’ ETAT ge gry Free! Free! Free! -., { A.B We Have Arranged With the Distributors for the New $99.50 for a large shipment of these wonderful Wash- ers to our store, and we do not have sufficient space to store them. As a result we are going to put every one of them out on trial until we need them. Anyone interested in trying one of these re- markable machines can secure one by merely writing, telephoning or calling in person at our store in Bellefonte. : . C. (Nines Don’t Miss This Opportunity To Try One Out ( This opportunity applies anywhere in Centre County ) Phone 110R Harter’s Music Store BELLEFONTE, PA. es _ en Bellefonte, Pa., June 13, 1930. PATIENTS TREATED AT AT COUNTY HOSPITAL, Mrs. John Bechdel, of State Col- lege, who had been a medical pa- tient for some time, was discharged on Monday of last week. Betty, six-year.old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Hendershot, of Spring township, who had been a surgical patient, was discharged on Monday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. John Witmer, of Harris township, are the proud par. ents of a baby girl, born on Mon- day of last week. Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Haugh, of State College, became the proud parents of a baby daughter on Mon. day of last week. Mrs. Frances Farrel and baby son, of State College, were discharged on Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Joseph Thompson, of Belle- ‘fonte, a medical patient for the past eight weeks, was discharged on "Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Willis Dillon, of Huston town. ‘ship, was admitted on Tuesday as a surgical patient. Robert, six-year.old son of Rev. and Mrs. Robert Thena, of Belle. Fonte, was admitted on Tuesday of last week for surgical treatment. Miss Mary Sweitzer, of Bellefonte, was admitted as a medical patient on Tuesday of last week. Loretta May, five-year-old daughter ©f Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Simpson, of Pleasant Gap, was admitted or "Tuesday of last week for surgical ‘treatment and discharged the same day. Mrs. Walter Houtz, of Pleasant ‘Gap, was admitted for surgical treatment on Tuesday of last week and discharged on Wednesday. ‘A baby was born in the hospital on Tuesday of last week to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Daley, of Milesburg. Clement Harter, of Marion, be- came a medical patient on Tuesday of last week. ‘Mrs. Doyle Woomer, of Bellefonte, ‘R. F. D, who had been a surgical patient for some time, was discharg- ed on Wednesday of last week. Benjamin Bequeath, of Bellefonte, who had been undergoing medical treatment, was discharged on Wed- mesday of last week. Mrs. Roxey Muirhead, of Win- burne, who had been undergoing surgical treatment following an automobile accident, was discharged on Wednesday of last week. Louise, five year old daughter of Br. and Mrs, Joseph Flack, of Bellefonte, was admitted on Wed- mesday of last week for surgical Zreatment. James Miller, of Coleville, admitted on Wednesday of week for surgical treatment. Ernest Wilson, of Bellefonte R. ¥. D, became a surgical patient @n Wednesday of last week and was discharged the same day. ‘Mrs. Effie Heaton, of Milesburg, ‘was admitted on last Thursday as ® medical patient. Hugh J. Murray, of Wingate, was was last admitted for medical treatment last Thursday. Robert Shope, of Milesburg, was admitted for medical treatment last Thursday. Miss Emma Bloom, of Bellefonte, a medical patient for the past five weeks, was discharged last Thurs- day. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Musser, of Bellefonte R. F. D., are rejoicing over the birth of a son, born in the hospital on Friday. James and Donald Fisher, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fisher, of Halfmoon, were admitted as surgical patients last Friday and discharged the following day. Edward A. Hirsh, of Ferguson, township, was admitted for surgical treatment on Friday. Miss Emma Smay, of Unionvills, who had been a medical patient for some time, was discharged last Saturday. George, the nine year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shuey, of Belle. fonte R. F. D. was admitted for surgical treatment on Thursday and discharged the following day. Paul Gross, of State College, be- came a surgical patient on Saturday. Bertha Barr, of Bellefonte R. F. D., was admitted on Saturday for surgical treatment. Samuel Atmore, of Philadelphia, was admitted last Saturday for sur- gical treatmen, John E. Jenkins, of McKeesport, was admitted for surgical treatment and discharged the same day. Mr. and Mrs. Hassel Montgomery, of Bellefonte, are receiving con- gratulations upon the birth of a daughter at the hospital on Sunday. Miss Sarah Brungard, a student nurse at the hospital, became a medical patient on Sunday. Mrs. H. C. Houck, of Bellefonte, was admitted on Sunday for med- ical treatment. Miss Utalcia Flack, of Bellefonte, who had been a surgical patient for the past eleven days, was discharg- ed on Sunday. Mrs. Genevieve Fosa and infant, wife and daughter of Joseph Fosa, of State College, were discharged on Sunday. William Kline, of Bellefonte, a surgical patient for eleven days, was discharged on Sunday. John C. Bair, of Bellefonte, a medical patient for the past two months, was discharged on Sunday. There were forty-eight patients in the institution at the beginning of this week. “Jack I am beginning to believe the baby looks like you.” “Are you, dear?’ “Yes; I noticed it more and more every day. “I'm so glad.” ‘Do you really want him to look like me?” “Of course I do. I've been sorry ever since we had him christened that we didn’t give him your name.” “Sweetheart, you don't know how nappy you make me by saying “And Jack dear, I found the love- liest hat today. I don’t believe I ever saw anything that was so be. coming to me. It's $25. Do you think I ought to pay that much for a hat?” DOWNIE BROS. CIRCUS | COMING ON MOTOR CARS. | It won't be long now, the big | show will soon be here. The advance { agents of Downie Bros., the largest | motorized circus in the world, have | just announced the coming of their big three ring circus for two per- formances, afternoon and night, in Bellefonte on June 20. And every mother’s son of us will be mighty glad to be young again or will we look around for a youngster to give us an alibi to be there as close to the center ring as possible. To laugh at the funny! capers of the ever funny clowns, to | marvel at the daring of the tra. peze artists. Just to get another look at the glaring spangled robes, craning our necks and straining our eyes to be sure we miss none of the hundreds of wonders that are going on around us. Or perhaps our fancy would be | to wander through the menagerie, | to feed peanuts to the elephants, to gaze at the strange and curious animals that the Downie Bros. agents have gathered from every corner of the globe, Downie Bros. circus furnish all of this and at a price that is with- in the reach of all. Twenty-five and fifty cents general admission. Prices that since before the war have been unheard of. And to make it a complete cir. cus holiday, Downie Bros. provide at noon an old fashioned free street parade that is a mile in length. All the old ideas of a circus parade made modern and a mile splendor ! mounted on motor cars offer a sight not soon to be forgotten. It requires over one hundred great motor trucks to transport this great amusement enterprise from town to town. Elephants, horses and every- thing are carried on motors instead of railroad trains. —— el en me IDENTIFICATION TAGS FOR BELL WORKERS. A new method of identifying those of its employees whose duties neces- sitate their entering homes and busi- ness establishments has been inaug- uratd by the Bell Telephone com- pany. The company has issued to each employee whose wgrk brings him in i contact with the publica card bear- ing his photograph, typewritten name and signature. The cards replace the familiar metal, bell shaped {badge which installers, repairmen ‘and others in the company’s service ‘had worn for many years. { In addition to the employee's photograph, name and signature, | each of the new identification cards bears the signature of the head of the department with which the em- ployee is associated. While the paotograph on the card serves to ments, the additional check of hav. his. signature also can be made, if believed desirable. The old bell- shaped badges have been gathered up and destroyed by the telephone company. Asker—Do you think the candi- date put enough fire into his speech? Teller—Rather. The trouble was he didn’t put enough of his speech in the fire. — —— A — ——. —Read the Watchman and get all the news worth reading. { support i whole plant. ' gladioli etablish the identity of the bearer | in homes and commercial establish- | ing the possessor of the card furnish ' FARM NOTES, —The home garden will provide for winter use a good supply of vegetables which may be canned, dried, stored or cellar forced. —A widely recommended ration | that has been extensively used by duck raisers, is as follows: As a starting ration a mash made up of equal parts of rolled oats and dried bread is fed. It is found desirable to add a small quantity of sand, one part to twenty parts of the mash, and moistened. As much as the ducks will clean up readily is fed five or six times daily. After the ducks are six days old = equal parts of bran, yellow corn meal, rolled oats and dry bread can be fed. i —Artificial brooding of turekys is a means of avoiding worms, lice, mites, and possibly blackhead, if the poults are kept away from in- fected areas. —Fruit thinning is more profit- able on trees carrying an excessive- ly heavy crop than on those where the set is slightly more than what is wanted. The return is likely to be greater on fancy varieties like Jonathan and McIntosh than on Ben Davis and Baldwin. —Good breeding stock and proper care are ton litter principles which should help to grow any litter of nine or more pigs to a weight of 2000 pounds at six months of age. —Dipping the sheep flock after shearing will save feed later be- cause the operation will kill lice and ticks which annoy the lambs and keep them from making proper gains. Any good coal tar prepara- tion or stock dip can be used. —Farmers’ Weekly and Dairy Ex- position at State College, June 17 to 19, will present a complete pro- gram of farm and home informa- tion, Entertainment will be provid- ed in addition to the educational features. —As soon as the early garden crops are harvested, succession plantings can be made without in- terfering with the crops which will occupy adjoining ground all the season. —It is sometimes necessary to stake up the larger flowering peonies. This may be done by a which will encircle the —Now is the time to inspect the binder for needed repairs. If the knotter hook is rusty, polish it with fine emery paper. —Turkeys can be brooded suc- cessfully on platforms and the method is advocated where no range free from contamination is avail- able. —All the summer flowering bulbs may be set out late in May. Setting out at bi-weekly intervals will provide a continuous supply of these flowers. The rule is to plant all bulbs twice as deep as their diameter. —Ton litters in Pennsylvania have averaged 10 pigs each. The smallest number was seven and the largest 18. As the cost per pig at wean- ing time depends largely on the number of pigs raised per sow, it is very important to use ton litter methods, save a large number of pigs, and have them as big and thrifty as possible at weaning time. —Numerous markets in the State make small fruit production a profitable venture, Cumberland and Plum Farmer are recommended black raspberries; Lathan, Cuthbert, Ontario, and Viking are the best red raspberry varieties, and Colum- bian is the leading purple raspberry. —Cababge root maggots can be controlled by using corrosive sub- limate. Make up the solution with one ounce of powder in eight gal- lons of water. Apply one-half tea- cupful around each cabbage plant. It should be mixed and used in stoneware or wooden receptacles in- stead of metal containers. —Soybeans, oats and peas, Sudan grass, and the millets are emer- gency hays. Of these soybeans are the best. They are nearly equal to alfalfa in feeding value. Wilson is the standard variety but Manchu is best for northern Pennsylvania. —The use of cod liver oil in feed- laying hens during winter months and in raising young chicks dur- ing the early spring is one of the recent developments in poultry pro- duction. Practically every one who has used & good quality has found that it has been helpful in keeping up the vitality of the flock, pre- venting leg weakness in chicks and securing a better texture of shell with eggs. The reason for the value of this product is largely due ito the vita- mine D which it contains. Vitamine D is the substitute for sunshine. It helps fowls to properly absorb the minerals which they consume. With- out vitamine D or sunshine, fowls will fail properly to absorb miner- als, even though they may be abundantly supplied. The popularity of cod liver oil has encouraged the use of many substitutes. The fishy odor which 'is characteristic of many of these i products is not a guarantee that | they are of any particular value from the standpoint of being a sub- | stitute for sunshine. There is even ‘a good deal of difference in the | efficiency of cod liver oil, so it is ‘well to buy a product that is either ‘tested for vitamine content or guaranteed to give satisfaction. —Cows like to breathe fresh air. Barns need to be porperly venti- lated. | FEED We Offer Subject to Market Changes: oS per 100lb 1 Quaker Ful, O Pep Egg Mash, 8.25 Quaker Scratch Feed ............ 2.25 Quaker Chick Starter............ - 4.50 Quaker Chick Feed.................. 3.00 Quaker 20 per cent. Dairy... 2.35 Quaker 24 per cent. Dairy... 2.40 Quaker sugared Schumaker .. 2.10 Quaker Oat Meal...................... 3.25 TR Quaker Growing Mash ........... 4.00 : ; Quaker Intermediate Scratch Ww Weed 5 exctechrasnsnasen Bane 2.15 C ayne per cent. EY ee 2.80 a Wayne 24 per cent. Dairy........ 2.55 2 J ou ayne 20 per cent. Dairy...... 2.40 Wayne Egg Mash...................... 3.15 see to sew on Wayne 189% Pig Meal............. 3.00 o Wayne 28%, Hog Meal ...... s25 dark silk at Wayne All Mash Starter.......... 3.90 Wayne All Mash Grower........ 3.40 ; Wayne Calf Meal... -. 125| Nig ht? . ... . Rydes Calf Meal... 5.00 Bran... 1.80 A Midas... Lia 2.00 B..Midds ................0c.uiiain 1.85 9 Corn and Oats Chop ........ 2.10 It’s much Cracked Corn 2.25 ° o Corn CHOP... 225) easier if you Flax Meal =... oon 2.40 Linseed oil meal 3.00 1 Cottonseed Meal 2.60 work beside 4 Gluten Feed .................... 2.40 Alfalfa meal ...... 3.25 good portable Alfalfa loaf meal 3.50 1 d k Beef Scrap or Meat Meal...... 4.00 Hog tankage: ..... ....... 2.70 amp ? an mage Oyster Shells ....... 1.00 Mica Spar Grit. 1.50 sure that you Stock Salt aw 1.00 . Common Fine Salt... 1.25 have the right Menhaden 559% Fish Meal...... 4.00 . Ii h b alb Bone Meal... .... 3.25 ChAreoRl _...........coce cme: 3.00 Size 1g t S. Dried Buttermilk ... - 9.50 Dried Skim Milk........cccccoeeeeeet 9.00 Pratt’s Poultry Worm Powder 10.00 Pratt’s Poultry Regulator...... 9.00 Cod Liver Oil, cans gal........... 1.80 WE % 5 Cod Liver Oil, bulk gal........... 1.80 vy. J 1 bbl. 1st Prize Flour............ 1.60 14 Bbl Pillsbury Flour........... Orders for one ton or more de- livered without extra charge. We make no charge for mixing your own rations. Baby Chicks per 100 S. C. White Leghorns ........... $ 8.00 S. C. Brown Leghorns............ 8.00 Barred Plymouth Rocks ........ 10.00 White Plymouth Rocks... 12.00 Rhode Island Reds ................ 10.00 Your orders will be appreciated and have our careful attention. A. F. HOCKMAN BELLEFONTE Feed Store—23 West Bishop St. Phone 938.4 Mill—Hecla Park, Pa. Phone 2324 FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 207% 3-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent Employers, This Interests You The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan, 1, 1916. It makes insurance com- pulsory. We specialize in plac- ing such insurance, We t Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates, It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance, : JOHN F. GRAY & SON State College Bellefonte 30 years in Baney’s Shoe Store WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor BUSH ARCADE BLOCK BELLEFONTE, PA. PERN POWER CO BETTER LIGHT MEAN! EASIER SEWING 6060 mks Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia 30 minutes, checks a Cold the fix day, and checks Malaria in thr days. 666 also in Liquid IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 1420 Chestnut St., PHILADELPHIA Have Your Diamonds Reset in Plantiur 74-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry Fine Job Printing at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest ‘‘Dodger” to the fim- est BOOK WORK that we can mot do in the most satisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office. Free Sik HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wis men, guaran to wear months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A mew pair FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER’S TINY BOOT SHOP the Business YOUR MEAT MARKET-— Practically “right around the- corner” from where you live! Be sure to include a visit here in your next shopping tour. We offer daily meats for every family menu, Young, tender pork; prime cuts of western beef; fresh-killed poultry—all are moderately priced to save you money. Telephone 668 Market on the Diamond. Bellefonte, Penna. P. L. Beezer Estate..... Meat Market