Deo Nt Bellefonte, Pa., April 4, 1924. Compensation. The following verse, by Edgar A. Guest, was found as a marker in the Bible of the late Mary Belle Struble, who died here last week. hose who read the record of her life in this paper would feel that she “had paid with something fine.’ T’'d like to think when life is done That I had filled a needed post, That here and there I'd paid my fare With more than idle talk and boast; That I had taken gifts divine, The breath of life and manhood fine, And tried to use them now and then, In service for my fellow men. I'd hate to think when life is through, That I had lived my round of years A useless kind, that leaves behind No record in this vale of tears; That I had wasted all my days By trading only selfish ways, And that this world would be the same If it had never known my name. Y’'d like to think that here and there, When I am gone, there shall remain A happier spot that might have not Existed had I toiled for gain; That some one's cheery voice and smile Shall prove that I have been worth while; That I had paid with something fine My debt to God for life divine. —Edgar A. Guest. HENRY BERGH. (The champion and founder of the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animals). By L. A. Miller. “A merciful beast.” —Bible. Henry Bergh did more towards eliminating the suffering of dumb brutes and the feathery tribe than any man living. This under Providence, he did, and he is entitled to all the laudations that humanity can bestow. There are plenty of facts to prove his tenderness, his sympathy, his benev- olence, as well as his great will-pow- er and obstinate firmness. This benefactor has for many years pleaded, in private and in public, the cause of creatures without capacity to speak for themselves. That they are neglected and cruelly beaten without cause of provocation, is a fact patent to all observers. They are the slaves of tyrants, who overtask them, pun- ish them when they are young, and abandon them to the cold and cruel hospitality of the common and the roadside when they become old. Thoughtless boys and men over- burden the horse, and then forget to feed him with sufficient oats and hay. They neglect to water him, to clean him, and they apply the boot and the lash, because he does not pull and run with his accustomed strength, speed and spirit. If his driver happens to be in a bad temper, the dumb beast has to suffer a shower of blows. The iron bit is jerked furiously in his bleeding mouth; the rawhide is plied savagely upon his back, until the blis- ters rise in long lines upon his shiv- ering body. He is beaten over the head with huge sticks and kicked un- til his persecutor becomes too tired to continue his cruel treatment. How often an inconsiderate person drives a horse until the poor animal is drench- man is merciful to his ed in sweat, and then ties him to a; post and leaves him unblanketed in the cold, while he (the driver) halts at a tavern to take his moonshine, toasts his feet and chats with his neighbors. He then mounts his seat, and the liquor poured down his throat seems to circulate in the whip he wields over the horse. The dumb beast catches cold and becomes rheu- matic; but he must make so many miles and hour or suffer the conse- quences; he must draw so many bush- els of produce or endure the penalty of kicks and blows. Mr. Bergh stepped to the front to defend the useful animals that render us such efficient service. He has spoken well and written wisely in their behalf. He secured legislation to aid him in his praiseworthy endeav- ors, and in all directions societies have been organized to prevent cruelty to the “good creatures of God.” “A merciful man is merciful to his beast;” a cruel man is cruel to his beast; he is a beast himself, and de- serves the punishment he gives his horse. We need a Bergh in every town to protect the rights of the horse; horses have rights as well as! men and women. They have a right to be well fed, well sheltered, well curried and well cared for in the fur- row and on the road. They are good creatures of God, and He created them to be serviceable to man, not to be the objects of his neglect and abuse. When a man’s horses and cattle troop about him at the sound of his voice you may be certain he is a kind, good-hearted person. You will find him kind at home, kind abroad, and everywhere commended for his hospi- tality. On the other hand, when you see a man whose horses and cattle and sheep flee at his presence, you may rest assured that he is a tyrant to his family; that he scolds his wife, whips his children, and quarrels neighbors. There are no hpocrites in nature outside the pale of humanity. The meek-eyed