Belletonte, Pa. , September 0, 1018. Te Correspondents.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. P. GRAY MEEK, - - Editor. Terms of Subscription.—Until further | motice this paper will be furnished to sub- } scribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $150 Paid before expiration of year - 1.75 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor. EUGENE C. BONNIWELL, Philadelphia. For Lieutenant Governor. J. WASHINGTON LOGUE, Philadelphia. Secretary of Internal Affairs. ASHER R. JOHNSON, McKean County. Congress At Large. JOSEPH F. GORMAN, Lehigh County, FRED IKLER, Columbia County, J. CALVIN STRAYER, York County, SAMUEL R. TARNER, Allegheny County. Congress. Wm. E. TOBIAS, Clearfield County. Senator. MATTHEW SAVAGE, Clearfield County. Representative. JOHN NOLL, Bellefonte. BACK TO THE SCHOOL BOOKS. Schools and Colleges Will Open Next | Week. With the coming of September the mid-summer vacation comes to an end and the various schools and colleges throughout the country will open their doors for the 1918-19 school year. Naturally there is considerable speculation as to just what effect the prolongation of the war will have on the enrollment of students this year. So far as the public schools are con- cerned the only way in which they can possibly be affected is in a small- er attendance at the opening of school, owing te the help of the boys and girls being needed on the farms for the fall work. The preparatory schools and colleges will undoubtedly suffer more cr less, as many of their old students are now in service and the new draft law will take others who would probably go to college were it not for the war. But now, more than ever, is the time when the coming generation will need the ad- vantages of all the education possi- ble to get, and counting the various adverse contingencies parents should endeavor to have their sons and daughters attend either the public school or college, according to their age and degree of education. THE BELLEFONTE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. The Bellefonte public schools will open next Monday morning at 9 o'clock. Several weeks ago the “Watchman” published a list of the teachers who will be in charge, with only one vacancy. That was teacher of history in the high school, and that position has now been filled by the schoo! board securing the serv- ices of Miss Louise M. Kelso, of Wooster, Ohio. While it is impossible to tell at this time what the envollment will show next week, the indications are that it will be close to normal, which is in the neighborhood of seven hundred. The outlook for a large high school is very encouraging. There will be a number of new teachers in the schools this year but all have been selected with a knowledge of their ability to teach in the positions for which they have been chosen, so that the schools will lack nothing for the various changes made. THE BELLEFONTE ACADEMY. The Bellefonte Academy will open on Wednesday of next week. Those connected with the institution say the outlook is very good for an attend- ance almost as large if not equal to that of former years. This historic school, 113 years old, has outlived fifty other Academies that started with it in Pennsylvania in the early part of 1800. It has ever been an inspiration in the athletic, social, mental and religious phases of the community life. It has always responded to the na- tion’s calls and sized up to the needs of every hour. It had a splendid mil- itary company last year, and will have a good cone this year. Today over 175 of its students are known to be in the service against the Kaiser. Three are already known to have died either on the field of battle or in the hospital. The teachers and students have con- | tributed hundreds of dollars to Red Cross work, and have purchased over a thousand dollar’s worth of Liberty bonds, thrift and war stamps during the present year. Nearly sixty thousand dollars of good business will be brought to Cen- tre county this year by the Academy boys who will assemble in Bellefonte | next week from New York, New Jer- : sey, Maryland, Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and other States. Such an institution as this deserves the heartiest encouragement and sincer- est support of every citizen of Belle- fonte and Centre county. THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE The Pennsylvania State College will also open on Wednesday of next week and it has been announced by | the faculty of that institution that | the outlook is for an attendance of at least eighteen hundred students. Up to the present time 748 have been en- rolled in the Freshman class and if is expected that the final enrollment will show 800 students. Of course many of the upper classmen have entered the service but it is estimated that in the three classes there are one thous- and young men who will return to college. —— Subscribe for the “Watchman.” i TATE.