Belletonte, Pa., December 13, 1918. — S———————— THE SUBTLE MINISTRIES. The murmur of a waterfall A mile away, The rustle when a robin lights Upon a spray, The lapping of a lowland stream On dipping boughs, The sound ef grazing from a herd Of gentle cows, The echo from a wooded hill Of cuckoo’s call, The quiver through the meadow grass At evening fall— Too subtle are these harmonies For pen and rule, Such music is not understood By any school; But when the brain is overwrought It hath a spell Beyond all human skill and power To make it well. The memory of a kindly word For long gone by, The fragrance of a fading flower Sent lovingly, The gleaning of a sudden smile Or sudden tear, The warm pressure of the hand, The tone of cheer, The hush that means “I cannot speak, But I have heard!” The note that only bears a verse From God’s own Word— Such tiny things we hardly count As ministry, The givers deeming they have shown "Scant sympathy; But when the heart is overwrought, Oh, who can tell The power of such tiny things To make it well! —Frances Ridley Havergal. A ——————————————— DO YOU KNOW? Red Cross Christmas Roll Call | December 16th to 23rd Do you know the Red Cross Christmas Roll Call? Do you know when it's going to be? Do you know it’s the call of our brothers, who are far away, over the sea? Do you know that if you answer “present” you'll be helping some boy over there, and youll show that you're backing our soldiers and willing to do your full share? Do you know that to millions of chil- dren this sign of a haven, indeed, for they know it means food, cloth- ing, shelter and love to supply every need? Do you know what the mil- lions of members all over our well- beloved land have been able to do through the Red Cross in offering a kind, helping hand? Will you an- swer “I'm here” to the roll call? Will you be a member this year? If you will you'll receive the “love button’—a token of Christmas good j epee PE—— MAKE ROLL CALL UNANIMOUS. The official designation, and the only proper characterization of the demon- stration that will occupy the attention of the American people, under the auspices of the American Red Cross, immediately preceding the coming holi- day season, is “The Red Cross Christ- mas Roll Call.” The object of the Christmas Roil Call is to register in terms of active participation the spirit of a nation. The spirit in question is personified in Red Cross membership. It is not to be a “campaign” to raise a war fund nor a “drive” to strengthen the material resources of the Red Cross organiza- tion. Its main objective is the ex- tension of Red Cross membership to the uttermost limit. a See to it that no false conception of the purpose of the Roll Call finds lodg- ment anywhere, and, while emphasiz- ing the grandeur of the movement un- der its only logical name, keep ever- lastingly in mind the idea to—*Make it unanimous.” NEW FACES FOR OLD. The American Red Cross has under- taken varied tasks. These range from darning the socks of the soldiers to making new faces for those disfigured by war. Mrs. Ladd, the wife of Dr. Ladd, now doing service in Red Cross hospitals abroad, is working in her Paris studio making masks to cover disfigured faces. A photograph of the soldier showing how he looked before being wounded is obtained and then a mask of copper or silver is made to re- semble it and replace the part that is gone. This is made as lifelike as pos- sible and held on, as a rule, with bows behind the ears like spectacles. The soldier cannot eat or sleep in these masks, but he can’ see and breathe through them. Sometimes a nose is put on so lifelike that it cannot be de- tected, and sometimes it is a chin or in rare instances almost the entire face. This great humanitarian work enables the victim to mingle with people with- out being made conspicuous or con- scious that he is being avoided. in the Cradle of the Deep. A few men were put into the bar- racks of an older company at Great | Lakes. One of these boys snored So loudly that the next day the boys | planned to get even. That night when | his snoring commenced one hoy got at each end of the hammock and be- | The boy, | gan to raise and lower it. waking up much dazed, screamed © “Oh, ma, I wish I'd taken your adviee and gone into the army. I didn’t kn” I'd get so seasick!” HORSES FOR FRANCE. (Continued from page 2, Col. 6.) | able sense of fairness, apd later on, | during my service on the western | front, I found out that the French- 1 { | { "man in all his dealings is fair and | just. | Pretty soon the prisoners faded out | of sight and we came alongside the | dock at Bordeaux. I was all eagerness | and strained my eyes so as not to miss | the least thing. The dock was full of {| Freneh cavalrymen, hurrying to and | fro. Huge Turcos, black as the ace | of spades, with white turbans on | their heads, were majestically strid- ing about. | After we warped into the dock and | made fast, our work was over. We had | nothing to do with the unloading of | the horses. The French cavalrymen came aboard with a bunch of cavalry | halters hanging over their arms. It | was a marvel to see with