Bena idan Bellefonte, Pa., February 14, 1919. YOU AND YOU. Every one of you won the war— You and you and you— Pressing and pouring forth, more, Toiling and straining from shore to shore To reach the flaming edge of the dark ‘Where man in his milions went up like a spark; You, in your thousands and millions com- ing, All the sea ploughed with you, all the air humming, All the land loud with you, All our hearts proud with you, All our souls bowed with the awe of your coming! more and Where's the Arch high enough, Lads, to receive you, Where's the eye dry enough, Dears, to perceive you, When at last and at last in your you come Tramping home? glory Every one of you won the war, You and you and you— You that carry an unscathed head, You that halt with a broken tread, And oh, most of all, you Dead, you Dead! Lift up the Gates for these that are last, | That are last in the great Procession. Let the living pour in, take possession, Flood back to the city, the ranch, farm, The church and the college and mill, Back to the office, the store, the exchange, Back to the wife with the babe on her arm, Back to the mother that waits on the sill, And the supper that's hot on the range. the And now, when the last of them all are by, Be the Gates lifted up on high To let those Others in, Those Others, their brothers, that softly tread, That come so thick, yet take no ground, That are so many, yet make no sound, Our Dead, our Dead, our Dead! O silent and secretly-moving throng, In your fifty thousand strong, Coming at dusk when the wreaths have dropt, And streets are empty, and music stoppt, Silently coming to hearts that wait Dumb in the door and dumb at the gate, And hear your step and fly to your call— Every one of you won the war, But you, you Dead, most of all! —Edith Wharton, in Scribner's Magazine. U. S. NAVAL FORCES LAID 70.- 000 MINES. Rear Admiral Joseph Strauss and Commander William Glassford, who achieved distinction with the Ameri- can naval forces abread, have arrived on beard the Lapland at New York. ' Admiral Strauss was head of the! greatest mine-laying expedition’ ever attempted, when an American and’ British fleet, working under his order, spread 70,000 mines across the North Sca from the Scottish coast to Nor- way, 245 miles, and virtually bottled up the German submarines operating out of Heligoland and Kiel. i “When the armistice came and some time before that, the work of laying the great field, 20 miles wide and 245 miles long, was completed,” ! said Admiral Strauss, “and long be-! fore that time we had begun to take toll from the Huns. We have posi- tive information that many German * submarines were destroyed. Our fleet consisted of eleven ships between 5000 and 6000 tons, four ocean tugs and several tenders and a force of 7000 men. | “We have laid 70,000 mines, and at one time laid 5500 mines in four hours. There were plans perfected to lay a complete mine barrier in the Mediterranean, when the armistice came and stopped further work. The British navy had three ships working ! with us.” Commander Glassford was com- mander of the destroyer Shaw when | her steering gear jammed at : o'clock in the morning of October 9. | She was one of the convovs of the gi- | ant Cunarder Aquitania, then in the | British channel loaded with American | troops for a British port. It was a! question of whether the Shaw would ! ram the Cunarder or Commander | Glassford suffer his craft to be cut down. He chose the latter course, and the Shaw was cut in two just forward of the bridge by the knife-like bow of the Aquitania. . Sir Charles C. Allen, head of the Goaport Aircraft company, yachts- man, who arrived, said that had the British government allowed the use of an aircraft engine that had been developed the Atlantic would have been crossed by airships at least four times by this time. “It is logical that a flying boat must be the craft to make the trans- Atlantic trip,” said Sir Charles. “We are building the largest flying froat in the world at the present time, which can make the trip and return at an economical speed of seventy- five miles an hour if necessary. It would be a sportsman’s game to cross by airplane by high speed, but it is the flying boat that will be selected to make the voyage an undoubted success. It is doubtful if any cross- i will be made before next year.” —Ex, Another Roosevelt Story. “Theodore Roosevelt never failed to take a side or a stand in any argu- ment or any fight,” said Judge Ben B. Lindsey, of Denver, at a communi- ty memorial service in the First Con- gregational church a. Wilmette. “Roosevelt was the most courageous man of his day,” said Judge Lindsey. “He was the type of man the country needs as a political leader. I was with Col. Roosevelt when he was shot in Milwaukee. The bullet of the would- be assassin struck a folded speech in his pocket. In the speech were the names of a number of his enemies. Some of their names were obliterated by the bullet. At the hospital he smilingly remarked to me that his en- emies had done him a service at last.” —Chicago Tribune. The Infant Terrible. Caller—How much your hair is like your mother’s. ne Little Girl—Oh, nc, it isn’t. Mam- | ruary,” gives appropriate lines in his | a pasteboard heart, each to be in a ma’s comes off and mine don’t. VALENTINE MEMORIES AND | GAMES. St. Valentine’s Day! What fond, sentimental recollections of our youth it recalls! Even when we were boys we manufactured terrible Valentines, consisting of a very sanguine heart, or generally two hearts, pierced by an arrow, the artistic offering being drawn with a liberal amount of red ink, while underneath was sure to be some doggerel about mine, thine, di- vine and valentine. Then there was, and still are, for that matter, the grotesque comic val- entine, in which the butcher, the bak- er, the grocer, the plumber, the dude, the flirt, etc., are lampooned with slapstick satire a la Billy Sunday, if he wrote verse, though Heaven forbid! REAL HEART TEASERS. There are many dainty and really ar- tistic valentines, the receipt of which sets many a maid’s heart a-flutter. The poets, of course, have sung elo- quently about the day, and some of these songs, such as Herrie’s (who seems to have been a hack poet, for he sang about everything) give the origin of the pretty custom: Oft have I heard both youths and virgins say Birds choose their mates, and couples, toe, this day; But by their flight I never can divine When I shall couple with my valentine. Praed, in “Song of the 14th of Feb- usual breezy way: Apollo has peeped through the shutter, And awakened the witty and fair; The boarding-school belle’s in a flutter, The two-penny post’s in despair; The breath of the morning is flinging A magic on blossom, on spray, And cockneys and sparrows are singing In chorus on Valentine's Day. Last year the Cockneys were singing in the trenches, incidentally hearing the shots and shells “singing,” and re ceiving as well as sending Valentines, though Mars is a ruthless rival of Cu- id. Of Valentines there are no end, be- ing of all kinds, shapes and sizes. Of paper curiously shaped, (sang Bohn) Scribblers today of every sort, In verses Valentines y’clep’d To Venus chime their annual court. I, too, will swell the motley throng, And greet the all-auspicious day, Whose privilege permits my song, My love thus secret to convey. St. Valentine’s day is a pretty priv- ilege for lovers, and an interesting one for everyone else, for as Emer- son said, though we generally mis- quote it: “All mankind loves a lov- er. Certain people, however, take an unfair advantage of the “all auspic- ious day” to send forth a spiteful car- icature to an enemy, though in many cases there is no deliberate intention of insult, but a spirit of fun of the el- emental variety. GAMES FOR THE DAY. In fact, St. Valentine’s day is a day of youthful frolic, and there are nu- merous ways of passing the evening delightfully. For instance, on the ar- rival of the guests partners may be chosen by giving each girl one-half of different color, then, from a grab-bag, the boys draw their halves of the hearts, matching colors with the girls for partners. § Then for the jolly games! Putting | an arrow in a heart is good fun. ’Tis | done like this: On a white sheet on the wall is drawn a large heart. The players stand a short distance away, and with sharp-pointed arrows try to! hit and pierce the heart. This is harder to do than it sounds, as the ar- | rows often rebound. This game can be made more interesting by blind- | folding the players, turning them | about to confuse their sense of direc- | tion, and then letting them try to pin | the arrow on the heart (where they | think it is). The way in which the players go, and where they pin their | hearts furnishes no end of fun. The one who succeeds not only wins a| prize, but will soon be happily mar- MATCHING VALENTINES. | Matching Valentines is another jol- | ly game. A comic Valentine is put! into an envelope, a boy draws one | from a bag, and his partner is given an envelope with a jumble of letters, | and from these they are to write a verse appropriate for the Valentine. | The original verse is written in a notebook, which the hostess keeps. ! After a given time each reads aloud | what they have written, then the has- tess reads from her notebook the cor- | responding poem. As the two are’ greatly different, plenty of fun is the | result. : Many other interesting games can | be played. The frolic should end with a dinner of light refreshments. The tablecloth may be decorated with fes- toons of crimson paper hearts. Little Cupids will do for favors, and a large ry cardboard heart for a centrepiece, filled with candy and nuts. The menu should be suggestive of St. Valentine’s day, such as dough- nuts formed in lover’s knots, heart- shaped cakes with red icing, sand- wiches cut in heart shapes, etc, while cider or grapejuice will do for | beverages. ’ Mercy for Flies. A French doctor, famous for his ef- forts to protect animals from cruelty, was one day annoyed by a big blue fly which buzzed uninterruptedly on a window pane. The doctor called his man servant. “Do me the kindness,” said he, “to open the window and put that fly care- fully outside.” “But sir,” said the servant, who thought of the drenching the room might get through an open casement, “it is raining hard outside.” “Qh, is it?” exclaimed the doctor. “Then please put the little creature in the waiting room and let him stay there till the weather clears.” ——The world’s record for carry- ing an umbrella belongs to Postmas- ter General Burleson. He has carried an umbrella for 36 years; is never without one. The reason is this: When he was nineteen years of age he had an attack of gout. It left his walking difficult, he disliked to carry a cane, so he adopted an umbrella. He has now carried one for over 13,000 days. DON’T QUIT! “You're sick of the game?” that’s a shame; Well, now, You're young and you're brave and you're bright. “You've had a raw deal?” I know, but don’t squeal; Buck up, do your damnedest and fight. It’s the plugging away that will win you the day, So don’t be a piker, old pard. Just draw on your grit; it’s so easy to quit, It's the keeping your-chin-up that's hard. Anon. HAVE A HOBBY IF YOU WOULD LIVE LONG. New York. — This hurly-burly, racking existence that many of us lead day after day and year in and year out would soon finish us off com- pletely, says the American, if we hadn’t a few real side interests to fuss with during our few hours respite from the daily grind. “Fleas are good for a dog,” says David Harum, “be- cause they keep him from thinking on being a dog.” Hobbies are in some- what the same category—they keep us from thinking of our troubles. The average American boy runs a whole gamut of hobbies before he leaves a grammar school. Usually he starts with postage stamps or coins, passes on through successive years of picture-card, mineral, sea shell and butterfly collecting, and finally grad- uates into amateur photography, wireless telegraphy, aeroplane making or something else of the semi-scien- | tific or mechanical sort. Stamp and coin collecting are the childhood hobbies that most often per- sist into mature manhood. Thousands of grown-ups are as eager devotees of philately and numismatics as they ever were in their teens. Not infre- quently a small fortune is paid for some rare stamp or coin, while there are many collections of both valued at thousands of dollars, says a wrifer in Gas Logic. So strong a hold has the stamp-collecting mania on the public that small nations frequently find it profitable to put out entire new issues of stamps. There are many other hobbies com- mon to large numbers of people— rare books and prints, old china, laces, pewter-ware, chickens, yachting, epi- taphs, birds, sweet peas and dahlias, heraldry, autographs and so on ad in- finitum. The most interesting fads, however, are those that have an un- usual twist. There is no end of hob- bies of that sort. One of the strang- : est things about them is that they so often represent the almost exact an- Hithesis of the hobbyist’s vocation in ife. One of New York’s ablest and best known chemists, for example, is an ardent devotee of everything theat- rical. For years he has carefully col- lected books, periodicals and clippings dealing with every phase of the life and accomplishments of stage folk. His home is filled with theii pictures and autographs, with the playbills of premieres and other souvenirs of the drama that are the chief joy of their scientifically-minded owner. In the same class is an English clergyman who is an enthusiastic col- lector of old decanters. Still another clergyman—the rector of a large New York city church—took up wood- carving in odd moments and in a small workshop in his rectory turned out a great deal of wonderful work of this kind. A beautifully carved altar and other woodwork in the church may be seen today. Another hobby far removed from the everyday interests of its owner— a hardheaded business man—is that of collecting everything printed on the subject of Paris. It would scarcely be stretching it much to say that he actually lives there. He has practically everything ever printed and obtainable on Paris —ancient tomes, guidebooks to its streets and points of interest printed in all languages, and maps of all per- iods. No one, perhaps, knows all “Paree” better. Motorists Pay Millions. Harrisburg.—Receipts from 1919 automobile licenses are around $2,- 000,000, many thousands of dollars ahead of what they were at this time last year. Money has been rolling in- to the automobile division at a rate which has never been known before, and one of the reasons assigned is that the weather conditions have been of a character which has permitted owners of cars to drive them freely. The division has been running with three shifts of men in order to get out the tags. Those Girls. Miss Elderly—Next year is leap year, I had a chance to marry las leap year, but I wouldn’t accept it because everybody would say I had done the proposing. Miss Keen—You were foolish, dear; they would have said that at any time. C NN NR \ Children for AAR N Ry NS The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- Fort Tree $ PI “ Allow no one to deccive you in this. All Count:rfcits, Imitations and ‘* Just-as-good ” are but Experimcuts that trifle with supervision since its infancy. and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALways Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years @ The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK cry, Big, Bona Fide Reductions «ses ON 2l.... Men’s Overcoats seveliliesne Fauble’s It will be Worth your While See Us FAUBLE'’S ss« Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, Pa. Dairy Feed The same energy and money is expended in feed- ing inferior Dairy Feeds as is expended in feeding your Milk Cows a Good, Wholesome BALANCED RATION. The difference is in production. Our Dairy Feed is 100 percent. pure; is composed of Cotton Seed Meal, Wheat Bran, Alfalfa Meal, Gluten Feed, Molasses, Fine Ground Oats, Etc, Etc. ; is high in Protein, isa GUARANTEED MILK PRODUCER and at the RIGHT PRICE. Ryde’s Calf Meal A substitute for milk ; better for calves and pigs and not nearly as expensive. Every pound makes one gallon good, rich milk substitute. Beef Scrap, 55 per cent. Protein Brookville Wagons, “New Idea” Manure Spreaders Pumps, Gasoline Engines, Roofing, Etc., Etc. Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store 62-47 DUNLOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. Is Bellefonte Up to Date? This interesting question will be answered when the result of the campaign for the local Y. M. C. A. is known. Should we not, as citizens of Bellefonte, help to bring a right answer ? The First National Bank. 61-46-1y Bellefonte, Pa. WILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING 3-4 Ton for Light Hauling Big Truck for Heavy Loads “Greatest Distance for Least Cost” GEORGE A. BEEZER, BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR.