Beworrai atcn. Bellefonte, Pa., January 9, 192. rum i NEW COUNCIL ORGANIZED. New Year Right. The old borough council held its however, requesting the Fire and Po- lice committee to get together on Every Member Present to Start the some definite recommendation by next | meeting night and every councilman 1 be prepared to take final action. | Burgess Walker then addressed the NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND county. [inal meeting on Monday evening and new council and asked that an or- . ——The fourth annual state farm products show will be held in Harris- burg January 20th to 23rd, inclusive. ——The kiddies are all back in school again, the schools having open- ed on Monday morning following the holiday vacation. ——Wouldn’t it be funny if “Bus- ter Brown” went to the court house today to get a license for his dog ‘“@ige” from the new County Treas- urer? Mr. and Mrs. William Derstine * will move from their present apart- | ments in the Lyon building, to Mrs. Cyrus Strickland’s house on Bishop street. The members of the United | Brethren church gave their pastor, Rev. George E. Smith, a purse of sev- enteen dollars on Sunday as a New Year’s present. ——Jacob Smith has purchased from Miss Kitty Potter the brick | residence on north Spring street now | occupied by W. C. Cassidy. Mr. Smith expects to take possession ! April 1st. Mrs. C. F. Harlacher will make public gale of her farm stock and equipment on Thursday, January - 16th, at her home near Stormstown. Sale at 10 o’clock p.m. L.F. Mayes, auctioneer. A change in the milling firm of | Bradford & Son, Centre Hall, took place:the beginning of the year. Vic-! tor Auman was taken into the firm and in:the future it will be known as . Bradford & Co. Now that the Holidays are over, the schools and colleges all in full: swing, new county and borough officers in charge the only thing to look forward to is trout fishing season and that is only ninety-seven days away. ——1In the organization of Philips- burg borough conucil for the ensuing two years Edward L. Gates, editor of the Philipsburg Ledger, and formerly of Bellefonte, was elected secretary at a salary of two hundred dollars a year. : ——A¢t the annual meeting for the election of officers of the Auxiliary of the Bellefonte hospital, held at the hospital, Wednesday afternoon, Mrs. - .Brouse was re-elected president; Mrs. Keller, secretary, and LMrs. Shugert, treasurer. ] ——Former sheriff W. E. Hurley has bought the small brick residence property on Howard street owned for- merly by M. I. Gardner. It is the one recently occupied by the Buckius fam- ily. ‘Sheriff Hurley and his family will move there from their present residence on High street before April first, —5—While in the act of cranking |. his Ford car on New Year's day, Pe- tar Shuey, of Axe Mann, a brother of C. G.:8huey, of Bellefonte, had his right arm broken when the critter back-fired and the crank struck him a fervific blow. Mr. Shuey works at the penitentiary and the injury will keep him off duty for some time. ~The Odd Fellows band of this attendance. Prior to the meeting of council Burgess W. Harrison Walker administered the oath of office to poor overseers Alexander Morrison and Thomas Morgan and borough audit- ors C. L. Gates and Merrill T. Eisen- hauer. When the old council convened every member was present. The Street committee presented the report of the borough manager which showed that the total collections made by him from July to January 1st, 1920, were $870.40. The Water committee presented the report of the borough manager so far as it related to that department and further reported that on east Curtin street there is a gap of over eight hundred feet between two fire plugs and the committee recommended the placing of an extra plug in the gap, which was authorized. The Fire and Police committee re- ported several recent fires and also presented the burgess’ check for $27.00 for fines and licenses collected. The Finance committee reported a balance in the hands of the treasurer on January lst of $822.66, after notes and bills approximating twenty thousand dollars had been paid. The committee also asked for the renewal of notes for $1,500, $1,400 and $2,000 for six months from January 2nd; one for $5,000 for six months from January 5th, and a new note for $5,000. A communication was received from D. C. Stackpole, district engi- neer of the State Highway Depart- ment, enclosing a complete statement of the borough’s apportionment for the building