Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 03, 1916, Image 3

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Bellefonte, Pa., March 3, 1916.
County Correspondence
Items of Interest Dished Up for the Delec-
tation of “Watchman” Readers by a
Corps of Gifted Correspondents.
PLEASANT GAP PICKUPS.
Exertion is connected with success and
renown.
The most important truth cannot be
too early learned.
Of the eighteen kilns at Whiterock,
seventeen are running full time.
When you let in one bad habit it leaves
the door open for a lot of others.
If anold man has any folly hidden
away in him, a pretty woman will find it.
' Without exercise of body and mind
there can be no happiness in this world.
The business man who advertises. and
the farmer who fertilizes is bound to
. succeed.
Progress in moral and intellectual ex-
cellence is our duty, our honor and our
interest.
It is said that when girls are not busy
picking husbands they are as a rule busy
picking quarrels with those who are.
The beauty of a religious life is one of
its greatest recommendations. Yet we
have more church members than chris-
tians.
Beauty and wit will die, learning will
vanish away and all the arts of life be
soon forgotten, but virtue will remain
forever.
Herbert Showers and son George have
purchased a seven passenger Mitchell
car. There is nothing too good for the
Showers’.
Miss Emma Klepfer, a trained nurse
of vast experience, is visiting the family
of John Eckels. Mr. Eckels is a cousin
of the professional lady.
The public sale of George P. Miller
was fairly well attended, and remunera-
tive prices were realized for his live
stock and farming utensils.
The river of time rolls by without
ceasing; and on its bosom we are hast-
ening to the great ocean of eternity! It
will not wait for us, when repenting of
our idleness.
Geo. P. Miller, the retired farmer, has
changed his plans. Instead of moving to
Pitcairn he has rented the Noll Bro’s.
hotel, and expects to take possession of
the premises on April 1st.
The nation is.not on the verge of war.
She is just taking a course in the uni-
versity of experience, where is taught the
lesson of common sense—the knowledge
that life is just what we make it.
Our secrets should never be disclosed,
for they are generally those mean things
that we would hide from everyone and
on this account, not fit to tell to anyone,
not even our most intimate friends.
Harry Hoy, who recently completed a
fine residence in the new Pleasant Gap
addition near the cross roads, has moved
into his new house and will in the future
be registered as a citizen of the south
precinct of Spring township.
The Republicans hereabouts seem de-
termined that the Hon. Harry B. Scott
shall succeed himself, notwithstanding
the alleged efforts on the part of his ex-
cellency and a few other antagonists of
harmony. Foreign interference will be
humiliated.
The oyster supper of our volunteer fire
department on Saturday night was a de-
cided success, sociallly as well as finan-
cially. All participants were delighted
with the judicious and business-like way
the management handled their numerous
patrons and friends.
As soon as it became known that
Abram V. Miller anticipated the chang”
ing of tenants, six applicants mater”
ialized in one day. This is proof posi’
tive that farming is a paying vocation:
Farmers were never so prosperous as
now.
- And now a weather sharp comes to
the front and says that long whiskers on
a caterpillar are a sign of a cold Febru-
ary. It’s a long time since we stroked
the whiskers of a caterpillar, but our
youthful impression was that they all
wear their whiskers trimmed the way Cy-
clone Davis, of Texas, trims his.
Samuel E. Weber, of Centre Hall, pur-
chased some lots on the Leathers plan
adjacent to the Whiterock quarries, and
expects to erect two up-to-date tenant
houses as soon as the weather permits.
It is also rumored that Mrs. Libbie
Crotzer will start the erection of four
houses on her lots on the same plan in
the early spring.
Jasper Brooks, our justice of the peace,
has sold his fine residence to a Mr. Evy,
and will make his future home in Altoo-
na after April 1st. He says he regrets
leaving the Gap, since he has spent so
many pleasant years here. However,
since all his children are residing in Al-
toona he thinks it advisable for father
and mother to go there also.
Thos. Jodon,our intensive model farmer
and stock dealer residing midway be-
tween here and Axe Mann, purchased a
splendid black mated team of horses
at the horse sale at Centre Hall, on Mon-
day, they are beauties. Tommy is now
stabling ten as fine horses as money can
buy. None but the best on the market
will satisfy the ambition of this up-to-date
dealer.
The people of Pleasant Gap who had
occasion to attend court this week, all
speak in complimentary terms of the
way our new Judge facilitates the busi-
ness of the court. His liberal views and
courteous methods meet with the appro-
bation of all our people. While not a
finished orator, he deals in a direct way
with the bar, and what he says never
fails to create a deep impression.
Squire Brooks makes the bold asser-
tion that there is a vast difference be-
tween a woman's love and a man’s; his
passion may lead him, in the first in-
stance, to act in opposition to opinion,
but its influence is soon suspended, and
a sneer or a censure will wound his pride
and weaken his love. A woman’s heart,
on the contrary, reposes more on itself,
and fault found in the object of her at-
tachment is resented as an injury—she is
angered, not altered.
Our knitting factory is now employing
sixteen girls. This new enterprise is
quite a desirable commodity. Heretofore
our male population was about all em-
ployed, but this is the first enterprise
here to employ girls, and they seem to
appreciate the work and make reasona-
bly good wages. They make from $1.35
to $1.60 a day, and full time. Taking
into consideration the fact that their
fathers before they were born were con-
tent in making fifty cents a day, under
present conditions the girls have no kick
coming.
A person who would advocate a change
in the way women dress at this enlighten-
ed age (or half dress) is liable to be ex-
tremely censured by a multitude of these
injudicious half dressers. This injudicioys
practice has grown so ridiculously horrid
that the General Federation of Women’s
clubs has undertaken a crusade for
modesty in women’s dress. And there is
need of it. Any one who can look back
twenty or thirty years will recognize the
vast change that has come over the atti-
tude of the American people toward the
question of suggestive dress and more
than suggestive speech. Magazines and
newspapers use pictures and print stories
today which could not have been openly
circulated twenty years ago. The stage
presents dances and music shows that
would not have been tolerated by. the so-
ciety of earlier day. While the serious
drama deals with subjects, for good or
ill, that formerly were not thought fit for
a theatre. We are getting more cos-
mopolitan perhaps. We are certainly get-
ting more luxurious in our tastes. And
all this effects the manners and ultimate-
ly the morals of the rising generation.
The club women alone cannot stop this.
But they can help to check its worst ex-
cesses. And it is a work in which their
aid is greatly needed.
The Philippine question is again agitat-
ing the attention of Congress. They are
considering a bill, an amendment to the
Philippine government bill, which au-
thorizes the President to grant the
Filipinos their independence in from
‘wo to four years. Any proposal to
change the status of the Islands bristles
with difficulties. So far as that goes,
keeping the Islands as a permanent de-
pendency also has its danagers. In case
of a serious war involving the United
States, Japan could probably take those
Islands about as easily as she took the
German Asiatic possessions. Freedom
for the Islanders would of course make
it even easier for Japan to take them.
Any grant of independence would have
to be hedged about by restrictions even
more carefully drawn than those which
we placed about the independence of
Cuba. For an independent Philippine
nation would have to rely for its liberty
upon the strength of the United States,
and a few corrupt native politicians
might easily take action which would
emberoil us in serious complications.
American interests in the Islands could
no doubt be as well safe-guarded as they
are in Cuba. But, once assuming that
the natives are capable of maintaining
an orderly government, the important
question is one of international relations.
Taking over those Islands was probably
one of the most unfortunate things this
Nation ever did, though we don’t see
how it could well have been avoided. And
there need be no great out-cry now about
letting them go. For whatever measure
of independence we grant them, we can’t
in reality let them go. As long as we
protect them, we must continue to ex-
ercise a friendly supervision over their
affairs. The old world has long since
learned that too much outside, far-away
territory is a dangerous asset.
COBURN,
Herbert Stover has purchased a new
piano.
Thomas Eisenhuth has secured a job
as watchman with the R. R. Co.
_ We expect to have a rural telephone
line through our town before long.
Quite a few of our people attended the
play at Millheim on Tuesday evening.
Luly Hosterman has returned home
after spending several weeks with her
mother at Centre Hill.
Philip Meyer is again able to be out,
after a siege of la grippe, and will soon
take up his work at the chicken farm.
Fred Stover, one of our progressive
farmers west of town, is still confined to
his bed with kidney trouble and dropsy.
Samuel Ard, who has been confined to
his house nearly all winter, is again able
to walk down town. Glad to see him out
again.
While he was on his regular cream
route Frank Walker slipped and fell on
the walk, and broke his leg just above
the ankle.
T. T. Eisenhuth is prepared to saw
shingles, and is ready to supply all with
a fine grade of roofing, which he manu-
factures himself.
Many people are complaining of not
being able to secure a house in which to
live the coming year. The population
must be rapidly increasing in our Burg.
