SE fe Bemorrit atdn Bellefonte, Pa., April 16, 1926. PLEASANT GAP. M. M. Keller and family spent Sun- day at Oak Hall. Mrs. Fred Roush, of Altoona, spent the week-end here. Dale Brooks came home from #%he hospital on Monday. Miss Lois Rishel was home from New York last week. There are quite a number of cases of grip in this locality. Jack Mulfinger, of Spring Mills, was a visitor here last week. John Wilson, of Osceola Mills, spent Sunday at the Millward home. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Clements spent Friday shopping in Lock Haven. ~My. and Mrs. Earl Weaver are re- joicing over the arrival of a young son. A family from State College is ex- pected to move into the Collins Baum- gardner house the coming week. Miss Jean Noll, who has been nurs- ing Mrs. Blaine Mabus and son Dick, at Bellefonte, is home with a sore throat. Seven ladies of our town were in- itiated into the P. O. S. of A. by the degree team of Bellefonte. The order is in a thriving condition. From personal observations I feel positive that Senator Pepper will have a walkover in Centre county at the primaries, with Vare second and Giff an insignificant third. George Showers and Bent Bell, of the Pleasant Gap poultry farm, are unable to supply the demand for their chicks and have already decided to double their capacity next season. Miss Grace Confer, our newly-ap- pointed postmistress, is getting along extremely well. She is courteous and accommodating, and her services are highly appreciated by the patrons of the office. Raymond Melroy has opened an ice cream parlor in the rooms in the hotel recently vacated by Supt. Ray Noll He is sure to make a success, since he is an all-around good fellow, the kind intended . to make a success. .in -all undertakings. The business is flour- ishing. The importance of good nursing has never heen properly appreciated, otherwise more books would have been written on the subject. Good nursing is just as important as the science of medicine. A great many people are apt to criticise the charges of a professional nurse, but I don’t agree with them. The nurse, like the doctor, is expected to respond to any and every call, even if it takes her in contact with loathsome and conta- gious diseases. Because of this fact, and also for the reason that she is compelled to spend several years in training at nominal wages, she is worth in the sick room every ¢ent she demands. Nursing the sick is a try- ing job and those who do it are worthy of their hire. Real Estate Transfers. J. K. Johnston, Exec., to Paul A. Vonada, tract in Walker Twp.; $2,000. Edward Sweiler, et ux, to Harry Bloom, tract in Bellefonte; $1,800. Franklin E. Weiland, to Andrew C. Smith, tract in College Twp.; $1,000. George C. King, et ux, to William H. Haney, tract in Gregg Twp.; $500. George W. Rossman, et ux, to Jos- eph H. Gilliland, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1,850. Matilda J. Shreffler, et bar, to John H. Hipple, tract in Snow Shoe Boro.; $250. Samuel M. Rice, et al, to Ira J. Sprankle, tract in Bellefonte; $2,200. ~ Ella Bowers, et bar, to M. B. Meyers, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1. Jennie B. Lingle, et bar, to J. El- mer Royer, et ux, tract in Potter Twp.; $8,900. Charles W. Slack, et ux, to Calvin F. Emery, tract in Centre Hall; $2,- 800. . Robert Brennan, et ux, to Clara T. Bateson, tract in State College; $1. , Clara T. Bateson to Robert Bren- nan, et ux, tract in State College; $1. Mary C. Bickel, et al, to Emma C.’ Hall, tract in Boggs Twp.; $675. W. G. Ulrich, et ux, to Alma C. Haines, tract in Millheim; $2,250. . Wassill Kozloski, et ux, to Andy Onistich, tract in Rush Twp.; $800. Elizabeth Korman, Exec, et al, to Mable B. Korman, tract in Bellefonte; $115. William Oliver, et ux, to Frederick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $3, 200. Samuel B. Stover, et ux, to Fred- erick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $1,425. David W. Stover, et ux, to Fred- erick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $300. Emanuel Ettinger, et ux, to Fred- erick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $450. Simon Rote, et ux, to Frederick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $525. George M. Rupp, et ux, to Fred- erick Limbert, tract in Haines Twp.; $400. William Walker, et ux, to Harbison Walker Refractory company, tract in Worth and Half Moon Twps,; $1. Emery S. Ripka, et ux, to Myrtle I. Grazier, et bar, tract in Millheim, $10,000. Alma C. Haines, et al, to David H. Rearick, tract in Penn Twp.; $7,000. Sarah Satterfield to Wesley W. Tate, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $,600. William Kuhn, et ux, to Helen Gladfelter, et bar, tract in Harris Twp.; $1,000. John F. Zechman, et ux, to Wil- liam. S. Tennis, tract in Harris Twp.; $1,900. Bellefonte Trust company, Exec, to John F. Hines, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $340. Thomas Gilbert, et ux, to Nelson A. Stover, tract in Miles Twp.; $450. Mary A. Schenk, et al, to Lydia S. Pletcher, tract in Liberty Twp.; $1. Ten Million Forest Trees to be Ship- ped This Spring. Secretary Stuart announced re- cently that ten million forest trees will be shipped this spring from the nurseries operated by the State De- partment of Forests and Waters. From the Mont Alto Nursery in Franklin county there will be ship- ped 3,700,000 trees. The Clearfield nursery comes second with 3,500,000 trees, and the Greenwood nursery in Huntingdon county will contribute 1,- 200,000 trees. In spite of the late spring, more than 400,000 trees have been shipped already. The demand for forest trees has been so great for this spring that the entire nursery supply, except a few short-leaf pine, were allotted months ago. Several hundred forest land owners, who were disappointed in not getting trees this year, have already filed their applications for trees for the spring of 1927. Forest tree planting will be fea- tured this spring in every county of the State. The 10,000,000 trees that will be planted will bring back to production more than 9,000 acres of land. In 50 years, when many of these trees will be large enough to cut, they will produce more than 300, 000,000 board feet of lumber urgent- ly needed by the people and industries of the State. Road Hogs Not Popular With Aver- age Motorist. If motorists would learn the rules of the road, always bearing in mind to share the road with other users of the highway and “keeping to the right,” there would be fewer acci- dents. Hogging the road is the cause of many accidents, particularly at turns. : Carelessness is particularly notice- able at turns. It is no easy matter to turn corners at speed prescribed by law, and. novices should practice traveling at low speed just before reaching corners and before making the turn at a speed not more than four miles an hour. Drivers should always signal by waving the hand which way the car is to turn or when it is to come to a stop. In making a turn on a country road, where the motorist cannot see beyond the turn, unusual precaution should be taken. Too many motorists make these turns with their machines far over the mid- dle of the road, thereby endangering the other fellow, who frequently is doing the same thing on the opposite side of the turn. It is well to re- member that half of the road is yours Beware of Fake Seed Salesmen this Spring. This is a timely warning issued by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. Reports have been re- ceived by the Department from other States in which the so-called Zenith Lawn Accessory Company, a firm making a speciality of selling “Her- bae Prati,” is operating. A statement has been received from the United States Department of Agriculture which reads in part as follows: “The Post Office De- partment has denied the company the use of the mail. Grossly erro- neous statements as to the suitabil- ity of ‘Herbae Prati’ for lawns have been made. Its qualities have been proclaimed in such phrases as ‘the boss of all grasses;’ ‘the world’s most beautiful blue-grass;’ ‘a lawn in 30 days anywhere; ‘it will grow where other grasses have failed, in any soil or climate;’ ‘heat, cold or shade will not affect it.’ “An analysis of the mixture made by the department seed testing la- boratory showed it to be composed mainly of meadow fescue and Ital- ian rye grass. The victims have paid as high as $1.50 a pound for the mix- ture, whereas, according to the de- partment, the constituents of the ‘Herbae Prati’ mixture could have been purchased from reputable seed firms for not more than 18 to 20 cents a pound. “The postal fraud order has put a stop to the use of mails by the firm, but traveling agents are still active throughout the country sell- ing ‘Herbae Prati’ by house to house canvas and to local seed handlers.” While the presence of these travel- ing agents has not yet been reported in Pennsylvania, the public should be constantly on guard, says D. E. M. Gress, the State’s well-known botan- ist and seed specialist. re i te mn Our Largest State. Texas, the largest of the United States, has an area of 262,290 square miles. To the casual reader these figures may seem very little. They show, however, that the Lone Star State is more than fifty-four times as large as the State of Connecticut, as an old Southern statistician tells us. If it were possible to run a railway train from Connecticut to Texas and back in a day and if the train could take the entire population of the Nut- meg State, as given in the last cen- sus, at every trip, and upon its return to Connecticut there should be as many persons in the State as there were before the train left with its cargo, and if each person were placed upon an acre of ground upon his ar- rival in Texas, the train would be obliged to make 224 trips, or to de- populate Connecticut 224 times, be- fore accomplishing its mission, and then there would remain in Texas not elbow his way around in the crowded Southwest without chafing the nap of his coat sleeves, may gath- er some solace from the statement that the entire population of the globe, divided into families of five persons each, could be located in Tex- as, each family with a house on a half-acre lot, and there would still re- main many millions of vacant lots.— Exchange. : Electrified Food to Join Artifical Sun in New Rickets Cure. The use of ultra-violet electric rays upon various foodstuffs may be the next application of electricity to the well being and health of mankind, according to recent experiments cov- ered in a report of the Scottish Board of Health, says the Pennsylvania Duitie Service Information Commit- ee. Oranges and other fruits have for years been successfully ripened by the use of ordinary electric light. The report of the Board is based upor further researches along these lines. It has been found that numerous foods whose use tends to cause rick- ets can be made definitely anti-ra- chitic by the application lamp. Milk exposed to the artifical sunlight rays becomes richer in vitamines, and a substance inherent in many foods, cholesterol, is made beneficially act- ive by the electric sunlight. The essential vitamines in food are largely destroyed by cooking, accord- ing to the report, and it seems prob- able that they can be restored by this use of electricity. Ultra-violet rays produced by quartz lamps are being used to cure various diseases, notably rickets, and this application is closely tied in with the modern problem of smoke abate- ment, since these same diseases are both caused and aggravated by a dearth of sunlight containing the beneficent rays. Taking No Chances. Cohen, accompanied by his wife, visited the oculist to have his eyes examined. “Now Mr. Cohen,” ordered the ocu- list, “close your right eye and read this sentence,” The patient read the sentengte, whereupon he was asked to close his left eye this time and repeat the per- formance by reading another line of words. : At this point he hesitated. Remov- ing his wallet, he turned to his wife and transferred it to her with a whis- per: “Here Becky, you'd better hold on- to this for a while. You can never tell when he’ll want me to close both eyes at the same times.”—Every- body’s Magazine. ——First Visitor—My dear, these you hear her say when she passed them around, “Take your pick?” ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. 5 KLINE WOODRING — Attorney-at- Law Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im MEDICAL. Eisen SU OSE room 1 Or Get Rid of That Backache! Bellefonte People Point the Way. The constant aching of a bad back, The weariness, the tired feeling; Headaches, dizziness, nervousness, Distressing urinary disorders— Are often signs of failing kidneys And too serious to be neglected. Get rid of these troubles! Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant di- uretic to the kidneys. Hosts of people recommend Doan’s. This is a Bellefonte case. You can verify it. Samuel Weaver, S. Water St., says: “My kidneys acted irregularly and I almost got down with backache. Mornings I felt so lame and stiff, I could hardly bend to put on my shoes. After using Doan’s Pills, from Run- kle’s Drug Store, I was benefited in every way.” (Statement given April 5, 1922.) On July 22, 1925, Mr. Weaver said: “Time hasn't shaken my faith in Doan’s Pills. This confirms my state- ment of 1922.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Wea- ver had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 71-2 Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces “of ud PAA AA AAA Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES and the other half belongs to the | nearly half a million of empty acres. | cakes are as hard as stone. ; Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished other motorist. The man who hears that he could | Second Visitor—I know. Didn’t 68-15-11 nS - _— Se ti . & iat mr - —- TL It was on June 25, 1876, at the Centennial acclamation of Emperor Dom Pedro of Bi later, two out of every five farms in the Ui telephone service notice. Now, fifty ’ years ition in Philadelphia, that the amazed il first brought Bell’s invention to public nited States have | The telephone has just passed its fiftieth birthday This half-century of history has been marked by extraordinary progress. The service has been extended into a Bell System of close to seventeen million telephones. Its facility and dependability have reached a height which to the user seems commonplace by very familiarity. But a review of these fifty years emphasizes most the necessity for further progress in pace with the requirements of the future. In Pennsylvania even the most remote towns have their telephone service, and thousands of lines radiate off through the back-country, bringing it into the universal community which this service creates. But this was so ten years ago; and, yet, since 1916 the number of tele- phones has almost doubled. New users and new uses continuously push this growth forward. New developments of equipment and method make possible a constantly in- creasing usefulness of the service, despite the magnifying complexity of the great switching system which is the mainspring of it all. The “ pioneer” era of telephony was inspired in its overcoming of great obstacles. But each year calls for new and just as essential pioneering in the growing intricacies of so complex a service mechanism. THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. ) — yr ONE POLICY, ONE SYSTE OF PENNSYLVANIA M, UNIVERSAL SERVICE HRI KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at= Law, Bellefonte, Pa Prompt ate tention given all legal business em= trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5 Hast High street. 57-44 M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All pre- fessional business will receive prompt attention. Office on Temple Court. G. RUNKLE — Attorney-at-Law. Consultation in English and Ger- man. Office in Crider’ Bellefonte, Pa. Hens Exchange, second floor ef 49-5-1y ———— PHYSICIANS. D R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. State College Holmes Bldg. D., Physician and State College, Centre Pa. Office at his resi. Bellefonte Crider’s Exch. 66-11 S. GLENN, M. Surgeon, county, dence. VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday. © fonte, rooms 14 and 15 Temple dourh Wednesday afternoons and Saturdays a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Both Phones. 68-40 Feeds We Keep a Full Line of Feeds in Stock Try Our Dairy Mixtures —22% protein; made of all Clean, Pure Feeds— $46.00 per Ton We manufacture a Poultry Mash good as any that you can buy, $2.90 per hundred. Purina Cow Chow $52.00 per tem 0il Meal, 34 per cent. protein, 54.00 ¢ -% Cotton Seed, 43 pr. ct. prot., 50.00 « essssesasne Gluten, 28 per cent. protein, 48.00 * © Alfalfa Meal .....co0000vvenes 45.00 ¢« BPN ooesirevcrrnssrencrnsves 84.00 « « MIAAHMES J... i ar eessroinee 86.00 ¢« « (These Prices are at the Mill.) $2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery. 0. Y. Wagner & Go., Ing 66-11-1yr BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Job Printing ; e—A SPECIALTY—e AT THR WATCHMAN OFFICR There is no atyle of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the moat aat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work, Cas on or communicate with this office. 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 ins Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. it will be to your interest te consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, Bellefonte 43-18-1y State Collega: Fire! Get Protection. The following Lines of Insurance are written in my Agency FIRE AUTOMOBILE (All Kinds) BOILER (Including Inspectiom) PLATE GLASS BURGLARY COMPENSATION LIABILITY ACCIDENT and HEALTH EVERY POLICY GUABANTERR YOU PROTECTION When you want any kind ef a Bond come and see ma Dor’t ask: friends. Thay don’t want to go om your Bord. I will, H. E. FENLON Bell 174-M . Temple Oeurt Coot BELLEFONTE, ra