Bellefonte, Pa., January 21, 1927. First Philadelphia Pastorate AUTOBIOGRAPHY. ‘By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D. In the year 1874, after two years service at the Allentown church, 1 was surprised by receiving an invita- tion from Samuel C. Perkins, Clerk of Session, to conduct the approach- ing Sabbath service at the First Pres- byterian Church,Washington Square, Philadelphia, which I accepted without the slightest idea that it involved a ‘Call if the service made a favorable impression. Mr. Perkins, on being questioned later by me as to how he had become aware of my existence, said, “When I was at the Yale Alumni «dinner and was seated beside Dr. At- water, Professor of Philosophy at Princeton, I asked him if he could sug- gest anyone for the vacant First church pulpit and he answered, ‘Send for the young pastorat Allentown, New Jersey, whom I heard preach a -cery creditable sermon inthe First ‘Presbyterian Church, Princeton,at the time of his graduation.’ ” Thus his recollection after two years of an ef- fort at preaching I had made and which I thought a failure profoundly influenced my life. I was invited to remain over and conduct the Wednes- ‘day evening service also. I don’t think anybody could have been less in- terested than I was, as I always had my thoughts turned to New York rather than Philadelphia if perchance «desire and opportunity for a change coincided. The church, though but lately decorated at a cost of $6,000, seemed rather cold and forbidding, al- most barnlike and capable of seating some 2000 people. The pulpit was perched high up and far from the body of the pews in order to command the vast galleries. It was well calculated to crush out all spontaneity in a peacher and neutralize all the inspi- ration derivable from a near seated audience. The organ and choir were at the rear, which confined the praise ‘service to a fine musical performance ‘of the choir in which the congregation but slightly participated. But to ‘suggest any radical change in the in- side of the church would have been .as great a desecration as tampering with the Ark of the Covenant and too greatly disturbed the shades of Albert Barnes and his historic predecessors. On leaving the church, a friend, Mr. Lee, took the liberty of advising me strongly not to commit suicide by ac- cepting a Call to this down town <hurch, undergoing slow and sure de- pletion by migration of old time fami: lies westward, saying it had already gone so far that Dr. Herrick John- son, a superior preacher, afterwards Professor in McCormick Seminary, had for six years vainly sought to stem the tide and dicouraged by the fact that the in the center aisle never had an occupant, had resigned in dispair. Needless to say “his well “meant advice did not impress me until later, as the idea of a Call was furthest from my thoughts. But almost im- mediately a Call was extended and the matter had to be taken under serious consideration. Two things decided me to accept, the most important of which was that it would satisfy my dream as a preacher by furnishing me an un- rivalled opportunity to reach young men, the medical colleges being close at hand and the boarding houses crowded with clerks. As for the de- pletion by migration this piqued my courage. One day a parishioner of mine, a farmer, took me for a ride through the pine barrens of New Jer- sey, five miles from Allentown, that are sandwiched between the rich lands of Monmouth County on either side. Away from every human habitation, in the center of this waste was a cot- tage and a blacksmith shop surrounded by so many teams and vehicles cof «every description that I asked, “Is there a public sale here today?” “Oh, ‘no these are customers of the smithy.” “But is this not an impossible loca- tion, so far from his patrons?” “They are willing to come any distance for this smith knows how to drive a shoe, temper a blade, mend a utensil little short of perfection.” It was a trea- sured lesson for life and I counselled myself that if I just proved a good mechanic at my trade of sermonizing, I need not fear about patrons and the double six pews in front of the pul- pit would be filled. I accepted the Call and was duly installed and for the ten years of my pastorate in that down town church had an average audience of 1200 at every service, though in that period I :saw almost every residential dwelling on the several streets furnishing the supporters of the church vacated and turned into boarding and business houses. Ralph. Waldo Emerson says something like “If a man is the arti- ‘ficer of a superior rat trap, patrons in plenty will besiege his doors.” Or in a deeper sense, “If a man plants ‘himself on his divine instincts the world will come around to him.” In the second year of my pastorate at the First Church, my father and moth- er came from Winchester to visit the Centennial and attending services, for ‘the first time heard their son preach. When my father was a merchant in ‘the days when there were no drum- mers and merchants must needs go in person to the city to buy goods, on one of his yearly visits to Philadel- phia, he took my mother with him when I was too much of an infant to ‘be left behind. Albert Barnes was then much in the ecclesiastical eye, be- ing the storm center of the New School Movement that disrupted the Presbyterian church. My mother, al- ways progressive in her views, sym- pathized with the position taken by Mr. Barnes and when Sabbath came ‘was eager to see and hear the pastor of ‘the First Church and for the first time attended the service with me, a babe in her arms. The second time she was in that church was in the Cen- tennial year, twenty-four years later, and looking up she saw standing in ‘the place of that great Divine, that first six pews. —_— babe of hers and might have rever- ently said that “the travail of her soul was satisfied.” My dream was fulfilled in having during those years in my audience crowds of young men from that and all parts of the city. It was a task to try to the utmost the mettle of a young man of 24, the audi- ence including not only young men such as Edwin S. Stuart, James Gay Gordon, Joseph Caven and many oth- ers conspicuous later in the business and political history of the city, but Judges of the Courts, Supreme Jus- tices, Trunkey, Sharswood, Stirrel, ete, and many surgeons, doctors and lawyers of distinction. When in the city, Andrew G. Curtin, of Bellefonte, Ex-War Governor and Ambassador to Russia, always attend- ed First Church services and for an entire winter after his return from Russia gave me the pleasure of seeing him occupy my own family pew. In his youth my father informed me he was called, “Laughing Andy.” The gift of scintillating wit allied to an acute intellect made him the most popular “stump speaker” in the his- tory of the State. He was a man of lofty stature and a rarely handsome and refined countenance. The most conspicuous of the war Governors, he was aways at the elbow of Arbaham Lincoln with the full strength of Pennsylvania resources in men and money. Devoted to the last degree to the welfare of the soldiers in camps and field, he was the object of un- bounded admiration. Amongst my hearers, Mr. John Wanamaker found a place when his duties permitted and was a life long correspondent and friend. The year before his death he visited me at my farmhouse at Bed- ford in company with Dr. Radcliffe, of Washington, an old-time friend, and found me in rough farm clothes. On parting I said, “If you get up there before I do, tell Wagner, of Paris, apostle of the Simple Life, that you saw cne simpleton down here leading it. Perhaps the auditor who gave me the greatest pleasure was John Cham- bers, the “War Horse” of the Phila- delphia clergy, who having no service of his own, attended mine on Sunday nights, the several last years of his life. This and the fact that he some- times stood in the pulpit with me were sources of the keenest satisfaction, seeing that in my boyhood he had fre- quently in summer vacations preached for my pastor at Bedford and I was deputed to bring him with my horse and runabout to the church from the Springs which, on one occasion, he in- formed me, he had attended for 47 years in succession. In the pulpit at that time he made such an impression upon me that I felt I would give worlds to preach like him. Never even afterwards did I hear a man so gifted, not so much with scholarship but heaven-born, natural, impressive eloquence. Among my Elders were Samuel Perkins, President of the Pub- lic Building Commissions; George Griffiths, Superintendent of Sabbath School; Samuel T. Bodine, father of Samuel T. Bodine, President of U. G. I. Company; Mr. Purvis, father of the distinguished preacher and professor; John B. Gest, President of Fidelity Trust Company, and among others William G. Crowell, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Com- pany. I think he was like the swallow that builds its nest neath the eaves of God’s house, the services of the sanc- tuary of the First church being his meat and drink. Mr. Crowell was in- timately associated with George H. Stuart and Mr. John Wanamaker in founding the Young Men’s Christian Association and the Men’s Noon Day Prayer Meeting in Jaynes Hall. He told me that he had loaned Mr. Wan- amaker $1,000 in gold with which he began business at Oak Hall. He was a man of such guarded and veracious speech that I would believe him im- plicitly, the whole world to the con- trary. His statement is corroborated by the fact that John Wanamaker's Biographer states that it took $375 cash for fixtures and $700 for cloth and that his entire capital amounted to les than $2000. It is further strengthened by the fact that often when Mr. Wanamaker met me, even down to late in life Le was wont