Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 11, 1930, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., April 11, 1930.
——————
A YEAR OF HOOVERISM.
(By Dr. L. M. Colfelt.)
Now that a year of President
Hoover's administration has elapsed
it is proper for the American people
to reckon up some of the outstand-
ing results, It must be confessed
they are not so roseate as the peo-
ple were led to expect from the pre-
election claims made by big busi-
ness and the Captains of Industry,
Even Mr. Schwab will allow that,
though he broke away from his life-
long fealty to the Democratic Party,
succumbed to the influence of his
money bags and advocated the elec-
tion of Mr. Hoover on the ground
that he would prove 2a business di-
rector of consummate ability and
continue the prevailing prosperity of
the nation. So said all the multi-
millionaires. But how sadly have
they been disillusioned. Suddenly
out of a clear sky came the flash
and roar of the most appalling and
tremendous financial crash ever
witnessed in the history of the
world. The evaluation of securities
has never been equalled, running in-
to billions. Never such widespread
ruin—never So many suicides from
irreparable financial losses. But Mr.
Hoover is a man of resource and to
restore confidence he summoned 2a
conference of famous financial doc-
tors composed of the heads of the
biggest corporations and he put to
them this question, “How many mil-
lions can you pledge to spend OR
t works of utility and improve-.
ment?” and with one accord they
came to the rescue and vociferated
loud enough for the country to hear
that they would pledge the com-
panies of which they were financial
managers to spend hundreds of mil-
lions—to be exact some four thous-
and millions which has since been
swolien to eight thousand millions.
But where is this money to come
from? Manifestly from the issue of
fresh securities, from watering
stock, or borrowing outright, the
same vicious methods of financing
which precipitated the late debacle
so that reduced to plain sense Mr.
Hoover's questionnaire Was simply
“How much can you borrow ? What
credits can you command?” Is not
this but an attempt on the part of
the business world to lift itself by
its own suspenders. Would it not be
poor policy for an individual busi-
ness man waterlogged with the
weight of financial obligations to at-
‘tempt to galvanize prosperity in a
period of depression by extensive,
fresh borrowings? Has any cure of
financial crashes and consequent
widespread business depression ever
been devised other than that of Mr.
Cleveland's “Work and Save.” Mr.
Hoover is such a commanding genius
in the business management of the
pation that he is going to reverse
the inexorable laws of political
economy and revive prosperity with
the slogan “Borrow and Spend.”
One year of Mr. Hoover and no
nearer relief for the farmer. The
much depended upon special session
of Congress for ithe passage of a
Tariff Bill calculated to rescue him
from his sad plight, after seven
months bickering owing to the in-
ction and comprehension of con-
siderable manufacturing relief end-
ed ina deplorable fiasco. The regular
session is wrestling with a compre-
hensive Tariff Revision but does not
seem to be making much beadway.
No one can forsee the outcome and
it would surprise us if the hill
should finally fail. Of one thing we
Pennsylvanians may be assured, that
the days of High Tariff are drawing
to an end. The present producing
capacity of this country because of
its improved ‘machinery and efficient
workmen can supply all home con-
sumption in seven months of opera-
tion. For the other five months
production, foreign markets must
be obtained. But foreigners simply
will not submit longer to the denial
of reciprocity on the part of Ameri-
can manufacturers. They will not
continue to throw their doors wide
open to international trade while the
United States has already taken re-
prisal on American automobile im-
portation. Coming events cast their
shadows before. But it is not the
foreign resentment that so much
menaces High Tariff. It is the coall-
tion of the Southern and Western
Agricultural States which has al-
ready established a working bloc in
the Senate and arrested every at-
tempt to increase tariffs in the
present session.
As for the attempt of the Hoover
administration to bring financial re-
lief to the farmer directly by shovel-
ing out millions for the purpose of
stabilizing and setting a fixed and
remunerative price upon wheat and
by interfering artificially in the
functioning of the Chicago Board of
Trade is about the absurdest bit of
economical quackery ever devised
and deserves the fate reserved for it
in the not distant future. Uncle
Sam will get his fingers well burnt.
No nation on earth is big enough
to control the wheat market. To fix
the price above the world’s demand
the United States must hold the bag
while Canada, Australia, Argentina,
India, Russia and all Europe liqui-
date to their own advantage. Already
‘the collapse is asserting itself. When
this pseudo-dictatorship was es-
tablihed, wheat was ruling at $1.34
a bushel. It is now $1.08 a bushel.
The average visible supply of the
last ten years was 47,000,000 bushels.
The present visible supply in the
United States is 167,000,0000. The
avalanche is piling up and is grow-
ing more menacing. No nation at-
tempting this method of relief has
succeeded. The American bankers
tried it in the loan of $50,000,000 to
the sugar planters of Cuba to bol-
ster the sugar market. The govern-
ment of Brazil advanced $50,000,000
to purchase and hold the Coffee sur-
plus for the planters of San Paola.
Both attempts were complete fail-
ures and the Sugar and Coffee mar-
kets have not even yet recovered
EE —————
from the demoralization that ensued.
be defied even by
‘girls in
Nature cannot
Governments that presume to
the role of omnipotence. The
relief for the farmer is in the
sec
product by adjusting
law of supply
ducing acreage and
sification of crops,
calls on Governments
by a wise
is like the Man in
of whom one devil was cast,
seven other devils entered in
the last state of that man was
than the first.
Though but one year in the
light of Administration Mr.
ventor of Government
sion. The people have elected
a body of Competent Senators
Representatives
Standing Committees charged
the duty of
seems to think this method is
inefficient and obsolete. And
any revolt and question is br
to his attention he makes haste to
Congress and appoints
dispense with
a Committee of Experts who
scour the country, ascertain
truth and report for Congressional
action. This has produced a
action and left a bad taste in the
is not
functions
the roll of the “Rubber
Unquestionably this
progress in the wrong direction, an
insensible revolution in the form of
government, a decidedly reprehen-
sible short cut doing away with the
mouth of Congress, which
disposed to abdicate its
and play
Stamp.”
necessity for educating voters by
public discussion and formation of
which shall enforce
by the choice of Representa-
and charged with the
duty of concreting the nation’s will
public opinion,
help
tives equipped
in suitable laws. This may
slower method of ascertaining
and securing action, but
participation
the fundament
forcement of Prohibition it is
venturing into an
for all about you are signs
vague strife. Rabid Prohibiti
say unfortunately Enforcements has
fallen into the hands of its enemies,
is but half heart-
be enforced as
soon as the government commits it- |
to the enter-
prise and especially as soon as Mr.
that Mr. Hoover
ed, that the Law can
self whole heartedly
Mellon is superseded. The so-
cause every man’s home is his own
castle and every man's cellar
own Laboratory and
erty says at the Socials the
pring flasks in their pockets and the
their stockings. The women
of the opposing camp say she
consummate liar and so it
mere assertions pro and con—a per-
fect Babel all over the land of con-
damnation of
two indubi-
Actuaries of |
tention between, and
each other. Meanwhile
table facts stand out.
satisfactory prices for
himself to the
and demand, by re-
The farmer who
to exercise
the Devil of low prices for his grains
the Scripture out
Hoover
has achieved immortality as the In-
by Commis-
and they have se-
lected out of their number special
“ggcertaining the Truth”
about every question and phase of
Government as they arise and re-
port to the whole body and secure
suitable legislation. But Mr. Hoover
it secures
by the people and
of government of the
people, by the people, for the people.
When one essays to sum up the
results of one year of Hoover En-
enemy’s country
can’t be invad-
ed without a warrant, Mrs. Daugh-
FARM NOTES.
aes
—Agricultural outlook reports
state that apparently the high point
in the expansion of sheep numbers
in the United States has been
reached. A new annual record
slaughter of sheep and lambs is ex-
pected within the next few years
and it maintained at the high levels
of the last three or four years.
essay
only
wy of
diver-
—Depth of planting
seeds depends on the seeds, soil,
season, and seedbed preparation. In
a clay soil the seedbed should be
particularly well prepared to make
shallow planting possible. As a gen-
eral rule, small seeds like lettuce,
onions, carrots, radish, and spinach
are planted one-half to three-
quarters of an inch deep, and large
seeds like beans and corn are plant-
ed one to three inches deep.
Of the 35 important diseases
'known to afflict livestock some-
where in the world, only 24 of
them are known to be present in
this country. Seventeen of these are
but
and
worse
lime-
quite
and
with
vegetable
71-16-tf
LUMBER?
Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432
W.R. Shope Lumber Co.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing,
——————————————
AMERICAN CHANGE
THEIR EATING HABITS.
In ten years the eating habits of
the American people have undergone
a radical change.
We are eating more fruit, more
green vegetables, more poultry, more
milk and butter. We are eating less
beef, less wheat, less corn, less meat
generally.
The only kind of meat in which
there has been an increase in domes-
tic consumption is pork, and that
being effectively controlled or are
fast approaching what is hoped may
be complete eradication, the rest of
the 24 being under partial control
or study.
slow,
when
ought
—All grain and mash should be
fed to the chicks in clean hoppers
or troughs. This practice may re-
duce the spread of coccidiosis, round
shall
the
‘ham.
increase is mainly in the form of
Figures compiled by the Bureau
of Home economics of the United
States Department of Agriculture,
which reveal those facts, throw an
interesting side-light on the change
which is going on in American life.
Not so many years ago the great
re- | worms, tape worms, and other
troubles which may be picked up by
the chicks if their feed is scattered
in dirty litter or on contaminated
°T | ground.
is i.
__Artistic table lamps can be
made from jars and vases and the
shades can be made to match the
furnishings by any homemaker
with a taste of such work.
__Recent findings have shown that
the organism which causes black-
head in turkeys lives in the soil.
majority of Americans were engag-
ed in heavy manual labor. Their
work called for large meals of hed®-
ty food. Now a large and growing
proportion of factory workers and
other laborers are machine- tenders,
their work calling for comparatively
slight muscular exertion. The work-
ingman'’s dinnerpail is no longer the
jnstitution which it once was.
the larger cities and even in smaller
communities the quick lunch coun-
ter with ham sandwiches and cheese
sandwiches as its principal staples,
is far more popular with the aver-
age young mechanic.
Consequently if turkeys are raised
on contaminated soil they can hard-
ly escape the disease. The danger
will to a large extent be averted if
a three-year rotation is followed,
Experimental findings have shown
that the cecal worm found in chick-
ens is a menace to the turkey. It is
believed that if the young turkeys
are affected with cecal worms the
injury they do to the lining of the
intestinal walls is sufficient to per-
mit the entrance of blackhead or-
ganisms into the blood stream, thus
infecting the bird with the incurable
disease and the one most dreaded
by turkey breeders. The remedy,
therefore, is to keep the young tur-
keys on clean ground and entirely
separate from chickens.
—
be a
truth
is
like
of a
onists
»
called
“wets” say it cannot be enforced be-
Plans are now being made to
start inspection of apiaries in various
is his | .ounties of the State to curb costly
i fattening foods.
'has gained in popularity. Between
. that indicates another reason for the
bee disease, the bureau of plant in.
dustry, Pennsylvania Department of |
Agriculture, announced.
This work is being done in ac-/
cordance with the State Bee Law!
effective since July 1, 1923, and en- |
acted at the request of the beekeep-
ers of the Commonwealth. This law
specifically requires that bees be
hived in modern movable frame
| hives which permit free inspection
i of each comb to determine the pres.
boys
is a
goes,
the Metropolitan Life covering one- os
seventh of the population, 17,500,000, ence 7 Foeond sed OtRer beg id
publish the fact that the actual al- hives, = common in the past, are |
cholic deaths have
hundred per
mony before
tee of Congress has attested
arrests for drunkenness in the City
of Cleveland, have increased
thousand fold since
Commitments to
Farm from 300
these 53 per cent were
from delirium tremens.
much assertion upon
the
order to the formation
than an ascertainment of the
facts obtained before some
of unquestioned authority.
Judiciary
whose presiding officer is Hon.
S. Graham, a Philadelphian of
manding legal and judicial experi-
Both sides are afforded an
Out of
ence.
impartial ‘hearing.
welter of opinion, contention,
peration, ignorant, emotional,
terical, advocacy,
truth may be sifted. Perhaps
Night that envelopes this
problem, deliver us from the
lam of controversy thatis convulsing
American
clarify this situation
Society and threatening
Institutions,
that is satisfactory to neither
and bring about the triumph of
Temperance over the whole land.
AUTOMOBILE LAWS.
Whatever we happen to become
accustomed to always seems the fi-
nal word in wisdom. In Pennsylvania
we would consider a twenty-mile an
hour speed limit absurdly slow and a
fifty mile limit dangerously high. No
speed limit at all we would regard as
simply murderous.
Yet a compilation
show speed laws ranging from
to fifty
on up to no limit in at least
forty miles as it is in seven
States with twelve States consider- | year. If stunted during this time,
ing forty-five miles per hour the |it will never fully recover. Good
safety limit. bone and muscle are of prime im-
There is an equal variety in
line tax rates, Pennsylvania’s
nineteen other States being
cents, in contrast to a rate of two
cents in six States, three cents in
twelve States, five cents in
States and six in three States.—Dan-
ville Morning News.
—— Encourage others to subscribe
for the Watchman,
increased six
cent since 1920. Testi-
the Judiciary Commit-
tribunal
This is
a fair way of realization in the
hearing which is now going forward
of witnesses pro and con before the
Committee of Congress
some grains
some Moses may be sent from Heaven
to lead us out of this Egyptian
of traffic laws in
the forty-eight States of the Union
ty miles an hour in Massachusetts
miles an hour in Nevada and
States. Pennsylvania's speed limit is
declared by the law to be a public !
nuisance and meance to the com- |
munity.
Last year, over 19,000 clonies of
, bees were inspected by representa !
one | tives of the State. In all cases where
that
-
Prohibition, | gisease and unlawful hives were
the Correctional . i ot
to 11,000 and Of : found last summer a second inspec
suffering
There is
both sides of
question but few absolutely
reliable facts. No greater service
could be rendered the country in
of an opinion
‘tion will be made, the work tostart
about May 1 this year. Beekeepers |
who are violating the law were in- |
formed of the fact and requested to |
transfer their bees into movable !
frame hives, and to notify the Bu-
reau of Plant Industry at Harris-
burg as soon as the work was done.
The Department has been liberal
in giving time for beekeepers to
comply with the law by placing their
bees in modern hives. However, as!
a last recourse owners not comply-
ing with the requirements will be
prosecuted. This must be done as
a protection to other beekeepers in
the community. Last year approxi-
mately 100 prosecutions were neces-
sary in eight counties.
real
Geo.
com-
the
vitu. — The best method of eliminating
| P
| the same
hys-
of
even
bedbugs from a hen house is to
first thoroughly clean the entire
house, getting out every little speck
of both dust and straw. After this
thoroughly cleaning, the walls and
perches should be painted with car-
bolineum, and the rest of the house
sprayed with a 20 per cent solution
of soluble stock dip. If this applica-
tion is done thoroughly, it will elim-
inate all of the live bugs, and probably
will not affect the eggs. The second
application is necessary.
vexed
bed-
party
—Good yields per animal are
necessary to low cost production.
—Qats or rye, either one, are
feed that can be used with fair
success in feeding hogs.
—Nothing but pure bred sires are
now being used by 17,345 live stock
owners in the United States.
—Dehorning calves should be
done when a few days old, or as
soon as the horns can be felt under
the skin.
twen-
nine
A foal makes more than half of
other |its entire growth during the first
gaso-
and
four
portance with the horse and feeds
which tend to produce these should
be chosen.
—Barley is a g hog feed. -It
ig trifle bulky for the best results
for fattening purposes when fea
alone. When used on a 50-50 basis
with corn and a 5 per cent tank-
age ration, good results have
been obtained with barley as a pork
seven
‘as the statistics
'ing converted into pork probably |
alling
That is one reason why Wwe are
changing from a nation of heavy
eaters to a nation of moderate eat-
ers.
Another is the general desire to
avoid fat, So much has been saidin
print and otherwise about the physi-
cal danger of overweight that even
those who care little about how they
look are deliberately avoiding the
And as for girls—
well, it is hardly necessary to point
out that they can't keep those
boyish figures and eat the old-
fashioned three square meals a day.
Lettuce is one item of food which
1920 and 1929 our national consump-
tion of lettuce was multiplied by
four from 13,000 carloads in 1920 to
over 53,000 carloads in 1929. And
change in our eating habits. Let-
tuce is one of the chief sources of
the nealth-preserving vitamins, un-
heard of by the public ten years ago,
now generally understood to be es-
sential to the health of everybody
‘who does not spend most of his or
her time out of doors.
For the same reason, in 1929 we
ate more than three times as much
celery, more than six times as many
carloads of carrots. These vege-
tables stand high in the list of foods
In| op any
are more hazardous thai
the grain crops when intelligently
cultivated, that while the invest-
ment per acre is higher in produc-
tion cost, the profit per acre is vast-
ly greater in good years and at least
as great in average years. :
Already the United States has
that they
some beef from South America,
With the falling off in domestic con-
sumption, there is no encouragement
for the cattle farmer to expand his
activities. Hogs offer a better out-
look for the future, dairy farming
looks like a stable and growing in-
dustry in which to start one’s sons,
put the agricultural prizes of ten
years from now will go to the grow-
ers of fruit and vegetables. If the
present tendency in food habits c¢on-
tinues they will be sitting on top of
the world in 1940.
—————————— pr ————————————
____Officials and Federal biologists
are investigating food conditions in
the Pike county district where 31
dead fawns have been found.
Preliminary investigations indi-
cated that the young deer had
starved to death due to a shortage
of natural forage. No indications
contagious or communicable
disease was found.
ETT
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
XECUTOR'S NOTICE.—Letters testa-
mentsry having been granted to the
unde: tagacd upon the estate of Kl-
of State College bor-
knowing
same are uest-
te must
ed to make prompt paymen and
having Dy against said by
resent them, duly autheniicated, for set-
Executors,
W. Harrison Walker, State College, Pa.
Attorney fi11-6¢
DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.— Let-
tion been
ters of a having
fate
bted
granted ig dersigned
n o the unde
the estate of Josephine Alexander,
of the Borough of State College, deceased
all persons owing themselves e
to said estate are requested to make
containing a high percentage of
vitamins. And we are eating about
twice as much grapefruit, cabbage,
caulifiower, tomatoes and turnips as
we did ten years ago.
In 1917 we consumed about 42
gallons of milk per individual. In
1928 this had increased to 56 gal-
lons. In the same period we in-
creased our butter consumption by
three pounds per head and our use
of cheese by two pounds. That
much of this increased use of dairy
roducts can be traced to the “eat
less meat” campaigns is hardly to
be doubted, especially when we com-
pare the figures showing the falling
off in the use of meat. !
In 1920 the average American ate
63 pounds of beef in the course of
the year. In 1929 this had fallen
off to a shade over 51 pounds, In
period we reduced our
average consumption of veal from
about 7 and one half pounds to
about 6 and three fourth pounds.
We continued to eat about the same
average amount of lamb and mut-
ton, but our consumption of pork’
ran up in those nine years from an’
average of 60 pounds to almost 74
pounds. Of all kinds of meat, we
are eating almost 25 per cent less
! than we did twenty years ago.
We have cut down on bread— :
wheat bread and corn bread both—
of flour and corn-
meal shipments show. The falling
off here in twenty years is nearly .
40 per cent.
Out of figures like these we ob- |
tain not only an index of the chang- |
'ing tastes and habit of the nation,
but information of the greatest value
to the forward looking producers of
and dealers in foodstuffs.
It seems to be apparent to wheat-
growers, for example, that their
market is getting smaller. That
should make many farmers consider |
trying to reduce the cost of produc- |
tion, cut down wheat acreage, turn |
part of the wheat land into some |
other crop which promises a better
market.
The grower of corn is not af- |
fected as is the wheat farmer, for |
an increasing amount of corn is be- |
about compensating ror fhe f
off of human consumption of corn
bread. There is every indication
that the trend in food preference |
will continue about as it is going
now. That means there is an en-
larging opportunity for the fruit
and vegetable grower. Already
fruits and vegetables total a higher
value in annual production than any
other money crop except corn. To
the Western farmer accustomed toa
single crop on large acreage, such as
corn or wheat, or the Southern
farmer whose sole staple has been
cotton, such crops as celery, lettuce,
tomatoes, peppers, strawberries and
other small fruits seem Hke kitchen
garden. stuff, not worth while: both.
ering with. But the experience of
producer.
specialists in such crops has
ceased to become a beef-exporting
country. In fact, we are importing
ATTORNEYS.AT-LAW
| courts.
KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney
' Sy “paw, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices
room 18 Crider’s
Bellefonte, Pa.
1y
G. RUNKLE.— Attorney-at-Law,
Consultation and Ger
man. Office
in Crider's Exchange
PHYSICIANS
D
C
St.
every
the Court
from 2 to
8 p.
to 4:30 p. m.
urgeon,
county, Pa. Office at his
R. R. L. CAPERS.
OSTEOPATH.
m.
Bell
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and
8 State
College, Centre
residence.
8-41
Bellefonte State CBE,
der’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes
. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regls-
tered and licensed by
isfaction guaranteed.
and lenses matched. Casebeer
Bellefonte, Pa.
| A
fonte, in ie Carbrick.
House,
fitted.
the Se
Frames 1 placed
ae
Bldg,
Optometrist,
Saturday,
ding
prompt payment, and those having claims Wagner's 169 Dairy - .20 per H
inst the sam t prese! Dairy per
a thenticated, de Eg them, ay Wagner's 32% - 210 H
ACY O ALEXANDER, _ | Waguers 20% Dairy 230 per Hf
‘Administrator, | Wagner's Egg Mash - 290perH
W, J ison Walker, State College, Pa. | Wagner's Pig Meal - 280perH
orney. “11-6t | wagner’s Scratch Feed - 2.30 per H
C HARTER NOTICE.—In the Court ot | Wagner's Medium Scratch 2.40 per H
Qommon Pleas ol Co to | w re Chick Feed - 2.60perH
] ., No. 99, , , agner’s c! - 2
Notice is hereb -
de ee EN ey lica: | Wagner's Horse feed with
oh je ro Sey Arh Eatin rail ~ 2 a
Act of 1874 of the C 1
Pennsylvania, and the i Wagner's Winter Middlings, 200 per H
to, for the charter of an intended cor- Wayne 32% Dairy - 280perH
poration to be called OMICRON _AS- | Wayne 24% Dairy - 2.55 per H
OCIATON; the character and object | wayne Egg Mash - 815perH
of which is to hold property, real and yn 8 :
personal, and for other purposes set | Wayne Calf Meal = 4.25 per H
foMn in She ee of Incorporation; Wayne mash chick Starter 3.90 per H
ses to have and to | wayne mash grower - 8.40 per H
possess and all th - yi pe
fits Tp riiioves of a a Purina 34% Cow Chow - 2.90 per H
Sssennly . and . its Spriements, he Purina 249%,Cow Chow - 2.65 per H
e 0’ 0! Chi
Prothonotary’s office oy Contre ® onaly, ¢ | Purina ck Startena - 4.50 H
75-13-3t ARTHUR C. DALE, Solicitor. | 0ji Meal . 8.00 per H
— | Cotton Seed M . 260perH
Gluten Feed - In perl
Gluten Meal - 25
Free SILK HOSE Free ||mominy Fea - 2:50 por B
seiidgl! Sk Heo W Fine ground Alfalfa - 2.50 per H
s Kni nka. . - 425per
men, guaranteed to OBR ox Sam Agee, $07 i a
months without runners in leg or rap . - a0 per
holes in heels or toe. A mew pair ster Shell - : 1.00 per H
FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. Fine Stock Salt . = LlOperH
YEAGER'S TINY BOOT SHOP Seed Barley, . 1.25 per B
Feeding Molasses . 1liperH
Cow Spray al, 1.50 per G
Let us grind your corn and oats
54.00 WY
Round
PITTSBURGH
Sunday April 13
SPECIAL TRAIN
Ly. Bellefonte 210A. M.
See Flyers or Consult Agents
ALL STEEL EQUIPMENT
Pennsylvania Railroad
—
meee le
EE SS
about
Automobile
Imsurance
Ed. L. Keichline
Phone 190
Temple Court
Bellefonte, Pa.
Representing
Pennsylvania
Indemnity
Corporation
A Stock Company
{ParTicieating AutouoniLs [rnsunance
4 &
Cotton
lots.
your
Seed Meal, Oil Meal,
Meal, Gluten Feed and Bran Molas-
Dairy Feeds with
Alfalfa
We will make delivery of two ton
No charge.
When You Want Good Bread or
Pastry Flour
USE
«“«QUR BEST”
oR
«GOLD COIN” FLOUR
(.Y. Wagner & Co. in
68-11-1yr.
All Sizes
Cheerfully sad
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
IPSS APS
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
Full Line of Pipe and Fit
tings and Mill Supplies
of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
tehod
o4-18-t1,