Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 09, 1925, Image 6

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    "Bellefonte, Pa., , January 9 9, 1925.
AARONSBURG.
I'red Wolf, of Akron, Ohio, spent
several days with his father, Charles
Wolf, on Front street.
Miss Ardrenna Harman, of New
York city, has been the guest of her
mother, Tammie Stover.
Josiah Rossman has been ili at his
home on Front street. His condition
is somewhat improved at this writing.
Miss Lizzie Yarger, of State Col-
lege, who was here several weeks, and
Mrs. Carrie Smith, of Millheim, spent
New Year's day at the Stover home.
‘Mrs. W. H. Phillips had as Christ-
mas guests her daughter and grand-
daughter, Mrs. George McKay and
Miss Florence McKay, of Philadel-
phia.
Miss Amanda Haines, after the
Christmas holidays spent at her home
in this place, has returned to State
College, where she has lived for some
years.
After spending a number of weeks
in Bellefonte with her son, M. T. Ei-
senhauer and family, Mrs. J. G. Ei-
senhauer has returned to her home in
this place.
Paul Krape came up from Philadel-
phia and spent Christmas with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Krape, re-
turning to Philadelphia Sunday after
Christmas.
Kermit Orwig came up from Nor-
thumberland and spent part of his va-
cation with his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. G. Bright, and his friend,
Charles Cunringham.
Master Morgan M. Otto, after hav-
ing spent his Christmas vacation with
his mother, Mrs. John M. Otto, on
Main street, returned to Bordentown,
N. d., where he is attending a military
school.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stover and
daughter Elizabeth, of Dauphin, and
Miss Marian C. Stover, of Harrisburg,
spent several days at ‘Christmas time
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S.
Stover, in town; also Mrs. Stover’s
sister.
Frank Armagast has been housed
up since Christmas, suffering with a
very sore knee; having contracted a
heavy cold which settled in his knee.
Mr. and Mrs. Moser and family, of
Danville, spent New Year’s day at the
Armagast home.
Miss Eliza Summers, of Williams-
port, is the guest of her brother-in-
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John
Wolf. Mrs. Wolf has been seriously
ill during the past few weeks but is
improving and her neighbors trust she
may soon be quite well.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kreamer and
two sons, Carl and Ray, of Norris-
town, were Christmas guests at the J.
F. Krape home. While here they
spent some time with relatives in Mill-
heim and Woodward from which place
they left for their home on Monday of
this week.
Mr. and Mrs, G. C. Cunningham had
with them during the holidays their
two daughters, Miss Lois, a teacher in
the public schools at Penllyn, and Miss
Margaret, a student in C. S. N. S,,
Lock Haven, Miss Lois left Saturday,
remaining in Sunbury until Sunday.
Miss Margaret returned to Lock Ha-
ven Monday morning.
William C. and Henry Mingle, of
Akron, Ohio, spent a few days with
their parents, Mr, and Mrs. E. G. Min-
gle, in this place. They came east to
attend the funeral of their brother-
in-law, Herbert Hosterman, who died
Christmas morning, in Buffalo, N. Y.
The body was brought to the home of
his mother, in Woodward, burial be-
ing made in that village.
Mrs. Harding’s Will Filed.
Mrs. Warren G. Harding, widow of
the late President, left an estate esti-
mated ai $500,000. The bulk of her
property goes to her two grand-chil-
dren, Jeanne and George de Wolfe,
who are children of Mrs. Harding’s
only son, Marshall de Wolfe. Mrs.
Harding was divorced from her first
husband in 1884. The greater part of
the money will be placed in trust for
the children until they are 28 years
old. Jeanne is now 15 and George is
12. Meanwhile they are to have the
“interest on the estate. Mrs. Harding
alse made liberal bequests to many
friends and persons associated with
‘the Harding administration. Dr. Carl
Sawyer, in whose sanitarium Mrs,
Harding died, received $10,000; clerks
and stenographers at the White House
during the Harding administration,
received from $500 to $2,000. The
‘Harding home at Marion was be-
queathed to the Harding Memorial
Association and is to be converted in-
te a library and “forever preserved
“to the public for the benefit of poster-
ity.”
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
snywhere.
(ity Cash Grocery
nm PAPI AP PIII
‘In Ordering Bread
+ Tton’t forget to enrich your table
, Fith our “other baked goods that
lend variety and deliciousness to
. your meals at little expense.
: BREARFASY ROLLS CRULLERS
COFFEE RINGS - CAKES
2 + FANCY BUNS RAISEN BREAD
» CURRANT BUNS PIES
“ They give you the same: food value
» as our wholesome Bread.
CITY BAKERY
RAPA ISPS PI
Dodge Bros. Motor Cars
Graham Bros. Trucks
Hockman’s Garage
lhe...
Centr 01 and Gas Co
Distributors of
Products
Bottorf Bros.
The EXIDE Battery
Service Station
Automobile Accessories,
Radios and Supplies
and ;
Electrical Contractors
Bottorf Bros.
ASAP NAS INSP INNIS IIS SSSI E
2 a RINT IIIS IN
GALAIDA’S
SANITARY
Fish and Oyster Market
Bush Arcade—Both Phones
Fish, Oysters and Dressed
Poultry at All Times.
Bell Telephone 82 M
WORN UPUIUIRINS TTNP CTNI AL AIP NINGS 0G tN
PPS NS UII PS ISIS IPA P
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
EIN NIAAA APS
All Standard Lines
Eaton’s and Craine’s Papers
Blair 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
PRA
IT'S REAL SATISFACTION B
HXRP>HOm ob
TENET
over any Mountain you suggest.
PENN STATE AUTO CO.
DON'T BUY FROM
The
Potter-Hoy Hdw. Co.
Unless you want Real Quality
and Satisfaction for Your
Money.
ii
Before } Be YouDir 3 Buy
Any LUMBER, FLOORING,
FINISH, SASH, DOORS,
MILL WORK
Get Shope’s Prices
done 46 W United
PUPP PISS S IPSS
Bellefonte Lumber Co
MILL WORK SHINGLES
BUILDING SUPPLIES
ROUGH LUMBER LATH
Bellefonte Lumber Co
BOE ITEI IP
Enduring Gifts
Quality Furniture...
Showing the largest Lines of
Exclusive trade-marked Furni-
ture in Centre County
W. R. BRACHBILL
Spring St. Bellefonte, Pa.
ANUS WIA AISA APPS
They Say they Know—that
The Variety Stop
China and Toy Departments
are the Best in Centre County.
Kom and C what U think.
G. R. SPIGELMYER & CO.
M. R. JOHNSON
Marble and Granite
ee
CEMETERY WORK
of every description
Before You } Before You Vale |
BE SURE TO READ THIS
We have nominated as our
leaders the
MODERN GLENWOOD STOVE
W. W. Lawrence & Co'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
PUAN NPA NIISISS
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.
Es
QAARAAP I NIAAP PPI
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
Casebeer’s
Christmas Window
for Gifts that; Last,
#6
do. ; . REGISTERED el
Orme cie and Jeweler
FORTUNES MADE
WITHOUT EFFORT
profits of Stockholders in Mail
Order Houses Stagger the
Imagination.
CUSTOMERS SUPPLY CAPITAL
One Man Makes More Than $250,000
on $25,000 Investment in Nine
Years—Hundreds Like
Him.
(Copyright.)
There is one way to make money by
dealing with the mail-order houses but
it isn’t by buying goods from them,
The man who thinks he is making
money by buying his goods from mail-
order houses has only to read of the
amazing profits made by some of these
big corporations to realize that all the
money is being made by the man on
the other end of the deal.
The stockholder in a big mail-order
concern toils not and neither does he
spin, but he piles up his money so fast
that it makes the ordinary man’s head
swim to read about it. Here is the
experience of the stockholder in one
of the large mail-order concerns, as
told by a reliable financial journal, It
gives a glimpse into the inside work-
ings of the mail-order business that
should be of interest to those who
have made such things possible.
How the Game Works.
In 1908 this man bought 600 shares
Jf stock in the mail-order corporation
In question when the stock was selling
around $40 a share, the 600 shares
zosting him a little less than $25,000.
In 1911 the company declared a stock
dividend of 33 1-3 per cent. In‘ other
words the company afier paying cash
dividends regularly, had accumulated
an surplus profit of one-third of the
amount of capital invested in the
business; but instead of distributing
this profit among the stockholders the
company kept the money in the busi-
ness and issued stock for that amount
to the stockholders. By this action
200 more shares of stock were issued
to the man who had originally bought
800, increasing his holdings to 800
shares, without his having put any
more money into the business.
Another stock dividend of 50 per
cent was declared in 1915 and this
added 400 shares more to his holdings,
giving him 1,200 shares in all. A third
stock dividend of 25 per cent was paid
early in 1917, bringing this man’s
stock holdings up to 1,500 shares, still
without his having paid in any more
money, On this 1,500 shares of stock,
cash dividends of $8 a share are now
being paid. This investor therefore
is now receiving $12,000 a year from
his original investment of about $25,-
000, and as the stock is now worth
ground $160 a share, the present mar-
ket value of his stock is $240,000, giv-
ing him a profit of $215,000, in addi-
tion to cash dividends which he re-
ceived during nine years, amounting
to many more thousands of dollars.
Only One of Hundreds.
This is the story of just one small
stockholder in one mail-order concern.
A profit of more than $215,000 made
by one small stockholder in nine years
on an investment of less than $25,000!
It reads like fiction but it is financial
history. There are hundreds of other
stockholders in this and other mail-
‘order corporations, some of whom
have made millions while this man
‘made thousands. Add the profits of
‘all these stockholders together and the
‘result is a sum that Staggers the imag-
ination.
Small wonder that the men who own
the stock of the big mail-order houses
ican live in palaces, ride in the highest-
MVM WW WW YW | ipriced gutomobiles, own palatial pris
'vate yachts and buy $100,000 paints
iings, But who has furnished the
money to pay for the palaces and the
automobiles and the yachts and the
$100,000 paintings? The people in the
country and the small towns who have
{kept an endless stream of money flow-
ing into the coffers of the mail-order
‘houses have made all this possible,
‘Their millions of dollars have gone td
‘the big cities to build up these great
‘concerns. Their millions of dollars
have provided the automobiles and
yachts and other luxuries for the
‘stockholders in these corporations,
Present From Mail-Order Buyers.
These men who have piled up such
big fortunes in the mail-order busi:
‘ness have not even had to pay fox
much of the stock from which they are
NOW drawing princely dividends. The
‘people in the country and the small
‘towns, generous souls, have bought it
for them. This is shown in the case
‘of the stockholder just menti®ned, who
ioriginally invested. The generous
‘mail-order buyers have made him a
‘present of $215,000 worth of stock and
‘he has not had to turn his hand over
‘to get it. He has never even had to
so much as write a letter to get if,
The generous mail-order buyers have
handed it to him on a golden platter.
There's money in the mail-order
business without a doubt, but its on
the side of the man who does the sell-
ing and not the one who does the
buying. If you must do business with
the mail-order house, buy some of its:
stock and let the fellow in the next
town buy you automobiles and private
yachts while he struggles with the
| hard times that come from draining
.his town of the cash that goes to keep
you in luxury. Ge .
|
The Best at Less
in
Pianos Radios
Phonographs
HARTER’S MUSIC STORE
18 N. Allegheny St.
Sam
Says
Fixit
S. H. POORMANS GARAGE
Your Satisfaction
IS OUR RECORD FOR SERVICE
That Good GULF Gasoline
on the edge of town, on the State
College road.
EDGETFONT FILLING STATION
and REST ROOM
BOND C. WHITE, Prop.
The Scenic
Moose Temple[Theatre
PICTURES
SHOWS
(oo
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 Fancy 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
BEEZERS GARAGE
STUDEBAKER
International Trucks
See the “Duplex” Car
GEO. A. BEEZER
iil
REGISTERED -
G. F. Musser Co
WHOLESALE GROCERS
FRANK .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
Was Never in Business
in Any Other Town
Wion Garage
New Location...W. Bishop St.
BELLEFONTE
ET AO,
NPP
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.
NAAAAAAAAA, AAAANANRANNS
3 NAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAPAANA
Montgomery & Co
BELLEFONTE, PA,
Genuine
ENGLISH BROAD CLOTH
SHIRTS
Specially Priced
$2.45
Blue — Tan — White — Gray
The Real
Coaster Wagon
“The Premax”
The best built wagon we
know of.
Just an ideal X-mas gift
for the Boy.
Olewine’s Hardware
PURPA P PUI PIP SPSS IG
AAAAAAAAAAAARAAAAAAARS
The Talk of the Town!
Selby’s and Just Wrights
Arch Support Shoes
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
Mingle’s Shoe Store
Nissel's Meat Market
is in on the Buy at Home Jam-«
paign because it offers such
Choice Meats at the Right
Prices that there is no reason
for anybody buying elsewhere.
FW IPSS AAS SSNPS
Vegetables
EVERYTHING IN SEASON
Fruits
EVERYTHING OF THE BEST
Carpeneto’s
Buy In Gentre Gounty
Buy from whom you please
BUT
Buy in Centre County
Hazel & Company
FUP P AT PPS PAP
eee T H E eos
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