On Wednesday evening a very good
entertainment was held in the Liberty
school house. The program consisted of
recitations, songs and dialogues. The
"school is under the supervision of Miles
Breon, who has taught there for some-
time and is very successful as a teacher.
All who were present enjoyed the even-
ing.
NITTANY ITEMS.
P. C. Miller returned to Punxsutawney
Tuesday.
Mrs. H. K. Allison entertained the B.
A. club at dinner Thursday.
Rev. Rudisill, of Salona, was unable to
hold services here Sunday afternoon, on
account of the drifted roads.
Mrs. Warren Markle is visiting in Ty-
rone, from there she will go to Pitts-
burgh on a visit to her mother.
Paul Emerick, a student of a Williams-
port Commercial school, spent Sunday
with his mother, Mrs. Etta Emerick.
The motor bus through Nittany valley
was unable to get through Sunday and
Morday on account of the great snow
rifts. .
Chas. Gunsallus, Harry Mauck and
Chas. Fravel are busy getting ready for
theiv, Dublic sales the latter part of
arch.
The social given by the Senior class of
Walker township High school was not
very well attended Saturday evening, on
account of the inclemency of the weather.
EE —._.-sanll 66 EEEEE———SS———————
TYLERSVILLE.
With the coming of spring more auto-
mobiles are to be seen on the public.
highways. :
The revivals in Sugar Valley are clos-
ing with rather better results than dur-
ing recent past years.
The two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Wagner are again down with la grippe,
their second siege this winter.
Mrs. Abbie Wantz, who has been ill for
a long time, has been taken to the Lock
Haven hospital for treatment. She was
accompanied by her son, Samuel Wantz
and his wife, and by Charles Cole.
The cold weather and sledding were
fully taken advantage of by those who
store ice, stock saw mills and haul. lum-
ber. Our citizens have learned this win-
ter to take time by the forelock and not
to procrastinate when there is particular
work to do.
During a long newspaper experience
and extensive travelling the writer has
not found ageneral, or family newspaper,
to compare in appearance with the
DEMOCRATIC WATCHMAN, for whose
columns it is an honor to write. That
P. Gray Meek will some day, if he lives
long enough, refuse to be a party to the
circulation of evil which now so largely
crowds the pages of all papers, there can
be no doubt. I want to tell him a little
story, and the reader will have to listen,
too, if this goes into the WATCHMAN and
not into the waste paper basket. Many
years ago I was in charge of the news
department of the daily and weekly
Bulletin at Freeport, Illinois. My partner
was a politician by the name of Poffen-
berger, of Maryland, and a Pennsylvania
Dutchman, jolly and practical, who was
our business manager. His name was
P. O. Stiver and I believe he came from
Centre county. One day Mr. Stiver put
on a circulation “boomer” to canvass ad-
joining counties. He was about 35 years
old, handsome, fairly successful, ap-
parently interested, a stranger to our
office, coming in from Iowa. This was
in the day, at least for us, before the
linotype had arrived and my office was
on the second floor near the “boys” who
always appeared starving for copy when
there was no news and overloaded when
the supply was large. To this sanctum
the canvasser would come now and then
to chat with me. I remember distinctly
one of our most heavy days in the news
line, a day when a prominent citizen and
a brother of former Governor Waterman,
of California, had walked into the river
skirting Freeport, in his night robes at 4
o'clock in the morning, and apparently
without any cause had ended hislife. This
was a strange suicide, a prominent man
and there were rival dailies in town. I
would not admit that we were exactly
“yellow,” but some of the Chicago papers
were, and Chicago but one hundred miles
away we were infected with scare heads,
leaded play up and other devices of that
day, and I am sorry to say of this day
also.
the distribution office where the carriers
were being supplied and found the can-
vasser devouring my story, my scare
heads, my details, they were all there—
no paper dared leave anything out, that
meant “scoop” and “ignominy.” He ap-
peared later in the evening at my door,
looked in, found me busy taking a story
for the morrow’s paper and turned re-
luctantly away. At early breakfast next
morning the police office called me up
(they belonged to our political party and
kept us posted) telling me they had
another suicide “story” and they added,
“He's from your paper, too.” That set
me wondering and rather unsettled even
a newspaper worker who presumptuously
has no nerves (plural). I hot-footed to
the station near-by to make inquiry in
the matter and found that our canvasset,
like a player, had acted out to the mi-
nutest detail the tragedy the older mane
had put on the night before. The scene,
the hour, the costume, the very spirit of
the play and the finale were attempted,
but fate in the guise of a policeman in-
terfered and my description of the old
man’s suicide was not quite played to the
end. The canvasser was taken to his
boarding house and apparently having
thought better of the matter, went to bed.
