Sein Bellefonte, Pa., June 12, 1925. PLEASANT GAPg George Magargle is building an ad- dition to his home. Mrs. William Kerstetter has been laid up with neuritis. Miss Lois Rishel has returned from Boston, having graduated from a mu- sic school there. Ward Hile and wife returned to their home in Valparaiso, Indiana, after a two week’s visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hile. : Harold and Ralph Wagner, inter- esting sons of Prof. Wagner, of Har- risburg, are spending their vacation at the T. E. Jodon home. Jack Kenneth Crissman, aged 8 years, joined his father and several others on a fishing expedition to the Red Mill, Pennsvalley, last week. Jack caught a sucker measuring over nine- teen inches. The balance of the sportsmen failed to get a bite. Little Jack is correspondingly happy. The season for the luscious strawberry shortcake is almost due. We now have strawberries from June to November. A few years ago that would have sounded like a fairy tale, a horticultural phenomenon contrary to the laws of nature. The ever-bear- ing strawberry is here in actual fact. We now pick strawberries for five months instead of one. The M. E. Junior League, at their festival Friday night, in Noll’s grove, was very liberally patronized. Their total receipts aggregated $75.00. After deducting expenses of $18.00, they had a balance of $57.00. All of our festivals, when weather conditions were favorable, have succeeded ad- mirably well from a financial point of view. Benevolence is a part of re- ligion; it falls, like the dew from heaven on drooping flowers and the good, reviving effects are felt, seen, and admired. Charity is placed at the head of all christian virtues by St. Paul. John Mulfinger has resigned his po- | sition as assistant postmaster at the Gap, the resignation taking effect Sat- urday last. John proved himself up- to-date in every detail, studious and accommodating in the extreme. He —— ing the past two years. Our jails and penitentiaries have been filled to over- flowing, and still the rotten work is going on at a frightful rate. The costs of our Federal courts have been doubled. It has raised up an army of hypocrites and law-breakers and has turned millions of money from our treasury into the pockets of the boot- leggers and up to date has failed to show one moral or economic benefit to society, to business, or to mankind. Statistics show that over 3000 persons died from the effect of poisoned liquor during the past two years. We under- went a four year’s trial without any results towards the betterment of con- ditions. We must cast away the per- nicious hypocrites and false prophets, the time is surely over-due. All we can do is to appeal to common sense and justice of the American people. Some of the higher-ups are becoming alarmed over the situation now exist- ing. If they are wise they will make an effort to call a halt speedily. —Get your job work done here. 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 occupations tend to weaken the kid- neys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains are the result. You suffer annoying bladder irregularities; feel nervous, irritable and worn out. Don’t wait! Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic to the kid- neys. Workers everywhere recom- mend Doan’s. Here's a Bellefonte case: Mrs. Howard Shuey, S. Water St., says: “My back ached so I 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 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. 70-24 and dizzy spells and my kidneys didn’t |+ Alfred Blum the fearless ainmal trainer with Walter L. Main Circus coming to Bellefonte Saturday, June 20. g— sm Grow Better Chicks Without Water or Scratch Feed. Chicks will grow almost twice as rapidly on a diet of milk and a min- eral mash than on water and scratch grains. After reviewing data cover- ing over a hundred feeding experi- ments, it has been found that the milk-mineral mash method is the best feeding method for quick growth and full bodily development. In feeding chicks milk it should al- ways be in the same form. Never feed ¢ sweet milk one day and sour the next. If allowed to sour to the clabbered stage, the whey and solid material should be mixed before feeding, for much of the lactic acid and mineral content is in the whey. in the morning. Automobile Rate—$7.50. Send for free sectional puzzle chart of the Great Ship “SE DBEE” 32-page booklet. gag The Cleveland & Buffalo T: Ja 14 ul l Jo ransit Co. Fare, $5.50 Your Rail Ticket is Good on the Boats ; | A restful night on Lake Erie Makes a pleasant break in your journey. A good bed i cool stateroom, a long sound sleep and gm, Steamers “SEEANDBEE”-“CITY OF ERIE"—*“CITY OF BUFFALO” Daily May 1st to November 15th Leave Buffalo— 9:00 P. M. Eastern Arrive Clavaiue] *7:00 A. a Standard Time teamer ** OF BUFFALO” arrives 7:30 A. M. Connections for Cedar Point, Put-in- etrolt and Ask your ticket agent or oa i Jedi bo poled = Ean Other points: Mitre Cleveland —9:00 P. M, Arrive Buffalo —*7:00 A. M. New Tourist «Jhe Great Ship SEEANDBEE"’ — Length, 500 feet, Breadth, 98 feet 6 inches. Lyon & Co. Bon Ton and Royal Worcester orsets.... Those Usefyl Lines—and the Correct, Girdle to Create Them The BonTonRound-U : LAT ATA AT LT A/T A/T A VAT A/V LV A/T A/V 4 The smart one-piece Corset or Girdle that women are all talking about these days—is unquestionably the garment to give the The New Bordered Voiles in all col- ors; also a New Line of Striped Eng- lish Broadcloths. Lyon & Co WA \AY never asked for the position, only ae- cepted it to help out when prevailed upon by his numerous friends, all of le whom regret that conditions did not justify him to continue. Miss Eleanor Magargle, a talented young lady, suc- ceeds John and will unquestionably make good. The present incumbent shows culture and refiinement and amiability. Our talented little lady, Miss Lois | Crissman, was most agreeably sur- | prised last week when she received | 1 the first prize of $5.00 in gold, the premium offered by Mrs. John S. Walker in household arts. Miss Criss- man has always been regarded as very proficient in all she undertakes. She thinks Mrs. Walker is just it, owing to her generosity and hospitality. The |: mn youngster is now busily engaged in showing her highly prized envelope and contents to her numerous young friends about the Gap, and will never forget the 42nd commencement of the Bellefonte High school. William Shuey, our next door neigh- bor, is the proudest man at the Gap. His face is wreathed in smiles, and he steps out like a grenadier. It is a boy. The announcement was chron- icled in last week’s papers, and was verified, since the mother returned to her home from the hospital, bringing with her a lovely little boy. Billy would not think of turning the little LULL ULC CCE COE TT CE OT TO TTT from Z to 10..... price per pair 25 Cents correct foundation for the straight-line figure. Bon Ton Round-U Models are fashioned for exqui- | site brooches—in dainty tones and substantially woven rubber—for the average stout or slender figure. | Special Sale of Childrens Socks in sizes Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. oan i Loc, = TTT TT > ) h yr i ' $1.75....$1.75 Senger Lo and bls A won be eed with sadness shou e die. Yet oll he cannot look down the future with- THE E [ ] IPMENT Le out a shudder, Anafher ponin to foo : = means retrenchment and reform; that po If} is, a redistribution of food and clothes. = : Li The same Simon} hat supplied two BEHIND YOUR TE lL E P HON E I must now supply three. iil The mother of Washington is enti- — il Jie to a Zefjon's gratitude. A good 4 DECEMBER 31st, last, there were 899,049 tele iH oy generally makes a good man,” : . . I ° ° once Be the mother of Washington. olin served by this company in Pennsylvania. ; La di es’ Gu ar ant e e d Silk H 0 S e eorge was always a good boy. is ; : i . GE SE The cost of the telephone plant and equipment as shown ol The mother made him a good boy, in- on its books was $191,400,000. ik tilling into his heart the principle 91:49: y $ S : CL a I Te $212 per telephone, on an average, divided as follows: ie his country, 2 one of fis brighiens Land and bil dings $28.67 ch. ill ornaments of the world. e mother Ceres 26.07 per telephone i formed Te he an Switchboard and other central 5h God for the gif oF Washingion: i oficeequipment. ............ $8.47 a Ie are no less indebted to Him for the : td gift of is inestimable mother.” Ye, Oazide pls, orks, cables, i These Hose are guaranteed there is something indescribably love- , Subscribers equipment ) . ly in a devotedly pious mother. The 1E etc. wp : yor.0h “ lL not to develop a “runner” in goo) mother Wichiy 8 Yoweri) juss S fies, Sumnitore. topaii: thie 03 pl ence over mankind, and shapes the u 1es, furniture, repair shop 5 3 destiny of nations. DE ones motot ar i; the leg nor a hole in the heel A man had the audacity to say that tools et id ? - ~ = § the Pleasant Gap paragrapher was ad- { PE nese Aral .- 2.717 5 or toe. If they do this you vocating i Ismperanos is simply ae = because he realizes that the temper- 1 FL . . . ance i on = unusually popular 2 Total ...i 2.2 ruined $212.00 per telephone oh will be given a new pair free. at this time. This is a mistake. I ad- 5 a hi \ vocite the cause because I am cogn- en years ago the average Wes but $129 per telephone. izant of the fact that it is right. I Such has been the effect of the rising cost of materials on the id am willing to admit that I disagree in many respects to the methods indulg- ed in by the Anti-Saloon League, ow- ing to its drastic measures of trying to enforce the Volstead act. The ex- penditure, according to reliable statis- tics, is simply burdensome and enor- mous. There is a great demand for the reduction of taxation, by the bet- ter classes of the entire country; the relief of that burden is not apparent, very little has been accomplished in the way of shutting out crime makers. — The political parasites and hypocrites of these pretenders have enhanced in value their ill earned wealth, are growing fat feasting on the tax mon- ey in the Federal treasury. It is al- leged that $25,000,000 has been spent to annihilate rum running along the Atlantic coast alone. They have par- tially succeeded, and the fact of the matter is that our army of home boot- leggers are delighted. They have par- tially shut out the best quality of im- ported liquors and giving the boot- leggers a larger demand for the home product—poison. The product of the . Anti-Saloon League, the Volstead law, Fo , : a” i bas cost the tax-payers of America RL CT OE TO CE OT TE TO TH TE : over $1,000,000,000 in cold cash dur- - hfe lt lu Ta gn Et pt UE UE ELE SUE Cl Badia lille fafa telephone plant during the period of its greatest growth, ~ despite a thousand and one economies and improvements in engineering and construction. But perhaps what is of most interest to the user of tele phone service is the volume of equipment behind the tele phone instrument itself. ; Not merely a pair of wires and a few switches at the other end, but a great volume and complication of apparatus, much of it as delicately adjusted as a watch. And a keen, twenty-four-houra-day organization of 22,000 skilled men and women. 2 We Have them in All Colors #2 Yeager’s Shoe Store iL 91 THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA LE Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. CITT TT TTI TT I TT CITI TS s itd Loa a et s i £2 ; Prt