Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 29, 1930, Image 3

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Bellefonte, Pa., August 29, 1930.
Your Health
THE FIRST CONCERN.
The late Eloise Meek, physician
and Doctor of Public Health, com-
menting on the writer's zealous cam-
paign for dental hygiene, said: “Itis
good to teach care of the teeth but
why not be equally concerned about
care of the eyes? If we lose our
teeth we can get artificial ones but
there is no artificial substitute for
lost eyesight.” With this wise thought
in mind, advice from three writers
on health subjects is here reprinted:
Care of Eyes.—We all know the
colored part of the eye is the iris.
It is brown, or blue, or black, or
gray.
The iris is really a muscle. What
appears to be a black patch in the
middle is a hole in the iris. Thisis
the “pupil,” which varies in size as
the muscles and circulation of blood
cause it to dilate and contract.
Of course, the iris is subject to
disease as is any other muscle. Its
most disagreeable ailment is called
“iritis.”
In iritis, or inflammation of this
muscle, the most marked symptom
is pain. This may be located either
in the eyeball, or in the forehead
tween the brows. There is much
watering of the eye and bright lights
cause distress,
There is a zone of redness in the
“white of the eye,” around the iris,
together with dimness of vision. The
redness gradually spreads until the
entire white may become inflamed.
The pupil, which normally reacts to
light and shade, becomes fixed in
iritis.
This condition requires careful at-
tention in order that the sight may
not be affected permanently. Valu-
able time is sometimes lost my mis-
taking the trouble for ‘“conjuncti-
vistis,” which is an inflammation of
the mucous membrane lining the
eyelid and covering the eyeball.
Reading, or any close work, must
be avoided, and dark glasses may
be worn for comfort. But the underly-
ing cause must be cleared up before
recovery can be expected.
In the chronic form there may be
present some blood disease, tuber-
culosis, or diabetes. In the first case
the constitutional disease is probably
the cause of the iritis. Your doctor
will institute the necessary general
treatment.
But if the cause is obscure, a search
must be made to find where the
trouble lies. Chronic constipation,
pyorrhoea, decayed teeth, abscessed
tonsils are all factors in producing
the disease.
In the control of this disease I
want to emphasize the importance
of plenty of rest and relief from
nervous excitement. The patient
should spend much time out-of-
doors and exercise reasonably. But
he must be careful to avoid the
bright sunlight. The diet should be
carefully watched.
In treating iritis the pupil is kept
dilated by the medicine the doctor
prescribes. For the relief of the
pain, the application of heat, as hot
as can be borne, is the most bene-
ficial. Capsicum_vaseline applied to
the temple may help to relieve the
suffering.
If there is redness of the eye or
any pain, be sure to consult your
doctor immediately. The trouble is
probably not serious but do not take
a chance.—By R. S. Copeland, M.D.
An Eye Full of Beauty.—In the
daily hygiene of the body, the eyes
and their aids—the lids, brows and
lashes—are more often than not
overlooked, yet they require the same
daily care accorded the hair, teeth
and nails. The eyes should be given
a bath morning and night; in the
morning to remove the secretions that
have accumulated during sleep. and
to freshen and stimulate them for
the day; on retiring to remove dust
and grime and to prepare them for
any special treatment required, which
is best given at this time, as it pro-
duces the best effect during the
quiet hours of rest.
Because of the extreme delicacy of
the tissues. never use force or “dig”
into the eyes with a wash cloth or
towel. Use two eye cups; bathe both
eyes simultaneously, In this man-
ner the entire field—eyes, under and
upper lid—are actually bathed. The
following eye wash is of signal bene-
fit when used as an eye bath:
Eye Wash.—Boracic acid, 1-2
dram; sodium bicarbonate, 1-2 dram;
peppermint water, 3 drams; fluid ex-
tract hamamelis (white), 4 drams;
camphor water, 2 ounces; distilled
water, 3 drams; fluid extract hamame-
lis (white), 4 drams; camphor Wwa-
ter, 2 ounces; distilled water, 2
ounces.
Use in eye cups.
Physiologic salt solution—one tea-
spoonful of refined salt to one pint
of boiled water—makes an excellent
wash. This may be applied warm
on pledgets of cotton to cleanse the
eyes, after which cold water should
be repeatedly dashed on for its tonic
value.
After a month's daily attention,
the health of the eyes responded by
a clearness eminently delightful—and
let it be emphasized that the beauty
and expressiveness of the eye de-
pends almost entirely upon its color,
and healthfulness.
Beauty of color in the eye is
also dependent on health. Every
color of the eye is beautiful when the
organ itself is brilligntly healthy; no
color adds to the luster of the eye
when this is dull, heavy, bleary, con-
gested, jaundiced, or pale, sick and
w
y. T
The color acquired by an outdoor
life, or by exercise in the open, gives
vigor to the blood, owing to the
large amount of exygen and elec-
tricity inhaled through the lungs
and skin. This purified blood is car-
ried to all parts of the body, re-
building the tissues upon a more
beautiful and sounder base.
The iron in the blood—itself a
strong pigment—takes the oxygen
from the atmosphere and carries it
as vividly red, buoyant blood to all
parts of the organism. If the blood
is thin and pale, if it is poor in
iron, it carries little oxygen. and the
tissues are weak, pallid, destitute of
life, force, expression, energy, beauty.
color.
The color of the eye also changes,
apparently, by absorbing or reflect
ing the color from their surround-
ings, We are all acquainted with
the improvement manifested by the
eyes when the complexion is scien-
tifically “made up.”
As a rule, the color of the eyes
conforms to the general coloring of
the hair and skin, and it is quite a
study to select such colors in dress
as will harmonize and enhance their
beauty. —By Charlotte C. West, M.
D.
Revive Beautiful Xyes After Ex-
posure to the Sun.—During the mid-
Summer season when the sun glares
down upon us the eyes are apt to
suffer more than we realize. Eye-
strain rarely develops overnight, us-
ually being a much longer process,
that gathers magnitude as time
passes.
“Therefore, I think a little con-
versation to remind you that your
eyes need special attention at this
time may not be amiss. On those
days when you've been frolicking
in the woods or on the beach you
should bathe your eyes when you
return.
Should the eyes be red and so
tired that a tight drawn sensation
is experienced, hot compresses will
bring almost instant relief and go a
long way toward insuring a clear,
normal eye condition within a few
hours.
Put a little water in an enamel
saucepan over the fire and when it
reaches the boiling point remove it,
permitting it to stand until suffi-
ciently cool to make its use safe
and comfortable.
Then saturate a folded piece of
gauze in the hot water and without
wringing it out place the cloth over
the eyes, closing them firmly but
not too tightly. As soon as the
cloth begins to cool, replace it with
a fresh hot one.
Ten or fifteen of these hot
presses are ample.
A boric acid solution should then
be allowed to flood the eyes to clear
them of any fine particles that may
be causing irritation and to soothe the
membrane. Thus every effort to
counteract the damage done by un-
usual exposure is made and bene-
ficial results are bound to follow.
An excellent formula which can
be kept handy in the medicine chest
just for such cases is made by adding
ten (10) grams of boric acid to one
hundred (100) grams of rose water.
These amounts, of course, fill a
good-sized bottle and the liquid must
be diluted before it is used. Four
or five drops of the solution added
to one-half (%) cupful of warm
water make an agreeable solution.
Should the eyes not feel refreshed
after half an hour, salt water pads
may prove an effective remedy.
This treatment is especially good
if further activity is to be entered
into because it stimulates circula-
tion, wiping out the tired lines that
overexposure causes and tones up
the eyes generally SO that they
sparkle again with life and the love
of living, —By Josephine Huddleston.
NEEDLESS KILL OF RABBITS
EXCEEDS STATE STOCKING
Stocking rabbits in most sections
of the State would be unnecessary
if autoists really tried to protect
rather than kill the harmless little
animals, according to Hugh H. Gron-
inger, chief of the bureau of preda-
tory animals.
Based upon an actual count made
on a 40-mile stretch of the William
Penn Highway, Groninger found that
one rabbit is killed each twenty-
four hours on an average of each
twenty-one miles of road. The count
was made during weekly trips in a
forty week period.
Because traffic and therefore
needless kill of rabbits is lighter on
less heavily traveled roads, Groing-
er estimates that the daily average
is one rabbit for each 100 miles of
road in the State. Ina county with
a total mileage of 1200 the daily
kill, according to Groninger’s esti-
mates, would be twelve. Based up-
on his own personal experiences
Groninger believes that more than
one half of the rabbits killed result
from carelessness or a cowardly
complex of automobile drivers.
This needless kill, Groninger - as-
serted, is greater each year in each
county than the number of rabbits
the Commission is able to stock.
com-
HIGH BEACON LIGHT
PATH OF AIRPLANES
Coyotes that sing to the moon and
ground owls that emerge from the
burrows of prairie dogs to hover at
night, soon will be disturbed in their
desert haunts in southern California
and Northern Arizona by the rhyth-
mically flashing beacons of a mod-
ern airway.
Work has just been started on the
first 245 miles of the Los Angeles.
Kanas City airway, over which hun-
dreds of passenger and mail planes
now are plowing the upper air.
The desert stretch will have tow.
ers 51 feet high, spaced from 29 fo
38 miles apart, depending on the lay
of the land. :
Red flashes near each beacon will
inform night-flying pilots of his
course and identify each beacon
station by means of a code of dots
and dashes.
«MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL” !
TELLS SECRET OF CHARM.
Girls, if you want to keep your |
beauty, lend an ear to Dorothy Dell |
Goff, 17-year-old senior at a New
Orleans high school, who was chosen
at Galveston’s recent pageant as
“the most beautiful girl in the
world.”
Here’s her advice:
Eat plenty of fresh fruits and
vegetables,
Drink plenty of milk.
Go easy on candy and pastries.
Take plenty of exercise—dancing
and swimming are fine.
Avoid late hours, get plenty of
sleep.
Don’t smoke cigarets nor touch
alcoholic drinks.
A pink-and-white blond, 5% feet
tall and as graceful as a young
willow, Dorothy is back home again
after having triumphed over Amer-
ican and foreign beauties to win the
crown of “Miss Universe” at Galves-
ton. And she is about as different
from the typical bathing beauty as
one could imagine, for she’s a quiet
girl who has always remained close
to her mother.
TALL, AND STILL GROWING
Dorothy is tall for her age and
still growing. She is a perfect 34.
Her blonde hair is long, her blue eyes
large and intelligent. Her trim
eight inch ankles arise out of her
2AA slippers. She has never used
rouge nor lipstick in her life; she
doesn’t need any. She weighs 122
pounds.
For the first time in the history
of national and international beauty
contests, she is one winner who is
honest enough to say that washing
dishes gives her a great big pain
and cooking is something she de-
spises. :
«I want to be an actress like
Marie Dresser,” she says, “and that’s
my one goal in life.”
“Cook?” she repeated. “Not I. I
hate it like nobody's business.”
The golden-curled 17-year-old from
the Cresent City has been winning
beauty contests since she was 13
months old, so the honors at Galves-
ton were received with somewhat
blase reaction.
WAS BEAUTY AS A BABY.
When she was 13 months old
Dorothy was entered in a beautiful
baby contest in Hattiesburg, Miss,
and won first place. At 10 she was
crowned the queen in a Gulf coast
bathing beauty contest at Ocean
Springs, Miss. Last year she was
chosen ‘Miss American Legion” from
a large field of contestants and this
year was selected “Miss New Or-
leans” from a field of 75 entries.
In the past two years Miss Goff
has been appearing in amateur
theatricals and has been singing over
the radio. She has a rich contralto
voice—almost a baritone.
“The old bunk about loving house-
work is just plain silly,” she confid-
ed. “I hate it. I couldn't broil a
steak to save my life and the very
thought of sweeping and dusting
gives me the creeps.”
“Of course I have a career in
mind,” she replied to a question.
“I am going to be a real actress,
not ‘just one more actress’ but a
real, honest-to-goodness actress like
Marie Dresser, I hate mushy mo-
tion pictures and saccharine plays,
and if I thought I couldn’t do some-
thing better I'd have no ambition to
perfect myself for the stage.”
Most of Miss Goff’s time at home
is spent with her music and danc-
ing lessons.
. HER VIEW ON BOYS.
“Boys?” she repeated. ‘Boys are
all right in their place, but the girl
who has a career ahead of her can't
afford to waste her time in parties
and automobile rides and late dances
—she has to work.”
And work Miss
how!
At 7 a. m. she is up in the morn-
ing for 15 minutes of stiff calis-
thenics before her breakfast of fresh
fruit and crisp toast—no coffee.
There is 30 minutes of piano and
then an hour of dancing practice.
There is a light luncheon of fresh
vegetables and milk and then an
hour of relaxation—sleep, if possible.
Afternoon brings another 30 min-
utes of piano and 30 minutes of danc-
ing. Dinner is a slice of rare roast.
beef and a bit of vegetables and a
great glass of milk. In the evening
there may be two hours in a down-
town picture show or it may be two
hours of serious reading—and then
to bed. .
“I haven't been awake later than
10 o'clock in ages,” she smiled.
PINK HER FAVORITE COLOR
Goff does—and
Miss Goff leans to dresses in
pastel shades and wide.-brimmed
hats. A pale pink evening dress
trimmed in pale blue won the plau-
dits of the Galveston throngs, Her
appearance in a pink bathing suit
with a white belt won the beauty
crown.
“Mash notes?” she smiled. ‘“Plen-
ty of 'em, but maybe theyll stop
now that they know I don't like tc
cook and keep house.” :
“Could you describe your ideal
man?” the interviewer asked.
“No. I couldn’t,” Dorothy replied.
I have never been in love and I
have no ideal. I guess when I love
a man it will be because he is him-
self. I have no idea of getting mar-
ried soon, but I will never let the
career stuff interfere with marriage.
If I seea man who wants meand I
want him, I'll marry and quit every-
thing but home.”
THE OLD AND NEW STANDARD FOR
FEMININE PERFECTION.
For the sake of comparison with
the measure of Miss Dorothy Goff,
recently voted “the most beautiful
girl in the world,” the proportions
of the Venus de Medici, ageless
standard for feminine perfection,
are here given:
GRECIAN INFLUENCE.
When the Greek sculptor Cleo.
menes, carved his beloved Venus de
Medici, he gave hera waist of 27%
inches and a perfect 341% bust. She
anh
iB
5 +
d.
mo
Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432
ve W. R. SHOPE
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing
s
SAA.
SLIPPERS
Tl 8 IN.
A i
WEIGHT 122 DS
AS BATHING BEAUTY-—Here
is Dorothy as she appeared at the
Galveston pageant when the
judges crowned her “Miss Uni-
verse,” or the most beautiful girl
in the world. The figures show
her measurements.
proportions were so lovely that they
became an ageless standard for fem.
inine perfection.
There was the Apollo Belvedere,
too. His marble proportions—six
feet two in height and with a chest
measure of 42 inches—set a mark
for growing youths to aim at.
Twenty-five centuries have passed
since Greek artists raised such
standards of normally healthy and
attractive human beings, and men
and women in America are still try-
ig to live up to the reputations of
Venuses and Apollos.
The art canons set up by the old
masters grew out of the belief that
human proportions are based on
secret harmonies. It was thought
that the head or the foot or some
other part of the body must be the
significant unit from which a for-
mula for perfect bodily proportion
could be worked off. Some figured
eight head lengths to a perfect body.
some preferred seven. Seven heads
as a standard for height was partic.
ularly endorsed by writers who
linked their formulas with occult
revelations and mystic number har-
monies.
The old Greek Pythagoras, whose
researches into Oriental lore made
him a person of great traditional
wisdom, was said to have learned
the key to all harmonious propor-
tions in sculpture, painting and
other arts. And the search for this
supposedly lost lore of the ancients
has never been entirely given up.
GOOD SWIMMERS
EASILY DROWN.
Dr. J. Moore Campbell, chief of
the bureau of communicable dis-
eases, issued a warning to supposed-
ly expert swimmers, The exper-
ienced swimmer according to the
statement runs almost as great a
hazard from drowning as does the
inexperienced one.
“Too much emphasis can not be
placed upon the necessity of exer-
cising care when swimming in water
over one’s depth,” said Dr. Campbell
today. “Our records indicate that
numerous drownings occuring at sea-
shore and lake resorts take place
among that class of swimmers who
style thmeselves as experts. From
a misguided estimate of their own
prowess and from a desire spectacu-
larly to exhibit it, many excellent
swimmers take long chances by at-
tempting to negotiate great distances
and sometimes disastrously fail in
the effort.
“No swimmer, no matter how good
he thinks he is,” continued Dr.Camp-
pell, “should attempt to negotiate any
appreciable distance without being ac-
companied bya canoe, boat or motor
launch. Nature, especially in chilly
or cold water, often backfires in the
form of cramps, which render help-
less the victims, resulting in drown-
ing.
“Needless to remark ,those who
are not able to swim should never
venture beyond their depth unless
accompanied by a good swimmer,
Nor should they indulge in this sport
in territory the bottom of which
they are not entirely familiar with.
“Finally, many necks and backs
have been broken by the unwar-
ranted supposition that the depth of
the water was sufficient to permit
a high dive. Before this type of
swimming exercise is indulged in,
the actual depth of the water should
be definitely ascertained.
This’ ap-
plies equally to pools,”
was just past five feet tall, and her
concluded Dr. Campbell.
SUFFRAGE DISCOURAGES
EMILY NEWELL BLAIR
Emily Newell Blair, who cam-
gned for suffrage in Missouri back
in 1914, is “frankly quite discour-
aged about women in politics.”
She made this known in her con-
tribution—the first pesimistic one—
to a fat compendium of opinions on
women and the ballot gathered by
the League of Women Voters to
mark the tenth birthday of femi-
nine suffrage in America,
These views, gathered ~ from not.
ables of both sexes, are to be pub-
lished for the anniversary, August
26, of the signing by former Secre-
tary of State Colby of the procla-
mation that actually culminated the
movement. Mrs. Blair said:
«I am afraid the suffragists have
made the same mistake as the tem-
perance group. Both of them thought
that with their victory they had
only to defend their position; and
so, just as the Women’s Christian
Temperance Union stopped its edu-
cational work for temperance and
devoted itself to claiming the Eight-
eenth Amendment worked so the
suffragists stopped their educational
work of convincing people that wo-
men had a right to equality and de- |
voted themselves to other interests.”
Mary E. Wooley, president of
Mount Holyoke College, in respond-
ing to the league’s query said:
“The granting of the suffrage to
women has not brought about the
|
millennium, but it has meant a de- |
cided step toward better govern-
ment.”
Said Newton D. Baker, former
War Secretary: “The years of ex-
perience under the Nineteenth
Amendment are not enough to enable
me to express any positive judg-
ment as to the use which women
in general have made of their suf.
frage privilege.”
Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt said wo-
men had made “a contribution to!
better government,” and that where-
ever they have taken part in local
politics, there is no question but
what the general standards have
gone up.”
REAL ESTATE TRANFERS.
David Chambers, et ux, to James
F. Uzzle, tract in Snow Shoe Boro
and Snow Shoe Twp.; $1.
W. Scott Crain, et ux, to Lewis W.
Gill, tract in Worth Twp.; $2,000.
Albert Huntingdon, et ux, to Emily
G. McCloskey, tract in Liberty Twp.;
$250.
H. E. Dunlap to Deposit National
Bank, tract in Philipsburg; $104.40.
L. L. Smith, treasurer, to E. S.
Bennett, tractin Worth Twp.; $62.94.
Ralph E. Malone, et ux, to Ed-
ward Green, tract in Spring Twp.;
$200.
Bertha Hendershot,
Charles L. Byron, tract
burg; $1.
Anna B. Confer,
C. Holter, tract
$1.
Philip C. Holter, to William Bland,
tract in Howard Twp.; $1.450.
Centre County Commissioners to
Whitmer Steel Co. tract in Miles
Twp.; $5.
William Freeman, et ux, to Charles
E. Freeman, tract in Philipsburg; $1.
Claude E. Wert, et ux, to D. S.
Wert, tract in Potter Twp.; $1.
D. S. Wert, et ux, to Claude E.
Wert, tract in Potter Twp.; $1.
Union Cemetery Association to
Mrs. J. D. Musser, tract in Miles
Twp.; $5.
Charles L. Byron to Bertha Hen-
dershot, et bar, tract in Philipsburg;
$1.
Martha Haines to Stewart Haines,
tract in Haines Twp.; $15.
John Hockenberry to Katherine
Shawley, tract in Spring Twp.; $1.
Ella Wasson to Emma May Borest,
et al, tract in Halfmoon Twp.; $1.
J. W. Henszey, et ux, to Omicron
Association, Inc., tract in State Col-
lege; $1.
william E. Clark, et ux, to Omi-
cron Association, Inc, tract in State
College; $1.
et bar, to
in Philips.
et al, to Philip
in Howard Twpg
CRASHES FOR HALF YEAR
COSTS OWNERS $2,000,000
While much has been said and
written about the human toll in
automobile accidents, little attention
has been given to the purely finan.
cial aspect of motor crashes. It is
surprising, therefore, to learn that in
the first six months of 1930, 16,136
motor vehicles in Pennsylvania were
damaged to the extent of approxi-
mately $2,000,000.
These figures are given by the
Keystone Automobile Club in an anal- |
ysis of the accident reports as tab- |
ulated by the Safety Division of the |
State Bureau of Motor Vehicles. :
UNIVERSITY OFFERS
$10 FOR HUMAN BLOOD
Wanted human blood, $10 per hun-
dred cubic centimeters.
This is the offer of the Univer-
sity of California Hooper Founda-
tion, which announced the need of
blood through the state department
of public health.
The blood, however, must be from
individuals who have just recovered
from attacks of infantile paralysis.
According to Dr. Karl F. Meyer,
director of the Foundation, the blood
isto be usedin the manufacture of
serum to treat infantile paralysis.
ATTORNEYS.AT-LAW
—_
KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in
all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s
e.
Exchang 51-ly
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at-
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at-
tention given all legal business
entrusted to his care. Offices—No. 0b,
East High street. 57-44
. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law
and Justice of P Al
the eace. 1
professional business will receive
prompt attention. Offices on second floor
of Temple Court. 49-5-1y
G. RUNKLE. — Attorney-at-Law,
Consultation in English and Ger-
man. Office in Crider’s Exchange,
Bellefonte, Pa.
PHYSICIANS
S. Glenn, M. D., Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre coun-
ty, Pa. Office at his residence.
R. R. L. CAPERS.
OSTEOPATH.
State Colle;
66-11 Holmes Bl
Bellefonte
Crider’s ‘Ex.
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis-
tered and licensed by the State.
Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed.
Frames replaced
and lenses matched, Casebeer Bide.
High St., Bellefonte, Pa. -22-tt
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed
by the State Board. State College,
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 4:00 p. m. Bell Phone. 68-40
FEEDS!
We have taken on the line of
Purina Feeds
We also carry the line of
Wayne Feeds
per 100ib.
Wagner's 16% Dairy - $2.10
Wagner's 20% Dairy - 2.30
Wagner's 32% Dairy - 2.60
Wagner's Egg mash - 2.80
Wagner's Pig meal - 2.70
Wagner's Scratch feed = 2.40
Wagner's horse feed - 2.25
Wagner's winter bran - 1.70
Wagner's winter Middlings - 1.80
Wayne 249% Dairy - = 2.55
Wayne 329% Dairy = - 2.80
Wayne Egg mash - - 3.10
Wayne calf meal - - 4.25
Wayne all mash grower - 3.00
Purina cow Chow 24% - 2.65
Purina Cow chow 34% - 2.90
Oil meal 3490 - - - 280
Cotton seed meal 349% - 2.60
Gluten feed o - - 2.40
Hominy feed - = - 2.50
Fine ground Alfalfa meal - 2.25
Meat Scrap 45% - - 4.00
Tankage 60% - - i. 4.00
Fish meal - - - 4.00
Fine stock salt - - -1.20
Oyster shell - - - 1.00
Grit - - - 1.00
Feeding Molasses - Li5perH
Cow Spray - = 1.50 per G
Let us grind your corn and oats
and make Feeds with
Meal, Gluten Feed and Bran Molas.
ses
We will make delivery of two ton
lots. No charge,
When You Want Good Bread or
Pastry Flour
USE
“OUR BEST”
oR
“GOLD COIN” FLOUR
C. Y. Wagner & Co. in
BELLEFONTE, PA,
75-1-1yr.
nas ——
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
FEIT
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfullyssa Promptly Furnished
00-18-11.