mm m— RR EFA Berri Ji Country Correspondence PLEASANT GAP. George Cabers is driving a new Star sedan. Rev. McKechnie has been laid up with the grip. i Roy Bell had a radio installed in his home recently. Mrs. William Rossman visited last week in Milton. Mrs. Nellie Gheen is visiting this week in Sunbury. Harry Bilger installed a new radio in his home recently. Mrs. A. M. Kerstetter is visiting with her daughter in Linesville. A kind word may fall like drops of rain upon the drooping flowers. Mr. and Mrs. Walter are rejoicing over the arrival of a young son. Frank Millward was discharged from the hospital last Saturday. Mrs. Jack Noll attended the C. D. of A. card party on Friday evening. * Mrs. Lyons, of Bellefonte, is spend- ing some time with Mrs. W. D. Her- man. Miss Helen Noll entertained a num- ber of her friends at a 500 party last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Lowman have returned from a two weeks visit with friends at Berwick. Mrs. McKechnie had a scovere at- tack of neuralgia the past week, but we are glad to announce that she is gradually recovering. A kind word, an obliging act, even if it be a trifling one, has a power su- perior to the harp of David in calm- ing the billiows of the soul. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Noll and Mrs. Fred Clemens were visitors in Belle- fonts on Tuesday; taking in the town and having a most enjoyable time. I am convinced that there never yet was an instance in which kindness has been fairly exercised, but that it has subdued the enmity opposed to it. Our school board left for Harris- burg on Tuesday to consult with the State officials, with a view of fixing up the location of our new school build- ing. om Mr. and Mrs. David Crum, of Lines- ville, are rejoicing over the arrival of a young daughter. Mrs. Crum was formerly Miss Tamazine Xerstetter before her marriage. Miss Bess Eckenroth continues quite ill. She has a trifle of over $3,000 tied up in the Centre County bank mix-up, but now since there is a pros- . pect of an early settlement she may recuperate. Nothing is more valuable and so easily purchased as good nature. A man with a pleasant disposition finds friends every-where, and makes friends when people of a contrary nature see only enemies. Rev. Rishell held revival services the past week at the M. E. church. Seekers for the better have not up to this time been in evidence. In:the language of Billy Sunday, “those who don’t want to go to Heaven will have to go to Hades.” Mrs. John Herman, Miss Edith and the son-in-law, the Rimmey family, motored to Lewistown on Sunday and spent the day with the Harry Grove family. Mrs. Herman and Miss Edith will spend the balance of the week at Lewistown, returning home on Sunday next. Men think very little of the value of a bow, or a smile, or friendly salu- tation, yet how small the cost, how great the return. By a few soft words and a pleasant look, enemies have been made friends, and old attach- ments renewed that had been annulled for years. A smile beams upon the lover’s heart like a ray of sunshine in the depths of the forest. We had 18 inches of snow the past week but the same is gradually pass- ing away, so that we have experienced no inconvenience. The fall was surely beneficial to all kinds of grain. Our sportsmen, true to their nature, have given considerable attention towards providing for the sustenance of the small game. All seem to think that the indications are that we will have an early spring. It is to be hoped ‘they are correct. Pleasant Gap has been fortunate the past week. Our former barber left us with a view of locating at State Col- lege. The Noll Bros. refitted their cozy little shop in first class order in every detail. Mr. J. H. Halstead, a practical barber of Cleveland, Ohio, called to inspect the premises, resuit- ing in his renting the same, since which time the shop has been very busy up to 11 p.m. Everybody here is delighted, and a bright fufure awaits the new comer. And the beauty of all is the barber's wife is also a practical barber in every detail. She is quite proficient in marcel work, besides being up-to-date on the most fastidous hair bob accessions. Yes, we are again in our glory. RUNVILLE. Mrs. Leona Osewalt and daughter, of Snow Shoe, visited at Mrs. Jacob Shirk’s on Friday. Miss Catherine Rowe and Miss Iva Lucas, of Bellefonte, were Sunday visitors at the John Lucas home. Miss Lulu McClincy went to Wil- liamsport, on Friday, to visit with her brother, James McCliney and wife. Mr. and Mrs Ford Walker, of Milesburg, called at the L. J. Heaton and Earl Kauffman homes on Sunday. The stork has been busy in our town the past week, making three visits. At Earl Kauffman’s he left a young son; at Fred Witherite’s young son and Claude Confer’s a Jeughter. They are all getting along fine. Disagree as to Just When Man Should Wed One of those sweet journalists who gives advice to the lovelorn propounds the query, “What is the best age for a man to marry?” And then, of course, she answers it, and quotes a noted physiologist in support of her | contention. Young men should marry at the age of twenty-five. Prior to that birthday they should resolutely resist the blandishments and artifices of the fairest charmer, but once the magic boundary is passed they need have no fears, They are ripe for the ma= riage vows. Married men will venture to disagree with this feminine authority. Since all of them are married, more or less, it follows that most of them have de- cided opinions on when a young man ought to abandon bachelorhood and assume the marital responsibility, to- gether with the furniture contract. If you put the question to them, how- ever, you would be certain to find a wide diversity of views about the spe cific age for the venture. They would agree on this much, we think, fitting the test to each indi- vidual: The young man should marry when he is quite sure he can fee the minister without cheating the landlord. He should marry when he is resigned to the exchange of gentle bonds of home. He should marry when he is confident that beating carpets and mowing lawns will not mar the perfec- tion of his dream. And above all, he shouldn't get married for a joke. If he does he is almost certain to find that the joke is on him.—Portland Oregonian. Law of Treasure Trove Near Chichester, England, recently the ancient law of treasure trove was called in a legal case. A governess, walking along Selsey beach, had found an armlet half buried in the sand—a worthless old ornament, she thought, of no interest or value. But Investigation by her employer re- vealed that the armlet was of pure gold, and subsequent examination by scientists proved that it was British In workmanship and probably 2,000 years old—a rare relic of the pre- Roman period in the British isles. No one knew what legal disposition of the armlet was to be made, until attorney for the British museum proved that under the old treasure trove law it must be turned over to the government, the government how- ever, being obliged to pay the finder 80 per cent of its value. But its value, sald the scientists, was incal- culable, After an interesting court case a jury of Chicester farmers awarded the girl £20 (about $100) and the British museum took the Jewel. The Patriot Gen. ‘€Charles“P. Summerall told a story about patriotism at a Washing- ton reception. “As soon as America entered the World war,” he said, “a chap named Jethro Barker decided to volunteer. He was on. fire. with a patriotic wish to | serve his country. So he applied at a recruiting office and was duly thumped and prodded, trotted up and down and jumped over chairs and tables. “Then came question time. All sorts of questions were put to him, and his answers were very satisfactory. But the final question staggered him. “‘Have you ever served a jail sen- cence? “No, gentlemen, I must confess i naven't’ he answered, but he added with a gulp, ‘I'd be willing to serve a short one if it’s necessary.’” The Diver’s Telephone James F. O'Malley, famous diver, said to a New York reporter the other day: “I had a funny experience with an old lady visitor. I was down on the sea bottom at the time, and she asked the men if she could talk to me over our sea telephone. They sald she could, and so- this was the talk we had: “ ‘Hello, diver! “ ‘Hello, ma'am.’ “ ‘What are you doing down there? “ ‘Just now I'm sitting down having a rest.’ “‘Good graclous! sitting on? “‘On some rocks. “ ‘Oh, diver! Surely you're not sit- cing on those damp rocks! Do you want to catch your death?” What are you Old Mills Electrified The sentimental battle waged by old cesidents of Holland to have their his- toric windmills preserved, because modern machinery was making such inroads, has won out. A number of old mills in Holland, instead of being torn down and replaced by modern machinery, will be retained in their present appearance, but electrified so that they may be made more efficient. The promoters of the electrification project gave in to the petitioners when it was brought to their attention that the windmills were beautiful relics of old Holland. The Inspired Compositor Professor Phelps tells the Boston Lfranscript that when he was a boy he set type on a religious journal. One day, in the column “Ministers and Churches,” there appeared in the proof “Lillian Russell will wear tights this winter.” How it got there no one knew. The editor crossed out the line and wrote “such is life!” on the margin. When the paper appeared it contained among the news of the rlergy, the item about Miss Russell, followed by the editorial comment “such is life!” | sycamore; Ancient Eastern City Stands for Desolation With the annexation of Transjor- dania of the Hedjaz districts of Maan and Akaba, one of the strangest cities in existence comes under British man- date. This is the wonderful pink city of Petra. In ancient times this flourishing cen- ter of eastern splendor stood near the point of intersection of the great cara- van routes from Palmyra, Gaza, Egypt and the Persian gulf, four days’ jour- ney from the Mediterranean and five from the Red sea. Now it is miles from nowhere and can only be reached on horseback with a strong armed es cort. The city is entered down a dark and narrow gorge, in places only ten feet wide, which is nothing more than a great split in the huge sandstone rocks. It is like wandering along some mysterious passage to Aladdin’s cave, until the pass suddenly ends in a mass of temples, tombs and theaters of exquisite architecture. There, right out in the “blue” and in the wildest aspect of nature, is a treasure house of the most delicate masterpieces of Greece and Rome. Perfect columns with Corinthian cap- itals, support the richly carved roofs. Facades and doorwiys of exquisite de- sign stand desolate in the wilderness. The architecture of kings is used to provide shelter for a few wandering Bedouins. But the most astonishing thing of all is that these tombs and temples were actually hewn out of the solid rock, which has the most peculiar deep pink coloring. ing built up like ordinary buildings, they were hewn downwards from the ground level. Almost completely sur- rounding the city are rose-colored mountain walls, divided into groups by great gaping cracks and lined with rock-cut tombs in the form of towers. —E. W. Polson Newman, in the Lop don Mail. Thames Has Double Ebb It Is a rare thing that an interesting happening entirely escapes the eye of the press, but recently such an event was unrecorded: London river, the river of the empire, enjoyed a double ebb and flow of its tide and no one said a word about it. Such a mani- festation is certainly a curious one and not always explainable. But be- fore the Thames was embanked, its vagaries in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries were pretty fre- quent, for in 1658.it ebbed and flowed twice in three hours, and in 1662 three times in four hours—a sergeant major’s allowance which has never been surpassed. And some old chron- icler has left an account of the quite unprecedented freakishness of London river one winter day in 1641, “a won- der,” he confesses, “that, all things considered, the oldest man never saw or heard the like.” — Manchester Guardian. Barrie Publicity Expert By making his shyness a legend, Sir: James: Barrie has become one of the world's greatest . publicity ex- perts. Last year he made page one fn most of the newspapers in Eng- land by demanding that his name, blazing in electric lights on Piccadilly, be removed from the signs advertis- ing “Peter Pan” This year he fis engaging in a law suit to prevent presentation of his first play. It is called “Walker, London,” and accord- ing to Barrie, is a jejune and imma- ture work he wants permanently buried. But the copyright has run out and an enterprising firm of young men promises to bring out “Walker, London” as a musical comedy. Barrie has sought an injunction. Beaten The French foreign minister, M. Briand, tells an excellent story of how a friend with a somewhat vitriolic wit scored over a political opponent. The opponent was criticizing in the chamber of deputies a bill brought in by Briand’s friend. : “When,” he declared, “I first read the text of the ridiculous and impos- sible measure I thought I was becom- ing mad.” “Becoming!” interjected the wit “Becoming indeed! How fond the honorable member is of adding un- necessary words.” Reimbursed in Will When Carrie Safford of Reading, Pa., had her will drawn she included a bequest of $10 to her niece, Mary Pousland of Portland, ®laine, to pay for some dishes broken when she tripped and fell while helping with the housework while there on a visit. The niece would not allow her to pay for the dishes at the time, so the pay- ment was made as a provision in her will.—Ohio State Journal. All Alike Theodore Dreiser, the novelist, was calking about certain Greenwich vil- lage Utopians. “They despise money,” he said, “and at the same time they're dreadful bor- rowers.” Mr. Dreiser shrugged his shoulders. “All Utopians,” he ended, “are I-O- J-topians, I imagine.” First to Make Fiddles Iradition has it that King Ravanon of Ceylon was first of which there is any record to start the fiddle business. He is said to have invented the ravan- | astron, 5,000 years ago, a cylinder of | open on: one side across : i which strings were drawn taut. The :nstrument was played with a bamboo bow.—Grit. Instead of be- | RIGHT? The great word of impression that the English visitor takes away from a study of American universities is “organization.” It comes into his constant vocabulary very early. The idle, easy ways of Oxford and Cam- bridge, boasting that the greater part of the benefits that they bestow come from interminable and spontaneous conversations round the fire—these are the things most clearly lacking in the American university. The foot- ball player is almost a pawn in the hands of his coach. The debater often has the words of his speech written for him by a professor. Classes are compulsory. Every breath that the student takes is the university’s busi- ness, and he must breathe it at an ap- propriate and scheduled time. In the excess of organization some- thing is lost, although something is also gained. But it is perhaps the Englishman to discover the loss much sooner than he discovers the reason for it. The reason for it,of course, is partly in the American. In America the conversationalist is very rare. The American does not take to the French- man’s quick throwing to and fro of a conversational ball. He prefers tak- ing turns at monologue. And he loves organization. The organization ot his social life, the number of his club luncheons, is the wonder of the world. Still, for this organization in the universities there is a more special reason. Here, as in so many other things, America has undertaken a task quite different from any that the world has ever before seen. The European or English university has been able to leave the student much freedom to learn as he chooses simply i because it has made no attempt to cater for the student who does not choose to learn at all. The European university has always been an asylum | for the oddity with a kink for intel- |lectual interests, a refuge for the { minority. America, the first to do SO, has tried to give a college education to everybody. The experiment has demanded the price. I have heard Americans argue that she has by so doing stultified the very purpose of higher education and sacri- ficed ability to mass mediocrity. Be that as it may—and there Ts much to be said on both sides—it is evident that it makes education's problem very different. For not only has it brought a volume of students to the university, for parallel to which we have to go back to Europe before the Reformation, but—and here the com- parison with the mediaevals breaks down—the great majority of them cannot love learning for its own sake. For the taste is rare. The eritic who criticisms answered. Organization? Yes. But what sort of people are you organizing ? But here is a question that will not down: Granted that organized ath- letics, the fraternity system, the amassing of credits, are wise policies with which to meet the problem of the indifferent numbers, are you not sacrificing to them the genuine love of learning. And is not a system of education which does such a thing a very parody ? Nothing is more foolish than an af- fected eccentricity of superiority. An intellectual who cannot take an or- dinary place in the life of ordinary world the ordinary world can well af- ford to spare. This self-differentia- tion is the quality one finds in the third-rate; always in a Marie Corelli, and never in Shakespeare. And yet is there not a danger? Is the con- versation of a fraternity house meal table good enough intellectual chew- ing-ground for the Oliver Wendell Holmes of the future? Is it not the whole philosophy of loyalty to a fraternity a great fraud? I shall never forget the sight of a man of sixty dining with his old fraternity and singing with them— Delta Tau Delta, My home and shelter. To what was this loyalty? The mem- bers, the very building, had changed. There is no way of life of Delta Tau Delta different from that of all the rest of the world. How can a man serve three Greek letters? What re- sult does the attempt bring but ter- rible and crushing sameness, man to man, fraternity to fraternity? It is just the wrong size; that is the frat- ernity’s great vice. It is too small to be a permanent and enduring society, too large to be a body of boon com- panions. And this is a vice that it shares with many instruments of American sociability. How necessary is this fear that the individual is being destroyed. It is, of course, obvious that no general- ization about America can be at best more than half a truth. But if the Middle West, as it sometimes tells the traveler, is America, then the fear is necessary. For the Middle West certainly hates individuality. But America, I think, like a wise shop- keeper, displays its best goods in its windows, on its east and west coasts. Why is it that people are best educat- ed when they live by the sea? The TONIGHT - Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headaches rors hilicus aifacis fone an elimin an you feel fine. Bany, [ { m “Better Than Pills For Liver lls” ~~ 1 ARE OUR IDEAS OF EDUCATION advantages of the East are manifest. It has age and tradition, which is essential to culture. to the west coast to find their equal? Why, if Iowa or Utah have not for- gotten their pioneer days, has Cali- fornia left them so far behind in ed- ucation as in other things? often told that it is because the sea brings it into contact with other cul- tures and saves it from isolation of the Middle West. tion is surely too facile. I do not be- lieve that the excellence of Stanford is entirely due to the fact that the students go down from Palo Alto to watch the steamers coming into San Francisco. explanation, if it is not in natural virtue, is in the climate—the climate of California, which has forced the people, perhaps unwillingly, perhaps unadmittingly, into leisure. leisurely life is the greatest need of the American university of to-day. By far the greatest vice of American education is that there is much too much of it. educated in a hurry. Long evenings, the Socratic threshing out of subjects until boredom, talk, talk, freedom; all is education, and not text-books and credits. whether the Eighteenth Amendment has prohibited it.—M. C. Hollis in The Outlook. 3 of the old stock company days. ing his company on tae cheap. They traveled from town to town in freight cars at freight rates. cion one Sunday morning, and the junction boss came out and bawled to the conductor of the freight: sawled back. ais head out of a cattle car and thundered : yut the actors first.” ” Look at Bernard Shaw. sn't he? one man sald to another. remembers this finds many of his | ther, ‘I ever escaped from.’ "—Detroit Free Press, ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. But why, if you We are trusted to High street. KLINE. WOODRING — Attorney-ate leave Yale and Harvard on the east © +Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im coast, is it necesary to travel six days ¥ tcbin i courts. Office, room 18 Origen Law, Bellefonte, Pa Prompt at- tention given all legal business ene J KENNEDY _ JOHNSTON—Attorney-at- his care. Offices—No. 5 East 57-44 But the explana- I> prompt attention. Office on second floor of Temple Court. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All pre- fessional business will receive -5-1y RUNKLE — Attorney-at-Law. G. W Consultation in English and Ger= : man. Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Crider’s Fachaige I think, rather, that the SE SO, PHYSICIANS. For a Bellefonte R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. : State Colle, Crider’s Exch. 66-11 wl Holmes Bldg. No one has ever been S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- dence. 35-41 It remains to be seen | a. oe fonte, rooms Court: Wednesday afternoons and Bapiriazs a VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday. 14 and 15 Temple m. to 4:30 p. m. Both Phones. ren Matter of Precedence David Belasco was telling stories “A manager,” he said “was mov- “Well, they pulled up at a june- “ ‘What ye carryin’, Jim? “‘Oh, manure and actors’ Jim “‘Themn the heavy tragedian stuck * ‘Gadzooks, fellow, you might have Talk Dr. Harry E. Kirk of Baltimore, who “‘Brown’s a magnificent talker, “‘The most magnificent, said the En MEDICAL. Bellefonte Folks are Learning How to back? Do you get up lame and stiff; drag through the day being tired, weak and depressed? should help your kidneys. Backache is often the first sign of failing kid- neys. low. gravel, dropsy or fatal Bright's dis- ease. sickness! ulant diuretic to the kidneys, before it is too late. .{ dent tells an experience: shop, 242 E. Logan St., says: “Kidney trouble caused many miserable hours and backache was very annoying. It became so intense sometimes, it was hard for me to strengthen from a from a stooped position. My kidneys were sluggish, too and the secretions were scanty. A languid feeling took away my energy. Doan’s Pills, from Runkle’s Drug Store, strengthened me up in fine shape.” ; Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Backache Is a Warning! Heed It. Are you miserable with an aching Then you Urinary troubles quickly fol- Neglected, there's danger of Don’t wait for serious kidney Use Doan’s Pills, a stim- This Bellefonte resi- Clyde G. Swartz, prop. of machine 60c. at all dealers. Foster-Milburn 70-43 Doggie, you can’t cook food that way I'll cook the food—you run and play. —Young Mother Hubbard, Frankfurters that are made of choice meats and spiced with pure ingredients. All our meats are up to the highest standards—inspected by the government and by us. Beezer’'s Meat Market ON THE DIAMOND Bellefonte, Pa, CHICHESTER SPILLS Lad Ask Drugglet {i heter SBE messiilc boas; sealed with Blue Ribbon, ake me o - B | © NID PILLS, loND BRAND PILL SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWNERE tae 66-11-1yr Feeds We Keep a Full Line of Feeds in Stock 0 Try Our Dairy Mixtures —22% protein; made of all Clean, Pure Feeds— $48.00 per Ton We manufacture a Poultry Mash good as any that you can buy, $3.00 per hundred. We handle Purina Cow Chow $54.00 per ton € nas declined a call to the Fifth Ave- 0il Meal, 34% Protein......... 56.00 *¢ ¢ aue Presbyterian church, the richest |Cotton Seed, 43% Protein... 50.00 * *hurch in the world, was talking about | Gluten, 23% Protein....... othe 50,00; "4210 talkers. Alfalfa Meal....... .......... 50000 * ‘Great talkers are always great Bran. .................... 36.00... sores,” he sald. “Look at Coleridge. |migglings ....... oionidinikintis 40.00 “ « {=~ These prices at the Mill—$2.00 per ton extra, delivered. G. Y. Wagner & Go., Inc. BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Job Printing e—A BPECIALTY—e AT THR WATCHMAN OFFICR There is no atyle of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at consistent with the class of werk. {an on or communicate with this office. Employers, This Interests You The Workmans’ Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, lols. It makes Insane Oo pulsory. We specialize in p! ing such insurance. We ins; Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. It will be to your interest te consult us before placing your Tnsurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, Bellefonte 43-18-1y State Colleges a Fire! Get Protection. The following Lines of Insurance are written in my Agency FIRE AUTOMOBILE (All Kinds) BOILER (Including Inspectiom) PLATE GLASS BURGLARY COMPENSATION LIABILITY ACCIDENT and HEALTH EVERY POLICY GUARANTHNNS YOU PROTECTION When you want any kind ef a Bond come and see ma Don’t ask friends. They don’t want to go om your Bond. I will. H. E. FENLON Bel) 174-M Temple Court Commercial] BELLEFONTE, PA. 56-21 ,