Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 01, 1927, Image 3

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    BewoirHatn
Bellefonte, Pa., July 1, 1927.
Science versus Revelation.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D.
At this period of my life I found
leisure to make a more crucial ex-
amination of ‘the findings of Science
with the intent of discovering, if pos-
sible, a rational basis of harmony
with Revelation and complete my own
Theological readjustment. With the
hope of affording some assistance to
others disturbed by the apparent an-
tagonism between Faith and Knowl-
edge I am moved to suggest a line of
reasoning which has afforded com-
fort to my own mind.
One of the hypotheses of science—
it is but hypothesis, regards the prim-
al matter as diffused stuff without
structure, properties, parts or indeed
anything whatever—in which was no
spirit, no life, no matter, such as we
are acquainted with. And that out of
this stuff matter was formed or gath-
ered or contracted by energy, acting
in a straight line or “push”— the
“push” not being mechanical power,
nor chemical, nor vital, but conveying
them all and furnishing infinite space
with blazing suns and worlds of life.
‘We can have no objection to this as
a reverent attempt to explain God’s
way of doing things; but if stuff,
push, and space are to be regarded as
the cause, continuance and limit
of all things—as three idols—then we
must maintain that pure science can
admit of no such idolatry. The self-
generation of natural laws is physi-
cally and logically impossible in the
light of the persistence of matter and
energy. Other things must come in
or matter and energy ever remain as
matter and energy. We have wheels
within wheels and rhythm within
rhythm, but of the inner power work-
ing the wheels and producing the
rhythm science knows nothing. It
may exist in the form of motion, that
is dynamic energy, or in the form of
energy with distance to act through-—
that is potential energy. The con-
vertibility of these energies, so far
as science is aware, consists solely of
‘transformations of dynamic into po-
tential and of potential into dynamic
energy. What that is which conducts
the transmutation, and which under-
lies all matter—which applies law to
nature in the mould of a tear and the
round of a planet, science does not
pretend to name. Moses has ventur-
‘ed to anticipate the researches of
science and to attribute all physical
effects to
THE INTRUSION OF DIVINE ENERGY.
“The Spirit of God moved upon the
waters.” The Seer, in deep scientific
spirit, beheld the earth “in walteness
‘and emptiness.” Matter was there
but shapeless, formless, uncondition-
ed. Over the earthly materials min-
gled with fluid, moved or brooded the
spirit of God.
The work upon dead matter ascrib-
ed to the Holy Ghost illustrates the
enlightening, vivifying ordering and
elevating influence of the spirit of
‘God in our own nature. It is not a
mere coincidence that the long and
varied operations of creation, provi-
dence, redemption, regeneration are
full of peculiar and striking resem-
blances. The culminating point in
‘Christianity, the loftiest and most
mysterious height of revealed truth
had its due place assigned at the very
beginning. This is just what we
ought to expect. Instead of being un-
natural the divine and spiritual are
the very soul of nature. And is not
this conception of the Holy Ghost im-
manent in nature and in man a more
rational explanation of the mysteries
about us than any yet given. We
cannot yet prove it in such a way as
to satisfy the axact sciences, but may
not the Holy Ghost as the real secret
of all the creation and recreation be
one of those disclosures of Moses’ in-
spiration and Christ’s genius, which,
Wke God, in a Spirit, penetrates to
the absolute unity and anticipates by
many centuries the last synthesis of
‘the understanding.
The positive sciences seem to be ap-
proaching by sure and rapid steps the
resolution of all phenomena into ev-
olutions of simple force. The sepa-
rate forces, heat, electricity, light,
chemical action are not, as once
thought, ultimate and distinet reali-
ties, but are different forms of the
same force convertible into each oth-
er. Time or space are but conditions
of force. Matter is known to us only
as a condition of force. The ultimate
atom of the chemist is a figure of
speech, a poetic license. The atom
theory of Dalton can go no further
‘than say that all chemical forces are
related to each otherin fixed mathe-
matical proportions. But of that ulti-
mate atom it can say nothing save that
it conceals a secret energy of which it
knows nothing. Hence
THE SUBSTRATUM OF MATERIALISM
IS SPIRITUALISM.
