"Bellefonte, Pa., December 3, 1926. Thrilling Civil War Days AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By Rev. L. M. Colfelt, D. D. The Civil War broke out in my 12th year and it was with thrilling inter- est I trotted along beside the fifers and drummers as they beat time for the companies recruited in Bedford county when, they marched through the streets to entrain for the seat of war. Lieutenant Barndollar, after- ward Captain, with his Zouaves, beau ideal of a handsome officer, Captain Filler, later a Colonel and after the | f; war, editor of the Philadelphia Rec- ord, Captain Saul Metzger and other officers passed in frequently recurring succession with companies composed of well known youths. Alas! Many of these older schoolmates who wenf forth with high hopes of glory soon ! were laid in too early graves, lan- guished in hospitals or rotted in pris- on pens. The first regiment of troops from the vicinity spent their first | three years enlistment in garrison ' duty on the coast of the Carolinas. When their term of enlistment expir- ed, they returned and related what a | picnic they had enjoyed and the regi- ment’s quota of 1800 men for re-en- listment was overfilled. But on re- turning to the army they were order- ed into active service under Grant in the Wilderness Campaign and at the battle of Cold Harbor into which they went near 2000 strong, they came out able to muster barely 200. Of a truth, Bedford county became a ‘“Bochin,” the place of weeping. From the firing of Fort Sumpter, a shot that struck every northern heart, to the capitulation at Appoma- tox, I followed the course of the war with thrilling interest as it was pub- lished daily in the Philadelphia Pub- lic Ledger. Indeed, I think I could have written a history of the war from memory, being conversant with the movements of the troops of the sev- eral armies and even the losses sus- tained in every great battle from start to finish. With what a thrill did I read the long dispatches sent late at night from John Cessna’s office to my father, depicting the phases of the first Bull Run battle, with what heart- sickness I read of the fearful disaster of Fredericksburg and Chancellors- ville, in which 60,000 men were sacri- ficed by incompetent commanders. What elation over the victory of An- tietam, how great the suspense over the fate of Gettysburg, the booming of whose guns I fancied I could hear on July 4. The taking of Donelson, Vicksburg, Shiloh and Chickamauga, the battle in the clouds at Chattanoo- ga, Sherman marching through Geor- gia, the little Monitor at Hampton Roads, the heroism of Farragut at New Orleans, McClellan at Gaines Mills, Grant’s final pounding the Con- federacy to dust as with the Hammer of Thor and Sheridan breaking through Lee’s lines on a Sunday—all were graven on my memory as with pen or iron forever. Just before the battle of Gettysburg, Lee, in invading Pennsylvania, surrounded General Milroy at Winchester, Va. I have: seen and talked with the man, Colonel Glass, who lived about 5 miles west of Winchester, who guided Early’s army around behind the hills until, without discovery, they had complete- ly surrounded General Milroy’s little force of 9000, thinking to make them an easy conquest. But braver than General Milroy never lived. For three days, he held out against a host. I have seen the swinging cradle perch- ed at the top of a high telegraph pole on the heights of Winchester to which he mounted and with a glass observed the movements of the foe. On the night of the third day, he summoned his officers and informed them that his force could hold out no longer, and if ‘they were willing, though he would coerce no man’s will, he would at their head, make trial of escape. As for himself, he would never surrender. Five thousand of his men with Mil- roy at their head cut their way through and made their way to Ever- ett, Pennsylvania, 8 miles from my home. General Milroy was repri- manded and relieved for not retiring in time when he should have been hon- ored for delaying Lee’s army for three days, giving Meade time to come up with Lee at Gettysburg and secure the advantage of position. General Miles, at Harper's Ferry, not only did retire but surrendered 13,000 men without striking a blow. On hearing of the arrival of Mil- roy’s army at Everett, my brother, Charles and myself, then in my 14th year, determined without our parents knowledge to go afoot to the camp and satisfy our curiosity to see some- thing of real soldier life. We were so young that we passed the sentinels without difficulty, but found, while it was easy to get into the lines, it was not easy to get out. We had to get a Provost Marshall’s permit to make our progress. We delved pretty thoroughly into the mysteries of camp and before returning home we edged our way without stoppage into the very presence of General Shields, surrounded with his staff, on the hotel porch and listened eagerly to all that was going forward. But we exper- ienced somewhat of a thrilling sur- prise when a courier, covered with dust, his horse afoam, flung himself from the saddle, rushed up the hotel steps to the general, saluted and shouted, “The Rebel Cavalry have arrived at McConnelsbug, 25 miles dis- tant.” The General turned to an or- derly and said, “Take my horse to the Smith-man across the street and have him shod as quick as Hell can scorch a feather.” His army, without ar- tillery and many of his men even with- out guns which had been thrown away in their flight were in no condition to put up a fight and in 30 minutes the whole force resumed their retreat westward to camp next at my own county town of Bedford. My broth- er and myself made an orderly retreat I ‘ious and gave my heartfelt thanks to i chard to the cellar for winter storage. i while driving down a fairly steep i the cart and heels furthest away. I and with this taste of war’s alarms were borne homewards in the gener- al flight, with this impression, that no scene on earth is more terrible than a defeated army in a panicky retreat. I would like to detain my gentle readers with just one other incident that happened in the pre-college per- iod, when I was about 16 years old. My father and myself were driving two noble horses, 16% hands high, in a Germantown 2-seated carriage from Winchester to Everett, when we arriv- ed at the Potomac river opposite Han- cock, Maryland. A ferry of the flat boat wire type, propelled across by the current of the river was in use but unfortunately the ferryman was ab- sent from his post and would not re- turn for several days. Not wishing to be delayed, we questioned his wife as to a possible fording of the stream which was at least one-half mile wide. She pointed to the ford which the armers sometimes ventured in low water. We should not have attempt- ed the unknown passage, indeed, my father strongly vetoed the venture but I overcame his objections with foolish presumption so far that he agreed, if I would drive. My fishing experience in home rivers helped me to diagnose the ‘situation and avoiding the still waters I kept just above the riffle. But the great rocks in the bed caused the horses to flounder and the car- riage to careen dangerously, When we arrived at the middle of the stream the water was flowing six inches deep in the carriage, one of the horses seemed as if he was trying to climb a house roof. At this moment the same horses’ trace came off the single- tree and the stop necessary to put it on probably saved our lives. The horse seemed to have compressed his feet ina space no bigger than a bushel basket and stood tremblingly leaning upstream. I saw I could not put it on withcut dangerously disturbing his balance and debated whether I should Jump in the river breast deep. Hap- pily I decided to try putting it on while standing on the tongue and I will never forget the intelligence of that horse and how he cooperated in refraining from struggling while I reached over his back and got hold of the outside trace and with care re- fastened it to the singletree. Before getting into the carriage I said to my father, “I will take a survey of what is ahead,” but the moment I looked I cried, “My God! Father, the rock our horse was scrambling up is as big as a house and the water ahead is full of boulders. I must have gotten too far upstream.” Instead of getting in the carriage I got astride the near horse to better see what was ahead and turned the team abruptly down- stream to shun the big rock. I can see that hickory tongue bend yet as the front wheel struck the rock and shifted the whole carriage down the river. But the tongue was good stuff and held and I can see and hear my father still as he sat in the back seat, now lifted to heaven and now plung- ed down into the depths, murmuring prayers, voicing his terror as we went floundering and plunging the remain- ing distance to the shore. I am not ashamed to confess that was one of the occasions I was somewhat relig- God for our safe deliverance. One autumn afternoon I was en- gaged carting apples from the or- On returning for a fresh load I thoughtlessly perched myself on an upturned flour barrel. Reins in hand roadway and going over a rough place, the barrel tilted and I was tumbled in a somersault, landing on my back on the ground with head to saw the great juggernaut cart coming and shut my eyes certain it would crush my head like an egg shell. Squirming backward as I did, the great wheel grazed my head and plastered my hair in the sand. My very high spirits of that day evaporat- ed and it was a sobered lad who con- tinued his task feeling with David that there had been not a “step” but a hairbreadth betwixt me and death and that only the sparing Providence of God had saved me from destruc- ion. Permit me to photograph at this point, a man, Abe Oyler by name, unique and original, who might well have figured in the pages of fiction. He lived on the mountains near my home in improvised shelters made with a small axe he always carried in his belt. With no companion but a small dog, he shunned all the labors and habitations of men. He was a “mighty hunter” and an unrivalled shot. No animal could escape him and the grey squirrel vainly sought refuge in the holes in the highest trees for without gaffs to aid he could climb any tree and with axe cut the squirrel out from his haunt and cast him down to his dog. Often did I hear his whoop on the mountains announcing his suc- cess on the trail. It was better than a play to hear him describe how he was caught in his cabin on an island in Dunning’s Creek which was sub- ject to sudden and mighty freshets. How he awoke in the morning and on stepping from his hammock found himself in water up to his neck. Climbing to the roof, he awaited ail day the abatement of the flood but it only rose higher. All he could do late in the afternoon was to make a swim for it. To the east, the stream was narrow but the current too swift and the down floating timbers made such an attempt fool hardy. He strapped his gun and clothes on his back and hung his shoes about his neck and started upon his perilous half mile battle with the water floods to reach the western shore. To his grief he found his impediamenta too much and he said his shoes especially, filling with water, dragged his head under, threatening to drown him and he had most reluctantly to abandon them. Great was the astonishment of the flailers in Barnhart’s barn, cn gazing over the waste of waters, to see this strange, amphibian monster, his head bobbing up and down in his coonskin cap, finally emerge at the barnyard and reveal the familiar features of the well known Abe. When the Civil War broke out, Abe enlisted as a sharpshooter and was in HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS.WORD PUZZLER When the correcy letters are pinced In the white spaces this pussie will spell words both vertically and herizemtally, The first letter In each werd is indicated by a mumber, which refers to the definition listed below the pumml Thus No. 1 under the column headed “horizontal” defines a ward which fll the white spaces up to the first black square te the right, and a numbes under “vertical” defimes a word which will fill the white squares to the mext black eme below. tionary words, except proper names. Ne letters ge In the black spaces. All words used are dios Abbreviations, slang, initials, technical terms and obsolete forms are indicated im the definitions. CROSS-WORD PUZZLE No. 3. l 2. 13 14 8 6 [7 1819 mn 10 I 12 / % Is 16 7 18 119 20 I 22 23 29 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 [EE 34 35 J6 37 58 39 40 4 42 43 44 l 45 46 47 48 47 $0 51 52 53 54 dl $6 57 58 59 60 1] 62 T®, 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Horizontal. Vertical, 1-—Strand of false hair 6—To loiter, or be idle 10—Fatigues 12—To urge on 14—Preposition 16—Portico 18—Woody plant 20—Skill 22—Holes in skin 24—Free, or loose 25—Group of letters 27—Mixture of vegetables 29—Note of scale 30—Was attired in 32—Natives of Poland 34—Changes 38—Wise men 40—To father 41—Preposition 43—Support on a larger vessel for a smaller boat 45-—Metal container 47—Piece of ground 49—Citrus fruit 51—Over there 62-—God of love 54—Native of the capital of Italy 56—Sun god 67—Binds 59—At no time 61—Den 62—To colonize 86—Lures Solution will appear im next issue. 1—Indian’'s wife 2—That thing 3—Fee 4—Harvest of grain §—Central figure in a romance (pl.) 7—Bone 8—Fitting 9—To roll up, as a flag 11—A fight 13—To bore out 15—To skulk 17—Lowest class of serf among an- cient Spartans 19—Doors to the outside in a ater 21—Runs along, as a horse 23—Sellings 26—To fear 28—To resign from a Masonic lodge 81—Potential energy 83—Mist 85—To cut in two 37—Highest voice In a quartet 39—Famous youth who met a pieman 42—Arsenal 44—Volumes 46—The jack of a suit of cards 48—To work the. 34—Lively 50—Part of a church §3—Ocean 65—Meshed material 68—Note of scale 60—Right (abbr.) many a heavy fight. Finally in the Battle of the Wilderness under Grant, a shell struck him and shattered his leg from the knee down. He said this did not trouble him so much but when he dragged himself to a tree, another shell “smashed”; his breast and one | arm. He was carried from the field, taken to Fortress Monroe and his leg amputated. He came home but gan- grene set in and his limb had to be re- amputated. I recall distinctly the night it occurred. The doctor was tou intoxicated for the duty and a young novice, studying medicine, Nicodemus, by name, performed a successful oper- ation. Abe was not bern in the woods to be scared by an owl nor to be killed by shattering shells. On meeting Abe of a morning and asking him how he fared, he used to reply, “Fine! Only I have the rheumatiz bad in my wooden leg and I suffer every now and then with the blind sthaagers.” There was something inimitable in the pro- nounciation of “Staggers.” Indeed, his vocabulary was always enough in itself to keep you in constant laugh- ter. After the war he became com- paratively civilized, married, reared a family and in spite of his disabilities, split rails, rived shingles, mended shoes and died the death of a man who, without hope of reward, did his devoir bravely for his country and purchased its deliverance from slav- ery and disruption at a great price. Provides $500,000,000 to Fight Animal Abuse. Washington.— Establishment of a $500,000,000 trust fund for the prose- cution of persons cruel to animals and for the protection of animals and game in all parts of the world, is pro- iA LAA a 1 iM i \ WU pt AY 20 £ perry us. waiting for you time our thoughts are always Gifts and Gifts and Gifts and the giving of a Gift is certainly a joy to most of This Store is truly a Gift Store of the better sort and we have “‘millions’’ of Beautiful Things Solution of Cross-word puzzle No. 3. JUMP P AlS|S|E[T A L A FILIYIRAIL 3. D AV : N IE END LIBFIAR Tull [T]I[O[N TE ERY B Fl I |RIRAR VIAINBRCIL EA BlAIR IN AlT| MU TiO AC DINIE|S [LIYIRIE vided for in the will of Stacy Anson Ransom, scientist, who died August 26. The fund would be accumulated from the investment of $40,000, which is provided in the will filed here. Half of the income would be used to pro- tect animals and game and the re- mainder would be accumulated and in- vested until it reached $500,000,000. Getting Up Nights Tells You of “Danger Ahead.” A Normal Bladder Does Not Act at Nights. A. C. Smith, 41 W. Broad St. Bethlehem, Pa., says: I am willing to tell or write of the benefits received from Lithiated Buchu (Keller Formula). I now rise in the morn- ing refreshed and feeling tine.” It cleanses the bladder as epsom salts do the bowels, thereby neutralizing excess acids and driving out foreign matter which are causes of abnormal bladder action. Keller Laboratory, Mechanicsburg, Ohio. Sold by all drug stores. Locally at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. JEMS F. P. BLAIR and SON JEWELRY SILVERWARE Installment Buying Vs Christmas Saving Which is the Better Plan? Buy the thing you would like to have now, without any money, and pay for it in weekly installments or Save by weekly payments in our Christmas Fund and consider buy- ing when you have the money to pay cash. We leave the answer to you. READING RIGHTS. Subscription Privilege Expires Jan. 1, 1927. If you Hold Any Warrants, we will Arrange. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Bellefonte, Pa. Harvest with Thanksgiving ¢€ T: get the Kern” was an ancient Scottish phrase,’ meaning “to complete the harvest with Thanksgiving.” Those who make this Bank the depositary of thier funds and the agent of their financial operations complete the harvest of their desire with Thanks- giving. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM eA NSN NS SST NS AN MINN SA NA NERNN AN SECT ANA VEIN A ANN ANCRANA A Raa) GRAN VEARRNNAR) QQ Special Sale ~ Winter Coats Owing to the unseasonable weather we are going to have a Clearance Sale of all Ladies’ Children’s and Misses’ Coats 45 Ladies’ Coats, all sizes from 16 to 47, at cost. This will be a saving of from $5 to $10 onjevery Ladies’ Coat and $3 to, $4 on Childrens’ Coats. § [See our;;Coat Racks. All sizesfat a phenomenal price of ; : $4.75 A 8 Lda AT Do Your Christmas Shopping Here Hand embroidered Linens, Luncheon Sets, Towels, Pillow Cases, Napkins, Night Gowns, Buffet Covers Lyon & Company