e— Bellefonte, Pa, May 21, 1926. JEWS OF RUSSIA IN PITIABLE CONDITION. New York.—The wracking experi- ence of a three-months’ “nightmare” journey through a gray, huddled Twentieth-century inferno of misery, want and helplessness was recounted by Miss Irma May of New York city, who returned on the steamship Paris direct from a tour of the “hunger re- gion” of Poland, Galicia and Bessara- bia, where hundreds of thousands of Jewish families, after a ten-years’ struggle against the impoverishment of the war, are now crushed in a final tragedy of industrial ruin, destitution and starvation as a result of the lat- est economic collapse in eastern Eu- Tope. Miss May, who was abroad on a visit when the first reports of the new Jewish disaster in Europe reached this country, was commissioned by cable by David A. Brown, national chairman of the United Jewish cam- paign for a $15,000,000 overseas chest to complete the reconstruction tasks undertaken by the American Jewish joint distribution committee in Rus- sia and the eastern European coun- tries, to obtain first hand information of actual conditions and the extent of the breakdown of trade and indus- try affecting the Jews of these coun- fries. INQUIRY BEGAN IN JANUARY. ‘She started on her mission early in January and in the last three months has journeyed from city to city, from village to village in all the large Jew- ish sections of Poland, Galicia and Bessarabia. Her reports by radio and letter to Mr. Brown, based on authenticated statistical ' information, make up a day-by-day chronicle of human ruin and despair, crowded with intimate detail of the suffering of workers ‘broken by months and years of unem- ployment, of merchants stripped of their last resources, of proud and poor alike leveled to bread-lines and :soup-kitchens, of women and children starving and freezing and waiting in piteous resignation for death. More than a million Jews of Poland —one-third the entire Jewish popula- tion of the country—are at present absolutely without any means of sup- port, and their only hope of being saved from extinction, Miss May de- clares, rests on the early arrival of relief funds from America. The Jewish cities of Bessarabia, Miss May found, present a repetition of the Polish picture of impoverish- ment, stagnation and helpless misery. Due to a two years’ crop failure, the historic Jewish agricultural commu- nities of this region are shattered by want, famine and disease. Child mortality in Bessarabia has reached 100 per cent, as a result of severe malputrition and lack of med- ical aid, and favus and hunger-typhus are spreading ominously. The food allowance of Jewish families in this section of Bessarabia—all available food supplies are rationed by local “hunger committees”—is a few ounces of corn meal and a fraction of a pound of potatoes a day. FRENZIED STRUGGLE FOR BREAD. Miss May’s final experiences in Po- land represent a peak of the appall- ing panorama of physical and moral breakdown in which a piteous, fren- zied struggle for bread, hopeless sub- mission to squalor and disease, and a panic of self-destruction as an escape from unbearable suffering and de- gradation bespeak the utter collapse of the ancient communal structure of Jewish life in Poland, and threaten the extinction of millions of lives of of men, women and children. In Brest-Litovsk Miss May found the poorest of the poor, mostly war widows, still living in the ruins of the synagogues in: wkich they took shel- Utterly depleted by the destruction of the military occupations and coun- ter-occupations, scarcity of work and food and the struggle against broken- «down, rudiamentary living conditions, the years of famine and internal tur- : relieving the plight of these people. War orphans and chidren born in the years of famine and internal tur- moil are growing up as waifs, with ~ weakened constitutions and no out- look for a normal adjustment to or- ~.derly productive life. Pennsylvania Passes Goal Set for Seal Sale, As Christmas Seal Chairman for - Pennsylvania I am happy and de- lighted to report that the 1925 Seal Sale passed the goal set, $500,000. The total will run between $505,000 and $510,000. For this fine showing credit is due to all who co-operated + :and assisted, and your organization, . .you and your workers had a splendid + share in this. The increased returns enable the ‘affiliated organizations of Pennsyl- " vania Tuberculosis Society to do more “ithis year and enlarge their efforts “against tuberculosis. That this great- er effort is ‘needed is apparent from the more than 7,000 deaths each year in Pennsylvania from tuberculosis, a preventable disease. One of the most serious aspects of this situation is that the majority of the fatalities are among people in the producing years of life when they are most needed by their families and their communities." With best wishes, I remain, very sincerely, Henry W. - Shoemaker, Christmas Seal Chairman for Pa. Gas Pipe Line 120 Miles Long. One of the latest developments in the long-distance transmission of gas is near Essen, Germany, where gas is sent through a pipe line about 120 miles long. This line supplies light- ing and heating fuel for thirty vil- lages and towns along its route. —JIt’s all in the “Watchman” and it’s all true. VIRGINIA OPENS TREASURE HUNT State Ready With $500,000 to Redeem Missing Old- Time Bonds. Richmond, Va.—There is a treasure chest of more than half a million dol- lars in gold, or rather in gold bonds, in this country, and there is no rea- son why those who are devoting their energies to chasing the will-o*-the- wisp of fortune should not dig down into old trunks and other receptacles of family papers and find out if they are entitled to share in this large sum. of money. Those who are entitled to partici- pate in this chest of geld will not have to employ attorneys to prosecute their claims, nor will they have to make an examination of genealogical rec- ords. If they find a document bearing the title “West Virginia Certifidte” the chances are 1,000 to 1 that by pre- senting this certificate to Rosewell Page, second auditor of the common- wealth of Virginia, they will receive in return West Virginia 31% per cent gold bonds, bearing coupons fro January 1, 1919. Mr. Page says that there are out: standing, unclaimed, more than $500, 000 of these certificates, the redemp- tion of which was provided for in the Virginia-West Virginia = debt settle ment. Treasure Hunt Advised. The certificates bear dates of 1871, 1879, 1882 and 1892. Because they were of little value at one time their owners do not realize that today thev are so much gold. An opportunity for the people to indulge in a veritable treasure-hunt game is here furnished. The bonds to redeem these certificates have been issued. They await only the recep- tion of the documents to be issued ir exchange. The history of this transaction dis- closes the successful effort of a state to redeem its credit. Before the seces- sion of West Virginia from Virginia at the opening of the war between the states, the mother state had Issued bonds and owed approximately $35, 000,000, covering money expended for navigation companies, plank road companies, turnpike companies, bridge campanlies, state roads, railroad com- panies and state defense. Virginia claimed that West Virginia should pay a third of this debt, as that sec- tlon of the old state had received a third of the benefits of the bonds is- sued. West Virginia denied the claim, State Redeeming Credit. For a long time the bonds went un sald, and the debt with interest went ‘to $45,000,000. Finally, on the dates already mentioned, Virginia passed a series of refunding acts, and gave to the old bondholders Virginia bonds for two-thirds of the amounts due them. In addition she gave them, for the re- maining one-third, certificates statinz that West Virginia owed them the re- maining third. These are the “West Virginia Certificates.” West Virginia laughed at the idea of Virginia issuing “West Virginia Certificates.” were these certificates considered that many of them were sold for 10 cents per hundred and less. Finally, for the benefit of the bond and certificate holders, Virginia sued West Virginia, and in decisions rendered by the Su- preme court of the United States on March 6, 1911, and June 14, 1915, Vir- g'nla was awarded judgment against West Virginia for $12,393,929.50 with interest at 5 per cent from July 1, 1915. West Virginia settled the debt ana mterest in 1919, paying $1,062,867.16 in cash and $13,500,000 in gold bonds. Of these bonds $1,138,500 were held “in escrow” by West Virginia to pay certificates that had not been present- ed. More than $500,000 of this sum has not yet been claimed. Women Find Outings Working in Orchards Washington.—Despite the hardships Jf the “fruit gypsies,” as the migrant workers on western fruit ranches are popularly called, a number of women “follow the fruits” in this way in order to give themselves or their chil- dren an outing in the country and at the same time to supplement the family income, according to a recent report by the United States Depart- ment of Labor, on conditions of em- ployment of women in the highly sea- sonal industries of fruit growing and canning in the state of Washington. Nonresident workers constituted about one-third of the 3,014 women who were interviewed during the in- vestigation and who were employed in the berry flelds. In the prune, ap- ple and pear orchards, in the fruit, vegetable and fish canneries, and in the fruit warehouses in the state. The great majority of the migrants were found in the outdoor work. Some of the migrants failed to make ¢heir expenses and became stranded, a fact attributed in the report to the seasonal nature of the work and un- certainty in regard to length of em- ployment and earnings. . Mule Shoots Horse Peoria, Il.—A mule on Ernest Lar- gent’'s farm has shot a horse dead. Pawing on the back porch, his usual signal that he wanted sugar, the mile kicked a rifie over, the fall discharged it and the bullet stopped fn a stal- lion's neck. AE i Of such little value | The Cost of Automobiles. It costs the average automobile Pupil: Please ma’am they smelt it. —Good Hardware, Uc owner $700 a year for everything con- | 0 —rn : Al nected with his car including the or- | J. McC. Davis, Owner. M.C. Luke, Manager | D5 iginal cost, according to figures giv- fic =] Ui en out by the Bureau of Industrial Technology. It would be interesting : Water Street Inn to compare that figure with what we all pay for house rent or thé cost of | Reservations for Special Dinners owning a house. ; Probably the average automobile and Parties owning family pays more than $700 | 71.20.1¢ a year on account of its home, but the cost of the automobile in many cases is as much as the rent. The family of moderate means that wishes to operate a car will do well to study the means by which automo- bile costs can be kept down. Rapid driving over rough streets and roads will greatly increase the charge for depreciation and repairs. If people must tear around the country as if they were rushing to a fire where their property was being burned up, 1784 they will have to pay an extra charge to the garage man. Also the old car will deserve the favorite title of “junk” much soon” r. Where people own their own homes and erect their own inexpensive gar- estes () eens age on their own land, they reduce L | i the cost of storage to a small item. { 5 d In the days to come, every family all e S ee S il SAS A. W. KEICHLINE SSSA REGISTERED ARCHITECT BELLEFONTE, PENNA. 71-11-6m* SAIS He HE 1926 “Seeds Which Succeed ” AESRrlan Il = oe 71-16 tf EEE EEE EEE Quality Goods § Make Satisfied Customers e strive to get the BEST GOODS MADE. We are satisfied we get them. Hence you will save money when buying from us. | Dockash Ranges, Florence 0il Stoves, Kitchen Newly-W S Cabinets, Refrigerators, Linoleums, Kitchen Utensils, Etc. Olewine’s Hardware ought to learn to do simple repairs on its own car. The inexperienced owner may do his car more harm than good when he tries to make his own repairs. But if he makes a thorough study of the mechanics of the car, Ze ought to be able to do the less difficult repair jobs. The young man of the future will find it just as desirable to know how to repair a car as to do complicated arithmetic examples. The country is getting great benefits from the gen- eral ownership of cars, but people | Garden Fertilizers ; need to study the methods by which such ownership can be made inexpen- sive.—From the Reformatory Record. 142 years’ experience in growing and marketing seeds assures you reliable results in your garden. Sprayers.... Tools Hats Off to the Nose! Teacher: Does. any one know: how iron was discovered? Pupil: Yes ma’am. Teacher: Well, tell the class Potler-Hoy Hardware Go. Bellefonte, Pa. - ® Erie on one of the Great Ships of the © & B Line makes a pleasant break in your journey. A good bed in a clean, cool stateroom, a long, sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast in the morning, Steam “SEEANDBEE”-“CITY OF ERIE”—-“CITY OF BUFF. ” - Daily May 1st to November 15th ALD ‘Leave Buffalo— 9:00 P. M. Eastern Leave Cleveland—9:00 P. M. Arrive Cleveland *7:00 A, M. Standard Time Arrive Buffalo— *7:00 A. M. * Steamer “CITY OF BUFFALO” arrives 7:30 A. M. Connections for Cedar Point, Put inBay, Toleds, Detect nd other points. ur ticket agent or tourist ckets i ourist Aortic Rate $7.50, agency tor e New} Send for free sectional puzzle chart of the Great Ship “SEEANDBEE” and 32-page booklet. The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co. Cleveland, Ohio | Your Rail Ticket is Good on our Steamers Four C & B Steamers are $5.50 Tomorrow Alright A vegetable aperient, adds tone and vigor to the digestive and eliminative system, improves the appe- tite, relieves Sick Headache and Bil- iousness, corrects _Constipation. ed NN? JUNIORS~—Little NRs One-third the regular dose. Made of same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. ms SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGISTw RUNKLE’S DRUG STORE, We Clean and Dye | to Satisfy [\. EG We Call for and Deliver Phone 362R Koons & Stickler Custom Tailoring, Dry Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing 8 Bishop Street, Bellefonte, Pa. 71-20-1t - on eZ TRUN HER } errRANDS | Fil ga he r 3n * I Cell I Copyright aD The House of Kuppenheimer I! She Knows He’s Safe She neither leaves him alone at home, nor takes him out through dangerous traffic and inclement weather to shop. Her tele- phone makes this exposure unnecessary. Mother need not leave the comfort mer the duties of her home to get her meats— a few words over the telephone will bring the family food. Order your Meat over the telephone trom us. Our service consists not omly of free delivery, but guaranteed quality at lowest possible prices. It will save you time, effort and money. P. L. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. 34-34 We’re Style Specialists---- and young men know it This is a young man’s store that sells young style for all ages. who makes the best styles and makes them better than anyone else---and we pick the winners for you. want a two-button suit, we'll show you one that hits style on all sides-- and hits it right. Baldwin. 3 Sim The Clothier —the house of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes We know If you Ask us for the