Bellefonte, Pa., November 7, 1930. SE DISABLED. The bugle’s call—the drum’s low beat— Crowds surging through the flag swept street— And straight, young figures marching by To music flung against the sky— Yet on this day of peace I see Another, lonelier company: These are not they who fell—these still Are tortured on Golgotha’s hill! And one is here who not again Will feel the pulse of rapture when The high, hard trail has yielded to His conquering steps—Another who No longer now will joy to see The April dawn’s swift ecstasy Of blue and gold—And here one lies With pitifully staring eyes, To whom the drum’s low beat will bring Remembrances of osme hideous thing— So, on this day of peace, I see Another, lonelier company: These are not they who gladly died But they who still are crucified! ' THE VERDICT. I had always thought Jack Gis- burn rather a cheap genius—though a good fellow enough—so it was no great surprise to me to hear that, in the height of his glory, he had dropped his painting, married a rich widow, and established himself in a villa on the Riviera. (Though I rather thought it would have been Rome or Florence.) “The height of his glory”—that was what the women called it. I can hear Mrs. Gideon Thwing—his last Chicago sitter—deploring his unaccountable abdication. “Of course it's going to send the value of my picture 'way up; but I don’t think of that, Mr. Rickham—the loss to Arrt is all I think of” The word, on Mrs. Thwing’s lips, multi- plied it’s rs as though they were reflected in an endless vista of mir- rors. And it was not only the Mrs. Thwings who mourned. Had not the exquisite Hermia Croft, at the last Grafton Gallery show, stop- ped me before Gisburn’s ‘“Moon- dancers” to say, with tears in her eyes: “We shall not look upon it’s like again?” Well! —even through the prism of Hermia's tears I felt able to face the fact with equanimity, Poor Jack Gisburn! The women had made him—it was fitting that they should mourn him. Among his own sex fewer regrets were heard, and in his own trade hardly a murmur. Pofessional jealousy? Perhaps. If it were, the honour of the craft was vindicated by little Claude Nutley, who, in all good faith, brought out in the Burlington a very handsome “obituary” on Jack—one of those showy articles stocked with random technicalities that I have heard (1 won't say by whom) compared to Gisburn’s painting. And so—his resolve being apparently irrevocable —the discussion died out, and, as Mrs. Thwing had predicited, the price of “Gisburns” went up. It was not till three years later that, in the course of a few weeks’ idling on the Riviera, it suddenly occurred to me to wonder why Gis- burn had given up his painting. On reflection, it really was a tempting problem. To accuse his wife would have been too easy—his fair sitters had been denied the solace of saying that Mrs. Gisburn had “dragged him down.” For Mrs. Gisburn—as such —had not existed till nearly a year after Jack’s resolve had been taken. It might be that he had married her ——since he liked his ease—because he didn’t want to go on painting; but it would be hard to prove that! he had given up his painting because | he had married her, Of course, if she had not dragged him down, she had equally, as Miss Croft contended, failed to “lift him up”—she had not led him back to the easel. To put the brush into his hand again—what a vocation for a wife! But Mrs. Gisburn appeared to have disdained it—and I felt it | might be interesting to find out why. The desultory life of the Riviera ! itself leads to such purely academic Speculations; and having, on my way to Monto Carlo, caught a glimpse of Jack’s balustraded terraces between | the pines, I had myself borne thither the next day. ie Y found the couple at tea beneath their palm-trees; and Mrs. Gisburn’s welcome was so genial that, in the ensuing weeks, I claimed it fre- quently. It wasnot that my hostess was “interesting:” on that point I could have given Miss Croft the fullest reassurance. It was just be- cause she was not interesting—if I found her so. For Jack, all his life, had been surrounded by - inter. esting women; they had fostered his art, it had been reared in the hot- house of their adulation. And it was therefore instructive to note what effect the ‘deadening atmos- phére of mediocrity” (I quote Miss Croft) was having on him. I have mentioned that Mrs .Gis- burn was rich; and it was immedi- ately perceptible that her husband was extracting from this circum- stance a delicate but substantial satisfaction. It is, as a rule, the people who scorn money who get most out of it; and Jack’s elegant disdain of his wife's big balance enabled him, with an appearance of prefect good-breeding, to transmute it into objects of art and luxury. To the latter, I must add, he re- mained relatively indifferent; but he was buying Renaissance bronzes and eighteenth-century pictures with a discrimination that bespoke the amplest resources. Larno 4 ‘Money's only excuse is to put beauty into circulation,” was one of when; on appointed luncheon-table, a later day, I had again run over from Monte Carlo; and Mrs. Gis- burn, beaming on him, added for my enlightenment. “Jack is so morbidly sensitive to every form of beauty.” Sa : Poor Jack! It had always been his fate to have yoed say such things of him: thé fact sHould be set down in exXtenuation. What struck me now was that, for the similar tributés—was it the conjugal note robbed them of their savour? No—for, oddly enough, it became apparent that he was fond of Mrs. Gisburn—fond enough not to see her absurdity. It was his own absurdity he seemed to be wincing under—his own attitude as an ob. ject for garlands and incense. : “My dear, since I've chucked painting people don’t say that stuff about me—they say it about Victor Grindle,” was his only protest, ashe rose from the table and strolled out onto the sunlit terrace. I glanced after him, struck by his last word. Victor Grindle was, in fact, becoming the man of the moment—as Jack himself, one might put it, had been the man of the hour. The younger artist was said to have formed himself at my friend’s feet, and I wondered if a tinge of jealousy underlay the latter's mys- terious abdication. But no—for it was not till after that event that the rose Dubarry drawing-rooms had begun to display their “Grindles.” I turned to Mrs, Gisburn, who had lingered to give a lump of sugar to her spaniel in the dining-room. Why has he chucked painting?” I asked abruptly. She raised her eyebrows with a hint of good-humoured surprise. “Oh, he doesn’t have to now, you know; and I want him to enjoy himself,” she said quite simply. Ilooked about the spacious white- panelled room, with its famille- verte vases repeating the tones of the pale damask curtains, and its eighteenth-century pastels in delicate faded frames. “Has he chucked his pictures too? I haven't seen a single one in the house.” A slight shade of constraint cros- sed Mrs. Gisburn’s open countenance. “It’s his ridiculous modesty, you know. He says they're not fit to have about; he’s sent them all away except one—my portrait—and that I have to keep upstairs.” His ridiculous modesty—Jack mod- est about his pictures? My curi- osity was growing like the bean stalk. I said persuasively to my hostess: “I must really see your portrait, you know.” She glanced out almost timorously at the terace where her husband, lounging in a hooded chair, had lit a cigar anddrawn the Russian deer- hound’s head between his knees. “Well, come while he’s not look- ing,” she said, with a laugh that tried to hide her nervousness; and I followed her between the marble Emperors of the hall, . and up the wide stairs with terra-cotta nymphs poised among flowers at each land- ng. In the dimmest corner of her boudoir, amid a profusion of delicate and distinguished objects, hung one of the familiar oval canvases, in the inevitable garlanded frame. The mere outline of the frame called up all Gisburn’s past! Mrs. Gisburn drew back the win- dow curtains, moved aside a jardi- niere full of pink azaleas, pushed an arm-chair away, and said: Tr you stand here you can just man- age to see it. I had it over the mantelpiece, but he wouldn't let it stay.” Yes—I could just manage to see it—the first portrait of Jack’s Ihad ever had to strain my eyes over! Usually they had the place of hon- our—say the central panel in a pale yellow or rose Dubarry drawing- room, or a monumental easel placed so that it took the light rough curtains of old Venetian point. ¢ more modest place became the pic- turé better; yet, as my éyes grew accustomed to the half light, ail the characteristic qualities came out —all the hesitations disguised as audacities, the tricks of presidigita- tion by which, with such consummate skill, he managed to divert attention from the real business of the pic- ture to some pretty irrelevance of detail. Mrs. Gisburn, presenting a neutral surface to work on—form- ing, as it were, so inevitably the background of her own picture—had lent herself in an unusual degree to the display of this false virtuosity. The picture was one of Jack's “strongest,” as his admirers would have put it—it represented, on his part, a swelling of muscles, a con- getting of veins, a balancing, strad- dling and straining, that reminded one of the circus-clown’s ironic ef- forts to lift a féather. It met, in short, at every point the demand of lovely woman to bé painted “strongly” because she was tired of being painted “sweetly”—and yet not to lose an atom of the sweet- ness. i “It's the last he painted, you know,” Mrs. Gisburn said with par- donablé pride, ‘The last but one,” she corrected herself —‘“but the oth- er doesn’t count, because he destroy- ed it.” ; “Destroyed it?” I was about to follow up this clue when I heard a footstep and saw Jack himself on the threshold. As he stood there, his hands in the pockets of his velveteen coat, thé thin brown waves of hair push- ed back from his white forehead, his lean sunburnt cheeks furrowed by a smile that lifted the tips of a self-confident moustache, I felt to what a degree he had the same quality as his pictures—the quality of looking cleverer thay he was. His wife glanced at him deprecat- ingly, but his eyes travelled past her to the portrait. “Mr. Rickhand wanted to see it.” she began, as if excusing, herself. He shrugged his shoulders, still smiling. ? : “Oh; Rickham found me out long of the axioms he laid down across the Sevres and silver of an ‘exquisitely jhis arm through mine: ago;” he Baid lightly; then, passing “Come. and: first time, so often, basking under | ES — see the rest of the house.” He showed it to me witha kind of native suburban pride: the bath. rooms, the speaking-tubes, the dress- closets, the trouser-presses— all the complex simplifications of the mil- lionaire’s domestic to economy. And whenever my wonder paid the ex- pected tribute he said, throwing out his chest a little: “Yes, I really don’t see how people manage to live without that.” : | Well—it was just the end one might have foreseen for him. Only he was, through it all and in spite ‘of, his pictures—so handsome, so ! charming, so disarming, that one longed to cry out: “Be dissatisfied {with your leisure!” as once one had prolonged to cry out: ‘“Bedissatisfied i with your work!” - But with the cry on my lips, my diagnosis suffered an unexpected | check. “This is my own lair,” he said, leading me into a dark plain room at the end of the florid vista. It was square and brown and leathery: no ‘“effects;” no bric.a-brac, none of the air of posing for reproductinin a picture weekly—above all, no least sign of ever having been used as a studio. The fact brought home to me the absolute finality of Jack’s break with his old life. “Don’t you ever dabble with paint any more?” I asked, still looking about for a trace of such activity. “Never,” he said briefly “Or water- colour—or etching?” ; His confident eyes grew dim, and his cheeks paled a little under their hansome sunburn. “Never think of it, my dear fel- low—any more than if I'd never touched a brush.” And his tone told me in a flash Yhat he never thought of anything else. I moved away, instinctively em- barrassed by my unexpected dis- covery; and as Iturned, my eye fell on a small picture above the man- tel-piece—the only object breaking the plain oak panelling of the room. “Oh, by Jove!” I said, It was a sketch of a donkey—an old tired donkey, standing in the rain under a wall. “By Jove—a Stroud!” I cried. He was silent; but I felt him close Detuiel me, breathing a little quick- y. “What a wonder! Made with a dozen lines—but on everlasting foun- dations. You lucky chap, where did you get it?” He answered slowly. “Mrs. Stroud gave it to me.” “Ah—I didn’t know you even knew the Strouds. He was such an in- flexible hermit. “I didn’t—till after-—She sent for me to paint him when he was dead.” “When he was dead? You?” I must have let a little too much ‘amazement escape through my .sur- prise, for he answered with a dep- recating laugh. “Yes—she’s an awful simpleton, you know, Mrs. Stroud. Her only idea was to have him done by a fashionable painué —abh, . poor Stroud! She thought it the surest way of proclaiming his blind public. And at the moment I was the fashionable painter.” “Ah, poor Stroud—as you 3 Was that his history?” y a 1 “That was his histoty., She be- lieved in him, gloried in him—or thought she did. But she couldn't bear not to have ail the drawing- rooms with her. She couldn't bear the fact that on varnishing days, one could always get near to see his pictures. Poor woman! She’s just a fragment groping for other fragments. Stroud is the only whole I ever knew.” “You ever knew? But you just | said—" Gisburn had a curious smile in his eyes. “Oh I knew him, and he knew me—only it happened after he was dead.” I dropped my voice insti “When she sent for you?” “Yeés—quite insensible to the irony. She wanted him vindicated—and by me!” He laughed again, and threw back ' his head to look up at the sketch of the donkey. “There were days when I couldn't look at that thing . —couldn’t face it. But I forced myself to put it here; and now it’s cured me—cured me. That's the reason I don’t dabble any more, m dear Rickham; himself is the reason.” For the first timé my idle curi- osity about my companion turned into a serious desire to understand him better, . by! | wish you'd tell me how it hap- ctively. and twirling between his fingers a cigarette he had forgotten to light. Suddenly he turned toward me. “I rather like to tell you—be- cause I've always suspected you of loathing my work.” i I made a deprecating gesture, which he negatived with a good- humoured shrug. : ‘Oh, I didn’t care a straw when I believed in myself—and now it’s an added tie between us!” Heé laughed slightly, without bit- terness, and pushed one of the deep arm-chairs forward. “There: make yourself comfortable—and hére are the cigars you like.” He placed them at my élbow and continued to wander up and down the room, stopping now an then be- neath the picture. ; “How it happened? I can tell you in five minutes—and it didn’t take much longer to happen—I can remember now how surprised and pleased I was when I got Mrs. Strcud’s note. Of course, deep down, I had always felt there was no one like him—only I had gone with the stream, echoed the usual platitudes about him, till I hdlf got to think he was a failure, one of thé kind that are left behind. By Jove, and he was left behind—be- cause he had come to stay! The rest of us had to let ourselves be swept along or go under, but he was high above thé current—on everlasting foundations, as you say. “Well, I went off to the house in ,my most egregious mood—rather greatness—of forcing it on a pur.’ enough * y | or rather Stroud’ He stood looking up at the sketch, moved, Lord forgive me, at the pathos of poor Stroud's career of failure being crowned by the glory of my painting him! Of course I meant to do the picture for nothing —1I told Mrs, Stroud so when she began to stammer something dbout her poverty, I remember getting off a prodigious phrase about the honour being mine—oh, I was prince- ly, my dear Rickham! I was posing to myself like one of my own sitters. “Then I was taken up and left alone with him. I had sent all my traps in advance, and I had only to set up the easel and get to work. He had been dead only twenty-four hours, and he died suddenly, of heart disease, so that there had been no preliminary work of destruction —his face was clear and untouched. I had met him once or twice, years before, and thought him insignificant and dingy. Now I saw that he was superb. “I was glad at first, with a mere- ly aesthetic satisfaction: glad to have my hand on such a ‘subject’ Then his strange life likeness began to affect me queerly—as I blocked the head in I felt as if he were watching me, what would he say to my way of working? My strokes began to go a little wild— I felt nervous and uncertain. | “Once, When I looked up, Iseem- ed to see a smile behind his close grayish beard—as if he had the secret, and were amusing himself by holding it back from me. That ex- asperated me still more. The se- cret? Why, I had a secret worth twenty of his! I dashed at the can- .vas furiously, and tried some of my tricks. But they failed me, they ‘crumbled. I saw that he wasn’t the showy bits—I couldn't distract his attention; he just kept his eyes on the hard passage between, Those were the ones with some lying paint. 'And how he saw through my lies! “I looked up again, and caught sight of that sketch of the donkey hanging on the wall near his bed. His wife told me afterward it was the last thing he had done—just a note taken with a shaking hand, when he was down in Devonshire recovering from a previous heart attack. Just :a note! But it tells his whole his- tory. There are years of patient scornful persistence in every line. A man who had swum with the cur- rent could never have learned that mighty up-stream stroke. “I turned back to my work, and went on groping and muddling; then I looked at the donkey again. I saw that, when Stroud laid in the first stroke, he knew just what the end would be. He had possessed his subject, absorbed it, recreated it. | When had I done that with any of my things? They hadn't been born of me—I had just adopted them. “Hang it Rickham, with that face watching me I couldn't do another stroke. The plain truth was, I | didn’t know where to put it—I had never known. Only, with my sitters and my public, a showy splash of colour covered up the fact—I just threw paint into their eyés.