what ease | and efficiency that ship was unload- | ed. The condition of the horses was | pitiful. They could hardly bend their legs from stiffness. They would hob- ble down the gangplank and stand trembling on the dock. In about a minute or so they would stretch their necks way up into the air and seem to be taking long breaths of the pure air. Then they started to whinny. They were calling’ backward and for- ward to each other. Even though I did not understand horse language, I knew exactly what they were saying. ' They were thanking the good Lord . for their deliverance from that hell ' ship, and were looking forward to : green pastures and a good roll in the | dirt. Pretty soon you could see them bend their forelegs and lie down on the dock: then try to roll over. It was pitiful; some of them did not have the strength to turn over and they feebly kicked. Pretty soon the whole dock was a mass of rolling | horses, the Frenchmen . around, gesticulating and jabbering. their height and weight. horse was led into a ring chalked out on the dock and the army inspectors examined it. Very few were reject- ed. From this ring of chalk they were led into a portable stall and branded. You could hear the sing- | song voice of the prander shouting out | what sounded like “Battry Loo.” As come over, get the horse which had got in conversation with an inter- preter and he informed me that the average life of these horses in the French army was three days, so these ship to go into a worse hell of bursting shells and cracking bullets. I, after passing a rigid examination as to my nationality, and being issued a cattleman’s passport, inquired my way to the prefecture of police. I deliverd to him a sealed envelope which I had received in New York. Upon opening it, he was very gracious to me and T went into a rear room, where the interpreter put me through a grilling examination. From there morning in the company of a sergeant box compartment on the funniest look- ing train I ever saw. The track seem- ed to be about three feet wide; the wheels of the cars looked like huge cogwheels on an engine minus the cogs. After bumping, stopping, and sometimes sliding backwards, in 26 hours we reached a little town. Sup- always moving in the same direction. 1 was ushered into the presence of 1 could hear a dis- and upon inquiring termaster corps. tant booming, France, striving to hold back the Ger- man invaders. I trembled all over on the we. ern front. Two (ays afterward I again reached Bordeaus, and shipped to New York on the French liner RochambeauX. to the Frenchman who had sent me over. He was very courteous, and as 1 reached out to shake hands with him, he placed both hands on my shoulders and kissed me on the right and left cheek. I was dumfounded, blushed all over, and after receiving the pay that was due me, I left. 1 think I could have borne another trip across with horses, but that being kissed upon my return completely got my goat. I went back to the routine of my office, but everything had lost color and appeared monotonous. I believe I had left my heart in France, and I felt mean and small, eating three square meals a day and sleeping on a soft bed, when the armies on the other side were making the world’s history. Sometimes when sleeping I would have a horrible nightmare; I could see those horses being boiled alive in steam. Several times later I passed that sign on Greenwich street, “Horses for France, Men Wanted,” and the picture of the second foreman dropping the pasty-faced doctor would loom before my eyes. I do not know to this day | what became of that nervy wreck of aumanity, who had the temerity to tell our foreman where he got off at. 'I | know he did not make the passage with us. | For high class job work come | to the “Watchman” office. wm Srtbseribe for the “Watchman.” been branded, and lead it away. I] and a private, got into a little match- | a French officer, who, I later found out, | was a brigadier general of the quar- ! Upon arriving in New York I reported | HIS ONLY BOY. H. S. Cooper, Dallas, Texas. I have a boy over there—my only son. He is right now in the front of the Front, for he is an engineer. You ask me if I am not worried about him, if I am not afraid that he will be kill- ed, wounded, made a prisoner? Before he enlisted I did worry As a baby I was afraid that he might not live; as a youth that he ight not grow up and marry carry on my name; as a he might not be all that I Now, I have no reason to worry, no cause to be afraid, for I know that he will do his duty to the extent of his life—and that which comes in the line of duty is neither to be feared nor worried over, it is sim- If he comes back to me safe and sound he will be pride. If he comes back wounded and helpless he will be my here. If he comes not back at all he will be my patriot. And, even if I should never know the manner or place of his death} or where his body lies, I will know that he died as should a soldier— that a grateful people, a host of lov- i ing friends and his whole kith and kin | will mourn his fate sincerely and will | hold him in sacred remembrance as one of those who willingly and cheer- | fully gave all that they had for their : country and their loved ones! What have I to 1. What is there to fear? Death? It can come to all oi us but 2. All the remaining weekly once—had he stayed at home it might have been his fate to meet it in less 3. Wounds ? Without the risk of these where would have been his sac- rifice and my pride in him! great—the supreme—sacrifice always impending, what are these ones to fear or worry over? there should come the supreme sacri- fice of death in defense of right and liberty there will come to me and all who love him the supreme consola- tion that he did his duty to the ut- most as a man and a patriot—and could anyone who loved him ask for about him. rightly an man that wanted him to be. ply to be done! Worry? Fear? woory about ? glorious form! Imprisonment ? ! more? jumping | After getting the horses up, they were divided into classes according to : Then each ' low, east or west. i And some | the grown people | standing and friendship; I was taken to a hotel, and the next plies were piled up as high as houses. | Officers and enlisted men were hurrying to and fro, and I could see long trains of supply wagons and artillery limbers | found out that it was the guns of | with excitement, and a feeling that 1! cannot describe rushed over me. I was listenir; *o my first sound of the guns | | i | | | 1 | | | Worried about him? Afraid for him? Not for a minute! The Meaning of Our Red Cross. The red in our cross stands for sac- rifice, for giving life, as the warm, | crimson blood gives life to the body. The cross has the same length on all four sides of its arms, to signify that it gives life equally to all, high or It stands alone al- no words or markings on it, to g that hie fod Cross workers have : only one ought—to serve. he yelled this, a French private would ' ask no questions, they care not wheth- ! er the wounded be ours or of another people—their duty is to give, and to ways, show give quickly. The Red Cross stands on a white | - i ground, because real sacrifice can | come ony from pura: hearse if | jee must come, not from hate, ut | poor horses had only left that Bey | from love; from the noblest thoughts | and wishes of the heart, or it will fail. | ‘That is why children love this flag. i It is drawing them by millions in the schools of our land, in a wonderful army of rescue under the President, to give for others. day the children of all | lands, under the Red Cross, will teach the ways of under- the beauti- Cross which is echoed in their lives.—H. N. to make, to save, ful meaning of the Red Cracken. Bell to Sound for Prayer. George Wharton Pepper, chairman ' of the Pennsylvania Council of | tional Defense, has presented a bell | to the American Red Cross at Wash- | ington and for a unique purpose. At | the stroke of noon, every day, a per- iod of three minutes is set apart at ' the national headquarters of the Red tion. some way to call everybody’s sented to the Red Cross. Level of Its Homes” reading. pier homes. my | week in the year. couraged. ticles, special pages The Companion the coming year. and | place of many papers, sO great ety—and at the price of one. year, 52 issues. . serial “Anne Exeter,” ning December 12. new subscribers: 1919. 1918. Sickness ? 1019. include With the 4. bers. All for only $2.50. smaller And, if desired. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, tou, Mass. Good News. and strength. This is good news. preparations of iron. pation. dy and research by one of the most cessful pharmaceutical chemists. They cially beneficial in cases of pale, physical exhaustion,—makes the | more vigorous and the old less Peptiron is sold by all druggists. Serv- Officers. German troops captured only against 682 German officers and 252 privates according to figures American headquarters. The chief surgeon of army declares: that all transported to months. Mac low. hospital trains. ty-nine have been held up. Na- suitable foods may poor. Cross for silent prayer or medita- Mr. Pepper was asked to designate ( atten- tion to this moment for devotion. suggested a bell and had one es ecial- | ly made at Troy, N. Y., which he pre- “No Civilization Ever Rises Above the And no home rises above the level of its } The Youth’s Companion intro- | duces the whole family to the best writ- ers of the day—those who contribute the things that make better minds and hap- “No other publication would appeal to me at this time” tells the exact story of the hopefulness and entertain- ment and information and suggestion and ; economy that The Companion gives each | Every age is liberally | provided for, every wholesome interest en- | Serials, short stories, rare ar- | and exceptional ed- | itorials. It is true that your family needs | They | deserve it with all its help. It takes the | is its vari- | Still $2.00 a | Don't miss Miss Grace Richmond's great i 10 chapters, begin- | The following special offer is made to | The Youth's Companien—>32 issues of issues of The Companion Home Calendar for All the above for only $2.00, or you may MeCall's Magazine—12 fashion num- | The two maga- | zines may be sent to separate addresses if | | Commonwealth Ave, & St. Paul St., Bos- Many of the nervous, pale and debili- | tated are being helped to recover health | They are taking Peptiron, which com: | bines iron in the most agreeable, effective | and up-to-date form, overcoming all the | objectionable features of older and other It comes in choco- | late-coated pills—does not injure the teeth, does not leave an inky or metallic flavor | in the mouth, and does not cause consti- | Peptiron is a thoroughly scientific prep- | aration, the ultimate result of careful stu- | It is a} real. not a make-believe, iron tonic, espe- { blood, weak, unstrung nerves, mental and young feeble. | Germans Capture Only 209 American American officers and 1873 privates taken by the doughboys, given out by | the American | seriously wounded Americans will have been America within three | The seriously sick will fol- | The Americans have 250,000 hos- pital beds in France and twenty-one Contracts for twen- —On every farm there should be a storehouse so the surplus be saved until such time as they are needed. Many farmers lose much every year because their facili- ties for storing perishable foods are Shoes. YEAGER SHOE STORE AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAANAAAANAAAANS BARGAINS! BARGAINS! BARGAINS! No matter how much care and thought I give to the purchase of my Shoes, I make mistakes. For example, in order to get good quality in Boys’ extra heavy High Top Shoes I purchased them in the black leather, because it is very much better than in the tan, but the average boy or parent does not look to "the wear and service of Shoes; they want what they think is style. In this case boys want Tan Shoes and this black one is not selling. My motto is to have nothing on my shelves that does not sell and I will sell them to you at a loss. These Shoes are made of leather, not shoddy, but absolutely solid. They are the old- fashioned peggy kind, bought to sell at $5.00 I will Shoes. { | { i i { \ | i i i t | | + i i | close them out at $3.50. I have many other such bargains to offer from now until Christmas, this space is too small to tell you of all the bargains that I have. Inever advertise anything that I do not fully carry out, all I can say is to come and see for yourself. i i | 4 sue- | thin | | YEAGER'S SHOE STORE or | THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN 12, BELLEFONTE, PA. Bush Arcade Building 58-27 Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. i i Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Do your Christmas shopping now, and do it here. We have the largest stock for useful presents; prices A Ui : ih “Good Morning, Perfection” Rayo Lamps A central-draught designs to choose from. Safe and easy to keep clean. See your dealer. Give the most light for oil consumed. and hot blast s Easy to light and Stay lighted in the strongest wind. See your dealer. Cold les. Do you have a Perfection Oil Heater to greet on cold mornings? Its answer is “heat”—a cheerful, room-filling warmth that drives away every bit of chilliness and makes getting-up time really comfortable. You can have this same Perfection heat in any room in your home when- ever you want it. Besides, a Perfection saves coal and that’s something you have to think about this winter. Use ATLANTIC Rayolight | and then you will get the most heat from your Perfection. It burns without smoke, smell or sputter because it is so highly refined and puri- fied that it doesn’t know how. You'll find that it gives a clearer, more brilliant light in your lamps and lanterns, too. Always ask for it by name. By the way, better not wait to get your Per- fection Oil Heater, And remember, they are safe. See your dealer now. Perfections are reasonably priced—$5.65 to $10.00. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY Everywhere in Pennsylvania and Delaware (UH the lowest. For Women and Misses Bath Robes Handsome Winter Coats and Suits Kimonas Silk Hosiery—black, white and colors House Dresses Gloves—Trench, Kid and Fabric Sweaters Shirt Waists in Georgette, Tub Silk and Cotton Fabrics FURS— Handsome Neck Pieces and Fur Sets in Taupe, Natural and Black Fox, Black Lynx, French Coney and Mink. Full animal Neck Pieces and all new- shaped Muffs. A large variety of Children’s Sets. . New Collar and Cuff Sets : Ladies’ and Children’s Handkerchiefs—silk, linen and cotton Silk and Gloria Umbrellas for Men, Wome and Children | —_— For Men A large assortment of new Neckties Gloves and Sweaters Silk and Cotton Hosiery Bed-room Slippers Linen, Silk and Cotton Handkerchiefs Collars, Silk Scarfs Pajamas and Night Shirts eee General Line of Gitts I Fancy Ribbon for bags, Ribbon and Japanese Novelties. Sweet, Grass, and other Fancy Baskets. Cut Glass, § Ivory Pieces, Manicure Sets, Boudoir Caps, Shell § Combs, Pins and Barettes. 1 Table Linens 2 yards wide, heavy damask, satin Linens stripe, beautiful floral designs, with Napkins to match. Lunch Cloths, Towels—regular and guest size ; Linen “Scarfs and Doilies, Pillow Cases and Cushion Tops. re mp AS AAS Won yon & Co. - Lyon & Co