onte, Pa.,, November 20, 1931. — Your He al THE FIRST CONCERN. S——— t THE BRAN BUGABOO By Dr. John Harvey Kellogg Good Health Magazine Something more than eighty years ago, Sylvester Graham, a highly cultured college professor and a lawyer, became convinced that the fine flour bread which was then in general use was unwholesome be- cause it represented only part of the grain, the mineral part, the bran and the germ being lost in the bolting process. He set out on a campaign to convince the public of the superiority of bread made from the whole grain meal. He was so able a lecturer that he soon had a great number of followers, and bread made of wheat meal in a few years became popular in many places, and was known as graham bread. In recent years, this whole- some bread has become so widely used its name is spelled with a small g instead of a capital, and probably few people know its origin. When patent flour made by the rolling process came into fashion, the millers soon discovered that the growing popularity of whole meal bread was not at all in the interest of their business, and so began a campaign of opposition. Very soon articles began to appear in the pa- pers about the injurious effects of bran and of whole meal bread. The writers of these articles waxed elo- quent in describing the lacerations produced in the stomach and intes- tines by bran, the danger of using it in cases of ulceration, colitis, etc. Those who listened to this teaching soon found themselves suffering from | distinct forms of constipation, which | created a demand for mineral wa- ters and laxative pills of many sorts. Remedies for constipation multiplied until their name was legion. A large part of the population found it necessary to resort yearly or more often to various mineral springs, the salt and bitter waters of which by producing strong laxative effects, were supposed to cleanse the system from accumulated bile and other natural consequences of chronic constipation. Very nearly thirty years ago, 1 suggested that sterilized bran be put up in packages ready for use. The idea was laughed at as being very . absurd. 1 was very often advised that intelligent people would never be induced to use bran, but as I had for years been prescribing it, I had frequently found difficulty in obtaining clean bran in fit condition for food; and feeling assured that in time there would be an apprecia- tion of its value, I was anxious to make it possible for people who de- sired to use bran to obtain a clean and wholesome product, free from weevil and other insects, so under- took to have bran especially pre- pared from clean wheat and kept free from dirt and refuse, and then went a step farther in sterilizing the bran, so as to make it in every way as wholesome as bread or oth- .er cereal products. In spite of the opposition of the manufacturers of patent flour, bran has made steady progress in gain- ing the confidence of the public, | especially through educational cam- paigns which the numerous manu- facturers of bran products have car- ried on through the advertising col- umns of the newspapers. At the present time, many car- loads of bran products are required daily to meet the growing demand. | Probably more than ten million peo- ple in this country alone are mak- | ing daily use of bran. The shelves | of drug stores are no longer loaded | down with bowel-regulating nos- trums of various sorts. Thousands of drug stores have become cafe- | terias and are selling more foods than drugs. | While the popularity of bran has thus been increasing from year to year, the opponents of its use have continued their efforts but with lit- tle success for, notwithstanding their | dire predictions of the harm which bran must certainly do, and in spite of the fact that it is being daily used by many millions of people, little or no evidence of harm done by it has been brought forward. is evident that if the use of bran is so dangerous, with so many millions of people making a daily use of it, | supervision, and without medical there should certainly develop num- erous cases to support the claim made respecting its unwholesome- ness. Certain medical journals have been making much of a jingle case re- ported by a Virginia doctor, in which a man ate bran and had an obstruction which was attributed to the bran, so that an operation was required. The case was brought forward with much emphasis as proof that the free use of bran is dangerous. One well-known doctor goes so far as to maintain that rather than to make use of bran, the bowels should be allowed to move once every other day, insisting that this infrequent bowel action is natural for some persons, a mon- strous assertion for which thee is no scientific basis. Several questions arise which are at least worthy of consideration: Is bran the only food which when used in excessive quantity has be- come a cause of obstruction? The inquiry brings to mind a case with which the writer hecame acquainted | when serving as a student assistant | with tae iate Dr. Lawson Tait, of Birmingham, England. Dr. vaiescing from typhoid rever who was sunering from intestinal ob- | struction. uring the fever he had been fed, as was the custom in | those days, on milk with an admix- ture of whisky. A week or two ‘after convalescence was established, |a lump the size of an infant's head was observed in the young man's abdomen and obstruction developed. | When the abdomen was opened, | manipulation of the mass led the | surgeon to the conclusion that the | contents consisted of indigestible railk curds which had somehow be- come lodged in the bowel. Instead {of 0 the bowel, the doctor gently kneaded the mass until the | contents were reduced to a soft ‘paste and passed on, thus causing |the tumor to disappear. The ab- domen was closed and the patient made an excellent recovery. Milk is a food which is capable of complete digestion, leaving no resi- due, yet in this case, it happened to form an obstruction. Will it be argued that on this ac- count milk should never be eaten because of the possibility that it may form an obstruction? It is more than likely that the food itse' w..: not the cause of the obstru-..- 1 citaer in the case of the milk or the bran, but of some un- usual state of the bowel, a spastic condition, perhaps, which held back the food until a real obstruction de- veloped. That it is natural for anybody's bowels to move once in two days is just as reasonable a proposition as it would be to maintain that hop- ping on one leg is natural for a man who has lost one of his legs. The | one-legged man is crippled, and hop- ping is the only manner in which he can move from point to point. He hops only because he cannot walk. His mode of progression as the ornithologists would say, it saltant and not ambulatory. | The situation is precisely the |same with the delinquent colon. Its delayed movement is due to the fact that it is crippled. The principal work of the colon specialist is to find out just how the colon is crippled or hindered, ‘and then to find some way to ren- der the necessary assistance. The one-legged man finds hopping | very tedious and tiresome, but when supplied with an artificial limb, he can walk, if not so fast or so faras a man with two good legs, at least with much less effort and inconven- ience than without the artificial as- sistance. It is safe to say that while among | the ten or fifteen millions of people | who are making use of bran, one case of obstruction due to the in- | judicious use of bran has occurred lin the course of twenty or thirty | years, there have bsen during the /same time thousands of cases in | which the intestine has been ob- | structed by meat, or beans, lobster ‘salad, sauer kraut, or any one of hundreds of other common foodstuffs. And it is more than probable, | already intimated, that when bran was associated with obstruction, it {was not the real cause, but was in- cidental to some special morbid con- dition present. Of course it is possible for bran to be used in excessive quantities. | When taken by itself, it may pos- sibly accumulate in cases in which there is a spastic condition of the bowel, that is, cases in which the bowel is contracted to such a de- gree that food readily passed through it. In such cases, the use of mineral oil with 'bran will prevent its packing to- gether and accumulating. Bran is bulkage, not | for when wet it becomes pliable land ceases to be a source of me- | chanical irritation. | In cases of chronic in which patients suffer from pain or heaviness after eating, nausea, soreness in the gallbladder stomach is empty. In cases of this sort, bran should be used in connection with some pultaceous material which wiil serve as a vehicle to help it through the intestine. Taken by itself, bran gives the stomach, and especially the duodenum, an excessive amount of work to aid in moving it along. Psyllium seed is very useful as a vehicle for bran. rr m— HOW OLD IS A MIDDLE AGED PERSON? A.—In the medical profession the term applies to persons between 45 land 60 years. | of middle age come earlier to some |and later to others, but that is a | fair average. WILD GAME HELPS HUNGRY MILLIONS The food value of game birds and animals taken by hunters over the | country this | tary fare to many millions of dollars, in ad- | dition to the worth of the recreation | obtained in hunting them, observes a bulletin of the American Game Assoclation. The Fish and Game Commission |of New Jersey alone has estimated the food value of the game which | will be procured during the present | season at $1,000,000. According to the commission, the hunting season | “will furnish an increased food sup- |ply for tens of thousands of fam- ilies.” The Bureau of Biological Survey at Washington has credited the | country’s wild life with supplying meat and fur each year to th: value of $150,000,000. Several State game ber that, while no part of a game creature may be sold, properly tanned, makes a good coat, and the antlers a good place to hang it. Tait | | was caued LO see a young man con- remnants are not roughage, duodenitis, | that is, so-called cases of indigestion region, | the so-called “goneness” when the The characteristics year as a supplemen-| for their tables will amount | departments | | are advising deer hunters to remem- | a deer hide, | PREVENT FOREST FIRES TO PROTECT GAME LIFE “The sporstman who protects the! forest from fire” said George H. Wirt, chief of the bureau of forest protection, Pennsylvania department | ‘of forests and waters, ‘does the | greatest thing that can be done for | ‘the protection of game.” | The first few days of the hunting | ‘season are frequently accompanied | | by forest fires. This year recent’ rains and the absence of frosts have! eliminated the of forest fires thus far. But all that is needed are several hot, windy days to make conditions right for forest fires to burn. The true sportsman never takes any chance with fire in any yway from which a forest conflagra-, ‘tion may start. | Every year in Pennsylvania many’ game animals and birds are killed by forest fires because of their homing instinct. Driven from their haunts by forest fires they return before the fire is completely extinguished. Often their feet and legs are injured and some become so severely burn- ed on the body that they later die. “Every hunter,” said Mr. Wirt, “should be careful with matches, tobacco and camp fires, so that there may be no damage done to the home and food of the game or to the game itself. It is usually the unloaded gun that kills someone; and it is the careless use of fire that starts a forest fire. “A true sportsman will give his quarry at least a reasonable chance to save itself. Letting a forest fire get started or continue to burn is a sure sign, not of a sportsman, but of a sport, and a poor sport at that. A state game official recently defined a sportsman as one who plays fair when he pursues the recreation of hunting and fishing or when dealing with his fellow man and their prop- erty. “Fortunately, we have in Pennsyl- vania an army of hunters, the ma- jority of whom may be classed as true sportsmen. But, unfortunately, a few individuals often undo the ef- forts of all the rest to protect the forests and game. Carelessly drop- | ped matches or cigarettes and un- tended camp fires are the marks by | Which he may be known far and wide. “When you read in the press of several hundred acres of woodland, where fire had been kept out for the last twenty years, suddenly burned over with considerable loss to stand- ing timber and game animals and birds, you can be sure if a hunter is blamed he was a sport and not a sportsman. “Among the most ardent support. | ters of conservation generally are the hunters of Pennsylvania who have constantly backed wise legisla- | tion and reasonable regulations for the protection of forest, fish, and game. The great strides they have accomplished are indicated by the fact that Pennsylvania has a nation- wide reputation as a foremost game and forest State. But the premier | position to which most of us feel Pennsylvania is entitled will never be attained until sportsmen them-' selves eliminate from their ranks the sports, the selfish game hogs, and the “fire fools,” who somehow still continue to violate reasonable game laws and annually lay waste thousands of acres of Penn's Woods.” TARDY AUTOISTS CAUSE A TAG JAM | Scattered throughout Pennsylva- | nia are more than 1,500,000 applica- tions for 1932 motor vehicle regis- trations waiting to be returned to the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. If history repeats itself, and in this] case it usually does, an avalanche of these applications will start rolling into the bureau along about the middle of December. So commented Benjamin G. Eynon, Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, as | he contemplated the coming of that annual last minute rush. “And the sad part of it all is | that much of it could be avoided,” the Commissioner sad. “Right now, tucked away in drawers or pigeon holes of desks are thousands of these applications, the receivers of which are fully capable of returning them immediately. In most cases it is just as easy to get them off ‘now as it will be next month. Con- tinued delay may bring New Year's day with the automobile tied up in| the garage because it can't show 1932 tags.” | If the pup has chewed the appli- | cation or one of the young hopefuls of the family has torn it to shreds, | | Commissioner Eynon said the bureau will be lenient and will forward a new application on request without | charge. This, however, does not ‘apply to lost 1931 rgistration cards. | Replacing them costs 50 cents. i “I am strongly in favor of that] ‘Do your Christmas shopping eagly’ slogan, praticularly so if the public ‘would also apply it to their 1932 | registration application,” the Com. missioner added. LIGHTS OUT OF FOCUS ARE MENACE ON ROAD Keep headlights properly focused, the chief of the safety division of | the bureau of motor vehicles says, |i calling motorists’ attention to the | | menace of a defective lighting sys-| | tem. i | “The motor vehicle operator isnot | lan aviator,” he said. “His lights | should show him the road ahead and ‘not the tree tops. Lights adjusted last month may be improperly fo- |cused this month. Many a fatal |accident has occurred because of | | blinding headlights. “The ‘one-eyed’ automobile is a source of danger. It deceives the approaching operator. It confuses him as to its location on the high-| way. He can only guess if it is | in the middle or on the side of the road, and guesses often are fatal. | Play safe and carry extra bulbs in| | the automobile. ! under the direction of physical ex- |gram of improving mental cases by MENTALLY ILL PATIENTS ATTAIN HEALTH BY PLAY. A department of physical educa- tion to help mental patients “play their way to health” is the latest innovation at the Danville State Alfred Kan, grad University, well versed in the theory and practical application of physical diversion as an aid to mental health, is head of the new department. Well directed physical activities will bring to the hospital's popula- tion an opportunity to improve phys- ical and mental health as well as enjoying athletic diversion. Another activity of the depart- ment will be to give to the students in the Nurses Training School op- portunities for diversion, exercise and competitive sports. This diver- sion for the nurse, whom contact is made with patients, will further promote the well being of the 1800 patients through athletic activities. The first duty of the director of the new department is the comple- tion of a survey to determine the activities now under way, such as the hospital baseball team, falling ercises, and outline a program rounding out the present activities and adopting a schedule of exercises which will meet the requirements of the hospital's guests. The patients fall generally inte two classes, acute admissions and those remaining for long periods of constant care. The physical edu- cation must be arranged to meet the needs of both classes. To the present program of base: ball, basketball, calisthenic, croquet. swimming, horse shoe pitching, shuf- fle boards, tennisand out-door volley ball will be added such diversion as bowling, track and field exercises, hand ball, football, tennis, hiking. ping pong, relay races and other athletics. The move is a pioneer endeavor in the treatment of mental disease and local hospital officials look forward to satisfactory progress in their pro- physical education. ESTATE TAXES ORIGINATED IN PHARAOH'S DAYS Inheritance taxes in ancient Egypt were higher than those which Penn- sylvania now imposes on estates, ac- cording to Linn Reist, Department of Revenue official in charge of col- lecting the State tax. The Egyptian records of the Seventh Century before Christ show that there was a transfer inherit- ance tax for the Empire of the Nile Valley. The rate was 10 per cent,” | Reist said. | “The Pennsylvania rate for wife | or husband, parents, sons, daughters, grandchildren and all direct £ ants is two cents on each dollar. Here is one tax which has been tremendously reduced since the days of the Pharaohs.” 2 Reist traced the history of in- heritance taxes from Egypt to an- cient Greece and thence into Rome in the time of the Caesars. “In the year 6 A D. Emperor Au- gustus persuaded the Roman Senate to a five per cent inheritance tax much like Pennsylvania's. It allowed deductions for funeral ex-| penses, as we do, and reckoned trusts of life estates on the basis of capitalized income,” he said. “On the death of a vassal in Eu- rope in the Middle Ages, the prop- erty reverted to the king for re- distribution and later could be claim- ed by the heir within a year and a day on payment of a fee. i “Our own Pennsylvania law allows one year for the settlement of the | tax before the interest penalty of | one per cent a month is added.” | TEACHERS SHOULD BE | REQUIRED TO TAKE OATH | | Pennsylvania college or public! school teachers paid from public | funds would be required to take! ths of to State and] Federal constitutions, according toa resolution adopted at the annual convention of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Pennsylvania group. The oaths would include obedience to the Volstead and Snyder acts, the national and State enforcement laws, it was pointed out. The resolution recommended to Governor Pinchot and State Legisla- tors that laws providing for such oaths be enacted to include all teachers paid wholly or in part from public funds. It was introduced by Mrs. John Repp, Philadelphia, chair- man of the resolutions committee. Mrs. William H. Alexander, Monon- 'gahela, Pa., was elected State regent to succeed Mrs. Joseph M. Caley. for only 10 cents? S-minute connection. For 70 cents you can telephone to friends, rela- tives or customers as far as 120 miles away—for friendly chats, family reunions, business trans- actions. And after 8:30 P. M. you can call them Just give the number to the op- erator (ask Information if you don’t know it) and “hold the line.” These low rates apply on Calls for a Number — when you do not ask the operator for a specific person —and are for a TELEPHONE | A CHRISTMAS PRESENT | ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW THE LAND OF SNOW AND ICE SE Years ago Dr. Wilfred Grenfell | 5 Law, Barn . { » captured the imagination of the all Office, Youn 18 Oriente world when he turned aside from the life of a conventionally success- KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney at ful physician in a great metropoli- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at. tan center and steered his way tention given all legal business among the ice-floes of the Labrador | East sind to Sra to a field of service offering noth- | ing but danger and privation. | M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney at Law EE a ee itsld and Justice of the Fane x who never saw, never heard this | promi Hares. Offices oa second floor gallant and intrepid adventurer for of Temple Court. 49-5-ly ont will o y acknowledge a! ebt gratitude to him for an in- spiration to service that saved them Consultation [in_ English Al Gite from that particularly deadening | Bellefonte, Pa. form of selfishness which always results from a failure to apply the! Christian religion to life. The superior value of Doctor Gren- fell's work has been recognized and | acclaimed the wide world over. In| knighting him the King of England gelletonte simply gave public and formal rec- Crider's Ex. 66-11 ogision to the honor and esteem in which 2 was held by people of, gig is fs many lands. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat. In the aritcle contributed by Sir | isfaction guaranteed, Frames replaced Wilfred to this issue of the advo- and lenses matched, Casebeer SOE. cate we not only make closer ac- | High 5, Bellefoms, Pu ay quaintance with one of the most ap- VA B. ROAN tometrist. Licensed pealing phases of his work but we E by the State Board. State College, feel the heart beat of his sympathy every da sxceft Saturday, Be with the brave people of the North [gute in the Garbrick building Sppestia land, of whom he declares with hr ny Dem. a us m. characteristic simplicity and modes- to 4:00 p.m. Bell Phone 88-40 ty that they have given back to him more than he has given them. Our readers will be glad to know | that a beautiful Grenfell art cal- endar for 1932 has been produced by Raphael Tuck and Sons. The] quotations in the calendar are from the writings of Sir Wilfred and the very unusual pictures are repro- duced from photographs of Labrador | and Newfoundland. The calendar is being sold for the G. RUNKLE.— Attorney at Law, ; = es R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEGPATH. State Holmes } ®) D, CASEBEER, OBtometrigt Rdg y FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% ‘733% J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent benefit of the Labrador work. It NEED NOT SUFFER monthly pain and delay due may be procured at the price of two | tocolds nervous Joss siusilas elutes. dollars through The Methodist Book | rejiable ve QUICK Sold by pd Concern or any of the depositories. all druggists for over 45 Ask for— £4 Here is the suggestion of a beau- tiful Christmas present such as no one has ever received before. | It will be prized for what it is— | a real work of art—and it will be welcomed wherever it goes for the tonic of its faith and optimism. “Life is always everywhere areal, | tough, courageous fight, with daily opportunities, to which are added all the fun of achievement, and all the glories of the conqueror’—these words from one of the pages of the TTT ER “INE DIAMOND & BRAND" EDS! We have taken on the line of calendar seem to be spoken to us MN by “the gallant pioneer, wnose steie-| PUriNA Feeds ing picture on the cover shows him standing in the prow of his ship We also carry the line of looking through and beyond the ice- fields to the men, women and chil- W yi eeds dren whose call he heard many a € F ago and still answers with that complete devotion possible only per 100lb. to one whose powers are wholly at| Wagner's 169% Dairy Feed - 1.40 the service or men for Christ's sake. | Wagner's 20% Dairy Feed - 145 Wagner's 32% Dairy Feed - 1.60 Wagner's Pig Meal - = = 175 Ee aL = 1% Wagner's Scral - = 1 IRA D. GARMAN | Wagner's Horse Feed - - - 140 JEWELER Wagner's Winter Bran Bulk - 1.10 1420 Chestaut St., Wagner's Winter Midds Bulk - 1.20 PHILADELPHIA — Have Your Diamonds Reset in Plantium § | Blatchford Calf Meal 25lbs - 1.25 74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry Wayne Calf Meal Per H - - 3.50 Wayne Egg Mash - - - - 2.10 Oil Meal 34% =- - - - - 190 Cotton Seed Meal | . - 15 . . Soy Bean Oil Me - =» =» = Li GoodjPrinting [Guten Feed - . - - - - 130 Fine Ground Alfalfa Meal - 2.25 A SPECIALTY Meat Scraps 45% - - - - 200 | Tankage 60% - es = « = 250 at the [Fish Meal 55% - - - - - 380 | Fine Stock - = = wo = 1 WATCHMAN OFFICE |Oyster Shell - - - - - = 100 There is no style of work, from | Molasses «+ » +» w= - 10 the cheapest * * to the fin | ont Let us grind your Corn and Oats BOOK WORK and wake Wp Sood, Nita that we can not do in the most Alfalfa ged Men Off a Sho ly tucios with the class . work. Rte asd er Bo Pdi We will make delivery ontwo ton office. orders. All accounts must be paid in 30 that and Coln This Interests You The Workman's Compensation BE Sel C.Y. Wagner & Co. inc Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates, Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating FI Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Idd PAA Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies | All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES | Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished 08-15-21.