Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 11, 1927, Image 3

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    Demon fa
Bellefonte, Pa., February 11, 1927.
Winchester and London.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D.
Undoubtedly the most ancient city
in England is Winchester and on the
top of Twyford Down, behind St.
Catherine, the vestiges discover them-
selves of the great Roman road from
Porta Magna to Vinta Blagrum or
Winchester. As near as possible we
followed this high road through the
meadows that stretch away from the
Itchen and over the Downs of St.
Catherine to the Cathedral City. The
ride carries us through some of the
most engaging scenery and productive
land in Great Britian. Here and there
delicate and tempting vales open up
their vistas of exquisite green. Sin-
gle or in pairs are scattered cottages
which bespeak a love of beauty un-
known among us. If indeed it be true,
that wherever you see a flower in a
cottage or a bird cage at the casement,
you may feel sure that the inmates
are better and wiser than their neigh-
bors, then the English peasantry are
the best in the world, for nothing im-
pressed me so much in this short
journey as the cottages, hidden away
amid vines and flowers, like birds-
nests in the tree-boughs. All archi-
tectural barrenness was covered down
by the craft of Nature, the jasmine
here, the rose there, and the Virginia
creeper everywhere clustered over
lattice and threshold and oft running
over and clothing with green the whole
bracken wall, gave humble but em-
phatic tokens of attention to some-
thing beyond absorption in the mere
servile labors of life. From peer to
peasant, in England, the love of flow-
ers seems to be deeply rooted. In-
deed, traveling everywhere in England,
there is the impression that the Eng-
lishman’s reverence for nature is very
strong and he does not hesitate to sac-
rifice to it the instinct of utility. Much
of his fair isle could be put to more
productive use than parks and pre-
serves for a gentleman’s enjoyment.
The fields would grow more corn if
the great spreading oaks were cut
down, and the purse of the owner
would be fuller, but Nature would be
robbed of half her loveliness. It is
harvest time and the fields are aflame
with harvest colors. The men and wo-
men and children, with bright colored
clothes, are all in the field a-haying.
It seems like a gala scene. Familiar
with the discomfort of hay-harvest on
a Pennsylvania farm, the broiling
heat, the flying seeds, the sweat, the
intolerable closeness of the mows in
the great barn, this scene in the Eng-
lish meadows, with the workers so de-
lightfully cocl, the women in their
white aprons, was a revelation. Read-
ing Thompson Seaton, in our boyhood,
we used to think it an outrageous po-
etic license that could turn haymak-
ing into a pleasant ideality but thence
forward we could pardon it. If Eng-
lish workmen receive less reward they
certainly toil in the fields under less
‘hot and exhausting conditions. The
life of an outdoor laborer in England
we should think much more endurable
than a like condition in America. The
sun is an almost unknown quanity in
the farmer’s calculation and was so
coy and distant that year, that they
were reduced to the extremity of pray-
ing for him to shine once more in mid-
summer.
Thus through the beautiful lands
we rolled on toward the village of St.
Cross and by St. Catherine’s Hill, the
northern slope of which was covered
by the boys of Winchester College, at
play. On this hill, where we lingered
to take in a final view of the beauty
of the scene, Cromwell stood and from
its summit battered the castle of Win-
chester and forced it to surrender.
Over against it, to the northwest,
Winchester lifted itself like a battle-
ment against the sky with its vast
length of cathedral, the fine tower of
its college and the mass of that por-
tion of Charles II palace which still
remained. Once the capital and
stronghold of southwestern England,
Winchester, now derives its chief im-
portance from the ancient and splen-
did eccelesiastical establishments of
which it is the seat, the Bishop of
Winchester ranking permanently in
dignity next after those of London
and Durham. The cathedral as it now
stands, is a nearly complete record of
the successive stages of architecture
from its rise up to the 16th century.
We can credit, without difficulty, the
- historical tradition that, King Lucius,
becoming a convert to Christianity,
erected here A. D. 164, the first Chris-
tian church, on the site of the pagan
temple. In the old stones we can read
the struggles of the first Roman set-
tlers, the fierce resistance of the Sax-
ons, demolition by the Danes and re-
paration by the great Alfred. What
tragic histories were enacted around
about that majestic central tower!
How oft did the waves of successive
conquest threaten to topple it down
but forever it stood, defiantly firm.
Not its dedication to the Trinity nor
to the apostles, Peter and Paul, saved
it, but the honest mason who plumbed
it true. Portions of the transept and
nave, too, are not a day younger than
one thousand years and the Norman
architecture sketches its rise and fall
in the whole exterior. The building
is, as usual, in the form of a cross
and is one of the largest English
cathedrals, being 545 feet long.
While the exterior may disappoint by
its plainness, the interior amply
makes up for the deficiency of out-
ward display. The vast length of
the vista made by the nave and the
choir with the splendid ceiling over-
head, the lines of columns and arches
on each hand and the large and beau-
tiful window behind the choir, termi-
nating the view, all contribute to pro-
vide an impression of grand solemni-
ty and magnificence. Richness of
ornamentation discovers itself in
every object examined in detail. An-
cient chambers and tombs exhibit
some of the finest effects of Gothic
sculpture in the world. The chantries
of William Wykeham, Bishop Fox,
Cardinal Beaufort and Bishop Wayn-
-—
flete are particularly superb. Behind
the altar is a stone screen of wonder-
ful elaboration and beauty. The altar
is ornamented with West’s painting of
the “Raising of Lazarus from the
Dead,” one of his most masterful
works. Many relics of anitquity are
likewise preserved here.
Lingering in Winchester only long
enough to visit the College Chapel,
with its famous Jesse Window and
the school room on whose walls in
old Latin phrase, the scholars are
admonished thus, “Either learn or de-
part, or in the third place, be flogged,”
we took train and left the old cap-
ital for the new, which has so far
eclipsed the former in size and gran-
deur.
LONDON.
Nothing impresses the traveler on
arriving in London more forcibly than
the comparison he must needs make
between the English and American
newspaper press, distinctly, it must be
confessed, to the disadvantage of the
latter. The English people, being pre-
eminently a sea-faring nation and a
large proportion of her people having
their path in the mighty waters, as
well as surpassing all other nations in
the number and wide distribution of
her colonies, the press must needs
mirror daily, the round earth in their
news columns. From the four quar-
ters of the globe the happenings of
each day are flashed to London. To
read an English newspaper is an edu-
cation in cosmopolitanism and breadth
of view. The editorials are especially
noteworthy, being written by men of
light and leading in the literary world
who recognize that the press has a
mission in educating and correcting
public sentiment. Since the passing
of Watterson, Dana, Greeley and Cur-
tis, the American newspapers have
been dignifid by no editors of intellec-
tual distinction. There is nothing in
the editorial columns that ranks above
the commonplaces such as any report-
er might write, and so colorless are
they that they might be omitted with-
out sense of loss by their readers. As
for forming and leading public opin-
ion, they are opportunists trailing far
in the rear with ears to the ground
and never the courage of a mouse in
grappling public wrongs and stem-
ming public abuses. As for the news
columns, they are limited in the ex-
treme, rarely describing a larger comn-
pass than the city of their publica-
tion. The news of the world is con-
spicucus for its absence. Endiess
columns are taken up by events better
fitted for a Police Gazette, and by the
inane functions of the newly rich mas-
querading as high society. It would
seem that a prize fighter’s bout is
more important than the greatest de-
bate in the Senate Chamber upon sub-
jects of national moment and the issue
of a lawn tennis game more note-
worthy than the events upon which
the destiny of nations may turn. The
final deposit made upon one’s mind by
the perusal of a London daily such as
the Times, is a painful realization of
the utter provincialism of the staple
city newspaper published in the Unit-
ed States.
Our first visit in London was to
Westminister Abbey and on that day,
we beheld a funeral pageant. The
great doors were thrown open and
the body of Arthur Penhyn Stanley
was being borne to its last receptacle
within the walls. No worthier name
has ever been added to the Abbey’s
scroll of distinguished dead. A
preacher of Christianity by life as
well as word, he was loved and ven-
erated by multitudes who had little
veneration for the clergy in general.
An ardent defender of the Church of
England, he was yet a link between
the various sects who, in the violence
of their denominationalism, would
rend each other and the Church of
God in pieces. An enthusiast for hu-
manity, men of all nations met around
him and found him, though an earnest
Englishman, a real brother. His cath-
olicity of feeling attracted not only all |
classes of men but the best and high-
est culture of his time. The thinkers
of all climes and all religious parties
were irresistibly drawn to the man
who appeared behind the books bear-
ing the name of Dean Stanley. His
“Jewish Church” will live as a work
of genius, but above the genius of his
works has always been the eloquence
of his personality. If we in America
and brethren in the most distant col-
onies felt this attraction to the man,
it was not strange that his death call-
ed forth an outburst of grief never be-
fore exhibited for any English clergy-
man. Not only the lesson of Catho-
licity but of patience and ‘hope to
those who think themselves poorly
equipped for high uses and grand re-
sults might well be drawn from the
career of this great man. Arthur
Stanley had a poor natural equipment.
His was veritably a “vile body” or
more iruly indeed, a body of humilia-
tion. His voice was not sweet nor
magnetic yet his thought was so
wholesome and noble men were com-
pelled to listen when he opensd his
lips. He never could distinguish col-
ors nor see any landscape vividly,
yet borrowing the eyes of others he
described with as fine a delicacy and
power as if his own eye had penetrai-
ed every nook and cranny of nature.
His taste was defective and but for
the watchful care of his friends he
would have forgotten to eat, yet he
was the most convivial of men ap-
parently and an unrivalled host. With
a nature of the most untoward char-
acter, he yet conquered every difficulty
and was most effective in the aspect of
life in which he was equipped the
least. What wonder the great Abbey
would not hold the mass of humanity
who sought to pay his body the last
reverence. An unusual hush of grief
filled the place as the burial service
was chanted and the lesson read by
Canon Prothero, assisted by Rev. Dr.
Farrar. Then the organ played the
“Dead March” in Saul. This is the
time when Westminister Abbey is
most sublime! The solemn notes of
the great organ peal forth.
“The door is closed, but soft and deep
Around the awful arches sweep
Such airs as soothe a Hermits sleep,
From each carved nook and fretted bend
Cornice and gallery seem to send
Tones that with seraph hymns might
blend.”
While the instrument still is play-
ing the cortege moves around the
chancil headed by the Archbishop of
Canterbury, step by step they follow
the body under grey, time-worn
arches, past tombs long forgotten
though they hold royal dust, past an-
tique statues and dusky painted win-
dows to the broad steps behind the
altar leading to Henry VII chapel.
The steps are lined with choristers.
In a niche in the southern corner, be-
side the Duke de Montpensier, Dean
Stanley was placed. The stalls of the
Knights of the Bath were filled with
weeping ladies and the whole chapel
with the representatives of all that is
grandest and best in England. Amidst
the chanting of the choristers and sol-
emn words of his venerable colleagues
and of regretful friends of every class
and party and land, Dean Stanley’s
body is laid in its last resting place
against the Day of Resurrection.
Westminster Abbey is pre-emi-
nent as the sepulcher of the philoso-
phers, heroes and Kings of England,
As a work of men’s hands, the Abbey
is indeed one of the most exquisite
ideas ever transmuted into stone. It
is marked with the impress of anti-
quity, solemn with religious awe,
adorned with all the magnificence of
ecclesiastical profusion, with dim win-
dows, fretted pillars, long colonnades,
splendid arches and dark ceilings. But
these impressions are greatly en-
hanced by the scene of Death’s enor-
mous and awful labors, to which West-
minster Abbey introduces the behold-
er. Well may one reverence the pow-
er of death, as from the midst of this
temple, he casts his eyes around on
walls filled with the statues, the in-
scriptions, the monuments of the illus-
trious dead. Here you may walk over
Kings, who trampled down thousands
in their day. They lived like gods 1m
their time but they died like men and
now their ashes are but the equal of
the less fortunate who repose by their
side. Here is the Coronation Chair,
in which the Kings and the Queens,
from the days of William the Con-
queror, A. D. 1066, have sat to be
crowned but humble as I am I pos-
sess more consequence in the present
scene than the greatest prince of them
all. There in yonder south transept
are the remains of poets, Chaucer,
Shakespeare, Milton, Southey, Thomp-
son, who swept with masterly hand
all the chords of the human heart;
hard by repose the great novelists,
Thackeray and Dickens, who delineat-
ed with such rare powers the life of
their contemporaries in all its varied
aspects; next are the inscriptions of
the historians, Macauley, Thirlwall,
Grote, who told so eloquently the story
of the race’s vicissitudes; scientists, |’
too, beginning at the great name of
Newton and including many a seer
who looked with piercing and success-
ful eyes into the great Arcana of Na-
ture’s secrets, doctrinaires, South,
Butler, Paley, the Wesley Brothers
and many others who moulded the re-
ligious convictions of their time;
statesmen, such as Lord Catham, Peel;
Pitt, Fox, Channing, Palmerston, who
guided the nation through great crises
very skillfully; musicians, who charm-
ed their fellow men and actors, who
diverted them. How many glorious
names there are in this Campe Santo
of the illustrious dead! What mighty
hopes of the human heart were crush-
ed out forever as the stones were laid
over them! How has pride attended
these puny children of the dust even
to the tomb! Could aught signify
more profoundly the vanity of human
life! They toiled their brief span to
gain a transient immortality and all
at length retired to the narrow house
with no attendant but the worm, no
flattery but an epitaph!
“Too frequent dreams of the great busy
world
Come over me and I pine and strive for
fame
Widely my life boat's sails are all un-
furled
,And I forget where bound and whence
I came.
Yet here I pause and pray I may remem-
. ber
Where leads my path and why I sojourn
here.
Auto Legislation.
Washington, D. C.—That the auto-
mobile still continues to be the favor-
ite form of indoor sport for our solons
is indicated by the fact that approxi-
mately five thousand bills legislating
for and regulating the automobile will
be introduced in the forty-four State
Legislatures scheduled to convene this
winter.
Thos. P. Henry, President of the |
A. A. A. at whose instance the survey
was made, expressed the opinion that
the very progressive and clear-cut
program adopted by State automobile
and local clubs affiliated with the na-
tional motoring body, would prevent
the enactments of the most undesir-
able types of legislation sponsored in
some of the Legislatures.
Here are some of the mojor subjects
that will be thrown into the legisla-
tive drag-net: The adoption of a uni-
form motor vehicle law; various gas
tax proposals, the majority of them
designed to increase the rate of the
tax; Compulsory Automobile Liabili-
ty Insurance; legislation to eliminate
speed traps and “gyp” clubs, nation-
wide reciprocity as to registration and
license plates; speed limit legislation;
uniform certificates of title laws;
drunken drivers’ law; legislation deai-
ing with short measures of gasoline
and oil.
“While the legislative programs of
our motor clubs are by no means uni-
form but vary according to local con-
ditions, the clubs are on the whole in
the vanguard of the battle for sane
and necessary legislation,” Mr. Henry
continued.
“By and large, our survey shows
that the great majority of local A. A.
A. motoring units throughout the
country are either in favor of compul-
sory automobile insurance or advo-
cate the postponement of the issue un-
til experience in Massachusetts has
crystalized into definite knowledge.
er r—————— ees.
—There are a good many folks who
need a good kicking after they are
down in order to make them realize
thal they are down and out for good
and all.
The Greatest Producer of Silver.
Canada has held the premier place
within the Empire as the greatest pro-
ducer of silver for the past two dec-
ades. During the last few years Can-
ada has been the third largest pro-
ducing country in the world, being
outranked only by Mexico and the
United States. Last year third place
was captured by Peru, whose produc-
tion exceeded that of Canada by slight-
ly over one and a half million ounces.
The principal producing areas in
Canada are, in order of their import-
ance, Ontario, British Columbia, and
Yukon. Silver ores have also been
found in other parts of the Domin-
ion, but the total productions from
these areas has been small. The total
recorded production to the end of
1925 is 493 million fine ounces, last
year’s output being slightly in excess
of 20 million ounces. The market
price of silver fluctuates from day to
day; the highest yearly averages were
recorded on the London market in 1853
and 1854 at $1,348, and in 1920 at $1,-
346. The lowest price was in 1915 at
$519. The total market value placed
on Canada’s production during the
vears for which records are available
(1887 to 1925), based on average
market values from year to year was
$318,826,880. In 1925 the production
was valued at $13,815,742.
The mines of Cobalt, South Lorrain,
and Gowganda, all in the province of
Ontario, are at present Canada’s prin- |
cipal silver producers.
mines have contributed slightly over
Ontario’s |
363.3 million ounces to the accumulat- |
ed total of Canada’s silver production,
of which only 18 million ounces were
produced prior to 1903, the year of the
discovery of the Cobalt area.
ception for the graduates at their
home on the campus on Tuesday after-
noon. The second semester’s instruc-
tional work at the College started on
Monday morning.
Kept Mother in Mind During Swinm.
Mrs. Jane Young, widowed mother
of 17-year-old George Young, who
won the $25,000 Catalina Channel
swim, was chiefly concerned over her
son’s comfort.
“Poor boy, I should have been there
to look after him,” she said. “Wasn’t
it wonderful! He’s such a good boy.”
It was some time after Mrs. Young
had received the news before she
could collect her thoughts. Then she
was full of praise for George and a
bit worried lest after his strenuous
swim he was not receiving the proper
care.
“I hope they put him in a nice,
xa bed when he was through,” she
said.
Mrs. Young proudly showed the last
letter she received from her son be-
fore the swim.
“Pray for me, I will put my last
ounce of strength and grit into the
race,” George had written, “and won’t
give up till I reach the shore in front.
I will be thinking of you all the time
I am swimming.”
The mother advised George “to do
your best and don’t forget your pray-
ers.’
Mrs. Young, then recently widowed,
brought her son from Scotland four-
teen years ago. For a time she work-
ed as a cook and a waitress, but she
became disabled two years ago and
The |
average production in Ontario for each |
of the past four years was 10.7 million !
ounces. Dividends paid out to the end
of 1925 by silver companies operating |
in northern Ontario amounted to ap-
proximately $92,000,000.
George left school to take up the bur-
den of finding a livelihood.
When he was six years old George
began to swim in a Y. M. C. A. He
soon attracted the attention of Johnny
Walker, swimmer instructor at the
Granite Club and was trained by the
latter.
Silver production in British Colum-
bia and in Yukon is obtained from
lead-zine ores. The present rate of
production in British Columbia is
about 8,500,000 ounces per annum;
Yukon’s production last year was
about 905,000 ounces. There appears
to be every reason to believe that the
present rate of production of silver in
Canada will be maintained for some
years to come. The decline in produc-
tion in Cobalt has been more than
compensated by new discoveries and
increased production from South Lor-
rain and Gowganda, and there has also
been an increase in the production
from British Columbia.
Man and Wife Graduate at Penn State
College.
Impressive ceremonies marked the
eighth annual mid-year commence-
ment at the Pennsylvania State Col-
lege on Tuesday night of this week.
Sixty-three bachelor degrees and nine
advanced degrees were awarded by
president Ralph D. Hetzel. The address
was given by the Rev. Moses R. Lo-
vell, of Washington, D. C.
Graduation of a man and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Rawl Milo Chase, from the
course in education was a feature of
the exercises. Mr. Chase is a war
veteran completing rehabilitation
work at the college and Mrs. Chase
was a former high school teacher.
Both expect to enter the graduate
school immediately to work for ad-
vanced degrees and then enter the
teaching profession.
President and Mrs. Hetzel held a re-
Walker said he belonged to the “I
told you so” class.
“I knew he would be a world beater
some day,” Walker explained. “Just
watch his spray from now on.”
Hindu Studies American Farming at
College.
Coming all the way from India to
study American agricultural methods,
D. P. Chowhury, a graduate of the
University of Calcutta, this week
started as a member of the Junior
class in the school of Agriculture at
the Pennsylvania State College.
Chowhury’s father is owner of more
than 250,000 acres of land in the prov- |
ince of Bengal in India, and is anxious
to learn the operation and mechanism
of American farm machinery and crop
handling methods so that he can bet-
ter supervise the family’s vast estate.
Although married and a father,
young Chowhury expects to spend two
| years alone at Penn State to accom-
plish his aim. He received advanced
standing through his work at the Uni-
versity of Calcutta and elected to
study agriculture in America rather
than enter a law school in England.
In order to become thoroughly fam-
iliar with all departments of the Penn-
sylvania State College, Dr.'Ralph D.
Hetzel, spends the afternoon on an in-
spection trip to each school and divis-
ion in company with its respective
Dean or administrative officer. He is
taking three weeks to make this thor-
ough survey of the service of each
branch, planning to complete the work
by February 18.
eb.
12
AT 2:30
TOMORROW
Saturday Only
7:00
Moose Theatre
F
Feb.
12
and 9:00 :
Seven
Smashing
Reels
Two
Hours
of Thrill
would hurl him to eternity.
THE LIFE STORY OF JOHN LEE
Known Wherever the Flag of Liberty Flies
To but one man in the history of all civilization has it happened
that three times he stood awaiting death, a prayer was on his lips,
a hangman's noose adjusted, awaiting the sudden
Three Times They Tried to Hang John Lee
THREE TIMES THEY FAILED
Founded
Upon
Facts
Millions
Know
It’s True
shock which
Grand Scenic Prologue by Star Artists
SINGING
Full Program of Interesting Novelties
VAUDEVILLE
DANCING
Popular Prices: Matinee .35 .15, Ev’g. 50 25
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
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. 5, Hast
High street. 67-44
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 Ger
man. Office in Criders Exchan
Bellefonte, Pa. - ok
ms—
PHYSICIANS :
R. R. L. CAPERS,
OSTEOPATH.
Bellefonte State College
Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg.
8. GLENN, M. D. Physician and
Surgeon, State College, Centre
county, Pa. Office at his resi-
35-41
D
dence.
D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regls-
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 24% 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
sem $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 439%....$42.00 per ton
Oil meal 84%............. 54.00 per ton
Gluten feed 23%.......... 42.00 per ton
Alfalfa fine grade......... 45.00 per ton
BIRR ou. covitossionionenin 36.00 per ton
Middlings ............... 38.00 per ton
Mixed Chop.............. 38.00 per ton
(These Prices are at the Mill.)
$2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery.
b. Y. Wagner & Go., lné
66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Caldwell & Son
Bellefonte, Pa.
Plumbing
and Heating
Vapor....Steam
By Hot Water
Pireless Furnaces
NANPA ISIS SSIS
Full Line of Pipe and Fit-
tings and Mill Supplies
All Sizes of Terra Cotta
Pipe and Fittings
ESTIMATES
Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished
66-15-tf.
Fine Job Printing
at the
WATCHMAN 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