Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 27, 1931, Image 6

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i
En NrUDY ADVOCATED
1, health, welfare, and police |
ments should coordinate their {
and ascertain as soon as |
ble the number of children in|
communily who need special at- |
tion. A word-blind child may be |
murderer of tomorrow because |
his efforts to compensate for ihs |
gnized deficiency. The child
ose special abilities are unrec-
, or possibly repressed, may
the bank hold-up man of later
rs because of the ignorance of
e teacher or parent, This is such
® huge field that it would require
lumes to cover its manifold
So, cannot be entered into here.
t the fact does remain that every
d is an individual, and the com-
wai tn of factors responsible for
t individuals's departure from
be path of rectitude probably dit-
Eérs from all others. Hence the ne-
say for the individual study of
e child, and this can best be ac-
Eomplished with the aid of trained
ologists and psychiatrists.
A questionnaire sent to the school |
s of any community soon
wlicits the information that a defi-
mite percentage of the children are
abnormal and should receive im-
mediate attention ff they are to be
Saved from bécoming social liabili-
es.
We are mak pid advances in
@ndustry and but in the
Sphere of si ences we are
moving all lowly. Before us in
his is a virgin fleld wherein lies our
®olden opportunity to render
Bervice to mankind.
real
———————————
EXPECT GOOD “CROP”
OF PHEASANT EGGS.
Although not wanting to count
Rggs before they are laid the Game
Commizsion hopes to have between
©5,000 and 70,000 ring-necked pheas-
ant eggs during the spring season.
At each of the two state game
arms 300 cock and 1200 hen pheas-
ants are being held for breeding
pur \
C. A. Hiller, in charge of propa-
gation, intends to retain about %,-
000 of the eggs for hatching pur-
Poses at the two farms. About 12.-
000 will be allotted to the game ref-
uge keepers for hatching and the
remainder will be distributed to
Sportsmen and farmers. The pres-
ent rate of requests may necessitate
reduction of the allotments to be
made to individuals who have made
requests for the A;
At the State wild turkey farm
= large incubator will be to
hatch the birds. Breeding stock
there consists of 100 hens and twen-
ty gobblers.
i
—————_—
FARM POPULATION
SHOWS INCREASE.
For the first timein ten years, an
increase in farm population is an-
unced by the Federal bureau of
ren economics, according to
¥gporls received here.
When the estimates are compared,
he results reveal 208,000 more peo-
: were living on farms in the
ited States on January 1, this
Year than on the corresponding date
@ year ago.
The estimates, by geographic di-
Wisions, show that, with one excep-
Clon, the Middle Atlantic division
gin which Pennsylvania is located)
Bras the highest percentage increase
farm population. In the
rth Central Mountain and Pacific
divisions, more people are apparent-
By still leaving the farms: than are
Boing back to the country.
In 1930, it is estimated that 95,-
900 people left farms and 111,000
returned to farms in the Middle At-
Jantic States.
HOW FALLING WATER
FORMS RAINBOWS.
Rainbows are produced by the re-
op and reflection of light rays
drops of rain, mist or spray.
e most perfect rainbows are seen
When the sun is shining brightly be-
An the observer and rain is falling
n large drops in front of him.
Sometimes several hows are seen
simultaneously when the sun is shin-
fing on a sheet of rain. This is
elie to the fact that the upper drops
Fefract light rays differently from
Rwe lower ones. “
The principal bow I$ known as
@he primary rainbow; it exhibits by
Sar the finest display of the, colors
@f ‘the spectrum, being red on the
@utside and violet on the inside.
The rays are refracted on entering
wach drop, reflected from its interior
®arface, and then refracted again on
@merging.
2,000,000 PERSONS BEING
FED BY RED CROSS,
The full disaster measure of last
Summer's drouth was calculated by
@he Red Cross.
Approximately 2,000,000 persons
#n 850 counties in twenty-two States
were being fed off or otherwise aid- |
@d by the Red Cross on the last day
ge ;
: AS DETERRENT OF Dine
em ————
- BELL
FONTE
Dr. R. L. Capers
Osteopathic Physician
Special Non-Surgical Method
ot Treating Rectal Diseases
Bloodless and Painless
Hovrs 9-12 a. m.
