Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 25, 1931, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., September 25, 19631.
ROAD STOP SIGNS MEAN
YOU MUST STOP DEAD
Stop signs erected at intersections
aiong through-traffic streets and
highways, and at other dangerous
crossings, have more authority un-
der the motor code as amended by
the 1931 Legislature, and are being
more rigidly enforced.
“The letter S-T-O-P inasignatan
intersection means that, and more.”
“Section 1014 of the motor code has
been amended so that the operator
of a vehicle who has stopped at one
of these signs must yieia the right
of way to oncoming traffic. In
other words, the mere act of stop-
ping does not mean compliance with
the law; the operator must be sure
that the way is clear for him to
enter or cross the intersection with-
out interfering with traffic on the
main street or highway. If he fails
to do this, even though he stops at
the sign, the brunt of responsibility
rests upon him.”
A reecnt statewide survey reveal
ed that the stop sign provisions ot
the law are being more rigidly en-
forced by local officers than under
the old code. “Previously the fines
collected went to the State, but un.
der the amended code these fines go
to the municipality, which natural-
ly is an incentive for local author-
ities to be more active in this re-
spect than ever before.” ‘Operators
of fire department, police or fire pa-
trol vehicles responding to a fire
alarm, in the chase or apprehension
of violators of the law, or ambulances
when traveling in emergencies, are
the only vehicles or operators ex-
empted from the stop sign provi-
sions of the law,” he ex
“And even in such instances these
vehicles and operators are required
to give proper warning signals to
oncoming traffic before crossing a
stop intersection.”
Two types of stop intersections
are provided for. One is the regu-
lar through-traffic stop sign, erect-
NON-RESIDENT HUNTERS
TAXED RECIPROCAL FEES.
Non-residents desiring to hunt in
Pennsylvania, formerly paid only
the regular $15 fee charged for such
licenses by Pennsylvania. Under
a new law passed by the Jewent
Legislature a reciprocal license fee
must be Residents from
other States will have to pay the
same fee for a non-resident license
in Pennsylvvania as is charged for
such a license in their own State.
That the sportsmen of va-
nia will be familiar with the fee
charged for non-resident licenses in
other States, the Game Commission
recently scured an up-to-date list of
these fees as follows: Alabama,
$25; Alaska, $50; Arizona,
Arkansas, $15; California, $15; Col-
orado, $25; Connecticut, $15; Dela-
ware, $15.50; District of Columbia,
$15; Florida, $25.50; Georgia, $23;
Hawaii, $15; Idaho, $50; Illinois,
$15.50; Indiana, $15.50; Iowa, $15;
Kansas, $15; Kentucky, $15; Louis-
|iana, $50; Maine, $15.15; Maryland,
$15.50; Massachusetts, $15; Mich-
|igan, $50; Minnesota, $50.25; Mis-
| sissippi, $15; Missouri, $15; Montana,
!$30; Nebraska, $15; Nevada, $15;
| New Hampshire, $15.15; New Jer-
| sey, $15; New Mexico, $30.25; New
| York, $15; North Carolina, $15.25;
| North Dakota, $50; Ohio, $25.25;
| Island, $15; South Carolina
| South Dakota, $50; Tennessee, $15;
| Texas, $25; Utah, $15; Vermont,
| $15; Virginia, $15.50; W
| $25; West Virginia, $15; Wisconsin, |
| $50; Wyoming, $60.
| The reciprocal license feature also
| applies to the alien non-resident of
| Pennsylvania who is also a non-resi-
{dent of the United States. Such
| persons must also pay the same fee
| for a non-resident alien hunter's li-
|cense as is charged for a similar
| license in their own country or
| province. Up-to-date figures on the
| cost of such licenses in other coun-
tries and provinces of Canada, etc.
are as follows: Canada, Alberta,
$50; British Columbia, $55; Mani-
toba, $40; New Brunswick, $50;
Nova Scotia, $350; Ontario, $41;
Quebec, $25; Saskatchewan, $50; N.
W. Territory, $150; Yukon, $150;
Mexico, $20; England, $15; France,
ed along boulevard streets or high-| gis
ways. The other, provided for under
the amended code, is a sign erected
at a dangerous intersection on a
street or highway not designated as
a through traffic route. “This lat-
ter provides for the erection of stop
signs only at points where condi-
tions warrant on certain routes,”
“thus eliminating the necessity of
designating the entire highway as a
through traffic route, but protecting
the intersections that are dangerous.
‘These local stop signs can be erect-
ed by any municipality, with the
permindion of the State Highway
partment.
“All of these stop signs, however,
have the same authority, and pro-
vision is made in the law for a pen-
alty of $6 and costs for violation of
these regulations. At the same
time, it follows that in any accident
caused by failure of an operator to
comply with these regulations—not
only stopping, but the right
of way to oncoming the li-
ability for damages rests on the
shoulders of the driver who failed to
By W. R. Turner, Associated Magazine.
1. If you feel as though you are
going to faint, bend over so as to
force the blood back into the head.
Come back to the original position
slowly.
‘eye ball, go to a doctor at once.
3. Burns should be covered with
oil as soon as possible. Excluding
from burned surfaces eases
Ef
The difference between a wound
a sore is about six hours. Ap-
antiseptic to a wound as soon
ble.
To stop severe bleeding of
arm, fist of opposite arm in
armpit of wounded arm and force
injured arm toward body.
6. To stop severe bleeding of leg,
patient on back aud apply
4.
g
ly
as
5.
o
or drowning, apply arti-
OO ation at once; mit is, by
tle pressure com ower
Shes from the back once every five
seconds.
PENNA HUNTERS OWN LAND
THAT IS WORTH $1,284,575
A recent inventory made by the
Board of Game Commissioners shows
that the value of lands and build-
ings under their jurisdiction is now
$1,284,575. ‘This valuation is con-
servative. ‘The lands include 243,-
888 acres of State game lands used,
in part, for the establishment of
game refuges, but the majority for
public hunting Srongds, Buildings
valued at $169. are
State game lands and used as ref-
uge keepers’
of three game propagation farms
where ring-necked pheasants, main-
ly, are produced, is 1778 acres. The
value of the buildings on these three
farms is placed at $40,281.
The purchase of lands and build-
ings under the jurisdiction was
made possible by the sale of hunt-
ing licenses, none of it coming from
general State revenue.
Interviewer: “Are you one of
those girls who watch the clock?”
Applicant (with dignity): “No sir,
I have a wrist-watch.”
U. 8. HAS THREE-FOURTHS
OF THE WORLD'S AUTOS
Nearly three-fourths of the motor
vehicles in the world are registered
in the United States. This is shown
by Department of Commerce figures
based on a census as of Jan 1,
1931. World registration totaled
35,805,632, of which 26,697,398 were
in the United States.
If motor cars of all sorts were
evenly distributed, every fifty-fourth
person in the world would have one,
according to the census. In the
United States there is one for every
4.59 persons. Per capita registra-
tion for the world outside the
United States was 200.
France was second in registration,
with 1,459,650; third, with
1,308,272. Then followed Canada,
with 1,224,088; Germany, 679,300;
Australia, 563,657; Argentina, '366,-
See: SY, Log Brazil, 188,570;
pain Canary Islands,
with 189,650.
First place among f
tries in proportion of automobiles
to population went to Canada and
New d, with one registration
for every eight persons.
was next with one for every eleven.
Trailing the list were Yemen and
Oman, in Arabia; Cnina, Ethiopia,
the Solomon Islands, and Spitzber-
gen. Spitzbergen had one—a truck.
Despite the depression during 1930,
world registrations increased by
678,234 over 1920, says Charles F.
Baldwin, assistant chief of the au-
tomotive division. He points out
that there were 4,109,231 motor ve-
hicles produced in the world in
1930, leaving 3,430,238 to be ac-
counted for largely by scrapping or
other withdrawal from operation.
1200 INMATES OF
PRISONS ARE PAID
Approximately 1200 inmates of
the State's four penal institutions
are on the payroll of the prison in-
dustries, to a report of
John L. Hanna, State Secretary of
Welfare.
The largest number of inmates on
the prison industries’ payroll in any
one institution appeared at Western
Penitentiary where the figure reach-
ed 366, due in a large part to the
weaving and tag departments which
use more than 100 men apiece
Eastern State Penitentiary was sec-
ond with 311; Rockview was third
with 303 and the Pennsylvania In-
838 | qustrial School at Huntingdon was
fourth with 154.
Explaining the report, Hanna said
that this in no way totals the num-
ber of men working for many more
are at work but are not on pay-
roll of the prison industries. He
said these figures only indicate the
number of men whose training and
fitness were applicable to particular
trades which come under the divi-
sion of prison industries.
MENTAL CASES TOTAL 80,000
ately 800,000 hospital beds now ¥
the United States are set aside for
mentally ill patients, according toa
recent statement of Dr. William C.
Sandy, director of the bureau of
mental health, State Department of
welfare.
In Pennsylvania alone, Dr. Sandy
said, there are over 25,000 beds for
mentally ill and some 5000 beds for
mental defectives and epileptics and
there is need for many more.
Dr. Sandy said that despite the
seriousness of these figures they un-
doubtedly will increase until sucha
time as early discovery, treatment
and training become universal and
effective.
He: “I dreamed last night that
your mother was ill.”
She: ‘““Brute, I heard you
laugh
in your sleep.”
$35; |
| Oklahoma, $15; Oregon, $15; Rhode
$15.25; |
coun-
Australia |
At least one-half of the approxi: We
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
DAILY THOUGHT
‘“Heigh, Daddy Dofunny, how you come
on?™
“Poorly, my chile, poorly dis mawn.
I got de misery in my bres’
'N I got some heart distress.
My ole back’'s kinder stiff
‘N my hands—dey ‘fuse to lift—
But, Ise well, praise God, dis mawn!"
‘“Heigh, Daddy Dofunny, how curious
you talk!
How are you well when you can't even
walk 7"
“Hush, you foolish chillun, hush!
| What's dat singing’ in de brush?
{Can't I see de blue sky
| 'N white clouds floatin’ by?
| Dis here old back 'n dis here twisted
knee—
| Dey ain't me, chile, dey ain't me,
For Ise well, praise God, dis mawn!'"
—Rutn McEnery Stuart.
—You're going to look brighter, |
gayer, more cheerful this fall than
{for a long time. Why? Because
| color is fashionable, and fashionable
| daytime costumes are the colorful
| ones.
| More colors are fashionable this
| fall than last.
| addition. And not just those colors
‘used alone either, but used in com-
| bination with each other.
And this also means—new stock-
| ings. Because new shades have
| been made to blend with the new
| costume colors.
Fall stocking shades are darker
| than spring shades, because the
| darker ones are more in harmony
| with the darker fall costume colors.
| And these dark shades are neutral
ones, too, so they can be worn
| with different colored dresses and
| coats.
Most fashion-knowing women this
fall are going to want more taupe
stockings than any other color.
That's because taupe, which is real-
ly beige or brown with a little gray
in it, goes with more colors than
any other shade.
Taupe stockings go with brown
stockings, with black costumes,
with red or green or rust costumes
and with costumes that combine
these colors. Taupe stockings look
well with black or brown shoes, too.
So if you're planumg tc be prac-
tical, you'll supply yourself with
plenty of taupe stockings just about
now.
Because there are to be
lots of brown coats and brown
dresses, dark brown stockings are
coming back into fashion for fall
wear. And if you choose this color,
be sure the stockings are very dark
brown and very sheer.
Some fashionable women are al-
ready wearing the new, very sheer
black stockings with black formal
daytime costumes.
You'll ‘not see quite so many beige
stockings worn this fall as were
worn in the spring.
But there are some new fall
beiges that are darker and with a
more brownish cast that do go well
With some of the brown dresses and
coats.
—You're going to get more for
Tour money in lots of the shoes
uy this fall. Actually more leath-
er. Beacuse many of the new fall
| daytime shoes are cut higher.
Not that they come up high
{around the ankles. But between the
{strap and the vamp, for example,
| there's less open space. The leath-
|er is built up higher.
| Which is the practical idea for
| fall as well as the smart one. It
| leaves less foot exposed to the ele-
ments. Besides giving the foot a
| trimmer, neater look that goes well
| with ih, fall air and clothes.
The walking oxford, for ex-
ample, is more apt to be cut
enough to have four eyelets instead
of the two or three eyelets that
have been popular this summer.
The smart fall one.strap for
street wear is likely to come up
higher on the side between the vamp
ang the sap.
opera pump is cut
slightly higher at the 2D at and
front. And the step-in, which
really looks like a high-cut opera
mp, ia Erowing more and more
Plage
A newer type of higher-cut shoe
is the monk's oxford, so-called be-
cause it looks some like the
high-cut slippers the monks in Eu-
ropean monasteries wear. It has a
slight resemblance, too, to the slip.
pers some men like to wear around
the house.
So that's one t to watch for
when you're bu new fall street
shoes—the higher cut.
But there's something lower to
watch for, too, lower heels. And
you'll have to watch sharply for
Hath hicause heels really don't look
mu ower. They the
gracefu curved lines of Mog Mie
Several times during the last few
months we've mentioned this ten-
dency toward lower heels. Our
check-ups on shoe fashions show
it's growing more ana more import-
ant. More and more women want
the comfort this lower, less spindly
heel gives them. So more and
more shoes are
shoe heels this fall is two inches—
a good quarter-inch less than they
re.
All the shoes illustrated show
contrasting leather tri A
The kid one-strap is trimmed
with bands of opalescent kid or with
suede. The oxford is a combination
of suede with calf tip and quarter.
Alligator makes the band effect
on the suede monk's oxford. ‘The
step-in is of kid with a trimming of
pin seal and the kid pump is trim-
med with opalescent leather.
—Apple Tarts.—Fix one can ap-
ple sauce, two tablespoons melted
butter, one teaspoon lemon juice and
one-fourth teaspoon allspice. Fill
previously baked farts with this
mixture. Sprinkle grated cheese
over the tops and serve. Makes
sixteen tarts.
Not just black or
| brown, but green, red and rust in|
ang
ee ——
THE GIRL IN THE 5TH FLOOR
BACK
(Continued from page 2. Col. 6.)
she wouldn't have left Boston with-
out seeing Bill, Sam or no Sam,
note or no note.
The shop to function, fol.
lowing its y routine. Nicky,
playing her part in this, refused
steadfastly to think of the morrow.
“A Mrs. Butler just called; said
she wanted to see Mr. McMasters
explained Sam.
“I guess it means he's got it. That
will tickle him; it's a big contract.”
Nicky felt a surge of pleasure
herself. ‘“He’'s—he's very clever,
isn't he?”
“They don’t make them any bet-
ter,” Sam assured her warmly.
“He's the sort that goes ahead. You
just can’t stop him.”
| Nicky, at her desk, traced a de-
|sign on the back of an envelope. A
| question had popped into her mind
| but she scorned voicing it.
| “The only trouble with him,” Sam
|added, “is that his business isn't
only his bread and butter but his
wife and family too. I don't believe
he's looked at any girl twice since
he started in business for himself.
He—" He stopped short. “Somebody
in the shop,” he announced and shot
out.
Nicky, however, had had her ques-
tion answered. Her pencil traced
on for a moment, and then she
thrust it aside. ‘The eternal fem-
inine!” she murmured cryptically—
and a shade scornfully.
The day moved on past luncheon
time and so to five o'clock.
“I guess,” said Sam, then, “we
might as well lock up. He probably
won't be back till morning.”
| “I guess,” said Sam, then, “we
| might as weel lock up. He probably
{won't be back till morning.”
Nicky didn't stir. “But he ought
to know about Mrs. Butler and that
Newton contract,” she began. “I
think—' She broke off. A step had
sounded in the shop; a step that,
identified at once, sent the blood
si through her veins.
1 came “I hoped I'd find
u here,” he said, with that nice
mpetuosity of his. “Have any
trouble today?”
And
Evidently Mrs. Butler was of less
importance than Sam had estimated,
however. For Bill interrupted her.
“Seen the evening papers?”
” J Wiy? she asked apprehen-
y.
He started to answer, and then
realized that Sam was present. “I'll
lock Sp Sam,” he said. “You needn't
Sam withdrew with visible reluc-
tance. He, as he afterwards re-
ported to his domesticated recording
angel, couldn't make head or tail of
something was.
Sam was right.
“I have been to Newfield,” an-
nounced Bill, the minute the door
had closed. “Left at four and got
there at seven.”
“You—you've been to Newfield?”
cky incredulously.
“Nowhere else”, he grinned. “And
I've had a busy day. First I took
your friend Willie Johnson—the one
who saw you administer the
—for a little ride and he decided it
was all a mistake. That it"—his
became a bit grim—‘“must have
some other fellow, as he
wasn't there at all. In fact, Willie
went to the ckief of police and sign-
was an unmitigated liar who craved
a chance to get his name in the pa-
pers.”
“Not—not really!” babbled Nicky.
“How did you manage it?”
“I can be awfully persuasive al
times,” said Bill. "And—well, I've
noticed that gery murder case de-
velops a Willie Johnson—somebody
who makes up a story out of whole
cloth, and then springs it on a pal-
pitating world.”
He produced cigarets, offered her
one. But Nicky wasn't smoking,
80 he took one himself—and then
forgot to light it.
“I also discovered the murderer,”
he announced abruptly.
Nicky half rose, her eyes wide
and her hand at her throat. “For-
give me,” he begged. “I shouldn't
have shot it off that way.” He had
an arm around her, steadying her.
“Sit down; I'll get you a glass of
water.”
Nicky sat down. “No—don't
bother; I'm all right” Then,
through dry lips, she added, “who
—who was it?”
“Nobody—unless it was your
ther. He was responsible
that house of yours and its
resent condition. I suspected some-
thing. ike that—-old houses are all
m at heart; especiaily those
with antiquated plumbing and ante-
diluvian heating devices.”
“I—I don't understand,” she pro-
“The gas heater in the living
room asphyxiated them.”
“But—but the doctor said it was
Syatide of potassium,” babbled
icky.
“I picked up a better doctor in
Springfield who reminded your doc-
tor—and the coroner as well—that
cyanide of potassum would not have
caused instantaneous death. Also,
that they would not have died peace-
fully, Band in hand, but in agony.”
“But—but even that doesn’t prove
that—that they were asph ted.”
“No; but I did. With asgist-
ance of a couple of guinea pigs—
nice lusty ones. In the ce of
the chief of police, the district at-
torney and several reporters, I placed
them on the divan in the living
room, lighted the heater and closed
the SO smiley down at her.
“Thirty minu we opened e
door and—both were dead.
“But—but we have used the gas
heater ever since I can remember,”
she protested, “and it never killed
anybody before.”
“Thal,” he ained, “is because
two bricks had fallen over the draft
in the flue, throwing the fumes out
into the room through a break in
the isinglass door, ‘That happens
ed an affidavit to the effect that he
again and again. In fact—" He
turned, took a volume from his
desk, of it and laid it before
her. *“ that,” he suggested, in-
dicating a passage.
The type wavered but Nicky read:
Old-fashioned gas appliances
are extremely dangercus in that
they produce carbon monoxide.
This gas is fatal in quantities
of four-tenths of one percentin
the air. During 1925 alone, 607
people were ted in New
ork City by faulty gas tubes
or gas-heating devices of anim-
proper type.
Nic lifted her still dazed eyes.
| “But—but why didn’t somebody else
| think of that?” she asked.
| “Because—well, partly because
| Willie Johnson ached to see his
{name in print, partiy because the
| papers needed a good murder mys-
tery and more particularly because
| there was everybody but a plumber
|on the case. The physician saw
| cyanide of potassium; the chief of
police saw a murder. I—saw a
| stove! That's all.
las a detective I was a darned good
| plumber.”
| “And—and people really believe
|you?” asked Nicky. And before he
{could answer, she added, ‘T'll bet
{lots of them never will.”
| “Perhaps not,” he admitted. “But
| the chief of police and the district
| attorney are convinced, and if any-
|body in Newfield—or elsewhere—
| wants to test it out himself, all he's
|got to do is to step into the room
'and light the heater. That will do
{the rest—and rid the world of one
doubter.”
He stopped abruptly. Nicky's head
| had pitched forward and, pillowed
lon her arms, rested on her desk.
| “Poor—poor !” she sobbed.
“And poor Breck! I—I—I-—-"
| The paroxysm that shook her,
| Fusppiug her voice off, affected him,
| too.
| “It was tragic for them,” he said
| huskily, “but—"
| Nicky's head came up. “We—
{we didn't always get along,’ she
| said. “But—but she was my sister
and I did love her. And—and they
—they said—"
Again her voice broke and again
her head went down. But she had
caught at his hand as a child
might and clung to it.
Presently she spoke again, head
down and voice muffled. “I—Idon't
know how I can ever thank you. It
—if it hadn't been for you—"
“Nonsense!” he broke in gruffly.
‘I'd do it for anybody. Who
wouldn't 7"
Nicky raised her head. Just a lit-
tle. What was it Sam had said?
That he—not Sam, of course—had
not looked twice at any girl since
ne started in business?
Maybe so—but he was looking at
her now, unquestionably. In a way
that she would have preferred he
should not look twice at any other
what was in the air but he felt sure 8irl
Then, abruptly, she became con-
scious of his fingers in hers and
the blood burned hotly in her tear-
drenched face. She released them
instantly.
“I—I mustn't keep you,” she sug-
gested, but with no sincerity.
But he didn't look as if he wanted
to go. He looked well, as a man
who has just looked twice at a girl
that he is destined to look at many
poison | times more should look. Sam had
been right—there was something in
the air. As electric as a first kiss
| might have been.
{ et Jon the moment—all Bill said
| was: * n't sup u'll care to
stay on here Ee pgose yo
Nicky gave him- a swift glance,
and then her lashes masked her
eyes. “I'd love to—more than any-
else in the world,” she an-
nounced impulsively. “If—if you
think I'll do.
But that was not all her eyes
had said—or his.
Nor was it what Mrs. Moriarty
was saying. To the
to me
like of that,”
“If you ask my
they've
one, will
As somebody has remarked, it
takes all kinds to make a world.—
Hearst's International Cosmopolitan.
for
PENN STATE STARTS
HER SEVENTY-SIXTH YEAR.
The Pennsylvania State College
opened its 1931-1932 academic year
Wednesday morning of last week
with a record enrollment of more
than 4500 students. ‘The freshmen
class was again limited to 1225 on
the campus and fifty in the Forestry
School at Mont Alto, which also
opened last week, the increase be-
ing due to more te students,
return of former students to com-
plete their college courses, and con-
tinuation of more students in the
upper classes. Lack of class rooms
for liberal arts and of laboratories
for chemistry and physics, the two
schools of the college which give
the majority of the first.year
courses, prevent any increase in
freshman enrollment.
President Ralph D. Hetzel pre-
sented six new department heads and
thirty other new members of the
faculty at the opening convocation.
Three of the new heads have been
on the Penn State faculty for some
time, and the others come from oth-
er institutions. The promotions are
Dr. C. W. Hasek, who becomes head
of economics and sociology; Profes-
sor H. A. Everett, of mechanical en-
Franklin
are Dr. Francis M. DuMont, former-
ly of New York Untversity, to head
Romance languages; Dr. Harry B.
Northrup, formerly acting head of
metallurgy at Penn State and lately
consulting and sales engineer in
Clevel who heads the extension
division of mineral industries; and
Dr. Albert W. Gauger, former head
of mines and mi department at
University of N Dakota, who
becomes head of mineral industries
research.
I told you that
WOODRING.—Attorney at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. in
all , room 18
5l-ly
KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney at
J Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at-
tention given all |
entrusted to his care. 0.
Bast High street. 57
M._EZICHLING Attorney Bt 14%
and Justice of the
professional business will recetve
prompt attention. Offices on second floor
of Temple Court. 49-5-ly
G. RUNKLE.— at Law.
Consultation Ly and Ger-
man. Office Crider’s a
Bellefonte, Pa.
Belletate
C werd and lice by the State.
»v8 examined, fitted. Sat-
isfact 01 guaranteed.
and i+ ses matched, beer
High ¢L., Bellefonte, Pa. Ti-23-t2
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed
by the anys Board. State
fonte, in the bri build opposite
the Court ouse, W 3 pois
from 2 to 8 p.m. and 9 am
to 4:00 p.m. Bell Phone 68-40
FIRE INSURANCE
At a Reduced Rate, 20%
133% J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent
A————— - al
Wagner’ 320, Dairy Feed 1.56
8 -
Wagner's 209% Dairy Feed - 140
Wagner's 16% Feed - 135
Wagner's Scratch - = 150
Wagner's Mash . - - 180
Wagner's Meal - = « 17
Wagner's Horse Feed - - - 140
Wagner's Winter Bran - = 1.00
Wagner's Winter - 1lv
Wagner's Standard Chop 1.40
Blachford Calf Meal 25» - 1.25
Wayne Calf Meal Io 3%
Wa Egg Mash - - - -
Oil Meal 34% = = «» «.« 180
Cotton Seed Meal 43% - - 170
Soy Bean Oil Meal - = = 170
Gluten Feed 23% - - =- - 150
Fine Ground Alfalfa Meal - 2.25
Meat Sc % sel
y - ===» 3
a ls «= x 3
Milk Dried - = = - 4.00
Fine Stock Salt - « - - . 100
Round Grit =- -« - - - =- 130
Oyster Shell . - - - - = 100
Lime Grit =~ « « - = - « 100
Bone Meal - - - - -. - - 275
Let us grind your Corn and Oate
go gel By ily
Cotton Seed Oil Gluten,
Alfalfa, Bran, Midds and Molasses.
We will make delivery on two ton
orders.
All accounts must be paid in 30
days. Interest charged over that
time.
If you want good bread and
use Our Best and Gold Coin
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully sad Promptly Furnished