Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 27, 1928, Image 6

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    Bellefonte, Pa., January 27, 1928.
EE ————————————————
Grouse Holding Their Own in the
State of Pennsylvania.
Harrisburg.—Reports from Michi-
gan, Minnesota, Ontario, New York
and New England concerning the
scarcity of grouse cause Pennsylva-
nians to marvel that during the last
ten hunting seasons for grouse in
this State an average of 365,000 birds
have been taken each year, George
M. Sutton, State ethnologist, said
today. :
Sportsmen have wondered particu-
Jarly at the 1927 season’s kill, which
numbered 335,664, for it was believed
that our grouse were rapidly on the
decrease, first, because adjacent re-
gions have been so_infested with
grouse disease which seems not to
have pervaded Pennsylvania, second,
because the terrific invasion of gos-
hawks during the winter of 1926-27
robably took a toll of 100,000 grouse
» this State, and third, because the
three miserably cold, damp, and late
breeding seasons of 1925, 1926, and
1927 doubtless destroyed many eggs
and young. :
Grouse, Sutton said, are holding
their own in Pennsylvania today be-
cause the following forces help them
solve their vital problems: the pow-
er of the Game Commission to close
the State or part of the State to
hunting and to regulate the daily and
seasonal limits: the game refuges
sanctuaries where they feed, and
where their natural enemies are con-
trolled; the extensive winter feeding
program carried on by the game pro-
tectors, Boy Scouts, sportsmen’s
clubs and farmers; the introduction
of ring-neck pheasants which relieves
art of the burden which would be
‘borne by the grouse alone were not
other large game birds present; the
intelligent control of predatory mam-
mals and birds and the sportsman-
like attitude of the average Pennsyl-
vania hunter who says, “I will not
kill a grouse if I see they are getting
scarce.”
If we are to keep this splendid
game bird we must keep a sufficient
breeding stock, and this will require
alert, intelligent handling of a diffi
cult problem, the ethnologist added.
Gain of More Than 750,000 Tele-
phones in the U. S. During 1927.
Estimated figures compiled before
the close of the year indicate that
there are now about 18,500,000 tele-
phones in the United States, a net
‘gain during the last year of over
three-quarters of a million. More
than 2,850,000, or 15.4 per cent, are
Served from dial system central of-
ces.
Approximately 5,000,000 miles of
telephone wire were placed in service
during 1927, making an estimated to-
tal of more than 63,000,000 miles of
wire in operation in the telephone
systems of the United States,
Not only was there a notable ex-
tension during 1927 in telephone
plant, but there was, at the same
time, a marked increase in the vol-
ume of telephone traffic. For the
year, as a whole, the telephone com-
panies in the United States trans-
mitted an average of 72,500,000 con-
versations daily, which represents an
increase of approximately 2,500,000
over the average number of conversa-
tions per day in the preceding year.
On a per capita basis, the average
number of telephone conversations in
the United States was 205.8 yearly
during 1927.
The number of telephone workers
required to take care of the expand-
ing telephone plant and traffic showed
an increase of about 6,000 and to-
talled at the end of the year, about
875,000. This figure excludes those
employed in factories manufacturing
telephone apparatus and supplies,
who number about 50,000.
Unjust Criticism.
Typographical errors are the bug-
aboo to a reporter. He oftentimes
sees a story in which he has taken
great pride garbled through a mis-
take in the spelling of an important
word, or through the transposition of
lines and letters.
The average reader of a newspaper
fails to understand why so many mis-
takes are made, and criticizes unjust-
ly for such errors, not realizing that
type is handled by many persons be-
fore it goes to press.
- The fault of mistakes is not entire-
ly due to type setting, as errors of
his own may not be caught as he
hastily reads over wnat has been
written, and even
look mistakes. .
Recently a newspaper in a college
town carried an account of the inau-
guration of the new coliege president,
and the newspaper account of his op-
«ening remarks werz as follows: “The
great objection of modern education
may be said to be the effort to train
youth to deal masterfully with exist-
ing conditions,” but it should have
vead, “the great objzctive.”
Newspaper pu*lishers, editors and
reporters well know that such errors
Jeave a bad impression of the whole
article and there is no reader who
realizes that anymore than the writer
‘who gleans over his “masterpieces,”
and finds words misspelled, and some-
times made senseless by ludicrous
errors.—Exchange.
Do Not Force Plants.
If a plant has been growing thrift-
ily for some time and then begins to
go back, it probably needs a rest, and
no amount of forcing will do any
rmanent good. It will, says Nature
agazine, do a definite harm. Dur-
ing the resting period a plant is bet-
ter if left entirely alone in a cool,
dry cellar. It will of its own accord,
and without any attention of any kind
begin to put out new green shoots.
When these shoots show themselves
the plants should be given a thorough
watering, a repotting if necessary,
and brought up into its place in the
sun. After it is growing well it
may be given fertilizer.
proof readers over-|
Chinaman Carried Off
Maiden of His Choice
“Lah-bah,” or the “twelfth moon
eighth day” is always lucky for mar-
riages. Poor people of the Anhui
province in China can be sure of an
auspicious day without going to the
expense of consulting the fortune-
tellers.
This year in the town of Liuanchow
there was a novel 11arriage proces-
sion. A young man of twenty-two
wanted his bride, but her parents are
said to have thought him too poor for
the girl, and demanded a sum of
money which they thought would end
in the match being broken off. Friends
suggested he should abduet the girl;
80 on the auspicious “eighth” he and
a few friends went to the girl’s home,
and they were in such force as te
carry the day. To prevent anything
like lawlessness the bride and groom
were bound together back to back and
the young man was marched off, like
the snall, with his house chia li—wife
—on his back. The girl had protest:
ed she did not want to be his wife.
and apparently sulked, but next day
things were smoothed over by friends
“But why tie them back to back?’
asked one. “Oh, to stop the girl from
struggling,” said a friend of the
groom, In other words it was cave
man stuff.—North China Herald.
Friend’s Mild Rebuke
Failed in Its Purpose
Smith and Jomes were personal
friends, so one day Smith took a per
sonal friend's liberty and said tr
Jones:
“You mustn't take offense if 1 speak
to you about something I have had on
my mind for some time—just a little
babit of yours.
“Nobody has ever had the nerve to
tell you before,” Smith continued in a
hesitating sort of voice, “and you ar~
such a splendid, noble fellow.”
“Yes, yes,” answered Jones.”
Smith cleared his throat; then, with
great determination, launched out:
“You're one of those fellows whe
never really know what is being said
to them; you're always pursuing some
train of thought. Anyone can tell half
the time you are not listening by the
faraway look in your eyes. You've
offended a lot of people. Of course,
it's terribly rude, only you don't know
it. You mustn't any more, old chap”—
putting his hands on Jones’ shoulders
“Promise me you'll not,”
Jones was then obliged to face his
friend.
*Just what were you saying?’ he
inquired in a faraway voice.
Organization Counts
The Baldwin locomotive works got
an order for a monster locomotive. It
was shipped in 15 days.
“How did you do it?” one of th.
officials was asked.
“Organization,” he responded. “Oi
ganization is the art of getting men
to respond like thoroughbreds. When
you cluck to a thoroughbred he gives
vou all the speed and strength of
heart and sinew he has in him. When
you cluck to a jackass he kicks.”
Here is an illustration worth while.
which surely applies to men as wel!
as lower animals.
A wonderful thing is the ability tc
~espond with complete efficiency when-
ever called upon.
And a more wonderful thing is to
oe able to get other men to respond
that way when you call upon them.
That is what the great men of in-
dustry—as well as of war—have been
able to accomplish.—Gulf Coast Lum-
berman.
It Was a Good One
«t was our custom in English class
at school to choose a certain person
to read his theme aloud before the
class, writes a correspondent. On this
particular day the girl who sat across
the table from me had let me see her
paper before class started. It was a
good one, so when the teacher asked
whose theme we would like to hear,
I promptly suggested that the girl
across from me read hers. She arose.
but instead of reading the one I had
seen, she took another one from her
book. It was a wonderful ode to the
president of the senior class; praising
him to the skies and throwing oratori-
cal bouquets at him. I was the presi:
dent.—Chicago Tribune.
Idea for Searchlights
fn the night, when low clouds flom
mn a thin veil above the river, where
searchlights on battleships throw their
beams upon them, a curious round
patch of light can be seen on a cloud,
Airmen flying above these clouds
would also see the patch of light and.
in clear weather, the long beams cast
upward into the sky.
The suggestion has been offeren
that air-lighthouses should be provid-
power,
Understand Now That
Sun Radiates Health
Two architects at Paris have built
@ house of which any room may have
sunshine al any moment of the day,
provided the sun is shining. It turns
on a pivot like a railroad turntable, A
finger on the electric button is all that
is needed.
This may not initiate a new style of |
architecture, or house-building, It
would be a little expensive for the
average householder; he will content
himself with moving his sitting or
dining room to it. But the house il-
lustrates and emphasizes the new .de-
votion to the sun.
Our doctors and scientists have just
found out new and exceedingly valu-
able therapeutic qualities in the sun's
rays—rays that strike the skin with-
out any intervening medium. It is
nature’s oldest and finest remedy, con-
stantly used and relied upon by the
lower animals but long misunderstood
and unappreciated by the high ani-
mal, man. We have always talked
of the benefits of out-of-door life, but
we did not realize our dependence on
and debt to those healing and vitaliz-
ing rays direct from the source of al’
life on our planet.
We are still discovering gold unde”
our feet.—Pathfinder Magazine.
Nature Has Provided
for Needs of Aphids
Aphids are the tiny insects that live
on the tips of tender plants and the
under side of leaves. The extraor-
dinary thing about them is that al-
though they can exist for generations
without wings, when the need arises
they can grow them in a night. The
aphids are sap-suckers. They settle
down, drive their beaks into the bark
until they reach the sap, then sit con-
tentedly drinking their fill. They are
80 contented, in fact, that they often
sl their skins, casting off legs and
eyes, and cling there blind and help-
less. Clinging thus, the helpless moth-
ers give birth to their young, who
having eyes and legs, run about quite
actively until they find the sap
streams. The processes are repeated
until the plant harbors so many of
these tiny creatures that they drink
all its sap, and the plant dies. The
aphids, having to seek new sources of
food, produce a generation of aphids
with wings. These they unfurl and
then fly to a live plant.—London Tit-
Bits.
Nation Without Language
One of the strangest things to be
| found among the nations of the world
|
Is the fact that Switzerland has no
language of its own. The official lan:
guages of Switzerland are French, Ital-
ian and German, all three being ree
ognized as the “mother tongue” of the
majority of the inhabitants. . :
A majority of the people speak Ger-
' man, while the others use French and
weather the light would penetrate the |
cloud of mist and be visible fron
above.—Popular Science Monthly,
Tourmaline Peculiarity
The crystal, tourmaline, is capable
of attracting small bits of paper snd
straw in much the same way as any
ber. This attraction is, of course. due
£0 an electrostatic charge.
When the crystal is exposed te sun
light of a low temperature it loses its
electrical charge, but regains it upen
being heated again. If it has a nega-
tive charge at first, it will have a posi-
tive charge when it is reheated.
Several other precious stones ex
bibit phenomena along this line, but :
tourmaline is the most interesting and
spectacular of all
Italian, varying as a rule, according to
the proximity of the people to each
country whose tongue they speak.
Public documents and notices are
printed in both the French and Ger
man languages.
“n the Swiss national parliament the
members make their speeches either in |
French or German, the members being
as familiar with one language as the
other.
Statements from the President ‘on
Switzerland are furnished to the news
papers in both languages.
Germs Losing Virulence
Changing habits and diet of man
provide germs with different types of
soll, so that it is not difficult to believe
that germs change their character in
the course of centuries, notes Hygein
Magazine, editorially.
Leprosy, smallpox and scarlet fever
aave been almost stamped out or
have largely lost the virulence that
made them scourges of the past. Ap-
pendicitis has become commoner, but
it is pointed out in the editorial that
the seeming increase may be due to
greater facility in recognizing the dis-
ease. :
Outdoor sports, sensible diet ana
comfortable clothes have almost com-
pletely eliminated a condition known
as chlorosis, formerly called the
“green sickness” of young girls, a
form of secondary anemia due to the
sheltered life of the past.
Clever Little Girl
Of course, all children are clever to
their parents, and the amazing thing
is that most of them seem clever to
the Woman. This particular little girl,
it would seem, should have a great fu-
ture iff a city like New York.
Recently on one-of the few pleasan.
days she went to her village drug
store and ice cream parlor combined
and asked for an fce cream soda, It
was 20 cents. She complained bitterly
to her mother. The next day, with
ed with vertical searchlights of great the satisfied look of the cat that had
Even in moderately foggy | eaten the canary, she reported she
had got an ice cream soda at the same
i place for 15 cents. “But how?’ asked
the mother. “Well,” she explained
with childish elaboration, “the coffee
sodas are only 10 cents and an ice
cream cone is only 5, so I ordered
both and put them together!"—New
York Sun.
Crool! Crool!
Outside it was cold, dark and rainy,
but from the lighted windows of the
regimental P. C, came sounds of mirth
and jollification.
“Say, buddy,” sald Post No. 2, jusi
over and green to the job, “what does
P. OC. stand for, anyway?”
“Oh, that?” answered Post No, 1, ar,
oid-timer. “That means pinochle cig.”
—Exchange.
i finished before spring opens.
FARM NOTES.
Bring in for forcing a few pots of
bulbs at a time from the frame where
you stored them in the fall.
If you have neglected to get your
farm accounts started do it now, say
farm management “specialists of the
Pennsylvania State College. Do not
elay.
Have you decided yet what new
equipment will be needed in the sug-
arbrush next spring? Don’t wait un-
til March 1, and then expect quick
service,
Alfalfa is the most efficient pro-
ducer of high-class protein. This le-
gume will produce at least fifty per
cent more hay per acre than the com-
‘mon clovers.
Are you planning to store a good
supply of ice this winter? It will
add to the comfort and convenience
of the farm home and will also be
an economical article where refriger-
ation is needed.
Total and summarize the year’s
business. Make a complete analysis
of the record. Find out where mis-
takes have been made and arrange
for changes to better the record and
the year’s income.
Grape arbors can be used to make
the farm home grounds attractive,
say Pennsylvania State College land-
scape architects. Plan the location of
these arbors so that they will fit in
with the surroundings.
Whether in the dwelling or in the
greenhouse, flower pots should be
scrubbed occasionally to remove the
moss and slime that collects cn them.
No plant can be expected to do well
under adverse conditions.
In dealing with plants cautious
care must be exercised because they
are living things which are always
changing. Unless this is remembered
serious mistake may be made in land-
caping the home grounds.
Any time after the first of the year,
when the weather permits, may be
devoted to apple, pear, or grape prun-
ing. The earlier this is begun the
J reater the chances of getting it
Have you loverhauled your lawn
mower or will the first day of use next
spring find it in poor condition for
its duties? Better see that it is in
good shape now with plenty of oil
on the wearing parts to prevent rust.
When watering plants, do it in the
morning and give the soil a thor-
ough soaking. Use water that is not
so cold that it will chill the plants.
With the aid of a funnel the work
may be done with neatness and dis-
patch.
A system of poultry records that
gives the life history, its brothers
‘and sisters and the history of their
life, its matings, and the story of
the progeny from the matings will
tell the poultryman what progess he
is making in his breeding work.
That cabbage buried with the roots
attached keeps better than without
them is a mistaken idea, say Penn
State vegetable gadening specialists.
the cold penetrates through them
more rapidly than through soil or
other covering material.
Cut into wood the broken-down
lived their usefulness. Also include
| the vigorous old trees of unprofitable
| when the litters are farrowed they
‘can bz nominated for the 1928 Ton |
| Litter Club. Pennsylvania was first
jin 1927 among all States with 126
fruit trees and those that have out-
varieties. Nothing spoils the appear-
ance of an orchard so much as the
presence of even a few disreputable
looking trees that should be removed.
February 1 is the opening date for
ton litter enroilments. Better sign
up with the county agent and then
ton groups. Help keep the Keystone
state first in 1928.
Thinning out the crooked, short,
bushy-crowned, diseased, slow-grow-
ing, and poor timber trees is a pay-
ing farm operation at this time of
the year, Trees that are straight,
tall, well-crowned, sound, fast-grow-
ing, and good timber should be saved.
Where trees are too thick some
should be taken out to give the re-
maining ones a chance to develop.
To determine how many eggs a hen
will lay, it is first of all essential to
use some identification mark. A
numbered leg band is used for this
purpose. Each hen has a different
numbered band, and it is convenient
to letter the bands serially so that a
different letter is used each year.
Thus, A-101 may be the leg band of
a hen hatched in 1928; B-101 will be
the leg band number of a hen hatched
in 1929, and so on.
Vegetable growers, whether home
garden or commercial should consid-
er carefully the source, quality, and
variety of seed to be planted. If
you have located a good source: en-
deavor to get seed of identical par-
entage for use this year. Send for
catalogs of several seedsman, but do
not shop around too much. Extrav-
agant, vague statements regarding
varieties should be diregarded, but
much authentic information may be
obtained from reliable seed catalogs.
Vitamines should not worry the
good poultryman so much in summer
as in winter. Green foods and sun-
shine supply the vitamines that are
apt to be lacking in the winter ra-
tion. During the early spring months
these factors are apt to be lacking
unless the poultryman takes special
pains to see that the birds have green
stuff and sunshine, Alfalfa leaves,
whan put in a rack where fowls may
eat them, will help to supply the need
for green material.
Direct sunlight will help the hens
to lay strong shelled eggs as well as
eggs with a high degree of hatcha-
bility. If hens have been closed up
they should be turned out into the
The stems should be cut off because | be
NEW MOTOR CODE ORDERS LI-
CENSE CANCELLATION FOR
CERTAIN OFFENSES.
“You pays your money and you
takes yer tags” sounds like a motor-
ists’s version of paradise. If that be
true, then Pennsylvania motorists’
have it. The same tags, albeit, may
be cancelled with equal ease. The
Bureau of Motor Vehicles has so sim-
plified the system that little is re-
quired of the applicant because so
much has already been done by the
bureau. The Vehicle code fits in
nicely with the ideal convenience to
owners and bureau business methods,
_ A title is valid during the entire
life of the vehicle or until it is sold
or destroyed. License plates are good
only during the calendar year for
which they are issued. They must
be replaced annually.
In licensing motor vehicles, trailers
and semi-trailers, which total some
million and three-quarters, the bulk
of them within the span of a few
weeks, a system at once fraud-proof
and simple is vital.
Applications are furnished by the
Bureau to every owner whose car is
titled but, under the new Code, own-
ers who did not obtain tags for a
current year will not receive applica-
tion for the following year except by
specially requesting it. This is a
new procedure and calculated to save
materially in postage expenses and
cost of application cards which are
never used, or, being sent require
correction due to some action on the
part of an owner during the season
he did not have license. Persons who
move out of the State and. do not
notify the Bureau figure largely.
Horse power, the basis for deter-
mining fees for motor vehicles of the
passenger class, is computed on the
some formula as before. The diamet-
er of the cylinder bore in inches is
squared, multiplied by four tenths
(.4) which results in the accepted rat-
ing for registration purposes.
Records of registration are filed nu-
merically and alphabetically accord-
ing to make of vehicle and manufac-
turers’ serial number. The current
year’s records and those of the two
years preceding are maintained. Each
year’s records may be destroyed af-
ter two years.
Title and registration records total
more than twelve millions which are
constantly referred to. In 1926 clerks
handled 11,375,000 applications and
file cards, 100,000 telephone calls,
made references to 2,300,000 file cards
and messengers completed about 40,-
000 errands within the Bureau.
One important change made in the
reciprocity provisions for non-resi-
dents is that foreign corporations car-
rying on business within Pennsylva-
nia and owning and regularly oper-
ating vehicles here must register the
vehicles in this Commonwealth.
Non-residents operating on Penn-
sylvania highways carrying freight
or passengers for compensation may
operate for 30 days only with the
license of the foreign State; for a
longer period Pennsylvania tags must
procured.
When the applicant for license is
not entitled to it under the Code, li-
cense shall be refused. The same is
true if by neglect or refusal, the nec-
cessary information required on the
form is not furnished, or when iees
Teuired under the law have not been
paid.
The fate of the so-called “Colle-
giate” car was effectively sealed with
a single gesture when Section 411,
(a) became a part of the Code. It
empowers the Secretary of Highways
to suspend the license tags on any
vehicle which is not equipped, unfit
or unsafe. Within this meaning are
loose steering mechanism, permitting
wheels to oscillate; bent or broken
radius rod; a motor vehicle which has
been subjected to misuse, meglect or
accident so as to an extent that it will
not withstand normal road shock or
strain.
Making, or permitting others to
Fire Insurance
Does yours represent the value of
your property five years ago or today ?
We shall be glad to help you make
sure that your protection is adequate
to your risks.
If a check-up on your property val-
ues indicates that you are only par-
tially insured—let us bring your pro-
tection up to date.
Hugh M. Quigley
Temple Gourt, Bellefonte, Pa.
ALL FORMS OF
Dependaile Insurance
71-33-
sunshine on bright days. If it is
necessary to keep them closed up, |
then the windows should be thrown |
open during the middle of the day so
the direct rays of the sun may get |
in. Glass substitutes may also be,
used in place of some of the window |
glass to let in more.
—Subscribe for the Watchman.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND PE )
Ladies! your Drug; fo
hi.ches-ter 8 Dlamond B
sad Gol
Fills in Hed d 2d
ee
make, any unlawful use of a vehicle
places the owner liable to the sus-
pension of the license on the vehicle.
Conviction of misstatement of facts
in application for license will have
the same result.
Duly authorized courts and the
Pusiie Servite Commission may re-
quest or order the sus i i-
Spnses on vehicles, Pension. 2.1
‘Uhecks returned to the De
because of insufficient funds pe oon
such checks are not paid upon demand
Tarvem Se Suspension of license, if
ecks are i in pe
Tent of license, Submitted in bay-
mportant changes have
to regulate the use and aay Juste
the abuse of dealers’ license plates
First, the definition of a dealer, man.
ufacturer or jobber in Article One
leaves no chance for doubt or mis-
take. Plates may be used in the mot-
or vehicle business of the dealer; for
his personal pleasure when car iq op-
erated by himself, or a member of his
immediate family; for teaching a new
operator who holds 2 learner’s per-
mit and for such new operator to
take examination; for testing motor
vehicles in the dealer's possession and
for demonstration. the latter
case a duly licensed operator may op-
€ car bearing a dealer's tags
if accompanied by the dealer or his
employe. In no other instances than
those cited may a car be operated by
other than a dealer, his employe or
member of his family when such car
bears dealer’s license.
The Code emphasizes the display of
plates in the proper manner and the
necessity of keeping them free from
Zens, dirt or other foreign mater-
ials. : :
Pennsylvania residents who are
touring or visiting outside the Com.
monwealth at the time of license re-
newal or at any other time, for that
matter, should make certain of their
new tags. For instance, the winter
13 spent in Florida or California and
the motorist has obtained tags from
that State. He complies with the
laws of that State but as soon as he
returns to Pennsylvania and crosses
the border, he must display current
Pennsylvania tags, in addition to the
foreign tags or without them. The
important fact is that, being a resi-
dent, he must have local tags, regard-
less of the foreign tags and reciproc-
ity extended to residents of the for-
eign State. :
Within 48 hours of the loss or de-
facement of one or both license tags,
application must be filed for replace-
ment. A fee of $1 is required. The
Code foresaw possible abuse of this
practice and requires the owner to
return to the Bureau of Motor Ve-
hicles whatever remains of the brok-
en set of tags.
Protection is afforded the motorist
who has not discovered the loss or
defacement of his tags. The motor-
ist who has discovered this fact and
has filed application for re-issue may
be questioned by officers. He may de-
fend any prosecution by filing affida-
vit reciting that he has made appli-
cation within 48 hours of discovery
and that such application is pending
action of the Department.
Another advantage the new code
affords the owner: is in the transfer
of tags from an old car to a newly
purchased one. Ten days was permit-
ted to complete the entire transaction
and secure a transfer certificate per-
mitting the use of tags issued for
the old car with the new one. After
January first, 20 days is allowed if
the application was filed withing 48
hours of purchase.
No person may give or lend the
tags issued for his car and when the
car is sold or otherwise disposed of,
the registration automatically is can-
celled unless transferred by payment
of fee, to another car owned by the
same person.
Dealers who discontinue their busi-
ness must at once return all dealer’s
tags issued them, to the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles.
—S Scientists have found a skull half
an inch thick in Arizona. But why
go as far away as Arizona ?—London
Sketch.
ASHINGTO
16-Day Excursions
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10
SATURDAY, MARCH 31
FRIDAY, APRIL 6
FRIDAY, JUNE 29
$12.60
Round Trip from
BELLEFONTE
Proportionate Fares from Other Points
For details as to leaving time of
trains, fares in parlor or sleeping
cars, stop-over privileges, or other in-
formation, consult Ticket Agents,
or David Todd, Division Passenger
Agent, Williamsport, Pa.
Similar Excursion, ¥riday, October 12
Pennsylvania Railroad
P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market
About Selecting Meats
The most satisfactory way to buy
meats that we know of is to induce
friend husband to come with you te
our butcher shop to assist you in
your selections. As a rule men eat
more meat than women and their
tastes and selections are generally
more reliable. We have all the
meats in season, fresh daily and
Sender and appetizing. Try this
plan.
Telephone 450
Market on the Diamond
Bellefonte, Penna.
.