fm e—— - — - _— — . 5 S ' WHY DRUGGISTS DIE YOUNG Bury a Barrel of Apples and Hit Real Estate Transfers. Shoes. Shoes. Demorradic aclu, Cut ; H. C. L. C. G. Bright to Lucretia Condo, 8 Be tao P= HL ustomers Like This Very Particular | Apile lovers in the cities who have | tract in Harris township; $2800. EL LL ES AS A tae Lady Must Be Great Strainon 5 few square yards of back yard or| IL J. Dreese to Sadie E. Jackson, = i Bellefonte, Pa., November 5, 1920. the Nerves. ganien Space ean be Seu of $2 tract in College township; $160. Li = - — — cheap supply of apples throughout the | Mary E. Cole, et bar, to Allen Smi- LE Oc The drug store was filled with wor- | winter if they take advantage of the | ley, A oh in Philipsburg, $1600. : or Sy FOUND CARDS WERE MARKED | ried looks—prescription faces. All present market surplus, buy a good | Fred Woods, et ux, to Frances Mey- | Fl Sf were eager for. quick action and the | grade of sound apples and bury them | o; “tract in Philipsburg, $2000 y d= LE druggist was doing his best t in barrel pit storage. By doing this ? ? : = 2 Revelations That Came as a Shock to |, 0p =, g his best to meet | 4 "own and city consumer not only |, L- D- Musser, et al, to Elmer C. |G A Wounded Soldiers in Hospital all the demands. A woman, the only | yelps the farmer and grower to dis- Musser, tract in Ferguson township; | [ic fire at Washington. one without a prescription in her hand, | pose of an extra large crop this year, $600. i I shifted back and forth until she got|but provides himself an all-winter Robert Fenton, et ux, to Ruth M. Se Lh Here is a melancholy story about directly in the path cf the druggist. supply of first-class fruit. House cel- Bair, tract in Rush township; $1. Uc Uc “mirkers.” “Wait on me, please,” she said snap- | lars are usually too warm to permit | Ruth M. Bair to Robert Fenton, ir = Tae & fire roarked playing cards | PIL. Tm in a hurry” Die Keeping of apples for any length | tract in Rush township; $1. Hi 37 so that he who plays may read the “What did you wish?” 0 me. ae barrels be set at) Bert S. Forringer, et ux, to, Fred | 2A so backs of the cards. Wounded soldiers Some birdseed—canary bird. And least half way he i a Leathers, tract in Boggs township; $1. LH LA under treatment in the Walter Reed I want the real stuff, none of this| vertical position where good drainage Anna W. Northamer, et bar, to |[l 0es or Ln hospital In Washington play cards camouflaged birdseed—sand, cornmeal, | is available. Earth may be heaped up Jennett Robins, tract in South Phil- | Fk i continually. They use decks which sawdust and a lot of other stuff.” around the top, and after filling with ipsburg; $100. : = b5 are given to the hospital, not new “But, lady, we— apples, a straw bag mat and lid is | Thomas Tubridy, et ux, to George | 5p a decks but those. which: have been Oh, you can’t fool me. Ive been | provided. Barrels may also be placed Cartwright, tract in Snow Shoe town- Ic ° ° = used Tis by Washington clubs, espe- reading up on this birdseed graft. 1|in a horizontal position well buried | ship; $200. 4 Al ally bridge Whitt clubs Of Womew fn | 1524 10 8 magazine Where they were and covered with earth, After the | Mary Tocarchik, et al, to Andrew |B rowin Ir S Al solely. jamming all sorts of junk into this | frst freeze, earth should cover the | Onestuk, tract in Rush township; [Ic Keen-eyed soldiers, as the story new goes, were surprised to discover one | day that some of the cards were marked by small knife point indenta- tions on the border of the back. The marking was not accidental. Scrutiny showed that the high cards | —eight spot up to ace—were carefully marked. The marks were so faint as to be almost imperceptible, but a per- son familiar with them could read the backs. Immediately there was a search for the card marker, for the soldiers may | gamble a bit now and then—officially they don’t, but actually they—well, it’s nobody’s business if one wounded buck private wishes to wager another wounded buck private that his five cards beat t'other chap’s five cards. Anyhow, if somebody was marking cards in the hospital the boys wished to talk to him. But investiga- tion revealed—and this is where the hospital soldiers were shocked—that whatever marking was done took place before the cards arrived at the | hospital. Not all decks were marked, only a deck now and then. The inference seems to be that somebody in Washington club life, woman's club life at that, is gracious- ly giving the wounded soldiers once- used card decks which have somehow been knife-pointed. The war veterans say that they have been shell shocked and otherwise startled, but they are vastly amazed at a phase of society life in Washington. Probably First Moving Pictures. America is not the original home of the moving picture. This assumption is disproved by an apparatus of an- cient Siamese civilization recently re- discovered. The apparatus consists of a number of ancient movie machines unearthed at the National museum in New York, where they had been hid- den away in boxes since their pre- sentation to this country by the king of Siam in 1875. The cinematic art as practiced hun- dreds of years ago in Siam was car- ried on as follows: The proper nums- ber of figures. designed from leather by hand. were mounted on rods and projected on the screen by the hand of the operator. The screen was a white cloth hung between the audience and the light. The shadows were manip- ulated by the operator’s pushing the manikins along in a trough. As action advanced through climax and anti-climax, the operator recited in a singsong voice five-reel dramas of the love and wrongs of the kings and queens represented. High Living. He was an Englishman, and it was his first introduction to the American Sunday-night supper. with all sorts of good things on the table at the same time. With an air of bewilderment he helped himself to everything that was passed him and then valiantly attack- ed his loaded plate. Picking up a fish ball in his fingers, he applied a gen- erous smear of honey to it and bit into the new combination. A look of hor- ror overspread his features, and he turned to his neighbor and put a warn- ing hand on his arm. “] say, steady on old chap!” he whispered, after a copious drink of water, “there’s something dead in this‘'bun! Don’t try it, whatever you do !”—Youth’s Companion. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN Nope, this isn’t the Undertaker, but old Whatsa. Use promoting business for him by Hanging Crepe. He feels Bad and wants Company, but all he Gets is Mean Looks, which Confirm his Opiuion that this is a Tuff Old World. He hasn't Smiled since the Pigs Ate Willie and now he Can’t be- cause his Face has Set. | { every Sunday. stuff we're feeding our poor little canaries. Think of cheating a poor lit- tle canary.” “But, lady, you don’t understand—" “Oh, yes, I do understand. I want birdseed that has a glaze on it—the kind that shows it is fresh by its bright color. I don't want this gritty stuff. I know what I'm talking about. I’ve been reading up and—" “How much did you want, lady?” “Oh, about a nickel’s worth.” And the poor, unhappy prescription- eers fell in a faint.—Indianapolis News. DAYS OF CHIVALRY ARE GONE This Hustling Age Seems to Have Lit. tle Time for the Merest Ele- mentary Courtesy. It was the hottest and most uncom- fortable day of the summer and the car was even more crowded than usual, says the Indianapolis News. Two young women who had done their full share of work for eight long hours, managed to squeeze into the car with the rest of the passengers. Of course all the seats were taken. Even a sug: gestion that some one offer the girls a seat was far from their minds. They stood in the aisle, as good-naturedly as they had done nearly every day in months past. One can imagine their surprise when an elderly man rose to proffer one of the girls a seat. “Take my seat, lady,” he said. “you look lots more tired than I” Gratefully, one of the girls started for the seat. A tall broad-shouldered man was just ahead of her. “Naw, yuh don’t.” he snarled. *I1 guess I'm nearer the seat than you are,” and he started to sit down. “Well, T guess if you are going to take the seat 1 may as well keep it until I am ready to get off,” the first man said, and with that he sat down again. ~ioa - Two blocks later he got off the car, the tall broad-shouldered man rushed to the seat, and the young women held on to the straps. More Than Her Mouth. Although the groundhogs at the “700” did their best to keep the spring day away from that fine park and playground for the people, time will bring spring within a few weeks now, at the worst. Time has a way of making things move. Although crowds at the National Zoological park have fallen off ma- terially during these cold winter Sun- days, nevertheless many visit the park Much attention is given the animals kept indoors, naturally. Thus the mother hippopotamus has her admirers. Recently two small boys, that good sort that shy rocks at cats and sparrows, were standing in front of the hippopotamus cage, watching Mrs. Hippo eat hay. “Look at ‘'r open ’er mouth!” said one boy, lost in admiration, “Mouth nothin’!” exclaimed the oth- er, “That ain’t ’er mouth—it’s ‘er whole head she’s openin’!”