Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 18, 1920, Image 3

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    Pemorraiic aici,
Bellefonte, Pa, June 18, 1920.
Country Correspondence
Items of Interest Dished Up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PINE GROVE MENTION.
Mrs. J. Will Kepler spent Wednes-
day on a shopping trip to Tyrone.
Mrs. W. H. Goss, who has been
quite ill the past week or so, is now
somewhat improved.
The ladies of the Lutheran church
cleared $74.00 at their refreshment
stand on Saturday evening.
C. L. Goodling, superintendent of
farms at State College, is entertain-
ing his parents, of York, Pa.
Mrs. Margaret Dale and baby boy,
Jack Rutherford, are visiting Mrs.
Dale’s parental home in Altoona.
The venerable Alexander Everhart,
of Altoona, was in town on Saturday,
the guest of ’Squire D. W. Miller.
J. Sumner Miller and wife, of Pleas-
ant Gap, motored up on Saturday and
spent the evening among old friends.
Mrs. W. E. Johnson spent the latter
end of the week with friends in Belle-
fonte while doing her summer shop-
ping.
Drover C. H. Tussey shipped a mix-
ed carload of stock from Pennsylvania
Furnace to the eastern market on
Wednesday.
The ladies of the Reformed church
will hold a festival on the lawn sur-
rounding the church Saturday even-
ing, June 26th.
F. M. Goss and chum, Mr. Clemens,
of Braddock, spent the latter end of
the week at the A. F. Gross home on
Main street.
Mr. and Mrs. Orin Osman, of Centre
Hall, were Sunday visitors here and
at State College. They like their
new home very much.
Comrade W. E. Tate and chaplain
John Mechtley, of Capt. Foster G. A.
R. Post, atended the annual encamp-
ment at Indiana last week.
Mrs. Margaret Tussey, of Arch
Springs, with her interesting little
son, William Goheen, is visiting her
parental home in the valley.
J. R. Smith, the wide-awake tea
salesman, is now driving an entire
new outfit, which is making quite an
impression on his customers.
P. Lytle O'Bryan motored over
from State College on Saturday and
spent a short time with his mother,
who is somewhat improved in health.
J. Neff Everts, who spent six weeks
in a Philadelphia hospital recovering
from a rather serious operation, re-
turned home last Friday very much
improved in health.
Miss Grace Elder and Mrs. J. A.
Fortney represented the Lutheran
Sunday school as delegates to the dis-
trict Sunday school convention held
at Boalsburg this week.
Hon. A: G. Morris, of Bellefonte,
with his daughter, Miss Lida, and Mrs.
Ross were guests at the St. Elmo for
dinner last Thursday while homeward
bound from a trip to Tyrone.
‘Squire Watt and friend are back
from their week’s outing on Stone
Creek and report a good catch of
trout, sunfish, suckers, eels, and
biggest of all, a nine foot blacksnake.
Children’s Day exercises were held
in the Presbyterian church at Bailey-
ville last Sunday evening. A milita-
ry drill by the children was one of
the successful features of the evening.
The well known octogenarian, E. Ww.
Comfort, of State College, who in fact
is past eighty-one years of age, left
last week for an extended visit among
friends in the middle west, his former
home.
The young folks of Fairbrook held
a picnic in Meyers’ grove on Saturday,
and on the same day the Branch
Sunday school picnicked in the
Shingletown gap. Both outings prov-
ed very enjoyable.
During an electric storm which pass-
ed over the western end of the county
last Friday lightning killed two of
Ralph Judy’s best cows which were
browsing in the pasture field. As
Ralph is just a beginner on the farm,
he feels the loss quite keenly.
T. G. Cronover and wife, of Hunt-
ingdon, were vistors in town last Fri-
day. Mr. Cronover has just closed
a deal for the timber on the J. I. Ross
tract west of town and _expects to
begin operations at no distant date.
He estimates it will take several years
to clear the tract.
Harry Kuhn, driving the Boal bus
from State College to Lewistown, met
with an accident last Saturday morn-
ing when the steering gear refused to
work and he crashed into a telephone
pole, badly wrecking the bus. The
dozen or more passengers were bad-
ly shaken up but none seriously in-
jured.
