Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 25, 1918, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., October 25, 1918.
County Correspondence
items of Interest Dished up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PINE GROVE MENTION.
Allen Burwell is off duty, nursing
a broken finger on his left hand.
Ralph Reed, of Gallitzin, has been
visiting his father, J. I. Reed, of east
Main street.
The receipts at the Corl & Walker
cider press for one week’s cider mak-
ing were $60.00.
We are glad to note
ment in S. A. Dunlap,
be around again. :
Our mutual friend, W. E. Reed, is
locomotin’ on crutches on account of
a badly sprained knee.
Mr. and Mrs. Sinus Reish are open
for congratulations over the arrival
of a baby boy. No. 3
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Kepler spent
several days last week on a shopping
trip to the Mountain city.
Farmer and lumberman George
‘Boal Thompson, of Alto, transacted
business in town on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Bierly were en-
tertained at dinner on Sunday at the
William Yocum home at Erbtown.
Our public schools were closed last
week on account of the Spanish influ-
enza but were reopened on Monday.
John McWilliams and family, of
Johnstown, are visitors at the Grand-
pa McWilliams home at Rock Springs.
Master Joseph Adair McCracken
came in from Johnstown for a week’s
outing at the McCracken home in the
Glades.
Mrs. Ida Williams was called to Ty-
rone last week on account of the ill-
ness of Mrs. Fred Williams with in-
fluenza.
Earl Smith came down from Altoo-
na to spend the Sabbath with his
father-in-law, W. D. Port, who is crit-
jeally ill.
Bart Ward and Frank Hunsinger
are included in the bunch of carpen-
ters erecting the soldiers’ barracks at
State College.
William Grant Gardner has been
appointed health officer of east Fer-
guson township, in place of W. D.
Port resigned.
Miss Mary Goss, one of Tyrone’s
corps of school teachers, is spending
her thirty day’s vacation among rel-
atives in the valley.
Miss Mary Kepler, who is holding
down a job in the war risk insurance
bureau at Washington, spent a ten
day’s furlough among her friends
here.
After spending a month with his
mother and other relatives in this vi-
cinity, Joseph A. Goss has returned
to his clerical position with the Pitts-
burgh Steel company, very much im-
proved in health.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bloom, of
Gatesburg, are receiving congratula-
tions over the arrival of a sweet lit-
tle baby girl, Frances Bates Bloom.
This makes two boys and two girls in
the Bloom family.
Rev. James Wilson, a Y. M. C. A.
worker in France, is back in the
States on a furlough and spent a
short time here recently. He is the
picture of health and looks as if he
enjoyed the work over there.
Mr. and Mrs. Newton C. Neidigh
and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Tyson attend-
ed the reception given to the newly-
weds, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Brey, of
Greensburg, at the W. H. Kanarr
home near Tyrone, last Friday.
J. H. Everts and wife and Harry
Collins, of Pittsburgh, and Prof. Paul
Martz and wife, of Cleveland, Ohio,
have been here visiting friends and
gathering in a supply of chestnuts,
which are quite plentiful hereabouts.
Among the flu victims here are Mr.
and Mrs. Ed. Martz. Mr. Martz is
the very efficient mail carrier on the
star route between State College and
Pine Grove Mills and while he is ill
Hop J. W. Kepler is handling the
mail.
Every man who had a gun or could
borrow one was out for squirrels on
Monday morning but found them very
scarce. At that Lester Hoy bagged
6, the limit, Sam Hess got 5, J. W.
Kepler 4 and S. S. Krumbine one that
was snow white (an albino).
Comrade W. A. Roberts came up
from Washington to attend the annu-
al reunion of the 45th regiment,
Penna. Vols, not knowing that the
gathering had been postponed on ac-
count of the epidemic of Spanish in-
fluenza. But he took advantage of
the trip to spend a day with the
“Watchman” correspondent (W. H.
Fry) and also visited the J. F. Kim-
port and Samuel Roberts homes at
Boalsburg, as well as relatives at
Milesburg. Comrade Roberts was se-
the improve-
who is able to
Medical.
That Morning
; Lameness
“If you are lame every morning, and
suffer urinary ills, there must be a
cause. Often it’s weak kidneys. To
strengthen the weakened kidneys and
avert more serious troubles, use
Doan’s Kidney Pills. You can rely
on Bellefonte testimony.
Mrs. J. T. Gordon, 130 E. Beaver
St., Bellefonte, says: “I, and anoth-
er of my family, found great benefit
from Doan’s Kidney Pills. We got
them at Parrish’s Drug Store. I was
troubled with backache and a dull,
constant ache through the loins. I
was in misery at times and mornings
was sore and lame. I dreaded to be-
in my housework. Doan’s Kidney
ills made my kidneys normal and
relieved the backache. I have had no
return of the trouble and I consider
Doan’s a fine kidney remedy.”
verely wounded at the Battle of the
Wilderness but recovered and now,
notwithstanding his four-score years
he is ‘still young in spirit. Mr. Rob-
erts is employed in the Treasury De-
partment at Washington where he hag
been for twenty-seven years. He had
three brothers in the war, one of
whom was killed in an auto wreck at
Cincinnati two years ago.
At a special meeting of the Penns-
valley Lodge, No. 276 1. O. O. F., on
October 11th, the newly-elected offi-
cers for the ensuing year were install-
ed by district deputy grand master E.
S. Erb as follows:
Noble Grand—A. L. Bowersox.
Vice Grand—J. B. Walls.
Rec. Sec’y—W. S. Illingsworth.
Fi’l Sec’y—D. S. Peterson.
Warden—W. H. Fry.
Conductor—J. H. Bailey.
Chaplain—Dr. R. M. Krebs.
R. S. to N. G.—J. H. McCracken.
L. S. to N. G.—A. S. Bailey.
Outside Guard—Charles M Ross.
Inside Guard—C. H. Meyers.
BOALSBURG.
A. E. Gingrich spent Friday in
Bellefonte.
Dr. Longwell, of Centre Hall, was
in town on Monday.
Boalsburg went “over the top” in
the Liberty loan drive.
Cyrus Confer and family moved to
State College last week.
A. A. Dale .lsq., of Bellefonte,
spent Monday night in town.
G. E. Meyer and Ralph Rishel made
a trip to Altoona on Tuesday.
Mrs. Margaret Rhoades, of Cur-
wensville, was a visitor in town over
Sunday.
Miss Sara J. Keller, who was con-
fined to her room a week, is able to
be out again.
Austin Dale and daughter Cathe-
rine, transacted business in Bellefonte
on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reitz and son
Henry, of Stonevalley, were week-end
visitors in town.
Russell Ishler, Riley Stover and
Charles Hosterman, students at Penn
Beate, spent Sunday at their homes in
own.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harter, who
have been ill with influenza, are re-
covering. No other cases have been
reported in Boalsburg.
D. W. Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
man Slagle and baby and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Faxon and children, are
camping in the mountain for a week.
Mrs. Henry Gingrich and daughter,
Miss Bertha; Mrs. Alfred Lee and
daughters, Mrs. Houtz and Miss
Eloise, of Cedar Creek, were in town
on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Meek, of Wad-
dle; Harold Hackenberg and sister,
Miss Geraldine, and Miss Luella Gep-
hart, of Rebersburg, were visitors at
the home of A. J. Hazel recently.
The body of Esther, wife of James
Jacobs, and her infant daughter, were
brought from Wilmington, Del., on
Monday for burial in the Brown plot,
Mrs. Jacobs being a grand-daughter
of Mrs. E. E. Brown, with whom she
made her home until a few years ago.
Men Should Skip This.
A little girl wrote the following
composition on men:
“Men are what women marry.
They drink and smoke and swear, but
don’t go to church. Perhaps if they
wore bonnets they would. They are
more logical than women, also more
zoological. Both men and women
sprang from monkeys, but the wom-
en sprang farther than the men.”—
Ladies’ Home Journal.
Hood’s Sarsaparillia.
A Real Iron Tonic
Puts Iron Into the Blood Where it is
a Prime Necessity.
You must have an abundance of
iron in your blood if you would have
the vigor necessary to overcome ob-
stacles, take the initiative, push
ahead and bring things to pass.
Iron is a valuable medicine; it gives
strength, stamina, endurance.
You can have more iron, better col-
or, steadier nerves, by taking Pept-
iron, a real iron tonic, which will
make a gratifying change in your
condition in a very short time.
Peptiron combines iron with nux,
celery, pepsin and other valuable in-
gredients, and is in_chocolate-coated
pills. Pleasant to take and easily as-
similated. Of druggists or direct
tom C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass.
3-40
emu
FINE JOB PRINTING
o—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There is no style of work, from the
cheapest *‘ t
er’ 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, Cail on or
ce
communicate with this
Get the Best Meats.
You save nothing by buying poor, thin
or gristly meats. I use only the
LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE
and 1 customers with the fresh-
est, chorpost, t blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no
* higher than poorer meats are elsewhere.
I alwavs 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. Beliefonte, Pa.
DIAMOND BRAND P|
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 63-42
for
years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable
OLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
Green’s Pharmacy, Bellefonte, Pa.’
The POTTER-HOY
Hardware Co.
AARONSBURG.
Thomas Hull, who is employed in
Winburne, spent several days with
his family in the burg.
H. C. Stricker and daughters, Geor-
gie and Lulu, who are all employed in
the munition plant at Burnham, spent
Sunday at their home in our burg.
Messrs. Frank W. Miller and Davis
Arnold, of Lewisburg, on Saturday
morning enroute to State College to
see the Penn State-Bucknell football
game, made a short call at the Thom-
as Hull home on North 2nd street.
_ William Haffley and family, all hav-
ing been ill with the exception of one
child, are now improving nicely. Mr.
Haffley is able to be out doors, Mrs.
Haffly is able to be out of bed and it
is hoped will soon be quite well again.
Mrs. Alice Eisenhauer and son Har-
ry, and Mrs. C. E. Musser spent Sat-
urday in Bellefonte with Mrs. Eisen-
hauer’s son Merrill. They brought
Mr. and Mrs. Eisenhauer and son
Francis home with them to spend
Sunday.
On Monday morning H. A. Acker
received a message that his son-in-
law, John Goodman, of Yeagertown,
had died. Up to this time the writer
has learned no particulars. Mr. and
Mrs. Acker were taken over on Mon-
day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Herman, of
State College, spent Saturday after-
noon at the home of Mrs. Herman's
brother, ’Squire A. S. Stover and
family. On Monday afternoon Mr.
Stover went to State College, where
he will do paper hanging during the
present week.
KEEP YOURSELF WELL.
If you are sick you should make it
your business to get well, and to get
well quickly, and good and well too.
Neither this world nor the world to
come has any use for sickly people.
Heaven never intended us to be sick-
ly and we never would be were we to
live right. Really we ought to be
ashamed of ourselves for being sick-
ly. It is as much a duty to keep our-
selves in good physical condition as
to maintain good momals.
A SOUND MIND IN A SOUND
BODY.
These two were intended to be
cempanions through life. At least
this is the order of Nature, and if we | [Uc etc.” Inspect the High Art line /o-day. i
are to depart from it we will have to ir
bear the consequences, let them be Ee aT LE
what they may. If you are not well the : FL
in body there may be a possibility of Sh]
you, too, finding the necessary relief | Sry =
in one of the successfully used reme- Le ia
dies of the day—“Goldine.” Here is ® ® Sh
a Dreparstion, $hat goes right to She Ll P Lo
seat of trouble and helps to restore |E . I
wasted tissues and build up the sys- i Allegheny St. 53-4 BELLEFONTE, A Lh
tem as few remedies do. Made from | 2p = ELE EE
roots, barks, berries and such simple | EUSICUSIEENSISIELSUSISUEYCUEUELELLEL CULE ENSURE ES
herbs that were used long ago with
SRSA
CLC]
aI
QUA MANNAR 4 BROR. Lim tiS0 MR
Early Buying is Wise Buying
ET
Y® are going to have a new suit this Fall, oh
of course ; therefore consider the im- 4
portance of buying it early. 2
~H 1
Our assortment for this season has just been LE
received. Come in today and you will have =
the opportunity of selecting from the widest =
variety that a full assortment provides. We i
offer an up-to-the-minute stock of i
| U
High-Art Clothes
MADE BY STROUSE & BROS., INC., BALTIMORE, MD. Tc
This season our showing of this famous line on
is particularly attractive because it contains TO
a most pleasing array of fabrics in styles to I.
suit every type at prices that are exceedingly As
moderate. Le
=
Remember the old saying ‘Never put off, Oc
i]
success. In fact, a tonic and nervine
that seldom fails in proving its
worth.
You will always find it for sale at
63-42
so sm ——— ——
LET US
Solve Your
Heating
Problem
Thousands Of
Satisfied Users
¥ in city, town and
i country testify to the
wonderful efficiency and
f economy of the Calosic
Pipsless Furnace.
e've a book of remarkable
letters written by Caloric owners
and not in one is there a word of
anything but praise for the Caloric.
e'd like to show you the
Potato Diggers
The late crop of Potatoes promises to be good and
with the labor question very unsettled, there will
be a demand for efficient Potato Diggers. The
Success Jr. Potato Digger
is efficient. It not only lays potatoes on the ground
but every potato on top of the ground and in plain
view of the pickers. The price is right. Supply
is small so let us have your order early. They are
extensively used in this vicinity and have given
satisfaction to every user. If you are in need of an
elevator machine, we can fix you up.
WIARD PLOWS PERRY HARROWS
NEW IDEA MANURE SPREADERS
BROOKVILLE WAGONS FERTILIZERS
MISSOURI GRAIN DRILLS.
Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store,
DUNLOP STREET 62-47 BELLEFONTE, PA.
TRADE
MARK
LORI
The Original Patented Pipeless Furnace
and have you read some of the letters
in this book.
Comeinand investigate this furnace
er R that heats through one
register. It'sa
1
e h
Bellefonte, Pa.
62-35
PNAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAIAAAAI IS PIS SP POS PIPPIN
PAULIN ALAS AAA ASP AA AAAS AAPL A APPS PSPSPS
INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS
ILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING
3-4 Ton for Light Hauling
Big Truck for Heavy Loads
“Greatest Distance for Least Cost”
OANA
GEORGE A. BEEZER,
BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR.
Attorneys-at-Law.
mm
KLINE WOODRING — Attorney-at-Law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courte, ot
~1y
B. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. Practice
in all the Courts. Consultation in Eng-
lish or German. Office in Crider’s Ex-
change, Bellefonte, Pa. 40-22
fice room 18 Crider’s Exchange.
S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at
Law. Office in Temple Court, Belle.
fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at-
tended to promptly. 40-46
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.
M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at-Law and Jus-
tice of the Peace. 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., Physician and Si
State College, Centre county, Pa. ce
INSURANCE!
Fire and Automobile Insurance at a
reduced rate.
62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent.
wm
ESTAURANT.
Bellefonte now has a Fi
taate Heionte now has a First-Class Res-
Meals are Served at All Hours
Steaks, Chops, Roasts, te
half shell or in apy Siyle desired: Sand
s, , an ythin, ta
be had in a jew min utes any time. Ia ade
dition I ha
i ngysa Cpins bit Depa ie
POPS,
SODAS,
SARSAPARILLA,
ab SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC..
r pic-nics, families
A The Tulhg Boner
the purest syrups and properly carbonated.
C. MOERSCHBACHER,
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.
50-32-1y.
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 ry
5, 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,
eeks)
limit 52 wi
10 per week, partial disability,
(limit 26 weeks)
PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR,
payable quarterly if desired.
Larger or smaller amounts in proportion
Any person, male or female, engaged in a
Srsferred occupation, includin g house
ping, 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 Agi, the strongest and Most Ex
tensive Line of Solid Companies represent-
ed by any agency in tral Pennsylvania
H. E. FENLON,
50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Fa;
Good Health
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER
Vien you hevg dripping steam pipes, leaky
water- , foul sew: or
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
I the Kind we do,
hy edon
Dor ur 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 r, unsanitary
work and the lowest grade of finishings. For
the Best Work try
Archibald Allison,
0 ite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa
Post 56-14-1v. ie,