Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 01, 1924, Image 3

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    Dewi itn
Bellefonte, Pa., February 1, 1924.
Country Correspondence
Itemas of Interest Dished Up for the
Delectation of “Watchman” Read-
ers by a Corps of Gifted
Correspondents.
PLEASANT GAP.
Never advise to appear wise.
John Barnes has bought the neat
bungalow in Horntown now being oc- | ing harmoniously together, and the |
cupied by the Fike family.
Charles Rimmey has sold his small |
bungalow to a Mr. Klinger; consider-
ation $500.00 cash. The lot measure-
ment is 60x270 feet.
Mrs. Agnes C. Coldren, noted for
her good sticking qualities at her
home, has at last broken the monoto-
ny by taking a trip to Selinsgrove, to
visit friends and recuperate.
A large amount of ice is being har-
vested in the Ray Noll farm. Quite a
bunch of it is being hauled to Belle-
fonte. The cold snap has produced an
extra marketable quality of ice.
Lawrence Hile, of Axe Mann, has
purchased the old Keene property in
Horntown from the late owner, Mr.
Davis, of West Virginia, and will,
after April first, again become one of
our citizens.
Capitalist William Kerstetter has
purchased the up-to-date premises of
Orrie Bulbarger; consideration $2000.
The premises have been recently re-
modeled throughout so that it is now
a very desirable home.
Qur efficient assistant postmistress,
Miss Marion Gettig, has accepted a
position as one of the clerks in Noll
Bros. stores. Marion made quite a
success as a school teacher, likewise,
as postmistress, and is succeeding ad-
mirably as a hustler of merchandise.
William Lambert, one of the old
stand-by employees of Whiterock, was
on Tuesday caught underneath a ledge
of falling rock and was injured to
some extent; but happily not to a ser-
ious extent. It is to be hoped that
Billy will be himself again in a few
days, and will be able te resume op-
erations at the old stand.
It is a noticeable fact that more
properties were sold and transferred
at Pleasant Gap the past two years,
or since our state road was completed,
than changed hands the previous
twenty-five years prior to the comple-
tion of the road, besides the prices of
real estate have increased from twen-
ty-five to thirty per cent.
William Wolford was recently dis-
charged from the U. S. Navy on ac-
count of the expiration of his term of
enlistment, and is home visiting his
parents, friends and former associ-
ates. He encircled the globe several
times during his term of service. He
expects to re-enlist at an early date.
A born soldier it seems is never con-
tented unless he is in uniform.
A little less investigation and more
action at Washington would be wel-
comed by the average citizen. The
kind of financing that will carry on
successfully a private business, is
what we need at the head of the gov-
ernment. The government guaran-
tees its citizens life, liberty, employ-
ment and pursuit of happiness, and
comes about as near it in one instance
as the other.
The sincere orator has befriended
humanity, for it has seldom been re-
corded that he pleaded the cause of
the despot. He is the embodiment of
free speech, which is among the most
precious of our rights; for if the pub-
lic voice is stifled the oppressor has
his own way in everything. Eloquence
is a wondrous power in shaping the
destiny of nations. The faculty of
being able to move people at will, is
one of the highest forms of genius.
Miss Anna Bilger and Miss Bess
Eckenroth, who for nine straight
years served as head pushers in the
warden’s home at Rockview, have re-
tired from their strenuous duties and
are now regular boarders at the Gap.
‘While they have declined to accept
several tempting offers, they have de-
cided to live retired until spring, any-
way. Happily, the girls are in very
good circumstances financially. They
made good money and saved it, hence
are independent. Wait until the blue
birds come again and you will no
doubt see these enthusiastic workers
open some new project that may sur-
prise the population.
Our neighbor, Joseph Schmoyer,
went up against it a few days ago,
when he had occasion to stop from
force of circumstances rather abrupt-
ly. The way it happened, Joe was
going down the state road early in
the morning in his automobile to go
to work. For some unknown reason
HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS
AH DONE JINE SO MENNY
|LoDGES, TRYIN’ T/ KEEP
UP WID SOCIETY, AH
lGoT So AH CAINT KEEP
UP WID MAH JUES!
Copyright, 192.3 by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.
he evidently forgot that the White-
{ rock “dinkey” crossed the road, and
|a train of twelve stone cars was cross-
| ing when the ambitious Joseph struck
| the centre of the train. The result is
| that the train was uninjured, but the
i auto was badly damaged; so much so
that an entire new body will be re-
i quired to put the machine in shape.
Our two Sunday schools have a very
i creditable record. The Lutheran and
| Methodist churches. We have 250
| boys and girls attending our public |
| schools; while the two churches have
i enrolled a total of 310 Sunday school
scholars. And the beauty of the mat-
ter is that as a rule they have an un-
{usual attendance. The parents and
| the Sunday school teachers are work-
i best of all is there is no rivalry ex-
isting between the two congregations;
all they seem to have an ambition for
is to have their own without infring-
ing on each other. They have also
shown their good and earnest judg-
ment by combining the two flocks for
their annual picnics. The good work
benefit to the young and rising gen-
eration of Pleasant Gap. The mem-
bers of both congregations are de-
serving of great credit in their judi-
cious management.
That topic which is always on the
end of the human tongue in every lan- |
guage, is the topic of the weather. We
just passed through quite a variety.
First it was too warm, then too cold
to suit the average citizen. Only one
kind of weather has been really
unique, and that was experienced by
Noah and his meager family and all
too numerous families of animals. |
That occurred a few years previous |
to the establishment of the United
States Weather Bureau. How the
millions who lived between the great
flood and the modern statitician surviv- |
ed the lack of official records we are
not informed. The weather bureau is
recent, and it is to be hoped it will be
a joy forever. But there are men and |
women older than the weather bureau,
and it is the fiat of every one of them |
that this is an unutterably exception- |
al winter, as far as we’ve got, and the
oldest inhabitant is ever an entity to
be revered and believed. He and she |
are indisputable. The groundhog, ali-
as the woodchuck, is now about to be
put to the test. His reputations is at
stake as never before. Either he is a
prophet or he isn’t. Heads or tails.
In a great measure, also, the good
name of the neighboring city of Punx-
sutawney is in the mighty balance.
The appellations of groundhog and
Punxsutawney are synonymous. The
weather of the moment does not
promise uproarous applause for the
groundhog and Punxsutawney. But
the winter has come to the stage of
adolescence only. Let the groundhog
and Punxsutawney be watchful and!
waiting. We don’t have any particu-
lar line for the groundhog. But
speaking of the weather bureau, it
surely is a blessing to our farmers, |
who are great advocates of the newly |
inaugurated service. In many in-
stances the farmer, as well as the rest
of mankind, have been mutually ben-
efitted since the establishment of the
new and indispensable service.
RUNVILLE.
. Miss Jennie Taggert, of Ocean City,
is visiting with Mrs. Alice Rodgers.
James Burd, of Moose Run, spent
Sunday at the home of his sister, Mrs. |
Paul Bennett.
Rev. Andreas, of Milesburg, gave a
splendid address on the Eighteenth
Amendment, Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Reese visited
over the week-end at Williamsport,
with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Walker. |
Mr. and Mrs. Rightnour, and four |
children, of Bellefonte, spent Monday |
evening at the home of Mrs. Sallie
Friel. i
Miss Lulu MecClincy, Mary Earon |
and J. H. McClincy, of Williamsport, |
visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. |
Lewis Fetzer. |
Miss Alice Heaton, of Moose Run;
Hazel and Mary Shawley and Miss |
has a tendency to be of invaluable |
PINE GROVE MENTIONS.
i
Mrs. Maude Fry is suffering with
|2 bad attack of the flu.
| Entire families in this section are
{in the clutches of the grip.
| Philip Dale, a Civil war veteran, of
| State College, is quite ill with heart
| trouble.
| Stock buyer Joe Shoemaker spent
Tuesday among the farmers on the
- Branch.
Harry F. Gearhart was a business
visitor on the Branch last Thursday
evening.
Misses Maude and Gertie Miller |
spent Tuesday at-the C. M. Dale home
| on the Branch.
Mrs. Anna Way and Ethel Weaver
spent Sunday afternoon with Virgin-
ia Dale, on the Branch.
Paul Sunday, one of our enterpris-
ing farmers, has a four thousand
bushel lime kiln smoking.
{ Mrs. John F. Kimport, who has
been ill the past ten days with bron-
chial trouble, is now convalescing.
Miss Helen Beachey, of State Col-
|lege, was a pleasant caller with
friends at Rock Springs on Sunday.
| Mrs. Randall Rossman was dis-
| charged from the Bellefonte hospital
| last Thursday not very much improv-
ed.
The E. C. Musser home caught fire
last Friday but fortunately a bucket
brigade was able to extinguish the
flames.
Mr. A. F. Markle, of State College,
was taken to the Bellefonte hospital,
cn Saturday, for an operation and
treatment.
Mrs. Margaret Quinn, of Pennsyl-
vania Furnace, was a Friday visitor at
the postmaster George Glenn home at
State College.
Farmer Harry Glenn, who has been
lill since early last summer, is not im- |
proving as rapidly as his family and
friends would like to see.
We are anxiously waiting for to-
morrow to see if that pesky little
prognosticator, the woodchuck, will
stick his nose out of his hole.
The venerable Samuel Glenn braved
the storm, on Saturday, and spent the
day with his old friend and neighbor,
Charles Dale, on the Branch.
Charles H. Martz is so seriously ill
with pneumonia that his two daugh-
ters in Cleveland, Ohio, were sum-
moned home and are constantly at his !
bedside.
Earl Musser, James E. Lenker and
James R. Smith will all celebrate
their birthday anniversaries on
groundhog day. A wedding is also
slated for that day, according to the
cracker box orators. :
John Thomas add wife are rejoicing
over the arrival of a little daughter
on Tuesday night. Mr. Thomas is a
| Senior at State College and will grad-
‘uate next June.
The little girl has
been christened Sarah, after her
grandmother.
Miss Anna Dale and party, located
at Lake Worth, Florida, had the sur- |
prise of their life the past week when
Dr. W. S. Glenn, of State College,
visited them. They did not know he
was in the State and his call was like
a breath from home.
The Boal bus line made its last trip
on Tuesday and service has been dis-
continued indefinitely. The line was
operated between State College and
Lewistown by way of Boalsburg and
Potters Mills, but lack of patrenage
! has thrown it into the discard, for the
time being, at least.
Guy Riggel, who has been John
Dale’s farmer the past year, flitted to
Jersey Shore last Thursday. Edwin
Dale and bride will start housekeep-
ing on the Walnut Grove farm. Mr.
Dale is an instructor in the vocational
school of Spring Mills but will take
up farming in the spring.
Four inches of snow fell in this
section on Friday night and the high
gale on Saturday piled it up in huge
drifts. The cold snap which followed
pushed the mercury down to eight de-
grees below zero. But it was just
what the young people were looking
for, and the jingling sleigh bells tell
Walker, of Yarnell, were Sunday call-
ers with Miss Kathryn Rowe.
Mr. and Mrs. James Shirk, of Pitts-
burgh; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Shirk,
Samuel Shirk and Mrs. Toner, of
Bellefonte, spent Monday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Shirk.
Those from this place who attend-
ed the funeral of Mrs. A. C. Lucas,
at Altoona, an Tuesday, were: Mary
Heaton, Franklin Lucas, Mrs. Samuel
Shirk, Mrs. Edward Walker and Fred
and Clair Witherite.
OAK HALL.
Mrs. E. C. Radel is visiting her par-
ents at Millersburg, this week.
Miss Eliza Gilliland is assisting at
the home of her brother James, near
Boalsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Kline, of Axe
Mann, spent Wednesday visiting at
the Dale home.
Mrs. Nannie Gilliland spent Friday
and Saturday of last week at the
Dome of Miss Olive Mitchell, in Belle-
onte.
The Oak Hall Lime and Stone Co.
resumed operation again, Monday,
after having been closed for a week
while repairs to the crusher were be-
ing made.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lowder and
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lowder and chil-
dren motored to Reedsville, Sunday,
to attend the funeral of their aunt,
Mrs. Rothrock.
The Tallest Chimney.
The tallest smokestack in the world
is said to be in western Montana,
where it has been erected of specially
made brick by a copper company to
carry off smoke and gases. It is 30
feet higher than the Washington
monument and its diameter is so
great that the great stone shaft could
be placed inside of it. It is itself a
monument to American imagination,
enterprise and skill. Its height is so
great that the surrounding country
does not suffer from the fumes it
emits; no doubt its emanations de-
scend somewhere, but they are so
scattered as to leave no noxious trace.
—Providence Journal.
| of nightly sledding parties.
| While out driving in his new Star
| car, last Thursday, Merrill Homan
{lost control and ran into a telephone
pole. The front axle was broken and
the car otherwise damaged so that it
| had to be trailed into the Stuck and |
Kline garage for repairs. Mrs. Ho-
| man and little son were also in the
| car but fortunately no one was in-
jured.
Among those who braved the stor-
my weather, last Saturday, to at-
tend the funeral of the late Mr.
| Fleming were W. J. Taylor and son
Jesse, of Mapleton; Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Huey, of Cochranville; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert M. Fleming, James G.
Allison, P. M. Goss, Mr. and Mrs.
John P. Fleming, Noah and Levi Hol-
i stetter, James Kauffman, S. W.
Peachey, T. E. Zook and J. S. Peach-
ey, all of Belleville; Dr. and Mrs.
| Miller, of McAlevy’s Fort; Dr. L. E.
| Kidder, of State College, and Dr. and
Mrs. E. R. Fleming, of Boston. The
| funeral was in charge of Rev. J. Scott
Becht, D. D., and Rev. J. Max Kirk-
patrick.
On Sunday morning while an old
friend, Andy J. Lytle, was rounding
{out his morning snooze Mrs. Lytle
went to the cellar to stir up the fire
in the furnace. During the night the
water pipes had frozen and as she
and ashes. Fortunately she was not
a similar experience when she at-
en range. It was literally blown to
{ fragments and Mrs. Lytle was thrown
i through a windo wont a porch roof
suffering injuries from which she did
i not recover for some weeks.
And They’re Still at Outs.
Two neighbors fell out.
Said one, paving the way to peace, |
“I wouldn’t have said what I did say
lif it hadn’t been for the nasty looks
{ you gave me.”
| Said the other, not quite mollified,
i “I gave you no nasty looks, you al-
ways had them.”
Peace has not yet been ratified.
opened the furnace door the furnace
exploded, covering her with water
injured but her clothing was ruined
and the furnac e a total wreck. Some '
ten years or more ago Mrs. Lytle had |
tempted to stir up the fire in the kitch- |
UMBRELLAS AND MORALS.
By L. A. Miller.
i Is it stealing to appropriate an um-
| brella belonging to another, to your
cwn use? It is not so declared in the
| decalogue, or, at least, not in the old
, version. Common law is silent on the
| Subject, probably becaause it existed
| before the umbrella became a thing of
i prey. The unwritten law, or common
usage, appears to regard the appro-
priation of an umbrella in time of
rain as one of the inalienable rights
of freemen, classing it probably un-
der the head of works of “charity and
necessity.” To take an umbrella
when he has no immediate use for it,
The fool carries his umbrella in clear
weather, the wise man when it rains.
The philosopher, who delights in far-
ing a man has placed in front of his
door, and in taking his umbrella for
shelter. One is merely a fixed shelter
while the other is portable.
argues that while the sin, if sin it be,
is the same in each case, there are so
many more benefits and advantages
connected with taking the portable
such an extent that it becomes really
much less than that of using the fix-
ed shelter.
For instance: A man may be in a
hurry to get his supper, or to catch a
train, or to get to the lodge or prayer-
meeting, or he may be going to take
| his intended to the opera. How can
he do any of these if he has to stand
under a stationary awning? Such
protection is no accommodation to
‘him at all. To be of real service to
him that protection from the rain
must be portable. Being compelled
to stand under a fixed awning he is
i prone to swear, which he is not while
bowling along under the portable one.
| All sorts of people congregate un-
. der awnings. A man who wears a fine
| suit of clothes may be jostled by dir-
ty workmen,
meet his old tailor, or boarding-house
keeper, or an enemy who may embroil
{ him into a fight, or he may be smitten
by the glance of a storm-stayed maid-
en and become estranged from his af-
| fianced, or even from his wife. He
| may be standing cheek by jowl with a
| pickpocket and get robbed, or have his
corns trodden by a hob-nailed trogan
bo the hoof of a heavy-weight pud-
| dler.
All in all the opportunities and
provocations for swearing are much
greater under an awning than under
an umbrella. The good man who had
the awning erected did not intend it
should be the cause of inconvenience
| to any one, much less to be productive
{ of immorality. No doubt he would
' cheerfully give an umbrella to each
person stopping under his awning
| rather than have them injured in this
way. Therefore, it is better to risk
i the dangers lurking under an awning
| during a shower than to appropriate
{an umbrella found standing in idle-
| ness.
The first account we have of the
umbrella is when Vishnu, one of the
gods of the Brahma trinity, descended
into the infernal regions with one
spread over him. It is sculptured on
i the ruins of Ninevah and monuments
of Egypt. The Greeks used umbrel-
las made of peacock feathers and the
plumage of rare birds as royal cover-
ings for the maidens who represented
goddesses in processions; especially
during the feast of Bacchus.
This projects sufficiently to hang
the obstruction on the fact that the
losing of an umbrella may be dated
back to that time, as Bacchanalian
revels of modern times are notorious
for the number of umbrellas lost.
In Siam, the fellow who ranks next
to the lord of the Elephants is the
lord of twenty-four umbrellas. These
‘are for the King. They are all white,
and no one else in the kingdom is al-
lowed to use a white one. The offi-
cers of state may have one or more
common cotton ones, but the people are
not permitted to use any at all. The
King may be laboring under the im-
pression that it is as much a sin to
steal an umbrella as a turban, and
| knowing by his experience with the
‘two dozen he has that his morally
weak subjects could not resist the im-
pulse to steal from each other, he has
wisely decreed that the temptation
shall not be placed before them.
Possibly the name umbrella, has
has something to do with the light-
ness, in a property sense, in which it
is held. The name comes from the
| Latin umbra-a-shade: A shadow.
| Only a fleeting shadow! An English
! gentleman traveling in Italy a centu-
ry or more since, wrote back that the
ladies, in addition to fans, carried
things of greater price, which invit-
ed shadow. He also saw horsemen
with a parachute on a long handle
attached to one leg, so that while
their hands were free they carried
shadows with them wherever they
went. Even then it was not the sub-
stance that was considered valuable—
only the shadow.
. The parasol never was regarded as
lightly as the umbrella. It is not a
little umbrella, as most people sup-
pose. It derives its name differently.
It comes from the Italian parae—to
parry, to ward off; and from Sale—
the sun, to parry the sun. See? No
doubt this is why they are flourished
around so recklessly by ladies on the
streets and in crowded places. It is
ry
\ Better Than Pills
For Liver HEF
{
x You can’t
| = \ feel so good
: but what NR
| will make you
| RV feel better.
ACTS
Sa ONAL veg
C. M. PARRISH
BELLEFONTE, PA.
will stamp a man a thief or a fool. |
fetched theories sees little difference !
between taking possession of the awn- |
He even
awning that they mitigate the sin to |
or he may perchance |
all a man can do sometimes, to parry |
' the parasol and keep its ribs from |
|
Old Jonas Hanway, of London, had
| jabbing his eyes out.
the distinguished honor of introducing
the umbrella into use in London as a
protection against rain. That was in
1750. Previous to that time they had
been used by a few ladies in France
for the same purpose, but were cover- | P
ed with feathers. Old Jonas was
hooted and stared at, and called an old
woman, and all sorts of queer names,
but he stuck to his parachute and had
the pleasure of seeing his traducers |
carrying them and enjoying the pro- |
tection they afforded against wind
and rain, before he died.
Robinson Crusoe, “The monarch of
all he surveyed,” had one made of
| skins, which is always pictured in his
illustrated travels. It was during the
reign of Queen Ann, however, that
the umbrella became fashionable for
gentlemen, her couriers setting the
example. On a rainy day a man who
thought anything of himself would
parade the streets with his immense |
with colored |
Some of the court ladies ;
umbrells, ornamented
streamers.
had mirrors fastened inside of thers
to enable them to note any derange-
! ment of their elaborate coiffeur. Oth-
ers had little windows in them to
peep through at the gentlemen.
| I had an object in view when I se-
lected the umbrella for my topic this
| week. When I left Pittsburgh to re-
turn to my old home in Centre county,
before leaving the city, our office force
presented me with a superb eight dol-
lar silk umbrella. I was so proud of
it that I neglected to use it for at
| least ten years. One day when it was
' raining and I was about to go for my
mail my good wife prevailed on me to
break in my good umbrella. I did as
| directed, but unfortunately left it
| standing in the postoffice and return-
{ ed home without it. As soon as I dis-
| covered my mistake I returned to the
postoffice—but no umbrella; some one
' who knows a good thing when he sees
'it had appropriated it. It was far su-
perior to any umbrella I had before or
since.
A Careful Buyer.
The Jeweler—Yes, we have cheaper
wedding rings, but they’re only plat-
1. and won’t last more than a year or
WO.
Titus Wadle—I’ll take one of them.
If my marriage outlasts the ring I
can have it replated.
MEDICAL.
Get at the Cause
Many Bellefonte Folks are Showing
How to Avoid Needless Suffering.
There’s nothing more annoying
than kidney weakness or inability to
properly control the kidney secretions.
Night and day alike, the sufferer is
tormented and what with the burning
and scalding, the attendant backache,
headache, and dizziness, life is indeed
a burden. Doan’s Pills—a stimulant
diuretie to the kidneys—have brought
peace and comfort to many Bellefonte
people. Profit by this Bellefonte res-
ident’s experience:
Mrs. Mahala Kreps, Phoenix Ave.,
says: “My kidneys were in wretched
condition and I suffered a lot with
dull, nagging backaches. At night
the pains were so severe I couldn’t
rest. My kidneys acted too often and
I had dizzy spells and headaches.
Doan’s Pills helped me from the first
and four boxes cured me. I have had
no return of the trouble.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
Caldwell & Son
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Plumbing aud 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 BSPECIALTY—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 sat-
isfactory manner, and at Prices
consistent with the class of work,
Cah on or communicate with
office,
—
=a
known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW.
ELINH WOODRING — Attorney-at~
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im
all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s
Exchange. b61-1y
N B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law.
Praetices in all the courts. Come
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belletobte
a. 40-
sultation in English or German.
KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-ate
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate
tention given all legal business en-
trusted to his care. Offices—No. 6 Hast
High street. 57-44
M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law
and Justice of the Peace. All pro-
fessional business will receive
prompt attention, Office on second floor of
Temple Court. 49-5-1y
G. RUNKLE — Attorney-at-Law.
Consultation in English and Ger=
man. Office in Crider’s Exchan
Bellefonte, Pa. 55.5
PHYSICIANS.
R. R. L. CAPERS,
OSTEOPATH.
Bellefonte State Coll
Crider’s Exch. 66-11 Holmes Bligs®
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his resi-
dence. 85-41
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed
E by the State Board. State College,
every day except Saturday. Belle:
fonte, rooms 14 and 15 EA Cour
Wednesday afternoons and Saturdays
a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Both Phones. 68-40
7 2 2 >
BOSSY IS GLAD FOR
MEALTIMES
when you educate her to our
feed! It is rich in nutriment for
her, and will mean more milk
each day for you. It will cost
you no more than you have
been paying before; and it will
bring you cash returns. Listen
to our little songster!
“Quality talks”
C. Y. Wagner Co, Tc.
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
o
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
@®
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 Street. 34-34-1y Bellefonte, Pa