CE TERT CT A a SD FE SERS, Bruni fit Bellefonte, Pa., January 23, 1920. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——On Wednesday night, January 28th, at 8:30 o'clock, the Bellefonte army and navy basket ball team will meet the Bellefonte High school five on the armory floor and a scrappy game it will be. You are expected to be there. ——A meeting of farmers has been called for the court house, Bellefonte, on Wednesday afternoon of next week, to consider the proposition of the Western Maryland Milk company to establish a pasteurizing plant at Milesburg. ——The training school for nurses of the Bellefonte hospital, has now four vacancies. Applicants must be girls with a High school education and over eighteen years of age. For further information consult Miss E. Eckert, superintendent of the hospital. — Dr. R. M. Krebs and Mrs. J. M. Williams are both housed up with illness at their homes in Pine Grove Mills this week. Mrs. Williams was taken sick on Monday while getting ready to go to Woodward to attend the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Wolfe. —_A little daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Larimer, at the Bellefonte hospital, on Sunday night. This is their second child. Their first, | Elizabeth, being about thirteen years old. The baby has been named for ity grandmother, Marietta Staples Larimer. ~The main building of the Gen- eral Refractories fire brick plant at Flemington was totally destroyed by fire son Saturday evening, entailing a loss approximating $75,000, partially covered by insurance. About seven- ty-five men have been thrown out of employment temporarily. —While going down stairs Mon- day morning, Mrs. Charles Penning- ton fell, breaking two bones in her left leg, near the ankle. Mrs. Pen- nington was leading one child and carrying another; leaving go of the one she was leading she clung to the baby, which was unhurt by the fall. — Gordon Montgomery has given up his course in the Pierce business college, Philadelphia, and on Monday went to work in the office of the Bellefonte Fuel & Supply company with a view of learning all about the coal business so that eventually he can take charge of the interest in the business held by his father, the late Joseph L. Montgomery. ~The regular meeting of the Woman's dah will. be held in the High school "building Monday, ‘ary 26th, at ow e Ta following a short business session Dr. Tanger, of the history department of State College, will address the women on American Dependencies and Terri- tories. It is hoped that all the mem- bess “of the club will be present and that they will take with them a friend. —A “regular meeting of the Cen- tre county Pomona Grange will be held. at Spring Mills, Thursday, Jan- uary 29th, 1920. There will be the usual two sessions, opening at 10 a. m. and 1:30 p. m., respectively, with the intervening time for lunch, which will be served in the hall. All pa- trons are requested to take their lunch boxes as usual. One of the items of business is the installation of officers. The dancing hall on the third floor of the Bush Arcade, so popular with the young folks on account of its goad floor, has been thoroughly over- hauled, a fine, new panelled ceiling put on, repainted and made very at- tractive looking. It will be re-opened this (Friday) evening by Waring’s orchestra, of Tyrone, to be followed by a - dance next Friday, the 30th, with music by the Lyric orchestra, of Lock Haven. ———John Coakley and his family, who. now occupy the Decker property on Lamb street, have purchased the Al. Heverley property on Beaver street and will move to their new homie in April. Mrs. Coakley’s fath- er, Thomas Quick, is a member of the Coakley family, having made his home with his daughter for some time. Mr. Heverley and his family will move to the new home they have bought on Logan street. ——One hundred dollars were real- ized Tuesday by Miss Linn, chairman of the Armenian Relief association, from the illustrated lecture given by Dr. Wirt, at the Lyric theatre. Dr. Wirt, who is a very pleasing talker, presented the condition of this sacri- ficed nation in a manner that should appeal to all classes of people. Sim- ply and forcefully put, the story il- lustrated by most beautiful pictures of those eastern countries, gave to the hearer an intimate knowledge of the anguish of these people, without the harrowing gruesomeness we have all learned to associate with this stricken country, ——FEverybody