Bellefonte, Pa. September 21, 1928. GOVERNOR HAPPY IN MARRIED LIFE. Sympathetic and Devoted Wife Has Helped Smith to Attain Success in Public Life. By Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson. No man travels alone, least of all “Al Smith.” He was guided during those early years by a devoted and Christian mother, at whose knee he learned to walk humbly with his God, the path she herself had trod. When their day of parting came, she died happy in the thought that her son was in the keeping of a pure and ten- der wife. Al Smith’s mother took a natural pride in her gifted son’s high office, but far more important than this was the comfort she took in the knowl- edge that her son and his wife loved each other. Our Governor, Alfred E. Smith, is called “The Happy Warrior.” To be sure he is a “Happy Warrior.” But he was made happy long before you could have called him a “Warrior.” He was happy those summer evenings when, as a very young man, he could bicycle up from South Street to call on Katie Dunn in the Bronx. He was happy when she taught him that “close harmony,” which has lasted to this day. She made him happy on that evening when he asked her to marry him. She made him happy that May morning in 1900, when she promised to love and honor him, and when his good friend and teacher Father John Kean gave them his Blessing. And Alfred Smith was made happy in that modest little home in Madison Street. Five children were born there. No, only two children were born there, Alfred, Jr., and Emily. Cathe- rine was born at No. 9 Peck Slip, Oliver and Walter were born at 25 Oliver Street. There were sure many anxious and serious times, through which his wife had to guide him. The family income was very small. But that and the rooms were the only small things in that home. Hopes for the future were big. Faith and love were on a large scale. Finally when opportun- ities came, they found Al Smith hap- py and ready, made so by a devoted and sympathetic wife. The home life of Katie Dunn had been a happy one too. She was greatly beloved by her family and friends—and I am told charmed them all with her sweet personality, and lovely voice. Alfred Smith was cap- tured by her love ballads. She took part in many entertainments and con- certs in the Bronx. It is said, at one of these entertaintments her lover was in the audience to listen and ap- plaud, but before the evening was over he had put on a song and dance act of his own to the delight of ail, especially Catherine. She certainly must delight in his performances now. I know of no one who plays a leading part more suc- cessfully and she still applauds. He has no better or fairer critic. I real- ized the big and important part she played in her family when I, with my husband, visited her at St. Vincent's Hospital, last winter. She was con- valescing from a very serious opera- tion and was surrounded by all of her family—each one showing great joy in her recovery. The Governor, though radiating happiness then, showed plainly the strain which he had undergone during her illness. It was deeply impressed upon me what she meant to them all. I can never forget in 1911 going with a Committee of twelve, to che City Hall to discuss conditions on Randall’s Island with Mr. Smith then Majority Leader of the Assembly. It was in the evening and after we had finished our discussion, he invited us to walk over to his home nearby in Oliver Street to meet Mrs. Smith It was there I first knew her. We were all charmed by her gracious manner and tact—qualities she pos- sessed in a marked degree. These qualities stood out in Houston at the time of the Democratic Convention. It was a real pleasure to see with what skill and tact she handled that situation. The observed of all observ- ers—you can well imagine, a very conspicuous figure. The recipient of a great deal of attention—receiving it all with simple dignity and mod- -esty, never seemingly fatigued by the attention showered upon her—always a tactful remark for each occasion. I had the pleasure of taking Mrs. Smith to call on Mrs. Woodrow Wil- son while there. They had never met before. There were two women des- tined to play very important parts in their husband’s lives. Mrs. Wil- son filled all our requirements in the role she so successfully played as The First Lady of the Land and I am sure that Mrs. Smith will do the same. She unselfishly keeps herself modest- ly in the background—finding her greatest satisfaction in her husband’s success. The “Unknown Warrior” al- ways at his side, binding up his wounds and finding her only reward in the knowledge that he needed her —Happy Warrior And Happy Wife in such a partnership. rn ——— psp Penn State Students in Practice Teaching. Twenty-five seniors in the school of Education at the Pennsylvania State College are now in Johnstown for a nine-weeks’ period of practice teaching in which they will take com- plete charge of certain high school classes under the supervision of the resident teacher and a college staff faculty member. This is the second year that the Johnstown,schools have been used for this purpose. Professor Frank A. Butler, formerly on the fac- ulty of the University of Wisconsin is in charge of the resident supervi- sion. A second group will go to Johnstown for nine weeks beginning November 12. | GETTING EVEN WITH BROTHER KERLIN. Several months ago we published a paragraph from the “Call It A Day” column of the Harrisburg Telegraph. It expressed the columnist’s reaction to a sandwhich he bought at Centre Hall, while on a motor trip through that section. : The prayer of the paragraph was in substance that the writer might be delivered from ever meeting up with such a combination of bread and ham again. We republished it, not because we wanted to slam anybody, but because it was really an amusing bit of writ- ing. W. W. Kerlin, the Centre Hall poul- try magnate, took offense at the article, at us and about everything else in sight because he regarded it as a reflection on the fair name of the metropolis of Potter township. Of course it wasn’t but Mr. Kerlin didn’t see it that way. He wrote us a letter in which he expressed in no uncertain language his opinion of us—and we want to tell you it wasn’t very high. That is water under the wheel, however. All of Centre Hall has for- gotten the sandwich incident. The town hasn’t been ruined by it and now the sun has broken through the clouds that Mr. Kerlin thought we had helped hang over it. The writer of “Call It a Day” was in Centre Hall again, last week, and the diatribe on the sandwich becomes a paean of praise of the garage man over there. This is what the Tele- graph of September 13 said and we republish it to heap a few coals of fire on the head of brother Kerlin: I don’t know his name . . . the man who turns the handle on the Tydol pump at Centre Hall . . . but he gets a verbal gold medal from me . . . not because the amount involved was im- portant . . . but just because what he did was unusual . . . I stopped at his place near the stop-go light yesterday afternoon . . . bought five gallons of Tydol-ethyl, five of common Atlantic, and two quarts of Mobile-B . .. the bill was $3.05 . . . O, said the gentle- man when I gave him three dollar bills and a quarter—O never mind the five cents; make it three dollars even. . . it was the first time in my life such a thing happened ... I remember about two weeks ago I bought some gasoline South of Carlisle . . . the bill was $1.38 . . . I tendered a dollar and forty cents ... the gentlemanly at- tendants tried to “stall” me out of that two cents... but I stayed till they found the change . . . it was only two cents . . . but it was mine. Back on Centre Hall mountain, too, I encountered an innovation . . . the woman at Pete Coldron’s eating place actually buttered two hamburg sand- wiches for me and my girl-friend . . . butter on a sandwich at a roadside eating place is as scarce as an Al Smith vote at W. C. T. U. headquart- ers . . . this man Coldron has a nice place ...it was so clean the flies didn’t linger... quite a change in that mountain since I wrote about the terrible coffee-place last spring . . . now some one has hauled three ancient street cars to the crest... it looks like a street car graveyard . . . the transcendent beauty of the scenery is pitifully marred . . . Coldron says he owns the entire mountaintop . . . possession is now in the courts for determination . . . but there ought to be a law against beauty-marrers . . . really. What we went to State College for was the same reason that took a thou- sand other Pops and Moms . . . Fresh- man week begins there today... twelve hundred future wearers of “dinks’ arrived to learn what it is all about . . . they call it the “green in- vasion.” because the Froshs wear the green dinks . . . a week from yester- day the Freshmen will begin to live under rules and regulations prescrib- ed by the student governing board . . . but until that time they are free as birds . . . having only to spend seven days acquiring a preliminary con- signment of regard for Alma Mater the youngsters made me feel a little sorry ... not that they felt sorry; they were alive and well . . . but the advent of twelve hundred Freshmen at State told me a story of hundreds of homes just beginning to get used to the idea that a youngster is almost grown . .-. I think I could get a little sobby on this subject, but what’s the use ...I should have to follow the boy or girl from the time of the first feeble wail . . . past the time when the boy’s curls were cut . . . beyond the period when he started to school . . . the first bicycle . . .and all that sort of thing . . . and finally end at State ...0or Bucknell ...or Pitt .a Freshman . .. a youth of utmost con- fidence . . . satisfied that the world is his oyster . .. but in reality only a boy—or a girl--almost on the grown- up threshold . . . facing the bitterness of disappointment ... and now and then a joy, or pleasure . . . so yester- day afternoon as I drove through the milling crowds of Froshs I wondered how many of them thought their Pops and Moms are “old stuff” . . . relics of an ancient past . . . then it occurred to me that less than ten years from now they will have acquired—or regained —their sense of proportion ... and Pop and Mom will be re-pedestaled . . . that is the way of the world. Would That the Spirit of the Good Doctor Could See This. When Professor Lars Frederiksen, of the Royal Veterinary and Agri- cultural College, at Copenhagen, Den- mark, visited the Pennsylvania State College last week, he paid a high tri- bute to the work of the late Doctor H. P. Armsby. While visiting the respiration cal- orimeter installed by Doctor Armsby in the Institute of Animal Nutrition, Professor Frederiksen said that Doc- tor Armsby’s book, “The Nutrition of Farm Animals,’ had done Danish Far- mers more good than any other book circulated in his country. He also de- clared that trials at the agricultural experiment station in Denmark found the Armsby feeding standard closer fun any other to the Danish stand- ard. | GRIZZLY BEAR IS BECOMING RARER THAN BUFFALO. “The buffalo was never half as near total extinction as is the grizzly to- day.” This is the startling statement made by Will C. Barnes, assistant United States forester, in summing up the annual game census of the na- tional forests as it relates to the griz- zly bear, says a Bulletin of the Amer- ican Game Protective association. The census discloses that there are only grizzly bears in the national for- ests in the United States, outside of Alaska, and 50 per cent. of these are in Montana—not a single individual grizzly is reported from any of the national forests in California, a State in which these animals were once abundant. Nothing could more definitely in- dicate the necessity for protecting this great carnivorous species; unless it is the intention to pursue it to ex- termination. The Alaska brown bear also shows a heavy decrease in numbers since the last census and a definite need for curtailing hunting privileges in the limited area where this animal is found. The summary of the game census of the national forests discloses the following footings: Antelope ................... 7,665 Black Bear.................. 51,017 Grizzly including Alaska brown BAL. ise daar 3,380 Caribou ......0 0. cel 35 Deer ...cueoiiisiieiiens 709,856 Ble i nia 74,179 Moose. ................... 7,950 Mt. Goat... oe 19,334 Mi. Sheep .................. 13,248 This census is not an actual count but is the result of close estimates made by men who are constantly on the ground and are keeping tab on game conditions from to year to year. The antelope shows a slight in- crease, except in the few herds that are in captivity, which do not seem to thrive. Those on open range are doing well and in some instances have become a nuisance to farmers. It has been found that young antelope can be raised on a bottle successfully. These youngsters become tame and when accustomed to handling can be shipped anywhere without danger. Deer show a steady increase. In the Kaibab Forest, over-population is still acute and no effective plan has been definitely agreed upon for con- trolling the size of this herd. Starva- tion takes its annual toll. Elk herds continue to increase. The Yellowstone herd is dangerously close to the maximum of 20,000 head, the annual kill of about 1,500 not being enough to offset the natural increase. Moose are scarce, while mountain goat and mountain sheep show slight increases. It should be remembered that hunt- ing of game under State laws is per- mitted on most of the national forest areas. National forest game is not protected by sanctuary except in cer- tain instances. The United States has the responsibility also for care of the game in the national parks, all of which are sanctuaries. Uncanny Numbers. Here’s something interesting about the number 9. It is from the Rock Island Magazine. A man with an uncanny mania for juggling with figures placed a pad of paper and a pencil in his friend’s hands and said: “Put down the num- ber of your living brothers. Multiply it by two. Add three. Multiply the result by five. Add the number of your living sisters. Multiply the re- sult by ten. Add the number of dead brothers and sisters. Subtract one hundred and fifty from the re- sult.” The friend did as directed. “Now,” said the other with a cun- ning smile, “the right figure will be the number of deaths, the middle fig- ure the number of living sisters, and the left hand figure the number of liv- ing brothers.” So it was! Here is one discovered by W. Green in the latter part of the eighteenth century, that by multiplying 9 by any figure the sum of the resultant fig- ures will inevitably add up as nine. Thus: Twice 9 is 18; add the digits to- gether, and 2 and 7 is 9. So it goes on up to 11 times 9, which gives 99. Go to any extent and you cannot get away from the figure 9. For exam- ple, nine times 339 is 3051; add the digits together and they make 9. Again, 9 times 5071 is 45,639; the sum 2 these digits is 27; and 2 and Tis 9. Reptile Farm is Prosperous for Four Youths. Four youths, none more than 18 years old, comprise the members of an unusual business partnership. The Louisiana snake farm and its well- filled cages, located in the back yard of one of the firm members, prove the success of the corncern. The boys catch the snakes—mostly water and cotton-mouth moccasins— in the Louisiana swamps by the use of crooked sticks, and bring them out to their “farm” in bags. Some rat- tlers and many non-poisonous species also have been captured by the youth- ful adventurers. | Poison is extracted from the fangs of the reptiles once a week and this is sold at $10 an ounce for the treat- ment of snake bites. It requires but a day for the rep- tiles to acquire a new supply of the venom. Many narrow escapes have been made by members of the snake-hunt- ing party on their weekly jaunts to the Louisiana swamps. The most re- cent was' a few weeks ago when the party was attacked by a five-foot al- ligator which they finally subdued and tied with a rope. The partners are Jules Richard, 17; Ralph Richard, 14; Fred Hubert, 18, and Adolphe Duvalle, 17. —One-quarter of a million children under 18 years are industrially em- ployed. '50 HOURS TRIAL | 9 learning that his capacity to absorb j tion each day T1-16-tf LUMBER? Oh, Yes! Lumber, Sash, W. R. Shope Lumber Co. Call Bellefonte 432 Doors, Millwork and Roofing WINS FLYING LICENSE. How hard is it and how long does it take to learn to fly? These questions, doubly doubtful because of the conflicting estimates of aviators, are fairly simple, ac- cording to William P. McCracken Assistant Secretary of Commerce in charge of aeronautics. McCracken, himself a veteran flier, holds that the average man should be able to “solo” after five or six hours of dual instruction. “This instruction,” he said, “should be spread over a period of from six to fifteen days. An hour of instruc- is enough, since the novice concentrates so intensely on details is soon exhausted.” Statements that it is as easy to learn to fly a plane as to learn au- tomobile driving are far from cor- rect, the aeronautics boss declared. “Even those who have never tried to drive an automobile have ridden in them so much that they can judge speed and distance and have uncon- sciously become familiar with meth- ods of operation. A better compari- son is the sail boat. The average man can learn to fly much quicker than he can learn to handle even the single sheet cat-boat with any degree of proficiency,” he declared. If a few hours of instruction and a couple of solo flights will make a fairly competent flier, still it does not make a Lindbergh. Nor does it fit a man for 500-mile cross-country jaunts. The novice will be far safer if he wings his first 100 hours within sight of his airdrome, McCracken assert- ed. After learning to solo, he must then diligently practice until he has the “feel” of his ship and has ab- sorbed some knowledge of adverse flying conditions. The department will issue a com- mercial license to an aviator with 50 hours of flying behind him, but will not allow him to carry passengers on trips. After 200 hours of flying he can get his transport license. The eager novice, in picking a teacher, should find an aviator who has a commercial or transport license and a licensed plane, especially the latter, since the department will not issue licenses for obsolete “crates” which are unstable, McCracken said. The best planes to learn in are the low powered, stable machines which can land at a comparatively low rate of speed. The high-powered, speedy planes are too sensitive for the novice. Although it is not absolutely nec- essary for the flier to be familiar with motors, it is always valuable knowl- edge, McCracken declared. “If the flier can afford to have a mechanic take care of his plane, he needn’t know anything about the mo- tor. I know expert fliers who boast that they know nothing whatever about mechanical things. But if your motor goes dead. even if you land | safely, it is not always easy to find a ! mechanic competent to repair it.” ese Qe. —You can make any wallpaper | washable by going over it first with | sizing and then using a clear shellac. | This is advisable for the bathroom, kitchen and children’s room. i Don’t be. a “Road Hog.” Keeping to the right of the high- way is not only good manners but is an absolute requirement under the motor vehicle law. Motorists who disregard this provision add unnec- essarily to the hazards of driving, according to the Keystone Automo- bile Club, which calls upon all drivers to observe the rules of fair play and give the “other fellow” the same chance for safety they expect of him. ' “Only a road hog,” says the Club, “takes his half of the road out of the middle. If a motorist should happen to be using more than his share of the highway and -another driver sig- nals intention to pass, ordinary cour- tesy should impel him to pull over promptly to the right; yet it is a common occurrence to see drivers de- liberately hog the road and impede the progress of others. Unless mo- torists reform their driving practices, they can have only themselves to blame if more stringent State regu- lations are imposed.” IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 101 South Eleventh St., PHILADELPHIA. Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 72-48-tf Exclusive Emblem Jewelry Free sik HOSE Free Mendel's Knit Silk Hose for Wo- men, guaranteed to wear six months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A new pair FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER’'S TINY BOOT SHOP. FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% 73-36 J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent $4:°° Philadelphia SUNDAYS EPTEMBER 23, NOVEMBER 2 Leave Saturday night Preceding Excursion Bellefonte ..10.00 P. Milesburg . M Howard .... . M. Eagleville M. Beech Creek 10. M. Mill Hall ..10.51 P. M. URNING—Lyv. Phila. (Bd. St. Sta.) 5.55 p.m ‘“ West Philadelphia . 6.00 p.m, Pennsylvania Railroad Leave M. ‘ “ ! ‘“ “ “ ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING.—Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im all courts. Office, room 18 Crider’s Exchange. 51-1y KENNEDY JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business em~ Offices—No. 5, East 57-44 trusteed to hiis care. High street. 1 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, Con- sultation in English and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 58-8 PHYSICIANS R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State College Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his Tesiden®s D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames replaced and leases matched. Casebeer Bldg. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-t¢ VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday, Bellefonte, in the Garbrick building op~ posite the Court House, Wednesday after- noons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 430 p. m. Bell Phone Feeds WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF WAYNE FEEDS IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES Wayne’s Egg Mash $3.25 per H. Wayne’s Calf Meal 4.25 per H. Wayne's 32% Dairy Feed 3.10 per H. Wayne’s 24% Dairy Feed 2.80 per H. Wagner's 30% Dairy Feed 2.70 per H. Wagner's 22% Dairy Feed 2.50 per H. Wagner’s Pig Meal - 2.90 per H. Cotton Seed Meal, 43%, 3.50 per H. Oil Meal, 34% - - - 3.00 per H. Gluten feed, 23% - - 2.50 per H. Alfalfa - - - 2.25 per H. Tankage, 60% - - 4.25 per H. Meat Scrap, 45% - - 4.25 per H. Wagner's Egg Mash, Wagner's Scratch Feed, Cracked Corn, Chop, Bran, Middlings on Hand at All Times, at the Right Price. With the large crops of corn and oats let us grind your feed and make up your mixtures with cotton seed meal, oil meal, gluten and bran. We will do this at the small additional cost of 5 cents per hundred. If You Want Good Bread or Pastry TRY “OUR BEST” OR “GOLD COIN” FLOUR 0. Y. Wagner & Go, Inc 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Prime in flavor, freshness and nu- tritive value are our fine meats. That’s why particular housewives who take pride in their culinary ef- forts patronize us in ever-increas- ing numbers. will be sure to satisfy your family’s meat requirements when you shop and save HERE, P. L. Beezer Estate.....Meat Market PRIME QUALITY MEATS It’s why you, too, Telephone 667 Market on the Diamond Bellefonte, Penna. A Restful Night 5 SI Tous /, Add enjoyment to your trip East or West, giving you a delightful break in your journey. C&B LINE STEAMERS Each Way Every Night Between Buffalo and Cleveland offer you unlimited facilities, including large, comfort- om: jasures Jone mights refreshing sleep. Luxurious ins, wide decks, excellent dining room Courteous attendan able staterooms that service, a ts. A trip Connections at Cleveland for Lake Resorts, Detroit and Points West Daily Service May 1st to November 14th Leaving at 9:00 P. M.; Arriving at 7:30 A. M. Ask your ticket agent or tourist for tickets via C & B Line. New Low Fare $4.50 9% "Er $8.50 AUTOS CARRIED $6.50 AND UP The Cleveland and ‘Wharves: So, Michigan Ave. Bridge, Buffalo, N. will long you Hl I nh Company - Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating WRN Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Tull nt ud ll nN NAPA NNN 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. ammagsn 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. State College Bellefonte...