Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 05, 1917, Image 5

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    With the Churches of the |
County.
Notes of Interest to Church People of
all Denominations in all Parts of
the County.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY.
Christian Science society, Furst
building, High street. Sunday service
11 a. m. Sunday school 9.45. Wed-
nesday evening meeting at 8 o’clock.
To these meetings all are welcome. A
free reading-room is open to the pub-
lic every Thursday afternoon from 2
to 4.
Science literature may be read, bor-
rowed or purchased. Subject, October
7th, “Unreality.”
St. John’s church (Episcopal.)
Services beginning October Tth:
Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity, 8 a.
m., Holy Eucharist. 8:45 a. m., Mat-
tins (plain). 10 a. m., church school
and men’s Bible class. 11 a. m., Holy
Eucharist and sermon, “The Eucha-
ristic Sacrifice.” © 7:30 p. m., evensong
and address, “Christian Unity.” Fri-
day, 7:30 p. m., Litany and instruc-
tion. Visitors welcome. Rev. M. DeP.
Maynard, Rector.
Miss Bessie Shirey, of Woodland,
Pa., will speak in the United Brethren
ghapen, Wednesday evening, October
10th.
Not Easy to Make Good Escape from
Penitentiary.
Dash Jury, a Blair county citizen
who is a familiar figure in the crimi-
nal courts and who last July complet-
ed a term of imprisonment at the
Rockview penitentiary, was sent back
for another year last Wednesday by
Judge Baldridge, at Hollidaysburg.
After being sentenced Dash gave a
statement to an Altoona Mirror repor-
ter on how hard it is for convicts to
make good their escape from the peni-
tentiary, as follows:
By way of introduction Dash ex-
plained that the convicts at the prison
on the big farm in Centre county are
not very closely guarded. Referring
to his own experiences at the prison
during his first term which lasted a
year Jury declared:
“I’ve often been two miles from the
prison with nobody with me. It ain’t
no use trying to escape. They'll get
you again. You get out on them
mountains and you can’t get off them.
The mountains take a turn. I've
known fellows that got out when I
was there that would wander through
the mountains for a week and then
fetch up right above the prison. The
guards would get ’em.”
Jury went on to explain that the
prison authorities are assisted by
dwellers in the mountains who know
every path and who spot an escaped
prisoner on sight. These communi-
cate with the warden as soon as a sus-
picious character is seen and guards
are hot foot on the trail of the wan-
derer. According to the observation
of the man, who has broken into jail
so many times that he can’t keep
track of them all, a prisoner at Rock-
view, who knows when he is well off,
will stay his term out. Dash has a
holy horror of the mountains that girt
the beautiful valley in which the pris-
on and its huge grounds are located.
Dash had a good word to say of the
prison farm and general conditions
there. He told about the splendid
equipment of the farm and particu-
larly of the barns and stables. He had
helped care for the live stock during
his year there and had enjoyed the ex-
perience, but he manifested great re-
pugnance to going back to do another
year. ®
During his year at Rockview Jury
learned to do all kinds of farm work
and explained that he felt himself
qualified to serve as a farm hand.
Dash’s worst enemy is John Barley-
corn.
Training Airplane Experts at Penna.
State College.
Training students as inspectors of
airplane material is the latest war-
time addition to the curriculum of
The Pennsylvania State College.
Professor George R. Green has start-
ed a class of twenty young men in
wood technology. They will study the
structure, strength and durability of
spruce and ash, which are the chief
woods used in airplane construction.
Government officials have told Profes-
sor Green there is a great need of
competent inspectors to be stationed
at the various airplane plants
throughout the country. Later the
course will include a study of timbers
used in ship building, and Penn State
will cooperate with ship builders in
supplying inspectors in their yards.
——Last Friday night funeral di-
rector Frank E. Naginey was notified
of a death at the Bellefonte hospital
and told that he was to take charge of
the remains. Forthwith he went to
that institution and was told that he
would find the body in a certain room.
Mr. Naginey in some way got into the
wrong room and in the dim light saw
a form lying upon the bed which he
naturally took for the corpse. Pulling
down the covers he took hold of the
legs to straighten out the supposed
corpse when there was a kick and the
owner of the legs said: “What's the
matter with you? I’m not the corpse,
that’s in the next room.” Mr. Nagi-
ney was very much astounded, of
course, at having made such a mis-
take, but at that managed to identify
the man he had mistaken for a corpse
to be one the hospital could least af-
ford to lose, the genial James F.
Krape.
— On Wednesday afternoon a big
seven ton truck went over the bank
on the Red Hill, on the road to Snow
Shoe. and overturning caught one of
the men by the shoulder, pinning him
to the ground until passersby helped
to release him. The truck was from
Williamsport and with two men in it
was on the way to Snow Shoe for a
load of coal. Going up the hill the
driver of the car stalled the engine
and the car ran backwards and over
the bank, rolling down a distance of
twenty-five feet. The names of the
men in the car could not be learned.
Here the Bible and Christian | to hey 19, when a policeman was kill- |
— James H. Herron, chief engi-
neer of the new western penitentiary,
is moving his family to Bellefonte this
week. They have taken the Shoemak- |
er house at the corner of Curtin and |
Allegheny streets.
Senator Vare Implicated in Philadel-
phia Murder Mystery.
Philadelphia, October 2.—State Sen- |
ator Edwin H. Vare was today named |
as the man higher up who was to fur- |
nish the money to bring gunmen from |
New York for election work in the |
Fifth ward here on primary day, Sep- |
ed. Congressman William S. Vare,
the Senator’s brother, was named as |
giving assurance that the money
would be forthcoming from Isaac
Deutsch, the man who is alleged to
have engaged the gangsters.
The Vare brothers, who have made
millions in city contracts, were
brought into the case through sensa-
tional testimony by Samuel G. Malo-
ney ata hearing given to Mayor
Thomas B. Smith and eight others
charged with conspiracy to murder |
and other crimes in connection with
the Fifth ward killing. Altogether,
seventeen men are under arrest here
and in New York in connection with
the murder and the political feud.
Maloney, a former Republican fac-
tional leader in the Fifth ward and
now head of the local branch of the
Val O’Farrell detective agency, was
the star witness at the hearing.
Tonight Senator Vare, who with his
brother, the Congressman, are the
leaders of the faction opposed to that
headed by the United States Senator
Boies Penrose and State Senator
James P. McNichol, in this city, gave
out a statement in which he said that
everything Maloney swore to so far as
it concerned the Vares was an “abso-
lute lie” and is only part of the gener-
al frame-up he warned the people of
Philadelphia about in a public state-
ment two days ago. S
Prior to Maloney’s recital of alleg-
ed conditions in the Fifth ward, Isa-
dore Stern, a member of the Legisla-
ture from that ward, told how he had
warned Mayor Smith the night before
the primary on the long distance tel- |
ephone of possible bloodshed, and how |
he had engaged a special train to
bring the Mayor from Atlantic City
for the purpose of bringing about or-:
der and how the Mayor replied that |
Stern could not “pull any sucker stuff
like that over on me.” !
{
—_——
BOALSBURG. |
Miss Annie Lohr is visiting friends |
in Philadelphia. |
Rev. Courtney is attending Synod |
at State College this week. i
Mr. and Mrs. Fearon Russell went
to Lewistown on Saturday for a short
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. William Goheen went
to Graysville Tuesday to attend Pres-
bytery. {
Harvest Home services will be held |
in the Lutheran church on Sunday |
morning, at 10:30 o’clock. {
|
Cyrus Wagner, of Altoona, spent'
the week-end with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Wagner.
The Civic club will meet at the home |
of Miss Frances Patterson, on Friday |
evening, October 6th, at 7:30 o’clock. |
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Meyer and Mr. |
and Mrs. O. W. Stover and son Riley !
spent Sunday evening with friends in |
Centre Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reitz drove to |
Stone Valley on Sunday morning to
visit their son Robert and family, re-
turning home on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Charles and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Faxon and children
motored to Philadelphia on Friday and
returned on Sunday morning. The
trip was made in Mr. Charles’ car.
Mr. and Mrs. William Stover, Mr.
and Mrs. Huston Shuey and Mr. and
Mrs. Grant Charles attended the fun-
eral of Mrs. Stover’s brother, John
Page, at Rebersburg, on Tuesday.
Monday night was poster night for
Penn State and as usual the boys paid
our town a visit. Several members
of the state constabulary were also
present to see that the fun was prop-
erly conducted.
Mrs. L. A. Kidder entertained a
number of women friends on Wednes-
day by taking them for an automobile
ride with a stop at Millheim for din-
ner. The trip was made in two large
cars from the Kidder & Houtz agen-
cy, and was pronounced a very enjoy-
able affair.
Mrs. Lillian Ross Meyer and daugh-
ter, of Farmville, Va., Dr. and Mrs.
James Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Porter
and daughter; Mrs. Esther Gregory,
son and daughters; Mrs. Miller and
daughter, of Huntingdon county; and
Mr. Secrist and sister, of Palmyra;
Mrs. Agnes Meyer, of Williamsport,
and George Meyer, of McElhattan,
were among the friends at the funeral
of Miss Louella Ross.
COLEVILLE.
H. W. Reeser, of Snow Shoe, visited
our village last Thursday.
Mrs. Samuel Justice left last Satur-
day for a visit in Tyrone and Altoona.
The venerable George Fravel, of
Soy Shoe, was a visitor here last
week.
Miss Kate Williams, of Scotia, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. Harry Keller-
man.
George and Arthur Bush, of Altoo-
na, are visiting their sister, Mrs. Ed-
ward Green.
Michael Shank, of Osceola Mills,
visited at the home of his aunt, Mrs.
Fearon Minnemyer, last week.
Mrs. George Hollobaugh and her
daughter, Miss Oleta, spent the past
two weeks visiting in Altoona.
Mrs. Edward Smith, of Ralston,
spent Sunday here with friends. Mrs.
Smith left Monday for a visit in Al-
toona and Juniata.
Mrs. Sarah Poorman was 87 years
old on Tuesday. A few relatives
gathered at her home in the evening
to honor this occasion.
A large crowd of neighbors and
friends gave Mrs. James Kelley a sur-
prise on Thursday evening, when they
9 came to help celebrate her birth-
ay.
lice in two hours.
——Subsecribe for the “Watchman.”
TEACHING SOLDIERS TO SING!
Soldiers at Fort Shafter Learn Words
and Airs of America’s War Songs
From Movie Screen.
There is one officer on Oahu, says
the Sunday Advertiser of Honolulu, ac-
cording to the Army and Navy Journal,
who is a firm believer in the value of
| song as a military asset to the soldier.
Col. James A. Irons, commanding the
Second United States infantry, believes
so thoroughly in the importance of hav-
ing soldiers know the songs of the na-
tion—particularly the war songs—that | ed by the burning coal escaped to the |
he has provided a means of teaching
the men of his regiment just what the
war songs of America are.
The method which Colonel Irons has
started at Fort Shafter is one which
should be used throughout the army.
It consists of having national and pa-
triotic airs played by the orchestra
at the evening performances at the air-
i drome—Fort Shafter’s moving picture
theater—while the words are thrown
upon the screen where the men can
read them. In this way the soldiers
become acquainted with the words of
the songs, and what is equally impor-
tant, they become accustomed to sing-
ing together. The soldiers are enthusi-
astic over the new plan and the sing-
ing is worth going far to hear. It is
not impossible that, sometime within
tke service of the men who are now
serving the second infantry, that regi-
ment may be called on to march from
Bordeaux to Berlin, and that the march
will be made easier and the spirit of
the men at the end of the hike will be
far better if it is made to the tune of
“Annie Laurie”’—the regimental an-
them—sung by every man in the regi-
ment.
Cards have been issued from the
regimental press printing the words of
“Annie Laurie” and the “Star Spangled
Banner,” and the list of 90 battles,
engagements and skirmishes in which
the Second infantry took part. The
first was in November, 1791, at Mau-
mee Fords, O.
BIRDS AID IN WAGING WAR
Their Work in Increasing Crop Yields
by Destroying Insect Pests De-
clared Highly Important.
Food is needed for our armies. Birds
help the farmers produce that food by
destroying insect pests, Therefore,
birds may be considered as one of the
allies. In the Farm and Fireside one
reads:
“Birds are almost as busy as bees,
and their work in increasing crop
yields is highly important. One of the
cheapest and most effective ways to
fight insect pests that annually take
crop toll estimated at $800,000,000 is
to aid in the preservation of bird life.
Few people realize how many insects
| are destroyed by birds. A teaspoonful
of chinch bugs has been taken from
i the crop of one quail, and an adult
bird has been known to eat 5,000 plant
Such worms and
bugs as infest our gardens are favor-
| ite food for bluebirds, robins and many
| other kinds of birds.
“It is true that some insect pests
may be fought with chemicals. Owing
to the great war, though, prices for
many materials commonly used in
sprays, washes and poison mashes are
pretty near prohibitive. But the birds
work at before the war wages.
“Birds also eat thousands of weed
seeds. A single quail, when killed, was
found to contain 10,000 pigweed seeds.
With labor scarce and high, whatever
will aid the farmer in his crop against
weeds is worth while.”
Bags From Banana Trees.
Machinery has been taken to Hon-
olulu from the state of Washington
by four men who are making an in-
vestigation of the use of the fiber of
the banana trunk for bag making. The
investigation was brought about by an-
nouncements that the sugar planters
of the Hawaiian islands, as well as
those of other sugar-producing coun-
tries, are faced with uncertainty con-
cerning steady shipments from Cal-
cutta of bags to be used as containers
for raw sugar. Ever since bags have
been used by the Hawaiian sugar
planters in exporting the raw product
from the islands to the mainland of
the United States, the Hindu bags,
which are made to contain 125 pounds
each, have proved to be satisfactory.
War conditions have caused the plant-
ers to cast about for a substitute.
Old Laws, Modern Conditions.
New England, with its recollections
of ancient “blue laws,” should be in-
terested in the report that war-time
England has seen fit to revive a statute
of Charles I.’s time prohibiting the
transaction of business on the Sabbath,
says the Springfield (Mass.) Repub-
lican. As there is a shortage of labor,
with the consequence that shop people
are overworked, the need of providing
a day of rest is acute, and numerous
shopkeepers have been arrested for do-
ing business on Sunday. The English
authorities are very ingenious in dig-
ging up ancient statufes to fit some
new and unforseen situation.
One Fish a Day Is Limit.
The limit catch for anglers in Range-
ley stream, near Haines Landing, Me.,
is probably the smallest of any waters
in the United States—daily limit one
fish, fly fishing only.
The reason is that this stream is the
breeding place for the big Rangeley
trout, and Maine sees that its stock of
big trout is not unnecessarily depleted.
The famous Page trout that weighed
12 pounds was taken from this stream
in 1867. The fish was the record fish
for almost fifty years, the laurels than
going to the 14%%-pound trout taken in
the ‘Jepizon.
Vanishing Coal Beds.
| Many coal beds in the great coal
! fields of the Western States have at
| one time or another taken fire and
{ burned for long periods, baking and
' reddening the overlying strata so that
. they have become a kind of natural
brick or terra cotta. The fires were
{ hot enough in places to fuse and re-
| crystalize the overlying shale and
| sandstone so as to form natural slag.
| At some places the slag resembles
| true igneous rock; at others it consists
‘largely of rare minerals.
Thoroughly fused slag seems to oc-
cur chiefly in crevices or chimneys
! through which the hot gases generat-
|
| surface. The chimney-shaped masses
{ of slag are harder than the surround-
i ing baked rock and, after that has
| weathered away, form the curious pin-
| nacles that surmount many clinker
| bluffs or buttes in the West.
i Some of the coal beds, especially
! those on the higher hills, were perhaps
ignited by lightning; others were
| probably started by prairie fires or
| camp fires; but since burning at the
! surface has been so common as to af-
{ fect most of the coal beds in an area
: of more than two hundred thousand
square miles, much of it has probably
been due to spontaneous combustion.
Coal beds are now burning at or near
the surface in many places in the
West. The fire is disclosed by the
smoke and the fumes that rise from
it, and by the heat at the surface of
the earth near the outcrop or above
the bed—heat so intense+that it kills
all vegetation.
As the coal burns out, the overlying
i rock or earth generally caves in, so as
to form large fissures in the ground.
As the fire works back from the out-
crop the heat acts on the overlying
rocks, but finally combustion dies out
for lack of oxygen. It is hard to say
how far from the surface the fires
may extend. Field studies of the
United States Geological Survey in-
dicate that a bed lying beneath twen-
ty feet or less of cover may burn out
completely under large areas, and
even where the cover is several hun-
dred feet thick the burning may ex-
tend five hundred feet back from the
outcrop.—Youth’s Companion.
S. Simons Goes A-Lunching.
Simon Simons, honorary president of
the Economical Sports association,
looked at the clock again, drew in his
belt still another notch, and decided he
really must go to lunch.
“Pm really quite hungry,” he
thought. “I believe I'll try a sort of
progressive luncheon—it will be quite
a lark. Let's see, I'll start at Oopen-
heimer’s—their 10-cent bowl of ivy
soup is the biggest in town.” And he
walked five blocks to Oopenheimer’s,
drank the soup and set out for Swish-
endish’s, eight blocks away, where, he
knew, the b5-cent sandwiches were
quite as big and as crowded as the
usual 10 centers.
After lingering over a Siamese
cheese sandwich, he walked to Bickel
and Watson streets, to Pogenwoog’s,
where he got an ice-cream cone for 3
cents, and by that time he was so
hungry from all the exercise that, in
desperation, he strode into a restau-
rant where a placard read: “Full
course dinner, 85 cents.”
When he gof, back to the office, two
hours later, he found that Twickenham
B. Woos had dropped in to buy $2,000
worth of stock in the B. V. D. sand-
paper mine, and dropped out again.—
Indianapolis Star. #
Conserving Wheat Flour.
A prominent New York hotel has
recently added to its, menu a bread
containing rye flour and whole wheat
flour in addition to white flour. Anoth-
er method of saving wheat flour which
is being well received, is to use one
part of cottonseed meal to four, five
or six parts of wheat flour. A United
States senator not long ago served
bread made from these ingredients to
several of his colleagues in Washington,
and they seemed much pleased with
it. Government chemists have demon-
strated that flour cam also be made
from peanuts, dried peas, sweet pota-
toes, etc., and that such flour can be
mixed with wheat flour to make excel-
lent bread.—Popular Mechanics Mag-
azine.
$90 Coal.
Probably a record price for coal
was recently paid by the captain of an
American cargo steamship returning
from Genoa to New York after deliv-
ering a war cargo at the Italian port.
At Genoa the Yankee skipper was com-
pelled to pay $90 a ton for coal enough
to carry him to Fayal, in the Azores.
At the island port he was able to
purchase coal at the compgratively rea-
sonable rate of $30 a ton, and got 500
tons, enough to bring him to New York.
The extremely high price of coal now-
adays is somewhat of an offset to the
big profits to be made in war freights.
—Subscribe for the “Watchman”.
New Advertisements.
OR SALE.—1914 Ford Touring Car.
Mechanically perfect. Paint good.
62-28-tf SIM THE CLOTHIER.
W “tice tiome. e janitor, Good wages,
nice home, easy but steady work.
Address,
62-39 Box H, Bellefonte, Pa.
OR SALE.—Fairbanks gasoline engine
on wheels and chopper complete.
Grinds 20 to 30 bushels per hour.
Good shape. Will sell cheap. Apply to
28tf H. W. TATE, Bellefonte, Pa.
URNISHED ROOMS, also furnished
apartments, with all conveniences,
are for rent in the Shoemaker
Apartment house on Spring St.
Inquire of
Roberta Smith, on the premises
62-38-tf
XECUTRIX NOTICE.—The undersign-
ed Executrix under the last will and
testament of Dr. Wm M. B. Gland-
ing, late of the borough of Bellefonte, de-
ceased, hereby gives notice to all those
knowing themselves indebted to said de-
cedant’s estate to make immediate payment
thereof and those having claims to present
them, properly authenticated to her for
settlement.
ANNIE E. GLANDING,
62-39-6t BeHefonte, Pa. Executrix
Dr. Moritz Salm
Specializes in Diseases of the Eye,
Ear, Throat and Catarrh and
all Chronic Diseases.
DR. MORITZ SALM,
Garman House, Bellefonte, Pa. Next
visit Tuesday, October 9th, from 10
a.to 8 p. m. and every 4 weeks
thereafter on the samee day as fol-
lows: Nov. 6th, Dec. 4th, 1918—
Jan. 1 and 29; Feb. 26; March 26;
April 23; May 21; June 18; July 16;
Aug. 13; Sept. 10; Oct. 6; Nov. 5;
Dec. 3 and 31.
Consultation and Examination Free.
The following list of diseases we
cure in a short time and relief given
at once:
ASTHMA —Oppressed feeling, chok-
ing or smothering sensation and
difficult breathing.
BRONCHITIS—Hacking cough, pain
in the chest; loss of flesh.
BLOOD DISEASE—Scrofula, chronic
blood poison.
CATARRH—The symptoms and con-
sequences of which are too well
known to repeat.
DEAFNESS—Partial or complete,
and the diseases of the ear.
DYSPEPSIA—Loss of appetite, bloat-
ing of the stomach or any of the
forms of catarrhal inflammation of
the digestive organs.
HEART DISEASE—Pain in the
back, puffiness under the eyes,
swelling of the feet and frequent
urination.
LIVER DISEASE—Pain in the side,
muddy complexion, feeling of lassi-
tude and constipation.
MEN—Diseases peculiar to men in
all stages.
NERVE DISEASES—Loss of sleep,
loss of memory, melancholia, im-
paired intellect, unhappy and mis-
erable ‘without reason.
RHEUMATISM-—Acute, chronie,
muscular, articular or sciatic, for
which remedies and doctors have
proved unavailing.
——Subscribe for the “Watchman.”
INSURANCE!
mrs Put your ad. in the “Watch-
man.
E'S YOUR CHANGE
You Can Live in a
New Up-(0-Date Home
By Moving to Clearfield
We have new homes for
several families with girls to
work in the Velvet Mill.
For particulars apply to
Clearfield Textile Co.
62-37-4t. CLEARFIELD, PA.
Louis Dammers'
Philadelphia
Eyesight Specialist,
ONE DAY ONLY
BELLEFONTE, PA. |
Garman Hotel Parlors
Friday, October 12th, 1917
9.30 a. m. to 2.30 p. m.
My Special §] 00 GLASSES
I offer you a fine pair of glasses, in-
cluding Dammers’ eye examination, clear
crystal lenses, gold filled frame and ele-
gant case as low as
$1.00
Special Ground Lenses at Lowest Prices.
Invisible Bifocals
Two pair in one. No lines. No cement.
Last for years.
Eye examination by the Dammers Scien-
tific Method, without asking questions,
without drops, test cards or charts, abso-
lutely free of charge. Don’t fail to take
advantage of this remarkable offer. i
807 Chestnut St., Philadelphia.
Fire and Automobile Insurance at a Fehl Blg. Eckert Blg. Goldschmid Blg.
reduced rate. Lancaster Allentown Altoona |
62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent.
~ 3
Because He Built Metz Cars to
Meet the Public’s Demands
You!
Mr. Buyer
Want a
Beautiful,
Durable,
Well
Equipped
Car.
upkeep. You want a car that
Shop.
108-inch wheel base, 32x3
roadster.
Literature on recuest.
METZ MADE MILLIONS
You demand the most economical car
will be a stranger to the Repair
The Power-Full Metz 25
and is the lowest priced car of its size and specifications built.
1% inch tires,
man top, rain vision wind shield, Stewart Speedometer,
house electric starting and lighting system, Atwater-Kent Ignition,
wire wheels without extra charge.
OUR BANKING PLAN
ONCE ON 12 MONTHS’ TIME. $300 AND $7.50 A WEEK WILL DO.
Other cars taken in trade.
UTO TRADING GO., INC., OF PITTSBURGH
Metz Distributors Pennsylvanian. Ohio and West Virginia.
Center and Euclid Aves.,
OR ADDRESS
B. W. SPANGLER, District Manager
FISHER, CLARION CO., PENNA.
And Makes 929, of
Every Car.
in cost of running and
answers all these requirements
full elliptic springs, one
Westing-
Price $650 for touring car or
DELIVERS A CAR TO YOU AT
Ask for demonstration
Profitable Agency Territory Open.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Second
Liberty Loan!
Prove that you have good business judgment
as well as patriotism by sending us a subscrip-
tion to the new 4 per cent. Liberty Loan, pay-
able, 2 per cent. with subscription; 18 per cent.
November 15th; 40 per cent. December 14th,
40 per cent. January 15th.
The First National Bank,
61-46-1y
BELLEFONTE, PA.
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