Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 15, 1929, Image 3

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“Bellefonte, Pa., November 15, 1929
PATIENTS TREATED
AT COUNTY HOSPITAL
John C. Marks, of Tyrone, was
admitted on Monday of last week
for medical treatment. :
Clair J. Flick, of Union township,
was - admitted on Monday of last
week as a surgical patient.
Mrs. Ralph Tressler and infant
son were discharged on Tuesday of
last week.
Wilbur Jackson, of College town-
ship, a surgical patient, was dis-
charged on Tuesday of last week.
Edward Meinzer, a surgical pa-
tient, was discharged on Tuesday of
last week.
Mrs. Bossert DeHass and infant
son, of Bellefonte, were discharged
on Tuesday of last week.
Chester Roup, of State College, be-
came a surgical patient on Tuesday
of last week. .
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Corman, of
State College, are receiving congrat-
ulations upon the birth of a daugh-
ter, on Tuesday of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bathgate, of
College township, are rejoicing over
the birth of a son, on Wednesday
of last week.
Mrs. Nancy Clements, of Belle-
fonte, became a medical patient on
Thursday of last week.
Miss Eva Bryan, of Milesburg, be-
came a surgical patient on last
Thursday.
Miss Lauretta Dufford, of State
College, was admitted last Thursday
for surgical treament.
Mrs. John Bickel, of Curtin town-
ship, a medical patient for the past
three weeks, was discharged last
Thursday.
Bond Brungard, of State College,
a surgical patient for the past week,
was discharged last Thursday.
Mrs. William Mongan and infant,
of Howard, were discharged last
Thursday.
Michael Levinski, of Scranton, a
surgical patient for the past week,
was discharged on Wednesday of
last week.
Jean White, seven-year-old daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray White, of
Bellefonte, was discharged last |
Thursday, after having undergone
surgical treatment.
Alice Bamford, of State College,
i
Moon and Earthquakes
After studying the records of more
than 1,200 earthquakes in California
which have occurred since 1812. a Pa.
cific coast scientist comes to the in-
teresting conclusion that all the quakes
came when the moon was in a cer:
tain quarter. The quakes occur on a
fault-line, or crack in the substructure
of the earth’s crust. It was found
that when the fault-line ran in a north-
westerly direction the earthquake
would come when the moon was be-
tween the meridian and the western
horizon, or when it had not yet arisen
FARM NOTES.
—Most men will do fairly well to
keep an ordinary supply of live stock
in good condition and, paying its
way.
—This year there is a nation-wide
movement among sheep raisers to
put on a docking and castrating
campaign.
—As in the case of all other live
stock, care and attention are the
main essentials in producing good
hogs for early market.
—A good hog oiler kept filled with
old crank-case oil, diluted with coal
and was in the directly opposite pe- oil, and a little coal tar dip added,
sition.
When the quake occurred on a fault-
line running east and west, it was
found that the moon would be in the '
corresponding quadrants of the sky.
will hold the lice in check and keep
down mange or scurf.
—Since prevention is always the
; shespest remy, all sheep should be
; carefu twi ing,
Four out of five of the strongest goon Lo rine A a ne
is
shocks occurring in one place would small, the benefit considerable.
come when the moon was in the
same position it had been in during !
the main shock.
lationship between the moon's posi-
tion and earthquakes is so consistent
has not yet been explained.
|
Took Pessimistic View
of Wire Communication
A number of prominent men of Pro-
fessor Morse’s period were dubious
about the practicability of the tele:
graph and believed it to have very
restricted limits. In view of the de-
velopment of this form of communi-
cation and its present high efficiency
it is interesting to note some of these
early comments, J. Fennimore Cooper
author of the famous Leather-stocking
Tales, wrote to Morse on January 31.
1838, as follows: “My dear friend: 1
wish you all success with the tele:
graph, which might be made very use
ful for long distances. Your difficulty
will be in communicating between
more than two stations, for half a
dozen sparks traveling on the same
wire will play the devil with the reg-
isters.” The Western Union today
sends as many as eight messages over
one wire at the same time by ingeni
ous automatic devices,
li
Chocolate Ancient Beverage
Chocolate was a favored drink on
this continent long before the arrival
of the white man. It was extensively
used by the Aztecs and before them
the Toltees. A Florentine who had
resided in the West Indies finally in-
was admitted on Friday for medical
treatment.
Walter Fuller, of Bellefonte, was |
admitted on Friday for surgical |
treatment and was discharged the
following day.
Mrs. Sarah Adams, of State Col-
lege, became a medical patient on
Friday.
Mrs. Joseph Forster, of Bellefonte,
became a surgical patient on Friday.
‘Mrs. Charles Williamson and child,
of Bellefonte, were discharged on
Friday.
Mrs. Della Miller, of Bellefonte, a
surgical patient for the past four
weeks, was discharged on Friday.
Mrs. Hugh Atlee, of State College,
a surgical patient for the past elev-
en days, was discharged on Friday.
Patsy Sabit, of Benner township,
a medical patient for the past twelve
days, was discharged on Friday.
Mrs. John Shaw, of Snow Shoe
township, a medical patient for the
past twelve days, was discharged on
Friday.
Miss Alice Lewis, an instructress
in the Bellefonte High school, was
admitted on Saturday for surgical
treatment.
There were 34 patients in the hos-
pital at the beginning of this week.
J. 0. STUTSMAN GIVEN
: FEDERAL APPOINTMENT
Jesse O. Stutsman, former warden
at the Rockview penitentiary and
since retiring from that institution
a resident of Bellefonte, has been
appointed superintendent of the new
‘federal detention headquarters in
New York city, according to an an-
nouncement from Washington last
Friday. Mr. Stutsman has been
away from Bellefonte this week and
it has been impossible to ascertain
when he will enter upon the duties
of his appointment.
While serving as superintendent of
the Detroit house of correction Mr.
Stutsman was selected by Governor
Pinchot, shortly "after he became
Governor, as warden of Rockview
penitentiary to succeed John Fran-
cies, resigned. He remained at
‘Rockview through practically all of
the Pinchot administration then re-
signed. He moved into Bellefonte,
having purchased the old Gordon
home, on Curtin street. During his
residence in Bellefonte Mr. Stutsman
has devoted some of his time to
writing, having written a book on
prison management and care of in-
mates.
ee A
——A large black dog bit Emmy
Lou Craig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Craig, of Curtin street, on the
right leg, just as she left her home
to go to school last Friday after-
noon. The dog sank its fangs into
the tender flesh and it was with
difficulty that it was driven away by
other children. A hastily summoned
physician cauterized the wound and
so far the little girl has shown no
ill effects. The dog is a stray, with-
out any collar or tag andso far has
not been located in Bellefonte. It
is just possible he is a country can-
ine who followed someone into town,
but it would be well to keep an eye
| its use gradually spread through Lu
troduced chocolate into Italy, whence
rope, though not without opposition.
Its introduction into Prussia was pro
hibited by Frederick the Great. A fa-
mous Paris physician, Bochot, on the
other hand, proclaimed e¢acao one of
the most noble of discoveries, far
more worthy to be the food of the
gods than nectar and ambrosia, and
Linnaeus, noted Swedish botanist, who
gave cacao its scientific christening,
coined a name, “Theobroma,” from
two Greek words, meaning “food for
the gods.” which remains its secien-
tific name today.
A Promise
Although she had never been mar-
ried at all her views on remarriage
were very strict. So, of course, she
had to call on the young divorcee and
tell her so.
Frankness was one of the virtues on
which she prided herself, so the con-
versation had not progressed far be-
fore she declared to the young bride,
“Pardon my saying so, but don’t you
think you might have waited more
than a month after your divorce to
marry your second husband?”
“Oh, do you really think s0?” re-
plied the bride, “I'll make it a point
to wait longer next time.”
Midget Kangaroos
Australia has more than 100 varie- |
ties of animals in which the mother
carries her young in a pouch on her
stomach, says James T. Nichols in
Successful Farming Magazine.
“The most noted of all these an}
mals is the kangaroo,” he writes, “of
which there are a half hundred varie-
ties. Some kangaroos are small as a
rat and others are so large that when
standing on their toes they are taller
than a man. Although a kangaroo is
a hardy animal, at birth it is very
small, often but little larger than a
mouse.”
Patience Is a Virtue
A rather unusual man once said te
the writer: “I let most of my mail
lie on my desk 30 days unanswered.
After that time I generally find little
of it needs to be answered.” This
habit is not without its drawbacks,
but there is something in it. Most of
the things that worry us are really
trivial. If we had the patience to go
slowly, to let them wait, to hold our
tongue, so many things would settle
themselves. So many things we argue
about and even quarrel about would
disappear if left alone,—Philadelphia
Star.
Primitive Home Life
morning. The Samoans have no bath-
tubs. They bathe daily in the cool
mountain streams. Their furnishings
are limited to pots or gourds. Pebbles
on the bare ground replace carpets.
The Fgyptian peasant along the Nile
lives in a clay house. His bed and
chair are a ledge of earth on the side
of the room. In Arabia, dinner is
served in a huge pot into which the
diners dig with their hands and bring
out for such a dog, as he ought to
be captured and killed.
forth their portion.
—At the earliest possible age the
Just why this re- | colt should be fed oatmeal and bran,
; oil meal, corn and legume hay. He
may be weaned at four to six months
jo! age, depending on his condition.
—Traditionally sheepmen have be-
i lieved that the best sheep have cov-
| erings of wool over their faces.
An-
other common belief was that folds
around the neck and shoulders of a
sheep was an indication of a fleece
of superior quality and value. An-
other idea commonly held was that
the weather exercised a controlling
influence in the quality and quantity
of wool. .
Research work by the United
States Department of Agriculture
has disproved two of these ideas and
confirmed the other, but with a
highly important modification. To
bring out the facts, the department
workers have for years carried on
pains taking investigations, using
methods which they admit seem
wasteful and useless until the meth-
ods and results are understood.
The bureau of animal industry
maintains a flock of sheep in east-
ern Idaho. Each June at shearing
time each sheep is identified, weigh- |
ed, and sheared. The staple is meas-
ured. The fleece is weighed. A
sample is inclosed in a tin contain-
{er and sent to the United States Ex-
| periment farm, Beltsville, Md.
In
the wool laboratory skilled workers
dry the samples in an electric con-
ditioning oven and get the moisture-
free weight. They remove grease
with carbon tetrachloride and the
dirt by a special scouring process.
Another drying makes possible a de-
termination of the weight of clean
wool and of dirt. Thus it is possible
to compile a complete record of
each sheep's production each year
and for successive years.
These records have disproved the
first two ideas which were widely be-
lieved. Weather does make some dif-
ference in wool production, but there
is much more difference between in-
dividual sheep in one season than
there is between flocks in different :
This points the wisdom of |
: : colored like dawn, foaming with del-
constant culling of low-ylelding ewes toute Jace. She had brought it home,
seasons.
and selective breeding for heavy
fleece production. >
Application Or taese Iacts om the
sheep ranges is returning to sheep-
men each year many times the cost
. of the research, says E. W. Sheets,
| who is in charge of the Department
of Agriculture. :
—It has been demonstrated many
times by experiment stations as well
as by thousands of producers that
hogs do better and make larger gains
from a given amount of feed when
they have constant access to water.
Normally a hog drinks only small
gquantites at a time, but it likes to
drink often. It will drink several
times during one feeding period when
it can run to a self-feeder at will.
When the feed is thrown on the
ground or on a feeding floor where
the individual hog must eat incom-
petition with a large group it will so
long as there is grain to eat. But
when it can run to a self-feeder it
soon learns that there will be plenty
of feed left when it returns. Then it
begins to eat more deliberately and
to drink several times before it has
: satisfied its hunger.
—When steers are shipped to mar-
ket there is always some shrinkage
or loss in weight. By proper hand-
ling it is possible to reduce this loss.
Steers which have been getting a full
feed of corn and alfalfa hay should
have their grain somewhat reduced
a day or two before shipping and
given mostly prairie hay or fodder
in place of alfalfa. Steers which
have been getting a good deal of
silage should be fed dry fodder be-
fore shipment to market. Arrange
to ship so that the cattle will arrive
at the stock yards during the night
or early in the mo! so they can
take on a fill before the buyers bid
on them.
—Pullets can be taught to roost
but certain precautions must be tak-
en. ‘Much of the difficulty in teach-
ing pullets to roost can be over-
come,” says County Agent R. C.
: Blaney, if the roosts are accessible
‘and there are
no other objects ip
, the pen for pullets to perch on.”
Nests should be closed at night to
discourage the practice of roosting
in them. The mash hopper also
should be constructed so that the
birds cannot roost on them. A light-
ing board half of the distance from
the floor to the perch often aids in
, getting the birds of heavy breeds to
roost. The earlier the birds are
| taught to roost after they are put
"in their new quarters the easier it
| will be.
Rural Japanese housewives roll up |
cheir beds and store them away every |
—January and February are the
months when all flocks should be
fed heavily, says T. S. Townsley, ex-
tension poultry specialist of the Mis-
souri College of Agriculture. By
January 1 most of the pullets ought
to be mature and ready to lay, while
the majority of hens should be
through the molt. Conseauently with
proper feed, egg production ought to
pick up rapidly during January and
February and reach its maximum
during March or April.
—~Subseribe for the Watchman.
1 lid, and gently, by its shoulder rib-
71-16-tf
LUMBER?
Oh, Yes!
- W.R. Shope Lumber Co.
Lumber, Sash,
Call Bellefonte 43.
Doors, Millwork and Roofir g,
7 BLOCKS APART
(Continued from page 2, Col. 6.)
“Yes. Was Gillan on the war-
path? You ought to hear your heart,
Johnny. ‘Bump—bump’ it goes.”
He smiled faintly. “Doesn’t every-
body’s 2”
“Not so loud, I don’t think. My,
it’s loud!” J
“You're pretty near it,” Johnny
said. .
They sat still. Madeline listened
to the heart, and then she listened
absently to the sounds from the street
outside. Summer evening sounds, con-
fused and pleasant. Children shouting.
Car horns. A player-piano in the
house across, playing “Rio Rita.”
Madeline's lashes dropped. She felt
drowsy, steeped in peace. Her hand
stole up and touched Johnny's face.
“Isn’t this nice?” she murmured.
“Aren’t we—happy?”
The quick intake of his breath was
like a sob. It startled her. She lift-
ed her head, and her gray eyes were
wide, probing his.
“Oh, what?” she almost
Then he told her.
At first she didn’t believe it. He
was wrong. He was mistaken. What
he said could not be true. Somehow
it had not occurred to her that old
Mrs. Lane, being mortal, must go
the way of every mortal thing. She
had thought of her as living on and
on in the little gray house looking
just the same, crying, “How? How's
that ?”’ to Johnny’s mother, forever.
Then all at once it was clearly
true. Old Mrs. Lane was dead. Her
little house would be sold or let; and
when September came, Johnny's
mother wouldn't go—anywhere. !
“And,” said Madeline slowly, |
thinking aloud, “we're right where |
we were. We're—right back—where
we were—before.”
“Don’t!” Johnny groaned, and hid
his face in his hands.
He needed her bravery, and so she |
was brave, quiet and even-voiced and |
calm. She put her arms around him
and crooned soothing things, the old, |
two-year-old soothing things. Every-'!
thing would be all right. They'd find |
a way. After all they were young. |
They had lots of time. A little extra
delay—What did it amount to, in a.
lifetime ?
She might, at this rate, have been |
smiling soon and making Johnny
smile had not the thought of the
chiffon chemise intruded. She didn’t
know why she thought of the chem-
ise. She just did. It slid uninvited
into her mind, that beautiful thing,
’
moaned.
all paid for, only today.
~ She got to her feet mechanically.
“Johnny—* I want to show you—"
She went into the bedroom and
immdiately was back, carrying a
glossy white box. She removed the
bons, lifted out the gossamer frag-
ment. Bits of tissue-paper fell un-
heeded to the floor, drifting like
plumes.
“Isn’t it—beautiful, Johnny?”
“Gee, it is,” he said, staring dully.
“It is new?”
Madeline held it over her dress.
She caught it close at the hip, and
pointed her toe, and turned this way
and that, gazing down. She had for-
fotten Johnny. “Beautiful,” she
breathed. “I never had anything so
beautiful.”
Suddenly she remembered him;
caught what he had said. “Um-hum.
New,” she answered. “I got it to-
day.” Her gray eyes lifted, grazed
him, went beyond him. “I bought it
for—Atlantic City.”
Then she was crying, clutched
tight in his arms. ng as if her
heart would break. And she had a'
dim sense that he was crying too,
that the tears on her face were not
all her tears, and the sobs that shook
them both not all her sobs. They
clung together desperately, like two
in a storm, who fear to stir apart
lest it destroy them.
Long they clung like that till their
anguish spent itself and all the tears
they had were cried away. Till their
kisses grew less pitiful, more fierce.
Till it came to them that waiting,
after two years of waiting, was a
cold and a futile, useless thing.
Mrs. Dietz was reading a maga-
zine with rough gray leaves and a
red-lipped, sloe-eyed cover. She was
creak-clump! creak-clump!
floor.
elbow in a paper bag, and another
magazine sprawled at her feet. A,
movie magazine. Mrs. Dietz had
read it through. ’
She turned a rough gray leaf of
the magazine that was not a movie
magazine, and as she did so, paused,
for somebody was coming up the
stairs. It sounded like Madeline. '
But, thought Mrs. Dietz, it wouldn't
be Madeline. Not at half past ten’
A. M. with everybody wanting their
nails fixed for Thanksgiving, and
this the day before.
It was, however, Madeline. |
She came in slowly looking white |
and queer; looking straight at Mrs. |
Dietz. She let the door bang which |
was not her way, and dropped on!
the chair nearest it. i
“Hello,” she said. ’
“Well!” said Mrs. Dietz. She clos- |
ed her magazine and put it near the |
chocolates, and folded her hands on
her stomach. “Well!” she said. “I |
suppose you've lost your job or some- |
thing.” |
“No.” |
“It looks like it,” accused Mrs. |
Dietz.
Madeline took her hat off. She
twisted it in her hands and inspect- |
rocking as she read, back and forth,
on the |
There were chocolates at her |
i plentiful, cheap
ed it. “I got—I wasn’t feeling well,” |
she explained. “So they sent me |
home. In a cab.”
“Wasn't feelin’ well?” !
“Not hog : said.
She up, and wriggled out of
her coat, and dropped it behind her
on the chair. “I I'll lie down.”
She took five steps toward the
bedroom; stopped; and whirled to
confront her mother. There was a
defiance in her attitude, and there
was a curious, weary triumph.
“Johnny and I are going to be
married this afternoon,” she said.
“I've just talked to him. On Marek’s
phone.”
Married ?”
“Yes.”
Mrs. Dietz stared. ,
“You know,” Madeline said, a lit-
tle wildly. ‘“License—and minis-
ter—”’
Mrs. Dietz still stared, her mouth
working.
“I—I don’t qnow just exactly how
we’ll manage,” Madeline said. “I
guess you and—and Mrs. Sebastian
will have to do the best you can.
Together, I mean. In one flat. Be-
cause—"
“Because
mother. , >
“Because—well—"
Mrs. Dietz wept. She clutched her
heart. She walked the floor and
wrung her hands, as she had seenit
done in Reel Five. She said, many
many times, “Oh, what did I do that
you should disgrace me like this?
Oh, what did I ever do?” —Hearst’s
International Cosmopolitan.
what?” shot out her
ONE-EYED AUTOMOBILES
BECOME VERY NUMEROUS
Attention of the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles having been called to the
fact that many motor cars operating
at night with only one headlamp
burning bear on the windshield the
“Inspected and Approved” slicker,
Commissioner Benjamin G. Eynon
| has made an investigation and learns
that when these vehicles were in-
spected the headlamps were in good
condition; that the burning out of a
bulb or bulbs occurred after the in-
spection was made. .
said
“In a great many cases,”
Commissioner Eynca, ‘burned-out
bulbs ' re an indication of careless- |
ness on the part of the owner or
operator of a motor vehicle. Fre-
quent lamp burnout results from high
voltage. The causes of high voltage
are first, loose or corroded electrical
connections in the Battery Circuit,
or generator charging rates set too
high. To remedy his condition all
electrical connections in the battery
circuit should be kept tight and free
from corrosion, and the generator
charging rate should be decreased by
adjusting the third brush.
“Scores of cars encountered on
highways haye dim headlamps, re-
sulting from low voltage or a rusted,
tarnished reflector. The cause of
low voltage may be either loose or
corroded electrical connections in the
lamp circuits, or a generator charg-
ing. rate too low for the individual
driver’s requirements. All electrical
connections in the lamp should be
kept tight and free from corrosion,
and the generator charging rate
should be increased by adjusting the
third brush.
“The operator so careless of his
equipment that his lamps are dim, or
his bulbs continually burning out, is
also of that careless category which
carries no extra bulbs and operates
at night with only one headlamp
burning.”
