Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, December 06, 1918, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., December 6, 1918.
County Correspondence
items of Interest Dished up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
ORVISTON.
Clay Shope, who has been ill, is
able to work again.
Clayton Poorman had two sieges of
flu but is again on duty at the upper
works.
Influenza is on the wane. The only
deaths here were William Jones Sr.,
Tyler Fravel and a child of Forrest
Emenhizer. Considering the fact
that almost four hundred all told
were ill, the percentage of deaths
was small.
The Floyds entertained the people
of Orviston, Monday evening. Their
acts consisted of high-class magic and
sleight of hand. The Antrim enter-
tainment course was a source of
pleasure last ye: ;, and promises to
be better this year.
Mrs. Margaret Jones and little son
William left for Wilkes-Barre to
spend a few weeks with her mother-
in-law, Mrs. John R. Jones. Mrs.
Jones has not been well since the
death of her husband, but news from
Mrs. John R. Jones that she was far
from well sent her to console the be-
reaved mother, and assist her.
A BIRTHDAY SURPRISE.
Miss Grace Croll was pleasantly
surprised by quite a number of her
young friends springing a party on
er. Mrs. Charles Young was hos-
tess. The occasion was Miss Grace’s
sixteenth birthday. Those present
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young, at
whose home the party was held; Mr.
and Mrs. George Croll, Mr. and Mrs.
Brion Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Ola Cy-
hert and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton B.
atson. The Misses Abbie and Char-
lotte Herr, Bessie and Verna Shank,
Lois and Dorris Young, Mary Croll,
Josephin Poorman, Velma Poorman,
Viola Poorman, Mae Lamison, Thel-
ma Nelson, Kathryn Diem and Gladys
Marshall. Messrs. Ward Walker, Joe
Flack, William and Delbert Barnhart,
Willis and Chester Thompson, Ben
and Clair Poorman, George Moyer,
Sam Schwarm, Maines Bower, Lloyd
Heverley, William Johnson, Arthur
Crotzer, Oscar Peterson, Alex Hume,
and Walter Shank, and the following
juniors who felt as big as the biggest
and enjoyed themselves quite as
much. Theo. Young,
Beatrice Croll, Roy and Billy Cyphert,
George Nelson and Charles Young Jr. |’
Everyone enjoyed themselves, a
dainty lunch was served, games were
played and the guests departed wish-
Miss Grace many happy returns.
She received many useful, beautiful
and appropriate gifts.
LEMONT.
The steam thresher is busy getting
the grain ready for market.
Jack Mitchell butchered the largest
hogs that have been killed in this
community so far this fall.
Mrs. Frank Brandt and two sons,
of Altoona, visited at the home of her
father, B. F. Hoy, this week and help-
ad to butcher.
Most of the people are done butch-
ering and the hogs were in fine order
and produced lots of lard, which is a
good thing as it is surely needed in
most parts of the world.
Rev. C. C. Shuey, of Bellefonte,
spent Monday near town, butchering
for Fannie Shuey, and he reported
that as his fifth day this season and
that he still has two days.
Edward Williams, Martin Williams
and Charles Coblé each bagged a fine
turkey this season along the side of
Nittany mountain, but aside from that
there was very little game taken.
Rev. Thomas C. Houtz, of Selins-
grove, spent a few days visiting
among friends in these parts last
week, and preached for the Beliefonte
Lutheran congregation Sunday morn-
ing.
This town has had quite a visita-
tion of the flu, but so far only a few
have been seriously ill and it is hop-
ed that it has passed its worst stage
now as most of the sick ones are on
the mend.
The Houserville U. B. church was
epened for services on Sunday and it
is hoped that all the churches in this
community will soon be opened again,
as the Sabbaths are dull days with-
out religious services.
PLEASANT GAP ITEMS.
Mrs. R. W. Noll spent the week-end
with relatives in Altoona.
Miss Mary Corl, of Boalsburg,
spent Sunday among friends at the
ap.
Ed. Mulfinger, who is employed at
Milton, spent several days here last
week.
Miss Catherine Williams, of Benore,
is visiting with her sister, Mrs. C. K.
Stitzer.
Mrs. George Wise, of Tyrone, is
visiting with her mother, Mrs. J. A.
‘Armstrong.
Mrs. John Breon, of State College,
is visiting with her daughter, Mrs.
Charles Brown.
Our flu patients are all getting
along very nicely. No new cases
have been reported lately.
Veida Tate, who is employed at
State College, spent her Thanksgiv-
ing vacation with her parents.
Miss Marie Lambert was admitted
to the Bellefonte hospital last week
and underwent an operation for ap-
pendicitis. At this writing she is
getting along very nicely.
BOALSBURG.
Miss Mollie Hoffer is spending some
time with Miss Sara J. Keller.
Bruce Lonebarger came up from
Virginia for a ten day’s visit with his
family.
Mrs. Harry Lonebarger and fami-
ly, of State College, spent the week-
end at the home of D. W. Meyer.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brooks, of Pleas-
ant Gap, were in town on Tuesday as-
Mildred and | fort
|
sisting Jacob Meyer with his butch- |
ering.
Miss Margaret Bingaman, of Bea- |
vertown, spent a few days with
*Squire and Mrs. John Zechman.
CENTRE HALL.
William Stump has been quite ill |
with influenza for several weeks. :
Miss Helen Williams, of Beech |
Creek, is visiting friends near town.
Mrs. Elmer Miller returned last
week from a visit of several months
in the west.
Reuben Spangler and family, of
Bellefonte, were guests of Mr.
Spangler’s mother on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Stover, of Bell-
wood, were week-end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William McClenahan.
Mrs. Sara Stover recently received
word that her daughter Anna, a Red
Cross nurse, had arrived safely over-
seas.
Mrs. Laura Harper and Miss Hel-
en Harper, of Bellefonte, spent the
Thanksgiving season at the G. H. Em-
erick home.
Mrs. Brooks and children, of Ohio,
were guests during the past week of
Mrs. Brooks’ parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Breon.
Lee Frazier, who has been station-
ed at Philadelphia for some time, vis-
ited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Foster
Frazier, east of this place, last week
while on a short furlough.
Big Closed Car Year.
It is the general opinion among
motor car men that this fall and win-
ter will see the largest sale of enclos-
ed cars and winter tops in the history
of the industry. There are perfectly
logical reasons for this expected
trend.
Heretofore a large proportion of
motor car owners used to put up their
cars for the winter. Times have
changed. Motoring is now an all-the-
year-around occupation, because it hase
ceased to be regarded merely in the
classification of pleasures, and the
motor car has come into its own as a
legitimate factor of practical trans-
portation. But the drive on enclosed
cars and winter tops has received an
extra impetus due to the war. The
universal desire to speed up, to keep
going winter or summer, the necessi-
ty for every man over here doing ex-
tra work because so many of our men
are over there, has turned the atten-
tion of motorists to the advantages
of enclosed cars and winter tops. Hav-
ing decided to use motor car trans-
portation to the utmost, they look for
a car that can also give them protec-
tion and comfort. It is, after all,
a natural trend dictated by a common
sense appreciation of utility and com-
ort.
Fish Can Shock You to Death.
The marshy waters of Bera and
Rastro in South America are filled
with innumerable electric eels, which
can at pleasure discharge from every
part of their slimy, yellow-speckled
bodies a deadening shock. This spe-
cies of gymnotus is about five or six
feet in length. It is powerful enough
to kill human beings and the largest
animals when it discharges its nerv-
ous organs at one shock in a favora-
ble direction. It was once found nec-
essary to change the line of road from
Uritucu across the steppe, owing to
the number of horses which, in ford-
ing a certain rivulet, annually fell a
sacrifice to these gymnoti, which had
accumulated there in great numbers.
All other species of fish shun the vi-
cinity of these formidable creatures.
Even the angler, when fishing from
the high bank, is in dread lest an elec-
tric shock should be conveyed to him
along the moistened line.—Pathfinder.
One of the Oldest Languages.
In richness of vocabulary the Lith-
uanian language is only equaled by
the English. Many of its 75,000
words are almost identical with the
corresponding Greek, Latin or San-
skrit words. So well have some of
the primitive characteristics of the
lengusgs been preserved in the undis-
turbed backwaters of Lithuania that,
if it were possible for the Romans
and Greeks to rise from their graves,
they would, it is said, have little diffi-
culty in understanding whole sentenc-
es as spoken by the Lithuanians fo-
day, while these could just as easily
understand some of the phrases of
the Sanskrit. The language seems to
have nothing in common with the
Slavic or German. Although the
Lithuanians were surrounded for cen-
turies by Russian, German and Pol-
ish influences, they managed to pre-
serve their speech in its original pur-
ity.—Detroit News.
Asking Too Much.
The success of Samuel Gomper’s
war mission in London and Paris led
a New York labor leader to say:
“Gompers is a wonderful executive.
There’s nothing he can’t do. Some of
his followers, indeed, demand too
much of him. :
“Late or. Saturday night Gompers
was awakened by a ring at his door-
He aL on a dressing-gown
bell.
and hurried down to the door. A lit-
tle girl stood on the steps. She said
breathlessly:
“Mr. Gompers, mom says pop’s
come home drunk again, and she
wants to know if you’ll please step
round to our house and give him a
good beatin’ up.’ "—Washington Star.
The Thrift of Years.
Every man should strive to live at
least one hundred years and die all
hitched up in working harness. Many
a man feels that he would like to re-
tire at about sixty and spend the rest
of his years with nothing to_do but
lead a gold headed cane around by the
hand. It is thrifty to stay on the job
just as long as possible. Every man
should make the century plant his fa-
vorite flower and the undertaker his
worst enemy.—Thrift*Magazine.
CASTORIA
Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fietcher.
In use for over thirty years, and
The Kind You Have Always Bough.
Roads in China.
Every Chinese road is a forced con-
tribution on the part of individual
Chinaman to the public welfare. But
nothing on earth is of so little inter-
est to a Chinaman as public welfare.
That he should be compelied to make
any contribution to it is extremely
galling to him. Add to that the fact
{ that the road that is made across his
land is still counted as part of his
land when it comes to paying taxes,
and you may form some idea of the
reluctance with which the Chinese
landowner gives up his portion of the
public highway. e very sight of
neighbors and Strangers making use
of that strip of land brings the bitter-
est resentment to his bosom.
In order to lose as little soil as pos-
sible, he puts the road at the end of
his field, where the adjoining owner
must share one-half of the public do-
nation with him. But his neighbor’s
land may not be of the same length as
his, so that the two pieces of road do
not fit together well. Chinese high-
ways have a wonderful tendency to
zigzag.
The road is the exact width of the
Chinese vehicle. It is true that carts
must meet somewhere, but for such
inevitable meetings no provision is
made; in such case the drivers must
turn out on the planted field. To pre-
vent that, the owner has cut a ditch
alongside the road, as deep and as
steep as a gas-main ditch in our
cities. The driver on the road can
neither turn out for the driver he
meets; nor can he pass under or over
him. Just how the two will pass is
one of the many Chinese puzzles,
which the landowner does not think
that it is his business to work out.
Constant travel over this narrow
road causes dust, which is blown
across the near-by fields, and tram-
ples the surface of the way down
hard. Both causes lower the road
perceptibly. As soon as the rains be-
gin and the land has received its fill
of water,
seeks the lowest level—which is the
road. But one road is still lower than
another, so that the water flows in
the direction of the lower “highways.”
The higher roads form creeks, and the
lower ones collect the water into
lakes. In any case, travel is out of
the question during the rainy season.
The action of the flowing water is
not favorable to the roadbed. The
water tears away the looser seil and
cuts great gaps in the path. Gradu-
ally the roadbeds become well-nigh
impassable.
The farmer does not treuble himself
about the uneven road; he is concern-
ed with his field. In case some soil
has been carried away by the water,
he digs into the road and throws
whatever oil he can get back into his
field. It sometimes happens that a
road is lowered as much as one foot
during a single year. Next year’s
rains will work still worse havoc; but
why should the farmer worry? Pub-
lic welfare is concerned, not he. If
folks wish to travel by a better road,
they may look for one.
The obvious suggestion that roads
be built higher than the fields, fall on
deaf ears. One farmer could not do
it by himself. To find two farmers
agreeing on this one issue would be
too much to expect in China. As for
the traveling public, not one of them
would raise a finger to encourage or
assist the farmer; that would help too
many other people. The municipal
government on its part has enough
to do keeping the imperial highway
in order; rural roads are none of its
concern.
Should the Chinese villager come
to see some day that the welfare of
the many is the welfare also of the
few, and that service is worth while
according to the benefit it affords oth-
ers, these troubles will doubtless have
an end. Meanwhile, traveling in the
land of Confucius is not a pleasure,
but a penance.—Ex.
Returned Soldiers Will All be “Road
Boosters.”
Washington, D. C.—“There will be
a couple of million real ‘Road Boost-
ers’ back in the United States when
the war is over, as I think all of the
men over here appreciate how good
roads can be made invaluable. In my
mind there is no doubt that the good
roads of France saved her in two in-
stances.”
Col. Robert H. Tyndall, of the 150th
Field artillery thus writes from “over
there” to Chairman Carl G. Fisher, of
the A. A. A. Touring Board. It will
be remembered that these two were
closely associated several years ago
in the trans-continental tour from In-
dianapolis to San Francisco, at which
time much of the route of the Lincoln
Highway was decided upon. Col. Tyn-
dall is an inveterate road driver and
has covered thousands of miles of
good, bad, and indifferent American
highways. In his letter “home” he
goes on to say:
“I have seen movements of troops
made in the dark which would have
been impossible in any other country
than France. Here the roadmakers
have scientifically planted trees that
absorb drainage on the side and at
the same time shelter the highways
so as to keep them just moist enough.
Tn some instances you will find a tall
Medical.
Helpful Words
FROM A BELLEFONTE CITIZEN.
Is your back lame and painful ?
Does it ache especially after exer-
tion?
Is there a soreness in the kidney
region?
These symptoms suggest weak kid-
neys.
If so there is danger in delay.
Weak kidneys get fast weaker.
Give your trouble prompt attention.
Doan’s Kidney Pills are for weak
kidneys.
var neighbors use and recommend
em.
Read this Bellefonte testimony.
Mrs. Fred G. Houser, 10 Potter St.,
says: “I have used Doan’s Kidney
Pills and found them very beneficial,
in fact, Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me
of very serious kidney trouble. I
gladly recommend Doan’s to any one
bothered with weak kidneys.
. Price 60c., at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Houser had. Foster-Milbu
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 63-48
the remaining moisture
ily measure distances with the eye.
“One of the great things they do
here is to repair a road and even
make an entirely new surface without
interfering with the stream of traffic.
In one campaign we were in, over a
thousand trucks passed my regiment,
each carrying 22 soldiers. This was
for reinforcement on the flank and
was done without the slightest confu-
sion. One does not find here the lit-
tle holes that cause so much trouble
remaining in a road.
places are
drained, right up tothe front line al-
most.”
The Art of Tattoo—Ancient and
Modern.
Our fighting men will come back |
from Europe, especially those of the |
navy, strangely adorned with tattoo- |
ing. It is bound to be so. Sailors and
soldiers to a less extent, have devel- |
oped this curious fad since times long |
prehistoric.
Consider the jack tar for example.
One of the first things he learns on
entering the service is that a pig's
foot tattooed on his left instep will |
protect him from drowning. This is!
more than ordinarily important in,
these days of submarining.
The antiquity of tattooing is evi-
denced by its almost universal em-
ployment gong
In New Guinea the young women are
tattooed all over their bodies, their
faces being similarly treated after
marriage.
In the Solomon Islands a girl is not
eligible for marriage unless she has
poplar standing higher than the rest
of the trees bordering the road, at!
every kilometer, so that you can read- |
The potted |
immediately filled and |
primitive peoples.
Aliens Lose $200,000,000.
| business in which German-owned in-
terests are to be sold to “100 per cent, |
Americans” in January and February |
was announced by the alien property |
custodian. With concerns previously
listed, the businesses to be sold are
valued at more than $200,000,000.
Included in the new list are the
German-American Lumber company,
of Millville, Fla., which was said to
be an important link in the German
economic .espionage system in the
United States, but is now building
ships for the United States Shipping
Board; Lutz Shipping company, also
. of Millville; Elly Coal company, of
Girard, Ill., owning 30,000 acres of Ill-
inois coal lands; American Lava com-
. pany, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Dr. Jea-
ger Sanitary Woolen System compa-
ny, International Hide and Skin com-
pany and Gerstendorfier Brothers,
color manufacturers, New York.
The custodian also announced that
he will sell here within the next two
weeks $1,000,000 worth of pearls, ru-
bies, emeralds, tea, leather, motor-cy-
cles, cylinder oil and other commodi-
ties formerly enemy owned.
——When Elsie came home froma
neighbor’s house munching a choco-
late, her mother said reprovingly,
| “Now, Elsie, how many times have 1
told you not to ask Mrs. Gray for
chocolates 7” :
“1 didn’t ask her for any,” replied
| Elsie calmly. “I know where she
. keeps them.”
been tattooed. The girls of Borneo !
are thus adorned from waist to knees
in most elaborate fashion; likewise |
their hands, feet and ankles.
In Burmah, under the last King,
every male was required by royal |
edict to be tattooed from waist to |
knees; and it was customary for the
girls to have their tongues tattooed |
with charms to attract the men.
Widows in the Hawaiian Islands,
up to very recent years, had the
names of their dead husbands tattoo-
ed on their tongues. Egyptian wom-
en today have their lips pricked blue |
for becomingness. And in Yezo, the
northernmost island of the Japanese
archipeligo, the fashion demands that
girls shall greatly enlarge the appar-
ent size of their mouths by tattooing
in red about the lips.
Most remarkable of all tattooers,
however, are the New Zealanders,
whose men of rank have always been
distinguished by an ornamentation of
this kind covering the body from head
to foot. The face, dug out with gash- |
es inflicted by a sharp shell—the cuts
prevented from healing by rubbing
ocher and other colored earths into
them—presents the appearance of a
carven mask adorned in complex pat-
tern with two or more tints. The
whole effect is that of an elaborate
scrollwork, which is supposed to be
highly ornamental.
Airplane Mail Popular.
An average of 1,000 packets of |
mail are now being carried regularly
every day between Vienna and Kiev
by airplane. The distance between
the two cities is 750 miles and the
claim is made that this is the longest
route now being, operated in any part
of the world. The trip takes from 10
to 12 hours, compared to 40 hours by
train. It is made in four stages, the
intermediate stops being Cracow,
Lemberg and Proskurow.—Ex.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
N o Tonic
Like Hood’s
Sarsaparilla for a Time Like This,
After Influenza, the Grip.
When purified blood, rebuilt
strength and regulated bowels are es-
sential.
In the after-effects of influenza, the
grip and other prostrating diseases,
ood’s Sarsaparilla has remarkable
health-helping effect.
It expels the poisons that have
weakened and depleted the blood,
causing pallor, anemia, flabby flesh
and lax muscles, It is the standard
blood remedy with a successful rec-
ord of nearly fifty years. :
Many people—it is really astonish-
ing how many—need a fine, gentle,
easy cathartic in these trying times.
We recommend Hood’s Pills, used in
the best families, and equally effec-
tive with delicate women or robust
men. Easy to take, easy to operate.
FINE JOB PRINTING
o—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There is no style of work, from the
cheapest ger” to the finest
BOOK WORK,
that we car: not do in the most satis-
factory manner, and at Prices consist-
ent with the class of work. Call on or
communicate with this office’
EE —————————————
Get the Best Meats.
You save nothing by buying poor, thin
or gristly meats. I use only the
LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE
and supply my customers with the fresh-
est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no
higher than poorer meats are elsewhere.
I 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.
boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon.
C / THE DIAMOND BRAND,
HO Tadies! Ask your Drug ist for
o ) ©hi-ches-ter’s Diamond Bran
W'ake no other. Buy of fo
if Beugoisi, Ask for OI J-OI ES.
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for
4 years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable
¥ilis in Bed and Gold metallic
OLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
|
| WHEN THE COAST ARTILLERY
; SPEAKS.
! We Expect Death for Our Enemies—
Here is a Word from One Who
Has Served His Coumtry and
Tells of an Eenmy Con-
quered.
Mr. J. S. Pettingill, ex-member of
49th Co., Coast Artillery Corps, now
residing in Lock Haven, Pa. says:
“For twelve years I suffered from
nervous indigestion. I had it.so bad
that I could scarcely eat anything
without bringing on headaches and
palpitation of the heart. I was trou-
bled with gas in the stomach and was
very nervous. I had not been able to
do any hard work for two years.
I started taking Goldine upon the
advice of a friend and am now work-
ing in the brick yard and though Ido
the heaviest kind of work I stand it
fine and feel better than I have in
years.”
Mr. J. S. PETTINGILL,
Lock Haven, Pa.
For sale at Green’s Pharmacy,
Bellefonte, Pa.
New York.—An additional list of |
tended to promptly.
J
ces—No. 5 East High street.
We
—
Attorneys-at-Law.
KLINE WOODRING — Attorney-at-Law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts, Of-
fice room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 5l-ly
B. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. Practice
in all the Courts. Consultation in Eng-
sh or German Office in Criders Bue
1i
change, Bellefonte, Pa.
S. TAYLOR —Attorney and Counsellor at
aw. Office in Temple Court, Belle.
fonte, Pa. f legal
All kinds o business at-
40-46
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given all
legal business entrusted to his BB
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., Physician and Su
State College, Centre county, Pa, | fice
at his residence. 35-41
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 AllHours
Steaks, Chops, Roasts, ters on th
half shell or in any a an
wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can
1€ hadin a few injmites any Hie: Ji
on I have a complete plan ared to
furnish Soft Drinks in ar 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 gyrups 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
|
LET US
Solve Your
Heating
Problem
Thousands Of
in city, town ad
country testify to the
wonderful efficiency an
economy of the oric
Pipsjess 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.
We'd like to show you the
and have you read some of the letters
in this book
Comein and investigate this furnace
that heats through one
i ygsister, It'sa wi
ET 0 BT e happy ownersays he
‘ PR can get up-
I i We { stairs by A, % and
CATED, le an len”
mh AI BEA How would that
WN
3 EN \ em , the
fin Nd iio Caloric is guaran-
teed todo every
7) thing we say—
Ban¥, must do it or
> no one is
as to’
buy it.
COME
IN
The POTTER-HOY
Hardware Co.
Bellefonte, Pa.
62-35
BS
The Preferred
Accident
Insurance
THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY
BENEFITS:
$5,000 death by accident,
5,000 loss of 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 ome eve
25 per week, total disability,
(limit 52 weeks)
10 per week, partial disability,
Qlimit 25 weeks)
PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR,
pavable quarterly if desired,
Larger or smaller amounts in proportion
Any person, male or female, engaged in a
prefarred occupation, including house,
eeping, over eighteen years of age
good moral and physical condition may
insure under this policv.
Fire Insurance
{ invite your attention to my Fire Insur-
ance cy, the strongest and Most Ex
tensive Line of Solid Companies represent
ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania
H. E. FENLON,
Agent, Bellefonte, Fa,
VA A/Ta
50-21.
Good Health
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaks
water-fixtures, foul sewerage, Or escaping
, you can’t have good Health, The air you
Breathe is poisonous; your system becomes
poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come.
SANITARY PLUMBING
the kind do. It’s the only kind yous
ro to er Wedon’t trustthis work to
boys. Our workmen are Skill Mechanics.
no better anywhere. Our
Material and
Fixtures are the Best
r inferior article in our entire
Ny And with good work and the
finest material, our
Prices are Lower
than many who give you poor, unsanitars:
work and the lowest grade of finishings. Fer
the Best Work try
Archibald Allison,
O ite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa
Dposee 56-14-1v.