| the body in the chair to the outer | chamber where the official papers were signed. The reaction of such a sight is hard to discern. One revelation comes in the fact that no matter how mild a murder may be death in the electric chair could not be near as horrible. The anticipation is the only punishment. There is no physi- cal suffering. After the grim sight was over and we were once more out in the sunshine we could not help but remember another verse written by Byron, “He died as erring man should die Bellefonte, Pa, May 1, 1981 “TIS A FEARFUL THING TO SEE A SOUL TAKE WING.” By John M. Fleming On monday morning of last week, in a dimly lighted, bare lttle room, at the Rockview penitentiary, a man died. He did not die naturally from choice neither did providence take from nim his life. The man died paying a debt. The debtor was society. ‘the debt, the life of a fel- low man. The State acted as agent and shortly after seven o'clock the ———— obligation was paid and the entry 5 NEW SC : under the was William Watkins A NEW SCHOOL FOR a was removed from the ledger. LEADERSHIP TRAINING | The twenty-five year old negro A standard school of leadership | boy had broken the sixth command- : : i ments: =: He. had: wantonly. killea(2MSE Will be held jn the’ 'Evan- | James Harward, Chester county Selical church of Bellefonte during | farmer who had befriended him and two weeks in June. The following | given him employment for three cerdit courses will be offered: “A years. The murder was willful, de- Study of the Pupil,” “The old Testa- | liberate, and premediated and nine- ment,” * The Life of Christ,” and teen days after it had been Sotamit. “The New Testament Church.” ted a jury of twelve men decr at registration fee will be $1.00. Cred- | Watkins should die in the manner ,.. es. nn this school will be accepted proche Dy Jaws Souths in iu Slee. for the international diploma. Chester county jali on Saturday. He had been confined there since the crime occurred, January 10, 1931. Promptly at seven o'clock on Mon- day morning he was electrocuted. We witnessed the execution and only the immortal lines of the poet can convey our impression, “Oh, God, it is a fearful thing To see a human soul take wing.” It was a beautiful morning. The grim hand of fate had sent a warm spring sun to radiate the light that would be the last the young negro fe yuge is as food for the tree would see. The shadows from the pp, maple tree manufactures more main cell block draped the death lof this food than can be used dur- house in an appropriate black asthe ;.. tne current season, and stores hour of doom approached. One| guard and several prison officials es- | he a noe for use the following corted the witnesses to the ground floor of the execution building where | oe early spring arrives the sap, each one signed their name in ay, Cas congea during the win- ter, returns to liquid form, and large book. | flows freely. At five minutes of seven the im-| man to oF Jong ei Jeg mense iron barred door at the front food, to be boiled down as syrup of the circular staircase that leads gang sugar and made into candy for to the upper rooms was opened and his own delight. we were escorted to the death cham-| Bug even in this man cannot en- ber above. tirely outwit nature. The cells of The room where 207 men and one | the tree retain a major portion of woman have breathed their last is | this stored-up supply of sap. Man appall in its simplicity. The | gets only the smaller part. If he only light was one near the chair could get all of it the tree would which shed an unnatural pallor|not be able to put forth its buds over the entire room. The blinds and leaves and in time would die. on all the windows were lowered and only faint cracks of light were per- mitted to enter. The chair sits on the immediate right of the entrance and it is necesary for each witness to pass within touching distance of the grim instrument in making his way to the concrete bench which is Without display. without parade. Meekly had he bowed and prayed i As not disdaining priestly aid | Nor desperate of all hope on high.” TAPPING FOR MAPLE SYRUP When Calvin Cooiidge, in referring to the springtime flow of maple sap, said the “earth is again pouring out her first seasonal beauty,” he spoke poetically but not adequately, ac- cording to Martin L. Davey, head of the Davey Institute of Tree Surgery. , The earth has merely furnished | the crude materials, principally wa- ter, Davey explains. Surgar-laden maple sap is a product of the growing season in the previous year. Its Your built around the back and side of | the room. The chair is perhaps the most commonplace looking instrument that ever before Joue Rely within its grip the power o a i) his most cherished possession. It resembles much an ordinary wooden arm with the exception | of the fact that the straps are plain- ly seen and a canopy is overhead. It | is surrounded by ropes that are] placed after the witnesses are seat- | ed, Within this small enclosure stands the executioner, the attending | guards, the doctor and the officials | in charge. | After the six men who have been | designated as official witnesses and | the newspaper representatives have | taken their places the grim business of the execution is proceeded with | EL Cl A The | P TRIAL LIST FOR MAY COURT. Fourteen common pleas cases have been listed for trial at the May term of court. ©One of them is that of Thomas Morrison against the Bor- ough of Bellefonte and burgess Hard P. Harris for damages for alleged injuries in a fall on the icy pavement of burgess Harris in the spring of 1930. Another case, if it comes to trial, gives promise of some sensational testimony. It is that of Mrs. Pasqua DiBartola against Stella Shaffer for damages for the alienation of her husband's affec- tions. The list is as follows: Kato Coal Co. vs. New York Cen- | tral and Hudson River Railroad Co. Trespass, Ralph A. Smith vs. New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Co. Trespass. Henry Brown vs. Harry Abramson. Appeal. W. C. Shoemaker and J. C. Shoe- maker, trading and doing business as Shoemaker Bros. vs, H. E. Dunlap. Trespass. Thomas Morrison vs. The Borough | of Bellefonte and H. P. Harris. Tres- ass. John O. Todd and Evelyn M. Todd, in their own right, and Hazel Chris- tine Todd, by her parents and next friends, John O. Todd and Evelyn M. Todd, vs. F. W, Hoffman. Trespass. R. T. Hafer vs. P. H. Gentzel Assumpsit. J . T. Bechwith vs. Co. Trespass. The P, R- R. W. F. Bradford, J. W. Bradford and V. A. Auman, co-partners trad- ing and doing business as Bradford | and Co,, vs. Raymond Walker. As- sumpsit. Lilah V. Hockenberry vs. John Hockenberry. Feigned issue. Nathan Teitelbaum, trading as Keystone Commissaries and Employ- ment Service, vs. Bellefonte Central Railroad Co. Trespass. Standard Accident Insurance Co. vs. Alex C. Bailey and Lewis Stein, | trading as Bailey & Stein, sit. Assump- Holt, vs. M. F. Calderwood and Mrs. M. F. Calderwood. Ap Mrs. Pasqua DiBartola vs. Shaffer. Trespass. BE ——— Sunday morning, May 3, Rev. Otto C, Miller, superintendent of the children's home at Mechanicsburg, will speak in the Methodist church in Bellefonte. In the evening of that day he will speak at Pleasant Gap. We will do your job work right kitchen walls stay SPOTLESS when like the smooth workings of a clock. | A board containing several light bulbs rests across the arms of the chair and is connected with the two | terminals where the electricity en- | ters. The witnesses are informed | that a test will be made to show | that 2000 volts are running through | the chair and that the mechanism | is in perefct working order. After the test, the executioner re- moves the board, taking two sponges dips them in a tub of salt water that sits on the floor near the chair. He places one sponge in the head piece the other in the terminal point that is connected to the left leg of the condemned man. The door leading from the cor- ridor of the doomed is opened by a and the final feet of the last mile come into the prisoner's view. The young negro walked with un- faltering step. The priest was the first to enter and closely behind was the young man who was about to pay his debt to society. On [00] either side Walked a , prison Svard . this CLEAN, wa id those hea ditures for cleansers. but the iki arms y nd ethout 3-piece FREE ALUM d » €asy way you avo vy expen any apparent fear. priest step. Does 70%; of Your Cooking ’ ped to the front of the chair and . . in the sed at the Hi i found, to my great surprise, that the he lyoung. sss places bia Au favors aad healiul food Surpri gh Speed potatoes had long since finished their of crime without assistance or verbal instructions. The guards stepped especially for electric range to the chair and adjusted the stra use by the “Wear-Ever” pedple. “Onc cvening, justas I put the potatoes ~~ pan. It hadn't seemed that the current Pads chest, one Ander each rhe The Sauce Pans have a of2 oa my clecuic range for boiling, some wason neatly loag enough, yet the pota- one around each wrist, and one each and 3 quarts, with exactly callers came. I entertained them for about toes were splendidly cooked, ready to leg. The executioner adjusted the wover at sifestien uspee: five minutes, then, since they would not mash and serve.” Rey hi Ba oi dese mage SO i 1d ed of che * x x x . og plunged L the gwiten int Sfure 3 the sivpial bottoms for quick hen absorp- current under the potatoes. REDUCED! During the past 18 months the switch board dimmed as the am- Special “Steam-Seal” § OTed de: 5 Almost two hours later I pre- clectric sauge(beatry pad SHdiony have was decreased. Again the excessive steam f00ds ailed upon my callers to stay been greatly e insta lights flashed up brightly and a i in their ow SW for dinner. When I again went prices for these full-sized, full convenience wisp of blue smoke circled h - minimum of water. models have been cut almost in half! ward from the chair. Four times this proceedure was repeated. Once the executioner left his and walked to the front of the modern guillotine to view the man he had executed. Then he released the switch. ‘The entire amount of time! that had elasped was only three minutes. The man was rendered | unconscious one-four-hundredth part of a second after the switch had | been thrown. | The doctor stepped to the body | and bared the chest. He listened for 2a moment and then turned to the witnesses, “Gentlemen,” he said, “T pronounce, william Watkins, dead.” { The witnesses arose and filed past | Come in today and select the range that harmonizes with yonr other kitchen equipment . . . Ask Jor installation NOW —while you're making your kitchen spic and span for another year. POINT ELECTRO and Pans = = And do you know electrically cooked Paul Holt, by his next friend, Bila | Stella CLEAN, Fast Heat That Doesn't Blacken Pots users on West Penn lines average only 3{c A West Penn customer who recently pur- chased an electric range says: to turn on the current I WEST PENN ELECTRIC SHOPS REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. FRESH John W. Eby, et ux, to Allen C.| Witmer, tract in Walker Twp.; $1. Allen C. Witmer, et ux, to Howard Struble, et al, tract in Walker Twp.; $1. John E. Ertle, Trustee, to C. J. Grenoble, tract in Miles Twp.; $52, R. P. Haugh, et ux, to Elsie Gren- oble, tract in Miles Twp.; $1,000. Adam H. Krumrine, et ux, to George C. Harper, et ux, tract in State College; $1. George C, Harper, et ux, to Fred B, Hicks, tract in State College; $1. John U. Reuf, et ux, to Theta Building Asso., tract in State Col- lege; $1. I. G. Gordon Foster, et al, to O. K. Harlam, tract in State College; $400. John L, Holmes, et al, to O. K. Harlam, tract in State College; $1,- 500. Robert W. Roan, to Orvis C. Smeilt- zer, et ux, tract in Benner Twp.; $5,700. Maria Hollobaugh to Robert S. Muirhead, tract in Spring Twp.; $1,150. | dumped a whole can at one place. Reno A. Lepley to Elsie Noll Gill, | With the nursery fish together tract in Mayon vp. $1. | large 3euodz, they Temaiued togeth- Bellefonte Cemetery Association to | vi hid 8 SLreAe generally » Docs i " | Wes Anhie Kramer, tract in Belle- | .q., ont sportsmen pointed out, and onte; I. | estimated that during the first few Mary J. Forcey, et al, to Mike days of the season practically all of | Chieppor, et ux, tract in Philipsburg; | the stocked fish of legal size have $5,000. | been removed by fishermen. All of John Hruska, et ux, to John | the stock placed were brook trout. Hruska, et ux, tract in Rush Twp.; | | $1. | POTATO EXPERT WRITES | William R. Saucerman, et ux, to BOOK ON CROP GROWTH | Joseph Harpster, et ux, tract in Fer- | Dr. B L:-Nixon, plant pathologist | guson Twp.; $800. | James H. Holmes, et ux, to Lynn | of the Pennsylvania State College, R. Daugherty, trustee, tract in Pot- | | ter Twp.; $1. | tato wizard” and nominee for the i | 11931 Capper award of $5000, is the . Donald Snyder, et ux, to Philip | author of “The Principles of Potato | Figaro, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; | production,” a new book off the 3350. | Savilla L. Florey, et bar, to Even | J. Breon, tract in Gregg Twp; $1. | PROUT IN CREEKS RESENTED Complaints against the placing of liver fed nursery fish in streams just prior to the opening of the trout season and placing them in large numbers instead of scattering them out, were heard on all sides from sportsmen on the first day of the present trout season. The number out for the opener was about the usual number, hun- dreds being along the banks of all the streams. One sportsman declar- ed he believed there were ten fisher- men for each trout. A few reported getting the limit but many declared that the greater part of the trout were the compara- tively tame fish of the nurseries which were unused to the streams and were caught with comparative ease. Owing to the low water last year no stock was placed in the streams. | Under the new ruling of the Game | Commission, the commission now | places all of the fish. Sportsmen | complain that the commission was | late in getting this done and that | where they did stock streams they press. Good seed, foliage protection, value of humus, proper potato mentality, Ellen J, Breon, et bar, to Savilla | and adaptations for economical po- | tato production are covered in this | book, which is one of a series on { vegetable production edited by Dean | R. Watts, Howard H. Baumgardner, et al, to | BR. of A ar e. Pan State { Mary B. Shuman, tract in Union | | Twp.; $1. : | | Parts from twenty-seven standard C. D. Bartholomew, et ux, to Annie i automobiles were used by a Florida G. Harrison, tract in Potter TWD. | man in building a car so small that $533, | only one person can occupy it. Maude E. Auman, et bar, to John a —————— O. Eisenhuth, tract in Haines TWP.; | It requires more than 16,000 cattle | $200. to furnish one pound of aurenolin, | Rose E. Cowher, et al, to Thomas | an extract used in the stoppage of P. Cowher, tract in Taylor Twp.; bleeding and as a remedy for hay $1,100. | fever. ' | | Florey, tract in Gregg Twp.; $l. | Alexander Flegal to Annie Koral, | tract in Philipsburg; $1. you do your cooking with a 1931 automatic ECTRIC RANGE! YOUR CHOICE CHEF that electric range operating cost for the thousands of r meal per person? That foods actually go farther? And that when you cook cooking in the heat stored in the burner and in the heavy “‘steam-seal’’ aluminum | well known as Pennsylvania's “po- | ATTORNEYS.AT-LAW ai Practices in Bellefonte, Pa. x s1-ly S Exchange. KENNEDY JOHNSTON. Law, Pa. i tention §lven all entrusted to care. East High street. KLINE WOODRING.— 1aw » . —Attorney-at- Prompt at- ShesNo, & KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All professional business will prompt attention. Offices on second of Temple Court. torney-at-Law, G. RUNKLE. — At '» Consultation in lish and Ger Office in er's man, Bellefonte, Pa. SP R. R. L. CAPERS. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte 8 Crider's Ex. 66-11 Holmes ! D. CASEBEER, Optometrist.—Regis- tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat. lafietioh guaranteed. Fruuna Topiated enses matched, Case High St. Bellefonte, Pa. ow VA B. ROAN, Optometrist, Licensed i by the Stste Board. State i ry Saturday, fonte, in the Garbrick b the Court House, Wednesday ® from 2to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4:00 p. m. Bell Phone. 08-40 FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% | 33% J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent | | | | | | | | | | | | | | -_— { i FEEDS! We have taken om the line of Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne Feeds per 100ib. Wagner's 16% Dairy Feed - 1.70. Wagner's 20% Dairy Feed - 1.80 Wagner's 32% Dalry Feed - 2.00 Wagner's Pig Meal 18% 2.10 Wagner's Egg Mash 189; - 2.25 Wagner's Scratch Feed - 1.60 Wagner's HorseFeed - - - 180 Wagner's Winter Bran - - 1.50 | Wagner's Winter Middlings - 1.60 Wagner's Standard Mixed Chop 1.80 | Wagner's Chick Feed - - 2.30 | Wayne 249% Dairy Feed - 225 | Wayne id Mash - - - 250 Wayne Mash Chick Starter 3.25 Wayne All Mash Grower - 27 Wayne Calf Meal - = = 400 Blatchford Calf Meal251b. - 145 Oil Meal 34% - - - 225 Cotton Seed Meal 43% - = 200 Gluten Feed - = = « 200 Hominy Feed - - - - 1.80 Fine Ground Alfalfa - - 2.25 {Beet Pulp - - - - aw. LI5 | Meat Scrap 45% - > = 3.00 Tankage 60% - - - 3.25 Fish Meal - - = - 3.75 | Fine Stock Salt - « oe! 1.90 Round Grit - - - '- . 130 Lime Grit - - - 1. | Oyster Shell -o- -. 100 | Let us grind your Corn and Oats |and make up Jour Dairy Peed, with | Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten, | Alfalfa, Bran, Midds and Molasses. | We will make delivery on two ton | orders. All accounts must be paid in 30 days. Interest charged over that If you want good bread and past:yiule Our Best wis Quid" Cvs C.Y. Wagner & Co. n PA, Caldwell & Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully sad Promptly Furnished