71-16-t¢ ER? Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 43; W.R. Shope Lumber Co. | Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Rocfir, Co ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney a! Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all courts. Office, room 18 Crider's Bx- ange. B1-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—At y-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt A tion given all legal business entrusted ‘his care. Offices—No. 5, tn eet. ) .—Attorney-at-Law and ; fessional business will receive proiapt attention. ices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1 . RUNKLE.,— Attorney-at-L a w, Consultation in Ensua and Ger- man. Office in Crider's Ex llefonte, Pa. PHYSICIANS S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, . State College, tre county, Pa. Office at his residence. : 35-41 R. R. L. CAPERS. ) ' OSTEOPATH. llefonte State Coll Jrider’s EX. - 66-11 Holmes Bldg. \ D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- , teréd and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, fitted. Sat- action guaranteed. Frames - placed d lenses matched. =Casebeer EX . High ,, Bellefonte, Pa. @ 1-23 AVA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed 4 by the State Board. State Coll every day, except Saturday, Be ite, In the Garbriok building opposite >. Court House, Wednesday afternoons >m 2 to 8 p.. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. 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 grina Dairy, 34% - $8.10perH urina Dairy, 24% - 2.80 per H ‘ayne Dairy, 32% - 8.00perH Tayne Dairy, 24% - 215 per H 'ayne Egg Mash _ - 3.35perH Jayne Calf Meal - A425perH 'ayne Horse feed - '260perH fagner’s Dairy, 32% - 280perH Jagner’s Dairy, 209% - - 2.50 per H jagner's Dairy, 169% - 2.30 per H jagner’s Pig Meal - 2.90 per H /agner’s Egg Mash with Buttermilk . _- - 8.00perH) We are using Molasses in all of ir feeds. 2 wif otton Seed Meal - . 2.80perH il Meal - - _- 820perH Tuten Feed - - 2.60 per H Ifalfa Meal - = 225 per H [eat Scrap, 46% - - 4.00perH ankage, 60% - - 425perH uttermilk - - 10.00 per H yster Shell - 1.10 per H alt . . 1.10 per H We deliver at a charge of $1.00 per »n extra. : When You Want Good Bread or Pastry Flour USE “OUR BEST” OR ‘GOLD COIN” FLOUR : Y. Wagner & Co. in gn-1yr, BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces EC a Full Line of Pipe and Fit “tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotte Pipe and Fittings : ESTIMATES “heerfully and Promptly Furnished 66-16-t£. THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. TO SPEND MILLIONS. ' A gram of State-wide proportions is planned by the Bell Telephone Com- pany of Pennsylvania for 1930, ac- cording to an announcement by Leonard H. Kinnard, president of the company. i This prospective expenditure rep- resents an increase of $10,000,000 over the tentative construction budg- et for 1930 fixed by the company’s engineers a year ago. : “Not only does our new 1930 budget exceed by $10,000,000 the earlier estimate for = construction expenditures next year, but our plans call for a $215,000,000 tele- phone expansion program during the next five years,” Mr. Kinnard said. “This new five-year construc- tion budget exceeds by $50.000,000 the appropriation tentatively decid- ed upon for this period when we considered the subject about a year ago “These upward revisions of construction budgets for 1930 the succeeding four years are dence of our faith in our State its prosperity.” : "Although a large portion of the Bell Company’s 1930 appropriations will be devoted to extension of cen- tral office facilities, nearly one- third of the total will be spent on soutside plant.” This constitutes the equipment and apparatus outside the central offices, including such items as poles, cross arms and aerial and underground cables. In round figures the outside plant ex- penditure will be $16,200,000. Approximately $8.750,000 of this amount will be spent for the con- struction of underground and storm proof aerial cable. The magnitude of the cable construction program to be carried out in this State next year is shown by the fact that 685,000 miles of wire in storm proof cable is scheduled for construction under, the company’s 1930 budget. These storm-proof cables are encas- | ed in lead and provide so great a degree of protection against ad- verse weather conditions that serv- | joe interruptions due to storm | | CHICHESTER SPILLS f.adies! Ask your Drug; © Ohl:ches-ter 8 Diam: our and evi- and . Buy of Druggiat: ek for ONO ESTER 8 . DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 28 years known as Best, Safsst, Always Reliable $44,000,000 construction pro- | P conditions are reduced to a mini- mum, It is the policy of the Bell System to extend the use of storm roof cables wherever .the volume of business = makes their installa- tion economical. ; Nearly $6,000,000 is to be spent i for new building construction. This will include major additions to sev- eral existing offices and the con- struction of new offices throughout the State. - Construction of two central office buildings’ in Philadelphia, and the erection of a large new central office structure in Pittsburgh is called for in the company’s building programs for the State’s two larg- est cities. 2 . Telephone engineers have estima- ted that there will be about 78,000 telephones added to the Bell net- work in this State during the year. In arriving at this net figure they predict that approximately 336.000 telephones will be installed and that about = 258,000 will be disconnected because of the removal of subscrib- ers to other neighborhoods or towns, and other causes. The daily average of local tele- phone calls in the State during 1929 has been, on the basis of figures now available, 5,370,000. During 1930 it is estimated that local calls will total 5,730,000. an increase of 360,- 000_a day. ce ai An average of 281,000 out-of-town calls was made daily by telephone users in Pennsylvania during 1929. This figure also will be increased, according to the estimates of tele- phone engineers, to 306,000 calls a day. . .ry ? S. bU PONT - BUYS GIANT ORGAN A seven-manual pipe organ, said to be the most complete ever made, has been completed at the Garwood factory of the Aeolian Company. Designed and built especially for Pierre S. du Pont, this organ, which cost approximately $250,000, will be shipped next week to Mr. du Pont’s Longwood Conservatories, ‘Kennett Square, Pa. - The instrument is sixty-five feet long, forty feet wide and twen- ty-five feet deep. It has 10,374 pipes and more than 200 stops, and can do at one time everything a military band, a symphony orchestra and sev- eral organists can do. PIERRE | played both manually and automati- | have | ether or not the property is { cumbered, and many other queries i the answers to which we hope will’ 'aid in the work now under way to cally. Three hundred employes been at work upon it since April. ‘ last SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE |- —Read the Watchman for the news | your voice. at school, in city jobs, or in homes across country, the young folks want to hear TELEPHONE “pom veguiarly. i | | | US wE FIT THE FEET i i i i i i i I 8 1 Baney’s Shoe Store i WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor .30 years in the. Business =the fo COMFORT GUARANTEED l=2nerianena Ue USUEU BUSH ARCADE BLOCK . BELLEFONTE, PA. SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED =n P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market 34. This is to call your attention to the fact that we have bought for hundreds of Christmas dinners the finest turkeys we could locate. We have them—plump and tender—in all weights, both gobblers and hens. We ask that you let us have your order as early as possible so that we can reserve for you the bird that will meet your needs. - Telephone ' 667 : Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. 34 | State of the Union. 1930 CENSUS WILL BE After the 1930 census is com- pleted and published, parts of it may look as though the files of the war ‘and navy were lifted from the government printing °~ presses and put in the city directory. The reason? Next year, for the first time since the taking of the first United States census nearly 140 years ago. the law requires that every war veteran be listed, with the facts of his service, when it began, when it ended, what war or wars, on land or sea and SO forth. Briefly, it will have the war rec- ord as best remembered by millions of veterans throughout the United States, and William C. Steuart, of the Census Bureau in Washington, has asked veterans’ organizations of Central Pennsylvania to “give the little enumerators a big’ lift by writing out your war record for the census.” 3 This new departure comes along with other innovations that will be a part of the 1930 census—now re- garded as the biggest venture of jts kind ever undertaken by a Government. ~ Mr, Steuart calls attention to the 1930 census as it affects business, large and small. Every business in the country, from the greatest cor- porations to the smallest country stores, must be covered. And for the first time a census will disclose to the country the ac- tual facts as to employment and unemployment, everywhere and in all industries. the enumeration of more than 120,- | 000.000 people,. the sex. race and age of each of them who are of working age; tabulation of the | home. owners and of the basic facts. of American agriculture inso- | far as the ownership of land is in-| volved. csp : “Another important task assigned to the 100,000 enumerators who will | begin their work next April is to : ascertain, as nearly - as possible, | the number of persons of foreign pirth or alien parentage in every “No one need fear that his per- sonal or business secrets will ever be disclosed to friend or foe. The | oath of the enumerator requires that he or she keep secret the an- swers to confidential queries” Mr, Steuart says. | “If he or she does not, the enum- erator is guilty of a crime, and if detected there is not the slight-' est doubt as to what will happen. | The law will be invoked and en- forced to the limit. : “It will be noted that for the tion of about 6,500,000 American farms, i “The census of agriculture for, Tt can be | than 300 | make farm life i attractive as well ‘able. “In 1920, there were 24 000 | tractors reported on American farms. The five years that follow- ‘ed saw the number increase to ap- | proximately 585000. There is question that this latter figure will i be doubled, if not tripled, in the re- . hever hefore made in this or any other country.” tug wal HH ' =< There" have | of -the’ people of -the United States, ‘but never one on so great a scale ‘as the ome now. being planned. . the American people. 1930 will call for replies to more | questions, pertaining to: acreage, tenure of operators, crops, | livestock, mechanical equipment, | en- in America more ! as more profit- no turns of the 1930 census, “All the indications aré that the forthcoming enumeration is going to be a real ‘count’ such as was been fourteen censuses . There was a time when it re- quired more than a year to count That was when there was about one-twen- i tieth of our present estimated popu- x i lation. ‘ “Can you tell now, approximate- 'ly, what the population of the , United States will be when the 11980 census is completed?” Mr. : Stewart was asked. i “It will be” ne said, “more than © 121,000,000 and less than 125,000 - ‘000... We are certain as to this, ‘because we know that the popula- ition of the continental United States is now increasing at the rate of 1,400,000 perosns each year, Or, to put it another way, at the rate of one person every twenty seconds. “These totals are made up of the annual excess of births deaths, which amounts to about 1, 150,000. and the excess immigra- tion over emigration, which gives us an additional 240,000 each year. “Our 1930 census will show that there are thirty times as many people as were in the country in 1790 and nearly twice as many as in 1890, or only forty years ago.” - Hitory, said Mr. Steuart, records no instance in which population has so rapidly increased as has heen the. case in the United States. Neither is it of record he added, that the increase in population has anywhere else been accompanied by so great an improvement in the comfort and well being of the peo- ple generally. The Fauble 43rd Anniversary Sale is calling you. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Bellefonte Cemetery Association to William C. Kreamer, tract in Bellefonte; $50. i Adam S. Bierly, et ux, to Dinius Brothers, trdct in Miles Twp.; $500. Israel Hollingsworth, et ux, to Ezekiel Kirk, et al, tract in Half- moon township; $4. Bellefonte ‘Central Railroad pany to Pine Hall cemetery Asso, tract in Ferguson township; $1. ——The Fauble 43rd Anniversary § 3 Sale is calling you. EY te eee —=THe Fauble 43rd Anniversary Sale is calling you. +... BOOK OF- MANY “Facts. || 7 or =z — — {CHIRSTMAS checks for 1929 have been mailed. = We have opened our books for 1930. A little sum each week that is not missed. / / yy HI A comfort giving check just when you need it most. Let us enroll you. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. ! - It will include, as new features, | first time there will be anenumera- . 4 ~ What the Law Requires When there is no Will—the law steps in—and it is the duty of the Court to appoint an Executor of the Estate. Prudent is he who makes a Will and appoints this reliable Bank as Executor or Trustee —an assurance of safety, and expert management, Talk the matter over now with one of our Officers. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. 2a MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM over pew com- Going Strong FAUBLE'S 43rd Anniversary Sale! The biggest crowd in the history of any store in Centre County was waiting for our doors to open on this, the Greatest Sale in our 43 years of merchandising. ‘The Store is one mass of Dependable Bargains. You can make your dollar do double duty by shopping with us now. Everything in the Store is on sale. The savings are more than worth- while. Come and see for yourself. ~ A. FAUBLE