Bruna pn Bellefonte, Pa., August 23, 1929. AE Oats EE ————————— ATIENTS TREATED AT COUNTY HOSPITAL Ralph Neff, of Centre Hall, became surgical patient on Monday of last gek. ‘Harriet Johnston, eight-year-old iughter of Prof. and Mrs. L. F. 'hnston, of State College, became a rgical patient on Monday of last sek and was discharged the follow- g day. Mrs. Harrison Johnston, of Benner wnship, underwent surgical treat- ent on Monday of last week and as discharged the following day. Mrs. Mary Lammy and infant, ife and son of Frank Lammy, of ew Holland, Pa., were discharged 1 Tuesday of last week. G. Harold Osman, of Benner town- ip, was admitted on Tuesday of st week as a surgical patient. Orvis L. Boyer, five-year-old son of r. and Mrs. Lester Boyer, of Mo- annon, was admitted on Tuesday last week for medical treatment d was discharged on Sunday. Mrs. James H. Fulton, of State )llege, became a surgical patient on 1iesday of last week. Mrs. Russell L. Richards, of Ty- ne, was discharged on Wednesday last week, after having undergone rgical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. James Dean, of Penn- lvania Furnace, are receiving con- atulations on the birth of a son, at e hospital on Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Fred Corl, of Spring township, 13 admitted on Wednesday of last sek as a medical patient. Howard Corl, aged seven years, son Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Corl, of Ben- r township, who has been a sur- cal patient for the past two weeks, 1s discharged on Wednesday of last ek. James Blackwood, of Unionville, a rgical patient for the past three seks, was discharged on Wednesday last week. Lewis Handman, of Cleveland, rio, was discharged on Thursday of st week, after undergoing surgical satment for a day as the result of . automobile accident on Snow Shoe >untain. Paul Cost, also of Cleve- 1d, was discharged the same day, ter receiving surgical treatment for juries received in the same acci- nt. James Watson, of Pittsburgh, was mitted on Wednesday of last week » medical treatment. Miss Alice Ruppert, of Huston wnship, became a surgical patient Wednesday of last week. Lawrence Barto, five-year-old son Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Barto, of Fer- son township, became a medical tient on Wednesday of last week. Miss Frances Brooks, daughter of :. and Mrs. Clyde Brooks, of Pot- + township, was discharged on ursday of last week, after having dergone surgical treatment. Malcolm Peters, of Milesburg, a ydical patient for the past two eks, was discharged on Thursday last week. Mary Ann €herry, five year old ughter of Mr. and Mrs.” Melvin erry, of Bellefonte, was discharg- on Friday, after having undergone jay’s surgical treatment. Malcolm Clevenstine, of = Walker wnship, became a medical patient Thursday of last week. Mrs. Nancy Hugg, of Union town- p, was admitted on Thursday of t week as a medical patient. Mrs. Wade Harpster, of State Col- 'e, who had been a surgical pa- nt, was discharged on Friday. Lewis Neff, of Snow Shoe Intersec- n, was admitted on Saturday as a «dical patient. : Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Marquebeck, of ite College, are receiving congratu- ions over the arrival of a baby y, born on Sunday night. There were thirty-two patients in + hospital at the beginning of this ek. ANY WOOD CHOPPERS AT WOOD CHOPPING BEE. Spelling bees and corn husking 3s were very much in vogue forty fifty years ago and always proved ite interesting. It is so rare that > hears of such things in this day i age that when something is done it recalls the past it seems likea f out of an old-time book. Last Thursday evening about enty-five wood choppers gathered the home of Paul Stover, who lives the Joseph Eckley farm in Bush low, and sawed and chopped ugh of stove wood to last the nily through the winter. Mr. yver is a younger brother of Lloyd Stover, recorder of Centre county, i for a year or two lived out near tsburgh. His health became im- red while living there and last ing he moved back to Centre mty and located on the Eckley 'm where he is strugeline to make iving and regain his health. It was help him out with his winter's wlv of fuel that the chopping bee « held. ost of the wood chovopers. manv whom were relatives and friends Mr. Stover from Coleville, were vompanied bv their wives and iehters who took alone well filled ikets and a big sunver was also a ture of the chopping bee. ~Subseribe for the Watchman, SESQUIPLANE “SUN GOD” FLEW OVER BELLEFONTE. The sesquiplane “Sun God,” in which Nick Mamer and Art Walker set out to make a non-stop flight from Spokane, Wash., to New York and return, by refueling in the air, had to turn tail, on Sunday night, after flying over Bellefonte to keep from being caught in a hard rain storm while crossing the Alleghenies. The fliers reached New York short- ly before five o'clock, Sunday after- noon, and after circling over the city and being refueled over Long Island left about seven o'clock on the west- ern flight. The pilots decided to fol- low the course of the airmail to Chicago and passed over Bellefonte about nine o'clock Sunday evening. They had not flown many miles when they were confronted by an on-com- ing storm and turning around they flew back over Bellefonte and on east. Just where they went is not known but they returned to Bellefonte about three o'clock Monday morning and for two hours circled around here un- til it became light enough for them to see the mountains when they headed west and disappeared on the continuation of their trip. MOTOR CLUB'S PICNIC LARGELY ATTENDED. The annual picnic of the Centre County Motor club, held at Hecla park, last Thursday, was largely at- tended and the program was varied enough to keep everybody in a regu- lar picnic humor. The league ball game between Bellefonte and Phil- ipsburg was interesting for Belle- fonters up to the eighth inning, as the home team had the advantage of a 7 to 2 score, but in the eighth Philipsburg scored five runs and won the game in the tenth. Trapshooters from Bellefonte, State College, Philipsburg and Pleas- ant Hill engaged in a clay pigeon | MAIN STREET IS THING OF PAST. Main street, like the town pump, has passed from American life. Villages and small towns are re- placing the traditional “main drag” with boulevards equipped to handle floods of traffic efficiently. Any man who hasn't been back to the old home since the war wouldn't recognize it. 9 All over America the revolution is | taking place. Old awnings, hitching posts, livery stables, basement barber shops, dingy pool halls and shabby second hand stores have been reno- vated, snappy new store fronts put in, store equipment modernized and beautified and many new and up-to-: date structures erected. Whatever paved roads have gone the change is especially to be noticed. The result is in journeying to the up-to-date village, town or city you find it built around a most modern business street. The styles they handle are the latest, so the little town girl in her finery can step out on the city’s boulevards and feel at home.” The chasm between the city and the country is rapidly vanishing. The country cousin is just as chic and self-confident as the city maiden, and the independent retail merchant in town and city is modernizing his stock salesmanship, advertising and service and is now more than hold- ing his own against the chain store invasion. TROTTERS TO DO NIGHT RACING. Following the example set by of- ficials of the Grand Circuit at Toledo, Ohio, the first night horse-racing program ever to be staged in New England will take place at the eighteenth = annual Houlton Fair August 27, 28 and 29, according to announcement by the Houlton Agri- cultural Society. Workmen have already begun the setting up of the necessary poles and the laying of | electric lines. | Horse racing at night was first staged at Toledo merely as an ex- shoot, fifty targets to the man. There periment to stimulate interest in rac- were five men on each team and ing. It proved to be so successful Philipsburg won with a total of 204 that lovers of horse racing began to out of a possible 250; Bellefonte was request it as a permanent feature. second with a score of 192, Pleasant Hill 191, and State College 159. R. T. Terry, of Bellefonte, and Slagle, of State College, made the best in- dividual records, each one breaking 45 targets. SATE COLLEGE TO WADDLE ROAD TO BE COMPLETED Under tion of $375,088.55 for surfacing earth roads in the State the Centre County Commissioners have decided that part of the money that comes to this county shall be used on the route from State College to Waddle. Accordingly work will be started very soon. Completion of this stretch, most of which is now im- proved between Potters Mills on traffic route No. 53 and State College, will afford a new outlet for the College to points along the Bald Eagle moun- tain and a shorter route to Tyrone. The new road will make State Col- lege the center of four roads follow- ing virtually the four points of the compass. Residents of Waddle and other Patton township people will have a direct connection with the Lakes-to-Sea Highway eastward and virtually an air-line route to the State Capitol, in contrast to the present round-about f#rail via Bellefonte or Warriors Mark and Water Street. KEEP ROADS OPEN AT ALL TIMES IS WARNING. Creation of many new airports in Pennsylvania, the majority of which adjoining one or more state highway routes, has increased the hazards of travel along these thoroughfares, be- cause operators of motor vehicles disobey provisions of the law for- bidding interference with traffic. Captain Wilson G. Price, superin- tendent of the State highway patrol, this week cautioned drivers who park not only near airports, but on the State highway generally. The law provides, he said, that the roads must be kept open for the orderly passage of two way traffic. It is not permissible that machines be parked on each side of a highway so as to force lines of traffic to rub hubs and scrape fenders. The road must be kept open. Owners of land- ing fields, ball parks, recreation grounds, picnicking places, eating stands, gasoline filling stations and other magnets for travelers, should bear in mind that fact. It would not be to their advantage were officers stationed along the road to keep traffic moving. THE MENACE OF TAXATION. No person can escape being affect- ed by the cost of government. It is reflected in employment conditions, the purchasing power of wages. in- dustry, activity, and perhaps most important, the cost of the necessities and luxuries of life. : When the individual is over-taxed the whole community suffers. And when a business is over-taxed, the cost must be passed on to the ulti- mate consumer, who pays all over- head. There are localities in the United States where vast acreage of land has been returned to the State or county, seized for non-payment of taxes. Industries are driven away. The unemployment probiem appears. The inevitable result is stagnation. At the present time the small town is offered an unrivaled oppor- tunity to progress and prosper, be- cause of the trend of manufacturers away from the great centers of pop- ulation. And the industrial cities of the future will be those which, along with the natural rural advantages, have a reasonable tax rate and eco- nomical government. the Wheeler-Flynn alloca- | | | | Plans formulated at the Toledo track will be followed there. It will be necessary to erect 52 poles on the inside of the track. These poles will be 25 feet in height and each will be surmounted by a large reflector be- hind a 1000-watt light. The poles will be so arranged that the circles of light from each bulb will overlap to eliminate shadows. Maine and New Brunswick rac- ing stables have evinced much in- terest in the experiment and it is expected that there will be a regu- lar card of racing on each night of the three days fair. —Read the Watchman for the news $ to be free of advantages of Just think how wonderful it would be never to scour a sauce- pan again . . . to know that the freshly painted kitchen walls . would never be smoked up... fumes. These are just a few of the Electricity gives such clean heat that you can take a pan di- rectly off the range and place it WEST PENN J 1879—-LIGHT'S LUMVB T1-16-tf ER? Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 43. W.R. Shope Lumber Co. : Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofir,, m——— CAR INSPECTION CHARGE UNKNOWN. Whether charge may be made for inspecting motor vehicles and their equipment during the compulsory inspection period recently announced by Governor John S. Fisher is a mat- ter for the individual inspector to decide, according to Commissioner Benjamin G. Eynon of the Motor Ve- hicle Bureau. “The provisions in the Motor Code authorizing these inspections,” Ey- non said, “contains nothing whatever concerning such a fee, but rather in confined to the statement that upon proclamation by the Governor it shall be the duty of this depart- ment to compel every resident own- er of a motor vehicle being operated in this Commonwealth to submit the vehicle to such inspection of its mech- anism and equipment as may be designated by the department. “Therefore we are not in a posi- tion definitely to recommend to of- fical inspection stations that a fee should be charged although we are of the impression that the average motorists would not object to paying a reasonable fee in order to ascer- tain whether or not his car is in safe conidtion. On the other hand, some portion of the motoring public may feel that the compulsory fea- ture of the inspection is being used as a means to require them to pay his fee. Certainly no one expects to reecive much for nothing these days, and effective work is worth its price, i but because the law makes no men- tion of this particular feature we must of necessity leave the matter to the discretion of the official in- specting station.” The period beginning Oct. 1 and ending Nov. 15 has been fixed as the time for inspection. Nearly 2,000,000 motor cars and trucks are to be ex- amined in forty working days, or 50,000 per day. emer eee PLAN ROAD REPAIRS. Centre County Commissioners have begun negotiations with the State | highway department to enable the county to make use of a part of its allocation of $19,000 in State-aid funds. They plan to rebuild the | Boalsburg Pike. This road begins at Axemann, extends over Rishell’s Hill and ends at Shiloh Church, where it intersects the State highway between | Pleasant Gap and State College. BELLEFONTE COOKS ELECTRICALLY . . bere is why! {; There's no smudge, smoke .. or fumes in electric cooking on a snowy ta and curtains. all worry about electric cooking! COLDETS Ju smudging the linen. It does not cause sooty deposits on walls Moreover, the heat is kept. . . where it belongs . . . in the per- fectly insulated electric oven. Even on baking day, the kitchen stays cool and comfortable. And not one bit of current is wasted. Cook electrically for economy! POWER CO STATE FORESTRY SCHOOLS ARE FINALLY MERGED. Announcement is made of definite plans for the use of the new Penn- sylvania State Forest school which has resulted from the merging by legislative action of the Mont Alto and State College forestry instructional facilities. Freshman foresters are to spend the first year and summer in camp at Mont Alto and then com- plete their course at State College where they will be given opportun- ity to specialize as professional for- esters, as lumber industry or wood utilization specialists, or for private forestry work. 5 A two year course for forest rang- ers and forest guards, to be given at Mont Alto, is provided for those not prepared to enter the four year course. Senior foresters will spend their last two months at Mont Alto developing a working plan of the State forests in that section. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR JURY COMMISSIONER. We are authorized to announce that candidate for nomination for Jury Com- missioner on the Democratic ticket, sub- ject to the primaries of the party to be held Tuesday, September 10, 1929. Mr. Condo will appreciate your support. FOR TAX COLLECTOR We are authorized to announce that Edward Klinger, of east Howard street, will be a candidate for the nomination for Tax Collector on the Republican tick- ket, at the Primaries to be held on Tues- day, September 17th. We are authorized to announce that W. M. Bottorf will be a candidate for the nomination for Tax Collector for the Bor- ough of Bellefonte, on the Democratic ticket, at the primaries to be held Tues- day, September 10, 1929. We are authorized to announce Orian A. Kline as a candidate for Tax Collec- tor of the Borough of Bellefonte, subject to the rules governing the Republican Fj naty election to held Tuesday, We are authorized to announce that Sarah M. Love will be a candidate for the nomination for Tax Collector in Bellefonte borough, on the Republican ticket, at the primaries to be held September 10, 1929. CHICHESTER S PILLS Ladicet Ask your Druggist le BE Brrr Si Seng known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable years SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWNERE ES » % ble cloth without BILEE-—~1929 James C. Condo, of Gregg township, is a' ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW ci Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in alf courts. Office, room 18 Crider’'s Ex- change. 51. T KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt atten- tion given all legal business en High 57-44 to his care. Offices—No. 5, East street. M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All professional Offices on second floor of Temple business will receive prompt attention. -5-1y G. RUNKLE.— Attorney-at-L a w, Consultation in English and Ger- man. Office in Crider’s Exchan Bellefonte, Pa. ——————— PHYSICIANS S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residence. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. State College Holmes Bldg. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- D* Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. C isfaction guaranteed. Frames =~ placed and lenses matched. Casebeer Bld: . High : St., Bellefonte, Pa. 1-22-tf VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State Colle; every day except Saturday, Belle- fonte, in the Garbrick building opposite the Court House, Wednesday afternoons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Bell Phone. 68-40 FEEDS! Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds Purina Cow Chow, 349, $3.10 per H. Purina Cow Chow, 24% 2.80 per H. Purina Calf Meal 5.00 per HL. Wayne Dairy, 82% - 3.00 per H. Wayne Dairy, 24% - - 2.70 per H. Wayne Pig Meal, 189, - 8.10 per H. Wayne Egg Mash - - 8.25 per H. Wayne All Mash Grower 8.50 per H. Wayne Calf Meal - 4.25 per H. Wayne Horse feed - 2.60 per HL. Wagner’s Dairy, 30% - 2.80 per H. Wagner's Dairy, 229 - 2.50 per H. Wagner's Dairy, 169, - 2.20 per H. Wagner's Pig Meal - 2.80perH. Wagner's Egg Mash - 2.80 per H. Cotton Seed Meal - - 280perH. Oil Meal - =- =- - 8.20perH. Gluten Feed - = = 2.50 per H. Flax Meal - - 2.40 per H. Alfalfa Meal - - 225perH. Meat Meal, 459, - - 4.00perH. Tankage, 609%, - - 4: 2p per H. . Oyster Shell - - 1l9perH.. Stock Salt - - 110porH. We have a full line of pou..." and stock feeds on hand at all times at the right prices. Let us grind your corn and oats: - and sell you the high protein feeds and make up your own mixtures. We- charge nothing for mixing. We deliver at a charge of $1.00 per ton extra. : If You Want Good Bread or Pastry TRY “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR C. Y. Wagner & Co. ie 86-11-1y». BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating phe Sx Vapor....Steam $ By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces § Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES 08-15-t2. oath Cheerfully ssa Promptly Furnished “