He did not appear for breakfast nor
his day’s duty at the office. This was
not strange, considering what had hap-
pened, but at 9 o'clock when he did not
respond to the maid’s call his door was
forced and there he lay in a welter of
blood, a razor slit from ear to ear. There
was an old love story and trouble such
as everybody has now and then but the
fateful thing in the whole matter was
“suggestion” at an hour when one man at
least should not have read the story.
How much we who write and we who
edit are responsible for depends upon
how mcuh greater is the good we publish
than the evil we spread. I do not know
if Bellefonte and Centre county would
“stop your paper” if you published the
good only and not the evil. If you as
editor advocated peace, prohibition,
woman suffrage; if you dared to stand
for good wholly as Mr. Bryan stands and
not half heartedly with a President who
is preparing to “resist evil,’ the very
thing that a great big brother of ours
told us not to do. If you as local gleaner
saw the progressive and the good, birth,
marriage, wedding anniversary, commen-
dation for those whom a lot of people see
only evil in. If you could go out every
day like the honey bee and gather the
sweets you find and put them all in, joke
and all, and not go out like the bumble
bee that’s always looking for the bad,
accidents, suicides, crimes, horrors, state
wide and nation wide, lies about the
other country, telling the very most we
know. Isay I don’t know what your
readers would do to you. You are possibly
serving as a servant, like the President,
giving the people what they want and not
serving as a master giving the people what
you were sent to serve, so some old day
when you and Wilson go to settling up
with the Old Man and find your’e behind
on the credit side “good,” and quite a
bit short on the debit side, “evil,” I ex-
pect there’ll be at least two old Demo-
crats of our bunch who'll be in a duece
of a fix. :
The WATCHMAN is beautifully
clothed each week when it comes
around; it sets the fashion to all the rest,
but it should “watch” it’s thinking ma-
chine. and conversation until they, too,
will be in full accord with what it pre-
tends to be.
EAST BRUSHVALLEY.
What appears more beautiful than the
February sun shining upon the ice-robed
trees?
W. J. Miller spent Saturday and Sun-
day with his wife, at the home of Samuel
Mowery. )
In the afternoon I passed through |
Few or no services were attended in
EE. EE ral,
Rebersburg on iast Sunday, owing to the
violent storm.
A cold wave striking east Brushvalley
on Friday night filled many of the lanes
and cross roads to the brim.
Blaine Hanselman, of this place, made
a short visit with friends and relatives in
Union county, several days last week.
Mrs. Elmer Cooney, of Montandon, at-
tended the funeral of her sister, Miss
Susan Stitzer, who was buried on Sat-
urday.
Harry McCool and Ambrose Weber, of
this place, assisted Ray E. Weber, of
Rockville, in moving his household goods
to Smullton one day last week.
WOODWARD.
We have very stormy weather at this
writing.
Jacob Fultz is under the doctor’s care
at present.
Mrs. E. H. Musser is sick at present
with rheumatism.
We all are in favor of an open season
for hunting at this place.
Mrs. James Weaver is very ill just
now. We hope she will recover soon, as
she has been sick a long time.
The following young people left for
Plainfield, Ill, this week: Brice Sheesley,
Chas. Benner and his sister, Miss Milria
Benner, of this place.
There was lots of fun at the postoffice
Saturday night. Some person sent about
fifty post cards from Ida, Mich., to the
popular young people of this place.
The following young men were up to
Millheim Saturday to see the moving
picture show: Chas. Wolfe, Viris Stover,
Brice Boob and Steward Hosterman.
Flaw-Seeing Eyes.
It is said that when Raphael was hard
at work on his famous frescoes in Saint
Peter’s Cathedral, two churchmen made
him frequent visits. “You have made
the face of Saint Paul too red,” said one
of the visitors, critically. “Yes,” replied
the artist, in not entirely good humor;
“he is blushing to see into whose hands
the Church has fallen.” It does not tol-
low that one who cannot paint a picture
is therefore disqualified from criticising
it. But most of us are alarmingly, and
some of us savagely, free with criticism.
And the pathos of the situation is that
most of our criticism is worse than wast-
ed. A thunderstorm which sours the
milk in the pantry, usually clears the air
outside. But the trouble with most
criticism is that it sours the milk of hu-
man kindness without improving the
atmosphere at all. Criticism is seldom a
spur. It is frequently a drag. It is some-
times paralysis. Let something good be
said! — George Clarke Peck.
Tobacco in America.
A report issued by the Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce, entitled
“Tobacco Trade of the World,” shows
that the United States is the greatest
producer, the greatest exporter, the
greatest importer and the greatest con-
sumer of tobacco in the world. The
American production of tobacco leaf, of
all sorts, averages somewhat more than
1,000,000,000 pounds a year, valued at
$100,000,000. An enormous quantity is
exported, exceeding in value such items
ETAT.
Medica’.
as cotton manufactures, electrical ma-
chinery, paper and paper products and
leather and leather manufactures.
The Typical Building.
The insane asylum is the typical build-
ing in the United States from Canada to
the Gulf, according to Dr. Newell Dwight
Hillis, if he was correctly reported in the
newspapers. This alarming fact he sets
over against the well-known truth that
the principal building in Italy is the ca-
thedral. Many will contend that the
typical structure in the United States is
the many-storied commercial building
familiarly designated as the sky-scraper.
Perhaps these huge edifices are in some
degree responsibie for the increase of in-
sane asylums. The pressing life of our
times cannot fail ‘to affect disastrously
the mental virility of our hurrying and
worrying people. Another disquieting
utterance of the Brooklyn preacher is
that “every time you double the popula-
tion in this country, the feeble-minded
children are multiplied by four and the
insane by three.” These are depressing
statistics, if they are founded on fact,
and require close attention as to both
cause and effect.
——For high class Job Work come to
the WATCHMAN Office.
Medical.
“« ANTURIG!”
THE NEWEST
DISCOVERY IN CHEMISTRY
This is a recent discovery of Doctor
Pierce, who is. head of the Invalids’
Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buifalo,
N.Y. Experiments at Doctor Pierce’s
Hospital for several years proved that
there is no other eliminator of uric acid
that can be compared to it. For those
easily recognized symptoms of inflam-
mation — as backache, scalding urine
and frequent urination, as well as sedi-
ment in the urine, or if uric acid in the
blood has caused rheumatism, it is
simply wonderful how surely *Anuric”
acts. The best of results are always
obtained in cases of acute rheumatism
in the joints, in gravel and gout, and
invariably the pains and stiffness which
go frequently and persistently accom-
pany the disease rapidly disappear.
Go to your nearest drug store and
simply ask for a 50-cent package of
® Anuric,” manufactured by Dr. Pierce,
or even write Doctor Pierce for a free
sample. If you suspect kidney or blad-
der trouble, send him a sample of your
water and describe symptoms. Doctor
Pierce’s chemist will examine it, then
Dr. Pierce will report to you, without
fee or charge.
NoTE : — French scientists affirm that
® Anuric” is thirty-seven times more
‘| active than lithia in eliminating uric
acid, and is a harmless bub reliable
chemical compound that may be safely
given to children, but should be used
only by grown-ups who actually wish to
restore their kidneys to perfect health,
by conscientiously using one box—or
more in extreme cases—as “Anuric”
(thanks to Doctor Pierce’s achievement
is by far the most perfect kidney an
bladder corrector obtainable.
Dr. Pierce’s Pollets are the original
tittle Liver Pills, One little Pellet for
& laxative— “hree for a cathartic.
—————————
Here’s Proof
A BELLEFONTE CITIZFN TELLS OF
HER EXPERIENCE.
You have a right to doubt state-
ments of people living far away but
can you doubt Bellefonte endorse-
ment? "~~
Read it:
Mrs. C. Young, Potter St. Belle-
fonte, says: “For more than a year,
I suffered from a dull ache in the
small of my back. If I bent over, I
could hardly get up again. I never
felt able to do any housework, and
felt languid all the time. I was trou-
bled a lotlby dizzy spellsand the kid-
ney secretions were unnatural. Doan’s
Kidney Pills had helped so many
people that I gota box at Green's
Pharmacy Co. The first box cured
me. It has been three years now
since I have had any trouble from
my back or kidneys.”
Price 50c. at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same
that Mrs. Young had. Foster-Mil-
burn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. 61-9-1
Restaurant.
ESTAURANT.
Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res-
taurant where
Meals are Served at All Hours
Steaks, Chops, Roasts, Oysters on the
half shell or in any style desired, Sand-
wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can
be had in a few minutes any time. In ad-
dition I have a complete plant prepared to
furnish Soft Dri in bottles such as
POPS,
SODAS,
SARSAPARILLA,
SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC.,
for pic-nics, families and the public gener-
ally all of which are manufactured out of
the purest syrups and properly carbonated.
C. MOERSCHBACHER,
50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte, Pa.
Insurance.
Employers,
This Interests You
The Workmans’ Compensation
Law goes into effect Jan. 1, 1916.
It makes Insurance Compulsory.
We specialize in placing such in-
surance. We Inspect Plants and
recommend Accident Prevention
Safe Guards which Reduce In-
surance rates.
It will be to your interest to con-
sult us before placing your In-
surance.
JOHN F. GRAY. & SON,
Bellefonte. 43.18-1y State College
THE VERY BEST
—~TY
That Money Can
AALS
> 2 2
=! BIGJOAF 2)
\ 5 FLOUR ::
ws
Geo. Danenhower & Son
—
Wholesale Distributors,
61-6-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Coal and Wood.
A. G. Morris, Jr.
DEALER IN HIGH GRADE
ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS
AND CANNEL
COAL!
Wood, Grain, Hay, Straw
and Sand.
/ TT ATL TATA TATA TATA TA TL PATI
BOTH 'PHONES.
Yard Opposite P. R. R.
Depot.
58-23-1y
KI
J Bellefonte, Pa.
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Enrich the Blood.
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA, A SPRING
TONIC-MEDICINE, IS NECES-
SARY.
Everybody is troubled at this season
with loss of vitality, failure of appetite,
that tired feeling, or with bilious turns,
dull headaches, indigestion and other
stomach troubles, or with pimples and
other eruptions on the face and body.
The reason is that the blood is impure
and impoverished.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla relieves all these
ailments. It is the old reliable medicine
that has stood the test of forty years,—
that makes pure, rich, red blood—that
strengthens every organ and builds up
the whole system. Itis the all-the-year-
round blood-purifier and health-giver. It
embodies the careful training, exper-
ience, and skill of Mr. Hood, a pharma-
cist for fifty years, in its quality and
power to cure.
Ask your druggist for it today. 61-7-1yr
Attorneys-at-Law.
KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law,Belle
fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts Office-
Room 18Crider’s Exchange. 51-1-1y.
B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Pra tices
in all the Courts. Consultation in English
or German. Office in Crider’s Prange.
Bellefonte, Pa. 40-
S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at
Law. Office in Temple Court, .
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at-
tended to promnotlv. 40-46
in all the courts. on in
and German. Office south of court house.
All professional business will receive prompt at-
tention. 49-5-1y*
ENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law,
e Prompt attention given all
egal business entrusted to his care. Offi-
ces—No. 5 East High street. . 57-44.
G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul-
tation in English and German. Office
xchange, Bellefonte. 58-5
J M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices
ultati
in Crider’s
Physicians.
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su
State College, Centre ¢ county, Pa. "Bttce
at his residence.
Dentists.
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office
the Bush Arcade, onte, Pa. All mod-
ern electric appliances used. Has had
years of experience. All work of Superior quality
and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y
Plumbing.
Good Health
and
Good Plumbing
TOGETHER.
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky
water-fixtures, foul sewe , Or escaping
gas, you can’t have good Hi . The air you
reathe is poisonous; your system becomes
poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come.
SANITARY PLUMBING
is the kind we do. It's the only kind you °
ought to have. Wedon’t trustthis work to
boys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics,
no better anywhere. Our
GO
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 poor, unsanitary
work and the lowest grade of finishings. For
the Best Work try i
Opposite Bush House : |
56-14-1v.
Insurance.
The Preferred
Accident
Insurance
THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY
BENEFITS:
$5,000 death BY sccldens,
,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,
25 per week, total disability,
(limit 52 weeks)
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 fi engaged in a
preferred occupation, house
eeping, over eighteen age of
good moral and physical condition may
insure under this poiicv.
Fire Insurance
{ invite your attention to my Fire Insur_
tensive at & De Togas and Se
ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania
H. E. FENLON,
50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa,
Funeral Director.
H. N. KOCH
Funeral Director
Successor to R. M. Gordner.
STATE COLLEGE, PENNA.
Day and Night Service.
FAN
OY YY YY TY YYTTY
60-21-tf. Bell and Commercial Phones.
APR wa
ra Shah
Bellefonte; Pa. -
REL