—Washing- ton Star. Tomb Was Tramp’s Home. A tramp who had solved the present day problem of where to live by taking up his abode in one of the old Roman tombs at Arles, on the Rhone, gave two Dutch tourists the fright of their lives. They had gone out to see the remains by moonlight, when suddenly out of a tomb emerged a human form, which the moon caused to appear exceedingly ghostlike. The tourists fled at top speed for the town, declaring that they had seen a resurrection. The “ghost” was interrogated by the police and will be prosecuted for the French equivalent of wandering without vis- ible means of subsistence.—From the Continental Edition of the London Daily Mail. Captain Couldn't Answer. Master Charles Wymond Potter ac- companied his grandfather, Capt, Charles A. Wymond, to the river at Evansville the other day to see that the elevator, boats, barges and coal were all right. “Grandfather,” remarked Charles, “why do they call dirt mud when it’s wet, and dust when it is dry?” No reply from grandfather, who is still thinking about the answer.—In- dianapolis News. Thoroughly Selfish. “Do you know what I'd like?” said the first road hog. “No, what would you like?” said the second porcine person. “I'd like to have a motorcar so big there wouldn't be room on the broad- est boulevard for anything to pass me but a breeze.”—Birmingham Age-Her- ald. barrel end completely. The common pit storage where the apples are placed in a trench ona good bed of straw, and earth mound- ed over them is also an excellent way to store apples. But for ordinary home consumption the barrel method is perhaps more satisfactory as it will permit opening several times during the winter to obtain fresh supplies. Circular 74, issued free by the agricul- tural extension department of The Pennsylvania State College school of agriculture, tells how to go about pre- paring all kinds of home storage for fruits. Farmers and growers generally are advised by Dr. S. W. Fletcher, head of the State College horticultural de- partrient, to store apples by the pit method if no other storage is availa- ble. — Railroad Superintendent: you know how to fire an engine? Coramuter: Well, I ought to; I've been taking care of my furnace ever since 1914. Do $1000. C. 0. Mallory, et al, to John T. Brown Jr., tract in Miles township; $2200. Sarah Merryman to .Taylor town- ship Road School, tract in Taylor township; $20. J. Craig Hunter to George B. Hoov- er, tract in Benner township; $125. J. Craig Hunter to Geo. B. Hoover, tract in Patton township; $500. H. Laird Curtin, et ux, to Amelia V. Barton, tract in Curtin township; $100. Harriet Rowley to Mary E. Gunsal- lus, tract in Snow Shoe, $500. John Henderson, et ux, to Chas. P. Oxi erhout, tract in Taylor township; $600. Frederick Leathers, et ux, to Geo. M. Harter, tract in Howard; $4505. ——————————— A ——————————— “Taking the orchids to your fian- cee?” “No; to a girl in my factory. She is threatening to quit.” Children Cry for Fletcher's LAUER NENNANNNNNNNNANNNNNNNN WLR N \ LR LS SCURRY CRRA RRR The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. = What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GeNUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of age is its guarantee. In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford One Ton Truck is a portable “beast of burden” and surely has the “right of way” in every line of business activity. For all trucking purposes in the city and for all heavy work on the farm, the Ford One Ton Truck with Beatty Motor Company BELLEFONTE, PA. Use Genuine Ford Parts. NAANNNNNNNNNNN S| WANNER its manganese bronze worm-drive and every other Ford merit of simplicity in design, strength in construction, economy in operation, low purchase price, stands head and shoulders above any other truck on the market. talk it over and leave your order for one. NY NY ANN NNN SN A RRR RAR NN 0 and * Just-as-good ” are but It is pleasant. It contains allaying Feverishness arising @® Drop in and let's SRSA $6.00 $6.00 We have a complete line of (ULI ee SRE a LET ERS 5 Shoes for Growing Girls ~~ § EL, for school wear. Made of I 8] darktan Russia calf, vicikid i 8 and gun metal - all solid § C leather, low heels and high > Ch = ASRS nEan rl tops and the price is only $6.00 ot - ar] C 2 7: 2 Yeager's Shoe Store § Ee SRA THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN il SEER Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. E LRSh -— Jona UE Jom Sh) Ee eee RARE Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME. Adjustment Sale! T0 LOWER PRICES We have made radical re- ductions in all departments to make this month the banner month for low prices. We have made a 33% Reduction This means you will buy new winter merchandise at pre- war prices. We extend a cordial invita- tion to allow us to quote prices and show qualities that will prove to you we are doing as advertised. Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME