Bmore, Yat. Bellefonte, Pa., July 15, 1927. Re ——— EVANGELICAL SUMMER MEETINGS. Central Oak Heights, West Milton, Pennsylvania. The Evangelical Assembly grounds, West Milton, Pa. of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of The Evangelical Church, will be the seat of great activity during the months of July and August. It is there where the young people and the older folks of the Evangelical Church assemble for Bible Study, Religious Education, and Camp Meeting. This is a little city of cottages built among the sturdy and majestic oak trees, which invite lovers of God and nature to come beneath their shade and shelter for quiet and rest, worship and study. There are over one hundred cottages in the village, and a large up-to-date boarding house, serving the finest kind of meals; dormitory space is also provided for over one hundred tran- sients. Just now the Board of Trus- tees is completing the installation of over five thousand feet of sewer pipe, so that each building on the grounds will be equipped with the latest sani- tary facilities. The Board has also installed a water system, and this has required over five thousand feet of water line, reaching from the main of The White Deer Mountain Water Company along the highway, to all of the buildings, The expenditure for this purpose has totaled nearly $8000, and adds much to the convenience, beauty and general make-up of Cen- tral Oak Heights. Central Oak Heights, above and be- yond busy streets and beside rippling waters; near railway and inspiration, fellowship and culture, rest and rec- reation, annually attracts to the in- spiring and helpful services increas- ing hosts of Evangelicals and friends from far and near. Already the cot- tagers are making their appearance, although the sessions do not begin until July 25th, when the School of Religious Education will be opened by Rev. Dr. W. E. Peffley, Conference Director of Religious Education, who is also the Dean of the School. This School will offer, for one week, until July 31st, a standard training for pastors, Sunday School, Christian Endeavor and Missionary workers. Students will take a one course unit of ten lessons for credit, in addition to the devotional, inspirational and recreational features. During this week the Morning Watch will be in charge of Rev. C. I. Raffensperger at 7 o’clock, and at 8 o’clock Prof. P. E. Keen will conduct devotional bible study, theme “Life Eternal,” and the period from 9 to 11.30 will be devoted to class study. At 11.30 Rev. E. W. Praetorious, Gen- eral Secretary of Board of Religious Education will lecture on Sunday school work. A large part of the afternoon will be given over to recre- ation and each evening at 7.00 o’clock Vesper services: will be conducted by Rev. A. Ward Campbell, followed with lecture by Prof. V. C. Zener, D. D The Annual Convention of the Sun- day Schools and Christian Endeavor Leagues will be held Thursday and Friday afternoons and evenings, July 28th and 29th, respectively. August 1st to 4th the Bible Confer- ence will be conducted, under direc- tion of Rev. KE. Crumbling, Chancel- lor. Prof A. T. Robertson, D. D., L. L. D., Litt. D., the well known author and lecturer, who occupies the chair of New Testament Ineterpretation in the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary of Louisville, Ky. and Bishop L. H. Seager, D. D.. who has served The Evangelical Church in various capacities, as Editor, College President. and now as Bishop, will be the special lecturers and speakers for the Bible Conference. Bishop Seager will also serve as the special preacher over the first Sisjay of Camp Meeting, August 7th. Camp Meeting will be held August 5th to 16th, inclusive. The first week will be in charge of Rev. I. E. Spang- ler, Presiding Elder of the Carlisle District, and the second week will be presided over by Rev. A. F. Weaver, Presiding Elder of the Lowistown District. Wednesday, August 10th, during the first week of Camp Meet- ing Holy Communion Service will be observed. Friday, August 5th, will be Evangelical Homes, Lewisburg, anni- versary day, with special program of music and addresses, to be held on the Home grounds, near Lewisburg. The grounds where these summer meetings are held are central, con- venient, spacious, ideal—unsurpassed in location, situation and adaptation, and it is estimated that more people will attend this year than ever before. Marriage Licenses. v James D. Lawson, of Philadelphia, and Dorothy Mae Miller, of State Col- lege. John D. Dreibelbis, Jr., of State College, and Anna E. Hauser, of Lin- den Hall. Edward McClain and Eunice Sleigh, both of Philipsburg. Clair Francis Breon and Pearl Isa- bella Corman, both of Bellefonte. Serge C. Confer and Mary J. Sul- lenberger, both of Howard. Marvin J. Rothrock and Dorothy E. Mallory, both of Bellefonte. Paul C. Coxey, of Altoona, and ¥meline W. Hess, of Boalsburg. William J. Tucker and Mary B. Hile, both of Pleasant Gap. Roy H. Adams, of Mt. Braddock, and Vera J. Hile, of Pleasant Gap. Lee P. Smeltzer, of Bellefonte, and Mildred V. Gingrich, of Boalsburg. Johr W. Decker and Theresa L. Wagner, both of Spring Mills. S. Gray Rockey, of Fillmore, and Mary A. Smith, of Rock View. Clair S. Parsons and L. Evelyn Showers, both of Fleming. 'LINDBERGH JOINS SELECT COMPANY Now Member of the “Did It Alone” Club. Washington.—He did it alone! Col. Charles A. Lindbergh has Joined a choice company of solo ex- plorers and adventurers, because “he did it alone.” Dr. David Livingstone, Henry Stan- ley, Alexander Selkirk (Robinson Cru- soe), Capt. Joshua Slocum, Capt. Harry Pidgeon, Lieut. Andrew 8S. Rowan, John Colter, and Sir Galahad did it alone. “Adventurers ‘on their own’ have earned the world’s best glory wreaths,” says a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the Neg tional Geographic society. “David Livingstone sleeps in West- minster abbey because, traveling by himself, he revealed the geograpny of the dark heart of Africa. David Liv- ingstone was lost three years to the world when Henry Stanley—alone, ex- cept for native carriers—cut through the Congo to reach Livingstone at Ujiji and leave supplies and medical equipment for the missionary explorer. “The solo adventurer who carried the ‘message to Garcia,’ like Colonel Lindbergh, wore the American uni- form. Elbert Hubbard told the story which thrilled and still thrills: how the young officer on the eve of the Spanish-American war took the mes- sage from President McKinley for the commander of the Cuban insurgents deep in the trackless forest: how he crossed to Cuba, braving capture and death as a spy if caught; how he de- livered the message to General Garcia which put hope in the hearts of Cv bans, Sailed Around the World. “Difficulty in making a living in New England prompted Capt. Joshua Slocum to embark on an adventure par excellence. Alone he sailed the ‘Spray’ around the world. Last year Capt. Harry Pidgeon also circumnavi- gated the world in a still smaller boat, ‘The Islander,” a yawl 34 feet long and 10 feet 9 inches on the beam. He returned to Los Angeles, his home port, after an absence of three years, eleven months and thirteen days. On one leg of his voyage Captain Pidgeon did not see a speck of land, a sail, nor the smoke plume of a steamer for 85 days. “Courage when it goes alone has ;ver caught men’s imaginations. The early bards gave Galahad, Beowulf and St. George, the dragon slayer, no weapon bearers or assistants. More is the credit to the traveled Gulliver, to the Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's court and to Jack the Giant Killer, in the opinions of enthusiastic readers, because they did their deeds without aid. ‘The boy stood on the burning deck,” and the poet, who knew the public's preference for heroes, added, ‘whence all but he had fled. “Many lone adventurers have died sonely, This has been true of trail makers in the Middle and Far West. While Daniel Boone and David Thomp- son, he who mapped by himself the country between Lake Superior and the Pacifie coast, made their chief ex- peditions with helpers, each -raveled much alone. John Colter left an es- tate of $220. although he accompanied Lewis and Clark and by himself dis- covered what is now Yellowstone park. Colter's story shows one of the hazards of traveling alone: no one would believe his descriptions of Yel- lowstone wonders because he had no partner to confirm them. “In a cemetery in Shanghai stands 4 solitary headstone to Frank N. Meyer, plant explorer, who by intro- ducing new plant varieties into the United States, did much to promote American agriculture. Although Mey- er had Chinese helpers he pursued constructive adventure without white companions and finally sacrificed his life in a Yangtze river accident. Alone in China. “Out in China at the present time .8 Dr. Joseph Rock, who prefers to travel alone. His hazardous journeys to Tibet and Yunnan bave yielded, among other finds, the fruit of the chaulinoogra tree, which has been found to cure leprosy. When Peary discovered the North pole he had the Iskimos with him, but he was the only white man to stand on top of the earth! “Alexander Selkirk’s true story sroved so pathetically lonesome that Daniel Defoe found it necessary to give him that fictional companion, Good Man [I‘riday, when he wrote ‘Robinson Crusoe,” Selkirk, the real Crusoe, had a misunderstanding with the captain under whom he sailed and asked to be put off on uninhabited Juan Fernandez island near the Chil- ean coast. Here British sailors from the ‘Duke’ found him four years later, scarcely able to talk, surrounded by pet goats, parrots and ¢ats. He was dressed in the skins of goats which he was able to catch by his amazing fleetness. A bronze tablet on the island now marks ‘Selkirk Lookout.’ “One nonstop solo trip, not as long as that from New York to Paris, to be sure, but equally as famous, was made between Boston and Lexington by another hero who traveled alone, Paul Revere.” Styles Move Eastward San Francisco.—Shoe styles in Cali fornia are six months ahead and by the time the modes have reached the Atlantic coast Californians are wear- ing something else, asserts A. H. Geuting of Philadelphia, president nf the National Shoe Retailers’ associa- tion, Student Knew Twas No Time to Linger He was a student at the University of Missour! and “loved” military, as do all the students. “I tell you, doc,” he explained at the hospital, “my throat hurts something awful. I don’t believe I better go to military for a day or two.” “Not drilling outdoors now, are Jou?” the doctor inquired. “No, sir,” the student admitted. “Well, your throat won't interfere with your going to indoor classes.” “But you see, doc, I play in the band. and—" “Oh, in that case it’s different,” the doctor interrupted. “I don’t want you straining that throat in band practice Here’s an excuse for three days.” Three days later the student agair presented himself at the hospital. “Well, how's the throat now?” the doctor inquired. “Pretty good, I guess,” the student repiied. “Think you can go back to band practice now?” the doctor asked, “Guess I might just as well.” “Say, by the way,” the doctor re- marked, “I used to play In a band a little myself several years ago. Toot a horn a little yet once In a while. That's the reason I knew how hard it would go on your sore throat. What do you play?” “One of the drums,” the student re- plied, and slid hastily out of the door —Kansas City Times. Cats Alike Fond of Traveling and Home The glare of limelight that recently beat upon Fluffy, the London Victoria station cat, who boards the 10:45 train to Dover every morning, lunches upon nice creamy milk at the buifet there. and returns to town by the afternoon train, is a reminder of a curious fact about cats; they are at once the great: est travelers and the greatest “home bodies” of all domesticated animals. Other cats in England, and, indeed. in most countries, regularly journey long distances on trains, usually in the restaurant car, but sometimes with the train crew. As for seafaring cats, there must be hundreds of thousands of them, from North cape to the Horn. Southampton water to Nagasaki bay. Most liners carry quite a number; there are White Star vessels with five- and-twenty aboard. There was ap amusing incident not long ago when one of the Adriatic’s cats, that had failed to turn up when the ship sailed, reappeared for the next voyage with its tail proudly waving in the breeze and five little kittens trotting along behind.—Manchester Guardian. Being Allegorical He was a sorry creature to look | apon. His clothing was torn, his hair was disheveled, and there was an exhausted look upon his face. It was clear that he was going. through, or bad just gone throagh some terrific struggle. Out of sheer pity .1 stopped the man and asked him who he was and if there was anything I could do to help him. “I am Office,” he said. aothing you can do.” “There {is “Office?” 1 said, a little puzzled. “Oh, yes. You are looking for the man.’ “No, no,” he panted. *T'hat would pe easy, I am trying to get rid of the man.” Still Belief in Witches Belief in witches still exists in Eng- and today, stated a lecturer on witch- craft before a London society. She said in one village in Dorset a certain amount of the witches’ organizations still remains. When I went down there recently I asked one of the women about it. She said, “Witch Fanny is dead.” 1 asked, “Who is witch now?” and she replied without hesitation, “Witch Bessie is witch now.” The question of succession was easily and quickly arranged, but I could not find aut how or when it was done. Milk Without Cream A cow that possessed “a perfectly adjusted separator” has been reported by a correspondent to the Sydney Bul- letin. “She gave a lot of milk and her calves were the fattest and biggest in the herd, but for household purposes her milk was useless,” according to the correspondent. “The milk could be run through a separator without a drop of cream appearing either in the dish or in the interior of the machine. By no method of milking could she be enticed to give any cream.” Metric Measures The myriameter, or 10,000 meters, 1s equivalent te 6.2137 miles. The kilometer, 1,000 meters, is 0.62137 miles, or about 3,280 feet and 10 inches. Other units above the meter are the hectometer, 100 meters, 328 feet 1 inch, and the dekameter, 10 meters, 393.7 Inches. The meter is equivalent to 39.37 inches. Below it are the decimeter, 3.937 inches; the centimeter, 0.3937 inches, and the mil limeter, 0.394 inches. Watch Oddly Preserved After being lost for 12 months in a plowed field in England a farmer's watch has been picked up, and is go fing as well as if it had been in his pocket all the time. The man lost it while he was plow ing, and searched fruitlessly for fit Tet be has now found it lying on the ten of a furrow. Since it was lost. the 121d has been plowed twice, harrowed gi drilled. and has yielded a crop of Guintoen : HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS.WORD PUZZLE I g ¢ : CROSS-WO PUZZLE No. 1. 3 |4 § |é6 0 —~ ny 2! 24 26 129 3o |3/ 32 33 35 |36 37 38 40 4] Horizontal. 1—Preserved, as by drying 5—A Greek golony 9—Above 10—Chattels 12—About 12—A short poem 14—Cubic gentimeter 16-—Waste matter 18—That man 19—An asylum 21—A row or rank 23—A tract of land between hills 24—Horrible; fearful 25—Lamented; bewailed 27—Mother of Helen of Troy 29—Expressing an alternative 30—To offer reasons pro and com 33—Therafore 34—A vessel 35—Loo¥k!' 37—Dim; said of the ayes 39—By; in 40—In music, soft, sweet 41—A shadow Solution will appear im next issue (©. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Vertical, 1—A marine shell 2—A negative prefix 83—For example (abbr.) 4—An entranceway 5—A day in certain Roman months | 6—A mouth; opening T—Zeus loved her 8—Later 11—The property of matter which affects the smell 15—To clothe 16—A deposit at the mouth of a river 17—A turnstile 18—To note; observe 20—To chart; to sketch 22—Wrath 256—The system of created things 26—A monster 28—Our main artery 31—A ruler 32—The two-toed sloth 36—Combining form meaning egg 37—Canadian province (abbr.) 38—Royal mail (abbr.) 39—A measure of area A ——. Real Estate Transfers. Aikenside Farm to James P. Ai- kens, tract in College Twp.; $8,000. E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to Sarah S. Raines, tract in Port Matilda; $500. Samuel Grove, et ux, to C. U. Wie- land, tract in Harris Twp.; $48. Heirs of Martin Grove to Theodore D. Boal, tract in Harris Twp.; $170. Mary Heaton to Luther J. Heaton, tract in Boggs Twp.; $1. Madeline. H. Bathurst, et bar, to Millie E. Campbell, tract in Liberty Twp.; $25. Bellefonte Cemetery Association to Harvey H. Tressler, tract in Belle- fonte; $25. James S. Weaver to Blanche S. Ard, tract in Haines Twp.; $1. Ida Fehl, et bar, to D. W. Zimmer- man, tract in Haines Twp.; $1,320. Robert Brennan, Jr., et ux, to Clara F. Bateson, tract in College Twp.; $1. Clara Bateson to Robert Brennan Jr., et ux, tract in College Twp.; $1. Martha Kerin, et al, to Winifred | Kerin, tract in Snow Shoe Twp.; $1. ! C.H Smul], et al, to C. H. Bierly, tract in Miles Twp.; $1. { | | | ly, tract in Miles Twp.; $35. Samuel French to C. H. Bierly, in Miles Twp.; $60. tract George H. Brechtbill to C. H. Bier- | Solution to Last Week’s Puzzle. | XY E. R. Taylor, sheriff, to H. S. Bolo- pas, et al, tract in Liberty Twp.; $11,- 000. Philipsburg Coal and Land com- pany to Daniel J. Dennison, tract in { Philipsburg; $500. G. Edward Haupt, et ux, et al, to George - E. Young, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $225. Margaret Nolan, et al, to Frank | Shufian, tract in Rush Twp.; $1,800. Thomas E. Imler, et ux, to Roy S. | Imler tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1. | Christian B. Page, et ux, to Maude Too Much “Acid?” Excess Uric Acid Gives Rise to Many Unpleasant Troubles. UTHORITIES agree that an ex- cess of uric acid is primarily due to faulty kidney action. Reten- tion of this toxic material often makes its presence felt by sore, pain- ful joints, a tired, languid feeling and, sometimes, toxic backache and headache. That the kidneys are not functioning right is often shown by scanty or burning passage of secre- tions. Thousands assist their kidneys at such times by the use of Doan’s Pjlls—a stimulant diuretic. Doan’s are recommended by many local peo- ple. Ask your neighbor! DOAN’S ruts Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Ye Whether they be fresh, smoked or the cold-ready to serve—products, are always the choicest when they are purchased at our Market. We buy nothing but prime stock on the hoof, kill and re- frigerate it ourselves and we know it is good because we have had years of experience in handling meat products. Orders by telephone always receive prompt attention. Telephone 450 P. L. Beezer Estate Market on the Diamond BELLEFONTE, PA. 34-4 Insurance a FIRE LIFE ACCIDENT AUTOMOBILE WINDSTORM BURGLARY PLATE GLASS LIABILITY OF ALL KINDS SURETY BONDS EXECUTED Hugh M. Quigley Successor to H. E. FENLON Temple Court, Bellefonte, Penna. 71-33-tf CHICHESTER S PILLS T, Ladies? Ask your Ohl.ches-ter 8s Diamond Bran Pills in Red and Gold metallic’ boxes, sealed Blus Ribbon. Denseios. “art for ORL CIE ATER # PMCS BRAND PILLS, for 346 known as Best, Safast, Always Reliable Sn » RE Page, tract in Liberty Twp.; $1. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Vacation Bush Arcade Bellefonte, Pa. for the Bound Children If your children are going away or are staying at home this vacation, they will need new footwear—and we urge you to make your selection from our display, because we know you will be satisfied with your purchase.