Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 31, 1928, Image 6

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    Benoni ald
Bellefonte, Pa., August 31, 1928.
EE ——————————————— SE —
Insanity Not Often
Caused by Overstudy
“It is a fallacy jo oelieve that overs
study causes insanity. Overstudy like
any mental overwork causes a state
of exhaustion and brain fag. Teco
much study, which prevents the en-
Joyable realities of play and recrea=
tion, will not cause a mental breake
down in a person who is not liablq
to insanity,” states Dr. Alexander 8
Hershfield, [llinois state alienist.
“It is admitted that among thosa
students who devote too much timaq
to learning and to making high grad
there are many who are normal mens
tally. Mental disease and overstudy,
are common enough to be found tos
gether occasionally. A well-balanced
poy or girl finds sports, friendships
and sex of sufficient importance tq
act as an antidote to overstudy and
general school grind. In fact, it ig
‘normal for youth to find study irks
some when it interferes with its, fun,
“Insanity resulting from overstud
Js merely a coincidence. and close
examination of such a case will usu
(aly show other causes.”
¥
‘Operator Cut In on
Concert for Invalid
& young man of the city, contined
{¢0 bis howe with a bad throat, ans
yewered his telephone svmetimme aftep
midnight recently. Three girls of hig
acquaintance announced that they had
prepared a concert for his exclusive
entertainment, and that he shoul”
“please stand by.”
" The girls then put their telephonq
at one end of their piano, and got §
ukulele to fill out the harmony. Al}
‘three of them (semiprofessionals, by
.the way) sang to the soft accompanis
ment, doing all the popular songs of
the moment, to the unbounded joy of
ithe sick young man, who had been
dying for company all evening, They
‘continued for the better part of an
hour, when suddenly an operator cul’
iim, presumably to tind out why they
[were holding the phone so long. Sha’
jihad begun a sharp tirade when thq
music got the best of her. She lists.
‘ened silently and then in a minute shq
broke in and requested a song.—Cleves
‘land Plain Dealer.
nin
x Plants Reveal Ore
Several remarkable examples wherq
‘beds of ore were revealed by plantg
: growing on the surface above are sun
‘marized by Lidgely in the proceedingg
iof the Australian Mining Institute, |
{The Amorpha canescens shrub indi!
cates the presence of galena, the lead
isulphide ore, in Michigan, while in
‘Missouri a plant belonging to the pois
‘son sumach family serves the samg
purpose, as a lead ore indicator,’
‘Beech trees often indicate that limes |
stone beds are to be found in thd
@eighborhvod. In Spain a sort of
.bindweed, known as Convolvulus ath.
‘aeoides, is deemed of high value in
betraying the presence of underlying
deposits of phosphate ore. The plant
:Erigonum ovalifolium discloses the ex. !
_istence of silver ore in Montana. Thq
ealamine violet, which grows in uppet |
- Silesia, Westphalia and Belgium, is 3
‘sign of the existence of calamine, the
zinc ore, in the neighborhood.
Simple Arithmetic
A man with a wife and 11 children |
many of them grown up, appeared at
the entrance to an entertainment hall,’
bought two tickets, and demanded
that the entire family should be ads |
mitted.
‘The doorkeeper declined to admly |
them with only two tickets.
“But all these are my children,” saiq
. the man.
“Qf course,” said the doorkeeper)
; “but some of them are too old to be
-admitted free.”
“Too old? What's that to do with
14t? Doesn't it say on your bills that
ichildren under twelve are admitted
{free with parents?”
: “Yes.”
“Well, I've got 11 children, and i}
+11 children aren't under twelve, I'm
| peat.”
’
Cultivated Sponges
Sponges are now cultivated like
grain, It is strange to think of beds
{of sponges cultivated under the sea,
but this is no stranger, after all, than
beds of oysters.
The method is to cut up very fine,
dealthy, living sponges—a sponge ig
quite as lively as an oyster—into seeds.
‘These seeds, about half an inch in
diameter, are wired to blocks of ce-
ment and dropped into the submarine
sponge bed. They mature in two years,
The best sponges—those large, blond,
fine fellows called bath sponges—coma
‘from Florida. It takes them a full ten
years to grow to bath size.
$
Getting the Right Word
A little girl in Topeka was explain-
ing to her grandfather that the pene
dulum of the clock had been broken.
“What's the matter with the
clack?” her grandfather asked.
“The percolator broke.” replied the
tittle girl
“What is that?” asked the grand.
father, “The percolator?”
.4Qh, I don’t mean the percolator,”
ceplied the granddaughter, “That Is
what you hatch chickens in, isn’t it?
—Kansas City Star.
USE OLD AUTO TIRES
TO MAKE NEW SHOES
Saloniki Feasants Use 50,000
Casings a Year.
Washington, — Discarded American
automobile tires that once were dig-
patched to rubber salvaging plants
now are being made into shoes for
peasants of Saloniki, Greece. It i8
reported that 50,000 casings are im-
ported annually to meet the demand
Each tire makes three shoes.
“Saloniki is ramous as a city of
vefuge,” says a bulletin from the
Washington (D. C.) headquarters of
the National Geographic society. “That
fact accounts for its enormous peas-
ant population to whom the new foor
gear is a luxury.
“When the Spaniards persecuted
the Jews in the Fifteenth century,
some of them fled as far east as
Saloniki and their descendants now
help make up the city’s large Jewish
population, which nun.bers nearly
that of the Greeks. And in receni
years a human deluge of Greeks who
were driven out of Turkey swelled
the census figures from about 150.00
to more than 260,000.
“The original ‘Salonikans’ are lost
in the shuffle of nationalities repre-
sented among the inhabitants,” con-
tinues the bulletin. “On any busy cor-
ner one will see nearly as many dif-
ferent races as sit in a session of
the League of Nations. There are
Greeks from all parts of the peninsula.
Albanians, Italians, Russians, Ger-
mans and natives of every Balkan
state. Some of their families are
among the oldest inhabitants, human
remnants of the early occupation of
the city when it was a football in the
hands of empires, including the Mace-
donians. Saracens, Normans, Romans
Venetians, Bulgarians and Turks.
Rival of Constantinople.
“Kven with such a mixture, Salo-
niki has maintained its prestige as
one of the most important ports of
southeast Europe. When the Balkan
states are at peace and the port is
used as an outlet to the sea, it rivals
("onstantinople.
“The fine buildings which form a
solid wall on the land side of the
quay, pierced only by streets leading
up into the city, give Saloniki a mod-
ern appearance. Here and in the com-
mercial district there are shops, cof-
fee houses and a few fine old resi-
dences. The westerner at once notices
a lack of parks and other open
spaces, but a peep through an open
door to a courtyard in a narrow side
street reveals that most of Saloniki’»
beauty is hidden behind high walls.
“On the hills beyond new cottages
of former refugees indicate that Sa-
loniki has assimilated many of her
newcomers from other lands, but thou-
sands of them still live in the squalo-
of the Saloniki slums,
“In the dirty streets barefoot wemn-
en pled the rough cobble with loads
of wood tied to their backs that one
might hesitate packing on a donkey.
Smiling, ragged water boys and girls
in tatters carry their heavy jugs.
Milkmen, too poor to own carts, are
weighted down by two five-gallon
cans resting upon their backs until
their bodies are at right angles with
their legs.
Use American Street Cars.
“But with all its squalor and pov-
erty Saloniki can boast of a glorious
past. Several cities have been built
on the site since it was founded more
than 2,000 years ago. The present one
is named for Thessalonike, a half
sister of Alexander the Great. Cicero
lived there for a time; Nero and Tra-
jan decorated the city; it was once
the temporary home of three em-
perors and it became famous in the
Christian world as the place to which
St. Paul addressed two of his letters.
“Successive fires and pilferings
aave destroyed historic landmarks.
One of its oldest existing antiquities
is Varder street, which cuts across
the city. It was a part of the old
Roman highway from the Adriatic to
the Bosporus, which earlier still was
the Royal way of the Macedonia
kings. Where the Roman legions, the
phalanxes of Alexander and the im-
mortals of Xerxes trod its surface, an
American street car rumbles, driven
by a modern Greek or Spaniard. In
its course it runs under an old Roman
arch, .
“Some of the Saloniki churches
survived the fury of the Middle ages
and are the finest remains of the past.
“The Greeks have suffered by re-
.naining in Salonfki under foreign
regime, but one source of inspiration
to them has been the sight of Mount
Olympus towering among the bills to
the southwest.”
Find Way to Unroll
Brittle Manuscript
London.—The aid of ultra-modern
chemistry has been invoked to sal-
vage another relic of the remote past.
An ancient leather roll of Egyptian
writing had lain unopened for 350
years in the British museum because
it was so brittle that no one dared
unroll it. Experiments with a brok-
en fragment of the leather in the mu-
seum’s laboratory, however, finally
gave scientists a clew as to how to
handle the mysterlous manuscript.
Several thin coatings of celluloia
vere soaked into the pores of the
leather, after which it was cemented
with strong celluloid on to a piece of
celluloid-treated cheesecloth. In this
way it was unrolled without a break
and pressed flat between two glass
plates to dry. It remained perfectly
flat after drying and can now be read
with ease.
I Silver Utensils Once |
Prerogative of Rank
In the early days of civilization
sterling silver was restricted to royal-
ty and the nobility. In fact, we are
told that at one period of England’s
history the number of sterling silver
spoons and suchlike one could own
were actually restricted and governed
by statute. One could almost recon-
struct the regulatory table—one lord,
one spoon; one duke, four spoons;
one princess, one chest, and so on.
Sterling was displayed upon all cere-
monial occasions and these aristo-
crats of a far past day treasured
their s..ver to as great an extent ar
the young bride of today.
Five hundred years ago, with the
advent of the Florentine republic, a
new era began, Foreign commerce
brought wealth to men of lesser rank,
who established magnificent homes
and diled them with works of art
and beauty, chief among which was
sterling. Today sterling silver con-
tinues to be the inevitable tableware
for the person of discrimination. Its
use is not confined to the royal
houses. nor even to the tables of the
wealthy. It is available for every
howe of taste and moderate meuns,
say
“Bird end Fish” Story
by Truthful Angler
“Several years ago one of my
friends was strip-casting with frogs
at night,” relates Seth Briggs in Field
and Stream Magazine, “He made a
cast of about sixty feet, started to
retrieve his line, and feeling a tug
struck hard. There was considerable
commotion on the end of the line und
suddenly the fisherman became very
much excited. ‘My line's going right
up in the air, he shouted.
“Strange as this sounded, it was
true. The line had indeed traveled
from rhe surface of the water to a
position almost directly overhead.
The fisherman managed to get hold of
the er. of the line, and dropping his
rod he started to haul in hand over
hand. In an amazingly short space of
time there was another occupant in
the boat. It proved to be a night
heron, which had nailed the frog.”
Which only proves that almost any-
thing may happen on a fishing trip!”
Prized by Numismatists
The Numismatist says: “From a
source believed reliable it is said that
five nickels, in proof, of the Liberty-
head type, dated 1913, were struck
early in that year. These are all the
genuine Liberty-head sype dated 1913
that are known. None passed into cir-
culation. The five pieces ware ob-
tained from the mint by a gentleman
who showed them at the Detroit con-
vention of he A. N. A, in August,
1913. Nothing more was heard of them
until in December, 1923, when a gn-
tleman living in Philadelphia adver-
tised in the Numismatist as follows:
‘For sale, five J§-cent Liberty-head
1913 coins, proof, the only five-cent
Liberty-head coins of this design and
year in existence.’ These were un-
doubtedly the five referred to, There
is no record of the whereabouts of the
presert owner of these coins.”
