Bemorei Wan Bellefonte, Pa., October 10, 1919. Sm—— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. The fall election is only a lit- tle over three weeks away. The equinoctial rains this year came about two weeks late. Vogel’s big minstrels will be the opera house attraction tonight. A food sale will be held in the Sourbeck store room, Saturday, Octo- ber 11th. Cakes, pies, rolls and can- dy will be on sale. ——George H. Eberhart, represent- ing the Logan fire company, attend- ed the state convention of volunteer firemen held in Lancaster this week. ——When William Schmidt return- ed to Cornell University last week he was appointed assistant instructor in the electrical engineering department of the University. The W. C. T. U. thimble bee and get-together meeting will be held at the Reformed parsonage this (F'ri- day) afternoon, and be the guests of Mrs. Ambrose M. Schmidt. ——The Knights of Columbus will celebrate Columbus day next Monday, October 13th, by holding a euchre in their hall in the Reynolds building. The public is invited to attend. The property of the late Rob- ert F. Sechler, on north Spring street, was sold last Friday by the adminis- trators of the estate to Miss Winifred M. Gates, the price paid being $3,500. ——Any reader of the “Watchman” who is the possessor of an old flint lock gun, or knows of one, can find a market for same by inquiring at this office. Gun must be in good condition in every way. ——At the recent session of the Free Methodist church conference held at Warren Rev. G. B. Tingue was returned to the church at Flem- ing and Rev. G. J. Kelley was contin- ued as presiding elder of the DuBois and Tyrone district. ——Cyrus Gearhart, who has been living on the old Mayes place near Houserville, will sell all his personal effects on October 18th and on the 20th will leave with his wife and daughter for Finley, Ill., where his son, Wilbur Russell, is now located, expecting to embark in farming next spring. ——“The opening of the chestnut burr” was helped along considerably by the heavy frost of Wednesday morning, the first real frost of the season. As almost all garden truck has been housed there was nothing of any consequence to damage, while on the other hand the frost will mature the corn so that it can be husked and housed. ——In their opening game on Hughes field last Saturday the Belle- fonte Academy football team defeat- ed the strong All Scholastic team of Altoona by the score of 13 to 0. The game was especially interesting in affording the people of Bellefonte an opportunity to get a line-up on the Academy players and from the way they worked together on Saturday leads to the belief that they will be consistent winners during the entire season. ——Ever since the days of Ruger the Scenic has been the recognized leader in motion picture theatres in Bellefonte and this locality. In the years that it has been under the man- agement of T. Clayton Brown he has always striven to give the best possi- ble in motion pictures for the money. That he has done so in a satisfying way is proven by his large patronage at all times. The result is if you want to see good pictures, go to the Scenic. It will be two years next Mon- day, October 13th, since John Eckel opened up his present meat market on High street. While that in itself is a mere matter of business the in- teresting fact in connection therewith is that it was so cold at that time that he didn’t need any ice for his meat and never needed a particle of ice from that day until the next April. But he has been compelled to use ice in his refrigerator ever since, including last winter and from the way the weather has been of late he may have to use it for some weeks to come. ——VWilliam Parker, of Philips- burg, has leased the store room in the Centre county bank building and will immediately put it in condition for use as a florist’s show room. He ex- pects to carry a line of cut flowers, potted plants, seeds and bulbs and will specialize in funeral designs, wedding and reception decorations. Mr. Parker has been in the business in Philipsburg for some years and has had wide experience in handling plants and flowers. He comes here Hot as an entire stranger for he is a son of Geo. E. Parker, who is very well known in this place. ——The Presbyterian congregation of Centre Hall, which has been with- out the services of a regular pastor since the resignation of Rev. Josiah B. Still, last Sunday extended a unan- imous call to Rev. L. V. Barber, of the Lemont charge, to become their pastor, preaching at that place every two weeks. Rev. Barber’s original charge included the churches at Le- mont, Boalsburg, Pine Grove Mills and Buffalo Run, but recently the lat- ter church was attached to the Miles- burg and Snow Shoe charge which enables Rev. Barber to officiate at Cen- tre Hall. He has accepted the call extended by the Centre Hall congre- gation and his action will be consid- ered at a special meeting of Presby- tery to be held in Tyrone in Decem- ber. WITH THE BOROUGH DADS. Burgess Walker Makes Appeal for foundation for the new radio station Better Fire Fighting Apparatus. The six active councilmen were are now at work on the erection of i i ——Contractors George Rhoads and Son on Monday completed the in connection with the Bellefonte avi- ation field and Gehret and Lambert present at Monday night’s regular the station building. As a good part meeting, the first in five weeks. of the equipment is already here it Jacob Marks, George Eberhart were present repre- senting the Logan fire company and through burgess W. Harrison Walker submitted to council a proposition to turn over to that body a fund of $1,500 which they received from the | college work of Miss Anna Shuey, less: ; sale of the company’s Pierce Arrow car on condition that council purchase for the company a modern chemical fire truck, of a design and capacity that will meet with the approval of the company. In presenting the prop- osition burgess Walker took occasion to point to the fact that Bellefonte’s volunteer fire department is sadly lacking in up-to-date fire fighting ap- aratus, while neighboring towns are spending thousands of dollars in pur- chasing the best that money can buy. The matter was referred to the Fire and Police committee with the request that they make a report on the same at next meeting of council. Burgess Walker also informed council that the War Department is sending to Bellefonte one of the cap- tured German “77” guns, and natur- ally a suitable place will have to be selected for a permanent resting place for the gun. Mr. Walker sug- gested the triangle in the Diamond, known as the “safety zone,” where a concrete foundation can be erected and the gun anchored permanently with its muzzle pointing down High street. The matter was referred to the Street committee. A communication was received from tax collector J. Kennedy John- ston requesting an increase in com- missions allowed him from three to five per cent. during the rebate per- iod and an equitable increase after the expiration of the rebate period, and the matter was referred to the Finance committee. C. Y. Wagner submitted two prop- ositions to borough council in connec- tion with the Phoenix mill. One was to purchase the plant at the price the borough has been obligated to pay and then lease the water power to the borough at an annual rental of $600. Proposition No. 2 was to lease the plant, exclusive of the water power at an equitable yearly rental with an option to purchase the same, exclu- sive of the water power, at the end of four years for $15,000, or water power included for $25,000. The propositions were referred to the Special committee. A communication was received from the State Department of Health calling attention of council to the fact that complaint had been made regard- ing foul air issuing from the sewer at the ientrance of Burrows alley. Inas- much as no such complaint has ever been made to council members of that body rather resent ‘the complaint made to the State Department of Health over their heads and the sec- retary was instructed to write the Department for the name of the com- plainant. In the meantime the mat- ter was referred to the Street com- mittee for investigation. Residents of Bishop street sent to council a petition requesting the oil- ing of that thoroughfare as the in- creased travel thereon on account of it being a detour for the State High- way Department has resulted in al- most a continuous cloud of dust. In- asmuch as the borough has the dust- aline the matter of oiling the street was referred to the Street committee. The Street committee presented the report of the borough manager for the month of October showing a total of $324.70 collected from various sources and numerous repairs upon the streets and alleys. The Water committee presented the borough manager’s report as it affects the water department, includ- ing a suggestion that a new spiral water meter be purchased for use at the water tank of the P. R. R. Co., as the kind of meter now in use there is not adapted to such high pressure work and breaks frequently. The new meter suggested will cost in the neighborhood of $75.00 and council authorized the purchase of one. The Fire and Police committee re- ported that there had been considera- ble complaint about the police not do- ing their duty and that the committee and burgess had decided to put the force under the direct control of the borough manager. In making the change it was decided to do away with a “chief” and place both men on the same level, and to equalize the wages it was recommended that po- liceman Yerger’s salary be increased from $70.00 to $75.00 2 month. The committee also reported that a six week’s leave of absence had been granted policeman Harry Dukeman and that A. J. Robinson had been ap- pointed to the force for that period of time. The Finance committee reported a balance of forty dollars in the hands of the treasurer on October first and presented for renewal! notes aggre- gating $11,800, which were authoriz- ed. Bills to the amount of $3,900 were approved and council adjourned. meter hth It was Some Altercation. The Marklesburg correspondent of the Huntingdon Globe says: “During an altercation between C. H. Buckius, road engineer of the State Highway Department, and Dan- iel Brindle, last week, Mr. Brindle suffered a double fracture of.the low- er jaw. He was brought for treat- ment to the office of Dr. Koshland and later removed to the Blair Me- morial hospital, Huntingdon, to have an X-ray examination and a dental splint applied.” i i | M. R. Johnson and ought to be only a matter of a few weeks until the station is completed and planes can then get in commu- nication with the Bellefonte field by wireless. a Ali now Mrs. Whiting, through the col- ' jumns of the “Watchman” and noting | her many prizes and honors while at | Dickinson, it is scarcely necessary to call the attention of our readers to what they already know was an error . in our comment upon her school work. Mrs. Whiting, the third daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey, was a mem- ber of the class ‘of 1916 Dickinson College, instead of the Seminary, as we inadvertently put it. 1 Penn State opened its football season on new Beaver field last Sat- urday by defeating Gettysburg by the | score of 33 to 0. The visitors held the State team without scoring in the first half of the game but a shake-up between halves put pep into the State aggregation and during the third and fourth quarters they gave a better account of themselves with the result that the pigskin was safely placed be- hind the Gettysburg goal posts five times. The game brought to light the fact that State has good football ma- terial and with proper development it should make a winning team. The United States Navy is seeking enlistments of young men to help man its ships. The life of a sailor these days is very different from what it was twenty or thirty years ago. Then it was regarded as almost a dog’s life, but today it has been elevated to the plane of any oth- er calling in life and has the advan- tage of giving the young man who en- lists an opportunity to acquire var- ious trades as well as affording him the chance of seeing much of the world. Any young man who is at all interested should read the advertise- ment published on the 6th page of to- day’s paper. Mr. N. Clair Doyle, manager of the Bellefonte office of The McVey Co., real estate dealers, whose head office is in Altoona with other branch offices in Johnstown and Mt. Union, was in Altoona last Friday attending the first annual business meeting and banquet of the company held at the home of Mr. Charles McVey, the pres- ident and general manager. Though The McVey Co. has been doing busi- ness the past four years this was the first meeting of that character and as | evidence of the success of the firm is the fact that at its head office in Al- toona and different branch offices it! now gives employment to eleven’ peo- ple, all of whom were present at the meeting. The McVey Co. has already | established a clientelle in Bellefonte and Centre county and has bright prospects for good business in the fu- | ture. Two more prisoners were fool- ish enough to think they could get away from the penitentiary and they tried it on Sunday evening. They were Homer Davis, sent up from Lawrence county, and Alexander Johnson, colored, of Allegheny coun- ty. They had one night’s liberty un- der the stars but were picked up by a | guard early Monday morning as they were walking down the railroad to- ward Milesburg. Railroad trackmen saw the two men go by but not know- ing they were escaped prisoners did not molest them and thus virtually allowed one hundred dollars in re- wards to slip through their fingers. The prisoners were taken before Judge Quigley on Monday, given the customary sentence, which in their cases runs from two to three years, and on Tuesday morning they were taken back to the old institution at Pittsburgh. And thus ended their at- tempt to gain freedom before their time had legally arrived. ——1In the regular report of the borugh council proceedings published in another column will be found the proposition of the Logan fire company to turn over to Borough council the sum of $1,500 if council will purchase for the company a good chemical truck. While at a casual reading the real necessity for such a truck may not be apparent, but when the fact is considered that practically all of the equipment the two fire companies have are horse drawn, and hors- es for such a purpose are next to impossible to secure now, at least as promptly as they are needed in time of a fire, the proposition is one that deserves the most careful consideration. Another fact to take into consideration is that the big majority of fires could be ex- tinguished in their incipiency could the fire companies get there promptly and with the proper kind of equip- ment with which to fight it. And the damage done by the small amount of chemical compound used would be very slight compared with the dam- age always done with water. These arc all incontestable facts and should | be carefully considered. The only! question that can be brought up! against - the purchase is that of finances, but other towns have laid a i bonded debt for the purchase of up- | to-date fire apparatus, and the ques- | tion for the Bellefonte council to solve is which way will display the great- er wisdom: Go further in debt for the purchase of proper equipment for | the fire companies or run the risk of getting along with the present equip- ment and taking the chance on no | fires occurring. AMONG THE ARMENIANS, NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | i —Mrs. Scott Houser, her son Earl, and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Houser and their Bellefonte Young Woman Writes of —Miss Sallie Dunlap is spending this | child, motored here Wednesday from Du- Her Work Among the Refugees. i The following letter was received by Mr. Charles F. Cook from his daughter Elinor (now Mrs. Robert | MacDowell), who is doing uplift work among the Armenian refugees in! ' Kars, Russia, and it tells in a direct | ‘way of the conditions and needs of burg, spent Saturday and Sunday at his , those people who have been driven from their country and in addition to | Kars, Russia, July 16 ’19. | Well here I am at last! The ride over from Joliloghli was beautiful. | week with her sister, Mrs. Ramsey. | | —DMiss Elizabeth Boeking, of Tyrone, | has been a guest this week of Mrs. H. N. Crider. —DMrs. J. G. Butterworth left Saturday to join Mr. Butterworth in Wilkinsburg, | where they will make their home. —Editor Edward L. Gates, of Philips- | old home in this place. —George P. Bible left Sunday for Kan- | After so closely following the being homeless are almost friend- sas, from where he will start on his Chau- tauqua work for the winter. ! —Miss Jane Miller is in Williamsport, | having gone down Saturday for a visit of | two weeks with her brother and family. —Mrs. Fred Bryan and her : er, relative to the Farmers’ children i Bois, for a visit with relatives in Centre | county. —Miss Miriam Beck, of Nittany, was in Bellefonte yesterday, and while here look- ed after some business for her grandfath- Mutual Fire Insurance. —Francis Thal was in Bellefonte the latter part of last week for a short visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Thal. Francis is an employee of the P. R. R. Co. at Osceola. —Mrs. Whipple, of McAlevy’s Fort, and Mrs. Irvin, of Sistersville, W. Va., who had been visiting here with Mrs. T. W. Romig and Mrs. A. C. Smith, left Bellefonte to re- turn home Saturday. —Morton Smith has been spending a One winds around and around, up the spent the after part of last week here bart of the week in Washington, called ‘mountain side, almost to snow line, | and coming from eighty feet below | ' sea level, and terribly hot weather, it was some contrast. | Kars is in the Caucasus mountains | and our house is on a hill outside the | city. It was a military city and few civilians lived here—everything in barracks, towers, etc., built by Rus- “sians. Our house is an officer's billet —forty rooms—fifteen of which we use. The Russians surrendered, or gave over the city to Armenians, who were chased out by the Turks, who in | turn were chased out by the English in March, and they gave over the city ; to the Armenians in May. i My work for the present is helping | in the office and taking charge of ma- terial in stock, as well as arranging some means of distribution, and it is no easy job, I assure you. Kars has been badly neglected, and has almost nothing, compared to other stations. I think it will be one of the big orphanage centres, and as soon as supplies, ete., arrive, I will have plenty of orphanage work to do. August 11, 19. This week we are expecting five hundred orphans from Erivan, next week four hundred from Tiflis, as well as one hundred others as soon as I can take them. I will have two barracks for or- phanages, each holding six hundred and fifty. Will put girls in one and boys in one, and am so anxious to get started. My, these orphans are so different from those in Baku, who have been a long time in orphanages. These thin, little tads just sit playing with a string—no, not playing, just hold- ing it. I have the things I brought from home for a starter to use in kinder- garten work, and if the box you sent arrives, as I sincerely hope it will, I can use everything to advantage. Do thank every one for me, wish I could write each one a letter of thanks, but that is out of the question. Many refugees pass through Kars every week on their way home to Ar- menia. Things are still very unset- tled in Central Turkey. The govern- ment feeds the people. We confine our work to the children. Flour and bread is given daily. Each person is now allowed three-fourths of a pound of bread each day, and when one con- siders that they live almost entirely on bread, it is a small amount. But even on those short rations the flour may not hold out. The spirit of re- volt has seized the people and they are striking, both for us and for the government, and we are hoping by cutting off the bread allowance to force them to go to work. After five years’ wandering ~ they naturally do not know their own minds and follow any leader, and al- most all the best type of Armenians have been massacred. Then those Russian Armenians are not the strong type the Turkish Armenians are. I do wish all the Americans and English here could realize how dif- ferent in environment, heritage, and in every other way these Armenians are from them, and maybe some would love them more. They seem to have expected to find people of the average American type. Had we Americans been refugees for five years, living often upon grass and roots as the very best and wealthiest Armenians often had to do, I wonder if we would not have become degen- erate too—at least temporarily. Why, little wizened, dried-up peo- ple come here, and it is hard to tell whether they are old men or children, and they never laugh. Those Miss Bond has had for three months are brightening up and taking a new in- terest in life. For some, it is their first interest, for being born on the march they know nothing but starva- tion and dirt. Now that cold weather is coming on I hope we can take more in. Gregory Bros. Sell “Candyland.” The Gregory Bros., who have con- ducted the Candyland store in the McClain block, alongside of the “Watchman” office ever since they opened the same five years or more ago, on Wednesday sold out to James Caldwell and Edward Osmer, who will conduct the same in the future. The Gregory Bros. hereafter will devote all their time to their store at State College. The new proprietors are en- terprising and courteous young busi- ness men and the “Watchman” wish- es them success in their new under- taking. Whose Letter Was It. In Monday’s mail the “Watchman” received an envelope addressed “Watchman Office, Bellefonte, Pa.” Upon opening it we found that it con- tained not a thing and hoping that some one in Pittsburgh, where it was posted, might have intended to send us something worth while we publish this notice with the hope that if such was the intention we want to inform the sender that the supposed enclos- ure didn’t get here. with relatives, Sunday. —Mrs. J. J. Kilpatrick is at her former home in Philadelphia, called there a week ago by the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Clayton. —Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brandman and their family are contemplating moving to Philadelphia, after being residents of Bellefonte for fourteen years. —Mrs. John Hinman Gibson, who hall been visiting here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Cook, returned to her home in Chicago a week ago. —Rev. Wilson Potter Ard, pastor of the Bellefonte Lutheran church, has been at New Berlin this week attending the Alle- gheny Synod of the Lutheran church. —James B. Krape, caretaker of the Rast- ern Refractories company building, visit- ed for the week-end in Johnstown, with his brother, George Krape and his family. —Mrs. John A. Woodcock will leave Bellefonte this week to visit for an indefi- nite time with her son, Rev. John R. Woodcock