Demon tc = Bellefonte, Pa., March 10, 1922 ———————————————————— a ———— LITTLE MOTHER OF POVERTY ROW. Deear little mother of Poverty Row, Rocking your baby 'mid sorrow and toil, ‘Whence is the light that transfigures you 80? Whence is the beauty no sin can assoil? Now I must look at you there by the door, 1 who am fortunate, buoyant and strong; You who are hunted and wretchedly poor, Lulling your babe with a lullaby song! Dear little mother of Poverty Lane, Where are the roses that bloomed in your cheek? Blighted I fear by deception and pain, Men are so cruel and women so weak. Ragged and torn is the dress that you wear, . Making you squallid from head unto feet, Still I must own you are womanly fair, Still I must paint you as tenderly sweet. Brave little mother of Poverty Place, Mother-love healeth the stripes of the rod, Hence is the beauty face, Loving your baby and trusting in God. that lighteth your Hear now my prayer for your beggar-born boy; Great in all honor and good may he grow, Bring you solace and glory and joy, Dear little mother of Poverty Row. —George Horton. LIFE MORE INTIMATE IN WASHINGTON. Interesting Facts About Our Coun- try’s Capital Told by a Resident of Washington. BY J. C. G. In all cities there are innumerable events of an intimate nature that would interest the people all over the country mightily, but they seldom es- cape beyond the confines of the local press, because the high lights must have the right of way in the dailies. Especially is this true of Washington as the seat of government, the center of diplomatic life, and the city of a thousand wonders to tourists, and here “he stage is always set for the unusual. The latest prediction for the capital city is that it is destined to become the educational center of the world be- cause of its possession of unrivalled opportunities. In no other city can so many specialists be found, it is said. Besides its universities of established renown and approximately two-score of private schools of high standing, which annually attract thousands of out-of-town students, Washington un- doubtedly has the most excellent lab- oratories of America. The Congres- sional Library which has scarcely a peer in Europe and none in this coun- try is supplemented by the public li- brary and numerous departmental li- braries. All these resources by con- gressional enactments are open with certain necessary restrictions to all students. Among American cities, Washing- ton stands unique in including in its population thousands of young people well prepared and anxious to under- take collegiate and professional courses, having fairly uniform office hours and willing to devote leisure to study. The George Washington Uni- versity recognized the needs of these young people and to meet these needs it provides a system of double instruc- tion. The university in this way minis- ters to large groups of young people earning their living by day and ob- taining a higher education in the evening. Many of these students are government employees and the service rendered them is likewise rendered the government in making its servants more efficient through better train- ing. An official list of accredited corres- pondents who were engaged in telling the world of the happenings of the Disarmament Conference totaled 513 and showwed that practically every country of size noted on a modern map had one or more press represen- tatives on the ground. Japan took first place among foreign nations with about forty correspondents. Genuine good will and the utmost friendliness radiate from the White House. Mr. and Mrs. Harding are un- affected in manner, simple in their tastes and equal to all ceremonious occasions. They are a handsome couple and carry themselves spledid- ly as genuine, substantial Americans should. Mrs. Harding has the neces- sary versatility for the position. She is a first-class manager and an expert hostess as well as a musician and a horsewoman. Friends of President Harding express it as their belief that one of the principles to which he adheres closely in his great office is that he is the President ef all of the people of all of the United States. Friend and admirers of ex-Presi- dent Wilson will be pleased to know that on January 14th, boy scouts with banners picketed Washington to an- nounce the opening of the campaign of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. Washington’s quota of the fund is $35,000. The non-partisan mass meeting which opened the campaign in the National Theatre on Sunday was addressed by Charles Edward Russell, Hamilton Holt and Samuel Gompers. Headquarters of the cam- paign are established on Fourteenth street where