Not a Pet “Kitty”
Although Leslie Pizer was only two
years old he was just as keen a con-
noisseur of cats as the next young
man, so when the biggest cat Leslie
had ever seen padded into the back-
yard and came right up to lie down
beside him Leslie was just about the
proudest chap in vondon. Such a
handsome and affectionate cat should
be petted and otherwise encouraged,
Leslie thought—but the cat thought
otherwise and responded to the touch
of the little hand with a disconcert-
ing growl, Leslie's mother appeared
on the scene in time to snatch her
child from the menacing teeth of a
leopard. It had escaped from a neigh-
boring dealer in wild animals,
You Never Can Tell
She came into the drug store several
times a week to use the telephone
booth, giving as a good rerson that
the rates were lower than if she tele-
phoned from her apartment, and the
service more prompt.
On every occasion she opened the
door as far as it would go and looked
carefully into the corners of the booth,
so unfailingly that a clerk one day
asked the reason.
“Seventeen years ago,” she replied,
“1 dropped 5 cents on the floor while
telephoning, and when [ picked it up
I found 30 cents lying right beside it.
1 thought it might possibly happen
again.”
Expensive Yards
Two rival western teams both boast-
ed of the prowess of their foothall
teams, and a game was arranged.
One town bet quite heavily on its
team, and to make the result fairly
certain, hired a celebrated professional
player. Early in the game he made a
sensational run of 70 yards to a touch-
down—and to the surprise of the spec-
tators, was immediately removed from
the game. The manager gave this ex-
planation:
“Why, we guaranteed to pay that
guy at the rate of a dollar a yard.
Do you think I want to see the town
go broke?”
Daring and Happiness
Girls of today are more daring, but
they also are franker. gayer, healthier,
and amply more able to take care of
themselves, thinks a critic of tife, writ-
ing to the Woman's Home Companion.
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a
S the Court of Common Pleas of Cen-
tre County, to me directed, will be ex-
posed to public sale at the Court House
in the Borough of Bellefonte, on
- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th, 1928.
The Following Property:
All those eighteen certain lots of ground
known as Lots, Nos, 18, 75, 96, 121, 124,
125, 191, 192, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200,
201, 202, and 203, on a plot or plan of lots
designated as “Beaver Lawn,” State Col-
lege, Centre County, Pa., more particular-
ly bounded and described as follows:
Lot No. 18:—BEGINNING at a point
20 feet south from an iron pin located at
the intersection of Calder Alley and High
Street and extending back in a southerly
direction 48.55 feet along High Street to
line of Lot No. 19; thence along line of
lot No. 19, in an easterly direction 120
feet to a sixteen foot alley; thence in a
northerly direction along last mentioned
alley 39.4 feet to Calder Alley; thence in
a westerly direction along Calder Alley,
120 feet to High Street, and the point of
beginning.
Lot. No. 75:—BEGINNING at corner of
lots Nos. 75 and 76 on Markle Street;
thence in a northerly direction along
Markle Street 42.5 feet to the south bound-
ary of lot No. 74, 130 feet to the eastern
boundary of lot No. 73; thence along line
of lot No. 73 in a southerly direction 40
feet to line of lot No.
the point of beginning.
Lot No. 96: —BEGINNING at a point
on Centre Street 70 feet south from an
iron pin located at the corner of Centre !
Street and Markle Street and extending
in a southerly direction 40 feet to the
north boundary of lot No. 97; thence along
said boundary in a westerly direction 150
feet to a 20 foot alley; thence along said
alley in a northerly direction 40 feet to
the south boundary of lot No. 95; thence
along the last mentioned boundary in an
easterly direction 150 feet to Centre Street,
and the point of beginning.
Lot No. 121: —BEGINNING at the corn-
er of lot No. 121 and 122, on Foster Ave-
nue; thence in a southerly direction along
line of lots No. 122, 174 feet to a 20 foot
alley; thence along line of said 20 foot al-
ley in a westerly direction 90 feet to the
eastern boundary of lot No. 120; thence
in a northerly direction along the line ot
lot No 120, 186 feet, more or less to l'os-
ter Avenue, thence in an easterly diree-
tion, 48 feet along Koster Avenue to the
point of beginning.
|
Lots Nos. 124 and 125, BEGINNING at
the corner of lots Nos. 123, and 124, on
Prospect Avenue; thence in an easterly
direction 102 feet along Prospect Ave-
ue, to the west boundary of lot No. 126,
thence along said boundary of lot No.
126, in a northerly direction 200 feet to
a 20 foot alley; thence in a westerly di- '
rection along said alley, 100 feet more
or less, to line of lot No. 123, thence along
line of lot No. 123, in a southerly direc-
tion 216 feet to Prospect Avenue to the
point of beginning.
Lots Nos. 191 and 192, BEGINNING at a
point on the northwest corner of Hamil-
ton Avenue and Oak Street, 50 feet from
an iron pin located at the northeast cor-
ner of Hamilton Avenue and Oak Street
and extending in a northerly direction
150 feet along Oak Street to a 20 foot al-
ley; thence in a westerly direction along
the said alley 155 feet to another 20 foot
alley; thence along the last mentioned al-
ley in a southerly direction 165 feet to
Hamilton Avenue; thence in an Easterly
direction 100 feet along Hamilton Avenue
to the point of beginning.
Lots Nos. 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200,
201, 202 and 203; Beginning at a corner
of lots Nos. 193, and 194 on Hamilton
Avenue; thence in an easterly direction
along the line of Hamilton Avenue; 500
feet to corner of Hamilton Avenue, and
Spring Street; thence along line of Spring
Street in a northerly direction 140 feet to
a 20 foot alley; thence along said 20 foot
alley in a westerly direction 500 feet more
or less, to line of Lot No. 193; thence in
a southcr!v direction along the east line
of lot No. 193, in a southerly direction 150
feet to Hamilton Avenue the place of be-
ginning.
All those certain lots of ground known
as Lots 19, 119, 120, on the plot or plan
of lots designated as “Beaver Lawn” State
College, Pennsylvania, more particularly
bounded and described, as follows, to
wit :—
Lot No. 19: —BEGINNING at a point
68.55 feet South from an iron pin located
at the intersection of Calder Alley and
High Street; thence in a Southerly di-
rection forty-five feet along High Street
to point at line of lot No. 20; thence East
along line of lot No. 20, one hundred and
twenty feet to a sixteen foot alley; thence
North along said sixteen foot alley forty-
five feet to line of lot No. 18; thence West
a2iong line of lot No. 18, one hundred and
twenty feet to High Street and the point
of beginning.
Lot No. 119: —BEGINNING at a point
one hundred and fifty feet West from iron
pin located at the Southwest corner of
Foster Avenue and Markle Street and ex-
tending in a Southerly direction two hun-
dred feet to a twenty foot alley; thence
in a Westerly direction along said Alley,
thirty-five feet to the Intersection of an-
other twenty foot alley; thence along the
last mentioned alley thirty feet in a north-
erly direction to the boundary of lot No.
118; thence in a Northerly direction one
hundred and eight feet along the bound-
ary of lot No. 118 to Foster Avenue;
thence in an Easterly direction fifty feet
along Foster Avenue, to the point of be-
ginning.
Lot No. 123:—BEGINNING at an iron
pin located on the Northeast corner of
Prospect Avenue and a twenty foot Al-
ley; thence in an Easterly direction for-
ty-eight feet along Prospect Avenue to
the western boundary of lot No. 124;
thence along said line of lot No. 124 in a
Northerly direction two hundred and six-
teen feet to a twenty foot alley; thence
in a Westerly direction along said Alley
fifty feet to another twenty foot alley;
thence along last mentioned Alley in a
Southerly direction two hundred and
twenty-five feet to Prospect Avenue and
the point of beginning.
All those three certain lots of ground
known as Lots, 20, 92, and 122 on plot or
plan of lots designated as Beaver Lawn,
State College, Centre County, Pennsyl-
vania, more particularly bounded and
described, as follows: —
First:—Lot No. 20: Bounded and de-
scribed, as follows, to wit: —
BEGINNING at a corner at the Inter-
section of High Street and a fifteen foot
Alley; thence along line of said fifteen
foot Alley one hundred and twenty feet
in an Easterly direction to corner at In-
tersection of lot No. 19 and lot No. 20 on
teen foot alley in the rear of said lot;
thence North along said sixteen foot al-
ley 45.93 feet to corner at intersection of
lot No. 20 and lot No. 19: thence along
the Southern boundary of line of lot No.
19 in a Westerly direction 120 feet to in-
tersection o flot No. 19 and lot Neo. 20 on
High Street; thence along High Street,
in a Southerly direction forty-five feet to
corner of High Street and a fifteen foot
alley, the place of beginning.
Second :— Lot No. 92: Bounded and de-
scribed, as follows, to wit: —
BEGINNING at a point 100 feet North
from an iron pin located at a street corn-
er and extending in an Easterly direction
one hundred and ninety feet to a twenty
foot alley; thence in a Northerly direc-
tion fifty feet along the said Alley to the
Southern boundary of lot No. 91; thence
along the said boundary one hundred and
eight feet in a Westerly direction to
Markle Street thence along Markle Street
fifty feet in a Southerly direction to the
point of beginning.
Third :(—Lot No. 122, Bounded and de-
scribed, as follows, to wit: —
BEGINNING at an iron pin located at
the Southwest corner of Foster Avenue
and Markle Street; and extending in a
Southerly direction one i.undred and six-
ty-five feet along Markle Street to a twen-
ty foot alley; thence along the said Alley
in a Westerly direction eighty-twe and
one-half feet to the Eastern boundary of
lot No. 121; thence in a Northerly direc-
tion along the last named boundary, ap-
proximately one hundred and eighty feet
to Foster Avenue; thence in an Easterly
direction fifty-seven feet along Foster
Avenue to the place of beginning.
Seized, taken in execution to be sold as
the property of J. M. Stewart or J. Max
Stewart.
Terms of sale—Cash,
Sale to commence at 1:30 o'clock p. m,
of said day.
H. E. DUNLAP, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte, Pa.,
August 20th, 1828 73-33-3t.
writ of Fieri Facias issued out of |
76; thence in an
easterly direction along the said line of |
lot No. 76; 144 feet to Markle Street and |
—— NE
| ——George McKenzie of Philadsl-
phia was young and an aspiring auto-
| bile speeder until Sunday. Now he is
| dead.
——The Watchman gives all the
news while it is news.
peo
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
|
|
|
XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Estate of
Emma H. Kinne, late of Milesburg
Borough, Centre County, Pennsl-
vania, deceased. Letters testamentary
having been granted by the Register of
Wills of Centre County to the undersign-
ed in the above estate, all persons having
claims or demands against the estate of
the said decedent are requested to make
known the same, and all persons indebted
to the said decedent are requested to
make payment thereof without delay, to
the undersigned Executors.
GREGG BROTHERLIN,
P. 0. Box 539, Pittsburgh, Pa.
AUGUSTA C. SHOEMAKER,
Executors.
Blanchard & Blanchard, Attys.
