5 = Bellefonte, Pa., December 5, 1919. Country Correspondence ttems of Interest Dished up for the Delectation of “Watchman” Read- ers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. RUNVILLE. Milford Heaton, of Portage, spent Sunday among friends at this place. L. J. Heaton spent last Wednesday at the home of his brother, at Rock- view. _ Burtus Witherite, of Osceola Mills, is spending a few days at the home of his parents. Mrs. Claude Lucas, of Snow Shoe, spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Ida Witmer. Samuel Shirk, of Bellefonte, spent last Friday at the home of his broth- er, Jacob Shirk, Mrs. Hannah Way, of Fleming, was an over Sunday guest at the home of W. T. Kunes. Miss Maude Walker spent Thanks- giving at Hornell, N. Y., with her sis- ter, Mrs. Clair Poorman. E. R. Hancock, of Philipsburg, spent last Tuesday at the Furl home and helped Mr. Furl butcher. Miss Madge Poorman came home last Wednesday, after spending sev- eral weeks with her brother at Johns- town. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Watson - and ‘three children, of Bellefonte, are vis- iting Mrs. Watson’s sister, Mrs. F. L. Shope. : Mrs. Clara Heaton, of Clearfield, after spending two weeks with Mrs. Mary Heaton, departed for her home on Sunday. Mrs. William Rodgers and daugh- ter Margaret, of Tyrone, visited at the home of Charles Rodgers and L. J. Heaton, on Friday. Mrs. Addie Lucas spent last Tues- day at Snow Shoe, at the home of her son Ellery, and also assisted in help- ing them to butcher. JACKSONVILLE. Mrs. Chester Neff spent Thanksgiv- ing with friends in Bellefonte. Mrs. Maude Pletcher is visiting friends in Eagleville this week. Miss Elizabeth Vonada is visiting her sister, Mrs. Lynn Ertley, at Re- novo, expecting to spend most of the week there. Miss Isabelle Ertley will spend the next few weeks here with her aunt, Mrs. Mary Stover. Mrs. Decker, of Bellefonte, is spending a few days among friends and relatives in this place. Butchering is the principal order of business among the people in this section at the present time. Many of the school children in this section are suffering with colds and sore throat, but fortunately none of them are seriously ill. Mrs. Walter Daley is here visiting her mother, Mrs. George Ertley, while Myr. Daley and Guyer Ertley are out on the trail of venison. The schools of this place are plan- ning a big Christmas entertainment and everybody is willing to do his and her part to make it a success. Fuller particulars will be given later. Many of our hunters went out into the Alleghenies the latter part of the week in order to have their camp fix- ed up and everything in readiness for the opening of the deer hunting sea- son on Monday. Among the crowd are M. S. Betz, Guyer Ertley and Walter Daley, the latter of Altoona. BOALSBURG. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McFarlane mo- tored to Bellefonte on Monday. Miss Ellen Seyner, of State College, visited friends in‘town on Sunday. Cyril Zechman was home from Sus- quehanna University, Selinsgrove, for the Thanksgiving vacation. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Brown, of Yea- gertown, spent Thanksgiving at the home of their son, Rev. E. F. Brown. Mrs. Emma Young and three daughters, Calvin Stamm and Harold Fisher were Bellefonte visitors on Saturday. Mrs. B. F. Homan, of State Col- lege, accompanied by Mrs. Mary Brungart, spent Monday at the home of Charles Mothersbaugh. Miss Marian Dale and brother Frederic, and Miss Elizabeth Everts, of Oak Hall; Miss Fay Bohn, of Wal- nut Grove, and Miss Virginia Dale, of the Branch, were guests of friends in town on Sunday. OAK HALL. John Korman has accepted a posi- tion at the Nittany garage at State College. Miss Mary Gibboney spent her Thanksgiving vacation at her home in Stonevalley. Mrs. George Hazel, of Bellefonte, was a visitor at the home of Harry Wagner on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Reitz and son were Sunday guests Reitz home at Boalsburg. William Korman and bride, of Ty- | rone, spent a few days at Mr. Kor- man’s parental home in this place. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Korman motored | to Tyrone on Wednesday and attend- ed the wedding of their son William, | to Miss Vera Cassidy. Needed His Help. “Jack, I wish you would call on me occasionally.” “Why, Madge, I thought you were engaged to Dick Slowboy.” “No, but could get up a little brisk competi- tion.” Same Old Bull. At a club this entry wus found in the complaint book: “The hot water in the lavatory today was quite cold and there was none of it.” | “Yes,” Carr answered. at the Henry! 1 think 1 could be if 1! Reported to be Performing Wonders in a Little Town in Indiana. If the reports of the wonderful i healing powers of Billy Mays, a for- ‘mer Clearfield county boy, are cor- | rect, the days of miracles have not passed away, or else the man is im- bued with a supernatural power be- yond the knowledge of man. Accord- New Carlisle, Ind., he is now engag- ed in healing the sick, the halt and the lame of that place and the cures he has already effected are simply marvelous. But read the story of this wonder-working man as sent broadcast; it is at least interesting and worth considering from a scien- tific standpoint: New Carlisle, Ind., Nov. 29.—A “healer” has come to New Carlisle. He has laid his hands on the halt and lame and they have passed on “heal- ed.” The evidence of what he has done was found here today, but how he did it baffles explanation by medic- al science, and even the “healer” him- self cannot explain. He is called the “miracle man.” On a hot summer day last June Joe | Carr, the hardware man at New Car- i lisle, stood in front of his store wher ! a. perspiring young fellow, of heavy { build, slouched up to him: | “Know where I can find a_ garage | right handy hereabouts?” asked the | stranger. “I gotta a breakdown.” “Up on the next square,” answered Carr, biting off the end of a cigar and feeling in his pocket for a match. “Like to smoke?” asked the young man as Carr struck a match and broke the head off. ; “Let’s see the cigar,” said the young man. He took it, squinted at it with cne eye, rolled it between his palms and handed it back. : Carr put the cigar in his mouth, and immediately spat it out with an expression of keen disgust. “What in thunder did you do with it?” demanded the hardware man. “It tastes and smells terrible.” The young man chuckled a hearty, guileless laugh as he held up two clean muscular palms to show he had used no drug on the cigar. © That was the first cure’'in New Car- lisle. Today hundreds come by train and automobile for the magic touch from those pudgy palms which the devotees stoutly assert remove pain and disease. When Carr finally recovered from his astonishment, he asked the young man, who was again concerned about his automobile, what else he could do. “My name is Billy Mays, and I cure folks with my hands,” explained the stranger. “I’ve always been doing it in a small way just for fun, but I'm on my way from Pittsburgh to Long Beach, California, where all the crip- ples and sick folks go, and I'm going to make a regular business of it. My old jit busted down, and I expect If] have to stay around here for a while until I get it fixed. Know anybody around here who wants to be cured ?” Carr did know a friend who was very ill, indeed. His friend was the village doctor, Dr. James Burke Way- nick, who had lived in the community all his life, and had helped bring into the world half the younger population in town. ; Doctor Waynick was almost help- less with rheumatism and paralysis. He had been an invalid for twenty- eight months and it was said his days were numbered. * The doctor looked up from his in- valid chair as the two men entered. He was not greatly impressed with Mays’ appearance, short, powerful, pudgy hands, mild blue eyes, hair thick and low on the forehead. “Where do you feel the worst?” ‘Mays asked. The question is quite habitual with him now. .. Without removing any clothing whatever, the young man applied his hands, rubbing gently, but firmly. A new spark of light came into the old man’s tired eyes. A smile came over ‘his face. “I can’t believe it. Never heard of such a thing,” exclaimed the doctor. But he felt like stirring himself. He felt thrilled with the pulse of grow- ing vigor. There was a tingling sen- sation that permeated like oil from the hands of the stranger. “This is wonderful! I can be cured. What’s happening I cannot explain, but I am coming to life again,” he ex- claimed over and over again. After that Mays did not repair his ing to a news story sent out from | “Too well.” | young man’s wife. It was she who | had inspired him to drop his work in ‘the Toledo shipyards, where he had been running a riveting machine at $20 to $25 a week. He had often cur- ed his friends, but never thought of accepting pay. Now he treats as many as 230 “cases” a day, and ' charges all the uniform price of $1 a treatment. Today, outside the sanitorium was a line of people, some with crutches and others being borne on chairs and stretchers. The reception hall was filled with people. On the left was a parlor crowded to overflowing. All , eyes were turned to the portieres that hid the dining room from view. By dint of edging and squirming it i was possible to enter the dining room through the hall door, six or eight people sat about the room. Through- | out there was an awe-stricken silence. | In the center of the room stood Mays. | Propped up on a box on a chair in | front of him sat a little girl about 4 | years old. Her eyes were half closed, | and it was evident that the reasoning | power of the little brain had never | fully developed. Mays caressed the | head and moved his fingers over the | eyelids. Beside him stood an anxious i mother, her face animated and beam- ing with hope. . . “How does it feel, darling?” she asked eagerly as a pleased smile spread over the features. The child did not answer until the question was repeated several times. Then she burst out with rapid ejaculations: “Tickle, Tickle! Tickle!” she laugh- ed. A stylishly dressed woman crowded her way into the room and whispered to Mays as he helped the little girl to the floor. “Please, you must come with me,” .she pleaded. But Mays calmly stepped over to the next person in line and helped him to a chair. He was very prosaic. There was not the slightest evidence of mysticism. “But, lady, I couldn’t do that. You will have to take your turn,” he said. “These folks have been waiting for hours, and they’d bawl me out for fair if I left them to see your father.” Members of some of the most prominent families in Indiana have come here for treatment. Among these are members of the Studebak- er family and the Olivers, of plow fame, and one of the first to benefit was Leo Cassaday, living three and one-half miles outside of New Castle. He was afflicted wth rheumatism. Mays was interviewed while he sat in a car massaging through heavy clothing the body of Frederick Rosti- ser, of South Bend. He says he is 29 years old and was born on a farm near Clearfield, Pa. No other members of his family had ever shown signs of this mysterious power. He had worked as a common laborer and was also a pugilist. He said once he got a decision in a fight with Gunboat Smith. ; “And how does it work with you?” Mr. Rostiser was asked. “Two weeks ago I was so helpless from paralysis that gangrene had set in on my left foot,” said Mr. Rosti- ser. “I have had fourteen treatments. Not a sign of gangrene remains and I am able to walk a little.” Public Schools Prepare Most College Students. Public High schools of Pennsylva- have prepared more than 92 per cent. |: of the total number of Freshmen en- rolled this year at The Pennsylvania State College, according to figures re- cently compiled by A. Howry Espen- shad», registrar of the College. Of the High schools that have sent stu- dents to State College this year, Scranton Central High leads the num- erical list, having twenty-five of its | graduates in the present Freshman class. State College High usually heads the yearly list, but Scranton won out this fall by one more student. Altoona, Harrisburg, and Philadel- phia schools stand high in their per- centages this year. The 878 Freshmen enrolled there CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, aud The Kind You Ilave Always Lought. { was there to make a sketch of ner. Luncheon was just over, and she was talking to a little knot of women. The first words I heard, s 1 slid quietly into a nearby seat, wer: { «National Biscuit,” recalling pleas | antly my own tasty Uneeda Lunch eon. I liked her, and gettled fortably as she Spoke ages and ears busy. “Between the dark and daylight, she was quoting. “there's always s bit of paus i seems waiting and listening—for th children. Since they were tin} things, I’ve given that hour to m babies. First I had tol ; Then, when they to toddle, I “You see, even went on, ‘are much IIE mals. They are most lovable ana most tractable after they've had something to eat. National Biscuit dainties ‘always begin our Chil- dren's Hour like a feast. For the tiny toddlers there is a varied menu, sometimes TUneeda Biscuit and milk, sometimes Graham Crack- ers, Oatmeal Crackers or Lunch Bis- cuit. This is changed on special occasions to Old Time Sugar Cooks os_or TiecgaNewtons and, rarest of ce cream and Nabisco, and those. vere our party days. “Don’t think i] 0 har is just a chat is all, and made us sure they vould keep coming évery day—for ou and I both know we must feed if we would pind after their 1 top of today’s i 2%” market list by foo » the unanimous ¥} ur pad of vote of the family. t seem ] getizing as only National Biscuit Products can be. During the years when my babies were growing up we never missed the Chil- dren's Hour with its fasty, feast. private preparatory schools. Some began their work in public schools and finished in private institutions. Eight hundred and seven were prepar- ed in public schools only. Of the to- | tal number of schools that have pre- | pared Freshmen, 352 are located in Pennsylvania, and twenty-nine. are situated outside of the State. “One hundred and fifty-two schools have but a single representative. Some of the schools and the num- ber they sent to State College this year follow: Scranton Central High, Philadelphia Northeast High, 12; and Bellefonte High, Bradford High, Wilkes-Barre High and York High each sent 11 students to Penn State this year. Five other schools prepar- ed nine men each, four prepared eight each, three prepared seven, nine pre- pared six, and thirteen prepared five, making a total of 367 freshmen from the 44 different schools. joyable to the young, but few such visit the aged. per acre. physical prop- erties. High standard char- acteristics dis- tinguish them as Fertilizers of Character. Write for particularsand request a copy of our booklet. Gettysburg, Pa. 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It keeps in personal touch with all of them in such a way as to be of assistance very often when other matters develop affecting their interest. It Invites You to Take Advantage of Its Unusual Service. We are prepared for the transaction of any business connected with proper banking. We Lend Money 9 Carry Checking Accounts Have a Savings Department Issue Certificates Bearing Interest at 3% Issue Traveler's Checks Payable Anywhere Furnish Foreign Exchange on all the Prin- cipal Countries in the World Let us do your Banking Business 61-46-1y The First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 1 EL A —— ——————————————— OA i ——————— Ee... —— HS —— SRS am . CLEARFIELD MAN A MIRACLE ! “jit.” He sold it to a junkman for | this fall were prepared for college in | 25; State College High, 24; Altoona | ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. HEALER. : a Vishing is Sick. 381 different schools, of which 337 are | High, 18; Harrisburg Tech., 14; West | S— | ‘ote dun | a Err IL EL out 2 the | Public High schools, the balance being | Philadelphia High school for Boys, 13; ' La, Beno IHG = Muinrney as. all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’'s Exchange. o1-1y B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law, N Practice in all the courts. oncul tation in English or German. Of- fice in Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte Pa. 40-! S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counse H or oie, "oes tile. , Bellefonte, Pa. nds legal business attended to promptly. 0.5% KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at- law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at tention given all legal business em- trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5 Hast h street. 57144 M, KEICHLINE — Attorney-at and Justice of the Peace. All pre- fessional business will receive prompt attention. Office on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y law G. RUNKLE—Attorney-at-law. Con= sultation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 68-8 PHYSICIANS. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician Surgeon, State College, county, Pa. Office at hi and Centre s resi. + 35-41 Ww dence. ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- taurant where Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, Oysters on the half shell or in any style desired, Sand- wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can 18 Jracin § a few gilts any time. fn ae on I have a complete plant prepa fumish Soft Drinks in bottles such as POPS, SODAS, SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and the public gener-. ally all of which are Ee out af the purest syrups and properly carbonated. C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. INSUR ANCE! Fire and Automobile Insurance at a reduced rate. 62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. com Employers, This Interests You The Workmans’ Compensation Law goes into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes Insurance Compulsory. We specialize in placing such in- surance. We Inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce In- surance rates. It will be to your interest to con- sult us before placing your In- surance. JOHN F. GRAY. & SON, Bellefonte 43.18-1y State College a ‘The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BENEFITS: $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot, 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,000 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eve 25 per .week, total disability, (limit 52 weeks) 10 per week, partial disability, (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM §12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion Any person, male or female, engaged in a preferred occupation, including house keeping, over eighteen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this poiicv. Fire Insurance 1 invite your attention to my Fire Insur- ance Agency, the strongest and Most Ex tensive Line of Solid Companies represent. ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania H. E. FENLON, 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Fa. Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewerage, Or escaping gas, you can’t have good Health. The air you breathe is poisonous; your system becomes poisoned and invalidism is sure to come. SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’s the only kind you ought to have. Wedon’t trust this work te boys. Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, no better anywhere. Our ‘ Material and Fixtures are the Bes Not a cheap or inferior aiticle in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are Lower than many who give you Joon unsantary work and the lowest grade of finishings.1 For the Best Work trv Archibald Allison, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 56-1¢-1v.