Children’s Day services will be held
in the Presbyterian church here at 10
o’clock Sunday morning. Rev. Mr.
Miller, of Mt. Union, will fill the pulpit
at the evening services, at the con-
clusion of which a congregational
meeting will be held for the purpose
of voting for a pastor as successor
to Rev. L. V. Barber, resigned.
Last Saturday morning Carey Shoe-
maker, who gathers up the milk and
cream in this section, lost his trailer
and the result was many gallons of
cream were spilled on the road. On
Sunday morning the Spring Mills con-
densary truck was ditched on the road
near the XKimport farm and much
milk spilled. The driver was badly
cut and bruised but not seriously in-
jured.
A large crowd atended the annual
memorial services here on Satirday
evening for deceased members of the
1. 0. O. F. Rev. S. C. Stover made
the address and it proved very inter-
esting and appropriate to the occas-
jon. The list of diseased members of
Pennsvalley Lodge No. 276 is as fol-
lows: Capt. James Dunlap, Dr. James
R. Smith, Robert G. Brett, H. M. Stov-
er, James B. Ard, Cyrus Goss, A. G.
Archey, J. G. Heberling, J. W. Fry, D.
G. Meek, O. F. Shaw, D. S. Erb, J.
W. Lawrence, Jacob Erb, Willis Ripka,
W. H. Musser, H. M. Krebs, Ray Al-
bert, Mahlon Hoover and J. Calvin
Sunday.
PLEASANT GAP.
The dark horse show was in prog-
ress in Chicago last week.
Crowd not so much life into one
day; spread it out and it will last
longer.
Mr. G. W. Rees and wife spent last
Sunday with Mrs. Jonathan Bilger, of
the Gap.
Keep steadily on at thy calling, for
if you stop, like the bycicle rider, you
will have to get off.
Once in every four years the office
really seeks the man. The office
aforesaid being the vice Presidency of
these United States.
There may be some uncertainty as
to just what the war was fought for,
but nobody named Herman Johnson
has any uncertainty what he is fight-
ing for.
George C. Miller and wife, of Axe
Mann, left last Saturday for an ex-
tended trip to Kansas, Missouri and
Illinois. They expect to be absent for
four or six weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Ephriam Keller left
for a brief visit with their son Paul and
family, of Philadelphia. Paul is one
of the clerical force of the P. R. R. in
the city of Brotherly love.
Mrs. Peter Shuey spent last Tues-
day in Bellefonte, calling on old-time
friends and incidentally giving a lit-
tle attention to laying in a stick of
necessary household supplies.
Daniel Schlottman, the old veteran,
has been at Hazleton and Williams-
port the past six weeks. He returned
home for Decoration day, but expects
to return to Williamsport for an in-
definite time, within a week.
Those people who are always com-
plaining of being neglected by others,
are the very ones who are neglectful
to others; because if they were busy
in their attentions to others they
would have no time to notice their
neglect.
Miss Marion Gettig ,of Pleasant
Gap, accompanied by her aunt, Mrs.
Adams, of Niagara Falls, left for
Pittsburgh on Tuesday last, for a
week’s sojourn in the Smoky city.
Shopping and sight-seeing was their
mission.
The action of Congress in passing
a bill permitting farmers to combine
recalls an ancient one about little
Johnny, who asked his mother wheth-
er he could have the apple pie in the
pantry. She said he could, and he
said, “Thanks, I’ve had it.”
It is now alleged that the cherry
crop in this vicinity, as well as the
plum yield will not exceed a more
than half normal crop. The three May
frosts did the business. However, the
prospects for a huge berry crop are
most encouraging.
Adam blamed Eve and Eve blamed
the devil; it is natural for political
parties contending for the patronage
of the people, to make accusations
against each other, but some of these
days the veil will be lifted from the
eyes of the people, and seeing matters
in their true light, old terra will be-
gin to quake.
The superintendent of our state
road is putting forth every available
effort with a view of completing the
concreting of the road to the Cross
roads at the Gap in six weeks. A sec-
ond mixer is being installed which will
materially aid in facilitating the work.
As soon as the concreting to the Cross
roads is completed, the detour will be
annulled.
The state road has two crews of
workmen from Pennsvalley; one from
Spring Mills, and another from Pot-
ters Mills and the Loop. The compa-
ny brings the men from their homes
in large trucks each morning and ve-
turns them to their homes each even-
ing. They are a reliable, trustworthy
bunch; the kind who don’t require
constant watching.
Mr. Perry Krise retired from the
hotel business some two years ago
and returned to his former home at
the Gap, since which time he has pur-
chased two houses here and is now
busily engaged in repainting the same
and otherwise making numerous im-
provements. There evidently was a
time when the venders of spirits flour-
ished beyond description.
The Noll Bros. possessed four wire
stretchers in the last two years, and
now they are minus four stretchers;
today they have none. Why? Sim-
ply because they loaned them to their
neighbors, who failed to return them.
A person who borrows a thing from
you and keeps it is worse than a thief,
for the thief takes it unawares, while
the borrower comes into your presence
and appeals to your generosity, and
you, wishing to improve in virtue,
thus endeavor to accommodate him;
but when he fails to return the arti-
cle, he has not only done what the
thief does, but has also abused your
feelings, destroying your confidence
in humanity, thus rendering you less
generous to your fellow beings. Bor-
rowing and lending should be avoided
when possible.
Numerous of our Nittany valley
farmers are complaining that they
are badly in need of fertilizers but are
unable to procure the same owing to
the inefficiency of our present railroad
system. The present railroad conges-
tion is a very serious drawback to our
agriculturalists. It looks as if our
railroad management needed a new
head; the executives have not been
obeying the orders issued by the In-
terstate Commerce Commission, to
end the freight congestion, and the
Commission threatens to apply the
penal clause of the new railroad law
if necessary, to secure obedience. The
present traffic situation is unusual,
yet the fact is it ought not to have
occurred, and railroad control ought
to be centralized, and so effective that
it cannot occur again. The Interstate
Commission is a judicial, not an ex-
ecutive body; it is not qualified, and
is not expected to operate the roads.
But what these roads need today and
are likely to need for a good while to
come, is a central operating authori-
ty. If they can’t get together and
run the roads efficiently there will
pretty surely be renewed demands for
a system of administratien that can
do it, and that means a genuine meas-
ure of government comtrol.
LEMONT.
Most of the corn is up and doing
fine.
There will be a fair crop of fruit
in these parts this year.
The fine weather has brought the
wheat and grass along in good shape.
Quite a few people passed through
town on their way to the commence-
ment at State College.
C. D. Houtz and wife are spending
a few weeks at the home of their
son, Clarence, at Unionville.
_ James Thorp’s are busy entertain-
ing a great big daughter, who came to
stay with them permanently.
The Honserville United Brethren
congregation will hold Children’s Day
service, Sunday evening, June 20th.
The Children’s Day services held in
the United Evangelical church, Sun-
day evening, were quite entertaining.
: Carl, the little son of James Wil-
liams, who has been quite ill for sev-
eral months, has not improved very
much.
Christina and Martha Knepp, the
two daughters of Henry Knepp, who
were brought home from the hospital
last week, are getting along fine.
Florence Rhoads, and Lydia Steb-
bens, of Williamsport, who spent a
few days at the home of B. F. Hoy,
returned to their home on Monday.
Adam Lauck, who was hurt one day
last week by falling from a mower
and getting into some of the machin-
ery is able to be out again, but was
badly staved and bruised up.
AARONSBURG.
Earl and Guerney Wert, of Phila-
delphia, spent Sunday with their moth-
er, Mrs. J. J. Fielder.
After spending several weeks with
her children at Jersey Shore, Mrs.
Mary Brion returned home last week.
Master Robert Wetherhold, of Lan-
caster, has arrived in town to spend
the summer with his aunt, Mrs. W. A.
Guisewhite.
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Swabb, of
Johnstown, were pleasant guests one
day last week of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam Guisewhite.
