Bellefonte, Pa., April 18, 1930. Four Health THE FIRST CONCERN. He brushed his teeth twicea day /ith. a nationally advertised tooth- aste. The doctor examined him twice a ear, He wore ained. He slept with the windows open. He stuck with a diet with plenty f fresh vegetables. ‘ - He relinquished his tonsils and raded in several worn-out glands. He golfed—but never more than 8 holes at a time. He got at least eight hours sleep ve ht. He gh smoked, drank or lost is temper. He did his daily dozen daily. He was all set to live to be 8 hun. his rubbers when it red. The funeral will be held next Jednesday. He is survived by i n specialists, four health in- pe op. siums, and num- cous manufactures of health focds nd antiseptics. He had forgotten les and trains at —If you suspect that you may ave high blood pressure, or some- ne tells you that you have it, donot 2 too disturbed, for many a person as lived far past eighty in spite of about automo- grade crossings. ‘With the rapid pace of life in Bing days, it is no wonder that sople have high blood pressure. As doctors have increased knowl- ige of the variations that occur ‘om normal to abnormal blood ressure, they realize that “normal cod pressure is rare. ; ok diseases have high blood ressure as a symptom. Bright's isease, that familiar disease of the idneys, is usually accompanied bY igh blood pressure. : But the Possession of high blood ressure does not prove that you ave Bright's disease. A a matter : fact, many other conditions are -companied by it. High blood pressure may be ought on by an éxtreme nervous- 3g8, worry or some other disturb- jce of the nervous system. One : the outstanding causes 18 auto- toxication, or intestinal poisoning. There is a vicious circle set upin ie system by overindulgence In ch foods, alcoholic or other over- imulation, lack of proper rest and 1y kind of excess which upsets & nervous system. There 1s bound , pe intestinal poisoning, blood -essure and general ill-health where ese excesses exist. __Everyone should have a physical ;amination by a competent doctor ice a year. After a person is ‘ty it is well to have an examina- on twice a year. “Prevention the watchword today. Be on the fe side and guard your health. Of course, we should begin early life to keep fit. To keep in good .ndition by a proper diet and ev- y day physical exercise means ng life. Those who must live a sedentary ‘e should be extremely careful to it enough exercise to counteract e inactivity of hours In the day’s ork. Your muscles, arteries and veins ust be plastic and in good working der to do the work of the body. Vigorous exercise of some sort is e only thing that will accomplish is. Golf, walking, swimming and all nsible exercises help to get rid disease, as well as to prevent it. One doctor of my acquaintance «ce said that he had “kept ten tients with a blood pressure of 0 in good condition for ten years rough exercise on the golf course. e also said: “People should not be ncerned with the arithmetic of gh blood pressure, but « wholesome conditions of living nich will eliminate the cause of gh pressure.” Walking is a pleasure rather an merely a means of getting mewhere, provided, of course, that r feet are kept in perfect ndition. The first essential in the oper care of the feet is -anliness. Perspiration and dust use offensive odors and often re- 1t in skin abrasions and blisters as 21l. A cool or tepid foot bath after a ng walk will make you feel fresh ough to want to start all over ain. It will allay any sensation burning and will stimulate and rden the skin. _There is a form of indigestion sich is caused by eating too much archy food, as potatoes, gas and gue discomfort, especially at ght. The best remedy, to over- me this ill, is buttermilk or sour- dk. It is wise to keep the dietlow starches and sugars. —Let the springtime be a sea- n of house-cleaning but not by the king of drugs—rather by consider- 7 one’s ways of living and taking 1 advantage of the opportunities at are offered to live a really gienic existence in adjustment th the world around us. —After fifteen years of research Colgate University, Dr. Laird as- rts that the best theory for why » sleep is the one Poor Richard tered 150 years ago—that sleep with provid- | rigid | LEGEND REVEALS | PRETTY t HOW EASTER GOT ITS EGGS. | Easter, and what fun! Egg hunts, fuzzy bunnies, candy chickens, and colored eggs. How did it all be- gin? The old German legend tells us it was just this way, and of course it happened long ago. Princess Elizabeth and her little daughter were living disguised a® plain village folks in a small town, with only old Peter to serve them. Their castle lay in ruins, their lands were over-run with enemies, and Tie Prince either dead or imprison- The Princess spent long days and wakeful weary nights waiting for some news of him—some word to tell her that her homeland was safe to return to, but none came as the winter dragged on. The Princess spent her time in the cottage, her little daughter by her side, and tended to their simple wants herself, but one warm day in the early Spring the Princess noted for the first time how wan and pale the child was. For her sake the mother tried to smile, and to make their life a bit more cheery and happy. The season advanced rapidly, and Easter promised to be flowery and wonderful. At the thoughts of Easter in her homeland the Princess saddened again, but as she thought of the little cakes they used to make she smiled and planned to try her hand at a few for the little daughter's sake. Old Peter was hustled off to the market place to buy eggs, and sur- prised enough was he at the order, for up to this time the Princess had eaten what was brought to her with no interest whatever in the food. He said: “There are no eggs in this coun- try. I have asked time and again, time and again for them, but the vendors laugh at me and think me crazy. They know bird's eggs, but they never eat them, and when I say we eat hen’s eggs they answer, “Old man, we have thrushes and magpipes, robin and bluebirds, but never a hen bird flies in these parts.” The Princess was amazed, and Peter was sent on a long far jour- ney south, with the order to bring back hens and roosters and eggs, or not to come back at all! Just before Easter the old man reappeared, carrying big and little baskets, and big and little hens and roosters. Elizabeth was de- the village come to her house early Easter morning for something new and wonderful. Mothers were asked, fathers, aunts, uncles and cousins, and on Easter morning you may be sure they came. What feast! Omelets, cakes, eggs cooked in every way possible as- tonished those present who ate and ate, and stared at Peter as he walk- ed about with a large fat biddy- hen in his arms. What a wonderful bird it was! : Then came the colored baskets for the children, and orders to look after more eggs to take home with them. Into the garden they raced, ‘and there under the daffodils and lilies, the tulips and the dandelions, were blue and purple and scarlet eggs. The children shrieked with glee. They cried. “But the hen-bird’s eggs were creamy white. These are all bright with colors. Who ever brought these, do you suppose?” Just then a little brown rabbit went scurrying across the green i grass, and the children followed him. Where he disappeared lay great mounds of marvelous eggs. All shouted: “The bunny! The Easter bunny!” And nothing could ever make them believe the rabbit hadn't left them the eggs. So as the years go by the pretty custom is repeated, and on Easter morning the children delight in won- derful candy and sugar, paper and toy eggs, and in some real old-time happy families there are on the table good old-fashioned colored hens’ eggs like those Elizabeth hid in her garden so many years ago. If you will save the dry, brown skins from onions and boil the eggs to be hard you will obtain beauti- fully dyed Easter eggs of various shades of brown, with no taste of the onion and no danger of poison, as from some other dyes. | While the day is more generally | observed at the present time, mod- | ern people temper their devotions, and the handsome wardrobe and other like desires of the flesh are | given their part in the makeup of | the Easter day. The egg of myth | ology is still in use today, but for ‘the satisfaction of appetites. Easter.—Easter is to the Scotch, Paaske, and the ! The Word known as Paques; { Pasch; the Danes, | Dutch, Paschen. St. Paul calls ‘Christ ‘our Pasch.” The English 'name is derived from that of the old spring, Ostera or Eastre, festival occurred about the same ‘time of the year as the celebration | of Waster. When the early mission- 'aries went to Britain they found ‘the people worshiping this goddess ' to whom the month of April, which | they called Easturmonath, was dedi- | cated. The missionaries substituted the Christian feast for the old heathen one, but they allowed the . people to give it the name of their | goddess, and so the word Easter { came to be used. {| Co-operation is not a sentiment —it is an economic necessity. | { makes us healthy, wealthy and wise. | Only he puts it sleep takes away | that tired feeling and helps us on to | vitality, money and knowledge. . That's the low-down. Perhaps the ‘only people who don't want that hint to get about are the night club owners. lighted, and bade all the children of German or Saxon goddess of two adivsory committees whose | ficials of the Census Bureau. 1 1 i i , Western State Penitentiary, FORM OF SCHEDULE 1930 POPULATION CENSUS. The questions being asked by the enumerator in the 1930 census of population are as follows: 1. Relationship to head of family, including a statement as to the homemaker in each family. 2. Whether home is owned or rented. 3. Value of home, if owned, monthly rental, if rented. 4. Radio set? (Yes or No.) 5 Does this family live on a farm? (“Yes” or “No.”) 6. Sex. 7. Color or race. 8. Age at last birthday, 9. Marital condition. 10. Age at first marriage. married persons only.) 11. Attended school or college any time since Sept.1, 1927? (“Yes” or “No.) 12. Whether able to read and write? (“Yes” or “No.”) 13. Place of birth of person. (State or country.) 14. Place of birth of person's father. (State or country.) 15. Place of birth of person's mother. (State or country.) 16. Mother tongue of foreign-born person. or (For each 17. Year of immigration to the United States. (For foreign born only.) 18. Whether naturalized. (For foreign born only.) 19. Whether able to speak Eng- lish. (For foreign born only,) 20. Occupation of each gainful worker. : 21. Industry in which employed. 22. Whether employer, employee, or working on own account. 23. Whether actually at work. (For each person usually employed but returned as not at work, addi- tional information will be secured on a special unemployment schedule.) 24. Whether a veteran of the United States military or naval forces; and for each veteran, in what war or expedition he served. Among the most important of the new questions is that calling for the value of the home if owned, or the monthly rental if rented. This will make possible a classification of families according to economic status, or perhaps one might say according to buying power. Such a classifi- cation is urgently desired by indvid- uals and firms using the census figures as a basis for organizing their selling and advertising cam- paigns and will serve many other purposes. The replies to these ques- tions will be used only as a basis for classification on the families into broad groups, and particular pains will be taken to see that the in- formation given by any individual for his home is notin any way made public. Another new question is that which asks for the age at first marriage. This will serve two pur- poses, In the second place it will make possible a tabulation of im- portant data on the size of families, such ‘tabulation to be based on the number of children reported in the families of women who have been married a stated number of years. The question on radio ‘sets will give a direct answer to the ques- tion as to how large the potential radio audience is. In the classification of gainful workers according to occupation and industry it is proposed to put much greater stress than heretofore on the returns for industry, and to in- struct enumerators to pay special attention to this section of Ihe schedule. Women doing housework in their homes (or supervising such work done by servants) and carrying the other responsibilities of the home will be designated as home-makers. This designation will be entered in the family relationship column of the schedule, rather than in the oc- cupation column, in erder that those women who follow a profession or other gainful occupation in addition to being home-makers, may be prop- erly classified in respect to both lines of activity. A special schedule for unemploy- ment will contain a number of ques- tions designed to separate those not working into several classes, in- cluding, besides those absolutely un- employed those who have a job but are for the time being on lay-off without pay, etc. Provision is again made for class- ifying the foreign born, which still form a very important element in our population, in five different ways namely, by country of birth; by mother tongue (which is some- times a better index of nationality than is country of birth); by year of immigration to the United States; by citizenship (that is] whether naturalized, having first papers, or alien); and by ability to speak English. The form of the determined after a long series of conferences in which about 40 new questions suggested and endorsed by numerous organizations and individ- uals were carefully considered by 1931 TAGS TO BE MADE | move the furniture about and take !| | the lights along, say State College | agricultural engineers. schedule was; © gi and of- | ‘use to save fruit and vegetable! BY STATE PRISONERS. | With the completion of the con- tract for the manufacture of 1930! automobile license tags at the the jurisdiction of the State De- partment of Welfare, the tag de- partment this month swings into the manufacture of the 1931 tags, Paints have been tested for new tags and metals are on hand. The Department of Revenue placed the order for the new tags with the division of prison in- dustries, change in the form and method of { enumeration in the 1931 tags which are said by officials of the department to be entirely tory. revenue satisfac- —Read the Watchman and get all the news. | under | fruit trees girdled by mice and rab- | Your county agent can tell! the | has This virtually assures no’ ‘ped great distances. | ing an ample number of convenience FARM NOTES. taints ——Rape pasture cows’ milk. —If conditions are favorable, rape will make a good pasture crop five weeks after seeding. —On soils containing sufficient lime the most productive grazing crop known today is sweet clover. —The home gardener may extend his growing season in the fall by the use of hotbeds and cold frames. —By treating their seed carefully grain growers can save hundreds of thousands of dollars, which are lost annually through plant diseases, —Lime can be spread and disked in ahead of oats, corn or soy beans, or it can be applied after the corm or soy beans come through the ground. —Sudan grass belongs to the sorghum family and for that reason is a hot weather plant. It should not be seeded till the ground is well warmed up. —Prepare for the control of in. sects by having on hand spraying and dusting equipment together with such insecticides as arsenate of lead, nicotine dust, and nicotine sulphate. —Besides conserving moisture and keeping down weeds, cultivation tends to break up the harbors of mice, adds plant food to the soil, and makes more available the plant food already in the soil. —Dairy leaders say that if each farmer who makes his living from milking cows would sell just one un- profitable cow to the butcher the problem of the dairy industry would be solved. Another way is to fatten the cow for slaughter on the farm. —The market discriminates very severely against ram lambs and against lambs that have not been docked. These operations are sim- ple and easy if done before the lambs are three weeks old. — Cabbage root maggot can be controlled by corrosive sublimate. Use one ounce of the powder in eight gallons of water. Dissolve the powder first in a little hot wa- ter. Apply one-half teacupful to the soil around each plant. Make the first application soon after the plants are set and two more at 10- day intervals. Handle the solution carefully as it is extremely poison- ous. : —On account of its plentiful growth of root and top, even on poor soils, sweet clover probably is the most efficient legume for sup- plying organic matter and nitrogen. Some of the best potato growers in the State use a 2-year rotation of wheat or oats, in which sweet clover is sown and then plowed down the next spring for potatoes. —Plants from the greenhouse or hotbed should be sufficiently harden- ed before being set in the field by gradually lowering the temperature and reducing the amount of water supplied. Cabbage plants will have a reddish tinge when they arehar- | dened sufficiently to be transplanted into the field, ——Prevent in every way the carrying of infection from mature fowls and from contaminated ground to young chicks, Keep the old and young stock separate, State College poultry specialists urge. —The farm garden makes liberal contributions to the family larder if it is well-planned, properly planted, and correctly cultivated. Utilize the space to produce a continuous sup- ply of fresh veegtables and a suf- ficient amount for canning, drying, and storing. —This is the proper time to prune climbing roses. old shoots and preserve the younger ones which are more vigorous and which produce the most flowers. —TUnless the seed oats are treated with formaldahyde before sowing, smut will be invited to exact a heavy tax. Why grow ten acres of smutty oats when nine acres of clean oats will produce as much and a petter quality grain? —Much more convenient lighting can be had, particularly in the liv- {ng room and bed rooms by provid- outlets. This makes it possible to Seed treatment, planting dis- | fi strains and! eradi- | cation of host weeds, spraying, and sase-free or resistant varieties, seedbed treatment, sometimes dusting are ways the plant doctors and insect eradicators crops from disease and insect pests. —Poultrymen who have been us- ing lights on their laying flocks should plan to discontinue them | about the first of April. — This is a good time to save the bits. you how to bridge-graft the injured trees. —Dry skimmilk, or milk powder, is nothing more than fresh, skimmilk from which the water has been driven off by heat, leaving a fine, white powder, which will keep sweet a long time and can be ship. —A straw loft high enough to keep you from using swear words will make a lot of difference in Rene the poultry house warm and ry. HE straw stack in the barnyard of a farmer fel over one morning and buried four valuable cows and several hogs. Calling his ncighbors who had telephones, the farmer asked ihiem to come at once to help save his endangered live- stock. The neighbors began arriving with their pitchforks within a few minutes, and their com- bined efforts succeeded in digging out the cows and hogs without the loss of one. ys TleModern Farm Hou:e Ras a« TELEPHONE Bank Account, with the maintenance of A a proper balance not only gives one money in hand for present needs, but what is much more valuable,! establishes a certain credit with the Bank. The banker knows this, and prospect- ive borrowers who tell him they have no bank account, show a lack of business sense, and are at a disadvantage. There are few people, who at one time or another, do not have to borrow— often the need is urgent. Relations with a strong Bank will al- ways help. The account may be small, but it puts one on ‘better terms with those from whom one wishes to borrow. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Remove all | [IE sweet | Dress Up For Easter A very little money will bring you out all new, Easter—if you let the Fauble Store help you. We are showing bigger and better values right now than we have been able to do for over fifteen years. Our O. K. is All That's Needed ---As You Well Know emiitiwo