noe Bellefonte, Pa, November 28, 1950. NOTED FODD EXPERT SAYS SWEET CIDER IS FINE TONIC. Cider which is unfermented is ex- ceedingly wholesome and valuable. Its value lies in the fact that it contains a very agreeable tasting substance called “malic acid,” which acts as a disinfectant and antispetic for the stomach and for the intes- tines. Sweet cider may be used with excellent results in cases of loss of appetite, emaciation and malnutrition, and its use at any time is to be recommended highly. Sweet fresh cider is also a valuable aid and even a remedy in cases of gastric and intestinal catarrh. It assists in relieving disturbances such as’ jaundice and billiousness. It acts asa remedy for diordered kidneyy and liver. It helps in cases of con- stipation and often sterilizes infected intestines. Fresh sweet cider will assist in preventing acidosis, a common ail. ment due to improper eating. Gout, and in fact, almost any disorder due to uric acid poisoning is often re- lieved by a liberal use of fresh sweet cider, Malic acid is milder than some other fruit acids and acts beneficial- ly on the system. The system more easily absorbs and utilizes the malic acid of cider than it does tartaric acid of grape juice, and for that rea- son sweet cider may be taken into the stomach in large quantities with- out any evil results. The best time to drink itis shortly before meals and before go- ing to bed. A large glassful one hour or one-half hour before eating is a very satisfactory method of drinking fresh cider. Cases are exceedingly rare where good, wholsesome, clean, fresh cider disagrees with any individual. If there is a tendency for the cider to disturb the system unduly, it prob- ably will be found to be caused by the use of an inferior brand. Those who have tendencies to acidosis should select only a clean, wholesome brand of cider and use it freely to combat this ailment. Of course, it is better to eat only such foods that do not cause acidosis, rather than try to select some rem. edy that will offset the trouble, but often this is very hard to do until one understands just what causes acidosis in any particular case. Cider should be made from select- ed apples which have been proper- ly washed and cleaned in advance of pressing and grinding. It should be placed in containers that are clean and sterile. The juice is sometimes pasteurized by heating at a tem- perature of 165 degrees, The organism : which causes fer- mentation to take place is thus kill- ed. This process causes the cider to lose some of its delicious flavor, but seems to be about the most sat- isfactory way of keeping it sweet in bottles. The hettter way. is to purchase it sweet and fresh as long as possible in the fall of the year. Under the present system of keeping apples for cidér it is possible to buy freshly | prepared cider during the greater part of the year. Extreme heating of cider its flavor, reduces its wholesome. ness and decreases the beneficial re- sults to be obtained from the use of it. Green Gravenstein apples contain twice as much of the malic acid as Baldwin apples, and the Green Maiden Blush nearly three times as much. The practice of using of apples, wind falls, semi-decayed apples for cider is a bad one. No one wants to drink a liquid that is contaminated with filth and that is made of substances unfit for food. There is but one way to protest against such abuses. Buy the brand that is known to be prepared care- fully and under conditions that war- rant a wholesome, clean, pure, fresh product. Use it freely. It is only an ex- cellent brand of freshly prepared cider that can be considered as valuable in disinfecting the stomach and intestines, A wholesome brand of fresh apple juice will give amaz- ing results in this respect, but a poorly prepared concotion 1s gerous to use. ———————— er —— DEMAND INCREASES FOR CAMP LEASES. Permanent camp site leases on the State forests now number 2301. More camp site leases were granted in 1930 than in any previous year in the history of the department, according to a statement by Forest- er William A. August, of the bu- reau of management, Department of Forests and Waters. Forester August has charge of permanent camp site leases. Last year rentals from camp site leases amounted to $19,449.60, and it is expected that this year thé receipts will be approximately $25,000, State forest camp sites are leased ! at a. nominal rental, ranging from | $7 to. $15 a year, but there is no charge for renewing, transferring or terminating these leases. These re. ceipts are paidinto the State Treas- ury and become a part of the State School Fund. This increased number of camp sites may be dttributed in part to the unemployment conditions, as many of the lessees, have reported that due to unemployment they spend practically all their time in the forest where they canlive more economically in their rustic forest cottages and thereby escape the temptations for extravagance which constantly confront them in the towns and cities. ll ——— “Are your poems widely Friend: read?” Poet: “I'll say they are. editors read the last cone)” Over 20 |1)R. VIZETELLY SAYS SLANG spoils | poor grades wormy and | dan- | GIVES HIM GREAT “KICK.” Dead languages are dead ‘because they had no slang to vivify them,” is the opinion of Dr. Frank H. Vizetelly, dean of American lexicog- raphers, who acknowledges he gets “a great kick out of the expressive- ness of American slang.” it that seems to fit, no matter how spontaneously it originates,” he de- clares, and when usage decrees he puts slang in the dictionary. “There is a certain sincerity about sl that frees it altogether from snobbery,” says the lexicographer, “gnd it leaves very litle room for doubt. There's not the least doubt about a man's meaning when he calls you a dud, a wet blanket or a calamity howler. You can’t pos- sibly kid yourself that you don't, and I don’t mean maybe! «When Marlowe didn’t keep his nose clean’ the gang decided to give him the works, so he was taken for a ride. After they gave him the heat they lammed from fear of go- would have burned for sure. put me on the spot and that I've got to come over with the goods. So experience has taught me that a spieler shoots a hot line nowadays— and how! I've learned to know what it means to do a bit. “H. L. Mencken certainly wasn't | far wrong when he said that ‘slang is the source from which the ener gies of decaying speech are con- stantly refreshed.’ “Did slang come over with the | Mayflower? Who knows? Isn't there a bit of itin Priscilla’s? “Why don’t you speak for yourself, John?’ Anyway, slang has been with us since the Declaration of Independ- ence and the days when “Yankee doodle stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni.” The Mac- aronis were the Marylanders in the Revolutionary war. : “The slang picked up by vaude- ville acts consists of wise cracks culled from newspapers or cribbed from some bozo lit up with a little pony oil. Then it is shot across the footlights, and all the boobs in the trenches of the underworld buzz around the dance halls, shooting the stuff off as if it were thier own. “And what are they? Just noth- ing more than the common or gar- den paluka. “What's paluka? In the under- world he’s the fall-guy; but out in Hawaii he’s justa poor fish, served as hors doeuvre and eaten raw. The | world is full of palukas.” FRANCE ARGUES OVER OUT IN ARMY SERVICE. For the first time since France i became a Republic, the period of | compulsory service in the army has | been reduced from 18 months to a i year effective today. |” ‘By thislaw the nation reduces its army 100,000 men, a drastic cut { which has brought criticism from i Nationalists who see a new danger in growth of the German Facist spirit. The French Government main- tains the country thus gives proof that its desire for peace is stronger than mere words. Since 1928, when the 12-months’ military service law was voted, !France’s military advisers have | gone about the task of preparing for the army's reorganization. It was the former leader of the German Reichswehr, General von Seeckt, who gave French strate- gists the new idea. “The Allies at Versailles,” said General von Seeckt, “imposed upon Germany the type of army best i adapted to war of the future. A small mobile army, quick to handle, is more deadly than a ponderous mass of men slow to act. The military maneuvers, carried out by French forces during the summer and autumn on the Italian and German frontiers convinced the i French High Command, headed by | Minister of War Andre Maginot, | that the German general was right, iIn all, the army of slightly more than 100,000 men was in the field, | equipped with every -war device i known to science. France's army of one year's serv- lice is expected to total 523,769 ef. | fectives, although acording to M. { Briand at Geneva the figure is 556,- i 000 representing a reduction of 41 i per cent. | According to report M. Maginot | is. credited with the idea of a super- efficient group of 200,000 men avail- , able for any given danger point, : while the remaining force of 300,- 1000 odd men would be reinforce- | ments. There are | French soldiers, i 106,000 professional but it is alleged that only 46,000 remain in France, ! the remainder being spread among | the overseas possessions. From the | conscripts France could rely at a ! given time upon only 90,060 as be- {ing efficient soldiers, it is claimed, ! thus leaving France at a disadvan- i tage against Germany with figures ! respectively 136,000 and 250,000. a—— | FORESEE RADIO WAVE AS WARTIME WEAPON. A radio device that could stop all | airplane and automobile motors at | once is a theoretical possibility 1n | war machinery, the Bureau of { Standards states. { The Bureau is working already on an “ignition harness” to shield igni- | tions from which such a device, al- i though no remote control for motors i has yet been perfected. This remote control to stop all engines by broadcasting with enor- { mous power on the same wave length as the ignition system would allow a lone figure in a bomb proof | laboratory to stop all enemy planes {and all motor transportation with ld twist of a dial , Such adévice would require enor- { mous sending power, but a Eu- ropean physicist says an automobile ‘has actually been stopped by trans- ‘mission of other wavés corrésgond- ‘ing with those of the ignition sys- + tem of the car, “There’s something snappy about ing up tothe big house, where they “You can realize that you nave errs: Ke mts MILE- A A- M INUT ] 1 E MARTY RM | HELL THINK You'RE HAW! Haw /~ YouR: THRIFTY OLD DAD WILL THROW A FIT WHEN NE |SEES THAT SPIFFY CAR OF YouRS! (7 DECKER CHEVR E 1924 Ford Turing ......... 15.00 1926 Chevrolet Truck open 1927 Buick Sedan Standard 4 1925 Ford coupe $ 140.00 BXPPESS: ...........oeceonnss 150.00 Six: $ 450.00 : 1926 Ford coupe +80. 1008 Tevivlel Some he $ Sm 1920 Whippet Coupe ...........- $ 290.00 ; : n less 192 hevrolet Sedan ............ 19 ppet Sport Road- 1920 DO ee Dia aL $ 350.00 1929 Chevrolet Sedan ......... $ 450.00 ster .......................... $ 150.00 1929 Ford Roadster 1st 2 1929 Chevrolet Coaches 1924 Oldsmobile Coupe ....... $ 125.00 Tires ..........iieal.. $ 325.00 eaelt ..........oiis 90.00 1924 Oldsmobile Touring ...$ 50.00 1926 Chevrolet Touring ...... $ 60.00 1927 Chevrolet Sedan ... 1926 Overland 4 Ton Panel 1929 Model “A” Ford Ton 1925 Chevrolet Coupe .......... $ 125.00 body Truck only....... $ 40.00 Truck large steel 1927 Chevrolet Roadster ...$ 140.00 1929 Stewart Cattle rack © Box on 325.00 1924 Chaviog. Roadster ...§ 25.00 Truck... $ 150.00 = Chevrolet COUDE ......... 200.00 1926 Essex ach ! 1920 Vim 3 Ton Dump er is : 1928 Essex Coupe (automatic) Truck..$ 150.00 BCH oi 150.00 1927 Essex Coach 1927 Pontiac Sport Road ‘1930 Chevrolet Coach 5 wire 1925 Buick Sedan Standard Stel lala 25.00 wheels .............. 500.00 SIX i ierveaans $ .00 1926 Oakland Sport Road- 1927 Chevrolet Touring ...... $ 140.00 1924 Buick Roadster ........... $ 60.00 Stor... oiececenees $200.00 Phone 405...... BELLEFONTE, PA. Decker Chevrolet Co., Bellefonte, Pa DROVE HII OVER TO — \T-HE TOOK ONE LOOK AT THEIR USED CAR BARGAINS AND BOUGHT A SEDAN AND A LIGHT ‘TRUCK FOR HINSELF! HAW HAW! You CAN AFFORD TO BUY ‘EM Nn BUNCHES THERE!) 4 OLET CO. a Yo 8 | To PROVE \ DO MODERATE DRINKERS OUTLIVE TEETOTALERS? pe About the most interesting tribution to this age-old argument concerning the effects of alcohol on the human species is the evidence assembled by Dr. Raymond Pearl, of Johns Hopkins University. This seems to prove that moderate or occasional users of alcoholic liquors live longer than teetotalers. I have recently had occasion to thoroughly review this investigation. It has nothing to do with prohibi- tion, for the people investigated did their drinking and were mostly dead and gone before there was any prohibition in Baltimore—where, for that matter, there isn’t much yet: ‘Dr. Pearl was only interested inthe dead ones, since he was studying the length of life and a man doesn’t know how long he is going to live until he is dead. From family histories gathered in an investigation of the predisposing causes of tuberculosis, Dr. Pearl se. lected about 2,000 cases in which the records seemed clear as to the individuals’ drinking habits. These ‘he classified as total abstainers, moderate or occasional drinkers and heavy or steady drinkers. The heavy drinkers time, having shortened their lives from five to ten years by their use, or overuse of alcohol. This evidence of increased mor- tality from the heavy or steady use of alcohol is in accordance with all previous investigations. It is suf- ficient to be indisputable, and suf- ficient to have dragged down the average length of all users of al- cohol to considerably less than that of teetotalers, provided all drinkers had been classed together, which is the usual classification. The distinctive thing that Dr. Pearl did was to make three classi- fications, and the distinctive fact con- died - before their. ' NEBRASKA TOWN NOW ON A CASH BASIS. Bloomfield, Nebraska, has attract- ed the attention of the United States by .an experiment which is watched with considerable interest. The merchants of Bloomfield, pop- ulation 1,500, decided twenty-eight months ago to put the place on a cash basis. Today only automo- biles are sold on credit. The orginal idea was to get rid of dead beats. Some people did move away. Motion picture theatres were hard hit at first, because apparent- ly the Bloomfielders didn’t have spare cash for recreation after pay- ing cash to the merchants for necessities. But now the place is adjusted to the new arrangement, that he proved was that his class of moderate drinkers actually lived a fraction of a year longer than these whose descendants swore they never touclied a drop. What his data seems to prove is not that alcohol directly benefits or adds to the vitality of human life, but rather that under _the social conditions. existing in past generations in Baltimpre the people who drank alcohol occasionally were for .some reason a better and more vigoru$ class of human stock than those who never touched liquor. That is an’ interesting idea, and one could offer all sorts of reasons as to why it might be so. It would also be interesting to speculate on whether the moderate drinkers of th present generation livin under our prsent regime of prohibition will be a more vital group and live longer than those whoobey the law. But one thing, is sure, and that is those who drink heavily of prohibi- tion booze pass in their checks ahead of time, just as their grand- daddies did with a much better booze. .- ti : in Gold! ; will be given away. The Gold Coin is Five Hundred Dollars || | GOLD fun | ot only children will be happy on the night | before Christmas this year.” Forty-five others who have made pur- chases in Bellefonte stores will have reason to rejoice. A First Prize of One Hundred Dollars Forty-four other prizes in gold coin Buy everything possible at home. only-because you may win a prize, but because it is a duty you owe your local merchants. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK | BELLEFONTE, PA. | Ls NE . Not Here on Display P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market 75-1 YOUR THANKSGIVING BIRD We have the Thanksgiving turkey you want. It is a bird! It has youth and the weight to meet your requirements. Drop in our butcher shop right away and select yours from among the many we have for other customers who depend upon us for their choice turkeys, fowl, and meat cuts. Telephone 666 : Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. Everybody is pa cash and even the doctors and dentists col- | lect on the spot—or give their serv- ices free if circumstances warrant it. And no longer is the most in- fluential citizen the man who owes the most money. Mrs. Bloop:—Does your car have a worm drive? Mrs.—Beeps—Yes, but I tell him just where to drive. —Read the Watchman and getall the news. "CHICHESTER SPILLS Pills in sed y Loss. sealed with Blue Ribbon. awd i Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years in the Business