———— AUTO ROAD EXTENDING FAR INTO POLAR REGION. Most any American who has an automobile, a bicycle or even a good egs venture far within the Article Circle. A road located in Northern Fin- land and believed to be the north- ernmost thoro in existence, starts about 300 kilometers within the circle and extends about 250 kilometers farther north to the Fjord of Petsamo in the Artic Ocean. Incidentally this harbor is free from ice the around. American automobile tourists are going to hear much about this road pext month when delegates to the Sixth International Road Congress convene. E. W. Skogstrom, di- rector general of roads, Helsingford, Finland, will submit a detailed re- rt on its construction and capabil- Ry in handling traffic. The Imperial Russian Government started construction of the highway in 1916 as a military measure: It would establish communication with the Allies and bank the German blockade of the Baltic Sea. Then came the revolution in that country in March the following year and Finland resumed the construction work. Total cost of the road aggre- gates $1,500,000. The road has been open for quite some time and already venturesome motor tourists have traveled to its northern end. Automobile service stations and roadside hotels have sprung up but most of them are open only during the summer months. Among the delegates who will open their sessions October 6 and continue until October 11th are Wilhelm Richard Boeckl and Ed- mund Stinnes. Boeckl won the world championship for figure skat- ing at the Madison Square rink, New York city, last year and will be there as one of the delegates from Austria. Stinnes is a son of the late Hugo Stinnes, Berlin, Germany, mo- tor magnate and capitalist. He comes as a representative of the society for the promotion of auto- mobile highways. Another represen- tative of the society will be Joseph Brix, of Berlin-Charlottenburg, gov- ernment consulting engineer. The highway education board has sent 300 invitations to the delegates of the congress to participate in a number of highway inspection tours. ! The tours are being arranged to af- | ford the foreign delegates first hand information on the construction, maintenance and use of all types of modern roads in the University. ‘GIGANTIC STRIDES MADE IN USE OF ESPERANTO ee — EE IY -IN- BELL prs ——————————————— EFONTE Dr. R. L. Capers | 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 CEE EE) mo—— Merchandise and Prices CORRESPOND C.Y. Wagner & Co., Inc. Manufacturers of Flour, Corn Meal aa 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 i Esperanto was creaied by Dr, L. L. Zamenho!f (1858-1917), who was born at Bielostock, Russia. He be- lieved that much international mis- understanding might be removed if a common language were available, and he conceived the idea of Esper- anto. By the age of nineteen, he had completed the construction of his new language, but it was then subjected to scrutiny and practical tests till 1887, when he published his “Lingvo Internacia” under the pseu- donym of ‘Doctor Esperanto.” Since that time the use of Esperanto has spread rapidly, and Esperanto as- sociations have been formed in every country. Even in the British Isles, where the importance of the movement does not appear to have been fully understood, there are sup- d to be 100,000 persons with al owledge of the language, The | third universal Esperanto congress was held at Cambridge in 1907, and | since ‘hen more than 1,250,000 text- | books have been sotd in these is-| lands. More than 1,260 delegates, | representing every country in the world, attended the twenty-second universal Esperanto congress at Ox- | ford. Among them were a number ! of Icelanders. ! i lp rn FOR HAPPY FISHERMEN i NEXT SUMMER SEASON, | Fishermen, here's something pleas- ant to think over while chill winds blow and skaters glide over your favorite haunts, the fisheries of! Pennsylvania promise many happy days with rod and reel. i Pike, perch, suckers, black bass, brook trout, catfish, lake trout, min- nows, pickerel, sunfish--a variety of fish to suit the sport of every type of fisherman has been distributed for your benefit. A statement issued says that a total of 69,344,028 fish and 92,236 frogs were distributed to the streams from the Pleasant Mount Fish Hatchery between January 1, WW, and November 30, 1930, in-| ve, sm m— A ——— School Inspector to Pretty Teach- er-—"Do you teach observation?” “Yes.” “Then Iwill take the class. Now, Shildren, shut your eyes and sit Following this the inspector made a slow whistling sort of noise and followed with, “Now, children, what did I do?” 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 TAXES RAISED BY HARD TIMES Burden Is Lightest in Communl- ties Boasting Live and Thrive ing Towns. FARMER FEELS THE EFFECT Is Inclined to Forget, at Times, Thal He Is Most Vitally Interested in Prosperity of Near-by i Cities. | (Copyright, 1917, Western Newspaper Union.) ! Taxes are always heavy-—to the man | who has to pay them—but taxes In | some communities are much higher than In others. If you have ever stopped to investigate the matter you have discovered that the lowest taxes are found In the most prosperous com- munities. And there's a reason. i The prosperous community has the | lowest toxes because there Is a large | amount of wealth in the community against which the taxes may be as- sessed, There are prosperous mer- ' chants with large stocks of goods up- , on which taxes are levied. Property | values are high and there are thriving . industries which pay a large propor . tion of the taxes. i The higher the property values ana the greater the wealth of the commu- | nity the lower are the tax levies, for a . lower tax on each hundred dollars of i valuation Is required to produce the necessary revenue for the administra- tion of the city and county govern- ments. Other Taxes Are Ralsed. On the other hand, take a dead town Property values are low. Merchants’ stocks are small and they have little money in the bank. Industries which ordinarily pay a large part of the taxes of a community have closed «Io There are vacant store buildings ch were formerly filled with stocks of merchandise upon which the owners paid heavy taxes. Who pays the taxes that were once pald by the mechants, the manufacturers, the bankers and the men who had large holdings of high-priced property! conduct the city and county govern- ments, to maintain the schools, to build and repair the roads must be collect- ed from someone. Who pays them? has been planning to bulld his home must pay ¢ouble or triple the amount which he paid in the times when the town was prosperous, to make up for The taxes to The man who owns his little home or the vacant lot or two upon which he The Key to Better Busiess LIFE IS A GIVE AND TAKE PROPOSITION the merchants, the bankers, the manu- facturers and the big property owners who bore the heaviest burdens of tax- ation when times were good. The farmers in the country sur counding the town are also among the heaviest sufferers from the ebbing of | the town's prosperity. A certain amount of money must be ralsed by taxation to provide for the expenses of the county. Roads must be built and kept in repair. Bridges must be built and maintained. Salaries of county officers must be pald. County institutions for the care of the sick and the poor must be maintained. In counties which contain one or more thriving towns, a large proportion of the taxes for the county are pald by the towns. The greater the wealth of the towns and the higher the prop- erty valuations, the lower the tax levy for the entire county. When the tax levy is low the burden placed upon the | farmer is light. Burden Falls on Farmer. When the county contains no pros perous and wealthy towns, the greater | part of the burden of taxation for the | county falls upon the farmer. The value of the farmer's property does not | fall in proportion to the value of the property in the town and the higher tax levy that results from the lower property values In the towns makes his taxes higher. The farmer forgets at times that hu is vitally interested in the prosperity of “his town,” He thinks that it is up to the town to take care of itself and that it is up to him to take care of himself and he overlooks that fact that the prosperity of the town means as much to him as it does to those who live in it. The farmer who is inclined to overlook this fact has only to think of the matter of taxes and he is likely to change his point of view for taxes are one thing that neither he nor any- one else can escape, and they are one thing in which the farmer ordinarily takes a very lively interest, How Farmer Can Help. There is just one way in which the tarmer can best promote prosperity in the town near which he lives and that is by spending his money In that town Instead of sending it away to the far- distant city. Every time the farmer sends an order to & mall order house he helps to destroy the prosperity of his own community and to boost hie own taxes. When he sends a dollar away from home he gets none of it back. When he spends a dollar at home, a part of that dollar comes back to him in some way. It helps the town where it is spent to provide a profit- able market for his products and It helps the town pay a large part of his taxes. The farmer is the one man in the community, above all others, who should have no love for the mail order houses for they are doing more to add to his troubles than any other one The Kind of Coal You Want Best grades obtainable, prices right. Out Shiuache Bal Bei ium LJheus tuminous in- a Genuine Pine Glenn and Cherry Run, Cambria Smokeless and Dustless, and others. J. 0. Brewer Coal Yard Successor to Thomas Coal Yard Call 162 J—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 City Coal Yard 0. G. Morgan, Proprietor Bellefonte, Pa. Anthracite C oO al and Bituminous Exciusive 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 384 J Armstron§ Meat Market Carpeneto’s Always the Best, Fruits, Vegetables Lumber Steel Claster’s ....At the Big Spring.... For 1931 is Back to Pre-War Prices at W. R. Brachbill’s Furniture Store Candy and Tobaccos Phone 28 Build We Deliver u ing Supplies 1 You are Invited to See Furniture the New Spring Styles in Ladies’ Dresses Better Values Than Ever Cohen & Co. 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 Coat and Dress Sale Enna-Jettick the taxes which are not paid now by 88€ncy. Hilo 4-Hour Hard Drying Enamels in Shoes for Women a oti al All Shades, Rich in Color and NOW ON $5.00 and $6.00 Dunible = Besfythioe in Hard- —— id If you want, satisfactory printing at, reasonable prices H. P. egtror Sid Bernstein Mingle’s Shoe Store | | the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you. Ha RD Belefoctn Fu DRINK Shop at THE KATZ STORE ) We Recommend . Runkle’s Drug Store and Sell “Larro” Flav-O-Lac City C ash Grocery ...And See For Yourself = (Culture Buttermilk) —For Health rh hig “More Profit Over A Wholesome and s— Good Taste, its Correctness it can be had hi Healthful Beverage Allegheny Street er ms ot Remiadt Mayer Bros. Hoag’ S Dairy Store Bellefonte, Pa. We Propose to Bush Arcade Phone 334 Cor. High and Spring . . Phone 629 Give It to Them 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 amo.g those who feel that Olewine’s Hard- ware is a good one to deal with. If so, we are rvalizing our aspiration to give 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 Pags to Buy al 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 For tim . Bellefonte, Pa. ’ -— over vt timaily” sos i ry Hardware Comp’y plat i jpueern SE Buy Electrically Herr & Heverl Christmas Shopping is Easy || || Bellefonte Fuel & Supply C0. LISTEN | They Cost the Least to Use Buy Lumber y RETAIL ny : Drain and Refill and Save the Most Labor— Washers, Sweepers, Ironers, Radios, ; Lamps, New Shades— | at Prices to Suit Your Purse. Electric Supply Co. From a Lumberman W. R. Shope Ferndale (Croceries Highest Quality Food Products Prompt Service At the Lowest Possible Prices We Deliver Phone 62 Hunter's Book Store THE REASON: there are so many Nice Things to give that are inexpensive, Coal, Feed and Oils BELLEFONTE, PA. Moshannon } $5.00 Osceola Mills § Per Net Ton | 5-Ton Lots...$4.50 per Net Ton i For Cold Weather with TEXACO— Clean, Clear, Golden MOTOR OIL Center Oil and Gas Co.