and his family, in Syracuse, N.Y, —Mrs. H. 8S. Cooper has arranged to returning to Philipsburg , leave today for Memphis, Tenn., and after spending a few days with friends there, will go directly to her home in Dallas, Texas. —Mrs. George Robertson, of Hartford, Conn., has been a guest this week of Miss Adaline Olewine, coming here from Cen- tre Hall, where she had been visiting with her father, D. B. Brisbin. —The Misses Elizabeth and Emily Par- ker, of Somerset. came to Bellefonte Mon- day. Miss Emily remained but a day, while her sister will visit for a month or more with her brother, G. Ross Parker, and his family. —County Commissioners D. H. Grove, W. H. Noll Jr., and Isaac Miller went down to Philadelphia on Sunday to at- tend the annual state convention of coun- ty commissioners held at the Bellevue- Stratford the fore part of the week. —DMelvin C. Frankhouse, of Mt. Union, who served twenty months in France at first with the engineers ‘and later with the ordnance, spent Sunday in Bellefonte as a guest of Charles E. Gates, with whom he was billeted while stationed at Calais. —Miss Gertrude Darden, at school at the Birmingham Seminary, will spend Sunday with Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes. Miss Darden is the sister of Miss Martha Dar- den, well known to the younger set of | Bellefonte, through her frequent visits here. —A. G. Morris, his daughter, Miss Lida Morris, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morris left Wednesday of last week on a drive to Vermont. The trip being a business one, it was made in as short a time as possi- ble, the party returning to Bellefonte Sun- day. | —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Noye, who were married in Ithaca, N. Y., on the 24th of September, spent several days visiting with relatives in Bellefonte last week. Mrs. Noye before her marriage was Miss Caro- line Murphy, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Linn Murphy, former residents of Belle- fonte. —George A. Houtz, of Toledo, Ohio, was an arrival in Bellefonte on Monday on a visit to his sister, Mrs. Edward Cunning- , ham, and on Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. Cun- ningham and their guest went over to Lin- den Hall for a visit to the old Houtz home. Mr. Houtz will spend two weeks or more in Centre county. —Mrs. Sara Brown will return to Belle- fonte today, after spending the greater part of the summer in Baltimore with her daughter, Mrs. Robert Wray. Mrs. Samuel Sheffer, who has been with Mrs. James Harris during the greater part of Mrs. Brown’s absence, will return to her apart- ments in the Chambers home on Curtin street. —Miss Daise Keichline arrived home Thursday from Battle Creek, Mich., after spending the greater part of the summer there as a guest of Dr. and Mrs. Eggle- | ston. Miss Keichline will be in Bellefonte until December, expecting to leave at that time for Florida, with a patient, with whom she will spend the winter in the South. —LeRoy Fox, of Lock Haven, was in Bellefonte for Sunday, visiting with his son Richard, who makes his home with his grandmother, Mrs. Henry Haupt. The Misses Helen McMann and Dorothy Weil- der, of Lock Haven, were also guests at the Haupt home for the week-end, visit- ing there as friends of Miss Margaret Haupt. —A Bellefonte visitor last Friday was | Alfred Martin, of Pittsburgh, a son of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Martin, of Bellefonte. He was born in Bellefonte and spent his early life here, moving to Pittsburgh up- wards of thirty-five years ago. At pres- and he is looking a little thin, as he only recently got out of the hospital after spending six months in the institution and undergoing a very serious operation. —Rev. M. De P. Maynard, rector of St. John's Episcopal church in this place, will remain in Williamsport until December. He is chairman for the Harrisburg Diocese of the Nation-wide campaign of the church’s mission and the work will not be organized so that he can leave it in other hands until that time. He has a supply here but comes up for special serv- ices. The Nation-wide mission is the same movement in the Episcopal church that other denominations already have un- : der way. —Mrs. Robert Sechler left yesterday for her former home in Mifflinburg, to spend a few days before going with her mother, Mrs. Shontz, to Kansas. Having planned to visit for a month with rela- | tives of Mr. Sechler’s, at Hiawatha, Mrs. ! Sechler will return east near the middle of November, then be with her sister in | Johnstown until after Christmas. Upon leaving Bellefonte, Miss Myra Sechler will spend some time in Harrisburg with ! friends, before going to make her home | with her sister, Mrs. Cox, in Franklin, Pa. 1 i i | ' i re AA. yy i y there as a representative of the Bellefonte postoffice, to attend a hearing before a joint commission regarding postal salj- ries. ; El Who Sneaked Our Flivver? ] It is a wonder that all of Bellefonte and many parts of Centre county were not kept awake most of Tues- day night for some one, or more, took possession of Geo. R. Meek’s rattlin’ old Ford and rode about six gallons of gasoline away. The flivver was left standing in front of his house Tuesday night and . when he emerged next morning it was gone. The first impression of the owner, of course, never conveyed an . idea that anybody could have stolen ; such a thing so he made inquiry in the neighborhood thinking it possible that some kindly disposed person had taken it in out of the cold. But no such good fortune befel it. Then he got to thinking that Henny’s child of 1215 was, on occasion, still fond of a race and that it might have started oT alone to give Mitch Cunningham, another has-been runner, a trial of speed. But it wasn’t down where Mitch hangs out. Later it was found in front of Blackford’s restaurant on Bishop street, with nothing gone but its blanket. | Mrs. Blackford said she had heard a noise in front of the place between four and five in the morning and up- on looking out of the window had seen two boys, both in their shirt- "sleeves and hatless, wrestling with the critter. Finally they gave up ‘trying to get it to move another inch "and when one of them said: “Let’s beat it,” they both ran up Bishop | street. Late Tuesday night assistant coun- ty superintendent Milford Pletcher parked his Ford in the Diamond and when he went to start home in it found that the switch key was miss- ing. As Mr. Meek had removed the switch key from his car it is quite likely that the rascals took the one from Mr. Pletcher’s in order to get the other one going. About three o’clock the same morn- ing S. D. Ray saw two boys get into Dr. Reed’s car hut before they could get off with it he frightened them out and they got away without iden- tification. Modern Health Crusade Work in Cen- tre County. | Elizabeth B. Meek, by invitation of the Anti-Tuberculosis Society, went to Philipsburg, Monday evening, to give an illustrated talk on public health and the Modern Health Cru- sade work. Last year the Society for Prevention of Tuberculosis, instead of confining its work to the prevention and cure of tuberculosis, launched in- to a general educational campaign on public health, called the Modern Health Crusade, for children of school age in grades one to eight. The scope and result of the crusade in the schools of Bellefonte, was published in the “Watchman,” June 6th, and the list of officers and pupils who had earned the title of “Squire” in issue of June 13. It is the purpose of the Anti-Tuberculosis Society of Philips- burg, of which Miss Laura Crissman and Miss Carrie Hess are leaders, to introduce the Crusade into the schools of Philipsburg and this work will be in charge of Miss Wynn, a graduate of Goucher, who has volunteered her services and who will have the aid of several others interested in this im- portant work. Systematic plans are being made to extend the Crusade in- to all the schools of Centre county and thereby emphasize a few simple health truths as an aid to teachers in interesting pupils in health work. The members of the Society ask the co- operation of all teachers in this earn- est endeavor to help make our county the healthiest possible. peti AA Fall Movings. In the Shoemaker flats, which Mrs. Smith has decided to keep until Mrs. Herman Holz and her son Harry take possession in the spring, will be Mrs. Frank Warfield, her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James Craig; Dr. and Mrs. Capers, and Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Schad. Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Cairns have leased the south side of the Emerick house on Spring street and are mov- ing in this week. Polar Beverages.—The best yet. Ask your dealer. Ginger ale, root beer, birch beer, Lemon soda, sarsa- parilla.—A JIMON’S SONS. Distrub- utors, Lock Haven Fa o7-4t See the magnificent settings in “Salome,” at the Lyric theatre today and tomorrow (Saturday) matinee and night. 40-1t Sale Register. Saturday, Oct. 25.—At the residence of Cyrus Gearhart, one-half mile west of Houserville school house, on Mayes property, one mare, cow, 9 shoats, chick- ens, 2 buckboards, and other farm im- plements; also a full line of household goods, including good organ. Sale at 1 p. m. sharp. L. Frank Mayes, auction. eer. p=