De — Petorvaic Waldman Bellefonte, Pa., January 11, 1929. r Health, You The First Cencern. THE HEALTH GNOME SAYS— Christmas comes but once a year There is no doubt of that. But there's little use, and no excuse To be foolish o'er that fact. Now, Johnny Jones, a friend of mine Pid just that very thing; He celebrated with bootleg stuff, That had an awful sting. Mary Ann, she too went wild And danced her young head off. A nervous breakdown was the cost, Methinks that head was soft! Another fellow, Willie Wake, Tried to eat it all— And Willie Wake, in consequence, Isn’t eating now at all! The moral to this short tale of woe Is plain, it seems to me. In celebrating Christmas time, Make use of sanity. —As it is understood by many of | us heart disease is not so alarming | as it often appears to be. This “dis- | ease’ can be divided into three kinds; functional, when the heart is: not damaged but does not do its work properly; slightly damaged, when the | heart can “carry on” for years; and | badly damaged, calling for close ob- servation and no over-exertion. These three conditions can be likened to a chair which can not be used because | it seems to be, or is, too weak. A chair wobbles when used, but on examination it is found that one or more screws are loose. A screw driv- er can promptly correct that fault. | A functional “heart disease” can of- | ten be as easily cured. The “serew’ | that is loose can be indigestion or an, unstable nervous system due to finan- | cial or family worries. Correct the: conditions and the heart becomes nor- | mal. This, therefore, is not heart dis- ease as physicians view it, although the suffering and discomfort is just as painful. | One functional disturbance of the heart is called “acute indigestion.” : This produces sharp, often agonizing pain, shortness of breath—gasping for air describes it better. The heart becomes rapid and irregular, both ‘n time and force. The face becomes pale and clammy. The patient cold and chilly. This is what happens: Something eaten does not digest, it ferments and causes an excessive amount of gas which distends the stomach to such a degree that it takes the place that belongs to the heart. Tt struggles against this barrier, beat- ing rapidly to make up in the num- ber of beats what is lost in force. The duty of the heart is to pump the dark red or venous blood through the lungs. This blood carries the poisons produced by the blood, circu- lates through the tiny blood vessels surrounding the lung air-cells, there is an inter-change through the micro- scopic sieve-like membrane of these cells. The air we breathe gives up its oxygen, which passes into the blood stream and the blood gives up its poison— carbonic acid gas. If the’ blood passing through is lessened in: quantity the oxygen in the air is not taken up in sufficient amount to make us comfortable. No matter how much air we breathe if the oxygen does not | pass into the blood stream our breath- | ing does us no good. Another thing happens because of this hampered heart action. The chemical changes necessary for life are still going on producing carbonic acid gas which, re- | maining in the blood, brings about a heavy dull stupor. If net promptly relieved the situation will become serious. I hope that this picture has been so drawn that my readers can apppreciate that this condition no matter how alarming is not heart dis- ease. To repeat, something eaten forms “gas” which distends the stomach. The stomach presses on the heart which struggles to do its work in a small cramped space and loses force. | The blood can not pass freely through | the lungs, keeps its poison, and does ' not take up enough oxygen. Distend- | ed stomach causes pain. Lack of ox- | vgen and poison retained cause short- | ness of breath, dullness and stupor. What is the method of relieving this | situation? Let the suffering person assume the position of most comfort, as nature unconsciously directs that this be done. Mix one teaspoonful of aroma- tic spirits of ammonia in one quarter glass of cold water. Take about one quarter of this mixture at once, then sip of the rest until all is taken in about ten minutes. If this does not relieve in fifteen minutes repeat the dose—that is, one teaspoonful of ar- omatic spirits of ammonia mixed and taken as before. If this is ineffective then call a physician. In any event have a thorough examination to pre- vent a recurrence and to correct a cor- rectable defect. Do not forget we are just using a “screw driver” to tighten up the loose screws. It must be emphasized however that a heart disturbance due to an unstable nervous system caused by worry is not a medical problem. It is an individual problem to be solved by the individual. Let us now go back to our broken chairs. We have easily fixed the screws but we find another chair where the legs and rounds have be- come loosened because the glue is not holding, again easily fixed, but takes longer and must be watched more carefully. | sects, aphids and thrips. "stabbed (To be continued) CER Ad Wiiter's Idea of Great American Home According to the advertisements it is a private residence and gentleman's estate and built of certified lumber and southern pine, the aristocrat of soft woods bought direct from the mills, and colored stucco, hollow tile, concrete for permanence, sheet steel for every purpose, the inherent charm of stone, and brick that is cheaper in the long run, and it is covered with everlasting shingles, lined with cork insulation, appointed with correct hardware, painted with imperishable colors, heated with an absolutely silent oil furnace and radiators from a world institute of heating that blankets the nation. It has artistic interiors made so with lacquer, beau- tiful ceilings, screens that last, a mod- ern breakfast nook inspired by Old world craftsmanship, the secret of lovely oak floors, the last word in liv- ing room style that turns into a bed- room at night, the recognized leader of all coal windows, the utmost in san- itary engineering, instant hot water from plumbing fixtures with finest quality of brass pipes that contain more copper, and bathroom luxury used on Park avenue yet priced low enough for the most modest cottage, and is desirably located in a fast- growing community with rising values and filled with period furniture, genu- ine linoleum, and musie fiom radios, phonographs and grand picnos used by the immortals and bought cn the installment plan with a small down payment or what have you?—Kansas City Star. Kept Within Law but Cot His Shaft Homes A Mount Vernon (N. Y.) lawyer { had lost but one case in a practice extending over 25 years. "This par- ticular case should never have bien lost; the lawyer knew it and wus cor- respondingly angered at the judge, { whom he blamed for the loss of the case. Arising from his seat the luw- yer addressed the court: “Your Lonor, is it agzinst the law to think?” “Of course not,” replied the judge. “Ig it against the law to tell whar you think?” “Of course not,” replied the judge. “You know very well that it is nol.” “Is it against the law to say at all times and anywhere what you honest- ly think, you honor?” “Now, Mr. —, your experience teaches you that you can say at all times and anywhere what you really think,” said the man on the bench. “Well, your honor,” said the defeat: eld lawyer, “I think that the decision just handed down was rotten.” And he “got bg" with it. Peach Grower's Friends. The ladybird beetles are perhaps the most beneficial of the several insects that act as a check on the peach tree insects. They prey upon scale iu- The twice- ladybird beetle 1s usually prevalent on peach trees that are heavily infested with the San Jose scale. It is jet black in color and has two orange or red spots on the back. Ladybird beetles take their nourishment by sucking scale insects dry. They also assist materially in checking infestations of the rusty- brown plum aphid or other aphids. Syrphus fies, lacewing flies, tachina flies, ground beetles and some of the assassin bugs and praying mantis are other insects that are beneficial to the peach grower. Indians Good Swimmers. The Bureau of American Ethnology says that the Indians were remark- able swimmers and some of the tribes were in the water as much as were the primitive Polynesians. They swam six or seven different ways, including treading water, and would dive to the bottom of deep water. A common in- stitution among the Indians was the sweat bath. They would sweat in ‘a specially constructed sweathouse, which was closed up to keep the heat in, and when they thought they had sweated enough would suddenly run outdoors, giving warwhoops, throw themselves into the cold water, and after a while re-enter the sweathouse to dry off, since they had no towels. The Lombards. Lombard street, the principal bank quarter of the city of London, takes its name from the “Lombards,” so- called Italian goldsmiths and money- lenders, who settled there in the be- ginning of the Twelfth century. They were then commonly called “Longbeards,” and the name of the thoroughfare was spelt indifferently Longhord and Langebred. A century or so later it had become corrupted into Langbourne—that is, “long brook”—and this misleading title is still retained for the ward in which it is situated. Daring Air Thieves. Explorers in Abyssinia report that there are many birds of prey in that country, the most daring of which, and the most common, is the Kite. Flocks of them will sit for hours in the trees near the camp waiting for an opportunity to steal a meal from the cook tent. In this they will often take great chances and they have been known to dart across the cook’s fire and steal food from his pans on the stove. They have no hesitation in stealing the food from any wild ani- mal they encounter which happens to be enjoying a meal THE LOVELY LADY (© by D J. Walsh.) ADGE MEREDITH calied Lim up that morning on the telephone, “Come over tonight for a game of bridge, Guy, and meet out guest, Miss Angell. She's perfectly lovely. You'll fall in love with her, I know. I'm simply crazy about her. Mother first met her at the Woman's club in Delfield, and she hasn't rest- ed till she got her here to make us 8 little visit. You'll come?” “Sure, I'll come, Madge. And thank you for the chance to meet the lovely lady.” Guy Holding laughed as he waited politely for Madge to hang up first. Then he went back to his desk and forgot about everything but what he was doing. He even forgot about Madge whom he had reason to think liked him a good deal and who came nearer to being his ideal of what a girl should be than any woman he bad ever met or was, perhaps, likely to meet. le lunched downtown and went nome rather late to dinner, remerm- bering as he entered his mother's house that he had made a promise to Madge. Iiis mother met him in the hall She was plump, gray-haired and fad- ed but a nice woman for all that, as Guy often teld her, He adored his mother, And she worshiped him. Her husband hadn't amounted to much, but her son was entirely satisfactory He took after her side of the family when it came to go-getting, but for all Lis business acumen he was ter ribly ingenuous. Mrs. Holding suf- fered a good deal on that account Calla waited ypon them at dinner. Caila was colored and elderly, but a perfect maid. She set Guy's soup be fore Lim like a caress, and he smiled at her out of frank, boyish brown eyes. “Going out this evening, Mrs. Holding inquired. “That's so. 1 am, Madge asked me.” Lis mother smiled in a pleased vay. “I'd rather planned to take you to see u play, but if you don't mind waiting till tomorrow night—" “I'm rather glad. I've got a whole pasketful of your socks to mend” Mrs. Holding said. “You best of mothers!” Guy blew ner a kiss across the table and she Llew him one back again. After that the roast fowl warmed up from yes- terduy tasted ever so delicious. dear?” Guy walked down the moonlit street | ander the denuded maples to the Meredith house, which was at the ex- treme end. He thought about secing Madze and wondered what she would be wearing. No matter what it was it would be sure to be the right thing. Madge met him at the door. She nad on a liitle cocoa-colored fiuck trimmed with a few bands of skunk fur, very becoming to her fresh, dark coloring. “Now prepare to be overwhelmed,” she bade Lim as he laid aside his Lat and coat. “Miss Angell is perfectly lovely.” “So ure you.” He laughed at her, aoting the color that rose in her smooth cheeks. Mrs. Meredith was in the living room with the guest who sat in a deep winged chair by the fireside. At a word there rose out of that winged chair the most beautiful woman Guy had ever seen, She was tall, slender, yet exquis- itely rounded, with no suggestion of pone or muscle in her white arms and shoulders. Her hair had the ashen glean of white gold, her face was a flower, her eyes dark, wonderful. She wore a gown like a bit of dawn-rose and lavender and silver, and when : she spoke her voice was like the call of a bird to its mate. Guy (ried not to stare, but he could think of nothing nicer than just to look his fill at her. And when Madge brought out the card table and they sat down to play he was glad to be nearer to her. Before the evening was over he had fallen victim to that glamor which attacks a man once only perhaps in his whole life. And all night he lay awake, his head whirling with dreams of Miss Angell and plans to see her again, de was not himself next day. That afternoon he got leave from his boss and took Miss Angell for a ride in his roadster, and that evening he made a theater party and invited the Mere: diths and his mother—and her. The following day he sent her a sheaf of tea roses to carry with her when she went away. He had one more glimpse of her as she took the train and then the pall descended. How was he going to live without her? No, rather how could he keep on seeing her, wooing her until he could break down every barrier and make her his? He moved as one in a dream, and when he ate his Lady’s Delight—the marvelous dessert which it took both his mother and Calla to achieve—as if it were sawdust he could no longer conceal the state of his feelings. “What's gone wrong with Madge?’ Mrs. Holding asked. “She looks so wan, Are you going over there as much as usual, dear?” “1 haven't seen Madge in weeks,” Guy replied unthinkingly. «She was here today,” Mrs. Hold- mg ventured. “I thought maybe you'd ask her and me to go somewhere to- night?” “Qh, all right.” proposal patiently. two Guy accepted the Between acts hie {ried to find out from Made something about Mis~ Angell. “She wrote the nicest bread-and-but ter letter! She has asked me to vis it her,” Madge said. Madge was going to visit her! That made Madge interesting, and he turned his attention to her. Another week passed. Ile had sent flowers to Miss Angell and had re ceived a creamy-tinted note from her —coo0l and sweet as parfait. It wasn't much, but—it was something. Then he did a bold thing. le went to sce her—but she was not at home, and he came away uncomforted save for a sight of the old pillared house and the sharp-eyed servant who had ap swered his ring. Now the awful desire for sympathy so controlled him that he sought his mother, He got out of bed, put on his lounging robe and slippers and went into her room in the dead of night. There by the faint, golden- shaded light he told her all that was in his heart. Mrs. Holding sat up in bed with the extra blanket about her shoul ders. She had been awakened from a peaceful sleep and she looked old. frumpish with cold cream on her face and her gray hair skewered on cur ers. “I'm so glad you told me rhis dear,” she said. “I've known, of course, what was geing on, but 1 had to wait until you were ready to pive me your confidence. Guy, you be lieve what I tell you, don’t you? You have never found me lying to you or using the slightest subterfuge.” “Never, mother,” “Then, my dear, painful as it is 1} shall give you the truth. Miss An- gell—" “She's not going to be married?! Guy leaped from his chair. “Qh, Cear, no. If she was ever go ing to marry she would have dene so years ago. She has had lovers enough. Why, 1 remember when 1 was first engaged to your father mo2ei. ing her at a party—you see I've al- ways known about her. She was al: ways pretty as a picture, but since she inherited all that money and took that course at a beauty institute—" “Mother! What are you saying? “I'm trying to tell you, my dea: gon, that Lavenia Angell is exactly one year acd rine weeks older than 1 am,” She had produced a cataclysm, but pecause he had always believed her he managed to do so now. Wasn't she Lis own mother and hadn't she al- ways told him the truth? Desides, as he looked at her, the conviction seeped in. Madge could have told you, bu she wouldn't,” ended Mrs, Holding. six weeks later Madge Meredith showed Mrs, Holding a diamond and platinum ring. eYou don't mind,” she whispered. “Dear!” Mrs, Holding kissed uer “You know 1 think Guy has always liked me—escept once—for a little while,” Madge said. Mrs. lloiding wsiniled joyously. “Well, 1 shouldn't let that worry me,” she replied. Steel Industry Born in Old Massachusetts The awesome exhalations of the genie Steel as wafted from his work- shops in Pittsburgh and Gary and the combined sorceries of the metal industries as seen by Detroit, all had their beginning so far as America is concerned on the banks of the Sau- gus river in Massachusetts. “Ye Company of Undertakers of ye tron Works,” with capital equivalent to $5,000, there began the manufac ture of iron in 1642. In the low meadows near where the city of Lynn now stands there were to be found iron ore, and easy transportation was furnished by the river, and water power, too. There America’s first iron works continued to operate suc- cessfully until the late 1600's. When one “Thomas Hudson of Lyn” sold hig land to this iron works com- pany it was agreed that he would be given the first casting it produced. This was a small but heavy iron pot poured directly from the furnace with- out first becoming pig iron. Thomas Hudson treasured this and handed it down to his descendants. Two hun- dred and fifty years later it was pre- sented by one of these descendants to Lynn's public library, where, in- closed in glass, all may view it.—De- troit News. Pointed Suggestion An old farmer, who was attending a church convention, chuckled to him- self as he read the subjects on the program. “See here, parson,” he said to his pastor, “you’ve had papers and discussions all day on how to get peo- ple to attend church. I've never heard a single address, at a farmers’ conven- tion, on how to get cattle to come to the rack. We put all our time on the best kind of feed. I sort of have a notion that if you put more time on discussing what to put in the rack, you wouldn't have to spend all that time discussing how to get your folk to attend church.,”—Montreal Family Herald. Ancient Superstitions Coins worn as pendants or amulets were common in the ancient world, be- cause of their likeness to the moon; and it Is probable that medallions, and hence medals, were originally circular for the purpose of introducing the lunar element and thereby counteract ing the blighting effects of admiration or envy. Spitting is mentioned by many ancient authors as a protection against the evil eye, and this explains the custom of spliting on a coin. which is still widely practiced. A Corporate Executor W-. should you intrust the estate that you have built up after years of work and self-denial, to incompetent hands. A banking institution with Trust powers and large resources, is betteriqualified for this important work than any individual. The First, National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. THE | | Stabilizer of Credit EEPING a substantial balance in one’s Checking Account is a stabilizer of credit. This bank affords you every accommodation con- sistent with sound banking practice. & Checking Accounts are cordially in- vited. STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM FIRST NATIONAL BANK AON MEANY NN NIN AS A WER AN VY) lL A No! Just a clean-up of Suits and Overcoats left over from our great sale. See our window’s for prices You may think them a joke, but they are'lfacts. Facts that will save you a lot of money. A. FAUBLE I