Demorraiic alco “Bellefonte, Pa, March 11, 1927. Shattered War Veterans Wage Brave Battle for Health At U. S. Hos- pital 81, City’s “Land of Forgotten Men.” On the Kingsbridge Road, near the outskirts of the Bronx, lies New York’s Land of Forgotten Men—where World War veterans, sorely wounded, have been paying the supreme sacri- fice on the installment plan since 1918. Mor than eight years have elapsed since the second battle of the Marne, and 1927 records show that the major- ity of those first occupants of the white cots in United States Veterans’ Hospital 81 have given up the hope- less struggle for life to pass on to their reward. But the places they left vacant are being filled rapidly by for- mer serivce men who have struggled bravely to “come back to normal” and have been beaten pitifully by physical weakness and nervous disorders. In the eight busy post-war years most New Yorkers have forgotten to ask the fate of those nerve racked, shell-shocked soldiers, the inevitable residium of the World War. Only a few of those who pass down Kings- bridge Road peer behind the high picket fence that shuts out the spa- cious thirty acres of government res- ervation, where the three buildings of the Veterans’ Hospital are dedicated to serve nearly a thousand broken men. FINEST SURGEONS ON STAFF. Some of the most skilled physicians and surgeons in the country minister to the war victims. No expense or ef- fort is spared to bring them back to health. In some cases remarkable cures have been accomplished. What was once a derelict, a mere shell of a man, is restored to manhood and is returned to his place in society. But in more instances the patient is be- yond the aid of medical or surgical skill. All the hospital attendants can do is to ease the pain a little and di- vert the mind until the time comes to “go west.” Then a military funeral is provided for the unfortunate, who is at last released from his hopeless pain. To make life more enjoyable in this Land of Forgotten Men the govern- ment has prepared a variety of work- shops for the practice of occupational therapy. “The object of this is to arouse in- terest, courage and confidence on the part of the patient,” said Dr. Frank Albert Davis. “Through such means it is possible to co-ordinate the mind and the body toward a more normal state, to overcome his mental and physical disability and to re-establish in the patient the greatest possible capacity for social and industrial ad- justment. Music is another form of occupational therapy which can be utilized with beneficial results.” MAKES FRIENDS OF CASES, Every man in the hospital is known to Dr. George F. Brewster, the com- manding officer, who by personal in- terest endeavors to make a friend out of every patient instead of a “case.” . “All of the men seem to appreciate friendliness,” said Doctor Brewster, “even though ‘they may be sick unto death. “Every attendant ir the hospital is trained to cultivate memory for names. This helps to remove the in- stitutional atmosphere which is not good in the treatment of mental cases.” The cne man who is in daily contact with cvery resident of the hospital is the Protestant chaplain, the Rev. Dr. Glarence’ G. Reynolds, for many years pastor of a Presbyterian church in Elizabeth, N..J., now on the staff of the :Army and Navy Y. M. C. A. of New York City. He knows every pa- tient by his first name and acts as confidant and friend to them all. , Letter writing for the men who are incapacitated by disease is one of @haplain Reynolds’ chief duties. Fre- quently it is the last letter of the boy to his mother, the husband to his wife, or: the youth to his sweetheart, pen- wed just a few hours before death. 'CHAPLAIN'S DUTIES MANIFOLD. + “It does the boys good to have some ene to talk to,” said Dr. Reynolds. “Many of them are so sick that there is little hope for their recovery, and the ‘best one can wish for them is a speedy release from their pain. Very few of them are bitter about the war which is responsible for their pain and suffering. Many of them seem to find great comfort in religion. They like to remember events of bygone days and to talk a bit sadly of the hopes. and ambitions that were once theits but can never be fulfilled.” While Doctor Reqnolds is the Prot- estant “chaplain, he is welcomed by men of other denominations as well as by the Jewish and Catholic in- mates. He is supported by the army and navy branch of the Y. M. C. A., the only chaplain of the association in this district. The “Y” is aided in this work by the Protestant churches of New York City. hihwoln Highway Best Improved. The. Limeoln highway between New York and! San Francisco, 3,142 miles in length, has been improved by the States and counties on all but 41 