Bellefonte, Pa., THE FIRST CONCERN. INFANTILE PARALYSIS This is the season of the year 1n | which infantile paralysis is preva- lent and newspapers everywhere «contain reports of cases of children, and even adults, suffering from paralysis and dying of this crippling malady. The most modern method of treat- ment is the use of serum taken from someone who has recently re- | covered from the disease. The exact. method of spread of infantile paraly- | sis. is not known, although it is realized that it spreads from person to person and that when once in ‘the body the poison travels through the nervous system, affecting chiefly the nerve cells in the front of the spinal cord and thereby bringing :about paralysis. There seems to be no doubt that “people do not develop the disease be- cause they have in their bodies | :an immunity to it, perhaps having | suffered at some time a very mild infection, Apparently there are people in communities’ who are carriers of in- fantile paralysis and who spread the disease from one person to another without themselves being actually sick. The detection and control of carriers is the most important step in preventing epidemics of many in- fectious diseases. The causative agent of in- fantile paralysis is not known and attempts are.being made in many research institutions to find out the nature of the organism. In a recent small epidemic there were 12 cases of the disease, 10 who were treated with convalescent serum and who recovered; two who were treated without the application of modern medical means, but by the use of faith and adjustments died. * The interest which the public has shown in lending its efforts to the control of this disease is best rc- vealed by the fact that in Montreal during the last epidemic, according to Professor H. B. Cushing, cripples for many miles around wrote to the ;health department offering to come at their own expense to supply serum, if it were required for new cases of the disease. Health authorities should have a sufficient amount of convalescent serum on hand to treat cases in time of epidmeic. In the epidemic which took place in Manitoba, 8,000 cubic centimeters of serum were available, an amount representing ‘eight quarts. The serum is in. jected with a needle into the mus- cles, and, if given early, aids in ‘the prevention of paralysis and in producing prompt recovery. The next most important step may well be absolute rest in the acute Stage. When the patient in the early acute stage of infantile paraly- sis is given absolute rest, the amount of congestion in the spinal cord is — ll our Health | “IN- BELLEFONTE g— Dr. R. L. Capers Osteopathic Physician Special Non-Surgical Method of Treating Rectal Diseases Bloodless and Painless Hours 9-12 a. m. Monday and Wednesday 1-5 p. m. Friday 7-9 p. m. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 7-9 p. m. Phone 128-J The Variety Shop Over a Third of a Century at Same Location vs nisin Merchandise and Prices CORRESPOND C.Y. Wagner & Co., Inc. Manufacturers of Flour, Corn Meal ana Feed And Dealers in All Kinds of Grain Bell Phone 22 BELLEFONTE, PA. TRY OUR State College Cottage Cheese and Cream Cheese, Butter, Whip- ping Cream and Certified Milk— Harry E. Clevenstine When Winter Comes you will Need Your FUR COAT Let Us Repair or Remodel It— Guaranteed Satisfaction Harry Greenlerg Spring and High Streets Bellefonte, Pa. Phone 558-J less, and the amount of paralysis is naturally less also. .. After the acute stage has disap- | peared, it becomes necessary to! treat the paralysis by modern ortho- | pedic methods. Massage and elec- | tric treatments are not to be given ! “unless they can be administered by | trained investigators who will not | irritate inflamed tissues, | . If it were not for the fact that. ‘many people have a natural im- | ‘munity to infantile paralysis, the amount of crippling and permanent | ‘injury from this disease would be | far greater than it now is. Unquestionably the virus or agent that causes infantile paralysis is, ‘widely distributed so that the op- | portunity is open for infection. There | Seems to he considerable likelihood that people who have some immuni- ty to the disease develop increasing Immunity as they grow older. : -Furthermore, as one reaches adult age he is less frequently exposed to the disease than when he was a child. Some investigators have ar. gued that immunity decreases with ‘age, and that it is only the lessen- ‘ed exposure that keeps most adults from having the disease. : It is known of course, that im- munity to other infectious diseases ‘brought about by inoculation against them tends to wear off after a ‘period of time. It is known that ‘the incidence of both infantile paralysis and diphtheria is low in infants under one year of age; ‘probably because such infants are not frequently exposed to these dis- ‘eases, but probbaly also because the | infant at birth has in its blood im- mune bodies against infectious dis- eases derived from the mother. Wes ieors Wife: “Goodness, John! re did you get t ; Yste 2 you g hat lighted Tod 1 Professor: “I picked it up. Some careless person left it o that hole in the road.” ae You Need No Longer be Told You Have an Expensive Foot Enna-Jettick Shoes for Women $5.00 and $6.00 Mingle’s Shoe Store PICTURES ARENOT ALWAYS TRUTHFUL Some Mail Order Houses Find Them Very Useful in Their Business. CAN “DOCTOR’’ PHOTOGRAPH Concerns Can Give Wrong Impres- slons With Illustrations While Sticking to Truth In Descriptions. i (Copyright, 1917, Western Newspaper Union.) i “Figures never lie,” it has been | claimed, but this is far from the | truth. The defaulter who has “doc- tored” his books in such a way that he . has escaped detection for years, knows that figures can be made to lie. The shrewd politician, whe knows how to juggle statistics, knows that they can be made to tell a story that is far from the truth. But there is another medium of ex- pression which is also supposed to be a stickler for truth, but which is a greater prevaricator than figures. That is a picture. A picture of any person or thing, supposedly, is an ex- act reproduction of the original, but this is frequently only a wild suppo- sition. The photographer who did not make his picture tell a little fib now and then would soon go out of busi- ness from lack of patronage. Pictures Better Than Words. Pictures have come to occupy a very important place in the life of the world in recent years. It has been said that for newspaper purposes a pleture which tells its story strikingly is worth more than columns of written words I | on the same subject. Newspapers and magazines have realized the truth of { this fact and ‘as a result pictures are | used profusely in illustrating the‘news and fiction of the day : No one has been quicker to realize the possibilities of the picture when properly—or it might be said improp- erly—used, than the mall order: man. He has realized that a picture will do more to sell his kind of merchan- dise than a column of words and fig- ures. One reason for this is that it is harder to catch a picture in/a lie than it is printed words and figures. For instance, if you sell a man a table on the strength of a printed statement that it 1s 48 inches wide and if when the table reaches the customer fit is only 86 inches wide, the customer not only has a moral right to kick, but he has a legal right to accuse the sell- er of obtaining money under false pre- The Key to Better Business LIFE IS A GIVE AND TAKE PROPOSITION tenses. However, if the customer buys a table which looks in a picture to be 48 inches wide, but which proves upon its arrival to be only 36 inches wide, he has no legal grounds upon which to base a complaint if the sell- er has not told him in so many words that the table was 48 inches wide. Stick to Truth in Figures. Some unscrupulous mail orde: nouses have taken advantage of this selling power of pictures in a very in- cenious way. They adhere strictly to the truth in the actual measurements given in their catalogues of the arti- cles which they have to sell. They may employ descriptions which exag- gerate the qualities and appearances of the articles offered, but when it comes down to actual measurements the descriptions given are technically correct. Then these concerns rely upon their pictures to sell the merchandise, realizing that a picture will make a far deeper impression upon the mind of the prospective buyer than the act- ual figures given. A picture of a wide, roomy bed will attract the eye and the reader probably will not stop to measure off the width of the bed as it is described in the catalogue to see whether it is as wide as desired. Fig- ures, in the abstract, mean little to the average reader and do not convey the impression that is given in the pic- ture. A former manager of a mail orde: nouse tells how his concern manipu- lated pictures in this way to suit its purposes. It had pictures of its chairs retouched so that the legs seemed to be an inch and a half in di- ameter, when they were really less than an inch. It made narrow beds appear in the picture to be wide and comfortable. Posts of iron beds that were really an inch in diameter were made to appear as if they were three inches in thickness. These things are easy for any competent artist to do. Patrons Had No Recourse. This concern, however, adhered rig idly to the truth in the measurements included in the descriptions. Custom- ers who found, when they received their goods, that they were not what they expected, could kick, but it would ‘46 “thei” tio’ god. The mall order house could show that it had set forth ‘the measurements truthfully in cata- logues, and there was no recourse for the customer. There is no question but that pic tures will lie, sometimes without any manipulation, and the person who buys an article of merchandise from a pic- ture is taking big chances, even though the picture is not intentionally altered to give a wrong impression. Any ama- teur photographer knows from experi- ence how the camera often will give ‘a wrong idea of proportions, The only safe method is to buy from the local merchant where one sees the article itself and not a picture of fit. The article itself cannot lie about its dimensions, at least, If you want, satisfactory printing at. reasonable prices the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you. Goodbye Dirty Coal Dust! You can say this only when you use Genuine Dustless Coal scientifically treated to eliminate coal dust. Our Cambria Smokeless and Dustless Coal saves cleaning, sweeping and dust- ing. See us before buying. J. 0. BREWER Successor to Thomas Coal Yard Studebaker Free Wheeling «..Means.... A transmission which permits the engine to pull the car, but prevents the car pulling the engine. BEEZER’S GARAGE North Water Street City Coal Yard 0. G. Morgan, Proprietor Bellefonte, Pa. Anthracite C Oo al and Bituminous Exciusive Saie of the PINE GLENN and The Original Cherry Run Coals Special Notice We handie U. S. Government in- spected meats for the health and protection of our patrons. Leave your orders early for your Xmas Turkey, Duck, Geese and Chickens. Phone 384 J Armstrong Meat Market Carpeneto’s Always the Best, Fruits, Vegetables Candy and Tobaccos Phone 28 We Deliver Lumber Steel Claster’s ....At the Big Spring... Building Supplies W. R. Brachbill Established 1841 Furniture and Rugs BELLEFONTE, PENNA. Part Wool Double Blankets 66x80—Plaid Designs A Useful Xmas Gift $ 1" PAIR Cohen ® Co. Department Store Bellefonte, Pa. * Potter-Hoy Hardware Co. Only One Heatrola Made by Estate Store Co. WE SELL IT Phone 660 . . . Bellefonte THE R.S. Brouse Store In ‘Bush Arcade On High Street . . Always Fresh Groceries Glenwood Stoves Makes Baking Easy Peninsular Parlor Circulators Blaben’s Floor Linoleums Hilo 4-Hour Hard Drying Enamels in All Shades, Rich in Color and Durable — Everything in Hard- ware, at the Right Price. H. P. Schaeffer HARDWARE Sid Bernstein Sells For Less Come in, look around and be convinced. ‘The Family Outfitter Next Door to Richelieu Theatre Bellefonte, Pa. We Recommend and Sell“Larro” rem. “More Profit Over | Martha Washington Candies Received Fresh Weekly City Cash Grocery Shop at THE KATZ STORE ...And See For Yourself that Price has nothing to do with Good Taste —OQur merchandise is chosen first for itg Good Taste, its Correctness—If it can be had Runkle’s Drug Store NA WITH SAFET, 9 8 iY et ev) RY003 Feed Cost” 4 All h S for lower prices we’re doubly glad—We be- Ty Hoag’s Dairy Store egheny Sirool Ie an He et Remedies May er Bros. i Bellefonte, Pa. We Propose to Bush Arcade Corner High and Spring Streets : Give It to Them I BELLEFONTE, PA. Phone 334 Bellefonte. Pa. Phone 629 Insurance mse Ed. L. Keichline Bellefonte, Pa. If in Need of a Real Victrola Type Parlor Heater It will certainly pay you to investi- gate the “Torrid Sunshine” —sold by The Bellefonte Hardware Comp’y We trust you find yourselves among those who feel that Olewine’s Hard- ware is a good one to deal with. If so, we are realizing our aspiration to glve real service in all our deal- ings, aud we thank you for your response to our efforts. Olewine’s Hardware It Pays to Buy the Best It Pays to Buy ai Beezer’s Foods of Excellence will Help You Win Fame as a Provider of Splendid Meals—If It’s Quality You Want, We Have It. P. L. Beezer Estate Cash Meat Market Established Over Forty Years Phone 666—667 Free Delivery Fruit and Vegetables Bonfatto’s Wholesale and Retail All Kinds of Produce We Deliver Phone 240 W. High Street Buy Electrically They Cost the Least to Use and Save the Most Labor— Washers, Sweepers, Ironers, Radios, Lamps, New Shades— at Prices to Suit Your Purse. Electric Supply Co. Buy Lumber From a Lumberman nas W. R. Shope Herr & Heverly Ferndale (Tyncorjes cseess FANCY Highest Quality Food Products Prompt Service At the Lowest Possible Prices We Deliver Phone 62 Christmas Shopping is Easy —fin— Hunter's Book Store THE REASON : there are so many Nice Things to give that are inexpensive. Bellefonte Fuel & Supply Co. Coal, Feed and Oils BELLEFONTE, PA. Moshannon { $5.00 Osceola Mills Per Net Ton 5-Ton Lots...$4.50 per Net Ton LISTEN! Drain and Refill For Cold Weather with TEXACO— Clean, Clear, Golden MOTOR OIL Center Oil and Gas Co.