Bewoaiatdnn. Bellefonte, Pa., August 8, 1930. A HR EE EBSA, JUST FOLKS. It does not matter much that I This day have failed to gain renown, This, to my credit, I reply: “I have not crushed another down. I have not prospered by a lie Nor over trifles worn a frown. “It does not matter much tonight _ That I have little gold to spend ‘What is lost by doing right? Poor gains are_those regrets attend. Against this boast the loss is slight: I played the man and played the friend.” So homeward bound I whistle now Gay snatches of a merry song I have not broken trust or vow, I have not stooped to shame or wrong. No weaker man with battered brow Is cursing me for being strong. —By Edgar A. Guest. “SUSAN AND THE DOCTOR.” Susan started going with the boys early. Too early. Her mother had died, and there was no one to look after her. Her father had af- fairs of his own on his hands. Susan's escapades, from the time she was 13, had been a source of talk in the town where she lived. But they seemed all to have hap- pened in a past that was not in- credible. People had -almost forgot- ten that she had once gone with Buddie Merton and Carl Flannigan and Chuck Myers and Pat Dougherty —her affair had been going on for so many years with the doctor, And it had obscured not only her relations to other men, but almost everything else about Susan. Peo- ple did not think about the long and steady efficiency of her posi- tion in the Farmers Bank, where she had risen from clerk to assist- ant cashier, and where she was ac- tually a standy-by. When they went into the bank, and up to Susan’s little barred window, they did not see her—slim, shining-hair- ed, immaculate—as the cashier who dealt out nickels and dimes and bills with swift, experienced, white fin- gers. They did not recall how her present security was due to her- self alone. She had never depended upon her father for a living. She had never depended upon any one. She had borrowed money and taken a business course and then asked old Henry Houghton for a place in the bank; and it was upon that first meager and grudging admission that she had lived and put money aside and paid for the always fashionable perfection of her tailored clothes and the smartness of her hats. They looked through the little win- dow at her white hands and smooth hair, and thought: “I wonder how her affair is com- ing on with the doctor! Oh, yes! Susan was handy and she was bright. She made some of those pretty clothes herself—knitted Scarves when scarves were in fash- ion, and embroidered collar and cuff sets when they were the thing. She kept her two rooms and kitchenette at Mrs. Calverton’s in exquisite order. Women did admit that. And there were men in town who said that no one in that bank knew as much about its business as Susan. But all that seemed irrelevant to the consistent interest of her love affair. It obscured the rest of her life to Susan herself. There was never a moment when she was not aware of it. At the bank, when she was making accounts with swift and practiced accuracy, it was there in her breast, something unsatisfied, an ache and a craving; it was there behind the businesslike rhythm of the adding machine; and when she sat at the big table in the back room where the sunshine lay slant- wise in the morning its sweetness enveloped her in dreamy pain. She could never give herself up to the warmth of the sunshine. Her white fingers had to keep at work to ease the craving and subdue the thoughts that drew to their tight, inevitable center in her mind. It was with her when she went out on the street at noon. She frowned at the outdoor brightness. Suppose the doctor should come past! The possibility of it blinded her for a moment, with tense per- sistence of desire; and she would have liked—if she could have liked! —to stay in the shelter of the bank, where it was shaded and apart. She might be with Nita Allen, the stenographer; but her eyes could not be restrained from their rest- less, watching alertness. She must notice every car on the street. She must look down the narrowing vista to the building where the doctor had his office on the fifth floor, and must strain for a brief and unsat- isfying glimpse of the figure of a man who might be the doctor him- self coming out of the building. In Wessel's drug store, where she had her tuna-fish sandwich and glass of malted milk at the shining new counter, she had to talk gayly and brightly, in the usual ironic rep- artee, with the crowded line of sten- ographers and young business men, above her restless preoccupation and the constant small wear of pain. “Hello, Susan! How are you?” “Fine.” “Where do you keep yourself these days?” In the busy street of the growing town she felt almost a stranger— she, Susan, who had lived here all her life and knew every window dis- play in every store! But her affair with the doctor had set her apart from the rest of the town—from the old crowd, her own crowd: Elsie Adams, was married and had two babies; Letha Grove, who lived with her parentsand hadn't changed since high school days; Mary Wil. son; who came back now and then from her work in Chicago. Susan seemed never to have known another man than the doctor; and at times, when she heard in the { —with her drug store the animated chatter about dances, she wondered if she could actually whom the boys used to fall over one another to ask to dances, who chose this one or that with imperi- ous freedom, who was the most popular girl of her day. But when she went home after work—home? well, back to Mrs. Calverton’s —at half past five through smoky twilights of fall or the veiled tenderness of spring, resent- ful wonder would come over her. again, She went up the same gray— painted steps of the large, neat porch. She put her hand on the same bronze knob of the door. Inside, the house odor, orderly and slightly aging and remote, never quite that of home, enveloped her in dreari- ness. She could not stand the board that creaked on the stairs and the hot-water faucet that ran a mea- ger and maddening trickle. How could she endure this place a day longer? She had certainly never meant to spend all her life in a rooming house. Independence was all right. She wasn't going to have to ask anybody for things. But Susan had always planned,” be- ing methodical and worldly shrewd, that when the time came, when she was ready, she would marry and have a home of her own, the kind she wanted. And here she was, well along in the twenties, with nearly all the other girls in the crowd settled, and she still living in two rented rooms at Mrs. Cal- verton’s! Sometimes it seemed as if her whole scheme of life were go- ing astray . But when she entered her room, with its waiting orderliness of cushions and reading lamp and cigaret trays placed here and there, the dreariness vanished. Her im- patience sternly curbed itself. Mrs. Calverton was used to the whole thing. Besides, the doctor would be here in a little while. Susan went into the kitchenette. The shelves were filled with things of his own special choice—Mocha ' coffee, fig preserves, salted almonds. Susan saw these things, brought back the beloved and secret intimacy of a hundred little dinners. She used to love toput on her best clothes and go out to dinner with | men, tothe dining room of the Mel- rose, the most expensive place and be seen by them. But there was a painful kind of delight in giving up these old pleasures of hers—her own special pleasures. She wanted them again at times; | but there was the same delight in sacrificing them to his demand for secrecy and seclusion. Anyway, he would be here in a little while. She would be with him. He came up the stairs, into the living room, into the doorway of the kitchenette. Susan felt the vital largeness of his presence, war the whole place into life; although old manner of cool concentration she did not turn from lher work at the small gas stove. His arms were around her, and she was drawn backward. “Susan! Aren't you going to tell me you're glad to see me?” Through his arms she felt the straining domination of his need. The dinner was exciting and happy and cozy—one of their own little dinners, at the card table with the linen cloth that Susan had em- briodered in her leisure time, with the favorite dishes she had kept from her own home, and with the orange candles and the green-glass candlesticks that he had bought her. The shades were down. Their voices . were so low, sothat even Mrs. Cal. verton could not hear. But after he had left, Susan lay in her narrow bed aching and alone. Her tingling body wg# tense with resentment. No matter how they parted, her body was left tense and aching—for he went away, he left her alone, she could not stay warm and at ease in his arms and wake up beside him in the morning. She hated him. Then she turned and tossed. Her sleep seemed always to be shallow and tense. She craved wildly to break away from him. Why must her own need be sacrificed to his? Her life was passing—But it was as if he had sown within her the seed of his trouble. The affair had begun in quite a different way. Susan, for the time being, free of all her men. had broken the last frayed end of her brief but hotly melodramatic “case” with Pat Dougherty. And she didn’t want to go with any one for a while. It seemed to her that she had tried nearly all the eligible was men in this town, and that there | in any of them.’ was no interest There wasn't a one whose silly de- votion could make up for the loss of her position in the bank or who could give her anything that could | surpass it. In idleness and in revulsion from the extremely hot persistence of Pat Dougherty, Susan had looked up some of the old high school crowd again. She took pleasure -in going with Letha Grove and “the girls” to concerts and basketball games. There was in it the de- fiance of the men who admired her, and challenge to them, Never had she enjoyed her work in the bank so much. She exulted in the rapid, ceaseless click of her adding ma. chine. When ever she thought of Pat Dougherty it was with a wild, glad sense of escape. At this time Susan used to wake up and look out at the dew wet grass of Mrs. Calverton’s lawn, with a feeling as cool and fresh as the morning. However, such a state of affairs could not last for any one used to as much excitement as Susan. She began to get restless and’ to make excuses when ‘the girls wanted her to go somewhere with them. She wanted—what did she want?—she didn’t know. But something. “I'l tell you what's the matter with you.” Mrs. Calverton said. Stisan used to go downstairs some- times and talk to Mrs. Calverton in "the evening. be Susan—the one and they in | town, where she would see people ! In disgust she love, That's what's the trouble.” “I!” Susan exclaimed. “This is about the first time I've been out of it.” ! “You think so,” Mrs. Calverton said. { Susan laughed gleefully again. But when she went back upstairs to her room, that she had taken such delight in arranging and keep- ing just as she wanted it, she felt restless and lonely. She began to look at men with a different eye, although she was scarcely aware of it. really thought, before, of how hand- some he was—and interesting, too, and mysterious! Living in that big old brick house on the great lawn the dimly romantic legend of the “not quite right” aunt and invalid moth- good looks or noticed them because she hadn't considered the doctor within the realms of possibility. He had never gone with a woman in this town. He never appeared at dances. Susan began to amuse her- self by wondering about him and speculating ‘half idly about him, When she hurt her arm, ina fall from the rocks at a picnic she wouldn't let Ross Crabtree take her to Dr. Bradley's office when they got to town; but the next day, in a spirit of mischief and daring, and she didn’t know what else, Susan went to the doctor’s office. She hadn’t exactly meant any- thing at first—or nothing that could be put into words. She hadn't thought when she began it that it controlled affairs that never went too far—Or had she meant some- thing more? Had she been restless, wearied, impatient, tired of her cold and narrow hardness, wishing to be forced somehow into change?—At any rate, she hadn't meant nothing like this. She hadn’t dreamed, see- ing that handsome face upon the street one day and wondering what i the doctor would be like if she knew him, how the sullen humors, the { regal gloom, and lordly gayety, the insistent warmth of his intimate presence could break into her shin- ing hardness; and how at last her I cool strength, at the appeal of his sudden childishness, could diffuse into a passion of tenderness. She had noidea when she started deftly, and with a subtly cool speculation, ito draw him to her, that the thing i could ever be real—that he would want more of her, and that she would give it, with the future—al- ways so clear to Susan—lost in haze— i | Other girls in town, girls living at home and managing only a “date” now and then with an unattached man, envied Susan the Doctor. They saw the two driving off in the Doc- tor’s car, not to a dance—they nev- er went to dances—but all by them- Selves for a long and mysterious rive. : “ | realize how the situation and the ‘relationship between them had slow- ily changed through the years. | ~ She remembered, with brooding nostalgia now—a wonder if she | could have made things end differ- ' ently—what he used to tell her at first. i “You're the only thing I've got in this town. The only thing I've got in this damned, futile existence.” And ‘then his voice broke, and his big, handsome body was twisted and crumpled in pain before her awed, incredulous eyes, “Oh, God, Susan —give me some happiness! You're free. You can do as you -please ‘with yourself. And I'm held in this damned—or, no, God, I can’t call it that!'—but I can’t live in it any longer, they never let me out of it.” Yes, that was true. It was she who had been the free one, the in. calculable one, at first. He used to tell her that she lived in the open daylight and he always in shadow. She was the only ray of daylight that he had. Was it through a long underground persistance of craving, then, to right the balance and as- sert his final necessity of domina- tion, that he had slowly bound her to him and taken her freedom with her love? By the giving of a free gift she had bound herself. But ‘that she, Susan, should be conquer- ed and held at last by tenderness! {—what an amazing overturning of nature and fate. Gradually, what he said to her came to be: “But how can I? You knew how things were in the beginning. Well, it’s just the same. They're still alive. And you wouldn't live with them.” Even that was true. The old im- perious Susan could not even have contemplated being shut up for a night with those terrible women in ; that gloomy house. She was not too loyal to wonder | sometimes, now, if the hold of the two old women was still so inevit- able, She had made him a differ- ent person from the solitary man she had passed upon the street. The compensation and sustainment had done their work. That terrible hold did not sap all his strength jor turn his energy into hopeless i brooding. He had a secret pride. And although he still shunned dan- ces and social meetings—and made Susan shun them—in his old mis- anthropic way, he was no longer afraid to meet other men. His train- ing and study, after all these years, was at last beginning to show; and people in physical extremity did not care about the equivocal reputation of their surgeon. = He was making money now. Susan knew how much that meant, and fear had glowly grown into her that he could make place for her if he would. But she dared not quiet the fear by an as- surance that would force the last of her pride to break away from him. His mother died. Susan heard it at noon - in the: drug store. Fred Jefferson told her. “I hear the doctor’s. mother died last night.” “You've never been in ' One day she happened to pass the . doctor on the street. She had never that was dark with trees, and with ' er. She hadn't really thought of his’ would be essentially different from : her other wild and yet carefully ! But Susan herself could scarcely ' verton’s. aa Things irrelevant to that state- ‘ment were the first that came into Susan’s mind: Fred Jefferson's: eyes, curious and cold, betraying the tone he had taken, and the calculated shock of his statement (Fred was an old beau of hers, he had always taken a sneering tone about her af- fair with the doctor;) and then a painful thrust of anger because she must hear from other people this news affecting the man who was hers. The news seemed to have no other significance, although a, kind of sickness made her food taste- less to her. It was not until she went out of the drugstore, into the open light of the street, that she stopped still -—for the barest second-—while the meaning of the event opened up dizziness before her, “The doctcr’s mother died ' night.” A wildness of impatience thrilled through her. It was agony to go on with her work at the bank. She walked home through a changed, in- credible world—it was June, lawns were fresh, roses were out. Susan hadn't noticed that until now. The low sunlight of half-past-five lay across Mrs. Calverton’s lawn. The green ‘thick stalks of the peony bush bent over and laid flushed thick blossoms against the cool earth. For the first time in years Susan thought of the woods—in the deep green filter of sunlight, the flush of wild geraniums—Cars sped down the wide bright street. She "heard voices of children playing. All the town. all the world, was com- ing out of the tightness and un- | certainty of spring into the open and sunlit freedom of summer. He telephoned the bare news to her—a guarded voice, withdrawn and strange. He could not seeher just now. He would manage it to- “morrow. But after all these years, on this perfect night, it was ter- .rible to be thrown back again into the old tense suspension of living. She ate a solitary dinner, stood at the window a while, and went to bed, The news made its small in the town. last uproar Not because of the doctor’s mother herself—she had been, in her own person, almost forgotten—but because of the way her death would affect the doctor and Susan. “What's her?” There were very few who could actually say. “She used to be quite a beautiful woman. The old doctor did everything for her.” It was rumored, but never quite substan- tiated, that the old doctor had taken his own life. But they only knew ~ that for years she had ab- sorbed the care and money of her son; and all reminiscence of her ended: . “I suppose now the doctor will marry Susan.” And Susan, accepted for some time in a role seemingly static, be- came a heroine of a sort in the eyes of the town again. been the matter with “But the summer went on and the thing still hung fire. The doctor stayed on in the brick house, Susan went daily to her work at the bank and back to her rooms at Mrs. Cal- The roses were gone, the peonies shed their petals on the grass; there Were only bitter-smell- ing yarrow and boneset in the woods. People wondered, laughed cynically, or were indifferent; women who had loved Susan’s mother talked angrily about the selfishness of men: and the rest of the force in the bank, getting their heads together, de. clared: “Susan ought to give him a jack- ing up!” There were so many things to to think of, the doctor said. There was the old home. There was Aunt Agnes, She trusted him. Af- ter all these years, he could not put her in an institution. And when Susan hard and resentful in her balked desire, would not agree, he called her cruel and cold. Susan, with the heat and confidence of her fresh bloom upon her, fought with him, almost in the old arrogant way. “It can't stay as it is. Don’t you see? That’s all I'm saying.” Almost—but without the old straight and clear direction of her free imperiousness—because beyond that statement she dared not go. She was sobbing and angry, her hands still clutching with weakened passion at the edges of the couch, but a feeling of brokenness lay within her. The doctor sat in the big chair that he claimed as his. His voice was husky. He was al- most too tired to speak. “Susan, I'm tired. I've got to have some time to myself. I've had this strain for years. I can’t think of anything. I can’t think of anything, I can’t do anything now.” 3 Then go, then go, Susah wanted to say. But it was only telling her- self to go. She was bound up in him. The wold habit of passionate consolation remained; and she could not keep her strength or her anger at the tired appeal of his hands loosely clasping the arms of the chair, and the bright remoteness of pain in his eyes. She went over and put nerveless arms about him and laid her wet cheek against his hair. : After he had left she lay on the couch; and then tired, more tired than he could be, more tired than anything in the world, she struggled up through a daze of weakness to take off her clothes, fold them neat- ly, wash her face, brush her hair— as her stern sense of orderliness still commanded—and lie down on her. single cot—lie down to the old dissatisfaction turned now into apathy. The next morning the lawn out- side the windows was not so bright. The green, still thick and déep along the edges, beside the sunken coolness of the old cement walk, was fading into dry brown at ‘the center. The leaves had a look of dustiness. The doctor came to see Susan as always: But a sense of estrangement, | an acutal thing, not the old resent- ment that had made her turn more long suspension of action passionately to him, had crept be- tween them. Or was he a little more cautious and infrequent, now that the eyes of the town were curiously upon him, and that some- thing else might be expected of him? For imperceptibly the light which shone upon that image of two had shifted and brought out the figure of the doctor into relief. The lift- ing of the strain was beginning to tell. He looked fresher, freer, more vigorous, The gloom had lifted so that his handsomenesgs was no long- er mysteriously perceptible through his aloofness. Anyone could see it now. He met people with an awk- ward interest. Nothing held him back from them—nothing but the still secret, unacknowledged pull of his affair with Susan. And they felt a new respect for him, for it was plain that he was his own man at last. “Well, the poor fellow,” men of. ten said, when women accused him of dealing selfishly with Susan, “he’s been tied down ever since he wasa kid. Let him stretch himself awhile before he gets tied down again.” Women, on the other hand, to men who still admired and stood up for Susan, often said with a hard, small clarity of perception: “I think he could do better than Susan now.” So that no one was really sur- prised when he started going with another girl. Susan knew it long before she consciously knew it as a definite actuality, long before her tortured imagination began to settle and dig its talons into the acutal image of now this girl and now that. She could only turn at night in a rest- less fever of conjecture and rejec- tion of the fact itself. She want- ed to know, and at the same time skirted all possibility of discovery, until finally her torture of uncer- tainty grew more unbearable than knowledge itself, and forced her to say to him—a laughing hint that couldn’t possibly be true, “I believe Jou ast be going with some other r mn He answered her impatiently and without sympathy, “Well, good heav- ens, Susan, you played around long enough! We can't shut out the whole world forever.” That answer, little as it told and incredible as it seemed, was an ad- mission. And now the torture of her imagination was worse than any- thing she had gone through before. She did not know who it was, Peo- ple were thoughtful enough to avoid all mention of the name, and even of the doctor’s name; but she could see their knowledge in the curious conjecturing glances of their eyes. Her natural swift directness made her crave to go straight to the point and learn the fact. But that seemed to have bound her into itself so that she was unable to move hand or foot out of the new agony of suspense. Now, what had she left? But she could not let him go. Still, ‘outwardly, the affair seem- ed to go on pretty much as it al- ways had. They had their little dinners together. The warm weath- er lasted on into the fall; and on Sunday they were to drive as usual to the Four Corners. Susan dragged herself out of her tired inertia and got up in good time on Sunday morning so that she could bathe, wash and wave her hair, and press her white silk sleeve- less dress. She looked out of the window and saw the doctor coming up the walk. Her roadster stood out in front. He looked handsme, large, well-dressed. Susan felt even more than the old thrilling leap of pride. She want. ed to tell everyone that this man was hers. The time had long pass- ed when it was ' enough to know this sweetly in secret. iarity of going down the walk to- gether and getting into the car made her fear look small and fool- ish, like a night terror dragged in- to daylight. “Have a good time!” Mrs. Cal- verton called. She stood and look- ed after the couple. All the same, Susan had the feel- ing that the large, well-kept sur- geon’s hands upon the wheel were not hers ‘to touch. The profile was strange. She chattered recklessly to keep him from speaking. The doctor seemed, after a little : while—and that might have been only because the motor wasn’t act- ing well—to be responding to her. It was just like all of their drives, so that, when they came to the top of the One-Mile Hill, turned aside from the main road and stopped in the midst of the tangle of fall flow- ers, the silence brought back fear to her with which blinded her. She sat in in. credulous stillness; but her heart was pounding. She tried to say that she would get out and pick some goldenrod. “Susan, look here.” Even her breathing was suspend- ed. The world was stopping. “We've had the best out of this. Don’t you think so, too?” Silence, He turned toward her, and some. thing like the old pleading broke through the strained huskiness of his voice. It was almost like an ac- cusation. “You must have known this was coming as well as I did.” Silence —“My God, I wish you'd say some- thing!” Through her dry throat Susan forced a muttered “What?” “Well, just a response. You make me do it all.” “What is there to say?” That was all there was to it. Susan felt it, in a terrible tired- ness, as she sat with her slim hands loose in her silken lap. The great autumn landcape of brown fields and tufted trees spread out beyond the hill. She saw it. But she could not even feel pain for the difference between this chance final view and all the other happy ones. The doctor felt it. He did not even try to explain. There was so much to be said that there was mnoth- The famil- | a shock of surprise | A ————— A TR EAR ing to be said. And yet there was little after all. The thing had come to an end, He sat hunched loosely over the steering wheel and stared at the autumn landsc: too. Nevertheless, Susan did not die when the affair was over. In fact, she was aware of other powers in her that had never been brought to fullness. In spite of the bleak dreariness in which she moved, she resented the finality of her aspect in the eyes of the town. For a while she looked at the men who came into the bank with a faintly re-awakened interest. She would have” to work now to getone of them; but that would be all the more reason for doing it. There was old Tommy Rumsey. His wife was dead. He had always liked Susan, if he was not quite so apt, now, to pat her cheek and squeeze her hand. To him, however, she was young. He was a rich old codger. The town would have to yield her, involuntarily, a place among the matrons if she married him; and sometimes it amused one side of her mind—an earlier side, belonging to the old Susan, having nothing to do with the doctor—to conjecture what she could make him do. Could she force. him out of that big house in the country and into a new one in town? Susan thought she might. Now, when she was walking home at night she made long, interminable plans about what she would do if she married Tommy Rumsey—only to lose them abstractedly, if her eye caught sight of a new car or a strange person or just anything. And the other men—the bank ex- aminer, whom she knew to be a bachelor; a certain pleasant travel- ing man; Sid Bartley, who had started out as a mechanic, but now with a garage of his own, was a new possibility—they were not worth while either. In fact, Susan felt with an amazement about which she could do nothing that she didn’t want to marry any one. She resented the patronage in the tone of her old beaux—she wasn’t done yet!— and the pitying tone of the older women, the way in which the town took it for granted that she was still think- ing of the doctor. In the bleak clarity of her vision, she had admit- ted the truth when he had said that it was ended. Sometimes she wondered—if she had told him this or that at such and such a time— but she had waited too long until expectation had frayed out into nothing. His need and demand had crushed out of her more tenderness and passion than perhaps she had possessed. Why should she, Susan the most unlikely one, have been sacrificed to that need? But she un. derstood Mrs. Calverton in that, too. She could not really wish it had never been. She might be happier, but she would not be what she was now, not this Susan, Her love for him had gone too long balked, half fed, unsatisfied. All that it had really left was her practical capability. She took ref- uge in the shelter of that away from feeling. It grew restlessly. She was no longer contented in her work in the bank. She began to talk about going West and finding something else to do. Nothing seem- ed interesting now, but she could foresee—at the end ofa long, dim vista of change—how an interest might open up. She was not finish- ed. But it was finished—her affair with the doctor—her heart; yes, her life after all—The doctor was mar- rying Marjorie Pratt. He was building a new house and sending off the old aunt to an institution. His practice was enlarging. People took him as he was. But as long as she livedin this town, they would never look at Susan without think- ing of the doctor. (Harper's Maga- zine.) 5 RATTLERS, COPPERHEADS ON WAY TO WATER } i medal { i Doctor J. Bruce McCreary, deputy secretary of health, says that the hazard of bites --from rattlesnakes and copperheads has increased be- ‘cause of the extreme hot spell. “These snakes which usually re- main in the depths of the forests and mountains are coming to lower levels because of the drying up of local water supplies in their imme- diate locality,” said Dr. McCreary. “While there is no desire to convey the impression that it is hazardous for this reason to be in the woods ‘or near streams, it is suggested that ; tourists and hikers be on the alert , for a posssible meeting with a veno- ‘mous reptile. While even with the present dry weather such a meet- ing is not very probable, it is never- theless wise to be on one’s guard.” REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Harmon Bowes, et ux, to Clarence Buck, tract in Liberty Twp.; $1. George E. Young, et ux, to Ralph L. Struble, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Anna Bilger to Clarence Ripka, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $150. Dennis Quigg, et ux, to Arthur E. May, et ux, tract in Benner Twp.; $2,400. Sarah M. Lemon, etal, to Walter S. Mandore, tract in State College; $1. William Freeman, et ux, to Samuel Finberg, et al, tract in Philipsburg; $14,000. Annie H. Krebs to James P. Aikens, tract in College Twp.; $100. William D. Custard, et ux, to Vera Crawford, tract in State Col- lege; $1. Thomazine Lane, et al, to John S. Walker, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Clarence Ripka, et ux, to Edward C. Witmer, tract in Spring Twp.; $2,500. Lizzie A. Weaver, Exec, to John W. Meese, et ux, tract in Spring Twp.; $1. —Read the Watchman and get all the news.