! Bellefonte, Pa., October 26, 1928. TETAS UNS “BELLE FONTE.” A copious fount of beauty rare, So gurgled, gurgled up, Within a shady valley, where Twas so inclosed, that nature there Seemed formed in one huge cup. Twas thus a wand’rer first had seen It gurgling brightly up; And nothing in proportions, mean,— He saw its glories had not been, As down he knelt to sup. When quenched his thirst, he ‘rose to gaze Upon this cool retreat: Shut in by hills, the woods, a maze, It seemed as if no end of days Could make ’it a village seat. For thus it was, his thoughts would take A quite ambitious stand; “A spot so grand, oh! who'd forsake, Although it all his genius wake To clear and till the land!” But thwarted not by such a doubt, He first began to think, “I'll workmen bring, this pool scoop out, And put a wall of stone about, And put a cup to drink.’ “And soon the world will learn its fame, And some will come and stay; And by degrees twill get a name When nature wild turns nature tame, And then, a town, we'll say.” “The iron rail will pierce yon hill, And science find us out, Where deep the vale, there'll be a will To bridge it so that trade may still, Come in, and stir us ’bout.” “Thus, I forsee a town will rise, Around this lovely spet, And, it will grow to wondrous size, And when this generation dies, This scene there’s naught ean blot.’ Thus queried be; the dream seemed wild It grew to be a taunt; He acted as the dream had styled, And proved at last ‘twas very mild, He called that town Bellefonte. —From the Watchman of August 1900. —Written by Rev. W. A. C. ee ee. pene. X THE UNHAPPY STORY OF MARY TODD, THE WOMAN LINCOLN LOVED. _ Mary Todd, daughter of Robert Todd, President of the First Nation- al Bank of Lexington, Kentucky! We come upon her at an embarrassing moment, perhaps. She is fourteen years old and determined to attend - the Derby Day races, in spite of the fact that her Presbyterian father and still more Presbyterian mother have forbidden her to do so and have lock- ed her in her room. Mary is not as much cast down as | might be supposed. She stands by the window, wearing one of her mother’s best frocks—a deep rose silk, with a skimpily gathered skirt cut six inches from the ground, a high Byron col- lar, enormous puff sleeves and a huge hat with a rose-colored plume stand- ing a foot above the crown. She is decidedly pretty. The hat cannot conceal the mass of chestnut curls over her shoulders. Her eyes are beautiful, a deep blue, large and set well apart. She has a round little face anda pink-and-white skin. She pus one foot out of the window, fol- ows it with its pantaletted fellow, scuttles across the porch roof, goes monkey fashion down the clematis vine and for the moment we lose her. It was a long time ago—in 1832, to be exact. But stiib the story of that escapade of Mary's persists. It | was early afternoon and the street, on which stood the Todds’ house, was almost deserted. Almost! As Mary ran under the shade of the syringa hedges, her father appeared from no- where. Mary got her lifelong love of fin- ery from her father. He wore a bell- shaped blue broadcloth coat and white linen trousers strapped under his boots, and a bell-shaped hat, and a _chokingly high stock, and he halt- ed his daughter by obtruding a gold- mounted cane across her path. His temper flared. “What are you doing here and in your mother’s dress? Go home to bed, Miss.” A temper like his own crackled in Mary’s blue eyes. “I won’t! I'm go- ing to the races with the Thurstons.” Robert Todd did not propose to give public exhibition of either his own or his daughter’s peppery tongue. The neighboring windows were open. He took her by the arm, whirled her about and in five minutes Mary was relocked in her room. There she tore off her mother’s dress, thrust it in the grate and set fire to it. Then she burst into tears, shrieked “Fire! Fire!” until the entire family had crowded into the room, and in an agony 4° contribution, forced into her mother’s hands her savings for four years. Then she offered to take a whipping! No one could resist Mary in a re- pentant mood and she was forgiven. But still, her mother was troubled. Mary’s love of dress, Mary's fiery temper were elements of character her mother could not reconcile with the fact that Mary had a scholar’s mind. At fourteen, Mary led all the girls of her school. And this was no backwoods school. Lexington, in 1832, had earned the name “Athens of the West.” It was the center of a very real culture. It had a uni- versity and many private schodls where some of the newest European theories of education were being tried out. The wealthy families of Lex- ington, like the Todds, gave their children a solid education. At this time Mary and her older sister, Elizabeth, were attending the Mantelli school, where nothing but French was spoken. At fourteen Mary was the best of an accomplish- ed group of Joung linguists. At least, it seems like an accomplishment that her schoolmates were able to twit Mary in French and ing of Latin on the subject of the at- tempted runaway and an indecent ex- posure of cambric pantaloons, for Mary to lose her temper in French s0 completely that the preceptress took an hour to bring her to a proper state of contrition. ; Mary was a sensitive, ardent child. It was difficult not to excite her to too great repentance. That night Mary set a punishment upon herself for impertinence to the preceptress. She appeared the next morning in the astronomy class wearing a dread- ful-looking frock of linsey-woolsey, dyed with walnut juice. When the preceptress demanded an explanation, Mary replied that as love of clothes was one of her besetting sins, she had decided to remove the object of sin. Therefore she had exchanged her own wardrob for that of Tessie Grey, a poor white who lived in a cabin out on the Frankfort turnpike. She threw the class: into convul- sions of merriment as she miniicked Tessie’s agony of joy over the trans- action. Standing with arms akimbo, her body slack, her little feet in Tes- sie’s huge brogans, Mary drawled through her nose: “I ain't goin’s to give these hyer cambric pants up, Miss Mary, now you say they're mine, not if the Al- mighty says He wants to wear ’em in Heaven.” The preceptress, who had caught herself joining with the children id their avid following of Mary’s inimit- able description of the details of her penance, rapped on the desk and sent ary home. How could one punish a child like Mary Todd so as to teach her self- control? Certainly the preceptress did not know how. Nor her parents. Her father said she’d outgrow her bad temper, quite obvious to the fact that he’d never outgrown the habit of letting go when he wanted to let go. Her mother hoped that her good blood would tell. For Mary was not only of distinguished stock on her father’s side, with a grandfather who succeeded Daniel Boone as Chief Mili- tary Commander of the State, but her mother’s people were of the best in the Union. Her maternal grandfath- er was General Andrew Porter of Revolutionary fame, one uncle was Governor, of Michigan, another of Pennsylvania, and still another was to be Secretary of State under Tyler. But even if her good blood did” not teach her self-control, it, combined with her mother’s training, made of her that good old-fashioned thing, a lady. Mary was accustomed from birth to a home where guests were frequent and were beautifully enter-, tained. By the time through school, she was fitted to car- ry on the family’s social traditions. But she was to have little opportu- nity to do this in Lexington. Mary’s Mary was boots pulled up own dear mother died and a step- | mother came to the house on Short Street. Elizabeth married and went to live in Illinois. Small stepbrothers appeared. The new Mrs. Todd had i little patience with what she called Mary’s saucy tongue. There was con- stant friction that ended one day, when Mary was nineteen, in Mary’s furiously packing her trunk and furi- ously departing for Springfield, Iili- nois. Elizabeth had married Ninan Ed- wards, Attorney General of Illinois. It was in the Edwards’ home Mary settled and it was in the Edwardses’ home that she met the young intel- lectual elite of the town, among oth- ers Stephen A. Douglas and Abraham Lincoln. Immediately after Mary’s arrival in Springfield, the young men organized a cotillion party for her and thus gave her instant opportunity to take her place as a belle of the town. Which she did. She waltzed divinely. Stpehen Douglas told Lincoln so, af- ter dancing three times in succession with her. Lincoln was near the refreshment table, telling a story to a large group of young men. He paused, look- ed down from his enormous height at the dwarfish Douglas in his impec- cable black broadcloth and ambled over to Miss Todd. He asked her to be his partner in the next square dance. Mary looked up at this careless giant in shabby, snuff colored clothes and heavy shoes. She was much too finicky about people's dress. Yet as she felt her lips curl in scorn, she caught the look of his eyes and told herself that she never had seen such beautiful eyes in a man—gray eyes of an unfathomable sadness and ten- derness. She rose and took Lincoln’s arm for the dance. After the quadrille Lincoln found himself telling her about his night study of Euclid. Mary knew Euclid and engaged him to come the follow- ing evening to see her, bringing his book along. He discovered at the mo- ment that Mary knew French and German and her stock with him took another bound. And she was so dain- ty with all her erudition, so pretty ! He kept his engagement the next night and for many nights. Mary had a gift for friendship with men of the mental type, a gift few women possess. She had not been in Springfield a year before she had es- tablished several such friendships. The most solid of these were with Douglas and with Lincoln. Long be- fore they knew it she recognized that both were in love with her. Her brother-in-law, wards, and her sister, Elizabeth, watched with not unanxious interest Mary was a flirt but one never could tell! Douglas, whose brilliant future was obvious, was entirely eligible as a suitor. Lincoln, no! A likeable fel- low but socially an outsider. When Edwards protested against Lincoln’s constant presence, Elizabeth insisted that Mary’s sense of humor and her social ambitions would protect her. } Ninian Ed-' “Why, Mary made fun of him yes- terday,” she said, “for the benefit of’ the sewing circle. She had us in con- vulsions showing how he led her through the Virginia reel. And she can tell a story with every one of Abe’s grimances. One doesn’t do that with a man one loves.” “Mary does. Mary would poke fun at the twelve Apostles’ “And wash their feet afterward a smatter- | with tears !” said Elizabeth. “Yes, but that doesn’t do away with the hurt to the heart. I wish she’d as the control that tongue of hers. Just be- latest leg coverings were called. It | cause she’s so lovable makes it all the was stili more of an accomplishment i worse.” He sighed and picked up his hat, then came back to say, “You warn Mary that Abe Lineoln as a friend is delightful but as a suitor he won’t do.” - Dutifully, warning the first time she was alone with her sister. Mary tossed hor curls with a laugh. “The man I'm going to marry, dear Elizabeth, will one day be President of the United States! That evening Elizabeth reported to her husband that Mary was planning to marry Stephen Douglas. In the two years that followed their meeting Mary Todd and Abra- ham Lincoln grew to know each other well. Lincoln saw many unhappy ex- hibitions of her hasty tongue. Some- times he himself was the victim. On the other hand, she represented to him all that he lacked in family back- ground, in culture, in refinement of mind and manner. More than that, she was utterly lovable and she crept into his heart as a brilliant child might have crept. Lincoln’s uncouthness irritated Mary, but she had not known him a month before her capacity for keen esti- mates of human beings told her that the stuff of Lincoln’s brain was as much above that of Douglas's as quartz crystal is above glass. Lin- coln excelled anyone she’d ever known in mental and moral power. He was the only person she’d ever known whose sense of humor exceeded her own. Her temper at times interfer- ed with hers, as she ruefully admit- ted to herself. Lincoln’s never. She was of a type that could love greatly only where she admired great- ly. It was not six months after this meeting that Lincoln held Mary Todd’s heart in his ecalloused palm. But she fended him off for a long time, She knew that poverty and toil would be the lot of Lincoln’s wife, and she wanted to play a little longer. It was, of course, her own “hasty tongue that finally betrayed her. He was careless and absent-minded about his engagements with her. He ambled into the parlor late one win- ter evening, his Euclid under his arm, to find Mary standing before the grate, in her best party dress, cheeks scarlet, eyes snapping. He recog- nized the danger signals and threw up both hands. “Jings, Miss Todd, I forgot all about the cotillion! I got into an argument down at the office about— Well, come along! I won't waste any more time.” Mary looked at the unpolished over the faded jean pantaloons, at the threadbare, spotted roundabout coat, lacking all but one button, at the rusty black stock, half tied, at the unkempt black hair. “You are not a gentleman,” she said in a low voice of fury, “or you neither would forget an engagement with a lady nor come into her pres- ence looking like a horse drover.” “Noj” replied Lincoln gently, “I reckon I never was meant to be eith- er a gentleman or a lady’s man. And I don’t like that knowledge any better than you do.” She was staring up at him, a new insult forming on her lips, when the tragic humility and pride in his beau- tiful gray eyes pierced through her anger. She gasped as she realized the ‘enormity of what she had said and springing forward, she seized one of his great rough hands in hers and bowed her head upon it. “Oh, my dear! my dear!” she groan- ed. “I am not worthy to tie your shoe latchet!” The Euclid dropped to the floor and Mary was lifted into his mighty em- brace and folded to the breast that through life and through death was to be her home. Mary’s various relatives did not like the engagement and did not hesitate to say so. It should have been a quick marriage—let the world go hang! But Lincoln was heavily in debt and was only beginning to build his law practice. He dared not undertake the duties of a husband and father until he was better established. So it was a long and stormy engagement. Lincoln was neglectful of the small attentions and amenities that make an engagement beautiful, careless in keeping his appointments. Indeed, sometimes it seemed to Mary that he forgot for days that he was engaged. This mortified her and she would re- prove him bitterly and go off with one of her other admirers to the dance Lincoln had forgotten. What Mary had not then eome to understand in some ways was Lincoln was abnormally sensitive. Gradually, as the months slipped by, he began to think that however much he loved a woman, he was by ngéure unfitted to make her happy. He grew depress- ed, spent long hours in his office star- ing into space, would listen to Mary’s stormy reproaches and repentances with tear-dimmed eyes. nearly a year, on the first of J anuary, 184, he said to her with a heavy sigh: “Your right, Mary. I'm not fit for anything but the barnyard. So I'm giving you back your freedom,” and he walked out of the house and out of her life for many months. Everyone knows that his broken en- gagement made Lincoln suffer the torments of the damned. But what the world has ignored is that Mary Todd suffered as much. Not only was she utterly humiliated, not only did she know that her own lack of self-control was partially to blame for the situation, but she loved Lin- cdin passionately and unwaveringly. No other man ever could or ever did enter her life. She became ill with her suffering as did Lincoln. He fin- ally went to recuperate with his friend Speed in Louisville but Mary remained in Springfield. She gave away her trousseau, In the fall of 1842 Lincoln return- ed to Springfield and settled down to work, dejectedly enough. One ev- ening he went to call at the home of Simeon Francis, editor of the Sang- amon Journal, who was a great friend of both Lincoln and Mary. The two men were talking in the parlor when the outer door slammed and Mary ap- peared, blinking in the lamplight. She gasped and turned to go, but Lincoln made one great stride and seized her by both hands. “The court is taking a recess, Francis,” he said over his shoulder and the editor fled. “Mary,” Lin- Elizabeth issued ‘the And after | coln went on huskily, “I am. the most miserable man living. If what I feel were equally distributed to the whole human family, there ‘would not be one cheerful face on earth.” She looked up into the gray eyes that were so inexpressibly dear to her and although her lips quivered she could not prevent a dimple from appearing at the corner of her mouth as she said, “Misery loves company.” But for once Lincoln would not smile. “I’ve reached the point where I realize I'll never be anything but a husk of a man without you. I don’ see how you could mourn for a fellow like me, but Francis says you have.” Mary threw her pride to the winds. “I shall go widowed all my life, Abr’am, without you!” Lincoln turned her face up to his. “Then we're going to be married be- fore your friends or your relatives know what's happening. I reckon I've learned my lesson.” A few days later, Lincoln met Nin- ian Edwards on the street and in- formed him that he and Mary were going to be married that evening in the Episcopal church. Edwards, who was over six feet tall, drew himself up to utter a re- tort that should once and for all put the quietus on Lincoln. But the look he caught in the gaunt face above his own caused a sudden change in his words. What came forth, though grudingly, was. “No, Mary is my ward and must be married from my house.” Thus on the rainy evening of No- vember 4, 1842, in ‘the parlor of the Edwardses’ home, Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln were married. There were no attendants. There were not more than thirty people present. And Mary, who had all her life looked fox- ward to the magnificence of her wed- ding dress and outfit, was married in a muslin dress with neither veil nor flowers. Lincoln had prepared no home for Mary. They went to live in the Globe Tavern, kept by the Widow Beck. Their room and board cost them four dollars a week. But they did neg stay in the tavern long after Bobbie was born in the summer of 1843. Mary induced her husband to make the plunge and they bought a story- -and-a-half frame house with a barn and well fenced yard in a good neigh- borhood. Temperamentally, Mary was a syb- arite. She could not have endured » without breaking the labor and the deprivations of those early years of marriage had she not finally achiev- ed the finest luxury that can be vouch- safed to marriage—complete mental | Companionship with the man she had | married. They both cherished that compan- ionship. After his marriage, Lincoln spent less and less time sitting round the sawdust spittoons in the stores of Springfield, arguing and swapping yarns. Mary was educating him. He spent more and more time in study and in general reading. However scantily the larder might be supplied, Mary saw to it that in the parlor there were always good books and she made her husband read these books aloud to her and diccuss them with her. She regularly read French and German poetry and philosophy and a French journal to him, translating as she read in her vivid, eager voice; no one could read or tell a story more : expressively. One marvels at her energy. She did all her own ‘sewing and house- work. She kept everlastingly at Lin- coln about his bad manners. She saw that he was dressed properly— at least he ceased to wear jeans in court and top-boots to dinner parties. Their home was beautifully ordered and in spite of poverty they began to build a reputation for hospitality. Bobbie was almost three years old when their second son was born and named after their close friend, Ed- ward D. Baker. Bob was a preco- cious youngster whom Lincoln spoil- ed outrageously. Lincoln’s .incapac- ity as a father was rapidly becoming a real anxiety to Mary. There were days when Bob was so. naughty and his father so lackadaisical that Mary’s nerves flew to pieces and Lincoln fied the house, leaving Mary to wrestle alone with the child he had spoiled, with the wretched kitchen stove, the smpty larder, the teething little Ed- ie. Lincoln often mourned to his friends that he was not a “good pro- vider.” Poor Mary at first was con- stantly dogging him to split the kin- dling, to attend to the winter's supply of wood, to lay in the stock of winter vegetables. But finally she saw that, herein, she could not change him and ceased to demand anything of him in the house, but concentrated entirely on pushing him forward in his pro- fession and in politics. Both of them having such pro- nounced characteristics it took a long time for them to make the mar- riage adjustment. But they climbed the final hilltop to understanding | when they had been married about i seven years. Lincoln had been back- ( sliding in the matter of spending ev- { enings at home. He was running for | Congress and that gave him an ex- cuse for many a long evening in his office. with Herndon, his partner, swopping yarns in the old bachelor manner. After all, a spoiled boy, a sickly baby, a peppy wife at times | take the savor out of the most order- ly home. Mary was hurt and worried. She didn’t like Herndon. With her un- canny skill at sizing up men, she had seen his dangerous weaknesses. He drank too much, used drugs, was lax with women. He had a strong hold jon her husband’s affection and admij- | ration. She had right to worry. And | the more she fussed, the more Lin- coln stayed away from home. Eddie was the very darling of Mary’s heart. He was the quaintest baby in the world. At four he was a long, lean, brown little chap with pathetic gray eyes and a humorous, full mouth, the image of his father. { In the middle of January, 1850, he was taken ill. It did not seem ser- ious, but his deep affection for the child made Lincoln anxious and he did his utmost to share the nursing with Mary. After two weeks of slow fever, it looked as if the worst was over and Lincoln ventured to stay down-town ‘until midnight one evening, talking atheism with Herndon. About the time he started for home, a little moan from Eddie startled Mary, read- ing beside him. The child was in a violent convulsion and before she could apply a single remedy he was Lincoln heard her shriek as he en- tered the back door. He made the stairs in a leap and rushed into the bedroom. “Eddie! Look! Look ”—holding “Dead! the little body toward him. My baby! My little son!” Lincoln stared, horrified. “It can’t be! Tt's just a fit! I'll get the doc- tor!” But Mary knew. It was death. She could not let Lincoln go. “Don’t leave me alone again! I shall go mad.” Lincoln gave a great groan. “You were alone with him while I fooled with Herndon! If I had been here to get the doctor: if But Mary would not blame him now. “If I’d not been a shrew,” she wept, “you’d have been here!” “God has punished us both!” Great tears ran down Lincoln’s cheeks, and clasped in each other's arms, Eddie’s father and mother mingled bitter tears of loss and of regret. Long after the little fellow’s death, they grieved for Eddie with the ex- travagance inherent in their peculiar natures. But, as if God had, indeed, a purpose in the tragedy, the Lincolns found themselves working together in a harmony they never before had achieved. Their love deepened to a complete understanding. More. and more Mary gave the force of her tremendous personality to moving Lincoln forward on his career. She entertained more and more. People who went to the Lin- coln home said that the two were ut- terly unique: Lincoln with his perpet- ual fund of stories and his wife with her witty tongue that sometimes hurt but was always funny, and with her kindness of heart that permitted no guest, however humble, to feel that he was not one of the important per- sonages present. In December, 1850, another son, William Wallace, was born, and in April, 1853, a fourth son, Thomas, whom his father called Tadpole. Just before Willie's birth, a crisis came in Lincoln’s career. He came home one day and said that he’d been offer- ed the job of territorial Governor of Oregon and wanted to accept. To his astonishment, Mary shook Ebe “No! They are, her head vehemently. merely trying to hide you on the Pa- cific Coast, Abr’am, because they fear you on the Atlantic.” Nonsense!” protested Lincoln. “I've no more reputation than a yellow dog in the East. I'd like to go out into the wonderful new country. I think we'd do well. Perhaps we could get out of debt.” “You are meant for better things, Abr'am. The Almighty had a reason for giving you your wonderful brain and your unassailable balance. Some day He'll show you that reason un- mistakably, and you must be free to follow.” ’ And although different committees of politicians waited on her urging her to change her decision, Mary remained the same. The terrible question of slavery was now tearing at the vitals of the na. tion. Mary studied the question with Lincoln, read omnivorously, handing on to him epitomes of what he had no time to read himself. She took notes on his speeches whenever she could leave the babies, criticized them and made suggestions. When his friends suggested that he debate tha slavery question with Stephen A. Douglas, Mary was enthusiastic. Money? She'd find it somehow. The children? She’d manage somehow. And she did. She wrote her sister while the de- bates were going on that although she was sitting in the kitchen, one foot on the cradle rocker, one hand stir- ring the stew pot while the other held the pen, she wished her sister to real. ize that Mary Todd was married not only to one of the Lord’s saints but to a saint who was one of the intellec- tual marvels of the world. “And I know his intellect, for I've helped to stock it with facts!” He needed a Pianager for all the externals of life and Mary was that manager during all the years of prep- aration for the “far-off, divine event.” The debates with Douglas launched him well on the road to the Presiden- cy. During the summer of 1860 Mary entertained extensively. She acquir- ed a hired girl, used a Chicago cater- er when necessary, made herself sev- eral party dresses with crinolines as enormous as those of any Broadway belle and kept open house for the weil known who came from all parts of the United States. On Election Day Mary suffered more from nerves than did her hus- band. He spent the day in his crowd- ed office. There were a good man callers at the Lincoln home in the i f ternoon, but in the evening the house was deserted. Mary, with the boys, went down-town for a little while and looked in at the hall, where her hus- band was surrounded by an enormous and noisy crowd of men and women shouting out the early returns and singing, “Oh, ain’t you glnd you join- ed the Republican Party!” She felt that the boys ought to see the acclaim their father was receiv- ing. Her only regret was that Eddie had not lived to witness it. But she could not bear the excitement and shortly she returned with the children to the quiet house. The boys went to bed. ary sat beside the lamp sew- ing and thinking. It was nearing dawn when her husband came in. His face was ghastly white in the lamp- light. : “Mary,” he said huskily, “God help us, they have elected me!” She rose and stood for a moment supporting her weak knees against her chair, a sudden and inexplicable sadness choking her. Lincoln held out his arms and husband and wife clasped each other in a long embrace. The White House was in a badly run-down condition when the Lincolns moved into it. Mary had no idea how much it would cost to renovate it or how many servants were actually needed to run it. With the common sense of the experienced housewife, she discharged the steward and un- a —————— dertook to run the place until she un- derstood its need. With this more rose the first whisper of gossip. The Lincolns had been in the White House about a week when Mary, splendid in a purple grenadine, swept into young Stoddard’s office, Stod- dard was the third of Lincoln's secre~ taries and among other duties he was to help Mary with the social work aE the Administration. She tossed a letter before him. “How can I have the author of that: arrested?” she cried. Stoddard read—“You do your own: work because you have been a servant yourself. Both you and your husband are known to have nigger blood in: your veins. You had better not insult. the Southern arisocracy of Washing- ton by making any advances toward’ them.” Young Stoddard flushed. “It’s annoy-- mous. You'll receive many such,. Madam President. Don’t read them!” He threw the letter in the grate. Mary set her lips firmly and went on with her task of inspecting the: contents of the White House, (Continued until next week.) ernie Two Bus Lines Planned by Pennsyl-- vania Road. The Pennsylvania General Transit Company, the bus subsidiary of the: Pennsylvania Railroad and R. K. khouse, of Philadelphia, a direc- tor of the transit company made application to the Public = Service ommission to operate the first in- terstate bus service across the entire State. . Two routes are proposed in the pe- tition ag Presented. The. bus company would operate through the central part of Pennsylvania, while the route described in the Stackhouse application. is along the southern tier counties. Six busses capable of carrying 29 pass- engers each would be placed in ope-- ration. The transit company’s service would begin in Philadelphia and ex- tend to the Ohio State line at a point near East Palestine. The cities and towns along the proposed route are Paoli, Downingtown, Lancaster, Har- risburg, Lewistown, Hollidaysburg, Ebensburg, Blairsville, Pittsburgh and Beaver Falls and other intermediate points. Some of the busses would: deviate from this route at Hunting-- don and go to Tyrone and Altoona and thence back to the main route at nsburg. The southern line, as proposed by tackhouse, presenting his petition as. an individual because Franklin county was not included in the charter re- cently granted by Gov. Fisher per- mitting the bus subsidiary to operate in 55 counties, originates in Philadel- phia also. It follows the other route to Lancaster, where it branches off to York, Gettysburg, Chambersburg, Bedford, Greensburg, Pittsburgh and Beaver Falls and thence to the Ohio boundary line. Other busses would go to towns south of Gettysburg, visiting Em- mitshurg, Waynesboro, Green Castle, Mercersburg and thence to MeCon- nellsburg, where they would continue along the main southern line. ——e. Silence Band In Honor Of Armistice. To celebrate the tenth anniversary of Armistice Day on Nov. 11 ga dem- onstration of silence at 11 a. m., liter- ally world encircling in its scope, has. been arranged. For this purpose the League of Re- membrance, with headquarters in New York, has sent invitations to the: heads of every country within the latitudes of 30 degrees and 45 degrees. to cooperate by the suspension of ail industrial activity as far as possible, and the cessation of all vehicular traffic during the two solemn minutes at 11 a. m., the hour when the Ar. mistice agreement was signed in 1918 and the great war ceased. In this way, says the League as the earth revoles around the sun, and the hands of the clock move in unison, every hour of the procession of twen- ty-four on Armistice Day will be sig- nalized in every longitude by a rev- erential and prayerful pause. The League of Remembrance, es- tablished on Nov. 11, 1919, to pro- mote world peace, is cooperating with national, State, civic and other agen- cles in the United States and abroad to secure the world wide. celebration of Armistice Day by the two minutes: silence. The invitations have been sent out not only to the heads of every govern- ment of countries within the latitudes mentioned but also to various groups of peoples in those countries and to their diplomatic representatives in Washington. This year’s work, limited to a belt of countries around the globe is but the Preparatory stage to a greater campaign next year to capitalize world sentiment for peace by invit- ing every country in the world to ob- serve the silence at the eleventh hour of the eleventh month of the eleventh year since the first Armistice Day. et eseses— American Men Spend $750,000,000 Annually In Keeping Good Looks. Mere man in the United States spends more than $750,000,000 yearly in 75,000 barber shops trying to make himself beautiful, according to Jo- seph Byrne of New York. Byrne, secretary of the National Beauty and Barbers Supply Dealers Association, addressing the annual convention in Chicago said there are thousands of men who have their hair marcelled or permanent waved, “There are more than those who admit it who have their faces mas- saged and have facial treatment to rub out wrinkles,” Byrne declared. “There are many men too who have their faces lifted. “It used to be an oddity to see a man get a public manicure. Today men give almost as much trade to the manicure shops as do the women. em pe Minister: “Come, come, my friend, try to lead a better life. Why, you are continually breaking one of the ° Commandments.” His Friend: “Nope, parson. I don't have any trouble with a single one of the Commandments. It's the amend- ments that I simply can’t keep.” —Country Gentleman.