REET ERA Bemorvaiy Wad Bellefonte, Pa., February 20, 1920. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —Washington’s birthday falling on Sunday this year Monday will be observed as a legal holiday. ——Arthur Thomas purchased the R. B. Taylor property on north Thom- as street on Saturday for $5,000. ——A. C. Derr, business manager of the Centre Democrat, is confined to his home on east Lamb street with a serious attack of pneumonia, the re- | sult of a case of grip. ——Mrs. George C. Rhoads is ill at her home in Coleville, suffering from the effects of a broken knee cap, the result of a fall last week, while re- turning from the home of a neighbor. ——John J. Curry, author, lecturer and soldier will be in Belle- | fonte on February 24th, and deliver his celebrated lecture entitled, “Un- written History of the War,” in the court house, at 8 o’clock p. m. No poet, | admission will be charged but a col- lection will be taken to defray expens- | es. Mr. Curry comes to Bellefonte | under the auspices of Washington Camp No. 887, P. O. S. of A. ——Everybody wants to see a big boom in Bellefonte this spring and it might also be added that everybody should see the motion pictures shown at the Scenic every evening. They will boom your spirits and help you ‘forget your daily worries and trou- | bles. Big programs every evening, | with pictures always up to date, and | no old-timers or repeaters. If you are | not a regular get in with the big bunch and pass your evenings at the movies. ——The friends of Bellefonte Chap- ter Daughters of the American Revo- | lution, and the public in general, who desire to enjoy a rich treat should be present at an entertainment of pic- tures of Washington’s times, on Mon- day evening, February 23rd, at 7 o'clock, in the High school assembly room. There will be no charge; the Daughters desire to give this pleasure to their guests as a means of observ- ing the anniversary of Washington’s Birthday. ——For the good work he has done at State College Henry Keller has | been recommended for post graduate work at the University of Wisconsin, at Madison, Wis., as an agricultural economist, the vocational board for wounded soldiers to pay all costs but current expenses. Mr. Keller was one of the recent 112 graduates at State’ College but will be accredited as hav- ing graduated with his original class of 1917. He will leave for Madison either tomorrow or on Sunday. ~~ ——Having served two years as farm agent for Centre county R. H. Olmstead has tendered his resignation to take effect on or before the first of April. In his capacity as the official head of the farm bureau in Centre -county he has been able to make a close study of agriculture in general and he has evidently become impress- ed with the life in general and the financial results in particular that he anticipates engaging in farming in Dauphin county after April first. of Tyrone, will play the Bellefonte Academy five on the armory floor to- morrow (Saturday) evening at 8:30 o’cleck. ‘I'he Big Five is composed of semi-professionals which assures a splendid contest. In this connection it might be said that on Monday even- | ing the Academy defeated the Altoona Triangles by the score of 45 to 22, which shows that the locals are now finding their stride. Go down and see this game, it will be well worth the 25 cents admission charged. The Krader Motor compar, of Bellefonte, which has opened offices in the old Curtin building on the cor- ner of Allegheny and Howard streets with Harry N. Meyer, former clerk to the County Commissioners, in charge, on Wednesday received a car load of Cletrac tractors manufactured by the Cleveland Tractor company. This tractor is of the baby tank type with caterpillar drive and they were quite an attraction while being driven through the streets from the P. R. R. station to the garage on Pike alley now used by the Krader company. —The man who flattered himself last Saturday that winter was about | over and we were due for a general breakup got an unlooked for jolt on! Sunday morning when he found the mercury running zeroward and a reg- ular winter gale in full swing. The rain of Saturday evening turned to snow during the night and enough of ' it fell in the country to again drift’ shut many of the roads. The result | was the motor busses could not get! through to Lock Haven on account of | the drifted condition of the roads be- | tow Zion and were able to get only as | far as Lemont on the way to State | College. The cold snap continued | through the early part of the week. -——Qn the last sheet rating put our by the Ford Motor company of their various agencies in District No. 3, which includes the entire western central part of Pennsylvania, the Beatty Motor company of Bellefonte has a rating of seventy-eight per cent., out of a total of one hundred. It stands second best, the highest rat- ing, seventy-nine per cent, being giv- en to the Ford agency in Johnstown. Other agencies run as low as twenty- four per cent. Considering the fact that there are over twenty agencies in “the district it is a flattering commen- dation of the salesmanship, service and efficiency of the Beatty Motor The Big Five basket ball team, company to be given so high a rating. IMPORTANT REAL ESTATE DEAL Lyric Theatre to be Converted Into an Up-to-Date Hardware Store. Announcement was made this week that the Lyruc theatre and the build- ing adjoining where the Workmen’s Bargain store is located have been purchased from Ray Brandman by Mrs. Sarah J. Owens, the considera- tion being $12,000. Possession of the Lyric theatre building will be given immediately, and the other building just as soon as Mr. Brandman closes out his stock of merchandise, which he hopes to do in the near future. The property was purchased pri- marily to secure the Lyric building | 2 4 . caution than criticism, and it might for a new hardware store to be estab- lished in the near future by Edward R. Owens, Harry M. Murtorff and Mark W. Williams, three of the oldest employees of the Potter-Hoy Hard- ware company. Right here it might be stated that Mr. Owens has been in the employ of the Potter-Hoy compa- ny the past eighteen years as pur- chasing agent. Mr. Murtorff has been connected with the company for fif- teen years, the past seven years be- ing manager of the retail sales de- partment, and Mr. Williams has been connected with the company for twelve years as a clerk in the retail department, so that the three men have had ample experience to justify { them in starting in business for them- selves. i The new company will be known as | the Bellefonte Hardware Co., and al- i ready much of the stock for the equip- | ment of the store has been ordered. The Lyric building is admirably lo- cated for a store. It is on the corner of Allegheny and Bishop streets, on the direct line of travel from Nittany i valley to Bellefonte. The building, { which is 30x80 feet in size, will re- i quire some remodeling, of course, and ! contractor W. S. Scholl will start | work on the same on Monday. The i floor, of course, will be leveled and | big glass show windows and a glass | door put in the front of the building. | It is the expectation of the men inter- {ested in the new company to have | their store open for business by March 15th. They will start out with a full i line of hardware for the retail trade, | builder’s supplies, stoves and ranges | and all kinds of household and cook- {ing nteusils. Their motto will be i “Quality and Service.” All the base- i ment under the Lyric will be used for | storage purposes with the exception ! of the room’ occupied by Port’s tailor- "ing establishment, it will remain there ‘for the present. | Mrs. Owens has already rented the i adjoining building now occupied by : Workmen’s Bargain store to P. Man- gino, the Italian shoemaker now lo- cated on High street’ who, with oth- ers of his countrymen, will put a shoe store in the front of the building and use the rear portion as a factory for making new shoes and repair’ work. They figure that at the start they will be able to turn out twenty-five pairs of shoes a day and if the manufactur- ing business proves successful it will be increased as the sales warrant. Many business have been started in just sueh a small way, and who can tell? It may eventually grow into a big shoe factory for Bellefonte. i. Clayton Brown Takes Lease on Garman Opera House. T. Clayton Brown, who has very ‘successfully managed the Scenic thea- tre in this place for a number of years past has, within the week, taken a lease on the Garman opera house for a term of years and will thus extend his interest in the show business in Bellefonte, combining the legitimate drama with his already large patron- age at the Scenic motion pictures. Mr. Brown will take charge of the opera house within the coming month land will keep faith with all the book- ings that have been made by manager , Garman for the opera house until the close of the season. The fact will be recalled that last summer Mr. Brown | took a lease on the Lyric theatre and in doing so purchased outright the "motion picture machine and all the equipment of that house. The sale of the Lyric building naturally releases i the equipment and Mr. Brown antici- | pates installing the motion picture { machine in the opera house and other- wise equipping that place for motion ‘pictures as well as legitimate shows. Just what changes and improve- ments Mr. Brown contemplates mak- ing on. the interior of the building cannot be definitely stated this week, as he probably will not decide defi- nitely on that until the building pass- es into his possession, but with a gen- eral knowledge of the way he has ca- tered to the comfort and welfare of his patrons at the Scenic there is rea- son to believe that he will do likewise at the opera house. The Garman opera house was built about thirty-five years ago and has been conducted by members of the family ever since, E. F. Garman hav- ing had charge of the same for a num- ber of years past. He has always en- deavored to give Bellefonte a good line of entertainments during the the- atrical season, and if some of the of- ferings did not ‘come up to expecta- tions, it was not his fault. So far as the new manager, Mr. Brown, is con- cerned, he will be able to devote his entire time to the business of looking after the Scenic and the opera house, hence should be able to cater to the tastes of the people of Bellefonte and community. Fred Showers has bought the three story brick house, on north Spring street, now occupied by Mrs. James Toner. The property was owned by Mr. Claude Cook. Mr. Showers’ mother will take possession on April 1st. ——See “The Miracle Man.” —The high cost of everything these days is being submitted to by the general public with such a toler- ant patience that it is really difficult to draw a line between legitimate profit and profiteering. Far be it from the “Watchman” to charge any merchant in Bellefonte with profit- eering for the simple reason that the fluctuations in prices of staples are so varied from day to day that it is ‘ impossible for any ordinary purchaser to keep track of them. But a story is current on the street of a little in- | cident that happened in a Bellefonte store a few days ago which we are prone to tell, more in the nature of be a good thing for merchants every- where to consider. As the story goes a well dressed stranger strolled into a certain store in town and was just I 8-1t Centre County Boys and Girls to Get Vocational Training. The boys and girls of Centre coun- ty are to be given the advantage of . vocational training without the ex- pense of going to college or a regular vocational school. This county has | been selected as one of seven in the ' State in which this new form of edu- - cation will be introduced and given a thorough try-out. The state board of vocational training in conjunction | with the federal board will place a ‘man in each of seven already seleci- ed counties to act as county vocation- al supervisors. ried on mainly through the rural high schools, a certain number throughout the county being selected to receive the special instruction in vocational work. The new service will be insti- tuted at once in Centre county and | the rural high schools to be offered The work will be car- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. i | | —Mrs. Geissinger is visiting with her | sister, Mrs. Kerstetter, in Harrisburg. | Miss Marian Roseberry, of Clearfield. { was a guest of Miss Lois Kirk from Fri- ‘ day until Sunday. | Mrs. J. Will Conley is visiting in | Washington, Pa., a guest of her daughter, i Mrs. W. B. Wallis. | —Mrs. Luther Hughes went to Philadel- | phia a week dgo, called there by the death i of her mother, Mrs. Herron. | —Miss Mary McGarvey spent Wednesday | and Thursday of last week attending a church meeting in Harrisburg. ' Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Derstine had as week-end guests their son Jesse Derstine, of Juniata, and his daughter Betty. —Mrs. Edmund Blanchard has been in | Bellefonte during the past week and will leave from here to. join Mr. Blanchard at Fort Worth, Texas." : | —Frank A. Carson, of Potters Mills, was , in Bellefonte on Tuesday looking after the casually looking around when a child | this special advantage selected at an | future welfare of the little family of the entered and asked for a pound of su- gar. The sugar was weighed out and | early date. | John B. Payne, a former resident of late Harry Wilkinson. . —Mrs. Frank Compani, who had been the little one charged 24 cents for it. ' Bellefonte, a graduate of State Col- , visiting in Philadelphia with her broth- Promptly the man became alert and told the clerk to give the child the right change. When the clerk stated that he had done so the man asked for the proprietor, and to make a long story short he proved to be a govern- ment detective on the hunt for prof- iteers. It is also rumored that sugar took a sudden drop of a few cents a pound in the store in question.: *eo Milk Station Now Assured. Several weeks ago the “Watchman” told of the strong probabilities of a milk pasteurizing and shipping sta- tion being built in Bellefonte and the movement has now progressed to that stage where the new enterprise seems | actually assured. Mr. J. A. Collins, representing the Western Maryland dairy; J. H. Port, assistant milk agent of the Pennsylvania railroad compa- ny, and Mr. McCullough, of the P. R. R. Tyrone force, were in Bellefonte on Wednesday and stated that the plant will be built in the near future. Op- tion was taken on the Thomas proper- ty lying just south of the old Thomas homestead on Thomas street, and it is just possible that the deal for the property will be closed before this is- sue of the “Watchman” reaches its readers. The Western Maryland dairy peo- ple are not asking the people of Belle- fonte to contribute a cent toward the location of the plant. All they want is the good will of the people of the town and the community. Mr. Col- lins stated on Wednesday that the plant will be one of the most modern it is possible to erect and that his company will accord fair treatment to everybody. - ——See “The Miracle Man.” - The “Sunny South.” The amusement loving public, will be glad to hear that the J. C. %ock- well “Sunny South” company, show that leaves you laughing when they say “good night,” will be the at- 8-1t traction at the Garman opera house’ ‘Wednesday evening, February 25th. This is a colored show out of the or- dinary, inasmuch as it is clean to a fault and during the entire perform- ance there is not a line, an action nor an insinuation to which exception can be taken. It contains more real hu- mor, wit, novelties, surprises’ ‘and original ideas than any similar attrac- tion. The management wish to give the public a run for their money and have gotten together one of the strongest and most capable colored organizations of the day. There is snap and ginger from beginning to ead. The music is all new, bright and catchy and of that popular variety that can be whistled after one hear- ing. The performance, from the rise to the fall of the curtain, is intensely humorous and utterly devoid of wul- garity or indelicacy of any sort. Itis bright, snappy, wholly enjoyable and free from objectional word or act. The organization is accompanied by an excellent solo concert band and a superb orchestra. The “Koontown” parade, being a decided novelty, takes place at 4 p. m. : Three Octogenarians. Ordinarily when a man has passed the four score mark in years he is re- garded as being physically fit for swaddling clothes and the cosy com- fort of a big arm chair in front of a crackling fire, but itis not thusly that some of the Bellefonte octogenarians spent the anniversary of their natal day. Take for instance, one of the town’s best known citizens, Thaddeus R. Hamilton. He was eighty-four years old on Tuesday and far from toasting his shins before a crackling fire spent the day about as usual, braving the blustery cold weather and going around the town about as spry as the average fifty-year-old. Mr. Hamilton is the youngest-looking old man living in Bellefonte. He is not only spry of foot, healthy and rugged in appearance but has a head of black hair that is only lightly sprinkled with gray and which is really the en- vy of many of the young baldheads of Bellefonte. Mr. Hamilton’s brother William, living on north Allegheny | street, is just about two years young- er, or in the neighborhood of eighty- two. While writing about octogenarians it might also be mentioned that Amos | Garbrick, of Coleville, celebrated his ! eighty-third anniversary last Satur- day, but he is not nearly so spry- looking as either of the Hamiltons. In fact Mr. Garbrick is showing the weight of his years very pronounced- ly, although he was able to come into Bellefonte on a business trip one day last week. ——See “The Miracle Man.” lege and who since his discharge from service less than a year ago has been connected with the State Board of Ed- ucation, has been assigned to Centre county as the supervisor. He will , work with county superintendent D. 0. Etters and together they will se- ‘er, Albert Ammerman, returned to Belle- fonte early in the week. { —Martin Cooney is convalescing from "an operation performed in the Clearfield hospital three weeks ago. Mr. Cooney re- , turned to Bellefonte Sunday. | street, are entertaining Mr. Ott's —Mr. and Mrs. William Ott, of Bishop | sister, | lect the districts and schools in the yg Ripka, of Williamsport, who will be the! county to receive the benefit of this : valuable instruction. During the past | six months Mr. Payne has been locat- ‘ed at Fredonia, Mercer county, and . before coming to Bellefonte on Tues- day spent a few days in Harris- | burg, where he and Supt. Etters at- | tended a conference with the State | board relative to the work in Centre | county. | Mr. Payne will have his headquar- ; ters in the county superintendent’s of- {fice in the court house and work out i from Bellefonte. For the present he and his wife, who prior to her mar- | riage was Miss Hester McGinley, will | stay with his mother on High street. Twenty-three Licenses Granted. In ye olden time license court in ward to with a great deal of anxiety, not only on the part of the applicants but by a large percentage of the peo- ple generally—some for one reason and some for another. And after court had been held there was even greater interest felt until the presid- ing judge had handed down his deci- sion on the various applications. But it is different now. License court in Centre county was held the second Saturday in December and the only proceeding was the hand- ing of twenty-four applications to the court by the prothonotary. The court took them in hand and so far as the general public was concerned that ended the proceeding, as no further interest has apparently been mani- cants. In fact it is not yet generally that twenty-three of the licenses were granted ten days or more ago and one application, that for Spring Mills, re- fused. All licenses, however, were granted subject to the federal law. And now that the applicants can get their license the question arises will they lift them, and what will they do with them when they get them? | After war-time prohibition went into effect on July 1, 1919, practically all the licensees in Centre county renew- ed their licenses by the month for several months but as time passed they dropped off one by one until now there is. not over a half dozen who have had the courage to keep theirs good. - And the present status of the courts in Pennsylvania is so chaotic and con- tradictory on the necessity of a li- cense that an ordinary man has a hard time trying to find out where he is at. Some judges aver that a license is necessary to sell near beer and soft drinks while others insist that it isn’t and have refused all licenses on those grounds. Hence it is a safe conclu- sion that if the Supreme court finally affirms the constitutionality of the Volstead act very few landlords in Centre county will pay out good mon- ey to lift what might prove to be only a worthless serap of paper to them. Among the Sick. William W. Keichline was able to be out yesterday after ten days of very serious illness with influenza. Mrs. Keichline was taken sick at the same time ‘he went down and later develop- ed pneumonia. Reports yesterday were to the effect that she has passed the crisis and is convalescing slowly. Alfred and Florence Jane Cohen, two of the children of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cohen, of Spring street, are quite ill with influenza. In fact the little girl was so sick Wednesday night that it was feared she wouldn’t survive. BIRTHS. Alice Jane is the name of the daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gettig, at the Bellefonte hospital, Thursday of last week. Mrs. Gettig, bafore her marriage, was Miss Roxy Crosthwaite, of Altoona. : Mabus—On February 17th, to Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Mabus, of Bellefonte, | a son, it being Mr. and Mrs. Mabus’ fifth son. : hart and Miss Relda Shawley, a | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred | Shawley, both of Curtin township, were married at Orviston last Satur- | day evening by Rev. Walter T. Mer- rick. Both young people are especial- ly well known in and about Orviston and have many friends there who { wish for them only a rose-strewn 8-1t | pathway in their matrimonial career. Centre county was always looked for- | fested by anybody, even the .appli- | known, but it is a fact nevertheless, | | in Bellefonte for a month or more. | —Mrs. Kennedy, of Tyrone, spent the Katherine Moore, at the home of Miss | Moore's grandfather, Isaac Miller at the ! toll gate. —Mrs. Charles Garis, of State College, i was in Bellefonte between trains on Thurs- ! day of last week, being on her way to Williamsport to spend some time with her son and his family. | —Mrs. Odillie Mott is in New York with , her daughter, Mrs. A. (0. McMillan, called ; there Wednesday by the serious illness of ! | Mrs. McMillan, who is suffering from an | acute attack of appendicitis. —Miss Mabel Allison, of Spring Mills, departed last Friday on a trip east, ex- pecting to spend ten days or two weeks with her brother, William Allison, in New York city, and with friends in Philadel- | phia. —Dr. Melvin J. Locke is contemplating spending several weeks at Rochester, Minn., having planned to take a much needed rest while attending the clinics at the sanitorium of the famous Mayo sur- geons. —Mrs. Julia Connelly is entertaining her daughter, Mrs. George McKee, of Pitts- burgh. Mrs. McKee came to Bellefonte with her sister,’ Miss Mary Connelly, who had been visiting in East Liberty for two weeks. : ! —Mrs. O. D. Eberts, of Martha Furnace, and her sister, Mrs. G. O. Benner, of Cen- tre Hall, spent Saturday visiting togeth- i er in Bellefonte, while looking after some business and doing several week’s accu- mulated shopping. : —Elliott Lyon Morris is home from Philadelphia, where he completed a course at the Pierce Business college. Having accepted a position in the paper mills of | Johnsonburg, he will leave to begin his work on the first of March, —Miss Olive Marks, of Derry, Pa., ar- rived in Dellefonte Saturday evening, com- ing here to see how her brother, John Marks and family, who have all been ill with the grip, were getting along. When she found them all improving she left for her home on Sunday. : —Wallace H. Gephart, of Bronxville, N. Y., and his daughter Ellen, arrived in Bellefonte Saturday. Mr. Gephart came for a short visit with’ his mother, Mrs. J. W. Gephart, while the child will remain for an indefinite time with her grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Thomas. —Mrs. Oscar Gray spent a part of last week in Philipsburg, going over to see her uncle, Carl Smith, who was thought at that time to be seriously ill. Mr. Smith's condition at present is very much improv- ed. Miss Shaughnessy was in charge of Mrs: Gray’s home during her absence. —Miss Elizabeth Cooney left Wednesday to go directly to New York city, where she will spend ten days or mire in the whole- sale houses and exclusive retail shops, se- lecting her millinery goods for the early spring trade. During Miss Cooney’s ab- sence her shop will be in charge of her most competent trimmers. —-Augustus Gillen, of Williamsport, was a Bellefonte visitor over Sunday, coming here to see his mother, who has not been in the best of health of late. He also spent a few hours with his brother, E. I. Gillen, at Milesburg. Gus is in the hotel business in the Lumber city and expects to continue catering to the public during the coming year. —Samuel Rhinesmith, one of the old Troop L boys who saw service in France and who is now holding down a good job at the Nickel-Alloy plant at Hyde City, was a Saturday and Sunday visitor at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Rhinesmith. A younger son, Malcolm, who is working in Tyrone, has also been a vis- itor at the parental home during the week. —D. W. Orr, of Jacksonville, braved the weather conditions Wednesday and came to Bellefonte, partly because he had some business to look after, and partly because he could not otherwise find out what the outside world was doing, no mail having reached them this week. He says work- men are busy cleaning out the roads, but it will be some time before the rural mail is again regularly distributed. —A “Watchman” office visitor on Wed- nesday morning was Mr. C. D. Young, of Kerrmoor, Clearfield county, but who hus been down at Lyontown the past six weeks or two months assisting in the care of his sister, Mrs. Shuman Lyon, who is in very feeble health. Inasmuch as Mrs. Ly- on is about eighty years of age, there is little hope of her recovery and Mr. Young is doing all he can to make the evening of her life as comfortable as possible. —Mrs. Henry Armagast and her son John drove to Bellefonte yesterday from Hunter's Park, compelled to make the trip to do some necessary buying. As only a part of the road up the valley has been opened, they drove for most of the way through the fields, then seeking a more comfortable return left to go by the moun- tain road. There are some of us who feel sometimes that our small allotment of sugar is very small, but should we have the experience of Mrs. Armagast and then be able to get only two pounds, we per- haps might think ours came easy. | week-end in Bellefonte, as a guest of Miss | —Mrs. Samuel Hazel and her daughter Grace, who returned to Bellefonte last fall, after spending two years in Pittsburgh, i have taken apartments in the Brockerhoff building on Bishop street. —Miss Alice Wilson, who has been at the Bush house since closing her apart- ments in the Harris home on Allegheny street, will leave this week for an indefi- nite stay with relatives in Milton. Pe Irvin G. Gray Will be Retried Next Week. Armed with a bench warrant issued by prothonotary Roy Wilkinson on ' Tuesday sheriff Harry Dukeman went to Pittsburgh on Wednesday and yes- .terday brought to Bellefonte from the western penitentiary Irvin G. Gray who next week will be retried in the two cases in which retrials were or- dered by the Supreme court. The. i Gray cases have figured so much in | the courts of Centre county and the | State during the past eighteen months : that the public is conversant with’ all | the facts. And as considerable time ' has now elapsed much of #he sensa- tionalism that attached to the cases ! when they were first brought before the public has worn away and the tri- , als next week will be devoid of the in- | terest manifest when Mr. Gray and his two sons were first tried. The Gray cases, by the way, will be the only quarter sessions cases to be tried next week. Only about eight ‘minor cases had been listed for the February term of court and they have men summoned for next week have been notified not to appear. This will be the first regular session of court ever held in Centre county at which there was nothing requiring the serv- ices of a grand jury. The traverse jurors, however, will be needed for the trial of the Gray cases and any civil cases ready for trial. — meets A ranma me mtmm—— Two Slight Aviation Accidents. On Sunday pilot Stevens, com- ing from Heller's field, Newark, to Bellefonte, was compelled to come down at Hartleton owing to low oil pressure and in landing broke one of the runners on his plank. After re- plenishing his oil supply the pilot managed to take off and get on. his way but in doing so he tore the broken runner loose all but one end and with it dangling from the machine and swaying back and forth in the air he flew to Bellefonte, but the broken run- ner interfered with his making a good landing and the result was he tipped up and broke one of his propellers. ed the Bellefonte field pilot Krader came in from Cleveland and in mak- ing a landing got to one side of the runway; plunged into a snow drift Neither of the pilots were injured and the damage to the machines was not great, but it was necessary to get a runner here from Newark to réplace. the one broken on pilot Stevens’ plane. Central District P. O. S. of A. Organ- ized at Altoona. The Central Pennsylvania district P. 0. S. of A. was organized at Altoona on Wednesday night by representa- tives from Camps in the following eleven counties which will be included in the district: Blair, Cambria, Cen- tre, Clearfield, Somerset, Bedford, Huntingdon, Mifflin, Union, Snyder and Clinton. The officers elected are as follows: First past president, E. S. Ripka, of Centre Hall; president, C. L. Nonemaker, past State presi- dent of the P. O. S. of A.; vice presi- dent, W. L. Holter, Morrisdale; secre- tary, Clarence Silknitter, Huntingdon; treasurer, M. R. Johnson, Bellefonte; assistant secretary, Charles Shore, Mapleton. The first convention of the association will be held in Altoona on July 22nd. Try This to Prevent Flu. One of our readers has handed us a very simple concoction which she says has worked like magic in the commu- nity in which it is being used for preventing influenza and grip. It is not a remedy or a cure. It merely acts as a preventive of the malady. And it is so simple to make and easy to take that it certainly is worthy of trial. Take half a pint of vinegar and half a pint of water, mix together and into it stir one teaspoonful of cayenne pepper. Put it in a bottle and take a teaspoonful two or three times a day. Martha Washington Party. To all patriotic members and those who took part in the “Feast of the Red Corn:” There will be a Martha Washing- ton dress party at the Logan hose house; Friday, February 20th, at 8 o'clock. Everybody attend and take a friend and a box containing enough eats for two. Dancing. No admis- sion. For further particulars see Sal- lie Fitzgerald. ——See “The Miracle Man.” 8-1t Sale Register. Friday, March 5, Robert Rudy will sell at his residence ,west of McAlevy's Fort, two ponies, one bay mare, one bull, farm implements and household furni- ture. Sale at 12 o'clock noon. 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. IL. F. Mayes, auctioneer. eel Grain Markets. Corrected by Geo. M. Gamble. Red Wheat, No 1 & 2......000000 $2.35—2.40 White or Mixed No. 1 & 2....... 225-230 >. 5 1.05 1.40 1.25 practically all been disposed of, and because of this fact the grand jury- Within two hours after Stevens reach- and also nosed-up his machine, break- 3 ing the radiator and a propeller. unl “dpe |