ox, the innocent sheep, and the noble steed will not hasten to taste salt in the hands of a merciless master. How often do we see boys pelting cows with sticks and stones, making the speechless animals atone for the indolence of their drivers by increas- ing their speed from the meadow to the stable. Do these boys ever reflect that they, probably, owe to the cows they over-drive and beat, the physic- al strength that enables them to hurl the cudgels and stones that urges the gentle animal to an unnatural gait? Our new civilization has a heart with which it feels, as well as a head with which it thinks, and it begins to open its eyes to the cruelty to animlas. Car loads of starved and thirsty cattle, sheep and swine still point to the barbarism of a darker age; but law now demands that the poor, four- legged prisoners shall be fed and wa- tered, and the men monsters who dis- regard this human law do so at their peril, and, as we advance along the path of progress and intelligence, the evasion of this law will become more and more difficult. With the age of steam came that refinement which shrinks at the thought of speed purchased with the sweat and blood and life of the spirit- ed race-horse. The iron horse, with its lungs of fire, mane of smoke, and legs of steam, can travel faster than the swiftest steed, and its speed can be increased without pain, so that there is less need now than ever be- fore of horses with flying feet. Still, “the whole inferior creation, groan- ing and travailing together in pain,” appeals to man and his maker in dumb eloquence for relief. Even now “the fear of man and the dread of man is upon every beast of the earth, and upon every fowl of the air, and upon all that moveth upon the earth, for unto man’s hands are they delivered.” A wail comes up from the woods and prairies, from the lakes and riv- ers and marshes, because of the wan- ton cruelty of man. Birds and deer and other game are rapidly disappear- ing before the wasteful footsteps of men, whose murderous guns and traps and nets spare nothing that ministers to their gluttonous appetites and their cruel cupidity. Herds of Buffalo are scattered and slain for the amusement of some “sport,” who never did a no- ble act in his life, and who is not en- titled to such a sacrifice on the altar of his vanity and ambition. Prairie chickens are caught in nets and car- ried off to market, to fill the purse of some one who does not care on whose land he trespasses, or whose rights he invades, so long as he can get the designed to be distributed to all and not to be monopolized by the few. Aside from the unjust and mean and cruel monopoly of the fowls of the air and the beasts of the field and the in- justice which comes of it, there is creatures themselves. They suffer fright and pain; many that are not wantonly killed are separated from their mates and wounded. Parents are slain and their offspring starved to death. See how the poor things tremble with fear in the presence of man; hear their cry of pain coming sound of the gun strikes terror to the heart of the unoffending bird. The truant boy, who steals the young brood from the warm, round nest, breaks the heart of the mother, and she proclaims her loss with a pathos which might move the hardest heart. Flocks of wild fowl, entangled in nets spread by men whe care not for the relations of the mother-birds to their offspring, flutter and scream in anguish, and appeal in vain for the freedom of the unchartered air, which is their right. The graceful and beautiful deer, whose innocent face should be its protection, is pursued by men who hunt it merely for pas- time, and wound it and kill it merely for amusement. Happily, Legislators gave us bet- ter game laws. A grateful constitu- ency of humane men and women will who" notices even the sparrow which falls to the ground, will bless you. Do this work of mercy now; no time should be lost. Cruel men can only be restrained by the force of the law. Away with the rets that grasp so greedily more than the prairies. Put an immediate stop to hunting at times of the year when the young need the protection of par- ents. Our advancing civilization calls for still stricter laws for the protec- tion of our game. We cannot afford the wanton waste of life which marks the age. Cattle and sheep, sent to the slaughter, are receiving a little pro- tection; now strike for the welfare of the innocent inhabitants of the woods and waters. Nature and Scripture are on the side of mercy. Interest and principle join in indignant pro- test against cruelty to the creatures of God. America owes to herself the duty of shielding her friends, the birds. Our crops will be consumed with worms and insects if we do not spare the birds, the police of the air, that destroy the devouring flies and bugs and worms so destructive to our harvests. In 1861 Mr. Bergh was appointed secretary of Legation to Russia, by President Lincoln, and afterwards Consul to St. Petersburg, remaining there until 1864, when ill health forc- ed him to resign his position. Soon after his return to America, in 1865, he mapped out the plan for the forma- tion of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. This organization has flourished in the teeth of savage and hateful hos- tility, and has been a source of relief to beasts of burden that were over- with his | worked, underfed and cruelly beaten i by intemperate and heartless men. Cattle, sheep, swine and other animals used as food, now have better care while in transportation. Bergh once said: “State after State is adopting our laws and seal, and when I have succeeded in planting a kindred soci- ety in every State of the Union, I may be pardoned for believing that I have not lived in vain.” The highest expectations of Mr. Bergh have been realized. Societies have sprung up in all quarters, agents are employed everywhere, and the strong bit of the law is put in the jaws of brutal men. It is gratifying that the press all over the land de- fends and applauds the noble work of the society he founded. When Mr. Bergh began his great work, there were no laws in the Unit- ed States for the protection of ani- mals from assault. Now about forty States lift the shield of the law for their protection, and humane socie- ties are enforcing the law with vigor and success. The Society for Prevention of Cru- elty to children seems to have been suggested by Mr. Bergh’s society, and to have grown out of it. When just and tender sentiments crystalize into statutes for the benefit of brute crea- tion, we may be sure that helpless hu- manity will find shelter under the charitable wings of an advanced christian civilization. When Mr. Bergh seized the cruel evil of the abuse of speechless brutes by the throat, at once there came up, as from the pit of perdition, a chorus of malicious criticism and misrepre- market value of the wild fowls God | positive and wicked cruelty to the | up through the listening ear. The | appreciate such a service, and God, a fair share of the winged game of sentation from the press and from the bar, and he had to carry his banner through storms of ridicule and abuse, ta invective sarcasm, and persecution; but he knew that his patent-right of protection came from Heaven, bearing the seal of truth and the signature of mercy. With a patriotic, humane, and martyr spirit, he stood in the front of the great moral agency whose influ- ence of the present day reaches be- yond geographical limitations. A man of education and refinement, he relinquished the ease and luxurious indulgences which his wealth could afford, and because the butt of laugh- ter and scorn, that he might save the dumb beast from harsh, cowardly, and brutal cruelty. He was bullied by coarse lawyers in courts of justice; he was ignored by the do-nothings and social tramps, as a fanatic in pursuit of notoriety; but he kept on working bravely in the face of opposition and persecution. Mr. Bergh was abundantly qualified to conduct his own cases in court with marked efficiency. On one occasion, being called to task for his interfer- ence in court, he exclaimed: “I stand here as an humble defender of the much-injured brute creation. I am here as an advocate of the people.” He once said, “Two or three years of ridicule and abuse have thickened the epidermis of my sensibilities and I have acquired the habit of doing things I think right, regardless of public clamor. He began a brave and zealous cru- sade against cock-fighters, dog-fight- ers and pigeon slaughterers, when- ever they pursued their cruel sports within his reach. He surely rendered a great service to the community and ‘humanity. In 1874 he rescued two { little girls from inhuman women— this led to the founding of a “Society ‘for Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- { dren.” Louis Bonard, a Frenchman, came to America many ‘years ago, accumu- | lated a fortune of $150,000; at death !he bequeathed the sum total to Bergh’s society. Wills aggregating half a million dollars in bequests have been drawn by philanthropic men in favor of this grand society. A mon- i ument should be erected to this grand man in every State where his organi- zation exists. { CLEAN UP WEEK THIS MONTH. Clean-up week will be observed - throughout the State during the third i week of this month. Requests are be- !ing sent to the officials of every city, ‘ borough, community and hamlet in the i State by the officials of the State de- | partments of health, forest and wa- | ters and state police to prepare for | the most intensive clean-up period i that Pennsylvania has ever witnessed. The clean-up efforts this year will i not be confined to the settled portions ‘of the State. In the most remote towns and hamlets there will be direct | crusade to eliminate dirt, fire hazards and conditions that menace the public health. Especial attention will be de- ' voted to breeding spots for flies. The avowed aims of the State-wide drive are announced as health protection, fire protection and forest protection. In setting the third week in April as the clean-up period, the State of- : ficials explain that they selected that seven day period because it falls in the week that housewives throughout the State generally devote to spring house-cleaning. April 1, too, has gen- erally been regarded as moving day through the State. A later date is not advisable, it is explained, be- cause the intent of the drive is to eliminate the fly breeding spots be- fore the first spring flies deposit their eggs. A program providing for a certain type of cleanup work on each day of the week has been formulated by the State officials in charge of the drive. Thus, Monday is proclaimed as “street and alley day” with the work of the day set forth as cleaning streets, side- walks, gutters, ditches and sewers. Tuesday is forestry day. Dead growths, underbrush and lawns are to be cleaned that day while it is propos- ed to have fences repaired, whitewash- ing done and tree boxes straightened. Wednesday is fly and mosquito day. Cesspools, stables, pig pens, chicken coops stagnant pools and garbage cans are to receive the attention of the cit- izen clean-up army on that day. Thursday is junk day, providing for the removal of rubbish, junk and waste. Cellars and attics are to be visited that day. : Friday is truck day and it is rec- ommended that trucks be employed to haul away the refuse of the four days’ clean-up work. Saturday is “put in order” day. Everything overlooked during the preceding five days is to be finished then. The appeal to the local authorities and welfare organizations suggests that a meeting be called to outline the work of the week. “Call a meeting and start the ball rolling,” the letter reads. “Numbers of strangers motor through your town each day. They notice and remark about it; whether they remember your town, because it looked so well kept or whether they can’t forget, because it was so unsightly, depends upon you.” The clean-up drive this year is the second held under State auspices. One of the features of the program will be the broadcasting of “clean-up” talks each night during the week from sta- tion WDAK, near Harrisburg. The week’s radio program will open on Saturday, April 12th, with Rev. C. Waldo Cherry, of the Pine Street Presbyterian church, of Harrisburg, urging his invisible audience to aid in cleaning up the State. Preachers throughout the State will also be asked to appeal to their parishioners to aid in the work by means of pulpit talks on Sunday, April 13th. No Such Car. : The teacher was trying to give her pupils an illustration of the word “perseverance.” “What is it,” she asked, “that car- ries 2a man along rough roads and smooth roads, up hills and down, through jungles and swamps and rag- ing torrents?” There was a silence, and then Tom- my, whose father was a motor dealer, spoke up: “Please, Miss,” he said, “there ain’t no such car.”—Youth’s Companion. "her about the deal. ‘had it fixed up to sell 2 man a loft yond mortgage on the wi SOME THINGS WORTH KNOWING. | Q.—What is the population of Mex- a? A.—Approximately 15,800,000. Q.—What was the Stool of Repen- tance? A.—The stool so-called was an ele- vated seat on which persons guilty of certain offenses stood in Scottish churches. Q.—What is the meaning of the | Latin inscription on the seal of Har- vard University ? : A.—“Seal of Harvard Academy in New England; for Christ and Church; truth.” Q.—When was Governor Sulzer of New York impeached ? A.—August 13, 1913, and the mat- ter brought to a vote on October 16, 1913. Q.—Is there a government leper colony in the United States? A.—Yes, at Carryville, La., operat- ed by the U. S. Public Health Service. Q.—Is it true that the name of Mount Rainer has been changed to Mount Harding ? A.—No. However, a mountain in Missoula county, Montana, was on De- cember 6, 1922, named after the late President. Q.—How can linen be told from cot- ton? A.—One way is to set fire to one of the threads. If itis cotton, it will blaze up, and continue to burn. If linen, it will smoulder. Another way is to wet the finger, and place it un- der the cloth. If the moisture comes through it is linen. Q.—Are there any homestead lands in Alaska? A.—Yes, there are large areas ot land in Alaska that can be taken up | under the homestead laws. Write to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, Washington, D. C., for in- formation. Q.—What is lampblack ? A.—A finely divided soot formed by the incomplete combustion of carbon compounds, such as heavy oils or pine- wood. It consists chiefly of carbon with about 10 per cent. of complex hydrocarbons, and is mainly used in the preparation of printing ink. Q.—What is the size of bacteria? A.—They range in size from a sphere less than one micron (11,000 MM, or about 125,000 inch) in diame- ter to a large spiral form about 40 microns in length. Some 4,000,000,- 000 bacteria of average size could be packed into a grain of granulated Q.—When is the best time to plant peach and plum trees? A.—The spring of the year is the time to transplant fruit trees. It is advisable to do it early in the spring, giving the trees a start through the summer. If transplanted in the fall, one runs the risk of having them die during the cold weather. Q.—Which is the largest building in the world? What is its capacity? And its size? A.—The General Motors building in Detroit. The building has space for 6,000 people. There are 30 acres of floor space, containing among other things about 1,600 offices. Four miles of corridors connect the various sec- tions of the building. Q.—What is the British Mons Star? A.—The Mons Star campaign serv- | ice bar was given to British soldiers who served in France from August 1, 1914, to November 23, 1914, without regard to the particular campaign in which they were engaged. The Mons | Star 1914-15 campaign service bar ! was given to the men who served be- | fore December 381, 1915, without re- | gard to the campaign in which they | served. { Q.—Which is the fastest train in the world ? A.—The fastest traveling on a reg- ular schedule was placed in service in July last on the Great Western Rail- ; way, England. The train runs be- tween Cheltenham and Paddington, London, a distance of 77:1-2 miles, | which the time table requires to be covered in 75 minutes, or a speed of 68.8 miles an hour. Q.—What is caracul? And Baby Lamb? A.—Caracul is the skin of the: young of a certain species of Persian sheep. Baby Lamb is the name given ! to the fur obtained from lambs killed just before the birth of the lamb, and the lamb is removed from the mother in order to get the fur, which is supposed to be finer be- fore than after birth. It is difficult to tell one from the other, except that caraon] is usually not as fine as baby amb. Black Prevails. Black is again supreme. If woman wants to be fashionable she has to be in black; in any case her hat must be black, even if it is worn with another color. Beige is the second most fa- vored color. It is often seen combined with brown. Brown, too, is accepted, and a little groy. Coats follow the rules of dresses. However, in order not to look absolutely as if they were ready for a funeral women very often wear on the black background a scarf or large handkerchief of vivid tones, which gives a gay note to the ensem- ble. Rose Descat has a nice choice of crepe de chine scarfs embroidered in vivid multi-color designs of Russian inspiration. She shows also long scarfs of reps de soi in brown color- ings embroidered in brilliant silk with geometric designs in a lighter or darker tone to match the background. Big Business. A real estate man was plainly- wor- ried, and his wife asked him to tell It seems that he building, a marble yard, with dock privileges; a factory site and a sum- mer garden and to take in part pay- ment a block of frame tenements, a small subdivision, an abandoned !ime kiln and a farm. “He assumes a $20,000 mortgage on the loft building,” explained the rea! estate man, “and I take over a sec- subdivision. Get me?” “I guess I get you,” responded his wife. “But what is the hitch about?” “Well, I want $4 in cash.”—Pitts- burgh Sun. ———— A pes a —Get your job work done here. MIGNONETTE — Today you sent me mrignonette; As if, perchance, I might forget That winding garden of our play filled hours Aflame with ~olor, fragrant with bright flowers 1 need not even ci~se my eves to see The hoxwood hedge. or the crepe-myrtl” tree: And though I left it many years ago, Birds hover near the roses still. T know, And little children stoop to look within The lily cups, so white and pure an? thin. I see that dear old garden bloominfs vet In every spicy spray of mignonette: —Eleanor G. R. Young. in Christia~ Science Monitor. Doctor Tells How to Care for Child’s Teeth We have been taught to believe that dentists have much to do with good teeth. The work of the dentist, how- ever, only begins after the teeth are here, when they are all formed and in whatever condition they are developed in the jaw, which is the result of the prenatal influence, whether good or bad, so far as the teeth are concerned, It has been said that a clean tooth never decays, but the teeth must be sound in the beginning to make this true. Prenatal influences and care are very necessary, and also as much care and attention in regard to diet and hygiene should be given when the child is from two to five years old. The sixth year in a child’s life di- vides the preventive and reparative care necessary, and the limit should not be reached before this care is given. Care in the kindergarten age is better than when in the first grade at six years, and the nursery or pre- school time is better than the kinder. garten.—Dr. Harold Cross in the Na- tion’s Health. Cafeteria Chief's | ded Halts Drain on Profits How efficiency can be used to stop small leaks and increase large profits was illustrated recently in a downtown cafeteria where the manager evolved a 3 2: ted way to conserve on toothpicks. sugar like logs of wood in a wood pile. | Originally he had a sort of slot ma , ¢hine to deal out the toothpicks, but | this brought little good will to his pa- trons, as most of them would resent being permitted to take only one. Anx- fous to keep his trade, he corded the toothpicks in a large open glass dish. This made it handy for his customers to take a pocketful at one grab and some of them took enough to start the furnace fire at home, judging from the way the cafeteria’s stock wus depleted, Then the manager hit upon the plan of dumping the toothpicks into the howl and stirring them up with a large spocn. This gives the customers the impression he is liberal, but the tooth- picks’ tangled condition ‘makes it dif- ficult to get more than two or three as the patrons pass in front of the cashior’'s desk.—New York Sun and Globe. Raccoon Washes Food The raccoon, colloquially callea “coon,” because of its manner of walk- ing and other similarities to the bear, has been nicknamed “the little brother of the bear.” It is common to the whole of the United States. It reli- giously clings to a quaint trait of wash- ing meat of all kinds before eating it. When meat is offered the racccon it must be thoroughly washed or else eaten under protest, apparently, many a coon preferring to go hungry rather than eat flesh which it has not been allowed to wash. Moreover, the rac- coon is not willing to let any one else do the work for it, insisting rather on being allowed to do it all himself, hold- ing its food in both forepaws and sousing it about in the water—no mat- ter how dirty it is—until it is reduced to a pallid, flabby, unappetizing mess which only a coon could look upon without misgiving.—Detroit News. IN BIRDLAND. #1 say, old top, how do I look in a straw hat!” Worth the Money A Los Angeles woman relates tha during her trip to England she went to a place where she hired a guide to show her around. After he had ex- plained the principal attractions of the neighborhood she remarked, as she handed him his fee, “I trust that what you have told me is absolutely true; I never feel as though I should pay for untruths.” “Well, ma'am,” responded the ald fellow, scanning the coin, “truth or untruth, you've had a good shilling’s worth.” Evidence of Sincerity Several people at the house party warned Bluebelle not to take her new admirer too seriously. More than one matron playfully cautioned her not io jot him turn her head. He was a nice enough fellow, but too much of a flat- terer, they all said. Bluehelle gazed with a baby stare. “Nevertheless,” murmured the girl “how can I doubt him?” “Th?” “He says 1 nm so beautiful.” —— i iat ae | SMULLTON. | Most flittings are now over and | everybody cosily housed for another ! year. | L. E. Meeker and Sherman Lutz | were business callers at the Keystone i printing house, last Saturday. | Harry Bowersox will leave for : Woodward this week to assist John H. | Brindle in his farm work this summer. Saturday night an electrical storm passed over this section and it was quite a freak for this time of the year. { Very little rain accompanied the storm. ! J. V. Brungart and J. H. Showers expect to give special attention to . the raising of chickens this summer. i Mr. Brungart has already a fine lot of young chicks. | Amos Fehl has improved his home by re-roofing his house. Mr. Fehl takes pride in having his buildings in g repair, and has the assistance of his good wife in the work. i Mrs. L. S. Bierly is at present hous- ed up with rheumatism. We are sor- ry that her first week in our midst should have to be spent in this way, and hope for her speedy recovery. Our item of last week in reference to the “night sneak” was relished by some of the good thinking people of this town, who know that such things are going on here We do not want to dwell too much on this but if those who are guilty of this kind of conduct would read from the 4th page and the 3rd column of the Bellefonte Repub- lican of last week they will find what kind of medicine is given such per- sons. Herbert H. Stover will erect coal sheds at Coburn this spring and in- stall a coal conveyor, thus doing away with the tiresome work of shoveling. His lumber is sawed and practically all his material is ready, and as soon as weather for building will permit he will start. His many customers whom he accommodated during the coal shortage of two winters ago have not forgotten him and his orders for coal are daily received. We are living in a great age; an age of inventions and discoveries. If those who have slept 'neath the clods of the earth for fifty years and more could come back to this old world they would find things quite different. Everything has changed. They would not be at home here. We have thous- ands of what are called modern inven- tions; we have electrical apparatuses of all kinds; the speed wagon; the aeroplane, and what not. There is one thing that has never been invent- ed, and thanks to the good Lord for that, for it has never been tried, as it is the nature of carnal man to hide from it; that is a machine that can be turned upon man and show his inner nature. The Lord invented this ma- chine, when in His word he says, “by their fruits ye shall know them.” Can a man be judged by another; not ex- actly, but he judges himself by the way he moves in this world. For in- stance, if he does not speak to his neighbor, if he tries to spoil work for another, if he throws insulting re- marks about some other perscn pub- licly on the streets, when ia fact no harm has been done him; when he fights with another man’s children be- cause he does not like their parents; when he tries to keep other peopie from going to places he does not go, these are some of the things thot show up the nature of a man in {h» light of the Divine word. There were times when such things as these did not exist but they are too prevalent today. No wonder John Bunyen, when he wrote “Pilgrim’s Progress” likened the human heart as being {''- ed with all kinds of wild and deceit- ful animals. BOALSBURG. Miss Martha Houtz, of Pittsburgh, is spending some time at the home of her parents. Charles Segner returned home Thursday from a five day’s visit in Washington, D. C Mrs. Lester Brouse entertained her mother, Mrs. William Rockey, of Tus- seyville, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Clement G. Dale, of Pleasant Gap, spent Thursday at the home of Austin Dale. | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reitz and P. B. Lonebarger and daughter visited friends in Williamsport on Sunday. I Miss Abyss, Cyrus Wagner, William Gettig and John Hess, of Altoona, , were week-end visitors in town. | Prof. Lewis Lenhart and wife, of : Beech Creek, visited at the home of | Mrs. Jennie Fortney, on Sunday. Miss Elizabeth Korman, of Oak i Hall, enjoyed a few day’s visit at the | Home of her grandfather, D. M. Sny- er. { Mrs. J. H. Ross, of Linden Hall, vis- . ited from Saturday until Tuesday with | her daughter, Mrs. George Mothers- baugh. Foster M. Charles, our enterprising plumber, is arranging for some de- cided improvements to his home on west Main street. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brooks and daughter Evelyn, of Spring Mills, | spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Meyer. A number of Knights of Malta went to Altoona on Saturday to attend a special Malta meeting, returning ear- ly Sunday morning. Mrs. E. H. Meyer, of Newark, N. J., arrived in town on Sunday evening to assist in caring for her mother, Mrs. William Meyer, who was suddenly taken ill on Friday. Evening services will be held in the Lutheran church, Thursday and Fri- day, at 7:30, the week preceding Palm Sunday. Communion services on Palm Sunday at 10:30 a. m. Mr. and Mrs. George Rowe and daughter Daisy, and Ralph Rishel, motored to Williamsport on Sunday for a day’s visit with the former's daughter, Mrs. Harry Kuhn and fam- ily. Two handsome evergreen trees were planted beside the fountain on the public square, on Friday. The pro- ject originated with the Civic club. A number of the townsmen went to Petersburg for the trees and the pu- pils of the schools assisted in the planting.