THE FUTURE OF
THE SMALL TOW.
Electricity is giving every town an
opportunity to become a city. In|
the past, great industrial concerns
have been forced to locate in the
congested centers of population be-
cause of the necessity of reliable
small plants
common in towns and villages could
available power. The
| ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all
courts. Office, room 18 Crider’'s Ex-
change. : b1-1y
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at-
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ne
tion given all legal business entrusted
to his care. Offices—No. 5, East High
street. - 57-44
J M. KEICHLINE.—Attorney-at-Law and
{
Justice of the Peace. All professional
business will receive prompt attention.
Offices on second floor of Temple Court.
49-6-1y
G. RUNKLE.— Attorney-at-L aw,
Consultation in English and Ger-
Office in Crider’s Exchatfe
man.
Bellefonte, Pa.
PHYSICIANS
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his residence.
R. R. L. CAPERS.
| OSTEOPATH.
Bellefonte
Crider’s Ex.
C
State College
66-11 Holmes Bldg.
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis-
tered and licensed by the State.
Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed. Frames * placed
and lenses matched. Casebeer Bl¢: , High
St., Bellefonte, Pa. 1-22-t¢
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist,
by the State Board. State Coll
every day except Sat
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!
We have taken on the line of
Purina Feeds
We also carry the line of
Wayne Feeds
Purina Dairy, 34% - $8.10 per H
Purina Dairy, 24% 2.80 per H
Wayne Dairy, 32% - 38.00perH
Wayne Dairy, 24% - 2.15 per H
Wayne Egg Mash _ - 335perH
Wayne Calf Meal - 425perH
Wayne Horse feed - 260perH
Wagner's Dairy, 32% - 2.80perH
Wagner's Dairy, 20% - - 2.50 per H
Wagner's Dairy, 169 - 2.30perH
Wagner’s Pig Meal - 2.90 per H
Wagner's Egg Mash with
Buttermilk . 3.00 per H
We are using Molasses in all of
our feeds.
Cotton Seed Meal - . 280perH
Oil Meal - - - 8.20 perH
Gluten Feed - - 2.60 per H
Alfalfa Meal - - 225 perH
Meat Scrap, 45% -. - 4.00perH
Tankage, 60% - - 425perH
Buttermilk o - 10.00 per H
Oyster Shell = - 1.10 per H
5 . 5 1.10 per H
Salt
We deliver at a charge of $1.00 per
ton extra.
When You Want Good Bread or
Pastry Flour
USE
“OUR BEST”
not be counted upon for unremitting, |
efficient and economical service.
industrial nonentity.
The development of interconnected
electric systems and the consequent
decrease in small, local plants is rap-
idly changing all this. Now thou-
sands of towns receive the same
high grade service, at the same low
rates, that is provided in great cities.
And many of them are gradually
coming into prominence as industrial
centers.
The small town can offer the ad-
vantages of unlimited space, reliable
labor and pleasant living and work-
ing conditions that the great city
lacks. And wih the adjunct of
power, it can make
an almost irresistible appeal to all
manner of industries.
————On account of the absence
of Rev. H. E. Martin, C. C. Shuey, of
Bellefonte, will preach in the Church
of Christ, at Orviston, the coming
Sabbath evening at 7:30 o'clock.
— The Watchman gives all the news
worth reading, all the time.
DON’T GET UP NIGHTS
Rev. D. Lee, Portsmouth, N. H.,
Says, “Come or write to 101 Crescent
Way and I will tell you how in a
short time the bladder irritation was
relieved by Lithiated Buchu (Keller
Formula). My case was of long
standing and painful. Was bothered
4 and 5 times each night.” It acts
on bladder as epsom salts do on bow-
els. Drives out foreign deposits and
lessens excessive acidity. This re-
lieves the irritation that causes get-
ting up nights. The tablets cost 2
cents each at all drug stores Kel-
ler ‘Labora , ‘Mechanicsburg, Ohio
or locally at ©. M. Parrish.
As
a result, the smaller town was an |
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«GOLD COIN” FLOUR
Wagner & Co. inc
BELLEFONTE, PA.
CY.
86-11-1yr.
“Caldwell & Son
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
: By Hot Water
| Pipeless Furnaces
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Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully snd Promptly Furnished
08-15-41.