Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 13, 1917, Image 3

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    Bema Hiden
Bellefonte, Pa., July 13, 1917.
County Correspondence
Items of Interest Dished up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
EAST BRUSH VALLEY.
Miss Anona Yearick and Miss
Maude Stover were Sunday visitors
last week at Madisonburg.
W. A. Winters recently purchased
an Overland touring car and already
operates the same quite successfully.
D. D. Royer has a company of men
engaged at building a lime stack
which is twenty-four feet in diameter.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Miller and son
Rodney visited several days last week
with friends and relatives at Logan-
ton.
Quit a number of our people at-
tended the memorial services and fes-
tival at Madisonburg on last Satur-
day evening.
Mrs. A. S. Winkleblech and daugh-
ter Bertha are spending some time at
Mifflinburg, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. A. D. Auman.
The hay crop will be the next item
for consideration. Notwithstanding
the cool and damp weather the crop
looks quite promising.
H. H. Royer, of Rebersburg, had a
crew of men employed during the past
week at quarrying stone for the re-
pairing of our state highway.
Ray E. Weber and family and
Charles Smith, of Mackeyville, spent
last Sunday very pleasantly
at the |
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McCool. |
The outlook for the summer crops |
encouraged Mr. H. Y. Stitzer io tear
off and enlarge his sheds and gran-
eries.
his activity, just call and see him.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Smith and fam-
ily, of Woodward; Mr. and Mrs. Mi-
chael Bower and family, Henry Mow-
ery and Hon. William Krape, of
Aaronsburg, were Sunday visitors in
our midst.
AARONSBURG.
Arthur King, who is employed over
in Flemington, spent one week with
his family.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Breon, of
Lewistown, spent Tuesday with Mr.
Breon’s mother, Mrs. A. D. Weaver.
Mrs. Lingle and two children, of
Huntingdon, spent several days with |
Mrs. Lingle’s sister, Mrs. Calvin Gil-
bert.
Russell Sylvis, who enlisted and
was stationed in Philadelphia, came
home Tuesday morning, called here |
by the illness of his mother.
Mrs. Jennie Sylvis is quite ill at
her home on North 2nd street. She is
under the care of Dr. C. S. Musser and
it is hoped she may soon be well.
Mrs. R. G. Swanson and daughter
Gwendolyn, of Newton Hamilton,
were over Sunday guests of their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Keener.
Mr. and Mrs. Durbin Holloway, of
Akron, Ohio, are visiting among rel-
atives and friends in our burg. Last
week Mr. and Mrs. Crouse together
with Mr. and Mrs. Holloway spent
several days in Gettysburg going over
the famous battle field.
If you doubt or question as to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolfe have |
again returned to their home in this
place after spending several months
on a trip through Ohio and Illinois.
They were accompanied home by Mrs.
Wolfe’s son, Earl Cummings, who in
a few days left for Pitcairn to seek
employment until the opening of
school.
The August Cosmopolitan.
One of the most striking features
in August Cosmopolitan is the begin-
ning of a new three-part story. “Blue
Aloes,” by Cynthia Stockley. The
scene is laid on a Karoo farm in
South Africa, a part of the world with
which Miss Stockley is familiar. Lov-
ers of a weird and mysterious story
will read “Blue Aloes” with unusual
interest.
The second instalment of “The Rest-
less Sex,” by Robert W. Chambers,
also appears in August Cosmopolitan.
If you did not start this new novel
with the July number, start it now.
It is the greatest novel of the year.
Elizabeth Robin’s “The Tortoise-
shell Cat” is this famous writer’s de-
but in Cosmopolitan. Her unusual
story is a real treat.
Samue! Merwin is there with a de-
lightful Henry the Ninth story, en-
titled “Salvage.” It is another epi-
sode of Henry’ puppy loves.
Lilly Langtry continues her remi-
niscences. In August she writes of
her experiences with English royalty,
particularly of the late King Edward,
who was noted for his patronage of
the stage.
Arthur Reeve has written a great
mystery story for August Cosmopol-
itan, entitled, “The Nitrate King,” in
which Craig Kennedy puts all his
energy and intellect into the fathom-
ing of a great mystery.
George Ade is there with a great
Fable in Slang.
Jack London’s “Michael,” one of the
greatest dog stories ever written, is
continued.
Herbert Kaufman writes of Thomas
Edison.
C. N. and A. M. Williamson’s won-
derful motor car romance, “The Ad-
venture of Jose,” is continued.
Mary Roberts Rinehart’s trip
through the Northwestern Rockies
takes the reader of this issue on a
pack train through the Cascade Moun-
tains.
John Galsworthy’s “Beyond” is con-
tinued.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox has writter. a
wonderful poem called “The Hour,”
with decorations by W. T. Benda.
These are only a few of the big fea-
tures in August Cosmopolitan, Amer-
ica’s Greatest Magazine.
— For high class job work come
to the “Watchman” office.
SHE DID HER SHARE.
i Gi = =~)
'A WONDERFUL SEARCHLIGHT.
eo
p————
And It Was Not Upon the Blood Soiled The Most Powerful In the World, It
Field of Battle.
1
During the first days of that most '
lamentable conflict that we now know
as the war between the states a little
woman down in South Carolina gave
her husband and their four grown sons
to fight for the cause that to hey seem-
- three tons.
Almost Rivals the Sun.
It is ten feet high, its mirror has a
diameter of five feet, and it weighs
Its beam is as brilliant as
the sun at 8 o'clock in the morning or 4
in the afternoon, New York latitude,
‘and you can read a newspaper by its
ed just. She was not belligerent; she
its focused beam is so intense that it
was brave. A few years later a neigh-
bor brought ber word that all but the |
youngest boy had been killed.
At the end of the war the youngest
boy returned. He was a captain and
not a captain merely by courtesy. As
he rode through the old plantation he |
saw to his intense surprise that it was
in a fair state of cultivation and that
foodstuffs had taken the place of cot-
ton. He had expected to find those
broad acres filled with weeds and
briars.
greeted his mother and been in turn
proudly greeted by her he spoke of this.
“That was my part,” she told him.
“You couldn't fight without having
something to eat, could you?”
It was then that he noted the marks
of toil on her hands, and he knew that
the faithful old negroes had not done
all the hard work.
heels together in the military fashion
and lifted his hand to the rim of his hat.
“Mother,” he said not very steadily,
“I salute you, the greatest soldier of us
all.”—Hapsburg Liebe.
SEE THE FUNNY SIDE.
He brought his |
light thirty miles away. The heat of
will set paper afire at a distance of 250
feet. It has a candle power of more
than one and a quarter billion.
These are a few astonishing facts in
the Popular Science Monthly about the
Sperry searchlight, the invention of
Elmer A. Sperry of Brooklyn, who is
already known as the inventor of the
airplane stabilizer and ship gyroscope
bearing his name and the first electric
"arc light.
As soon as he had proudly |
| is twenty-two times more brilliant than
One of the most powerful beacons
along the coast is the Sandy Hook
lighthouse. But the Sperry searchlight
that light. Were the Sperry lamp sub-
i stituted for the lighthouse beacon a
ship passing out to sea could be bathed
in light until it disappeared below the
horizon. By swinging the light back
and forth across the sky it has been
made visible 150 miles away. For navy
| use the Sperry lamp illuminates a tar-
get ten times more brilliantly than
any other projector devised.
OUR FIRST WATER WAGON.
' A Prohibition Petition That Saw the
Use Your Sense of Humor When Dis- |
tressing Situations Arise,
Humor proves to be the saving clause
of many a distressing situation. The
trouble with most of us is that we
take our troubles altogether too se-
riously. We fail to see the funny side
of things that for the moment concern
us, even though we are quick to grasp
it when we are mere onlookers.
In the face of gathered clouds that
seem to shut out the sunshine forever
it is not a bad idea to remind ourselves
that this old mother earth has been
revolving on her axis for countless
ages, that generations of men have
come and gone for thousands of years
and that the march of human progress
has gone -right along in the forward
direction despite what seemed to be
occasional setbacks.
“Laugh and the world laughs with
you.”
situation if we can only see it from
the right angle.
to smile in adversity and think how
much more laughable it would be if
conditions were reversed at least feel
less uncomfortable over it and take
pleasure in looking forward to the
er foot.—Omaha Bee.
The Drum of the Ear.
The reason deaf people cannot hear is
Light Here In 1681.
The water wagon started on its jour-
ney through this country longer ago
than most persons realize. 1 offer you
as a proof of this assertion a copy of
a quaint document that had its birth
in the month of April in the year 1681,
says Girard in the Philadelphia Ledger.
This old document is in the form of a
. petition to a royal governor signed by
There is humor in nearly every
Those of us who try
twelve men who were determined that
the brewers’ big horses shouldn't run
over them and reads as follows:
“Whereas, wee, ye inhabitants of ye
neu Seated Towne near ye falls of Del-
laware (called Crewcorne), finding our-
selves aggrieved by ye Indians when
drunk, informeth that wee be and have
been in great danger of our lives, of
our houses burning, of our goods steal-
ing and of our Wives and Children af-
frighting insomuch that wee are afear-
ed to go about our Lawful affairs least
when we come home we finde you and
our concerns damnified.
“These things considered, wee doe
humbly & jointly desire that the selling
of brandy and strong liquors to ye In-
dians may be wholly suppressed, when
if done wee hope wee shall live peace-
i ably.”
time when the shoe will be on the oth- |
that the drum of the ear is imperfect |
or has been destroyed. Sound is noth-
ing but the vibrations of the air acting
on the drum of the ear. When people
are quite deaf it is because the ear-
drum will not respond to these vibra-
tions, but they can still feel these vibra-
tions even if they cannot hear them.
When a number of deaf mutes are sit-
ting in a room together and one wishes
to attract the attention of another he
strikes his heel on the floor, and every
one in the room feels the vibration and
looks around to see who called,
In the |
large asylums for the deaf and dumb |
the doors are hung very loosely, so that
if you shake them it sets up a vibration
like stamping on the floor, and that is
the way they wake up deaf people that
sleep too late in the morning.
Ether and Matter.
The densest matter is more or less
porous. Gold will absorb mercury as a
lump of sugar will absorb water, show-
ing there must be interstices or inter-
atomic spaces in it, but the ether shows
no such property. If a drop of water
could be magnified sufficiently one
would ultimately see the different at-
oms of hydrogen and oxygen that con-
stitute the molecules of water. If a
small volume of ether could be thus
magnified the indications are that the
ultimate part would look like the first,
which is the same as saying that it is
not made up of discrete particles, but
fills space completely. This is expressed
by saying that the ether is a continu-
ous medium and incomparable with
matter.—Exchange.
Safety First.
I was returning home the other eve-
ning about 6:30 o'clock when I saw
Tommy, my neighbor's boy, playing
with a crowd of other boys. I knew
that his family always had supper at 6
o'clock sharp, so I said, “I'll bet you 5
cents you'll miss your supper, Tommy.”
He grinned up at me saucily and re-
plied: “Then you lose your bet, 'cause
I got the chops right here with me.
Ma sent me for 'em at 5 o’clock.”—
Everybody's Magazine.
Too Mean a Trick.
“See here; I wrote and asked you
when you were going to pay that old
account and even inclosed a stamp, but
you never answered.”
“My dear sir, wouldn't it have been a
mean trick to use your own stamp to
disappoint you?”
A Warning.
“Don’t be too ready to bandy wit
with a chemist.”
“Why not with a chemist?”
“Because he always has a ready re-
jort.”—Baltimore American,
Postage Stamps.
There are at the present time over
21,000 varieties of postage stamps in
circulation throughout the world.
Let gratitude for the past inspire us
with trust for the future.—Fenelon.
A Bit of Human Nature.
The other day a husky and rather
rough looking driver was having trou-
ble with his horse and, suddenly losing
his temper, started to beat him. A
number of men rushed toward him
with the intention of stopping him
when his arms were suddenly arrested
in midair. The would be rescuers
paused, too, and looked. Standing
close by the man was a little girl, of
not more than four years—just looking
—looking. Not a word was spoken, no
pen could describe the look on the lit-
tle one’s face, but the heavy driver
stopped his beating and spoke kindly
to his horse. Strangely, too, the horse
moved, and there was no trace of the
incident except a flush underneath the
driver's tan, a few damp eyes among
the spectators and a happy smile on
the little girl's face. — Philadelphia
Press.
Raw Eggs Keep Longer Than Boiled.
Raw eggs keep good much longez
than cooked eggs, even when these are
hard boiled. This was proved by Dr.
Leon Lindet, a member of the Paris
Conseil d’'Hygiene, after many French
soldiers had reported that the hard
boiled eggs they received from home
had gone bad, while the raw eggs re-
mained edible for weeks.
Dr. Lindet explains this fact by say-
ing that the boiling makes the inner
membrane pervious to gases, liquids
and microbes, and the white of the egg
becomes an agglomeration of coagu-
lated albumen and particles of a serum
that is an ideal medium in which mji-
crobes thrive.
Wild Carrot Seed.
Seeds of the wild carrot are small
but very numerous and are covered
with weak bristles which catch on
wool, hair and clothing and distribute ’
the weed for considerable distances.
They frequently are harvested with
grass, clover and alfalfa seed and are
widely distributed by this means. As
found in clover seed, the wild carrot
seeds are usually without barbs, as
these are rubbed off in the clover huller.
Timid Sheep.
Sheep, when they become frightened,
always run to an elevation, because
their ancestors originally came from
the mountains. They always follow a
leader, because in the dangerous moun-
tain passes their ancestors had to ge
in single file.
The Great Mystery.
Are we made to tick and keep the
hours of this mortal sphere only?
When we are done here shall we be
run down forever, never to move
again? Or do we belong to the horol-
ogy of the universe? — Henry Ward
Beecher.
Trouble and Joy.
You can’t keep company with Trouble
and then expect Joy to do his level best
at pickin’ de banjo for you to dance de
stars ter sleep.—Atlanta Constitution.
In this world one must be a little
too kind to be kind enough—Mari-
Vaux.
All Eyes on Woman Congressman.
Miss Jeannette Rankin, the lady
member of Congress from Montana,
attracts more interest from sightsee-
ers than any other member. Every
visitor in the galleries cranes his neck
to get a glimpse of the first woman to
be elected to the House of Represen-
tatives, and as Miss Rankin walks
through the corridors the guides point
her out to their parties, whereupon
the strangers lose all interest in the
big oil paintings of historical scenes
and the statues of the Statuary Hall.
“There goes Miss Rankin, the wom-
an Congressman,” whispers the guide,
and all eyes are upon the lady. Wom-
en visitors are most interested in what
she wears. With one quick apprais-
ing glance the average woman can tell
you the style, texture and cut of her
dress and can give a pretty accurate
guess as to the price tag.
The average man wants to get a
good look at the lady Congressman to
see at first hand whether she is pret-
ty, fair, medium or ugly. The idea of
a woman politician being good-look-
ing seems rather incongruous to men
men, but in Miss Rankin they find a
lady who, while her hair is touched
with gray, possesses a fine face, an
attractive figure and really makes a
picture that is easy to look at.
Apparently Miss Rankin does not
worry over being the object of such
general curiosity, and when strangers
step up to her and ask the privilege of
introducing themselves and shaking
hands, she is very gracious. But it
must be tiresome to be a popular hero-
ine of that sort, and nobody could
blame her if she carried a grouch oc-
casionally. There are compensations,
though. Not only does she enjoy the
distinction of being the only woman
ever elected to the House of Repre-
sentatives, but she also is the only
woman in the world who has the priv-
ilege of walking upon the floor of the
Senate, sitting on one of those luxu-
rious red-leather couches and listen-
ing to the debate. No other person in
skirts can do that. Even Mrs. Wilson,
wife of the President with all her
power and influence, has not the en-
tree to the Senate Ccamber. If she
wishes to hear the debates, she must
go to the gallery, where seats are re-
served for her.
Progressive Croquet.
If you live in a neighborhood where
there are several lawns suitable for
croquet, not separated from one
another by any great distance, you
can arrange a progresgive party that
will be different from the ordinary
summer evening entertainment. It
will interest a surprisingly large numn-
ber of persons, says the Youth’s
Companion. Even those who consid-
er the old game of croquet as quite
“gone by” will be glad to play it un-
der these conditions.
_ Five or six croquet grounds, one
lighted by red Japanese lanterns,
another by blue lanterns, a third by
yellow, and so on, are the tourna-
ment fields. The players’ progress
from one ground to another, as from
table to table in a progressive indoor
game. A small prize for the winner
will increase the interest.
Progressive refreshments go appro-
priately with the game. Serve them
at small tables on each croquet field—
sandwiches on the first, salad and wa-
fers on the second, fruit on the third,
and so on, with cake and ice cream at
the last. Those who finish their
games first will have the longest time
at ths refreshment tables.
Of course you can have the same
sort of party, except for the lanterns,
in the afternoon, but the “atmos-
phere” will not be quite the same.
Finding the Latitude.
Altimeters or barographs are used
by aviators to measure the heights
to which they ascend.
Both of these instruments are con-
structed on exactly the same princi-
ple as the aneroid barometer. They
depend upon air pressure. At sea
level, where the air is much compres-
sed by its own weight, the pressure
is about fifteen pounds to the square
inch, but at greater heights it be-
comes less. The barometer is gov-
erned by the pressure and so indi-
cates the height above the sea level.
There are many forms of barome-
ters. The simplest is bent like a very
long letter J and partly filled with
mercury. The upper part is closed,
and the space above the column of
mercury is a vacuum. The lower or
hook end of the tube is open and sub-
ject to the pressure of atmosphere.
As the pressure becomes less on ris-
ing above the surface, the mercury in
the long part of the tube falls. The
extent of the fall indicates the height.
Airplanes use one of these instru-
ments mentioned which are practical-
Medical.
Time to Act
DON’T WAIT FOR THE FATAL
STAGES OF KIDNEY ILLS.
PROFIT BY BELLEFONTE
PEOPLE’S EXPERIENCES.
Occasional attacks of backache,
bladder ills, headaches and dizzy
spells are frequent symptoms of kid-
ney disorders. It’s an error to neglect
these ills. The attacks may pass off
for a time but generally return with
greater intensity. Don’t delay a min-
ute. Begin taking Doan’s Kidney
Pills, and keep up their use until the
desired results are obtained. Good
work in Bellefonte proves the effec-
tiveness of this great kidney remedy.
Mrs. S. S. Leitzell, 118 E. Beaver
St., Bellefonte, says: “I was trou-
bled by backache in a severe form and
I was nervous and run down. Dizzy
spells were common and my kidneys
annoyed me in different ways. Doan’s
Kidney Pills fixed me up right good
and whenever I have felt a return of
the trouble, I have at once bought a
box of Doan’s at Parrish’s Drug Store.
They have prevented the attack from
becoming serious. Doan’s Kidney
Pills are worthy of praise.
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Leitzell had. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 62-27
’ 1
ly self-registering barometers, and
when the airplane comes down the in-
strument shows how high it has been
carried.—Philadelphia Press.
Mr. MacQueen, who is to lecture
at the Chautauqua hcre, has many
strange stories and quaint yarns that
he picked up while traveling around
the globe. While in the highlands of
Scotland he met a canny old Scot,
who asked him. “Have you ever heard
0 Andrew Carnegie in America?"
“Yes, indeed,” replied the traveler.
“Weel,” said the Scot, pointing to a
little stream near by, “in that wee
burn Andrew and [I c.ught our first
trout together. Andrew was a bare-
footed, bareheaded, ragged wee callen,
no muckle guid at onything. But he
gaed off to America, and they say he's
doin’ real weel.”
Truthful Excuse.
‘The sheriff caught his young as-
sistant writing love letters in business
hours today.”
“What did the young fellow say
when he was taxed with doing so?”
“Said he was not shirking his duty,
as they were all writs of attachment.”
—Baltimore American.
The Chautauqua is America’s fourth
great institution. The other three are
the home, the church and the school.-
Judge Ben Lindsey.
“Want to save some money ?V
“Sure! How?”
“Buy a season ticket to Chautauqua,
It's much cheaper than paying single
admissions.”
The Chautauqua is the people's col
lege.— Bishop John H. Vincent.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Nervous, Run-Down,
Haggard-Looking
Women and men suffer from blood
and nerve conditions for which it is
impossible to conceive of a better
remedy than Hood’s Sarsaparilla and
Peptiron Pills taken in conjunction,
one before eating and the other after.
These two great medicines aid each
other, and it is economy to take both,
a four-fold benefit being derived.
Peptiron Pills are the ideal iron
preparation—no injury to teeth, no
constipation effect. All druggists.
62-25 C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass.
FINE JOB PRINTING
o—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There is no style of work, from the
cheapest “Dodger” to the finest
BOOK WORK,
that we car: not do in the most satis-
factory manner, and at Prices consist-
ent with the class of work. Call on or
communicate with this office’
Get the Best Meats.
You save nothing by buying poor, thin
or gristly meats. I use only the
LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE
and supply my customers with the fresh-
est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no
higher than poorer meats are elsewhere.
I always have
—— DRESSED POULTRY —
Game in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want.
TRY MY SHOP.
P. L. BEEZER,
High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte,Pa
{ THE VERY BEST
FLOUR
That Money Can Buy
SALLY
A \
= BIGjoar 2)
FLOUR / /
Geo. Danenhower & Son
Wholesale Distributors,
62-7-tf. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Mr. Farmer
YOU NEED
—LIME —
NOW more than ever before.
Potash is scarce. Your soil con-
tains considerable potash in una-
vailable form; an application of
burned lime in some form, such as
H-O OR LUMP
will make a portion of this potash
available for crops. Order Lime
early and be prepared.
High Calcium Pennsylvania Limes.
Write for Booklet.
American Lime & Stone Co
62-27-14t General Office: TYRONE, PA
IE SR ATR SR
Attorneys-at-Law.
KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law,Belle
fonte, Pa. Practicesin all Sourts, 15 fice:
Room 18 Crider’s Exchange.
B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Pra tices
in all the Courts. Consultation in English
or German. Office in Crider’s Exchange
40-
Bellefonte, Pa.
S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor a
w. Office in Temple Court,
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at
tended to promptly. 40-46
M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices
in all the courts. Consultation in English
and German. Office south of court house.
All professional business will receive prompt at.
tention. 49-5-1y
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law
Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given all
legal 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
in Crider’s Exchange, Rellefonte. 58-§
sn,
Physicians. .
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon
State College, Centre county, Pa. Office
at his residence.
Dentists.
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office
the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All mod-
_ ernelectric appliances used. Has had
years of experience. All work of Superior quality
and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y
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 Drinks 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.
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 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,
(limit 52 weeks)
10 per week, partial disability,
(limit 26 weeks)
PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR,
pavable quarterly if desired.
Larger or smaller amounts in proportion.
Any person, male or female, engaged in a
referred occupation, including house,
eeping, over eighteen years of age of
good moral and physical condition may
insure under this poiicv.
Fire Insurance
{ invite your attention to my Fire Insur
ance Agency, the strongest and Most Ex-
tensive Line of Solid Companies represent-
ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania
H. E. FENLON,
Agent, Bellefonte, Pa,
50-21.
semmam—
Good Health
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER.
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky
water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escal
, you can’t have good Health. The air you
reathe is poisonous; your system mes
poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come.
SANITARY PLUMBING
hs she pt 7e gy, Stn ror ot vy
t . Wedon't tru
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 poor, unsani
work and the lowest grade of finishings.
the Best Work trv
Archibald Allison,
Bellefonte, Pa
Opposite Bush House -
i x 56-14-1v.