Belefonte, Pn. January 29, 198%. | Your Health +E FIRST CONCERN. | i By Dr. Morris Fishbein Pneumonia, called by Osler “the «captain of the men of death,” called also “the friend of the aged,” since it is a means of guick death for those who have survived to the point at which their life is merely a bur- den and no longer a pleasure, con- tinues to be a disease of great mor- tality among all civilized peoples. The disease is transmitted from one person to another or by ma-| terials containing the secretions from | the nose, throat and lungs of those who are infected. Our present con- dition of housing, the crowding that | takes place in the street cars, trains, | elevators, motion picture houses, and similar places, leads to such inti- mate contacts of human beings that transmission of respiratory diseases is exceedingly likely. Apparently the disease develops | two or three days after the germs get into the lungs through inhala- tion, provided that the human body is not possessed of enough resist- ance to throw off the infection. The patient with pneumonia should, if possible, be attended bya nurse who understands the proper sanitation and hygiene of the sick- room in contagious cases, and who will see to it that the dishes, the vedding and other materials in con- tact with the patient are nroperly sterilized or disinfected before be- ing permitted into possible contact | «with other people. i Pneumonia, above all of the oth- ar diseases that attack mankind, de- mands good medical attention and “the best of nursing care. | The disease tends to run a limit- | ed course. During the time when “the lungs are congested it is neces. | =arv to supnort the action of the | heart bv proper measures. Oxygen administered properly tends to re-| tieve the strain on the incapacitated tizsues of the lungs. | BLOOD PRESSURE | The average blood pressure of men | at 20 years of age is 120; at 60 _years of age, about 135. In peo- {John R. Collins, with the very important or Groundhog day, as cai it. This second day of February is groaning under Su- perstitions which partake of the sub- out eary Candlemas day, | i | | | { i = ‘9 | February, rich in feast days, starts EE Man's relentless war on the natural enemies of bugs may some day prove his own undoing. When the grass hoppers, locusts, army worm, cut- etc, which are McNary of Oregon Prof. A. Brazier ins. Our » by the way, inherits his importance from his German ancestor, the r. The| legend of this Teutonic hibernator is to the effect that he uncurls himself from his winter slecp on this day. If he finds the skies overcast or the ground covered wtih snow he takes stock for an early spring. | Should there be brilliant sunshine he simply yawns and turns over for another nap. Our first German abouts must have prophet badger, which is seldom found east of the Mississippi, but they amiably made the best of it and took up with the groundhog or woodchuck. After all, it's what one makes of a thing that determines its worth. Many quaintly charming rhymes are connected with the day. Here is one: “If Candlemas Day be dry and fair The half of the winter's to come and mair; If Candlemas Day be wet and foul, The half of the winter came at Yule. If Candlemas Day be fair and bright, Winter will have another flight; But if it be dark with clouds and rain, settlers here- missed their Howell of Johns Hopkins charged that the grasshopper menace in the Middle West this summer was a resalt of the | government policy of exterminating rodents. Pointing out that ground squirrels, gophers, etc, constitute the | chief clieck on the increase of in- sects on the western plains where there are few insect-eating birds, Pro- fessor Howell said such animals not only eat large quantities of grasshop- pers but they actually diz up and devour the eggs of insects. The Department of Agriculture, he claims, is practically exterminating rodents by poison over thousands of square miles with resulting “terrible scourges | of insects.” Professor Howell would have the rodents controlled rather than exterminated. - Why Traffic in United States Passes on Right The reason why traffic in the Unit | ed States passes on the right rather i Winter's gone, and will not come again.” | Another contains some advice for matron and maid: “Down with the rosemary, an’ so Down with the bays and mistletoe; Down with the holly, ivie, all Wherewith ye drest the Christmas hall: That so the superstitious find Not one least branch there left behind. For lock, how many leaves there be Neglected there Maids, trust to me, S80 many goblins shall ye see.” DELEGATES-AT-LARGE FOR NATIONAL CUNVENTION. The list of candidates for than the left, contrary to the practice | | of the rest of the world, has just been | discovered by the Department of Agri culture, It originated, says a department bul {etin, with the drivers of the six-horse teams of eastern Pennsylvania. oak that was pulled out on the left side of the wagon body. The driver usually walked beside his team or rode a saddle horse. [Krom the lazy board he could operate the | prake and call to his horses, dele- | gates-at-large and alternates to the | next Democratic National tion, as agreed upon at the recent meeting of the Democratic State Committee, follows: For delegate-at-large the commit- tee recommended to the voters: Sedgwick Kistler, Lock Haven, member of the National Committee; of Coudersport, chairman of the State Committee; Roland S. Morris, Conven- | 1 | | | of Philadelphia, | through the earth take former Ambassador to Japan; E. J.| Lynett, of Scranton, eidtor and pub- ple who are overweight this pres-|lisher of the Scranton Times; John | .sure is likely to be higher. A va-|F. Short, of Clearfield, editor and riation of five millimeters of mer- publisher of the Clearfield Republi-| cury above or below these figures | may be considered within the aver- | age. There are many reasons why the ‘blood pressure may fall below the average. ‘This occurs whenever a person is nauseated, faints, or has | a severe hemorrhage. There are, nowever, other conditions of general weakness in which the blood pres- sure is low and in which the physi- needs to concern himself with building the person back into a good «condition. A condition may develop follow- ‘ing any long continued infection, and the method of taking care of the condition is obvious. Rest is necessary. If e who had a severe cold, even without a fever, would stay in bed in the acute . stage and if every person who had a fever would ay ln bed from one ‘to three days r the tempera- ture became normal, a vast amount «of degenerative disease, of low blood | pressure, and of general weakness “would be avoided. f ‘There are certain diseases which | ‘ phia, a ‘Roosevelt; Mrs. Anna Felix, of Pitts- | tee; can; Guy Bard, of Lancaster, the party's candidate for Lieutenant Governor two years ago; Robert Gil- more, of rt, a manufac- turer; Judge Henry C. Niles, of York. Mrs. Emily Roosevelt, of Philadel- distant relative of Governor burgh; Mrs. Lulu Roberts, of Harris- | burg; Mrs. Anna Cort, of Latrobe; Mrs. Katherine Flohr, of Allentown; vice chairman of the State Commit. Mrs. Mary Doran, of Johns- town; Mrs. Carroll Miller, of Pitts- burgh, sister of Mr. Guffey; Mrs. Isabel Crosby, of Meadville. Alternate delegate s-at-large: James P. Rossiter, of Erie; Clinton B. Ellenberg, Stroudsburg; A. B. Clark, Altoona; Charles A. Jones, Pittsburgh; George R. Meek, Belle- fonte; Michael R. Kerwick, Philadel- phia; Hiram G. Andrews, Johns- town; Stanley Janowski, Nanticoke. Mrs. Anne Madden, Millvale; Miss Macken, Montrose; Mrs. Frank ps, Altoona; Mrs. Kathryn Stime, York; Mrs. Frank len, _ attack the glands of internal secre Montgomery county; Mrs. Lucy Win- . tion which are concerned with keep- | gton, the blood pressure normal] through maintaining proper elastic- ‘ity in the blood vessels. , Since the blood pressure is a re. | , flection of the power of the heart "to push the blood through the ar-| : teries and veins and of the condition | (of the blood vessels through which the blood passes, any factor that greatly influences these two basic | features of the circulation may : about either a high or low "®lood pressure. i { _ Epidemic sore throat usually oc-| «curs in explosive outbreaks and is apread chiefly by milk. It must be differen from seertain other types of infection of #he throat by streptococci which smay occur almost any time be-| «cause of the widespread distribution «of the various forms of streptococci among people generally. There is, for instance, in a sore throat which is due to invasion of the throat by the streptococci as- sociated with scarlet fever in cases in which the rash of scarlet fever does not develop. Any time that the throat is invaded by these viru- ‘lent germs and the body is unable ‘to throw them off, there occurs in- ‘flammation of the throat, the ton- ‘sils and the neck with fever, pros- tration, and all of the other symp- toms that usually accompany infec- typical of inflammation. This disease is usually spread from ‘one person to another, except so far as concerns the epidemic form. In the epidemic form it is usually found that the germs are ralifariea through milk. e disease begins promptly and lmsually follows a rapid ig, Most of the epidemics of septic sore vthroat have occurred in the spring Mechanicsburg; Mrs. Helen Sutton, Bangor, and Miss Marion Stone, Coudersport. APPRAISERS WILL CHECK TAX RETURNS 1932 will soon begin their secretary of Revenue Clyde L. King announced. The assessments made by them will be on the gross vol- ume of business transacted during the calendar year ending December 31, 1931. The mercantile license year be- | gins May 1, 1932, and license taxes should be paid on that date. All | persons liable for this tax are ad- vised by Secretary King that they should make accurate returns of their whole volume of business for the calendar year 1931, on which the 1932 license tax is based. Investigators from the State De- ent of Revenue will check. the returns made to the mercantile ap- praiser by dealers, to verify the ac- curacy of such returns. Addition- al assessments will be made in all cases where it is found that erron- eous reports are made. All mercantile, theatre, billard, bowling alleys and eating house licenses are assessed by the mercantile and are pay- able to the county treasurers. of course, they may occur at any In general, the only advice that can be given relative to the avoid- ing of septic sore throat is proper; examination of the throat by a com- petent physician who will recom- mend removal of the tonsils or of lymphoid masses in case there is frequent infection. The routine garg- ling of antiseptics is not apparently particularly helpful in preventing infection. The gargle merely cleans the throat temporarily and the per- son may take in a full dose of live «or in the early summer, although, streptococci just as soon as exposed. pool and | ’ | | | i | Coaches and other vehicles of th. ! day—luate In the Seventeenth century —were driven from the right side, but traffic had to make room for the wax- oner, seated on the left. So the prac- tice of turning to the right gradually spread until it became the established American custo! Why Oceans Are Salt The oceans are salty because they are the reservoir for the inflowing wa- ter from the land areas of the earth. These flowing waters in passing up min- ute particles of salt and hold them in suspension and finally deposit them in the oceans. When water is evaporated from the oceans the salt remains in the sea, and the rain that falls on the land is fresh water, which again flows to the oceans, dissolving more salt from rocks and earth and depositing it in the ocean. This proc- ess is continuous, so that the oceans are constantly growing more saity. Why Mahogany Turns Blue The bluish haze that is often no- ticed on a polished surface is nothing more than the accumulation left by moisture and dust from the atmo- sphere. This may be washed off with a damp cloth or soft material, wrung out of tepid water in which a littie pure soap may be used if necessary, or a few drops of olive oil may be put on the cloth. Wipe off with a soft, dry cloth or clean chamois. Why Letter J Is Dotted The consonant j did not appear Iu the Latin and other alphabets of west- ern Europe until the Sixteenth cen- tury. It had been by. the letter 1. In manuscripts the letter | was carried slightly below the line to indicate that it was being used as a consonant, This form crept into the alphabets. Why Called “Dark Ages” The times usually referred to as “The Dark Ages” are the earlier cen- turies of the Middle ages, I. e, from 476 (the fall of the Roman empire) till the end of the Tenth century. The word “Dark” refers to the Intellectual darkness characteristic of the period. Why Soldiers “Break Ranks” The vibration of a body of soldiers marching across a bridge Is so great. and sustained such a considerable time, that it may endanger the struc ture: therefore, they are required to break ranks. Why Use of Guinea Pigs Guinea pigs are used in laboratories Aue to the fact that they are suscepti ble to many of the diseases of man. They are also small animals and can be easily handled and are not vicious. Why Known as “Rookies” Army recruits got their nickname rom the term “rookery,” which in English military slang refers to the quarters in the barracks occupied by subalterns. How to End Worry Worrying can be cured, declares 8 Auropean specialist, who claims that constant suggestion and resolution can cure people of this weakness, Why Flag Is “Colors” The use of the term “the colors” as applied to a flag is based on a figure of speech which employs a part to in- dicate the whole. Why Eggs Become Tainted It has be~n found that eggs become tainted if stored near citrus fruits. tmmense Brass Brain Figures Out the Tides In a room of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey building at Wash- ington is a great machine which an- swers to the name “Great Brass Brain” Its function is to predict tides with the utmost exactness at any place in the world, or to tell the state of the tides at any moment ir the past. This robot is a marvel of wheels and pulleys. Tides rise and fall with i i historian. The | | driver, instead of having a seat in- | side the wagon, rode on the “iazy | board.” a sliding board of strong white | mathematical exactness, but there are a large number of forces acting upom | of the earth, and many other things The machine takes into account 37 of these factors in its mechanical ca’ ~ulations, Its chief purpose is to help in set ting time schedules for ship move ments, but it is also useful to the i i | them, such as the moon, the motion | | i For instance, the delay of the Brit. ish expedition which landed at Charles. town in 1775, which gave Paul Revere | the chance to save the countryside, has been ascribed to their waiting for low tide. Brass Brain, however, showed that the tide was low when the British landed, so that they must have been waiting for something else, probably provisions. in Black Hills Region | One of the most productive water | | | Vast Water Resources pearing formations of the northern In- | terior of the United States is what Is | known as the Dakota standstone, | | which crops out about the flanks of | the Black hills in southwestern Sout | Dakota. The formation extends east- | ward and northeastward to the bor- ders of Iowa and Minnesota. As the sandstone slopes away from the Black hills, the water percolates northeastward and eastward through the porous rock and underneath a dense covering of thick clay shale. Beneath the James river valley h .« under considerable pressure, and where the surface altitude is not too great, strong-artesian flows have been | obtained. In fact, the artesian wells are among the greatest natural re- gources of that area. However, so many wells have bees driven, the supply shows signs of hav- ing been taxed about to the limit, and the force of many of the wells has fallen considerably below the original pressure, Monarch Before His Birth Sapor, king of Persia, probably nolds the record for the earliest age at which a king has been crowned. He was crowned about two months be- fore he was born, His father, the reigning king, dled at that time, and an uncle, finding the throne vacant, organized a usurpation, The queen, anxious for the succession of her son, proclaimed a coronation ceremony and had her unborn child crowned in her own person. Such was the veneration of the people for the dynasty that the ceremony was effective in fore stalling the uncle's usurpation. The child proved to be a boy and ruled as King Sapor. Birthplace of Telephone Among the many things for which Boston is famous is that it was the birthplace of the telephone. It was on the afternoon of June 2, 1875, that Prof. Alexander Graham Bell and his associate, Thomas A. Watson, were working in two garret rooms over the electrical shop of Charles Williams at 100 Court street, Boston, and there discovered the principle of the tele phone. More than nine months later Professor Bell received from the Unit- ed States on March 7, 1876, a patent No. 174465, and thus established the existence of the Bell telephone. This has often been called the most valu- able patent to mankind ever issued. Under the Stone “passing through a village in west. ern India,” writes a lady missionary. “followed by a friendly crowd, we stopped at a small wayside altar, the god heing represented by four flat stones decorated with red paint. We said, ‘There is no god here. These are only stones’ ‘Oh’ sald a man, ‘the god is underneath’ We prompt- ly lifted one of the stones to discover beneath it three large, hibernating frogs, whereupon a great laugh went wp from the crowd, in which we all joined.” Knew the Candy Man A Baltimore policeman picked up a small girl crying lustily for “mamma.” Other than that her name was “Marie” he could learn nothing about her. She was taken to police headquarters, Finally some one thought to ask her where she bought her candy when at home. She gave the name of a candy storé owner without hesitation. The rest was easy. Her name was Marie Biser, aged four. She had strayed from her mother in a downtown store. —Capper's Weekly. Consolation for Fat Folks Many people in middle age and be- gond are the worst and most serious offenders in the fad of reducing. Na- ture intentionally, with most folks, adds weight with years. The layer of fat that becomes most noticeable over the stomach is furnished for addi- tional warmth and protection to vital organs, and to compensate for the fact that with age the body generates less warmth. A little fat, at forty, is no sign of physical degeneration.—Amer- . lean Magazine | pictured as living on blubber and in- | gant race In the world at the present e————————— HOW GILA MONSTER SPREADS POISON WHEN IT BITES.— The Gila monster, which inhab- its the southwestern part of the United States, is the only liz. ard known to be venomous. The poison apparatus differs from that In snakes, which have the poison glands and fangs in the upper jaw. In the Gila monster a row of venom glands lie along the inside of the lower lip and the openings are near the bases of the grooved teeth. When the lizards bite they de- liberately chew the object and cause a considerable amount of the poison to work into the wound through the channels of the teeth. Although the bite of the Gila monster has been known to cause death to man, as a rule the poison is not fatal to human beings, partly because the creature seldom has an op- portunity to bite so large a vic tim and work the venom thor oughly into the wound. These lizards feed chiefly on other liz ards of smaller species and on these the venom takes effect rapidly. FRR R WHI IN HHH R NRHN RRWHR How Eskimos React to March of Civilization The Eskimo has “gone white.” The most prosperous and most extrava- era of depression is the fur-clad deni- zen of the Arctic, who is generally habiting an igloo, Eskimos within range of civilization save gone In for commerce, particn- larly the fur trade, in a wholesale fashion, and some of the most sue | | cessful make incomes from $5,000 to | wary short wave length.. The heat Is | $140,000 a year. They spend all they make. When an Eskimo has a rich | harvest of furs and cashes in on it, his first thought is to book passage on an airplane flying to some city | where, in exchange for his money, he can buy a white man's outfit. He usually purchases a swift moto poat, new hunting and fishing equip- ment, and clothes of the white man's mode, for use on ceremonial indoor occasions. If he has not already in- stalled a radio he buys one, and it Is probable that he will purchase musi- cal Instruments in addition.—Boston News Bureau. How Corn Is Popped by Radio Explaining how corn is popped by radio, and why it is placed between jars of ice, the General Electric com- pany says that “the heating of the corn is produced by radio waves of generated by current Induced within the kernels themselves, The purpose of the glass jars, with ice, placed on each side of the corn, was to show that this was so—that is, that the sur- rounding atmosphere was cold and that the only thing that was heated was the corn itself. The reason that the corn was heated by the short wave radio waves and the ice water was not was because of the difference of the olectro-conductivity of the corn ker- nels and the Ice water.” How Spores Travel Scouting trips with airplanes show chat spores of certain plant diseases are often found at heights of 10,000 feet in the upper air. This is one ex- planation for the spread of such dis-, eases as black stem rust of small grains, say specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. Investigators working with white pine blister rust have found that spores of that disease falling in a per- fectly still atmosphere from a height of one mile require 55 hours to reach the earth. Such experiments make it clear that plant disease spores may he blown for long distances unless brought down by rain or some other agency. How Gelatin Is Made Gelatin is formed by the action of boiling water on connective tissue, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, skin, hoofs and bones. By one commercial process the selected tissues are washed and soaked in warm, diluted soda lye for about ten days and then heated in an air-tight compartment. They are next washed In revolving drums, bleached by fumes of burning sulphur and rewashed to remove the sulphur, after which the gelatin is dis solved out with boiling water. Color is removed by means of bleaching charcoal, and the clear, hot solution {s poured out in thin layers, which, after setting, are cut into small sheets and dried on nets. How to Restore Honey Pure ) oney is liable to granulate dur- ng cold weather and it can be re stored to its former liquid condition without injuring its flavor in any way by placing the container in a vessel of warm water and never allowing the temperature to go above about 120 de- grees, The honey will then become liquid «nd retain its delightful aroma. How Bee Finds Its Way The bee finds its way home by its sense of direction. When it leaves the hive it circles around and then flies off. Each hive has its own odor. which helps the bee to identify its hive. How Miles Differ A standa-d, or statute mile, contains 5280 feet: a nautical mile contains 6,080.2 feet BELLEFONTE GRADES IN BASKETBALL LEAGUE Basketball among the boys of the grade schools of Bellefonte is al- ready exciting a lively interest among the youthful dribblers. About forty reported for the first and enjoyed a hard work-out. Two ods a week have been assigned them in the gymnasium for the pur- of providing exercise and the opportunity to develop their ability in the game. Be Paaicns Jay ol in the 7th and 8th grades of both build. . These four teams will play a regular schedule of games among themselves. It is also planned to select a grade school team of the best players on the four teams and arrange games with the Freshmen Hi-Y and other available opponents The boys will have to maintair passing grades in all subjects in or- der to play on their teams. They must also have good records of con duct and attendance. It is hoped that some suitable trophy or award will be provided by some organization or business fir in town to be placed in the room which wins the grade championship ——————— A ——————— —Dahlia bulbs should be examine to see if they are keeping well. I |they are shriveling cover them witl sand; if they show signs of starting into growth they should be kept ii a cooler place. The Birthday Surprise SURPRISE PARTY! Betty Hale's eyes danced with excitement as the guests flocked into the farm house. terday myself!” Mrs. Hale beamed knowingly. “Why, you don't folks have think only city telephones, Employers, This Interests Yc Compensatio State Coliege Bellefont MODERN WOME penis NOT SUFFER monthly TTL: $5,000 in Cash Prize Ask Your Druggist for Particu