Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 04, 1918, Image 3

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    Bear acm.
‘Belletonte, Pa., October 3 1918.
County Correspondence
items of Interest Dished up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PINE GROVE MENTION.
I. J. Cronover is housed up with an
attack of lumbago.
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Davis are both
on the sick list this week.
Our old friend, Ed. Kocher, is off
duty, suffering with a billious attack.
A. S. and Naomi Bailey transacted
business in the county seat on Fri-
day.
W. D. Port is somewhat under the
weather this week with asthmatic
trouble.
Samuel Gray Elder lost a good cow
on Friday as the result of ptomaine
poisoning.
J. Warren Ingram is home from
the hospital and is improving slowly
but surely.
The Grant Martin residence on Wa-
ter street is now illuminated with
electric light.
Misses Catharine and Inie Roush
have accepted good positions in the
Mountain city.
David Umberger left the farm last
Monday to take a job in the railroad
yards at Altoona.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goss, of Ty-
rone, were over Sunday visitors with
relatives in town.
W. H. Gross suffered a relapse
after almost recovering from a recent
illness and is now back in his bed.
W. A. Lytle and wife motored to
Hartleton, Clinton county, and spent
the Sabbath at the Sinus Stamm
home.
A. C. Kepler is adding two new
porches to his already commodious
home in the Glades. S. E. Ward has
the job.
We are glad to note an improvement
in the condition of S. A. Dunlap, who
was stricken with paralysis while
picking apples.
Mrs. Elsie Meyers, with her three
bright youngsters, made a visit to
the home of her mother, Mrs. Sue Pe-
ters, on Main street.
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Davis have been
notified of the serious illness of their
son, J. Alfred Davis, in training at
Camp Jackson, S. C
C. M. Trostle and wife, of White
Hall, were among the mourners at
the grandmother Bierly funeral at
Milesburg on Tuesday.
W. E. McWilliams and J. B. Go-
heen spent Friday with their old
friend, Joseph Barr, whois seriously
ill at his home near the Fort.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Noll and Mrs.
Chestie McNamara, of Altoona, are
nite the Frank home at Grays-
ville, the latter’s parental home.
C. M. Dale, wife and daughter Vir-
ginia, and Mrs. Alice McGirk and
daughter Etta were Sunday after-
noon callers with relatives in town.
Mr. and Mrs. Curt Cronemiller and
Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Neidigh motored
to Camp Meade a few days ago to
spend a brief time with the soldier
boys.
John Everhart and family, of Bell-
wood, Sundayed with relatives in the
valley. John is holding down a good
position in the State Highway De-
partment which he considers better
than farming.
Deemer Nybart, a soldier boy at
Camp Grant, spent a six day’s fur-
lough among Centre and Clinton coun-
ty friends, and was guest of honor at
a dinner given by Mrs. J. F. Kimport
last Thursday.
Ralph Illingsworth spent several
days with his brother Henry and his
grandmother, Mrs. Celia Snyder, who
has been confined to bed the past two
months but is now able to go about
with the aid of a cane.
Mrs. Aaron Thomas, of Centre
Hall, spent Friday at the Ed Mayes
home. The latter is well along with
his farm work and expects to have all
his crops marketed before Old Boreas
begins to put in his best licks.
Everybody in Ferguson township is
urged to attend the Liberty loan rally
in the I. O. O. F. hall tomorrow (Sat-
urday) evening. The speakers will
be Judge Henry C. Quigley, D. F.
Kapp, George R. Meek and C. C. Har-
ris.
Daniel Irvin, of Pennsylvania Fur-
nace, is confined to bed as the result
of injuries sustained by the kick of a
horse, and is liable to be laid up for
some time to come. On Monday his
son Clarence took over the farm
stock, etc., and is now a full-fledged
farmer.
Mrs. Charlotte Kepier is arranging
to close her home and go to Pitts-
burgh for a month’s visit with her
daughter, Mrs. Graff, later going to
the home of her other daughter, Mrs.
DeVoe Meade, whose husband has
charge of the animal husbandry de-
partment at the Maryland Agricul-
tural College.
The noted evangelist, Rev. Paulson,
of Altoona, closed his series of revi-
val meetings here on Sunday even-
ing in the Methodist church. Much
good was accomplished and during
the meetings a service flag containing
seven stars was dedicated. At the
closing services $130.00 were contrib-
uted to the payment of the evangelist
for his services.
In one of our previous “Mentions”
we said that our friend, James Hoov-
er, had made a trip south for blooded
stock. He failed to find what he was
looking for but down in “Maryland,
My Maryland,” he discovered a plan-
tation that just suited his fancy and
he bought it. Mr. Hoover is tenant
on the D. G. Meek farm and has giv-
en notice that he will quit the place
this fall and move to Dixie land.
To Prosper and to Live.
To work, to help and to be helped,
to learn sympathy through suffering,
to learn faith by perplexity, to reach
truth through wonder—behold! this
is what it is to prosper, this is what
it is to live.—Phillips Brooks.
AARONSBURG.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Otto and son
| Morgan spent several days visiting
relatives in Williamsport.
Mrs. Boyd Vonada and son Harry,
after spending a week with Mrs. Vo-
nada’s father, J. H. Crouse, returned
home Saturday.
H. D. Krape left yesterday for
York, as a delegate to the United
Evangelical general conference, which
will convene there. John P. Condo
will also attend as a delegate but not
from this district.
Tuesday evening, October 1st, at
eight o’clock, a meeting was held in
the Lutheran church in the interest
of the fourth Liberty loan. There
was a good turn out of people, who
subscribed liberally for the good
cause.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Keller had as
guests on Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. El-
mer Bartley, of Bellefonte, and Mrs.
Knoffsinger and children, of near
Pleasant Gap. Mrs. Keller and baby
Gladys accompanied them home for a
visit of several weeks.
Sunday, September 29th, the United
Evangelical congregation held their
annual Harvest Home service. The
service was one of great interest.
Rev. Snyder, as is his regular custom,
delivered a splendid sermon and one
in perfect harmony with the occasion.
The decorations were splendid. The
offering went to the Evangelical home
near Lewisburg, of which most peo-
ple know something, and that to the
good of the home.
CENTRE HALL.
Miss Bessie Breon returned last
week from a short visit to Philadel-
phia.
Earl Fleming, of New York, arriv-
on Saturday for a few day’s visit with
old friends.
James Keller, a Junior at Franklin
and Marshall College, Lancaster, left
last week to resume his studies.
Misses Lynda Craig and Alvina
Showers, of Pittsbugh, visited friends
in town for a short time last week.
Mrs. Kate Bachman and sister,
Miss Barger, were guests of their
aunt, Mrs. John Spangler, for several
days.
Mrs. James Strohm received word
on Monday that her daughter, Mrs.
Ammon Burkholder, of Phillipsburg,
N. J., who had been seriously ill with
influenza, was improving slightly.
Considerable excitement was caus-
ed for a short time on Tuesday even-
ing by a tramp on crutches who asked
several persons for supper and when
he received it became abusive because
it was not what he wanted. He was
arrested and given a hearing before
‘Squire Brungard, who commtited
him to the Bellefonte jail.
OAK HALL.
Mrs. Lloyd Tate is suffering from
an abscess in the head.
Mrs. Walkins and son Charles, of
Millbrook, were Sunday visitors with
her parents in this place.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Etters and
son George were recent visitors with
relatives in Blair county.
Miss Sutter, teacher of the Oak
Hall school, made a business trip to
Lemont on Monday evening.
Mrs. Wolda Homan and son Blair
spent a few days last week with her
mother, Mrs. Sunday, at Tadpole.
Mrs. J. J. Tressler, who has been
suffering with rheumatism the past
two months, is not improving very
fast.
Miss Grace Gramley and friend,
Miss Mary Dolin, of Juniata, were
week-end visitors at the A. C. Low-
der home.
Miss Margaret Ferree, who has
been attending the Lock Haven Nor-
mal, is spending a few days with her
parents at this place.
RUNVILLE.
Farmers are busy sowing wheat.
Mr. and Mrs. James Yarnell, of
Snow Shoe, visited James Fetzer last
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. W. H. Watson and children,
of Snow Shoe, visited her sister, Mrs.
F. L. Shope, of this place.
Samuel Shirk, of Bellefonte, is
spending a few days with his broth-
er, Jacob Shirk, in this place.
Jacob Shirk, who was hurt last
Monday by being thrown from a
truck, is getting better slowly.
Mrs. Claude Lucas, of Snow Shoe,
spent last Thursday at the home of
her mother, Mrs. J. S. Witmer.
Rev. A. J. Orlidge, former pastor
of this place, was assigned to Braden-
ville and has been succeeded by Rev.
J. C. Erb, of New Berlin.
Rev. J. S. Wilson and wife, of Cas-
elman, Somerset county, spent Sun-
day calling on their many friends in
this place. Rev. Wilson will remain
at Caselman for another year.
BOALSBURG.
The County Commissioners and
clerk were in town on Saturday even-
ing.
Frank Fisher and family, of Altoo-
na, and John Fisher, of Bellefonte,
spent the week-end with their moth-
er, Mrs. A. E. Fisher.
Mrs. Peter Weber, of Huntingdon,
who has been helping to care for her
sister, Mrs. J. J. Tressler, on Cedar
creek, was a visitor in town on Sun-
day.
Mrs. Tammie Keller, of Linden
Hall, attended services in the Re-
formed church on Sunday and spent
part of the day with Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Meyer.
CASTORIA
Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fletcher.
In use for over thirty years, and
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Problem of Soldiers’ Clothes.
The soldier has little or no "choice
in clothing and the conditions of cam-
paigning are such that soldiers are
; seldom ideally dressed. The changes
of temperature that western Europe
can experience in 48 hours completely
baffle anyone who possesses a re-
stricted wardrobe and who is obliged
to live in the open. Yet the soldier
in France must be prepared for any-
thing in the line of weather.
In the British army, the seasons
are regulated by official routine rath-
er than by any slavish adherence to
climate. The first signs of spring are
Army Orders commanding that all
“special heavy winter clothing, such
as trench coats, furs and sweaters,
shall be handed in by April 1. And
handed in these comforts duly are,
whereupon the weather forthwith
becomes wintry again and the middle
of April is perhaps marked by a three
days’ blizzard and a sharp frost.
Garment by garment the winter
clothing disappears into the store-
houses,—sweaters, winter shirts,
trench gloves and mittens, leather
coats,—all inexorably return to the
Ordnance Department. During the
summer this clothing is cleaned, re-
paired, sterilized and repacked in
bales ready for the succeeding au-
tumn and winter issue.
The clothes collected are replaced
by issues of lighter stuff, more suit-
able for warm weather wear, for in
the summer, fighting is hot work, and
gunners prefer to serve their guns in
knee-length underdrawers and a shirt.
During some battles in the hottest
days the men have stripped even far-
ther than this, and worked bare to the
waist, as their grandfathers served
the guns in Nelson’s day.
Wool and flannel seem heavy stuff
for summer wear, but the British ar-
my is old in experience and knows the
best all-round materials. Cotton,
though excellent for comfort, is said
to swell the sick lists rapidly, for
when soaked through with perspira-
tion it dries in such a way to chill the
wearer, while the heavier wool,
though less pleasant to wear, dries
without ill effect.
The same standard outer uniform
serves the British soldier for all con-
ditions of marching. It does not
shrink or get hard from repeated
washing, and it is extraordinarily
durable.
British army clothing may not be
handsome or even well cut, but it is
most carefully designed to furnish the
maximum of practical use combined
with the first hygienic qualities. The
best testimony to its excellent quality
and design is the fact that the soldier
himself acknowledges that “ration
clothes” are the best that can be
found for army wear.
To Frighten Birds from Berry
Patches.
In many sections where berries are
grown the birds are so destructive it
frequently becomes a temptation to
the owners of the fruit to kill the
birds. The proper plan is to have
some fruits, in the way of Russian
mulberries or some other small fruits
that are not marketable, for the birds,
and they will to a great extent leave
the larger and more valuable fruits
alone. Where no such provision has
been made it is an easy matter to
frighten most of the troublesome
birds away, by erecting windwheels,
which will whirl rapidly in the breeze,
and frighten them away.
The wheels can be built with a sim-
ple cross made of strips 1x2 inches,
and two or three feet long, with lids
of candy pails attached to each of the
four ends, with a thin strip under the
lid at one edge of the two-inch strip,
to make the surface of the lid at a
certain angle. These catch the wind,
and if care has been taken to proper-
ly balance these crossed lids, they will
revolve smoothly and rapidly on a
large nail or spike driven into a cross
arm on an upright, after holes slight-
ly larger than the nails have been
drilled through the cross arms exact-
ly in the center.
These lids may be painted different
bright colors, or cheap mirrors placed
on the surface. The flashes of sun-
light reflected from the mirrors will
be like flashes of lightning in every
direction, as the angle on which they
are mounted will throw the reflec-
tions in every direction.
To increase the effectiveness of
these useful devices, hang a string of
sleighbells in such a position that one
of the arms will shake it slightly each
time it passes around, and the noise
combined with the bright colors and
flashes of light will surely keep the
birds away from the berry patch.
——Subsecribe for the “Watchman.”
Reads Like a Fairy
Tale, but Truth is
Stranger than
Fiction.
Had Almost Given Up Hope.
“I give Goldine praise for what it
has done for me. I had rheumatism
for over ten years. I had almost
given up hope of ever being better
but some way I felt confidence in
Goldine almost from the start. The
first bottle gave me such relief that
I felt as though I had a new lease on
life. I hope all that have or are suf-
fering as I did will try it. I surely
cannot praise it too highly.
Certainly this will prove to those
who have not taken Goldine what
wonderful results are obtained in giv-
ing Goldine a full and thorough trial.
You will never regret it as thousands
praise the day they found Goldine.
Goldine can be secured at Green’s
Pharmacy, Bellefonte, Pa., where
they will be glad to tell you what it
has done for others.
GOLDINE—Memorize the name.
63-39
Business Must Finance the War.
“More business than-usual”—that’s
the slogan that will-win the war. It
is the business of advertising to keep
the dollar at work. How are we going
to keep dollars at work at a time
when the industrial resources and
business energies of the people are
being drafted for the war? Adver-
tising is the answer. The government
has shown its faith in the power of
advertising by making use of it on a
scale of magnitude never before at-
tempted in this or any other country.
It is the business of advertising to
pull idle dollars out of their hiding
places and put them to work. If this
is the business of advertising in nor-
mal times, then advertising has a job
now that is collossal in its propor-
tions. Advertising must not only sell
the Liberty bonds, the war savings
stamps and the Red Cross, but must
keep business from languishing, for,
after all, it is big business and little
business that must “finance” the war.
If there is no business how can we
“finance” the war? We cannot “fi-
nance” it out of our savings; that
idea is fallacious. We can only make
money by spending money. If we
stop producing things, and selling
things, and buying things, and mere-
ly depend upon our savings, we will
soon reach the bottom of the box and
the next government loan will find us
without any money with which to buy
bonds. .
“But,” says the economist fresh
from the cloistered monasteries of
learning, “if all the productive ener-
gies and resources of the country are
diverted to the business of war, it is
impossible for business to go on as
usual.”
We don’t want business to go on as
usual. We must do more business
than usual. As a matter of fact, we
have only scratched the surface, so
far as the productive power of this
country is concerned. We could act-
ually make everything needed for the
war and at the same time increase
our productive capacity in all other
lines a hundred fold.
Don’t put up the shutters or pull
down the sign. Business must go
right on or we will lose the war—and
then Germany will take up business
where we left off.
And if business must go right on,
advertising must go right on, for ad-
vertising is the most important fac-
tor in merchandising. Every dollar
must be kept at work. We must
save, but not hoard. An idle dollar
in the bank is a lazy, unproductive
dollar. It is the function of adver-
tising to pull these idle dollars out of
the bank and put them to work. It is
the business of advertising to in-
crease the earning power of every
dollar in all lines of industry to the
end that the people may finance the
war with the least drain upon the
country’s resources and with the least
interruption to normal activities—
Pittsburgh Dispatch.
Supply of Trained Nurses Ample for
U. S. Needs.
New York.—There will be enough
nurses to care for the sick and wound-
ed of America’s army of 5,000,000
next year, according to a statement
made by Miss Adelaide Nutting,
chairman of the committee of nurs-
ing of the committee of National De-
fense.
She said that, whereas Surgeon
General Gorgas had called for 25,000
graduate nurses by next January,
27,000 already had been enrolled by
the Red Cross and 16,000 of these
actually inducted into military serv-
ice.
—Subsecribe for the “Watchman.”
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Blood and Nerves
Best and Most Economical Treatment
for Combination of Ailments.
_ Impure, impoverished, iron-lack-
ing blood and weak, unsteady, under-
nourished nerves form a combination
of ailments that is most successfully
treated with Hood’s Sarsaparilla and
Peptiron.
Taken in conjunction, one before
eating and the other after, these two
great medicines supplement each oth-
er, and form the most economical
treatment—Hood’s Sarsaparilla for
scrofula, rheumatism, ecatarrh, dys-
pepsia, loss of appetite, that tired
feeling; Peptiron for anemia, tired
nerves and exhaustion.
In cases where there is biliousness
or constipation, Hood’s Pills give
Doms relief. Sold by all druggists.
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 can not do in the most satis-
factory manner, and at Prices consist-
ent with the class of work. Call on or
communicate with this of ,
Get the Best Meats.
. 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,
You save nothing by bu;
High Street. 34-34-1y. Beliefonte, Pa.
X Y} ‘adles! Ask your Dragelst for
t (£0) Ohi.ches-ier's ‘Diamond Bran d
WEE Pills in ed and-Giold metallic
& Y boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon.
Take ther. B
7 Devcon. Auk for OILI-ONEAT
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for
years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
The Negroes and the Balloon.
_ A Southern man of whom we read
in Everybodys tells of a balloon as-
cension made from Charleston one hot
summer afternoon. A thunder-storm
came up. The balloonist, amid buck-
ets of rain, the roar of thunder, and
the flash of lightning, was blown
about like a thistledown. On toward
midnight he found himself over a
plantation and threw out his anchor
—a grapnel at the end of a long rope.
_ It happened that a Negro had died
in one of the huts of this plantation.
The funeral was to take place in the
morning. A dozen friends of the de-
ceased sat in the soft summer night
before the hut, telling ghost-stories.
Suddenly in the darkness above
them they heard strange noises—a |
flapping, as of great wings, menacing
cries. And they saw dimly a form-
less black shape.
All but one man ran. This one
man, as he cowered on his stool, had
he ill luck to be seized by the grap-
nel.
The grapnel, going at a great pace,
whirled him up for four or five feet
in the air, and jerked him along at
the rate of fifteen miles or so an
hour.
“Oh, Massa,” he yelled, squirming
and kicking in that strange flight.
“I’s not de one! I’se not de cawpse!
Henny? in de house dah! In de house
ah!
~ ORVISTON.
William Jones Jr., who has been
very ill, is improving steadily.
Mr. and Mrs. Garland Patterson
are rejoicing over the arrival of a lit-
tle daughter, about two weeks ago.
Congratulations, “Preach.”
Mrs. Rebecca Woomer is here to
spend the winter with her daughter,
Mrs. Rickard. “Grand-ma’” is a wel-
come addition to the Upper Works
society.
Medical.
Renewed |
Testimony
No one in Bellefonte who suffers |
backache, headaches, or distressing |
urinary ills can afford to ignore this |
Bellefonte woman’s twice-told story. |
It is confirmed testimony that no:
Bellefonte resident can doubt.
Mrs. J. C. Johnson, 365 E. Bishop
St. 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 nearly fall. I got Doan’s
Kidney Pills at Green’s Pharmacy
and two boxes did me more good than
anything else I had previously tried.
The backache and pains disappeared
and my kidneys became normal.
now feel better in every way.”
LASTING RESULTS.
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-
nent.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milbu
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 63-39
LET US
Solve Your
Heating
Problem
Thousands Of
Satisfied Users
in city, town and
country testify to the
wonderful efficiency an
economy of the Caloric
Pipeless Furnace.
We've a book of remarkable
letters written by Caloric owners
20) not i one is i 3 wee ot
an ut praise for the Caloric.
We'd Like to show you the
The Original Patented Pipeless Furnace
and have you read some of the letters
in this > :
Comein and investigate this furnace
MAIR that heats through one
ANE ah register. It'sa
The POTTER-HOY
Hardware Co.
TRI,
Attorneys-at-Law.
KLINE WOODRING—Attorney-at-La 11
fonte, Pa. Practicesin Za Law Bel .
Room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 51-1y
B. SPANGLER.-Attorney-at-Law. Practice
in all the Courts. Consultation in English
or German. Office in Crider’s Pept
Bellefonte, Pa nge.
S. TAYLOR-Asiorges and Counsellor at
w. Office in Temple Court, Belle
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at-
tended to promotly. 40-46
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given all
legal business entrusted to his care. Offi
ces—No. 5 East Hieh street. 57-44.
M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law and Jus-
tice of the Peace. All professional busi-
ness will receive prompt attention. Office
on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y
G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law. Consul-
tation in English and German. Office
in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 58-5
Physicians.
GLENN, M. D,, Ph d Surgeon,
State College, Centre county, Pa. Sic
-4
Wh 2
INSURANCE!
Fire and Automobile Insurance at a
reduced rate.
62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent.
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
bs hadin a few mines aay time. In ad-
ion I have a complete t ared
furnish Soft Dri 4 PE repara 2
POPS,
SODAS,
SARSAPARILLA,
SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC..
for pic-nics, families and the public gener-
ally all of which are es 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
preferred occupation, u house,
eeping, over eighteen years of age
moral and physical condition may
insure under this policy.
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, Fa,
3 50-21.
Good Health
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky
water-fixtures, foul sewerage, or escaping
, you can’t have good Health. air you
Breathe is poisonous; your system becomes
poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come.
SANITARY PLUMBING
is the kind we do. _It’sthe only kind’ you
. Wedon't trust this work to
QuRht to a rimen are Skilled Mechanics,
no better anywhere. Our
| Material and
Fixtures are the Best
heap or inferior article in our entire
dee 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 trv
Archibald Allison,
Bellefonte, Pa.
62-35
Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa
56-14-1v.