Pr. Deworvaic atc Bellefonte, Pa., December 7, 1928. Your Health, FOOD You need fuel food just as an en- gine needs coal or gasoline. Bread and butter, cereals, fats and sugars are chiefly fuel foods. You need fuel food justas an en- gine or an automobile needs repair materials. Milk, meat, fish, eggs, poultry, cheese, green peas and beans give repair material, as well as fuel. You need regulating food just as an engine or automobile needs lubrica- ting oil, distilled water, water for the cooler, charging of the battery, ete. Regulating foods are milk, fruit, green vegetables and water. You need some every day, also some hard and erusty food, some raw and some bulky fruit and vegetable foods to give your teeth exercise and keep your bowels regular. = The average well person should drink 6 glasss of water (or fluid) every day, (three of them be- tween meals). Warm weather or warm work will of course make a larger intake necessary. If salt is eaten too freely an unnatural desire for fluid is created. Your chief need is fuel food. Your least need is repair food. Eat meat, fish, poultry, eggs or cheese once a day in moderate quanti- ty. Eat sufficient cereals and bread and butter to keep up your weight. Do not hurry at your meals. Chew and taste your food thoroughly until it slides into your stomach. CONSTIPATION Do not use pills, mineral waters or purgatives. Diet should be the mainstay in bowel regulation. Eat freely of whole cereals, oat- meal, whole wheat, graham or bran bread, fruits and bulky vegetables, such as lettuce, spinach, cabbage, sprouts, carrots, turnips, onions, ap- ples, prunes, dates. figs; also orange juice and lemon juice. Constipation will usually disappear if you follow this program every day: On rising in morning: 1 or 2 glasses of water. A few minutes of wild body bend- ing and twisting exercises, At breakfast: Fruit or fruit juice, cereal with 2 tablespoonfuls of bran or bran muf- ns. Soon after breakfast. A bowel movement: During the day: 4 more glasses of water or milk (2 between meals). Three por- tions of bulky vegetables and fruit. If this program is not effective, supplement it with harmless aids: Agar-Agar (Japanese seaweed) is a good bowel regulator and is not a drug. (A teaspoonful three tines a day, in milk, cereal or other foods.) Plantago-psyllium seeds are more effective than agar-agar and act simi- larly without drug effect. (Tea- spoonful once daily.) Mineral oil is serviceable for tem- porary use in obstinate cases and also has no drug effect. TEETH AND TONSILS Many serious diseases come from infection in mouth and tonsils and throat and nose. Keep the teeth clean. Brush them thoroughly night and morning. Use a little lemon juice and water as a mouth wash. Pure soap is a good dentifrice. Visit the denist or dental clinic every three months. Do not wait for a toothache. Do not let decayed roots remain in your mouth. Have them pulled with- on delay. They may cost you your ife. If your mouth is full of gold work and fillings or caps, have your teeth examined by X-ray. If found infect- ed, removal is usually the best course, especiallly if you have rheumatism or other chronic trouble. Infected tonsils also may cause rheumatism and organic changes. EYES If you have headaches, have your Sve: examined by a physician or occu- ist. Eye strain may break down your health. Wear glasses if they are needed and save brain and nervous system from strain. EXERCISE Get as much exercise in the open Sif as possible every day—at least an our. Even if active at your work, do set- | ting up exercises night and morning for 10 to 15 minutes, to make you straight and strong and well develop: ed. e exercises which require body bending and twisting are especially helpful in strengthening the abdomi- nal muscles and stimulating bowel aec- tion. OVERWEIGHT Do not allow yourself to gain weight gradually and hecome fat af- ter you have passed 381 or 35 years. Keep your weight after that age, | from five to ten pounds under the av- erage, or near your ideal weight. f you are gaining, cut down the fuel foods, bread and butter, cereals, sugar and fats—and eat instead more green vegetables and fruits. UNDERWEIGHT If you are thin and pale and losing weight, be carefully examined for lung trouble. at freely of bread and butter, egg yolks, cereals, milk and cream, but al- 80, of green vegetables and fruit. Sleep out of doors. Get plenty of fresh air. Breathe deeply. PREVENTION OF COLDS Prevent constipation. The new Ford has a very THE lubrication system for the engine of the new Ford is as simple in principle as water running down-hill. A gear pump in the bot- tom of the oil pan raises the oil to the valve chamber reservoir. From here it flows on to the main crank- shaft bearings and the front camshaft bearing, Overflow oil drops into the e¢il pan tray and runs into {roughs through which the connect- ing rods pass. As the ends of these rods strike the oil they scoop up a supply for the connecting rod bearing. At the same time they set up a fine spray that lubricates the pistons and other moving parts. From the tray the il runs into the bottem of the pan, and is again drawn up through a fine mesh screen and pumped to the valve chamber. This system is so effective that the five-quart contents of the oil pan pass through the pump twice in every mile when you are traveling at only 30 miles an hour. Yet there is only one movable part — the oil pump. FORD MOTOR COMPANY simple and effective lubrication system As a matter of fact, the lubrication system for the new Ford 18 so simple in de- sign and so carefully made that it requires practically no service attention. There is just one thing for you to do, but it is a very important thing . . . waich the oil! Change the oil every 500 miles and be sure the indicator rod never reg- isters below low (L). If the oil level is allowed to fall below low, the supply becomes insufficient to oil all parts as they should be oiled. To insure best perform- ance it is also advisable to have the chassis of your car lubricated every 500 miles. This has been made easy in the new Ford through the use of the high pressure grease gun sysiem. Proper oiling and greas- ing mean se much to the life of your car that they should not be neglected or care- lessly done. See your Ford dealer reg- ularly. He is especially well- fitted to lubricate the new Ford and he will do a good, thorough job at a fair price. Avoid alcoho. and tobacco. Train your skin to resist drafts and - changes in temperature by cool bath- {ing and cold sponging of neck and chest. Use a mild method oil spray in nose at first sign of a cold. Take fre- quent doses (level teaspoonful) of baking soda in water. Take a hot foot-bath, drink hot lemonade, or hot flaxseed tea, and go to bed and per- spire freely. Take no alcohol or “cold cures. Home Manufacture of Wines and : Beers and Liquors. More than $600,000,000 a year is . expended by the American people in the purchase of materials for making intoxicating liquors at home, accord- ing to a story by John T. Flynn in “Collier's Weekly.” The writer, after an extensive ex- amination of the various articles used for producing beer, wine and whiskey in the American cellar and kitchen, presents these figures: 000,000 a year is spent for home made beer, $220,000,000 for wine, $100,- 000,000 for hard liquor and about $50,000,000 a year for the machinery and apparatus for brewing and distil- ling. Add to this another $100,000, 000 for carbonated beverages and flavors used in connection with the other drinks. These sums do not include the im- pressive sums—far larger—paid to bootleggers. | While the anti-prohibitionists do the drinkng, much of the material for making the stuff comes from rock- Ffohed dry States like California and - Maine. This business of supplying home ' brew ingredients is becoming one of .the great industries of the country, according to Flynn. i No, Panama Hat Isn’t from Panama at All One of life's little oddities is that i the country which gives its name to ; the Jenana hat doesn’t make the hat {at all. And the panama isn’t a straw hat, properly speaking. The hats are made from the shred- ded leaves of a species of small palm , which grows almost entirely in coun- tries south of panama, Ecuador, Peru and Columbia are among the princi- pal producers. | The long leaves are cut, dipped in | boiling water and bleached before the women who weave them, begin work. The hat is not woven under water, as is commonly believed although water does play a part in the process. Us- ually the weavers begin work early in the morning, to keep the shreds from drying and to keep their fingers constantly damp, an essential factor in handling the strips. A weaver will spend as much as three weeks in mak- ing a single hat. Pwever: the time is p since a genuine: : panama wil sell for $60 or more in {its native land—and will cost much ' more before it reaches you. About $136,- | AIR CHIEF REPORTS | DROP IN PERSONNEL. America’s growing intrest in flying was reflected in the report of General James E. Fechet, Chief of Air Corps: i to the Secretary of War. | The report indicated that there was no serious lack of anything in the Air { Corps except of money and of vacan- [cles In commissioning personnel to | provide for commissioning eligible fliers or for advancement of junior officers to higher grades. | General Fechet reported steady de- crease in the number of enlisted pilots and said this. was primarily due to the better pay available to these men as civil flyers or pilots in other Govern- iment aviation agencies. | The lure of flight for college men was shown by the fact that approxi- mately 70 per cent of cadets entering {July 1 classes at primary flying schools were college graduates. ‘The problem of increasing the com- ' missioned personnel of the Air Corps,’ | Fechet explained, “is not one of pro- , ducing flying personnel but of pro- viding sufficient appropriations to al- low graduates of the Air Corps Ad- , vanced Flying School to be immedi- ‘ately commissioned as Second Lieu- tenants in the Regular Army upon graduation or placed upon active duty 1 as Reserve Officers, subject only, inso- ' far as numbers are concerned, to the limitations fixed by the annual inere- ments set for July 24, 1927.” Fechet recommended that suitable grades of rank should be set aside or established for enlisted pilots in order to permit the Corps to retain the ser- , vices of these men. Applications for flying cadet ap- pointments during the fiscal year end- ing June 30, 1928, greatly exceeded the number the year before and 3,830 ap- | plicants were authorized to take the | examinations as compared with 1,063 ‘ the year before. I" Air Corps flyers photographer 25,- | 000 square miles of areas in various parts of the United States for the War Department and other Federal agencies. A hint of what the passage of years {has done to the trim-waisted youths who became American flyers during the War was given by Fechet when he said that pressure of business and failure to pass physical examinations , had reduced the number of Air Corps ' Reserve officers capable of flying with tactical units from 38,000 to 7.000 704,606 Subscribe to Christmas Fund. Banks and trust companies under | supervision of the State Department of Banking will distribute checks for approximately $30,000,000 ore Christmas to those who subscribe to the special saving fund, Reports made at the time of the last bank call showed 704,606 per- sons garTying Christmas saving ac- counts. e average accounts es- timated at between $45 and $50. 1 - LD | Subscribe for the Watchman. te — A ————— fo Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432 LUMBER ? w.x snope Lumber co. 71-16-82 Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing FARM NOTES. Vis farmer with ve Dasie prideigies ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW of crop rotation an ress the im- | em —Leaves make a good mulch and Porous of the practice, in relation to Q KLINE BSE eA terey at i protection to rose bushes and shrubs farming. Th Tere Office, room 18 Crider's from damage by frost. —Even more striking results than Exchange. ily —Good feed and plenty of exercise ; this winter will aid the ewes to pro- ! duce good lambs next spring. | —If manure is handled out and ‘spread daily duri the winter ; months it saves double work in the , spring. —Acres not needed for field crops, fruit, garden, or pasture should be growing that other essential farm product—wood. —A good farm record book accur- ately kept will help a farmer to know his business. A farm without records is like a clock without hands. It may be running right but there is no way of knowing it. —DBefore winter comes go over the woodiest parts of your young planta- tions and cut or tramp the weeds away from the trees so that they will not be carried to the ground when the weeds go down. —There are two purposes for which the pruning shears and saw are used in the orchard; the first, both in time and importance, is to train the tree to the desired type of framework; the second, to maintain that framework in condition to produce the maximum amount of good quality fruit. —During the long winter evenings time re used profitably in the study of correspondence courses in agriculture and home economics. The Pennsylvania State College has free courses on a large number of subjects. A post card to the director of the cor- respondence courses at State College, { Pa., will bring you the new catalog. —The 1929 breeders should be se- lected now, say State College poultry specialists. Keep only those birds for { breeders that have pale shanks and : beaks, are still laying, and have not ! molted up to the present time. Those i birds should be up to breed weight, i true to breed type, and free from dis- ; qualifications as described by the | American Standard of Perfection. | —Competitive spirit is given a , chance for expression in farm pro- ‘ducts show. The educational feature, however, is the chief value of such ex- hibitions. The display shows the ex- hibitor how his products compare with the exhibits beside them. If i the other fellow’s are better it will ; stimulate the lower prize winner to do . a little better the next "year. Thus a valuable lesson is learned. « —Crop rotation is a farm practice which may be used by the farmer to "increase the productivity of his soils as effectively as the use of manure or commercial fertilizers, says the Unit- ed States Department of Agriculture. Furthermore, crop rotation as ordi- narily practiced does not entail any extra cost. The extra yield due to this practice is therefore a profit that may be credited to the farmer's managerial ability. —Decidious trees may be trans- planted any time during ~ the dormant season, that is, from the time the leaves drop in the fall until just be- fore growth starts in the spring. Where the conditions are not so fav- orable, it is better to set them in the spring. Many nursery trees are dug in the fall and stored during the win- ted. Another way is to dig them in the fall and heel-in over winter. This is done by burying the trees in soil. —The house cellar is a convenient place for vegetable storage. A dirt floor is referable, The furnace cel- lar should be separated from the stos- age cellar by a concrete wall or a: double wood partition: A window is needed for ventilation. An outside pit made by burying a barrel horizontally in the side of a , makes an ideal place for storing cabbage and root crops, and the unused hotbed pit fre- quently can be used successfully for storing celery. —For example, corn at the Mis- souri experiment station yielded 22.4 bushels per acre from cultivation alone. When_corn was manured the yield was increased by 14.7 bushels, or to 37.1 bushels per acre; when it was grown in rotation with other crops the yield was increased by 15.1 bushels, or to 37.5 bushels per acre. However, when both manuring and ro- tation were practiced, the acre yield was increased by 25.3 or to a total of 47.7 bushels per acre. —While rotations in different sec- tions, in a given locality, or even on a single farm may differ, there are cer- tain fundamental priniciples of crop rotation which have general applica- tion. These must be understood by the farmer if he is to put himself in a position to utilize the results that have been worked out by State experi- ment stations for his locality. The purpose of this bulletin is to acquaint e were recorded in trials at Urbana, Ill. In these experiments the use of fertilizers consisting of pulver- ized limestone, farm manure and phos- phate, was compared with a rotation of corn, oats and clover. The ave vield of corn obtained without the use of either rotation or fertilizers on this particular paririe soil in Illinois, was 23.4 bushels per acre. The gain ef- the abov fected by rotation alone was practic- | ally three times that obtained from the use of fertilizers and lime, or 27.8 bushels due to rotation. and only 9.2 due to the fertilizers. The total in- crease from the use of both fertilizers and rotation was 44.2 bushels per acre, or 7.2 bushels greater than the sum of their separate increases. —A study oi the leng-continued soil fertility experiments of this country and of England, made by the ! department, has brought out some important facts about crop rotation in its relation to soil productivity. These are discussed in Farmers’ Bulle- tin 1475-F, just issued. In general, crop rotation has been found to be practically 95 per cent as effective as farm manure or complete fertilizers ! in maintaining the yields of wheat, | corn and oats, and about 90 per cent as effective as these fertilizers in in- creasing the yield of these three maj- or crops. The beneficial effects of crop rotation do not impair the bene- fits derived from the use of fertiliz- ers: so that when these two farm practices are combined the one prac- tice adds to the benefits of the other. Enormous Hords of Buffalo in Aus- tralia, Most people will be surprised to learn that huge herds of wild buffalo rcam the plains of the nothern terri- tory of Australia. These animals are not native to the country, and there appears to be a considerable diver- sity of opinion as to their orgin. It is generally accepted, however, says Michael Terry, that when the military stations, were created near Darwin, 1826, Timor buffalo were imported for domestic purpo:} s. The earliest English settlers who arrived to develop the country found the animals in considerable numbers and tried to tame them for domestic uses. Most of them, however, had become too wild for this, and so they were left alone, so far as the white man was concerned, for the next fifty years. e climate and ‘other condi- tions, apparently, were ideal for their | requirements; they multiplied in numbers and increased in size till you can now shoot enormous speci- mens. It estimated that there are at least 30,000 of them at large in the northern territory. Their horns— which have a spread up to ten feet from tip to tip—are as big as one’s thigh at the butt and taper to pencil points at the extremities. The hide, an inch thick, will turn an ordinary’ bullet; the hunters use a .450 Mar- tini with a short ball. With his for- midable equipment of horns and hide and his powerful physique, it is easy to understand how the buffalo has been able not only to hold his own but to increase and multiply. The black man with his spear can do nothing against him, says Mr. Terry, and so keeps at a respectful distance; the dingo, or wild dog, which hunts down domestic calves, dare not tackle him. Only a handful of professional hunters, in quest of hides make systematic war upon him, 2,066,511 Autoists 5 Given Warnings. Highway Patrolmen warned, with- out arrest, 2,066,511 motorists dur- ing 1928. At the end of October 1,- 711,000 operators had been licensed by the Department of Highways dur- ing the year. Officials are wondering how many operators were warned twice or three times during the year, or whether the entire roll of operat- ors was covered, along with a few thousand out-of-State motorists. In October 230,000 were warned. : Patrolmen covered 410,290 miles in regular patrols and made 1211 in- vestigations of accidents and com- plaints. They also collected 52 bad’ checks which were issued to the bu- reau of motor vehicles in payment of licenses. In examining new opera ] patrol passed 18,916 and 6390 failed to make a passing grade. During the year 187,339 new operators have been passed, while 58,633 failed. Many of those who failed tried again later and succeeded. —Subscribe for the Watchman. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market 34-34 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 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. tors, the KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- i Law, Bellefonte, Pa. = Prompt at- tention given all legal business em~ i trusteed to hiis care. Offices—No. 5, East | High street. 57-44 KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law i M. rage J and Justice of the Peace. ~All pro- business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor : of Temple Court. 49-5-1y i G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law, Con- sultation in English and German, | Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle fonte, Pa, 58-8 fessional La ¢ R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. i Bellefonte State College { Crider's Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. ! 8S. GLENN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residence. PHYSICIANS tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat i Isfaction ~ guaranteed. Frames replaced and leases matched. Casebeer Bldg., High _8t., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-t¢ 1 } 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 9 8 m. to 430 p. m. Bell Phone 05-40 C D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regls- i ! | FEEDS! t 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 e id —— 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 Pee Mash 3.20 per H. Wayne Calf Meal - 4.25 per H. | Ryde’s Calf Meal - $5.00 per H. Wagner's Pig Meal -- 2.80 per H. Wagner's Egg Mash - . 2.90 per H. Wagner’s Dairy Feed 22% Wagner's Dairy Mixture of bran, cotton seed 2.50 per H., meal, oil meal and gluten, 30% - 2.80 per H. OilMeal . . . . 3.40 per H, Flax Meal . . . 2.40 per H. Cotton Seed, 43% - - 310 per H. Gluten Feed, 23% - 250 per H. Fine ground Alfalfa - 2.25 per H. Obico, fish and meat Meal 4.00 per H. Orbico Mineral - - 2.75 per H. Meat Meal, 50% - - 425 per H. Tankage, 60% - - - 4.25 per H, We can sell the above feeds and mix with your corn and oats chop and make you a much cheaper dairy feed than the ready mixed feed. 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. We will deliver all per ton extra. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry "TRY “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR feeds for $2.00 i C.Y. Wagner & Co, i BELLEFONTE, PA. 686-11-1yr. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating RNIN | Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces OUP S AAS I NP PNNS APS 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-t£.