rr rmm—m—— ee —————————————————————————————————————— No. 597, tract in Spring Mills; $5,~ Statistics compiled by the safe- y division of the bureau of motor | rehicles show that most automobile wccidents happen between 4 p. m.| nd 6 p. m., when drivers and pe- lestrians are returning from work. he number of accidents occurring n the early morning when the big jarade to work is on is small in| omparison. Fatigue, both physical | nd mental is given as one of the hief causes of accidents in the eve- ing hours. In 1931 between 4 p. m. and 6 p.| a., 372 fatal and (784 non-fatal ac-| jdents were reported to the bureau, jetween 7 a. m. and 9 a. m. 88 | atal and 2,080 non-fatal accidents sere reported last year. “Driving home from work in the vening may be relaxation for some | f us but for the big majority it is! n addition to the day's mental and | hysical strain,” said Walter W. Mat- | hews, director of safety division. | Men and women who have worked | ard all day are tired. Their men- | al alertness is below par. When | he emergency arises they are not | aentally capable of meeting it. We aay not like to admit it but I think | 2s true. Our statistics seem to] jake it so.” | Motorists should govern their riving by their mental and physical | ondition, Matthews asserted. They hould drive sanely and carefully at 11 times but more so when fatigued, e declared. n——— 'JELLS WHAT TIMBER TO USE FOR POSTS | nm s— | Where the chestnut has disappear- | d and there is stand of locust tim- | er, farmers still may have native | rees in their woodlots that can be sed for fence posts. County Agent | loss lists several of these in the or- | er of their importance. Here they | re: red cedar, black walnut, butter- | ut, catalpa, heart-wild, cherry, assafras, heart-white oak, and larch. | Red cedar is valuable but is not | paturally nor does it grow Dense thickets of young ance posts. Butternut is another tree scatter- d in numbers. Catalpa is rare ut can be grown into fairly rot- Heart-wild cherry! and the heart-' 700d makes reasonably good posts. assafras is not numerous, but it sakes a fairly good post. Larch | Tows only where planted; the wood | ; only moderately durable, Heart- /hite oak represents a possible post | upply where other sources are not’ vailable. i Without question the locust is the est species to plant for Wiig ma- | arial now, Ross says. tree roduces a very durable wood and oes it in a short time. Some | lantations on fairly good ground ave yielded 1100 ts to the acre 1 a 17 year period. 1 HE GAME COMMISSION TO BUY MORE WILD LAND Due to a large increase in the, ale of hunting licenses last fall,’ ae Board of Game Commissioners | as been able to further its exten- | ive land purchase program by al-| eating $125,000 sveune for the purchase of State ame lands. The action will in- | rease the present fiscal year's al- | tment for lands to about $325,000. uthorized the setting i .nts from each hunter's license for we purchase and maintenance of jditional State game lands the ame Commission has extended) very effort toward acquiring suit- | ble areas to be used as Game Re- | iges and public shooting grounds. | onsiderable headway has been \ade during the past few years with | ye Commission's $200,000 a year During nd purchase program. 331 a total of 82,667 acres was | the total holdings to | situated in thirty- ree blocks | re in Elk, Jefferson, Sullivan and i rizing system 18 been developed, and the cause off-flavors in strawberry ice — Subscribe for the Watchman. | gines, but of only 480 horse power. , machine designed by J. J. Van Kleek, 3 the accidental discovery of a A # lost city dating from 3000 B. C., BRITAIN CLAIMS FASTEST PLANES Naval Fighting Craft Have Elaborate Equipment. London.—Britain's aircraft carriers “Furious” and “Courageous,” now house what are claimed to be the fast. est airplane fighters of any of the world's great navies. Known as Hawker “Nimrods” these new machines fly at 200 miles an hour and climb to great heights at rockets like speed. They are replacing ob solete craft in the fleet equipment. Certain components in the new planes are strengthened to withstand | the shocks imposed by the use of a catapult which can send a machine | from stationery to 60 miles an hour in three seconds. They are and flotation boxes are placed betweer ‘he ribs #nd spars Inside the wings. They are fitted with more elaborate navigational equipment than their predecessors and carry wireless and additional lighting equipment for the purpose of assisting the pilot to find the carrier after a flight in haze or | cloud. The “Nimrods’ are powered wilh single Rolls-Royce “Kestrel” motors, | similar in construction to the 2 horse power and 2,600 horse power racing engines fitted to Britain's ree. | ord-breaking Schneider Trophy en —- Draw Up Rules for Air Flights in the Orient Washington.—New regulations gov- | earning foreign flights in Japan and | China have been passed following the Herndon-Pangborn difficulty, which led | to a “minor” diplomatic issue, The Department of Commerce has peen advised that permission for flight over Japanese territory must be ob- | tained In advance for each flight, as well as instructions outlining the route to be followed. Instructions must also be obtained fn advance for each place of landing and taking off. In China details of proposed flights must be given to the Chinese govern ment one month in advance, and per- mission of the Chinese government | awaited. Besides obtaining the Chinese gov- ernment’s approval one month in ad- | vance, airmen desiring to fly foreign airplanes Into China must also inform | the ministry of foreign affairs at Nan- | king five days prior to entering Chl- | nese territory. Permission to carry arms and munl- tions for self-defense may be given it reasons are stated. New Machine Takes Fight Out of Bulls Corvallis, Ore.—Designed to take the Aght out of pugnacious dairy bulls, a | Beaverton, Ore, has won the approv- | al of the Oregon experimental station here. The machine is equipped with a | long overhead sweep operated by a mo- ! tor attached to a reversible gear de- vice, The bull is led through a halt circle, turned around, led back, re- turned, with the operation repeated | until Mr. Bull becomes completely do- cile, Milk and Orange Juice | Aid Children’s Weight Sacramento, Calif. — The practice of serving milk to pupils in Sacra mento elementary schools as a mid forenoon “lunch” has been augmented | to include a small bottle of pure | orange juice. This new plan Was | included In the campaign against | malnutrition of children, when 0x- | periments Indicated that the gain in weight of a child taking both orenge julce and milk is double that of the | child that takes only one or the other | of the liquids. Popcorn Raising State Boasts of Bumper Crop washington.—Things are popping out in Towa. That state leads the country in producing popcorn. Sac county, Towa, raises more popcorn than any other United States county. Av- erage acreage in this product in Iowa from 1021 to 1930 was 25684. Ne braska ranks second. Most popcorn is grown on contract, thus making the marketing as important as the grow: ing. # Lost City in 4 Upsets Aryan Belief 3 London.—The old theory that ¥ # civilization was brought to India § $ by the Aryans has been upset by ¥ yt says Sir Edward A, Gait, chalr- 8 # man of the Royal Soclety of : 2 Arts. b § RD. Banerji, of the Indian ¥ %% archeological department, while st exploring in the lower Indus val- § #5 ley, found ruins built on the site 3 $2 of an older settlement. #y $ A great variety of ancient re- @ ¥ mains weve found, including seals i $ with legends in an unknown ple- § # tographic script resembling those 5 #2 found at Susa in Persia. £ 4 PNT NT NT land planes with wheels and no seaplane | floats, but in order to protect them | against the worst results of an emer: | gency landing on water, flotation bags | fill the after portion of the fuselage | | gun to accompany the heavy rain, At i home alone . . . | ded life, and vice versa, Both parties | had been warned by thelr mothers of | individual Compulsion neurosis Is a Scriptural Mention of the Raven as Scavenger The raven, largest of the crow fam- fly, nearly thirty Inches In length, carnivorous, a scavenger fond of offal, gluttonous in habit, is often mentioned by name in the sacred Scriptures. In other places also where In the early days of savage battling, reference is made to dead bodies being given to “the fowls of the air,” ravens, the common attendants upon battlefields are ne doubt referred to. The very first mention of a raven has connection in the mind with this | grim habit, for when Noah opened the window of the Ark after the flood and let out a raven (Gen. 8:7), which did not return, although there was neither dry land nor tree on which to rest, we cannot but think of the aw- ful food it would ravin upon in the dead bodies of beasts and human be- | ings, drowned in the frightful over flowing of the waters everywhere. Solomon, whose knowledge of nat- | ural history was deep and keen, had | a faithful imitation of Agur, the son of jakeb, who knew of that frightful | habit of the raven, the picking out the applies that habit parabolically as fol- lows: “The eye that mocketh at his father, and despiseth to obey his moth- er, the ravens of the valley shall pick it out,” (Proverbs, 30:17). Adapt Supply of Food | eyes of young or sickly lambs, so kill- | | ing them, and with judicial wisdom to Needs of the Body | “Sane eating without overindulgence will be a pretty safe basis for a | healthy life.” Flaying foolish adherence to tem | porary food fads, Dr. Solomon Strouse used the foregoing statement as the | theme of his article, “Building a Diet,” in Hygela, the Health Magazine. Food furnishes energy and builds u;. | proken-down tissue. Granting this, it is easy to see why the lumberman ol Maine uses 8,000 calories daily, where | as a tailor will use only about 2,700. on locality. In the United States we | eat a large amount of carbohydrate. | | That is because carbohydrate foods are cheap and easily available. In i | { : | i | The building of a diet depends als. | | i Alaska, fuel is supplied mainly by fat. . pread and butter, some meat and an | egg or two will pretty well cover most | of the fundamental nutritional require | ments of salts and vitamins.” “Milk, fresh fruits, fresh vegetables, i 1 ! i Bad weather prevailed when Mrs 3able visited her neighbor one night. With her was her little boy of seven, who found it very hard to behave dur ing his mother’s long and tiresome vis- its. This night the lad stayed close to | his mother's side, not because he was tired (as usually a child does), but be- cause he feared the thunder and the howling winds which already had be- last he wasn't able to control himself any longer and not wishing to appear rude In the eyes of the hostess, he said timidly to his mother, “Ma ‘cause pa may be ‘scared to stay without us.”—New York Sun. Idea Broke Up Wedding Ancient superstition caused a tragle snding to a wedding in a Macedonian village. The theory Is that if the wom- an can tread on the foot of her hus- band-to-be while he is standing at the altar during the wedding ceremony, he will obey her throughout their wed- the custom and at the church a stamp- ing contest began, resulting in triumph for the bride. = The groom lost his tem- per and before long the guests came to the defense of the family honor and a general fight took place. The bride- groom later repented but the bride would not see him. Mental Health Mental hygeine Is vastly important in the proper development of a normal sense of guilt and fear acquired In childhood commected with some feeling of having to do something in expiation of the funcled source of the sense of guilt, Reassurance and interest in other things Is a ture If the compul- gion Is not severe, In severe cases an understanding of the cause of the condition is necessary, the question and answer department of Hygein Thought of Papa | presented to prominent visitors. The i Magazine informs a reader. | Pride in His Work | A story told of the famous Italian | poet Dante relates how the poet once overheard a blacksmith sing one of his songs, In a horribly mutilated form. Whereupon, in anger, Dante upset the tools in the smithy. On being ques- tioned by the astonished smith, the poet informed him that he was as par- ticular about his productions as the smith was about his tools, and made him promise not to sing his songs un- | less he saw that he could do it cor- | rectly. i Motions of the Earth i So far as is known the earth has | four motions—rotation om its axis, | revolution around the sun, procession | of the equinoxes (a slow wabble of the pole of the spinning earth, like the | wabble of a spinning top, which re | quires something over 26,000 years to | complete), and motion through space together with the sun and ail the at- | tendant planets, toward a point in the | constellation Hercules. . agements of the two largest stores In Verna A . HB L O. O. F. Hall tract in Miles Twp.; $2700. LIGHTS ) Riss of NEW YORK i X Hi One of the station mastefs at Grand 8. Central has a side line. He owns u | gasoline and oil business on the Bos $650. trade Is poor. Motorists who used to pull in and say, “Fill her vp” now! count their gallons. They buy Just py REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. , et bar, to Lucy H. Field, et al, to William | G. Gordon, tract in Boggs Twp.; $1. enry T. Noll, et ux, to Leonard O'Donnell, tract in Spring Twp.; | Dean S.Braucht, et ux, to Trustees ton Post road, and he tells me that of Spring Mills Lodge I. O. O. F. 125. Vera W. Downes, et bar, to BE. O. Stohl, tract in Philipsburg; $1. E. O. Stohl to Vera H. Downes, et bar, tract in Philipsburg; $1. M. L. Newman, et ux, to B. A. Buscar, et al, tract in Penn Twp... Elizabeth C. Barnhart to G. C.. Benner, tract in Potter Twp.; $1. Asso., enough, apparently, to get home. Many | ask whether they cannot open 8 || charge account, but the station mas | ter's sou, who runs the business in his | absence, has strict instructions to do | only a cash business. The only excep- | tions to this rule, queerly enough, are | young men who look like college boys. | They usually pay the next time they | go by but, just to be on the safe side | the gas man takes their license num- | bers. Some drivers have ten gallons | of gas put in the tanks and then say | they have forgotten their pocketbooks | “That is all right,” says the gas man | “Just leave your spare tire.” If they | drive away without doing so, he just | telephones a police box down the road. i IE Increased and they come back. Then they usual: | ly discover some money. The station | master says the funny thing about the i whole affair Is that most of the motor. | ists are driving good looking cars, | many of them new, | * ———— fulness. * ® | A letter from Frank Hartman, ed | tor of the Republican, in Farmington. | N. M, says that he once went to | school in Pleasant Hill, Mo, with | Frank Trumbull, later head of the Col- | orado Southern & Michigan Central | railways. I first met Frank Trumbull | in Venice. I had preceeded him up through Italy and the tourist agencies and hotels used to get our mail hope | lessly mixed. We had a very pleasant time together, bux never could discover that we belonged to the same branch | of the family. | The history of depressions In the | Onited States appears to be that they last about three years, with nine fairly [ fat years in between. Those of us. | n therefore, who are still around in the | [i early 1040s may be expected to go | about snorting: “Panic! You don't shi know anything about a panic. You | Bj are too young to remember 1931." i Another use for a Ferris whee! | [i would be as a ring for all the keys to | sl the city of New York which have been | gf main trouble with most of these keys | {i is to find a door they fit. Yd * ® ° When Helen Morgan was in Havana .he movie people decided it would be pice to take a little shot of her buying something in a department store. The) did not care which store, but the man: Havana cared a lot. They were firm in the beilef that if Miss Morgan went | By on the screen in a store, the particular il emporium made a lot of difference. The contestants turned Miss Morgan's | i} sulte at the hotel into a verbal battle |} don't you think we better go ‘Some ground. Neither she nor her mother | understood Spanish, but they could perceive that the argument was bitter. The battle was at its height when Evelyn Kelly, an old friend of Miss Morgan, arrived. Not only could she understand Spanish but it appeared she had taken a temporary job in the | i§ older of the two palaces of merchan- |§ dise. That turned the scales of war. | Miss Kelly's store won in a walk, at | ji¥ the end of which the picture was | Jjy made, | Miss Morgan's only bet in Cuba was | ii} to the extent of a peseta. She lost It, |} and, not knowing how much a peseta might be, proffered a dollar in settle ment. To her surprise, she got 80 cents in change. he several Federal agencies looking to the relief of the credit situation will soon begin to operate. _'_landevena little optimismEwould| ‘prove a; § || 22 powerfulfstimulus. Sx JE © a Man [naturally is hopeful,fand thisq country offers-unlimited reasons for hope- ~} THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. " confidence will 'be felt, ws BS Baney’s Shoe Store i [ WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor 80 years in the Business [ 3 BUSH ARCADE BLOCK N BELLEFONTE, PA. ® A WORK SHIR ’ S »f jumping up on the back of taxicabs and going for a ride. They get on when the traffic stops for a red light, but the cars run so fest between lights that they have to wait for the next halt to get off. As the taxis begin to slow down, the kids leap gaily from their perches, seldom looking behind them, We aiways wonder why they don't get killed, but never yet have ¢een one hurt. *. & 9 A rather funny situation has beer created by recent investigations by state and federal agencies, It has made those engaged in the liquor and speakeasy business so nervous that many of them no longer do business obligations In cash, (©. 1932, Bell Syndicates. )—WNU Service. Swedes Staying at Home Gothenburg. — Sweden's emigration nas now dwindled to practically noth- ing. Official figures reveal that the number of Swedes who emigrated dur- ing the first three-quarters of 1981 totaled 532, as compared te 2,832 dur- ing the corresponding period In 1930, Squirrel Dog Fools g Hunter; Trees Bear 3 Canton, Pa. — Clyde Speary 3 and his shepherd dog went hunt- ing for squirrels. Speary sat down to wait for one to appear. He noticed his dog was excited. The dog % picked up a scent and trailed it % over the top of a ridge. Speary % followed. The dog had treed a bear, It’s 1 fl Double Back, Double Elbow, Re-inforced Arm Holes, Tri- fl ple Stitched. | Extra-heavy Blue Cheviot a oy cate Material. | Full size and It’s i l The Biggest Shirt Bargain |f fll we have ever offered— See ft. Our Window- .