of Penn- | it is | WHEN LOST IN WOODS Can- i as and THE FIRST CONCERN. ing the past summer who |off the marked trails’ and who i | Strangely enough women and chil- | the forest on to seek. ling to “cut across country” ed. i dailies car- raphy is steep and rugg i Septuee O : Oe stating falling of darkness always sompli-| that a fast mail plane was rushing cates sie Station, = Wien e cortin to a |person los expe oods Bn a disease in lore he usually spends the night | Chicago. After a nation-wide appeal out. Thad been issued for the fate, He, It ¥r. Hartmann of the University o ully treat- crews at night. ig Tgp pe with the | Occurrence of this kind apps serum, offered his available supply during the spring hes a re J —teacted from the glands of 900 er in Carbon county besale ; cattle but which was only sufficient several days, during which time For three day's treatment as i tak to later died. make te A Cattle the Neither is it impossible for a for- Wayo's of Rochester, Minnesota, sent ester to get lost, as experience prov- a supply to augment that of Dr. | ¢d when one of the foresters = Hartmann and from latest reports, | county spent an involuntary day ‘the patient was recovering. Addi- | night in She Woods, epAY. ORT son's disease weakens the iyseles, po 9) y and is al- Sowers Ee following employed in lumbering opsrations contribution to our knowledge of and after becoming a Sach sally the disease and treatment has been | trained forester, suggests the fol wnade by Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor lowing six Flea for ogi stray 3 off the mar ores : TS We Amctiean Medea] 1. Sit down and rest. Study the More that 75 years ago, the Eng- | 18 of the land; try to find out lish physician Addison described the Why p YO oy or Delp. sud 408 «disease which bears his name as a wear yourself out trying to run Shinical entity. Shortly iheregiter through the undergrowth or trying the French investigator Brown Se. to push through drift ed ROW. guard proved that removal of Sup- ““g pont walk aimlessly about. yarenal glands, situated near the ,., 0) only downhill. Follow a Kidneys, vag Incompativle Sh hte. stream downwards, if possible. They Some years ago, British physiol- on ogiits found within these glands a usually lead to a haotta . Don’t try to seek a way oul substance which was associated with dire the might or in a storm or marked blood pressure raising ef-|g,; " ping a sheltered place and fects. This substance was later make camp. Gather plenty of dry j§solated and is now commonly wood and build a fire in a safe known as epenephrine or adrenalin. Promptly it was shown, however, that this was not the indispensable ‘substance in the suprarenal glands. Large doses failed to prevent the development of Addison's disease. Dr. Hartman obtained a potent substance from the cortex of the adrenal gland, also near the kidney. ~ During the Pennsylvania hunting When this substance was injected season, hunters occasionally get] into cats whose adrenal glands had | temporarily lost in the forest. In| been removed, the cats survived for freezing weather and in blizzards, 30 days or longer as compared with which are not unusual in early De- five days of life for cats whose cember in parts of Pennsylvania, adrenal glands were removed but the danger of getting lost increases. | place. Be careful not to set the | woods on fire and extinguish your camp fire before leaving. 5. If you are injured, build a smoke signal fire, if possible, in ap | open spot on a knob or ridge top. sof 6. Don't lose your head and don't | give up. which did not receive cortin. | A small pocket compass is useful, | _ Rogoff and Stewart in Cleveland, providing the person carrying ole by the use of a similar cortex ex- knows which direction he shou tract, were able to prolong the lives ‘of their animals for considerable riods of time. They also reported | neficial results from . the use . of | SAP FROM THE HEMLOCK ‘their extract in a small series of | ° DIDN'T POISON SOCRATES | «cases of Addison's disease. | | | Since the hemlock attained prom- | In March, 1930, however, Drs. W. inence by being desi ted the State 'W. Swingle and J. J. Pfiffner of Tree of Pennsylvania by an act of Princeton University announced that the last General Assembly, consid- they had prepared an extract of erable information, some of it in- the cortex of the suprarenal gland correct, has been gathered concern- | Which would maintain indefinitely , = (ys evergreen conifer. the lives of cats whose adrenal Se misconception, obtained by lands had been removed. They also . oo" students of anctent history, is were able to revive’ aimals that that the hemlock is poisonous. John “were on the verge of death from W. Keller, Deputy Secretary of the Jack of the suprarenal tissue, restor- po ;ovivania Department of For- dng them to an apparently normal ests and Waters, said today that «condition and keeping them in this ,W °° Athenian philosopher Socrates, oo owe: 1, 1, |Wio draitk 3 view of Remiuclc, did y uary, . r. L. “G. Rowntree and other Bot drink tie’ 52) Om 3 hedloeh physicians ,..o put the fatal infusion of a of the Mayo Clinic reported the use slant called the hemlock, a herb ®/ the suprarenal extract in seven related to our wild carrot. “cases of Addison's disease, in all of | Another point considered of inter- “which there had been success in students is the derivation of imaintaining life. Following the in-| Sat io stile name of the hemlock, Jection of this extract, the appetite ng.ka canadensis. Tsuka is not of Teappears to the point of hunger, | man und patients gain weight, feel well | oars rE I nese. Pops’ sup: and become able to walk and to ex- . i. . “serc and The low, shrubby “ground hem ise are greatly improved. | " : Thus far the yy call ed | 106K: which produces an aromatic ‘cortin is a laboratory preparation. easier yer Bodog Roy of t the Manufactures of laboratory prod. | les ose By is actually a yew. Al-| ucts for general use have | Hoiog th Aodh oi com- | “working on the subject, but the thougt . of Pennsylvania and Preparation is not yet generally mon 18 Pan in association with the | «commercially available. Its value is often gry eadily be dis- ®0 apparent that manufacturers hemlock tres, it hoy ao Yo | ‘will, no doubt, soon have the prod- | HIRES he er tree as : ‘cone | poi od general pe. Passed since | 3bOUt one-half inch long; the § ground | the medical profession first recog- hemlock or yew had 3 3m: pid mized the importance of removal of Jer peey.. hp Je the Yow infected tonsils because of their re. —oriy. ': Br four feet. The hem- | dationship to disease. Tonsils are in Bg pry upon the un-| Tometiriie removed BE ude i of which, lengthwise, are ey are so grea enlarg as to , dnterfere with lio ns and | tW° whitish parailel Nines. | Wreathing. Between this [needles of tue Yew are Slightly Lo simple have these white | enlargement and the severe states | °F and do not hav wf infection in which the tonsils are! . A better acquaintance with the lied with pus there is a wide va-| pomiock, Fong to Keller, will | Much Pratigation has been done | SORVince al) mature Jove Ee of the mer and interes | ve OS a Jn the | pabits of our most typical Pennsyl- | to other parts of the body, and | Vania Byes. there set up secondary infections which threaten life. There are “well established cases in which in- fection of the tonsils was followed _ by infection of the heart, of the kid- : , and even of the peritoneum, | travel to return to camp. | —Westerners live cheerfully under | | conditions that would appall some in | the East. While | River, Mr. Clark stopped | fishing on the Klamath | with an | farming couple, one hundred | resulting finally in fatal peritonitis. ©!4 be fini ed miles from a railroad. They had BU Cou Semaitel Bo ten cows and sold seven hundred | ‘that removal of the tonsils early in| ‘life would entirely prevent or great. | dollars’ worth of shill > ¥ ORY io | ly diminish these diseases, routine |iting tourists yi abou | y ; much as the ten cows. With one removal of the tonsils would be ad- | vised by all physicians. i There are many other possibilities | for the production of colds, of ner- vousness and of fatigue besides in- fection in the tonsils. Investigators in the University of ‘Cincinnati have recently made a «controlled study of the relationship | wf removal of tonsils and adenoids ‘fo various diseases. thousand dollars a year the farmer | couple felt as rich as Rockefeller. | They spent ¢120 a year for sugar, | coffee, flour, raised everything else, | had their chickens, butter and milk caught and dried fish, saved about | seven hundred dollars a year. | It is still possible to live com-| fortably is this country if you know | They are con- DOW: 3 1 of these ————— vise Wa : he fing decrease Barbara (whose first tooth has greatly the incidence of colds, nasal | just dropped out): “Mummy, mum-| obstruction and sore throats. On my, quick, I'm coming to pieces! | other hand, they feel that infec- ES oe of the sinus, y | ——Subscribe for the Watchman. | | i | WHERE OUR COUNTRY’S United States continued last | $5,000,000,000 in hard metal the Vauits of the country already hold. On States world. With a similar movement to | came the object of searching parties per cent. led by the State forest rangers. | than |dren are not the only persons whom ,,.tq) for which men have fought, ers were called up- gugered and died, is stacked in rown men frequent- .g.1¢q throughout the country, but ly became bewildered while attempt- pion 8 in re- yon gions of the State where the topog- | New York. the curse of America and primary cause of the world depression, guarded impregnably. is not uncommon for forest fire in the massive steel and vaults of the New York Federal fighters. to Set sepataled f¥om thelr Reserve Bank, about half a billion ned dollars in bars, ht- gold is stacked in great piles, inac- | for tive, awaiting the time it may be he | called on as part of the nation's re-! t was exposed to cold and rain, and Seives. ‘sight, stacked in symmetrical piles on steel shelves in the underground in Pike vaults, which an army would be un- and able to enter. ‘steel and concrete walls eight feet | ex- thick, om Soo oods. Jocks and electric evices. the wodls, sors Willie long siege could bring out the de- fenders, of whom there are several board and found suitable. score, heavily armd. | The only ingress is by elevator, con- trolid from a central plant only on official demand. At the top is a steel fortress sur- rounding the entrance, with holes for shooting, behind which expert | marksmen stand. At the bottom, various locked doors lead along cor- ridors to the ponderous steel vault door, weighing many tons and oper- ated by time locks and machinery. Behind that are iron gates with three locks, requiring the combina- three men to open them. Then the gold store is reached. Steel cells, partitioned off by steel mesh, contain shelves on which the bars are stacked in ordered and numbered piles, as much as $10,000 worth in a bar. Some are in bricks, and some in the conventional metal pigs and ingots, like so much iron. In other corridors, American gold coins and English sbvereigns, worth millions on millions, are stacked on similar shelves in canvas sacks, not waiting so much to be put into cir- Eighty feet below the sidewalks, cylation as to remain there, like the concrete har gold, as guarantee for the Amercan paper bills issued against them. HORDE OF GOLD IS KEPT The steady flow of gold into the week, millions to the more than as a memorial to Wi States. September 18 the United A oem held $5,015,000,000 in gold, residents of Polish supply of the per cent of the ices in aiding anew it's independence. rom e province in Po- Soil very a pH France the two countries hold 65 In the last week more $7,500,000 came into New York. This vast supply of the yellow in size, in The mound is spiral in formation, th fourteen platforms rep - Toit Wilson's fourteen points offered at the peace negotiations at Versail- les. blet naming the particular point which that elevation is dedicated. An association known as “The Great President Woodrow Wilson Mound Association,” with Father John Suchose, rector of the Roman Catholic church attended by Poles there, has been formed to provide finances for perpetual upkeep of the mound. An American flag will wave from a twenty-foot pole at the top of the mound. in New York and Washing- About half the supply is in This hoard which Gandhi said is is ingots and coin, the ————————————— BOARD DISTRIBUTES TROUT The board of fish commissioners | has been busy with its fall distri- ‘bution of trout. Fish are being | shipped from the Pleasant Mount, | Corry, Reynoldsdale, Bellefonte and | Tionesta hatcheries. | The fish, which are being distrib- uted, are all of a legal size and are | being placed only in those waters | which have been survey;d by the A num- ber of streams which were stocked in the spring are receiving another shipment of trout. The gold presents a fascinating Lg WHAT IS THE CENTER OF POPULATION OF THE U. 8.7 The 1930 census shows the center of population 2.9 miles northeast of Kinton, Stockton township, Greene county, Indiana, which is 31 miles southeast by south of Terre Haute. complicated Only a No staircases lead to the vaults. eee ———————— a ad Get the Faets—-Ask An Eleetric Range User! MRS. GRACE E. McCOWAN, Pershing Drive, New Kensington, Pa. \ ? “WHENEVER | want an afternoon ‘out’, it's only a matter of preparing the foods a little earlier than usual and placing them in the oven of my electric range. | can really enjoy myself knowing that the time and temperature controls will see to it that dinner is ready for serving when | return. “| often prepare meals in this manner even when | am not leaving the house, for then | can concentrate on other duties without interruption or watching the clock. !t's really almost like having a maid to help with the cooking. “My electric range most certainly saves me much time and work, and is 5% so satisfactory in other ways that I'd hate to think of being without it". GX ¥ Sees & VeLorand Our Special Offer Makes it Easy for You to Enjoy this Freedom! $€)-5° down . . . . monthi ments as low As little as 33.50 down y a a responsibility is YOURS! remember, under West Penn's low rates, operating And remamur, under West Da rater tric range use is particularly economical. ificant to for such freedom. . . fai this aad hice ape electric range use? Don't delay longer . . . visit our local store y and see the Is on y. burners, 1 oven, full : Ir 9) Kr Aluminum Buy your electric range NOW, from us or any other , and this 3-piece $13.50 set... for electric “waterless "ee will be given to you absolutely FREE. Two Sauce Pans (2 and 3 quart) and one Steaming Skillet (1014” diameter by 214” deep). All have black Glyptal bottoms for quick heat absorption. *‘Steam-Seal" covers allow foods to cook in their own juices with a minimum of water. Removable handles for oven use. West Penn EvLecTRIC SHOPS oodrow | World War President of the United | | will be the tribute lot of und 36,000 square feet ny ® sland Park. On each platform is a bronze 5! i | — — OR SALE.—Real estate consisting dwelling house and double house Bellefonte. [Estate of Margsr utchison. i The FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Bellefonte, Pa 76-20-3t Execu - Trustees’ Sale of ‘Valuable Real Estat | By virtue of an order of the Cour Common Pleas of Centre County, Pe ylvania, the Moshannon National B: | of PHilipavuis; Pa., Trustee under mi | gage the Highland Clay Prodi | Company, will expose to public sale {the front entrance of the Court Ho !in Bellefonte, Centre County, Penn: | vania, on Friday, October %, 1931, 12:00 o'clock P. M. the following desc: ed property:— those two certain tracts of L | situate in the Township of Rush, Co (ty of Centre and State of Pennsylva bounded and described as follows: — BEGINNING at an iron pin nea railroad track in the line of a warr in the name of Joseph Turner, the | by land of Joseph Turner, North eigl four degrees thirty- ag minutes & five and fifty-one hundredths rods ti | stake on the bank of Moshannon Cre thence down the same and boun thereby, the six following courses distances, namely, North six deg | East thirty-six and ninety-seven | dredths rods to a stake; North nine grees West fifteen and ninety-four h | dredths rods to a stakz; North one Ae Mg CE - un: ths rods to | stake; North eight degrees thirty n {utes East nine and fourteen hundrec rods to a stake; North thirty-six | grees, Jwenty minutes East five | thirty-eight hundredths rods to a sta {and North sixty-six degrees fifty n utes East, nine and twelve hundrec rods to a post in stomes In the line land warranted to Stephen Kingst and thence by land of Stephen King: South five degrees fifty-six minutes eighty-one and seven-tenth rods to place of beginning; containing ti acres, seventy-nine perches, and the lowance of six per cent. for roads, Which said tract of land was surve on the twenty-second aay of July, 1 in pursuance of a warrant dated 20th day of June, 1921, granted to J Kyler, and recorded in the place recording of deeds for Centre Deed Book Vol. 126 page 331, reference thereto being had will fully and at large appear. 2. BEGINNING at a point in the « tre of branch railroad as now loc: | and running to Kelly mine tipple jon line of right of way of Pennsylv | Division of the N. Y. C. Railroad; the | by line of said right of way North | degrees 28 minutes West 82.6 feet t | Jost; thence by same North 47 deg | minutes est 100 feet to a p | thence by same North 51 degrees 17 r | utes West 1264 feet to a post on Sc | bank of Moshannon Creek; thence di | sald creek North 32 degrees 11 min East 274.4 feet to a post; thence same North 27 degrees 57 minutes 1 261 feet to a Fo thence by same Ni 40 degrees 45 minutes East 951 feet a post; thence by same North 30 grees 41 minutes East 136.8 feet t t; thence by same North 22 deg minutes East 630.7 feet to a post line of lands former Estate; thence by said lands and ls of Martha E. Snyder Estate South degrees 38 minutes East 1355 feet t post on bank of Moshannon Cr¢ thence down said creek South 13 rues 34 mirutes East 300 feet to a p ence bY is same South 12 degrees minus t 59.5 feet to a post; the uy same South 10 degrees 32 min est 216.2 feet to a post; thence same South 41 degrees 33 minutes V 324.8 feet to a post; thence b s South 38 degrees 24 minutes est feet to a post; thence by lands of rantor South 83 degrees 33 min est 1500.6 feet to a Branch Railroad to Kelly mine tip thence by same lands and along railroad South 39 degrees 33 min | West 464 feet; thence by said lands {along said railroad by a twelve de; curve 500 feet to point of beginn | containing 18 acres and 145 perches, being rt of a larger tract of ! conveyed unto the grantor by Walte: Stephens, Executor of the tate of L. Schoonover, deceased, by deed d April 19th, 1907, and recorded in Ce County, in Deed Book 95 page 664. EXCEPTING AND RESERVING | Parcel No. 2, nevertheless, all the « fire clay and other minerals, oll gas In and under the said premises, ° the right to recover the same, damages to the surface of the prem as herein conveyed caused by mi and removing all the coal, fire clay other minerals, oil and gas, under surface of said premises, and all d ages to any buildings or struct erected upon the surface of said mises caused by the subsidence of surface of sald premises or of strata overlying the sald coal, fire and other minerals, oil and gas, and to Any springs, wells and er water supply caused bx the mi and removal of any and all of the « fire clay and other minerals, oil and in and under sald premises wherein coal, fire clay and other minerals owned by the Orrin L. Schoonover tate or assigns, is hereby expre waived by the said tee in th veyance and hy it released unto the grantor, his heirs and assigns. AND EXCEPTING AND RESERV from Parcel No. 2 a right of way wagon road twenty feet wide seven hundred feet of the New Central right of way property now formerly of John A. Dahl, the sam ount wl n Berton Me: t on line begin at Moshannon Creek and parallel to New York Central righ WAY. Being the same premises which burne re Brick Company by deed February 7, 1925, recorded in Recorder's office for County of Ce in Deed Book Vol, 135, pee 555, veyed to Highland Clay Products ( singular, pany. Together with all and buildings, ways, waters, water cou fes, privileges, imp: rtenances thereunto rights, libe ments and a together with the p pertaining; an machinery, grinding, screen and cr ing equipment, b making machir ele , con , engines, bol drying equi t, kilns, kiln wi storage facilities, tools and rail ings, constituting any part of the n gagor's plant, or incidental thereto. Together further with any lands, 1 ditaments, premises, and appurtena: buildings, equipment and Improvem that may hereafter be acquired by mortgagor. | Being the premises described in mo Ie aforesald, recorded in Ce Coes in Mortgage Book 52 page Sale of said premises shall be r |to the highest responsibe bidder | such sale shall be subject to } tion b 'ayment shal made 4 full upon confirmation, ex that the Trustee may require amount as it shall deem necessary, not exceeding two thousand ( | Dollars, to be paid on the day of = For the further terms and condit of sgle and for further particulars reference thereto, jrosbettive purchs and other persons interested are refe to the order of sale ent in Ce | County in proceeding to No. 2 Sep | per Term, 1931, in Equity, or to | Trustee or its Attorneys. MOSHANNON NATIONAL B. OF PHILIPSBURG, PA. Arnold & Smith, Attys. ™T™ Clearfield, Pa. 76-