to say, “The sight of you always brings up in my memory my dear friend, Wiliam G. Crowell.” This with a certain degree of emotion be- traying an especial esteem. I also know that each recurring Christmas, Mr. Wanamaker made Mr. Crowell a handsome present. The gift on one of these occasions was a massive, cir- cular, gold chain of great length, cost- ing at least several hundred dollars and this was the apparent reason of Mr. Crowell’s allusion to the loan and that the chain was in grateful appre- ciation. Mr. Crowell conducted the purchase of the Pennsylvania Railroad depot for Mr. Wanamaker for $500,- 000. Shortly after the Centennial, when Mr. Wanamaker had stocked the new store with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of goods which per- haps did not move out as quickly as hoped, Mr. Crowell said he heard that Mr. Wanamaker was in financial straits and he went into his private office at 9 a. m. to find a Notary Pub- lic there. Mr. Crowell’s countenance fell as he thought the catastrophe had arrived but Mr. Wanamaker hastened to reassure him, saying, “William, it is not so bad as that though this was the 160th note I have had to meet this morning.” That a man who had be- gun business with little more than $1000 borrowed capital should have revolutionized the methods of doing business, built palaces of honorable commerce in Philadelphia and New York, filled them with countless mil- lions worth of always strictly reliable merchandise, identified himself active- ly with every good cause of civics, pol- itics, philanthrophy and religion in the brief space of one human life, cer- tainly bespeaks the superman. He had the greatest capacity I have ever known to shut one drawer of his mind and open another. At 12 noon he could leave his private office where he had been absorbed to the uttermost in business affairs, go to a public meet- ing and make as creditable a speech upon the subject for which it was call- ed as if he had never a thought on any other matter. He could alternate the full use of his faculties to a degree possessed only by the greatest histori- cal characters. His Epitaph might be well summed up in the words, “Seest thou a man diligent in business, he shall stand before Kings.” Something Mr. Wanamaker surely did. The body of my pewholders was composed of what were called the first families and social leaders of Phila- delphia such as the Haddocks, Car- stairs, Bories, Pauls, Bodines, Per- kins, Earles, Henrys, Savages, Mc- Ilvaines, Sharswoods, Lippincotts, Mc- Alisters, Wardens, Neills and many others. This was sufficiently over- awing to a country youth but late arrived from his farm environment. But I was taken to their hearts and treated doubtless with much charit- able patience and tolerance. One of the homes in which I much delight- ed to ungird was that of James W. Paul, whose hospitality General and Mrs. Grant always elected to enjoy when in Philadelphia and proffered Mr. James W. Paul a seat on the bench of the Supreme Court of the United States, which he refused. Mrs. Paul treated me kindly as a mother. Her youngest daughter, Miss Mamie Paul, then a scholar in the Sunday School, who was afterwards married to William Waldorf Astor, was quite the most beautiful and loviest dispo- sitioned girl I ever came in contact with in Philadelphia. It was not strange that when her husband was Ambassador at Rome she became the preferred and inseparable companion of Queen Marghereta. It was with frequent pleasure I sat at the board of Mrs. McAlister, Portico Row. At her table I met Julia Schaumberg, the famous belle of Philadelphia, over whom several generations of the men of fashion raved. She was the most brilliant woman conversationalist I ever met and rounded out her career with a much frequented Salon in Paris. It was her intellectual piq- uancy and brilliancy that gave her an unprecedented long social ascend- ancy. Mrs. McAlister married Colonel Heywood, of South Carolina, a critic and dramatist of distinction. They removed to Rome and occupied a pal- ace between the Castle of St. Angele and the Vatican in which I had the pleasure of visiting them and being entertained by them and found that Colonel Heywood had been honored with the appointment of the Pope’s Chamberlain and a daughter had mar- ried an Italian Count. Mr. William G. Warden’s home in Irving Place and Germantown, and St. Augustine, was to me also a delightful atmosphere of relaxation, Mr. Warden himself being an active church worker and generous supporter of all religious agencies, a man of great force of character and vast business activities. At that time he was sole owner of the Atlantic Re- fining Company, which remains as a monument to his organizing genius. I was honored with his life long friend- ship and cooperation. I was royally entertained all through the years by Mr. Frank Bodine, brother of Samuel, and a man of exceptionally refined manners. Abraham Perkins, one of the last of the old time, courtly man- nered merchants of Philadelphia, whose mourning store is now known as Leary’s Bookstore, treated me, youth as I was, with the utmost con- sideration and kindness. But the most congenial and restful home to which I was most frequently welcomed was that of Miss Meta Paul, daughter of Dr. Paul, occupying a mansion at 9th and Pine, with her two sisters and her brother, Rodman. Here in a chair placed for me in front of an open coal fire, I had many a tete a tete talk, as with an elder sister, with this highly reverenced and cultured woman, per- sonifying all that was most praise- worthy in the social traditions of old time Philadelphia. ; rie gp Frenchman First to Use Gasoline En- gine. _ The first attempt to employ gaso- line as a motive power was made by a Frenchman, Pierre Ravel, who pat- ented “a steam generator heated by mineral oils, to be applied to steam locomotive on ordinary roads.” Ra- vel’s engine was fitted to a small ear- riage, and developed three horse pow- er. The Franco-German war put an end to Ravel’s experiments for a time, but years later he built a motor car in which petroleum was used for the di- rect generation of motive power. In 1876 Lentz invented a burner by which a mixture of gasoline and other naph- thas, called massout, was used as fuel on steamships. About the same time gasoline was used as an illuminant in street lamps, and later a new use was found for it in the manufacture of varnish and oilcloth. Gasoline, crude petroleum, continued to be a drug on the market until the inven- tion of the gasoline motor, and its ap- plication to automobiles, boats, air- planes, and hundreds of industrial uses. Several inventors helped to inaug- urate the “Age of Gasoline,” but the chief of them was George L. Selden of Rochester (N. Y.) the father of the automobile.—Chicago Journal. SE ———p————— Reforestation New Subject of Re- search. Arthur C. McIntyre, a government research specialist in forestry, has joined the forestry department of the Pennsylvania State College to study research problems in reforestation. Mr. McIntyre has been engaged in similar work with the United States Forest Service, under the direction of the Southwest Forest Experiment Sta- tion. There he investigated conditions in the western regions from the Black Hills to California and through the Southwest. Mr. McIntyre is a graduate forester from the Michigan State College. He has spent many years in investiga- tional work. His whole time while at the Pennsylvania State Coliege experi- ment station, where he took up his new work early this month, will be devoted to forest research, ine, amounting to 8 per |. cent. of the distilled product of the Substantial Basis for Most Common Beliefs It is a fact proved by actual count that a large number of persons pre- fer the risk of being run over through having stepped from a sidewalk into the road, than to continue on the curb If by so doing they are compelled to bass under some ladder which has been erected against the side of » building, This superstition that it is unlucky fo pass beneath a ladder dates back to the time when the hanging of wrongdoers was a very common oc- currence. The nearest tree was usually chosen, but when towns sprung up and trees were less available, a lad- der propped against the wall madr the gibbet, The phrase “not worth a cuss” which is often applied to some person or article, was formerly “not worth a cress,” writes Mr. Charles Platt in Popular Superstitions. The expres- sion, he says, related to nasturtiums, which were a nuisance to gardeners because of their habit of scattering seeds all over the place, The belief that May is an unlucky month for marriage is due, he thinks, to the fact that the Romans dedl- cated that month to old people, which thereby suggests that young lovers had better take a back seat for @ time. Rest Not Advisable in Nervous Weakness Rest cures are going out of fashion and physicians are prescribing work cures instead, says Dr. George J. Wright in Hygeia Magazine. Pro- longed nervous weakness is usually considered the result of some other condition, such as a physical defect that reduces the body’s reserve strength or impairs the process of re- pair so that ordinary physical or men- tal activity is no longer possible. In- fections may produce the same effect of nervous weakness, Emotional disturbances are particu- larly depressing and exhausting. Vari- ous physical ills, such as headaches, stomach distress, a neck pain or a choking feeling are often due to emo- tional or nervous strain, but not to overwork. Work and worry may be very exhausting, but work by itself i= not harmful. People vary in their inherent mental and nervous strength as they do in physical strength. Persons leading a qulet, tranquil life may never discover that they are weak mentally or ner- vously. However, sudden crises, such as a war, force them to exert them- selves beyond their strength and a) breakdown follows, . Great Engineering Feat fhe construction of 600 miles of the canadian Pacific railway through the Rocky mountains in British Columbia constituted an exceedingly difficult en- gineering feat. The syndicate build- ing the road actually constructed the line from Montreal to Calgary, 100 miles from the mountains, before an available route through the ranges was discovered. The men who over- came the multitudinous engineering problems of those 600 miles of moun- tain construction erected a monument to themselves for all time. Before the work was started, the syndicate was granted terms considered over-gener- ous by political opponents of the gov- ernment and there was much opposi- tion to the project. One statesman predicted that the road never would earn enough to pay for axle grease.— Dearborn Independent. Worship Monkey God in many of the central Indian states the princes, on succession, have thair foreheads marked in blood from the thumb or toe of a Bhil, or bowman, They believe this is a mark of Bhil allegiance, but it more probably is a relic of days when the tribe was in | power in India, says a bulletin from the National Geographic society. They have binding oaths, the most sacred being that sworn by a dog, the Bhil praying that the curse of a dog may fall upon him who breaks his word. For centuries Hanuman, the monkey god, has been the chief divinity of these people. Offerings also are made to the much-feared goddess of small- pox and stone worship is still found among them. Short but Merry Life The gentleman bee is the world’s greatest loafer. He sings and plays all summer long. So long as the sun shines and the honey is coming in plentifully, the ladies of the hive who do the work, let him have all he wants to eat and let him live in the hive, But when winter comes his fun is over. The workers don’t waste their stingers killing him, they Just shove him out of the hive with orders to stay out. With free board and lodging cut off he dies in a few hours. So says Mrs. Hamilton, bee woman, who knows more about bees than most of us know about humans.—Capper’s Weekly. Given String of Names The longest name yet wished on a defenseless infant has been bestowed on a daughter of Arthur Pepper, Liv- erpool (Eng.) laundryman. The child’s initials exhaust the alphabet, Taking the letters in order, omitting p, which is provided by Pepper, the child was christened Anna Bertha Cecilia’ Diana Emily Fanny Gertrude Hypatia Inez Jane Kate Louise Maud Nora Ophella Quince Rebecca Starkey Terest Ulysis Venus Winifred Xenophon Yetty Zeno Pepper. She is sometimes called Miss Alphabet Pepper for ‘short. Odd Quirk of Nature . . in Recognized Genius The annals of literary forgery have nv more pathetic instance than the so-called Rowley poems of Thomas Chatterton. When Chatterton, perhaps the most shining example of precocity to be found in literary history, was twelve years old, he conceived the idea of fabricating the literary relics of a monk to whom he gave the name Rowley and whom he ascribed to the Fifteenth century. By the time he was seventeen he had aroused some interest in the poems of Rowley but not enough to satisfy his imagination, So he wrote to Horace Walpole, in- closing some pages of manuscript and inferring he had other papers and poems. Walpole wrote, asking to see whatever documents he might have and Chatterton sent so many as to arouse Walpole’s suspicion and cause him to call in the poets, Mason ang Gray, They pronounced the poems a forgery. Walpole dispatched a letter of admonition to Chatterton. Three months later he returned the manu- scripts, which, with the exception of one poem, never saw print until after Chatterton had taken his life in a moment of despair. lle was not yet eighteen when he died. So brilliant, so versatile was he that even those contemporaries who condemned him conceded that in many respects he was a greater genius. By some queer quirk of nature he had chosen to act the imposter, where he might with every prospect of renown have produced his work as his own.