"Bellefonte, Pa., January 30, 1920. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——Get your fishing tackle in shape as it is only seventy-six days until trout fishing season opens. ——Any person wishing to buy a good flour and grist mill should read the advertisement of one for sale in this issue of the “Wathman.” —Horatio S. Moore last week closed the deal for the Dr. J. L. Sei- bert property on Allegheny street now occupied by Mrs. Frank Montgomery. ——The thimble bee of the ladies of the Reformed church will be held this (Friday) afternoon, at the home of Mrs. D. R. Foreman, Spring street. ——W. Harrison Walker Esq., has received one each of the navy and marine blankets the government is now offering for sale. The navy blanket is grey in color and sells at $8.25. The marine blanket is olive drab and sells at $5.50. These blan- kets can be seen at Mr. Warker’s of- fice by any one interested in securing some, and Mr. Walker will accept and place orders for any number desired. ——On Thursday of last week rep- resentatives of Ballinger & Perot and William Steele’s Sons, architects, of Pittsburgh, were in Bellefonte and in company with John P. Kelley made a thorough inspection of the Kelley & Wion garage with a view of becoming expert witnesses for Mr. Kelley in the action brought against him by Anna M. Keichline, architect, and which is listed to be tried at the February term of court. i ———Announcement has been made of the marriage in Philadelphia last Saturday morning of Ogden B. Ma- lin, of Bellefonte, and Miss Elizabeth F. Meyers, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Meyers, of Asbury Park. The bridegroom holds the po- sition of assistant instructor in min- ing engineering at The Pennsylvania State College, and for the present he and his bride will reside at the Malin home in this place. ——Five hundred people or more wanted cvery evening to attend the Scenic and get the benefit of the best line of motion pictures being shown anywhere. Every picture you miss will be as much your loss as it will the Scenic management, and that is the reason of this invitation to attend. The Scenic offers the only regular amusement to be had in Bellefonte and every cvening’s program is a good one. Itis just the place to spend these long winter evenings. —Prof. J. S. F. Ruthrauff, of Phifipsburg, who some time ago re- signed as superintendent of the Phil- ipsburg schools to become secretary of the Philipsburg Chamber of Com- merce, has just turned down an offer from Jonas E. Wagner to become + principal of the High school at Bea- ver, Pa., at a salary of $2,100 per an- num, and now has an offer to become housemaster at Girard College, Phila- delphia. Though at last reports he was hesitating over the coffer it is generally believed that he will accept and leave for Philadelphia so as to be- gin his duties next week. ——Miss Sarah Packard, of the Home Economics Extension Service of The Pennsylvania State College, will talk on “Diet for the School Child,” Friday evening, February sixth, at a quarter before eight in the High school auditcrium. While Miss Packard’s talk is primarily intended to be helpful to mothers and others who have charge of children, it will contain information that will be prof- itable for any one to know. It is giv- en under the auspices of the society for the prevention of tuberculosis as a part of the Modern Health Crusade movement. There will be no admission and the public is cordially invited to come and learn. ——Governor Sproul last week ap- pointed Hon. A. G. Morris, of Belle- fonfe, a member of the board of man- agers of the Huntingdon reformatory in place of George H. Stewart, of Shippensburg, resigned. Mr. Morris served on the board from May, 1896, to May, 1916, when Governor Brum- baugh failed to re-appoint him for political reasons. During the last three and a half years of his twenty years’ service Mr. Morris was presi- dent of the board and he always man- ifested a great interest in the success and .welfare of the institution. His return to the board will be gladly wel- comed by the other members as well as the officials in charge of the re- -formatory. ———Centre county friends of Miss Laura Waite, a sister of Darius and J. S. Waite, of Bellefonte, will surely sympathize with her in the big loss ;she sustained in the destruction by fire early in the week of one of the dor- mitories of Piedmont College, at Demorest, Ga., where she is an in- structor in domestic science, The dor- miter burned was one occupied by tha teachers and a number of stu- dents, and the fire spread so rapidly that all of the occupants had little op- portunity to save anything. One stu- dent lost her life when she rushed in- to the burning building in an effort to gave some of her possessions. The only things Miss Waite was able to save were the clothes she wore and a few small trinkets she managed to get hold of in her hurried exit from the burning building. Her entire ward- robe except the clothes she wore, books and personal belongings, val- ued at almost one thousand dollars, were reduced to ashes, and so far as known she had no insurance on her belongings. Big Silk Mill Almost Sure for Bellefonte. Option Taken on Crider Lumber Yard as Site for a Quarter of | a Million Dollar Plant. Large Lot of Bonds Already Taken and Only Question Now is Labor. Residents of Bellefonte and vicini- ty are now face to face with an op- portunity of securing a big silk mill for the town which will cost equipped from $275,000 to $300,000 and give steady, high-class, well paid employ- ment to one hundred and twenty-five young men and women. There are only two little “ifs” in connection therewith. One of them is “if” the people in Bellefonte and vicinity will take $75,000 worth of first mortgage, six per cent. bonds as evidence of their interest in the project, and the other “if” the company back of the project can be given assurance of securing the labor they will require to operate their plant. The first “if” is growing smaller every day, as at the time this article was written on Tuesday after- noon $33,000 worth of the bonds had already been subscribed with from $8,000 to $10,000 ef prospects in sight, so that the men who are hand- ling this part of the project are very confident of success. As to the second “if” covering the labor question, that is to be worked out by means of ap- plication blanks to be published in the Bellefonte papers. The above are the facts in the case, now as to details. A few weeks ago the Bellefonte Trust company received a communication from J. H. and C. K. Eagle, Inc., owners and operators of silk mills at Shamokin, Mechanics- burg and Gettysburg. The Shamokin plant is the parent factory and at the present time employs about 2,700 op- eratives. As to J. H. and C. K. Eagle, Inc., they are rated in Bradstreet as “Triple A,” which is exceptionally high financially. In fact they are onc of the three largest silk mill operat- ors in this country. Some days after receiving the com- munication, Nelson E. Robb, treasur- er of the Bellefonte Trust Co., turned the same over to Robert F. Hunter, of the Bellefonte Board of Trade, and he in turn called a meeting of the newly organized Bellefonte Business Men's association and the matter was dis- cussed from every angle with the re- sult that it was considered worthy of investigation. The result was the Ea- gle corporation was invited to sub- mit a proposition and on the strength of that invitation W. U. Jury, con- sulting and construction engineer of the company came to Bellefonte and at a meeting of members of the Board of Trade and the Business Men's as- sociation stated that what they re- quired was a suitable site for the lo- cation of a mill, and the ground would have to be large enough on which to erect a double unit plant; that the cit- izens of the town and community take $75,000 in first mortgage bonds most- ly as evidence of their interest in the project and that they work out so far as possible the question of an ade- quate labor supply. The men interested in the proposi- tion got busy at once and a thirty day option was secured from G. M. Gamble for the Crider lumber yard, which is ample in size for a very ex- tensive plant. When the option was secured the company was notified and | Messrs. Thomas B. Hill, John Van- Orden, Joseph H. Jones and Robert Marshall, of the board of managers, ! W. U. Jury came to; Bellefonte and approved of the site | and engineer selected. nesday when preliminary papers of agreement were signed. The company is not asking Belle- fonte people to take any stock in the A111 mili, sale, And the $75,000 worth of bonds are asked more as a matter of good faith on the part of the people of this community than because of the mon- ey being needed by the company. As evidence of this is the fact that they estimate the cost of the location and first building at $100,000. In this building will be placed from $175,000 Mr. Lark, attorney for the | company, was in Bellefonte on Wed- | in fact there will not be any for | , to $200,000 worth of machinery be- : fore it is ready to operate. The com- pany will install the machinery and the bonds taken by the people of Bellefonte will be secured by a first mortgage on the entire plant. The bonds will be dated May 1st, 1920, and will bear interest at six per cent., payable semi-annually. The bonds run for seventeen years but the com- pany reserves the right to retire the same yearly at the rate of one-seven- teenth of the aggregate amount. All plants are built in units and the first unit of the Bellefonte plant will be a building 137x168 feet, one story high. It will be built of steel, con- crete and brick and made as near fire- proof as it is possible to build it, even to the roof. It will be well lighted with numerous large windows on every side and by immense skylights in the roof. Rest rooms, dressing rooms and lavatories will be provided ly sanitary. All the machinery will be driven by electricity. To operate the first unit of the plant the labor of 125 to 130 young men and women will be required, preferably between the ages of six- teen and thirty. One-third of the op- eratives desired are women, which would be from forty to * fifty. The mill is operated continuously from midnight Sunday until midnight Sat- urday and young women are employ- ed only on the day shift of eight hours, which is from eight o’clock in the morning until four in the after- noon. Young men are employed on the other shifts. The minimum wages paid to begin- ners are ten dollars a week to young women and fifteen dollars a week to young men. When operatives become | skilled, however, the women are able | to make from sixteen to eighteen dol- {lars a week and the young men from | twenty to twenty-five. And the com- | pany much prefers paying for skilled | help. In fact any young man or wom- an who fails to take an interest in the work and show progress in the hand- ling of the machines is not the kind of a person to find favor in the eyes of the company. The company has al- ways aimed to make their mills not only a healthy and congenial place of labor but insist on a high moral standard. Swearing and obscene lan- guage are not tolerated by either em- ployee or foremen. It is the desire of the company, if ‘ every proposition is satisfactorily met "in Bellefonte, to begin work on “the plant early in April so that it can'be ready for operation by the first of Ju- ly. And for this reason it is very im- portant that the question of labor is settled as early as possible. There- fore, the Bellefonte men who have the ' matter in charge ask all young men and women who would like a job in the new plant to fill out the coupon found in today’s and successive issues of the “Watchman” and mail to the address given thereon. In doing so you in no way bind yourself to work there unless you so desire and the company needs you. It is only in this way that the true situation of the amount of labor in the neighborhecod can be obtained. Following is a list of the purchas- ers of bonds up to yesterday noon, over | the aggregate amount being $40,000: | Olewine Estate | William Bottorf | State Centre Co. { H. P. Schaeffer | Brouse Store n. C.Brown ! John Gross Cohen & Co. { Wm. Katz i Charles Schlow | Dr. Rogers : S. Hazel Robert Hunter Mr. Thompson Mallory Studio C. D. Casebeer Blair Store Miss M. Snyder T. W. Cairns Robert Hale Sallie Katz W. R. Brachbill J. T. Eckels D. Finkelstine D. 1. Willard Hazel & Co. Bellefonte Trust Co. Montgomery & Co. J. M. Bullock H. C. Yeager Potter-Hoy Co. P. B. Hartman C. E. Royer S. S. McCloskey 7. H. Harter Elizabeth Cooney Miss Caroline Harper First National Bank entre Co. Banking Co. Mr & Mrs. Moerschbacher Mrs. Louisa Bush Geo. A. Beezer W. L. Daggett C. C. Keichline AAAS URINAL AAI SARA ARIANA IIIS IPP IPOS APPLICATION COUPON: Please enter my name on your list of applicants for employment in the Bellefonte plant of the J. H. & C. K. Eagle Inc. on or about July 1, 1920. Send to Sec'y of Business Men's Association of Bellefonte. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS WAAAAAAAAAANAANAAAS AANA NIN Potter-Hoy Co. Adding Big Line of China and Glassware. The Potter-Hoy Hardware compa- ny will in the near future add a most complete line of china and glassware to their already big stock of hard- ware. Work is already under way making the necessary changes in the company’s big store room on High street to accommodate the new line. The heavier lines of hardware will be moved from the store room into the basement and the other lines consol- idatedso as to make room for the chi- na and glass department in the rear of the main store room, next the of- fices. This department will be retail only, as the company will not carry a stock for wholesale. The stock has already been selected and ordered and will be here just as soon as the necessary shelving and counters can be cleared on which to display it properly. In- | asmuch as the line to be carried will i be quite extensive, both in china and | glassware, the public will have ample | opportunity to make pleasing selec- tions when anything in these lines is desired. ose ——1In speaking of the cold weath- | er last week “Waxey” Straub stated that it was so cold at his place ap along the mountain last week that it froze the leg off of a wooden chair. Any person who doubts this statement can get full particulars by asking the gentleman in question. and the building throughout be entire- | BIG MILK STATION. A Good Probability for Bellefonte in : the Near Future. ed a meeting held in the grand jury ‘room in the court house on Wednes- day afternoon in the interest of the erection of a big milk station in | Bellefonte. The meeting was called by Mr. J. A. Collins, of New York city, country manager of the Western | Maryland Dairy, with head offices at 11117-1125 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. The purpose of the meeting was to interest the farmers especially in the | establishment of a station in Belle- fonte. Mr. Collins, in an exhaustive talk started by saying that his com- pany had no stock to sell or anything of that kind; that their main interest at the present is to find out if the far- { mers will back them up in their pro- | ject to the extent of increasing their | dairy herds and consequently their { milk supply. If they will do so, Mr. | Collins assured his audience, the com- ! pany he represents will back him up | to the extent of making this county i one of the leaders in the State for the | shipment of sweet milk. He further | stated that the Western Maryland ! Dairy will pay the price set by the i Dairyman’s League. Another good meeting was held at I Julian on Wednesday evening, which | was addressed by Mr. Collins and Mr. J. H. Port, assistant milk agent of the i Maryland Dairy for Pennsylvania. { In connection with the above project { it might be stated that an option has been secured on a site for the con- densary in Bellefonte but the question of the plant being erected is in a good ! part up to the farmers. If they are | interested to the extent of increasing | their dairy herds in order to furnish ta good supply of milk, the station will be built without a question. The lot on which the option has been taken is on north Thomas street directly in front of Gamble’s mill. It is proposed to erect a large receiving station there where dairy men can de- liver milk. A car will leave Belle- fonte each day. It will merely be a receiving station, not a condensary or butter or cheese plant. It is said that it will improve rather than de- crease the milk supply in Bellefonte for the projectors have given assur- ance that at all times they will be ready to supply local milk men with ample supplies to satisfy their cus- tomers. em | A Few of Those Whe are Ill. i Mrs. Harriet T. Kurtz is again ser- | ously ill in the Orange General hos- | pital, at Orlando, Florida. i Mrs. Jacob Bottorf, of Lemont, was | taken to the Glenn sanitorium at State ! College, this week, suffering with an acute attack of neuritis. W. S. White, of Axe Mann, his son, Curtis White, and the latter’s daugh- ter, all of whom have been ill with pneumonia are slowly recovering. Mr. White’s condition was regarded as critical within the week, but at the present time he is showing some im- provement. The condition of Mrs. J. C. Meyer, who is a surgical patient in the Joseph Price hospital, in Philadelphia, con- tinues to be very critical. All of the family of Thomas Cald- well are ill with grip. Nittany Valley Farm Sold. The farm of E. C. Strohm, located a mile from Zion and which is one of the most productive in Nittany valley, has been sold through the Bellefonte office of the McVey Real Estate com- pany to George A. McClellan, of Al- toona. Mr. McClellan spent a good part of his life in Altoona but a few years ago moved to Columbus, Ohio. About four months ago he returned to Altoona and went to work for the Pennsylvania railroad company. It is his intention to hold onto his job in the Mountain city and put his son in charge of the farm. As the sale in- cluded the farm stock and implements Mr. McClellan will have everything in shape to go to work when the transfer of the property is made in the spring. The farm contains 110 acres, most of which is under culti- vation. Eleven Carloads of Cars Reached Bellefente on Sunday. Eleven carloads of Maxwell cars and trucks came to Bellefonte over the Pennsylvania railroad on Sunday, being consigned to the Krader Motor company, recently organized and chartered with a capitalization of $75,000. The consignment included twenty-seven passenger cars and six trucks, and were a small part of a train load of seventy-six railroad cars that came through from Michigan to Johnstown, the central distributing point for this district. Owing to the unusual scarcity of box cars all kinds of cars were used in the transporta- tion of the automobiles, from the flat car to the ordinary coal car. But all the autos were protected from the el- ements by tarpaulin covers. $1,500 Named as Minimum Salary for Instructors. At the annual meeting of the board of trustees of The Pennsylvania State College, held at Harrisburg last Thursday, it was decided to establish $1,500 as the minimum salary to be paid to all instructors at the College who are married, and all salaries un- der that figure will be promptly ad- vanced. A committee was also named to make a general survey of salary conditions in various eastern colleges. Judge H. Walton Mitchell, of Pitts- burgh, was re-elected president of the board. Over one hundred farmers attend- | —Miss Elsie Clayton, of Philadelphia, is | in Bellefonte visitirig with her sister, Mrs. i J. J. Kilpatrick. —Miss Kate McGowan and Miss Martha | Beezer spent Sunday in Lock Haven, as guests of Sister Hildegarde. —John H. Weaver, of Milesburg, was a “Watchman” office caller on Saturday while in Bellefonte on a business trip. —John Love Jr., of Altoona, spent Sun- day in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Love, of Reynolds avenue. —Walter Gherrity, recently discharged from service in the navy, will leave Belle- fonte this week to accept a position in | Altoona. —Miss Mary H. Linn went to Harris- | burg Monday, to attend a state conference of chairmen for the Near East relief as- sociation. ! 1 —David Locke, the youngest son of Dr. M. J. Locke, will accompany his aunt, Miss Adalaide Kipe, to Plainfield, N. J., to be there until summer. —Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brandman have been | spending the week in Philadelphia, Mr. | Brandman going down on business, while | Mrs. Brandman is visiting with near rel- atives. —The Misses Anne and Caroline Valen- tine left Friday morning to spend a part | of the winter in Philadelphia and New York as has been their custom for a num- | ber of years. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | | --Miss Mary Barnets, who had been a | patient in the Bellefonte hospital during a part of the month of January, was dis- charged Monday, returning to her home in Milton Wednesday. —Miss Bernardine Reifsnyder, of Mill- heim, joined her aunt, Miss Jennie Reif- snyder, in Bellefonte the after part of last week, to spend the week-end as a guest of | Mrs. J. S. McCargar. —~Charles W. Thomas, of New Castle, a son of the late William Thomas, of Miles- | burg, came to Bellefonte Saturday to look after some business relative to the final settlement of the family estate, he being the sole survivor. —Joseph Lodge, chief engineer, and W. H. Smith, auditor of the American Union Telephone company, both of Lancaster, Pa., have been in Bellefonte this week looking after the books and service of the company in this district. —Mrs. Louis Cabasino, who had been here for several weeks visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Todsock, left yesterday for Bethlehem, to spend a few days with her sister, Mrs. Joseph Black, before returning to her home at Corona, L. I. —Mrs. Philip Beezer, her daughter, Miss Helen, and Miss Agnes Gherrity have been in Ptiladelphia this week, having gone down Saturday to spend several days in the shops. During their stay they have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Daugherty, at Manayunk. —Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Sherry, of Pitts- burgh, stopped in Bellefonte over Sunday with Mr. Sherry’s parents, Mr and Mrs. George W. Sherry, on their way to New York. Mr. Sherry is with the Nugent's Department store and was going east to do some buying for the firm. | —Mr. and Mrs. John C. Larimer, of Bryn Mawr, are here with Mr. Larimer’s aunt, Mrs. John I. Curtin, who has been ill at her home on Linn street for the past two weeks. Mrs. Curtin’s condition is very much improved. In fact so much so that she is now able to walk about the house and use her hand quite well. —Mrs. Lohr, wife of Dr. Floyd Lohr, of | Latrobe, spent the greater part of last week in Bellefonte, as a guest of Miss Fitzgerald. Mrs. Lohr, who is better known here as Miss Margaret McFarlane, came to Bellefonte from Lock Haven, where she is spending some time with her mother, Mrs. J. Kyle McFarlane, on ac- count of Mrs. McFarlane’s ill health. —Mrs. J. L. Spangler will go to Phila ; delphia this week, to be with her daugh- ter, Mrs. Blackburn, for several days, and to meet Mr. Spangler, who is now in Washington, Mrs. M. L. Valentine joining them there Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Spang- ler and Mrs. Valentine expect to spend the remainder of the winter and the month of March at the Chalfonte, at Atlantic City. —Mrs. John L. VanPelt and her daugh- ter Rachel, who have been here with Mrs. VanPelt’s mother, Mrs. Rachel Harris, since the early winter, will leave next week to join Mr. VanPelt in Johnstown. The house they lived in having been sold and no other one procurable, they were waiting here until the new house they had secured in Osburn was ready for occupan- cy. —Mrs. Frank Crosthwaite and her daughter, Miss Isabelle Goheen, were in Bellefonte last week, on their way to Bos- ton, where Miss Goheen hopes to complete her course at the Emerson school of ora- tory, which was interrupted last year by her serious illness with influenza. Mrs. Crosthwaite has rented their home at State College and will live with her daughter in Boston. —Mrs. Frederic Schad and her small daughter, Beth Harris Schad, left yester- day for Mrs. Schad’s former home in New London, Conn., where they will visit be- fore going to join Mr. Schad in Detroit, Mich. The child’s grandmother, Dr. Edith Schad, accompanied them as far as Ty- rone, where they were joined by Mrs. Schad’s aunt, who went with them to New England. Mr. and Mrs. Schad had made their home in Bellefonte for the past six months. —W. H. McIntire, of Knoxville, Tenn. spent a short time in Bellefonte and State College last week, coming to Centre coun- ty from Philadelphia, where he had been called by the illness of Mrs. MeclIntire's mother, Mrs. J. C. Meyer. Mrs. Meyer came north some time ago, for a visit with her two brothers, Dr. William and Roy McCalmont, in Philadelphia, and while there became so ill that she was taken to the Joseph Price hospital and operated on last week. Mrs. Meyers’ condition has been regarded as critical. —Col. John A. Woodward, of Howard, spic and span as one of the figures used in a clothing advertisement in the monthly magazines, paid his respects to the “Watchman” office on Tuesday while on a brief visit to Bellefonte. We never see the Colonel without entertaining a thought that there is somewhere a fountain of perpetual youth and that he is drinking his fill of its life-giving. waters, for aside from the fact that his locks are silvered and he has chalked up more than the three-fourths of a century mark on his milestone, his cheeks are as ruddy and his step as springy as when the writer first formed his acquaintance upwards of forty years age. . spending the month of January i Washington, —Mr. and Mrs. William Bottorf spent Wednesday doing some buying in Altoona. —Miss Agnes Shields spent the week- end in Snow Shoe, a guest of Miss Eliza- ! beth Glenn. —Miss Margaret Stewart is visiting with her brother, Dr. Walter Stewart, in Wilkes-Barre. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beatty and their family have been visiting this week at | their former home in Pittsburgh. —Mrs. Betty Orvis Harvey is with her sister, Mrs. Arnold, in New York, having gone down last week on account of the illness of Mrs. Arnold. —Miss Maude Shontz joined her sister, | Mrs. Robert Sechler, in Bellefonte, Wed- ' nesday night, and during her visit here both she and Mrs. Sechler guests of Mrs. C. T. Hennig. —Mrs. L. D. Whiting, of Louisville, Kentucky, is north for a month's visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shu- ey, and with Mr. Whiting’s parents, at Beaver. Irs. Whiting arrived in Belle- fonte the after part of last week. —Mrs. John M. Dale arrived in Belle- fonte Saturday, coming from Raleigh, N. C., to look after the storing of her house- hold goods. Mrs. Dale, who had been have been with her daughter, Mrs. H. Yerger, will | remain in Bellefonte for the present. —Miss Agnes McGowan, who has beem resting, at her home west of town, left Sunday for D. C, to resume her work. Miss McGowan has been a registered nurse at the national capital for several years. —Miss Ruth Bertram is home from Mia- mi, Florida, where she had been with a patient since her graduation from a nurs- es training school several months ago. As Miss Bertram has not located perma- nently she will be in Bellefonte for an in- definite time. —Misses Sarah and Betty Stevenson, | daughters of Mr. and Mrs. George Steven- son, of Buffalo Run, who have both been home on a thirty day’s furlough, left yes- terday to resume their work with the gov- ernment as professional nurses at Otean, North Carolina. —Mr. and Mrs. George S. Houser and their two children were in Bellefonte be- tween trains on Tuesday, on their way home to Freeport, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Houser had been visiting with Mr. Hous- er’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Houser, of Lemont, since before Christmas. —Walter Butts, well known to many Bellefonte people, has been here for a part of the week, visiting with his sister, Mrs. Robert ¥. Hunter. Although having lived all his boyhood life here and having many friends in this locality, Mr. Butts has not been in Bellefonte for fifteen years. —Mr. W. T. Hubler, of Miles township, was a business visitor in Bellefonte yes- terday and found time to spend a few minutes in the “Watchman” office. Miles township has always produced exception- ally good citizens and if Uncle Sam’s cen- sus put a rating upon his citizens accord- ing to their value to a community we feel surc that Mr. Hubler's name would be in the first row. —Those from out of town who were here last week for the funeral of the late Mrs. F. Potts Green were, Capt. Edward Green, M. D., of Fort Wright, Fisher's Island, N. Y.; Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Lieb, of Centre Hall; Mrs. Charles Dimm and James Snodgrass, of Mifflinburg; Mrs. Frank Geary and Mrs. Willard Brown, of Lock Haven; Mrs. Anna Dinges Rossman and Harry Dinges, of Centre Hall. —Capt. “Dick” Taylor spent Sunday with his family in this place and on Mon- day left for Washington, D. C., to report for assignment to his recent appointment to a position in the Department of Justice. Of course we don’t know anything about what Capt “Dick” will be assigned to de but we just happen to recall the fact that the Department of Justice has jurisdiction over some eighty-seven million gallons of whiskey. —Mrs. Robert Sechler arrived in Belle- fonte Sunday, coming here from Altoona, where she had been visiting for a part of a week with Mr. and Mrs. Curt Wagner. Before going there, Mrs. Sechler had spent the time since coming from Kansas early in December, with her sister in Johnstown, and having accepted a position there, will return late in February in anticipation of making that place her home. Until that time she will visit in Bellefonte and with the family at her former home in Mifflin- burg. ——The Bellefonte High school bas- ket ball team now heads the Mountain league, having won all of the six games played. Last Friday evening they defeated Mt. Union on the ar- mory floor by a decisive score and Saturday evening they went to Ty- rone and won their game from the Tyrone High school by the score of 21 to 20. Tyrone stands second in the league with two games won and one lost. The Bellefonte High school girls however, lost to the Tyrone girls the same evening by the score of 17 to 5. Selling Out—We're going out of business. Watch for the date of the sale.—Workmen’s Bargain Store. 5-1t ——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. evap ll ee Will sell a few shares in gas well in best McKeesport territory. Have map on hand showing location. —J. M. Keichline. 2-tf Will have a car load of Larro feed in a few days.—J. S. Waite & Co. 5-2 ——DMerchandise at and below COST at the Workmen’s Bargain Store—Selling out sale. 5-1t 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.......... « $2. 2.40 White or Mixed No. 1 & 2...... . 2.25—2.30 OFIl vsssrescecssss dade nenns ns . 1.40 Oats ..vooi0e.. Titnsaaiseneseeavie JB Barley ..cc.ccviaianinii sielrie bainie'y 1.05 RYE covvninssvessvirecssnsenss ‘es 1.40 Buckwheat ..i..cocceiitiinnnnnee 1.25 “2 A