Page 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PENNA, > rrr Thursday, July 31st, 1913, Eee es m— — a —— ELS the Sublect were. mada : | of the Left ANENT TAXATION. . NEW GURRENGY BILL A EE i | on ete yw 1 sos ORTRIGHT - ANTIDOTE FOR PANICS responsive to sound credit, the ex- I your left hand to you aside from it y | ‘ Those of us who are advocates of panding and contracting credits of ev- | being a natural appendage of your left S——— ery day transactions, the normal ebb PROTECTS THE WAGE-EARNER, and flow of personal and corporate taxatio reform, ¢ ofte P \ wrist? It 1s estimated that hardly ove | 1. 0 Ter tre often met with | IGHTNING PROOF f ten uses his left band 6 | '¢ “rEUment. that it is only a few 4 ; dealings, Our banking laws must person out 0 “ anks who are crested. and p . . " FARMER AND MERCHANT. mobilize reserves: must not permit | Per cent of the 100 per cent of its usa- Sra nk Who " Interested, and that Itis not only lightning- the concentration anywhere in a few | bleness from getting up in the morn- it. 8 an absurd position to assume | proof but fire-proof and POI INE WILL CURB MONEY TRUST hands of the monetary resources of Ing until going to bed at night In that taxation Is more than a method storm-proof, too. the country, or their use for specula- | ¢hiy pespect the left handed person, of raising revenue, and that it can be ' tive purposes In sus h volume as to although often made the butt of the | made an instrument for the establish CORTRIGHT METAL SHINGLES " ment of social justice, 1 hold in my last as long as the building an i of other more legitimate, more fruit. | "lefty" stigma, is far superior to bi8 | hand a circular advertisement of a § he b " d never need repairs, f the o aq 3 Country Than Even Revision o | fu ‘uses right hand neighbor. There 18 Bardly | Trast Company in Victoria B.C. Can Just the thing for town or country buildings, because they Tariff—Analysis of the Administra- The means by which these objects | a left handed man or woman who can | ada, which LY 8 “Men are not . meet every condition of comfort, beauty and security. tion Bill ire to be accompli hed are SUMMAr- | poe use the right hand much more ished here for bullding 8, SLOres, s ) ized as follows by Senator Owens, . . or fact } ™ ve ' ti | chairman of the Senate committee on freely and with stronger grip than the €A. W, Greeley in Willlamsport Grit.) | Banking and Currency ( ight handed man or woman can use | ,nd all personal The currency reform measure now “The mean by which these ob- | the left. So weak is the left hand of | and taxes are before Congress probably Is the most |... on he important bill presented to that great | accomplished in large | many men and women that, although | and national resources. Thi % to | er Tag E: py Ce A a tt Ty | measure y ob g the bi 1. | revent onopols . law-making body since the Civil war, | ei Sut ha Who Dlistn Mori ATR rc" | mot crippled in any way and perfect | IC CF Jno} poly, in : ora : | serves and providing el currency. | ro > | Wiig rofits, and interest.’ tis . It is pregnant with grave and far- | This a very carefully worked out in 28 to shape and size, nevertheless ft 18 |, ..0 roocusury to com i vind For Sale by reaching conseqt es for every Mam. | he pill by requiring the banks to keep held back and guarded and restricted | usages. The vor « rodueHon | CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING COMF NY, woman and child in the ( utly : Be “la larger measure of their reserves | as though it were an injured member. | relieved from fines and penalt ”y 50 North 23rd Street, PHILA ZLPHIA, PA. pat al gvisSion O the T dwin with vi » i * eglion n hey ¢ ( rt { rm in : mparatis alg ance. | VY sg Binh Stab hy rey h \l | In lifting welghts or grasping objects | they also accou ur re tii 1 uarter of ; ¢ reserve banks and providing that | » . y .. | for the emigrat ( t1 | For more than a quarter of a century |... .n hanks may obtain United States | with the firmness necessary for mov- | American farme into the “wilds” of | Nothing to Live For. the need of a reform of our currency | preasury notes property secured and | ing or shifting the right handed per- | | : and banking laws has been widely |. eo cuarded | quantities sufficient son makes the right hand do three | ¥ecornize d. but the task involve ’ to meet any strain of our national?! fourths of the work.—New York Sun problems so intricate and complicated | hence at v ti yet at the same | time without permanently inflating | . | wid and shifted from one Congress tO |... curren A Woman at Greenwich Observatory. | wnother. It was a task so big that Con- S f Weak “When we visited Greenwich ob-| _- r t y t y 1 ur n . gress was afraid to wekle | even os , 0 gh 0 Leal ess * ; servatory.” sald the traveler, “] set my with the knewledge that our existing der ir present system the re. : : and an} law LT an | serves « } ) 1x system are im- watch by the observatory clock. Bince currency and banking WH ‘ 80 | ser Kin ! f im ’ clumsy y intiquated that | mobile ( navallable for commerce. | everybody else who has a watch does er of the reserves | that, nobody pald any attention to me, | a source of weak- | hut my wife created a big enough sen- | © "| sation for both of us Of More Profound Importance to the | hinder or impede, or stand in the way COWS (‘ar [] 1 the nt vit) ne |» { 9 att anada, and hey in W al i n Lid a pr f ting a rn hat the responsibility has been shirk- the banks of financial system, b commerce. ofter ow. | “She hand done a little shopping be- ng ti farmer © provocative of panic and violent | fore we went down to Greenwich. In HUN: our aw Wit Dun . +a ~ $8 8 00s se ss se and markets And the tuations values, upsetting | her hand bag she carried a remnant of I talking up | U i st d ! Rion calcula~ | luce. Far more attractive to her than | performed He Individual | y Bnd. enthusiasm. \ducing them to unmerite reyiw | the observatory's wonderful clock were | I. this is r ' on be matter 1 rid character of the reserves is ov-| the little fron pegs driven into the ob- | searing it might lead t arom tio - | servatory wall, which represented the true measure of the British yard, two | ne r raid f the trut} re ’ feet. one foot. six inches and three | Koes: “Here (Victoria) it p At the Workmen's Bargain Store for the next inches. oF 8 gredler cre 10 YolC a ewekes - 4 fifteen days. Sale starts . «| “Just at 1 o'clock out came her bit of |, nf avers’ or of the Tinit . lace, and at the minute when every- States | S ATURDAY JULY 19th | body else stood impressed with the fact It { 4 i 1 r Canadian! © 5 that standard time for a large part of friend ntinue nthe path the civilized world was being set with- | which to « n ‘ $1.50 LADIES’ WHITE SHOES, Low and High Cut, Sale Price in those walls my wife stood before Relling bd Lis poss : hod $250 LADIES BLACK PUMPS, Sale Price . 1| the {ron pegs calmly measuring lace.” — . ud ) $1.75 & $1.50 LADIES’ BLACK PUMPS & OXFORDS, Sale Price 1.18 New York Times. | ‘ t ' $1.25, $1.50 & $1.75 CHILDREN'S LOW SHOES, Sale Price | t t} ‘ fir 0c LAWN, all colors, Sale Price ‘ Outguessing In Baseball. odd 2 open t x ; 7c UNBLEACHED MUSLIN, 36 Inches wide, Sale prise Whenever you see a pitcher strike y mint If 1 " 8c BLEACHED MUSLIN, 36 inches wide, Sale Price out a batter who doesn't swing at the ' una of Pu y t oh 50c SILK CORDED SHANTUNG, all colors, Sale Price ,| ball you can know either that the 't! ; ' t t rade 10c CHAMBRAY GINGHAMS, all colors, Sale Price pitcher Is outguessing the Dbatter— blect ! rem A 50c MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS, Sale Price | serving Lim “strikes” when the batter | """ “© * stop 4 » y ) $1.75 MEN'S WORKING SHOES, Sale Price expects “balls”—or that the batter has |, = "0 : the ele 75¢c CHILDREN'S LOW SHOES, Sizes 2; to 8, Tan — Black, been instructed to “walt all you ean,” | me, ter r, and hine 1 50c BOYS WASHABLE SUITS, Sizes 2 to 8, Sale Price 39 in order to tire the pitcher. Of course, $1.25 BOYS WASHABLE SUITS, Sizes 3 to 8, Sale Price B89 if he takes enough time and gets the tcher to throw three balls and two | “her of : : A 4 v ite ios 0 A rocted on the | 5 10 Arise, 1 only mention them | Many more bargains which are not mentioned in jast ball and strike out, but in that case st cot ; place this space throughout the store. | the real fault will le in the orders giv. | «ve tine grand wtate ) en him beforehand When you see a man swing sturdlly at the ball and 5 LIVER a KNIGHT ’ i i A | miss it he jo either outguessed by the og g Workmen S Bargain Store, as Powerful Enemie tche nd is swinging at balls bh Gr" measures on 1h ant ren on the. pitcher in fool. Aliegheny St. Bellefonte, Pa. ill measures on impor t | ean't reach or else the pitcher is fool ers ii is a compromise enti I¥ | ing not his mind, but his eye—is throw tctory to none of Its VAriOus | ing perfectly good strikes, which nev- | ~~ we { = wWbhbN aN bg ertheless curve or “jump” sc that the . | batter is powerless to “connect with | | them." —~C. H. Clandy in St. Nicholas. | The Chilling Reply. According to a Washington Jega! | ! . light, there are times when a lawyer On Face, Chest and Back, Pimples regrets the use of an {llustration which Became Yellow and Started to Get bg . a moment before has appeared especial Crusty-like, Used Cuticura Soap 00 1Sirict on S ly felicitous | q v “he Arauwiaut of wy loathed and and Ointment a Week, Skin Clear brilliant colleague.” said counsel for | and Not a Scar on His Body. the plaintiff in a sult for damages from | ee rail . . “Is like tbh oO . . 3 | I rt a mattered | Trichices, Pa. When my baby boy For Sale at Par and Accrued Interest. was a week old small red pimples appeared here, there and everywhere” on his forehead. A couple of days later his . Whereupon opposing counsel improv. | pr face, chest and back | od bis opportunity. “All 1 can say,” RIE) Wor Just one mass of | he hastily interposed, “is that the gen- | = havite Tus Amis Rid Your Children of Worms. | tleman who has llkened my argument pra at A You can change fretful, ill-tempered "> 4" prickly heat. They be | 1 comes there ‘i w Woman big lo the havoy soung. | the snow pow falling outside has x 3 Yr yellow and started First Mortgage. Exempt From Taxes. Will ich money in the country and just | gers by ridding them worms | Deglected to observe one little point to % “2 £8 w get crustydike. He | is | Tossing. rolling. grinding of teeth, | which 1 flatter myself the similarity | 7 A was very cross and fret- | per cent Legality Assured lerying out while asleep, accompanied | gxtends—it has covered all the ground | ov ful and he lost his rest | Pay 42 . A | with intense thirst, pains in the stom- | 4g g ve bh u ” at night. I also lost my | | . . ry short time. " . and bowels, feverishness and bad | rout and mt up whole nights. Fo acted a Safe and Sound Investment. Call or write rved we breath, are symptoms that indicate if the . i t ove hil 5 ] y N " itt y were itchy. 1 didn't know what to was a J : why OW ‘ONE | worms. Kickapoo Worm Killer, a Crabs’ Shella | do and he was getting worse. It caused wold ou i \ «a urren- | pleasant candy lozenge, expels the The shell of a crab when once hard- | da. sfigurement and some people sald It would ang ! aking system Dake "Very | worms, regulates the bowels, restores | ened cannot grow, and the crad 18 | eave scars Crisis t Is a fair-weather ine | vo children y hes h an apnine ’ that refuses to wor k when most need- | Four Shillreh ey o 5d hat ens forced to moult or cast off his out. | “1 used eold cream which I thought only ed. | “I have used Kickapoo Worm Killer | §70Wn shell from time to time and | made it worse. My neighbor advised me Huge Loss in Panics | for vears and entirely rid my children grow a new one a little larger. A | to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment. He was . Panics, which the new currency bill | of worms. 1 would not be without | crab when growing this mew shell is | affected about two weeks before 1 used seeks to prevent, has ost the it" Guaranteed. All druggists, or | known as a soft shell or “soft” crab them. From that time on he rested just as ed States ar wrmous toll in wreck- | hy mail. Price 25¢. Kickapoo Indian good as any child can rest. When I had ell business and lined lives Th Medi ine Co, Philadelphia and St and at such times he 1s, of course, es- used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment a wave of suicide th veeps the wuin- | Louis C. M. Parrish. Bellefonte, Pa pecially subject to attack from his ene few days the dead skin came off In a WILLIAMSPORT y HY IB he FA nt nga hut | —Ady July. | mies, as the shell, which is his natural week's time his skin was as clear as any- ’ PENNSYL ANIA. a symptom of the Ssuflering at 1 hard- | | armor, is wanting. In museums there | body's and there is not a scar on his whole led 1 dire los Renounces Wedding Fees. | are exhibits of as many as fourteen body.” (Signed) Mrs. Wm. B. Coffin, eastoff shells of a single crab, begin. | Apr. 3, 1913 : " cl } ning with a very tiny one and each a Won Bony 2c. yall Clin ow y " ror . i Are sold everyw Pp Aberal " hat hereafter vill not accept one just a size larger than the last cach mailed free. with 32-p. Skin Book. Ade ind the farmer A dross post-card “* Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." A Ts Ba drafts apd as. suel.stould. Tie, a ie In a Safe Place, Sa Mon who shave and shampoo with Cue | nes are the df-| “if the chu \nuists tha | Master (who is trying to make a | ticuraSoap will find is bost for skin and scalp, | pan ind there | riage is a rit y longs to IL.” he | good impression on his strait laced | ‘ who Ll -— s of middle age | uid “then he church shoul make | aunt from whom he has expectations) | inch of unem free t | AVA NANAVAD marriage All | =~Mary, have you seen a letter any- ‘ of a pan- “I'he minister who does not need a CITY OF WILLIAMSPORT he wWaARe-earner where about marked “private? Mary | i few have | fos should be ashamed to take it, and ' fetime swept la ohurch whose minister needs the | =Y0u mean the one from the man who reckage. The | fee should bo ashamed and Imme- | can't get ‘is money out of you, sir? 1 "To N 1 {diately raise his salary. No minis- | put it be'ind the mirror, sir.—London ter should be forced to stand at a|pypch, Personally Conducted Excursions apital y ow the farmer | wedding with his pe hand behind 4 edit gone and the demand | him August 8, 3-22, September 5, 19, H E A DI S vs diminished or vanished | Putting It Nicely. October 3. 1013 L [| i , remunerative prices are | Why Married Men Live Long. Bmith’s little boy swallowed a farth- Concerned, From center to a ire um. | The Cincinnati Enquirer says The | Ing, and there Was great consernation LIKE A TRIP ABROAD erence o 1 mtion all suffer, and | reason a married man lives longer in the family The next da Smith's the wedakest suffer the most. It 8 than a single man is because the sin " y ound 11 Tri nly the wolves of Wall street, the | gle man leads a selfish existence. A mother-in-law called and calmly in- R P gamblers of the stock exchange, the | married man can double his pleasures, | quired, “Has young Tommy got over From Bellefonte raxploiters of other people's money, | Any time he has a streak of good | his financial difficulty yet? — London SPECIAL TRAIN of Pullman Who fatten on the misery of others. | ,ck ft tickles him all over, but it ‘ A ’ Y Answers. , Sar, and It % the primary purpose of the new » : g Patior Cars, Dining Ca makes him feel twice as good when Day Cooches, running via the urrency bill to prevent, as far as|p. tells his wife about it. And she is Good Plan . h possitiie, the recurrence of panics and |, pleased and proud that he feels " Picturesque Susquehanna at the same time to pull the téeth of | ike a two vear old. There Is not a *It's & good plan to mind your own Valley Route the Money trust which now, through | chance In the world of a man's arte- business,” admonished the wise guy. Tickets good going on Special the control of the nation’s eredit and | yjay hardening or his heart weaken-| “Yes, if you don't somebody else Train and connecting trains, and Wealth centralized in the hands of a ing when he can get a million dol- will” added the simple mug.~Phila- good returning on regular trains fow uge corporations, can create | jars’ worth of pleasure out of making / ia . . within Fifteen Days. Stop-oft panics to suit its own financial pur- his wife happy delph Record, at Buffalo within limit, allowed poses. This feature of the bill was —— returning en a Tala oy Tia tdrere Vu | Phonetio Spelling~-A teacher. is one Her Hint Failed Ilustrated Booklet and full in- SOLE ONLY AY mau J 4 ou _ " en y Congress: of the lower grades was teaching new | “ng you believe that two ean live as formation may be obtained from words to her pupils, and then, as an ™ Ticket Agents ,or A. E. Buchan ’ “The principles upon which we |exercise, requested them to use the cheaply as one y . ne t should act are also clear, The coun- [new words In sentences. The word “No; 1 don't belleve that even one 00 Frases, om ASht, ea er S oe ore, HIGH STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. - THAT - try has sought and seen ita path in |“seldom” was placed upon the black- | ean live cheaply.” Houston Post, burg, Pa. this matter within the past few years | board, and here Is one of the sen- -=goos it more clearly now than It ever |tences handed In by one of her boy Patience fs bitter. but its fru PENNSYLVANIA R. R. saw it before—much more clearly than pupils: “My father had a horse and y it 1s x-38 wwhen the last legislative proposals on | wagon and seldom” (selled ‘em. sweet. ~Roussenc.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers