Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 26, 1926, Image 3

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    Belefonte, Pa., November 26, 1926.
An Eventful First Car Ride.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
By Rev. L. M. Colfelt, D. D.
My first schooling was gotten in a
log schocl house at Chalybeate, Bed-
ford County, Pennsylvania. Yet in
that public school house that smelled
of wasps and frowsy children, where
in winter our faces burned fronting
the great wood stove and backs froze
I received the most faithful tuition
in the three R’s under Josiah Amos,
afterwards Squire Amos, that ever
was my after experience in academy
or college. He would compel us to
recite as many as five times a day in
our several text books and though
but 7 years old I was carried rapidly
forward through all the readers, the
arithmetics to algebra and the gram-
mars to rhetoric. I could write a
quite passable hand and spell almost
any word in the language. The old-
fashioned spelling bees, held pub-
licly at night, were no mean aids to
perfection in the art of spelling. To
this lame teacher I confess an ever-
lasting debt of gratitude for the pains
he took in laying the foundations of
my education deep and sound. I
am glad he lived to see the fruits of
his handiwork and bear witness to a
pardonable pride in my efforts as
preacher, editor and political speaker.
Then my father sent me to the
Classical Academy of Rev. John Lyon,
Bedford, Pennsylvania, where in my
10th year I was well started in Latin.
Great was the elation that filled me
when my teacher sent word in my
11th year that on Monday next, I was
to start Greek. Forthwith I went
to the library, got my hands on a
Greek grammar and mastered the un-
familiar alphabet by nightfall. By
the time I had reached my 14th year
I was ready for the Junior class in
college, leaving but two years to grad-
uate.
Indeed, I had read the Classics
far in advance of what was required
in the whole college curriculum,
which made my college course in
Classics superfluous. My teacher,
John Lyon, was a polite education
himself, his personality being more
instructive than his teachings. I
think he was the most highly cul-
tured man with whom I ever came in
contact, being the son of a distin-
guished father of Carlisle, Pennsyl-
vania, and having the advantages of
collegiate education in this country
and a university course abroad.
Years afterward, Dr. Alexander T.
McGill, professor in Princeton, con-
spicuous leader of the Presbyterian
«Church and father of the Chancellor
of New Jersey, told me that Rev.
John Lyon was the finest scholar he
had ever known. It was a privi-
lege little appreciated by the body of
pupils to enjoy his tutelage and honor
to the town to be dignified with such
- .an academy. His pupils were mostly
of a select class of boys and girls,
some from as great a distance as
Michigan and Missouri. Brinton
Lyon, Alexander Ring: Daniel Cessna,
Joseph and Frank Schell, Lyttleton
Savage, William Hughes, Mary Lyon,
Julia Marcell, Carrie Cessna, Mary,
Eliza and Louisa Anderson, Ella and
Marie Watson, Nellie ‘and Matilda
Hartley, James Russell and Rebecca
Russell, stand out in my memory as
students of high merit and of refined
and attractive personalities. Mr. Lyon
was a strict disciplinarian and wield.
ed on rare occasions with great effect,
a rattan covered with leather, and
lads of other schools and of homes
who had proved incorrigible were
reduced to lamb-like submission a:
soon as enrolled. Withal, he was a
genial man, tall, erect, springy in
walk, with piercing black eyes, won-
«derfuli waving black hair, most re-
fined facial features and altogether
so impressive a figure that it was not
strange he was called St. John the
Divine.
Owing to the strain of so
large a school he requested of my
parents that I, then 15 years old but
tall for my age, might be permitted
to assist him in giving out the spell-
ing in the morning and conducting
the lessons on the outline maps in
which the whole school participated,
chanting the exercise. He was wont
to leave the school at 11 A. M. for
his recess, in my care and it speaks
well for their self-discipline that,
though many of the scholars were
much older than I they never tock
advantage of the opportunity for
larking. I received for these and
other small services my tuition free
and the to me the pricely stipened of
$10 per three months quarter. I
shall risk being tedious by recording
how I spent that first $10. It was
expended in paying my railroad fare
to and fro on a Christmas vacation
visit in company with my brother
James, to my uncle Davis’ family
near Milroy, Pennsylvania. We had
a very pleasant time but when it was
necessary to return to my duties at
the school, a blizzard had frozen the
stream crossing and coated the whole
region with ice, making it quite im-
possible for my uncle to send us with
a team to the nearest railroad station
at Lewistown, Pennsylvania. We. set
forth bravely to walk the distance of
ten miles, but it was mostly gliding
and sliding the entire distance. The
cutting winds so paralyzed my fingers
I recall crossing the bridge from
Lewistown to the station that on my
overcoat coming open I could not
rebutton it and feared I = should
freeze before reaching our destina-
tion. Arriving at Huntingdon, we
found there was no evening train out
and would be none till Monday A. M.,
Having exhausted our funds in the
purchase of through tickets we reg-
istered at the hotel under serious
apprehension as to where the money
should: come from to discharge our
the sermon. On the next morning
before discharging the bill, we made
bold to approach a stranger who had
registered from our county and made
known to him our predicament and
asked the loan of $2.00. Without
hesitation, that kind man, whose
name is now unknown to me proffer-
ed the money saying he knew my
father by reputation and had no doubt
we would repay the loan, which
taught us a great lesson that it is a
good thing to have an honest father.
We took our places with happy hearts
in the train and on a level stretch
just outside of Huntingdon I had just
remarked to my brother at my side
“At this speed we'll soon be home”
when bump, crash, smash, the car
left the metals and was dragged 30
miles an hour by leaps and bounds
over the ties for some distance until
the coupling link broke and released
the car just on the edge of a precipice
that overlooked the river. Every
seat in the car was broken, the wheels
burst up through the floor and with
the last terrific jerk all the passeng-
ers were hurled forward in a heap
about the stove and door. I can hon-
estly record that I was not frightened
though I gave myself up for lost when
the seat gave way and the floor bil-
lowed under the upheaval of the
wheels. Indeed, I could even laugh
at a parrot in a cage carried by a
colored woman, that as the cage was
smashed, cursed and swore and chat-
tered over the hubbub at a fearful
rate. But when I got outside in the
crisp air the reaction came and I was
forced to sit down in the snow in a
faint. Happily no one was hurt but
one man who in the act of jumping
from one car to another was flung on
his head which taught me a lesson
that served well in later railroad ac-
cidents that it is best in a crash not to
attempt a self rescue but cling to the
seat as long as possible. A little lat-
er, a townsman, John Border, in an ac-
cident at the same place, attempted
to save himself by jumping out of the
window just as the car rolled over and
down upon him. His was the only
fatality. We were placed on an engine
and taken back to Huntingdon to
await the arrival of a passenger car
from Altoona. Finally, late in the
afternoon, we reached Mt. Dallas, the
terminus, only to find the stage gone.
A deep snow was falling and if ever
there were two dead-tired but happy
boys, it was my brother and myself,
when, after trudging eight miles
through the snow and the dark, car-
rying our valise, we finally, all cov-
ered with snow, burst into the farm
kitchen to greet our astonished par-
ents. This was my first ride on a
railroad and a jolly Christmas indeed!
Though fully prepared to enter the
Junior class in college in my 14th
year, my. parents, with the sad fate
of my brother in view accounted me
too young and decreed I should defer
matriculation several years. This was
one of the sorest disappointments es-
pecially as a number of my older
classmates went to the colleges of
their choice at that time. Some of
them were never forgotten nor for-
given for putting on airs upon their
return home and looking supercil-
iously down upon me as I was forced
to remain on the farm. But I had
my revenge several years later in
standing my “Exams” successfully for
the Junior class while they were
lagging in Prep’s and none better
than Freshman or Sophomore years.
I literally ate my heart out those two
years of enforced detention on the
farm not knowing that they were the
most valuable years of my life,
strengthening my frame, compacting
my muscles, laying up reserves of
nervous energy, teaching me the
dignity of manual labor and the value
of money measured in terms of hu-
mansweat and above all, filling my
mind with nature’s lore that in days
to come would prove invaluable in ill-
to come would prove invaluable in il-
lustrative material in my profession.
OAK HALL.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilliland and
family spent Sunday as guests at the
Nannie Gilliland home.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Houtz and
son visited, Sunday, at the home of
Mr. Houtz’s brother Walter, at Pleas-
ant Gap.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whitehill
spent the week-end visiting at the
home of their daughter, Mrs. Maurice
Green, of Clarence.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zong were
entertained at supper, Tuesday even-
ing, at the home of their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Zong, of State College.
Mrs. William Ferree and son Billie,
accompanied by her daughter, Miss
Margaret, of Greensburg, spent last
week in Philadelphia attending the
Sesqui.
Mr. and Mrs. George Lohr and
children, of Penn Hall, and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Frazier, of Bellefonte,
were entertained on Sunday at the
Edward Zong home.
The Better Start.
A better start usually can be had
by cranking the engine over a few
times with the starter before switch-
ing on the ignition. When the cyl-
inders have a chance to load up with
a stronger charge of gas, the firing
of but one cylinder when the igni-
tion is turned on usually will send the
engine off with a snap. Care should
be taken not to crank too long before
switching on the ignition, as the en-
gine will present starting trouble if
it becomes flooded with gasoline. Just
a few turns of the shaft and then snap
on the ignition.
EE. eG L
—Poultrymen of Centre county who
are raising a large number of pullets,
can reduce their labor and time by
convenient location of colony houses
on the range. The best arrangement
|is to have the houses 100 feet apart
{and in a square, four houses then oc-
HOT WEATHER AND
WAR IN CHINA.
Mrs. North Tells About Both in An-
other Homey Letter.
It has been some time since the
Watchman has published a letter froin
either Mr. or Mrs. W. R. North, who
are new located at the Syracuse unit
educational mission, near Chungking,
China. Of course the arrival in the
North home nine months ago of a
young son was quite an event, and
now the time of both father and
mother is so occupied in looking after
the wants of little Billy that they do
not have the leisure to do the writing
they did before he joined them. And
it is also natural that a good portion
of Mrs. North’s letters to grandpa and
grandma Shuey in Bellefonte are in
connection with Billy, who already
weighs nineteen pounds, and other
family matters in which the general
public has no particular interest. But
in a letter written home the latter
part of May, after disposing of all
family affairs she says:
“Bill and I are entertaining the boys
of the graduating class three at a
time. we started in having them once
a week but now we are having them
twice and I'm afraid we will soon have
to have them three times if we are to
get around before school closes, as
there are forty-three in the class.
“Most of these boys have never
eaten foreign food before and it cer-
tainly is interesting to see how well
the different groups observe the way
things should be done. Some do them
very well and make few mistakes and
then others are awful. .
“Rumors of war reach us daily, and
across the river just below the Rape
house a pontoon bridge was built to-
day, so it looks as if something might
happen soon. Bill and I are planning in
go into the city tomorrow to spend the
night but I don’t know whether we
ought to risk it; we might get shut in
and have to spend more time there
than we want to.
“(Ten days later.) Well, you see,
more than a week has elapsed and a
lot has happened. As I half expected,
I got locked in the city on account of
fighting and had to stay from Tuseday
until Friday. Bill got out home early
Wednesday morning but I didn’t come
with him, and it’s just as well I didn’t.
The fighting was much worse out
here than it was in the city; and
furthermore, in there the houses are
behind thick walls which can stop
some of the bullets, while out here
there is no wall at all.
“I really hadn't any exciting ex-
periences except having te stay in the
city longer than I had planned to do.
I was a little short of clothing but
managed to get through all right, but
it was nice to get back home on Fri-
day. The city gates were opened to
everybody on Saturday, and since then
it has been quite peaceful. Such is
war in China. I hope it is over for a
few weeks or years.
“It has rained most every day this
week so haven’t gotten many of my
winter things put away. t’s not
June yet and we're having weather
already such as you have in July and
August over there, so you can imagine
how hot it gets here. The mosquitoes
are so bad and it’s so hot here by the
camp that I'm getting out of patience.
I'll have to plan to do my writing in
the daytime hereafter. Just now I'm
going to undress and get under my
bed net as soon as possible. That’s
the only place one can be comfortable,
or partly so, in China. Enough for
this time.
Mrs. W. R. NORTH.
JACKSONVILLE.
Butcherings will begin this week in
this vicinity.
Mrs. G. G. Ertley and daughter
June, of Howard, were Sunday visitors
at the George Ertley home.
Services this Sunday morning at
10.30 in the Reformed church, when
Home Mission exercises will be held.
Misses Ella and Cora Neff, Ben Neff
and Ray Ishler, of State College, were
Sunday visitors at the Joseph Neff
home. :
Our former pastor, Rev. R. F. Gass,
of Bedford, is expected to visit old
friends in this county over Thanks-
giving.
The farm sale of Mrs. Lynn Ertley,
last week, was well attended. The
Ladies’ Aid society had a stand there
and took in sixty dollars.
From Pirate to King
The discovery of the Indians who
speak Elizabethan English is one of
the strangest travelers’ stories ever
heard in these days. It is not, how-
ever, quite unique, for the late Mr.
Cecil Sharp found in the Alleghanies
numerous communities of English
folk whose language, appearance and
customs dated from the end of the
Seventeenth century, and who had
preserved a large number of English
folk-songs that are no longer to be
heard in the mother country,
Nor were private communities of the
kind set up by Benjamin Sharp and his
crew altogether unique, for we pos:
sess records of the famous English
pirate, John Plaintain, who, having
begun his caréer of erime in the West
Indies, founded a state on Madagas-
car of which he conquered a consid-
erable part.
GOITRE CAME BACK
After Two Operations External Remedy
Then Successful.
Mrs. Myron B. Johnson, Millville, Pa.
says: “I have had two operations and
after four years another goitre began
growing, which for one year caused head-
aches, palpitation, dizziness, difficult
breathing, throbbing in throat and head,
nervousness, despondent, loss of weight,
pain in eyes and back of head. In fact,
Order Trees Now for Reforesting
Waste Land.
Centre county’s waste land owners
are relatively slow in making request
for forest tree seedlings for the pur-
pose of planting up those waste areas
which are fit for nothing else but wood
and timber production, says Thomas
C. Harbison, of the Penn forest dis-
trict. Nearly every farm has such
waste areas—large or small—which
should be planted during early spring
before the regular farm work starts.
If Centre county is to receive her just
quota of the forest tree seedlings,
which are to be distributed by the De-
partment of Forests and Waters, her
land owners should order them now.
Of the twenty million trees originally
available for distribution next spring,
only one half remain to be allotted to
new applicants.
To date Centre county citizens,
within the Penn forest district, have
made application for forest tree seed-
lings as follows:
C. G. Aikens
Ray C. Noll .........
Whiterock Quarries ..
Ernest Hbeling
Israel Jannet
H. B. HONG ........c.civrnieisvariie
Osceola Water Supply Co. vo.ovvnennee
Mary HB. Noff ............. aes
W. G. Edwards
J. W. Saxton
Chas: Bilger ...v.... iii iiss oes
Joi LIB cui ocicsiienrnbashvssansiics 1000
GS. Frank, M.D. .......... i. eee 6000
tesa cssssssssssrennasnnnen
Total ..i.eineeeinnviionineias 162,200
The district forester at Milroy is at
the applicant’s service to give advice
and assistance relative to forest tree
planting. He will show to prospective
tree planters the successful planta-
tions on state forest and will examine
for the purpose of making recom-
mendations, all prospective planting
sites above one acre in extent, upon
request.
Real Estate Transfers.
Lewis Stein to Harry Ratowsky,
tract in Philipsburg; $1.
Alexander G. Davidson, et al, to
Helen D. Ehrenfield, et bar, tract in
Philipsburg; $4500.
Wiilis M. Bottorf, et ux, to Ethel D.
Bottorf, tract in State College; $1.
Charles D. Bartholomew, et ux, to
A. P. Krape, tract in Centre Hall;
$725.
Henry F. Fisher, et ux, to A. P.
Krape, tract in Potter Twp.; $64.50.
Musser W. Gettig, to S. D. Gettig,
et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $1.
George Glenn, et ux, to James IL
Lytle, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1.
James I. Lytle, et ux, to Etta Ross
Glenn, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1.
Wilkie C. Horner, et al, to David F.
Young, tract in Potter Twp.; $30.
Adam H. Krumrine, et ux, to School
District of State College, tract in
State College; $1.
Albert Haupt to Samuel Haupt,
tract in Benner Twp.; $1,000.
E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to
Cramer, tract in Ferguson
$6,000,
Pine Grove Water Co. to
Cronover, tract in Ferguson
$625.
Ernest W. DeHass, et ux, to Wesley
Gunsallus, tract in Liberty Twp.;
$525. :
E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to Irvin G.
Gray, tract in Half Moon Twp.; $2000.
Jacob
T. G.
Twp.;
——The Watchman publishes news
when it is news. Read it.
Castle Worth $10,000,000.
Berlin,—Castle
Homburg, near
Frankfort-on-Main, to which the
former Emperor, according to his
settlement with the State of Prussia,
may “eventually” return, is consider-
ed the jewel of German castles. It
has 300 rooms and salons, many of
which are preserved just as they were
built by the Landgrave Frederick II
250 years ago.
There is in the castle a solid silver
service of 400 pieces, which cost a |
small fortune 100 years ago. In the
workroom of William II is a rocking
horse, which he used for a desk chair,
William, when not writing, was wont
to lean back in the saddle and rock
back and forth, as if riding at the
head of his troops. The bed chamber
of the late Empress Augusta Victoria
is paneled in solid mahogany, inlaid
with precious stones. The castle is
valued roughly at $10,000,000.
‘UBWIYNEBAM Yj) J0J 9qLIosqng—
Keep in
Trim!
Good Elimination Is Essential to Good
Health.
HE kidneysare the blood filters.
If they fail to function properly
there is apt to be a retention of toxic
poisons in the blood. A dull, languid
feeling and, sometimes, toxic back-
aches, headaches, and dizziness are
symptoms of this condition. Further
evidence of improper kidney func-
tion is often found in burning or
scanty passage of secretions. Each
year more and more people are learn-
ing the value of 'Doan’s Pills, a
stimulant diuretic, in this condition.
Scarcely a nook or hamlet anywhere
but has many enthusiastic users.
Ask your neighbor!
DOAN'’S 7&®
Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys
Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem.,Buffalo, N. ¥.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
Twp;
Medical Hints for Housewives.
Don’t expect to get the best serv-
ice if you call the doctor between mid-
night and beauty sleep. Even a gro-
cer would hate to get out of bed to
put up a yeast cake. !
‘Don’t ask the doctor what ails your
neighbor. He might tell you then
you’d be adding her troubles to your
own.
Ask the doctor now and then if he
needs money. This always makes a
hit. He will give you the reputation
of being a humorist.
It’s no disgrace to be sick. The dis-
grace comes if you stay sick and en-
joy telling about it.
Don’t tell your doctor about the
floral. wreath you sent when your
former physician died. He may not
be a lover of flowers.
If your family physician tells you
that your baby is not sick and that
you don’t need a physician, don’t get
mad and consult another physician.
He may be honest, too.
Say nothing derogatory to your doc-
tor about your former physician. It
may divert his attention to thinking
how long it will be before he gets his.
If your husband is intolerably se-
55000 | vere, don’t get a divorce. Try a course
of calomel. i
When sending flowers to diabetics,
don’t choose the sweet pea.
\ Better Thani
- IBC CE 3
You can’t
feel so good
but what
will make you
feel better.
PIRI —
RUNKLE’S DRUG STORE.
Insurance
Fire... Automobile
ALL OTHER LINES
Bonds of All Kinds
Hugh M. Quigley
Successor to H. E. FENLON
Temple Court BELLEFONTE, PA.
Cut Flowers...
and.....
Potted Plants...
ems
Artistic Funeral Work
tie
fil Kinds of Fruit Trees
Strawberry Plants
Berries and Vines
2h
HALF MOON GARDENS
Charles Tabel, Proprietor
Bellefonte Pa
Phone 139-J 71-39-3t We Deliver
IN
Our Meats
whether they be Beef, Pork or
Fowl, is always assured, because
we buy only the best and have our
own refrigeration plant in which
we season without freezing the
flavor out of our products.
Orders by telephone always receive
prompt attention.
Telephone 450
P. L. Beezer Estate
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
EKLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in
Office, room 18 Crider
5 all courts.
Exchange.
KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-at
Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt ate
sted tention given all legal Pushes en-
0 care. ces—No. Eas
High street. 5 Fo
M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law
and Justice of the Peace. All pro-
fessional business will receive
prompt attention. Offices on second floor
of Temple Court. 49-5-1y
G. RUNKLE. — Attorney-at-Law.
Consultation in English and Gere
man. Office in Criders E go
Bellefonte, Pa. 5, Fachan
B—————
mes osememann.
PHYSICIANS
D R. R. L. CAPERS,
Bellcfuai OSTEOPATH. 8
ellefonte tate Coll
Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldge:
8. GLENN, M. D. Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his resi-
dence. 35-41
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regis-
C tered and licensed by Ne State.
Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and
lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg. High S8t.,
Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-tf
VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed
by the State Board. State College,
every day except Saturday. Belle«
fonte, in the Garbrick building opposite
the Court House, Wednesday afternoons
from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to
4.30 p. m. Bell Phone. 68-40
Feeds
We Keep a Full Line
of Feeds in Stock
Try Our Dairy Mixtures
—22% protein; made of all
Clean, Pure Feeds—
$44.00 per Ton
We manufacture a Poultry
Mash good as any that you
can buy, $2.90 per hundred.
Wagner's Dairy
Purina Cow Chow.. ......... 50.00 « «
0il Meal, 84 per cent. protein, 54.00 *
Cotton Seed, 48 pr. ct. prot., 44.00 “
Gluten, 28 per cent protein, 45.00 * «
Alfalfa Meal .....co00000000ee 4500 “ «
LL Re Ee 8400 « «
Middlings .............. 7. 86.00 « =
(These Prices are at the Mill.)
$2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery.
We are discontinuing the storage
of wheat. After July 1st, 1926, all
wheat must be sold when delivered to
our mill.
0. Y. Wagner & Go., Inc
86-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pipeless Furnaces
NAPPA PIP PSI PPI NS
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies.
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully anda Promptly Furnished
66-15-tf.
manna
aso.
Fine Job Printing
at the
WATCHMAN OFFICE
There is no style of work, from the
cheapest “Dodger” to the finest
BOOK WORK
that we ean not do in the most sat-
isfactory manner, and at Prices
consistent with the class of work.
Call on or communicate with this
office
Employers
This Interests You
The Workman's Compensation
Law went into effect Jan. 1,
1916. It makes insurance compul-
sory. We specialize in placing
such insurance. We inspect
Plants and recommend Accident
Prevention Safe Guards which
Reduce Insurance rates.
er apparently had gone out of!
i h .
commission and we shivered through Olio
“Sorbol Company, Mechanicsburg,
‘ Liocally at C. M. Parrish, Druggist.
: ’ i ot | cupying about one acre of range. This | my whole body ached. In less than one Lodicet Ask your Drugglss It will be to your interest to
buith the Pa Ny the go: is better than building the houses in week after using Sorhol Quadruple most of Pilla 15 ited aod Gord. merle consult us before placing your
Hh t" to church O0€ 10Dg Yow, as it reduces the dis. ibe Symptoms left, The doctor now says, 238, scaled vith Blua, Ribbon, Market on the Diamond Insurance.
would provide, we wen ure tance the poultr n Las to travel ! i g all. I will gladly tel ‘ake no other. Si
i i i i -) yma . or write my experience,” 3
in the morning, in which the heat. Information xr most drug stores or write 50 Bak Always aH : JOHN F. GRAY & SON.
BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
BELLEFONTE, PA.
sem
—Subseribe for the “Watchman.”
Bellefonte 43-18-1yr. State College