— Well, medium those through—see tottering founda- Don’t you know paint was the one dead eyes could see straight to the tions underneath, "how, in talking a foreign language, even fluently, one says half the time not what one wants to but what one ¢an? Well—that was the way I painted; and as he lay there and watched me, the thing they called my ‘technique’ collapsed like a house of cards. He didn’t sneer, you understand, poor Stroud—he just lay there quietly watching, and on his lips, through the gray beard, I seemed to hear the question: ‘Are you sure you know where you're coming out?’ “If Icould have painted that face, with that question on it, I should have done a great thing. The next greatest thing was to see that I couldn’t—and that grace was given me. But, oh, at that minute, Rick- ham, was there anything on earth I wouldn't have given to have Stroud alive before me, and to hear him say: It's not too late—Tll show you how?’ “ft was too late—it would have been, even if he’d been alive. I packed up my traps, and went down and told Mrs, Stroud. Of course I didn’t tell her that— been Greek to her. I couldnt paint him, that I was too moved. he rather liked the idea —she’s so romantic! But she was terribly upset at not getting the portrait—she did so want him ‘done’ by some one showy! At first I was afraid she wouldn't let me off—and at my wits’ end 1 suggested Grindle. Yes, it was I who started Grindle. I told Mrs. Stroud he was the ‘coming’ man, and she told somebody else, and so it got to be true.—And he painted and she Stroud without wincing; hung the picture among her hus- band’s things. He flung himself down in the arm-cair near mine, laid back his head, and claspng his arms be- neath it, looked up at the picture above the chimney-piece. “I like to fancy that Stroud him- self would have given it to me, if he’d been able to say what he thought that day.” And, in answer to a question I put half meéchanically— “Begin again?” he flashed out. “When the one thing that brings me anywhere near him is that I knew enough to leave off?” He stood up and laid his hand on my shoulder with a laugh. “Only the irony of it is that I am still painting—since Grindle’s doing it for me! The Strouds stand alone, and happen once—but there’sno ex- terminating our kind of art.”—By Edith Wharton, in Sc¢ribner’s Maga- zine, COUNTY GRANGE TO MEET AT BOALSBURG TOMORROW, Centre county Pomona Grange, No. 13, will meet in regular session on Saturday, November 8th, at 10 a. m., in the hall of Victor Grange: at Boalsburg. V. A. AUMAN, Secretary. It would have ' I simply said : 3 It was that, ! that made her give me the donkey. i il ALE " .: “ - a . ARMISTICE DAY : WILL SOON BE HERE. By Elmo Scott Watson. Armistice day is a day for re- calling the thrill of joy which swept the world on November 11, 1918, when the four-year crescendo of the guns was stilled and the costliest war in all history came to an end. For us it is also a day for remem- bering the Americans who crossed the Atlantic to play their part in that titanic struggle and who never came back—the 30,000 men who sleep beneath the white crosses in the Meuse-Argonne, St. “Mihiel, Oise- Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Somme and Suresnes cemeteries in France, in Flanders field in Belgium and near Brookwood, England. But, most of all, it should be a time for remem- bering those who did come back, not the men who were returned un- | harmed to their rejoicing families, but the “human wreckage of war” —men with blinded eyes, with deaf- ened ears, with gas-seared lungs, with several legs and arms, with shattered nerves, men whose pre- cious years of youth and opportunity had been sacrificed for their coun. try. How many of them are there? The best answer to that is a state- ment made by Gen. Frank T. Hines, director of the United States Veter- ans’ bureau, that more than six hundred millions of dollars has been spent by the government in the re- nabilitation of nearly 130,000 leg- less, armless, wise crippled or physically handicap- ped men to the point where they are capable of self-support; that more than 26,000 men and women who served with the military forces of the United States are now re- ceiving treatment in government operated or supervised hospitals; today more than 18,000 ex-service men are undergoing treatment for disabilities due to their war service; and that there are under guardianship 25,727 veterans who are incompetent to take care of. their own affairs. | “The problem of paying the human cost of the World war was a huge one in the beginning,” says General Hines. “It is still a major national problem.” “Across 3,000 milés of ocean, in 1917 and 1918, we transported an army of 2,000,000 Americans, prac- tically without loss of life from enemy guns, torpedoes or mines. “Across the same expanse of wa- ter, a little later, 117,000 wounded and sick were brought back to the United States—some to live, some to die, many not to know for years the price they must pay for their participation in the war. Beyond the sea, on foreign soil, 80,000 soldizrs of the American Ex. peditionary Force were killed in ac- tion, or died of wounds, injuries or disease. . “In the single great offensive operation of the American" First army, in the period between Sep- témber 26 and November 1, 1918 the attack which brought about the enemy’s appeal for the armistice— our losses were 117,00 in killed and wounded. “These items, large as they are, do not constitute the total human cost ef our brief participation in the World war. There were, in addition, scores of thousands of young men who either died in the training and! concentration camps here in Amer- ica or in those camps onuracied | diseases with lasting effects. “The total toll of war was such that death or disability claims have been filed for one-fifth of all the men who served in the armed forces of the United States during the World war. More than half a mil- lion claims have been allowed. And nearly ten years after the war—on July 1, 1928—250,000 veterans, were receiving disability compensation. That army of disabled included men afflicted with anemia receiving from $40 to $100 a month, depending up- on the seriousness of their condition. It included thousands of men with impaired hearts or arteries. We had and have scores of thousands of other cases involving every disease. or abnormal physicai or mental con- dition from bronchiectasis to de- mentia precox.” | Another aspect of this problem is presented by General Hines in these words: “As time goes on the obligation’ of the government changes, The average age of the former service men isnow thirty-four years. That age is beyond the period of greatest susceptibility to tuwmerculosis. We shall have in Veterans’ bureau hos- pitals, therefore, fewer and fewer cases of tuberculosis. In 1922 we had 12,000; now we have 6,500. “So, too the surgical and general mental cases, including, of course, shot and shell injuries. sustained in the war, have béen decreasing. We had 10,000 in 1922. Now there are only 6,700. “But in another direction the gov. ernment’s obligation is increasing. There has been a steady, upward trend in the number of veteran pa- tients with mental and nervous af- flictions. In 1919 tnére were less than 3,000 such patients, including those who bore the so-called “invis- ible scars of war’; the shell-shocked veterans. Now there are 13,000. Our medical experts estimate that the peak of such cases will not be reached until 1947, when, with the veterans at an average age of fifty- three, there probably will be be- tween 40,000 and 50,000 suffering from nervous and mental disorders. We may have to provide hospital facilities for 16,000 of these unfor- tunate veterans.” Another estimate ot the increas- ing importance and scope of rehabil- itation is given by the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, a national organization of dis. abled ex-sérvice men established in _ 1921. This group has been named by Congress as an official represen. sightless and other-' PICKFORD GIRLS ~ "ROSE FROM POVERTY. | Any theatre manager on Broad- way today would pay half of his night's profits to secure a personal appearance of Mary Pickford, her sister, Lottie, and Lillian and Doro- thy Gish at his ormance. There would be fanfare and flashlights and a battalion of police to keep back the crowd. But theré was a summer not many years ago when this same now famous quartet literally whee- dled their way into Broadway play. houses—and as often as not were turned down at the mbox office. A writer in the current Photoplay Magazine discloses this interesting episode in telling how many of the contemporary stars of the movies fought poverty and adversity to win their way to success. It was when Mary Pickford was still Gladys Smith—her real name— that she, her sister, her mother, the two Gish girls and their mother shared a tiny New York flat for the summer to keep their expenses as low as possible. All of the girls, then in their early teens, had been on the stage sihce childhood but since none could get work during the dull season, “But poor as they were that sum- mer, Lillian and Dorothy and Mary and Lottie managed to see every worth while play in New York at one time or another, due chiefly to Mary's efficiency and aggressive- ness,” says the Photoplay writer. “They would go to the box office of the theater, all of them blonde and one a trifle taller than thé oth- ers, and Mary, presenting her card, would ask if the management rec- ognized professionals. The card read “Gladys Smith—Little Red Schoolhouse Company.” : “Needless to say, if the house happened to be crowded, the man in the box office told them to come around another time.” i CHESTNUTS COMING BACK TO PENNA. WOODS Reports made to the Game Com- mission from some sections of north- eastern Pennsylvania indicate that chestnuts may again become the chief article of diet for the wild animals and birds during the winter season. The blight which for more than a decade has deprived the woods dwellers of their one.time most de- pendable crop is largely responsible for the annual program of winter feeding which the Game Commission directs. Arlington B. Moyer, a deputy game protector at Long Pond, in a report to the Commission wrote in part as follows: “Game in Pennnsylvania, especially squirrels, will find a new source of food supply this year which their great grandparents enjoyed just a little ‘over: a decade ago, namely chestnut trees have sprung up as much as eighteen feet and have this ~yedr. given a good crop of the much appreciated nuts. busy Tourists were recently in sections of the Pocono mountains and gathered as many as five quarts in a short time. For the sake of our game and also ourselves we hope the chestnut tree will soon be restored in all parts of Pennnsylvania.” A BUS DRIVER FINED THREE TIMES ON ONE TRIP. The State record for frequency of arrest is now held by the driver of a trans-State bus who was taken in- to custody three times in five hours for speeding on the Lincoln high- way. This driver has been sum- moned to Harrisburg for a hearing and the State Highway Patrol wil endeaver to convince the officiating inspector that his driving privilege should be revoked. Arrested first at Malvern, second at Lancaster, and third at Geftys- burg, traveling each time at a speed in excess of fifty miles an hour, the busman laughed heartily when pick- ed up the third time, and said he seemed to ‘be keeping the entire pa- ‘trol “busy. - He was not. so hilarious, however, when he paid fines and costs totaling $43, Before the pa- trol is finished with him his smile may have entirely disappeared, of- ficials said. erative REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Kato Coal Company to Common- wealth of Pennsylvania, tract in Snow Shoe, Burnisde, Curtin, Liber- ty Twps., and Beech Creek Twp, Clinton county; $23,105.85. L. Edgar Hess, et ux, to Thomas Sleigh, Jr., tract in South Philips burg; $1. J. E. Walker, et ux, to John R. Styers, tract in Miles Twp.; $10. George W. Day, et ux, to Thomas C. Confer, tract in Miles Twp.; $310. John W. Walters to Martha Hop- kins, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Harriet Ward, et al, to Warren S, Ward, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1. John S. Lightcap Jr., to James A. Barkley, tract in State College; $1. Hélen E. Barkley, et bar, to John S. Lightcap Jr. tract in State Col- lege; $1. Charles F. Schad, et al, to Gerald A. Robinson, tract in Bellefonte; $1. G. A. Robison, et ux, to Merle C. Gordon, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $7,000. A. H. Krumrine, et ux, to Agnes H. Musser, tract in State College; $1,200. . Polly Williamson, et bar, to Thomas Sleigh, Jr,, tract in South Philips- burg; $1. abilities incurred during the war. So when Armistice day comes around each year, it behooves all i i i ir tative of the disabled who present Americans in the midst of the claims to the government. Accord- Solemn celebration of the day to ing to William E. Tate, national give a thought not only to those the next decade, ex-service men result of dis- commander, durin mn-e fhan 275.00 will fided ely as a5 a “who gladly died” but also to that “lonelier company” of those ‘who still ruzified.” ~ o are