Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 18, 1924, Image 3

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    Demon lca
Bellefonte, Pa., January 18, 1924.
—————————
Country Correspondence
Items of Interest Dished Up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PINE GROVE MENTIONS.
Mrs. Etta Corl, of White Hall,
spent Friday with relatives at Rock
Springs.
William Gardner Jr. is ill at his
home in the Glades, suffering with a
nervous breakdown.
Charles Smith, S. E. Fleming and
Rev. J. W. McAlarney spent Monday
with friends at Rock Springs.
Mrs. Thomas Mallory, of Altoona,
was a welcome visitor on Friday at
the G. B. M. Fry home, at Rock
Springs.
Mrs. Sadie Krebs was discharged
from the Bellefonte hospital last
week, and is now convalescing at her
home here. :
The many friends of Miss Nora Go-
heen will be sorry to learn of her ser-
ious illness at her parental home at
Baileyville.
Harry Thompson, the well known
lumberman of Charter Oak, was an
over Sunday guest at the Wagner
home at White Hall.
0. C. Shaffer, of Williamsport, rep-
resenting the Frick Motor corpora-
tion, spent last week in this section
drumming up business.
S. A. Homan, Cyrus Powley, Clay-
ton Corl and Martin Harpster were
pleasant callers on friends at Rock
Springs early in the week.
Miss Nancy McWilliams, teller in
the First National bank at Centre
Hall, spent the Sabbath at her paren-
tal home at Rock Springs.
George Bell and family, of Spruce
Creek, spent Sunday in town and call-
ed on a number of their old friends
who are confined to their homes with
illness.
Ed. Rossman, our popular garage
man, has been in bed the past few
days as the result of an attack of the
grip but hopes to be out again in a
few days.
Rev. J. W. McAlarney has just
completed a two week’s revival serv-
ices at Meek’s church, which resulted
in a number of conversions and pro-
bationers.
The Presbyterian Brotherhood will
hold its second monthly meeting in
the church at Graysville this (Fri-
day) evening, and a full turnout is
requested.
C. E. Close, tenant on the D. G.
Meek farm, lost his Holstein bull the
past week. The animal was a beauty
and weighed in the neighborhood of
1800 pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gilliland mo-
tored to Lewistown and spent Sunday
with Dr. Brungard. On the return
trip they brought home James Me-
Cool, who spent two weeks with
friends in Shaver’s Creek valley.
Our road supervisors have been
busy repairing a three mile stretch
of road through the Glades and by
way of Meek’s church to Fairbrook.
This road is under State supervision
and the supervisors hope to recover a
portion of the cost of repairs from the
State-aid fund.
Fred and Grover Corl had a thrill-
ing experience in a run-away on Mon-
day morning. They were driving
along the road with a team hitched
in a two horse wagon when an auto-
mobile passed from the rear without
warning. The horses frightened and
in their plunging broke loose from the
wagon and jumped down over a four-
teen foot wall into a field. Aside
from a few scratches neither the men
nor the horses were hurt but the har-
ness were pretty badly broken. Pas-
sersby helped the men make repairs
so that they were able to complete
their journey shome.
Mrs. Margaret Reed, wife of Rob-
ert E. Reed, of the Glades, will have
a lingering memory of her twenty-
ninth birthday anniversary, which oc-
curred last Saturday. While she was
engaged in finishing up her evening’s
work her home was suddenly invaded
by a horde of neighbors and friends.
Though somewhat flustered she soon
realized the meaning of the gathering
and became the charming hostess for
which she is noted. The affair was
planned by her husband as a surprise
for his better half and he succeeded
wonderfully well. Mrs. Reed received
many useful as well as valuable pres-
ents, including a roll of the “long
green” Refreshments were served
ana the evening proved a most de-
lightful one for all who were present.
HAMBONE'S MEDITATIONS
PAT LADY SAY AH SHO
MADE A GooD JoB ©’
CUTTIN' DAT GRASS, BUT
SHUCKS! cOSE AH cuT
IT GOOD -- AHS $r
PAID BY DE DAY!
A ;
SE
Copynignt, 1921 by McClure Newspaper Syndicash
—
AARONSBURG.
Abraham King and grand-son, Ray-
mond King, of Salona, made a flying
trip to the village one day during the
past week.
Frank Lohr, of near State College,
was an over Sunday guest of his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Mowery.
James Miller and family and Mrs.
Lucy Russell, of Lewisburg, spent a
few hours Sunday evening at the Wil-
liam Guisewite home.
One of our aged men, Frankiln Det-
wiler, who some time ago was quite
unfortunate in having fallen down
stairs, has not improved to any great
extent. Though able to walk through
the house he complains of being quite
dizzy.
Rev. J. S. Hollenbach and Mr. and
Mrs. George J. Weaver, on Tuesday,
motored to Lock Haven for the pur-
pose of bringing home Mrs. Hollen-
bach and baby Jack from the hospi-
tal, where Mrs. Hollenbach has been
a surgical patient for the past few
weeks. Their parishioners and friends
all wish for her a speedy and full re-
covery to health.
On January 8th .a surprise party
was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
H. E. Acker, in honor of their daugh-
ter Grace’s tenth birthday. At six
o'clock supper was served which con-
sisted of sandwiches, salad, sliced or-
anges, pickles, ice cream and cake.
The cake contained ten candles. A
guess dish added to the merriment of
the children; Martha Stover received
the prize. The evening was spent in
playing games and singing until nine
o'clock when all the little guests were
escorted to their homes by Mr. Ack-
er. Following is a list of those pres-
ent: Hazel Winkleblech, Catharine
Krape, Esther Krape, May Bower,
Bernice Gilbert, Grace Vonada, Doro-
thy Weaver, Eleanor Rupp, Marian
Rupp, Florence Schiack, Netta Mer-
ryman. Grace received a number of
presents.
RUNVILLE.
Edward Lucas is visiting friends in
Tyrone and Altoona this week.
Edward Coakley, of Yarnell, spent
Monday at the home of L. J. Heaton.
Rev. Rowe went to Milton on Mon-
day to visit with his two daughters.
Mrs. Sallie Friel, Mrs. F. L. Shope
and Mrs. Michael Witherite are on
the sick list.
Charley Hall and son Benner ,of
Dix Run, visited among friends at this
place on Thursday.
Mrs. Claude Poorman and daugh-
ter, of Bellefonte, spent Sunday
afternoon at the home of John Walk-
er.
James Walker, of Wingate, and
Mrs. Forden Walker, of Snow Shoe,
visited at the home of Earl Kauffman,
on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shope and Mrs.
Leona Howell and son, of Snow Shoe,
spent Monday evening at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Witherite.
The W. C. T. U. will meet at the
home of Mrs. D. F. Poorman on Sun-
day afternoon, January 20th, at 2
o'clock. All members are asked to be
present.
Rev. Andreas, of Milesburg, will
speak in the United Brethren church
in this place on January 27th, at 2
o'clock in the afternoon. , Everybody
welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. William Jodan, Mr.
and Mrs. Simon Hockenberry and
Mrs. Harry Hockenberry, of Belle-
fonte, spent Sunday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Sallie Friel.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Poorman and
three children, of State College;
Flynn Poorman, of Holt’s Hollow;
Claude Poorman and son Guy, and
Clayton Yarnell and two children, of
Bellefonte, visited at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. D. F. Poorman on Sunday.
PORT MATILDA.
“Moonshine” can be obtained with
less trouble than fresh eggs. And hot
stuff at that.
C. C. Hassinger, of Norristown,
transacted business here and in the
Buffalo Run valley, Tuesday.
The stork brought to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wash. Woodring, last
week, an eleven pound baby girl.
Charles Korman and family, of
Milesburg, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Korman’s mother, Mrs. Margaret
Hassinger.
Herman Griffin has resigned as
mountain foreman for the Superior
Silica Brick company. Polly Tomko
has been promoted to Mr.
place.
The good people of Port Matilda
have contributed liberally with mon-
ey, provisions, clothing and household
goods to Herbert Nicols and family,
who lost everything but the clothes
on their back when the house they
were living in burned on Tuesday of
last week.
Ray Shawver, while making re-
pairs on Mr. Mains’ car in his private
garage, last Saturday evening, with
the doors closed, was overcome by gas
fumes. He was taken to Ray Shive-
ly’s residence nearby and Dr. Harsh-
barger hastily summoned, who ren-
dered medical aid. He was in a ser-
ious condition all night. Car owners
will profit by reading these few lines
over twice carefully, and by keeping
the door open when working on their
car.
BOALSBURG.
William Stover went to Altoona on
Monday, for an indefinite stay.
A. W. Dale attended a meeting of
the Patrons Telephone company, in
Bellefonte, on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Odenkirk and
daughters, Dorothy, Helen and Sara,
of Centre Hall, were visitors in town
on Sunday.
Holy Communion will be observed
in the Lutheran church on Sunday,
January 20th, at 10:30 a. m. Prepar-
{ atory service on Friday evening.
Fred Weber went to Pittsburgh on
Wednesday, to uncrate some fine fur-
niture he made and shipped te that
place. Mr. Weber will visit friends in
Altoona and Huntingdon before re-
turning.
Griffin's |!
JACKSONVILLE.
Miss Mary Bartley is at the Fern
Dunkle home for an indefinite time.
Mrs. Mary Resides spent Sunday
with her daughter in Williamsport.
Willard Weaver has been in Lock
Yiaven this week looking for a good
job.
'
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i
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1
MAH JONGG.
J. B. Powell writes in The China
Weekly Review, Shanghai: Some
3000 years ago, according to the leg-
end, there was a fisherman named
Adult Division of Sabbath Schools of
Pennsylvania has New Leader.
| Ever since Mr. Walter E. Myers,
| torsuer superintendent of the adult
| division of the Sabbath schools of
| Sze, who lived on the shores of the Pennsylvania, was elected general
East Chien Lake near Ningpo.
There were many fishermen who lived
about the shores of East Chien Lake,
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Montieth and but Fisherman Sze was more enter-
children were Sunday visitors with
friends at Hublersburg.
The Stork stopped here last week
and left a baby girl at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Dunkle.
The ganister rock quarries on the
Malcolm Pifer farm, near Howard,
have been closed for an indefinite
time.
Services will be held in the Re-
formed church here on Sunday, the
27th, when Home Mission day will be
observed. The public is invited.
Quite a number of farmers in this
section will have public sale this
spring and are already getting their
stock and implements in shape for the
eventful day.
Diemer Ertley, who has been on the
sick list for some time, is now able to
be up |
be several weeks before he will be
able to do any work.
While cutting stove wood, on Sat-
urday afternoon, Fred Lucas sustain-
ed a bad cut when his axe glanced and
struck his foot. It required eight
stitches to close the wound.
Quite a number of children in this
locality and at Howard are suffering
with the chicken pox, and parents
should remember that “an ounce o
prevention is worth a pound of cure.”
OAK HALL.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Etters visited
with relatives near Altoona on Sun-
day.
Mrs. Annie Sunday, of Tadpole, is
visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Wal-
do Homan.
Mr. and Mrs. Clel. Garner and fam-
ily were callers with relatives in this
vicinity, Sunday.
Thomas Fishel and family, of Le-
mont, moved into the Etters tenant
house on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Kline and son
motored to Tyrone, Sunday, spending
the day at the home of Mrs. Kline's
brother, William Korman.
Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Dale, accom-
panied by Rev. and Mrs. W. J. Wag-
ner, of Boalsburg, visited at the home
of Mrs. Wagner's brother, Sinie Hoy,
near Bellefonte, on Wednesday.
rm ——_ A —————
ILLINOIS PLANS RADIO COURS-
ES IN ALL SCHOOLS.
Three hundred thousand school chil-
dren in one class! That will be
achieved in Illinois if plans of the Il-
linois State Teachers’ Association,
made at the recent annual meeting
materializes. The organization plans
to bring all of the public school pu-
pils of the State into one class two or
three times a week. Radio is to do
the job.
Through arrangements to be made
with a powerful broadcasting station,
probably in Chicago, a period during
school hours on certain days of the
week will be set aside as “school
time.” A prominent educator or some
other outstanding personage will lec-
ture through the radio at this hour,
and receiving sets in schools through-
out the State will be tuned in to re-
ceive the lesson.
The association appropriated $10,-
000 at its meeting to establish a cen-
tral office, part of the dutizs of
which will be to arrange for the radio
lessons. Numbers of schools in the
State already have radio equipment,
and others are expected to obtain sets
when the lectures begin to go out reg-
ularly.
Through the broadcasting plan the
world’s great men will speak directly
to the entire body of Illinois pupils,
according to its advocates. States-
men, authors, artists, scholars and
engineers visiting Illinois will be ask-
ed to talk to the State’s children. Sit-
ting at their desks in widely scatter-
ed schools, the pupils will receive ad-
vice and instruction from the world’s
best brains. They will feel the force
of the personalities that are doing the
world’s big jobs.
The voices of premiers and Presi-
dents will sound in country consol-
idated schools when the plan becomes
operative, its promoters explained.
Presidents of great universities will
instruct in rural high schools. The
inspiration of men of achievement
will pulse through every school build-
ng.
Educators attending the Illinois
meeting expressed the opinion that
radio receiving sets would soon be-
come part of the equipment of first-
class schools of the State. Even the
smaller schools will have them, they
predicted. Where school boards do
not feel able to purchase the outfits
school fairs and entertainments will
provide the money, as already has
been done for the purchase of motion
picture machines in many instances.
The teachers were enthusiastic
over the proposed new method of in-
struction.
“Education must claim its hour in
the air,” was the consensus of opin-
ion.
INCOME TAX IN NUTSHELL.
Who? Single persons who had net
income of $1,000 or more or gross in-
come of $5,000 or more, and married
couples who had net income of $2,000
or more or gross income of $5,000 or
more must file returns.
When? The filing period is from
January 1 to March 15, 1924.
Where? Collector of internal rev-
enue for the district in which the per-
son lives or has his principal place of
business.
How? Instructions on Form 1040A
and Form 1040; also the law and reg-
ulations.
What? Four per cent. normal tax
on the first $4,000 of net income in ex-
cess of the personal exemption and
credits for dependents. Eight per
cent. normal tax on balance of net in-
come. Surtax from 1 per cent. to 50
per cent. on net incomes over $6,000
for the year 1923.
en——————piph
—-Get your job work done here.
and around the house but it will
| secretary of the State forces, it has
i been evident that one man could not
| possibly fill both positions so that the
State association has for some months
|
| prising than the rest, for he decided | been on the lookout for the right man
that more fish could be caught from a
boat than by standing on the shore.
Sze’s family had considerable
wealth and they backed him in the
purchase of several boats. Then he
employed 100 fishermen from other
villages and started out to try his
luck. All went well until the wind
began to blow and then Sze’s troubles
began, for all the fishermen were
“land” fishermen and unaccustomed to
the rolling seas. They became sea-
sick and had to be taken ashore.
It looked like bad joss to this early
Izaak Walton, so a family council
was held and it was decided that sea-
sickness was merely a matter of the
mind—Imagination, if you please—
therefore the thing to do was to de-
vise some method for getting the
men’s minds off their mal de mer.
Fisherman Sze and his nine brothers
then thought long and seriously and
the result was a game which they
called Mah Diau.
So there you have the origin of
“Mah Chang,” “Mah Choh,” “Mah
Jongg,” “Mah Diao,” “Pung Wood,”
“Pung Chow,” “Mah Juck,” “Pe
Lung,” “Mah Cheuk,” or whatever
you desire to call this game of the an-
f | cient Chinese which has taken Amer-
ica by storm and which is being “tak-
en up” in London, Paris and other
world centres, not to overlook Chica-
go and Hannibal, Mo. and other
points west. The game of Mah Diau,
as originally played by the lowly fish-
ermen in the employ of head fisher-
man Sze, consisted of 108 pieces of |
cardboard and was played by four
persons and each held 13 cards even
as today is the practice in Shanghai,
New York and Washington, D. C. And
according to the legend, the fishermen
became so absorbed in the game of
Mah Diau that they forgot their sea-
sickness, and as a result Sze and his
nine brothers prospered and founded
a great family, which lives even unto
this day.
From this humble beginning the
game “caught on’ and next we hear
of one Chen Yu-mun, an officer in the
Imperial Chinese army, who was also
stationed at Ningpo, the provincial
metropolis of Chekiang province of
China.
General Chen’s chief job was that
of bandit-catcher, and his army was
known far and wide because of the
white caps which they wore. But
General Chen was sorely worried be-
cause of the habit of his soldiers of
falling asleep during the wee sma’
hours of the night, at which times the
bandits would slip through the lines
and hold up trains, or whatever the
means of conveyance were in those
days.
Hearing of the wonderful game of
Mah Diau, which was so fascinating
that fishermen forgot to get seasick
while playing it, he possessed himself
of several sets and tried them out on
his night guards. It worked moder-
ately well; but due probably to the
fact that soldiers, even in those days,
were more blase than simple fisher-
men. General Chen still had trouble,
for some of his soldiers persisted in
falling asleep when they should have
been watching for bandits.
After great meditation the general
solved the problem by inventing some
new cards; chung (red), fah (green),
pah (white) and north, south, east
and west. This brought the number
of cards up to 136, and never again,
says the story-teller, did General
Chen have trouble with his soldiers
falling asleep.
_ They stayed awake all night and he
is reported to have had trouble there-
after in persuading them to go to
sleep. They wanted to play the new
game all the time.
As time went on, continues the
chronicler, certain persons of low re-
pute, gamblers they were called, took
up the game and by means of the sim-
ple little cards took away the wages
of the fishermen and soldiers. But
the gamblers also made their contri-
bution to progress, for it is said in the
records that a famous exponent of
profit by chance, one Chang Shui-Mo
by name, also of the village of Ning-
po, found that the number of cards
was not sufficient. So he added some
more: Spring, summer, autumn and
winter, and mei (plum blossom), ian
(orchid), ruh (chrysanthemum), and
chub (bamboo). This made the game
so terribly fascinatig that it spread
to the far boundaries of the Celestial
Empire and has continued to this
present day to be the chief method of
recreation for officials and persons of
the upper classes, and even into the
lair of the bandits of Paozuku, who
have found their diversion in the click
and play of the little ivory and bam-
boo tiles as they move deftly from
hand to hand about the table.
Landed on Himself.
Judge—“You are charged with
pouncing on a chicken and running off
with it.”
Prisoner—“I guess it must be in me
blood, your honor; me ancestors land-
ed on Plymouth Rock.”—Boston Tran-
script.
“I say, Jenkins, can you tell a
young, tender chicken from a tough
one?” “Of course I can.” “Well,
how do you tell it?” “By the teeth.”
“Chickens have no teeth, man.” “No,
but I have.”
Many Women Use
Glycerine Mixture
Women appreciate the quick action
of simple glycerine, buckthorn bark,
ete. as mixed in Adlerika. Most med-
icines act only on lower bowel but Ad-
lerika acts on BOTH upper and lower
bowel, and removes all gasses and
poisons. Excellent for obstinate con-
stipation and to guard against appen-
dicitis. Helps any case gas on stom-
ach in TEN minutes. Sold by all
druggists. 69-3
: to fill this important position.
Mr. R. H. Cridland, of Little Rock,
Arkansas, a man of rich experiences,
was called by action of the State
board to be superintendent of the
State adult division and has accepted.
Mr. Cridland is a graduate of the
Ohio University, of Harvard and of
the International Training School,
and gave up a lucrative position in
commercial life in order to satisfy his
heart's desire in christian work.
Mr. Cridland was general secretary
of the Montgomery county (Ohio)
Sabbath school association for six
years, general secretary of Hennepin
county (Minn.) association for two
years and general secretary of the
Arkansas State Sabbath school asso-
ciation for two and a half years, from
which position he comes to Pennsyl-
vania.
He is a splendid type of christian
manhood, in the prime of life and is a
fine, winsome, earnest fellow with a
rich experience in organized christian
| work that will be quite an asset to
the adult division work of Pennsylva-
; nia.
Religion by Radio.
New and nobler uses of the raido
are continually developing. The
broadcasting of sermons and Sunday
services has become a common-place.
Now one of the popular Philadel-
phia broadcasting stations, Straw-
bridge and Clothier’'s “WFL” an-
nounces that, beginning with the first
Saturday night in Februray, it will
provide a Saturday night discussion
of the International Sunday school
lesson, by Dr. William B. Ellis, whose
published comments on the uniform
lessons are a weekly feature of more
than sixty daily newspapers in the
United States and Canada.
In addition to the individual Sunday
school teachers who will tune in for
this talk on the present day aspects
of the lessolns, by one who has travel-
ed widely in Bible lands, there will
doubtless be many friendly gatherings
of Sunday school workers at the
homes of neighbors with radio sets.
In a new and real sense, religion is
nowadays “in the air.”
MEDICAL.
Work Wearing You Out?
Bellefonte Folks Find a Bad Back a
Heavy Handicap.
Is your work wearing you out? Are
you tortured with throbbing backache
feel tired, weak and discouraged?
Then look to your kidneys! Many oc-
cupations tend to weaken the kidneys.
Constant backache, headaches, dizzi-
ness and rheumatic pains are the re-
sult. You suffer annoying bladder ir-
regularities; feel nervous, irritable
and worn out. Don’t wait! Use
Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic to
the kidneys. Workers everywhere
recommend Doan’s. Here's a Belle-
fonte case:
Mrs. Howard Shuey, S. Water St.,
says: “My back ached so 1 couldn’t
get a night’s rest. My work tired me
out and I often had to neglect it. I
was hardly ever free from headaches
and dizzy spells and my kidneys didn’t
act right, either. Doan’s Pills from
the Parrish drug store stopped the
backaches and other signs of kidney
trouble.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 69-3
Em
Caldwell & Son
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Plumbing and Heating
By Hot Water
Vapor
Steam
Pipeless Furnaces
Full Line of Pipe and Fittings
AND MILL SUPPLIES
ALL SIZES OF
Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings
Estimates Cheerfully and Promptly
Furnished.
66-15-t¢
Fine Job Printing
0—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THR
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There 1s no style of work, from the
cheapest “Dodger” to the finest
BOOK WORK
that we can not do in the most sat-
isfactory manner, and at Prices
consistent with the class of work,
oar on or communicate with this
office.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
ane a
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
»
i
ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW.
WOODRING — Attorney-at-
S Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in
all courts. Office, room 18 Crider's
Exchange. b1-1y
B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law.
N Praetices in all the courts. Com=
sultation in English or Germam.
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belletontes
Pa.
J Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at=
tention given all legal business em=
trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5 East
High street.
J M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law
fessional business
and Justice of the Peace. Al
ve
rompt attention. Office on second floor of
Ek 49-5-1y
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at-
1 pro=
will recel
emple Court.
G. RUNKLE — Attorney-at-Law.
Consultation in English and Ger-
man. Office in Crider’s Exthalee
Bellefonte, Pa.
PHYSICIANS.
se,
—
CAPERS, ;
OSTEOPATH.
D* R. L.
Bellefonte State College
Crider’s Exch. 66-11 Holmes Bldg.
8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his resi-
dence. 85-41
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed
by the State Board. State College,
every day except Saturday.
fonte, rooms 14 and 15 Temple Co
Wednesday afternoons and Saturdays
a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Both Phones.
THEY ENJOY IT
and it makes them strong, stur-
dy, and keeps them well. That
is the kind of feed you should
give your stock—full of nour-
ishment, good tasting, and the
kind that adds value to horse-
flesh, cowflesh, pigflesh, ete.
Use our stock feed and have no
stock troubles.
“Quality talks”
CY. Wagner Co, Inc.
66-11-1yr BELLEFONTE, PA.
Employers,
This Interests You
The Workmans’ Compensation
Law went into effect Jan. 1,
1916. It makes Insurance Com=
pulsory. We specialize in plac-
ing such insurance. We inspect
Plants and recommend Accident
Prevention Safe Guards which
Reduce Insurance rates.
It will be to your interest to
consult us before placing your
Insurance.
JOHN F. GRAY & SON,
Bellefonte 43-18-1y State College
~—
Fire!
Get Protection.
The following Lines of
Insurance are written
in my Agency
FIRE
AUTOMOBILE
(All Kinds)
BOILER
(Including Inspection)
PLATE GLASS
BURGLARY
COMPENSATION
LIABILITY
ACCIDENT and HEALTH
EVERY POLICY GUARANTEES
YOU PROTECTION
When you want any kind of
a Bond come and see me.
Don’t ask friends. They
don’t want to go on your
Bond. I will.
H. E. FENLON
Bell 174-M Temple Court
Commercial BELLEFONTE, PA.
56-21
®
CS —
Get the Best Meats
You save nothing by buying poor
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
meats are elsewhere.
I always have
—DRESSED POULTRY—
Game in season, and any kinds of goed
meats you want.
TRY MY SHOP
P. L. BEEZER,
High dtreet 34-34-1y Bellefonte, Pa”