First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. e are not only a National Bank doing what is called Commercial banking—receiving depos- its, paying checks, loaning money, etc.— We are also, in effect, a Savings Bank and a Trust Company. We have a savings department where you may start an account with a dollar, or even less, and watch it grow. ~~ We have a Trust Department that has the full powers of a Trust Company. And we are Ready to Serve you in Any Department First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 01-44 ¥ aa Destitute OR NEARLY SO ou read of cases very often in the news- papers where whole families were made destitute or nearly so from . the improper management of an estate. Look ahead and appoint a thoroughly re- liable and experienced Executor by naming the First National Bank to act in that capa- city. come in and consult us freely THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 3 AAARAYD AARAB AIT HRANRLT OO ARAMA SARA OLARRRA 0 AM B ~Srao | Bellefonte, Pa., February 27, 1925. EDWIN BOOTH. The Prince of Tragedy in America. By Levi A. Miller. Edwin Booth, the great actor, has been before the public for many years, and no lover of the drama will dispute the fact that he was the best repre- sentative man of the American stage; and when we consider his personal as well as his professional worth, we must give him a foremost place with the leading men of the country and of the century. He made his first ap- pearance as an actor, at the Boston Museum, September 10th, 1849, in the rt of “Tressel,” in Cibber’s version of Richard III, his father, Junius Bru- tus, one of the greatest tragedians of his time, at the same theatre. The eccentric and wonderful man was on the stage from 1813 to 1852, | when he died, aged fifty-six years. Before he became an actor he had been a sailor, printer, painter, sculp- tor and writer for the press. Driven from London by the envy and jeal- ousy of Edmund Kean, he came to America in 1821, and bought a farm near Baltimore, where his son Edwin (the seventh of ten children) was born in November, 1823, “on a night mem- orable for a great and splendid show- er of meteors”—the precursors of a star of the first magnitude. Edwin accompanied his father in his wanderings from town to town, and shared with him the sorrows, hardships and disappointments of his travels. His sad and strange exper- ience during these days of trial gave a sombre color to his after life and changed the tone of a cheerful temper- ament to the gloom and melancholy which later on assisted him so mater- ially in portraying the intellectual and emotional character of Hamlet. In the beginning of his career as an actor, Edwin Booth assumed the char- acters of Sir Edward Mortimer, Sir Charles Overreagh, and other tem- pestuous parts, in all of which he ex- celled. In the summer of 1852 he went with his father to California, from thence to Sandwich Islands and Australia. He had four years of se- vere experience and hard discipline of labor, trial, sorrow and disappoint- ment. But he was made of stuff too stern to yield to discouragement and disaster. The pure gold of the man shone the brighter for the furbishing of affliction and sore trial. The train- ing of grief and suffering was a source of education and polish, and resent a refined and cultivated man. One whose fine and delicate organi- zation combines the tenderness of a woman, with the majesty of “the true prince.” The dark hair is brushed from a full forehead; the heavy eye- brows give a background of shadow for the large brown eyes to flash un- der in the tempest of emotion. No man unendowed with imagination and poetic sensibility can properly trans- -| late the thought and feeling of a man of genius. He must be formed of the finest ciay, moistened with tears and tem- pered with smiles, to be a fit delinea- tor of the characters created by the true poet. He must be transparent in his earnest endeavor, so that the fig- ure photographed on his heart shall be seen in his face and heard in his voice. He must forget himself and become the embodiment and spirit of the subject he represents. In Hamlet the actor must give soul and sub- stance to shadows. The character is one of the great creations of the poet, so fine and flexible that the outbursts of passion are as natural as the sound of storms upon the air, and is the most difficult to impersonate on the stage. It is an expression of passion, thought and feeling put into speech that palpitates and bleeds if handled rudely. STATE FURNISHES LITTLE OF ITS OWN PAPER WOOD. Each year almost a half million cords of wood are ground up by the pulp and paper companies of Penn- sylvania for the production of paper, according to F. T. Murphy, forestry extension specialist of Pennsylvania State College. Of this tremendous pile of wood only about 30 per cent. is grown and produced in the State. This small production of paper and pulp from Pennsylvania grown wood is due largely to the use of spruce and other woods which are not found nat- urally in any quantity in this State. The native species of Pernsylvania which are used to the largest extent are: Poplar, beech, birch and maple, black cherry, bass wood, hemlock, gums and some few other woods. The wood must be cut in four to five feet lengths, peeled and allowed to season thoroughly. It should be kept clean, and no sticks should be less than four inches in diameter. Wood should be straight and sound, knots should be trimmed close to sticks, and it should be split only when too large to handle. Pulp plants buying and using Penn- sylvania woods are found in Elk, Clin- ton, Blair, Potter, York and Philadel- phia counties. Wood of the proper species may be cut and marketed from any point in the State providing it does not lay too far back from a ship- the young tragedian returned to the East in 1856 “no longer a novice,” but | an artistic actor of experience and | great vigor of soul. i He made the tour of the South and ping point, county agent R. C. Blaney points out. This market for wood should be aken advantage of by farm woodlot owners, with rare excep- tions, only as a means of getting rid Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Sunshiny Weather brings your mind to our Sunshiny Bargains in all our New Spring Materials New Dress Weaves in Silk and Cotton—stripes in all the New Colors, with White and Dark Grounds. New Plaided Effects with the Hairline Plaids. English Broadcloth, Silk Bro- cades---all colors. New Spring Coats Spring Coats in all the New Colorings. Special... One lot of this season’s styles Silk and Woolen Dresses—values up $1 3.50 AAAS to $28.00—Sale price . . .. Winter Coats 50 Winter Coats in Ladies and Misses that must be sold now regardless of cost ---all this season’s styles. STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM was hailed as a prodigy of skill and ' of products from thinning and im- genius in the principal towns and .provement cuttings from existing cities of the Union. In the summer stands. Where spruce and poplar of 1860 he crossed the Atlantic and | trees are planted for timber produc- acted in London, Liverpool and Man- ' tion, thinning and clean cuttings for |- Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. EE a The New Spring Top Coats are here. We are showing twenty dif- ferent styles. By far the Most Complete Assortment of Mens Spring Overcoats ever shown in Belle- fonte. Come in. Let us show you. You will be more than pleased. Price as Low as $20 A. Fauble chester, returning to New York in' the management of the Winter Gar- : den theatre, and continued its control until the building was destroyed by fire in 1867. In 1869 he opene Booth’s theatre, time he has been acknowledged as a star upon the stage in many of the principal cities in the United States. In San Francisco the receipts exceed- ed $96,000 for eight weeks’ acting. Here I may be permitted to say that performers on the boards, who draw their inspiration mainly from the bot- tle, are not now, as they were former- ly, the favorites of the public. They must have a loftier and purer spirit than they can find in their cup to win the reputation which buds and blos- soms and bears the fruit of fame. The public may, for a time, bear with the ‘antics of a man of genius who goes astray, but the confirmed sot will not suit the fastidious and exacting au- diences of the present age, nor excuse him on the ground that he is alcibi- ades defacing the images of the god, Edwin Booth, who had inherited from his father the insanity of intemper- ance; but conquered it utterly many years ago and nobly and grandly trod it beneath his feet. And, as he ma- tured in his career, through acting every kind of part, from a dandy Ne- gro up to Hamlet, he at last made choice of the characters that offered ample scope for his powers and as- pirations, and so settled upon a defi- nite, restricted repertoire: Hamlet, Macbeth, Lear, Othello, Igo, Richard the II and III, Shylock, Cardinal Woolsey, and a number of others. Edwin Booth has been tried by some of the most terrible afflictions that ever tried the fortitude of a human soul, but he heroically outlived them. Edwin Booth met with a great sorrow when he lost his second wife, an amia- ble and accomplished lady of great at- tractiveness of person and loveliness of character. Strong men are not ea- sily crushed by afflictions and disad- vantages. They rise superior to events that would be disastrous to ordinary actors on the stage of hu- man experience. It is said by those who are competent to judge, that this prince of tragedy excels, not in ele- gant comedy, but in fierce sarcasm and “stimulated madness.” He has intense poetic sensibility, and being a “man of moods,” like all men of real genius, he is equal to his efforts. Even when he seems to lack warmth and color, there is always artistic treatment and poetic expression in his voice and manner. He studies, analyzes, and masters every point in a play before its pre- sentation on the stage. He is not sat- isfied until the spirit of Shakespeare | gives life to his ideal. The mere memorizing of the words of the dra- ma is but a small part in his prepara- tion. The text in type is a mery body without the animating life. He did not rest until it contained a living | soul, pulsing. in the heart and throb- bing in the brain. No detail of his study was neglect- ed. Historic accuracy was demanded, and the passion of the play is brought | out as vividly as lightning from a thunder cloud. His face and head rep- 1862. The following year he assumed | d which he managed | until the spring of 1874. Since that | pulp wood would be most profitable. If our woodlots were properly handled and our waste land planted with trees of the proper species, { Pennsylvania should one of these days be self-supporting as to its pulp- wood requirements and the money { which is now being sent out of the | State for raw materials would be kept here to swell the income of wood- land owners and citizens of Pennsyl- vania. A A —— ASPARAGUS GROWS POPULAR WITH KEYSTONE CONSUM- ERS. Supply and demand are not equal in the case of asparagus. During the past few years markets have not seen enough of this delicious vegetable to satisfy those who hunger for it. “It is no longer regarded as a lux- ury, which only the well-to-do can af- ford,” says W. B. Nissley, vegetable gardening extension specialist of The Pennsylvania State College, “but it is rapidly being thought as a necessity. This vegetable merits a place in every farm garden, at least, and also in town gardens where space permits.” Now is the time to order asparagus roots for the spring planting, county agent R. C. Blaney states. These may be secured from a reliable seed- man or from some grower. Buy well-grown, one year old roots. The most widely planted variety is Washington. For a family of five, 75 to 100 roots will be sufficient. For a family of two to three persons 50 to 75 roots are enough. For larger fam- ilies add more roots proportionately. Where space is available it is well to plant the asparagus twenty inches apart in rows four to five feet apart. In small gardens where hand cultiva- tion is practiced, plant in squares twenty inches to two feet apart each way. Asparagus crowns must be set deep. In sandy soils they recommend twelve to fourteen inches and in heavy soils eight to ten inches. When the roots are planted cover lightly with one and one-half to two inches of soil. Later, after considerable growth has been made, the trench or hole may be filled gradually with soil. Nissley urges all who plan to start an asparagus bed this spring to send to State College for a copy of Exten- sion Leaflet No. 19, which tells how to plant this crop. GEORGE'S VALLEY. Barney Eisenhuth, of Spring Mills, R. D., contributes a few items from his section Another wish he expresses is that spring will come early so the farmers can get started with their work soon- er than they could last year. He says they have much sickness in George’s Valley and James Reeder, one of his neighbors, who hae been ill for some time, is improving. reo Under date of March 23rd Barney writes to tell us that he is 74 years old, still works on the farm, and is a “har” Democrat, so “hard” that he is going to stay that way until he dies. —If you can’t find it in the “Watch- man” it isn’t true. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. = LICH | $1.75....81.75 Ut ® ¢ée@ @ i ® 9 ° d@ Ladies’ Guaranteed Silk Hose : : These Hose are guaranteed i not to develop a “runner” in the leg nor a hole in the heel li or toe. If they do this you i will be given a new pair free. on Sy TRE 1 ns 2 We Have them in All Colors 2 Yeager's Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN |] |] a Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. i PF FL AE Fe A I TE Fa FE Fa rary Far eal