miles of its entire distance. This 41 miles is located in Utah. Moreover, its entire length is uniformly marked with the characteristic Lincoln high- way -signs, enameled in red, white and blue on a steel background. Forty-one miles is 1.3 per cent. of 3142 miles, hence a motorist is now affered a road between New York and San Francisco 98.7 per cent. improv- In an address delivered by the sec- retary of agriculture before the Amer- ican association of state highway of- ficials of Pinehurst, N. C., the secre- tary pointed out that by following a mere or less circuitous route between Washington and San Diego one could find a road 97 per cent. improved. In his: article the secretary says that the taiate he describes is merely a collec- tiem of improved roads and does not epincide with any of the United States toutes.. Neither is it identical with I RC VS TS WN FRO RON, any of the various trails which have been promoted in the past. out three other transcontinental roads one of which is 88 per cent. improved another 75 per cent. improved, the third 68 per cent. improved. In his calculations apparently he has inad- vertently overlooked the improve- ments that have been made upon the Lincoln highway, which leads all other possible routes as the shortest and most improved between the two coasts. The fact that the Lincoln highway is best improved is generally well known to motorists as evidenced by the fact that during the touring sea- son it carries the largest amount of travel. Moreover, it is the route that has always been selected to establish transcontinental records—for the sim- ple reason that one attempting to make a rapid drive across the country carefully selects the best improved road. One of the great advantages the motorist has in following the Lin- coln highway is that it is not neces- sary for him to make inquiry; the constant procession of permanent, uniform signs assures him that he is on his road all the time. It is the only transcontinental route that is uniformly marked. Odd Signal Codes Used in Football. Signals in football are essential, manifestly, but their importance can be overstressed. They became more and more complex in the later nine- ties, running into problems in addi- tion, multiplication, subtraction, even division, until football threatened to become an advanced course in mental arithmetic, writes Amos Alonzo Stagg in the Saturday Evening Post. Long signal drills were held at night. Such complexity defeated it- self and more ground was lost by the inability of players to remember their own signals than was gained through the opposition’s mystification. I nev- er have heard of algebraic signals, but it is my observation that every- thing has been tried once in football, and therefore quite possible that “Let x equal the ball’ has been propounded by some quarterback. In this period some coaches and schools wasted much valuable effort in trying to steal or buy the rival's code, usually for the big game, and spies were as thick, by report, as they 2fe in an E. Phillips Oppenheim nov- el. I always have ignored the other fel- low’s signals. A player worth his salt can see far more with his eyes than he can hear with his ears in defensive play. Carlisle is said to have used Indian words during Jim Thorpe’s time, but so many -different tribes and languages were represented on the team that it served little advantage. Possibly their “Chattahoochees” and “Wawa- missinings” were intended only to dis- ‘tract the paleface’s attention. If there is any jargon unintelligible to the uninitate it is the terminalogy of sailing ships, and the early Annap- olis elevens used to sing a very salty signal. The left half was the mair- mast, the fullback the mizzen, and the anchor called for a kick. To hear a navy quarter sing out, niuri the top- gallant clew lines and hands by the halyards,” shivered the timbers of many a landlubberly opponent. When Childs of Yale coached Indi- ana he took a leaf out of the nautical practice. The Hoosiers came up to play us one year, lined up in double file, and chanted their signals in uni- son to set up a rhythm, on the same theory that the sailor sings a chantey but the idea is thoroughly sound. being in the right position at the right second on. shift plays. Men cannot be shifted back and forth effectively without some form of rhythm. Some of the team, at times all eleven, must know precisely when the ball will be snapped, and to insure more than two or three men wokring in perfect uni- son, some method of timing is manda- tory. The army drill master’s “onc- two-three-four” will serve, so will a popular song. melody—anything that can be accented rhythmically, the ball going into play on the agreed em- Hurdlers frequently hum some rhythm under their breath to time their stride properly between hurdles. Childs used to train his middle and long-distance runners at Indiana be- hind a sulky pulled by a harness horse to teach them pace. Something of Swede Oberlander’s deadly aceuracy last season, I have heard, was due to his timing his passes to the rhythm of: . Ten thousand Swedes Came out of the weeds At the battle of Copenhagen. Real Estate Transfers. Howard T. Struble, et al, to Zion Union Cemetery Inc., tract in Walker Twp.; $242. : W. R. Weiser, et ux, to J. H. Reif snyder, tract in Penn Twp.; $200. Hannah S. Auman to Margaret C. Sweeney, tract in Potter Twp.; $450. Joseph Barnes, Sr., et ux, to Bertha D. Jones, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Bertha D. Jones to Grace L. F. Barnes, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Roy Huff, et ux, to W. S. Williams, tract in Bellefonte; $1. 7 Amanda T. Miller, et al, to Clarenc Lyons, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $279. Gamma Chapter of Phi Kappa Fra- ternity, to the Gamma Company of the Phi Kappa fraternity, tract in State College; $1. S. D. Gettig to Alma R. Rickert, tract in State College; $30. Herbert Hill to Ethel M. Pancoast, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Herbert Hill to Ethel M. Pancoast, tract in Philipsburg; $1. ; " I. G. Gordon Foster, et al, to Bessie Bloom, tract in State College; $1. James Millholland, et ux, to Phi See Omens... The secretary of agriculture points | W. R. North Writes of Conditions at Syracuse Mission. Chungking, China, Jan. 18th. Dear Home Folks: Just a few lines, as I am very busy about many things these days. Sarah and Billy left here for Shanghai early yesterday morning on board the Chi Chwan, an American river steamer. The activities of Gen. Kiang Kai Shek, the southern military leader, around Hankow, and his move toward Shang- hai have led our consul to anticipate foreign intervention to protect for- eign-owned property and the foreign- controlled customs. The lead will no doubt be taken, in such a case, by the British government, but consul Adams fears that Americans will be drawn into it, also. Should such an event occur it wouldn’t be healthy for foreigners in the interior. He has therefore advised all women and chil- dren to get out, and all men west of Chungking. On board with Sarah were some thirty other Americans, most of whom are her intimate friends, so she is not alone. There is nothing to worry about, although there might have been had she remained. Those of us who remained are getting ready to leave on short notice, taking with us as many of our earthly: possessions zs have not been sent down with our wives, or can’t be sold, as possible. There are plenty of steamers here, and five foreign gunboats, so you need not fear for the safety of yours truly. Remember, that anything may happen in China, and it is quite possible that all this affair won’t happen—foreign intervention, I mean—and Sarah may be back here in a few months. Any- how, everybody is O. XK. now, and likely to be from now on. Sarah will write you from Shanghai. Her address will be care of Rev. W. A. Main, Asso- ciated Mission Treasurer, 23 Yuen Ming Yuen Road, Shanghai, China. Will keep you informed as to furth- er developments. Don’t send anything of value to Chungking until you are further advised. : It made us almost sick to think of tearing up our house and leaving ail our associations here, foreign and Chinese, but it seemed the only safe course to pursue. I have always been a confirmed optimist in regard to conditions here, but the seriousness of the possibilities at present, under the radical leadership of Kiang Kai Shek, made me feel it advisable for Sarah and Billy to get to a place a bit more secure than this in case of trouble. Yours as ever, W. R. NORTH. A Different Florida. Dr. W. S. Glenn, of State College, has spent many winters in Florida. He was there before the boom, when it so that his opinion as to the effects of the deflation is one of considerable in- terest. In a recent letter to this office he wrote as follows: The Watchman comes regularly every Monday morning and you can’t conceive how glad we are to see it. The fine weather continues. 66 de- grees in the morning and 76 degrees in the afternoon, with the sun shin- ing almost all of every day. Have bought a Hudson coach here so that we go somewhere nearly every day. Wednesday we drove up to Earl Markle’s which is ten miles back in the Everglades from Stuart. We al- ways have bought our oranges and in turning the capstan or a section! : gang in shifting railroad steel. Some |they have practically no crop at all. found this choir practice laughable, | The wind blew the fruit from the trees phasis. *) Sigma Kappa Association, tract in grape fruit from them and were sur- prised and disappointed to find that when it was small and there are many All coaches probably use rhythms; {of the frees with scarcely more than I have for many years, to insure men | One orange or grape fruit. I am told that much of the fruit was frozen along the west coast during the cold weather of January so that the fruit ‘trop is likely to fall very far short of normal product. Work here and all over Florida is very scarce. Every day people are starting north because they can find nothing to do here. If they could only get more farmers into the Glades there would be a different outlook, for the soil is se rich there that'vegeta- ble gardening ‘could be made very profitable. But carpenters, plasterers, painters are surely not needed here now. mh Very little real estate is changing hands here and what transfers are being made are at just about half the price of last year. Hundreds who sold at the peak have had to take back their properties. Some of them give back the money paid but many don’t. They have some sort of law here in Florida covering just such cases and I have heard many argu- ments on it, but just ean’t understand | what it really is. Living is much cheaper than it has been for three years and generally speaking the place is very much im- proved over a year ago, notwithstand- ing the storm’s ravages. The large new hotels that I wrote of last winter are all completed and everything about them beautiful so that the effect is one of a completed city rather than a litter of building materials and a babel of building noises. Have not so far seen a sign that there ever was a hurricane and the thing that puzzles is as to how the great army of realtors got away so quick. Our stay here, so far, has been about the pleasantest season we have spent in Florida, principally because the frenzy of boom days are lacking and it is more like one’s idea of an ideal place to spend a restful and pleasant winter. W. S. GLENN. Marriage Licenses. Elizabeth A. Boal, of Clearfield. Howard S. Boal, of Clearfield, and Hazel M. Baney, of Bigler. Fred Walter Lucas, of Jacksonville, and Cora Louise Gallagher, of How- ard : Isaac Jones and Goldie Singer, both of Clearfield. . —————— Ap Ap ei ——————— —~Subscribe for the “Watchman.” was at its height and is there now | PINE GROVE MENTION. Mrs. Fred B. Tate is suffering with an attaek of pleurisy. James P. Aikens was a Harrisburg visitor several days last week. Philip Roop, contractor and build- er, is quite ill with heart trouble. The John E. Reed sale will take place at 1:30 o'clock tomorrow after- noon. Mrs. Stuart, of Pittsburgh, was a guest last week at the Fred Robinson home. Curley Randolph motored to Hunt- ingdon, on Tuesday, on a business mission. Howard Goss and wife were callers at the Sallie Barr home on Sunday afternoon. Plummer Port and family, of Stone valley, were State College visitors last Thursday. Mrs. Lizzie Mallory, of Altoona, was a visitor in town between trains last Friday. Mrs. Annie Fortney entertained five tables at cards at her home on Fri- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Will Murtorff spent several days last week with friends in Bellefonte. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Fleming motor- ed to Belleville, last Thursday, on a business trip. Miss Dora Porter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Porter, is ill with an attack of scarlet fever. Wilbur Smith, of McVeytown, was | a welcome visitor at the S. E. Flem- ing home last Thursday. Alvin Breon, of Struble, has re- turned to the Huntingdon hospital to undergo a second operation. H. H. Goss received word on Sun- day that his brother in Lewistown had suffered a stroke of paralysis. Ephriam Dodd, of State College, was a Sunday visitor at the home of his son Wilbur, in this place. J. Alfred Reed, of Greensburg, spent the early part of the week at his parental home in this place. Mrs. J. L. Wilson has returned home from the Centre County hospital and is now getting along splendidly. After a visit of several weeks in the windy city Philip D. Foster and wife returned home last Friday. Mrs. W. S. Ward is now recovering from an attack of acute indigestion suffered the latter part of the week. Raymond Miller, who has been a medical patient in a private hospital at State College, is now convalescing. Mr. and Mrs. James Wasson motor- ed to Altoona, on Sunday, and spent the day with the Lee Markle family. W. D. Swope made a motor trip to Altoona and Huntingdon, last Thurs- day, looking after some business mat- ers. Harry Oaks was ‘a brief visitor in town, on Monday, on his way from his home at McAlevy’s Fort to State Col- lege. Paul Goss, with his mother and sister Mary, motored to Tyrone, last Friday, and spent the day with rela- tives. Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Haugh are re- receiving congratulations over the re- cent arrival at their home of a nine pound baby boy. Dr. W. S. Gleen, who was confined to his room last week with an attack of the grip, is now able to make his regular calls again. Glenn Frank, young son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Frank, fell on Sunday evening and broke his left arm. Dr. Woods reduced the fracture. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Detrow, of Cen- tre Hall, were callers in town on Sun- day evening, having been entertained at dinner at the Charles T. Homan home on the Branch. This section was well represented at the horse sale at Centre Hall last week. J. Foster Musser bought a team for $450; Charles T. Homan got one for $440, and Albert Andrews one for $340. Mrs. Fred Fry has been confined to her room the past week with an at- tack of the grip and other complica- tions. Mrs. Sallie Burwell was the angel of mercy who looked after all her needs. John F. Kimport and wife, Alfred Lee and J. C. Gilliland, of Boalsburg, were here last Friday interviewing the dentist; Mr. and Mrs. Kimport spending a portion of the time with your correspondent.. Randall Dunlap, now one of the solid business men of Cherry Tree, spent several days here with his meth- er, Mrs. S. A. Dunlap, who has been a sufferer with a bad cold but is now somewhat improved. Everybody is cautioned to have their grinders in good condition for the good eats. by the boys of P. O. S. of A. camp No. 620, in the I. O. O. F. hall this Friday evening. The spread will be 50 cents per plate. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Segner and son, Teddie Boal Segner, motored up from Boalsburg and spent Sunday with Mrs. Viola Smith. For twenty years Mr. Segner was one of Fergu- son townships most enterprising farm- ers. While lwmbering on Tussey moun- tain, last Friday, a rolling log struck Walter Dreihelbis on the left leg, breaking his ankle, which will put him on an enforced vacation just when he is needed for the spring work on his farm. . The timely arrival of Mr. Barto, the teacher, at the Baileyville school house, on Monday morning, saved it from going up in smoke. As the fire started on the outside of the building it is thought to have originated from a nearby ashpile. The flames were Earl E. Baughman, of Bigler, and quickly extinguished by a bucket bri- gade. Our very obliging and efficient post- mistress, Mrs. Jessie Elder, was given a pleasant surprise on the occasion of her birthday anniversary last Wed- nesday. After closing up her accounts for the day she went home only to find her house filled with a host of friends, 211 of them ladan with baskets ' of good things to eat as well as birth- . day remembrances for their pleasant | ing for hostess. If proved a very happy even- all and it was a late hour when all departed for their home, wishing Mrs. Elder many more like anniversaries. The trapping season closed on March first and the Spring Mills fur dealer made his usual trip here during the week gathering up pelts. Among our successful trappers were J. A. Gummo with 31 foxes, 20 skunks and 4 minks; Guy Rossman 28 foxes, 18 skunks and several weasles; William Gummo 30 skunks and 4 minks; Andy Laird 20 foxes, and M. C. Wie- land 10 skunks. BOALSBURG. Fred Reitz is driving a new two door Essex. Rev. Wagner attended court as a juror this week. George Shugerts went to Altoona, on Tuesday, for a short visit. Dr. W. W. Woods and mother went to Pittsburgh, Monday, for a short visit. Miss Flora Murray is suffering with a badly sprained arm, the result of an accident. The Knights of Malta and their friends enjoyed a banquet and social time in their hall, Friday evening. Leland Walker recently purchased the O. F. Smith home, on west Pine St. Prof. Smith and family will oc- | cupy the Hillside residence. Mrs. Peter Hassel, of State College, and Miss Arlene Gingrich, of Read- ing, attended services in the Luther- an church on Sunday morning. CENTRE HALL. Albert Smith went to Avis on Mon- day in search of work. Mrs. Lizzie Jacobs was not very well during the fore part of the week. James McCool was taken suddenly ill, on Monday morning, while working at the barn. A number of our people enjoyed the wonderful show, “Sensations of 1927.” in the Richelieu on Monday evening. The Rebekah Lodge, at their reg- ular meeting on Tuesday evening, con- ferred degrees on nine applicants; after which very excellent refresh- ments were served. Miss Cora Homan will enter a hos- pital in Baltimore, on Friday, where she will take treatment for an affec- tion of the throat, which interferes with her ability to swallow. Mrs. C. A. Smith and Miss Grace Smith were entertained by Miss Mabel Allison, of Spring Mills, on Wednes-. day, at which time Miss Allison also entertained a number of ladies from Spring Mills and Millheim. Codfish Led to Discovery of America, it is Now Believed. Paris.—Codfish and not the riches of India was the inspiration that led to the discovery of America, and it wasn’t Christopher Columbus, but a Frenchman who made the discovery, anyway, says the well-known French writer, Leon Sazie. The desire of the people along the Basque coast, Sazie says in an article published here, to eat codfish, not only on Fridays, but on most of the other days of the week, led to the Ameri- can discovery. Any one at all conversant with his- tory, he says, krows that the peeple of Spain and the French Basques got into the habit of eating codfish long before 1492, and the place where the fishermen went to fetch their fav- orite food was off the Newfoundland banks. : The wealth of India myth as a de- termining factor in the discovery of America is exploded,” the writer says. In fact, he continues, it was these Basque fishermen who first took Co- lumbus across the ocean, having crossed it themselves long before. The next startling theory advanced by M. Sazie is how the Navajo In- dians got their name. There were a lot of people, the theory runs, from Navarr and Gascony on the New- foundland fishing trips, and what could be more natural than that the Navajo Indians got their mames from the Frenchmen who hobnebbed with the North American Indians before Columbus was born. Hardy Basque“ fishermen, in fact, Sazie says, knew their way around the world long before Magellan made his famous voyage of circumnavigation. As proof, he cites various names borne by members of the Japanese aristoc- racy, which, he says, are Basque in origin, with the added assertion that there are many Basque and Gascon words and modes of expression in the Japanese language. Hancock a Real Patriot During the siege of Boston, Gen- eral Washington consulted congress upon the advisab'lity of bombarding Boston. John Hancock, a @istin- guished merchant, was the president of congress. When Washington's let- ter was read, a silence ensued, and all waited John Hancock’s opinion. Naturally, he was personally inter- ested to a great degree, for his large and valuable estate was located in the heart of Boston. John Hancock, after a moment's silence, addressed the committee in the following words: “It is true, sir; nearly ail the property I have in the world is in houses and other real estate in the town of Bos- ton; but if the expulsion of the Brit- ish army from it, and the liberties of tre country, require their being burnt to ashes—issue the order im- mediately for that purpose.”—The Market for Exchange. “Night Telephone Sale.” A department store in Washington, D. C., recently announced a “night telephone sale” which comprised twelve articles of various kinds, rang- ing from golf balls to pearl necklaces. The rush kept ten telephone operators busy from six to nine o’clock in the evening, the hours of the sale. : ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im all courts. Office, room 18 Crider'’s Exchange. 61-1y J KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business en- trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5, East High street. b7-44 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 E Bellefonte, Pa. xchange mm PHYSICIANS R.R. 1. CAPERS, ollefoni OSTEOPATH. s ellefonte tate Colle, Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Buss 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- 35-41 D dence. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regig- tered and licensed by the State, Byes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg. h Bellefonte, Pa. % Hen St B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed VA E 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 $45.00 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 $47.00 per Ton Why pay more for something not so good ? We Have Taken on the 32 per cent Wayne * at . Dairy Feed $54.00 per ton 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%......... $45.00 per ton Oil meal 84%. ................ 56.00 per ton Gluten feed 239%.............. 42.00 per ton Alfalfa fine grade......... 45.00 per ton Br de 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., Ine 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell iS Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces WOU SSSI AAS PSPS 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 A SPECIALTY 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 mmm 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