—Mrs. Jane W. Tate, better known among her many friends as “Aunt Jane,” died on Saturday morn- , ing at the home of her daughter, Mrs. { Hiram Fetterhoff, on Bishop street. Though her last illness dated back i some six weeks, during most of which ' time she was confined to bed, she was up and around the house last Thurs- day evening. most eighty-one years old. An inter- esting incident in connection with her family history is that her grandfath- i er, John Furey, who was born in the north of Ireland in 1754, came to America when a young man and set- i tled in Carlisle. | en years then started west through i the State, crossed Nittany mountain i on a pack horse in 1810 and settled | at what was later the Washington | furnace property. A few years later i he moved from there to Centre coun- | ty and settled on a farm of 640 acres in Spring township, in the vicinity of Pleasant Gap. He visited Ireland twice after coming to this country i and died in 1830. It was onthe old homestead where Mrs. Tate was born and most of her t life was spent at Pleasant Gap. She was a life-long member of the Meth- odist church and one of those old- fashioned christian women whom it { was always a pleasure to associate with. When a young woman she was united in marriage to Hugh Beatty Tate who died many years ago. She was the mother of six children, three of whom survive as follows: Mrs. Samuel Noll, of Pleasant Gap; Mrs. Hiram Fetterhoff, of Bellefonte, and George B. M. Tate, of Pleasant Gap. She also leaves one step-sister, Mrs. Thompson, of Illinois. Funeral services were held at the Fetterhoff home at two o'clock on Monday afternoon by Rev. W. P. Ard, of the Lutheran church, after which the remains were taken to Pleasant Gap for burial in the Methodist cem- etery. Among those who were here for the funeral were Mr. and Mrs. J. Milton Furey, Harry Kline and son Durant and Miss Elizabeth VanDyke, of Williamsport, and Miss Bertha Gingerich, of Linden Hall. Il Il FLEMING.—Edward S. Fleming, a brother of Wilson I. Fleming, of this place, died in the Williamsport hos- pital on Saturday evening as the re- sult of a stroke of paralysis sustain- ed on Wednesday. He was a son of Isaac and Anna Stradley Fleming. His father came to this country from England and being an experienced wool worker located at Houserville, this county, where Edward was born. When a boy he spent several years in to Lycoming county. He was a black- smith by occupation but had lived a retired life for several years. He never married but is survived by five brothers and one sister, name- ly: Alderman Hudson R. Fleming, Eugene and Samuel, of Williamsport; Fleming, of Trout Run, and Mrs. Rathmell, of Williamsport. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Fleming attended the fun- eral which was held at two o’clock on Tuesday afternoon, burial being made at Williamsport. il if SHAFFER.—Mrs. Sallie I. Shaffer, widow of the late Reuben Shaffer, died at her home in Jersey Shore last Thursday, after an illness of some weeks. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Weaver and was born in Bellefonte on April 24th, 1853, hence was in her sixty-sixth ! year. When a young woman she worked as a compositor in the “Watchman” office and was always a painstaking and faithful employee. On May 3rd, 1882, she was united in marriage to Reuben Shaffer and shortly thereafter they went to Iowa to live. After eighteen years in the middle west they returned to Penn- sylvania in 1900 and took up their residence at Jersey Shore where she | lived ever since. Her husband died on December 3rd, 1915, leaving her with no children. She was also the last of her father’s family. The fun- eral was held on Monday, burial be- ing made in the cemetery at Jersey Shore. il Il HAAS.—Mrs. Katherine Haas, wid- ow of Louis Haas, and one of the old- | est residents of Benner township, 8:05 o’clock on Monday evening, of general debility. Her maiden name was Katherine Anderson and she was born in Germany eighty-six years ago. She came to this country when a young woman and all her life since had been spent in this vicinity. Her husband died many years ago but surviving her are a son and daughter, Robert L. Haas, at home, and Mrs. Richard Detling, of Spring Creek. She also leaves one sister, Mrs. Lawrence Fusser, of Kane. She was a member of the Catholic church and funeral services were held tin the church at ten o’clock yesterday i morning by Rev. Father Downes, after which burial was made in the Catholic cemetery. il 11 BALDRIGE. — Mrs. David Bald- rige, brief mention of whose death was published in last week’s “Watch- man,” was a daughter of William and Amanda Oliver Thompson and was born at West Newton, Pa., on No- vember 3rd, 1839, hence was in her seventy-ninth year. She was married at West Newton on April 30th, 1874, to David Baldrige, of Latrobe, and in the fall of that year they came to Milesburg to live. Mr. Baldrige died five years ago but surviving her are three children, namely: Frank O. Baldrige, of Pittsburgh; Lucie C., Jane Williams Tate was a daugh- ter of Jeremiah and Mary McKinley Furey and was born at Pleasant Gap on October 11th, 1827, hence was al- | He lived there sev- | Bellefonte before the family moved | Wilson I, of Bellefonte; Dr. J. F.| died at her home at Roopsburg at! burg, and Kate, at home. She also leaves one grand-son, Frank O. Jr. a sister and two brothers, as follows: Mrs. John O. Hood, of West Newton; : of Uniontown, Funeral Andrew Thompson, ‘and J. Frank, of Chicago. services were held at four o’clock on ! Sunday afternoon, burial being made | in the Union cemetery, Bellefonte. Il Il JUSTICE.—Donald S. Justice, in- fant son of Homer and Marie Bick- ett Justice, died at the Bellefonte hos- | pital on Tuesday, aged two months. ! Burial was made yesterday in the Meyer’s cemetery. Cp iene | Airplane Mail Service Routed Over Centre County. | The initial trip of the airplanes to be put in service carrying mail be- tween New York and Cleveland, Ohio, was made yesterday. Postmaster | Paul O. Brosius, of Lock Haven, had | the fact heralded far and wide that | Lock Haven would be the one stop- ping place between New York and Cleveland, being in the middle of the ! route. The consequence was that sev- eral thousand people flocked to the ' golf links of the Clinton Country club | | yesterday morning to see the airplane ' | come down, A number of Bellefont- eves i ers went down to be on hand for the , 5 ! brother Joe. | history-making epoch, among them | , representatives of the “Watchman.” | The machine was scheduled to leave | New York at six o’clock and arrive at : | Lock Haven at 8:30. A telegram was ‘received by postmaster Brosius, how- | ever, stating that the machine did not | get away until 7:08, and that a sec- {ond machine would follow an hour | later. When the time for the airplane | to arrive came and it did not show up | speculation became rife as to what i had become of it, but most of the peo- : ple stuck to their posts, determined to | see the plane or stay until they were | satisfied it was not coming. And the | forenoon was growing pretty long | when at 10:50 o’clock the first sight { of the machine was gotten as it came | sailing up the river course. Instead i of flying in an air line the pilot fol- | | lowed the river and it was five min- | | utes from the time the plane was first | { seen until it made a very graceful ! { landing on the hill west of the Clin- i ton Country club. | The machine was a Standard and { the pilot Max Miller. He delivered ia pouch of mail to postmaster | Brosius and was given one from the { Lock Haven office. He then filled up | with gas and oil, which had been ship- { ped to Lock Haven several days pre- | | vious and when he tested his motor i he found some trouble with one of the | cylinders. In fact it was motor trou- i | ble that made him late at Lock Ha- | | ven, as he was compelled to descend | at Danville to overhaul the machine. | i In testing out his motor he made a i circle of the big field on which he | landed and finally at 11:50 o’clock he { took a long glide and flew almost due | west, passing over Snow Shoe twen- i ty minutes later. He was in plain | sight of the people of that town. The i second plane, a Curtiss machine, fol- . lowed the first one within an hour and a half. In crossing the Alleghenies it sail- ed low over the Charles Reese farm above Gum Stump and was reported from there as traveling very little above the line of tree tops. An for Service to Auto Owners. Appeal Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 4, 1918. To the members of the committee on motors and trucks of Centre coun- ty, organized under committee of | Public Safety, and now Pennsylva- nia Council of Defense. i Gentlemen: — { On June 5th, 1917, the date of for- | mer registration, you were asked to | co-operate with your several local | registration boards in securing a one hundred per cent. registration for the county by volunteering, or securing volunteers, for at least one automo- bile to be in attendance at your dis- trict registration place during the hours designated for registration. ! Under the recent “Man Power Bill” passed by Congress, September 12th, | tration of all male persons tween the ages of 18 years. The sheriff has the county into sixteen tion districts. I again call and 45 ing a two-fold service: | 1st. A help to those who might | ty of failure to register. 2nd. A service to the local pride | and credit to your county in securing | a full and complete registration. elsewhere in the county papers. ROBERT F. HUNTER, Director, Department Motors and Trucks, Centre County. er Gt + mevtrmmr mamma Red Cross Festivals. A Red Cross festival will be held on the green at the church in Fillmore tomorrow (Saturday) evening. Th public is invited. ’ A festival will also be held at Roopsburg tomorrow evening. The Emerick busses will be run to Roops- burg and back to accommodate the crowd. Good speakers and good mu- sic at both festivals. | the latter realized that to beat a has- { doing. So he backed away, waving + his arms back and forth like a man! i talking with his hands. lowed him several rods then dropped : to all fours and with her cubs follow- ‘ing scampered up the bank and disap- | peared. | tion they asked was what made him i look so pale? . ed any knowledge of paleness and it ; he told of his encounter with the bear. ! Young “camp several weeks previous with a i contingent of national army men. between the hours of 7 a. m. and 9 | of responding to the treatment given o'clock p.m, isthe date set for regis- | he continued to grow worse until his be- | death. divided | W. H. Leitzell and was born in Re- registra- bersburg, this county, on August 19, upon | 1891, hence was 27 years old. When this committee, and any others who ' a boy his parents moved to DuBois may feel it their patriotic duty, to | and there he grew to manhood and volunteer or secure volunteers for the | married. same service on September 12th, | son and daughter, he is survived by 1918, keeping in touch with your reg- | his parents, a sister and two brothers, istration board as to whom it may be ; one of whom has been in the U. S. ar- well to offer assistance in getting to my five years. A number of Rebers- the registration place before the time | burg people motored to DuBois on of closing. Thus you will be render- Thursday to attend the funeral but otherwise have come under the penal- | compelled to return home before the | body arrived. Report your intentions in this mat- | Masonic building, Saturday after- ter, n a to the chairman of | noon, September 7th, at 3 o'clock, for the registration board of your dis- the purpose of discussing the work of trict, notice of which you will see, the new allotment. A full attendance | is requested. married to Howard Nagle, of Miles- TALE OF A BIG BEAR AND TWO CUBS. Charles P. Reese Had a Thrilling En- counter with the Animals on Saturday Afternoon. What would you do if you were suddenly confronted with an old she bear and two hearty cubs while trav- eling alone in the mountains? This is the question that Charles P. Reese was called upon to meet about four o'clock last Saturday afternoon, and the fact that he got off without a scratch is evidence that he took the best if not the only way out. Mr. Reese had been out beyond Snow Shoe to his No. 25 mine. Ow- ing to the fact that Monday was La- bor day and his mine would be closed he decided to go home and as some of his people wanted to make a trip to Williamsport in the car he decid- ed to walk it. So early in the after- noon he started home. He was caught in the hard rain that passed over the mountain about four o’clock and was trudging along on the rail- road this side of the home of his He was soaked to the skin, his shoes full of water and forg- ing along through the rain with his head down to keep the rain out of his Just as he came to the begin- ning of a deep cut in the railroad he heard some stones roll down on the track and glancing up he was some- . what startled to see directly in front of him a big she bear and on the bank a cub which he avers would weigh about one hundred and fifty pounds. Naturally Mr. Reese stopped right there but he had little time for: thought for almost immediately ! another cub came tumbling down the ! bank almost at his feet. Evidently believing that the bears were trying to flank him Mr. Reese hit the cub a | kick and it let out a squeal, and that’s | where he made a mistake. Very promptly the old bear rose on its! haunches and holding its front paws in a regular boxer-like attitude it be- gan to advance on Mr. Reese. Now i ty retreat would probably be his un- The bear fol- Mr. Reese breathed a sigh of relief that the meeting had ended so favor- ably for him and started through the cut on his way home. When he was | about to emerge from the cut he hap- | pened to look up and right there back . of a wire fence sat the old she bear | with a cub on either side watching | for him. Pretending not to notice them, but keeping one eye wide open | and in their direction he veered over to the opposite side of the cut and walked past them, and the bear made | no move to molest him. Passing through the cut Mr. Reese took to the road and soon met some of his family who had started to go after him in a car. The firse ques- Of course he disclaim- was not until he was safe at home and had changed to dry clothing that Died at Camp. The death of John W. Leitzell, of DuBois, at Camp Wadsworth, S. C., on Tuesday of last week, is causing more or less discussion in his home community. Leitzell was sent to Soldier Training When he was first examined for serv- ice he was put in the A4 class, owing to his having a wife and two child- ren. When the work-or-fight order was issued his wife withdrew her affi- davits of support and he was sum- moned before the local board of Du- Bois for further physical examina- tion. At the time he complained of illness but the board passed him and he was sent to Camp Wadsworth. There it was discovered that he was suffering with nephritis, and instead Deceased was a son of Mr. and Mrs. In addition to his wife, a owing to some misunderstanding as to shipping the body home they were ali is AAP an ——There will be a meeting of the women at the Red Cross work rooms, MARY MILES BLANCHARD. ——“The Eagle’s Eye,” a serial photo drama by William J. Flynn, the recently retired ‘chief of the United States secret service, will begin at the Scenic tonight. It is a wonder- fully dramatic picture and will run for twenty episodes. Don’t fail to see it. ——Herbert Auman has resigned his job at the Keystone Gazette to take effect September 15th, when he will go to work