Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 10, 1917, Image 3

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    1
Bellefonte, Pa., August 10, 1917.
County Correspondence
Items of Interest Dished up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PINE GROVE MENTION.
H. H. Goss was a Lewistown visitor
on Sunday. :
Mrs. Jane Albright, of Spring Mills,
is visiting her four sons here.
A community flag raising will take
place at Pine Hall on August 25th.
The whir of the steam thresher is
now being heard throughout the val-
ley.
Miss Sarah Waters, of Selinsgrove,
is visiting her old classmate, Mrs. S.
E. Hess.
W. H. Goss and wife were Sunday
visitors at the Sadie Gardner home in
the Glades.
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Ward and son
William spent Sunday with friends at
Alexandria.
Ed. Tressler is hobbling around
with a cane as the result of an attack
of lumbago.
Frank B. Krebs motored to Spruce
Creek and spent Saturday and Sunday
with friends.
Del Ward is visiting his grandmoth-
er at State College and having a roy-
al good time.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Johnson, of
State College, spent Sunday at the
Ira Rishel home.
Mrs. Harry Resides, of State Col-
lege, is visiting the J. D. Tanyer home
on east Main street.
Harry Wagner is nursing a sore
foot, the result of a cut while doing
some carpenter work.
Drover Tussey, of McAlevy’s Fort,
shipped a car load of fresh cows out
of the valley recently.
Rev. Wilson P. Ard, who is now sup-
plying a church in Bedford county, is
here on a little vacation.
Miss Mabel Goss, a typo on the Ty-
rone Herald, is enjoying her vacation
among relatives in town.
Ed. Isenberg and family, of Bailey-
ville, took a spin down the pike on
Sunday at a forty mile clip.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Walker were
over Sunday visitors at the A. S.
Walker home on the Branch.
Ira Corman took his wife and fami-
ly for a spin down the state road on
Sunday in his new Ford car.
Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Rishel and fam-
ily, of Oak Hall, motored up to spend
Sunday with relatives in town.
Rev. J. E. Reish, of Loganton, spent
his summer vacation in the harvest
field of his father, Jacob Reish.
Misses Viola and Edith Burwell
have returned from a ten day’s visit
at the A. F. Fry home at Lewisburg.
Rev. Victor Nearhoff gave notice on
Sunday evening that he would take
his vacation during the month of Au-
gust.
About fifty men are now engaged
in oiling and top-dressing the state
highway from State College to the
county line. :
Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Fry and four
boys motored down Nittany valley on
Sunday and spent the day at the
Deitrich home at Hecla park.
It required twenty automobiles to
convey the D. A. R. of Spruce Creek
on an outing to Penns Cave on Satur-
day where they held a basket picnic.
Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Neidigh spent
Sunday at the D. P. Henderson home
at Spruce Creek, and found Mrs. Hen-
derson somewhat improved in health.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Decker, of Al-
toona, came down to add their bless-
ing to a sweet little Miss who recent-
ly arrived in the W. H. Brouse home.
Mrs. W.P. Corl spent last week
with her brother, Clarence MecCor-
mick, at Scranton, where the latter
has been quite ill but is now conval-
escing. :
Mrs. Cyrus Brungard, of Centre
Hall, accompanied by her cousin from
California, were entertained at dinner
last Friday at the J. H. Williams home
on east Main street.
Mrs. Annie Campbell, of Wooster,
Ohio, accompanied by her two daugh-
ters, Margaret and Lizzie, are spend-
ing the hot weather at the McCrack-
en home in the Glades.
Harry Sunday, wife and two bright
little boys came over from Tadpole
and spert tne first day of the week
with relatives in town. Jacob Sunday
and wife, of Halfinoen, were also
among the visitors.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bloom and Mr.
and Mrs. T. A. Mallory, of Altoona,
were brief callers in town on Sunday
morning on their way to spend the
day at Penns Cave. Their drive home
was made via Bellefonte and the Bald
Eagle valley.
Beginning on Monday the mail goes
out from Pine Grove for the east at
8:30 p. m., thus making connections
with the early train east. An effort
is being made to have a mail pouch
brought from Tyrone on the bus at
1:30 p. m., thus giving two mails a
day.
Ex-Sheriff W. Miles Walker was
an old-time visitor hereabouts on
the first day of the week looking over
the scene in the Glades where he spent
his boyhood days prior to locating in
Bellefonte. He also took a peep at
the old Pine Grove Academy where he
laid the foundation of his education.
What might have been a serious au-
to accident occurred at Rock Springs
on Sunday evening. Miss Nannie
McWilliams was out in her Ford car
and in trying to evade a pile of crush-
ed stone ran into Mr. Kelly’s Chevro-
let runabout which was standing by
the roadside. No one was injured but
both cars were badly damaged.
——Call a man hard-hearted and he
feels complimented, but in the long
run it’s the soft hearted fellow who
draws the dividends.
WOLF’S STORE.
tH. A. Hanselman recently purchas-
ed a new Chevrolet car.
L. L. Hosterman paid Loganton
friends a visit recently.
Mrs. H. C. Zeigler spent Sunday un-
der the parental roof at Smullton.
George H. Showers and W. H. Gil-
bert made a trip to the county capital
last week.
The war, once so far away, has
drawn so close that the country feels
the draft.
Rev. Gus preached a very able ser-
moen in the Lutheran church on Sun-
day afternoon.
W. A. Winters and family attended
the P. O. S. of A. festival at Wood-
ward on Saturday evening.
Mr. Roy Nixon, from Clintondale,
and Miss Mildred Wolfe, spent Sun-
day with E. R. Wolfe and family.
Mr. H. Cyrus Zeigler is visiting
his sisters in Clintondale, and grasp-
ing the hands of old acquaintances.
The way some things are going on
these days it is enough to make An-
cient History turn over in its grave.
The wheat is all garnered,
Barley drawn in;
The oats is soon ready
For binders to swim.
There is no room in this country
for people who are giving two cheers
for the Kaiser and one for Uncle
Sam. :
Resourceful woman has found a
new reason for wanting a divorce.
“He married me to escape the draft,”
she says.
Prof. A. P. Weaver, wife and chil-
dren, from Hope, North Dakota, are
spending some time at this place, pay-
ing respects to father, brothers and
friends. Mr. Weaver made the trip
by auto, covering a distance of twen-
ty-three hundred and forty-one miles.
Master Walter M. Weaver gave a
party to his companions and friends
on last Saturday afternoon. Those
present were Paul Bressler, John, Hil-
da and Neta Brungart, Grace Gilbert,
Elizabeth Weaver, Carrie and Mary
Showers, Torie, William and Carlus
Tyson, Stanford Hosterman, Jason
Wolfe, Ruth and Paul Zeigler, John
Keith, Carl and Floyd Hanselman,
and Prof. A. P. Weaver's three chil-
dren. After being served with a fine
supper of appropriate refreshments
they left for home, all being satisfied
that they had had an ideal time.
OAK HALL.
Harry Wagner lost a valuable horse
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Rishel autoed
to Pine Grove Mills Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Eetters spent
Saturday evening at Bellefonte.
Mr. John S. Dale, of State College,
transacted business in town Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. David Williams, of
New York, were 1n our town last
week.
Harry Wagner, who is working at
Beaverdale, spent Sunday with his
family.
Mrs. Harry Wagner spent Friday at
Millheim, attending the funeral of Mr.
Shires
Misses Kathryn and Ellen Dale, of
Boalsburg, spent Thursday evening at
this place.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Rader and
daughter Eleanore spent Sunday at
Snow Shoe.
Clayton Etters had the misfortune
to break an axle on his Ford car Sat-
urday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Zong and son
Glenn, of Linden Hall, visited friends
at this place.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jackson and
daughter Julia spent a few days last
week at Port Matilda.
Most of the young people of this
place attended the festival at Linden
Hall on Saturday night.
Misses Estella and Esther Raymond
returned home Wednesday from a vis-
it at Sunbury and Millmont.
Mr. Harold Rishel and lady friend,
Miss Margaret Benner, of Rock. were
Sunday visitors at the O. L. Rishel
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Korman and fam-
ily, of this place, were visitors at the
Clifford Close home at Pine Grove
Mills on Sunday.
The Commonweal club and the Dol-
ly Dimple club held a picnic at Shin-
gletown Gap Saturday. All enjoyed
themselves very much.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Klinger, of Mill-
brook, visited at the home of Grant
Houser, Mrs. Klinger being a sister of
Mrs. Houser, who is ill.
A big festival will be held on the
school grounds August 11th. Music
will be furnished by the Lemont band.
Everybody come and bring your
friends with you.
H. H. Houser and family motored
to Eagleville on Sunday.
Miss Louella Ross, of Boalsburg,
spent the week-end here.
Mrs. J. H. Ross spent a few days
with her son Earle, at Madisonburg,
Miss Edwina Wieland spent the lat-
ter part of the week at Rock Springs.
A new Overland machine was purch-
ased last week by J. H. Ross, from S.
I. Poorman, of Pleasant Gap.
About fifty young people assem-
bled at the Big Spring Wednesday
night and held a moonlight picnic.
Miss Irene Pressler, who has been
assisting with the work at her broth-
er’s for the past three weeks, has re-
turned to her home here.
Mrs. J. I. Ross and son Samuel, ac-
companied by Miss Louella Ross and
Miss Irene Reifsnyder, motored to
Mifflinburg Sunday and spent the day
with the John Deihl family.
CASTORIA
Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fletcher.
In use for over thirty years, and
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
— Rn EE TPT,
BOALSBURG.
Mr. John Roush, of Madisonburg, is
visiting in town.
Miss Frances Patterson is sewing
at State College this week.
Mrs. Laura Bricker transacted bus-
iness in Bellefonte on Tuesday.
Dr. George Woods, of Pine Grove
Mills, was a caller in town last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weber, of Hunt-
ingdon, are visiting friends in this vi-
cinity.
John Stover, of Philadelphia, is vis-
iting his parents, Rev. and Mrs. S. C.
Stover.
A little daughter arrived at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William Brouse
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Williams, of
Houserville, were in town on Thurs-
day evening.
Misses Nelle and Anna Holter, of
Howard, are visiting Mrs. Charles
Mothersbaugh.
Miss Lillie Dale and Mrs. George
Dale and children are spending some
time at State College.
Owing to some troukle at the elec-
tric light plant our town was in dark-
ness Monday evening.
Mrs. J. R. Harter and son, of State
College, were recent visitors at the
home of James M. Ross.
William Meyer, William Stuart,
George Fortney and David Bohn mo-
tored to Sandy Ridge on Friday.
Charles Fisher Jr., had the misfor-
tune to fall from the balustrade of
Harry Hess’ store porch and break his
arm.
Mrs. Ilgen and children spent sev-
eral days at the home of A. J. Hazel.
Mrs. Ilgen is matron of the Allentown
college. :
Miss Grace Confer spent several
days last week with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. George Horner, near
Tusseyville.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reitz and son
Henry, of Stonevalley, spent the
week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Reitz.
Miss Mary Hazel attended the fes-
tival at Linden Hall on Saturday and
remained until Monday with her
friend, Miss Eloise Lee.
Farm agent Olmstead and Miss
Bliss, of The Penna. State Cecllege,
gave a canning demonstration in Boal
nall on Thursday evening.
J. W. Hackenberg, of Rebersburg,
was in town on Saturday and was ac-
companied home by his daughter, Ger-
aldine, who spent a week visiting in
town,
PLEASANT GAP ITEMS.
Carl Griffith, of Pittsburgh, is vis-
iting among friends at this place.
Mr. G. W. Musser, of Mill Hall, is
visiting at the home of Harry Evey.
Mr. Edward Wolfe left Saturday
for Pitcairn, in search of employment.
George Hile has gone to Burnham
where he expects to secure a position.
Mr. Frank Irvin has moved his fam-
ily back from Niagara Falls to this
town.
Mrs. Harry Brown, of Bellefonte,
spent Mcnday with her parents at this
place.
Mr. Edwin Twitmyer, of Seattle,
Washington, is visiting among old
friends.
Mrs. George Wise and daughter, of
Tyrone, are visiting with her mother,
Mrs. Armstrong.
Mr. Ira Viehdorfer, who is employ-
ed at Burnham, spent Saturday and
Sunday in this town.
Miss Mary Corl, of Boalsburg, is
spending a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Milliard.
Mrs. Charles Osmer, of Bellefonte,
is spending a few days with her
daughter, Mrs. Boyd Spicher.
Earle and Joshua Eckenroth, who
are cmployed at Ehrenfeld, visited
over Sunday with their families.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Robb, of Al-
toona, spent the week-end with the
latter’s sister, Mrs. Harry McClincy.
Mr. and Mrs. William Derome, of
Williamsport, are spending their va-
cation with friends and relatives at
this place.
The Pleasant Gap fire company is
planning a large parade for Saturday
evening, which will be followed by a
festival in Noll’s grove.
LINDEN HALL. |
Mrs. W. T. Noll is entertaining a
party of friends from Jersey City.
Miss Mary Hazel, of Boalsburg,
TEN the week-end with Miss Eloise
ee.
Over sixty dollars was taken in at
the festival, which was largely at-
tended.
Misses Levan and Margaret Ferree
called at the F. E. Wieland home on
Sunday.
G. Harry Keller is now in charge of
the garage at the state penitentiary
at Rockview.
Mr. and Mrs. George Mothersbaugh
and family spent Saturday night at
the J. H. Ross home.
Mr. W. I. Noll and son Paul, who
have been employed at Orviston for
the last month, spent the week-end at
their home here.
Miss Edwina Wieland entertained
Miss Mildred Avery, of Nehoopany,
and Miss Helen Gregory, of Wilkes-
Barre, for the past week.
Mr. William Catherman, who has
been employed as a machinist at Dan-
ville for some time, is now spending
a few weeks at his home here.
Mrs. J. H. Ross and son Paul, ac-
companied by Mr. and Mrs. L. C.
Swartz, of Hublersburg, and Mr.
Swartz’s mother, motored to Altoona
Sunday where they visited at the A.
C. Musser home.
The workings of the trading
with the enemy act already have be-
gun to be felt by German merchants
in Mexico, according to business men.
It is said that certain German mer-
chants have made overtures to mer-
chants of other nationalities, includ-
ing Americans, to allow shipments to
be sent under the names of the latter
and later transferred.’
EAST BRUSH VALLEY.
Nothing was ever appreciated more
than a drop in the temperature on last
Thursday.
Hary Hanselman, S. L. Gephart and
Charles H. Gramiey are noticed sport-
ing new cars.
Wilmer Stover and son Eugene, of
Aaronsburg, transacted business in
our midst on Monday.
Saw milling is again in full swing,
as Mr. Winkleblech expects to finish
the job by December 1st.
Mrs. Albert Stininger and son Park,
of Altoona, enjoyed a visit in old
Brushvalley last Sunday.
An unusual number of our people
attended the P. O. S. of A. festival at
Woodward on last Saturday evening.
Miss Alta Fehl and her mother, of
Juniata, are spending some time vis-
iting friends and relatives at this
place. .
Mrs. P. R. Hackman, who was not
enjoying the best of health during the
past week, we are glad to say, has im-
proved considerably.
Mr. H. A. Detwiler appeared on our
streets last Monday evening and is ad-
ministering to the wants and just
needs of his family at this place.
It is with grief and profound sym-
pathy for the bereaved children that
we record the death of our aged moth-
er, Mrs. Wohlford, who died very sud-
denly on last Friday, being overcome
by apoplexy.
The local Lutheran Sunday school
picnic, which was held in H. H. Roy-
er’s grove, was not as well attended
as was expected, owing to the late ad-
vertising. However, all in attendance
reported a nice time and lots of fun
and amusements.
Quite an excitement was created in
our town last Friday evening when
the gasoline was ignited by a lantern
being held too close to the flow while
filling the tank of W. J. Hacken-
berg’s car. Fortunately the fire was
extinguished before it reached the
large tank underneath the pump. The
car was burned considerably.
On last Friday while John B. Wertz,
of this" place, was loading coal at the
Coburn coal yards his team became
frightened at an approaching freight
train. In an attempt to stop the hors-
es Mr. Wert was caught by the wheel,
throwing him to the ground and caus-
ing a compound fracture of the leg.
He is now being cared for at the Belle-
fonte hospital, and is reporting as
getting along nicely.
——They are all good enough, but
the “Watchman” is always the best.
AARONSBURG.
Mrs. I. P. Adams and family Sun-
dayed with Mrs. Adams’ sister, Mrs.
E. G. Mingle.
Mrs. C. E. Musser is spending a few
days with her daughter, Mrs. John
Pressler, of Bellefonte.
_ Mr. Gross Yearick, of Philadelphia,
is at present circulating among old
friends and acquaintances in our
town.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Herman, of
State College, on Tuseday autoed to
our burg and were guests of ’Squire
A. S. Stover.
Arthur King, who is employed in
the Mill Hall brick yard, spent a few
days with his family, returning to his
work Tuesday morning.
Victor Stover arrived in town by
auto, from Akron, Ohio, where he has
been employed and also resides. Mrs.
Stover and baby have for some time
been in Pennsylvania.
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Stricker and
children, of Yeagertown, also Miss
Georgie Stricker, of Syracuse, N. Y.,
spent Sunday under the parental roof.
Miss Georgie Stricker will remain for
a longer period of time.
Mrs. John H. Haines, who for al-
most three months was a patient in
the Bellefonte hospital and who came
home a few weeks age, we are very
pleased to say, is getting along very
nicely and her many friends wish her
a speedy recovery.
——For high class job work come
to the “Watchman” office.
——1If every one of the country’s
20,000,000 homes throws away one
slice of bread a day, it means wasting
daily 875,000 pounds of flour, or
enough for more than 1,000,000 loaves
of one pound a day.
—— Subscribe for the “Watchman.”
Medical.
Plain Questions to
Bellefonte People
EVERY BELLEFONTE READER
WILL ADMIT THE SOUNDNESS
OF THE LOGIC.
Would Bellefonte people recom-
mend Doan’s Kidney Pills as they do
if the medicine were not reliable?
would they confirm their statements
after years have elapsed if their ex-
periences did not show the remedy to
be deserving of it? Statements like
the following must carry conviction to
the mind of every reader:
Mrs. J. C. Johnson, 365 E. Bishop
St., Bellefonte, says: “I was a great
sufferer from backache and pains
across my loins. I could hardly get
about the house. Dizzy spells would
come over me and I would néarly fall.
I got Doan’s Kidney Pills at Green’s
Pharmacy Co., and two boxes did me
more good than anything else I had
previously tried. The backache and
pains disappeared and my kidneys be-
came normal. I now feel better in
every way.”
THE CURE LASTED.
Over six years later Mrs. Johnson
said: “Time has proven that Doan’s
Kidney Pills are reliable. The cure
they made for me has been perma-
nert.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Johnson has twice publicly rec-
ommended. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
1
How Men Behave Under Heavy Fire.
It seems certain that the present
war will furnish new facts concerning
the psychology of the battlefield. It
should be remembered that, as the En-
cyclopedia Bratannica says, in a very
graphic way, “the duration of a cam-
paign is largely affected by the deadly
properties of modern firearms. It is
true that the losses in battle are rela-
tively less than in the days of Brown
Bess and the smooth-bore cannon, and
almost insignificant when compared
with the fearful carnage wrought by
the sword and spear. The reason is
simple.
“A battlefield in the old days, ex-
cept at close quarters, was a compara-
tively safe locality, and the greater
part of the troops engaged were sel-
dom exposed for a long time together
to a hot and continuous fire. Today
death has a far wider range, and the
strain on the nerves is consequently
far more severe. Demoralization,
thereforz, sets in at an earlier period,
and is more complete.
“When troops once realize their in-
feriority, they can no longer be de-
pended on. It is not the losses they
have actually suffered, but those that
they expect to suffer, that affect them.
Unless discipline and national spirit
are of superior quality, unless the sol-
dier is animated by something higher
than the mere habit of mechanical
obedience, panic, shirking and whoele-
sale surrender will be the ordinary
features of a campaign.
“These phenomena made themselves
apparent, though in a less degree, as
long ago as the American Civil war,
when the weapon of the infantry was
a muzzle-loading rifle, firing at most
two round a minute, and when the pro-
jectiles of the artillery were hardly
more destructive than the stone shot
of Mons Meg. With the magazine ri-
fle, machine guns, shrapnel and high
explosives they have become more
pronounced than even at Vienville or
Plevna.
“ ‘The retreat of the Thirty-eighth
(Prussian) Brigade,” writes Captain
Hoenig, an eye witness of the former
battle, ‘forms the most awful drama
of the great war. It had lost 5,370 of
its strength, and the proportion of
killed to wounded was three to four.
Strong men collapsed inanimate—I
saw men cry like children, others fell
prone without a sound; in most cases
the need of water thrust forth all oth-
er instincts; the body demanded its
rights. “Water, water,” was the only
intelligible cry that broke from those
morning phantoms. The evening’s
lead poured like hail upon the wretch
ed remnant of the brigade; yet they
moved only slowly to the rear, their
heads bent in utter weariness; their
features distorted under the thick dust
that had gathered on faces dripping
with sweat.
“‘The strain was beyond endur-
ance. The soldier was no longer a re-
ceptive being; he was oblivious of
everything, great or small. His com-
rades or superiors he no longer recog-
nized; and yet he was the same man
who but a short time before had
marched across the battle-field shout-
ing his marching chorus. A few act-
ive squadrons and not a man would
have escaped! Only he who had seen
men in such circumstances, and ob-
served their bearing, knows the dread-
ful imprint that their features leave
upon the memory. Madness is there,
the madness that arises from bodily
exhaustion combined with the most
abject terror. I do not shrink,’ he
adds, ‘from confessing that the fire of
Mars-la-Tour affected my nerves for
months.”
It should De borne in mind that
Mars-la-Tour was one of the engage-
ments of the Franco-Prussian war of
1870, long before the days of machine
guns, magazine rifles and other fear-
fully efficient weapons with which all
of the great armies engaged in the
present war are equipped.
——For high class Job Work come
to the “Watchman” Office.
THE VERY BEST
FLOUR
That Money Can Buy
SEALS
4 “ale 2.
AY A A354
=/BIGJoAF 2)
\ y FLOUR / /
Gs, To
Cum
Nn
Geo. Danenhower & Son
Wholesale Distributors,
62-7-tf. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Sg WT WY OW WW TW TY WY TeV YY WY ee OTT ee we!
CHICHESTER SPILLS
te ond Bran
Pills in Red and Gold metallic
boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon) *
Take no other. Buy of your
D st. Ask for OI I.CHES.'
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for
years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
(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, pet. De 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.
62-31 |
TRY MY SHOP.
P. L. BEEZER,
Attorneys-at-Law.
KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-Law, Belle
fonte, Pa. Practicesin all courts. -
Room 18Crider’s Exchanee. 51-1-1y.
in all the Courts. Consultation in English
or German. Office in Crider’s xchange
Bellefonte, Pa. 40-
S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor a
Law. Office in Temple Court, Belle
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at
tended to promptly. 40-46
J M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law. Practices
N B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Pra tices
in all the courts. Consultation in En
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. .
ces—No. 5 East High street. 57.
G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul-
tation in English and German. Office
in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 58-8
sxssama.
Physicians.
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon
State College, Centre county, Pa. e
at his residence. 35-41
Dentists.
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, Office
the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All mod-
ern electric 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 Somplets plant prepared to
furnish Soft D: s 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, paitial 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
preferred occupation, including house
keeping, over eighteen years of age of
good moral and physical condition may
insure under this policv.
Fire Insurance
{ invite your attention to my Fire Insur
ance Agency, the strongest and Most Ex-
tensive Line of Solid Companies represent-
4 ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania
H. E. FENLON,
50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Pa,
Good Health
and
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER.
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky
water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escaping
as, you can’t have good Health. The air you
Breathe 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
bo! 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, unsanitary
work and the lowest grade of finishings. For
the Best Work try
Archibald Allison,
Bellefonte, Pa
High Street. 34-34-1y. Bellefonte, Pa
0 ite Bush House -
Ppos 56-14-1v.