—Dearborn Independ- ent. Gestures Tell More Than Spoken Words It is one of the most difficult things in the world to act a lie. Gesture is, in fact, far more revealing—and far more truthful than speech. Compar- atively few persons possess complete control of this “language of the body.” Neither a golden tongue nor a voice thrilling with passion is any match for a contradicting gesture or glance. Scientific study of gestures has shown that they fall naturally into two classes—acceptance or rejection. Almost every gesture of which we are capable belongs to one or other of these classes, for, in truth, the lan- guage of gesture is much simpler than the language of the lips. Upward movements of the head, hands, arms or eyelids belong to the former class, and downward movements to the lat- ter. There are few exceptions to this, but they only prove the rule. For example, there Is a way of ralsing the eyebrows that expresses a sneer, but then a sneer is deliberate, whereas the gestures that are really tell-tale are always made without deliberation. Got Name and Victory Tradition says that the “Lango- oardi” were originally called “Win- nili.” Under the leadership of Ibor and Alo, sons of a prophetess called “Gambara,” they came into conflict with the Vandals. The leaders of the Vandals prayed to Wodan for victory, while Gambara and her sons invoked Frea. Wodan promised victory to those whom he should see at sunrise. Frea directed Winnili to bring their women with their hair around their faces like beards. He then turned Wo- dan’s couch around so that when he woke at sunrise he first saw the host of the Winnill. He asked “Qui sunt isti Longibarbi?” “Who are these long beards?” Frea replied, “As thou hast given them the name, give them also the victory.” They conquered in the ensuing battle and were thenceforth known as “Langobardi.” Finns Once Powerful " The Finns are descendants of a west: ¢rn branch of the great racial family of which the Mongolians are the mod- ern representatives in the Far East. But there is evidence that the Finns, or a closely allied race, were at a pre- historic time spread over a large area of Europe. In the course of time they mixed with other races to such an ex- tent that some of their original char- acteristics have been modified or lost, while some of those of other races have become Finnish. The original stock is now represented in Europe in a good many other places than Fin- land. The Hungarians, the Lapps, the Samoyeds, the Esthonians, and vari- ous people of Russia may be num- bered among these representatives. . Plants and Light All plants require some light. Sun- iight supplies the energy which causes chemical reactions to take place in- side the leaves. These reactions con- vert the raw food elements Into food elements available to the plant, says Nature Magazine. Therefore, such sun-loving plants as geraniums, roses, and abutilon, when set away in a dark corner, do not thrive so well as when placed in a sunny window. On the other hand, plants which like a mild amount of sunlight, and this includes palms, aspidistra, ferns, and many of the vines, do not thrive if put in a sunny location. Too Much Care The human body is good for only about 70 years anyway. Why keep it too much wrapped up in cotton wool? You won’t succeed in living forever. If you are healthy use your health even to the point of wearing it out: that's what it is for. As Bernard Shaw says, “spend all you have be- fore you die.” You cannot use gour cake and have it, and the worst of all ‘is ‘to let it mold on the shelf, Don’t outlive yourself. A master word ia work: ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW S KLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im all courts. Office, room 18 Crider's Exchange. b1-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business en- trusted to his care. Offices—No. High street. 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 Gers man. Office in Criders Exchan Bellefonte, Pa. 55.8 5, East 67-44 mm. PHYSICIANS R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State Colle, Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Blige: 8S. GLENN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his Sat D dence. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg., High 8t., 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 stock of Feeds on hand all the time COW CHOW 249% DAIRY FEED $50.00 per Ton Try our 22% Dairy Feed $44.00 per Ton We can make you a 30 to 32% Dairy Feed, to use with your corn and oats chop, made of Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten and Bran at $46.00 per Ton Why pay more for something not so good ? — Our Poultry Feeds Can’t be Better Scratch grains........... $2.40 per H. Wagner's poultry Mash.. 2.90 per H. Cotton seed meal 43%. ...$42.00 per ton Oil meal 849%............. 54.00 per ton Gluten feed 23%.......... 42.00 per ton Alfalfa fine grade......... 45.00 per ton Bran... 0 36.00 per ton Middlings ............... 38.00 per ton Mixed Chep.............. 38.00 per ton (These Prices are at the Mii) $2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery. b. Y. Wagner & Go., Inc 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces “ot dl ANNAN Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully ana Promptly Furnished 66-15-tf. Fine Job Printing A SPECIALTY at the WATCEMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can 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. It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. Bellefonte 43-18-1yr. State College’
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers