| Bellefonte, Pa., November 14, 1924. WHAT YOU EAT IN GRAPES. One eats and drinks a remarkable collection of things when he lightly skids a luscious grape down his throat. It is quite surprising to know all that the chemists tell you you have swal- lowed with one grape, a miniature drug store of beneficent prescriptions. You drink a large proportion of wa- ter and soluble substances in a grape, 79.997 per cent. water and 16.49 of various soluble matter. You get 13.78 per cent. of sugar; 1.020 per cent free acid; .832 per cent. albuminous sub- stances and .498 pectous’ substances, the jelly-making constituent. It is small in’ the grape, which makes it harder to make grape jelly than it does currant. This is what the chemist finds in prodding over the grape at first. Then he wants to find out just what the grape is made of, so he burns it and the ashes tell the ‘story, the water and other substances being determined by weight before and after the burning. In one thousand parts of fertilizing material the grape has taken from the soil and air he finds 830 parts of wa- ter, 1.7 parts of nitrogen, 8.8 parts of ashes, 5 per cent. of potash, .1 per cent, of soda, 1 per cent, of lime, .4 per cent. of magnesium, 1 4 per cent. of phosphoric acid, .5 per cent, of sul- phuric acid, .1 per cent. of chlorine and .3 per cent. of silicic acid. A grape is much more complicated than it looks. And then if you swal- low the seeds you get this much in ad- dition: 110 per cent. water, 19 per cent. ni- trogen, 22.7 per cent. ash, 6.9 per cent. potash, .5 per cent. soda, 5.6 per cent. lime, 1.4 per cent. magnesia, .7 per cent. phosphoric acid, .8 per cent. sul- phuric acid, .1 per cent. chlorine and .2 per cent. silicic acid. And most of us swallow the seeds. Did you ever realize how much you get out of a grape? No wonder it is a most healthful fruit. BIRTHS. Houser—On October 21, to Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Houser, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Ethel Marie. Corl.—On October 12, to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Corl, of Spring township, a daughter, Geraldine Ruth. Jarir—On October 11, to Mr. and Mrs. William Jarir, of "Bellefonte, a son, Walter William. Kushwarrar—On October 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kushwarrar, of Belle- fonte, a daughter, Helen. Halton—On October 15, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Halton, of Fleming, a daughter, Naomi Jane. Emel—On October 28, to Mr. and Mrs. John A. Emel, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Geraldine Irene. Kelly—On October 28, to Mr. and Mrs. James H. Kelly, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Viviaan Marie. Gill—On October 22, to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Gill, of Pleasant Gap, a son, LeRoy Russell. Montague—On October 31, to Mr. and Mrs. Edwin N. Montague, of State College, a daughter, Sarah Wilfenden. Derstine—On October 18, to ' Mr. and Irs. John B. Derstine, of Belle- fonts, a daughter, Mary Kathleen. Whitman—On October 12, to Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Whitman, ‘of Hub- lersburg, a daughter. Gettig—On October 17, to Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Gettig, of Marion town- ship, a daughter. Dunkle—On October 4, to Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dunkle, of Nittany, a son. Choosing the Storage Cellar. A cellar with a dirt floor and with- out furnace, where the temperature may he held quite steadily just above freezing and where the air will be somewhat moist is a good place to keep Irish potatoes, cabbage, celery, and all root crops except sweet pota- toes. If the main cellar is heated, one corner that has a window may be walled off with a double wooden wall and with regulation of temperature by means of the window, should serve the purpose very well. = = Buy at Home We pay taxes here and con- tribute to every public move- ment. And we sell Groceries that are as good as you can get anywhere. City Cash Grocery Fish and Oyters that Sell Fresh caught Fish and fresh shucked Oysters are the most im- portant factors in our business. We are not only anxious to serve you, we want you to know that we want to (create good will). Of course, you can disregard Best Quality and prompt service and merely buy Sea Foods, but will that grade of goods be the “cheapest in the end.” Galaida’s Fish and Oyster M’kt In Ordering Bread Don’t forget to enrich your table with our other baked goods that lend variety and deliciousness to your meals at little expense. BREAKFAST ROLLS CRULLERS COFFEE RINGS CAKES FANCY BUNS RAISEN BREAD CURRANT BUNS PIES | They give you the same food valie ‘as our wholesome Bread. CITY BAKERY Motor Cars Graham Bros. Trucks Hockman’s Garage Dodge Bros. ...The... Center Oil and Gas Co Distributors of (5%) Products Bottorf Bros. The EXIDE Battery Service Station Automobile Accessories, Radios and Supplies and Electrical Contractors Bottorf Bros. Service Quality Bellefozite Motor Service Co W. F. McCOY General Repairs All Cars Tires Tubes Accessories “The MOON SIX” HUPMOBILE Courtesy E UNBREAKABLE Can’t Break, Crack or Leak A Le Boeuf Fountain Pen is Guaranteed Unbreakable Come in and Try to Break One The Mott Drug Co of All Standard Lines Eaton’s and Craine’s Papers Biair Tablets Carter’s and Stafford’s Inks Dennison Goods Eversharp and Conklin Pencils Conklin and Moore Pens S We Invite you to drive it S = Hunter’s Book Store IT’S REAL SATISFACTION B HXP>DOW » ZootHtHP over any Mountain you suggest. PENN STATE AUTO CO. PAINT APA API AAPA DONT BUY The Potter-Hoy Hdw. Co. Unless you want Real Quality and Satisfaction for Your Money. FROM WRU AAO IN Pr Ftd UU Pt Rt nd dP aR Before You Buy Any LUMBER, FLOORING, FINISH, SASH, DOORS, MILL WORK Get Shope’s Prices Bell 46 W United wi Bellefonte Lumber Co MILL WORK SHINGLES BUILDING SUPPLIES . ROUGH LUMBER LATH ~ oth Bo Bellefonte Lumber Co AAA AAAARAA At | NPIS STITT AAG AAPA L SS Put A ASA SSSA ANS BSAA AANA NA NSN NN a iE $1.00 Delivers a Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet Hoosier Club Week November 14--21 W. R. BRACHBILL Furniture and Rugs Good Morning! We just want to tell you that The Variety Shop is one of the Busy Stores of Bellefonte. There’s a Reason. Kom & C why this is thus G. R. SPIGELMYER & CO. M. R. JOHNSON Marble and Granite CEMETERY WORK of every description Before You Vote BE SURE TO READ THIS We have nominated as our leaders the MODERN GLENWOOD STOVE W. W. Lawrence & Cc’s READY MIXED PAINTS, Val- spar Varnishes, Enamels and Stains, H. P. SCHAEFFER, Hardware COAL! Our careful selection has ena- bled us to sell and deliver at any time the Best Grade of Coal mined in Centre county. ¢ Centre Co.Fuel & B’ldg Sup. Co NATHAN KOFMAN, Prop. Knisely’s Market Clean and Up-to-Date FISH OYSTERS BUTTER EGGS SMOKED MEATS West High Street Lyon & Co Lyon & Co We specialize in Ladies, Misses and Children’s Ready-to-Wear Come and see our Blankets and Comfortables Visit our store before you do your Winter buying. It will be a Big Saving to you. LYON & CO. i aa Bellefonte Filling Station and Rest Room A Service Station for Impatient Motorists GREASES OILS GAS Confectionery Tobacco Oil Changed Free FRANK SASSERMAN, Prop. Russ-Bell’s Sodas, Ice Cream, Candy Martha Washington CANDIES Old Time Home Made Only a Few Christmas Weeks Off. Watch Casebeer’s Windows For Suggestions *# C. D. CASEBEER Jeweler and Optometrist POWER OF DOLLAR IS CASILY SHOWN Keep One Moving and See What It Will Do for Your Com- munity. PAYS MULTITUDE OF DEBTS When It Is Sent Out of Town, How ever, to Pay for What Can Be Bought at Home It Is Gone Forever, (Copyright.) It is a rather wonderful thing, when you stop to think about it what one lone dollar will do, if it is kept at work. This has been illustrated in a striking manner on several occasions by means of a very simple experiment. If you want to see just how important a role a silver dollar or a dollar bill plays in the life of a community here is the way to do it. Just attach a tag to the dollar and turn it loosc, with the request that every person who receives the dollar make a note on the tag as to how he received it. The re- sult will be an eye-opener. Here is the way it works: Smith, che lumber dealer, who first possesses the dollar, buys some groceries from Brown and pays for them with the dol- lar. About that time Jones, the plum- ber, who had done some work for Brown, sends his collector around and Brown pays the bill with this dollar. Jones owes Green, the printer, a small advertising bill; so he sends this dollar with possibly some others, to Green to pay his bill. Green had just put the dollar in his cash drawer when in comes Black, the milkman, to whom Green owes a dollar for milk delivered at his house. Green takes the dollar out of his cash drawer and pays Black. For some time Black has owed White, the carpenter, for some work done on his dairy house, so now he takes the dollar that Green has paid him and pays up what he owes White. White still owes for some lumber that he bought from Smith, the lumber dealer, so he takes the dollar and squares up his account with Smith. Smith now has his dollar back. Brown has been able to pay his plumbing bill, Jones has squared up with the printer, and so on, all around the circle. What Might Have Happened. Now suppose that Smith, instead oi puying his groceries from Brown, had purchased them from a mail order house in a far distant city and sent his dollar to pay for them. Brown would not have had that dollar to pay Jones, the plumber; Jones could not have paid his printing bill ; the printer would have had to stand off the milk man; White, the carpenter, would not have got the money for the work he had done for the milkman and Smith would not have got the money which White owed him for lumber. This is all so simple that it requires 0 student of economics or professor of mathematics to figure it out. Any- one can see that when Smith sends that dollar to Chicago or some other city where the mail order houses flour- ish, that dollar is gone so far as Smith and Jones and Green and the rest of the people in Smith’s town are con- cerned. That dollar will never come back to pay any bills in Smith’s town. And the thing that stands out most striking, but is most often overlooked, is that Smith, the man who first spends the dollar, is hurt just as much when he sends that dollar out of town as is the home grocer from whom he might have bought his groceries. Now just multiply this one dollar by 4 hundred or a thousand or ten thou- sand. One dollar may not seem to make much difference in the average town, but a thousand dollars or even a hundred dollars does make a differ- ence. . Just as ene dollar will pay a dozen or a hundred small bills, a hun- dred or a thousand dollars will pay a dozen or a hundred big bills. When Brown, the groeery man, owes a thou- sand dollars and can’t pay it, he is headed for the bankruptcy courts. When Jones, the plumber, can't colleet the money which is due him from Brown or maybe a dozen Browns, he is headed in the same direction as Brown. And so it goes all around the cirele until it hits Smith or a dozen Smiths who have sent their money out of town to add to the fortunes of the mail order men. Buyer One Who Is Hurt. Thus, it will be seen that this buy: at-home proposition is really a selfish one with the man who buys the goods. He is not hurting the home merchant when he sends his money out of town, any more than he is hurting himself. Every sensible man knows that his livelihood depends upon whether busi- ness in his town is good or not. IX business is not good, he cannot make a good living for himself and his family, no matter how hard he may work, and business cannot be good if the busi- ness men in the town are not making money. This is a plain business propo- sition for every man and woman in the community. By spending their money at home they are helping the home merchant only incidentally. They are buttering their own bread. When they send their money to the mail order house, they are not only hurting the home -merchant incidentally but—a thing more important to them—they are likely to be taking the bread out of the mouths of their own children. The Best at Less Pianos Radios Phonographs HARTER’S MUSIC STORE 18 N. Allegheny St. AAA AAS SAAS AAPA TIRE CHAINS I have tire chains to fit the new Balloon Tires. I also have them for the old style tires. See that you are ready Better for the first snow and ice, By having a new set of chains to fit the tires you dare now using. Be prepared! S. H. POORMAN’S GARAGE BELLEFONTE, PA. Your Satisfaction IS OUR RECORD FOR SERVICE That Good (JF _6asotine on the edge of town, on the State College road. EDGEFONT FILLING STATION and REST ROOM BOND C. WHITE, Prop. The Scenic Moose Temple Theatre PICTURES SHOWS Goo Have You Been getting everything that’s com- ing to you when buying groceries We give you Service and Good Groceries at Right Prices THOMAS S. HAZEL DEALER IN Staple and - Faney : Groceries $1.75 $1.75 Ladies’ Silk Hose (Guaranteed) We will give a new pair free for any pair that shows a run- ner in the leg or a hole in the heel or toe. Yeager’s Shoe Store MAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA BEEZERS GARAGE STUDEBAKER International Trucks See the ‘Duplex’ Car GEO. A. BEEZER REGISTERED G. F. Musser Co WHOLESALE GROCERS FRANK M. MAYER Manufacturer of Snow-flake and White-lily FLOUR We carry a large stock of All Kinds of Feed in both our Mills. We are always in the market for Grain, Bellefonte Mill Roopsburg Mill "uu ul UTP Pl PP Special! A few Good Used Cars NASH SIX OVERLAND CHEVROLET NASH FOUR "Sales - Nash 6s = Service WION Garage WIT SUS I UU AS ASSEN SN, fi Bring Health and Happiness to your home with a convenient “Heatmore” Pipeless Furnace CLEAN AND SANITARY Saves Fuel Saves Work Extra Heavy Castings Deep Cup Joints Revolving Cinder Crushing Grates Properly installed in your Home at a price that will sur- prise you. Carload buying gives us this advantage. A few remain unsold of the car- load. Place your order now and save some real money. Bellefonte Hardware Co. : IE Montgomery & Co BELLEFONTE, PA. Genuine ENGLISH BROAD CLOTH SHIRTS Specially Priced $2.45 Blue — Tan — White — Gray Quality Counts The RIGHT PLACE For the RIGHT GOODS At the RIGHT PRICE Olewine’s Hardware The Talk of the Town! Selby’s and Just Wrights Arch Support Shoes FOR MEN AND WOMEN Mingle’s Shoe Store WAP ASP SAAS AAPA AP Kisser’s Meal Market is in on the Buy at Home Cam- paign because it offers such Choice Meats at the Right Prices that there is no reason for anybody buying elsewhere. MENSA PS SISOS APP 3 WAU A APSA Fruits Vegetables EVERYTHING IN SEASON EVERYTHING OF THE BEST Carpeneto’s Buy in Geatre Goun(y Buy from whom you please BUT Buy in Centre County Hazel & Company eoee T H E econo Bon Mot EVERYTHING THAT IT’S NAME IMPLIES Schlow’s Quality Shop Offers you Many Opportunities in Quality and Service that you can’t get by buying abroad
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers