-
sands npon thousands of
miles of motoring without
a care—without ever lifting
the hood.
Ford dealers everywhere
have been specially trained
and equipped to service the
new Ford. You will find
them prompt and reliable
in their work, fair in their
charges, and sincerely eager
to help you get the greatest
possible use from your car
for the longest period at a
minimum of trouble and
expense. That is the
true meaning of
Ford Service.
COMPANY
Sis telephone stations to 333 kilocy-
cles.
“The directive radio beacon is a
special kind of radio station, usually
located at an airport, just off the
landing field,” the bureau explained.
“Instead of having a single antenna
like an ordinary radio station, it has’
two loop antennas at an angle with
each other. :
“Bach emits a set of waves which
is directive, i. e., it is stronger in one
direction than in others. When an
airplane flies along the two beams of
radio waves, it receives signals of
equal intensity from the two. If
the plane gets off this line, it receives
stronger signals from one than the
other. ;
“The indicator on the airplane
shows when the signals are received
with equal intensity, by means of two
vibrating reeds tuned to different
modulating frequencies used on the
When the beacon sig-
nal is received the two reeds vibrate. |
two antennas.
The tips of these reeds are white in
a dark background so that when vi-
brating they appear as vertical white
lines.
“The yeed on the pilot's right is |
tuned to a frequency of 65 cycles, and
the one on the left to 85 cycles.
is only necessary for the pilot to
watch the lines. If they are equal
in length, he is on his correct course.
If the one on his right becomes long- |
er, the airplane has drifted to the
right and if it drifts off the course
to the left the left line becomes long-
er.”
It was stated that successful flights
have been made up to 135 miles in
fog and over hazardous mountain ter-
rain. This distance is more than
enough to demonstrate the success of
the system, as it is contemplated that
beacon stations will be placed not ov-
er 200 miles apart with a straight
airway betwen them. They will be
supplemented by small marker bea-
cons at intervals. A characteristic
signal from a marker will show on
the visual indicator aboard the air-
plane what point is being flown over.
At —— fe ———
60-Year Old Inventor Enters State
College.
A sixty-year old lawyer and inven-
tor, who has already earned six dif-
ferent college degres, has just en-
rolled in the School of Engineering
at the Pennsylvania State College.
To study two-cycle engines with the |
expectation of perfecting one of his
own inventions, Charles H. Shamel, |
Washington, D. C., is taking graduate
courses in internal combustion en-
gines.
Mr. Shamel has been engaged in
the practice of patent law for many
years and has at the same time de-
veloped several of his own inventions.
At present he is trying to build a
two-cycle engine which will operate
at the same speed as a four-cycle en-
gine yet cost and weigh half as much.
rrr me fp pms].
—If it is news you are looking for
take the Watchman.
71-18-tf
LUVIBER?
Oh, Yes!
W.R. Shope Lumber Co.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing
Call Bellefonte 432
a.
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
WE THANK THEE
: For flowers that bloom about our feet,
| For tender grass, so fresh, so sweet,
| For song of bird and hum of bee,
: For all things fair we hear or see,
| Father in heaven, ws thank Thee!
i
{ For blue of stream and blue of sky,
i I'or pleasant shade of branches high,
| For fragrant and cooling breeze,
! For beauty of the blooming treee,
| Father in heaven, we thank Thee!
| —Ralph Waldo Emerson.
! No, sir! The tuxedo suit is correct
‘for an informal evening dance, but
‘ should never be worn before six-thir-
ty in the evening, at the very earli-
‘est. Seven o’clock is better.
i The two sided hat, one with a dual
. appearance, is the newest creation in
the smart French shops.
It looks entirely different when one
looks at it from different angles.
' Sometimes one thinks it must be a
toque and again a turban. Then
| when one takes another good look, he
. spies a long drooping brim on the op-
posite side.
While the general rule is down at
| the right and up at the left, one of the
‘best modistes is showing winter hats
! which arch up over the right eyebrow
. and slant down to the left side. They
i will be a real boon to women whose
profile is better from one point of
view than the other.
A new Reboux model is of very
supple, thin felt, with a crown shirred
at the center-front and caught up ina
curve which leaves the left eyebrow
and the right ear quite uncovered.
i The cloche brim flares out almost at
. right angles to the head on the left
side and makes a line like the peak of a
| jockey in front, diminishing to al-
most nothing in the back.
Cloche which arch well up over the
forehead and descend well to the back
are another winter feature shape.
. One seen recently at the opening of
| the races was particularly smart with
‘long sides which almost cover the
cheeks and has pointed outline on the
forehead.
Heavy felt printed on the outside
with chipmunk skin design has the
‘brim sharply turned up in front. A
' cloche in very rich taupe has a deep
‘crown which is to be pulled down on
: the head like the wrinklings of along
' glove about the arm.
It is no longer possible to lay down
| definite laws for each type of woman
| to follow. The day has passed when
| dressmakers could give advice by
! mail, merely through the application
| of a few time worn principles. Today
| the old order has completely passed,
| never to return. Old color harmonies,
| old silhouette laws mean nothing to
‘the modern woman who rightfully
considers herself not one of a group
but rather a separate and individual
type. With certain reservations it
may be said that the new motto of |
the fashionable woman is chacun a |
son gout—each to her taste.
chocolate much more tasty.
also are those who always
' pinch to both tea and coffee.
Always use a knife to mix pastry
dough, instead of a spoon. It makes
a lighter pie crust.
Lamp shades for the feminine bou-
doir—either for the bedside light or
the floor lamp are chiefly of peach
i color or a very delicate pink. This
latter shade is returning to favor
combined with silver or mirror glass.
However, a delicate shade of spring
green continues popular.
The black crepe de chine skirt, of
an ensemble with a scarlet overblouse,
add a
is made of innumerable little gores
that give the impression of a circular
skirt that is pleated. It is extremely
graceful.
Tweed suits and separate coats
take entirely different kinds of furs
this season. Suits favor short, curly
furs, like caracul, astrakan, broadtail
and curly lamb. Coats use long-hair-
ed pelts such as badger, lynx, wolf
and fox.
It is not too early to begin think-
ing about your holiday fruit cakes.
Not only for your own use, but home
made fruit cakes make the most ac-
ceptable of gifts.
the cakes are made early, the
flavor will be well developed and also
it will be one job less to do when
Christmas rush begins.
One pound or two pound cakes can
be baked in round or oblong tins and
attractively packed in gay boxes. The
accompanying recipes for dark and
for 50 cents a pound.
WHITE FRUIT CAKE.
1 cup water, 1 pound flour,
spoons baking powder, % teaspoon
salt, 1 pound seeded white raisins, 1
pound blanched almonds, # pound cit-
ron, 3 pound red cherries, 1 large co-
coanut grated, % pound. crystalized
pineapple, pound crystalized orange
8 egg whites.
ually. Sift baking powder and salt
with half the flour,
nately with liquid. Add remaining
flour to chopped fruit and nuts. Stir
floured fruit into cake mixture. Fold
in the beaten egg whites last. Bake
in loaf tins or round cake tins, lined
with heavy oiled paper.
Time, 2% hours; temperature, 250
to 300 degrees F. Size of pan, 4x9%
tins. Amount, 4 cakes.
Apple Fritters.—Peel and slice
crosswise, one-fourth of an inch thick,
fine, sour apples. Remove the core
and dip each piece in the following
batter: Mix in a bowl two ounces of
flour, two teaspoonfuls of melted
butter, a little salt and the yolk of
one egg. Moisten by degrees with
of the consistency of smooth, thick
cream. Then add the beaten white
of one egg. If you follow these di-
rections you will have the finest of ap-
ple fritters.
Potato Snow—For this purpose use
potatoes which are white, mealy and
smooth. Boil carefully and when done
peel them. Pour off the water; let
them steam until dry; sprinkle over
with a little salt; then rub through a
wire sieve or through a potato “ricer”
into the dish in which they are to go
to the table.
A tiny bit of salt makes cocoa and
There |
Cancer Cost Near Billion.
| Last year cancer caused a loss of
| $800,000,000. That is approximately
what 300,000 workmen would lose if
they were out of jobs for a year.
This estimate in Popular Science
Monthly comes from Dr. Louis I.
Dublin, statistician of the Metro-
politan Life Insurance Co. And he
predicts the loss will be even greater
for the present year. Of the total
$800,000,000 loss, Dr. Dublin says,
$680,000,000 represents the money
value of persons who died from the
disease.
of the value of all the iron and steel
manufactured in the United States.
The remaining $120,000,000 was the
amount spent in caring for the vic-
tims.
This is the package you want
| When you ask for
light fruit cake can be made at home !
One pound sugar, 3 pound butter, |
2 tea- |
peel, & pound erystalized lemon peel, |
Cream the butter, add sugar grad-
and add alter- |
inch loaf tins, or 7-inch round cake |
cold water, stirring constantly until |
This is equal to one-tenth |
It |
|
i
ounces
] full-size
biscuits
As Made in Shredded Wheat Factories for 34 Years
An unsalted, unsweetened whole
wheat food, thoroughly baked—
ready -to-serve—nourishing
and strengthening.
P.L. Beezer
Estate.
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.
.... Meat Market
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
{ KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney-at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices ims
all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s
Exchange. 5i-1y
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at-
{ Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at-
tention given all legal business em-
trusteed to hiis care.
High street.
Offices—No. 5, East
57-44
M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law
i and Justice of the Peace. All pro-
! fessional business will receive
| prompt attention. Offices on second floor
: of Temple Court. 4 1y
| G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law, Con-
sultation in English and German.
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle-
| fonte, Pa. 58-
| . "PHYSICIANS =. =
i
1
ek
CAPERS.
OSTEOPATH.,
Office at his residence.
35-41
. Bellefonte State College
Crider’'s Ex. 86-11 Holmes Bldg.
! 8. GLENN, M. D. Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
l county, Pa.
|
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. T1-2
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 4.30 p. m. Bell Phone 68-40
amma.
71-22-
FEEDS!
{
|
|
We have taken on the line of
Purina Feeds
We also carry the line of
Wayne Feeds
i 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
Peay 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.
i 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% - - 4.25 per H.
Tankage, 60% - - - 4.25 perH.
{| 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.
81 You Want Good Bread or Pastry
TRY
| “OUR BEST”
OR
“GOLD COIN” FLOUR
i
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C.Y. Wagner & Co.
|
|
1
| 86-11-1yr.
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
‘and Heatin
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
NOS SANUS ANSI IA
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished
06-15-tf.