Bellefonte, Pa., January 10, 1919. Country Correspondence Items of Interest Dished up for the Delectation of “Watchman” Read- ers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. PINE GROVE MILLS MENTION. We are having zero weather and the sleigh bells are jingling. Mr. and Mrs. J. Foster Musser Jpent the Sabbath at the G. Mec. Fry ome. Lloyd Ripka was a Tyrone visitor on Tuesday, mixing business with pleasure. James Cummings, of Belleville, spent last week among relatives and old acquaintances in the valley. On account of a fresh outbreak of influenza our schools are closed and a ban put upon all loafing places. Mrs. Anna Fry and Mrs. Frank Hunsinger were callers at the J. A. Fortney home on Monday morning. Mrs. Neda Lytle is visiting among friends at Pleasant Gap, with head- quarters at the Sumner Miller home. Hon. J. Will Kepler departed last week for Pitsburah to take up his new duties in the U. S. department of Labor and Commerce. Roy S. Goss has quit his job in The Times office at State College to help care for his mother and grandmother, who are both quite ill. While out on a shopping expedition last Thursday Mrs. Sarah Murphy slipped and fell on the hard street, cutting an ugly gash on her head. After a month’s visit at her paren- tal home on south Water street Miss Ethel Everts has returned to her work in isburgh, much improved in ealth. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Markle, both Pneumonia victims as the result of an attack of the flu, are now convales- cing, a fact their many friends will be glad to learn. W. S. Tate and a party of friends motored to the county capital on Mon- day to attend to some business then journeyed to Milesburg where they spent a brief time with friends. Miss Kate Dunlap, one of our effi- cient trained nurses, went out to Cher- rytree last Thursday to care for her brother Randolph, who suffered a re- lapse after quite a siege with the flu. Miss Catherine Kepler left for Washington on Wednesday to take a clerkship in the war risk insurance bureau. She is an adept in book- keeping and well qualified to fill any position. Mr. and Mrs. John Bowersox took advantage of the good sleighing to come to town on Tuesday for a visit with Mr. Bowersox’s aged parents, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Bowersox, on east Main street. Mrs. Margaret Bierly this week re- ceived word that her sister, Miss Jane. Potter, was seriously ill with appen- dicitis at her home in Philadelphia. Shie is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John F. Potter, former residents of Bellefonte. While walking about the yard last Saturday the venerable Isaac Reish tripped and fell, fracturing his left hip. A physician reduced the frac- ture but owing to his advanced years the Injury is considered quite serious. Mr, Reish had just returned from a visit among relatives at Pleasant Gap. eS E———— CENTRE HALL. Mrs. Ellen Stewart, of State Col- lege, visited her sister, Mrs. Eliza- beth Jacobs, for a few days last week. The homes of James Goodhart and George Heckman were brightened by the advent of baby boys during the past week. Jack Spangler, who has been on a convoy during the past eighteen months, is a guest of his father, How- ard Spangler. Week of Prayer is being observed in the churches this week. iy Wil- liams, of the Methodist church being 1 his place was taken by Rev. Pick- n. Squire Cyrus Brungard and Mrs. Brungard returned on Friday from a visit of several weeks with their daughters at Greensburg and Young- wood. Miss Delinda Potter resigned her school at Colyer and left on Saturday morning for New Castle, Delaware, where she accepted the position of as- sistant principal in the High school. Among those who returned from camps recently were Wallace Run- kle, from Pitt, and Bruce Stahl, from Newport News, Va. Norman Emer- ick, who has been stationed at Puget Sound, Wash., is also expected to re- turn home this week. The negro troupe which was to have appeared in the Grange Arcadia on Saturday evening as the third num- ber of the lecture course, did not put in their appearance, and inquiry at the lecture course bureau in Philadel- phia failed to :Jicit any information as to their whereabouts. AARONSBURG. Miss Lizzie Yarger has gone to Bellefonte, where she will be employ- ed in the hospital. John L. Stover, after spending some time with relatives in Duncannon and Hartsburg, returned home on Satur- y. Mrs. Lila Goodman will move on Tuesday into the east side of the R. B. Boob house on Front street. Mrs. Goodman came here from Lewistown after her husband’s death. There have been but few new cases of influenza during the past week, at least not as many as the few days previous. Thus far none have suc- cumbed to the disease. It is hoped that with proper caution we may be able