Bellefonte, Pa., January 16, 1931. PATIENTS TREATED AT CENTRE COUNTY HOSPITAL. Helen R. Benner, of Bellefonte R. F. D., was admitted on Monday of last week as a surgical patient. Mary Carastini, of Clarence, was admitted on Monday of last week for surgical treatment. Joseph Carastini, of Clarence, be- came a medical patient on Monday of last week. Clair Gilmour McVitty, of Fleming, was admitted on Monday of last week as a medical patient. Miss Clara Love, of Altoona, a student nurse at the hospital, was returned to duty on Monday of last week, after undergoing surgical treatment, Andrew E. Butterfield, of Brad- | ford, Pa., was admitted on Tuesday | of last week for surgical treatment. William Wantz, of Milesburg, was | discharged on Tuesday of last week | after undergoing surgical treatment. | Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Shultz, of Bellefonte, are the proud parents of | a baby daughter, born in the hospi- | tal on Wednesday of last week. Chester L. Billett, of Bellefonte, | became a surgical patient on Wed- | nesday of last week. | Betty Jane Hall, of Milesburg, was | admitted for medical treatment on | Wednesday of last week. | Irving Weiner, a student at the | Pennsylvania State College, was ad- | mitted on Wednesday of last week, | as a surgical patient. Master William Shultz, of Snow | Shoe, was discharged on Wednesday | of last week after undergoing medi- | cal treatment. Dean Rossman, of Millheim, was discharged on Wednesday of last | week after having been a surgical | patient. Mr. and Mrs. William Hall, of | State College, are the happy parents | of a baby son, born at the hospital | on Thursday of last week. i Edward Beck, of Bellefonte, was | discharged on Thursday of last week having been a patient in the hospi- | tal since Christmas eve when he! was struck by an automobile. John C. Shutt, of Bellefonte, was | admitted last Thursday for surgical treatment. | Hazel N. Rhoades, of Bellefonte, was admitted on Thursday of last week for surgical treatment. Kearney Walker, of State College, was discharged last Friday, after BIT -IN- ELLEFONTE Dr. R. L. Capers Osteopathic Physician Special Non-Surgical Method of Treating Rectal Diseases 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 The Variety Shop Over a Third of a Century at Same Location Merchandise and Prices CORRESPOND C.Y. Wagner & Co., Inc. Manufacturers of Flour, Corn Meal .na Feed And Dealers in All Kinds of Grain Bell Phone 22 BELLEFONTE, PA. TRY OUR State College Cottage Cheese and Cream Cheese, Butter, Whip- ping Cream and Certified Milk— Harry E. Clevenstine undergoing surgical treatment. | A. J. Hall, of Milesburg, was discharged on Friday, after having | been a medical patient for several! days. Miss Julia Fye, of Moshannon, was | discharged on Friday of last week, | after undergoing surgical treatment. Mrs. Emily Jane Shultz, of Cur- tin, became a surgical patient on friday. Mrs. Madaline Hackett and in- fant, of Bellefonte, vere discharged on Saturday. Mrs. Louise Rimmey and child, of | State College, were discharged on 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 558-J Saturday. i Harry Solt, of Axe Mann, was ad- ' mitted on Saturday as a surgical | patient, the result of an accident in which he was shot in the face. Chester Billett, of Bellefonte, was discharged on Sunday after under- going surgical treatment. Samuel W. Stover, of Lemont, was admitted as a surgical patient on Sunday after his automobile had been struck by a train atthe Lemont crossing of the Lewisburg railroad. , Robert L. Cain, of Pleasant View, | was admitted on Sunday as a surgi- | cal patient. | 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 Mrs. Bertha Lesho, of Snow Shoe, | died last Thursday, at the hospital. | | People Can Create and Maintain Pros- The Key to Better Business LIFE IS A GIVE AND TAKE PROPOSITION DEAD TOWN 1S ALWAYS SHUNNED Community With Such a Reputa- tion Suffers as From a Pestilence. RESTS WITH THE CITIZENS | | | | perity If They Will Keep Thelr Money at Home In Cir. culation. (Copyright, 1917, Western Newspaper Unlon. “Stay away from that town. It's a | dead one.” Do you want that to be sald of | | your town? Of course you don't, for | ' himself or herself at frequent inter | | to a large extent, that make possible you wish, as an matter of local pride, if | for no other reason, to have your town stand high In the estimation of the world. But are you sure that you | are doing everything in your power | to place your town In the position which you wish to oceupy? That Is the | question that every person should ask vals, When things are running smoothly, | when times are good, and when it is fairly easy to make a good living for the wife and kiddies, it Is so easy for | | | | | © a man to forget that these things do | i course, citizens of the community, not come to a town as a matter of | but are the result of the | right kind of effort on the part, of the | It 1s 80 easy for a man to grow careless and | think that because this condition ex- | {sted it will continue to exist without any effort on his part or that of the other residents of the community. That is why it Is important for every one to stop and think seriously once in a while about what It would mean to him If the prosperity that makes life worth living for him should take wings and fly away. Nobody Loves a Dead Town. ' Nobody likes to live In a dead town. | No one even likes to visit a dead town. That 1s why you sometimes hear that warning, “Stay away from that town. It's a dead one,” The town which has the reputation of being a dead one suf- fers as if from a pestilence. Busl- ness men seeking new locations will have none of it. The live traveling salesman, even, will give it a wide berth. Those who live in it will get away If they can. When a town Is live and prosperous | local business Is good, real estate val- ues are high and stable, labor Is in demand and wages are good, the streets are well lighted, the residents and their property are protected from - robbery and fire and good schools are maintained for the education of the children. When a town Is dead, there is little money in circulation, store buildings stand empty with “For Sale” sign hanging on the front door, there is lttle employment for the laboring man, the streets are dark, the schools | are crippled. { What sort of town do you want to | live in? There is only one answer to | that question. You want to live In the | live town and enjoy all the good things | that come to the residents of such a! community. : Answer Easily Found. The only question then Is as to how | these prosperous conditions can be | created or maintained and it is the | easiest thing in the world to find the | answer to that question. i If the people of a community wil | keep their money at home and keep It In circulation among themselves, they | need have no fear of ever being com- | pelled to live In a dead town. If the! people wlll patronize thelr own bus- | ness men Instead of sending their dol- | lars to the mail order houses, the | prosperity of the community will take | care of itself. | The local stores, to a very large ex | tent, make every town. The taxes | pald by the business men of the com- munity are the principal support of the schools and publie institutions, It is the taxes paid by the storekeepers, the public improvements, the fire pro- tection, the street lighting and the many other things which make a town worth living in. The mail order house does not pay any taxes In the town from which it gets its money. It doe= not help to support the schools or the churches. It does not help light the streets or maintain the fire de- partment. It is the aim of the mall order houses to drive small town mer- chants out of business, so that the people will be compelled to send to the cities for their merchandise and they are spending thousands of dol- lars every month to accomplish this purpose, If they should succeed, who would pay the taxes that are now paid by the local merchants? It's a certainty that the mall order house would not pay them. Issue Is Clear Cut. Every dollar spent at home helps to make the town a live one. Every dollar sent away from homes to the mall order house helps to make the town a dead one, The issue 's a clear-cut one and Is squarely up to every resident of the community, whether a resident of the town Itself or of the country surround- ing it. The man who does not care whether he lives In a live or a dead town, If there Is such a man, need waste no thought on the subject, but the man who wants to live In a live town cannot get away from it. It is up to him to make his town a live one or a dead one. If you want, satisfactory printing at. reasonable prices the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you. The Kind of Coal You Want Best grades obtainable, prices right. Our anthracite is all Premium Lykens Valley grade. Our bituminous in- cludes Genuine Pine Glenn and Cherry Run, Cambria Smokeless and Dustless, and others. J. 0. Brewer Coal Yard Successor to Thomas Coal Yard Call 162 ]—Day or Night 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 Street (ity Coal Yard 0. G. Morgan, Proprietor Bellefonte, Pa. Anthracite C oO al and Bituminous Exclusive Sale of the PINE GLENN and The Original Cherry Run Coals Special Notice We handle U. S. Government in- spected meats for the health and protection of our patrons. Leave your orders early for your Xmas Turkey, Duck, Geese and Chickens. Phone 384J Armstrong Meat Market Carpeneto’s Always the Best, Fruits, Vegetables Candy and Tobaccos Phone 28 We Deliver Lumber Steel Claster’s ....At the Big Spring... Building Supplies Quality is Essential in Furniture For Christmas Giving W. R. Brachbill Part Wool Doub'e Blankets 66x8o0—Plaid Designs A Useful Xmas Gift $ 1 50 Cohen @& Co. Department Store Bellefonte, Pa. Potter-Hoy Hardware (Co. Only One Heatrola Made by Estate Store Co. WE SELL IT Phone 660 . . . Bellefonte THE R.S. Brouse Store In Bush Arcade On High Street Always Fresh Groceries 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 Sid Bernstein Sells For Less Come in, look around and be convinced. The Family Outfitter Next Door to Richelieu Theatre Bellefonte, Pa. Mrs. Malissa Jane Patterson, of | State College, was admitted on Sun | day as a medical patient. Mrs. Edna B. Haupt, of Bellefonte R. F. D., was admitted on Monday | as a surgical patient. There were 43 patients in the hos- pital at the beginning of this week. | STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS Its Nature's Danger Signal Chas. Nicholas, 196 Market St. ’ We Recommend and Sell “Larro” “More Profit Over Hoag’s Dairy Store Corer High and Spring Streets City Cash Grocery Shop at THE KATZ STORE «.And See For Yourself that Price has nothing to do with Good Taste ‘—Our merchandise is chosen first for ity 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 Drag Store Remedies Bush Arcade BELLEFONTE, PA. Feed Cost” ||| Pasteurized Milk and Cream Aleghony Street and All Dairy Products Mayer Bros. Quality Guaranteed Bellefonte, Pa. Phone 334 Bellefonte. Pa. | We Deliver . . . . Phone 629 Newark, N. J., says, “Before using Lithiated Buchu (Keller Formula) my sleep was disturbed 5to6 times for bladder relief. Have tried most | everything but this gives greatest relief in quickest time and is least expensive. This letter is voluntary ‘and will cheerfully give my exper- | fence to anyone.” It acts on blad- der as epsom salts do on boweis. | Drives out foreign deposits and les- sens excessive acidity. This re- lieves the irritation that causes | getting up nights. The tablets cost | 2c each at all drug stores, Keller Laboratory, Mechanicsburg, Ohio, or locally at Parrish’'s Drug Store. Insurance Ed. L. Keichline Bellefonte, Pa. 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 Hardware Comp’y 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 tp Buy the Best It Pays (0 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 Established Over Forty Years Phone 666—667 Free Delivery Fruit and Vegetables Bonfatto’s Wholesale and Retail All Kinds of Produce We Deliver Phone 240 W. High Street Buy Electrically They Cost the Least to Use and Sawe the Most Labor— Washers, Sweepeis, Ironers, Radios, Lamps, New Shades— at Prices to Suit Your Purse. Electric Supply Co. Buy Lumber From a Lumberman W. R. Shope Herr & Heverly Ferndale (Troceries eesees FANCY Highest Quality Food Products Prompt Service At the Lowest Possible Prices We Deliver Phone 62 Christmas Shopping is Easy Hunter’s Book Store THE REASON: there are so many Nice Things to give that are inexpensive. Bellefonte Fuel & Supply Co. RETAIL Coal, Feed and Oils BELLEFONTE, PA. Moshannon | $5.00 Osceola Mills § Per Net Ton 5-Ton Lots... $4.50 per Net Ton LISTEN! Drain and Refill For Cold Weather with TEXACO— Clean, Clear, Golden MOTOR OIL Center Oil and Gas Co.