&9 Demorradic: atc Bellefonte, Pa., October 10, 1919. TRAVELED BY DEVIOUS WAYS Correspondent Experienced Acute Dis comfort While on a Journey Through the Holy Land, It is eight or nine miles, as I esti- mate, from the Euphrates to Censtap- tinople, if one follows the course of the Bagdad railroad, whose track is laid a part of the way where the feet of the “ten thousand” had marched, where St. Paul had tramped in his first and second missionary journeys, and where Godfrey of Bouillon, Tan- cred, Baldwin, Raymond and Bohe- mond had passed, and Frederick the First had perished. In my anabasis (if I may give my lonely expedition a name so ambitious and yet so contemned by many a youth) from the Euphrates toward Constantinople I had to make a cir- cuitous journey, as did St. Paul from Damascus, writes John H, Finley in July Scribner's. I went first from Aleppo to Damascus, then to Jeru- salem, then to Haifa (near old Caesarea where St. Paul took ship), and then by sea to Beirut and Herina, on the coast of Asia Minor, a few miles from St. Paul's “home town” Tarsus, which was also the same town as that toward which Jonah sailed from Jaffa, when evading the call to Nineveh. But the reader would, I fear, find this an uncomfortable and perhaps a tiresome trip, even to read of, for I traveled most of the way in freight cars (of the type known to our soldiers in France, accommodating “forty-five hommes or eight chevaux”) on a trawler (which was absolutely the most uncomfortable means of transportation that I had ever en- dured) and on a British “destroyer” which might very fitly have borne St. Paul’s name before he changed it, in the days when he was “breathing cut threatenings and slaughter.” There is a shorter and less indirect way, for, speaking generally, there is no direct way from one place to an- other in that part of the world. This Is probably the reason why the street in Damascus called “Straight” got its distinguishing name, SUFFERED FOR THEIR FAITH French Huguenots Driven Into Exile by the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. The Huguenots were the Puritans of | France in the sixteenth and seven- | teenth centuries. The name was first | used about 1560; its origin is un- known. The Huguenots suffered se- werely in the reigns of Francis I and his immediate successors, and after 1562 were frequently involved in war, under the leadership of such men as Admiral Coligny and King Henry of Navarre, afterwards Henry IV of France. Coligny and from 20,000 to 30,000 others fell in the massacre of 8t. Bartholomew, August 24, 1572. It is disputed in history whether this | was suddenly caused by the discov- ery of Huguenot plots or had been premeditated. In spite of all this, they continued numerous and power- ful and the edict of Nantes, issued i® 4598 by Henry IV gave them full po- litical and civil rights. Their power was broken after the surrender of LaRochelle and the revocation of the edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in 1685, and hundreds of thousands of Hugue- nots went into exile, going to Prus- sia, Holland, Switzerland, England, Scotland and America. | : Dancing in Haiti, Dancing to the music of a drum, saxophone and flute is the chief source of amusement for Haitians in their lit- tle villages on Saturday night, accord- ing to an article by William Almon Wolff in Collier's. Beginning at sun- down every Saturday night, he writes, one will come to a wine shop, if one follows the sound of the drum. The drummer sits outside. drumming marks the rhythm of the music; what melody there is, is borne by a flute, and almost always there is a saxophone. The music is the same at every dance. It is in common tone; a single cadence is repeated, over and over again. Dancing in Haiti resembles the sat- urnalia among the Australian aborigi- nes, Mr. Wolff writes. The dancers are frank and unashamed and one gets little or no feeling of a personal note between the two one sees dancing; rather they are staging a spectacle. Materials for Buttons. For no other human purpose are so many different kinds of materials used as for button-making. Products of the tilled field, the forest, the stream and the sea—vegetable, animal and min- eral—are turned to this account. : Buttons are common, middle-class and aristocratic—{rom the bone button. of the laboring man to the jeweled one in the turban of an Indian rajah or the symbol of rank on a Chinese man- darin’s cap. Among the by-products of the pearl. button industry are poultry grit, fish food and “condition powders” for hogs and chickens. The waste shell is a constituent of artificial marble and, floortile, and an ingredient of jewelry: polishes, soaps and cleansing powders. eee afte Hardly Flattering. She—I appreciate the compliment, but I’m afraid I could never make hood and the New Era” in the Belle- His unceasing | you happy. He—Oh yes, you could. You don’t know haw oncily nanos? ara “2 AE £ DOR CHAZ. L FRY S555 Dr. Charles L. Fry, of Philadelphia, field secretary of the United Luther- an Brotherhood in America, will de- liver his address on “The Brother- fonte Lutheran church at 7:30 o’clock this evening. Dr. Fry is one of the leading men in that denomination, and a most forceful speaker. His address will deal with the matter of organizing for service the man-power of the church, and the presentation of such a timely subject by a man of Dr. Fry’s calibre should be not only inter- esting but highly instructive. Marriage Licenses. E. E. Smith, Spring Mills, and Cor- rie McKinney, Millheim. John L. Rimmey, Boalsburg, and Grace E. Neff, Centre Hall. John L. Meiss and Blanche 8S. Walker, Bellefonte. John G. Ishler, Juniata, and Helen Coxey, Boalsburg. Albert O. Crain, Clearfield county, and Edna Caroline Scott, Philips- burg. ——Put your ad. in the “Watch- man.” Raised Sufficient Dust. “Prices are so high that several women of this town chipped in and bought a community broom.—Bray- mer Bee. 300 Influenza Cases. ; Washington.—More than 300 cases | of influenza were reported to the Public Health Service the past week ' by fourteen States, but the disease | has not reached the proportions of an ' epidemic in any State. The service | announced the cases reported gener- | ally were of a mild type. i States reporting and the numbers | in each follow: Alabama, 20; Arkansas, 14; Cali- | fornia, 51; Florida, 22; Georgia, 23; | Kansas, 31; Kentucky, 13; Louisiana, | 5; Maine, 5; Massachusetts, 62; Mon- tana, 4; New Jersey, 20; New York, 31; Washington, 8. Surgeon General Rupert Blue said: “The wisest thing to do is for every person to avoid contact with those af- fected; to keep out of crowds and crowded places; to be on the lookout for the first symptoms and when these appear to go directly to bed and sum- mon a physician.” Outfitted. Briggs—What would you do if you’ were in my shoes? Griggs—Congratulate myself that I had one good pair, at any rate. URING the we ATE ek of October 13-20, dealers everywhere are holding special displays and demonstrations of Perfection Oil Heaters. Visit your dealer and sec for yourself how siinple the Perfection is to operate—how it burns for 10 hours on a single gallon of oil—how it lights and gives full heat instantly an d turns out without smoking. It will pay for itself this fall alone by enabling you to keep warm without lighting the furnace. During the long chilly corners your furnace doesn’t reach. good for years to co winter it will heat up the It is me—a real economy as well as a never-ceasing, cold-weather comfort. Easily carried from place to place, smokeless, odorless and absolutely safe. the wick too high. Now is the time Heater. You can’t turn to buy your Perfection Oil There are designs for every taste, inexpensive models as well as those of more elaborate finish. THE ATLANTIC Philadelphia REFINING COMPANY "Pittsburgh SLC ITTV TT Tr a ar ar ar vara ar Look for * this round poster in your dealer’s window Shoes. SAS A Soa jo Lf - SMS all kin Yeager's Shoe Store Women’s Shoes for Corn Husking fter a lot of persuasion I sucgeeded in getting a manu- facturer to make me a large consignment of Women’s and Misses’ Heavy Shoes. wife and daughter who have the pluck to help Dad get in the Fall crops and do the Fall work. kind for the girls who must walk several miles to school, in They are designed for the farmer's These shoes are just the ds of weather and over all kinds of bad roads. The average shoe made and sold today for this rough usage, will not wear more than several days—half paper, other half poor leather—and the first time they get a good soaking, away they go. leather and guaranteed to give good wear. Every pair of these shoes is made of all solid Just a Word to the School Girls These shoes are not quite as stylish as some, but they are the kind your mother wore to school and, if you have a pic- ture of 9 you, A Free how sweet and healthy she looked. the kind of shoes and clothes that gave her good health. These shoes, as Harry Lauder would say, “Mind I'm tellin’ Bush Arcade Building your mother on her wedding day, look at it and see That’s because she wore will put the bloom on your cheeks. Price $6.00 sk for “Good as Gold” Shoes $1.50 Self-Filling Fountain Pen with Each Pair Free Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. RS AEsRSEs SSE EEE EEE Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. % WEBSTER NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARIES are in use by busi- ness men, engineers, bankers, judges, architects, physicians, farmers, teachers, librarians, cler- gymen, by successful men and women the world over. Are You Equipped to Win? The New International provides the means to success. It isanall- knowing teacher, a universal ques- tion answerer. If you seek efficiency and ad- vancement why not make daily use of this vast fund of inform- ation? 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations, Colored Phas. 30,000 Geographical Subjects. 12,000 Biographical Entries. Regular and India-Paper Editions. Writeforspec- imen pages, illustrations, etc. Foee, a set of 1 ocket SA EXEXAXEXAXEAEX ELEN EXEXAX AX EX ENA ARENA EXEX EX EX EX EXE EX EXE WX 2 ianated BB BE LT PT TT PT TL DLE I TL ITI TT I I LAT Co., Springfield, Mass, Bellefonte Trust Company Bellefonte, Penna. or more. your receipt. count. save their pennies. January 1st, and July 1st. vate business. Trustee, etc. SOME OF THE THINGS WE DO CHECKING ACCOUNT Ly We will start a checking account for you with $5.00 Pay your bills with a check which will be SAVINGS ACCOUNT Bring in a $1.00 or more and open a Savings Ac- Get a little Savings Bank for the children to We pay 3% yearly, compounded CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT We issue Certificates of Deposit at six months or one year and pay 3% interest, per annum. TRUST DEPARTMENT In our Trust Department we will manage your pri- Make your will and name the Belle- fonte Trust Company to be your Executor, Guardian, Consult us freely without expense. J L.SPANGLER, C.T.GERBERICH, N.E.ROBB President Vice President Secy-Treas Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. We are can sell muslins. ceived Enve match. cut, made of white batiste, extra fine quality, trimmed with an hemstitching and hand-em- broidere pastel shades of pink and blue ; shirring at bust and dainty ribbon bows at neck. They ar a dainty Price per Piece $2.50 Comfortables and Blankets These ¢ prepared to keep you warm. The largest line of fine Specials for October the only store that you Dove Under- We have just re- Night Gowns and lope Chemise to Like our display effective design of d French knots, in e very desirable for Christmas present. ool nights we are Comfortables in figured sateens, all colors, plain centres and all- over designs, filled with fine white cotton. $3.25 up to $12.50 Blankets in white and grey cotton, and Blankets in white and grey wool knap, from $2.50 up. White Wool Blankets from $8.50 up. La Vogue Coats and Suits This label meaus finest qualities, best workmanship and the la test and most up-to-date models. Prices very reasonable. Furs - - - Furs Just received a very large and fine assortment of Neck- pieces and Cape Stoles in the different colors and shapes. These were contracted for last April, or every price would be at least half again as much. We extend a cordial invitation for inspection. Lyon & Co. «+ Lyon & Co. Tn