Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 02, 1928, Image 6

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    Bellefonte, Pa., March 2, 1928
WHEN DREAM GULCH PAID.
(Continued from Page 2, Col. 6)
He did not know, though, that Char-
lie Wilson, coming to his senses with
blinding red pains flashing in his
brain, staggered to his feet and hit
Winkie Dunning.down with a blow on
the temple.
For a minute after that the battle-
field was strewn with four bloody,
oaning human bodies. Hec and
Winkie, the younger of the eclaim-
jumpers aiding the other, staggered
to their feet and slowly retreated, go-
ing back down Dream Gulch to Thiad
along a road now free of snow.
It was sometime later when Charlie
Wilson crawled to his hands and knees
again and moved over to where Jim
lay, his bloody, swollen face turned to
the sky, his fingers still working
spasmodically as though he were still
. struggling with his enemy. :
Little Two Barrel!” Charlie said, a
reverent respect in his voice as he
lifted the boy’s head to his lap.
Jim opened his eyes and looked up
into the friendly old eyes of his part-
ner.
“Did we—lick ’em?” he asked.
“Reckon they ain’t nuthin but the
hides an’ tails left,” Charlie answered.
“Don’t allow them two ornery cusses
will ever come lookin’ fer trouble like
that again. Sonny, yuh fight like
Two Barrel.”
Jim tried to smile but the effort
hurt him and it ended in a grimace.
“Guess we better get over to the
eabin,” he said.
It was another day before they
were able to get to thelr work again.
They had little fear that the maraud-
ers would attack them again soon,
but they were taking no chances and
earried their guns with them, ready
for instant use.
On the second day after that they
prepared for the first cleanup of the
sluices. The moment was tense.
Charlie, his hands trembling with
suppressed excitement, scraped the
gleanings. :
There was gold but it was little
more than color—not the rich pay-
streak they had staked everything on
finding... The two partners faced each
other with the knowledge that they
bad lost—they were done for.
It was late afternoon when they
left the sluices and went back to the
cabin. They were silent. Each was
thinking what a blow this diappoint-
ment had been to the other. Already
Charlie was looking on into the fu-
ture when the last of the snow would
be out of the hills and he could be-
gin a mew search for the lost ledge,
and Jim, too, was planning when he
and. Charlie could begin that search.
They said little, but Jim went to
the crude log shelter in which he had
kept his car during the winter, and
began to tinker over it.
With the paystreak cleaned there
was nothing longer to fear from the
elaim jumpers below, and he decided
that he was going to have a final
settlement with them and put a ques-
tion to Vera.
“Guess we can clean ensugh to keep
us going, can’t we, Charlie?” he
asked, making the first direct refer-
ence to the disappointment which had
eome to them.
“Reckon,” Charlie snswered.
Jim tinkered over the car, tuning
it up and getting it ready for a trip
down the gulch next day.
“Ground’s soft an’ it wouldn't take
much t’ start a slide,” Charlie cau-
tioned.” “I'd be kinda keerful erbout
travelin’ the gulch. Member back in
nineteen-two it ware just such a
spring as this, aw’ a feller named
Johnson was dein’ a mite o’ prospect-
in’ up t'other side o’ the gulch. He
sgt off a charge o' powder an’ the jar
started the whole mountain t’ movin’.
Johnson ware caught in the slide av’
he ain’t never been found. That
slidé’s what makes the big fill in the
gulch, bout a mile below.”
1 “Well, this old bus vibrates about
enough to start most anything,” Jim
conceded. I'll take chances on a lit-
tle rundown to Thiad, though.”
‘ “Don’t yuh reckon I best go with
yuh?” Charlie worried. “Ain’t no tell-
in’ about critters like them. Like’s
not they’d plug yuh afore yuh got a
chanct at ’em.”
“Well have to drive them from the
gulch,” Jim answered. “But we can
do it, can’t we:, Charlie?”
‘ The next morning Jim was up ear-
ly. ‘He was restless, eager to be away
but. Charlie was up ahead of him and
over at the sluice boxes.
The lure of the gold was tugging
at the old prospector, and he was
washing gravel again. Jim waited
for him until the morning was well
advanced, then he started the car and
worked it down across the gluch from
the cabin and over the roadway, dry
enough now to be in the best of con-
dition.
Charlie saw him coming and he
stopped his work.
“Allow I fergot,” he apologized.
“Pll git my gun an’ we'll go.”
He turned to pick it up from where
it: stood against the boulder.
He started frozen in his tracks.
Jim -sat bolt upright!
From the gulch where the dam held
back the water, there came a heavy,
ominous booming report that shook
the ground beneath them.
“Slide!” Jim called wildly.
Another report, heavier, even, than
the first,
The old man ran towards Jim.
“Them ware charges of powder,”
he said. “Them pole-cats has done
blowed the dam t’ git even!”
“Git fer the mountain side!” he
yelled, running with all the speed his
old muscles could give him, toward
the slope.
“Git up high. That water’ll tear
hell out o’ this here gulch. It'll clean
everything clean down t’ Delta!”
The: old man was climbing, but a
sudden wild fear, greater even than
fear of the raging death which was
sweeping down upon him, had gripped
Jim Marshall.
“Vera!” he said. “It will sweep ov-
er Thiad and she won't have a
chance.”
And even as the thought came to
him he threw the car into gear ard
the powerful engine leaped forward.
Charlie Wilson from a safe point in
the mountain slope turned to stare—
his young partner had suddenly lost
bis reason.
Jim hit the road at forty, fifty and
finally sixty miles, taking the twists
and curves on two wheels, but some-
how clinging to the grade when death
was resting its hand on his shoulder.
He went down Dream Gulch like
some wild demon, and as he came
near Thiad he began to sound his
horn shrilly.
Already the roar of the wall of
water which was crushing trees and
gravel banks and all else before it
as it rushed forward rumbled down
the gulch.
Vera and her mother had heard the
blasts, and then his siren. They were
in the road to see what had happened.
Te brakes screeched as Jim stopped
beside them.
“Get in!” he ordered. “The dam’s
broke. We've got to reach Delta and
get those folks out of there.”
Vera had not hesitated, and her
mother had followed. Even before
Jim had finished his jerky sentences
the car was hitting fifty miles again.
Down the gulch they plunged and
rocked and swayed—a roaring demon
—Closer and closer behind them was
the flood, another demon.
Jim drove into Delta as he had
driven into Thiad, his siren horn shill-
ing a warning. The meager popula-
tion of the place rushed cut to meet
him.
“The dam’s broke. Flood coming.
Children in car!” he yelled to them as
he came down the street.
The three men grasped the terrible
import of his message and half a doz-
en children were piled into the car
almost before it had stopped. The
older persons begar to run for the
sloping side of the mountains, as
Charlie Wilson had done.
As the car took to the steep, peril-
ous grade, laden with its burden of
humanity, the wall of water crashed
down the gulch and struck Delta.
It had spent much of its force in
traveling the miles of the gulch but
in that headwall of water were the
wrecked buildings of Thiad which had
long been dead but which was now
gone forever. Great trees snapped
off at the base. Boulders that a team
could not move were swept aside.
It was stupendous—that appalling
advance of an unleashed fury—and
almost as soon as it came it was
gone, leaving a torn and tumbled Del-
ta.
Hours later, when the flood was re-
duced to only a trickle of water, Jim,
with Vera at his side, made his way
up the gulch. He was going after
Charlie Wilson.
The road was washed away, and it
was almost evening before they came
to the place where the dam had been
that morning.
All along the way there had been
slides from the mountains on either
side of the gulch, and at the dam the
gorge was clogged again with the
most colossal slide of all. It had torn
away the whole face of the mountain,
leaving it bare.
Still there was no trace of Charlie
Wilson, and Jim was worried.
Then he saw him.
He was sitting on the mountain
side in the path of what had been the
slide. He
a great burden of sorrow pressed him
down. As Jim and the girl climbed
up to him, they saw the reason.
Across his knees rested his old
muzzle loading rifle, cocked, ready to
fire; and stretched out on the ground
in front of him were two human
forms, groveling, beaten, cringing in
fear—Hee LeBloc and Winkie Dun-
ning.
“Ketched ’em as they was makin’
their get-away,” Charlie explained
slowly, his old eyes afire with a light
Jim had never seen there before.
“They done it. An’ now they been
a-prayin’ fer fear the work o' their
hands ketched their wimmin folks.
They didn’t allow they'd be such a
flood. Reckoned it’ud only ketch you
an’ ne.”
“We'll get them out of here and
down to Wallace,” Jim said quietly.
“There’s some good comes out of most
evil. When we get them in jail, Vera
and I are going to be married.
He hesitated 2 moment.
“We want you to stand up with as,
Charlie,” he added.
That glow in Charlie Wilson’s eyes
was burning to a flame.
“I can’t [itt's Two Barrel.” he an-
swered softly. “When them thar crit-
ters blowed the dam, it started a slide
which done uncovered the lost gold
ledge—an’ I'm a-settin on it!”
—By Russel Ardson Bankson in Co-mo-
politan,
Seanson of Lent Explained.
At St. James church on Ash Wed-
nesday the faithful will receive the
blessed ashes. The priest places a
small portion of blessed ashes on the
forehead of the faithful on the first
day of lent as an outward sign of the
spirit of humility and penance thai
should be ours during this holy sea
son. Therefore when blessing the
ashes the priest prays: “O God, who
desirest not the death of the sinner,
bless these ashes which are to be
used in token of humility and pen-
ance; that we who know ourselves to
be but dust and ashes may obtain di-
vine mercy, the pardon of our sins
and the rewards promised to the pen-
itent. O God, who pardoned the Nin-
ivites who did penance in sackcloth
and ashes grant us to imitate their
penance that we may receive like
pardon.” In placing the ashes on the
forehead of each individual the priest
says: “Remember O man that thou
are dust and to dust thou shalt re-
turn.” That ashes have been used
in all ages as an outward sign of the
spirit of penance is manifested by the
Old and New Testaments and the his-
tory of Christianity. The ashes used
by the priest are procured by burn-
ing the palms used on the previous
Palm Sunday, to show that we will
not bear the palm of victory in eter-
nity unless we be humble and do pen-
ance and our body return to the dust
from which it came.
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
DAILY THOUGHT
You will never be sorry for thinking be-
fore speaking, for forgiving and forget-
ting, for being generous to the poor and
kind to the needy, for living a square
and fair life, for doing your level best—
for all these you will never be sorry.—-
F. Van Amburg.
A homemade dustless duster is a
piece of old underwear wrung out of
a mixture of three tablespoonfuls of
linseed oil to one-half pint of kero-
sene. Saturate the cloth, wring dry
and hang out to air.
Beans that are to be baked should
first be parboiled.
Good broths ean be made from left-
over bits of meat.
The fat from poultry makes a good
shortening for cookies.
Natural rice with cream makes a
good breakfast cereal.
Mock cherry pie can be made with
cranberries and raisins.
Quite likely one of the beautypoints
that needs reclaiming most is your
hands. And here you have the easiest
task I have set for you. There is no
other feature that responds as quick-
ly to care as the hands and yet they
are the most neglected.
Hands can be the reddened, rough
ill-cared-for members which belie the
beauty of your face, or they may be
exquisite things which express you
almost as much as your lips. And
the difference does not lie in the
amount of work you do. For even the
ravages of peeling potatoes, washing
dishes and polishing furniture may be
counteracted by simple but regular
care.
Your palms may have become hard-
ened by golf sticks, tennis rackets
or the wheel of a car. There is noth-
ing quite as unattractive in a woman’s
hands as the look and feeling of cal-
loused surfaces on the palms. For
this conditicn, apply cocoa butter and
equal parts of lanolin and almond oil.
Rub this well into the palms twice a
day.
To whiten the hands, soften brittle
nails and keep the cuticle in good con-
dition, use a combination of olive oil
and lemon juice. Beat well together
three ounces of the oil and the juice
of one lemon. Apply this to the
hands as often as convenient.
Always dry your hands well if you
wish to keep them from chapping.
You should be especially careful to
do this before going out of doors in
a wind. If your nails break easily,
rub vaseline over and around them.
For hands that perspire excessively
it is good to dry them well and then
dust them with boracic acid powder
or to rinse them in a saturated solu-
tion of boracic acid in alcohol.
An excellent remedy for the red-
ness that is so likely to mar the hands
which are constantly in and out of
{ water is lemon. Keep a half lemon
near the wash bowl and rub it over
your hands after each washing. It is
good also to rub over your hands the
whey from sour milk.
Nothing will take away the weath-
er-beaten look from hands as quick-
ly as a coating of cold cream, pre-
ferably one made by a pasteurized
process, placed over them every even-
ing. Leave this cream on and put on
over it old cotton gloves from which
the finger tips have been cut.
and show age, use a good rich anti-
{ wrinkle cream. J
i But you must remember that your
{hands do not stop at your
: particularly if you wear short sleeves,
and in my next talk on reelaiming
{ your beauty points I am going to dis-
{cuss the arms and elbows.
Many inquiries come to the Burea:
| States Department of Agriculture re-
{ garding the so-called waterless cook-
ing and devices designed to cook food
in this way. In explaining the prin-
the bureau points out that this meth-
od should not be applied to all foods.
Certain vegetables may be too strong
if cocked in a covered container. They
have volatile flavors which, if allowed
to escape, make a more palatable
vegetable of better color, as for ex-
ample, cabbage, cauliflower, or tur-
nips. Added water does not detract
in any way from the food value of
the vegetable provided it is either
cooked off or served with the veget-
able. Green vegetables, if cooked in
tightly closed containers, lose their
attractive green color. String beans,
spinach, and other green vegetables
are better cooked uncovered for a
very short time in a small quantity of
water or in their own juices. They
then retain some of their crispness
and fresh color.
On the other hand, foods that ecn-
tain a considerable amount of water
in themselves can be cooked without
added water, especially if they have
an outside skin or peel. Potatoes and
squash, for instance, are sometimes
baked in the jackets. In meat the
same result is accomplished when it
is seared and a crust is formed which
holds in the juices.
In cooking without added water,
other than baking in the skin, one of
two things must be done. Either the
heat must be so regulated as to keep
it low to prevent burning, or there
must be a cooking vessel which con-
ducts heat slowly and distributes it
cqually so that the food is cooked
through without being burned ‘at the
bottom. In addition it is usually nec-'
essary to hold .in all the steam, since
this is an important factor in cooking
most vegetables. This was accom-
plished in the old-fashioned Dutch ov-
en with a heavy cover. The earthen-
ware or heavy glass casserole does the
same thing, especially if it has no
steam outlets. Slow cooking in such
a closed container has long been re-
cognized as a valuable way for the
fonds which do not become too strong
when all of the volatile constituents
as well as the juices are retained.
Some of the so-called waterless cook-
ing devices on the market answer the
same purpose. In most cases, how-
ever, similar results may be obtained
by using equipment already in many
kitchens. In oven cooking, the heat is
carefully regulated and equally dis-
tributed, accomplishing the same re-
sult as cooking without added water.
ciple of cooking without added water, |!
1
i
FARM NOTES.
There are six steps in raising good
hea’thy chicks from hatching to ma-
turity. They are clean chicks, clean
houses, clean litter, clean feed, clean
management, and clean ground in
close confinement.
Birds are our greatest garden
friends. Shrubs and trees which at-
tract them may be selected for plant-
ing on the home grounds. Bird hous-
es and baths can be provided for them
that will be ornamental as well as
useful.
When corn borers are plowed under
few are killed in the process. If
there are no remnants left on the
surface, however, the borers die from
exposure or are eaten by enemies af-
ter they return to the top of the
ground.
Salt is needed by all animals that
eat vegetable and plant foods. The
average requirements for cows is
about three-fourths of an ounce a day
per 1000 pounds live weight and a
similar amount for each 20 pounds
of milk produced.
Drinking water for poultry may be
conveniently warmed with several
styles of simple electric heaters at a
cost about the same as for lighting
two electric lamps. Heaters of 75 to
100 watts capacity are about right for
warming two gallons of water.
A keen cutting edge should be kept
on hoes, wheel-hce blades, sickles, and
all tools used to cut weeds. If they
are in bad shape put them on the
grindstone or emery wheel; if they
simply need “touching up” a whet-
stone and file will answer the pur-
pose.
Is the farm wood supply ready for
the coming year? If not, devote this
week to finishing the job. Those old
dead trees will be better in the wood-
pile than standing in the woodlot.
Then there are spots in nearly every
woods where a few trees removed will
be better for those remaining.
Now is the time to plan for alfal-
fa seeding. Many Pennsylvania farm-
ers work into alfalfa gradually, by
mixing varying amounts of alfalfa
seed with the usual clover seeding.
In case the alfalfa should fail, be-
cause of a lack of sufficient prepara-
tion, this method still will produce a
crop of hay, say Pennsylvania State
College agronomists.
Recent bad freezes have ruined con-
siderable corn in eribs from which
farmers expected to pick a supply of
seed. Agronomists of the Pennsyl-
vania State College report that the
sweepstakes variety has been espe-
cially hard hit.
That there may be difficulty exper-
ienced in the Sure Crop’ sources of
seed also looms menacingly now
While one farmer has 700 bushels of
this variety cured by artificial heat,
not all corn growers or seed corn
breeders in the State are so fortun-
ate.
Farmers in Perry county who did
not dry their seed corn with artificial
heat are urged by county agent Roth-
rock to apply a germination test on
each ear. The county agent will ex-
plain a quick and accurate method of
making this test to all who desire the
information.
Flocks of ewes which have not been
If | receiving any grain this winter will
i your hands are beginning to wrinkle "welcome some now
was stolid, silent, as if |
and will return
good dividends on the investment,
| ays county agent, R. C. Blaney. Good
shepherds do not wait until the ewes
wrists, | have lambs at their sides before feed-
ing grain. If silage is available this
will be an excellent food for the ewe
flock, provided it is rot frozen or
moldy.
“These ewes must not only main-
: tai ir ow r weight but 1
of Home Economics of the United 13in thelr own body welahs but need
to build a reserve for the time when
they will be obliged to suckle two
big husky lambs,” declares Blaney.
The man who has the most trouble af
lambing time is usually the poorest
feeder and caretaker. Remember al-
sc that the well-nourished ewe will
shear from one to three pounds ad-
ditional fleece this spring.”
Flocks should be drenched at least
twice this winter for stomach worms.
Four hundred twenty-five crops of
over 400 bushels have been grown in
the Keystone 400 Bushel Potato club
in the six years of its existence. One
hundred and eighty-seven of these
crops were grown during the past
vear. :
No particular soil or locality holds
a monoply on these large yields, ac-
cording to J. B. R. Dickey, extension
farm crops specialist of the Pennsyl-
vania State College, who annually
sumamrizes the cultural practices em-
SqN[2 00% °Yy Jo sisquieux Aq peaford
In 1927 there were 36 counties rep-
resented and since 1922, when the
club originated, 51 of the 67 counties
in the State have had 460 bushel
CIOpS.
Dickey has found that last year the
average area planted to potatoes by
the members of the 400 club was 12
acres. The high yield third had 14
acres on the average, while the low
vield third had 11 acres each. In-
dividual patches ran from slightly
nore than an acre to 75 acres.
There were two 400 bushel yields
of Irish cobblers in 1927, which is
said to be rather unusual. Ninety per
cent of the club grew rural Russets
and the remainder a white rural. This
is exactly in line with previous years.
In the high third 75 per cent used
new seed from Michigan, while the
percentages for the low third was 51.
In the southern half of the State
the most popular =lanting dates are
in the late April and early May. One
of the most striking points uncovered
was the large amount of seed plant-
er. In 1926 the average row was 32.4
bushels per acre in 1922, the average
increased to 26.5 bushels in 1926 and
jumped to 23 bushels last year. The
high third of the club planted an av-
erage of 27 bushels last year and the
lew third 22 bushels.
Planting distances are getting clos-
ed. In 1926 the average row was 32.4 |
inches while last year it was 31 inch-
es. Spacing in the row dropped from
over 12 inches a few years ago to
10% inches in 1927. The 600 bushel
growers in the club averaged 28.7
inch rows and 9 inches apart in the
TOW. :
mR
Western Conference Bans Spring
Training for High School
Football.
E. K. Stock, principal of the Belle-
fonte High school and president of
the western conference of the Inter-
scholastic Athletic association, at-
tended a meeting of conference of-
ficials, held at the Penn Alto hotel,
Altoona, on Saturday, to adopt a set
of rules and bylaws for governing all
games in the future. Practically ev-
ery school in the conference was rep-
resented and after a thorough discus-
sion of all the rules submitted the
following were adopted:
1. All eligibility rules of the P. I.
A. A. shall be enforced.
2. The day for the opening of the
football practice is the first day of
September and no facilities for prac-
tice may be provided before that day.
8. Members of the conference must
rot promote summer football camps
or organized spring football practice.
4. Officials may be central board of-
ficials or any other mutually agreed
upon by both teams.
5. In conference games the quar-
ters shall be a maximum of 12 min-
utes.
6. Scouting an opposing team, eith-
er directly or indirectly, shall be
discouraged.
7. Games played under this confer-
ence shall be governed by official
rules.
A change was made in the point
system adopted to determine the win-
ner at the close of the season. No
provision had been made to reward
a team for tying a game in the points
system. A ruling was made that a
team will be given five points for each
tie of a conference team and five
points for each conference team it de-
feats.
Huntingdon High school made ap-
plication for membership in the con-
ference but was not admitted.
Real Estate Transfers.
Martha Rider, et bar,
Robert, et ux,
$2,300.
John L. Holmes, et al, to William
M. Cramer, tract in Ferguson twp.;
$400.
Thomas Mates, et ux, to Thomas
Byron, tract in Philipsburg; $700.
Charles Byron to Laura Nichols, et
bar, tract in Rush twp.; $1.
H. R. Long, et ux, to Harvey Em-
enhizer, et ux, tract in Boggs twp.;
$1,000.
Tau Co. of Delta Tau Delta Frater-
nity, to Gamma Co. of Phi Kappa,
tract in State College; $4,000.
Paul Stevenson, et ux, to Psi Chap-
ter of Phi Kappa Sigma, tract in
State College; $1.
Hannah Hogencamp, et bar, to Sar-
ah A. Hogencamp, tract in Union
twp.; $1. y
Sarah A. Hogencamp, et bar, to
Hannah Hogencamp, et bar, tract in
Union twp.; $1.
H. E. Dunlap, sheriff, to Ernest
T.” Spotts, tract im *Port Matilda;
$192.21.
Sadie Emenhizer, et bar, to Abner
: Rider, et ux, tract in Spring twp.;
700.
Cambria Title Savings and Trust
Co., to Ebensburg Trust Co., tract in
Howard and Marion twps.; $1.
J. R. Clifford, et ux, to J. R. Clif-
ford, tract in Philipsburg, $1.
Howard A. Vail, et ux, to J. R.
Clifford, tract in Philipsburg, $1.
to George
tract in Spring twp.;
—Life exhibits a picture of a traffic
officer in Chicago holding up an auto-
mobile loaded with suspiciously drip-
ping boxes. “What have you there ?”
he asks. “Only hooch,” they replied.
“Go on, I thought it might be history
books.”
Local High Presented With Football
Trophy.
A football, not one scarred and bat-
tered by conflict, but a beautiful sil-
ver one mounted on a silver base, was
presented to the Bellefonte High
School by the Western Conference as
a means of showing their appreciation
of the work and worth of our foot-
ball squad.
The trophy is to be a permanent
possession of the High school and will
take its place among the other fig-
ures in our trophy gallery. Its glory
will never be over-shadowed, for it
marks the finish of one of the great-
est football years in the history of
this school and the school itself will
never forget it.
Millionaire (to some of his prote-
ges): I owe all my success to only
one thing. Pluck, just pluck.”
Sagacious Questioner: “How do you
find the right people to pluck ?”’—Ste-
vens Stone Mill.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
St. Call Mrs. H. C. Valentine. Phone
104R 73-7-4t
XECUTOR'S SALE OF REAL ES-
Hs" FOR RENT, 109 west Curtin
E TATE.—Will be exposed at public
sale on
SATURDAY, MARCH 17, at 2 p. m.
the following real estate of James C.
Reed, deceased, in the town of Boalsburg:
A six-room house, stable, shop and all
necessary outbuildings on lot containing
two and seven-tenths acres. Also, one
tere of timber land.
JAMES W. SWABB
J. I. Reed, Auc. Executor.
EXECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters tes-
tamentury upon the estate of An-
drew J. Lytle, late of State College
borough, deceased, having been granted
to the undersigned, all persons knowing
themselves indebted will please make
prompt payment, and those having claims
against said estate must present them
duly authenticated, for settlement.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF STATE COLLEGE
Harrison Walker
Ww. Iixecutors.
Attorney State College, Pa.
73-4-6t.
OTICE IN DIVORCE.—Stella E, Lin-
gle vs. James C. Lingle. In the
Court of Common Pleas of Centre
County; No. 293 September Term, 1927.
Libel in Divorce. To James C.
Respondent: Whereas, Stella E. Lingle,
your wife, has filed a Libel in the Court
of Common Pleas of Centre County pray-
ing a Divorce from you, now you are here-
by notified and required to appear in the
Court on or before the First Monday of
April, 1928, to answer the complaint of
the said Stella BE. Lingle, and in default
of such appearance you will be liable to
have a divorce granted in your absence.
H. E. DUNLAP,
Sheriff of Centre County.
73.7-4t
FIRE INSURANCE
At a Reduced Rate 20%
7128.6m J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent
EE SE KA RTs
IRA D. GARMAN
JEWELER
101 South Eleventh St.,
PHILADELPHIA.
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum
72-48-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry
|
Free Six Host 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 pair
" FREE if they fail. Price $1.00.
YEAGER’S TINY BOOT SHOP.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
Pills in Red and Gold metallic
Doss, Sie with Rive Bibhon,
ake no other. Buy of your
Drugeist. Ask for ON L-ON ESTER 8
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 25
years known as Best, Safsst, Always Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
TIE DIAMOND BRAND.
Ladies! Ask your Dru, Elst for
Chi.ches.ter 8 Diamond Brand :
‘Quality Counts
23 YEARS OF PROGRESS
When we advertise our merchandise as
Quality Goods we describe them accurately.
From our years of progress we feel we have
served you justly. We invite your continued
patronage.
Dockash Ranges
Paint and Varnish
Window Glass
Builders’ Supplies
Galvanized Roofing
American Fences
Farmers’ Supplies
Asphalt Roofing
OLEWINE’S HARDWARE
Bellefonte, Penna.
SELECTING YOUR MEATS.
When you enter our butcher
shop be sure to scan our display
of choice cuts leisurely before
you make your selections. If
there is anything out of the or-
dinary that you want and it is
not displayed you may be sure
we have it in our refrigerator, so
please ask for it. We carry all
the choice meats that are in sea-
son. We solicit your patronage.
Telephone 667
Market on the Diamond
Bellefonte, Penna.
P. L. Beezer Estate..... Meat Market