The materialist can go no longer
take a lump of matter and say, “Here
is the only reality!” He must say,
“Here in this matter is a promise and
potency.” In other words it is a com-
‘bination of so many forces—the force
to produce in us the sensation of taste,
color, weight, and so on—and beyond
this degree and quality of force we
know nothing and can know nothing
about it. And so it is a curious fact
that this great statement of Christ
is at last scientifically settled—that
the war of the nominalists and the
realists is practically over and victory
has been given to spiritualism by
seience which seeks nothing outside
of matter—that in fine this God—this
inscrutable, elusive, immanent some-
thing behind all phenomena is a force,
a spirit, an immaterial and not a ma-
teril energy.
As this great synthesis of philoso-
phy goes on to its completion the re-
ligious insight will dwell with in-
terest upon this great principle of
force out of which has been evolved
all that is and will be evolved, all that
is to be—that principle conditioned
to our understanding always by mat-
‘ter, time and space, but caused by
—
nothing conditioned—that mysterious
principle in which rested at the be-
ginning all the possibilities of worlds
on worlds—all forms animate and in-
animate—the highest modes of being
in this world and those we hope to see
and realize hereafter.
Now if science becomes every day
more imperious in attributing all
these results to force, will not our re-
ligious instinct, with good reason, al-
so grow very busy with its old analo-
gies? She will say the scientists’ in-
finite force is but another term for
Religion’s Infinite, Holy Ghost.
She will wonder if that mysterious
energy is not the spirit of God, which
was in the beginning, by which all
things were made. She will wonder
if it is not that life which is the light
of men, often refused ingress, often
quenched, but still reducing chaos to
harmony, binding heavens arch over
by the upper world with stars of hope
and making of every soul who will re-
ceive and comprehend a dwelling
place of God. One is tempted to
hazard the prophecy that what dis-
pute there is between philosophy and
religion will at last resolve itself into
a question of terms. At all events
when so many are guessing reckless-
ly, may we not guess soberly and in
the fear of God, and put in the place
of this term force into which philoso-
phy resolves all phenomenon—the
last and highest conception of God
revealed by our religion, the execu-
tive life of Jehovah—the Holy Ghost
immanent in matter and mind.
Thus the lines of intellect and piety
converge. Any antagonism that pre-
sents itself is apparent rather than
real. Detached squadrons far out on
the elongated lines of battle on which
science and religion are rushing for-
ward in a common charge against the
forces of error, may, in the dust of
darkness, fire upon and wound each
other, but when the confusion passes
they will recognize one another as
comrades in arms. Specialists with
a singleness that is beyond praise,
limiting their labors to one field of
science, to one branch or even leap of
knowledge in order that they may add
some new thing to the intellectual
store of mankind, may unconsciously
narrow their own intellectual nature
until on concentration of mind on the
near and small they lose the faculty of
far-seeking and wide discernment.
They may utter wild hypotheses as
to the vast outlying province of re-
ligion, yet in the end it will be seen
that their real work has been friendly
to religion while the theorizing has
been but a harmless byplay of ignor-
ance and folly. Religion and science
are wedded by ties that no human
hardihood can put asunder. No true
scientist can give up religion and its
holy sentiment without surrendering
the highest dignity and inspiration of
his position and reducing his science
to an occupation of mere curiosity and
selfish utility. No Christian can sep-
arate his religion from science with-
out reducing himself to the impossible
task of explaining the universe with-
out positive knowledge, and tending
to a hard dogmatism, oppressive to
the spirit of every ‘intelligent man.
Science has not yet advanced far
enough to establish perfect accord
with revelation, but it is tending thith-
er, and in_its ultimate generalization
of force almost agrees with that rev-
elation of Holy writ, which tells of —
“A presence that disturbs me with the
joy
Of eternal thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused
Whose dwelling is the light of setting
suns,
And the round ocean anid the living air.
And the blue sky, and in the mind of
man,
A motion and a spirit that impels
All thinking things, all objects of
thought,
And rolls through all things.”
—r———— fp e————
Electric “Fish Ladders” Save Salmon
Fisheries.
Transportation for fish is now an
established fact. By means of “fish
railroads” and the longest “fish lad-
ders” in the world, millions of salmon
have been enabled to climb upstream
past a 265 foot dam to reach their
spawning grounds in the spring, says
the Pennsylvania Public Service In-
formation Committee.
These same fish, together with mil-
lions of young salmon, later leap
safely down that same dam on their
way to the sea. The electric power
companies in the American North-
west have made this possible. The
Northwest needed the electric power
produced by the falling water, so the
dams were necessary. The salmon
fishing industry, however, would have
been dealt a severe blow if the fish
had been unable to reach their usual
spawning beds.
The plan was worked out success-
fully on the Baker River, one of the
two main salmon rivers in the State
of Washington, where engineers cou-
structed a series of flumes and fish
ladders with low jumps and resting
pools, each with a gate to prevent the
fish turning back from their trip up-
stream. The last stage of the journey
is a tram railroad with a tank car
pulled by a cable.
Nobody knew certainly that the
new system would work until this
year’s run of salmon began, but it
soon proved successful. When the
downward run of young salmon start-
ed, five and six-inch fish went over
the dam at the rate of about 10,000
an hour, dropping with the falling
water into the deep pools below and
swimming off in good condition.
License Plates Muse be Easily Dis-
tinguishable.
Harrisburg.—“Too many illegally
displayed or attached license plates
are being used by Pennsylvania motor-
ists and we are out to stop it,” declar-
ed Wilson C. Price, Superintendent of
the State Highway Patrol in a state-
ment issued yesterday. “I mean li-
cense plates that are dirty, swinging,
battered or so attached that bumpers
or other equipment hides them. Those
are the worst elements we have to
meet in apprehending the hit-and-run
driver. His tag number is mis-read
by witaessess, we lose time and annoy
innocent motorists, often putting them
to expense to prove their innocence.
Paper Money Ordered Smaller.
For the first time since 1861. the
size of American paper currency is
to be altered. Andrew W. Mellon,
Secretary of the Treasury, has ap-
proved recommendation for reducing
the size of federal bills to permit an
estimated saving of 33 per cent. in
manufacturing.
New notes will go into circulation
in about 12 months, and will require
one-third less paper and ink, a third
less shipping weight, while permit-
ing 50 per cent. more notes to be
produced by the same operation.
The present size of paper currency
is’ 7 7-16 by 3 1-8 inches. The new
size will be 6 1-8 by 2 5-8 inches.
This is approximately the size of
present Philippine currency.
The new smaller notes will gener-
ally fit picketbooks without being
folded, it is announced, which is not
possible with present bills. This
frequent folding ‘and creasing will
eventually break the fiber of the
paper and hastens its deterioration.
Furthermore it is believed the smal-
ler notes will be more difficult to
counterfeit. The reduction in size is
not sufficient to render obsolete
money counting machinery or cash
registers now in use.
The new notes will mean $2,000,-
000 a year saving in manufacture,
Mr. Mellon estimates. For a while
national bank notes will be issued
at the present size. Until they are
discounted and the present federal
notes withdrawn the two sizes of notes
will circulate side by side.
The new notes will look like the
present bills with slight changes.
In future, the use of a particular
President’s portrait will be given to
a single denomination. Washington’s
face, for instance, will always stand
for a dollar bill, irrespective of class
notes.
Growing demand for paper money,
following American prosperity, com-
pels the Treasury Department to
operate full capacity with occasional
double shifts. In 1917 the Bureau
of Engraving delivered 128,672,045
sheets of currency and in 1926, 227,-
566,949 sheets. The new style cur-
rency will help solve the present pro-
duction of the bureau inasmuch as it
will be possible to print 12 bills to the
plate instead of eight.
Introduction of the new currency
offers a considerable problem. Al-
though smaller it is explained, the
new bills will be worth just as much
as the old. It has been decided that
the initial production shall be con-
fined to dollar bills and a sufficient
stock of the new bills accumulated
so that upon some future given date,
all of the dollar bills of the larger
size in circulation can be redeemed
upon demand. The Treasury warns
the public that advance specimens of
the new currency cannot be furnished
until new bills make a simultaneous
entrance in all parts of the country.
Many Eclipses This Year.
This is the year of years for
eclipses. There will be two eclipses
of the moon and three of the sun be-
fore December 8, according to Prof.
Harold Jacoby, head of the depart-
ment of astronomy of Columbia Uni-
versity.
For the first time in 35 years, New
York witnessed a total eclipse of the
moon on June 15.
“Despite its rarity,” said Professor
Jacoby, “another total lunar eclipse
will occur this year December 8, but
this other eclipse will not be visible
in America, except near the Arctic
Circle.”
The eclipse this month was visible
throughout the United States and re-
mained in totality for 22 minutes.
The moon entered partinal eclipse at
1:43 a. m,, and the total eclipse began
at 3:13 a. m. From this time until
3:56 a. m., was total invisibility, as
the earth stood between the sun and
the moon.
“Since the moon is visible to the
earth only by reflection of the sun’s
rays,” says Dr. Jacoby, “the earth
cast a shadow over the face of the
moon tht erased the moon from view
for 22 minutes.”
This rare phenomenon is especial-
ly significant to astronomers, accord-
ing to Professor Jacoby, in order to
determine to what extent if any, the:
moon possesses qualities of luminos-
ity and heat radiation of its own.
The total eclipse also presented an
opportunity to study the influence
of the great radio activity of recent
years.
Three eclipses of the sun will occur
this year one of them being a total
eclipse, June 29. It will be visible
only in Britain and .Scandinavia.
1776.
The first “Fourth” was celebrated
in Philadelphia, of course, for it was
there on July 4, 1776, that the Decla-
ration was signed and the signing pro-
Shamed by the ringing of the Liberty
ell.
But it was on the 8th of July that
the first official celebration occurred.
The intervening time was necessary
to prepare for the ceremonies. From
a platform in front of the statehouse
John Nixon read the Declaration of
Independence to a large concourse of
people.
When the reading was finished the
king’s arms over the seat of justice
in the courtroom were torn down and
burned in the street. Bonfires were
lighted in the evening, houses were il-
luminated and men and women and
children paraded the streets singing
and cheering until a thunderstorm at
midnight halted the celebrating pro-
cession.
On the 9th New York heard of the
signing and started celebrating the
memorable event.
Boston, the “hub of knowledge,”
learned about it on the 17th, and the
leading citizens gave a banquet, while
“liberal quantities of liquor, according
to the old customs, were distributed
among the populace. A goodly num-
ber of the “populace” became quite
drunk. All through the summer in-
land towns and villages were hearing
of the signing and immediately start-
ed celebrations of their own.
Celebrations in July,
—Subseribe for the Watchman.
of legs.
man is a two-legged animal has been
‘amply demonstrated; it remains to be
Fourth of July in Manila.
The little brown men in the Philip
pines, who fought against the Stars
and Stripes a few years ago, now cel-
ebrate its birthday with as much en-
thusiasm as the most patriotic Amer-
ican could wish. Long before sunup
in Manila the bustle of preparation is
heard in answer to the ruffle of drums
and the shrill notes of pipes from
army headquarters. Despite the great
number of Chinese in the city, Manila
does not encourage the firecracker,
owing to the highly inflammable na-
ture of many of the buildings, espe-
cially along the water front. But lots
of gay bunting is stretched along the
streets, and American colors are in
evidence everywhere. he hills beyond
the city walls echo to the boom, boom
of saluting cannon, greased poles are
erected in the public square and
things are humming in a way to make
an old-fashioned Fourth of July bar-
bacue look like a Quaker meeting.
In the afternoon there is sure to be
a speech from an open-air platform
draped with flags, and later a concert
of patriotic airs from the ornate bam-
boo band stand on the Luneta. The
well-to-do citizen of Manila puts on
an immaculate duck suit, pins a tiny
American flag on his breast in hcnor
of the day and goes out to see the fun
and take part in the grand parade of
vehicles and pedestrians on the Lun-
eta, which takes place as soon as the
climhing of the greased pole and the
potato and sack races are over. A
brilliant display of fireworks winds
up the day. The harmless torpedo
and less harmless tov pistol are in
high favor with grownups as well as
children, and it is very amusing to see
a fat elderly mestizo gentleman
gravely loading and firing a toy pis-
tol, or gleefully poppinz torpedoes on
tha pavement.—INew York Press.
Se —————— Gy ——————
Some Reasons for Longer Skirts.
How to lengthen skirts is a vital
problem to the textile industry, which
has been hard hit ever since the war.
The Independent, a national week-
ly, offers a solution. It says editor-
ally:
“If the true inwardness of legs
could be brought home to the kilted
sex by power of pen and print then
wit and humor would have served
alike the interests of abstract beauty,
the textile producers and many mis-
guided sisters. For the overwhelm-
ing majority of American women,
short skirts represent triumph of
faith over reality.
“Ninety per cent. of all legs on ex-
hibition are not worth looking at
twice. These may be divided into the
following categories:
“The grand piano—15%.
“The channel stake—25%
“The ankleless or salt back—20%
“The bandy or bowed—17%.
“The parenthetic or knock-knee—
121%.
“The victims of fashion cannot be
aware how silly they look, and how
they play into the hands of the other
10%, who are physically equipped to
win admiration by exposing their
calves. For our part, we are weary
The biologic fact that wo-
seen whether woman is as smart as
she was in the old days when an inch
of stocking above the shoe tops was
more alluring than bare skin above the
knees in this emancipated era.”
Two-Year Farm Course in Agricul-
ture at State College.
The two-year course in agriculture
at Penn State is designed to equip
the student for practical farming.
Young men and women who enter this
course find an environment that is
helpful to study and to putting into
practice the information they gain.
An applicant must be 18 years or
more of age and should be well enough
prepared in secondary school subjects
to enable him to pursue the work with
profit. Some high school work is de-
sirable but enirance examinations are
not required. Students have entered
this course with no other preparation
than that obtained in a grammar
school, and by good, faithful work
have been able to complete the course
in a satisfactory manner.
The work in the first semester is
definitely prescribed and includes the
most fundamental subjects necessary
to a general knowledge of agriculture.
Even if one purposes to be a special-
ist in any line of farming, he should
build upon a firm foundation. Dur-
ing the remaining semesters wide
latitude is offered the student in the
selection of subiects. A special two-
vear course in forestry is offered.
Further information about the two
vear courses can be obtained bv writ-
ine to the Dean of the School of Agri-
culture, State College, Pa.
Nothing could be more delightful
for a small girl than a printed liberty
crepe made after the smocked style.
Civil Service Examinations.
The United States Civil Service
Commission announces open competi-
tive examinations to fill vacancies in
position of automobile mechanic, cabi-
net maker, electrician, painter, plumb-
er steamfitter and timber inthe De-
partment Service at Washington.
The salaries are $1,500 and $1,680
a year.
Full information may be obtained
from the United States Civil Service
Commission, Washington, D. C., or at
any postoffice.
Fair Dates are Announced.
Between August 10 and October 13
sixty-six county fairs will be held in
the State. Those in this section of
the State will be as follows:
Clearfield Sept. 13-16.
Clarion Aug. 30-Sept. 3.
Huntingdon, Aug. 23-26.
Indiana, Sept. 13-16.
Brookville, Sept. 20-23.
Reading, Sept. 13-17.
Centre Hall, Aug. 27-Sept. 3.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
KLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im
all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s
Exchange. ! 51-1y
J KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-af
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at~
rusted ‘to his vara. "Ofiee- No 5 Dest
0 care. ces—No.
High street. : i,
M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law
and Justice of the Peace. All pre=
fessional business will receive
prompt attention. Offices on second fleox
40-5-1y
G. RUNKLE. — Attorney-at-Law.
Consultation in English and Ger
Criders Exchalign
of Temple Court.
man. Office in
Bellefonte, Pa.
PHYSICIANS
R. R. L. CAPERS,
Bellefont OSTEOPATH. 5
onte tate College
Crider’'s Ex. 68-11 Holmes Bldg.
8. GLENN, M. D. Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his resi-
D
dence.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
PRESIDENT JUDGE.
We are authorized to announce that
W. Harrison Walker, of Bellefonte, is a can-
didate for nomination on the Democratic
ticket for the office of President Judge of
the courts of Centre county; subject to the
decision of the voters of the county as ex-
pressed at the primaries to be held on
September 20th, 1927.
To Democratic Voters of Centre County :—
I am a candidate for the office of judge
of your courts, subjeet to your decision
at the primaries September 20, 1927.
incerely yours,
W. D. ZERBY
FOR SHERIFF.
We are authorized to announce that Harry
B. (Dep.) Dunlap, of Bellefonte, will be a
candidate for the nomination on the Demo-
cratic ticket for the office Sheriff of Centre
county, subject to the decision of the Cen-
tre county voters as expressed at the pri-
maries to be held on Tuesday, September
20, 1927.
We are outhorized to announce that
Elmer Breon, of Bellefonte borough, will
be a candidate for the nomination on the
Democratic ticket for the office of Sheriff
of Centre county, subject to the decision
of the Centre county voters as expressed
at the primaries to be held on Tuesday,
September 20, 1927.
FOR PROTHONOTARY.
We are authorized to announce that
Claude Herr, of Bellefonte, will be a
candidate for the nomination on the Demo-
cratic ticket for the office of Prothonotary
of Centre county, subject to the decision of
the Democratic voters as expressed at the
Primary tc be held Tuesday, September 20,
o
FOR TREASURER.
We are authorized to announce that Ly-
man L. Smith, of Centre Hall, will be a
candidate for the nomination for County
Treasurer subject to the decision of the
Democratic voters of the county as ex-
pressed at the primary to be held Septem-
ber 20, 1927.
We are authorized to announce that D.
T. Pearce, of State College Boro., will be a
candidate for the nomination for County
Treasurer subject to the decision of the
Democratic voters of the county as ex-
pressed at the primary to be held Septem-
ber 20, 1927.
FOR RECORDER.
We are authorized to announce that Sinie
H. Hoy, of Bellefonte, is a candidate for
nomination on the Democratic ticket for
the office of Recorder of Centre county,
subject to the decision of the voters of the
county as expressed at the primary to be
held Tuesday, September 20, 1927.
We are authorized to announce that D.
Wagner Geiss, of Bellefonte, Pa., is a can-
didate for nomination on the Democratic
ticket for the office of Recorder of Centre
county, subject to the decision of the
voters of the county as expressed at the
primary to be held Tuesday, September
20th, 1927. ’
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
We are authorized to announce that John
8. Spearly will he a candidate for the
nomination for County Commissioner on
the Democratic ticket subject to the decis-
ion of the voters of the party as expressed
~
at the primaries on September 20th, 1927.
We are authorized to announce that
John W. Yearick, of Marion township, will
be a candidate for the nomination of Coun-
ty Commissioner, subject to the decision
of the Democratic voters as expressed at
the primaries to be held September 20, 1927.
Republican Ticket.
PRESIDENT JUDGE
We are authorized to announce that M.
Ward Fleming, of Philipsburg, Pa. is a
candidate for nomination for resident
Judge of the Courts of Centre county sub-
ject to the decision of the Republican
voters of the county as expressed at the
primary to be held September, 20, 1927.
We are authorized to announce that
James C. Furst, of Bellefonte, Pa., is a
candidate for nomination on the Republi-
can ticket for the office of President Judge
of the Ccurts of Centre county; subject to
the decision of the Republican voters of
the county as expressed at the primary to
be held September 20, 1927.
We are authorized to announce that
Arthur C. Dale, of Bellefonte, Pa., is a
candidate for the nomination on the Re-
publican ticket for the office of President
Judge of the courts of Centre county, sub-
ject to the decision of the Republican
voters of the county as expressed at the
primary to be held September 20, 1927.
TREASURER.
I hereby announce that I am a candi-
date for nomination as the Republican
candidate for Treasurer of Centre County,
subject to the decision of the voters of the
party as expressed at the primaries to be
held Sept. 20, 1927. a
Your influence and support is earnestly
solicited.
JOHN T. HARNISH
Boggs Township.
Muc
tra
Rooms $2 so
with Bath $300 p
Send Postal For Rates
and Booklet
W. JOHNSON QUINN, President;
h Favored b
: : wom
valing Withouy Sen
—— .
TIMES SQUARE
NEW YORK CITY
JUST OFF BROADWAY
AT 109-113 WEST 458 ST.
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regise
tered and licensed by the State.
Hyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat~
1sfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and
lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg., High
Bellefonte, Pa. T1-22-
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed
by the State Board. State Coll
every day except Saturday. Bello=
fonte, in the Garbrick building opposite
the Court House, Wednesday afternoons
from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. te
430 p. m. Bell Phone. 48-40
Feeds
We Keep a full stock of Feeds on hand
at all times.
Wagner's 229, Dairy $48.00
Wagner's 329, Dairy $51.00
Made of cotton seed meal,
gluten and bran.
oil meal,
FOR THE POULTRY.
Wagner's Scratch Grain per bu...... $2.60
Wagner's Poultry Mash per bu...... $3.10
WAYNE FEEDS
We sell all of the Well Known Wayne
Brands of stock feed
Wayne’s 329, Dalry, per ton,........ $54.00
Wayne's 329, Dairy, per tonm,......... 50.00
Cotton Seed Meal, 43%, per ton,..... 50.00
Oil Meal, 349, per tem.............. 58.00
Gluten, 23%........ Sense snvsunceravans 48.00
BMHBIR .. .....ocovviniriiniisineasies 45.00
BIA oc. .-ecccrrsidrncsinsevesseen 38.00
Midillings ......................c.... 42.00
MIXed CHOP .ocviiiosissraainhoeieiss 44.00
850% Meal Scrap ..........cevvnvee. 4.256
680% Digester Tankage............. 4.25
We are making a wheat food Breakfast
Cereal, 4lbs for 30c. Try it. Sold at all
the groceries.
Use “Our Best” Flour.
G. Y. Wagner & Go., Inc
66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
ONAN AAA AAAS
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully ana Promptly Furnished
66-15-tf.
Fine Job Printing
4 SPECIALTY
at the
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There i8 no style 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.
Call on or cummunicate with this
office
ape
Employers
This Interests You
The Workman’s Compensation
Law went into effect Jan. 1,
1916. It makes insurance compul-
sory. We specialize in placing
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 43-18-1yr. State College