Public Sale
of House and Lot in Port Matilda
Notice is hereby given that the under-
signed, J. C. Weston, Trustee of the Es-
state of Susan E. Price, late of the Town-
ship of Worth, County of Centre, State of
Pennsylvania, Deceased, in pursuance of
an order issued out of the Orphans’ Court
of Centre County, Pa., will expose to pub-
lic sale, on the premises hereinafter de-
scribed
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1928,
at 2:30 o'clock p. m., in the village of Port
Matilda, Centre County, Pa., all that cer-
tain messuage, tenement and lot of ground
situate in the said Village, bounded and
described, as follows :—
Beginning on Main Street corner of
Cherry Street, thence East along Cher-
ry Street 195 feet to Wood Street, thence
along Wood Street South 180 feet to line
of lot No. 113, thence West along the
line of lot No. 113, 195 feet to Main
Street, thence along Main Street 180 feet
to Cherry Street, the place of beginning;
being lot No’s 107, 109, and 111, as
| shown on the plot or plan of the Vil-
| lage of Port Matilda, Centre County
Pa., having thereon erected a dwelling
' house and other outbuildings.
TERMS OF SALE: —One Hundred and
Fifty Dollars to be paid in cash when the
property is knocked down; the remainder
of the purchase money to be paid on con-
firmation of sale by the Court and de-
i livery of the deed by the Trustee.
73-33-3t. J. C. WESTON, Trustee,
| “SUPREME AUTHORITY” |
WEBSTER’S
NEW INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
—~THE MERRIAM WEBSTER
Because
Hundreds of Supreme Court
Judges concur in highest praise
of the work as their Aut . EB
The Presidents of all leading Uni-
versities, Colleges, and Normal [
Schools give their hearty indorse-
ment.
All States that have adopted a
large dictionary as standard have
selected Webster's New Interna-
tional.
The Schoolbooks of the Country §
adhere to the Merriam-Webster §
system of diacritical marks. 3
The Government Printing Office
at Washington uses it as authority.
WRITE for a sample page of the New
Words, specimen of Regular and India
happy
cereal will give
Biscuits.
Ca
Bellefonte, Pe. '
—Get your job work done here.
seam
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
OTICE.—IN THE COURT OF COM-
| MON PLEAS OF CENTRE COUN-
| TY, NO. 218, SEPTEMBER TERM,
i 1928 —Notice is hereby given that applica-
! tion will be made to the above Court on
| Monday, September 10, 1928, at 10 o'clock
+ a. m., under the “Corporation Act of 1874,”
‘of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
and its supplements thereto, for the char-
ter of an intended corporation, to be call-
ed the, “Mountain Top Fire Company,”
the character and object of which Zs to
maintain an organization for the purpose
of protection against fire of the build-
ings situated in the Southern end of Rush
Township, Centre County, and to possess
and enjoy all the rights, benefits, and
privileges of the said Act of Assembly and
its supplements.
Proposed charter is now on file in Pro-
thonotary’s office.
EDWARD J. THOMPSON,
73-32-3t Solicitor.
OR
Dry Cleaned?
The only difference between
a brand new suit and one
that has been dry cleaned
by us is the difference be-
tween $1.75 and whatever
you usually pay for a new
suit.
Try Us and See
Phone 362-R
To keep the
children
Warm days need not make
youngsters fretful. Give :
them food that they are
sure to digest. Light tasty bis.
cuits of Shredded Wheat
in a bowl of cool milk! They
will enjoy chewing the
toasted shreds of pure, one
hundred per cent whole
wheat. And this delicious
energy and vitality to be
active the whole day long.
Ask your grocer
for the big pack-
age of 12 full size
Shredded Wheat
Made by The Shredded Wheat Company
at Niagara Falls wo Visitors Welcome
Stickler & Koons
8 West Bishop St.
Cleaners - - Dyers - - Tailors
Hat Renovators
sm Ee
CHICHESTER S PILLS
Jiadices Ask your Dru
— s Ribbon.
NaN Take no other. Buy of
Dougyist, Aol Ones ren g
for
them the