Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 26, 1931, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    |
eto due 20, 1031. |
Your Health
THE FIRST CONCERN.
i
MIDDLE-AGED MEN PROVE EASIEST
DROWNING VICTIMS
By Dr. Morris Fishbein
Editor, Journal of the American Medi-
cal Association.
We take more care of our
than of our lives.—Seneca.
Health is man's normal condition; he
must do something foolish to lose it.—
James J. Corbett.
Most deaths from drowning occur
from May to August, when swim-
ming is popular. The majority of
cases of drowning occur in men.
Twenty-five per cent of those which
occurred in California in a recent
study of the subject by the Califor-
nia State Department of Health, af-
fected people between the ages of 35
and 54. Relatively few deaths from
drowning occur in people between
the ages of 20 and 34, presumably
because these people are at an age
when they swim fairly well and have
enough vigor to withstand the rigors
of exposure.
Approach of the vacation season
makes it important to emphasize
again the desirability of having
eve e associated with swimming
or with work around water under-
stand the elements of resuscitation.
The procedure is relatively simple.
The unconscious person should be
placed face down, with the head
slightly lower than the feet. Fing-
ers should be put in the mouth to
free it of any mud or other material
that may be in it. One arm
hand of the individual may be put
fortunes
have been seriously warned by the |
DEATHS OF THE WEEK
Department of Agriculture against
the use of cocoa, but, strangely, not
women of the country with refer- identified with the history of Belle-
ence to the harm that is being done fonte over half a century ago, died
to nursing mothers and to young at his home at Oak Park, Il, last
children BY 38 Jus of Cocoa p25 2 Saturday. As only a brief telegram
late in the form of candy. It is Mou. is Jealh nas 3 weived
lime some 8 upon tals known whether it was sudden or
subject.
4 Yes. The writer recalls the the result of prolonged illness.
‘case of a man who became so fond | He was a son of Allen and Re-
of chocolates that he frequently ate becca Crites Schreyer and was born
a pound at a sitting and boasted of at Milton 78 years ago. When he
his ability to consume chocolatesin wag a boy the family moved to
any quantity without injury. The p.neronte and it was here he grew
SCHREYER Charles A. Schreyer, |
a word has been said to the men and the last of a family prominently
sult of a stroke of apoplexy, follow- GAME COMMISSION BUYS
ing only a few hours illness. BIRD EGGS IN ENGLAND
He was a son of Andrew and emery
Mary Ream Gardner and was born The E00, PORIURSOn Con, Bo
in Blair county a little over 68 7 on’ine Gaybird Pheasant Farm,
years ago. The greater part of his Great Missenden, Bucks, England.
life was spent in Tyrone where he They will be incubated at the Fish-
‘was in the mercantile and coal busi- er state game farm. The Mongo-
ness. A few years ago he located lian is a larger form of the ring-
at Martha Furnace and conducted | neck bheusahi ang. is considered a
a general store, later going to Port SPL bird.
Matilda. The remains were taken Iwo hundred bob-white quail eggs
from the Coleman
to Tyrone where burial was made in "ere Purchased }
‘the Grandview cemetery on Saturday | hundred 6 % and oe Bom, ya Ole
afternoon. incubated at the Fisher game farm,
il Il ; ‘and fifty at State College, Pa,
or |
writer informed the gentleman of
the risk he was incurring, but no
heed was paid to his warning and af-
ter some years the bad results of the
chronic duodenitis induced by a
chronic chocolate poisioning made
their appearance, and, later X-ray
examination showed the presence of
a large number of gallstones which
were probably the result of the
chronic duodenitis induced by the
chocolate habit. Gall bladder dis-
ease is rapidly increasing in the
United States and the writer be-
lieves one of the prolific causes of
olate together with other ingesta
which irritate and infect the duo-
denum.
5. By no means.
6. Certainly not.
What is the comparative food
value of raw and cooked cabbage?
Raw cabbage is rich in vitamin C,
which is destroyed by cooking. Raw
cabbage is also more readily digest-
ible than cooked cabbage and less
likely to undergo decomposition
changes in the intestine. Laboratory
experiments show that juice of raw
cabbage is destructive to putrefac-
tive bacteria.
PRISONERS CULTIVATE
GARDENS AT ROCKVIEW
With the distribution of more than
1,000,000 trees and seedlings from
the nursery stock and the planting
of, and preparing for later planting
of more than 100 acres of garden
vegetables, the outdoor activities
upon which many State institutions
and depend to supplement their supplies
have been speeded up during the
to manhood and received his educa-
tion. As a young man he worked
for his father as a cabinet maker,
‘later going to Renovo where he
worked for several years in the P.
R. R. shops. It was whil2 working
there that he conceived ideas that
had much to do with his success in
later life. Along about 1888 he
went to St. Louis, Mo., but remain-
ed there only a short time then
went to Chicago, to work for the
Illinois Central Railroad Co. Later
| this disease is the free use of choc- he went with the Pullman Car Man-
ufacturing company and while work-
ing there invented the window
shades and folding connections be-
tween the cars which are now in use
on all Pullman cars and many oth-
ers. These inventions started him
on the road to financial affluence
and resulted in his retirement at an
early age.
While yet a resideni of Bellefonte,
in 1875, he married Miss Amanda
Galbraith. She died in 1882. After
going to Chicago he married again
but the second union ended in
divorce and some time later he took
unto himself a third wife. She sur-
vives with two daughters to his
first marriage, Miss Minnie, and
Maude, wife of Dr. Thomas Motter,
both of Oak Park, Ill He also
leaves two grand-children. The fu-
neral was held on Tuesday, accord-
ing to information contained in the
telegram announcing his death.
i il
CLEVENSTINE.—Mrs. Mary Eliz-
under the head so as to keep his past few weeks at the Rockview abeth Clevenstine, widow of the late
mouth and nose out of sand.
persen to perform artificial respira-
tion can kneel over the body, put-
ting one hand on each side of the
unconscious person, just below the
lower ribs. The movements may be
made in time according to count. At
one, the hands are placed on the
lower ribs, thumbs and fingers to-
gether, wrists about six inches apart;
at two, the operator arises on the
knees and with the arms straight
throws the weight downward and a
little forward, and at the same time
slightly squeezing the hands toward
each other: at three, the hands are
suddenly removed, which permits an
on of the chest; at a count
of four and five, the operator rests
and promptly begins again.
The re procedure takes about
five seconds, which will permit of
approximately 12 artificial respira-
tions a minute. The movement may
be kept up for hours. At the same
time, it is well to keep the drown-
fing person warm, if a blanket is
available, and to encourage circula-
tion by rubbing the legs. A physi-
cian should be secured as soon as
possible. Just as soon as the signs
of consciousness return, warmth and
stimulation are desirable.
There is no necessity for rolling
the drowning person over a barrel,
hanging him up by the feet, orany
other rough treatment that used to
be the vogue before modern artificial
respiration became established. The
two most common criticisms are
that the artificial respiration is car-
ried on for too brief a time (it is
the slightest possibility of resuscita-
tion and the application of the move-
ments too rapidly.
IN DR. KELLOG'S “QUESTION BOX"
IN GOOD HEALTH MAGAZINE THE
FOLLOWING ADVICE IS OFFERED
ABOUT
1. Does chocolate contain a great
deal of good essential food value?
2. Is it a fuel food?
3. Is there anything objectionable
about it?
4. Can a person cultivate an ap-
petite or craving for it?
5. Should it be included in the
food for a baby of twenty-one
months ?
6. Should a baby of this age be
fed chocolate bars, or cocoa?
Answer.—1. No. The chief food
value of chocolate is the sugar
which it contains. This is cane
sugar, which is not the best form of
carbohydrate because of its irritat-
ing properties.
2. Sugar is fuel food.
3. Yes. Chocolate contains theo-
promine and possibly other harmful
substances. The cocoa from which
the chocolate is made is prepared
from the residue left er ex-
iraction of cocoa butter, which
s largely used for the coating of
»andies. The manufacturers of cocoa
sutter have found difficulty in dis-
sosing of this by-product, which is
greatly in excess of Lhe require-
nents of the cocoa and chocolate
rade. According to a recent gov-
srnment bulletin, the manufacturers
save even made use of the cocoa
-esidues for fuel.
i profitable market for these surplus
-esidues, they have induced farmers
o make use of it for the feeding of
lairy cattle. They have also suc-
ceded in including a number of
oultrymen to rake use of it. Quan-
ities have also been sold to farmers
vho have used it for fertilizer. But
n all cases the use of cocoa has]
een found so highly detrimental
hat the Department of Agriculture
ound it necessary to issue a bulletin
The State penitentiary.
