SE, ——— ——— Aloe ® Beara al Bellefonte, Pa., May 6, 1921. Country Correspondence Items of Interest Dished Up for the Delectation of “Watchman” Read- ers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. ORVISTON. Mrs. Ira Condo has been quite ill but is now improving. Miss Emma Lomison is much better | than she was last week. Miss Sara Budinger is very ill at the home of her sister, Mrs. J. Ellis Harvey. Clair Poorman visited at the home of his brother, Roger Poorman, at Beech Creek, last week and reports a pleasant time. The Needle Craft club met at the home of Mrs. William Poorman, Mon- day. A very pleasant time was had by all, as Mrs. Poorman is a very agreeable hostess. Mrs. Ives Harvey, of Bellefonte, visited her old time friends and a few relatives last week, and every one was pleased to see her. rs. Harvey 1s a very pleasing and popular lady. William Barnhart, Miss Relda Shawley, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Barn- hart and son Lester, visited Mrs. Ver- da Ganeau last week at Clearfield. They report a very enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. George Bixel and daughters, Almeta and Mary Jean- nette, Karl Keller, Ben Poorman, Her- bert Confer, Harry Marshall, Mrs. William Lucas and Miss Josephine Poorman visited Lock Haven to hear W. J. Bryan. Mr. and Mus. Bixel and daughters remained over Sunday to attend the birthday or of Mr. Stouck, Mrs. Bixel’s father. Donald Bernhard Reagan, the in- fant son of Mr. and Mrs. James Dela- ney, passed away Thursday, April 28th, aged 2 months and 2 days. Born prematurely, the wee manny was far too tiny and frail to thrive, although tenderly and lovingly cared for. Fun- eral services were held at the home of his parents, Saturday morning, by Rev. Walter Merrick. Interment was made in Schenck’s cemetery. Floral tributes were very lovely, sent by the friends of the sorrowing young par- ents, in token of their heartfelt sym- pathy. ————————— RUNVILLE. Mrs. Ida Witmer spent the fore part of the week with her mother, at Win- gate. Lemoine Lucas, an over Sunday guest with this place. Miss Erma McClincy, lege, spent Sunday with in this place. Edward Gross, who is employed at Bellefonte, spent the week-end with his aunt, Mrs. Shope, in this place. Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Brooks and son Luther, of Pleasant Gap, autoed to this place on Sunday and spent the day at the L. J. Heaton home. Miss Mary Hoffman, who had beer spending some time at the home of Rev. G. A. Sparks, returned to her home at Altoona last Thursday. Murs. Lulu Davis, of Tyrone, is vis- iting her mother, Mrs. John Lucas, who has been on the sick list for some time but at this writing is able to be about. U. B. church services—Yarnell, Sat- urday, 7:45 p. m. Fairview, Sunday, 10:30 a. m. Pleasant Valley, Sunday, 2:30 p. m. Runville, Sunday, 7:45 Pp. m. Subject, “Our Mothers.” A wel- come to all. G. A. Sparks, Pastor. PENSE 4 Cn CENTRE HALL. Rev. W. R. Picken has been on the sick list for a week or more. Charles Stump returned from West Virginia on Tuesday, and will work on the state road. The Odd Fellows and Rebekahs held a joint farewell social for Rev. R. R. Jones and family. The Ladies Aid society of the Meth- odist church held a dues social in their church on Wednesday evening. Every- body had a good time. Tifteen pupils graduated from our High school on Friday evening. The exercises were very interesting and the hall was crowded. The silk banner was again won by our local High school at the meet held in Bellefonte last Saturday. Our pu- pils conducted themselves very cred- itably. Mrs. Mary Snyder and daughter, Miss Rebecca, returned to their home in Avis this week, after a stay of a month or more with the former’s sis- ter, Miss Gertrude Floray. The Misses Hazel and Margaret Emery and their guest, Miss Helen Weidensaul, of Altoona, entertained several gentlemen friends from the eastern part of the State over Sunday. J of Snow Shce, was friends in of State Col- LEMONT. John Hoy, who has received treat- ment for cancer is about cured. Wayne Hanna and wife, from the west, are visiting at Mr. Hanna's home. Mrs. B. F. Hoy, who has been quite ill for several weeks, is slowly getting better. The farmers are through sowing oats and some of them are ready to plant corn. Some of the early fruits have been hurt by the frosts but the apples are not all killed. The heavy rains the latter part of last week were needed, as the ground was very dry. The newly elected Presbyterian min- ister preached for the Lemont con- gregation on Sunday evening. Quite a few of the people from town attended the commencement exercises of the Boalsburg High school. Harry Grove went to Buffalo, Mon- day, to take treatment for cancer of the mouth. r— po—— a — — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” BOALSBURG. celebration in hon- | her friends! Mr. and Mrs. Frank McFarlane are spending some time in Philadelphia. Messrs. Robert and Israel Reitz, of Charter Oak, were in town on Mon- | day. Jerry Dunklebarger, of West Vir- ginia, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Hen- ry Reitz. A. W. Dale and Charles Segner transacted business in Bellefonte on Thursday. Mrs. Harold Coxey and daughter Eleanor, of Altoona, are visiting friends in town. Prof. Williamee entertained his brother from Woolrich from Wednes- | day until Thursday. Mrs. E. R. Tussey and cousin, Mrs. Morrow, of Arch Springs, were visit- ors in town on Sunday. Mrs. E. W. Hess and daughter Vir- ginia, of Shingletown, were guests of Mrs. Charles Kuhn on Sunday. Mrs. Harry McGirk, of Bellefonte, spent part of last week at the home of her mother, Mrs. Henry Dale. Mrs. Caroline Geary returned to her home in Centre Hall after a month’s visit with her sister, Mrs. William Meyer. Messrs. Coxey and Hess, of Altoo- na, are spending some time in this vicinity, engaged in wiring a number of houses for electric light. Rev. Babcock and Prof. Irving Fos- ter, of State College, addressed a meeting for the children in the Luth- eran church on Sunday morning. The children sang a number of hymns. The commencement exercises last Wednesday evening were well attend- ed. The eight graduates acquitted College High school orchestra fur- nished music for the occasion. Prof. Oscar Smith delivered the commence- ment address. Liquor Dealers Seeking to Make Joke of Constitution. “The liquor question has ceased to be a question of personal desire and has become a question of obedience to law. If the future policy of liquor in- lification of the Constitution through a change in the definition of alcoholic liquors from one per cent. to as high as they can get itis sure, then the Constitution of the United States be- comes a joke.” So said Col. Dan Mor- gan Smith, who led the famous “Bat- falion of Death” in France, in an in- terview recently with a representative of the Troy, N. Y. Record. Colonel Smith expressed himself in part as follows: “Prohibition must be | enforced—and not because it is prohi- | bition, but because it is law. As this ' government years ago set an example ! in abolishing slavery, so now should it i set an example regarding prohibition, | that the world may be free from the | beverage use of a habit forming drug that has debauched mankind wherever | it has been introduced. | «I place the purchaser of the liquor | in the same category as the man who i illegally sells it to him, a violator of { the law of the country, and fit inhab- | itant of a jail or penitentiary. { “Alcoholism is no less a menace to | the home, to good government, to law and order and to the permanency of American ideals, than was militarism. «Soldiers fought, bled and died on the battlefields to uphold the Consti- tution which guarantees liberty and freedom from oppression, and liquor dealers are seeking to make a joke of this sacred Constitution.” Clear Up! Now let us give politics a rest, and rout and siege and sally, and gayly shed our coat and vest, and go and clean the alley. Let’s gather up the dogs and cats which have this life de- parted, and let the cans and bricks and hats off to the dump be carted. In winter you may voice your views, which you believe important, and base long sermons on the news, but in the spring you ortn’t. Then every able bodied man should whoop the “CLEAN UP” slogan, and chase the old tomato can, the cast-off hat and brogan. So let us clear our bulging brows of trifling thoughts and narrow, and gather up the old dead cows and work the rake and harrow. The rub- ish left by careless men, and lazy hu- man cheeses, will bring a host of germs again, and they’ll bring punk diseases. And forty billion flies will come, as many microbes bearing, and round our weary heads they’ll hum, and keep us busy swearing. Clean up, clean up. On every block let all the workers rally. No man should stand around and talk until he’s cleaned his alley! ef — Cameron, Pike and Philadelphia counties are the only ones in Pennsyl- vania without Farm Bureau organiza- tions at the present time. Elk, Mon- tour and Fulton are the latest to join the ranks, and with Perry, will ask State College to supply county agents in the near future. aI — Get your job work done at this office and get it right. PRESS———ee le GLYCERINE MIXTURE PREVENTS APPENDICITIS. Simple glycerine buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka, removes all foul, accumulated poisonous mat- ter from BOTH upper and lower bowel and prevents appendicitis. Relieves ANY CASE gas on stomach or consti- pation. The INSTANT pleasant ac- tion of Adler-i-ka surprises both doc- tors and patients. A business man re- ports great benefit in a long standing case of indigestion and sour stomach. Runkle’s Drug Store. 66-18 eee —— CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. themselves with credit and the State | terests to evade prohibition by a nul- a public nuisance. ER -— Clean Up Campaign. As announced in last week’s papers, this is Fly Week, the opening week in the clean-up campaign. This clean-up should include: Removal of all rubbish, filth and trash from every household, school store, institution and vacant lot. Stables and pig pens should be cleaned and sprinkled with borax or kerosene. Cesspools should be cleaned, limed and screened. Streets and gutters should be clean- ed. Mosquito breeding places should be eliminated and oiled. Clean out rats and their breeding places. Arrange for the summer care of garbage: and plan for garbage dumps. Provide for protecting fruits and vegetables from flies. The success of a fly campaign de- pends upon the destruction of breeding places. Flies breed in filth, therefore, filth should be removed. Ninety per cent. of house flies are bred in the ma- nure of horse stables and hog pens. Manure should be removed twice a week during the fly season. Privies to which flies have access afford the double danger of offering a breeding place and focus for the spread of dis- ease. Rules and Regulations of Depart- ment of Health applicable to fly erad- ication and protection against fly dangers: No firm, person, or corporation shall expose for sale on any sidewalk or pavement or other exposed place any fruit, vegetables or other articles of food which are eaten uncooked, unless such fruit, vegetables or other articles of food are thoroughly screened and protected from flies, and unless they are on elevated stands at least twen- ty-four inches above the level of the sidewalk or pavement. No privy, cesspool or other recepta- cle for human excrement shall be con- structed, maintained or used so that fies have or may have access to the excrementitious matter contained therein. All privies, urinals, cesspools or other receptacles for human excre- ment shall be cleaned at sufficiently frequent intervals to prevent the con- tents from overflowing. The transportation of human ex- crement shall be effected in water- tight containers with tight fitting cov- es. Containers shall be thoroughly cleansed after each use. No human excrement or material containing human excrement shall be placed on the surface of the ground ox buried or otherwise disposed of where it is likely to gain access to any wa- ters of the State, unless subjected to treatment by a method approved by the Commissioner of Health. The contents of privies, other receptacles for human excre- ment shall not be used on ground within the corporate limits of any city or borough or within 700 feet of any habitation unless subjected to treat- ment by a method approved by the Commissioner of Health. No kitchen or laundry place. No garbage, offal, imals, decaying matter or organic waste substance of any kind shall be thrown or deposited in any ravine, diteh or gutter; on any street or high- way; into any waters of the State or be permitted to remain exposed upon the surface of the ground. Manure shall not be allowed to ac- curmaulate in any place where it can prejudicially affect any source of drinking water or as a sourc breeding it may become a menace to public health. No persons mit to be maintained any pond, privy vault, cesspool, well, cistern, rain bar- rel, or other receptacle containing water in such a condition that mos- quitoes breeding therein may become MEDICAL. Plenty of Proof Know—From People You Bellefonte Citizens. The greatest skeptic can hardly fail to be convinced by evidence like this. It is impossible to produce better proof of merit than the testimony of residents of Bellefonte, of people who can be seen at any time. Read the following case of it. E. J. BEckenroth, painter, Main St., says: “As every one knows, men who follow the painting business are troubled more or less with their kid- neys. Ihave used Doan’s Kidney Pills whenever bothered by my kidneys and they have always given good results. My advice to any one having kidney complaint is to take 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 Mr. Eckenroth had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 66-18 From Get the Best Meats You save nothing by buyin oor, thin or gristly meats. 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 sneats are elsewhere. 1 always have —DRESSED POULTRY— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want, TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, Hight Street. 34-31-1y Bellefonte Money back without question Ps if NT'S Saive fails in the treatment of ITC! ECZEMA, RINGWORM, T TTER or other itching skin diseases. Tey @ 75 cent box et our risk, 63-26 ©. M. PARRISH, Druggist,Bellefonts cesspools or | water shall | be allowed to discharge or flow into | any gutter, street, roadway or public! pomace, dead an- | e of fly: shall maintain or per- 2 | No pigsty shall be built or main- tained on marshy ground or land sub- | ject to overflow, nor within 100 feet of any stream or other source of wa- ter supply, nor within 300 feet of an | tion thereof, be punished by a fine inhabited house or public meeting | not more than one hundred dollars house on adjoining property. i ¢ garbage is fed to pigs provision shall | month, be made so that all unconsumed gar- bage shail be removed daily and dis- | 1905, P. L. 312. posed of by burial or incineration. All| garbage shall be handled and fed up- When | on platforms of concrete or other im- — When in doubt as to your pa- pervious material. Unslaked lime, hy- | per take the “Watchman.” pochlorite of lime, borax or mineral | | ties in accordance with the regula- tions and orders of the Department of Health, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and shall, upon convic, ; o or | Exchange. When | by imprisonment not exceeding one or both, at the discretion of | the court. Sec. 16, Act of April 27, | ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. S ELINE WOODRING — Attor - Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Store all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s 51-1y SPANGLER — Attorney-at- Practices in all the iy ew. i sultation in English or German. ; Office in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefont a. 20-23 i ™ a. | | Y KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney- i Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Proaey ge tention given all legal business en- trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5 East Ee 1 Money back without question’ if HUNT'S Salve fails in the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER or other itching skin diseases. Try a 75 cent box at our risk. oil shall be used daily in sufficient ' quantities to prevent offensive odors | and the breeding of flies. | Penalty for Violation of Orders and | H Regulations.—Every person who vio- lates any order or regulation of the Department of Health, or who resists | or interferes with any officer or agent thereof in the performance of his du- | TESTOR) | For Infants and dole Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the he ir —— Di tion . therety Pomcine Dit] Signature of ALGOHOL-3 PER GENT. i 1h AVesetabie TreparationforAs | | simitatingtheood by Regula: J fing the Stomachs and Bowels of ] Cheerfulness and | neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARGOTH 5 Es i) Rochelle Salts £f ate SoZ L n Seed Clarified Sugar F Wdergreen Favor, In Use For Over Thirty Years \ t {pful R dy for A helpful Remed onstipation i Di nd Feverishnes | a Loss OF on i 11. * iil resting therefrom : | Fac Simife Signature ® | i | | | | | | { | | | | ! | AE I | ; 3 . 7 v Ti, 7 “7 | | 5 L i. A man owes it to his friends and to himself to dress well. Your wife, mother, father or brother are prouder of you when you are well dressed. Your sweetheart prefers it, and your boss, maybe, is kept back from advancing you, because you don’t ‘‘look the part.” Try dressing better, doesn’t PAY YOU. We've got the good clothes for you from head to foot, to fit your body and your pocketbook. Wear our Good, “Nifty” Clothes A. Fauble and see if it 63-26 C. M. PARRISH, Drugglst, Bellefonte 57-44 High street. M. KEICHLINE—Attorney-at- J and Justice of the Peace. Tall 1 Sir fessional biSluess will receive ntion. c SEOUL asin e on second floor 3 W G. RUNKLE — Attorney-at- Cansulation ia pera yi n., } Bellefonte, Pa. geiin riders Exchapge: sam. PHYSICIANS. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. State College Holmes Bldg. DD BR. Bellefonte Crider’s Exch. WwW dence. 66-11 S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- 35-41 FLOUR We have our new Concrete Mill completed and now running. We built the best mill to produce the best flour possible. “Our Best” A WINTER WHEAT, STRAIGHT If you Want Good Flour—Try -—Or— “Vi 99 A Spring Wheat cory” “a We can Grind Your Feed While you Wait, We are in the Market, for All Kinds of Grain C. Y. Wagner & Co., Inc. 66-11-1yr 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 BENEFITS: $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one fcot, 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 per week, total disability, (limit 52 weeks) 10 per week, partial disability. (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amountsin proportion Any person, male or female, engaged in a preferred occupation, including house keeping, over eighteen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this poiicv. 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 The Preferred H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte fa Accident INSURANCE! Insurance Fire and Automobile Insurance at a THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY reduced rate. 62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. FINE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest * er” to the finest BOOK WORK, that we can not do in the most satis- factory manner, and at Prices consist- ent with the of work. Call on or communicate with this office