for Harry Cleven- stine in the City bakery." How the Fourth Liberty Loan Will be Advertised. Plans for the coming Liberty loan campaign embrace the most elaborate advertising schemes ever attempted. ! One of the features will be a series of full page advertising matter by the most distinguished men in the coun- try. President Wilson will head the list, and ex-President Roosevelt, ex- President Taft, Secretary Baker, Sec- retary McAdoo, General Charles M. Schwab, Henry Ford, and others will also contribute. Six million posters, designed by fa- mous artists, in a dozen designs, will be used, and 80,000,000 buttons dis- | tributed. No money will be spent in advertisements; no demand will be made on publishers, but they will be | Moving | asked to contribute space. pictures, specially prepared, will be used extensively, and on the opening day of the campaign twenty-four trains, cach composed of three large flat cars and a tourist car for the speakers, will start on a tour of the country. Each exhibit will consist of captur- ed cannon, huge shells, field artillery, specimens of German equipment, and other war paraphernalia. Several tanks that have seen service abroad, ‘will be included. The French High Commission has sent to this country . in which Guynemer, | brought ; the areoplane the famous French Ace, down seventeen Boche planes. Many other forms of advertising will be used, and nothing will be left undone that will present to the public the im- portance of placing the loan. Close Finish in Red Cross Baseball League. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. WW. LL r.C: South Ward reeadl 10 024 North Ward snes 11 000 | West. Ward... .............. 10 11 A473 From the above it will be seen that the race for the pennant in the Red Cross baseball league is nip and tuck between the three teams with four games yet to play; and the games are so divided that either one of the teams i can win out. One of the best games of the entire series was played last Friday even- ing by the North and West wards, neither team being able to score. Monday afternoon the North and West ward teams played two games, the first running seven innings and finally being won by the North by the score of 7 to 6. The second game was won by the West ward in the last in- i ning when they scored three runs, the final score being 4 to 2. The games yet to play are one between the North and South, one be- tween the North and West and two between the South and West ward | teams. The game this (Friday) even- ing will be between the North and South wards and as it will go a long ways towards deciding the standing of both clubs at the finish it will un- doubtedly be a hard fought contest. In fact it will probably be-the most exciting game of the entire season, and any lover of the sport should go out and see it. In fact you owe it to the boys who have worked so hard to keep the league going to go out and encourage them in the few games yet | to be played. And the most encour- aging feature to them, it might be added, is bigger gate receipts to turn over to the Red Cross. Two Men “Badly Hort In Railroad ~ Wreck. A very costly railroad wreck occur- red on the Snow Shoe branch last Thursday afternoon when eighteen out of twenty-three cars of coal were ! derailed and piled up along the track at the John Lucas farm just this side of the school house crossing. Brake- man Jesse Parsons, of Unionville, was . buried beneath the coal so that only : In fact. his arms were sticking out. it was not known that he had been caught in the wreck until his arms were discovered and the other train- men at once set to work to dig him out. With no tools to work with the men went at the coal with their hands and picked and scraped until their nails were worn to the flesh but they got the brakeman out alive. It was impossible to tell just how | badly he was injured and he was brought to the Bellefonte hospital as soon as possible. There it was ascer- tained that his most serious injury is a crushed hip and as he has been ge*- ting along fairly well there is every | reason to believe he will recover. Brakeman Cherry, of Tyrone, sustain- ed a broken leg and he was taken to his home in Tyrone on the evening train. Cherry had been braking just two days, having formerly worked in the engine house at Tyrone. The cause of the wreck is believed to have been a broken flange. The road bed was torn up a considerable distance by the wreck and to get the road open for traffic the immense pile of coal was leveled off and the track : When swung onto it temporarily. the old roadbed is repaired and the track replaced the coal will be sal- vaged. More People Must Buy W. S. S. The report of the war savings cam- | paign for the week ending August 24th shows that Centre county had a per capita that week of 25c., or a to- tal of $13.57 for the entire campaign. We retained fourth place. The special drive of the past week : was not % success by any means. In certain sections of the county, how- ever, tremendous sales were made, while in other sections practically nothing at all was accomplished. If we want to “go over the top” it is up to the PEOPLE in their