who has been at- tending the Scenic and Lyric lately have been exceptionally well pleased with the motion pictures shown at both places. They have been unusu- ally interesting and high-class in every way. In fact, the motion pic- ture that will attract the public these days must be good, and film compa- nies have come to realize that fact, so that they are not content to put out the mediocre stuff of years gone by but énsist on nothing but the best. And this is the kind shown at the Scemic every evening in the week and at the Lyric two and three nights a week. Every night you stay away you miss good pictures. i | rison ay, Janu- | p. m. Immediately! NEW LODGE OF FREE MASONS IN CENTRE COUNTY. State College Lodge No. 700 Consti- tuted Wednesday Noon by State Grand Master. A new page was turned in the his- tory of the Masonic fraternity in Cen- tre county at moon on Wednesday when a new lodge was organized at State College with the official title of State College Lodge No. 700. The ceremonies incident thereto were held in the I O. O. F. hall at the College and were conducted by the right wor- shipful grand master, John S. Sell, of Greensburg, and his staff. The new lodge starts off most auspiciously with a list of fifty-five charter mem- bers, natives of ten different States, and the prospects are very good for a rapid increase in membership. In the neighborhood of one hundred vis- iting Masons were present to see the new lodge constituted and at the com- pletion of the ceremonies a delicious luncheon was served at the Universi- ty club. Accompanying the Grand Master as part of his staff were grand senior warden Samuel Goodyear, of Carlisle, acting as right worshipful deputy grand master; past master Dr. Franks, of Huntingdon, acting grand senior warden; past master William Reiser, of New Kensington, acting grand junior warden; John A. Perry, of Philadelphia, grand secretary; Thomas R. Patton, of Philadelphia, grand treasurer, and Arthur Bacon, of Harrisburg, grand marshall; Dis- trict deputy grand master W. Har- Walker, of Bellefonte, was present and assisted in the ceremo- nies, making the address for the Grand Master. The new Lodge will be included in the district over which Mr. Walker, as district deputy, has supervision. The officers of the new lodge duly elected and as installed by the Grand Master for the ensuing Masonic year are as follows: Frank M. Torrence, worshipful master; William G. Mur- torff, senior warden; Frederick P. Weaver, junior warden; George Glenn, secretary; Ray D. Gilliland, treasurer; Roy I. Webber, David F. Kapp and George B. Jackson, trus- tees; Harry B. Northrup, representa- i tive to Grand Lodge; Harold B. Shat- tuck, senior deacon; John I. Taylor, junior deacon; Charles G. McBride, senior master of ceremonies; Winfred W. Braman, junior master of cere- monies; Thomas I, Mairs, chaplain; Harry J. Behrer, Pursuirant; W. Har- rison Thompson, tyler. The day’s ceremonies were very impressive and were conducted most successfully from start to finish. The visitors included prominent Ma- sons fr nesday, time numerous petitions for membership will be received. >» Superior Silica Brick Company Re- : organized. Stockholders of the Superior Silica Brick company held a meeting at the offices of the Eastern Refractories company in this place last Saturday and effected a complete reorganiza- tion by electing the following officers: President, Charles W. Albright, Al- toona; vice president and general manager, Ives L. Harvey, Bellefonte; secretary, Rev. H. S. McClintock, Philipsburg; treasurer, John S. Gin- ter, Tyrone. The new board of directors is com- posed of the following: Charles W. Albright, Fred J. Albright and H. A. Hutchinson, Altoona; John S. Ginter and William Fuoss, Tyrone; Rev. H. S. McClintock, Philipsburg; Ellis L. Orvis and Ives L. Harvey, Bellefonte; J. Ellis Harvey, Orviston; Mr. Kelsey, Flemington, and Mr. Morgan, of Phil- adelphia, the latter also holding the position of sales manager. The plant of the company is locat- ed at Port Matilda and has a capaci- ty of 35,000 bricks a day. They em- ploy sixty-eight men and at the pres- ent time are running full time. Just a little mystery surrounds the burning to death of Miss Alice Heck- man, at the home of her brother, Ad- am T. Heckman, near Penn’s Cave, on Monday. The woman was discovered early in the forenoon with her cloth- ing all in flames. Members of the household succeeded in extinguishing the fire but not before the woman was burned so badly that she died the same evening. Though suffering ter- ribly she was conscious a part of the time before she died but refused to disclose how her clothing caught fire. Miss Heckman was about fifty- eight years old and is survived by three brothers and one sister, namely: Adam T. Heckman, with whom she made her home; John, Daniel and Mrs. Decker, of Spring Mills. The funeral will be held today, burial to be made in the Heckman cemetery. His Greatest Honor. In our notice of the death of the late Joseph L. Montgomery last week we failed to state that he was presi- dent of the American Association of Independent Match Manufacturers, a union of all the leading independent match factories in the country that are not controlled by the Diamond Match company. To Mr. Montgomery probably more than any other one man is due the credit of bringing the independent concerns into co-opera- tion under one general head, and this his friends have always considered his greatest achievement. ——A son was born recently to Mr. and Mrs. Trood Parker, of Clearfield. ‘down to zero and below, makes for.a Monday, just when all the almanacs : —The first half year of college ; work at The Pennsylvania State Col- ' lege will be completed on January 31st, after a week of final examina- tions scheduled to start next Satur- | will receive diplomas on Monday, Feb- ruary 2nd. This special “war class” numbers 112 and is composed almost entirely of men who dropped their col- lege work to enter the service. — Many valuable gifts have been received during the past few months by the school of engineering at The Pennsylvania State College from man- ufacturers of machinery. A large amount of machine equipment was lost a year ago when the main engi- neering building was destroyed by fire, and this is gradually being re- placed by purchases and gifts. The shops at the College are now the best equipped of their kind in the State. ——Among the diversions already planned for the near future in Belle- fonte are a dance in the armory by the American Legion Post on Febru- ary 11th and a minstrel show for the benefit of the Odd Fellows band, the date of the latter not yet having been definitely set, but it is hoped to ar- range it for some time in February. Some of the old-time minstrel men of Bellefonte will be in charge, and for this reason something real good may be expected. EE Local Institute. The local institute of District No. 3, comprising the teachers of Belle- fonte borough and of Spring, Benner and Walker townships, will be held in the auditorium of the Bellefonte High school on Friday, January 30th. There will be two sessions, in the afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, and in the evening, at 8 o’clock. Interesting program, including demonstrations with real pupils, mu- sic by the High school orchestra and talks illustrated by the stereopticon, have been arranged. All friends of the schools are cordially invited. Visiting teachers will be served with supper under the management of the household arts department of the Bellefonte schools. emia A Real, Old Fashioned Winter. Of course the very old timers will scoff at the kind of weather we have had this winter and say it is nothing to what they had when they were . boys, but it is winter enough for the present generation with coal from six to twelve dollars a ton and all kinds of eats soaring in the sky. Seven weeks of it mow right in a stretch, with the thermometer never above the freezing point and a number of nights “good winter. And then had predicted a mild spell with thaw- ing weather, came the deepest snow of the season. Saturday and Sunday’s high winds drifted the country roads so that they were totally blocked at many places throughout the county. Scores of men were at work on Saturday open- ing up the main highways but Sun- day’s wind closed them up again. On Monday the state road between Belle- fonte and Lock Haven was impassa- ble in some places and the result was the regular bus service was tempor- arily suspended. Up in Ferguson township all the roads were blocked and what little traveling was done was through fields. The same condi- tion prevailed in other portions of the county. In fact, it has been the real, simon-pure winter weather, the kind our grandfathers talked about, and it can’t end too soon for us. Chinese Boys to Study Milling at Penn State. Encircling the globe in his search for an education that will aid in the operation of flour mills in his native country, Ying-Saing Hwa, of Wusih, China, arrived at State College last week to enter the course in milling engineering at The Pennsylvania State College, the only course of its kind offered by a college or universi- ty in the United States. He recently left the University of Nanking, Chi- na, where he was a junior in the ag- ricultural school, and will be enrolled in the junior class at Penn State with- in a few days. Within the next month he will be joined by his cousin, Yang Lee, who was also a student at the University of Nanking. Upon the completion of their course Atlantic and visit the grain centres and milling districts of Europe. Up- on their return home they will become assistants to their uncle, T. K. Yung, recognized as the “Mill King” of Chi- na, who owns a series of thirteen American-built mills in the Kaingsu Province, near Shanghai. At least two years will be spent in this coun- try, and summer vacations from col- lege will be occupied by working in the plant of one of the largest manu- facturers of industrial machinery in the country, at Milwaukee, Wis. By the time they return to China. they aim to know American methods of milling throughout, and their travel through America and Europe will aid them in taking the latest approved methods of the industry back to Chi- na. At Penn State the Chinese students will be instructed in the design of flour mills, the operation of milling machinery, the grading and identifi- cation of grains, the analysis of flours, and will even make and bake bread to show the difference produced by var- ious grades of flour, all under the di- rection of B. W. Dedrick, instructor in the milling course. day. The largest mid-year gradua-. | tion class in the history of the college | at State, the two boys will cross the | The Feast of the Red Corn. i “The Feast of the Red Corn,” a very | fascinating play, will be staged in | Garman’s opera house, Bellefonte, i next Thursday evening, January 29th, by a bevy of Bellefonte young ladies. The curtain will rise at 8:30 o’clock. CAST OF CHARACTERS. Weeda Wanta, Queen cf the Wanta Tribe Impee Light, her younger sister.......... Pudgee, Pudgee, Wudgee..... three children of the Queen Old Squaw, sorceress of the Tribe......cve.ecvnee.. Chorus and Dances Mary Parker Jean Brandman Mary Kline SCENE A hollow in a glen. TIME Evening before, and morning of, Feast of the Red Corn.” SYNOPSIS The maidens of the Wanta tribe of Indians once every year repair to a se- cluded spot to celebrate “The Feast of the Red Corn.” The one who in the feast finds the first red ear of corn expresses her dearest wish to the sorceress (an old squaw of the tribe), who calls upon the gods of the Four Winds to give a sign that the wish will be granted. This year the Queen Weeda Wanta joins the maidens, hoping to get the red ear because of her great desire to know of the welfare of the King. The scene opens with the entrance of the maidens into the glen where the feast shall take place. The old squaw tells the maidens that the Four Winds have whispered to her that there will be no wish granted this year because some one has committed a grievous offense. Impee Light, the younger sister of the Queen, is suspected of being the culprit and is threatened with burn- ing at the stake. The terrible mischief that Impee Light did was to have the three chil- dren play a joke by standing in shal- low water under the canoe after it was upside down. She put them where it was not deep and they all tipped over the canoe and went under it, so their heads were out of the wa- ter. As this was only a joke the Queen insists seriously that Impee Light has really saved the lives of the little ones and on this account, the Four Winds must be appeased and surely will hearken to the maidens. The old squaw undertakes to invoke the Winds again and this time with success. The feast is celebrated, the Queen finds the red ear, and in answer to her expressed wish she sees a vision of her King, who is alive and well and on his journey home. Proceeds for the Armenian relief, under the direction of the Patriotic League and the Women’s club. * Admission, 35, 50 and 75 cents. Let everybody attend. Ratrick McArdle Court of St. rentals Sunday was a big day for the ladies of St. John’s Catholic church, as it marked the organization and institu- tion of the Patrick McArdle Court of St. Isabella, a co-organization of the Knights of Columbus. About seven- ty-five delegates of the order were present from Lock Haven, Kane and Renovo to assist in instituting the new court. Included in the visitors were the state regent, Miss Francis Maher, of Kane; Mrs. George McNer- ney, grand regent of the Lock Haven court, and Miss McGuire, grand re- gent of the Renovo court. At the morning services at the Catholic church Father Downes took occasion to explain the purposes of the organization and the great good it can do in any community. The Court was instituted in the hall of the Knights of Columbus, in the Rey- nolds building, with an all day pro- gram. Music was furnished by the church choir from Lock Haven. AY six o’clock a banquet was served in the hall by the Bellefonte ladies. The new Court starts out with a list of seventy-three members and the following officers: Mrs. Odillie A. Mott; vice grand re- gent, Miss Anna McLaughlin; proph- etess, Miss Mary Woods; historian, Miss Agnes Shields; financial secreta- ry, Miss Catharine McGowan; treas- urer, Miss Elizabeth Cooney; Moni- tor, Miss Marie Doll; sentinel, Miss Helen Beezer; musician, Miss Helen Robb; chaplain, Father Downes; trus- tees, Mrs. Harry J. Jackson, Mrs. Ja- cob Gross, Mrs. Thomas Shaughnes- sey, Mrs. Philip Beezer, Mrs. Allen Waite and Mrs. Jack Robinson. “The Isabella Herman Beightol Electrocuted in Coal Mine. | tor in mine No. 26 of the Lehigh Val- {ley Coal company in the Snow Shoe | region, was electrocuted on Tuesday | afternoon by coming in contact with one of the high power transmission wires that conveyed the current to the motor. Beightol was killed outright. Fellow workmen who saw the acci- dent stopped the motor and released the dead body from contact with the wires. The unfortunate young man was a son of Mr. and Mrs. G. Beightol and was born twenty-six years ago. He had been employed in the mines the past eight years and was a careful and conscientious workman who stood high in the estimation of his employ- ers. An unusually sad feature of Mr. Beightol’s untimely death is the fact that he was married last Saturday to Miss Katie Watson, of Snow Shoe, and the bride of three days is now a widow. He also leaves his parents and two brothers, Jacob and William. Burial will be made in the Askey cemetery today (Friday). ——Mrs. Robert Rosenhoover has ter street, during the week. Grand regent, Herman Beightol, a motor opera- | { week in Philadelphia and New York, hav- Rachael Shuey | ing left Bellefonte Saturday. Sallie Fitzgerald | Flizabeth Eckenroth | { Point, Long Island, where she will been critically ill at her home on Wa- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. ae | —Miss Mittie Lucas, of Howard, is vis- iting in Bellefonte, a guest of Mrs. John Meese. —Miss Miriam Smith has been visiting with friends in Pittsburgh this week, hav- ing gone out Saturday. —Arthur Beezer has been spending the —Charles W. Heilhecker, local manager of the Bell Telephone, attended a meeting of the company in Harrisburg, Monday. —Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Olmstead are en- tertaining Mrs. Olmstead’s sister, Mrs. Herbert Cobb, and her son Jack, of ‘Wilkes-Barre. —Claire B. Williams, of Bayonne, N. J., spent Tuesday here with his mother, Mrs. George Williams, coming up Monday night and returning to New York Tuesday night. —James H. Potter, his daughter, Miss Janet, of Philipsburg, and Mrs. Sidney Keefer, went to Pittsburgh Tuesday to do some buying for the Potter-Hoy Hard- ware store. —J. S. McCargar went out to Pittsburgh on Wednesday to attend a meeting of the board of directors of the Edward A. Woods agency of the Equitable Life As- surance society. —Miss Alice Case, of Williamsport, is here with her niece, Miss Fitzgerald, hav- ing come to Bellefonte the early part of | the week, on account of the serious illness | of Mr. Fitzgerald. —Mrs. Jack Decker went to Reading the latter part of last week, to spend a few days with Mr. Decker before he returns to Bellefonte. Mr. Decker was east looking after some business. —Mrs. T. H. Hahne, of Tyrone spent a part of last week in Bellefonte, as a guest of Harry Walkey, at his home on Bishop street. Mrs. Hahne and Mrs. Walkey were friends from girlhood. —Miss Sara Wood Crary stopped in Bellefonte Wednesday for a short visit with her cousin, Miss H. E. C. Overton, on her way home to Shickshinny, from a visit with a nephew in Pittsburgh. —The Misses Anna and Emily Parker, of Somerset, made a short business trip to Bellefonte the early part of the week, spending the time while here with their brother, G. Ress Parker and his family. —Mrs. F. H. Thomas returned last week from New York, where she had been with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace H. Gephart, who are now located in the new home they have purchased at Bronxville, fifteen miles from the city. —C. D. Moore, of State College, is spend- ing the after part of the winter in Wil- liamsport, having gone down early in this week. Mr. Moore only recently returned from the Pacific coast, where he had been during the summer and fall. —Miss Adalaide Mitchell, the elder daughter of Judge H. Walton Mitchell, of Pittsburgh, and Miss Katherine Gans, of ! Connellsville, were guests over Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keller, coming here from State College, where they are both students. —Mrs. D. G. Bush is recovering so rap- idly from the effects of her fall several weeks ago that it will be possible for her to make the trip next week to College be with her grand-daughter, Mrs. Harry Gar- ber, for an indefinite time. —Mrs. J. E. Ward is entertaining both her sons: Arthur, who but recently return- ed from a business trip through South America, and Harold and his wife of Churchland, Va. The men are making the visit here at this time relative to the set- tlement of some business matters. —S. A. Mignot, who has been in Belle- | fonte with his father, Emil Mignot, for two years, left this week to return to his | former home in Clearfield. Mr. Mignot's stay here with the family covered the period of his father’s last illness, the set- tlement of his estate and the breaking up of their home. —Mrs. E. P. Moore, of Tyrone, has been at her former home at the toll-gate, for the past two weeks, called here by the ill- ness of her brother, Mordecai Miller, who is now slowly recovering from the effects of his fall two weeks ago. Mrs. Moore's daughter, Miss Katherine, has been here with her mother for a part of the time. —Because the roads were so drifted that William Keller, rural mail carrier of Cen- tre Hall, could not get over his route he took Saturday off and came over to Belle- fonte to see his wife, who was a patient in the Bellefonte hospital. Mrs. Keller, by the way, has so far recovered that she was removed to her home in Centre Hall on Wednesday. —Miss Jennie K. Reifsnyder, of Mill- heim, is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. 8. McCargar, expecting to be in Bellefonte about two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. McCargar- also had as week-end guests Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Ruble, of Cleve- land, Ohio, who came to Centre county last week for the funeral of Mr. Rubles brother, John Ruble, at Centre Hall. —Miss Anna Belle Hays, who was a week-end guest of Mrs. J. W. Gephart and her daughter, Miss Elizabeth, came here from Williamsport, where she had spent the Holidays with relatives. Miss Hayes’ home is in Gorin, Missouri, but being east for the winter with her cousin, Mrs. Hi- ram Hiller, at Swarthmore, came to Wil- liamsport, while Dr. and Mrs. Hiller and their two daughters went to Missouri for their Christmas. —B. T. Jamison, of Spring Mills, was in town on business on Wednesday and like most wise folks was traveling on the train; the roads being too badly drifted to take a chance. Mr. Jamison, like the writer, was sorely distressed at the result of the election in the county last fall, particular- ly as to the defeat of Capt. William H. Fry and Capt. “Dick” Taylor. He thought surely the voters would recognize the pe- culiar claim of those two gentlemen and reward them with the offices they sought. —Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Parrish had a pleasant surprise on Saturday, when their nephew, Joseph Parrish, who is with the White Motor Co., in New York, dropped in for a day’s visit with them. Naturally enough he reminisced a bit about his serv- ice in France and a part of one of his tales sounded so realistic to James Fox, Mrs. Parrish’s brother, who was one of the hearers, that the two ex-service men got | to digging into it and were wonderfully surprised to find that they had been on the same train during a long trip through France. Strange that two boys so inti- mately connected could have been so close | C over there and neither one any the wiser of it until they met in this little town thousands of miles away. | Arkansas —Rev. Wilson P. Ard is spending the week in Philadelphia, looking after some business interests. Coombs—Kepler.—At least one young woman of Centre county bene- fitted to the extent of securing a hus- band through her engagement to work for the government in Washington, according to the announcement of the marriage in that city, on Thursday of last week, of Miss Mary Eleanor Kep- ler, daughter of Hon. and Mrs. J. Will Kepler, of Pine Grove Mills, and Ray E. Coombs, of Missouri, the wed- ding having taken place at the home of a friend of the bride and the cere- mony being performed by a Methodist minister. The bride is very well known in the western section of Centre county, hav- ing at one time been a very success- ful school teacher. When the gov- ernment issued a call for help two years or more ago Miss Kepler went to Washington and took a position in the war risk insurance bureau. She soon mastered the intricacies of the work there and was made a supervis- or, a position she held until her recent resignation on account of her mar- riage. Mr. Coombs, as stated above, is a native of Missouri and a graduate of University. He served overseas during the world war and since his discharge from service has been a traveling agent for a well i known zine company in Missouri, in which he has a financial interest. The bride’s Centre county friends extend congratulations. Beightol—Watson. — Herman Syl- vester Beightol and Mrs. Kathryn Ro- setta Watson, both of Snow Shoe, journeyed to Hollidaysburg last Fri- day where they were married at the parsonage of the Methodist Episcopal church by the pastor, Rev. E. E. Har- ter, the ring service being used. Mr. Beightol is a motorman in charge of the electric transportation of coal from the mine to the tipple in the Snow Shoe region and following a brief wedding trip the couple will take up their residence in Snow Shoe. Sampsel—Dunklebarger. — LeRoy N. Sampsel, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Sampsel, and Miss Belle Dunklebar- ger, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Dunklebarger, both of Pleasant Gap, were married at Milesburg on Janu- ary 14th, by Rev. M. C. Piper. Study Course in Citizenship. The Women’s Club will begin its | course in the study of Citizenship on Tuesday evening, January 27th, in the High school building. The study class will meet at 7:30, and at 8:15 there will be an open for- um to which all (both men and wom- en) are invited. The discussion eath evening will be on the subject taken up by the class. The program is as follows: - January 27th—Borough organiza- tion. February 3rd—County tion. : February 10th—State government. February 17th—National govern- ment. February 24th—The judiciary. March 2nd—Political parties. March 9th—Election laws. We hope the men and women of Bellefonte will make these evenings interesting and helpful. ELIZABETH B. BEACH, Chairman. oe organiza- Trial List for February Court. Queens Run Fire Brick Co. vs. Kel- ley Bros. Coal Co. Assumpsit. Wm. C. Rowland vs. The Athletic Store. Assumpsit. W. W. Price vs The Director Gen- eral of Railroads Assumpsit. James S. Weaver vs. Sarah Mensch, et al. Assumpsit. Anna M. Keichline vs. John P. Kel- ley. Sci. Fa. Huston Township vs. Daniel Straw and George Steele. Assumpsit. (Two cases). Josiah Pritchard Garage vs. John I. Gray. Assumpsit. Frank Middleton vs. Dr. W. R. Hea- ton Trespass. Armstrong, Cator & Co. vs. Miss M. H. Snyder. Appeal. Mary Sunday vs. Veto Polce. sumpsit. H. A. Cathcart vs. Kelley Bros. Coal Co. Assumpsit. ; Crushed to Death Under § Street Car. On Sunday morning Mr. and Mrs. George G. Stitzinger, of New Castle, were on their way to church in their automobile when the machine was struck by a runaway trolley car. Mrs. Stitzinger was hurled from the ma- chine right under the wheels of the street car and was crushed to death. The wrecked automobile caught fire and Mr. Stitzinger was fearfully burned. Mrs. Stitzinger was the mother of Wayne D. Stitzinger, a for- mer student of the Bellefonte Acade- my and who married Miss Pauline Johnston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Kennedy Johnston, of Bellefonte. As- ——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. Monday, March 8th, 1920,—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. Grain Markets. Corrected by Geo. M. Gamble Red Wheat, No 1 & 2........0000 35—2.40 White or Mixed No. 1 & 2 225-230 0 1.056 1.40 1.25