Dron “Bellefonte, Pa., October 3, 1930. SAYS WOMAN IS LOSING BEAUTY French Expert Blames Cos- metics, Smoking, Drink and Late Hours. Paris.—The days of beautiful wom- en are numbered. Modern life, with its cigarettes, cocktails, cosmetics, and late hours, is slowly exterminating | feminine beauty, according to Dr, Mar- celle Peillon, one of the foremost wom- . an beauty doctors and specialists of ¥rance, Madame Peillon says: “Unless there is an immediate reaction to all these tendencies which destroy not only beauty but health in general, women who have beautiful skin, bright eyes, red lips and vivacious temperament will live only in novels. “The beauties of histories were real. France was a nation of handsome women, the most beautiful being in the Frankish and Gallic tribes when cosmetics were unknown, but when the salutary effects of bathing springs _ were known even to animals. Medic- inal baths, hot springs, and the na- tural curative waters are the best aids to beauty, along with the simple re- gime of living that goes with the se called cure.” Women are rarely deceived about their beauty, says Madame Peillon. They apply paint and powder and have their faces lifted; they massage and bind and pull themselves out of shape, when they really know that the only aid to beauty is good blood cir- culation, which makes clear skin, and skin is the natural indicator and mir wor of health and beauty. Nature Knows Best. No cosmetic, no cream will ever do what the sun can do. And no fage- lifting physician will ever provide pli- ant muscles like physical exercise, early sleep, early rising will do. Fa'l- ing features, swollen veins, cheeks, are due mainly to the life that was lived for 30 or 40 years away from the air, away from springs and sunlight. The great enemy of beauty, says Madam Pelllon, is alcohol. After alqo- hol comes the cigarette. The great- est ald to beauty, on the other hand, is exercise, which induces a good ap- petite, then comes bathing, and Ma- dam Peillon asserts, like most physi- cians, that it is all important for wom- en to have children. Few great bezu- ties in history have been childless. ‘Woman's beauty increases as she bears children, providing adequate care ir ‘taken, "Not Too Late, Sisters. The woman of today, painted and powdered, sallow eyed, dulled by Wwte hours, lacking in spirit and deficient ‘in blood, can overtake her beantiful sisters of the past if she commences now, but Mme. Peillon fears that mod- ern life will prevent women from ‘growing in the natural way that the “women of the past developed. if any women are skeptical, asserts ‘Mme. Peillon, let them not go to a ‘beauty doctor, but let them for the sake of their own curiosity and desire to be beautiful, simply try living nat urally for two weeks, stop smokmg, drinking, in case they do drink, rise early, walk bareheaded in the open air, begin to love deeply, and Mme. Peillon adds, since heauty is more es- sential than anything, let them em- brace motherhood, and their mirrors will soon show a different fate, a ‘keener eye, brighter tresses, a brow ‘that is serene, respected, and loved. “Big Ben” Rezulated by i : Pence and Half-Pence London.-—*“Big I’en,” the famous “four-dial clock that tops the great tower of the parliament buildings, and which is one of the largest and most accurate clocks in the world, owes its precision to pennies and half-penmnses. This surprising information was given by F. W. Dyson, the astror omer royal. “During the year which ended on April 30 the clock was compare? on 288 days at the royzl observatory, and on only 21 days did its error reach more than one second, the maximum being one minute four seconds,” he -gaid. “The controlling device consists of ‘a tray fixed about halfway down che pendulum, and when the clock is ios- ing slightly a heif-penny is placeé on the tray. This makes the pendulum vibrate slightly more quickly and gradually brings the clock to time. If the clock is gaining, a half-peany or a penny is removed. “As it takes a fifth of a second for WHAT Y. M. C. A. of the Bald Eagle below Howard. The summer their vacation there under Christian camp Wapalanne on the banks influence. WORKERS ARE DOING FOR THE YOUTH Photo taken WEST PENN ELECTRIC CUTS ACCIDENT RECORD. For the past seven years The West Penn Electric Company em- ployees have been steadily reducing accident frequency throughout the system and this year have set a new record low in the number of accidents per month which tend to cause loss of work on the part of the company. . In 1923, an average of sixty acci- dents per month caused much un- favorable comment and resulted in | a campaign to reduce the number | of accidents serious enough to cause | loss of time and money. Up to and including the year 1929, the number was reduced to an average of only | “thirteen per month. For the year to date, the entire West Penn System has had only eighty lost time accidents, or an ‘average of ten accidents per month. saggy | which compares very favorably with past averages and low figures. During the month of August, 1930, subsidary companies of The West Penn Electric Company, namely, West Penn Railways Company em- .ploying 680 men, Wheeling Traction . Company employing 600 men, Alle- gheny Pittsburgh Coal Company, 500 men, and Windsor Power House Coal Company, 450 men, operated during the entire thirty-one day period without the report of a single lost time employee accident. The total force of 2230 employees work- ed approximately 485,898 man hours in the generation and distribution of a dangerous commodity, the mining of bituminous coal, and the opera- tion of electric railways and auto- . mobile buses. The Allegheny Pittsburgh Coal . Company accomplished the months i of July and August without the re. port of a single accident serious in extent to cause loss of time. In addition, the West Penn Railways Company, employing an average of 680 men, has had only four acci- dents causing lost time during the seven months of the present year. Such a noteworthy job of acci- dent prevention can be compared with any public utilities company record in the entire country, it is believed and West Penn officials can point with pride at the record of their employees. SURVEY SHOWS SCARCITY OF FEED FOR CATTLE Securing adequate feed for live- stock will likely prove to be a prob- lem in a number of Pennsylvania counties this winter, judging from a survey made on August 20, by the Federal State Crop Reporting Serv- ice, While a surplus of hay is indi- cated in more than two-thirds of the available counties, a deficiency of corn is ap- parent in all excepting 13 counties. In fact, in only seven counties does the visible supply of corn promise to be in excess of local needs. There will also be a deficiency of oats, especially in the south central and extreme eastern sections of the Commonwealth. The most fortunate feature of the feed situation is the amount of hay in Pennsylvania. With the exception of New York State, Pennsylvania produces on the aver- age more hay per animal unit than any other important livestock State. The average for the past five years was 2.28 tons per animal unit, com- pared to 1.70 in Ohio, 1.42 in Illinois, ‘and 1.06 in Towa. the sound of ‘Big Ben’ to reach the bottom of the tower and about a couple of seconds to reach Trafalgar square, the limits of reasonable aecu- racy have been reached. It is only for astronomical purposes that more is ! required.” Grownups Crowd Kids Off Their Playgrounds | Beloit, Wis.—Adults taking ad- vantage of fun facilities of the elty playgrounds have crowded children | out of the places originally intended | for them, according to a report to eity | ‘officials. be provided for adults—and children. Subscribe for the Watchman. | i The supply of hay available August 20, this year ap- peared to be 1.76 tons per animal unit produced in most States of the Nation. . The following table gives the con- dition of pasture and corn Septem- ber 1, as reported by crop corres- pondents, and compared with aver- age, the probable production of feed ‘for livestock as indicated by con. ditions August 20: According to the survey the con- dition of pasture in Centre county was 27% of normal on Sept. 1, and corn outlook was for a 329, ‘crop. THE DEER PROBLEM IN PENNSYLVANIA. Deer have become so numerous in | many counties of Pennsylvania that they are not only ravaging farm crops but destroying the forests, | their own natural food and food and cover of small game. Many does are not breeding but require just as much food as those that are re- More parks are expected to | producing. This surplus stock of deer re- | sulted from over 20 years of pro- ' tection of does and fawns. The deer PREPAREDNESS IN BUSINESS By R. S. HECHT, American Bankers Association. My observations for many years, both as an employee and as an execu: tive, have convinced me that the rea son some men and women go ahead and others do not is that some keep themselves constantly prepared to ac- cept and fulfill larger duties and re- sponsibilities as they offer, and some do not. Grant, as we must, that there is a i certain element of luck in the condi- tions under which opportunity for promotion comes to different men and women, we nevertheless must also see that it is each individual’s own state of preparedness which determines his ability to seize opportunity if and when it comes, and having seized it, te succeed in meeting the greater de- mands which it inevitably places upon him, Real advancement never means go- ing ahead to easier tasks, but always to harder ones. Opportunity for ad- vancement is worthless unless in ac- cepting it you are able to carry with you the abilities and qualifications that prepare you to meet the heavier exac- tions that are an inherent part of op- portunity. it is far better to go into action in the fleld of enlarged responsibility prepared and qualified, rather than ' Tk | that you and the institution you for shall be exposed to the hazard of sponsibilities after having assumed them. The new spirit of all business seeks | to prepare its people in advance | oy; dividual workers and the eus- through education for the higher duties it holds in store for them. Bank Bandits Active The Seitest aamiber of bandit raids on American banking ever recorded in the figures of the protective depart- ment of the American Bankers Asso- ciation were reported during the six months ending last February. Bank i members of the association reported . for investigation 311 forgery cases, 107 | holdup robberies, 16 burglaries, 2 sneak thefts and 8 mortgage swindles while non-member banks, numbering less than half the total enrolled in the association, suffered 86 holdup robber- ies and 9 burglaries, non-members be- ing burglarized or held up once for every 89 banks, as compared with once for every 164 member banks. The as- sociation detective agents caused the arrest of 143 of the 236 bank crimi- nals apprehended during the period covered. The association’s report on these conditions urges support of the move- ment to provide city police depart- ments with radio-equipped cruising automobiles which have proved par- ticularly effective in Cleveland and Detroit in the broadcasting of alarms THE INDIVIDUAL YET NEEDED BY BUSINESS By JOHN G. LOI G. LONSDALE President American Bankers Association OME seem to think that the day of | the individual in business has passed. But they are wrong. While the individual may not attract such outstanding attention as he did in the days of old when institu- tions were con- ducted on a smal- ler scale, he nevertheless is to be found in any large corporation, dominating the situation, giving orders here, co- operating there and shouldering the responsibility of keeping a large group of lieutenants, captains and privates working in uni- son and moving forward under the banner of progress. And all of these are held accountable to the public be- cause the public has entered into a partnership agreement with the cor poration through purchase of stock. Welfare of Workers Even in the gigantic mergers tha. aave taken place within the last two John G. Lonsdale your having to build up to new Te- {| years there remains more than ever the necessity for a leader, an aggres- sive personality, whose duty it is to see that basic principles are not for- gotten, that the rights and privileges tomers they serve are as well pro- OF THE COMMUNITY. when Kiwanis visited “the Y boys who were spending Marshall College of West Vir- i ginia will be State’s opponent on | the foot-ball field tomorrow. A BPO FEED e Olfer Subject 10: to Market Changes: | per 1001b | Hecla Scratch Feed.................. 2.20 | Wayne 32 per cent. Dairy ..... 2.60 | Wayne 249% Dairy..................... 2.40 Wayne 20% Dairy...........ceeeuueen 2.10 Wayne 16%Dairy Ration ..... 2.00 Wayne Egg Mash. .................... 2.80 Wayne 189, Pig Meal ........ 275 Wayne 289 Hog Meal ........ 2.95 Wayne Calf Meal.......... 4.25 Rydes Calf Meal....................... 4.50 Bran ......... 1.50 A. Midds 1.80 B. Midds 1.60 Corn and Oats Chop ... 1.90 Cracked Corn .............. 2.50 Corn Chop 2.50 Flax Meal . 240 Linseed Oil Meal ......... . 2.60 Cottonseed Meal .......... . 2.50 Gluten Feed ...._....... . 240 Alfalfa meal ........... . 223 Alfalfa loaf meal ............. . 8.25 Beef Scrap or Meat Meal........ 8.50 Hog tankage ... 2.70 ‘Oyster Shells ........ . 1.00 Mica Spar Grit... 1.50 Stock Salt ........ ... 1.00 Common Fine Salt............... ~ 1.35 | Menhaden 559% Fish Meal...... 4.00 Bone Meal 3.25 CRErcoal ........ .......co. 3.00 Dried Buttermilk ... 9.50 Dried Skim Milk 9.00 | Pratt’s Poultry Worm Powder 10.00 Pratt’s Poultry Regulator...... 9.00 vided for as in the smaller business . units. It is gratifying to note that our cor- porations are giving more and more concern to the welfare of their work- ers. Numerous benefit organizations have been formed, opportunities of- fered for advancement of education and position, hospital service estab- lished and insurance and retirement pensions provided. This general humanitarian move ment in reality is the outgrowth of analysis, which has disclosed the need of improving the well-being of our in- dividual workers, realizing at the same time that our institutions will benefit. ‘copical Animals That Once Lived in Britain There are many mammals in our zoological gardens which we look upon as strange beasts and associate wiih ' tropical countries, or places quite as and the closing in on criminals imme- diately after or even in the midat of the perpetration of crimes. Last year . the average time elapsed between the ! receipt of radio calls by these cars and the 1325 arrests which followed was one minute and forty-two seconds, the report says. herds increased, but the food . for them did not. ; For two years the commission has tried to reduce the surplus by per- mitting the killing of does. This year the same policy will be pursued and 100,000 ‘special deer licenses will be offered for sale. This will be in ad- dition to the regular licenses for antlered deer and for a different season. It is expected that from 25,000 to 30,000 does will be dispos- ed of in this way. Some advocate the abrogation of the buck law entirely but the com. mission and most sportsmen of the State do not approve. “The build- ing up of the Pennsylvania deer supply from practically nothing in 1907, to the present surplus stock is an unanswerable argument in fa- vor of the buck law.” rep A “A wise old owl sat in an oak The more he saw the less he spoke The less he spoke the more he heard Why can’t we be like that old bird?” —Read the Watchman. remote. But many of these great crea- tures were at one time roaming over the forests, mountains, and plains of Britain, for in those far-off days our country was joined to Europe, so that many animals in their treks found shelter here. At one time the hippopotamus was fairly common in and on the borders of our rivers. This huge creature was | to be found on most of the English and many of the Welsh rivers south of Lancashire and Durham. In that distant age, known as the Pleistocene epoch, before the glacial episodes, the hippopotamus traveled north as far as Yorkshire, and this animal was iden- tical with the African species of the present day. In the earlier Pliocene epoch a gi- gantic swine, as large as the tapir, reached England, and it may have lin- gered on to the time when man first took up his abode here, but with this exception the wild boar is the only wild pig that ..c¢c know to have fre- quented this country. The latter re- mained in the great forests to the end of the Seventeenth century, the last re- corded specimen being killed in Staf- fordshire in 1683.—London Tit-Bits. —Read the Watchman. HE DIAMOND BRAND, Ladies! Ask your Dru flat for Chi.ches-ter 8 Dlamon CHIOHESTER PILLS boxes, sealed Take no other. Buy of 3 fat. Ask for ©! JAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 28 years known as Best, Safsst, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Cod Liver Oil, cans gal... Cod Liver Oil, bulk gal 1% bbl. 1st Prize Flour . 14 Bbl. Pillsbury Flour............ Orders for one ton or more de- livered without extra charge. We make no charge for mixing your own rations. Your orders will be appreciated and have our careful attention. A. F. HOCKMAN BELLEFONTE Feed Store—23 West Bishop St. Phone 93-4 Mill-——Hecla Park, Pa. Phone 2324 666 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold Saige first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 also in Tablets. | i i I your dresser still in the dusk when the bed- room lights are lit? There are no in- convenient dark spots -in the bed- room with ade- quate, well placed and properly shaded light. WEST PENN POWER CO BETTER LIGHT MEANS GREATER CONVENIENCE Fine Job Printing A SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE Bent BOOK WORK that we sau not do in the umludg sa factory manner, and a Pricés + consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with 0! aE IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 1420 Chestnut St., PHILADELPHIA Have ~Your Diamonds Reset in Plantium 74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry Employers, This Interests You The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan, 1, 1916. It makes insurance com- pulsory. We specialize in plac- such insurance, We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates, It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance, JOHN F. GRAY & SON State College Bellefonte RRR RRR ARR RRA WE FIT THE FEET COMFORT GUARANTEED Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years in the Business BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market 4-343 A MEALTIME SUGGESTION. Meat! What family menu would be complete without this essen- tial part of a good dinner. Meat builds health and restores energy. We always have the various kinds of meats that are most wanted. All are of prime quality—fresh, tender and fla- VO . Telephone 686 Market on the Diamond. Bellefonte, Penna.