several localities to buy W. S. S. W. HARRISON WALKER, Chairman War Savings Committee for Centre County. Pershing, - home. clerked in Montgomery & Co’s store = LIEUTENANT HENRY KELLER : WOUNDED. Additional News Notes of Men in the Service. In a letter received yesterday Mr. | and Mrs. Harry Keller, of this place, were informed that their son, Lieut. Henry Keller, of the 111th Inf. is wounded in the leg and at the date of writing, August 14th, the Lieutenant stated that he was on his way to a i base hospital where he expected to be laid up for several months. Lieutenant Keller, so far as pres- ent records are available, is the first Bellefonte boy to be wounded in France and it will be some comfort to him while in the hospital to realize | that a distinction that will be wonder- fully cherished in later years is his. Early in July Carl Deitrick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deitrick, was one of five sent to Delaware College for _ special training. After being there six weeks four of the boys were sent . to southern camps and Carl to Gettys- burg where he was assigned to the Tank corps. In a letter home last week he said: “This camp is very large. There are about 10,000 sol- ‘ diers here and all big men. A man has to be almost perfect to be here. I had another examination yesterday and passed 20-20, which gives me a ' high rating so far. I am now in the Tank corps, which is the best and - highest rated branch of the service. It is three points higher than the avi- ation. Our location here is among the monuments, five minute’s walk from Spangler’s spring, Bloody An- gles, Little Round Top, ete. Don’ know how long we'll be here or where we go from here, but don’t worry.” Along about July 20th Mark Mil- ler went to Williamsport and enlist- ed for service in the engineers, being sent to Fort Slocum, N. Y., July 26th. He was later sent to Alexandria, Va., for training and a card received from him on Tuesday stated that he likes camp life very much and has already been promoted to a corporal. Ralph Smith, of Bellefonte, has’ also been made a corporal at the Alexandria camp. Word was received last Saturday that Dr. W. E. Park, formerly of Cen- tre Hall, had been wounded in France ‘on August 10th. Dr. Park was with the Forty-seventh regiment, Fourth division of the regular army, and ranked as a first lieutenant. He sail- ed for France on May 10th, and was wounded just three months to the day later. The nature or degree of his wounds are unknown. Capt. George P. Runkle, who is i now in charge of one of the U. S. transports, got an opportunity to spend a few hours in Bellefonte on . Monday. He left New York Sunday night, arrived here Monday morning, was taken to Centre Hall in the after- noon to see his friends and returning left on the 8:10 train in the evening .s0 as to be in New York Tuesday morning. B. Graham Hunter, who is in the service as an assistant coast inspec- , tor with the rank of yoeman in the navy, stationed at Elizabeth Point, N. J., has been home this week on a fur- lough, visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hunter. Having almost completed his course iat the Bowman Technical Institute, , Lancaster, Benedict Beezer was home on a furlough over Sunday as it is just possible he and the other boys there will be transferred to a train- . ing camp very shortly. Among the men awarded commis- sions last Saturday at the field artil- lery central officers’ training school | at Camp Taylor, Ky., was to Horace «J. Hartranft, Bellefonte, a second : lieutenant of artillery. Lae | Hassell Montgomery and Milan B. | Walker, in service at the League Is- i land navy yard, Philadelphia, came ' home Saturday on a seventy-two " hours’ furlough. | Charles Anderson, Earl Kline and ! Dan Clemson, in training at Pitts- i burgh, were home over Sunday, ow- ! ing to the Labor day holiday on Mon- . day. Massey — Smith. — Joseph Massey, ! of Lewistown, and Miss Lillie M. : Smith, of Bellefonte, were married on | Saturday of last week at the Metho- : dist parsonage in Lewistown by the i pastor, Rev. Dorsey M. Miller. Im- | mediately after the ceremony they | journeyed to Punxsutawney where | they spent a few days as guests of | Mrs. Joseph Winslow. Miss Smith, ! who is a daughter of Mrs. Peter i M. Smith, has been a clerk in Mr. H. * E. Fenlon’s insurance office the past , thirteen years and for a number of vears past did most of the work of Mr. Fenlon as treasurer of the Belle- fonte hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Mas- + sey will make their home in Lewis- town, | . Edmunson—Reese.—Ralph Edmun- son, of Altoona, and Miss Nellie Reese, daughter of M. and Mrs. Charles P. Reese, of Reese’s Settle- ment, were married at 2:30 o’clock yesterday afternoon at the Methodist ' parsonage on east Linn street, by the - pastor, Dr. E. H. Yocum. The young couple were attended by Miss Ruth King, of Bellefonte, and John Reese, a brother of the bride. Immediately following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Edmunson departed on the Pennsyl- vania—Lehigh train for Altoona, where they will make their future The bridegroom formerly in this place. “9 Sv