Beworradi Yat, Bellefonte, Pa., October 22, 1915. CLOSING THE DOORS. | I have closed the door of Doubt; I will go by what light I can find, And hold up my hands, and reach them out i To the glimmer of God in the dark, and call: | *‘I am Thine, though I grope and stumble and | fall. I serve; and Thy service is kind.” I have closed the door on Fear, He has lived with me far too long. If he were to break forth and re-appear, I should liftunv eves and look at the sky, And sing loud, and run lightly by; He will never follow a song. | I have closed the door on Gloom. | His house has too narrow a view. I must seek for my soul a wider room, With windows to open and let in the sun. And radiant lamps when the day is done, And the breeze of the world blowing through. — British Weekly. HOW MICKEY SCARED THE GOAT. BY MARTHA ALRICKS JOHNSON, BELLE- FONTE, PA. One morning little Mickey was awak- ened by the sound of weeping. Half dazed with surprise he sat up in bed and listened. “I believe it’s mother,” he said, “she’s in the kitchen, I wonder what she’s cry- ing about?” When he heard “If I only knew what to do.” : Springing out of bed he tip-toed to the head of the stairs, and listened. “Oh dear, Oh dear!” he heard his mother say, “to think that its come to this. First my good man died, then me and Mickey came here among strangers, and I took sick, and couldn’t get work, but that the physician might be without a boy, and might then take him. When Doctor Palmer answered Mickey’s timid knock for admittance, and saw his little friend, he asked: “Is mother sick?” “No sir, I came about Nannie.” “And who's Nannie?” the doctor asked. “Don’t you know she’s the goat?” “And what about her?” “Why—why—the landlord says he'll take her, if mother don’t pay him what she owes him?” “Ah, I see, he means to levy on the goat if your mother don’t pay him.” “Did your mother send you to me about it?” “No sir, I came myself. I thought if you had no boy you'd take me, and then out of my wages mother could pay the landlord, and he couldn’t take Nanny.” “How old are you, Mickey?” “I'm going on nine, Mickey replied, stretching himself up trying to appear tall. I grow pretty fast.” “I know that you are improving in that respect every day, and I'm sure that I want a boy bad enough, but I fear you are too young. | willing, and with a little training could make yourself useful.” I know you are “Yes, sir, I'de do everything that you tell me to do.” “Now you go home,” the doctor said, and tell mother that I'll be to see her this afternoon and we’ll see about this business.” A few hours later, after a little chat with Mickey’s mother, the doctor en- gaged the boy to make himself useful in his office, and paid two dollars in advance on his wages, which liberality on the part of O'Toole to pay the landlord and release any claim he might have on the goat. the physician enabled Mrs. Doctor Palmer knew that he could | i 1 | i 5 'A HALLOWE'EN DINNER AND HOW | JAMES E. HARTER, DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY TREASURER. The WATCHMAN desires to call attention to the Democratic candidate for County Treasurer, whose picture appears above. He is one of the sturdy Demo- TO FIX IT. | The invitations to this delightful even- ing, when mirth and mystery pervade the | atmosphere, are very spiritedly word- | ed, as follows: | At the sign of the Jack-o’-Lantern so bright We'll expect you sure on next Friday night, ! The hobgobblins, witches and oracles, too, Are preparing a wonderful fate for you. Then the hour, the date and the hos- tess’ name are attached, and the invita- tions tied with tiny orange and black | ribbons. The envelopes are sealed with |! a dab of sealing wax. i When the guests arrive a jolly way to! break the ice is to give each guest a black | pastenoard cat when he enters the din- ! ing room, and tell him to wind up the | tail. The cats tail is the black yarn, and | the guests wind in and out carefully, each toward the end of his particular | piece of yarn which is tied to his chair ! at the table. : This takes some time, and by the time | each guest is ready to be seated, the Hal- | lowe’en spirit will be at high flood. : Present each guest with a witch’s cap or some other favor which he can wear. This adds grotesque amusement to the dinner. The menu may be more elaborate, but the one given is very delicious and ap- propriate: Mock turtle soup and cheese straws, French fried potatoes, lamb chops with mint sauce, French rolis and tiny Jack- o’-lantern butter-balls. Hallowe’en nut salad, olives. . Cider jelly and mystery cider cake. Coffee, hickory nut wafers, marshmal- , lows and Hallowe'en nuts to crack, and i fruit. | To defer the various games and cere- i ' monies until the “witching hour” is more fun, so it is well to festive board” telling weird stories. The ‘places may be marked with tiny corn | “linger round the poppers, now on sale in the shops, and a small crepe paper bonbon case will serve ; to hold unpopped corn at each place. | The corn is popped, marshmallows toast- ed and fortunes told over tiny candles in Jack-o-lanterns which grace the feast. “Small baskets, holding English walnuts tieu with gay ribbons, are passed around | after the nut-cracking, marshallow-toast- mo HOW NOBEL MADE DISCOVERY ‘ Cut Finger Caused Him to Find a Way of Handling Nitroglycerin With Safety. When that very dangerous explosive, nitroglycerin, was first invented ex- traordinary precautions had to be tak- en to prevent accidents while the sub- stance was being handied, but, not- withstanding this, so many disasters occurred that there seemed to be strong probatilities that its manufac- ture and use would have to be pro- hibited, says an English paper. After several governments had actu- ally interdicted its use, however, means were discovered by which this powerful explosive could be used with a minimum of danger to those who handled it. One of the methods employed was to convert the nitroglycerin into dyna- mite by its absorption in the infusorial sarth known as kieselguhr. This process, however, invelved a reduction of the explosive power of the nitro- glycerin and explosives chemists per- sisted in their researches to find_some substance which, when added to nitro- glycerin, would render it safe for han- dling without diminishing its explosive force. One of these chemists was Nobel. [t is on record that one day while No- bel was at work in his laboratory he cut his finger, and ‘in order to stop | the bleeding he painted some collodion (a liquid preparation akin to guncot- ton) over the cut to form a protective artificial skin. Having done this, he poured some of the collodion, by way of an experiment, into a vessel containing nitroglycerin, when he noticed that the twe sub- stances mixed and formed a jellylike mass. He at once set to work to investi. gate this substance, and the outcome of these experiments was blasting gel- depend on Mickey, and he didn’t want any better recommendation than that he was good to his mother, ‘and kind to animals. atin, a mixture containing 90 per cent of nitroglycerin and 10 per cent of scluble guncotten. Thus, as a result of a very trivial occurrence, that vio- lent explosive, blasting gelatin, was discovered. crats of Pennsvalley and is entitled to the united support of the party. Mr. Harter is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Harter and was born on the farm in Penn township on December 26th, 1869. From boyhood up until he twenty years of age he worked on the farm for his father and attended theo lic schools and the Spring Mills High school. He then spent a year at the England Conservatory at Boston. Seventeen years ago he embarked in the mer- cantile business at Coburn and has conducted the same ever since, proving quite successful. He has also served as tax collector of Penn township and during the past four years has been a school director and secretary of the board. Mr. Har- | weird message as it appears, bearing ter is a courteous and obliging gentleman and one whose integrity is beyond ques- | your fate. i i i i i ; i A feature of the Hallowe’en dinner is tion. The voters of Centre county will make no mistake in electing him to han- the “snap dragon” ceremony. The “mys- dle the county funds. I tery cake,” served with cider jelly, is ! | illuminated with 13 gay candles, graduat- ling in size from the centre. it is sur- { rounded by burning brandy, into which A S | | raisins have been scattered. As the cake The harrows are of various kinds. Yet! In regard to the less scientific guides | % ts een each guest makes only the special implements of the Belgian : Farm and Fireside says: ! one attempt to snatch a raisin from the husbandman is the spade. With it he | «pepe are a4 few weather signs which | flame. Gaining the bit of fruit brings fertilizes sands and dried marshes and are olde babl Gia forces back the river and sea floods. The today. Po oaaly an anyone Sine | 200% fuck, i ing, corn popping and “fortunes told with ' fruit seeds and parings” have been par- | ticipated in. These English nut shells ' contain tiny scrolls, with fortunes written Pub- | upon them in lemon juice, and nothing New : but heat will make them visible. There iis an ink prepared especially for this ‘caper. As each guest cracks a nut the : hostess repeats in solemn tones: “Hold above the candle what you find within.” , Care must be taken not to score the and couldn’t pay the rint, now its due ag’in and the landlord threatens to take the goat for it.” “Oh dear, Oh dear, if I only knew what to do.” : With that the child came into the room. “What’s the matter mother?” he said looking wonderingly about him. “You're not going to sell Nannie?” “Indade no, child, what ever would have become of us last winter when I was sick if it hadn’t been for her? Sure and wasn’t it from the sale of the milk that she gave, that we bought bread?” “I guess I wouldn’t give up Nannie.” The goat seemed to know that her friends were in trouble for when she heard the boy’s voice she rubbed her little black nose sympathetically against was SIBERIA. Paderewski’s “Pupil.” Paderewski arrived in a small west- ern town about noon one day and de- cided to take a walk in the afternoon. While strolling along he heard a piano, and, following the sound, came to a house on which was a sign reading: “Miss Jones. Piano lessons 25 cents an hour.” Pausing to listen he heard the young woman trying to play one of Chopin's nocturnes, and not succeeding very well. Paderewski walked ap to the house and knocked. Miss Jones came to the Siberia is generally known as the world’s headquarters for the bulk ice business. It is situated considerably north of the decent weather zone in Asia, and has been noted for many years for its production of high grade shivers, tragedy and gloom. Siberia is the largest patch of ground surrounded by a boundary line in the world. It contains almost 5,000,000 square miles. It is bounded on the south by a complete absence of water, on the north by a heat famine, on the west by a dearth of justice, and on the east by high steamer fares. This is why it has been almost immune from real estate agents. Siberian land is about the oniy Old-Fashioned Weather Signs. one horse with ease, rapidity, and regu- ; larity and admitting of a deepish furrow. | him, and licking his hand cried, “Ba! ba!” “What's the landlord going to take Nannie for?” “The rint child, the rint.” “I'll hide her, mother, in the widow McGargy’s cellar, then he won’t find her.” “He'll git her, all right, you may be sure, but the money, how am I ever to raise that? he’ll surely take her if I don’t?” “How much do you owe?” asked with manifest interest. “A dollar and a quarter, and there's but forty-five cents in the cup.” “That's a power of money to make up,” Mickey replied, looking down with a troubled look on his face into the little tin cup on his mother’s lap, that she kept the pennies in, that she got from the neighbors from the sale of the goat's milk. “We'll make it up, never fear.” “How will we make it up?” “I'll help you.” “You! Why Mickey you never made a cint in your life, you don’t know what you’re talking about.” the boy not appreciate it for many years. worse sent into the middle of Sibetia. land which cannot be sold to a prosper- ous Illinois farmer by a smooth land agent with a good line of conversation and a few photographs of ten foot wheat and nine foot pumpkins. Siberia is owned by Russia but she did Until 1900 she used it as a dumping ground for jexiles. When a Russian needed a punishment than hanging he was That was enough. It wasn’t necessary to guard him. Even if he escaped he would be too old by the time he walked back to do any more mischief. There are thous- ands of Russians in Siberia today whose sole occupation is trying to get out of the country and they are overworked at that. For many years Russia sent exiles to Siberia at the rate of 20,000 a year. This custom has been largely abandoned, but the exiles remain. Many of them are leading citizens now. England sent its criminals to Australia for many years, too, and some of their descendants now own private yachts and subscribe regu- larly to the church—which seems to show that if you send a bad man far enough away from civilization, he will gradually reform from lack of contami- nation. Siberia now has over 7,000,000 people and is going ahead rapidly. It has the longest railroad in the world, and there are more steamers on the River Ob than proverb of the Flemish country folks is: “The spade is a gold mine to the peas- ant.” The farmers of Belgium and their families are never idle. The soil is given no rest. Always they are digging, turning over the ground,hoeing, weeding or harvesting. Their thoughts are all concerned with their their fields. occupation and Origin of the Tomato. Excepting our scientists, there are comparatively few people in this country who know how many important products that now minister to the health, sus- tenance, and pleasures of mankind were added to the world’s supply by the dis- covery of America. A few of these are incidentally mentioned in an interesting article on “The Tomato,” in the current number of the Bulletin of the Pan- American Union by Edward Albes. The greatest febrifuge known today, quinine, came into existence because the Incas of Peru had discovered the medic- inal properties of the bark of the Cin- chona tree. The leaves of the coca plant, a South American product, have served to alleviate pain the world over by their essence cocaine. Indian corn, or maize, was unknown to the old world before it was found to be the great food staple of the Americas. Irish as well as sweet pota- toes had their first home in the new be fairly reliable, and some of them can be explained on a scientifi: basis: “Moonlight nights have the heaviest frosts “The higher the clouds the finer the weather. “The farther the sight the nearer the rain. “Dew is an indication of fine weather. “When stars flicker in a dark back- ground, rain or snow follows soon. “Expect a strong wind with stormy weather when smoke from chimneys ' hangs near the ground. ! “Here are a few in verse. They have | the advantage of being easily remem- bered: “Clear moon, Frost soon. Year of snow Fruit will grow. “Rain before seven, Fine before eleven. “If the sun set in gray The next will be a rainy day. “When the wind’s in the south The rain’s in its mouth. The wind in the west Suits everyone best. “If you see grass in January Lock your grain in your granary. “Evening red and morning gray i and there. use . ‘a black garbed hag stirs a pot hanging | The “mystery cake” contains a coin, a ring, a pen and a rabbit's foot, signify- i ing wealth, a happy ia fame and i Good Luck, respectively. are many and unique. The table is ar rayed in tiny doll witches, and zande- labras made from the new black and | : white striped crepe paper. “Bon Bon” he flavors "and table decorations on sale in the shops F2derewski can, afterward spending door and recognized him at once. De- lighted, she invited him in and he sat down and played the nocturne as only an ‘hour in correcting her mistakes, | favors are in this also; others are black ° | cats and jack-o’-lanterns, as well as tiny i corn poppers at each place. Miss Jones thanked him and he de- parted. Some months afterward he returned to the town, and again took the same , walk. i | The centrepiece is decidedly striking. It is formed from a large natural pump- kin, in which squares have been cut, and | covered inside with red tissue paper. Out- | side are signs bearing “At the sign of the i ' Jack-o’-lantern” and other quaint sym- | i bols, and small witches guard it here : On top of the witch-house ! from a tripod. The pot contains incense, | thousands cf lives, now returns to this which slowly mounts upward, giving a ! pleasant aroma to the room during the i meal. After the Hallowe'en dinner, for- tunes are told, games, capers and stunts i familiar to everyone are indulged in i until 12 o’clock. More Hallowe'en spirit | is added to the occasion if every nook | and corner is decorated with corn fod- ; der, jack-o’-lanterns and witches upon : broom sticks. i For Hallowe’en Nut Salad—Scoop out | | red apples, and place with a crisp lettuce | leaf upon individual salad plates. Line | with a dusting of chopped nuts, sprinkled He soon came to the home of Miss Jones, and, locking at the sign, read: “Miss Jones. Piane lessons $1 an hour. (Pupil of Paderewski.)” Physician of Eminence. Dr. Richard Pearson Strong, having quelled the epidemic of typhus fever in Serbia, thereby saving countless country to resume his place as pro: fessor of tropical medicine at the Harvard Medical school. He had pre vious plague experience in the Phil ipprines and China. Doctor Strong was born in Fortress Monroe, Virginia, March 18, 1872. It is said that even as a child he was attracted to medicine as a profession, and that the medical officers at the fort were his chosen friends. He graduated from the medi: cal school at Johns Hopkins, winning there are on the Mississippi, Irkutsh has street cars, moving pictures and several hundred thousand people, and the wheat crop of the country is getting large “You'll let me try?” “Indade I will, and no one would be more pleased than I, were you to suc- : with orange juice. Now add a part of i the apple pulp and several slices of ba- ; | nana. Fill with chopped nuts and gar- Serve with Help the traveler on his way; Evening gray and morning red Bring down rain upon his, head. c E When the clouds appear like rocks | nish with tender celery. world. The delicious concoction known as chocolate, serving man as both food and drink, had been known for centuries by the Incas of Peru and the Aztecs of his M. D,, in 1897. Then came a year as resident house physician at the Johns Hopkins hospital. He entered ceed.” enough to work into the world’s returns. Mexico before the Spaniards found it i and towers, | mayonnaise dressing. ; the army July 23, 1898, as assistant After breakfast Mickey started out in | But So dar, only one third as much land a ne Ch, Fs The earth’s refreshed by frequent | For Hickory Nut Vanyaluke Los Sregsen After By spend wort in % 1S cultivated in Siberia as is farmed in 3 | eggs, one-half-c 0. utter, Ww n € was Induce 0 al m- search of employment. Although he in- Towa. The rest of it raises wolves and | Europe. Tobacco was added to man’s showers. | €ggs, o up a ae quired for something to do wherever he thought he would be likely to find it, no one seemed to want his services. I Along toward afternoon he went home, heart sick, and discouraged. To his mother’s inquiry as to how he made out, | he had little to say, only to tell how tired : he was. “Never mind Sonny,” she said, “try again to-morrow, your luck may change.” As soon as supper was over the child went to bed, and long after it was time for him to have gone to sleep, his mother ' heard him sobbing in an undertone to ; himself, grieving his little heart out for ] Nannie. . In the morning he seemed brighter i than he had been the day before, and after breakfast he started out again to find work. He didn’t tell his mother where he was going, and she asked no ques- tions, although she went to the window and looked after him. She did not doubt that he would meet with the same suc- cess that he had had the day before, and she felt sorry for the child. Poor little Mickey; he was experiencing his first conflict in battling with the world, and found the lesson too hard. He took another course, however, from the one that he had taken before. He remembered that when his mother was sick, the doctor had one day said to him: “If you were a little older, Mickey, I would take you for an office boy; you take such good care of your mother.” And all at once it dawned on the child that possibly the doctor might take him now. Not that he was so much older, blizzards exclusively. Southern Siberia is warmer than Illi- | nois, but in northern Siberia the ther- mometer goes down to 90 in the winter, and agriculture does not flourish. Even in central Siberia, spring only gets a good start by June, and Autumn is in full blast by the last of July. This explains why the Siberian soldiers enjoyed them- selves so much in the mild and reviving snowdrifts of Poland this last winter. Siberia will some day contain 100,000,- 000 people and will go into busi- ness on its own hook. Russia may ob- ject, but it will be 5,000 miles from Pet- rograd to the vitals of the rebels, and the progress of an avenging army would be discouragingly slow. The Belgian Farm and Farmer. Farming in Belgium is the result of centuries of most diligent application with the spade and plow, a Belgian cor- respondent writes to the Yorkshire Post. % The farmers of Belgium have economical habits without parallel. Describing the fertile part of the country he says that each house is detached and surrounded by large apple and pear orchards, hedged with box, holly, hawthorn, where the cows are brought to fe<d every morning and night. The average house is of one story, and thatched with straw, contain- ing four rooms—one for meals and fam- ily life, one for the dairy and preparing the cattle food, and the others for bed- rooms. The old-fashioned oak furniture is brightly polished. Utensils of tin and copper shine on the walls which are whitewashed. Outside, the garden is gay with wall flowers, dahlias, and hy- drangaes, and the florists’ flowers: which would have been shown at provincial centers. Also boasted one of the finest shows in northern Europe both for stock, produce and flowers. The farmer's im- plements are simple but of first rate con- struction. The plow is light, drawn by pleasures by the Indians of America. Many other products might be enumerat- ed, but among them all perhaps none ministers more delightfully to the palate of the modern epicure or is more com- mon than the tomato. The name tomato seems to be of Aztec origin, given as tomato by some authori- ties and as xitomate by others, and still persists in some few of the older Mexican town names such as Tomatlan, Toma- tepeg, etc., but the general consensus of opinion among botanists seems to be that the plant and its culture for edible pur- poses originated in Peru, whence it spread to other sections of the Americas. It is certain, at any rate, that it was known i and cultivated for its fruit centuries be- fore the Columbian discovery. That the cultivated tomato was known to some of the European botanists over 360 years ago is evidenced by the fact that two large varieties were described as early as 1554, but for many years it was only in southern Europe that the value of the fruit for use in soups and as a salad was recognized. It was quite generally used in Spain and Italy during the 17th century, but in England and in northern Europe generally the plant was grown only in botanical gardens as a curiosity and for ornamental purposes. It was seldom eaten, being commonly re- garded as unhealthy and even poisonous. This belief probably arose because of the close resemblance of the plant to its allied relative the nightshade, or bella- donna, and had, of course, no foundation ‘in fact. It was not until the early part of the 19th century that the tomato came into general use as a food in northern Europe and even in the United States. Since about 1835, however, the use and cultivation of the vegetable has grown to such an extent that it has now become one of the most important of our garden crops.—Ex. ——They are all good enough, but the WATCHMAN is always the best. “If you ean get the official weather report by phone you’d better count on that first. But the proverbs and jingles just given are better than a common guess.”—Farm and Fireside. | World’s Highest Dam. | On Monday the people of Idaho cele- | brated at Boise, the State capital, the | completion of the highest dam in the | world. The Arrowrock Dam is across | the Boise River and is more than 348 | feet in height, and is the result of ten years work. It is 240 feet thick at the base, while | the crest is but sixteen feet in thickness, | and thc dam is 1060 feet long. It is | another link in the great chain of irri- gation dams which the government has built to reclaim the arid soil of the great Northwest and bring to the farmers and husbandmen of that section increasing prosperity through their crops. The great reservoir that will find the sterile plains is eighteen miles in length It can drain a basin 2610 square miles an area that is larger than several of the European principalities. Here the com- bined navies of the world could float in a lake nineteen square miles made of the imprisoned water behind the great struct- ure. Irrigation has long since passed out of the realm of conjecture. Its success means much for the West: means much for the country, as it opens to tillage and cultivation hundreds and thousands of square miles that have heen harren. This Arrowrock Dam. while a monster in size, is but one of the great engineer- ing feats which adorn the plan of irri- gation in the United States. The Idaho farmers are a unit in stat- ing that with the water which can be drained over the land now sterile acres and acres of crops can be harvested and add not only to the wealth of the State, but bring individual prosperity to thous- ands of Idaho farmers.—Phila. Press. i sugar, two cups of chopped hickory-nuts | | or shell-bark meats flour. Beat the but- | ter and sugar into a cream, then add the | well-beaten eggs and mix in flour enough : to make a .thick batter. Now add the | finely chopped nut meats and drop in | small spoonfuls upon buttered paper. | Flatten with the back of spoon and bake | in moderate oven. These wafers are very delightful with coffee. | To make cider jelly take two quarts of | jelly, allow three pints of cider, two cup- fuls of sugar and dissolve one package of ! gelatine in one and one half cups of cold i water. Add the sugar to the cider, | place on stove, and when hot dissolve the gelatine. Let this cool a minute while beating the white of one egg toa froth, then add it to the cider, and let boil until quite clear. Strain through a’ fine cheesecloth, pour into fancy moulds, | and when set, decorate with whipped cream flavored with lemon extract, and candied mint leaves to form a border. ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. ——The great demand for artificial | arms and legs by the European bellig- . erents has developed a large industry with headquarters in Washington, D. C. In the last year this county has shipped i monthly 100 artificial arms and 900 | artificial legs to the allies. Owing to the | great demand this output will be largely | increased in the near future, enlarged | facilities having been installed at the | plants in Philadelphia. Atlanta, Boston, | Pittsburgh and St. Louis. The chief companies manufacturing these artificial limbs have established recently branches in London and Paris, which will add! largely to the output of artificial limbs. ; Three-fourths of the artificial legs turn- ed out are nearly hip lengths, indicating that a large majority of the amputations are a result of wounds above the knee. ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN self to Harvard university, where he has operated along research lines. Malayan Rubber Industry. Since 1897 develcpments in the rub ber industry in Malay have been enor mous. In 1897 about 350 acres were planted to rubber. Year after year more jungle was cleared and the acre age increased rapidly. A tremendcus development was felt in 1906. De mand for rubber the world over taxed the supply and speculators rushed tc put land under cultivation. It is stated that in that year alone 150,000 acres were alienated for rubber cultivation. In 1912 there were 621,621 acres under rubber, and at the end of 1912 there were 1,056 rubber estates of over 100 acres in extent, the average yield per acre being 260 pounds. Work for Crippled Soldiers. One form which Germany's provi . sion for the employment of crippled soldiers is taking is the purchase of two large landed estates in the neigh- berhocd of Magdeburg, where each man will have a plot of ground for growing vegetables and fruit, which can be easily dispcsed of in the Magdeburg market. One estate ccst $375,000, and the other abcut the same price. Reward tor Scholar. Dr. Maude Slye, the Uniersity oi Chicago medical research worker, wha recently established the theory that cancer is inherited and not centagious, ‘as a result of ten years’ experiments with mice, nas been awarded the How: ard Taylor Hickeits nrize by the fac ulty of the university medical school
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers