© ————————————— I Demoraaic ican Bellefonte, Pa., February 22, 1924. Sem Country Correspondence Items of Interest Dished Up for the Delectation of “Watchman” Read- ers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. PLEASANT GAP. Society like butter, must be con- tinually stirred else it will burn. Humanity will go farther to see dogs fight than to hear an able dis- course from the pulpit. In the coal district a court injunc- tion doesn’t seem to have any more than 175 per cent. kick. When men become encoiled in the great anaconda of prejudice, all hope of progression is up with them. John Tate has taken advantage of the excellent sledding that abounds here. His sleigh bells made the wel- kin ring Monday morning. It is always best to form acquain- tances slowly, for in case of dissatis- faction you not only delay the event of your disappointment, but also of their discomfiture. The season of the year is here when the owners of grape vines should pro- ceed to prune their arbors. Cut them close and you will have a better qual- ity and a greater yield of this lus- cious fruit. Ward Showers, who for many years was one of the kiln men at Whiterock, has been transferred to the dinkey crew, but is not overjoyed with the change. He may like railroading bet- ter after he becomes acclimated to it. Josiah Zeigler, the up-to-date pro- gressive farmer adjacent to Madison- burg, made brief calls among his old- time friends here on Monday last. Mr. Zeigler has many friends in this sec- tion who are always delighted to see him. On Wednesday evening of this week Noll’s hall was filled with an over- flowing five hundred party, the un- usual attendance being because the proceeds will be donated to the Belle- fonte hospital, a most worthy propo- sition. $500,000,000 is filched by fraudu- lent and hopeless schemers annually, from the poor of the United States. Get rich quick schemes have beggared thousands and still the poor dupes persist in investing in worthless se- curities. John Barnes, one of our energetic real estate manipulaters, purchased a property in Bellefonte last week and sold a house and lot at Pleasant Gap. Mr. Barnes is actively engaged in real estate and is apparently succeeding admirably well in his new field of op- erations.’ One of our best and most enterpris- ing news boys happens to be a girl— in the person of Miss Nellie Baney. Inclement weather, snow, rain, and even thunder and lightning, don’t bar “her from serving her 65 Grits weekly. She is quiet and unassuming, she serves all of Pleasant Gap and the fish hatchery promptly. Comrade Fry’s ably edited Pine Grove column in the “Watchman” is sincerely missed by his numerous friends at the Gap. All are hoping for his speedy recovery. In fact, the elimination of his good work is no doubt regretted by all the readers of the “Watchman.” The Captain never indulged in “gush” or guess work, but had always a column of unvarnished truthful facts, which greatly appeal- ed to the intelligent public. Lady Astor, according to the con- census of cablegrams, is the wittiest woman who was ever elected to Par- liament. But after reading samples of her wit, we're obliged to confess that, if they accurately illustrate the well-known British sense of humor, she certainly hasn’t overestimated it. Indeed, you might say she has reduc- ed it to the vanishing point. This fun- ny business has become a habit. Ar- temius Ward once said, that if he ven- tured to take the second apple dum- pling for dinner, people would indulge in a hearty laugh. Conscience is a righteous governor midst the social activities of man, and would in its region prevent those im- moral extremes to which he is liable to swing by reason of the gift of free- dom; but God in his consideration for humanity’s welfare, has not left us solely dependent from conscience and its solicitous dictates; but failing to heed it, permits us to fall back onto nature, which employs the most rigid laws in all her operations. When conscience has ceased to be a govern- ing factor in the affairs of society, then of a necessity, we must go back to the school of nature and learn through antagonism and all the se- HAMBONE'S MEDITATIONS DE OLE OMAN DONE TOL P= Ross AR COMED HOME DRUNK TUR NIGHT bout AH GOT MO’ SENSE ‘N DAT --HITS DANGEOUS ‘NOUGH T’ LIVE WID HER SOBER LET LONE DRUNK! Coaynight. 192 1 by McChire Newspaper Syndicate. — vere lessons it teaches, that harmony is after all the best condition in which to live. * We never believed the ancient as- sertion that women .are more talka- tive than men; yet it’s a fact that every time we find somebody talking on our party line it’s a woman and another woman, and when we try again twenty minutes later it’s the same ones. They use their phone the way they lease it, by the month. I had intended to have more to say on this subject, but concluded to back up; since woman has always proved a great and essential commodity when the meal time comes around. Silence at the proper time is golden. Our Sunday school girls and boys were all smiles last Sunday owing to the constant fall of snow. They killed two birds with one stone. Nearly all our families are owners of one or two little sleds so that the children per- formed a double duty, that of coast- ing and attending the Sabbath schools, all of which caused the youngsters to be unusually cheerful. Cheerfulness is a spring of power and of pleasure, alike, to our physical, our mental, and our moral natures. It soothes and composes the passions and keeps them in a perpetual calm. The patrons of a well conducted Sunday school are more liable to grow up as good reli- able and trustworthy men and women. Our sick are mostly improving. Mrs. Clayton Gettig, who was confin- ed in the Bellefonte hospital for some time, has been discharged and is again enjoying the comforts of home. Her husband, who has been afflicted with rheumatism, reports no noticeable change. Mrs. John Weaver, who was seriously ill for some time, is much improved and on a fair way to recov- ery. Our good neighbor, Mrs. Henry Twitmyer, is still in the hospital with a slight change for the better. Mrs. . C. Baumgardner’s condition is un- changed. Miss Beatrice Noll, who had a severe attack of tonsilitis, has sufficiently recovered to again answer to roll call at the Bellefonte High school. It is alleged that Billy Ross, who retired from the farming avocation, will not remain retired but thinks very seriously of entering the Evan- gelistic profession. Wouldn’t Billy Ross and Billy Sunday make a strong team were they to join hands in Bil- ly’s new enterprise? Billy Ross has always been a strong advocate of the golden rule, and since he has a pow- erful voice, and is possessed of a little more than the ordinary oratorical ability, it is thought he might make a great success in his new venture. Bil- ly is naturally conservative, he is not enthusiastic in his advocacy of meas- ures of morals or political reform, and will go out of his way to spurn shams and frauds, whatever aliases they may assume. Billy says it is an en- viable task to be able to reach the multitudes with lessons of wisdom, and to encourage those who stand in the front of adverse events and in the midst of unhappy surroundings; to stand firmly upon the rock of truth and not yield to temptation, though it comes in the guise of an angel of light. Billy is manly, heroic, an ad- vocate of moral and religious culture. _ It does seem strange, nevertheless it is true, that the heads of some men get boozy long before their legs be- come shaky or their feet so blind that | they cannot see where to sit down. A drunken head on a sober body does not produce such a highly comical ef- fect as the sober head and body on tipsy legs. The sight is more pitia- ble, if it is not disgusting. The de- thronement of reason, no matter what cause, excites pity in the heart of any one, even the most unfeeling. Per- haps the most amusing individual is the one who has become intoxicated without knowing it. He is perfectly sober—in his mind—and goes along as though he was himself. His ideas are greatly inflated, colors and sounds are intensified and space itself is ex- panded. He reaches beyond the thing he wants to grasp, and those with whom he is conversing seem to be a long way off, which renders it neces- savy to speak very loud or get very near. The drink proposition is sub- ject to changes; fifteen years ago the purchaser of liquor would not invest in the ardent unless it were two years or over of age—it is different now. Quite recently one of our lushers went to his bootlegger for a quart, the vender said he was entirely sold out, but would start the machine at mid- night and he should call in the morn- ing for his medicine. I often wonder what the stuff tastes like. The advice of a Normal school pro- fessor in an address to a teachers’ in- stitute in a neighboring county, that the teacher must discover the cause for a pupil’s lack of interest in com- mon school subjects and overcome it by a proper presentation, probably will discourage the busy but conscien- tious teacher. The professor warned that a child must not be condemned for failure to become interested in subjects taught as they must be— same for every child. The teacher, he said, who expects children who differ in every other way to be exactly alike in their interests in all common school studies is out of place. The child who cannot become interested in certain studies may, upon proper inquiry, be found to have a much stronger inter- est in something else of greater use- fulness than the uninteresting study. The professor declared the discovery of the child’s want of interest to be one of the highest duties of teachers. It may be because of the manner in which the teacher presents the study or an inherent disinclination to be- come interested in that particular sub- ject; but either way, the professor says, it is the business of the teacher to find out. The essence of interest in children is their conception of use- fulness and he ventured to tell the teachers that in every case where they had failed to secure a child’s interest it was because the usefulness had not been made plain to the young stu- dent. The Normal school professor’s advice is good, but perhaps does not sufficiently take into account the ri- gidity of the system under which pub- lis school teachers work. Whether re- sults are excellent, indifferent, or poor, the teacher has little, if any time to devote to individual cases, though probably the born teacher will give less consideration to her record and more to the welfare of the child. No doubt if the teacher had the time to devote to individual cases for stim- ulation of interests, results would be different, but when those who cannot bother with individual children are added to those who will not, the total is larger than should be the case in a popular educational institution. BOALSBURG. Harold Fisher went to Clearfield on Tuesday. - Frank Fisher, of Juniata, Monday night in town. Israel Reitz, of Petersburg, was in town on a business trip last week. John Bricker, of Williamsport, vis- ited friends in town over Sunday. Miss Anna Sweeney is spending some time with friends at State Col- lege. Mrs. Vera Homan, of Centre Hall, is visiting her sister, Mrs. William Reish. Rev. S. C. Stover has been confined to his home on account of an attack of tonsilitis. Mrs. Magoffin went to Pittsburgh, Thursday, to consult an oculist and visit friends. Mrs. George Homan and daughter spent Wednesday with friends at State College. Mrs. Alfred Lee entertained a num- ber of ladies at a quilting party on Wednesday evening. Ralph Rockey and family, and Mrs. William. Rockey transacted business in Bellefonte on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John Dernar enjoyed a drive to Bellefonte on Saturday, in their new Chevrolet coupe. _ Nevin Meyer is making elaborate improvements to the interior of his residence on west Main street. Mr. and Mrs. John Kimport visited the latter’s father, Dr. Fry, a patient in the Bellefonte hospital, on Satur- day. A few of our loyal Democrats braved the storm, Tuesday evening, and went to Bellefonte to attend the banquet. Dr. Patch, of Altoona, representing the Anti-Saloon League, delivered an address and also sang a beautiful solo of his c¢wn composition, in the Luth- eran church on Sunday morning. Members of the Knights of Malta are beautifying the banquet hall in their Temple by hanging new wall pa- per, and expect to have it in readiness for their banquet on Friday evening. The cafeteria supper given by the young ladies of the Lutheran Sunday school was quite a success, more than $46.00 being added to the fund start- ed for a new heating plant for the church. spent Quite Trustworthy. The southern lady saw old ’Rastus setting out with his fishing tackle for a day on the river, and she deemed it a fitting time to rebuke him for his notorious idleness, since she and everybody else knew that the entire family was supported by the indus- try of ’Rastus’ old wife as a washer- woman. “‘Rastus,” she said severely, “do you think it’s right to leave your wife hard at work over the washtub while you pass your time fishing?” “Yassum, ma'am,” replied the old darky earnestly. “It’s all right, Mah wife don’t need any watchin.’ She’ll wuk jes’ as hard as if I was dah.” ——— pee ———— Teacaher May Flog Pupils. The rod was upheld as a necessary aid to the cause of education when a jury that tried Eugene Moyer, a school teacher of Lehigh county, ac- quitted him on charges of assault and battery, growing out of a whipping that he was alleged to have inflicted upon two sons of Ray Geary, using a razor strop. The outeome of the tri- al hinged entirely on the ancient question whether a teacher has a le- gal right to flog pupils for breach of discipline. The jury divided the costs between the teacher and father of the oys. AARONSBURG. Mr. and Mrs. John Bower, of east Front street, are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter. Miss Pearl King, on Wednesday of last week, went to Bellefonte where she will remain for an indefinite time. Harry Johnson, who has been spending the winter among his chil- dren, returned to his home in this place. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Vonada and two children, of Bellefonte, spent Sunday with Mrs. Vonada’s father, J. H. Crouse. Walter E. Orwig spent Monday with his family in this place, return- ing to his employment in Northum- berland the same day. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Mingle and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Stover motored to Pot- ters Mills, Saturday, where they at- Sended the funeral of W W. McCor- mick. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Eisenhauer mo- tored over from Lock Haven and are at present with Mr. Eisenhauer’s mother, Mrs. Alice Eisenhauer, on Front street. Mrs. Mary Breon spent a few days with her children in Jersey Shore. Her visit at this time was made on account of the illness of a grand-child, who underwent an operation in the hos- pital in that place. Charles Wolfe, who has been ill for the past two weeks, is not improving as rapidly as his family and friends would wish. During the week he has been subject to hiccoughs. Stanley Homan, the small son of Harry Homan, has been quite ill dur- ing the past week with the grip, which has settled in his stomach. He is under the medical attention of Drs. Frank and Miller. Our local electrician, William E. Weaver, has been busy for the past year wiring houses and various other buildings. During the past few weeks Sumner Burd, Sparr Werts and James E. Holloways houses were among the recent jobs which he very satisfac- torily completed. They all expect light within a short time. PS aly For Liver Ills. Tonight to tone and strengthen the rans of digestion and elimination, improve appetite, stop sick headaches, relieve bil- iousness, correct constipation. They ac romptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet thoroughly. ) Tomorrow Alright 25¢c. Box C. M. PARRISH BELLEFONTE, PA. MEDICAL. ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. Are You Tired, Achy--- All Run Down? This Bellefonte Resident Tells You How to Get Well. Tired all the time? Lame, stiff and achy? Tortured with nagging backache? Knife-like twinges when you stoop or lift? Miserable with headaches, spells and bladder irregularities? All are signs of kidney sickness! Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant di- uretic to the kidneys. Here’s Bellefonte testimony: Mrs. E. E. Ardery, Reynolds Ave., “My kidneys were weak and out of order and my back ached. I Doan’s Pills from Runkle’s drug store have always relieved these attacks and strengthen- says: became run down, too. ed my back and kidneys.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Buffalo, N. Y. dizzy Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mrs. Ar- dery had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mi -8 ELINE WOODRING — Attorney-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s Exchange. b1-1y B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law. Practices in all the courts. Com- sultdtion in English or German. Office in Crider’'s Exchange, Balletgnts Pa. 40- } | Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate tention given all legal business em- trusted to his care. Offices—No. § Hast High street. 57 I 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. rr] KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at= sis PHYSICIANS. R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. State College 66-11 Holmes Bldg. M. D., Physician and State College, Centre Pa. Office at his resi- 85-41 Bellefonte Crider’s Exch. S. GLENN, Surgeon, county, dence. —Get your job work done here. VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licen E by the State Board. Stete Colle = every day except Saturday. B 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¢ elle= fonte, rooms 14 and 15 Temple Co Wednesday afternoons and EP ay a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Both Phones. 68-40 oun an UTY ER A QUA BREAD is the staff of life, as you know well. Poor bread makes a weak staff that will not support you in health, strength and good will. Poor flour makes poor bread. By us- ing our flour you will depend upon a staff that is without Fine Job Printing 0—A BSPECIALTY—o AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no atyle 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 this office. weakness. Try our flour—you’ll like it C. Y. Wagner Co., Inc. 66-11-1yr BELLEFONTE, PA. Employers, CHICH THE DIAMOND PILL S Ladies! Ask your Dru t for ©hl.ches-te HS known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable years SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE eu ates THE UNIVERSAL CAR Buy Your Ford Now ITH spring almost here thousands of families, antici- pating the demand that is certain to exist for Ford Cars and Trucks are placing their orders for immediate delivery. Sales now are far ahead of sales at this time last year. Advance orders calling for delivery under the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan have already reached a total of 255,758 Cars and Trucks. The prospect of securing prompt delivery is daily becom- ing more uncertain. We cannot urge too strongly, there- fore, the necessity for placing your order immediately, if you are planning to drive a Ford Car this spring. See the nearest Authorized Ford Dealer Gort fotor 6G Detroit, Michigan . It is not necessary to pay for your car in full in order to secure delivery. You can get on the preferred list for early delivery by making a small payment down. Or, if you wish, you can arrange for delivery under the terms of the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan. 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 Collage Get the Best Meats You save nothing by buying Sor thin or gristly meats. I 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 Fire! Get Proteciion. 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 prices are no higher than the poorer meats are elsewhere. I always have ~—DRESSED POULTRY— Game in season, and any kinds of goed meats yeu want. TRY MY SHOP P. L. BEEZER, High otrees. 34-34-1y Bellefonte, P8