— “Bellefonte, Pa., December 22, 1922. Editor P. GRAY MEEK, : Te Correspondents.—No ‘communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. Terms of Subscription.—Until further motice this paper will be furnished to sub- scribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $150 Paid before expiration of year - 1.75 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 Published weekly, every Friday morning. Entered at the postoffice Bellefonte, Pa., as second class mail matter. In ordering change of address always give the old as well as the new address. It is important that the publisher be no- tified when a subscriber wishes the pa- per discontinued. In all such cases the subscription must be paid up to date of cancellation. A sample copy of the “Watchman” will be sent without cost to applicants. Centre Over the Top in State College Drive. The Centre county quota in the State College drive for $2,000,000 for student health and welfare buildings, a total of $75,000, has been pledged, according to an announcement from the campaign headquarters at the Col- lege. However, there will be no ces- sation in the efforts of the county committee to obtain more funds, for State College borough and Snow Shoe are the only towns in the county that have gone over the top with their quotas. Little more than half of the $10,000 quota for Bellefonte has been pledged, while the committee feels that there is much to be done in Phil- ipsburg, Boalsburg, Millheim, Centre Hall, Port Matilda and Unionville. The county quota has been met al- most entirely through pledges from faculty members, college employees and the residents of State College bor- ough, and the several thousand dol- lars secured from residents of Snow Shoe. The campaign is still on in the other towns of the county in an ef- fort to make the total subscriptions from this county go farther over the top than those of any other county. Professors White, Keller and Malin of the faculty, and Mrs. M. Elizabeth Olewine, of Bellefonte, have been the principal workers for the campaign outside of the college town. Centre is the fourth county in the State to reach its quota in the drive. Its last official total at headquarters was $75,689, and this figure repre- sents the largest total for any county thus far in the campaign. In this connection it is of special in- terest to note that more than one-third of the campaign total to date has come from pledges gathered on the a s Proyoors FJ the ball rolling with almost $45,000. Then State College borough came through with almost $19,000. The men students pledged $227,467 for Old Main reconstruction as a big student union, or activities headquarters, and the girl students pledged almost $15,- 000 for a starter on a woman's activi- ties building. Towns outside of State College pledged enough to make up the county quota over the college fac- ulty and town subscriptions to put the county well over the $300,000 mark. The campaign total is now around the $900,000 mark, and is expected to go up during the holidays with upwards of 1000 students working in its inter- est in their home towns. Adams, Cambria, Centre and Sulli- van counties are now in the select group and still raising more money, and others are coming fast. Hugo Bezdek, the popular director of athletics at the college, said at a mass meeting for the football team which left Tuesday on the trip to the Pacific coast, that when he comes back he is going to take off his coat and jump into the work for the campaign. He plans some work in Centre county as a starter and all who know him predict that he will bring in the pledges by the thousands of dollars. Penn State Gridders off for Pasadena Game, Coach Hugo Bezdek and his twenty- two football warriors from Penn State took the night train for Chicago on Tuesday of this week on the first lap of their 3000 mile journey to Pasa- dena, California, where they will rep- resent the East in the annual Tourna- ment of Roses game on New Year's day against the University of South- ern California. The trip from Chica- go was over the Sante Fe road, with a day of sight-seeing at the Grand Canyon as a feature of the out-going trip. Arrival at Pasadena is sched- uled for Christmas eve. The Nittany Lions have been prac- ticing hard for the past three weeks and even the heavy snow of last week did not hold them indoors. Snow- plows soon cleared off Beaver field and Bezdek put his players through their paces just as though it were Oc- tober. Reports from California are to the effect that the roses are in bloom, all of which is probably wel- come news to the players after their snow-scrimmages of the past week. The Penn State party is due to reach State College on the return trip about January 7th or 8th. The “Watchman’s” Christmas cards have been very unusual this year. They have been a bit more ex- pensive than formerly but the designs have all been exclusive and in such good taste as to excite the admiration of all who have seen them. FLEMING.—Mrs. Annie Owens Fleming, wife of Thomas Fleming, passed away at her home on Reynolds ! avenue on Monday afternoon as the result of hardening of the arteries. | While she had been ailing for some ! months past she was up and around until Wednesday of last week when , she was compelled to take her bed. She was a daughter of Josiah and Hannah Pugh Owens and was born in Blaen Avon, Wales, on September 8th, ! 1849, hence was 73 years, 3 months and 10 days old. She came to this country with her parents in July, 1869, and the family located at Axe Mann. That was her home until her marriage in the fall of 1877 to Mr. Fleming, and since then she had resided in Belle- fonte. She was a member of St. John’s Episcopal church for many | years and a kind, generous hearted and home-loving woman. She is survived by her husband and three children, Edward M., of Altoo- na; Thomas L., of Barberton, Ohio, | and Mrs. Cameron McKinley at home. | She also leaves one sister, Mrs. Mary | { i ters and four half-brothers, as fol- lows: Mrs. Edward Witmer and Mrs. Reuben Kaup, of Bellefonte; Mrs. J. Calvin Gfrerer, of Axe Mann; Mrs. Thomas T. Lucas, of Altoona; Edward R. Owens, of Bellefonte; Joseph H., of Pittsburgh; John M.,.of Altoona, and William M., of Zion. One half-sister, Sarah, passed away in 1877, and Mrs. Fleming’s death is the first in the family of children since that time. Funeral services were held at her late home yesterday afternoon by her pastor, Rev. M. DePui Maynard, after which interment was made in the Un- ion fo / | SHEFFLER.—Mrs. Frances Harri- son Sheffler, widow of the late John Sheffler, passed away at 12:30 o’clock on Monday at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Frank Sasserman, following five days’ illness with an affection of the liver. She was a daughter of Thomas and Ruth Furey Harrison and was born at Pleasant Gap eighty-two years ago. Her girlhood life was spent in that place but a good part of her life since her marriage to Mr. Sheffler fifty- eight years ago had been spent in Bellefonte. She was brought up in but later transferred her membership to the Methodist church and for many years worshipped with that congrega- tion. Since the death of her daugh- ter Kate several years ago she had made her home with Mrs. Sasserman. She was tHe last member of a fami- ly of ten children and of her ten chil- dren only five survive, as follows: Mrs. Fearon Hughes, of Niagara Falls; Mrs. Asher Adams, of Sun- bury; Mrs. John Inglebaugh, of Shar- on; Clyde, of State College, and Mrs. noon, burial being made in the Union cemetery. ll I! McWILLIAMS.—William Constan- tine McWilliams, a boyhood resident of Ferguson township, passed awayat his home in Cherry Valley, Ill., on Monday, following an illness of sev- eral years. He was a son of William B. and Elizabeth Sampsel McWilliams and was born near Graysville on Septem- ber 17th, 1851, hence was 71 years, 3 months and 1 day old. His boyhood life was spent on the farm in Fergu- son township and when he reached manhood, or almost fifty years ago, he took Horace Greely’s advice and went west, locating near Freeport, IIL, where he engaged in farming and stock raising. He was a member of the Presbyterian church and a ruling elder for many years. An upright, conscientious citizen, he was the kind of man that any community can ill afford to lose. In the fall of 1892 he married Miss Amanda McKibben, of Freeport, and she survives with two daughters, Hel- en and Berenice. He also leaves the following brothers and sisters: Cy- Williams, of Braddock, four half-sis- : the faith of the Presbyterian church ev. BE. E, McKelvey had charge of | the funeral services which were held | at two o'clock on Wednesday after- ; Harrisburg; Mr. and Mrs. Allen Scho- | | 1 | Hon. and Mrs. Well Known Bellefonte Couple to Cel- | ebrate Golden Wedding. On Christmas day, 1872, a youug man by the name of James Schofield, who had selected Bellefonte as his permanent abiding place, and a young woman by the name of Miss Ellen Fleck, of Philipsburg, were united in marriage at the home of the bride in that place by Rev. Thomas Barnhart, a well known Methodist minister of that day. They came to Bellefonte to make their home and for half a cen- tury have been among the best known and most highly esteemed residents of the town. And next Monday, Christ- mas day, they will celebrate their golden wedding by keeping open house to all their friends. A repetition of the marriage rite will take place just before the big Christmas dinner, the ceremony to be performed by Rev. David R. Evans, of the Presbyterian church. While many friends have been invited to witness | the repledging of their marriage vows | both Mr. and Mrs. Schofield will wel- come all who wish to attend. | Those who will be guests at the dinner to follow the ceremony, in ad- dition to Mr. and Mrs. Schofield, are their daughter, Mrs. G. Ross Parker NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mr. and Mrs. James Nolan will spend their Christmas in Pittsburgh, with Mrs. Nolan’s sister, Mrs. Julia Connelly. —Graham Hunter, of Binghamton, N. Y., spent a part of last week in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Hunter. —TFoster McGovern, with the State High- way Department, in the western part of the State, will be the Christmas guest of the McGovern family. : —James W. Herron’s father, George Her- ron, of Pittsburgh, will be the Christmas guest of honor at the Herron home on east Curtin street. —J. Harris Hoy will arrive in Bellefonte Saturday for his regular Holiday visit with his sisters, the Misses Anna and Mary Hoy and Mrs. Reynolds. —The college set numbering between twenty and thirty of our younger women and men, will all be home to help make merry at the Christmas season. —Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Valentine will come from Williamsport to be with Mr. Valentine's mother, Mrs. Harry C. Valen- JAMES SCHOFIELD. Kline—Korman.—Grant T. Kline, of State College, and Miss Anna M. Kor- man, of Oak Hall, were married at the Reformed parsonage at Boalsburg, on Saturday of last week, by the pas- tor, Rev. S. C. Stover. Immediately after the ceremony the young couple were taken by automobile to State College, where a bounteous wedding driven to Tyrone where they boarded the train for a wedding trip west. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Korman and is a popular young woman. position of purchasing agent at Mec- home. Krape—Colpetzer.—James B. Krape, dinner was served and later they were ' The bridegroom holds the tine, and his sisters over the Christmas day. —At the Badger home, on east Bishop | street, Elmer Eby, of Lewistown and his | wife, who is Mr. Badger's daughter, will 1 be the honor guests at the Christmas ! party. i i | | SR SR TT, home from Carlisle, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Johnston's house party will include Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stitzinger and their son George, of New Castle, who arrived in Bellefonte the early part of the week. Among Mr. and Mrs. Johnston's guests last week, was Mrs. Johnston's brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Holt, of Elrama. DOG SLEDDING IN ALASKA. Pleasure Riding by Dog Team in Alaska as Enjoyed by Dr. Eloise Meek. Anchorage, Alaska. November 17, 1922, Dear Family: — I don’t have a thing new to talk about and so have hesitated about sending a letter this week, but one feels an opportunity has been lost when a boat gets away without car- rying letters to some of one’s friends. Two days ago, November fifteenth, the cold weather really came along and the temperature that had been fif- teen or twenty points above freezizng dropped to within seven of zero and there it has stayed. Although the sun shine is very beautiful, everything outside is thick white with frost; and barely a film of snow on the ground! —Miss Sara Malin will close her home | over Christmas, intending to spend the | { Holidays with her sister and niece, Mrs. | | Shugert and Mrs. Lochrie, in Somerset ‘ county. —Mr. and Mrs. R. Wynn Davis, of Washington, Pa., will be in Bellefonte to- morrow night, to join in the Christmas celebration at the L. H. Gettig home on Bishop street. —Mrs. A. O. Furst and her daughter, Mrs. John Curtin are anticipating a visit to Overbrook, expecting to leave immedi- ately after Christmas, to spend a week or more with Mr. and Mrs. William 8S. Furst, at Overbrook. —R. B. Taylor and his son Robert will have with them for Christmas Mr. Taylor's ‘ three daughters, the Misses Eleanor and Anne, of New York city, and Miss Betty, a nurse in training at the West Penn hos- pital, in Pittsburgh. —Martin Cooney, who has spent much of | the winter in Wilkes-Barre, and his daugh- | | Allister hall, State College, and it is ter, Miss Margaret Cooney, an instructor in that place they will make their in the schools of Elizabeth, N. J., will be '! home-comers for the Holidays, which they { will spend with the family, on Bishop street. of Bellefonte, and Miss Keturah Col- | —Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes is anticipating petzer, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. entertaining a family house party, which William Colpetzer, of Rockview, were j wil include Me au Ue Rome ii unjted In marriage ga) sien olctock + > iki on signin R., of 1 | y 4 ) ’ hd J on ing rt fe roms of Lafayette College; her other son, John, ©: Drice’s ;parents, : : | being with her for the winter. Steely: pastor of She Evangelical | Edith Schad arrived here from church. Mr. Krape is employed at the Pittsburgh the early part of the week and Bellefonte hospital and we feel sure will be joined tomorrow by Mr. and Mrs. that all his friends wii ih him and Gail Chaney and their young son, Billy, his wife many years of unalloyed hap- and son George, of New Brunswick, N. J.; Mrs. William Rapsher, of Philadel- phia; Charles Fleck, of New York city; Howard Fleck, of Altoona; Mr. and. Mrs. M. L. McGinness, of Clear- ‘of Philipsburg; James Trimmer, “of | field, of New York city, and Mr. and { Mrs. Charles Larimer and two daugh- ters, Elizabeth and Marietta, of Belle- ' fonte, | The Schofield family is so well | known in Bellefonte that a few facts {in connection therewith will not be out of place. Mr. Schofield was born in County Monahan, Ireland, in 1848, hence is in his seventy-fifth year. He came to this country in 1867 and after all to be guests of the child's great grand- piness. For the present they will father, John P. Harris, at the home of Mrs. make their home with the bride’s fam- Frank Warfield, in Petrikin hall. | ily, and Mr. Krape will continue his —Ralph Musser, of Lewisburg, W. Va., work at the hospital. is expected home to spend Christmas with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Mus- | ser. of Boges township, | Mrs. Musser was VY Maomharahin fon Cheictmac The Y. M. C. A. is issuing a number | reason that the little son which arrived boys and young men. These make a trip. very appreciative gift, as it spreads | —Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler returned out not only over the year but is a ' to Bellefonte Wednesday evening to pre- pleasure and help which should last a | pare for their Christmas celebration, ut life-time. The secretary will be at which Mrs. Spangler’s grand-daughter, Eli- the office from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. to za Blackburn,.of Philadelphia, and Mr. and {5c tickat £ he hi ai Mrs. James A. McClain and their daugh- Sue icXets of membership to those | ter, Emily Eliza, of Spangler, will be the wishing to secure them. Membership £ house guests. Tom $3.00 up. | —Mrs. Irving Warner, with her son, Ir- t ving Jr., left Bellefonte Wednesday even- taking in the sights in New York and Philadelphia he went to Birmingham, where his brother William was locat- {ed and for eight months he worked | with him at the saddlery trade. That | was the year the Centre county. jail | was built and the contractor induced Mr. Schofield to come to Bellefonte, ! which he did. He at once went to work for the elder Harvey McClure but was with him only a few months when he decided to go to New York. He remained there until 1871 when he was induced to return to Bellefonte and did so, going into the saddlery ; business for himself in the room which I he now occupies and where he has been for fifty-one years. When he went in business for him- self he took up his residence at the | | Larimer—Welty.—Herbert F. Lari- (ing at five o'clock for the drive to Lew- mer and Miss Mary Jane Welty, both | istown, where they met Mr. Warner and of Bellefonte, were married at the the eldest daughter, Anne, whom her fath- Methodist parsonage last Thursday by er was bringing home for the Christmas the pastor, Rev. E. E. McKelvey. holidays. Anne is studying at a private school in New York. | —Mr. and Mrs. John Ostertag, of Har- | risburg, and their son George will spend : the Holiday week with Mrs. Ostertag’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Gamble. Mr. and Mrs. Gamble are planning to be Christmas day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. O'Brien, at Snow Shoe, Mrs. O’Brien being another daughter. ! —Miss Grace D. Mitchell, of Princeton, , and George Lyon, from the Ohio State Col- ‘lege, will be members of the Christmas party at Mr. and Mrs. John Porter Lyon's. Their daughter, Mrs. Dobelbower, and her small child will go to Philadelphia, to be with Mr. Dobelbower and his family for the Holidays and a January visit. —Among those from out of town who Important to Farmers. Start the new year right. Keep a farm account book during 1928 and know more about your own business. Do you know that 85 per cent. of the business failures are due to poor sys- tems of accounts or no accounts at all. Farming is the largest single indus- try in the United States. Why not ap- ply good business methods in your own business ? Five minutes per week is sufficient to keep a good system of farm ac- counts and the time spent this way ; unable to accompany her husband for the of memberships as Christmas gifts for ' recently is too young to stand the long rus B. McWilliams, Mrs. J. C. Goheen | Brockerhoff house and it was there he and Miss Mary McWilliams, all of ; met Miss Fleck while she was on a Tyrone; Mrs. R. G. Goheen and Mrs. | visit to her uncle, Mr. Johnson, at that William G. Gardner, of Baileyville, and | time landlord of the hotel. Their ac- George, on the old home farm. Bur- | quaintance naturally grew into one of ial was made at Freeport yesterday afternoon. Il ll ELLENBERGER.—James Ross El- lenberger, a native of Centre county, died at his home at Nealmont, near Tyrone, last Friday afternoon, follow- ing a brief illness with heart trouble. He was a son of William and Celia Ellenberger and was born at Maren- go on February 3rd, 1860, hence was in his sixty-third year. He followed farming until about four years ago when he sold out and moved to Neal- mont and for several years past had been elevator man in the First Na- tional bank building at Tyrone. Twenty years ago he married Miss Bertha Fetterhoff, of Tyrone, who sur- vives with the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Sarah Patterson, of Warriorsmark; Mrs. Anna Kyle, of Nealmont; William E. Ellenberger, Tyrone, and George W. Ellenberger, of East Liberty. Funeral services |! mutual sentiment and in due time | their marriage followed. During the first year of their married life they lodged at a boarding house but forty- nine years ago Mr. Schofield pur- chased the property on Thomas street which has been their home ever since. Of course they have greatly improved it from time to time until now it is one of the most comfortable homes in that section of the town. Notwithstanding the fact that the ; automobile has superseded the horse in many ways Mr. Schofield still con- ducts his saddlery business, which is the only up-to-date shop of its kind within a radius of many miles. But all his life has not been devoted to the bench and awl. He has always taken a deep interest in anything and | everything that would help Bellefonte | and Centre county. He is an enthu- of | siastic Democrat and on two ocea- sions was honored by his party by be- ing elected to the Legislature, the first meeting. were held at his late home at Neal- | time in 1892 and again in 1896. In mont at two o’clock on Monday after- | both sessions in which he served he noon by Rev. A. 8S. Fasick, of the K made a special point to look after the Methodist church, of which he was a | interests of Centre county. member, after which burial was made | Mr. and Mrs. Schofield have been in the Grandview cemetery, Tyrone. | blessed with a family of four chil- today, but must be before 9 g. m. Sat- urday, the 23rd. i will bring you far greater returns than the same amount of time spent on any other one thing you can do. The Farm Bureau has a very simple type of farm account book that any farmer can keep accurately, and your county agent will be glad to help you get started right, or at any time throughout the year that you may need help. One year’s experience will show you the weak spots in your bus- iness and at the end of that time you will be a better farmer or will quit the job. The Farm Bureau is a public agency supported by public funds for the im- provement of agriculture. Mr. Far- mer, if you are not receiving some benefit from this work, perhaps it may be partly your own fault. Come to the annual meeting at Bellefonte tomorrow and learn what this organ- ization is doing for Centre county. Give your suggestions as to how it could acomplish more. Bring several exhibits with you for the farm pro- ducts show which will be held at the court house at the same time as the Liberal premiums have been offered for the best exhibits. If convenient the exhibits should be in were in Bellefonte this week for the fun- eral of the late Mrs. Thomas Fleming were, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleming Jr. of Ak- i ron, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fleming, | of Altoona; William Williams, of Brad- , dock; Joseph Owens, of Carbondale, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Love, of Altoonu. —Mrs. Oscar Wetzel will have her son Merle with her for a visit during the Hol- idays; he and his cousin Miles, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Chorles Wetzel, will come in Saturday from Chicago, where they both are with the Public Service Commission of that city. Harry Wetzel, of Harrisburg, | the elder son of Mrs. H. M. Wetzel, will al- | 80 be home. —William T. Kelly will be host at a Christmas party which will be composed of his brother's family, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. | Kelly who, with their daughter and son will come to Bellefonte from Greer, W. Va., where they have been living for al- most a year; while their son Frank, who continued his work in York, will join them at his uncle's. —Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey, their daugh- ter Rachel and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Twit- mire will drive to Williamsport Monday, where they will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. North at a Christmas dinner. In addition to those from Bellefonte, the par- ty will include Mr. North’s parents and Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Donachy and their two children, of Kingston, Pa. —Mrs. W. H. Derstine will leave tomor- row afternoon to be the Christmas guest Miss Dora Ling, of Windber, ——Following close upon Thursday’s snow seven more inche € last | s of | ‘the beautiful” came down on Satur-' day night. | FT who was one of the graduates from the Bellefonte hospital training school for nurses in the class of 1922, has successfully passed the State board examinations and is now a regularly | certified registered nurse. | dren, all living and in good health, and we know we voice the sentiment of their many friends in wishing for them many more happy years of life together. | | i of her son Frank and his family, at Juni- The Mozee’s came up the other day with their dog team hitched to a new sled and asked me to “come along.” I "asked “where?” and was told, “Oh! {only out a bit to exercise the dogs.” | I grabbed my hat and coat and was off ' since I know that dogs will not wait. 'It was the same team that took me down the Kuskokwim river last year— 'a year older and now just in their ‘prime. Usually the dogs are “soft” in the early autumn but there were "four grown-ups and two children on the sled; only a skiff of snow with the ground bare here and there. Did ‘those dogs care? I should say not for we fairly flew along! | Before we got out of the village, a loose dog ran across the street and ‘away after him they went, like a pack of wolves. The dog scampered but that team was on the trail; no yelling ! nor brakes were of the least account. Across a ditch, over a little bridge, a short turn into an alley and bang! up against the post! The leader’s har- | ness broke, and he was off but the oth- er six were in a mess. Fortunately no one was hurt; only two dogs bit their tongue so that we left a bloody path as we went along after getting straightened out. The short distance stretched into ten miles and the time passed so quickly that we had to stop at a road house for lunch, not getting , back until four o’clock. I was cold—- “cold and so were the others, but the drive had been delightful. The only fault we had to find was that riding on a fast moving sled in cold weather , would surely produce cold hands and feet, if not prepared for it. | Last year, around Ruby, I had no- ticed how “mountainous ‘the country iwas and on my ride I was similarly | impressed with the same rolling coun- i try covered with small timber; seem- ed to be a country of hills and lakes. There are farms or “homesteads,” as their owners speak of them, but such tiny places, eastern people would scarcely dignify by the name of farm. |My idea of a homestead was a big, big place. The winter sport here now for men and women is gunning and the poor rabbits are the victims. There are {lots of them so, I reckon, it’s the law {of the universe but, from the number ! of women and men I met on Sunday i with guns, rabbits must grow on bush- | es to have any left for Monday. Did I not see that monkey fur was out and rabbit fur now in high favor in Paris? Tonight, the film of the “Queen of Sheba” is shown and I am going to see it although these spectacular pro- ductions of long ago do not interest me. one-half as much as nearer sub- jects, well acted, since I feel away back in all such up-to-dateness. All morning the buzz of a circular saw has filled the air with its music and I have been watching the wood- pile grow. There is plenty of coal but every one burns wood and, for blocks and blocks, great stacks of it are piled many feet high. There is surely no conservation in that direc- tion in Alaska so far as I have seen. I have never seen any computation by the forestry people as to how long it would take to grow more timber here- abouts but, the seasons are so short, I think almost double the time in Pennsylvania might be necessary. You are probably wondering what I am coming to. It is said that most of Alaska’s mineral resources have been found and removed; the wood is another resource that is being used rapidly and with great waste so that it is a question what there will be to offer future generations. Thanksgiving just thirteen days away suggests that winter must be here. The election is over but thus far I have not heard how it resulted in Centre county, nor really in Penn- sylvania. There is a little daily pa- per here that gives some news but very little outside this town. The western papers are very insular and one sees little comment on eastern af- fairs, but it is about fifty-fifty, as I remember seeing little western news in our eastern papers. | ELOISE. ——If you have put it off until the last moment and are now in dispair as ata. Mrs. Derstine will return home the middle of the week, to prepare for New Year's day, when she will entertain her son Jesse and his daughter Dorothy, who | will come from Ambridge to be with his | mother for several days at that time. —In addition to their two sons coming to what to send that friend who once lived in Centre county and still has at- tachments and interests here come in and subscribe for the “Watchman” for him or her. You couldn’t send any- thing for ten times the cost that would be more appreciated.