RE Bellefonte Pa., August 9, 1929. EEE EE SES CE. ‘ASHINGTON TO BE MADE MOST BEAUTIFUL CAPITAL. Congress has set out to make ‘ashington the most beautiful capi- 1 in the world. A wave of enthusiasm for accom- ishment of this goal apparently has vept both Senate and House and rtually all traces of a former reluc- nce to spend huge sums of money r public buildings in the District of >lumbia has disappeared. The pledge of President Hoover to nd full support to the movement is slieved to assure a continuation of ie huge program already under way. . Congress is now committed to the sting $265,000,000, and this pro- 1e next few years. The urge to make the city the most sautiful of all the world’s capitals oparently springs from the senti- ental interest of Congress in the at of government and the practical slief that it is cheaper for the gov- -nment to build than rent. But the American tourist, who rifts into the national capital by -ain and automobile, perhaps is more ssponsible than any other agency. With the advent of automobile yuring came expressions of disap- ointment from people in every sec- on of the country, and from all -alks of life. They usually made jeir entrance on historic Pennsyl- ania avenue, and found it a wide rab street, lined with cheap business puses and almost exclusively occu- ied in one section by Chinese curio nops and laundries. The increase in the number of gov- rnment employees from 35,000 to 70,- 00, and the likelihood of further ex- ansion of government activities in Vashington, has further spurred the ovement. Nearly 25,000 employees ow work in temporary or rented uarters, some of them fire-traps and | jsufferably hot in summer. In launching its great building pro- ram, Congress has reverted to the riginal plan of Maj. Pierre Charles /Enfant, French army engineer, who sas chosen to lay out the city more han a hundred years ago. The new building plan revolves round the capitol building, already cclaimed the most beautiful capitol n the world. A great mall, lined sith beautiful government buildings, s to connect the capitol with the Lincoln Memorial, skirting the White jouse. A great parkway is to be juilt between the union passenger tation and the capitol. To redeem Pennsylvania avenue nd make it worthy of its history, Jongress has bought a triangle with , half-mile frontage on the avenue at . cost of $25,000,000. Senator Smoot, R) of Utah, estimates that it will ost $200,000,000 to complete the riangle development plan. In the arrying out of this scheme, the gov- srnment will demolish a modern 12-, tory effice building and scores of esser structures. One of the most extraordinary rojects in the “capital beautiful” rogram, is a 200-foot parkway from ‘he Potomac river to George Wash- ngton’s home at Mount Vernon. Among the building projects now inder way and their cost are: Arlington Memorial bridge, connect- ng Arlington cemetery with the City, $14,575,000; enlargement of :apitol grounds, $6,244,000: Supreme ourt site and building, $7,500,000; Department of Agriculture buildings, $8,100,000; Department of Commerce ouilding, $17,500,000; Internal Rev- snue building, $10,000,000. New build- ngs eventually will be constructed for the Post-office Department, De- oartment of Justice, Labor Depart- ment, Navy Department, and the oresent State and War Department ouilding either will be remodelled or abandoned. ——— Act — THE POWER OF A SMILE. CEE Requests for copies, which are free, ; burg, Pennsylvania.” ympletion of a buildi rogram » ne oF , the title page to extend a hearty -am is expected to be expanded in Welcome to tourists everywhere, i minding them that state markers at jreal work of art and was lost for | James Lyall Stuart, secretary of {| Chief Engineer Samuel Eckels tells CERT 1929 ISSUE OF TOURIST ! GUIDE IN CIRCULATION. “Pennsylvania Highways” the 1929 | edition of the Department of High- ways official tourist guide, is off the "press and released for distribution. ‘should be accompanied by 5 cents postage and directed to “Bureau of Publicity, Pennsylvania Department of Highways, The Capitol, Harris- The new guide is larger, a handy 9 by 12 inches, with many scenic views and containing a wealth of informa- tion useful to tourists and motorists generally. It contains 48 pages print- ed on buff colored double coated pa- per and is bound in an art cover, of special weight paper to increase dur- ability. It appears more than a month earlier than ever before, at the inauguration of the vacation sea- son. Governor John S. Fisher, utilizes re- the borders bearing the word ‘‘Penn- sylvania” may be interpreted as meaning “welcome.” To stranger and Pennsylvania alike the Governor por- trays this Commonwealth “in the words of the critic who discovered a words to describe it, “See it your- self and feel the spell of its wonders and beauties.” the highways, devotes a page to the promotion of “Courtesy in Driving, with eleven safety rules directed at _ conservation of child life. in it the engineering problems which face the road builder of today. | Frederic Godcharles, State libra- i rian, and an historical authority, de- . scribes the Commonwealth’s historic | shrines locating the early land- ‘marks of national and state develop- ment. | “Historic Landmarks” is a direc- ‘tory divided by counties and listing every important site of historic sig- | nificance, with a summary of the | facts. The cover photograph is a view | from Friendship Hill, home of Albert | | Galatin, Swiss emigrant who be- ; {came Congressman, secretary of the ' United States Treasury, and for i twelve years a diplomat. The view (overlooks the Monongahela River in (turbulent beauty with the pictur- ‘esque background of forests in Greene rand Fayette counties. Friendship | Hill, situated at New Geneva, in Fay- |ette county, nearly 15 miles south- ‘west of Uniontown, was purchased | by Albert Galatin, who escrolled Is name on the rolls of Revolutionary fame. W. H. Stevenson contributes a | sketch on Friendship Hill telling 1% | history. Detailed travel directions between jimportant junction points, linked | with an outline map of the State, lare calculated to enable motorists to plan loop, triangle, and business tours | of any length. Mileages are | with each itinerary and a distance | schedule separates 92 key towns and cities, showing the mileages at "a glance. | Benjamin G. Eynon, Commissioner ‘of Motor Vehicles, presents a sum- mary of the new motor code. Sup-! erintendent Wilson C. Price, of the | State Highway Patrol, offers rendered. LIBERTY BELL. | Liberty Bell it would be well lout and paste in your scrap book: Independence. given | the | | service of the patrol to every motor- list and tells a few of the services | { autumn. ing to take the physical condition of | | their children for grante Here are some things about the! cause the law requires tha to cut July 4, 1776, the bell rang for the | much of the job unfinished,” said Dr. proclamation of the Declaration of | | STATE HAS NEW SYSTEM FOR AUTO TAGS. Detailed plans which will be used in the numbering of automobile li- cense plates for 1930 have been an- nounced by the Department of High- ways. Twenty letters of the alpha- bet will be used and 99,999 will be the highest numeral combination is- sued. Highway officials intimate that the new system will result in a saving of approximately $70,000 yearly in materials and postage. The plates next year, as before, will be made of steel. Bids were receiv- ed on aluminum plates which are much lighter in weight but were re- jected because of the higher cost. One of the chief benefits that High- way officials see in the new system is marked for special license numbers and combinations. Low numbers will lose much of their charm. At pres- ent to get a number less than 1000, either in the first numerical or “A” series, requires the approval of the Governor's office. Next year anyone may get a low number without get- ting the endorsement of the county |« chairman. New tags will be six by ten inches and six by twelve in the entire pas- senger, commercial, dealer and omni- bus series. The only tags of the old maximum size, six by fifteen, will be the traction engine series of which 5,299 are ordered. The first series of passenger tags will run from one to 99,999 in the same manner as the 1929 series. “A” will mark 100,000 instead of the now familiar “million” series. Beginning with A, the second se- ries will run to A999, followed by B to B9999 and soon to Z9999. The let- ter will then slide back to second po- sition,, a new series starting OA to 9A999, OB to 9B999, etc, to 97999. Third position series, the letter serving as the third digit, will begin with OOA and continue to 99Z99. The fourth position series will run OO0OA to 9999Z. The only series in the passenger class employing two letters on a plate is the last, beginning with AAL, 2, 3, etc., to AA999; ABI, 2, 3, to AB999 and so on to SZ999. It will pe seen that comparatively small numbers will represent the highest or latest tag issued for the year. Classification for fifth will follow alphabetical subdivisions. Tag shows, although it may be the 994, 305th to be issued. Commercial and dealer licenses will be recognized at once by an un- varying rule of carrying two letters after the number. Commercials will begin with OOAA and run to 99VE, various classes of trucks each allot- ted individual letter combinations. Dealers tags will provide for 30,000 total issue but the possible series will by no means be exhausted. The 1930 issue will run from OOKA to 999YK. Busses will continue to carry the distinction 70” series, ranging from 01 to 0999. State owned cars, the judiciary, legislative, consular, and national guard will employ numerical designa- tion with a word or words defining re mms -+| pleats in the skirt portion. rare entirely absent or very | sometimes even reduced to a round- ed petal of the fabric covering the i shoulder. the class. ere CHILD SHOULD BE FIT FOR SCHOOL. Thousands of young people will start to school for the first time this And many parents are go- of course have them vaccinated be- done. Then, with a blessing, they will start them on their way with Theodore B. Appel, ' Health. | feeling are shown for wear | morning, sport and tailored models, | ‘usually cut on straight simple lines | ; for self-tone but | ! contrasting materials for trimming. Secretary of | On October 24, 1781, the bell rang | “Throughout the summer months out for the surrend of Cornwallis. the Department’s mobile health units | April 16, 1873, it rang to welcome ‘are invading many remote rural sec- Lafayette to the Hall of Independ- | tions where thorough examinations Why not cultivate a smile? For one thing, it looks a whole lot better | than a frown. But let it be a natural memorate the birthday of Washing- jt js for the childin the isolated sec- | fall, and this means of course, that i it will be very much in favor for late summer wear when winter modes be- smile that is the outcome of the sun- shine that exists if only as a smoul- dering spark, in the heart of the most ' miserable person on earth. Now let that hidden sunshine radiate from your eyes. ” “What's the use of that?” Well, for one thing because it 1s contagious; that’s why. It will ac} tually radiate forces of life just as the sun warms the heart of Nature in the springtime. It sends the dark- ness scurrying out of the people’s lives and that is surely worth while. A kindly smile in the eye will help to drive the shadows from our lives too, for the gloomiest shadows can- not stand the genuine smile that comes from the heart. Now the smile we want you to cultivate is the smile in the eye, in which there is no apparent change in the features which are in repose. Uncover the joy in “the heart and let it out through the eyes. It may seem me- chanical to think of adjusting the eyes to let the smile through, yet it is certainly a help. One of the great teachers of sing- ing advises his pupils “to shade with the eyes.” It puts the whole anat- omy of the face, mouth, and throat into a harmonious balance, in prop- er adjustment to produce the perfect tone. Then when the pupil feels the thrill of that tone, he ever after- wards unconsciously adjusts himself, he feels only that tone and lives in it. A joyous laugh is a beautiful sound and one that is rarely heard. It is also a very fine exercise and rouses into action the forces that help and heal all through the body. But do not laugh too much; some en- ergy is lost that way and one is al- ways liable to reaction. We can’t be laughing all the time, it would wear ence. July 4, 1826, it ushered in the year of jubilee, the fiftieth anniver- sary of the republic. July 24, 1826, it tolled the death of Thomas Jefferson. July 4, 1831, is the last recorded ringing of this famous bell to com- memorate the day of Independence. February 22, 1832, it rang to com- ton. In the same year it tolled the death of the last survivor of the Declara- ! tion—Charles Carroll, of Carrolltown. July 2, 1834, it tolled once more, Lafayette was dead. July 8, 1835, while being tolled for the death of Chief Justice John Mar- shall a crack developed, starting from the rim and inclining in a righthand direction toward the crown. Its voice is silent, but its deeds will ring in the hearts of all patriotic people so long as the name of liberty shall last. [EE—— SE POLICE CARS, BULLET PROOF. Bullet-proof bandit chasing auto- mobiles soon will make their appear- ance in Pittsburg, equipped with the latest type of guns and tear gas. Gunmen there are straight shots, the police believe. Chasing desper- adoes through the streets in an au- tomobile that is as open to attack as a squad car is not to the liking of police there. The new machines will be armored, with turret slots for guns, and will be equipped with bullet-proof glass. Peter P. Walsh, superintendent of police, satisfied himself that the glass is shatter proof, by exhaustive tests firing a 38-calibre revolver point blank at a pane. The glass is bullet- proofed by layers of celluoid. To protect the tires from being shot, they will be equipped with steel drops. One of the squad cars will be kept cruising the city twenty-four hours a day. The other will be kept for emergency calls. “We must protect our men against desperate bandits,” Walsh explained. “We can do this only with absolute bullet-proof automobiles. The sooner us out. But a friendly, genial smile we get them, the better will be our is always in season and we shall be | chances to capture desperate gun all the stronger for it. | men.” are being made upon the pre-school children and advice for the correc- : tion of physical defects are being | DhY Ei lingerie. | suggested and followed up. These - children are fortunate indeed. “However, there yet remains a large proportion of children in the ‘cities and towns to whom this ser- 'yice is not available in this form but | whose need for it is just as great as ' tions. “It is not enough that the pros- pective pupil does not complain of any pain. Pain is the language of acute and sub-acute conditions. Fre- quently it is altogether lacking in many of the physical conditions that urgently need correction. Many so0- | geniy y | Lacquer red { well as the darker wine shades, and called ‘repeaters’ and ‘dull’ children merely need some slight correction promptly to get them out of these classifications. In municipalities this obligation for the most part, where the pre-school | concerned, rests upon the parents themselves. ! “With the splendid medical fa- cilities in cities and towns there is absolutely no excuse for the child to be sent into the kindergarten or | first grade with a correctible physi- | Yet this is exactly what | cal defect. happens in thousands of instances to children every Fall whose parents are indifferent to their physical con- dition. | “Under-nourishment, bad teeth and tonsils, weak eyes, defective “hearing, impaired hearts and many other deficiencies are readily dis- covered by your attending physician or by hospital clinicians. The pres- ence of any one of these defects will undoubtedly handicap your child in its school career. | “Therefore, if you are the fortu- ‘nate possessor of a boy or a girl en- | tering school for the first time this year see to it that a complete physi- cal examination is made as soon as possible. Sufficient time yet remains { for correction between now and the | opening of the school term. “The young school children de- serve an even break and a square deal. Give it to them by starting { them to school physically fit.” ———— teed a —~Subscribe for the Watchman. | child is | afternoon ' sleeveless ' the driveway is FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Cruel people are ever cowards in emer- gency.—Swift. —=Salt is one of the greatest beauty aids. It is used for more purposes as a beautifier and cleanser than prob- ably any other product. Renee Ad- oree is a staunch advocate of salt and its many uses. “My daily beauty ritual utilizes salt in several ways,” Miss Adoree related. “It is always on hand and doesn’t have to be put up at the drug store or shopped for at the beauty counters. “First, I use it to bathe my eyes. A lage pinch dissolved with water in an eyecup soothes the eyes and helps make them bright and shin- ing. For the teeth it is splendid, al- though it should not be used too of- ten. Three or four times a week I brush my teeth with salt to make ,them glisten. Another oral use for salt is as a mouth wash and as a gargle. “Nothing is more refreshing and invigorating than a salt rub-down after a tiring day. After a luke- warm bath, soak a towel in a basin of water in which has been dissolved a half cup of salt. Wring it almost dry and rub the body vigorously, then let it dry naturally. A dry salt rub-down is also repuvenating. Keep a towel handy that has been soaked in the salt solution and use it when you haven't time for a bath.” Another product which Miss Ad- oree uses as a beauty lotion is the homely lemon. For whitening and softening the skin it has no peer, she declares. “Undiluted lemon juice is excel- lent for the neck and shoulders,” she said, “and also for the hands, arms and elbows. After using it, sponge off with milk or water. For the face, diluted lemon juice is good, using one-half lemon to a pint of water. | This need not be sponged off.” —New undies are not as scanty as a few seasons ago, for they are fol- lowing the general trend of feminine frills, ruffles and circular flounces. They are also much more elaborate, with heavy trimmings of lace or em- broidery. A lovely new lingerie material is called “tigress,” which is a very fine silk voile but as durable as its name implies. It comes in all the charm- ing new shades used for undies as well as new printed patterns which are very popular for lingerie. White satin is also being much used, trim- med with bands of fine linen. The three-piece model continues to be the most popular, knickers, bodice and slip in one article, with the waistline coinciding with that of the srock worn over it and the slip cut on the same lines as the skirt. Lingerie models with a tailored with only pipings Tailoring nighties have shoulder- yokes, turn-over collars, buttons and | only an occasional group of knife short, French nighties are gen- erally very short in length coming to about eight or ten inches from the ground. One of the big shops is making a d. They will | charming new beige crepe de Chine | night-gown t this be | bands of black tulle with a black trimmed with narrow tiger done in points of tulle on the left front. A pale pink voile comes with narrow rows of pink lace in linen in a criss-cross pattern on the upper part, and a yellow crepe de Chine nightie has yellow rickrack braid around the hem and small roses formed of the braid around the neckline and pocket. Another in pink triple voile has a large fichu of black lace. Black trimmings, by the way, strike a distinctive note —Color trends are as significant for future fashions as those of sil- houette, fabrics or accessories, and upilpss all signs fail, brown will be , the favorite when the leaves begin to gin to appear. After a long summer of yellow greens and soft yellows which the ' dressmakers are showing now, they predict a revival chestnut tint for is still of the warmer autumn wear. in favor, as several designers are using a very , dark garnet known as ‘dregs’ which | explains itself. Capucine and nas- turtium shades are still popular and there is a little revival of hyacinth blue. Dirty rose” pinks appear for little jacket ensembles and dresses of shantung or crepe, with a still paler shade for ev- Any number of white georgette, crepe satin and crepe romain are be- ing shown for Casina wear, hut one doubts if white will be much favored for the winter. Black remains extremely import- ant, whatever the season, alone or combined with light biue, white or pale pink. Cinnamon brown has been worn recently by several smart wo- men on the Riviera for evening. —By coloring the cement of which made, using reds, grays and perhaps other restful col- ors that harmonize with green of grass and color of house, this utility is made more attractive. Coloring need not add greatly to cost, for with per- manent mineral pigments a little coloring material goes a long way. When taking pies from the oven, put a wire rack under them until they are cool. This keeps the crust crisp and prevents sogginess. When poaching eggs for an invalid, cook them in hot milk instead of war | Potatoes! HE growing of potatoes, to which we re- ferred last week, and the making of a Will, are not even remotely connected. But the wise farmer will do what we suggested, and the wise man, whatever be his business, will not neglect doing the latter. competent lawyer. Consult a Have him make your Will—which you may change at any time, and name this Bank as your Executor. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK : BELLEFONTE, PA. {0 BARRIO, ANLRATG ARAARAIJARANMAI 0 ARAANTO JAANE O AAA with | Protected Travel Funds HEN you purchase Travelers Checks of us, you write your name on each check, thus making it your own. When you wish to spend one you write your name a second time on the check in the presence of the person accept- ing it. Their use assures safety, conve- ience and cashability everywhere. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Sleeves: in spring ! ter. They will be much more nourish- | § J ing 7 ] A Wonderful Opportunity! We are putting on sale our Entire Stock of Boys’ Suits i AT as OFF the regular price. Remember: It’s only one month until school starts. This, we know, is an oppor- tunity you will find profita- ble to take advantage of. Our entire stock of B 0ys ’ Suits included in this sale--- none reserved. Sale lasts 2 Weeks, only. FAUBLE’S or ae a Ar haul HER SSL SUSIE SSN Rats A ER EC TSAI ESANANNTE INN = oy SANE ANANN 4 3, AN