Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 07, 1901, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
(2arr)er®r) ooui)fy jfress
KSTASMSHBD BY C. B.dOULD.
HENRY H. MULLIN,
Editor and Manager.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Per year $2 00
If paid in advance $1 50
ADVERTISING RATES.
Advertisementsare published at the rate of one
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per square for each subsequent insertion.
Rates by the year or for six or threemonthsare
low and uniform, and will be furnished on appli
cation.
Legal and Official Advertising per square, three
times or less, $2 00; each subsequent insertionso
oents per square.
Local uoticesten cents per linefor onei nsertiou,
five cents per line for each subsequentconsecutive
incertion.
Obituary notices over five lines, ten cents per
line. Siinpleannouncements of births, marriages
and deaths will be inserted free.
Business Cards, five lines or less $5.00 per year
overlive lines, at the regular rates of advertising
No local inserted for less than 75 cts. per issue.
JOB PRINTING.
The Job department of the PKRSS is complete,
and affords facilities for doing the best class of
work. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Law
Printing.
No paper willbe discontinued until arrearages
are paid, except at the option of the publisher.
Papers sent outofthecounty must be paid for
in advance.
—— ■■■■!! II HBIBHII II—I I
PERTINENT POLITICAL POINTS.
Dewey's house, Sampson's pen,
and Hobson's mouth, will go down
into history as a great trio.
If Carnegie wants to die poor
why doesn't he run for the Senate
in one of the deadlocked States?
Anyway, King Eddie has had
too much experience to take pro
fessional tips like Mr. Bryan's too
seriously.
If the Nicarangua canal hasn't
yet connected the Atlantic with the
Pacific, it has at least connected
Secretary Hay with Lord Paunce
fote.
The recent lynching in Indiana
has no excuse. The crime was
simply ordinary murder, not com
plicated by the usual cause for such
vengeance. The lynchers ought
to be dealt with by law.
One cause of appendicitis is said
to be the quick lunch counters,
where men gulp down their food
without chewing it, as if they were
shoveling coal into a furnace. Eat
slowly and live long.
Mrs. Nation furnishes a very fair
parallel to John Brown. Each did
ar> illegal act in order to call at
tention to an objectionable state of
affairs. Brown was hung, Mrs.
Nation will be what?
Since the founding of the United
States government, only S 1(1,000,-
000, or one-twentieth of one per
cent, of its tatal income, has been
lost by dishonesty. This seems to
be a pretty good record.
Wonder who will now take the
blame of having written the Samp
son endorsement that is causing so '
much trouble? Since it has ap
peared that his Santiago message
was written by someone else, no
one knows what to expect.
We have not yet been informed
whether the Pekin executions took
place on the persons of the offend
ers or on those of substitutes.
There are likely to be several res
urrections in China after the allies
are withdrawn.
Women claim that they possess
inventive talent, and yet less than
0,000 patents have been issued to
them while hundreds of thousands
have been issued to men. This
gives point to the assertion that the
fair sex can imitate but not origi
nate.
It is to be regretted that Congress
has ceased to authorize new vessels
for the navy. This penny-wise,
pound-foolish policy showed its re
sults in the Spanish war, when
more money had to be paid for
semi-worthless vessels than would
have sufficed to build a dozen bat
tleships if expended in time.
The Democrats have shown a
shade of sense by agreeing not to I
oppose the resolutions recommend- i
ed for Cuba by the President and
the Republican Senators. It is to
be feared, however, that it was the
selfish desires to escape an extra
session and not patriotism that im
pelled them to this course.
OUR FARMERS IN CONVENTION.
Farmers' Institute—Attendance Not
Large—Otherwise a Success.
Tt is to be regretted that our farmers
do not take a more general hold upon the
advantages offered at these institutes,
both bj the State and by the more ener
getic farmers of our county. While the
meetings held here, Feb'y 25th and 2(ith,
were quite well attended, the greater por
tion of the audience seemed to be town
people. Those who took part in the
program deserve the highest praise for
the very attractive manner in which they
performed their parts. The singing and
instrumental renditions should receive
special mention, but we feel to deeply our
inability to do justice to the accomplished
artists. The following papers were read,
also interesting papers, which we are un
able to reproduce, were read:
"THE ADVANTAGES OK FARM LIFE,"
( I >y Mrs. M. Wright.)
We have studied this question from
the standpoint, "What would add to the
pleasure, profit and improvement of the
farmer and his family?" *
Farming was the first business, and is
the parent of all other business. Not
only does the farm supply food for the
world, timber for building, ores, metals,
fuels, etc., but from the farm couies the
raw material for the supply of almost all
human wants. Therefore we must ac
knowledge that "we are all pensioners of
the farm." The needs of the farmer is a
subject of grave moment to the husband
mau. Why, bless you, we have been
nearly forty years trying to convince one
small farmer of the many advantages he
is possessed of, and the many more he
might enjoy by following our advice.
Vou have heard the old law, "If a wo
man will, she will"; you may depend on
it just as emphatic that if man won't, he
won't; and so there is a bit of slip-shod
farming done a tew miles west of Empo
rium.
Practical agriculture owes much to the
investigations and researches of modern
chemistry. Let us remember that no
science, as well as no scripture, is of priv
ate interpretation, my brother farmer.
Take advantage of present opportunities;
iill the question box to its fullest capacity;
the Professors will be giad to impart all
asked.for information. Ask them if we
shall have graded schools in the country;
a question of more importance than many
people think; it is one that needs our
careful consideration and study. lam
well aware that much may be said both
for and against abolishing our small
schools, and incorporating them into
graded ones. To our mind no better law
has been passed in the State toward es
tablishing a higher education than the
township high school system. What is
to be feared for our schools, mare than
anything else, is that they will sink in
j moral efficiency, will be regarded simply
I in their material advantages; this, how
ever, rests iu a measure, with the people.
To-day the little town of Shippen en
joys free mail delivery, and so should
every rural district in the State enjoy the
same service. What right have our city
people to have their mail delivered three
times a day to their homes, when the
people in rural districts get none unless
they go for it? It has been said that
agriculture is the foundation of industry
iu all bodies politic. If that be true,why
is it that farmers receive so little con
sideration at the hands of our government?
Some farmers become absolutely isolated,
and their families are gradually cut off
from intercourse with the outside world.
The mind soon moves in a contracted
circle, as weil as the body, and the whole
nature is narrowed, and at last becomes
unfitted for anything beyond the petty
details of barnyard and kitchen work.
Anything that will break up this indom
itable seclusion should be greatly wel
comed by the farmer and freely accorded
by our government.
The home is the heart of the nation;
therefore is worthy of thoughtful consid
eration. From the home trend we de
velop many important advantages for the
farmer and his family. Our homes are
what we make them; they should be hap
py and progressive. Between the home
set up in Eden and the home before us
in eternity, stands the homes of earth iu
long succession. Book and farmer arc
no longer synonymous terms. Brains
pay as well and are as applicable in the
farmer's home as anywhere. Nobility of
mind or character, is not a whit less noble
in the wheat field than in the counting
room or at the bar. Among no class of
people is home more important than
among farmers. Necessity is the mother
of invention, and so the necessity laid up
on the women of the farms, forces them
to develop an aptitude for doing and car
ing for many things. Now we have a
distaste for the romance of farm life. I
know there is much said, and more writ
ten, about the independent, joyous life on
the farm; how a farmer's wife lives near
to natures heart, and has the advantage
of fresh morning air, the beauties of the
sun-rise, etc. With all due deference to
those writers, I think this sun-rise busi
ness is a little overdone. lam sure there
are a few of us, at least, who would be
willing to let the sun rise alone, in his
glory, occasionally, while we took another
nap, could we do so. Another picture:
"The rosy cheeked milk maid," the mag
nificent. scene, so sweetly pretty; you can
almost hear the twitter of the robins, and
the song of the sky-lark, her little feet
brushing the diamonds off the grass as
she trips lightly along. A pretty chromo
to please the eye, but the reality is, wet
ankles, draggled skirts, and aching arms.
The goldeu hued butter, so often quoted
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1901.
when extoling farm industries, is too often
the medium of exchange for a few pounds
of brown sugar, a box of matches, the rest
in tobacco. Ah! my friends, there are
prose as well as poetry in the matter of
farm life. But, having put our hands
to the plow, let there be no turning back.
We need by sheer force of heart and mind
to rise above what is distasteful and mo
notonous in our lives.
We might call your attention to many
things that would enhance the pleasures
and add to the profit of the farm. Our
church, social and market privileges are
wonderfully retarded by bad roads. A
country road, like every other piece of
human work, is either good or bad, just
in proportion to the amount of sense and
ingenuity that has been put into its con
struction. Traffic between farm and
market is costly and uncertain; with scant
loads our farmers struggle through miles
of mire, every mud hole is an impassable
slough of despond. The road and the
wagon are twin handmaidens of agricul
ture that attend the farmer on every
journey to market, and they are forever
at odds with each other. If the man
who sold the farmer that wagon had tried
to sell him that road, homicide would
have become a virtue. Good roads bring
us closer together, drives out gloom, makes
neighbors of hermits. Let us remember
that all riches came from the ground, and
no nation ever became great whose farm
ers were not great, and remembering these
things, let us try to bring the city and
country a little closer together by having
better roads. You may think this ques
tion of roads should be tabooed by a lady
or that she may have little interest there
in. Good sir, the question ot the coodi
tion of the roads has brought more dis
appointments and heart-aches to the
farmer's wife than the husbandman'*
finances. What pleasure is there in a
pretty or expensive toilet, il she cannot
reach the outside world, and invite the
envy of her less fortunant sisters by an
ample display of her gewgaws? We
may not be able to tell you just how to
construct, a good road, but would suggest
that a good road was never made with
three ditches, one on each side, the other
in the middle. About the laziest specta
cle we ever witnessed in men was when
they were working out their taxes on the
road, and are not surprised that their
effort suggested the disreputable trinity
of bungle, blunder and botch.
< >ur highways have cost us thousands
of dollars, but little thought. And while
our brains have been gathering wool in
distant pastures our money has turned
into mud. I never had the heart to blame
a balky horse when I saw him overloaded,
driven over an almost impassable road; it
is his one solitary method of filing an ob
jection. The only beast that was ever
known to talk is said to have called Mr.
Balaam s attention to the bad going.
Legislation can draft no law suitable to
all sections. Legislation will not make
good roads so long as you are careless in
the selection of supervisors. If we are
taxing ourselves by a useless custom, let
us be lid ol it, for nothing enhances the
value of farm lands more than good roads.
I think if you give careful thought to
this subject, "The advantages of farm
life, all will admit that poor roads is the
bar put up to our everlasting disadvant
age. So we must conclude, in order to
have good roads, the man and money
must be had together, and that the money
is not the difficult part. Mend your
ways, gentlemen, and let it never be said
that that man was a Cameron county
farmer who left, as his last will, a sealed
document containing the impressive
words: "I owe much, I have nothing, I
give the rest to the poor."
t +
+ +
ADVANTAGES OF A FARMER'S BOY.
PAPER READ BY JOSIAH HOWARD, ESQ.,
AT THE FARMERS' INSTITUTE, EMPO
RIUM, PA., FEB. 26, 1901.
Advantage means superiority of state
or position. It seems impossible that
the life or condition of the farmer s boy
should be superior to that of a boy in
any other walk of life, and at first I did
not know whether the assignment of
this difficult subject to me was a com
pliment, or as a makeshift, but never
theless the statement is true, even if I
do not have the ability to make the
reasons clear.
How the farming community can
have furnished the world with its best
lawyers, best doctors, best ministers,
mechanics and business men for thou
sands of years, besides Bending what
she supposes to be the best half of her
population to fill up the cities and still
have the sons of those who went out,
even into the highest walks of life,
seems impossible.
It certainly is wonderful that boys
surrounded by the accumulated knowl
edge of centuries and reared in the
midst of living examples of success and
failure, with both an educational and
financial start, should fall behind the
boy who apparently had no start at all.
Whyisit? There is only one answer;
God has blessings to bestow which are
fundamental, and which education and
money alone, can neither equal, nor
duplicate, nor successfully counterfeit.
If a farmer or a doctor or a mechanic
has a boy whom he considers partiu
larly bright and capable, his parents
want to make a lawyer out of that boy,
and there is no doubt that the legal
profession has the pick of boys from all
classes of the people and that they are
as well, or better, educated than any
other class.
So you would naturally think that
lawyers' sons would take all the first
prizes in manufactures, commerce, arts
and governmental positions, but they
don't; they hold much lees than one
half of them, while it is said farmers'
sons till sixty per cent, of the first places
in the United States.
It is the same old story of the rabbit
running a race with a turtle and the
turtle won because the rabbit thought
Qod had made it impossible for the
turtle to beat him, but God ordains that
Right shall always triumph in the end.
It is only a weak, Billy woman who
would place her lazy indifferent boy
ahead of her neighbor's careful, indus
trious and capable son.
The first farmer was the first man
and Qod placed him in a garden capa
ble of supplying him with food for his
family and his cattle and told him to
dress it and care for it.
We all have a garden and should all
bo caretakers, then God will surely
give us the increase, for never did boys
have a better chance in the world than
to-day.
The farmer's boy helps take care of
the stock and knows that God never
intended the strong to crowd out and
trample down the weak and this sense
of justice grows with him and shines
like a star through all his life.
~He helps cultivate the potatoes and
learns that a row tbat is only half hoed
yields only half a crop and this teaches
him to be thorough and industrious.
He lives in the sunshin9, hunts wood
chucks, drives cows and cuts wood,
and in so doing lays up a supply of
health, independence and muscle that
stay with him.
He is protected from the follies and
depravities of city life until he is old
enough to withstand them. This life
of purity, industry and justice is God's
kind of a life and cannot be duplicated
or counterfeited.
We all need it and must grow in it if
we expect the blessings of health, pros
perity and peace; but unless we recog
nize these qualities as the fundamental
principles of superiority, the farmer's
boy will continue to get the larger share
of life's rewards.
They say "the face is an index of the
mind and heart " Our hearts and
minus are influenced by our habits, and
our habits are very much effected by
our surroundings.
In the country a boy looks on nature's
pictures and they are grand. All the
world seems lovely, orderly and inspir
ing only to high and noble attainments,
and the boys with their wide open eyes
and round healthy faces show the
cheerful confidence of souls that know
they are going to be men.
Now look at the city boy. Unless he
has good parents, no restrictions are
placed on his conduct; he seldom sees
the sun rise and is too busy to watch
the moon come over the top of the hill.
He has no wood to chop or errands to
run at regular hours. As he becomes
older, labor is performed only as a ne
cessity, and as fast as wages are earned
they are spent; schools or public librar
ies are not patronized. The sensational,
crime recording, untruthful Saturday
journals furnish the only standard of
life and society he gets, while the open
temptation to use tobacco and strong
drink leads him onto profanity and
obscene stories.
Possibly under all these adverse cir
cumstances the boy will have some re
deeming qualities, but his face will
grow hard and the chances are largely
against him.
It takes years to form character, years
to mould the expression of a face be
cause the association with nature is
better than it is with town life, but if
the country boy gets to reading the
misleading, sensational Saturday pa
pers and continues to absorb the stor
ies of brutai prize fights and crime in
all its varied details, his face and char
acter will lose the advantages he now
holds over the boys of all other classes.
Farm life is best, but the opening of
public parks, endowment of churches,
schools and hospitals by the govern
ment and private individuals, with the
lack: of good roads and good churches
in the country, has made the town life
look best.
The tide is changing. The world is
beginning to realize that city life is
only poor copies of pictures in the sky;
while steam heat and electric light are
only imitations of sunshine and a good
climate, and rich men are beginning to
spend some of their money in country
districts and endow the little school
house and church where they were
born, instead of leaving it all to hos
pitals and public parks in the cities.
If my remarks have contributed the
smallest degree of inspiration for better
health, better morals or a more firm
belief in the justice and infalibility of
God's laws with a desire to follow in
them, then my task will have been well
done.
NOTICES.
Low Rates West.
Commencing February 12, and every
Tuesday thereafter until April 30, 1901,
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail
way Co. will sell tickets to points in
North Dakota, Minnesota, Idaho, Col
orado, Utah, Oregon, Washington and
British Columbia, at greatly reduced
rateß. For the benefit of settlers. For
full information call on or address \V.
S. Howell, G. E. P. A., 381 Broadway,
New York, or John R. Pott, D. P. A.,
810 Park Building, Pittsburg,Pa. 49-12t
Homeseekcrs' Excursions.
On the first and third Tuesdays of
February, March, April, May and June
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway Co. will sell Homeseekers' Ex
cursion tickets from Chicago to points
in lowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Wyoming,
Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, South Da
kota, North Dakota, Montana, Utah,
Oregon, Washington and British Col
umbia, at rate of one fare, plus two
dollars, for the round trip, good for
twenty-one days. For full particulars
call on or address W. S. Howell, G. E.
P. A., 381 Broadway, New York, or
John R. Pott, I). P. A., 810 Park Build
ing, Pittsburg, Pa. 49-21t
The Election Returns Show
That the Lackawanna Railroad has
been elected Americas most comfort
able Railroad. If the result of election
suited you, take a trip on the Lacka
wanna with your family; if it Went the
other way, get even by taking a little
journey, and forget your troubles.
Remember Lackawanna Agents can
sell you tickets to any point in Greater
America. Excursion rates are now in
effect to all Southern resorts, Cuba,
Florida and the Pacific Coast. If you
want to know all about your proposed
trip, call on nearest D. L. & W. R. R.
Agent, or write Fred P. Fox, Div. Pass.
Agent, Buffalo, N. Y. 37-tf
Shippen School Board.
Regular meeting Shippen School
Board, held March 2d. Called to order
by Hon. F. X. Rlumle, President.
Present: Messrs. Blumle, Dixon,
King, Ostrum. Absent: Messrs. Pet
ere, Spence.
Minutes of last meeting read and ap
proved.
Moved by Mr. Dixon, seconded by
Mr. King, that the following bills be
paid:
May Moon, 1 cord wood, window
glass, |2 26
T. Lyons, 2 cords wood, 2 20
Emporium school bill when cor
rected.
W. R. Johnson, conveying chil
dren, 19 days, 21 06
Moved by Mr. Dixon, seoonded by
Mr. King, that Sec'y draw orders for
conveying children if bills be presented.
Carried.
Mr. Chas. King was authorized to
putin one day looking after children
that are staying away from school.
On motion board adjourned.
N. A. OSTRUM, Sec'y.
An exchange gives this excellent bit
of advise: Young man, when you are
courting your best girl don't make too
many promises. Don't say "these lit
tle hands will never do a stroke of work
when you are mine, you shall have
nothing to do in our house but sit all
day and chirp to the can aries," as if
any sensible woman could be happy
fooling away time in that sort of style.
A girl has a fine retentive memory for
the things and silly promises of
courtship. Occasionally in after yea rs,
when she is bending over the wash tub
or patching the west end of your trous
ers, she will remind you of them in a
cold, sarcastic tone of voice.
*it i ttt" t'T'it rr~- iii 1111 iii iin—■wnr-mriniimrr^''"
The sale of three million bottles ol this elegant hair dressing in the United States and Qreat
Britain in 1899 proves that it has surpassing merit and does all that is claimed for it
. HA .X' S . . t HAY S HAI K- HEAL ™f EVERY BOTTLE
Hair-Health I t WARRANTED
. . , . ♦ bacV Jssi ♦ to restore gray, white or faded
has been a bless.ng to thousands I I hair to youthful color and life.
Si-i''h.i^hlHuF* 7 ,° l ♦ \~r V»/ *lt acts on the roots, giving them
health- KKS rtifm T '^ e required nourishment and
ful h«r food, restoring youthful I X positively produces luxuriant
color and beauty to gray and faded I # I thick hair on bald heads,
hair. Kcmoves and prevents I T gdtka . _ _ . .
dandruff and stops falling and I * • ■>. T Not aG*ay Hair Loft,"
breaking of the hair. It is not a T 112 X the testimonyof hundreds using It.
dye, and positively will not dis- T ci(; V i \ T Hay's Malr-fiealtli is a dainty
color the scalp, hands or clothing, T |7* *J K 7 dressing and a necessary adjunct
and its use cannot be detected by T f (7., |Y T to every toilet, and unlike other
your best friend. T 7 preparations, has healthful action
Prevents hair falling after sea I (t.T w ?° tS °'- hair - c , aus , ing
bathing or much perspiration. t «heth« bl^^gide^'
One Bottle Does It. «large 50C. bottll : sJ At Leading DruggisfSi
FREE SOAP HARFINA SOAP. " I
•it out a i s *? n P Ol . l i? days and take it to any of the following druggists, and they
will jnve you a larg-e bottle of hay 's Hair-Health and a 25c. cake of Harfina Medicated Soap, the
best soap you can use for Hair, Scalp, Complexion, Bath and Toilet, both for Fifty cents ; regular retail
price, 75 cents. Inis offer is good once only to same family, redeemed by leading druggists every
where at the r shops only, or by the LONDON SUPPLY CO., 853 Broadway. New York, eitlier
with or without soap, by express, prepaid, in plain sealed ptic&igc on receipt of 6oc. and this coupon.
RUNDSMTTEC Any purchasing: Hay's Hair-
WWHIeHBI H £'£« Health anywhere in the United States,
i> AMU, who has not bt:en benefited, may have his money back by ad
dressing LONDON SUPPLY CO , 853 Hroadway, New York.
aht pec Remember the tunnes, "f/ny's Hair-Health. " ami "Harfina
ADDKKSS Soilpr RiJus . an iu i, 0U having //. //. H.
| Following druTgists supply hay's lluir*Moult!: ar.d iSoriina in t'.iuir shops only :
L. TAGOART, Emporium, Pa.
for infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa
ture of Clias. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
"Just-as-good" are but Experiments, and endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
yy Bears the Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CtNTOUH COMPANY, 77 MUWW»V »TWCCT. NIW VOWK CITV.
■lll—lit 'IMI lil'M ll' I" lll>WlJ.i^^9s^MgSs^^^gaaMaMM
tv
G. SCHMIDT'S.^
- , HEADQUARTERS FOR
||SL.., FRESH BREAD,
Jf popular p " ncv^.
n NUTS
#
V CONFECTIONERY
Daily Delivery. All orders given prompt and
skillful attention.
Is. You Get \ I
! \ the Profits \ ArMf" |
Under our plan of selling carriages, bug- \ j I
X gles, and harness, you get tho profits. The job- \ H
| No. 3034- X ber and retailer are cut out. By dealing direct X ~N o- , aT
J BnRK,. X with the manufacturer, you pay only the cost of X ;
R witble»th,'r \ "nHklugwith H modemte pmflt added; and you X n .rs" s . I
W quarter too. X t » ke your choice from the biggest stock and \ p r i co> »'
X fullest assortment. Our plan of \ 5J.95. ■
\ Selling Carriages Direct \
lnßur«i Mutiafaction—your money back if you are dissat- a
® i iflfr J x Our complete illu.-»trute«l cauiloguu, X
'Jjj /A X. mun y styles of vehicles. hnrnr»B. rohea, \
112 blankets and horse » (|iHpriient», with dt tailetl descrip- ■
I the COLUMBUS CARRIAGE AND HARNESS CO..
| Sox 772. Columbus, OMo. |
%B«aMSBBMMaBHBWaW»SB(»CkaBSBWI3»B3^W»CKBI9IEaaBgBaa#
WANTED!
Reliable man for Manager of
Branch Office we wish to open in
this vicinity. If your record is
O. K. here is an opportunity.
Kindly give good reference when
writing.
THE A. T. MORRIS WHOLESALE HOUSE,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Illustrated catalogue 4ctsstamps.
Get an jj
I Education
An exceptional opportunity offered fi
to young men and young women to jf
prepare for teaching or for business. E
Four regular courses; also special 8
work la Music, Shorthand, Type- t
writing. Strong teaching force, well 112
graded work, good discipline and l!
hard study, Insure best results to H
students of rj
Central State |
Normal School
LOCK HAVEN, C«nton Co., Pfl. 3
Handsome buildings perfectly equipped, <3
J steam lii'at, electric lights, abundance of *3
I pure mountain wnU-r. extenHive campus {«{
and Htiiletic grounds. Kxpcnsts low. hi-nd ,4
fur catalog. Ej
•I J. R. ruCKINGER, Principal, ?:$
8 Central State Normal School, •.
I LOCK HAVRN, PA. fjj