Monday and Wednesday 1-5 p. m.
Friday 79 p.m.
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 7-9 p. m.
Phone 128.J
The Variety Shop
Over a Third of a Century
at Same Location
29 00
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.
| Harry E. Clevenstine
TRY OUR
State College
Cottage Cheese
and Cream Cheese, Butter, Whip-
ping Cream and Certified Milk—
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
comp
West | |
fo
—_—
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
LOCAL DEALERS DO
BUSINESS IN OP
if Their Customers Are
Displeased.
Mall Order Men Prefer to Sell at Long |
Distance Rather Than Deal
With People In Their
Own Citiea
(Copyright.
One of the stock excuses of the man
who orders goods from a mail order
MEET PATRONS FACE TO FACE
| not, then, give him the preference over
| the far-distant mail order man if you
|
| be madesoff the transaction will stay
| at home ‘and do its bit toward making
{ the merchant and his town and, Inci-
| dentally, yourself, more prosperous.
| No business can be transacted as
satisfactorily at long range as It ean
when the two parties to the transac-
tion meet face to face. The only ex-
| house is that there are many things
that he wants that the local mer-
chants do not carry In stock. and that |
| it Is necessary for him to send away
from town to got them.
This explanation may be all right |
on the theory that a poor excuse is |
better than none, but it falls to pass |
muster when it is subjected to a It |
tle scrutiny.
| Ask the man who offers this as an
excuse for his dealings with the mail
order man why he does not 80 to the
local merchant and ask him to order |
the articles desired if they are not to
be found In the merchant's stock. The i
merchant will very giadly do this, and
the merchant and customer will hoth |
profit. The merchant can sell you
whatever you desire at as low a price
as the mail order house can make you |
on goods the same quality and he ean
make a small profit,
The customer will profit from the
transaction, because he will be deal-
Ing with a merchant who stands ey
he sells, and who
easily accessible In case arti- |
es purchased do not prove to be
Give Home Merchant Preference.
Why not try this plan the next time
you need something which you can-
not find in any of your home stores?
The merchant in the average sized
town cannot carry in stock everything
that all of the people in his town may
want at all times. It would require
a capital many times larger thih the
average merchant can command to do
this, but he does the best he can.
He ordinarily does carry in stock at
all times many things for which there
is no genefal demand, In order that he
may meet the needs of his customers
to the greatest possible degree, but |
there is a limit to his purchasing abil
ity. He is always ready and willing,
however, to make every effort to meet
The Key to Better Business
LIFE IS A GIVE AND TAKE PROPOSITION
must hive something which is not
be found In the local stores? He
will do the business in a satisfactory
manner, give you as quick If not quick-
er service and more satisfactory treat-
that |
| he will give you better values for the
Know They Must Face the Music |
ment, and the chances are
money. Finally, whatever profit is
ception to this rule is in the case
the mall order min himself, who can
| transact his business with greater suc-
| cess to himself at long distance than
he could if he had to meet his cus
tomers face to face. That is the reason
that he does business by mall Instead
of selling to the people in his own
city. If the goods which the mail or-
der man advertises in his alluring cat-
alogues were the bargains that he re
resents them to be, he worl
own city to sell all the goods
ness better so far as he is concerned
his customer Is some hundreds of miles
away from his office,
Does Business in Open.
The man who sells goods over the
counter, on the other hand, does busi-
He cannot hide be
hind = corporate name or talk to a dis-
pleased customer from behind the
locked doors of a private office. He
ness in the open.
knows that he must face the music
case he is a party to any transaction
that won't stand the light of day, He
knows that he must satisfy every cus-
| tomer with whom he may be dealing
or he will lose not oniy that customer
but probably others who will soon
all that the customer had: expected. | know all the facts if he does not do the
' square thing by any one of his ||}
patrons.
There is no reason in the world for
any person to send his money to
mail order house because he cannot
find the article he wants in his local
store. The local merchant is fn busi-
mess for the very purpose of getting
you what you want. He has the infor
| mation that will enable him to get
what you want and to get it as quick-
ly as you could get it from a mail or-
It Is only fair to him to
der house.
not Baye
to go outside of the cotifitles of his
» could
possibly obtain. But! the average mail
order house not only does not make
any effort to sell goods in its own city,
but will not sell to anyone residing
within the city iimits. The mall order
man does not want to meet his cus-
tomers face to face. He can do busi-
to
[| 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 J—Day or Night
—————
A ————
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
to
of
(ity Coal Yard
0. G. Morgan, Proprietor
Anthracite
and Bituminous Coal
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
——
————
P-
Carpeneto’s
Always the Best,
Fruits, Vegetables
Candy and Tobaccos
Phone 28
We Deliver ]
Lumber Steel
Claster’s
-...At the Big Spring...
Building Supplies
If
in
Furniture
For 1931 is Back to
You are Invited to See
the New Spring Styles in
Ladies’
Pre-War Prices at, Dresses
W.R.Brachbill’s|[ [| ~ gp meme
Furniture Store : | Cohen ® Co.
Potter-Hoy Hardware Co. "ar RT
re Sh % Broiie Store
Only One Heatrola
Made by Estate Store Co.
WE SELL IT
Phone 660 . . . Bellefonte
In Bush Arcade
On High Street
Always Fresh Groceries
give him the chance to make such |
fit as any deale; would make off the |
on and it is only fair to your- |
self to keep that profit at bome rather |
than to send it away to some far @is |
tant city from which it will never re-
‘the demands of the community. Why ton.
If you want, satisfactory printing at, reasonable prices
the Watchman Office will be glad to do it. for you.
|
Glenwood Stoves
Makes Baking Easy
Peninsular Parior 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
Coat and
Dress Sale
NOW ON
Sid Bernstein
Bellefonte, Pa.
Ed. L. Keichline
The Bellefonte
Olewine’s Hardware
Cash Meat Market
We Deliver
TT EE | , : a |
iy “11 | shop at THE KATZ Store ,
We Recommend " | Runkle’s Drug Store
and Sell “Larro” Flav-O-Lac City Cash Grocery And See For Yourself ug
ea (Culture Buttermilk )—For Health Meson nol ii 1s
“More Profit Over A Wholesome and — | || Good Taste, its Correctness—I it can be had
Feed Cost” 1] Healthful Beverage Allegheny Street | ey Seces wars doubly lad-~ _ ve
——— » : their money,
Mayer Bros. Il Hoag’ S Dairy Store Bellefonte, Pa. 'l we Propose to
Phums iste Cor. High and Spring . . Phone 629 Give It to Them |
If in Need of a Real find ives on J It Pays to Buy the Best .
Insurance Victrola Type a that Olewine’s Hard: | ( It Pays fo Buy at Beezer’s Fruit and Vegetables
I Parlor Heater (| (I, J euiing ou spiration| | | rot ot sss win ni row wi | Bonfatto’s
— It will certainly pay you to investi- to glve real service in all our deal- || | || 10g Quality You Want, We Have It. Wholesale and Retail
gate the ‘“Torrid Sunshine” —sold by ings, aud we thank you for your i
oF obrady—s motty-cotauminy i Bufo, 4, Hardware Comp’y util Ove Forty Teun Phone 240 W. High Street
“peak load.” Ee — ed]
0 : rH
Buy Electrically Linke Herr & Heverly || || Christmas Shopping is Easy || || Bolofonte Fuel 8 Supply Co. LISTENS
They Cost the Least to Use Buy Lumber Ferndale . H r Book S RETAIL Drain and Refill
and Save the Most Labor— From a Lumberman || || **"miete Groceries unter’s tore Coal, Feed and Oils For Cold Weather
Washers, Sweeplas, IronershRadive, Highest Quality Food Products THE REASON : BELLEFONTE, PA. JEzac0—
Lamps, New Shades— Prompt Service there are so many Clean, Clear,
at Prices to Suit Your Purse. At the Lowest Possible Prices . . Moshannon } $5.00 MOTOR OIL
: W. R. Shope We. Deliver Nice Things Osceola Mills | Per Net Ton —
Electric Supply Co. { | Phone 62 to give that are inexpensive. 5-Ton Lots...$4.50 per Net Ton Center oil and Gas Co.
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