- Bellefonte Pa., January $0, 1981. 2,000,000 CHRISTMAS TREES USED IN STATE THIS YEAR. Upwards of two million Christmas | trees were used in Pennsylavnia dur- | ing the holiday season, according to estimates by officials of the State Department of Forests and Waters, As usual, large quantities of trees | were imported into southeastern Pennsylvania, particularly Philadel phia, as well as the Pittsburgh dis- trict and the anthracite region. The imported trees were mostly spruce | and fir from the New England and | Lake States, or from Canada. Six or seven hundred carloads of Christmas trees were sent into Mich- | igan and as far west as the State | of Washington. The latter trees were Douglas fir. This tree is no! | related to the Balsam fir of the east, but both species are in de- | mand due to their great beauty and | symmetrical form. i Larger numbers of trees than ever | before were cut this year fom forest | tree plantations in Pennsylvania, as- | serts officials of the Department. Although seedlings for reforestation now distributed by the Department are be set out for timber | plantations rather than Christmas | tree use, many of the trees cut for | this purpose are from plantations | established more than 8 years ago, before the present ruling. Others are from plantations made with seed- | lings purchased from commercial nurseries. The sales of planted Christmas trees from one estate in eastern Pennsylvania now amount to several thousand dollars annually. The advantage of home grown Christmas trees is obvious, since | they are freshly cut and not so liable to injury in shipment. The imported trees gathered in the forests of Canada and the North Woods are commonly cut from six weeks to two months or more be- fore Christmas. They are also tightly bound for shipment and are handled frequently, In the management of Chirstmas tree plantationsit is estimated that if sturdy seedlings or (transplants are set out the trees may be cut from five to ten years after plant- | ing. A block of trees may be plant- ed cach year, and after the first block becomes old enough to har- vest, a subsequent block is of suit- able size for each year's crop there- after, As each block is cut it is replanted. The trees are planted from four to five feet apart, using two or three thousand to the acre. Planting stock for Christmas tree plantations may be secured from | commercial nurseries for five to ten dollars a thousand trees. — ———— ——— THE NEW PAPER MONEY IS NOT HOLDING UP. BlY -IN- BEL LEFONTE Dr. R. L. Capers Osteopathic Physician Special Non-Surgical Method ot Treating Rectal Diseases Bloodless and Painless Hours 9-12 a. m. Monday and Wednesday 1-5 p. m. Friday 79 p. m. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 7-8 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 ..a Feed And Dealers in All Kinds of Grain Bell Phone 22 BELLEFONTE, PA. | ef A—— —— S—————— TRY OUR State College Cottage Cheese and Cream Cheese, Butter, Whip- ping Cream and Certified Milk— Harry E. Clevenstine mg — ——————————————————— The Treasury has been disappointed in its hope of reducing the cost of | money circulation by reducing the size of paper money. The average | life of the $1 and $5 bills has prov- ed to be but a few days longer than | that of the old bills, The $2 bill, | owing, apparently, to the ancient! superstition that it is accompanied | by bad luck, stands up. The others become spoiled just as quickly and break just as badly. : Blame for the prompt return of bills as unfit for use is put largely upon motor and garage employees, the nature of whose business keeps ! their hands greasy and dirty. Since they cannot be expected to wash after =erving each customer, no an- ticipation of betterment in this di- rection can be held. One other trouble is the propensity to fold bills, a habit which it was thought theis- | sue of small bills would check. On this point it may be suggested to Mr. Mellon that people may be folding his currency so compactly because they regard it rather more highly than in some years. However, there is one balm. Coun- terfeiting has been ‘reduced to a minimum.” And, with that much’ gained, the Treasury is still search. ing for paper that will stand wear and tear more successfully. TRY EXPERIMENTS IN FALL PLANTING. Several experiments in fall plant- ing have been announced by the di- vision of prison labor, State De- partment of Welfare, as under way at the nursery of the new Western Penitentiary at Rockview. More than 35 quarts of bitter- sweet berries were sown in the nursery beds for growth experiment. A black walnut plantation was established by planting the nuts rather than seedling trees. i One acre of evergreen trees was planted to determine the practica- | bility of fall planting. : Orders have been received at Rockview to date for fall and spring planting for a total of 1,274,- 000 trees and seedlings. This figure exceeds last year's by more than 300,000 on the same date. “What's wrong with the anyway?" asked the first pessimist. “Too much rope is being used for 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 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 world, The Key to Better Busmess LIFE IS A GIVE AND Wui .N CONTROL TOWN'S DESTINY Can Make or Break a Community Through Exercise of Their 1 Power. THEY HOLD PURSE STRINGS It Is Estimated That at Least 80 Per | Cent of Retaii Purchasing Is Done by Feminine Shoppers. (Copyright, 1917, Western Newspaper Union.) It has been said that the hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world and nowhere is this more | literally true than in the world of | trade. The woman {s the purchasing! agent of the household and man, as a rule, is very glad to have her handle the job. | It has been estimated by some stu- dents of the merchandising gnine that | 80 per cent of all retall buying Is done by women. This may be a high esti- mate but a visit to the retail stores of any town or city is enough to con- | vince one that the figures are not too high, The preponderance of women among the buyers Is sufficient, at any | rate, to make not only the retailer but the manufacturer and the wholesaler realize that It is the women that they must please with their merchandise, Because they do by far the greater nart of the buying in any community, the women have a responsibility that they do not always appreciate. The women of a town, through their buy- ing power, can make or break the mer- chants of a town and as a natural con- sequence they can make or break the town. It is In their power to make it a prosperous town or a dead town. When the women of a town gcquire the mal! order habit, the town may just as well begin making arrange ments for its own obsequies. Hard to Understand. Just why a woman, who is a shop- per by instinct and a shrewd judge of values in merchandise, should suc- cumb to the lures of the mall order house it is difficult to understand but, unfortunately, some of them do. No one knows better than the woman who has had some experience In the buy- ing of merchandise how difficult it is to distinguish between the genuine and the imitation even after a close Inspec- tion. The gonad shopper, when on buy- ing bent, does not always take the first article that is offered for inspec- tion. In fact this is the exception rather than the rule. The merchants | a dozen sults TAKE PROPOSITION know it and expect It. They expect a woman, if she is a good shopper, t “look around a little,” If a woman should walk into a re- tall store and purchase the first suit | | that she tried on, for instance, the shock probably would prove fatal to the storekeeper or the saleswoman. | | The chances are that she will try on | and look at as many more hefore she selects one that suits | her taste or pocketbook, and the store- keeper not only expects but wishes her to do this. He wishes her to be satisfied as he knows that a satisfied | customer is the best advertisement ‘hat he can obtain, Taking a Chance. This same woman, however, may or- der a sult from a mail order house on the strength of nothing more than a pretty picture and an alluring descrip- tion. She has not even the opportun- ity to try It on, to say nothing of the | chance of examining the fabric, noting the exact shade of the material and inspecting the workmanship. The Kind of Coal You Want Best grades obtainabie, prices right. Our anthracite is all Premium Lykens | Valley grade. Our bituzanous in cludes Genuine Pine Glenn and Cherry Run, Cumbria Smokeless and Dustless, and others. J. 0. Brewer Coal Yard Successor 10 Thomas Coal Yard Cail 162 J— Day or Night City Coal Yard Oe: De Anthracite Coal and Bituminous Exciusive Sa'e of the PINE GLENN iL 200 The Original Cherry Rua Coals: | : She is | taking chances on the suit fitting her, | on the material being good and dur- able, the shade becoming to her and | the workmanship of such a character that the suit will not fall to pieces. The woman who takes such chances | cannot be called a shrewd shopper. It might be more easily understood why mere man, unaccustomed and averse, as a rule, to shopping excur- sions, should fall a victim to the cata- logue habit. He might find it easier to order from the picture in the cata- logue than to go to a store and look for the article that he wanted or he might take the position that he wouldn't know what he was getting anyway If he went to the store and he might as well take a chance on the mail order gamble, but why the wom- an who knows what she wants and knows that she Is getting what she wants when she gets it should buy on the “sight unseen" plan—ell, that's another question altogether. Woman's Greatest Opportunity. Women are tak'ng a more and more prominent part in public affairs all the time. They are alding now In many parts of the country In running the affairs of state. Even where they do not have the ballot they are playing a big part, individually and through their organizations, in the conduct par- ticularly of local governments, yet In the one field where they can do most to help build up their communities they may be overlooking their oppor- tunity. With the buying power In their hands they can do more for thelr community by stanchly ean possibly do in any other way. Man may think he Is a very impor cant element in the progress and devel- | opment of his town but when he re- flects that 80 per cent of the buying power of the community is in the hands of the women he is apt to real- Ize that he Is a very Insignificant atom. ———— the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you. We Recommend and Sell “Larro” ——— “More Profit Over DRINK Flav-O-Lac (Culture Buttermilk)—For Health A Wholesome and Peoa Cosy! Healthful Beverage Allegheny Street Mayer Bros. Hoag’s Dairy Store Bellefonte, Pa. Phone 334 Cor. High and Spring . . Phone 629 City Cash Grocery — Ee, I Carpeneto’s | Always the Best, Fruits, Vegetables Candy and Tobacces Phone 28 We Deliver 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 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 384 J Airmstrond Meat Market Lumber Steel Claster’s ....At the Big Spring.... Building Supplies Furniture For 1931 is Back to Pre-War Prices at, W. R. Brachbill’s Furniture Store You are Invited to See the New Spring Styles in Ladies’ Dresses Better Values Than Ever Cohen & Co. Bellefonte, Pa. supporting | thelr home business men than they Potter-Hoy Hardware Co. Only One Heatrola Made by Estate Store Co. WE SELL IT Phone 660 . . . Bellefonte In Bush Arcade On High Street Always Fresh Groceries If you want. satisfactory printing at. reasonable prices in Ge Stoves Coat and Peninsular Parlor Circulators D Blaben’s Floor Linoleums Hilo Ene Tord gm Enamels in ress Sale All Shades, Rich in Color and NOW ON | Durable — Everything in Hard- ——— ware, at the Right Price. - - H. P. Schaeffer Sid Bernstein HARDWARE Bellefonte, Pa. Shop at THE KATZ STORE «.And See For Yourself that Price has nothing todo with Good Taste —Our merchandise is chosen first for itg Good Taste, its Correctness—1f 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 Remedies Bush Arcade BELLEFONTE, PA. Insurance —— 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 give real service in all our deal- ings, aud we thank you for your response to our efforts. It Pays to Buy the Best It Pas fo Buy ai Beezer’s Foods of Bxcellence 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 making cigars and not enough to | ni) | hang gangsters,” growled the other Bellefonte, Pa. H 2 rdw are C om p’ y Olewine S Hardware | Whoopie Over vorty Yow Phone 240 W. High Street Buy Electrically Herr & Heverly | || Christmas Shopping is Easy i} 1 oflofonte Fuel & Supply Co. LISTEW) They Cost the Least to Use Buy Lumber dal . — RETAIL Drain and Refill and Save the Most Labor— From a Lumberman Ferndale Groceries Hunter's Book Store || Coal, Feed and Oils For Cold Weather Washers, Sweepers, Ironers, Radios, Lamps, New Shades— at Prices to Suit Your Purse. Electric Supply Co. W. R. Shope Highest Quality Food Products Prompt Service At the Lowest Possible Prices We Deliver Phone 62 THE REASON: there are so many Nice Things to give that sre inexpensive. BELLEFONTE, PA. Moshannon } $5.00 Osceola Mills Per Net Ton 5-Ton Lots...$4.50 per Net Ton with TEXACO— Clean, Clear, Golden MOTOR OIL Center Oil and Gas Co.