Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 07, 1930, Image 6

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    | This Space
1 reserved for
’
| Hoag’s
Dairy Store
"Bellefonte, Pay November 7, 1930.
— Ss -
Your Health
THE FIRST CONCERN.
vital to
Elements
Healthy Teeth
‘Milk Cortains
There were dentists in the year
500 B. C.—oh, indeed there were!
The painful probability is that they
‘weren't nearly as far advanced in
the business of tooth repairs as
‘dentists are today, but dear me, you
gould hardly expect that.
Those ancient gentlemen who
‘hung out their shingles and guar-
-anteed to remove either the ache or
the tooth in those dark times used
‘wooden or ivory plugs for fillings,
"The writings of Heredotus tell us
that—and, by the way of confir-
mation, the mummies dating from
that period have wooden plugged
teeth.
duced to a mere fibre, but there
isn’t the slighest doubt that the
centuries old filling once was a hard
‘wood.
Four hundred years later, both
ivory and wood filled the cavity,
the wood being used to keep the
ivory in its place. Visits to the
dentists—oh woe!-—were frequent in
those days, because the ivory, ever
in danger of falling, had to be
wedged into position.
In Rome, Petronius, the Beau
Brummel of his time, demanded
gold in place of ivory—which in-
novation brought on his indiscreet
head the imperial anger of Nero, who
himself aspired to be a dictator of
fashion, even in teeth fillings!
In Europe, ° later on, extraction
was considered the only cure for a |
violently aching tooth.
In 1750 a Paris dentist introduced
‘the transplanting of teeth. Many
.gallants of the period and the ladies,
upon whom their affections were
centered, bravely submitted to the
painful operation. The story is
even told that Louis the XVI and
Marie Antoinette, in the days of
their courtship, exchanged a tooth
apiece.
BUY - IN- BELLEF
ONT
The Variety Shop
Over a Third of a Century
at Same Location
Merchandise and Prices
CORRESPOND
The Key to Better Business
Do you know that more “property is controlled by retail .tores
than any other kind of business in this country. There is more
money invested in retail stores than in all the banks. “Their sales ex-
ceed that of the steel industry.
\ More taxes are paid by retail merchants than by an other class.
More people are employed in retail stores thanin any other trade.
You can put the plus sign on anything you like in regard to the retail
business. Therefore it pays to consider the ways and means of im-
proving the greatest activity in Bellefonte today. This can be done
by “Being a Booster for Bellefonte, and by Buying from Bellefonte
C.Y. Wagner & Co., Inc.
Manufacturers of
Flour, Corn Meal ana Feed
And Dealers in
All Kinds of Grain
Bell Phone 22
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Merchants.” They are paying the heaviest taxes and are making
Bellefonte the Business Center of the County.
LIFE IS A GIVE AND TAKE PROPOSITION
There was a time in the world when a man could do pretty
much as he pleased. What one man did was of little concern to
anyone else, for it had little effect on anyone else. Those
days are gone, however, and they will never return. To-
day, no man can live entirely unto himself. Life is a com-
plicated affair under modern conditions. No man in any community
is entirely independent of all others in that community.
Organized society, in the form of governments, national, state
and local, have recognized the new conditions and have decreed that
every man must observe certain rules in his relations with his
The aged plug is often re. |
TRY OUR
State College
Cottage (Cheese
and Cream Cheese, Butter, Whip-
ping Cream and Certified Milk—
Harry E. Clevenstine
fellow men. He must not do certain things that would endanger the
health of other people in his community. He must not do such
things as would disturb the peace and quiet of his neighborhood. He
must remember that he owes a duty to his community.
NOT QUESTION OF RIGHT.
A man may say that he has the right to spend his money where
he pleases; that no one can stop him if he wants to buy his grocer-
ies, his clothes and his furniture in some city miles away from where
he earns the money to pay for them, He is right. There is no
law to prevent him from doing so, unless it is the law of self-pre-
servation. The man who has the right to send his money away to
some distant city instead of spending it at home, also has the right
to send his children to that city to be -educated in the schools, which
his money helps to support, but he doesn’t exercise that right. He
sends his children to the local schools, the maintenance of which is
Dr. R. L. Capers
Osteopathic Physician
Special Non-Surgical Method
of Removing Tonsils—
Bloodless and Painless
Hours 9-12 a. m.
Monday and Wednesday 1-5 p. m.
Friday 7-9 p. m.
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 7-9 p. m.
Phone 128-J
made possible by the men who spend their money at home.
Life in any community today is a give-and-take proposition. A
man can not take everything and give nothing and get away with it
for any great length of time.. He can not take his-living from a
community and give nothing back to help the other fellow make a
living. If he cuts off the other fellow’s living, he is bound eventually .
to cut off his own, for unless the other fellow has money to hy his
labor or his goods he cannot make a living himself. -
You may say that what you buy doesn’t amount to much and
the money that you send away to the mail order houses in other
cities can not have any great ‘effect upon the general business condi-
tions in your town. Maybe it doesn’t amount to much and maybe
Modern denistry is based on the
idea of prevention rather than the:
extraction of decayed teeth, Proper '
diet is the foremost preventive
measure necessary to retain the
“teeth in prime condition. Fresh
vegetables, plenty of raw ripe fruit,
whole grain cereals and milk—a
‘quart of milk a day—are vitally.
“needed. f
That's why, for one reason, food
‘specialists urgently beg you to see
‘that each child, each adult member |
of your family, drinks a quart of
‘milk a day. Calcium, the element
in which the American diet is per- |
haps most frequently lacking, is |
found more abundantly in milk than '
in any other food. |
The person who drinks his quota
‘of milk a day is most likely to
maintain good teeth- throughout life.
“The reason for this is that the |
mineral matter found in milk, to- |
gether with the vitamin elements
which nature has placed there, form |
the most perefct food combination |
for building teeth and bone known |
to science.
TEETH'S DECAY PREVENTED BY
PROPER EATING.
‘Prevention of the decaying of!
tecth is possible, with the use of
scientifically balanced diet supple-
mented with mouth washing with
antiseptic solutions.
This has been proved by experi-
ments conducted by Prof. Russell W.
Bunting, University of Michigan
scientist. {
According to Dr. Bunting, keep-
ing the teeth and the mouth gener-
ally scrupulously clean with germi-
‘cidal washes is not enough to pre-
‘vent tooth_decays.
Proper food plays a vital part in|
‘the preservation of the teeth, as!
was shown. by tests, |
Dr. Bunting experimented upon
‘school boys and girls. They were ;
divided into three groups.
All three groups washed their
‘teeth with germ-killing pastes and |
‘washes, twice daily.
But one group, in addition to the
mouth cleaning, ate only a pre-
scribed scientifically balanced diet.
After a whole year, none of these
cavaties grew worse. No new cav-
new cavaties were formed.
The members of the other groups
were permitted to eat whatever
‘they liked. Their diet was not
regulated, and the result was that
two-thirds of them developed dental
caries or decaying of teeth.
The most striking thing about
‘the decay preventive diet was that
it was free of sugar.
The children in this group were
not permitted to eat candy, ice cream,
cake and pie. They used no sugar
even with their breakfast cereals.
"They drank suglarless tea and
coffee. Their reward was perfect
When Winter Comes you will Need Your
FUR COAT
Let Us Repair or Remodel It—
Guaranteed Satisfaction
Harry Greenberg
Spring and High Streets
Bellefonte, Pa.
Phone 55&-J
it won’t have any great effect upon the community’s prosperity in
itself, but what will be the result if every person in the community,
or. half of them, or a tenth of them, take the same view of the mat-
ter. Your business, in itself, may not amount to much, but taken
together with the business of ja hundred others in the community, it
amounts to a great deal. It amounts to . the -difference between a
prosperous community and a figeaa one. It amounts to the differ-
ence, in the end, between good times and bad times for yourself and
your own family. If you lived on a desert isle, it would make no
difference where you sent your money, because it would make no
difference whether you had any money at all or not. But you are
not living upon a desert isle, You are living in a modern communi-
ty. To do everything possible to build up that community is not
only a duty which you owe to the community, but—more important
still—it is a duty which you owe to ‘yourself.
TAXES WILL INCREASE.
You Need No Longer be Told
You Have an Expensive Foot
Enna-Jettick
Shoes for Women
$5.00 and $6.00
Mingle’s Shoe Store
You have children to educate. You want your community to
have good schools so that your children may have the same advan-
tages that the children in the big city have. If you live on a farm
you need good roads over which to haul your products to market.
You may say that you pay your share of the taxes-otit of which the
schoolhouses are built and the roads constructed. Maybe you do pay
your share, in proportion to the value of your world’s goods, but
where is the other fellow to get the money to pay his share of the
taxes if, after you pay your taxes, you send the remainder of your
money to some other community to help build their schools and con-
struct their roads. The merchants of any community pay a * very
considerable part of the taxes collected in that community. Go to
the tax books and you will find this to be the case. When the busi-
ness of the merchant falls off and he carries smaller stocks and has
less money in the bank, he pays smaller taxes, and as the amount
he pays in taxes decreases, the amount you pay must increase if the
and Sell “Larro”
‘‘More Profit Over
Feed Cost”
Mayer Bros.
Phone 334
Bellefonte. Pa.
schools are to be maintained and the roads kept up. It may be a
man’s own business if he wants to send his money to help build up
big cities where the mail order houses flourish, but it’s poor business
for himself as well as for everybody else in the community in which
he lives,
A —— —— Er ee
If you want, satisfactory printing at, reasonable prices
the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you.
J. O. Brewer
ANNOUNCES
the purchase of the
Thomas Coal Yard
Soliciting Your Patronage
Phone 162] N. Thomas St.
Studebaker
Free Wheeling
....Means....
A transmission which permits the
engine to pull the car, but prevents
the car pulling the engine.
BEEZER’S GARAGE
North Water Sireet
-
City Coal Yard
Wholesaie and Retail
Anthracite and Bituminous
ee COAL eos
Hay and Grain
Bellefonte, Pa.
Special Notice
If you are one of our customers you know all
about our High Grade Meats. If you are not
—come in and see the difference.
‘We handle nothing but Government in-
spected meats, which assues ycu getting
meat from healthy cattle.
Prompt Delivery
: Phone 3845
Armstrong’s Market
Carpeneto’s
Always the Best
Fruits, Vegetables
Candy and Tobaccos
Phone 28
We Deliver
Weekly Special
8s5lb. Slate Surfaced
ROLL ROOFING
$1.95
Claster’s
W. R. Brachbill
Established 1841
Furniture and Rugs
BELLEFONTE, PENNA.
Complete Bed Outfit
including Mahogany Steel Bed,
Link Springs, and 50-Pound
All Cotton Mattress, for only
$21.75
Cohen ®& Co.
Department Store
Bellefonte, Pa.
Potter-Hoy Hardware Co.
Only One Heatrola
Made by Estate Store Co.’
WE SELL IT
Phone 660 . . . Bellefonte
Electric Supply Co.
“Radio Sales and Service
Atwater—Kent
Golden-Voice Radio
Lowest Prices on Batteries
45 Volts B. Batteries $1.60
Dry Cells 35c.
Radio Tubes Tested Free
Glenwood Stoves
Makes Baking Easy
Peninsular Parlor Circulators
Blaben’s Floor Linoleums
Hilo 4-Hour Hard Drying Enamels in
All Shades, Rich in Color and
Durable — Everything in Hard-
ware, at the Right Price.
H. P. Schaeffer
HARDWARE
Hunting Time is Here
Buy your High Top All Leather
Shoes, Hunting Pants, Breeches, and
Everything for the Hunter to Wear—
Sid Bernstein
Next Door to the Richelieu
Sweet Orr and Woolrich
Exclusive Agents
Shop at THE KATZ STORE
...And See For Yourself
that Price has nothing to do with Good Taste
—Qur merchandise is chosen first for its
Good Taste, its Correctness—If it can be had
for lower prices we’re doubly glad—We be-
lieve our customers like to get the most for
their money.
We Propose to
Give It to Them
Runkle’s Drug Store
TRAE ET Tn
ti: Rexall so
Remedies
Bush Arcade
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Insurance
menses
Ed. L. Keichline
If in Need of a Real
Victrola Type
Parlor Heater
It will certainly pay you to investi-
gate the “Torrid Sunshine’’—sold by
The Bellefonte
We trust you find yourselves among
those who feel that Olewine’s Hard-
ware is a good one to deal with.
If so, we are realizing our aspiration
to glve real service in all our deal-
ings, aud we thank you for your
response to our efforts.
Olewine’s Hardware
It Pays to Buy the Best
It Pays to Buy ai Beezer’s
Foods of Excellence will Help You Win
Fame as a Provider of Splendid Meals—If
It’s Quality You Want, We Have It.
P. L. Beezer Estate
Cash Meat Market
Fruit and Vegetables
Bonfatto’s
Wholesale and Retail
All Kinds of Produce
We Deliver
Belletonte, Pa. Ha rdwvare Comp’y rable Qver i Phone 240 W. High Street
LISTEN!
? Bellefonte Fuel & Supply Co. :
F dal 1 e are ng orders for Personal " r eathe
From a Lumberman a. (Groceries for a Coal, Feed and Oils 70; CO Weal N
-— Highest Quality Food Products See Our Sample Books BELLEFONTE, PA. Clean, Clear, Golden
WwW R Sh At the Prompt Servies Prices Our 50c. and $1.00 Box Assortments Modapad } 00 MOTOR OIL
® ® ope We Deli are also selling— Osceola Mills er Net Ton .
: S ae Ver Provide Them Early 5-Ton Lots...$4.50 per Net Ton Center Oil and Gas Co.
teeth, at the end of the year,