Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 21, 1922, Image 5

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. 1 M . | Essel tract in Haines township; OAK HALL. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Exceptiona 3 usical | Saher Sukeal eb al, LD re i, Hy Wagner stgnsestes business on_SALD baby Serving i ou 08 MN room house at — OST.—Black leather Sovered i gaste
: 3 i ilips- . ndition. Inquire of F. J. = urg. d . il | 00k. b: containing
Program Coming 1s $350, ager, meh ups Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Peters and fam- HAUS. orrarcial phone. 27-2t* Bell’ 16-R3, SI Sener i De of people fo and around
= > ’ ily spent Sunday at the Edward a—— Worth township, Return (0 RON Ck:
There it no class of music more
beautiful, more helpful, more in-
spirirg, more up.ifting, and con-
tributed te more bountifully by the
world’s greatest music masters,
than thot which is composed to be
sung Curing services of divine wor-
ship.
Consider ‘ng that the opportunity
3 wonderful composi-
ered by a body of trained
zr tos rare in most
the Dunbar Phil-
i» Choir is presented at the
cua, not only as a company
tists to entertain, but as a
n of a choir ideal; such
ization as might appro-
priately adorn any sacred portal.
In presenting these artists it is
hoped that wherever they appear,
they may inspire a desire for more
beautiful music in the worship of
God.
The repertoire of the Philhar-
monic Choir includes a number of
the short, modern oratorios by such
composers as Buck, Stainer and
Schnecker, one of which is ren-
dered at each performance, this be-
ing the first company in the his-
tory of the Chautauqua to offer
such works in their entirety. The
programs also include a number of
old hymrs, the interpretation of
which is a special feature. As a
fitting contrast to the sacred music,
and by way of furnishing a strik-
ing climax and finish, the company
is heard in a number of secular
solos, duets, quartets and choruses
of a very high order, finally clos-
ing with a grand finale, ‘‘Cavalleria
Rusticana.”’
hear 1
BIRTHS.
Musser—On July 3, to Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Musser, of Bellefonte, a son,
William Jacob.
Corrage—On July 1, to Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Corrage, of Pleasant
Gap, a son, Daniel John.
Thompson—On July 8, to Mr. and
Mrs. L. C. Thompson, of Bellefonte, a
son, Hassel Curtis. Mrs. Thompson
before her marriage was Mrs. Julia
Steele Holter.
Bitner—On June 11, to Mr. and
Mrs. Oliver Murray Bitner, of Spring
township, a son, Hard John.
Mongan—On July 14, to Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. E. Mongan, of Bellefonte,
a daughter.
Shultz—On July 17, to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Shultz, of Bellefonte, a
daughter.
Kelley—On July 12, to Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Kelley, of Bellefonte, a son,
John William.
Elder—On July 14, to Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. Elder, of Ferguson town-
ship, a son.
Berardis—On July 10, to Mr. and
Mrs. Ottaira Berardis, of Bellefonte, a
son, Antonio Lorenzo.
Shuey—On July 8, to Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver J. Shuey, of Hublersburg, 2
daughter.
Rimmey—On July 3, to Mr. and
Mrs. James C. Rimmey, of Pleasant
Gap, a son, Keith Herman.
Dunklebarger—On July 5, to Mr.
and Mrs. Curtin Dunklebarger, of
Pleasant Gap, a son, Clarence Dean.
em —— ee —
Wm. Penn Highway Celebration.
The stretch of the William Penn
highway between Tyrone and Hunt-
ingdon has been completed and a for-
mal opening will be held at the Pem-
berton bridge, five miles east of Ty-
rone, on Thursday afternoon, July
27th. Gov. William C. Sproul will be
the principal speaker and addresses
will be made by representatives of the
State Highway Department, the Penn-
sylvania Railroad, and the county
commissioners of Huntingdon and
Blair counties.
The completion of the bridge, which
is one of the most beautiful on the
william Penn highway, opens to the
public a scenic route unsurpassed by
any in the central part of the State.
The celebration will be in charge of
committees representing the commu-
nities of Tyrone, Huntingdon and Al-
toona and will be the largest and most
interesting road opening ever held in
Central Pennsylvania.
e————————
LEMONT.
Sara Lenker and Beatrice Shuey
are on the sick list.
Orin Grove’s family are visiting at
the home of his father, William E.
Grove.
The farmers are almost through
harvesting their bumper wheat and
hay crops.
The fine rains Monday and Tuesday
will help the growing crops. The corn
and oats are looking fine and promise
to be big crops.
James I. Thompson has a crew of
men working at the old Center Fur-
nice mill, changing it into an ice
plant and cold storage.
A gang of men started in this week
in earnest to build the new piece of
road from Center Furnace to State
College, which will take the big curve
out at that place.
The school board of College town-
ship has elected the following teach-
ers for the ensuing term:
Dale—Helen Bathgate.
Houserville—G. W. R. Williams.
Lemont Grammar—Miss Johnston.
Lemont Primary—Margaret Glenn.
Oak Hall—Nellie Peters.
Branch—To be supplied.
Center Furnace—Ethel Houtz.
Pleasant View—Helen Emenhizer.
—————— ee —————
Real Estate Transfers.
Annie L. Gettig, et al, to George E.
Nove tract in Harris township; $1,-
Alice S. Snyder, et bar, to Clarence
% Snyder, tract in Boggs township;
Isaac M, Orndorf,
et ux, to J. L.
James S. Martin to Ida Way Meek,
tract in State College; $2,000.
Geo. W. Ferrer, et ux, to Geo. WwW.
Ishler, tract in Harris township; $1.
William L. Foster, et al, to Harry
W. Lonebarger, tract in State Col-
lege; $525.
Harvey L. Faulkner,
mer Sneath, tract in
$1,100.
et ux, to El-
Philipsburg;
ee eee
¢AWNEE ROCK A STATE PARK
tansa:z Acquires Site of a Great in
dian Battle Which Took Place
on Old Trail.
One of the real historical places in
Kansas—Pawnee Rock—a monument
cr hill of rock which stood alongside
of the Santa Fe trail, and which today
is still a break in the level of the Ar-
kansas valley through which the old
trail wended its way, has been made a
state park, according to the Great
Beud correspondence of the Topeka
Capital.
(itizens of Pawnee Rock who live at
thie base of this park are preparing to
make it one of the localities that will
Le remembered by the tourists as
they travel over the route which for
any years was the principal route
to the Pacific. The rock is to be
cleaned up for the summer, the road
to the top, where a monument and
pavilion are located, is to be made
over and the place made one where
tourists will find it pleasant to stop
and camp.
rawnee Rock was named for the
Pawnee Indians who met annually on
the rock, and tradition is that it was
the scene of one of the greatest fights
in the annals of the Indians of the
plain, when an attacking body of In-
diaus besieged the Pawnees while they
were in annual conclave, and the fight
lasted for days, the Pawnee being
safely fortified on the rock but being
cut off from water, though scouts man-
aged to reach the river during the
night and relieve their people on the
rock.
In the years when the chief route
to California was the Santa Fe trail
and the government maintained forts
every 40 to 100 miles the rock was a
favorite camping place for trains go-
ing through. The names of hundreds
of travelers were cut in the soft sand-
stone of which the rock is composed.
Among them were many men famous
in military history of the United
States, including General Sherman
and General Sheridan.
NEW ALLOY COMES INTO USE
Duralumin Said to Be Valuable for
the Construction of Worm
Wheels or Gears.
Worm wheels or gears of a new ma-
terial are a recent development, says
the Scientific American. Such wheels
have mainly been made of steel or
iron or bronze, but now, for certain
purposes and under certain conditions,
they are being made of duralumin.
This alloy has never before been used
as gears.
Duralumin is an alloy of aluminum,
magnesium, manganese and a little
copper, and its strength and toughness
can be made equal to mild steel, and
for a given section the weight is one-
third that of the continental bronze.
Superior strength in the teeth is as-
sured by the alloy’s tensile strength
and elastic limit.
The same properties that make du-
relumin a suitable and desirable ma-
terial for worm wheels also make it
valuable for spur gears and other
gearing.
Where duralumin can be run with
steel rather than against itself the
best results are obtained. For exam-
ple, in the timing gear trains of auto-
niohile motors, where both long life
and quietness are essential, helical
ent spur gears of duralumin alternat-
ed with steel gears have been in suec-
cessful service.
——
London's Infamous Slums.
The slums of London, especially in
Shoreditch and Bethnal Green, have
scores of householders who have not
had to pay any rent for two or three
years and have not the remotest idea
of who their landlords are. The land-
lords dare not come forward and ad-
mit that they own these houses, which
are in a shocking state of repair. The
property is now a liability rather than
an asset. These tumbledown houses
have mostly fallen into the hands of
foreigners and change hands so fre-
quently that track is lost of the for-
mer owners. The queen was shown
some of the worst of these places by
the mayor when she visited Shoreditch
recently. She had expressed a wish
that nothing should be “tidied up” be-
forehand. In two rooms of one ram-
shackle dwelling in Wilmer gardens
lives a man with no less than nine
children.
DS ——
His Affliction.
A new disease has been discovered
—at least so one of the workers of
the Pittsburgh chapter of the Ameri-
can Red Cross reports. It developed
the other day when a veteran called
for aid.
“What can we do for you?” anx-
fously inquired the worker as she
looked into the rather dejected coun-
tenance of the World war soldier.
“I need some assistance.”
“What does your doctor say is the
matter?”
“] dunno just what it Is, but he says
“formation of the diagnosis.’”
An effort is being made to ascertain
the nature of this new ailment.—Med-
ical Record.
Martz home at Pine Grove Mills.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Etters motor-
ed to Tyrone, Sunday, and spent the
day with relatives at that place.
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, of
Pleasant Gap, visited Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Smith’s brother, F. E.
Reish, on Main street.
Mr. and Mrs. Merril Houser and
son and Miss Mae
on Sunday at Crystal Spring park, in
the Woodward Narrows.
William Bohn recently completed
the new addition to the rear of his
house, and also erected a new porch,
which adds much to the beauty of the
place.
Marriage Licenses.
James M. Fetters, Bellefonte, and
Viola M. Tressler, Mingoville.
Rudolph C. Williams, Port Matilda,
and Anna Mary Hall, ¥leming.
James H. Algoe, Bellefonte,
Kathryn L. McIntire, Altoona.
Wilbur R. Barth
pich, Mattawana.
Fred C. Bechdel,
ry E. Pletcher, Blanchard.
Robert M. Gocher, Johnstown, and
Louise M. Grim, State College.
A Stitch in Time
Charge for Consultation.
Some folks claim a dollar saved is
a dollar earned. There is no doubt
but that this is good logic; if the dol-
lar is saved at the expense of lost en-
ergy and a possible chance of ruined
the logic is bad.
Many people actually believe they
are saving money
The - fact is
from danger), that a pair of perfect
fitting glasses will outwear a dozen
pairs of cheap ones.
I practice Optometry,
science of fitting glasses.
Dr. Eva B. Roan, Optometrist. Li-
censed by the State Board.
eyes,
cheap glasses.
Bellefonte every
to 4:30 p. m.
State College every day except Sun-
66-42
day. Both phones.
your crops
F fire and lig
70 cents a hundred.
67-28-3m
E
XECUTRIX'S
ough, deceased, all
Houser picnicked
SAR
67-25-6t
cash
and lightning.
66-16-6m
ARMERS—Take notice!
I will insure
months against
at the rate of
for six
htning,
J. M. KEICHLINE.
NOTICE.—Letters tes-
tamentary having been issued to
the undersigned upon the estate of
Harry C. Valentine, late of Bellefonte bor-
persons knowing them-
selves indebted to same are requested to
make prompt payment, and those having
claims against the same must present
them, duly authenticated, for settlement.
A B. VALENTINE,
Executrix,
Bellefonte, Pa.
, a ——
Farmers and Others Take Notice.
——
I will insure dwellings at $1.00 a hun-
dred and barns at $1.60 a hundred on the
lan, for three years, as against fire
J. M. EEICHLINE,
Bellefonte, Pa.
and
and Mary C. Es-
Costs no
Indiana, and Ma- :
ordinary
Delicious,
Saves Nine. No
(aside
a a or SALE IAPAIAIAT RITA NIUENINIUININONINII PSS
RAVI PUPP IPI SPE NG NENG ENE NEAT
SOLD IN
the drugless
&
24-tf
Saturday, 9 a. m.
Bac-te-lac
more than
Buttermilk
Is superior to ordinary
Buttermilk because of its
Velvety Smooth-
ness, Appetizing, Creamy
Richness, Uniformity, Puri-
ty, Keeping Qualities, Pal-
atable Flavor and High
Food Value.
SPLENDID RESULTS IN
COOKING and BAKING
I h BAC-TE-LAC
y purchasing Highly recommended by
physicians as a healthful bev-
erage and general conditioner.
ANY QUANTITY
estern Maryland Dairy
Bellefonte, Pa.
NEW
F
Cost $300 new
Price now, $200. BELLEFONTE ACADE: |
MY
OR SALE AT BARGAIN.—3% h. p.
Domestic Gasoline engine
|
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|
|
puinp. | :
and used 7 months. | |
7-20
Bellefonte and
We Make a Specialty of Moving
Furniture, Trunks & Baggage
“SERVICE AND
Anthracite Coal at Retail.
Pittsburgh Coal Wholesale and Retail
A. L. PETERS
GENERAL
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
Bell Phone No. 487-R-13. Commercial
Phone No. 48-7.
ally Motor Express |
BETWEEN
(Refillers
State College
RIGHT PRICE”
DRAYING
Terms Cash. Special Attention
66-50-tt 67-25
= °\ Che Latest Creation
POWDER IN FIVE TIMES
QUANTITY OF ROUGE
Smart Fresheningup Packet [2.5
for the Hand Bagor R=
Sparkling Ornament to Nas: £5
the Dressing Gable. NON Frese:
RICHARD HUDNUT 3
THREE FLOWERS TWIN COMPACT
(Sold Finished)
Richard Hudnut
Containing
ZL Fs
2
The Mott Drug Co
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Given to Mail Orders
SALIX CHAUTAUQUA
JULY 22 to AUGUST 5
BYRON W. KING, Superintendent
Lectures, Concerts, Music, Expression
Special Saturday and Sunday Programs.
Special Music Department.
Little Chautauqua on Earth.
For details, write
EVENING ENTERTAINMENTS
Chautauqua and Lyceum Classes.
Recreation, Health and Entertainment.
Biggest
KING'S SCHOOL OF ORATORY
Mt. Oliver, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Or Dr. T. J. LIVINGSTONE, Salix, (Cambria Co.) Pa.
67-27-2t
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAS AA
National Accounting Comp
Owned, Bonded and Control
Audits, Cost and Accounting Systems - {-
Local Office,
67-13tf
Room 7, 32 West Fourth
WILLIAMSPORT, PENNA.
any
led by National Surety Company
. Federal and State Tax Service
Street,
Bell Phone 1547
AAA AAA ANA AAAAAAAAAA AAAI III
N
H". that Diamond mounted in the
new style White Gold Ring that
is so popular and is here to stay
Different styles on hand for your in-
spection
the stone look twice the size.
from
W64-22-tf
——Subseribe for the “Watchman.” -
§
$8.00 to $25.00
F. P. Blair & Son,
Jewelers and Optometrists
Bellefonte, Pa.
This style mounting makes
Prices
HAYNES, Port Matilda.
E OR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa-
x CUE upon the estate of Robert
IRA D. GARMAN
E
EWELER P. Barnes, late of Spring township,
J Pa., having been granted to the under-
101 South Eleventh St. signed, all betseus Enowing Home n
estate a
PHILADELPHIA, oe : and those having
make prompt payment
nat the same must present
them, duly authenticated, for settlement.
Ww. H. NOLL, Jr., Executor,
Pleasant Gap, Pa.
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum
64-34tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY 67-27-6t*
.Scenic Theatre. |
Week-Ahead Program
Cut this out and save for reference.
SATURDAY, JULY 22:
TOM MIX in “CHASING THE MOON.” Another one of his various meth-
ods of locomotion stunts, a succession of thrills as a millionaire chasing an
antidote for poison. Sure fire hairbreadth escapes. Also, Snub Pollard
Comedy.
CONWAY TEARLE in “A WIDE OPEN TOWN.” Story of an honest
gambler sentenced to life imprisonment for murder committed in saving a
reform mayor's daughter js finally pardoned. Interesting with its sus-
pense. Also, Pathe News, Topics and Lloyd Comedy.
* TUESDAY, JULY 25:
ALLAN DWAN produces “A BROKEN DOLL,” a melodrama of heart ap-
of human nature revolving around a farm hand devoted
girl and the efiort he makes to replace a broken doll.
Screen Snap Shots and Movie Chats.
peal and touches
to a little crippled
A good story. Also,
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26:
CONSTANCE TALMADGE in “WOMAN’S PLACE.” This is a six reel
dandy picture that just suits her and is fine entertainment. Action, story
directing and all, good. Woman candidate for Mayor loses at polls but
Also, Sunshine Comedy. Don’t miss this
4
4
4
4
4
¢
4
§
<
4
¢
4
4
4
4
MONDAY, JULY 24: 4
4
4
4
¢
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
<
¢
4
¢
1
4
4
wins heart of the political boss.
good show.
THURSDAY, JULY 27:
HELEN CHADWICK in “THE GLORIOUS FOOL,” a good, six reel com-
edy of this Mary Roberts Rhinehart popular story. Very good. You will
like it. Nurse marries man she believes dying. He recovers and after com-
plications they are happy. Also, Pathe News and Review.
FRIDAY, JULY 28:
HOOT GIBSON in “STEP ON IT,” is a full of action, good story. Ranch-
er rounds up cattle thieves believes his girl is one of band but she saves
his life. Also, another episode of the ever interesting serial, “ROBINSON
CRUSOE.”
RANI IAPR ENININI IGN TET
a on ona
a SRR
ONIN
The Scenic with its six large fans, coolest place in town. Come
and see the fine week’s program above noted.
i
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It is Right
that you should expect from
your Bank
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Prompt andjEfficient Service
Courteous Treatment
Proper Accommodation when
needed
but your chief concern should
be Security
Does your Bank’s Statement show that this
essential requisite is present? Have you
confidence in its management? These are
the all important questions,
The First National Bank
GL45 Bellefonte, Pa.
c
ER
OE
=
You Can't Screen
the Cowyard, but
DAISY SPRAY with “BOB WHITE SURE
DEATH FLY KILLER” will insure you
1. Healthy and contented cows.
2. 33%9% more milk and easier milking.
3. A milk free from odor of taint from the insectide.
4. A guaranteed fly killer that will injure neither you nor
the¥animal. jE Es:
5.% Aimorefprofitable as well as a more pleasant milking time.
Other “BOB WHITE” products are—
DIP AND DISINFECTANT
LOUSE AND INSECT DESTROYER
ARSENATE OF LEAD
BORDEAUX MIXTURE
Each Guaranteed to be the Best of Its Kind.
The Potter-Hoy Hardware Co.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAANNANAAAAAAAAAANS