Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 24, 1928, Image 3

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    TAT or Sng
Bowls
Bellefonte, Pa., February 24, 1928
alth,
Your He
The First Concern.
The function of a mouth wash is to
eliminate, by vigorous rinsing, all the
particles of food and debris that have
‘been loosened by the brush. Warm
water, a salt solution made by add-
ing one teaspconful of salt to a pint
.of water, or the same salt solution
to which a little sodium bicarbonate
“has been added are probably not only
the safest but also the cheapest to
use as rinsing solutions.
The curative power of mouth wash-
es has been grossly overestimated.
In chronic cases of pyorrhea usually
seen, they are ineffective, neither
checking nor curing the disease. The
‘problem in sucecssful pyorrhea treat-
ment is vrimarily the removal of all
‘things that irritate the gum tissue
(tartar deposits, faulty dentistry, and
so forth) and the bringing about of
_active blood exchange in the gums by
means of a toothbrush.
The first part of the task must ob-
-viously be accomplished by the den-
“tist; the second part must be done by
“the patient. Tooth structure and tar-
tar are so much akin chemically that
-a mouth wash that would dissolve the
.one would also dissolve the other.
“Tartar must therefore be removed
mechanically with steel instruments.
It need not be mentioned that mouth
washes cannot correct faulty dentis-
try. In stimulating gum tissue they
are just as ineffective, being quite
incapable of bringing blood to the
areas involved. Many of them con-
tain astringents, which would tend to
keep the blood from coming in to the
area.
Mouth washes are usually adver-
tised as great germ killers; no doubt
many of them are if they are kept in
the mouth for a long time. But germs
are only secondary factors in py-
orrhea, entering the gums only after
a lesion has developed from irrita-
tions on the teeth that mouth wash-
es cannot remove. The problem of
re-establishing health in the mouth is
mechanical, not chemical or bacterial.
The failure of mouth washes in the
treatment of pyorrhea is quite evi-
dent.
Germicidal moutn washes are valu-
able only in the treatment of acute
mouth infections, caused by a specif-
ic germ or group of germs, as in
Vincent’s angina commonly called
trench mouth. Their daily use in a
mouth free from specific germ dis-
ease is not only unnecessary, but it
is to be discouraged.
Attractive advertising, ridiculous
and fraudulent claims made for pro-
prietary mouth washes and the in-
cessant search for a short cut are
responsible for the opinion that the
mouth may be cleaned and kept clean
and healthy by the use of a mouth
wash only. The cool, clean feeling
highly priced concotions lead the pa-
tient to think that his mouth is clean.
He is really only disguising ¢ dirty
one, and in using such mouth wash-
es he is a worthy disciple of the Or-
iental who uses perfumes instead of
soap and water.
All types of toothpicks should be
avoided. They irritate and lacerate
_ gum tissue, lowering its resistance to
infection. Wooden toothpicks used
over a leng period of time will wear
grooves in teeth.
When contact points are faulty so
that food cannot be dislodged from
" between the teeth with a brush, dent-
al floss may be used. Incorrect use
of dental floss is harmful to the gums.
It must be passed gently through the
contact points so that it will not
snap down on the gum tissue and
lacerate it. Usually a slight back and
forth movement will help to ease it
by the contact point. If bleeding re-
sults from the use of floss, it is be-
ing used incorrrectly.
Although each year more and more
people crawl out of their shells to
“brave the biting breezes of winter,
they should not overlook the taking
of outdoors into their home, Dr. Theo-
dore B. Apple said in one of his talks
recently.
That is the step that many people
fail to take, according to Dr. Apple.
They arrive at the rather illogical
conclusion that winter air was partic-
ularly manufactured for outdoor use
only, and that this being the case,
. every effort must be made to see that
none of it gets inside.
It is positively surprising to what
lengths they will go in their attempts
to bar the winter breezes. In many
rural sections practically whole homes
will be shut up—blinds drawn and
shutters closed. So that air can’t
get in, they say. In countless city
homes the practice of keeping out
fresh air is indulged in to an un-
healthy extent. One, of course, can-
not be blamed for using all modern
devices to keep out cold and elimin-
ate drafts. On the other hand, to
seal up a house efficiently turn on the
heat and permit it to remain that
way until spring comes is foolish.
It is neither to be supposed nor ex-
pected that one will want to try to
heat up the outside by opening the
house in summer fashion. But there
is such a thing as raising windows
and opening doors, preferably before
bedtime, and thus permitting the good
fresh air to come inside.
A super-heated home, with its at-
mosphere of breathed and rebreathed
air is a fine place for germs. More-
over, living day in and day out in
that kind of air, even if one does buck
the winter outdoors occasionally, is
prone to reduce one’s resistance and
make it possible for the germs to
. set up business in your body.
SMALLER PAPER MONEY
SOON TO APPEAR
The year 1928 will mark the first
change in size of paper money since
1861.
For months the Bureau of Engrav-
ing and Printing, the greatest print
shop in the world, will be busy mak-
ing new and smaller $1 bills so that
upon some fixed day next fall they
may be issued simultaneously over
the entire country and the old ones re-
tired at one swoop, to be redeemed, of
course, upon demand. Notes of oth-
er denominations will be printed and
put into circulation in 1929. The new
notes will be six and five-sixteenths
by two and eleven-sixteenths inches
whereas the notes now in circulation
are seven and seven-sixteenths by
three and one-half inches. By the
change, the government expects to
save $2,000,000 annually. The reduc-
tion in size of the bills is expected to
increase the capacity of the Bureau
of Engraving and Printing by 50 per
cent because 12 of the smaller notes
can be printed at one impression upon
the same press which now prints but
eight.
Through the change in size the bills
will be made more convenient to han-
dle and will also be more durable.
The new notes will slip into a bill
fold or pocket, it is claimed, without
creasing or folding and for this rea-
son are expected to have a longer
life than those now in use. The life
of the average bill now is not more
than six or seven months, treasury
officials say. Folding is one of the
chief items cutting short the life of
paper money. :
Designs on the bills are also to be
standardized. Many designs now ap-
pear on the various denominations
and the various kinds of notes. Wash-
ington’s portrait, for example, ap -
pears both on the $1 and some $20
bills.
Treasury officials point out that
through standardizing the designs the
new notes eannot be so easily raised
to higher denominations by the crooks
who make this their business. In ad-
dition to standardized designs on the
new paper money, there will be a re-
lation between the portrait on the
face and the engraving on the back
except in the cases of the $1 bill and
those above $100.
On the face of the new $1 bill will
be the portrait of Washington and on
the back will be the word “one” in
large letters. On the $2 bill will be
a portrait of Jefferson with an en-
graving of Monticello, his home on
the back.
Lincoln’s portrait will be on the
face of the $5 bill with the Lincoln
Memorial for the back. Hamilton’s
portrait will appear on the face of
the $10 bill and the Treasury building
on the back. For the face of the $20
bill Grover Cleveland’s portrait has
been chosen with the White House
for the back.
Grant’s portrait will be on the face
of the $50 bill. Benjamin Franklin’s
on the $100, McKinley’s on the $500,
Jackson’s on the $1,000, Madison’s on
the $5,000 and Chase’s on the $10,000.
All these designs have been ap-
proved, although some may be al-
tered later.
No retirement of money-making
machinery will be necessitated by the
change, it is said.
pepe
Worse than War.
Whatever else may happen during
1928, it is a practical certainty that
more than 25,000 Americans will be
killed in traffic accidents, and another
750,000 injured.
It is strange that the awful death
toll of automobiles does not serve as
a warning to automobile drivers and
pedestrians alike, but it appears that
it does not. While a slight lessening
of the accident rate in proportion to
the number of cars in use has been
noted, the total number of casualties
has steadily increased.
Many persons who worry over bac-
teria or minor dangers of other sorts
will take chances on the highways
which are bound to sooner or later end
in disaster.
As recent statistics show, three
times as many casualties result from
automobile accidents in a single year
as were suffered by United States
forces during the entire World war.
The war cost more lives, but the au-
tomobile is responsible for more in-
jured.
Among the yearly automobile
deaths are those of about 7,000 chil-
dren of school age, the greatest num-
ber being between the ages of six. and
twelve years. The greatest number
of acicdents occur between five and
six o'clock in the afternoon. Drivers
and pedestrians are about equally at
fault in their responsibility for acci-
dents, according to the estimates at
hand.
While the automobile is an indis-
pensible convenience of modern life,
it has already caused the death of al-
most as many persons as were killed
fin battle in all the American armies
since the founding of the Republic.
Reindeer Meat Gains.
Soaring beef prices are stimulating
the demand for reinder meat, ac-
cording to Ralph Lomen, president
of a great land barony in Alaska,
where two-thirds of a million tun-
drafter animals exist, writes a Seattle
correspondent.
The Lomen concern shipped 800,-
000 pounds of reindeer carcases to this
city during the fall months, about
one-third going east. Reindeer meat
is selling fast these days and pros-
pects for the medern industry are
increasingly bright day by day. The
meat is retailed at three public mar-
kets there in the form of steaks,
roasts, stews, meat and sausage.
The 650,000 reindeer now in Alaska
are increasing at the annual rate of
30 per cent, says Lomen, and by 1930
will number in excess of 1,000,000.
The pasturage in the north will care
for about 4,000,000 reindeer, so that in
a few years a million animals must be
marketed to keep the range available
for the herd’s existence. By that time
the meat is expected to have made a
place for itself on American tables.
—Subseribe for the Watchman.
| FRIDAY MARCH SECOND
TO BE PENNSYLVANIA DAY
Governor Fisher recently issued the
first proclamation asking observance
of Pennsylvania Day on Friday, the
second of March.
The day declared a state-wide holi-
day by the 1927 General Assembly,
which set aside March 2, the anniver-
sary of the granting of the Pennsyl-
vania charter to William Penn by
King Charles, of England. Since
March 4 falls on Sunday this year,
the Governor asked that the anniver-
sary be celebrated on the first Friday
preceding that date, in order that ex-
ercises can be held in the public
schools.
The proclamation follows:
“Whereas, the Act of March 9, 1927
provides that it shall be the duty of
the Governor to issue annually
proclamation designating March 4th
as Pennsylvania Day, (unless such
falls on Saturday or Sunday, in which
events the preceding Friday or the
following Monday may be named), to
be observed as a patriotic day by
the public schools and citizens of the
Commonwealth; and
“Whereas, in the present year said
Sorin day of March falls upon Sun-
ay;
“Now, therefore, I, John Fisher,
Governor of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, do hereby designate
and appoint Friday, the 2nd day of
March, 1928, as Pennsylvania day, to
be observed by the public schools and
the citizens of the Commonwealth by
appropriate patriotic exercises.
“Especially, I recommend that in
the public schools the exercises shall
have reference to the granting of the
charter of Pennsylvania by King
Charles II, of England, to William
Penn to the achievements and pro-
gress of our Commonwealth since it
was founded; and to the life and prin-
ciples of William Penn, the great Hu-
manitarian, statesman and founder,
in such manner as to develop a ueep-
er appreciation and to leave a last-
ing impression upon the youthful
minds of the pupils in the public
schools.”
Crown Jewels of Russia on
Display in Shop in London.
With histories which read like ro-
mantic fairy tales, eighty of the most
beautiful jewels in the world have
arrived in London from Russia.
Formerly the property of the
Russian Czars, these jewels were
purchased from the Soviet Govern-
ment for the sum of $500,000 by a
London jeweler, and are now on dis-
play in London’s most modern
throughfare, Regent street.
Since the Revolution the fate of
the Russia Crown jewels has been
a mystery, but according to the
English jeweler, who has been in
negotiation with Moscow for the past
twelve months, the Soviet Govern-
ment now has the majority of these
precious articles in its possession.
None of the jewels in the collection
is less than fifty years old, and some
of them have been in the Russian
royal family for generations.
“The most beautiful object among
them, is a tiny clock in fine diamonds,
and enamel, which once stood in the
private boudoir of the late Czarina at
Czarskoe-Selo, according to Em-
manuel Snowman, the man responsible
for bringing the jewels to England.
“This clock was made especially for
the Czarian by Faberge, the celebrated
Russia Court jeweler.
"Faberge vowed to make the most
exquisite clock the world had ever
seen. Ilussia went into estacies over
it, and it became world-famous.
FOE
Fold Your Bills Lengthwise.
There is a superstition widespread
through the country that in folding
your money you should fold the bills
lengthwise if you would prosper fi-
nancially. If you fold them short
across you will always be “hard up.”
The basis of this superstition is very
easy to come at. It is purely sym-
pathetic magic—Ilike, producing like,
what is associated in thought is as-
sociated in fact. When you fold the
bills lengthways the money remains
at its greatest length—literally the
“long green,” not curtailed nor stunt-
ed. If you fold the bills across you
diminish them in length—apparent-
ly cut them in two, curtail them.
Folded in one way they represent
money extending and folded the other
way cut off. There you have clearly
the association of ideas and the asso-
ciation of ideas brings about by sym-
pathetic magic, the association of ac-
tual fact,.
The superstition is a folklore prim-
er one but is interesting as showing
how the human mind, even without
the aid of tradition, unconsciously
evolves in terms of sympathetic mag-
ic—an example of the persistence of
the subconscious primitive in man’s
mentality.
—————————————
Women Should Serve as School Di-
rectors.
No school system, in a community
large or small, urban or rural, can
successfully develop without the help
of women on its school board, be-
lieves Mrs. Ernest J. Mott, of San
Francisco.
From her own experiences as a
member of a board of education of
the city and county of San Francisco,
Mrs. Mott recommends this kind of
public service to women voters. Wom-
en are needed on these boards, she
says, because they appreciate fully the
relation of the home to the school.
After her first appointment Mrs. Mott
was elected to the seven-year term
which she iz now serving.
“While there is no difference be-
tween men and women in their de-
sire to bring the public schools of
their respective communities up to a
very high standard of efficiency,” she
says, “the multiplicity of details that
confront school directors requires the
point of view, the knowledge and un-
derstanding, as well as the wise and
intelligent interest of both sexes.”
—The voters of the State will pass
on the merits of fourteen proposed
amendments to the State constituion
at the election in November.
HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
When the correct letters are placed in the white spaces this puszle will
spell words both vertically and horizontally.
The first letter in each word is
indicated by a number, which refers to the definition listed below the puszzle.
Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a word which will fll
the white spaces up to the first blnck square to the right, and a number under
“yertical” defines a word which will fill the white squares to the next black one
below.
No letters go In the black spaces.
All words used are dictionary words,
except proper names. Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obso-
lete forms are indicated in the definitions.
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 1.
TR BB I# 5 6 TZ I8 9 |
71 12 73 I a
#
15 16 17 8
19 20 I 21
I
2.2 23 og eC I 26
R7 | I 2.9 30 31
[32 33 [ 34
ll I~
3 29 40
41 42, I 43 99
45 4 147 28
49 50 51 I
53 I I i [ 55
(©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.)
Horizontal. Vertical.
1—Uncooked 1—To pilfer
4—Mendicant 2—Periods of time
9—That man 11—A giant 3—To encircle
13—Repast 14—That woman 5—Printing measure
15—Vegetables 6—To obtain 7—Profit
17—Inclining, as a lid 8—Permitted 9—Chickens
19—Cut with a saw
21—Middays 23—Rends
25—Intelligence 27—A pain
29—Artist’'s standard
31—Italian river
32—To regret
34—Beverage
35—Note of scale
36—Citrous fruit
37—A snare
38—An evil-doing
39—To love inordinately
¢1—A performer
¢3—Shall not (contraction)
{5—Stated
17-—Official
priest
t9—Departed
50—Gist of a story
52—Pedal digits
53—Unity
54—A refined kind of iron
33—Domesticated
headdress of a high
$5—Meshed material
10—Unit of work
14—A suggestion
16—Ocean 18—Labor
20—Hallucination 22—To wed
24—Island in the Pacific ocean
26—A cleansing agent prepared in
bars (pl.)
28—Billiard stick
30—Dispatches 31—Vegetable
33—One who sings the high part in
a quartet
84—City of New Jersey
36—Measure of volume
system
37—Characteristic
38—Setting
40—Unit of electrical resistance
41—What Shakespeare was the bard
of
42—A tear 44—Woody plant
45—Past time 46—Is owing
48—Established (abbr.)
51—To exist
12—Toilet case
in metric
Solution will appear in next issue.
SS
The Dandelion Flower and Its Uses.
The Pennsylvania German refers to
the dandelion flower as the ‘kee-blum’
(cow flower) and to the entire plant
as bidder-salawdt (bitter salad). He
pins great faith in chewing the root
as a palliative of stomach and liver
troubles.
“ Years ago the roots were diced,
roasted and employed as a substitute
for coffee. The dried leaves were
scalded in boiling water and the re-
sultant decoction administered to chil-
dren afflicted with bladder ailments.
A highly medical wine is even to- |
day prepared from the freshflowers. |
When mixed with cattle food they al-
so serve to stimulate milk production.
Bouquets of dandelion flowers sym-
bolized deep affection and undying
love acocrding to belief years ago.
An early substitute for tincture of
arnica was a preparation made by
digesting the flowers in hot vinegar.
This was a favorite application for
bruises and lacerations.
The word dandelion is a construc-
tion of two Latin words dens (tooth)
and leo (lion on account of the leaf
edges fancifully resembling a lion’s
tooth.
Taraxacum, the botanical term, or-
iginates from tarassein, a Greek word
denoting to move or to disturb. When
fresh leaves are masticated and swal-
lowed they act as a tonic to the sys-
tem.
Pioneer Welsh referred to dande-
lion as dante yellow. German arrivals
spoke of it as owenzahn and English
emigrants addressed it as wild en-
dive.
Other names for this cousin of the
common hawk-weed are canker-wort,
monk’s head, yellow gowan, priest’s
crown, false arnica, puff-ball and the
Irish daisy.
Dandelion is the most medical and
nourishing of the table salads if con-
sumed when the leaves have acquired
a bitter taste.
For use as a medicine the roots
should be collected in fall, carefully
washed and diced and then slowly
dried in an oven in order to destroy
parasites always present in the fresh
root.
rm —— A —————————
Trees Require Care for Good Condi-
tion.
There are so many decrepid, un-
kempt, battered and broken trees in
all localities that people often wonder
if it is really possible to keep trees
in a thriving, vigorous condition.
The old unsightly wrecks of trees
are frequently a menace and an eye-
sore to the community. A tree that
is not a thing of magnificent beauty
is not worth having. And ordinarily
there is little reason why trees should
not be kept in good condition.
The principle of taking care of
trees is the same as the principle in-
volved in taking care of any other liv-
ing thing. If attention is not given to
defects, and diseases in youth, then
it is certain that disintegration and
early death will follow. Pretty much
the same thing holds true with peo-
ple.
The expense of removing decayed
areas from trees and installing neces-
sary sectional concrete fillings in the
cavities, and the cost of other meas-
ures that may be required to restore
a tree to health and beauty, is neces-
sarily greater if trees are left to de-
cline almost to the point of death be-
fore help is given to them.—Chicago
ost.
m=
|
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney-at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa.
all courts.
Exchange.
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-ate
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate
tention given all legal business en-
Offices—No. 5, Bast
57-44
Practices ia
Office, room 18 Crider’s
61-1y
trusteed to hiis care.
High street.
J M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law
and Justice of the Peace. All pro-
fessional business will receive
prompt attention.
of Temple Court.
I
Offices on second floor
G. RUNKLE.—Attorney-at-Law, Con-
49-5-1y
sultation in English and German.
Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle-
fonte, Pa. 58-5
PHYSICIANS
R. R. L. CAPERS.
OSTEOPATH.
Bellefonte State College
Crider’s EX. 66-11 Holmes Bldg.
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his Teslognee.
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regls-
tered and licensed by the State.
Byes examined, glasses fitted. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced
and leases matched. Casebeer Bldg., High
St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-tt
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by
the State Board. State College,
ever, day except Saturday,
Bellefonte, in the Garbrick building op-
posite the Court House, Wednesday after-
noons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9
a. m. to 4.30 p. m. Bell Phone 68-40
Feeds
We keep a full line of all kinds of feeds
at the right prices.
Wagners 22% Dairy Feed $51.00
Wagners 32% Dairy Feed $55.00
Made of cotton seed meal, oil meal, glut-
en and bran. :
Wagners Mixed Scratch grains per H $2.70
Wagners Egg Mash, per H.......... 3.20
Wagners Pig Meal, per H.......... 2.80
We handle a full line of Wayne feeds.
Wayne 329% Dairy Feed, per ton....$62.00
Wayne 249% Dairy Feed, per ton....$56.00
Wayne Horse Feed, per ton..... oes. $52.00
Wayne Poultry Mash, per H........ $ 3.30
Wayne Pig Meal, per H............ $ 8.00
Wayne Calf Meal, per H.......0u00. $ 425
Cotton Seed Meal, 439%, per ton....$58.00
Oil Meal, 349%, per ton.........c000. $58.00
Gluten Feed, 23%, per ton.......... $50.00
Alfalfa fine ground, per tom...... . $48.00
Winter wheat bran, per ton......... $40.00
Winter wheat Middlings, per ton....$46.00
Mixed chop, per ton................ $46.00
Meat Meal, 50%, per H....... cases $ 425
Digescter Tankage, 60%, per H...... $ 4.28
We will have a full line of chick feeds
on hand by the first of March.
When you want good bread or pastry
|
Alarm Clocks Shock.
The alarm clock might well be
abandoned for a more soothing de-
vice, according to Dr. Paul V. Wins-
low, of New York, who appealed to
members of the National Associaticn
of Music Merchants, recently for an
instrument or attachment. which
would awaken sleepers by musical
tones.
board of control at a luncheon. Sud-
den awakening by violent sounds is
largely responsible for early morning
irritability and the chronic grouchi-
ness often present in highly nervous
persons, Dr. Winslow said. Many of
the nervous diseases to which man is
heir are attributable to shocks, and
in many cases have lost the power of
sleep because they prefer lying awake
in anticipation of a loud alarm to
being rudely awakened by it, he de-
clared.
“When one is suddenly awakened
by the alarm ore jumps quickly and
shuts it off,” he said. “The heart is
put into violent action, producing a
sudden shock to the heart and cir-
culation.”
Dr. Winslow asked the merchants
to produce a device which would
awaken a sleeper more slowly. He
recalled one perfected by a friend who
connected the alarm mechanism of a
clock with a phonograph. His friend
was awakened each morning by the
strains of ‘Hark, Hark, the Lark,”
he said.
How the Snake Charmer Keeps Him-
self Immune.
How does the snake-charmer work?
asks a writer in the Popular Science
Monthly. That’s one of the ques-
tions we've always asked ourselves.
And now an English doctor tells us
one of the secrets.
Take the case of the cobra, for in-
stance. It is a very venomous snake,
vet the snake-charmer is not harmed
when bitten by one.
The secret lies in the fact that the
charmer “milks” the cobra before he
allows himself to be bitten. He makes
the cobra bite into a piece of meat,
thereby expelling two-thirds of the
poison in its poison gland. When the
charmer allows the snake to bite him
immediately thereafter, there is not
enough poison left in the gland to
do any harm.
What is the next step? The charm-
er makes the snake bite a fowl while
he squeezes the remaining drops of
poison out of the snake’s gland; the
fowl dies and the charmer wins the
confidence of his audience.
——r———ee——
——The Watchman gives all the
news while it is news.
Dr. Winslow spoke before the |
AED TICATIERES . b
TIRIEIE 1 S|AlIVIE Use “Our Best” Flour.
BIRIEIDEE EINDER PERT .
RI HA A TIE/|REENIOIR oe at ae ae
uUiP JAR B|O| XE S|O Spring wheat.
TEE Bl AIR[N TEE SK
AWED sos | 0.Y. Wagner & Co., |
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I IFENMDIO/ERNR|OICEBAIN' |g 111yr. BELLEFONTE, PA.
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WE Sh Caldwell & S
PIN[E|UM[O|N; | d we on
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces §
ANAS PSPSPS SPS AS
Full Line .of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished
66-15-tf.
secon
Fine Job Printing
A SPECIALTY
at the
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There is 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 communicate with this
office
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.
State College Bellefonte.