RE, ——— a Bellefonte, Pa., May 7, 1915. County Correspondence Items of Interest Dished Up for the Delec- tation of “Watchman’ Readers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. REBERSBURG. Fruit blossoms abundantly. Beware of the May and June frosts. Our merchants are merry —business booming. Allen Brungart’s engine daily sawing wood. Orvis Walker has nearly finished his hennery, modern and complete. Mrs. Ethel Hubler and little daughter Frances are visiting at Selinsgrove. Frank Waite is aiding in the building operations now humming at Millheim. Mrs. Victor Walker is quite as handy at the lever of the gasoline transfer as the regular mail routist. It is a question whether all this educa- tion pays its cost, when it is thrown away on the street after dusk. The residence of Forest Ocker has been sided with a silvery glittering metal that gives a palatial glamour. Tom Harter is scouting around for more woods to lay low in the dust. He was trying to get Jim Corman’s, too. George Corman is following his pro- fession of Veterinary Oophorectomist, as a noted horse surgeon termed himself. Mrs. J. K. Moyer, having spent the is puffing spring months at Mont Alto, with her | daughter, resumed her residence here. Miss Elsie Miller, of Lock Haven, help- ed her grandma Hackenberg to do her spring house cleaning this week, quite handsomely. Sam Bierly shipped 100 bushels of apples to WilksBarre the forepart of the week. T hat is the best market in Penn- sylvania for apples. It is laughable to see Brother Vance McCormick make grimaces because Dr. Brumbaugh is operating upon State Col- lege for appendicitis! Mrs. John Page gave a regular farm- er’s feast to some lady friends from Rebersburg, and they speak glowingly of it for variety and propriety. The whole minor judiciary is insulted by the new scalp law, which requires proof to be made before State game pro- tectors. God save our scalps! Mr. and Mrs. Breon, of Coburn, and Mrs. James Harbaugh and Norman Douty attended the funeral of Walter Douty at Green Burr on Saturday. The improvements on the George Miller home have been supplemented by a concrete walk all around and across the side way, laid by Hubler and Corman. Cal. Weaver and his good wife have become quite citified in their tastes and the way they have had Wilbur Diehl decorate their new home is pleasing to the sight. Who can furnish us a copy of “Song Garland,” even though second hand? It was composed by W. J. Suffern and many of Emma Pitts’ songs are in it. The book is out of print. “Highfalutitudinous” is the latest ex- pletive a Rebersburg dame applied to the college bread-eaters who are not bread-winners. Success is the test of all earnest and honest effort. : William Shultz, of Green Burr, was a Sunday visitor with Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Frank, and his nephew, Frank Shultz. Bill is now a retired farmer, having made his pile raising tobacco at Avis. When the work road tax was abolished this opened wide the field for graft, and now nobody will work on the public roads, unless sentenced to the stone pile by some inconsiderate and stony-hearted Judge. Miss Geraldine Hackenberg has finish- ed her term of music under Mrs. Stauf- fer’s gifted direction, but she continues to practice on the piano three hours every day. It is practice that counts in the end. On Saturday night whilst all of W. J. Hackenbergs were away from the ice cream parlors, temporarily, some one not Billy Sundayistically inclined robbed the till. We will have to send for “Billy!” Jake Gephart recently sold a car load of baled hay. If he had another he could readily dispose of it to good custo- mers. But why do not our farmers club together as they used to do, and order a car load for the club? The gall of the Governor! Our highly taxed farmers from whom the State high- waymen took their roads are asked to get out and donate a day and sweat on the roads May 26th, and pay their taxes too! They are no fools! We did not expect Scotty to vote for submitting the liquor question or any other question to the electoral test. Scotty stood for whiskey at the polls. Why should he stand for microbious water or “pop” in the “House of Hogs.” We have been watching the daily re- ports to see how the Grange road bill, which was intended to supplant the Jones jackass law of 1913, was faring at the hands of Brumbaugh's Legislature. Guess “Jordan am a hard road to trabble 1 b'leve,” as the old minstrel sang. An aged man presented himself at the State prison to see a person condemned to be executed. The warden asked him what relation he was to the prisoner. He replied: “Brothers and sisters have I none: this man’s father was my father’s son.” What was the relation? Word from the Misses Rilla and Flor- ence Diehl indicates that they are in love with their new homes near Lewisburg and Vicksburg. There is a place near Lewisburg called Red Top where the Blue mountain gazelle wades in clover knee-high, and the peonies bloom peren- nially. Every man who wants to pasture live stock is bound to see that his pasture is fenced. The law is all against the raiser of live stock. Hence Pennsylvania does not raise one-tenth as much as she con- sumes. This is because her Legislators are generally of the Mexican burro varie- ty, nowadays. Some choicy meat thieves on Sunday night burglarized Chas. Bierly’s smoked meat storage plant. They took the hams and left the flitch. A search warrant is out, but the hams have probably flitted to Texas by auto. The funeral of Walter Douty, the young man who was kicked to death bya young horse, was held at Green Burr on Saturday and was largely attended, great sympathy being manifested for his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elis Douty. Itis believed he died from internal rupture, there being no visible mark on his side where the hoof hit him. Newt. Weber is working up his sum- mer ard fall wood from the limbs which the snow broke down last winter in the Jaspar Brungart orchard. The trees in this orchard were planted about seventy years ago by John Ruhl and his wife “Betsy” who was nee Heckman, and were of the choicest varieties, such as North- ern Spy, King of Tompkins county, Golden Pippen, French Pippen, Belleflow- er, Butter, Buchtel, Baldwin, etc. Old miners in the region of precious metals knew auriferons signs, which are not written in the books. They main- tained that there are gold, silver and lead in valuble quantities in these moun- tains between Rebersburg and Clinton- dale. John Ruhl located some about twenty years ago and sought to buy the mountain land, but the controlling in- terest in it was held in Great Britian and he could not geta lease nor deed. So the matter rests. But he lives and knows where the gold veins are. ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. PINE GROVE MENTION. The late showers have revived vegeta- tion very much. Most of our farmers are through with their spring planting. Cyrus Powley has been housed up with tonsilitis the past week, Hon. J. W. Kepler autoed a party of sight-seers to Tyrone on Sunday. N. T. Krebs is a Pittsburgh visitor this week, mixing business with pleasure. Mrs. Annie Miller, who has been ill several weeks as a grip victim, is better. Rev. R. W. Illingsworth came in from Erie and is spending this week at the Snyder home. Dr. L. E. Kidder and a party of Boals- burg friends are on a fishing trip down Spruce Creek. : J. N. Kimport is nursing a colony of Job’s comforters and has been housed up the past week. Returning home from church on Sun- day S. M. Hess found one of his horses dead in its stall. David Wertz took Horace Greely’s ad- vice last week, leaving his wife at Gates- burg and going west. Charles Homan is having his barn and outbuildings donned in a new coat of paint. J. R. Smith is handling the brush. J. I. Reed and party autoed to Pleasant Gap Sunday to hear Rev. J. I. Stonecypher preach his farewell sermon to his flock. Robert Glenn Goheen is handling the ribbons over a new stepper he has in training for Old Home week at Belle- fonte. Miss Edith Dunlap is enrolled as a student at a business college in Wil- liamsport and not at Lock Haven as stated last week. Harvey Shaffer, wife and Miss Emma, in their new Cadillac car, came up from Bellefonte for an afternoon outing with friends along the line on the Branch and at State College. Grandmother Margaret Hartsock, one of the oldest and best known women of College township, is seriously ill at her home near State College as a result of a Siroke of paralysis sustained last Friday night. The venerable Peter Corl, who recently returned from the German hospital, Phil- adelphia, is not improving as fast as his friends hoped for, and thinks of return- ing to that institution for further treat- ment. During the electric storm on Monday evening lightning struck a number of telephone and electric light poles in Ferguson township, badly crippling the service. One pole struck stood close to John Strouse’s house and the crash broke almost every pane of glass in the house. Supervisor J. A. Decker has a large crew of men at work completing the un- finished stretch of state highway in the neighborhood of Pine Hall. When this is completed quarries will be opened east of Pine Grove Mills and at Rock Springs and stone crushed to complete the road through to the Huntingdon county line. Several days ago James Gummo start- edon a trip through the Barrens in his new Ford car, and losing control of the steering wheel the machine made a high dive into the dense underbrush. It took Mr. Gummo and his party some time to get the car back on the road when it was found that little damage had been one. . Rev. R. M. Illingsworth, in his usual elegant and fluent manner, filled the pulpit in the Presbyterian church here last Sunday evening. His next sermon will be June 6th, at 7.30 p. m. Rev. John Marshman will preach next Sunday at 10.30 a. m. The church is being re- painted and pencilled. J. R. Smith & Son have the job. ——Have your Job Work done here. LEMONT. The oats are up and look fine. Some of the farmers have their corn planted. The carpenters began work on David Houser’s house on Monday. Walker Shutt, of Boalsburg, put in the concrete foundations for Maurice Kling- er’'s new house. . The light rains that we have been get- ting this spring are making the wheat look as though it would be fair to good. Irwin J. Dreese had the misfortune to run into a horse that was pasturing on the road, near Linden Hall, one day last week, and damaged his new car, but he was not hurt. —Put your ad. in the WATCHMAN. | SPRING MILLS. J. B. Howard, of Danville, made a fly- ing visit here on Monday last. Miles Johnson, our live assistant at the railroad station, took an auto trip to Millheim with a party of friends, on Monday evening last. The May showers of late have made the grass look like green velvet, but have for the time being put an embargo on planting and plowing. Will we have a Fourth of July cele- bration here like last year? As yet noth- ing is said about it. Last year the cele- bration was represented with ciphers. H. I. Brian & Co. are protecting the western side of their coal yard f.om the high waters of Sinking creek by erecting a huge embankment of heavy logs and stone on the banks of the creek, a dis- tance of several hundred feet. The garage and repair shop between the hotel and iron bridge over Penns creek is being pushed forward quite rapidly. In locating the building the shoemaker shop of John Huss was mov- ed a dozen feet or more towards the bridge. A. W. Rokenbrod, the new proprietor of the Spring Mills hotel, is putting the house in good shape—rearranging the interior and introducing several improve- ments. Mr. Rokenbrod was formerly proprietor of the Laurelton hotel, in Union county. Every Wednesday evening three of our stores and the postoffice close at six o'clock. This affords a breathing spell to the employees as well as the proprietors. There is only one or two stores that are open. Why don’t they join the majority and close too? They don’t do any more business by keeping open. WOODWARD. Luther Weaver and family visited at Millheim Sunday. : Mr. L. D. Orndorf was a business caller at Millheim Monday. Mr. Luther Haines moved into the Rev. Kessler home Monday. Miss Maud Weaver spent a few days with her grandparents, at Coburn, the past week. Mr. Dugan Zeme and friend, of State College, spent a few days at the Wwuod- ward house. Rev. Wentz, of Allentown, and Rev. Bierly, of Selinsgrove, enjoyed their din- ner at the Woodward house Monday. Mr. John Eby and wife, also Mr. Lewis Winegardner and wife, of Miilheim, en- joyed a ride in their new car Sunday and Spent the time with Mr. Eby’s parents ere. Elmer Boop, in his car, took Sarah, Velma, Moran and Blaine Hosterman to Bellefonte Sunday to see their brother, who is a patient in the hospital, but at this writing we hear he is getting along fine. Hope to see him home soon. The spring flowers are in blossom, the fields are growing green, the birds are sharply searching each furrow in the field, the flowers in the gardens are chuting forth their buds, all hearts are surely knowing what summer life is worth. Governor Names ‘Good Roads’ Day. HARRISBURG, May 5th.—The proclama- tion issued by Governor Brumbaugh de- signating Wednesday, May 26th, as “Good Roads” day throughout Pennsyl- vania has brought an immediate re- sponse. State Highway Commissioner Cunningham and chief engineer Uhler, together with first deputy State Highway Commissioner Hunter at the head of the bureau of township highways, have taken prompt steps to insure the hearty co- operation of the forces of the State High- way Department with those voluntarily enlisted in the counties of the Common- wealth. According to a statement issued from the State Highway Department every ef- fort will be made not only to enlist the forces of the State Highway Department on “Good Roads” day but also to urge and advise township supervisors’ boards in the more than fifteen hundred town- ships throughout the State to do all that they can to make the “Good Roads” day red-lettered in the State’s history. As showing the interest taken by the De- partment in the project, the statement cites the fact that {Chief Engineer Uhler has written to the assistant engineers in charge of the districts throughout the State, telling them that it is the wish of State Highway Commissioner Cunning- ham that they “make such arrangements as are necessary to give such advice and encouragement as is possible to the movement.” The chief engineer fur- ther has told the assistant engineers that should there be any machinery or other equipment not in use on state high- ways, they may authorize its being used on the township roads on that day, and they are instructed also to authorize the superintendents in their districts to co- operate. Mr. Hunter calls attention to the fact that on “Good Roads” day in Washing- ton county last year, about $12,000 worth of work was done at but little cost to the townships. Business men from adjacent boroughs and villages and students from the colleges turned out en masse, farm- ers stopped their usual work for the day and helped as best they could, the wom- en and children also helped in supplying food and refreshments to the other workers. What was done once can be done again, and the results obtained in Washington county last year can be du- plicated all over the Commonwealth this year. It is suggested that each supervisor take a leading part by organizing the work in his district; get together with the business men and all organizations in your township and effect an organization to direct the work. States That Lead in Minerals. Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Illinoi: and Ohio produce more than 40 pe: cent in value of the minerals found in the United States. Man's Vain Slide. No matter how little a man does, it always pleases him to be told he works too hard.—Atchison Globe. Dally Thought. By taking revenge a man is but even with his enemy, but in passing ft over he is superior.~Bacon. Julian Street and the Grand Canyon As for the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, it affects those who behold it with a kind of literary asthma. They desire to describe it; some try, pas- sionately; but they only wheeze and look as though they might explode. Since it is generally admitted that no one who has seen it can describe it, the task would manifestly devolve upon someone who has not seen it, and that requirement is filled by me. I have not seen it. I am not impressed by it at all. I am able to speak of it with coherence and restraint. But even that I shall not do.—Julian Street in Collier's Weekly. Chinese Drinking Grape Juice. Southern China is using increasingly great quantities of grape juice, which is 3 new article there. The climate is hot, and cool drinks are needed. Alco- holic drinks do not answer the demand in all ways. Nature Supreme. Not all the product of artificial greeneries are so lovely as that of the fields, the country garden, the fence rows, the first roses, the daffo- dils, the arbutus which hides under the hillside leaves, the first buds of the rhododendrons and the other forms telling of the life blood drawn di- rect from the earth, while poor man- kind has to take all second hand. | ! Flour and Feed. CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour | Feed Corn Meal and Grain Manufactures and has on hand at all times the following brands of high grade flour: WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The only place in the county where that extraor- dinarily fine grade of spring wheat Patent Flour SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food and feed of all kinds. All kinds of Grain bought at the office Flour xchanged for wheat. . OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, Medical. Attorneys-at-Law. Out of the Gloom MANY A GLOOMY COUNTENANCE IN BELLEFONTE NOW LIGHTENS WITH HAPPINESS. * A bad back makes you gloomy. Can’t be happy with continual back ache. : The aches and pains of a bad back. . : Are frequently due to weak kid- neys. Doan’s Kidney Pills are recom- mended for weak kidneys. So Bellefonte citizens testify. Mrs. Sara Miller, 210 E. Howard St., Bellefonte, says: “The first I noticed my kidneys were weak was when I began tohave headaches and dizzy spells and spots floated before my eyes. I also had pains in my back and a dull ache across my loins. I couldn’t do any lifting and if I sat down, I could hardly get up without help. Ialso had rheumatic twinges. After I had taken two boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills, the rheumatic pains disappeared and I was relieved of the other troubles. I have had very lit- tle trouble since.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Miller had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 60-19-1t Coal and Wood. A. G. Morris, Jr. DEALER IN HIGH GRADE ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS AND CANNEL COAL Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw and Sand. ALSO FEDERAL STOCK AND POULTRY FOOD BOTH 'PHONES. KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law,Belle fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts Office- Room 18Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y. B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Practices in al the Courts. Consultation in English or German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, an e hange, Bellefonte, Pa. | | S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Temple Court, Belle- fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to prompotly. 40-48 H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or Gerfhan M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices in all the courts. Consultation in and German. Office south of court house. All professional business will receive prompt . tention. 49-5-1y* KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given al legal business entrusted to his care. Offi ces—No. 5 East Hieh street. 57-44. G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul- tation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 58-§ Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su State College, Centre county, Pa. at his residence. 3541 te Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D. D. S,, office next door to Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for painless extract- ing teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices reasonable. 52-39 R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentis., Office in the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All mod- ern electric appliances . Has had years of experience. All work of Superior quality and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y Le wo S———— Plumbing. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escaping gas. you can’t have good Health. The air you reathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’sthe only kind you ought to have. Wedon’t trustthis work to boys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best Not a cheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are Lower than many who give you work and the lowest grade of r, unsanitary finishings. Fi the Best Work try ngs: BELLEFONTE, PA. P.R.R. Depot. Archibald Allison, 719 MILL AT ROOPBSURG. 58.23.1v ps a pa — — ee | Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. The First National Bank. 6-14-ly. Insurance. The Federal Reserve Banks make a good bank but it gives added 59-1-1y Groceries. The Federal Reserve system will not out of a bad one, strength to every well managed institution. We are still receiving subscriptions in aid of the helpless sufferers in Europe. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. Groceries. Early Rose Seed Potatoes raised in Michigan. Fine stock, $1.20 per bushel. Come early, as this is the last shipment for this season. * Finest Florida Grape Fruit, Ba- nanas, Cranberries, Oranges of fin- est quality in all sizes at 15¢c, 20c, 25c, 30c, 40c and 60c per dozen. All fancy stock. Late Caught fancy Blueback Mackerel—messed and boneless, Fancy smoked Bloaters. Asparagus Tips, the Elite brand, Food Supplies. tips at 10c. Something new fancy at 25c. Also a can of fine a good value. SECHLER & Bush House Block, — sy. . Burnham & Merrills’ Maine Baked Beans, with or without toma- to sauce—We find them just a bit ahead of all other best brands. Snappy Relish, new, just out, more appetizing than mustard, 10c. Dill and Sour Pickles, 15c per dozen. Dill Olives, the true Dill flavor, try them, 25c per pint. Floriday Cane Syrup, very fine goods for all kinds of cooking and baking purposes at 10c per can. Hams—medium and small sizes, sweet and juicy. Fancy Jersey Sweet Potatoes. and ‘Ferry’s and Briggs’ Garden and Flower Seeds. COMPANY, Bellefonte, Pa. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. This Agency represents the largest Fire Insurance Companies in the World. —— NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’ Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BENEFITS: $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of Both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot, 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 per week, total disability, a fiabity 10 per week, partial disability, (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion Any person, male or female, engaged in a preferred occupation, includi house, eeping, over eighteen years of age of moral and ph condition may nsure under this policv. Fire Insurance { invite your attention to my Fire Insur. ance , the strongest and Most Ex. tensive of Solid Companies represent. ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania, H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING 0—A SPECIALTY-—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no Tk of work, from the BOOK WORK, that we can not do in the most satis- f manner, an consist- actory. d at Prices ent with the class of work, Call communicate with this office” me