a Bellefonte, Pa., October 31, 1919. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. — “Broken Blossoms” can be seen at the Pastime theatre, State College, this evening. Don’t miss seeing it. ——The fifteen days “safety first” campaign conducted by the Pennsyl- vania railroad company will end to- day. ——While sugar is still a scarce commodity in Bellefonte all indica- tions point to a better supply gener- ally during the month of November. ——A Civil service examination will be held at Coburn on November 22nd to ‘fill a vacancy in the fourth- class postoffice at Woodward. The compensation of the office for the past fiscal year was $216. : ——Aviator M. P. Charlten, who left Bellefonte at 12:40 yesterday afternoon was killed at 2:30 o'clock when his motor stopped and his ma- chine went into a nose dive shortly after he crossed the Jersey line. ———The room in the Brockerhoff house block recently vacated by Blair's jewelry store has been leased by a firm from Milton who will open a fancy cheese store therein. The room is now being put in shape for occupancy. —1Is there a Republican, Demo- crat or Prohibitionist who can go to the polls on November 4th and vote against a poor, crippled, hard-work- ing man like James E. Solt for Over- seer of the Poor? 64-43-1t—Political Adv. © — At the public sale of the Em- pire Lime. company, in the prothono- tary’s toffice last Saturday morning, John Mignot outbid his brother-in- law, ‘Conrad Miller, and purchased the one-half undivided interest of the eompany for $18,600. ——David * Finklestine, * proprietor of the Bush Arcade cigar store and billiard! parlor, last week installed an automatic peanut roaster and popcorn machine ‘in the big show window of his store and the same has attracted considerable attention éver since. + ——Bellefonte hotels closed their bar-réoms promptly at four o’clock on Wednesday, the hour when war- time prohibition became effective to the extent of all liquors over one-half of one per cent. of alcoholic content. What the ‘next step will be is now open te:conjecture. ——Two ‘weeks ago the “Watch- man” ‘published a brief item to the effect that Bellefonte can get a silk mill if & suitable location for the buildings can be secured. Since that time one property holder has come forward with an offer to donate the land free of charge, and further de- velopments' are ‘expected in the near future. —_The people’ of Bellefonte and surrounding community are request- ed to buy their Christmas presents at the Episcopal bazaar which will be held in the parish house on November 20th. There will be a full-line of at- tractive, fancy and practical articles, at reasonable prices. So able for the children, young people and mother ‘and father. ——The Curtin Milling company at Curtin is now manufacturing a su- perior ' grade of roller flour which they have named their Excelsior brand, and which is as good as any flour on the market. So confident are the millers of its good quality that they have decided to put it on the Bellefonte market. See advertise- ment on page five as to where it can be purchased. : — This is the last day of Octo- ber and today’s weather is supposed to govern that of next month. The political campaign is about aqver and the battle of the ballots will be fought to a finish next Tuesday. If the best man don’t win it will be the fault of the individual voter and he will have no comeback. And just here we might add that it is only fifty-six days until Christmas and none too, early to begin your shopping for that time. # —1It is the duty of every citizen to vote next Tuesday. Don’t let any- thing over which you may have con- trol keep you away from the polls. It is to your interest now, as never be- fore, to vote, for with the cost of liv- ing ever going higher and unrest everywhere in the land we should have good men in our local offices. Men of high character, men of broad judgment, men of influence and use- fulness in the community and men who know how to save money for all of us. : ——The Scenic was crowded at every show of “Daddy Long Legs” last Friday and Saturday, shows that the public appreciates good pictures, and when the same are properly advertised they will draw good crowds. While every show can- not be a “Daddy Long Legs” yet the nightly offering at the Scenic is al- ways good and worth seeing, and many a splendid picture is missed by those who stay away even an evening now and then. To avoid this, be a regular. — Samuel Solt was arrested in Williamsport last week on a charge of fraud preferred by Henry Mott. The latter claimed that some time ago he sold an automobile to Solt for $395, on which a balance of $185 is still due. Solt later, it was claimed, sold the car to a resident of Belle- fonte for $150. The car in question is doubtless the one wrecked when Solt ran into the McQuistion house on Thomas street some weeks ago. Solt was held under $200 bail for a hearing before a magistrate. Something suit-. which tt GERMAN GUN ARRIVES. Boche “77” Reached Bellefonte Last Friday Evening. i The Boche “77,” the German gun ‘presented to W. Harrison Walker Esq., by the War Department in rec- ognition of his valued services as chairman of Group 8, Third Federal district war savings division, and ! chairman of the war savings com- ‘mittee of Centre county, reached Bellefonte last Friday evening from Newark, N. J., after being on the road | "since October 2nd. The gun was un- | loaded. from the car after dinner on Saturday and trailed by M. R. John- son’s big truck up High street to the : triangle in the Diamond where it now stands, and where it has already been viewed by hundreds of people. - a in the ordnance service in France the gun is one of the German 1898 mod- els and is slightly larger than the French “75.” The only parts missing I'are the breech block and range find- er and these the Germans always ‘managed to remove and hide before they surrendered the gun. According to the inscription on the gun it was ‘captured by members of the First di- vision on July 10th, 1918, at Sur In- ver, and was one of a number of such I'guns originally consigned by the gov- ernment to the Aberdeen proving ' grounds, Maryland. One of the wheels of the gun carriage still bears the camouflage paint with which the gun was masked while in action. Two bullet holes are noticeable in one side “of the nmietal guard and it is quite likely they were made by bullets from guns fired by American soldiers. While the gun was presented to W. Harrison Walker Esq., by the War Department it is his purpose to give it tp Bellefonte and a concrete base will be erected en the spot in the Dia- mond, where the gun now stands to which it will be securely anchored. It is hoped to have this work done so that a public presentation and official dedication of the gun may be made on November 11th, Armistice day, which” is to be duly celebrated throughout the United States. _ While the gun will be located in Bellefonte as the county seat, it will Ve a memento to all Centre county for the 'part its citizens played in the wai in general. And Mr. Walker de- servd§ all the credit for getting the gun, Alone and unaided he not only made application for the same but for six months resorted to every means possible to secure one of the three guns allotted to the Third Fed- eral reserve district and finally was successful. The gun is very much weather-worn and shows the result of hard campaigns, but for the present it will be allowed to stand in the con- dition in which it was received so that it will show to everybody who sees it just what young America went up against when they went to France to fight the Huns. —Vote for Harry Meyer for Pro- thenotary. re QA rm meen Miraculous Escape of William E. : Gettig. Very few men live to tell the tale after being run over by a locomotive, tender and the fore-part of a gondola car, but that was the experience on Saturday of William E. Gettig, of Al- | toona, brother of S. D. Gettig Esq., of Bellefonte. Mr. Gettig is gang leader of a force of workmen in the car shops yards at Altoona. While at his work just before the noon hour on Saturday he was struck and knocked down by a shifting engine and fell be- | tween the tracks right in fromt of the moving engine. Workmen saw the accident and called to the engineer to stop while members of Gettig’s gang ‘ran to the spot expecting to find his mangled body. What was their consternation, how- ever, to see him crawl out from under the second car behind the engine al- most as if nothing had happened. When knocked down he fell between the rails and ties in such a manner that he escaped any serious injury, though his clothes were considerably, torn. In order to make sure that he wasn’t badly hurt Mr. Gettig went to the Altoona hospital for a thorough examination and the only injuries that could be found were a slight lac- eration above the right eye, contu- sions of the right chest and an abra- sion of the right hip, none of which are at all serious. Mr. Gettig met with his accident when ke stepped backward from a car right in front of . a slow moving shifting engine. t —Vote for “Dick” Taylor for | Sheriff. | ae Dentist D. K. Musser has now located in Centre Hall and opened an office in the Dr. Hosterman building. ‘According to ex-soldiers who were Boche “77” Gun Secured by Mr. Walker for Bellefonte ———A new twelve inch sewer was put in this week over Spring street at its intersection with High street, the old one being wracked to pieces by the heavy traffic going over it. “Dick” ! | —Vote for Sheriff. One of the best pieces of mo- tion picture work ever done by David Wark Griffith is “Broken Blossoms,” | which was shown at the Pastime thea- | tre, State College, yesterday. Large crowds witnessed the picture and the | advance sale of seats for today’s ex- i hibitions are already quite large. If you failed to see this remarkable film production yesterday don’t fail to at- tend it today. —Vote for Frank Smith for Regis- ter. : Taylor for Bill Doak, the blind man, is contemplating with a great deal of satisfaction the mement when he will be able to throw his “old pencil case in the garbage can,” as he has tritely put it, and leave Dellefonte . for a school for the blind. Some weeks ago the “Watchman” told of the com- ing to Bellefonte of Miss Reichert, an instructor of the blind, and of her in- terest in Bill. She . procured pa- pers. for him with raised letters, such as the blind are taught to read, and Bill proved such an apt pupil that he has mastered the trick of reading them and already is quite expert at it. Miss Reichert is now interesting herself in having him placed in a school where he can learn basket and broom making, carpet weaving, etc., and he is all excited over the prospect and eager to go. With the aptitude that he has shown in mastering read- ing it is ‘possible that he can learn some trade in six months or a year and then he hopes to be able to get along without selling pencils on the street.’ : diag Td "Vote for D. Wagn Recorder. sha er Geiss for ro ¥ coe — Herbert Beezer, son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Beezer, returned home on Tuesday night of last week after more than two year’s service in the navy and has the distinction of being one of the last of the Bellefonte young men to return home. Herbert enlisted in the navy in July, 1917, for a term of four years and after he had served a brief apprenticeship and got- ten a fairly good pair of sea legs he was assigned to the cruiser Denver and saw consderable service with the Atlantic fleet both off the coast and in the southern seas. Then the Denver went through the Panama Canal with the Pacifie fleet and Herbert asked for a discharge for the reason that he would like to go to college. When the fleet finally reached San Francis- co he was given a provisional dis- charge, but is carried on the naval pay roll at the princely figure of one dollar a month, and is subject to call ~ "at any time within the four years if his services are badly needed. But he I'does not anticipate such a call and | has already gotten back into cits and will soon become as accustomed to civil life in Bellefonte as all the other boys who spent a year or more before the mast or following the flag. —Vote for Fry and Harter for Commissioners. ——On Monday afternoon Mrs. Edward Zimmerman, of south Water street, decided to go up town to a jewelers and have a much-prized ring made small enough to fit her finger. ! . The ring is an heirloom, hence is es- teemed even beyond its intrinsic val- ue. As she was walking along the south Water street pavement between Waite’s implement store and the falls she was idly twirling the ring on her finger when it slipped, fell to the pavement and before she could recov- er it, it relled into the creek. Con- siderably chagrined at her own care- lessness she went back to Waite’s store and told of her misfortune. Mr. | John Waite went with her to the spot ' where she claimed the ring had rolled into the creek but not a sight of it could be seen. Finally Mr. Waite put on hip boots and securing a rake wad- ed into the creek and pulled out a lot of moss in an effort to find the ring, but was finally compelled to give it up. Mrs. Zimmerman then took the rake and kneeling on the stone pave- ment raked up a big basket of moss but still the ring could not be found. Finally some school children came along en their way home and one lit- tle boy suddenly spied the ring lying between two bricks embedded in the moss. Then Mr. Waite got a stiff wire, bent one end of it into a hook and finally landed the ring safe and sound in Mrs. Zimmerman’s hands. —Vote for James E. Harter for Treasurer. | Mail Pilot Had Thrilling Experience , -' When Plane Burned. Mail pilot Bradford had a thrilling | experience last Friday on his trip | from New York to Bellefonte when { his mail plane caught fire and burn- ed up and he was painfully burned on the hands and face before he could jump from the plane and es- cape to a point of safety. Bradford had reached a point over the Seven Mile narrows, some distance this side of Mifflinburg, and was flying as close to earth as possible owing to the ex- tremely low visibility. Suddenly his motor stopped. Thinking his one gasoline tank was empty he switched over onto his auxiliary tank when in an instant almost his plane burst into flames. He was too low to set his plane to glide down, and with the flames flying higher and higher he had little time to pick a landing spot, with the result that he struck the top of a pine tree and his plane literally crashed to the ground. Fortunately Bradford was not even stunned and in an instant had his straps loose and made a leap out of the burning plane. He beat a hasty retreat and got about a hundred feet from the burning machine when the gas tank exploded. A passing auto- ist took Bradford to Laurelton where a physician dressed his burns and in- juries, which consisted of a slight cut and bruises, when he reported the ac- cident to the Bellefonte field and then returned to his machine which by that time was mostly in ashes with the ex- ception of the motor. The pilot came to Bellefonte on the evening train and on Saturday all that was left of the machine was brought to Belle- fonte and shipped to the repair shops at Bustleton, near Philadelphia. oo Roosevelt Memorial Meeting. While the several hundred people who gathered at the ‘ court house on Monday evening, the occasion of the Roosevelt memorial + meeting, were somewhat disappointed at the failure of the advertised orator of the even- ing, Samuel B. Hare Esq., of Altoona, to make his appearance, in his absence they heard a very good talk by Col. H. S. Taylor, who all his life has been an ardent admirer of Roose- velt. : ! The meeting was in charge of Har- ry Keller Esq., who presided and told the purpose of the gathering in a neat and appropriate speech. He then introduced Col. Taylor as the first speaker. The Colonel, by the way, was scheduled to talk until the ap- pearance of Mr. Hare on the evening train. A slight wreck at Unionville held’ up the evening train so that it did not: reach Bellefonte until nine o’clock, and when it finally did arrive the expected speaker did not appear. It devolved upon Col. Taylor, there- fore, to be the chief speaker of the evening and he not only entertained but at times thrilled his audience with his eulogistic portrayal of what hé’ charaéterized * as- dominant fea- tures of Mr. Roosevelt's: life. b In addition to the speaking there was music by the Odd Fellows or- chestra and singing by a selected choir under the leadership of R. Rus- sell Blair. “At the close of the even- ing’s program chairman Keller stat- ed that one purpose of the meeting was to give all those who desired to do so an opportunity to enroll as members of the Roosevelt Memorial association, which entailed the pay- ment of the small fee of one dollar, and a number of those present enroll- ed as members. : persed Mr. Hare made his appear- ance, bit too late to make a talk. —Vote for John J. Bower for Dis- trict Attorney. Three Men Sent to Death Chair. A triple electrocution took place at the western penitentiary at Rock- view on Monday morning, the first time since the electric chair became the death penalty in Pennsylvania that three men have been electrocuted at the same time. The first of the trio to be taken to the chair was Wil- liam Evans, colored, of Dauphin county, who on February 15th, 1918, stabbed to death Rufus Gillam, anoth- er colored man. He was placed in the chair at 7:08 and after four con- tacts was pronounced dead by Dr. Robert J. Campbell at 7:09. The second man to go was John Sandoe, of Lancaster county, who murdered four-year-old Anna Mary Hershey. He went to the chair at 7:14, was given five contacts and pro- nounced dead at 7:21. The last man was Gregory Psaros, of Lancaster, who murdered Peter Mormous. He was placed in the chair at 7:24, and following three contacts was pronounced dead at 7:29. Sandoe’s remains were claimed by relatives while those of Evans and Psaros were buried in the penitentia- ry cemetery. —Vote for ‘Condo and Stover for Auditors. wa Patriotic League Girls. There will be a meeting next Tues- day, November 4th, at 7:30 p. m., In the High school building. Everybody is urged to go to this meeting, as there is special business to attend to. If not a member go out and become one. The Penn State football team defeated Ursinus on Beaver field last Saturday by the score of 38 to 7. The State team left the College on Wed- nesday night for Philadelphia where tomorrow they will play the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania on Franklin field. Coach Bezdek has expressed his belief that the State team has an even chance of winning against Penn, so watch for the result tomorrow. After the crowd had mostly dis- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Peter S. Keichline went down to Phil- adelphia on Monday to consult a special- ist. * —Miss Adaline Olewine was a week-end guest of Mrs. Ray Gilliland, at State Col- lege. —Judge Henry C. Quigley has been holding court in Pittsburgh since the be- | ginning of last week. —Major and Mrs. H. Laird Curtin are in Philadelphia, having gone down Wednes- day fer a military inspection. ‘—Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Moyer, of Altoona, ! spent the week-end at the home of Mrs. Minerva Alters, on Water street. : —Miss Helen Bair, of Philadelphia. will come to Bellefonte today for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Garman. —Mrs. Russell Blair is in Bradford, vis- iting with her - aunt, Mrs. J. A. Riley. Mrs. Blair left Bellefonte Tuesday. -—Miss Daisy Smith, of Philadelphia, is spending her vacation in Bellefonte, visit- ing with her mether, Mrs. Fred Smith. —Mr. and Mrs. George Smith have been visiting in Bellefonte with Mrs. Smith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Showers, of east Bishop street. —Mrs. Amanda Hunter has returned to . her home in Pittsburgh after spending several months at the home of Mrs. Kate Kline, on Curtin street. -—-M. A. Landsy returned to Bellefonte on Monday evening after spending six weeks at the home studio of Antrim & Landsy, in Philadelphia. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hamilton have been in Bellefonte during the past week, visiting with Mr. Hamilton's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Thaddeus Hamilton. —Dr. and Mrs. Hiram M. Hiller, of Ches- ter, came to Bellefonte Wednesday for a short visit, Dr. Hiller expecting to spend much of his time in the woods. | —Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Brimmeier and their son Paul left Bellefonte Wednesday for Pittsburgh, where they will spend Mr. Brimmeier’s vacation with relatives.. ~_Mrs. Wallace Gephart is arranging to leave Bellefonte early in “November, ex- pecting to jein Mr. Gephart in New York city, where they will make their home. — Richard J. Lane, of McKeesport, with Mrs. Lane and their family, drove to Bellefonte .Sunday to spend: the week with Mr. Lane's mother, Mrs. James B. Lane. —Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sheffer have been entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Walter Price, of Kingston, N. Y.. and their daughter, Miss Mabel Price, Mrs. Sheffer and Mrs. Price being sisters. : . —Charles A. Morris, Basil A, Mett, Har- ry Ruhl and Hassell Montgomery will be ameng those from Bellefonte who will be in Philadelphia to morrow for the Penn State-University game. — Mrs. Edmund 'P. Haye§ will leave next week to join Mr. Hayes in Pittsburgh, where he is now permanently located. Mrs. Hayes has been in Bellefonte with Mr. Hayes’ mother, Mrs. R.'G. H. Hayes, since the 15th of June. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brew, of Hazle- ton, made one of their infrequent visits to Bellefonte last week, coming here ¥ri- day and remaining until Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. H. KE. Fenlon. Mrs. Fenlon is Mr. Brew’s only sister. Mrs. William A. Lyom returned to Bellefonte the early part of the week, ex- pecting to spend the early _winter_at her home on east High street, Mrs: Lyon has been for the greater part of the’ gummer with her children in New Jersey and New York. ; par Miss Irene Pletcher, of Howard, who is spending the winter at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dale, on the Branch, was among the out of town people to lake advantage of the change in the weather Wednesday, and spent the day in Belle- fonte. — Mrs. Edward Nolan and her daughter, Mrs. Levi Johnson, will come here from Chicago today, for a visit with Mrs. No- lan’s friends in Bellefonte. During their stay in Centre county they will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Walker and Miss Shortlidge. > Mrs. Matthew McGinness came over from Clearfield on Saturday for her first visit in more than a year at the home of her parents, Hon. and Mrs. James Scho- field. She was accompanied home on Mon- day by her mother, who will be her daughter’s guest at the hotel Dimeling. —Mrs. John C. Matthews, of Buffalo, N. Y., and her son, have been guests since the early part of last week of Mrs. Mat- thews’ father and brother, H. M. Bidwell and Morton Bidwell, at their home on south Allegheny street. Mrs. Matthews expects to return home early in Novem- ber. — Mrs. Joseph Strouse, of State College, her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Charles Strouse and one of her children, motored to Belle- fonte Saturday to spend the afternoon looking after some business and shopping. The car was driven by Mrs. Strouse’s grandson, Joseph Glenn, who is at school at State. —Mr. B. F. Kister, of the Ridg- way Record, was a “Watchman” office visitor on Tuesday, having been over at Millheim visiting old friends. Editor Kis- ter is a native of Pennsvalley and learned the printing trade in Millheim finally striking out for himself with the result that he has found a very pleasant and profitable occupation in Ridgway. Mrs. Lide Thomas Gibson returned to Philadelphia Tuesday, after spending a week here with her mother, Mrs. Isaac Thomas, who has been in ill health for some time. Mrs. Gibson is identified with the business interests of the city, as a member of the firm of the Ellsworth Nov- elty Co. Elmer Sager accompanied Mrs. Gibson to Bellefonte, spending the week here as Mrs. Thomas’ guest. — Mrs. George M. Glenn and her son Randolph were in Bellefonte Wednesday. doing some buying for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Glenn and their two children came from Bradford Saturday, to spend the winter with Mr. Glenn’s moth- er on Mrs. Isaac Gray's farm, up Buffalo Run. From there Mr. Glenn will go to State College for a course in agriculture in anticipation of taking charge of the Glenn farm, at Brierly, in the spring. —John L. Dunlap left for Illinois on Tuesday afternoon in response to a tele- gram conveying the sad intelligence that his sister, Mrs. Joseph Houtz, is lying at the point of death at her home in Kirk- land. Mr. Dunlap had made his plans to take a trip to Illinois this fall, intending to leave next Tuesday and go to Galena to see his brother William, whom he has not seen in forty-four years, but the tele- gram announcing the serious illmess of his sister hastened his departure just one week. In addition to the brother and sis- ter above mentioned Mr. Dunlap has another brother living in Kirkland. —Miss Anne Keichline, accompanied by James Shellenberger, drove here the fore- part of the week from Philadelphia, where she had been visiting at the Shellenber- ger home, Mr. Shellenberger having come this far with her on his way to Franklin. —Mrs. C. A. Stewart, of Willoughby Beach, Va., her two children and her sis- ter, Mrs, Edgar C. Carpenter, are all guests of Mrs. Stewart's and Mrs . Carpenter’s | parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Eckenroth, of ! Howard street. Mr. Stewart and Mr. Car- ; penter will join the women here at the end I*of their two week’s visit. | —Mr. and Mrs. John Gephart Munson j and their two children have been in Belle- fonte for the past week with Mr. Munson’'s mother, Mrs. L. T. Munson. Mr. Munson, who is with the J. G. White Electrical company, has been in the New York city offices since coming north from Chatta- nooga within the past year and is now on his way to Michigan, where he will be one of the firms representatives at Rogers. Census Enumerators Wanted. Sixty-two census enumerators will be needed to take the 1920 census in Centre county, one for every election district. So far the number of appli- cants are less than the number desir- ; ed and in order to give everybody de- siring to engage in the work an op- | portunity to file their application the | date for acceptance of applications i has been indefinitely extended by the ! supervisor of this district, Mr. Frank E. Costello, of Bradford, Pa. Per- sons desiring to become enumerators in. their district should get their ap- plications to Mr. Costello as quickly as possible, as the time is drawing te a close when all lists will have to be made up and sent to Washington for approval. eco —Vote for Harry Meyer for Pro- thonotary. ~——-The Berks county weather prophet asserts that we will have a white Christmas but a comparatively mild winter throughout with an early spring. He claims to base his predic- tions on the location of the planets and stars. And “Waxey” Straub, the Spring township farmer, agrees with the Berks county pregnosticator as fo the mild winter but he bases his pre- diction on the hornet’s nests. He avers that every nest the past sum- mer was built low, not far from the ground, and the walls of the nest are only ‘of ordinary thickness, and he says that is an infallible sign of a mild winter. We accept with a feel- ing of satisfaction these predictions of a mild winter and are willing to accept “Waxey’s” prediction as based on the hornét’s nests, as we have no particular ambition to investigate them very closely on our own ac- count. —Vote for Condo and Stover for Auditors. The mayor of Williamsport has already secured ten car loads of ar- my and navy feod supplies from the government for the people of that city, in addition to'large quantities purchased through the Williamspert postoffice. ‘The supplies included about everything in the way ‘of can- ned goods, especially vegetables and meats, as well as some sugar. Resi- dents of Bellefonte and vicinity were able to get a limited supply of the army food through the postoffice sales, but that was all. —Vote for D. Wagner Geiss for Recorder. Fifteen days of the squirrel and pheasant hunting season have passed and so little of either kind of game has so far been brought into Bellefonte that the natural conclu- sion is that both kinds must be very scarce, notwithstanding the reports to the contrary during the summer and fall. Of course some game has been killed in certain sections of the county, but it is hard to get, especial- ly pheasants. They seem to be un- usually wild and it is only the really good shots that have been successful in bagging any birds. —Vote for Condo and. Stover fer Auditors. : — Yesterday morning Charles Brachbill was out in his father’s gar- den doing a little work when he was attracted to a particularly green raspberry bush, and investigating he discovered that the bush was bearing a fall crop of berries. In proof of this he brought a branch to this office which © has in the ‘neighborhood of thirty berries on it, some big and ripe, others getting ripe and some in various stages of growth. ow —Vote for Frank Smith for Regis- ter. Eyes Examined Free. David B. Rubin of Rubin and Rubin, Harrisburg’s leading eyesight special- ists will be at the Mott drug store, Bellefonte, on Wednesday and Thurs- day, November 5th and 6th. He makes no charge for examining your eyes, and will not give you : glasses unless you really need them. He uses no drops in making the "exam- ination. 42-2t —Vote “for “Dick” Taylor for Sheriff. —— Buckwheat Flour. Our pure Buckwheat flour is new on the market. For sale at all gro- ceries. Mail orders promptly filled. CURTIN MILLING CO., 43-1t Curtin, Pa. ee + + me. —Vote for Frank Smith for Regis- ter. ——Tax payers of Spring township can find Collector Miller at the Gar- man hotel this coming Saturday— from 9:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. Come. 43-1t L. A. MILLER, Col. — —Vote for Harry Meyer for Pro- thonotary.