cotributions will be re- ceived. Mr. Wilson later faced a crowd of thousands from his front porch while he replied to remarks made by Mr. Gompers. “I thank you all for this. I don’t deserve it, but I enjoy it nevertheless,” he said. The Washington branch of the Travelers’ Aid Society at the Union Station claims that more immigrants pass through the capital city than through any other place in the coun- try with the exception of New York, and that California is the destination of more immigrants than any other spot in the country at present. Scarce- ly a day passes that assistance is not given to forty or fifty foreigners who, | new to the country and its ways and unable to speak the English language are en route to relatives, and who would become easy prey to the un- scrupulous were it not for the protec- tion of this society. On notification from New York, foreigners are met at trains, letters and passports examin- ed. They are advised how to conceal their money and then placed on west- bound trains. The society’s agents in California are notified to keep watch for the arrival of the party. The so- ciety is dependent on voluntary sub- scriptions. D. C. Commissioners and other prominent citizens are pressing Con- gress for the right to vote for Presi- dential electors. The only voters in Washington are those among the hun- dred thousand government employees who have retained residence in their home States where they are permit- ted to cast their votes by mail. It often seems that no class could be less interested in good government than are the masses who are employed on government work. This probably goes back to the fact that the lack of the vote puts the lid on their aspirations. Perhaps that pledge not to make use of political influence to promote their ambitions, which they take on enter- ing the service, hypnotizes them with the belief that “All who enter here leave hope behind.” Mr. Daniel A. Edwards is out of his job as president of the Washington Board of Education because he is run- ning a bureau which writes and sells essays and speeches to students and persons in the public eye must now prove the ethics of his position. Mr. Edwards disclaims that he advertises his business largely among Washing- ton schools, but he avers that he has prepared numerous speeches for Con- gressmen some of which have been printed in the Congressional Record. He employs a staff of twelve college graduates, men and women. Several of the men are clergymen while some of the others are employed in the scien- tific departments of the Government. Perhaps this bureau is the source of certain “bursts of eloquence” heard of college commencements. Mr. Ed- wards contends that his pursuit is ab- solutely ethical, but he will have to “show” the League of American Pen- women who are taking the old fash- ioned attitude about the matter—that is, that it teaches deceit to children. “There are far-reaching changes in Washington,” one reads. “In the Sen- ate, the old guard is rapidly disap- pearing. The old Republican machine is noticeably creaking and halting.” The old must fall away, but new ma- terial is developing to replace it. Why worry! Pennsylvania had no repre- sentation in the Senate for several days. Mr. Crow was in the hospital in the interim caused by Mr. Penrose floating out on the tide of the old year and the establishment of Mr. Pep- per. Mr. McComber, who succeeds Penrose on the finance committee will make himself heard. His voice vi- brates thoughout the Senate chamber and then some, so that no word is lost. Probably because Washington is not an industrial city, unemployment has not been so noticeable as elsewhere. Still the Bureau of Labor has capac- ity. The manager of one of the the- atres offered an orchestra seat free to any one turning in a serviceable cast- off sweater, overcoat or woman’s warm coat. The seat was for the opening performance on Sunday even- ing of “Irish Eyes.” Many who are seeking jobs do not have the where- withal to decently clothe themselves for the occasion. Urbain Ledoux, the Boston auction- eer of the unemployed, has been in Washington for months. Recently he has employed his time picketing up and down in front of the Pan-Ameri- can building, “in search of an honest man,” so he has announced. On this quest he carried a brightly polished lantern and a gay red and white striped umbrella. No reports as to success have yet been published. The storm that raged across the country three weeks ago merely “trailed its fringe” over Washington, but it left a coat of ice on the miles of walks and pavements that abound, and the kiddies indulged in coasting to the distraction of mothers who live