of the highway on south Water and Willowbank streets, the total of which was given as $6,070.95. The original estimate of the work made the borough’s share a little more than $7,200. Borough manager James D. Seibert stated that there still are some errors in the Depart- ment’s statement which will reduce | the total as above given, and the mat- ter was referred to the Street com- mittee and borough solicitor to check up. It might here be stated that the borough does not owe the above amount, as payments covering ap-- proximately the entire sum have been made. On motion council authorized the payment of $2,000 into the sinking fund and gave both fire companies their customary annual appropriation of $250. ; Bills totalling $4,188.81 were ap- proved and on motion the old council adjourned sine die. WT NEW MEMBERS SWORN IN. Burgess W. Harrison Walker then sword into office the two new mem- bers, Philip L. Beezer, of the South ward, and John L. Knisely, of the West ward, and also administered the oath of office to the three old mem- bers re-elected, namely: John S. Walker, of the North ward; A. Fau- ble and Harry Flack, of the South ward. In accordance with the new code Burgess Walker then announced council ready for organization and John S. Walker was elected president place is planning to put on a minstrel {and W. T. Kelly secretary. show for the benefit of the organiza- |- tion. . The date has not as yet been set but it will probably be some time within six weeks. Much of the old talent of the town will be drawn up- borough manager The first official business presented to council was a statement from the of a proposition submitted by G. R. Gamble to erect a building near his mill, put in a tur- on and just enough of new to make it a modern and up-to-the-minute black- | face success. ‘%——Miss Helen E. C. Overton, chairman in charge of the Christmas seals in Bellefonte, ‘closed out her al- lotment on New Year’s eve by diznos- a little over one seals to James R. Hughes and Harry The total sale of seals : Bellefonte was thus brought up to 25,000, or five thousand more than the ing of Kelier. original allotment. some good bargains in overcoats ‘in ———Sim, the Clothier, is offering an advertisement published on the seventh page af today’s paper. You may not need such a garment this winter but the indications are they will be even higher next winter than they arc this, and the wise man al- ways looks into the future, even in the purchase of clothes. ‘ Forest Ocker, who has been liv- ing at Rebersburg since leaving Belle- fonte a number of years ago, was in Bellefonte last week and assisted in taking the annual inventory at the G. TR. Danenhower & Son wholesale gro- cery. He has also accepted a position as traveling salesman for the same company, but has not yet decided as to whether he will move to Bellefonte or not. —-——The short course in agriculture at The Pennsylvania State College opened yesterday but owing to the fact that the college is so crowded with regular students that housing room is at a premium only a limited number of short course students . could be taken, and most of the num- ber have been put up at Lemont and will be hauled back and forth to the College. A photographic corps of the Goodrich Tire company was in Belle- fonte this week taking photographs and securing data for use in an ener- getic advertising campaign for their tires. Among the photographs secur- ed were pictures of tires on the Em- erick motor bus No. 22, which orig- inally was the palace on wheels in which Mr. Emerick and family made their trip to the Pacific coast and back. bine wheel and dynamo and furnish the borough all the electricity it will need for street lighting and to pump the water for a stated sum of 57.50 a day. The borough manager stated that the power that would be furnished the borough would be ap- proximately 150 h. p. during the night when the lights are on and 20 h. p. during the day hours, which ‘would be sufficient to operate the pump at the water works. The borough, of course, would have to provide its own street wiring and equipment as well as the pump and motor at the water works. Under the present contracts with the State-Centre Electric company it is now costing the borough $13.20 a day for street lighting while the pumping of water runs over eight dollars a day, or a total cost of approximately $22.00. The Special committees recommend- ed that the recent proposition of the State-Centre Electric company, which virtually meant a new contract for pumping water, be rejected and council so voted. Report was also made that the committee expected to meet officers of the Electric company on Tuesday for the purpose of effect- ing a final settlement of old differenc- es, if possible. The bonds of Alexander Morrison and Thomas Morgan, overseers of the poor, in the sum of $2,000, were pre- sented and approved. An application was received from H. Elmer Yerger for the position - of patrolman of Bellefonte borough and the same was referred to the Fire and Police committee. The fire companies reported that at a meeting of delegates held on Janu- ary 1st Charles Anderson had been elected chief fire marshall; Allen Waite first assistant and Frank Hull second assistant. The matter was re- ferred to the Fire and Police commit- tee for recommendation. Edward F. Gehrett was re-elected borough treasurer for a term of two years. The question of the purchase of new fire fighting apparatus was again brought up, but as no definite recom- mendations were at hand final action was postponed, president Walker, ' the new council organized with a full | dinance be passed regulating the con- trol of jitneys and commercial trucks within the borough. He stated that while some owners willingly paid the license exacted by the borough others refused and it was necessary to have an ordinance governing the same in order to compel the payment of li- cense fees. The burgess also asked council to provide some means of safeguarding the “kiddies” in their pleasure of coasting. He suggested that two or three streets be set aside for coast- ing privileges from four to ten o’clock p. m., and that a proper officer be there at that time to control traffic so as to prevent accidents. The matter was referred to the Street committee with power. There being no other business to transact council adjourned. ——“The Feast of the Red Corn,” to be sung by members of the Patri- otic League, will be staged in the Gar- man opera house Thursday night, January 29th. The Indian stage set- tings, a chorus of thirty voices, with plenty of good music interspersed with pretty dances, should make this benefit the most popular night of the season. ,oo—— ——Prof. Nathan N. Keener, dra- matic reader and impersonator, will appear in Bellefonte Friday evening, February 6th, under the direction of the Lutheran Brotherhood. Prof. Keener is head of the department of oratory at Susquehanna University, and has delighted local audiences up- on former occasions when he was with the glee club from that univer- sity. : The days may be getting long- er and the evenings shorter, but the latter are still long enough to make the Scenic a very attractive place to pass the time. The weather may be cold outside but it is always comforta- ble inside and the pictures are suffi- ciently interesting to make the time pass quickly. There’s a big program every evening and in order to avoid missing the best you should be a reg- ular. or —— ——Edmund G. Joseph, formerly of Bellefonte, and Harold R. Zeamans, of New York, have formed a partner- ship for the general practice of law under the firm name of Joseph & Zeamans, with offices in the Ameri- can Circle building at 1834 Broadway, New York. Everybody in Bellefonte ‘practically knows Edmund Joseph, -as it is only a few years since he was a boy in Bellefonte and his many friends wish him unbounded sugeess in his chosen profession. fe ~——Two hundred and fifty invita- tions have been issued for a gather- ing of ladies to be held at St. John’s Catholic church on Sunday, January 18th, for the purpose of instituting an order of St. Isabella, which is sim- ilar to the men’s organization of the Knights of Columbus in that church. Prominent officers and members of the order are expected here from various sections of the State and there is every reason to anticipate that it will be a big day for the lady members of the Catholic church. ——If Bellefonters suffer for lack of ice next summer it will be no fault of the weather man. There hasn’ been a day in the past month that there was enough let up in the cold weather to spoil the ice in making, and now itis from afoot to fourteen inches in thickness. But according to reports a far larger supply has al- ready been cut and stored than was put up last winter and with a new dealer out at Coleville and George H. Yarnell’s big ice house down at Hecla there ought to be plenty of ice for do- mestic use next summer; especially as it won’t take so much for highbalils. --~—In the reorganization of the State Highway Department field force C. H. Buckius, who has been located in Bellefonte, has been made acting engineer of district No. 4, composed of Venango, Mercer, Lawrence and Butler counties, with headquarters at Franklin. D. C. Stackpole remains in Bellefonte as cngineer in charge eof district No. 1. W. D. Meyer has been transferred from district No. 14 to district No. 13, composed of the coun- ties of Beaver, Allegheny and West- moreland, with headquarters at Pitts- burgh, and W. O. Bennett has been transferred from Clearfield county to McKean county with headquarters at Bradford. ~The many friends of Mrs. D. G. Bush, who dislocated her right shoulder three weeks ago, while on a visit to her niece, Mrs. Carrie Sides, at Jersey Shore, will be pleased to hear that she is recovering as well as can be expected. Mrs. Bush celebrat- ed her eighty-third birthday, Monday, and was very much gratified and pleased at receiving messages to the number of many more than a hundred, from friends all over the State; and on account of her inability to write, she takes this means, for the present, of sending her thanks to those friends. Her condition is such that it is ex- pected she will be able to he moved within a month. ——The Bellefonte Firemen’s Re- lief association will hold its annual banquet at the public building on Howard street next Tuesday evening. Well known local speakers will be in attendance. New County Officers Sworn In. Just a little more formality than’ has been customary in the past at- | tended the swearing in of the new ! county officers on Monday morning. It just happened that a brief session ‘of court was held that morning and | after the important business had been | transacted Judge Quigley suggested | | that the oaths be administered in open | court and consequently all the officers | elect were summoned to the court! room. The retiring Prothonotary, D. R.! Foreman, administered the oaths to James C. Furst, r-elected District At- torney, the new County Commission- ers, Harry P. Austin, George H. Yar- nell and George M. Harter, and the incoming Prothonotary, Roy Wilkin- son. Mr. Wilkinson then performed his first official act by swearing in Recor- der William H. Brown, re-elected. Recorder Brown then administered the oaths to Treasurer L. Frank Mayes, Sheriff Harry Dukeman and Register Frank Sasserman. Following him Prothonotary Wil- kinson administered the oaths of office to H. W. Irwin and H. C. Valentine, clerks to the County Commissioners; C. M. Gramley, T. A. Pletcher and H. H. Stover, the new County Auditors; A. Clyde Smith, deputy treasurer, and Walter Armstrong, deputy recorder. Judge Quigley then extended the congratulations of the court to the new officials and called attention to the fact that in their oath they had sworn to discharge the duties of their office with fidelity and to the best of their ability and as long as they did that they could feel assured they would have the support of the court, But the court would not withhold cen- sure if they were derelict in their du- ties. The new officers took charge offi- cially at twelve o'clock. One of the first acts of the new board of County Commissioners was to appoint a clerk for the board of auditors. Ralph Hartsock, who was one of the retiring auditors, called the attention of the Commissioners to the fact that under a new law they were empowered to he was an applicant for the position. After looking up the law the Commis- sioners made the appointment, but it was given to Miss Blanche Malone, of Snow Shoe, who for some time past has been assisting with the work in the county treasurer’s office. Her compensation was fixed at $60.00 a month, All the new officers were entertain- ed at the Nittany Country club on Monday evening by the retiring coun- ty treasurer, David Chambers. “eve Some Business Plans for the Spring. * C.'Y. Wagner has completed ‘all the plans for the erection of his big flour mill, which is to be located along the L. and T. railroad just south of the Pheonix pumping station and work will begin just as soon as the weather opens up sufficiently to make it practicable. It will be of reinforced concrete, four stories or more high, and will be built by Geo. E. Rhoads & Sons. Notwithstanding the cold weather work is going right on with the con- struction -of the big hydrating plant which the American Lime and Stone Co. is erecting on the old glass works meadow. Few people realize what an im- mense plant this will be when com- pleted or what the ultimate purpose of the company is in its construction. It will probably be the largest hydrat- ing plant in the world and, in addi- tion, will concentrate practically all of the production of that company at onc place. A large rotary lime kiln will be in- stalled and probably a battery of twenty-four stack kilns built on that plot so that all the lime, hydrated lime and by-products will be made at the one central plant, which will be electrically operated and electrically controlled. Stone from all the quarries will be loaded by steam shovels and hauled to the central plant where it will be’ manipulated as desired into ballast, fluxing stone, or lime and there will be no loss or overproduction in screen- ings for the latter will go right into the rotary kiln and be converted into buckwheat lime the advantageous use of which the trade is just beginning to discover. It is expected that cost will be greatly reduced in this centralization of the scattered units and that a long step will have been taken toward the solution of the labor problem. Irvin G. Gray to Get New Trials. On Monday the Supreme court handed down its decision in the case of the Commonwealth vs. Irvin G. Gray in which the judgment of the Superior court and the sentence of the lower court was reversed in the two cases appealed and new trials awarded Mr. Gray. Mr. Gray is now serving his sentence of not less than two years nor more than two years and six months in the penitentiary on one case on which he was convicted, so that just when he will be given new trials in. the other cases is, of course, problematical. Charles D. Fox, of the Wil- liamsport recruiting station, will be in Bellefonte one day each week to answer all questions pertaining to the U. S. navy; government insurance, allotments, etc. Enlistments in the navy are open to all men between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five. Mr. Fox can be seen in the vicinity of the Bellefonte postoffice next Tuesday, January 13th, when he will gladly "her niece, Mrs. appoint a clerk for the auditors, and | answer all questions asked. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Elizabeth Morris is visiting with Mrs. Samuel Fleming in Harrisburg. —Mrs. W. H. Wilkinson is entertaining McNeil, of Haddonfield, N. J. —Mr. and Mrs. Roy Witmer and their : little daughter left Tuesday morning to ' spend several days in Pittsburgh. —Col. J. L. Spangler, of Bellefonte, and R. M. Foster, of State College, attended the Jackson day dinner given in Wash- ington, yesterday. —Mrs. Wooden left Bellefonte last week for her annual winter visit with her nieces, Mrs. Seixas, of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Harris, of Reading. —B. F. Leitzell returned to Punxsutaw- ney Wednesday, after a month’s visit in Bellefonte with his niece, Mrs. Albert Schad. Mr. Leitzell is an employee of the | Punxsutawney Furnace Co. —J. B. Rockey, one of the representative citizens of State College, was a business visitor to Bellefonte Tuesday, motoring down early in the morning to transact his business before the rush of the day. —Miss Mamie Brown left Tuesday of | last week for Johnstown, having accepted ! a position as stenographer with the | Dwight Robinson Co., the firm with whom her brother Edward is now employed. —Mrs. Vernon Cowher and her three children, who had been here for a Holi- day visit with Mrs. Cowher’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Solt, left a week ago to retura to their home in Youngstown, Ohio. —Lester Musser, a recent clerk at the Bush house, and John Hines, who had been employed by the Emerick Motor Bus service, left a week ago for Detroit, Mich., where both have secured good po- sitions. —Miss Margaret Brockerhoff, who spent the late fall and early winter with friends in Philadelphia and at Atlantic City, re- turned to Bellefonte for Chirstmas, resum- ing charge of her uncle, Dr. Brockerhoff’s house, on Bishop street. —Miss Emma Waite, who has been in service at Washington, D C., with the Bell Telephone Co., is in Bellefonte, com- ing home for a vacation and to see her brother Malcolm, who has been ill since his return from Pitcairn. —Miss Agnes McGowan, who has been visiting at her home near Bellefonte, since before Christmas, will leave next week to resume her work at Washington, D. C., where she has been working at her profes- sion as a nurse, for a number of years. —Mrs. Thomas McCafferty went to Lock Haven Thursday for a three week’s visit with her niece, Mrs. Sweiler. From Lock Haven Mrs. McCafferty will go to Pitts- burgh, to spend the remainder of the win- ter with another niece, Mrs. Elmer Joans- haus. —Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Williams, now liv- ing at the Ward House, in Tyrone, and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. O'Brien, of Snow Shoe, were New Year's guests of Mrs. Williams’ and Mrs. O'Brien's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Gamble, at their home on Linn street. —Miss Sue Garner has been with her sister, Irs. William Bottorf, for more than a week, coming here from Philadelphia the day before New Years for a ten day's visit. With the exception of one day at State time in Bellefonte. —Mrs. Edmund Blanchard is contem- plating leaving Bellefonte to join Mr. Blanchard in the oil fields, near Fort Worth, Texas. Before going south Mrs. Blanchard will spend several weeks with her mother and sisters, at Ridley Park, and in New Jersey. —DMiss Pearl Powers, having accepted a position in Pittsburgh, left Bellefonte a week ago to begin her new work. Miss Powers had been in Bellefonte since before Christmas, coming here from Seattle, where she had spent the greater part o the past twe years. g —Miss Margaret Yeager, of New York city, is visiting at the home of William Noll Jr., at Pleasant Gap. Miss Yeager and her mother, Mrs. Maurice Yeager, lived at Pleasant Gap after leaving Belle- fonte, until going to make their home in New York. .—Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Gardner arrived in Bellefonte Tuesday, from Clearfield. Mrs. Gardner expects to remain here for sev- eral days, while Mr. Gardner went on a business trip to the western part of the State Joining him in Tyrone, Mrs. Gardner will return home with him today. | —Miss Daise Keichline will leave Belle- fonte about the 19th of the month for Bat- tle Creek, Mich., te go from there to Flor- ida, with Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hinman, to spend the remainder of the season with them at their winter home at Miami. Miss Keichline will not return to Bellefonte be- fore May. —Miss Mildred Locke, who had heen in Bellefonte with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Locke, for her Christmas vacation, returned to her study of music. Miss Locke possesses & mezzo soprano voice of unusual promise and has already had complimentary favors conferred upon her by the most noted musicians of the city. —Miss Rachel Shuey left Bellefonte Tuesday for Williamsport, for a visit with her sister, Miss Sara, and some school friends. From there Miss Shuey will go to Wilkes-Barre to continue her visit with friends in that section of the State, a part of her time while there being given to her sister, Mrs. Charles Donachy and her fam- ily. —King Morris and his father, Thomas K. Morris, of Pittsburgh, were in Belle- fonte the early part of the week; Mr. Mor- ris on his way to Hagerstown, Md., and King to spend a short time here before returning to Mercersburg. —Walter Gherrity, son of P. H. Gherri- ty, is in Bellefonte, having been discharg- ed recently from the medical department of the army. ——Rumor has it that the Roland Curtin property at the corner of the Diamond and extending through to the alley at Parrish’s drug store has been sold. The rumor is not without foundation because there is a purchas- er for the property, as yet unknown, but he has not been able to come to an agreement as to terms and proba- bly will not for some time as one of the owners is in China and communi- cation with her is very slow. Prothonotary Roy Wilkinson is looking for a home in Bellefonte. He wants a house with at least five bed rooms and will rent unfurnished or buy if a suitable offer is made. College, Miss Garner . will, spend all her Interesting Aviation News. While Wednesday was not cold like some days we have had the pilots on the aerial mail route were unable to get over the Allegheny mountains ow- ing to the density of the clouds. Pi- lot Robinson got in from New York and Max Miller started for Cleveland but when he reached Clearfield he was confronted with a bank of clouds that reached virtually from a few hundred feet of the ground to an altitude of seven thousand feet, and he was compelled to fly back to Belle- fonte. The pilot who left Cleveland ‘flew into the cloud bank at Brookville and was compelled to come down. Pi- ' lot Stevens, however, made the return flight from Bellefonte to New York. As now planned the big Martin bombers will be put into service as | mail carriers between New York and | Cleveland on January 16th, but the | usual number of DeHaviland cars will be kept here in case of emergency. | James C. Maresa, the wireless op- erator who helped to. install the radio station on the Bellefonte field and has since been in charge, was this week ' sent to Heller field, Newark, N. J., to complete the installation of the sta- tion there. He was succeeded here by Marshall C. Wright, who arrived in | Bellefonte on Wednesday. While the planes have not yet been equipped with the wireless apparatus the Belle- fonte station easily picks up messages from all points along the Atlantic coast as far south as Key West, Flor- ida, and from vessels five hundred miles at sea. Messages are also easi- ly caught from the Cleveland naval | station. woe Joseph L. Montgomery Ill in Sunbury. Joseph L. Montgomery left Belle- fonte Wednesday noon, to attend the meeting of the association of match companies, of which he is president, that is now in session in New York city. He had not been feeling well for a few days prior to his departure but undertook the trip notwithstanding. As the train neared Sunbury he be- came very ill, in fact so much so that he left the train at that place and was taken to the hospital. Fortunately Calvin Troup, superintendent of the Pennsylvania Match Co., at this place, was traveling with him and was able to look after his comfort until yes- terday morning when Mrs. Montgom- ery went down to be with him . until he recovers sufficiently to come home. Word received here yesterday after- noon was to the effect that Dr. Brin- ton, of Philadelphia, the specialist un- der whose care Mr. Montgomery was during his previous illness, has been called to Sunbury. He is in the Mary Packer Memorial hospital, a splendid institution, and is assured very effi- cient care. ‘*. Buster Brown. = Buster Brown is to be the attrac- tion at Garman’s this (Friday) even- ing. It is at least eight years since this exceedingly amusing musical cartoon has been seen here and the present management have seen fit to invest many thousands of dollars in new wardrobes, scenery and all nec- essary accessories. Buster Brown is of the kind that produces. many a gen- uine laugh; in’ fact, it was largely written with that end in view, conse- quently it is not to be wondered at that no less than four companies pre- sented this remarkable success for one or two consecutive theatrical sea- sons. Included in the present pro- duction are girls, girls and girls, for what would a musical comedy be with- out the dainty darlings and in this in- stance, they have been engaged: not only because they can dance, but for their singing ability as well. BIRTHS. Nancy Lee is the name of a little daughter born Wednesday, December 10th, to Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Seanor, of Roanoke, Va. Mrs. Seanor will be remembered as Miss Edith Payne. Mr. and Mus. W. F. Entrekin Jr. of Orange, N. J., are receiving con- gratulations on the birth of their first child, Virginia Bullock, who was born Monday, January 5th. Mrs. Entre- kin is well known in Bellefonte as Miss Harriet Bullock. Evan Blanchard, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Blanchard, of Linn street, met with a mishap while coasting last week that may result in a few per- manent scars on his face. With John- ny Curtin and Billy Potter he had been coasting out in a field on east Curtin street where there was no dan- ger of collision with motors and they were returning home down the alley running from Curtin to west Linn. For a last ride they started coasting down the alley. All went well until Evan reached the cross alley at the rear of the Crider property at the same time that a truck appeared. He hit it head on and was cut badly over the nose and one eye the wounds re- quiring some stitches to close up. It is hoped that permanent scars will not be left but that depends entirely on how the wounds heal. ——Mrs. Frank Warfield has leas- ed her former home, the John P. Har- ris home, on Linn street, and will take possession on Monday, expecting to conduct a rooming house. ——Will sell a few shares in gas well in best McKeesport territory. Have map on hand showing location. —J. M. Keichline. 2-tf Public Sale. Menday, March 8th, 1820,—At the residence of Charles C. Mesmer, 2 miles northwest of State College, on the Holmes farm. Live stock and full line of farm imple- | ments. Sale at 10 a. m. L. F. Mayes, auctioneer, J