to resume the regular Sunday services and schools may reopen. Earl Cummings, who last summer was sent with a contingent of Centre county young men to Camp Green- leaf, S. C., has been transferred to Carlisle, Pa., and last Tuesday morn- | | i { | | | | | i ing arrived home to spend a few days furlough with his mother, Mrs. C. W." Wolfe. On Saturday he left for Car- lisle to resume his duties. Earl is looking very well. His many friends were delighted to shake hands with him. John Brown, of Camp Lee, Va., was also home on a week’s furlough, leaving Monday to resume his duties in said camp. John looked very well and seemed glad to meet his many friends in and about town. RUNVILLE. | James Parks, of Rockview, spent | Sunday with his family in this place. | Miss Lizzie Weaver, of Milesburg, visiting among her many friends in | 18 ! this place. Mrs. Sarah Walker, of Austin, Pot- | ter county, after spending two weeks among her many friends in this place, returned to her home last Monday. The Ladies Aid of this place met at | the home of Mrs. Ida Witmer the first Thursday of this month and had a yey interesting meeting. With Mrs. | Sallie Furl, the president, some extra work is planned for the near future, | and one new member being received, the society adjourned. Mrs. Minne Lucas spent last Wed- nesday night with her husband’s par- ents, at ig her husband be- ing a flu patient at his father’s home, in that place. He was stricken while there looking after the family, all of whom had been victims. Fortunately all are recovering very nicely and Mr. Lucas is expected home this week. On the last evening of the old year the Red Cross auxiliary held a meet- ing in the church at this place and heard a good talk by one of our sol- dier boys, who has returned from | France, in the person of Earl Kauff- | man. He was in the battle when the! French retreated and failed to hbld | the line and a number of our men | were killed and wounded. He was one who received a wound by being hit | on the leg by a flying shrapnel. has been in the hospital for over two months and will have to stay until his | wound is fully healed. He told of the noble work the Red Cross is doing in France, and also says much more work | is yet to be done. That every dollar donated in money to the Red Cross is | well invested. Mr. Kauffman was: warmly welcomed by a host of friends and his permanent return is looked forward to with delightful anticipa- tion. He | ORVISTON. Jerry Bland is feeling rather indis- posed. L. C. Barner is very much indispos- ed and unable to work. John Bland visited his father, Jer- | ry Bland, who is working here. John ! is another son of Uncle Sam. He was | stationed at Camp Meade. Lieut. John Hume is visiting friends | at Falconer, N. Y. We have an idea | he has an especial friend there; at least, he admits the attraction. Paul Lomison is home from Camp Greenleaf: He had quite a big fight | with the flu, but is getting along all | right now. We are glad to see him so well. : Mrs. Ola; Cyphert was pleasantly surprised by a visit from her mother, Mrs. William Barnhart, of Curtin; also her sister, Mrs. John Heverly and two babies, Chris. and Blair, of Ro- mola. The Orviston church is having a se- | ries of cottage prayer meetings, pre- patatory to having a great revival. e church is very progressive and ranks quite high in members for so small a place as this. BOALSBURG. The schools opened on Monday morning with a fair attendance. Postmaster Jacob Meyer transacted Misingss in Bellefonte on New Year's y. Samuel Roberts attended his fath- er’s funeral at Snow Shoe, on Wed- nesday. Rev. S. C. Stover preached a New Year's sermon in the Reformed church on Sunday afternoon. Mr. Brown, of the Susquehanna University, Selinsgrove, preached in the Lutheran church Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Demar and son Paul went to Jersey Shore on New Year's day for a visit with Mrs. De- mar’s sister. A Natural Strengthener. The value of iron in medicine has long been known, but never more appreciated than today. People are learning that in Peptiron— a real iron tonic—this most useful metal is so happily combined that it is accepta- ble to all, even those who, for some rea- son or other, have been unable to take it in the past. Peptiron is an agreeable, easily assimi- lated, non-constipating preparation of iron, nux, pepsin, and other tonics and di- gestives, and is giving great satisfaction. In cases where blood-cleansing and liv- er-stimulating as well as nerve-strength- ening are needed, Peptiron is very effect- ively and economically supplemented with Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Hood's Pills. These three medicines form the Triple Combination Treatment to which the C. I. ! Hood Co. is now calling attention as es- pecially beneficial to sufferers from im- pure blood, weak, unstrung nerves, torpid : and sluggish liver, or a generally run- | down condition. Manless Ranch in Montana. Mrs. Maggie V. Hathaway, of Hel- ena, Mont., has proved that it is pos- sible to run a 600 acre ranch without the aid of men’s labor. She knows, because she has successfully conduct- | ed her “manless ranch” for six years, | raising grain, cattle and sheep. Mrs. Hathaway began life as a school teacher. In a few years she became county superintendent. Lat- er she married Mr. Hathaway, assist- ant State superintendent of schools, who owned a 320 acre ranch adjoin- ing her own. After the death of her husband Mrs. Hathaway farmed the two ranches. It was difficult to get masculine help, so she introduced modern machinery that could be op- erated by women, and announced to the country-side that hereafter her Pace was to be called the “Manless anch.”—New York Mail. ~——Subsecribe for the “Watchman.” | ture. | year of these districts, } ‘ground for expecting the ultimate ' ducted in_co-operation with Mexico | | near San Pedro, Mexico. i and other materials from Mexico, and | ' the inspection, cleaning, and disinfec- | tion service covers the ports of El : care of traffic in wagons and motor : ence list, Class 4. End Worst Cotton Pest. When the pink boll worm, the most destructive enemy of cotton known to the world, was introduced into Texas from Mexico in 1916, the Americans took measures no less vigorous for its eradication than they took a year lat- er for the suppression of the Hun in Europe. The ping boll worm, com- pared with whose capacity for de- struction the boll weevil is almost harmless, has for years reduced the ! cotton output of Egypt, Mexico, and South America by half, but strict reg- ulations against importation of cot- ton plants and diseased seed had kept America free from the pest. Its pres- ence in Texas was discovered before it had spread beyond a small area and this was immediately quarantined, under the Federal Plant Quarantine Act, and the work of eradication was begun by the Department of Agricul- So complete was this work of extermination that not one pink boll worm, egg, larva, or moth has been found within the quarantined areas | or elsewhere in Texas during the sea- son of 1918. This would seem to in- dicate, says a report just made, the efficiency of the clean-up during the and gives complete extermination of the pink boll worm in Texas. If this result is achieved it will be, in the opinion of ' the Department, “the largest success- ' ful entomological experiment of the kind in history.” - | Immediately after the discovery of the presence of the insect another | quarantine was established prohibit- ing the further entry into the United States of cotton or cottonseed from | Mexico; a border control service was organized to prevent the accidental entry of such products by rail; a dis- | infection service as to cars and freight from Mexico was made effective, and research work in relation to the life history and habits and means of con- | trol of the pink boll worm was con- Throughout the Summer all of the quarantined districts were under con- stant inspection, and all volunteer or seeding cotton has been destroyed. | Also field surveys are being conducted adjacent to the quarantined districts | to determine any possible spread be- yond the existing quarantine lines. The regulation of the entry into the United States of railway cars and oth- | er vehicles, freight, express, baggage, tion of such cars and freight, etc. were continued during the year to prevent the accidental movement of cotton and cottonseed from Mexico into the United States. This inspec- ' Paso, Laredo, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, and Brownsville. During the year 25,257 cars have been inspected and ' passed for entrance, divided among the border ports as follows: Browns- ville, 1,635; Eagle Pass, 3,836; El Pa- so, 6,787; Laredo, 12,990. : | No cars or freight fouled with cot- | tonseed are permitted entry until! such seed has been entirely removed. | This necessitates in many cases the | transfer of freight to clean cars on | the Mexican side. In addition, as a! condition of entry, all cars and, freight which come to the border con- | taining such seed are disinfected with | hydrocyanic acid gas. | The system of disinfection of cars and freight by means of generators Placed within the cars has been the est available means, but is unsatis- factory owing to the poor condition of the cars, and also to the fact that it gave no security against any in- sects which might be resting on the exterior of the cars or their motive parts. The erection of fumigation houses to disinfect cars on the rails was authorized last summer, and five fumigation houses are now well under way. Their size has been adjusted to the needs of the traffic, and they have the following car capaeity: Laredo, 15 cars; Eagle Pass, 8; Brownsville, 6, and El Paso, 1. At Del Rio no rail- road line crosses the border, and a house is being constructed to take trucks. Jobs Wait for Cripples. The Handicap Department of the United States Labor Employment Service is calling for more applicants. Some thirty a week of one-armed and one-legged men and those otherwise handicapped have been placed in po- sitions. Men with one leg are often put to work on lathes; one-armed men find positions as watchmen for build- ings and switch-crossings. The de- mand for such men has been so great that the department has exhausted its list of applicants. Their pay has ranged from $75 to $80 a month. This department is in charge of K. M. Coolbaugh, No. 1521 Arch street, Philadelphia. The serious shortage of caskets and of labor in establishments making burial goods, especially in the section east of Pittsburgh, has caused A. W. Clapp, chief of Labor Section, Prior- ities Division, to notify the Employ- ment Service that manufacturers of such goods are placed on the prefer- ——1In the early days of the war the officer in charge of a British post deep in the heart of Africa received this wireless message from his super- ior officer: “War declared. Arrest all enemy aliens in your district.” With commendable promptness the superior received this reply: “Have arrested seven Germans, three Bel- gians, two Frenchmen, two Italians, an Austrian, and an American. Please say who we're at war with.”—Amer- ican Boy. Buds and Buddhism. “My dear Mrs. Croesus, may I put your name down for tickets to Pro- fessor Pundit’s course of lectures on Buddhism ?” “Oh, by all means! You know how passionately fond I am of flowers.” CASTORIA Bears thesignature of Chas. H.Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought, Vienna Led Entire World in Exorbi- tant War Prices. Berne, Switzerland.—Food was so ‘ expensive in Vienna that a slender, ! unpalatable and unsatisfactory meal cost from $4 up. Clothes were so scarce that a mediocre suit sold at $500, while a pair of shoes cost from $60 to $90 a pair. The commonest necessaries of life were so difficult to obtain that one had to stand in line | for hours for a chance to purchase a | tiny portion at an exorbitant price. Vienna just before the armistice was concluded, as related to the corres- pondent by the last American to leave Austria. He is a member of the dip- lomatic service who was assigned to remain at the Austrian capital when war was declared and has just come to Switzerland. Austria quit, declares the Ameri- can diplomat, because it was a phys- ical impossibility to continue further. Not only was Austria without food, but without the commonest necessa- ries. It faced winter in almost liter- al nakedness, so scarce had clothing become. Before he left Vienna the correspondent’s informant disposed of nearly every article of clothing he possessed. The demand for clothing may be judged from the fact that he realized from $3 to $4 each for neck- ties four years old and which origi- nally cost $1 apiece; $100 for a 10- . year-old suit costing $25; $260 for a tuxedo costing $100; and $100 each for three suits bought in Vienna three years before and which were shiny, ragged and worn out. Old socks, cost- ing $1.25 and which had been darned, sold for $5 a pair. An overcoat two and a half years old, which cost 32, sold for $110. Badly-worn and repaired shoes and cuts in the uppers brought $10; two-year-old shirts, costing $4, brought $16 each; soft collars went for $10. A three-year-old top coat brought $46. The Keen-sighted Gull. There is perhaps no other bird, of land or sea, so keen of sight as the common gull. To convince a skeptic- al friend of this, an American natur- alist once made some interesting ex- periments. The two men were passengers on a ' steamer where the spring ebb aided them to run twenty miles an hour. A dozen gulls followed them in the steamer’s wake, without apparent ef- fort, and circled in graceful curves over the water. Breaking a cracker biscuit into four parts, less than an inch square each, the naturalist handed one piece to his friend, and told him to drop it into the seething waters on the starboard. Immediately the bit of biscuit be- came invisible to human eyes, and yet before it had gone thirty yards astern a gull detected it, and, dipping into the foam, secured it. Ome by one it picked up the other bits of biscuit, though neither of the two men could see them. Tearing off a postage stamp from an old envelope, the naturalist drop- ped it overboard. The gull detected the waif and made as if to pick it up. But when within a yard or so of it the bird saw that it was nothing in his line, and glided upward again to his favorite station on a line with the topmost truck. The Milch Whale. An official of the State Agricultur- al Department of Oregan recommends the cultivation of the whale for milk- ing purposes. Enough whales could be raised Tighe in Puget Sound, he says, to supply the United States with all the milk she needs. The female whale is a generous creature and gives a barrel of the lacteal fluid at one milking, This is a timely suggestion, but why keep all the whales in Puget Sound? Would not such a plan be selfish, sordid and monopolistic? If we are going to be truly democratic in this country, let’s be so in the mat- ter of whales. Let every farmer keep his own whale. What would be more inspiring than to see the happy hus- bandman arise while the King of Day was still lurking bashfully behind the eastern horizon, grab the family milk barrel and hurry out behind the barn to give old Flossie, the family whale, the morning milkin’! In the spring, when the little whalets begin to show up, think of the gross annual output of poetry that would be inspired in the breasts of our literati. It would be a rank and infamous injustice to let Puget Sound have a monopoly of the national supply of dairy whales. —Thrift Magazine. ——The truest measure of a man’s ability is the length of time it takes him to discover that he is in the wrong. Medical. Twice Proven If you suffer backache, sleepless nights, tired, dull days and distress- ing urinary disorders, don’t experi- ment. Read this twice-told testimo- ny. It’s Bellefonte evidence—doubly proven. Mrs. Elmer Yerger, 306 N. Beaver St., Bellefonte, says: “About ten years ago I had kidney trouble in its worst form. My back was so weak that I could hardly crawl around. My kidneys acted very irregularly and I was in constant misery. Dropsical swellings set in. I tried different rem- edies, but received no benefit. Doan’s Kidney Pills were recommended to me and I at once began their use. In a few days the trouble was relieved and I continued their use for about three months. They entirely removed the distressing kidney disorders. My back was strengtheened and I had no further trouble with my kidneys. I think Doan’s are the best kidney med- icine to be had. I recommend them to everyone in need of a kidney medi- ney (Statement given April 22, On October 18, 1918, Mrs. Yerger said: “It is a pleasure and a great privilege for me to again speak a ood word for Doan’s Kidney Pills. thers in my family have since had the same good results from Doan’s as I had. I confirm all I said in my for- mer statement.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Not One U. S. Army Man Executed for Military Offense. i Not a single member of the Amer- | S ican army has been put to death since | the beginning of the war because of the commission of a purely military | offense, Major General Crowder, | Judge Advocate General, declared in | his annual report to Secretary Baker. General Crowder said this fact is the outstanding feature of his report. “Very few death sentences have | been imposed,” he said, “and none of Such was the condition of affairsin | those imposed for purely military of- fenses have been carried into execu- tion.” Records of the Judge Advocate | General’s office show that 12,357 offi- ! cers and men were brought before general courtsmartial, of whom 10,- 873, or eighty-eight per cent., were convicted. More than half the charg- es against officers were listed under three heads: Absent without leave, drunkenness, and conduct unbecoming an officer. Convictions of enlisted men for de- sertion, the General said, were actu- ally less than in the previous year, al- though the strength of the army had increased many fold. : The report shows that one enlisted man was tried and convicted of “be- ing a spy” and that 773 men were con- victed of sleeping on post. Within nine months after the Na- tional Guard was drafted into Feder- al service, 1513 of its officers had been eliminated, Brigadier General John W. Heavey, chief of the Bureau of Militia Affairs, said in his annual re- port made public. These includeed one Major General, sixteen brigadiers and forty-two Colonels. Causes of elimination of the offi- cers are given as physical disability, 511; resignations, 648; action of effi- ciency boards, 352; deserted, two. In- cluded in the total under the heading “Action of Efficiency Boards,” the re- port says, were thirty officers dis- missed by sentence of court-martial. The large number of officers dropped can be satisfactorily expiained, Gen- eral Heavey said, by the fact that on- ly a small proportion had had any military training, while a substantial proportion lacked the necessary basic education and physical qualifications. Altruism. The back yard of a house in a Mas- sachusetts town is overlooked by the windows of an orphan asylum. In this back yard stood a barrel of ap- ples which were disappearing at a rapid rate. . The woman of the house, a widow and a knowing mother, summoned her eight-year-old son to make inquiry touching the curious disappearance of the fruit. : “Yes, mother, I’ve eaten the ap- ples,” he confessed, “but I really had to do it.” “Had to do it?” “Yes, mother, the orphans wanted so many cores.”—Chicago Herald. — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Hood’s Sarsaparilla. When a Family Needs a Friend In the Absence of Doctors Gone to War, After Influenza, the Grip,— Those wonderfully useful medicines, Hood’s Sarsaparilla, Peptiron and Hood's Pills—comprising the new combination family treatment—are warmly recommended. taken regularly, Hood’s Sarsa- parilla before meals, Peptiron after meals, and Hood’s Pills at night as needed, they are. reasonably sure to keep a family in health and prove to be reliable and always ready friends. They purify the blood, build up stren; and regulate the system. Get all, or any one, as you think Ix need, from your druggist today. FINE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. from There leno style of ok the BOOK WORK, that ot do in the most satis- we can not do e most factory manner, at ent ar Call on or communicate with this office’ A dangerous rasping cough andsorethroat can be quickly / relieved by Kemp’s Bal- sam. A few cents invested in a bottle will amply repay you when you have occasion touse. Used by thousands. Satisfaction guaranteed. Sold by druggists everywhere. (Get the Best Meats. You save nothing by buying poor, thin or gristly meats. I use only the LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and supply my customers with the fresh- ES ramen ing and Roasts. My p n higher than poorer meats are ¥ I always have —- DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, 34-34-1y. Beliefonte, Pa. CHICHESTER SPILLS High Street. Take no other. B: a BIASOND' BRAND PILLS, ix 33 Safest, i ces—No. 5 East High street. years Best, Always SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Attorneys-at-Law. KLINE WOODRING — Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts. Of- fice room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 51-ly B. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. Practice in all the Courts, (onsultation in Eng- lish or German. Office in Crider’s Ex- change, Bellefonte, Pa. 40-22 S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Temple Court, e- fonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. 40-46 KENNEDY JOHNSTON-—Attorney-at-law Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt attention given legal business entrusted to his cafe. Offi- 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 SoElish and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 585 Physicians. GLENN, M. D., Physician and S State College, Centre county, Pa. ; INSURANCE! Fire and Automobile Insurance at a reduced rate. 62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. eon, ce 1 ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, t th half shell or in any le Se air wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can be had in a few minvies any time, In ad- on I have a complete repared t: furnish Soft Drinks in bottles such. as POPS SODAS, SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener- ally all of which are Re Sa 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 $5000 TRAVEL POLICY 5,000 loss of 3 ,000 loss of one hand and one foot, 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, loss of one eve 25 per w total disability, Pit 62 wacko) 10 per. partial disability, (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion: Any Person. male of fsmale, engaged in a praterred occupation, ding house, , over eighteen years of age moral and physical condition may under this policy. ? Fire Insurance {invite attention to my Fire - ance. A cy, the si sngest and ve es . ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Fa, Good Health : and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky hae good Health, The air you , you can’t have . Breathe poisonous; your system becomes poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING kind do. It’s the only kind’ you he to ig We don’t trust ie work to boys. Our workmen are 11 echanics, no better anywhere. Our Material and Fixtures are the Best ch r inferior article in our entire NO Pahoment. “And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are Lower than many who give you r, unsanitary work and the lowest grade py. finishings. For the Best Work try Archibald Allison, ‘Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa Opposite 66-1¢-1v.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers