Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 10, 1930, Image 6

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    - Demorralic
October 10, 1930.
Pa.,
“Bellefonte,
Elephants Capable of
Speed When Infuriated
Cooper's “Lions 'N Tigers 'N Evéry-
thing,” mentions that “the speed wf
‘an elephant is a deceptive thing, and
it is a good horse that can keep
abreast of him, once he unlimbers into
full steam ahead.” Jennison’s “Nat-
ural History of Animals,” states that
“the usual gait is a walk, but when
frightened they break into an amble
by which they can cover 10 miles an
hour for a long period.” An article
by F. C. Selous in “The Living Ani-
mals of the World,” says as follows:
“That great authority, Mr. Sanderson,
says that the only pace of the Indian
elephant is the walk, capable of be-
ing increased to a fast shuffle of
about 15 miles an hour for very short
distances. This description exactly
coincides with my own experience of
the African elephant, except that I
think that animals of the latter spe-
cies, especially cows and young bulls,
are capable of getting up a pace of at
least 20 miles an hour and keeping it
up for from 100 to 200 yards when
charging.” These statements would
indicate that a charging elephant can
outrun all but the fastest of human
runners.
Aim of Pioneers Was
Destruction of Forest
Our forefathers thought not so much
atone DEATH ENDS HIKING
PACT OF TWO MEN
Partnership for a $25,000
Prize Is Dissolved.
Antofagasta, Chile—A hiking part-
nership of two Englishmen which had
been sustained for two years in a
gallant attempt to win a $25,000 prize
by walking from Buenos Aires to New
York was tragically dissolved when
one of them was run down on the rail-
voad near this lonely nitrate port.
The dead man is Albert MacLewin. !
He died in the General hospital and
was buried in the tiny Protestant cem-
etery on the Andean slopes above the
port, his companion, James Winyard,
and members of the Anglo-Americar
colony carrying the casket.
Started August 21, 1928.
Winyard, though grief stricken by .
the loss of his mate, declared that he
would see the adventure through by
himself, disregarding the representa- |
tions of his consul and local residents.
The two men commenced their walk- |
ing tour on August 21, 1928, following |
the Argentine railway toward Bolivia,
but the climate was much against
them. Winyard fell ill with fever and
MacLewin was bitten by a snake,
They were pitied by friendly Indians,
who cauterized MacLewin’s wound.
Both returned to Buenos Aires, a thou-
| sand miles away, and were in hospita!'
three months.
Undaunted, they trekked off again
' after recovery, this time following the
of the utilization as of the destrue-
tion of the forests.
get rid of them. For two centuries
little progress was made in this strug-
gle with the all-encompassing forest.
They wanted to |
The total forest volume was almost as
great a hundred years ago as it was
when the Cavaliers of Virginia and
the Puritans of Massachusetts were
first awed by the dark and mysterious
woods which, so far as they knew,
stretched continuously to the Pacific, |
thousands of miles to the west. The
only extensive cleared areas were on
the Atlantic seaboard. The old-time
water-power driven sawmill had made
but little headway against the incred-
ible vastness of the forests and their
sturdy and tenacious ability to repro :
duce themselves. The forests of Maine, !
prized two centuries ago as the source
of huge masts and spars for the king’s |
navy, have now their fourth crop of |
saw timber.
Needle 25,000 Years Old
A perfect bone needle, some 25,000
years old, is in the Field Museum
of Natural History, Chicago.
needle,
length, is complete and has as perfect
an eye as if it had been made yes-
terday. It was made by a prehistoric
Magdalenian craftsman, according to
Henry Field, assistant curator of phys-
ical anthropology, and it was un-
.doubtedly used for making clothes out
of reindeer skins. :
The needle was excavated from an: o.oo jettuce, in the opinion of
ancient rock shelter at Ganties in the
-south of France. [It was evidently
This |
more than three inches in"
fashioned with a flint blade and drilled
:by a (lint borer.
Garden of Straw Hats
In almost every other part of the
world where straw hats are made, the
process of bleaching is accomplished
by the use of chemicals, but in Luton.
‘England, which boasts of a great straw
‘hat industry, the hats are bleached by
exposure to the sun's rays. A large
open space attached to the factory is
filled with regularly planted sticks, and
upon each of these a straw hat in the
process of making is placed for a spe
cified time, during which the whitening
operation takes place in a natural man. |
“mer. The bleaching department with
its rows of hats has the appearance
of a garden filled with great white
"blooms.
A Poet at 8
Oliver Goldsmith. before he was
eight years old, had contracted the
habit of scribbling verse on small
seraps of paper. which, in a
little |
while, he would throw into the fire.
A few of these verses, however, were |
rescued from the flames and taken to |
his mother.
She read them with a |
mother’s delight. and saw at once that |
her son was a genius and a poet.
From that time she beset her hushand
with solicitations to give the boy an
education suitable to his talents.
Egyptian Mummification
fgypt owed its scientific advance
pefore other nations to the Nile. Its
dead could not be buried in the loose
alluvial soil disturbed every year by |
the floods. Tombs were hollowed out
of the hills, until their whole surfaces
were honeycombed by them. To tide
their dead over the weeks of the high
water, their bodies were carefully em.
balmed and this grew to be a custom
antil not only people, but even fa-
vorite animals (especially cats) were
converted into mummies.
No Loss
When Mary Louise visited in the
country her aunt gave her a live
rooster to bring home. Several weeks
later her aunt visited Mary Louise's
mother.
“Did you eat the rooster 1 gave
you?’ her aunt asked.
“No; he ran away,” said Mary
Louise. “But he was so old and tough .
we never would have eaten him, any-
way.”
railway to Chile. A diary found on
the dead man bears the stamps of sta-
tion masters, prefects, school teachers,
and farmers passed on the lonely route
and tells tersely of weeks of rain and |
scorching hegt.
Four hundred and eleven days were |
spent on the international rail route. |
Thirty were spent in traversing an |
equal number of miles at the moun-
tain crest. In the two mile tunnel
below the statue of Christ which
marks the boundary between Chile
and Argentina they struggled on with
flickering candles.
Adventures Bared.
“A narrow shave,” alludes the diary
to the fortunate passing of the de luxe
transcontinental pullman train when
the men were resting in a safety cut
ting.
It tells of another adventure which
befell them when nearing the vineyard
city of Mendoza. A stranger attacked
them violently. In self-defense they
were forced to use the sole gun they
carried. Just then a police patrol rode
up to the dismay of the tramps. For-
tuitously it turned out that their as-
sailant was an escaped lunatic.
After resting a week in central Chile
MacLewin and Winyard turned New
‘Yorkwards once again and smilingly
trudged off along the railroad that led
into the nitrate wilderness that was te
prove the graveyard of one of them.
Lettuce Called Aid to
Beauty of U. S. Women
Paris.—American women owe their
Mlle. Paulette Bernege, a dietician
who has just completed a three
months’ tour of the United States.
“Vitamins are their chief concern,” !
Mile. Bernege said. “They drink a
good deal more orange and tomato
juice than gin, contrary to the popu-
lar French conception, and they dis
tinctly are not ‘dollar grabbers.
“As a matter of fact, they are sur-
prisingly loyal and industrious, and
their independence of the male is one
of the striking things about their
great country.”
But Mlle. Bernege thinks American !
women are undernourished. It is her
contention that a happy medium
somewhere between the typical |
French and the typical American diet
would be very nearly ideal.
“Starvation may prove temporarily
helpful,” she said. “But in the long
run it will shorten life, rather than
lengthen it.”
Vienna Police Must Keep
Up Weight to Hold Jobs |
Vienna.—By the Austrian Court of
Appeals the right of the police to pen-
gion off any member of the force whose
weight drops below 115 pounds has
been upheld.
A verdict to this effect was givew
when Johann Kleinedler, age thirty-
three, appealed against dismissal from
the force because the semiannual
health examination of all policemen
revealed that he was under this
weight.
Firemen Rescue Kid on
“See the City” Trip
Canon City, Colo.—It took the fire
department to find six-year-old Wilbur
ward. Wilbur decided to “see the
city,” and spent the day doing so.
When he failed to return home in the
evening his mother notified the fire
department and he was found within
30 minutes.
Girl Invalid Faints;
Is Strangled in Bed
Los Angeles.—When she suf-
fered a fainting spell in her
home Louise Dahlquist, thirteen,
strangled to death. Her head
fell between the bed post and
the bed springs, causing death
by strangulation. She had been
ill for some time and subject to
fainting spells.
e 9 9 9. 0 9.0 0 9 9 0 0 0 9 0 9 0 9
ITT TT seed
BLT TT lS eT hh ees
9 9.9 0. 9 9 9 9.9.9 0. 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 2tecteotortock
BETTI IIT TA ST Sees
With Japanese History
| An old Dutch gun was recently (o-
|
| Ancient Cannon Linked
|
cated in the Kanzaki shrine, Saga, by
Prof. Chozo Muto of the Higher Com-
| mercial college of Nagasaki, who i8
. an authority on the history of the
i early Christian eclvilization. It has
for a long time remained unknown to
the public, but when Professor Muto
visited the shrine and saw the gun, the
marks it bears were declared by him
to be those of the United East India
company. The gun has also a letter
H on it, and Professor Muto believes
Netherlands, where there was a
branch office of the trading company.
History records that on the out-
break of the riots in Shimabara and
Amakusa by the Christians in 1637
against the Tokugawa government
rule, the government ordered the gov-
ernor to mobilize 100,000 troops to
bring to an end the civil disturbance.
The governor succeeded in defeating
the rebels the following year with the
assistance of Dutch men-of-war, which
were then anchored off Nagarzki.
Professor Muto connects this histori-
cal fact with the gun that has stood
unobserved in the grounds of
Kanzaki shrine. — Osaka Mainichi,
Japan.
Cinema Traced to Idea
Although it is not possible to say
that any one person definitely in-
vented the cinematograph, writes the
Paris correspondent of the London
Daily Telegraph, a large share of
One of his pupils, Prof. Charles
Yichet, in recalling his outstanding
i achievements, described him as “the
immortal creator of the cinemato-
eraph.”
AM. Marey made important contribu-
tions to physiology, as a student of
the circulation of the blood, to medi-
cine, to flying and to the cinema. Pos-
sibly it was his interest in the move-
ments of animals, and particularly
the flicht of birds, which led him te
concentrate his attention on the mak=
ing of “moving” pictures. In 1882 he.
made a photographic “gun”
which he was able to take sixty pie-
tures a second of birds in flight.
1893 he had produced serviceable
first true cinematograph recording
and projecting machines.
Growth of Brain
According to various authorities
quoted in Halls’ “Adolescence,” the
after eight vears. It reaches its maxi-
mum size at about 12 to 14, though
there may be a very slight growth he-
tween 20 and 30. In old age it grad-
nally loses weight and size. “In ‘the
boy of 15, the volume of cell bodies
is already on the average 124 times
their size at birth and by 30 will have
increased to 150-fold. Cells constitute
but a very small part of the total
brain, so that they can increase many
size or weight.”
Organized Beggary
While begging in Japan is not the
fine art and honorable calling that it
is in some parts of China, nevertheless |
in Tokyo and other large cities there
are hundreds who make their living
by soliciting alms in public. Competi-
tion incident to a highly commercial-
ized age has made it necessary for
these mendicants to organize, and a
{ beggars’ guild now
forces beggars’ law. The operations
of these persons are limited to three
_ hours each day and they have a
Communistic way of sharing their
pickings.
Ebb
The San Diego divorce court sud-
denly came to life. It was the wife
who was suing, and for a moment they
thought she was a poet.
“My husband,” she declared, “re
minds me of the way the ocean is at
i times.”
“You mean he’s so grand,” encour
aged the esurt without cracking a
smile.
“No,” snapped the woman, “I'm re
ferring to ebb tide—when it’s all go-
ing out and nothing coming in.”—los
Angeles Times.
“How I Removed My Goitre”
Minister's Wife Tells Experience
Letter Received Locally
Mrs. F. H. Baker, Titusville, Pa., has
written to C. M. Parrish telling how
she removed a stubborn case of goitre.
Her heart, eyes and nerves were in a
critical condition. Mrs. Baker has noth-
ing to sell. Everyone is invited to
call and read the letter C. M. Parrish,
666
| Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in
|30 minutes, checks a Cold the first
| day, and checks Malaria in three
days.
In
666 also in Tablets.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
q THE DIAMOND B
TD
ad 3,
Ladies! Ask your Drugglst for
Oh . Shea
|
|
1
|
i
|
|
| hi.ches-ter 8 Diamon n
} 4 ’ B Fills in Red and Gold metallic
—98 boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon.
| @ $9) Take no other. Buy of your
i Drugglst. Ask for ONI.ONES. TER 8
| DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 88
years known as Best, Safest, Always Rellable
OLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
this to stand for Hoorn, a city in the
the :
of Photographic “Gun”
credit for the development of this
machine is undoubtedly due to the |
great French scientist, Etienne Marey.
with
By !
cameras and projecting instruments, !
and it is claimed that these were the
size of the brain increases but little :
fold and not greatly affect its total !
enacts and en- |
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
CONDITION OF THE
Farmers National Bank, No. 13118
R EPORT OF
at Bellefonte, in the State of Penn-
sylvania, at the close of business on
September 24, 1930.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts
Other bonds, stocks and secur-
ities owned
Banking House
Furniture and fixtures,
Reserve with Federal Reserve
Bank
Cash and due from banks..
Outside checks and other
10,832.09
24,508.61
hrtuveicimdirrans $158,933.75
26,000
$2,500 28,500.00
S. 50% degrees West 64 perches to
White Oak; thence by land of the heirs
of Nicholas Lucas South 61% West 17%
porches to Chestnut Oak, thence South
degrees West 48 perches to White
Oak, thence South 64 degrees West 23%
perches to dead White Oak; thence
South 351% degrees West 16 perches to
stones, thence South 77 degrees West
9 perches to Rock Oak, thence West 8
perches to Chestnut, thence North 46
degrees West 34 perches to post, thence
North 56 degrees East 22 perches to
stone, thence North 49 degrees East 116
perches by land of William Shawley the
place of beginning. Containing 46 acres
and 100 perches and allowance.
Excepting and reserving out and from
the tract of land second above described
the following described iece of land;
Hams on 2,064.18 BEGINNING at a post thence along saia
otal $243,458.58 | land of William Shawley South 25 de-
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in
Surplus
Undivided profits—net
Due to banks, including -certi-
fied and cashiers’ checks out-
standing 4,667.64 y
pomsnd Seiisi RTT re, Eemure’ county,
Tite deposits 3 1521.93 Deed Book No. 173 at page 312, Con-
POLEL rim rts $243,458.58 | veying 13 and 109-160.
The land hereby conveyed comprising |
135 acres and b51 square poles is the
Sige of Pennsylvania, County of Centre,
. I, HAYS W. MATTERN, Jr, cash-
ier of the above-named bank, do solemn-
ly swear that the above statement is
true to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
HAYS W. MATTERN, Jr., Cashier.
‘3rd day of October, 1930.
S. D. GETTIG, Notary Public.
i My commission expires February 7th,
1
193 ’ Seized, taken in execution and to be |
: Correct Attest: sold as the property of The Estate of |
REED. O. STEELY | Mollie E. Confer, Frank Cox, Milford
W. H. BROUSE Cox, Executors: Frank Cox, Milford Cox,
W. C. SMELTZER | Ruth Cox, Nee Gilbert and Chaflotte |
Directors. Confer, heirs of Mollie E. Confer, de-
_— —— ceased and the Estate of John G. Con-
\ HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue
Centre County, to me directed, will
in the Borough of Bellefonte on
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1930.
The Following Property:
land situate in Central City, in
Township of Boggs, County of
and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and
described as follows, to-wit:
BEING a Corner Lot at the intersection
of Iddings Street and Spring
‘the North by lot of James H. Weaver,
on the East by an Alley and on
South and West by said Iddings Street
and Spring Street and fronting fifty
feet on said Street,
one hundred
alley;
dwelling house.
Seized, taken
and fifty feet to said
in execution and to be
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
of a
writ of Alias Fieri Facias issued out
of the Court of Common Pleas of
be
exposed to public sale at the Court House
ALL that certain messuage and lot of
the
Centre
: ] Street in
said Central City, and being bounded on
the
and extending back
théreon erected a two story brick
grees West 233 perches to a post, thence
along lands of Mrs. Krise South 42 de-
grees East 87 perches to stones, thence
along land of D. A. Lucas
degrees East 25% perches, thence along
grees West 92 perches )
beginning, being the same premises con-
Shawley, his wife, to Emma Shawley by
same land that was conveyed to said
Mollie E. Confer in the name of Mollie
E. Cox by deed from Amelia Shawley
and other devisees of Wm. Shawley
dec’d. dated August 21, 1914 and re-
corded in the office for the recording of
deeds in said County in Deed Book 116
page 281 ad that was conveyed to the
said Mollie E. Confer
Clair C.
19, 1920 and admitted to record
said Office May 27, 1920.
in
fer, Arthur C. Dale, Executor.
Sale to commence at 1:30 o'clock P.
M. of said day.
Terms Cash.
Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte,
September 30th, 1930.
Pa.,
At a Reduced Rate, 20%
3-38 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent
FEED
Sod " te Dopeny of Charles Mong
an IS. arrie . ong.
Sale to commence at 1:35 o'clock P.| We Offer Subject to Market Changes:
M. of said day. 2 per 1001b
Sarid Dine — Doan Sheriff. | fecla Scratch Feed... 2.20
CS ober 8rd. 1080. Conte Faw or t0-3t | Wayne 32 per cent. Dairy ...... 2.60
aT Te Wayne 249, Dairy..................... 2.40
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a | Wayne 209 Dairy... 2.10
writ of Fieri Facias issued out of | Wayne 16%Dairy Ration ...... 2.00
re Cote Ly vol ‘olin Pigargs Con’ | Wayne Bagg Vath oo 330
r , me directed, w e ex- area
osed to public sale at The Court House | Wayne 18% Pig Meal ........ 2,75
in Borough of Bellefonte on Wayne 289% Hog Meal .......... 2.95
| FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17th, 1930. Wayne Calf Meal........... vee 425
The Following Property: Rydes Calf Meal..................... 4,
| ALL that certain messuage, tenement Be 350
‘and lot of land situated in the Borough :
' of Howard, County of Centre and State | A. Midds 1.80
of Finnslvanit. Loans and described | B. Midds 1.60
. as follows, fo witi— Corn and Oats Chop ................ 1.90
BEGINNING at a post on road leading | cracked Corn ? 3%
ifrom Howard Borough to Jacksonville, |» ihe Toor mmmmmememe *
thence along land now. or. late of Sarah Corn ChOP ....oe-grnsnrrrcencs: 00
& Laces Jap] Henjalnn ond Me 3 Flax' Meal ........................ 2.40
un Si oyer, One Hundre i
‘and Twenty 120) feet to post; Linseed Oil Meal 2.60
thence along said Joseph Royer land Cottonseed Meal 2.50
. Ninety-two (92) feet to post; thence {Gluten Feed ........cconnaannennns 2.40
along land of Joseph Royer, One Hun- | Alfalfa meal ..............
‘dred (114) feet to road on place of be-
: ginning.
HAVING erected thereon a two story
. frame house and out buildings.
Being the same premises conveyed by
| Pheobe Mann to Russell J. Schenck by
| deed dated July 12th, 1918, and record-
ied in the Recorder's Office of Centre |Stock Salt ........
: County in Deed Book No. 122, page 255. Common Fine Salt
| Seized, taken in execution and to be | Menhaden 550. Tish Mea: iss
'sold as the property of Russell J. Menhaden 559% Fish Meal......
| Schenck. Bone Meal
|
Sale to commence at 1:30 o'clock P.
! M. of said day.
Terms Cash.
H. E. DUNLAP, Sheriff.
Sheriff’s Office. Bellefonte, Pa.
September 20th, 1930.
75-38-3t.
! HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a
writ of Fieri Facias issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of
Centre County, to me directed, will be
{exposed to public sale at the Court House
in the Borough of Bellefonte on
| FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31st 1930.
The Following Property:
ALL that certain piece or parcel of
| land situate in the Township of Burn-
side, County of Centre and State of
Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
i follows, to wit: —
| BEGINNING at stones; thence along
ithe line of George R. Boak West 151
, perches to a black sapling; thence along
I the line of lands of Sarah Bidlam North
170 perches to a post; thence Bast 112
! perches to stones; thence North 60 per-
{ches to a maple; thence Bast 39
| perches to stones; thence along the lands
| of James Mulhollan 230 perches to the
| place of beginning.
Containing 164% acres,
and having thereon erected
, dwelling house, barn and
i buildings.
BEING the same premises which
James L. McGonigal, et ux, by deed
dated June 19, 1920 and recorded in the
Recorder's Office for Centre county in
Deed Book 123 at Page 487. granted and
conveyed to Alfred Graham.
And Alfred Graham, being seized
thereof, died testate and by his last will
and testament, a copy of which is re-
corded in the office of the Register of
Wills for Centre county, Pennsylvania,
devised the same to Emma Graham,
John C. Graham, Maude E. Graham
and Florence Graham.
Seized, taken in execution and to be
sold as the property of Emma E. Graham,
John C. Graham, Maude E. Graham,
and Florence Graham.
Sale to commence at 1:45 o'clock P.
M. of said day.
Terms Cash.
less
large
out
more or
a
other
H. E. DUNLAP, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte, Pa.
October 6th, 1830.
writ of Levari
Centre County, to me directed, will
in the Borough of Bellefonte on
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1930.
The Following Property:
ALL that certain two tracts of
situate in Boggs Township, Centre Coun-
ty, Pennsylvania, bounded and described
as follows.
THE FIRST WHEREOF; BEGINNING
at post, thence by lands of Curtins North
35 degrees West 100 perches to White
Oak, thence by land of Roland Curtin
South 44 degrees West 120 perches to a
Rock Oak; thence South 44 degrees West
65 perches to a Black Oak; thence by
land of Joseph Lucas South 46 degrees
East 136 perches to a post; thence along
land of Nicholas Lucas North 44 degrees
and 23 perches to a Chestnut; thence
North 46 degrees West 34 perches to
post, thence by lands of Curting North
56 degrees Bast 22 perches to post,
thence North 45 degrees East 116 perches
to the place of beginning. Containing
102 acres and 60 perches more or less.
THE SECOND WHEREOF:
75-40-3t
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a
Facias issued out
of the Court of Common Pleas >
e
exposed to public sale atthe Court House
lana
Alfaifs loaf meal ..............
Beef Scrap or Meat Meal.
Hog tankage ...
Oyster Shells
Mica Spar Grit.
Charcoal
Dried Buttermilk ...
Dried Skim Milk........ccccoaaeneeeee
Pratt’s Poultry Worm Powder
Pratt’s Poultry Regulator... 9.00
Cod Liver Oil, cans gal........... 1.80
Cod Liver Oil, bulk gal 1.80
1, bbl. 1st Prize Flour . 1.60
1, Bbl. Pillsbury Flour.......... 4
Orders for one ton or more de-
livered without extra charge.
We make no charge for mixing
your own rations.
Your orders will be appreciated
and have our careful attention.
A. F. HOCKMAN
BELLEFONTE
Feed Store—23 West Bishop St.
Phone 93-J
Mill—Hecla Park, Pa. Phone 2324
North 50 |
lands of William Shawley North 43 de-
to the place of |
veyed by William Shawley and Amelia |
by deed from :
Shawley and other dated May i
the |
H. E. DUNLAP, Sheriff. |
75-40-3t |
FIRE INSURANCE
I your
dining room as
pleasant at night
as it 1s at noon?
|
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|
i
|
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Perhaps more
light or better
shaded light is
needed to make
your dining
room attractive
for the evening
meal.
|
i WEST
H PENN
POWER CO
BETTER LIGHT MEANS
PLEASANTER DINING
Fine Job Printing
ASPECIALTY
at the
WATCHMAN OFFICE
a
BOOK WORK
that we can not do in the
satisfactory manner, and at
There is no 2i%1e of
the cheapest ‘Dodger’
es
moss
Prices
consistent with the class of work.
a on or communicate with this
office.
IRA D. GARMAN
JEWELER
1420 Chestnut St.,
PHILADELPHIA
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Plantium
T4-27-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry
Employers,
This Interests You
The Workman’s Compensation
Law went into effect Jan, 1,
* 1916. It makes insurance com-
pulsory. We gpecialize 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
WE FIT THE FEET
30 years in
SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY
Baney’s Shoe Store
WILBUR H. BANEY, Proprietor
BUSH ARCADE BLOCK
BELLEFONTE, PA.
the Business
SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED
| BEGIN- |
NING at stones thence by land of Lucas’
P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market
4-343
A FINE FEAST—
can be prepared with lamb chops
as the principal item on the menu.
We always have these and other
kinds of meat in stock. Our la
assortment includes choice mea
to meet every mealtime require-
ment. All are fresh and of that
prime quality which particular
housewives insist upon.
Telephone 668
Market on the Diamond.
Bellefonte, Penna.