Harold Rothrock and Miss Eva
Stambaugh, of Lock Haven, spent an
evening with Miss Stambaugh’s aunt,
Mrs. E. G. Mingle.
On Sunday, June 13th, that busy
bird, the Stork, visited the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wance and
left a bright little son.
Harry Eisenhauer had the misfor-
tune to hurt his foot while working
with a hay bailer at Swengle. How-
ever, he is improving nicely and will
soon be able to resume his work.
The Misses Jennie and Marian Au-
man, of Coburn, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Auman. Miss
Jennie returned home the same day
while Miss Marian will remain indef-
initely.
Rev. Jacob Stover, of Centreville,
was an over Sunday guest of his
brother, George E. Stover. While here
he very ably filled the pulpit in the
Lutheran church on Sunday evening,
preaching to a large and appreciative
congregation. ' ; :
OAK HALL.
Mrs. William Kern, attended the
funeral of her uncle, James Shires,
at Johnstown recently.
Miss Trafma Radel, of Middleburg,
spent Sunday at the home of her
brother, E. C. Radel, of this place.
Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Dale and family,
attended the Grove reunion held at
(range Park, Centre Hall, on Satur-
ay.
Mrs. Charles Whitehill is spending
a few days at Pleasant Gap, where
she is helping to care for her father,
who is sick.
Mrs. Earl Houtz and daughter,
Betty, of State College, were recent
visitors at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Rishel.
and Mrs. Neff Everett, of ine Grove
ily were Sunday afternoon visitors at
the home of Mrs. Peters’ parents, Mr.
sd Mrs. Neff Everett, of Pine Grove
ills.
Miss Nellie Wagner, who is help-
ing her aunt, Mrs. Curtis Meyers, on
the Branch, for a few weeks, was an
over Sunday visitor with her par-
ents.
Mrs. E. C. Radel and daughter,
Eleanor, spent Friday in Bellefonte.
Mr. and Mrs. George Haze! and
family, of Bellefonte, were recent visi-
tors at the Harry Wagner home.
BOALSBURG.
Mrs. Caroline Geary, of Centre Hall,
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Wm. My-
er.
Children’s Day services will be held
in the Lutheran church on Sunday
evening.
Mrs. Jacob Norris and children, of
Altoona, are visiting at the home of
George Fisher.
Miss Rosalie McCormick, of Hub-
lersburg, is visiting her aunt, Mrs.
Jennie Fortney.
Mrs. Janet Mayes, of Milton, return-
ed home Monday after spending some
time with relatives.
Mrs. Edward Tussey and son, Wil-
liam, of Sinking Valley, are guests
at the Wm. Goheen home.
Mr. John Ishler, of State College,
spent part of last week with his
daughter, Mrs. Clyde Bouse.
Miss Flora Snyder went to Mill-
brook on Sunday to spend some time
with her sister, Mrs. Walter Korman.
The Boal—Corl bus running from
State College to Lewistown collided
with a telephone pole on Saturday
and was badly wrecked, although for-
tunately no persons were seriously in-
jured.
CASTORIA
Bears the signature of Chas, H. Fletcher.
In use for over thirty years, and
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
| more im 3 ]
fore, could Congress be induced to act,
The Budget Bill.
Tha veto of the budget bill was am-
ply justified, and the House has ad-
mitted this by omitting the provision
which gave Congress the power to re-
move an appointee of the President
and passing the corrected bill.
; Congress, of course, has no author-
ity to remove an official appointed by
the President, and the inclusion or
this provision was merely one more
illustration of the effort of Congress
to antagonize the President at every
opportunity. The President is strong-
ly in favor of this pressingly needed
reform in the national finances, and it
seems to have been thought that for
the sake of getting it he would over-
look this flagrant and unconstitution-
al invasion of the prerogative of the
Executive. He refused to overlook it,
and the House yielded.
But the bill is objectionable in
another and opposite direction. It
transfers to the Executive functions
of the House of Representatives. The
preparation of the budget becomes a
part of the work of the Executive and
will be done under the direction of a
Controller General appointed by the
President.
The House of Representatives is
constitutionally the purse-holder of
the nation. It is the duty of the House
to consider the revenues and the ex-
penditures and make the one fit the
other. For a long time the Ways and
Means committee had jurisdiction over
income and outgo, and if the esti-
mates exceeded the income it reduced
them or increased taxation. On ac-
count of the growth of public business
the Appropriations committee was
created, and that prepared all the
spending bills and the Ways and
Means committee prepared all the rev-
enue measures.
Then the process began of taking
bills away from the Appropriations
committee, beginning with the Agri-
cultural bill and the Rivers and Har-
bors bills, and assigning them to in-
dividual committees specially inter-
ested in those subjects. The two bills
mentioned were assigned to the com-
mittee on Agriculture and the com-
mittee on Rivers and Harbors. The
avowed purpose of this was to get
bigger appropriations, and the pur-
pose was attained. Then other bills
were transferred with a like result.
When Samuel J. Randall was chair-
man of the committee on Appropria-
tions five bills were taken away from
his committee to reduce its import-
ance and punish him for defeating the
first Morrison tariff bill.
Of course, expenses increased rap-
idly. The committee recommended
more money for the branches of the
public service in which they were con-
cerned than would have been recom-
mended by one committee obliged to
provide for all branches of the public
serivec. The national expenses mount-
ed rapidly. The system was vicious
and extravagant. It was supported
by log-rolling, members voting for
large appropriations in which they
were not interested in order to get the
votes of other members for bills in
which they were interested.
This evil ought to have been reme-
died many years ago, but not until the
enormous expenditures on account of
the war made the need of economy
rative than it ever was be-
and now it has acted by divesting the
House of some of its constitutional
prerogatives. All that was necessary
at any time was to restore all appro-
priation bills to a single committee.—
Philadelphia Record.
en A
JACKSONVILLE.
Rumors are rife of another wedding
in this section in the near future.
Harvey Harter, of Bellefonte, spent
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA.
Get a Good Grip on Health
Look out for the unnatural weak-
ness that indicates thinning of the
blood and lack of power. It means
that your bodily organs are starving
for want of good nourishment; that
the red corpuscles are fewer, unequal
to demands of health. Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla increases strength of the deli-
cate and nervous, restores red corpus-
cles, makes the blood carry health to
every part, creates an appetite.
If you need a good cathartic medi-
cine, Hood’s Pills will satisfy. 6523
Sunday at the William Eckenroth
home.
Jacksonville was well represented at
the festival held at Howard last Sat-
urday evening.
_ Br. and Mrs. Elmer Fultz and fam-
ily, of Axe Mann, spent Sunday at the
James Mackey home.
George Weight was painfully injur-
ed last week while assisting his father
in building a fence. The elder Weight
was engaged in nailing on the boards
when the hammer flew off of the
handle striking George on the head
and cutting a gash which required
four stitches to close.
Pertinent Questions.
Among the many Irish anecdotes
told by Canon Hannay, author of sev-
eral books under the pen-name of
“George Birmingham,” is the follow-
ing. An Irish gentleman who heard
of the death of a great enemy of his,
who had harassed him for many years,
remarked: “Well, it’s a comfort to
think that the devil’s got that fellow
at last.” A clergyman who happened
to be present felt it his duty to re-
monstrate against this uncharitable
view of the dead man’s condition. He
said he hoped that. in spite of all that
had passed, the poor man might have
escaped the extreme penalty. “Well,”
retorted the other, “if the devil hasn’t
got that fellow, all I can say is that
I don’t see much use in keeping a
devil at all.”
a —————————————
Rats as Food.
Doctor Kane, the Arctic explorer,
said that one of the worst curses in
the far North were the rats that in-
fested his ship. Nevertheless, when
in want of other food, he was glad to
cat them—sometimes chopped up and
#rozen into tallow balls.
He wrote: “During the long winter
nights Hans beguiled his hours of
watch by shooting rats with bow and
arrow. The repugnance of my com-
anions to share with me this table
juxury gave me frequent advantage of
fresh meat soup, which contributed no
doubt to my comparative immunity to
scurvy.”
MEDICAL.
It’s Foolish
to Suffer
When So Many Bellefonte People Are
Pointing out the Way.
You may be brave enough to stand
backache or headache or dizziness.
But, if, in addition urination is disor-
dered, look out! If you don’t try to
fix your sick kidneys, you may fall in-
to the clutches of dangerous disease
before you know it. But, if you live
more carefully and help your kidneys
with Doan’s Kidney Pills, you can
stop the pains you have and avoid fu-
ture danger as well. Don’t experi-
ment—use the remedy Bellefonte peo-
ple are publicly endorsing. Read this
case:
Mrs. Clair Miller, 231 E. Bishop
St., Bellefonte, says: “Doan’s Kidney
Pills have been a household remedy
with us for years. I have used them
at different times with satisfactory
results. I am glad to recommend
Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Miller had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 65-25
Ira D. Garman
Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry
“JEWELRY MADE OVER”
11th Street Below Chestnut,
63-34-6m. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
ran
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 onor
communicate with this office’
Bellefonte Trust Company
Bellefonte, Pa.
Why You Should Make aWill
To protect your loved ones.
To safeguard your estate
By making a Will you can appoint the Bellefonte Trust
Company as your Executor or Trustee.
You can thus assure to
your heirs the business manage-
ment and financial responsibility which this institution affords.
Your wishes can be observed in the distribution of your
property, for if you do not leave a Will the law may divide up
your possessions in a way that you might not desire.
How Have You Made Your Will?
Do not write your own Will.
“Home-made” Wills are
dangerous and often cause law-suits, because, when drawing a
Will the law must be known,
both as to wording and terms.
Consult a lawyer today about the making of your Will and have
him name the Bellefonte Trust
tor and Trustee.
J. L. Spangler,
65-3-tf President
C. T. Gerberich,
Company to act as your Execu-
N. E. Robb,
Vice President Treasurer
PUPA APSA EGA APPEL PIAS PAP PPPS INP
ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW.
KLINE WOODRING — Attorney-ate
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im
Office, room 18 Crdete
S all courts.
Exchange.
B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law.
Practices in all the courts. Come=
sultation in English or Germam.
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefou
Pa. 40-
S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsel
lor at Law. Office in Eagle
Block, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of
legal business attended to promptly. 40-40
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-ate
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate
tention given all legal business em
trusted to his care. Offices—No.
Hight street.
5 Hast
nr-44
M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at Law
and Justice of the Peace. All pro
fessional business will receive
prompt attention. Office on second floor of
'emple Court. 49-5-1y
G. RUNKLE—Attorney-at-Law. Come
sultation in English and Germam.
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle=
fonte, Pa. 58-8
dm
PHYSICIANS.
M.
State
Pa.
S. GLENN,
Surgeon,
county,
D., Physician and
College, Centre
Office at his resi-
dence.
INSUR ANCE!
Fire and Automobile Insurance at a
reduced rate.
62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent.
mn.
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,
,000 loss of one hand and one foot,
,500 loss of either hand,
,000 loss of either foot,
630 loss of one eve
25 per week, total disabili 7
(limit 52 Se i
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
erred occupation, including house
eeping, over eighteen years of age of
moral and physical condition may
insure under this policv.
Fire Insurance
1 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,
Nooo
50-21.
sm.
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
freshest, choicest, best blood and mus-
cle making Steaks and Roasts. My
prices are no higher than the 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,
Hight Street. 34-34-1y Bellefonte Pa.
Good Health
and
Good Plumbing
GO TOGETHER
When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky
water-fixtures, foul sewe , Or escaping
gas. you can't have good Health. The air you
reathe is poisonous; your system becomes
poisoned and invalidism is sure to come.
SANITARY PLUMBING
is the kind we do. It's the only kind you
ought to have. Wedon’t trustthis work to
boys. Our 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 poor, unsan-
itary work and the lowest grade of
finishings. For the Best Work {ry
Archibald Allison,
Opposite Bush
House Bellefonte, Pa.
ve141y