The nursery at the Rockview in-
stitution is extensive and in April
of this year shipped 1,268,553 units
of stock which were divided as fol-
lows: Trees to reforestation, 1,263,-
250; shade trees, 2152; ornamentals,
1785; and shrubbery, 1366. This
shipment virtually completed all or-
ders to the Rockview nursery this
year, with the exception of orders
from the U. S. Forest Service at
Warren.
With the depletion of the stock
at the nursery seeding and trans-
planting operations began at once
and approximately 11,000 trees were
lined out in nursery rows. Many of
the trees from this institution are
shipped to other States.
To provide a supply of vegetables
for the cannery at the institution
from which State institutions are
supplied with some of their winter
canned goods more than 100 acres
were prepared or planted as follows:
peas, 40 acres; spinach, 5 acres;
beets, 3 acres; cabbage, 4 acres. In
addition to the acres planted, 30
acres were fitteG for the sowing of
peas and 25 acres have been plowed
and fitted for tomatoes, corn @nd
beans.
The operation of the nursery, the
garden and the cannery are conduct-
ed by inmates of the penitentiary
under the direction of officials of the
institution. The entire work is un-
der the direct supervision of the di-
vision of prison labor of the State
Department of Welfare.
A POLYGLOT FOURTH
Patriotic celebrations conducted in
half a dozen different languages
are numbered among the features of
the Fourth of July in New York
city, the most cosmopolitan place on
earth. Neighborhood affairs,
in various parks, give Manhattan's
foreign born population a clearer
idea of the meaning of the day.
In each of the public parks there
is a flag raising, and the Declaration
of Independence is read in the lan-
guage used most in that particular
district. The celebrations general-
d year.
Isaac H. Clevenstine, for many years
well known residents of Hublersburg,
died at 5.20 o'clock, last Thursday
evening, at the home of her son,
Harry E. Clevenstine, Bellefonte, as
the result of a stroke of paralysis.
Although she had been in frail health
for several years she had continued
to keep her own home in Hublers-
burg, spending the winters with her
Several months ago she |
returned to Hublersburg for the
son here.
summer, but was there only a short
time when her health grew worse
and she returned to Bellefonte.
She was a daughter of Samuel
and Barbara Walkey and.was born
at Hublersburg on March 18th, 1852,
hence was 79 years and 3 months
old.
Hublersburg Reformed church for
many years. Her only survivors
are her son, Harry, of Bellefonte,
her three grandsons, Henry, Paul
and Crider Clevestine, and one
brother, Samuel Walkey, of New-
ark, N. J. Funeral services were
held at her late home, in Hub-
lersburg, at two o'clock on Sunday,
afternoon, by Rev. Harry Hartman,
of the Reformed church, assisted by
Rev. Robert Thena, burial being
made in the Hublersburg cemetery.
i I]
REESE. —Mrs. Margaret Reese,
widow of Dennis Reese, of Sandy
Ridge, died at the Philipsburg State
‘hospital, last Saturday morning, as
the resuit of blood poisoning caused
by an infected hand.
She was a daughter of William
and Suzanne Decatur and was born
at Hannah Furnace on November
6th, 1848, hence was in her 83rd
she married Mr. Reese and all their
married life was spent at Hannah
Furnace. Her husband died forty-
six years ago. She was the mother
of twelve children, eight of whom
survive, as follows: Christ Reese, of
Philipsburg; James, of Julian; Mrs.
She was a member of the
She was quite young when
| BOTTORF.—William Bottorf,
a nuinber of years a well known
resident of Bellefonte, died at the
Geisinger hospital, Danville, last
Thursday. He had been in failing
health for six months or more and
about three weeks ago went to Mil-
lersburg to visit a daughter,
J. A. Broschart. His condition be- |
coming serious shortly after his ar-
rival there he was taken to the
Geisinger hospital.
He was a son of John W. and
Amanda Harris Bottorf and was |
born in Bellefonte on April 5th, 1863, |
hence was 68 years, 2 months and 13 |
days old. His father was a black-
smith by occupation and when the
Scotia ore mines were opened,
(almost half a century ago, the fam-
ily moved to that place and William
got a job firing the boilers. He
lived at Scotia until the works
closed and the town was aban-
doned when he returned to Belle-
fonte. For a number of years he
fired the boilers at the heating
‘plant of the Bellefonte Academy, but
& was compelled to quit work owing
‘to failing health. Last spring he
‘and his wife quit housekeeping and |
had since been living with their son, |
John Bottorf, of east Bishop street.
He was a member of the Logan Fire
company for many years. |
He married Miss Margaret C.
Blair who survives with the follow-
ing children: G. A. Bottorf, of Sun- |
bury; Mrs. Edward Markley and
John W. Bottorf, of Bellefonte, and |
Mrs. J. A. Broschart, of Millersburg. _
‘He also leaves one brother, J. Linn
Bottorf, of Bellefonte. The remains
were brought to Bellefonte, on Fri- |
‘day, and taken to the Markley home, |
on east Howard street, where fu- |
meral services were held at two,
|o'clock on Sunday afternoon, by Rev.
'G. E. Householder, of the United
‘Brethren church, burial being made |
in the Union cemetery.
0 n
HINDS.—Mrs. Emma Joanna.
Hinds, widow of Ralph Hinds, died
at her home at Fiedler, on Wednes- |
!day morning of last week, following |
about a week's illness.
She was a daughter of George M. |
and Suzanna Shirk Rupp and was |
born at Aaronsburg on March 6th, |
11863, hence was 68 years, 3 months |
and 11 days old. In August, 1883,
she married Ralph Hinds and most gi
of her life since had been spent at
Fiedler. She was a member of the
Aaronsburg Evangelical church, a
member and president of the Aarons-
burg W. C. T. U,, and at one time 3
was a member of the Millheim
lodge of Rebekahs.
Her husband died in March, 1927,
but surviving her are four children,
Claude W. Hinds, of Aaronsburg;
Charles R., of Joliet, Ill.; Mrs. Flor-
ence R. Barker, of Renovo, and Mrs.
Mabel E. Beaver, of Pottsgrove. She
also leaves three brothers and a sis-
ter, James W. Rupp, of Seattle,
Wash.; George F., of Hartford, Conn.;
Mrs. Jennie E. Bond, of Nescopeck,
and Walter G. Rupp, of Aaronsburg.
Funeral services were held in the
Evangelical church, at Aaronsburg, |
‘on Saturday afternoon, by Rev. A.
|C. Paulhamus, burial being made in
the Aaronsburg cemetery.
——— i Si
| |
‘NEW YORK CENTRAL SHOPS
TO BE MOVED FROM AVIS
| The New York Central locomotive |
shops, employing approximately |
1700 men, are to be closed on
July 81st, and a few days later
ly begin at 10 o'clock in the morn- john Walk, of Hannah Furnace; Will be moved to West Albany, N.|
ing.
The big event in City Hall park is
the parade of nations. Dozens of
families, representing as many dif-
ferent countries, showing the cosmo-
politan character of the population,
are always in line. The head of
each family carries the flag of his United Brethren church and Rev. the
Brooks E., of Williamsport; Robert
and George, of Lewistown; Matthew
and Mrs. S. E. Twigg, of Sandy
Ridge, and Mrs. Alice Richards, of
Curwensville.
She was a lifelong member of the
i
'Y. It is a retrenchment movement
|of the railroad company which will |
also include the consolidation of the
‘shops at Drew, N. Y., with thoseat
| West Albany. At preesnt 2600 men
are employed at the three places but |
company plans to operate the!
native land, but the foreign flags are Raugh, of Coalport, had charge of consolidated shops with about 1700 |
greatly outnumbered by the stars
and stripes. The City History club
supplies the program at McGowan's
in Central park. This includes
a drill by Continental guards.
At ashington square French
residents gather and hear praise of
Lafayette. In Mulberry Bend and
in some parks Italian dwellers hear
addresses on
United States.
Tompkins square is set apart for
the Hungarians. At John Jay park,
Seventy-sixth street and the East
river, the Bohemians assemble
Hamiliton Fish and Seward parks
are reserved for the Jewish popu-
lation.
“The neighborhood celebration
gives the foreigners a better insight
into the history of their adopted
land,” said a prominent New York-
er. “Many ignorant Europeans do
not know the significance of the
day. The observation arouses in
them a patriotic feeling for Ameri-
ca.”
—Four men and one woman
the funeral services, held at her
home at Sandy Ridge, on Monday
afternoon, burial being made in the
Mt. Pleasant cemetery, near Han-
nah Furnace.
il ll
MAURER.—Henry Lloyd Maurer,
well known resident of Nittany val-
dale, on Wednesday morning of last
week, following an illness of four
years as the result of a stroke of
paralysis. He was within one week
lof being 67 years of age.
| He had served several terms as
overseer of the poor in his home
locality and when stricken with
paralysis was serving as road super-
visor. He was a member of the
Evangelical church, at Clintondale,
land the Nittany Valley castle Knights
of the Golden Eagle. He is survived
by his wife and several nieces and
| nephews.
Funeral services were held on
Saturday afternoon by Rev. Jacob
varning against the use of cocoa | were granted citizenship papers at Zang, burial being made in the
or any of the purposes named
When it was given to cows, milk
rroduction was reduced; when it was |
iven to poultry, egg production was
essened; when it was used as fertil- |
zer by farmers, there was a nota- |
le decrease in the crops. And so
armers, dairymen and poultrymen |
of Philipsburg;
Saturday. They were George Verba,
Andy Zanella, of
Clarence; Dr. Walter Thomas, a pro-
fessor at State College; Iivari Rajor-
naki, of Spring township, and Mrs.
Anna Gregory, of State College.
|
- | naturalization court in Bellefonte, on Mt. Bethel cemetery, near Lamar.
Il
GARDNER—Charles Gardner, who |
for the past year or more had con-
|ducted a small
Port Matilda, died quite
last Thursday morning, as
suddenly,
the re-
store and cafe at |
| company, his latest success being |S
men, which will mean 900 men will
be thrown out of employment. Sen- |
jority will prevail in selecting the
men to continue work.
| The removal of the shops will be |
a severe blow to Avis, as they have
| been the principal mainstay of the
town. The company also has car
the history of the joy died at his home, at Clinton- repair shops there but they have |
(closed since last fall. There isnowa
| rumor that they might be re-opened |
‘after the locomotive shops are mov-
ed away. i
| ——The New York American, of
|last Friday, announced that the
marriage of Miss Audray Dale,
daughter of Col. and Mrs. Frederick
Dale, of Baltimore, and Kenneth
Robinson, of New York, will be
solemnized in St. Thomas’ Episcopal
church, New York, on June 30th.
|For some time past Miss Dale has
|peen an acknowledged leading ac-
tress in Broadway musical shows,
having starred in “So This is New
| York,” “One, Two, Three,” “Apron
| Strings,” “Ric Rita,” and “The First
| Little Show.” She is a niece of Dr. |
David Dale, of Bellefonte. Mr. Rob- |
|inson is a writer and director of mo-
tion pictures with the Paramount
“The Last Parade.” |
Mrs. |
| where experiments with the artifi-
(cial incubator and propagation of
! these birds are being made on a
| small scale.
AMERICA’S VACATION
TO COST $5,000,000,000
America’s vacation this year will
cost the staggering sum $5,000,-
000,000, the American Automobile
association estimated today.
And more than half of that total
—$3,200,000,000—will be spent in
motor tours in the United States,
while about $400,000,000 will be used
by Americans in touring the neigh-
boring oasis, Canada.
demands.
P Safeguarding Deposits with 540000
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS
e safeguard depositors by having $540,000
Capital and Surplus, and by always being
strong in liquid assets.
Prudent bankers, and almost all managers of
banks are prudent, see to it that a certain propor-
tion of their resources are kept liquid. That is, in
the form of cash, cash balances with their reserve
banks, and marketable securities.
This assures their ability to meet even unusual
This always has been the policy of this institu-
tion, and a study of the statements of other banks
usually shows the same conservative care.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
BELLEFONTE, PA.
& Baney’s Shoe Store g
I WILBUR H. BANEY,
woupng op uj wel 0§ |
Proprietor 4
if] BUSH ARCADE BLOCK !
SALE!
3 Men's Fine
2 Shirts
! 7]
in
1
It doesn’t take a
#@ suits.
. Flad L0
| This is a Real Bargain
: IT'S AT
0 gamble about buying Shirts at this shop.
i best. Among the newest arrivals will be
i found new colors to harmonize with summer 8
il These Shirts are all from our regular
stock—former price to $2.50—all on el
. sale now at. $1.65 A
~..Frauble’s
shark to select what is i
1
Ee EU EU EUR SEUSS ELE CUE UES EUR
EEE EU UE EE OCU UE UCIUE