Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 17, 1928, Image 6

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    Bema tan
Bellefonte, Pa., February 17, 1928
«)'LLE MODISTE,” LAVISH
GLEE CLUB PRODUC-
TION NEXT WEEK.
Victor Herbert’s Triumph Plays the
New State Theatre Monday
and Tuesday.
Gay, glittering, gorgeous, “Mlle
Modiste” will make her bow next
Monday and Tuesday nights, as the
first legitimate attraction in Belle-
fonte’s splendid new “State” theatre.
The operetta is from the talented pen
of Victor Herbert and has been one
of the most popular plays ever pre-
sented in an American playhouse. In
presenting this as their annual show,
the Glee Club takes its most ambi-
tious step in the way of musical pro-
duction. :
The music,. most of it, is already
well-known, having maintained its
popularity ever since the play was
first produced. “Hark the Drum,”
“Furs and Feathers,” and “The Time,
the Place, and the Girl” are all lovely
tunes, but of course, “Kiss me
Again” heads the list. This melcdy
has caught and kept the popular fan-
cy longer than any waltz of its gen-
eration.
The lyrics are well-written, some
containing a great poetic beauty while
others are extremely clever and amus-
ing. Indeed, a great deal of the ac-
tion is told in song.
The drama itself is a well-con-
structed piece containing suspense,
love-interest, and comedy, with the
comedy perhaps paramount. The ac-
tion, as one has probably guessed,
transpires in Paris and is swift and
absorbing. At no time is the action
permitted to lag and the speciator
will find his interest riveted on the
stage always.
The story opens in the hat shop of
Madame Cecile in Paris where the
heroine, Fifi, is employed. Fifi, the
best saleswoman in the shop, has her
heart set on opera; but Madame, in
order to keep her, plans to marry her
to Gaston, her worthless and foppish
nephew. Fifi is loved by Captain
Etienne de Bouvray, young aristocrat
who comes to the shop surreptitious-
ly, fearing the wrath of his fiery old
uncle, the Count de St. Mar, who has
other plans for him. Into this scene
comes a fabulously wealthy American,
Hiram Bent, who charmzd by Fifi,
lends her some money by a ruse. Con-
fronted by the choice of marrying
Gaston or leaving the shop, Fifi, with
her new found means, of course,
leaves. Just before she goes, the
Count insults her and in her rage and
affronted pride, she vows never to
marry Etienne until his Uncle comes
£0 her with his hat in his hand.
Over one year later, Hiram Bent
returns to Paris bringing with him
“Mlle Bellini,” who is none other than
Fifi, now a great singer. Hiram
brings Fifi to a Charity Bazaar at
the Count’s chateau and from then on
things wax fast and furious. The ef-
forts of Fifi to elude detection, the
perplexity of the Count, the blunder-
ing efforts of Hiram to smooth mat-
ters over and the thwarted love of
Etienne—all work up into a climax
of fine power, replete with drama and
fan.
Through these glamorous scenes,
pert and pretty shop givls flirt with
handsome officers; light-hearted foot-
men cavort behind the back of their
master; stately Colonials dance the
Polonaise; Cadets, in gay uniform,
stir the audience with their singing;
butterflies, powder-puffs, “the Dun-
can Sisters,” and Farina—all flit
against picturesque settings. Un-
doubtedly the show has more beauty,
glamour and appeal, than any show
the Glee Club has ever put on and
when one thinks of “The Earl and
the Girl” or of “Pickles,” one realizes
what a claim that is.
Qutside the show proper there are
added features which are easily on a
par with the best parts of the hook.
Especially interesting is “The Glow
Worm” ensemble, in which twentv
girls, in perfect time, dance. The
steps are difficult, the costumes love-
ly, combining to make a very fine
ballet.
The principals are not se numerous
as usual, but they certainly make up
in quality what they lack in quantity.
Heading the cast in the three central
roles of “Fifi,” “Hiram” and the
“Count,” respectively, are Louise Tan-
ner, Peter Meek, and Bill Brachbill.
The first two have taken princinal
parts before, and you know what to
expect from them; but Bill sounds
an entirely new note in his portrayal
of the old aristocrat.
Paul Crust is seen as the hero and,
of course, plays the role with much
skill and all the charm of his former
peiformances. Catherine Bullock
makes “Madame Cecile” a real Par-
isian while Donald Conrad excels in
the part of “Gaston.” Louise Meyer
and Kenneth Little lend personality
to the roles of “Marie” and ‘“Rene,”
with Virginia Kern and William
Markley offering contrast as a tem-
peramental dancer and her silly old
swain.
Dorothy Wilkinson and Lenore
Morgan fairly live the parts of “Mad-
am Cecile’s daughters; Eugene Robb
is a good “Francois,” while Henrietta
Hunter runs away with a hit as “Mrs.
Hirma Bent,” newly rich and in Paris
for the first time.
These many features are but a few
of the charms in “M’lle Modiste’s hat
box,” and she is very anxious to have
you see all of them she asks you to
come see her next week at “The
State.”
The admission charge will be 75
eents and reserved seats will be on
sale at Gross’s on Saturday.
enema —
Lead pencils contain no lead. Lead
pencil is as much a misnomer as it
wotld be to call a horse a cow. The
black substance used in pencils is
neither a metal nor a compound of
metal.
one of the forms of carbon.
EE
It is plumbago or graphite,
GASES ONCE WASTED
TURNED INTO MONEY
Industry and Public Benefited
by Chemistry.
East Pittsburgh, Pa.—Modern chem-
istry is demonstrating that even odors
can be turned into aol rg and cents.
Gases that have pollyted the atmos-
phere are now being captured and con-
verted into the liquids from whieh
they originated, to the profit of both
industry and the publie.
Experts of the materials and process
engineering department of the West-
inghouse Electric and Manufacturing
company decided that too many smells
were going up the chimney in the
process of treating insulation with
resinous materials. §o they trapped
the gases as fast as they were gen-
erated, mixed them with water and
then distilled this liquid, recovering
from 80 to 90 per cent of the solvents
used in the formula.
How far chemical engineers can go
in eliminating and using fumes by
liquefying thém before they are dis-
charged into the air has not yet been
determined, but experiments now un-
der way suggest that far-reaching re-
sults are possible. The saving already
effected by the capture of used sol-
vents is said to be considerable.
Chemists point out, however, that
recovery methods might be too well
perfected, for it is possible that some
of the agents recovered from gases
would themselves be difficult to de-
stroy.
Seeks to Make Blend
of Light and Music
Philadelphia.—A basic patent for an
invention to blend light with music
has been granted te Mrs. Mary Hal-
lock Greenwalt. Mrs. Greenwalt has
been conducting experiments in the
blending of light and sound for 2
years. She believes that her patent is
the first granted for a new means of
expressing human emotions in rhyth-
mic form.
While music is being rendered b)
singer, violinist, pianist or orchestra,
Mrs. Greenwalt’s apparatus floods the
performer with lights of varying in-
tensity. The fluctuations in light are
intended to enhance the emotional
and intellectual appeal of the music.
The apparatus may be operated with
a keyboard.
Years of training in music, of pro
fessional experience as a concert
pianist, of study of physics, mechanics,
physiology and psychology wemt into
the achieving of the results now rec-
ognized by the granting of the basic
patent.
Mrs. Greenwalt was born in Beirut,
Syria, the daughter of Samuel and
Sara Tabet Hallock. She came to the
United States when a girl of eleven.
After she left school she took up the
study of music.
Mystery Blasts Being
Studied by Scientists
White Plains, N. Y.—Residents of
aorthern Westchester county are
searching to find a solution to the
mysterious blast which rocked build-
ings and spread terror over several
miles of the countryside. The heavy,
dull roar and the quiver cf the earth
kept the county police busy answering
telephone calls for hours.
Aimilar blasts have occurred at in
.ervals of exactly six months within
the last two years. They always come
at night. The ground was shaken
and the noise of the explosion was
Lieard, but on each occasion it was
unaccompanied by any flare or light
such as would have been the case had
the explosion been due to powder or
gasoline or other known explosions
that are set off by friction or heat.
Scientists have been asked to study
che terrain in the vicinity and ascer-
tain if the blasts are being caused by
some disturbance deep under the
earth.
To Stop Dress Snobbery
Atlantic City, N. J.—With special
approval by the principal some 50 high
school girls are wearing middy blouses
and blue skirts in an effort to stop
dress snobbery.
anfoorfonforionforforferfoefonInfonfectocfonforforforforfortoctoriecferte
“Lifer” Sues Woman;
Charged Cruel to Cat
Boston.—Jesse Pomeroy, “lifer,”
who entered the state prison at
Charleston a seventeen-year-old
boy, nearly fifty-one years ago.
is the plaintiff in a $5,000 ac
tion in which he denies charges
that he has been cruel to ani
mals while in prison.
Pomeroy remains In his cell
while two attorneys represent J,
him before the Suffolk Supreme
civil court.
The defendant is Alice Stone
Blackwell of Dorchester, pub
lisher of a magazine for women,
who told the court that “she felt
it a public duty to write a letter
to a Boston newspaper in 1925
in opposition to a pardon for
Pomeroy. The letter described
his crime as much worse than
that of Leopold and Loeb and
repeated a rumor that Pomeroy.
when permitted the companion-
ship of a kitten, “had skinned i
alive.”
Counsel for Pcmeroy told the
court that the suit was brought
to “spike a lie,” and said that
animals had been Pomeroy’s only
friends in prison.
BIER LE lds sae
Banana Employed by
the Serpent in Eden?
“Early inhabitants of the East be-
lieved that the banana plant was the
source of good and evil and that the
serpent which tempted Eve hid in a
bunch of the fruit,” according to W.
T. Pope of the Hawaii experiment
station of the United States Depar#
ment of Agriculture. ’
Undoubtedly this legend influenced
the early classifiers who designated
two species of the plant as musa par-
adisiaca (fruit of paradise) and musa
sapientum (fruit of knowledge). The
common name, “banana,” was adopted
from the language of an African Con-
go tribe, and first came into use dur-
ing the Sixteenth century. Prior to
that time the fruit was called “apple
of paradise” and “Adam’s fig.”
The name “banana” seems to have
been borne for a long period by the
fruit, which was eaten raw. The term
“plantain” was given to a variety
which, though closely related to the
banana, is edible only after being
cooked.
The generic name “Musa” for the
banana group was bestowed by the
botanist Linnaeus in honor of An-
tonius Musa, a learned physician of
the early Roman empire.~Chicago
Journal.
Modern Homes Built
on Old Mission Site
On the heights east of Manila is an
old Franciscan estate with an early
Seventeenth century church on it, and
down in a vale the ruins of a chapel—
the holy edifice and the ruin alike
memorable of a forgotten age. when
Spain under Philip II attempted to
evangelize the world. The churen,
which, of course, has a monastery at-
tached to it, was the sanctuary
whence Franciscan missionaries went
to Japan, China, Cochinchina, Cam-
bodia, India, Java, the Moluccas and
other parts. Back of the altar was a
cave in which the friars knelt and en-
dured voluntary bleeding in order to
be steeled against tortures in heathen
lands and to resist the temptation un-
der physical pain to apostatize them-
selves. The “via crucis”—for prayer
and penitence—began in the monas-
tery courtyard and ended at the
chapel, a distance equal to that which
Christ walked from Pilate’s palace in
Jerusalem to Mount Calvary. An
American has acquired this old estate
and laid it out in suburban home sites
which prosperous Filipinos are eager-
ly buying. The chapel and church
are carefully preserved.
Clerical Sandwich
A missionary to one of the islands
where man-eating is still practiced
was captured by a cannibal chief. To
his surprise he was offered his free-
dom on condition that he would carry
a small packet to another chief in the
mountains. He agreed and he was
so grateful to his captor that when
on his way he met a detachment of
marines, he declined to accompany
them to safe territory. The sealed
packet should be delivered as he had
promised.
But while one officer was arguing
with him another quietly opened the
packet. [It contained a small quantity
of onions with a note to the chief
reading: “The bearer will be delicious
with these.”—Boston Transcript.
Poetic Justice
“Arabs dearly love what we call
poetic justice,” said Lowell Thomas,
the writer-lecturer. “They tell the
story of an Arab who stole a horse
and sent his son to market to sell it.
On the way to market, the son was
himself robbed of the horse and
forced to return to his father empty
handed.
“‘Ah!’ exclaimed the old man when
nis son walked back into camp. ‘I
see thou has sold the horse. How
much did it bring.
“ ‘Father,’ said the son disconsolate-
ly, ‘it brought the same price for
which thou thyself didst buy it?”
A World Thinker
The need of the hour is for a world
chinker. Most of us are like flies that
buzz around a very small area—and
perhaps get caught or swatted before
we even get into the next room. At
this state of civilization—and we
have quite a considerable civilization
at the moment—we need men who do
not buzz about a small area but who
can look all up and down the long
road along which the caravan of his
tory has passed and is passing.
We need men with perspective—
world thinkers.—Grove Patterson, in
the Mobile Journal,
Morphia Tests
Morphia is a very common poison,
out its presence is easy to detect by
the chemist. With no great difficulty
he can detect the presence of even
one-twenty-thousandth part of a grain!
The usual residue having been ob-
tained, an addition of iodic acid is
made, and then, should morphia be
present, the whole at once turns blue
when a little starch-paste is added.
Alternatively, chloride of zinc may be
added, and the mixture, when heated,
produces a beautiful and lasting green
color.
Rarin’ to Go
An Alabama man declares that the
priefest courtship of all was that of
a darkey couple in that state. It ran
about as follows: Rastus speaking
first:
“Why dor’t you take me?”
*’Cause you’ ain't ast me.”
“Well, now | asts yo'.”
“Well. now 1 has yo'.”
SPREADS SUNSHINE
AMONG SHUT-INS
Carolinian Has Given Away
80,000 Bouquets.
Greenville, S. C.—Spreading sun-
shine is the hobby of A. G. Gower,
Greenville bookkeeper — figuratively,
that is. :
* For eight years he has made and
presented 80,000 bouquets to Green-
ville shut-ins, persons who are ill,
and others,
Gower estimates that he cuts 230,
000 blossoms annually from his gar-
den, all of which are given away. The
monetary return is nothing, but, he
says “It is spreading sunshine whole-
sale, and my reward is so tremendous
that it is boundless. I have a treas-
ure house without limits.”
He began his flower mission in 8
small way about 20 years ago. It was
not until just after the World war in
3919 that it began to assume its pres-
ent large proportions.
At that time he was asked to teach
a Bible class in the United States
Army Hospital No. 26, at Camp Sevier.
[aH teach the class,” he said, “if you
will let me bring the boys flowers
every Sunday morning.”
Then the work of spreading sun
shine began in earnest, His flower
garden became larger and larger, un-
til today it occupies every nook and
; cranny of the half-acre plot around
his home,
For 48 hours each week Gower is
engaged with long ¢olumns of figures.
But early mornings, late afternoons
and evenings, find him in his garden
caring for the (lowers that have
brought happiness to him and the per-
sons who receive them. Saturday
afternoons until dark he gathers the
flowers for his baskets of bouquets.
Kills Three of His Brothers
and Ends Own Life
Bakerstield, Calif.—Albert Villard,
difty years, hanged himself from his
own automobile and then shot him-
self to make death doubly certain
after he had killed three of his broth-
ers and wounded a fourth, according
to reports brought here, Walter Rice
of Tulare said he found the slayer’s
body hanging by a rope from Villard’s
car on a road nine miles from Tulare,
Joe Villard, suffering from bullet
wounds inflicted by his brother,
walked two miles to a neighbor's
ranch to notify the authorities.
The three brothers who were killed
~—August, Eugene and Gabriel Villard
—with Joe and their parents were at
breakfast and did not know that Al-
bert was in the room until he began
shooting, Joe said.
" Ranchmen say that for several years
Albert has held a grudge against his
brothers, claiming he was deprived
of his share of the Villard ranch.
5,000,000 Italian Born
Living in United States
Rome.—Latest statistics here show
that there are 9,118,593 expatriated
Italians living in different parts of the
world. The figure is probably even
greater than this, as the consular re-
turns from some countries are con-
fessedly incomplete.
The greatest number of emigrated
{talians live in the American conti-
nent. Between North and South and
Central America 7,674,583 Italians are
accounted for.
The United Statcs alone has mors
than 5,000,000 of them, while there
are 150,000 in Canada, 800,000 in Mex-
ico, 87,000 in Costa Rica, 800,000 in
Brazil, 1,600,000 in the Argentine, and
21,500 in Chile.
In Europe there are 1,267,841 exiled
ftalians, more than half of whom are
living in France. In Africa there
are 189,100 Italians, while Australia
has 27,000 living under its flag.
Think Farm Children
Superior to City Bred
Wellington, New Zealand.—Farm
children are superior to city reared
children, says a national report on a
survey of the physical growth and
mental attainment of the boys and
girls of New Zealand. Superiority of
farmers’ children was most pronounced
at the age of thirteen. .
The survey included 20,000 town
and country children ranging in age
from ten to fourteen and was carried
out by Dr. Ada Paterson, director of
the health department’s division of
school hygiene, and Dr. E. Marsden.
assistant director of education.
AOA ANAOAN AOAC ANAC ANANA AOA AAD
OR RRR ERRORS RRR BALE
S000 OBCERCR0EC8
Will Written on Egg
Shell Termed Valid
Brooklyn.—Wills have been
written on eggshells, coalbins
and bedposts, and might possibly
be tattooed on the shoulder of
an heiress and remain valid.
Crenna Skellers told of these
among other unusual legal doc- §
uments in a talk on “The Pow-
er to Make a Will,” given at the
Academy of Music.
Among surprising provisions
in wills of historical people,
Miss Skellers announced that
Gouverneur Morris willed that
his wife’s income be doubled if
$ she married again. Thomas
% Paine, she said, although com-
{3 menly considered an atheist, be-
2 queathed his soul to God. Many
Southerners, including George
Washington, she revealed, freed
their slaves in their wills.
0
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SEIN EB BE.
el
rn
£ven Finest Violins
Must Have Exercise
A violin, like a growing boy, accord-
ing to the experts, is much better
when kept busy. And dance tunes are
just as good for “exercising” even a
priceless Stradivarius as are the high-
est class concert numbers. A violin,
bearing the date 1713 and believed to
be a genuine “Strad,” has been in the
possession of the family of William
McDonald of Rice Lake, Wis. says
the Milwaukee Journal, for 175 years.
Mr. McDonald, who owned the instru-
ment for 53 years, has used it in old
fiddlers’ contests throughout this part
of the state.
Inside the violin is this inscription:
“Antonius Stradivaris
tonio Stradivari, made in the year
1718). The famous Cremona carver
was at the height of his career as a
violin maker in 1713, and all the evi-
dence to be found in the family rec-
ords leads the McDonalds to believe
the instrument is an original of the
noted maker.
Daily Loss of Weight
The loss of weight that we under-
go every day has been the object of
recent research, says Science. In
the experiments, conducted by the
Carnegie institution at Washington,
two sensitive balances were used.
Both were strong enough to weigh a
man, but delicate enough to register
minute changes in weight. One of the
balances would indicate a change of
one-third of an ounce, and a person
could sleep all night on its platform.
The other was a hundred times as
sensitive, but could be occupied only
for an hour or so at a time. The total
moisture losses through the lungs and
skin of a woman of average weight
averaged around 30 grams, or one
ounce per hour; for a man the figure
was about one-third higher.
Forgetful
The forgetful man got to the rail-
road station a few minutes before
train time, but he felt he had forgot-
tei something.
He looked over his baggage. It was
all there. He felt in his pocket. His
wallet was bulging pleasantly. Ab-
sently he reached in another pocket
and pulled out two tickets to Niagara
falls and a marriage license. So that
was it!
He groaned and rushed for a tele
shone booth.
But it was no use. He had forgot-
ten the name and telephone number
of the girl with whom he had intend-
ed to elope.—American Legion Month:
ly.
Streams That “Meander”
“Crooked as the River Jordan,” is
an old expression, but there are
streams that make Jordan look
straight. In the old days when packet
steamers were .popular-gs-transporta-
tion up and down the Mississippi, pas-
sengers used to get out at many of
the sharp bends and walk across a
narrow neck of land to rest from the
tedious trip, the steamer arriving
sometimes an hour later. The White
river in Arkansas is another erratic
stream. It travels 1,000 miles in
traversing a distance of 30 miles.
A Month of Birthdays.
February is the shortest month in
the year, a fact well known to all of
us, but it is also a very important
month. It is full of birthdays, and
we shall enumerate a few of them,
even though we repeat facts known
to us all. February gave us Wash-
ington, the founder of our Republic,
and Lincoln, the saviour of the na-
tion. Daniel Boone, that great pio-
neer who read our title clear to that
huge tract of land lying west of the
Appalachian Mcuntains, was a Feb-
ruary lad, the eleventh being his day.
It is fitting, too, that the Boy Scouts’
birthday falls in the same month with
this greatest of scouts, and that spe-
«cial exercises by their troops will
mark his birthday. And toward the
end of the month—the twenty-seventh
—we find the birthday of Henry W.
Longfellow, who sang of our original
settlers as no other poet has done, and
who also sang for the children:
Between the dark and the daylight,
When the night is beginning to lower,
Comes a pause in the day's oceupation
That is known as the Children’s Hour.
erm enti
ANNIVERSARIES OF THE WEEK
February 16—Fort Donaldson sur-
rendered 1862.
February 17—President Jefferson
elected 1801.
February 19—Jefferson Davis inaug-
urated 1861.
February 20—Panama-Pacific Expo-
sition 1910.
February 21—General Sherman bur-
ied 1891.
February 22—Washington’s birthday.
Cremonensis,
Faciebat Anno 17138” (Cremona of An- |
WORTH KNOWING
One automobile in each twenty in-
jared some one last year.
Two inches is the average thick-
ness of the hippopotamus’ skin.
It requires 567 bees working a life-
time to produce a pound of honey.
A French chemist claims that he
i has invented a non-inflammable gaso-
i line.
| Few men make themselves masters
“of the things they write or speak.—
Selden
| Over 6,000 kinds of caterpillars
have been found in America north of
: Mexico.
| Falls kill more people than battles,
‘according to the National Safety
Council.
The saxophone was named for its
inventor, Antoine Joseph Sax, of Bel-
gium and Paris.
A single bee averages only 31.65
trips from hive to field during its
entire existence.
One person in each one hundred in
the United States was injured by an
automobile last year.
Eighty per cent of all savings in
the United States are said to be in
the names of women.
Nevada is now a State without a
street car, busses having entirely sup-
planted the trolley system.
A rate war among the barbers of
Butler, Mo. has forced the price of
hair cuts down to 20 cents.
The average life of the honey bee
is six weeks; three as a field bee;
three as a nurse rearing its young.
The first game of intercollegiate
football was played early in Novem-
ber, 1869, between Princeton and Rut-
gers universities.
Three per cent of all bees issuing
from the hive never return, as the re-
sult of the toll of storms, birds, and
their own consuming labor.
The largest electric sign ever built
was lighted for the first time, Feb-
1, in Times Square, New York
City. The new sign is lighted by
8115 lamps, which are connected with
twenty miles of wire.
A policeman of Bourne, England,
recently held up traffic when a duck
started to waddle across the road. In
the middle of the road she sat down
to lay an egg. Ten minutes later the
egs was rescued and traffic resumed.
Realizing the educational effect of
films, the British government has ap-
pointed Mrs. Ashley, wife of a mem-
ber of Parliament, as censor of eti-
quette for films. So the villain may
eat peas with his knife in America—
but not in England.
Sailors have numerous supersti-
tions. A sailor may sing, but he sel-
dom whistles, for whistling is sup-
posed to bring on a hurricane. Blue
paint is also unpopular with sea-far-
ing men, who dislike to join a vessel
having any part of her painted blue.
Army airmen will now have a three
mile limit. Instructions to regulate
high-altitude flying by ars Air
Corps pilots have been issued by Ma-
jor General James E. Fechet, chief
of the Air Corps. Because of the
dangers of high- altitudes, special per-
mission and special apparatus will be
required for those desiring to go
above the three-mile limit.
The most remarkable echo known is
one on the north side of Shipley
church, in Sussex, England, which dis-
tinctly repeats twenty-one syllables.
In the Cathedral of Girgenti, Sicily,
the slightest whisper is borne with
perfect distinctness from the great
doors to the cornice behind the altar,
2 Jistanes of two hundred and fifty
eet.
Hedjaz, in southern Arabia, is a
land of despair for safety razor and
shaving soap manufacturers. Ibn
Saoud, its ruler, has not only forbid-
den smoking, the use of alcoholic
liquors and perfume, and the wearing
of silver and gold ornaments and silk
garments, but has made shaving a
crime for which both the barber and
the man shaved shall be punished.
——The “Watchman” is the most
readable paper published. Try it.
IRA D. GARMAN
JEWELER
101 South Eleventh St.,
PHILADELPHIA.
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum
72-48-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry
Free six HOSE Free
Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wo-
men, guaranteed to wear six
months without runners in leg or
holes in heels or toe. A new Satz
FREE if they fail. Price $1.00.
YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
pr
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ki ther.
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OND BRAND PILLS, for
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SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
H=
TE
Where Do You Buy
the meat vou prepare for the
family? You should choose your
butcher with the same care that
you do your physician or any oth-
er person who may control the
health of those you love. Skill-
ful in the selection and cutting of
all kinds of meat, we take pride
in a reputation for having the
best the market affords.
Telephone 667
Market on the Diamond
Bellefonte, Penna.
P. L. Beezer Estate..... Meat Market