in dread of reckless auto drivers. Traf- fic has become so- heavy here that scores of mothers accompany their children to and from school. To re- lieve apprehension, the chief of the traffic bureau has announced that a hundred Washington women will as- sume the task of protecting children at street crossings. The women will wear white bands on their arms and station themselves at all intersections where there are schools at the hours when children come and go. The birds and squirrels which make their houses in the beautiful parks of the city are among the delights of children and grown-ups who keep them supplied with food the year round. The splendid old trees where these little animals live are kept in prime condition. Although every pro- tection is given these creatures, many lose their lives owing to pet cats and dogs that live in the neighborhood of the parks. A “Make the Child Fit for School Campaign” will be waged here as a preparation of the child of pre-school age. The object is to determine by record of height and weight of as many children as possible their degree of malnutrition. The staff of nurses of the Child Welfare society is ready to weigh children at the various centers of the society daily. The archives building, the need for which has been repeatedly made plain, is looming up. The Senate has passed the bill for half a million dollars for the purchase of a site. Irreplaceable government records are stored in many buildings in varying degrees of near-fireproofing and exposed to ser- es . ious risks. Every department and bu- | ‘ reau building is choked with files of historic documents that bear upon government business. the these documents have been removed to the Library of Congress. Washington, the city of conven- tions, will some day have a great con- vention hall that will take care of all the people who desire to assemble at any scheduled entertainment. Funds are now being subscribed. “The distribution of sky bright- ness in the locality of Washington agrees closely with that observed in Switzerland, except the Swiss sky is brighter, which results no doubt from the secondary reflection of light from the Alpine snows.” This is the obser- vation of Dr. H. H. Kimball, of the U. S. Weather Bureau. Washington is beautiful at all times, so “never mind the weather.” {STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH URGES CREATION OF LOCAL SENTIMENT FOR VAC- CINATION. Records of the State Health De- ties in which small pox cases are un- der quarantine, and the total number exceed 25. The majority of these cas- es are grouped in two localities. One outbreak totaled 6 cases, 4 of which died. With the exception of these vir- ulent cases, the others are and have been of the mild type occurring in our State for a number of years. Small pox is no longer an import- ant cause of death in this country. In 1912 Pennsylvania had a death rate from the disease of 0.5 for each 100,- 000 of population. Since that time it has been reduced to less than one- tenth of one for each 100,000 of pop- ulation. However, in 1919 a death rate of 9.8 occurred in Louisiana, which is a warning that the danger among an unvaccinated population must not be lost sight of and that vig- ilance dare not be relaxed. Dr. J. Moore Campbell, chief of the Division of Communicable Diseases, says: “Victims of the infection are frequently but little inconvenienced, escaping with a slight headache, back- ache, and temperature; a condition resembling grippe which may not be sufficiently severe to require medical advice. Following the passing of these symptoms a rash appears and although often scanty and running a more rapid course than in the severer cases, it is the small pox eruption. “These mild cases frequently es- cape notice and quarantine. Their existence is not suspected until other persons infected by them become ill. Any community in which mild small pox occurs is at the mercy of these missed cases. It is not within the power of health officers to detect them in time to protect others and the individual is necessarily left to seek his own protection. This is neither; impossible nor difficult, since the offf- ciency of vaccination as a preventive of small pox has been unquestionably established for decades. “Every one should acquire this pro- tection because the carelessness of one in this respect may lead to the quarantining of places of business, or the mills and factories in which many are employed, to the serious incon- venience and financial loss of all. “The creation of local sentiment against the reckless person who will- fully courts infection and, even more so, against him who when ill with symptoms resembling small pox does not call a physician, is not only justi- fied but essential if small pox once in- troduced into a community is to be eliminated in the shortest possible time.” Penn State Changes Entrance Re- quirements. Training in foreign language stud- ies are no longer prescribed for en- trance to several schools at The Penn- sylvania State College. By a recent ruling of the college senate, High school graduates applying for admis- sion to any one of the twenty-five courses offered by the schools of ag- riculture, engineering, mining and the department of home economics, may substitute other credits for entrance. This is the most radical action on en- trance requirements taken at Penn State in many years. For the present foreign language will still be an en- trance requirement for the schools of natural science and liberal arts, how- ever. This step is in keeping with the great strides made in recent years by industrial, vocational and commercial High school training in Pennsylvania. Fewer secondary schools are teach- ing foreign languages, and beginning next year the study of foreign lan- guages will not be required of agri- cultural students at Penn State. This change does not lessen the fifteen units of admission requirement at the college. An increase in free elective units has been made. These adjust- ments are in line with the new High school curriculum of the State De- partment of Public Instruction. m————— ————— Greatest Foes. Every household should have its life- guards. The need of them is especially great when diseases, the greatest foes of life, find allies in the very elements, as colds, influenza, catarrh, the grip, and pneumonia do in this stormy month. The best way to guard against these diseases is to strengthen the system with Hood's Sarsaparilla—one of the greatest of all life-guards. It removes the conditions in which these diseases make their most successful attack, gives vigor and tone to the vital organs and functions, and im- parts a genial warmth to the blood. Remember, the weaker the system the greater the exposure to disease. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the system strong. If the liver is torpid or the bowels are sluggish, causing biliousness or constipa- tion, Hood’s Pills will be found of great gervice. They are especially made to be taken with Hood's Sarsaparilla. €7-10 Until recently, ! | | | FARM NOTES. HOW TO RUN A PAYING DAIRY. The paper below was written by Declaration and the Constitution ; Lewis P. Satterthwaite, proprietor of were not under proper protection, but Fountain Farm and raiser of Hol-| stein cattle, fruit and Rhode Island Red poultry, Newtown, Bucks county, Pa., and read by him at the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Breeders’ and Dairymen’s Association at Har- risburg, January 26th. 1 think my dairy improvement could be expressed in just three words, namely: Scales, pencil and pa- per, which I have used since May 1, 1908, one month after I commenced farming. Why I neglected the first . The one I have left has averaged 9866 pounds for six years. Her only . fault is always having bull calves. I have one purebred cow descended from a purebred heifer I bought, that has dropped two heifer calves. She has averaged 7263 pounds of milk for two years. Oh, how I wish more of purebred ' bureaus would get into the C. T. A.,! and improve their herds, so that when | some of the rest of- us want some’ . purebreds, we would know what we were getting, and not give our good, hard-earned money for some pure- i breds that are not worth more than ' beef price. 1 have bought from two breeders in ‘my county and have been disappoint- Conference Program Announced. The following is the program of the coming session of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Meth- odist church, which will convene in the First church, Tyrone, next Tues- day evening: ’ TUESDAY, MARCH 14. 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.—Examination of . undergraduates. {7 p. m.—Anniversary board of tem- perance, prohibition and public mor- als, Rev. H. L. Jacobs presiding. Speakers: Dr. Clarence True Wilson and the Hon. John T. Davis, prohibi- | tion director of Pennsylvania. | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15. | 8:30 a. m.—Opening session, sacra- month I started keeping a dairy I do of each time. Do you suppose I ment, organization and business. not recall, unless it was because my | would go to them again to buy or ad- | time was otherwise taken up in get- ting used to farm work after having i vise any one else to? o° i They are getting a fictitious price 2 p. m.—Missionary sermon by Rev. | J. H. Daugherty. i 4 p. m.—Institute on Personal been away from it for two years in: for them and doing more harm to the | Evangelism, in charge of O. B. Poul- town sitting at a desk. My brother and I started in with | ten ordinary cows and finished up the first year with six that averaged 5307 pounds of milk each. The next year we raised our num- ber to nine and the milk production to 6456 pounds, an increase of 1149 pounds each. The following year our average in- creased only 100 pounds and the next partment show that at present there ! year it dropped 25 pounds, and the are but seven Pennsylvania communi- | year 1912 we dropped still further to 6406 pounds. In 1910 we had built a silo and of active cases in the State does not should have increased production. HAMPERED BY TUBERCULOSIS. We were going backward. The an- swer was soon tound to my mind, as | one evening, when going to the pas- ture 1 found one cow down and unable ' to come to the barn. I had to kill her and found she was in the last stage of tuberculosis and we decided some of the others must have it, too. We decided to apply to the State | and have the herd tested. It was a sad blow, I thought, when all was said and done, as the test re- vealed the whole herd was infected, except two out of twenty head. I saw them slaughtered in Philadel- phia one morning, and that evening, along with my father went to West Edmenston, N. Y., where I purchased seventeen head, eleven high-grade Holstein and six grade Guernseys, at a price unheard of at that time in our community, October, 1913, $125 for a fresh cow. TOOK A GOOD CHANCE. I came near coming home without them, but decided to take a chance. Two of the Guernseys proved unprof- itable and were soon disposed of. We completed the year 1914 with an increase of 2300 pounds over the old herd, bringing the average of fifteen head up to 8747 pounds. I commenced to feel better. Two of the cows gave over 10,000 pounds thought that was a lot of milk. The next year I had four to give: over 10,000 pounds and none of them the same as the previous year. One failed to breed and the other dropped back to 8000 pounds. In 1916 we started the first C. M. A. in the county and at the end of the year the records showed that it did not pay to keep a cow that gave less than 7000 pounds of milk, unless a dairyman was getting an extra price for high butterfat milk, as she showed a profit of about $60 over feed cost, and after deducting labor and other expenses, it did not leave much net profit. NEW DEPARTURE WORKS OUT WELL. I then decided to raise calves from cows that gave 7000 pounds or more and that tested not less than 3 per cent. fat. During this period, 1915, 1916 and 1917, I had plenty of alfalfa and silage. In the spring of 1918 I moved to another farm and naturally it upset my dairy, and had no alfalfa or sum- mer silage, and that year my average production dropped to 7400 pounds. In 1919 the average was 9592 pounds for 19 head and last year it was 9592 pounds for 17 head. Three gave over 11,000 and four gave over 10,000; 3 over 9,000, 2 over 8000, 5 over 7000 and 1 over 6800 for 10 months with first calf. Two of my best cows died last year and I sold six others to the butcher. Two became unprofitable through old age, two failed to breed, one had abor- tion and became unprofitable, and one had twins the previous year, which seemed to break her down. This I think accounts for last year’s lower average. I have had no roughage for four years, except timothy hay and silage, and feel certain that if I had alfalfa or good mixed hay, the average would have been far better. So far we have only milked twice daily, but feel that cows averaging 50 pounds or more daily should be milked three times and a considerable increase would be made. AIMS AT 10,000 POUND AVERAGE. My aim now is a 10,000-pound aver- age for the herd, and I raise no calves except from 10,000 dams. I have always fed one pound of grains to three and one-half pounds of milk the year round, except when first turning out to pasture, as the cows would not consume that amount for a while, Many dairymen do not feed in sum- mer, but I consider it poor economy, as the cows freshen in the fall and winter and are in a poor physical con- dition and not in their prime for maxi- mum milk production. I now have 28 head and have raised all of them from the 17 head purchased in New Job except four, which are pure- 8. I have raised 40 calves since Sep- tember, 1913, from the cows I bought. Some one will say: A lot of work and care. Yes, I admit that. A few did not grow well, while some did not produce up to my ex- pectations and were disposed of; others went far beyond my expecta- tions. EXPERIENCE WITH PUREBREDS. Since 1914 I have purchased six head of purebred Holsteins and have only one of them left. The other five were not worth the room they took up and were sold at a sacrifice to the butcher, and not to some other breed- er, as some do. each, and I: { breed than good, and the sooner they | clean house the better. {| AN HONEST C. T. A. RECORD BEST. | When I buy a cow I want a yearly ‘record. Give me a C. T. A. record honestly made under normal condi- tions. It is worth far more than a sev- en day record made under abnormal conditions. I have completed three full years in the C. T. A. and six months in the fourth, when it was necessary to dis- : charge our tester owing to inefficient "work and we were unable to secure another one, and so had to drop our ! association. C. T. A. work in Bucks | county seems to have hard sledding. | He ran one association three and a i half years and another one year. Both i have died from lack of interest and . testers. According to 1920 census we i have 31,000 dairy animals in Bucks county and we should have at least | six associations going. { I have solicited C. T. A. members i with our county agent and it is like | pulling teeth to get them to join, and joining take very little interest. | Some think it costs too much; some | say it is a good thing, but are not ready to join; some, that they know their cows are poor and want to get better ones before starting; some, that they expect to do it themselves (but in reality never do), and some are afraid to join because their cows will show up so poorly. Thare never was a time when a man should put forth more effort to have a good producing dairy than at present. It is not a hard matter for any man to keep a record of his doing and weed out his boarders; and when you find them, have courage to send them to the shambles. If it wasn’t for the boarders and unprofitable cows, the dairy business would be on a more prosperous basis today. It is like keeping a set of farm accounts to ascertain in what lines of farming we are making our money ror losing, and when we find the leaks dispose of them, in so far as it {is in our power to do so. { Itis very little trouble and the | time is well spent in jotting down a { few figures each day, and at the end i of the year itis a great source of sat- i isfaction to see your year’s business | on a sheet of paper. I have found it | so for thirteen years. Get a good pure- i bred bull and raise your own dairy, for we can’t buy them unless we have a pocket full of money to pay the other fellow for raising them for us. Use your scales one day each week and keep the pencil working, and it won’t be long before you have a good dairy which is producing a nice prof- it and a great source of satisfaction. We get out of anything in life just in Sropertion to what we do and put in it. PUBLIC CAMP GROUNDS IN STATE FORESTS. The Department of Forestry will develop thirteen public camp grounds in the State forests this spring. They will be fully equipped for the conven- ience of campers and sportsmen, and will be ready for use when the trout fishing season opens, April 15th. To promote wider use of the State forests and to encourage out-door recreation in Pennsylvania, the De- partment will provide open-front shel- ters, or lean-tos, stone fire-places, walled-up and covered springs, com- fort stations, and in some instances, public telephones at the various public camp grounds. Use of the camp grounds will be free, but permits is- sued by the local forest officers will be required when campers occupy a camp for more than two days. Nine of the camp grounds will be equipped and situated particularly for automobile tourists who carry their camping outfits with them. These camps will be along improved State highways. One of them will be de- veloped at Caledonia Park, on the Lin- coln highway, between Gettysburg and Chambersburg. Thousands of automobile tourists, many of them campers, motor over that highway to the battlefield every summer, and it is believed they will use the camp ground maintained by the Depart- ment. Several camps will be off the main highways, in the woods, for the ac- commodation of fishermen and hunt- ers. Other camp grounds will be de- veloped when the Department has funds available for the project. rly An WHALES BIG AND PLENTY OFF CAPE MAY. Hans Hansen and Peter Johansen, two Cape May, N. J., fishermen, re- port that while fishing for cod eight miles east of Five Fathom Bank lightship a few mornings ago they were surrounded by a school of whales, which came so near the small fishing skiff that the fishermen became frightened, pulled up their anchor and moved away. Hansen said that the whales were the biggest that he ever had seen in his long fish- ing experience. Fishermen at Cape May say that more whales have been sighted off shore this year than for more than 20 years. They seemed to be hunting for the Gulf Stream, which sea going men say seems to be swinging in shore this winter, a sign of early spring. ———— fy ——————— —Get your job work done here. son. Address by representative of department of evangelism of Board of Home Missions, etc. | 17:30 p. m.—Anniversaries board of i Home Missions and Church Extension ‘ and Education for Negroes, Rev. S. B. { Evans, presiding. ! Speakers—Dr. Willim M. Gilbert, of { the Bureau of Foreign Speaking Work | of Board of Home Missions, etc., and i Dr. P. J. Maveety, secretary, Board of Education for Negroes. THURSDAY, MARCH 16. i 8:30 a. m.—Conference session. { 10 a. m.—Corporate session. i 3 p. m.—Visitation by conference in | body of Home for Aged. 4 p. m.—Institute on Rural Work, | in charge of W. W. Willard, president i of Conference Rural association. Ad- | dress by representative of department { on Rural Work of Board of Home Mis- ! sions, ete. i 7:30 p. m.—Inter-scholastic banquet iat Columbia Avenue church. 7:30 p. m.—Joint anniversary of Boards of Epworth League and Sun- day schools in First church and Pres- byterian church, young people to as- semble in the Presbyterian church. Bible story telling contest, with awarding of prizes. Address for Board of Epworth League—“Growing a Life Worth Losing,” Dr. W. S. Bovard, Board of Sunday schools. Address, “The Challenge of the Present Day Sunday School Movement,” Dr. C. E. Guthrie, Board of Epworth League. . Bishop McDowell to bring “Greet- ing” to young people in Presbyterian church. FRIDAY, MARCH 17. 8:30 a. m.—Conference session. 9 a. m.—Executive session. _2 p. m.—Anniversary Woman's For- eign Missionary society, Mrs. Robert Bagnell, presiding. Address by Miss Carrie J. Carnahan, Pittsburgh. 3 p. m.—Meeting Conference Dea- coness Board in Presbyterian church. 4 p. m.—Institute on Religious Ed- ucation, E. C. Keboch, presiding. Ad- dress by Dr. W. S. Bovard on “The Need of an Adequate Program of Re- ligious Education.” : 8 a. m.—Concert by Pittsburgh La- dies’ orchestra. SATURDAY, MARCH 18. 8:30 a. m.—Conference session, re- ception of class, etc. 2 p. m.—Mutual Beneficial associa- tion in lecture room. 2:30 p. m.—Anniversary Woman's Home Missionary society, Mrs. Wil- liam Lee Woodcock, presiding. Ad- dress by Mrs. D. B. Street, Washing- ton, D. C., general secretary Deacon- ess department and Hospitals, Wom- an’s Home Missionary society. 4 p. m.—Institute on Religious Ed- ucation. Address by Dr. H. S. Lay- ton, Altoona, “The Importance of Re- ligious Education, as Viewed by Pub- lic School Men.” Symposium, daily vacation Bible schools, week day religious instruction, church and young peoples’ leadership training schools, departmentalized Sunday - schools, rural Sunday school campaigns, etc. 7:30 p. m.—Anniversaries Board of Hospitals and Homes and Conference. Causes, M. E. Swartz, presiding. Speakers, Warren VanDyke, J. E. Skillington and N. E. Davis, secretary Board of Hospitals and Homes. SUNDAY, MARCH 19. 9 a. m.—Love Feast, led by Rev. I Ellis Bell. 10:15 a. m.—Sermon by Bishop Mec- Dowell. 2 p. m.—Memorial services. 3:30 p. m.—Ordination services. 7:30 p. m.—Bishop Henderson, rep- resenting the Centenary. Real Estate Transfers. A. Stewart Bailey, et al, to D. A. Anderson, tract in Ferguson town- ship; $311.25. W. W. Shultz, et ux, to John S. Ginter, tract in Worth township; $8,600. David Chambers, et al, to John Se- prich, et al, tract in Boggs township; $5,000. Samuel C. Bower, et al, to John C. Glenn, tract in State College; $725. Claude Cook, et ux, to Robert A. Rudy, tract in College township; $100. Claude Cook, et ux, to Robert A. Rudy, tract in College township; $210. Andrew Lytle, et ux, to Catherine Rudy, tract in College township; $110. Andrew Lytle, et ux, to Mrs. Rob- ert Rudy, tract in College township; $125. Margaret E. Reed to Samuel Flem- ing, tract in Ferguson township; 'y Wm. L. Foster, et al, to Joseph Tressler, tract in State College; $100. Joseph Tressler to John C. Glenn, tract in College township; $6,000. Luther M. Musser, et ux, to Harry C. Krader, tract in Haines township; $200. George Lewis, et al, to Myra Lew- is, et al, tract in Taylor township; $1,000. Cyrus Johnson, et ux, to Curtis L. Grenoble, tract in Ferguson township; $360. Chas. T. Aikens, et ux, to Emma A. Martin, tract in State College; $10,~ 000. Bessie M. Long, et al, to Mary C. Glossner, tract in Liberty township; $450.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers