Cr RR * Bowral Mid Bellefonte, Pa., April 23, 1920. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. colored Eighteen AVIATOR BADLY INJURED IN : FALL OF PLANE. ! Miraculously Saved from Burning to i Death by Heroic Work of i Boyd Sampsel. Sa TS RS SRT EID Aviator Krader Falls at Gordon. | Bellefonte to Cleveland mail pilot 'H. M. Krader cracked up at Gordon, five miles from Snow Shoe, yesterday | shortly before noon and was quite i painfully though not seriously hurt. RE EE SBR A BEL Ee ——— Cams LEAGUE OF WOMEN CITIZENS. | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. { —0. J. Stover, of Blanchard, was a bus- Centre County Women Preparing 0 j,i visitor in Bellefonte on Monday. Exercise Right of Franchise | —Mrs. Payne left Saturday for her for- ' mer home in Norfolk, for a visit with her Intellig ently. { daughter, Mrs. Paul D. Seanor, who re- That U. 8. mail pilot J. T. Murphy | ycjock for his regular flight to Cleve- He left the Bellefonte field at eleven The Centre county Suffrage party | was disbanded and its records and | | sides there. —Judge Henry C. Quigley is out in the Whiterock quarries at Pleasant | tained when his plane fell in a tail Gap last week. — The thimble bee of the Ladies Aid society of the Reformed church was held at the home of Mrs. Harry Clevenstine Thursday afternoon. Mary Pickford in “Heart O’ the Hills,” from the famous novel by John | Fox Jr., at the Scenic theatre, Friday and Saturday, matinee and night. 17-1t — Clarence Ziegler, who has not been well for several weeks, was com- pelled to take his bed last Friday and has since developed a severe attack of typhoid fever. By special request Mrs. Kra- der will sing, “Open the Gates of the Temple,” at the Methodist church, on Sunday evening at 7:30. Lovers of music will appreciate this opportuni- ty. — The ladies of the Lutheran church will hold a birthday social in the basement of the church Friday evening, April 23rd. The admission will be one cent for each year you are old. The Brotherhood of the Lutheran church of Bellefonte will serve a chicken and waffle supper on Thursday evening, April 29th, in the basement of the church, to which everybody is invited. Supper 75 cents. Cake and ice cream extra. — Sixteen six week’s old Chester White pigs attracted considerable at- tention in Bellefonte on Tuesday morning. The pigs were a prominent part of some farmer’s possessions who was moving through Bellefonte. They had been purchased of Thomas Tress- ler who, by the way, has twenty-three more just like them. — Announcements of the mar- riage of Miss Jane Frances Crowley, of Lock Haven, and John Joseph Car- son, of Philadelphia, were received in Bellefonte yesterday; the wedding having taken place in Lock Haven Wednesday, April twenty-first. Mr. and Mrs. Carson will be at home at 5514 Chew street, Germantown, after June first. — People who patronize motion pictures do so for the entertainment and education to be derived therefrom and naturally they are prejudiced in favor of the place that shows the best pictures. This is the principal reason for the good attendance at the Scenic every evening during the week. The pictures there are always good and patrons know that they will find something worth seeing. — According to Secretary of Ag- riculture Frederick Rasmussen Cen- tre county farmers last year paid out for male help the sum of $652,000. The average amount spent by farmers employing help was $260 for the year and twenty-two farmers were without help and unable to get any. While the total sum spent appears to be quite large when the average is con- sidered it is not so big, at that. ——The parishioners of the Altoo- na diocese of the Catholic church con- tributed $32,526.37 during the year 1919 to the support of St. John’s and St. Mary’s orphanages at Cresson. St. John’s church of Bellefonte gave $275.00; St. Peter and Paul’s church of Philipsburg, $420.00; St. Mary’s church of Snow Shoe, $365.50, and Our Lady of Victory chapel, State College, $50.00, a total from Centre county of $1110.50. — “The Love Kiss” will be the at- traction at the Garman opera house on Thursday evening, April 29th. If the show is anything like its name it ought to be rippin’ good. And per- haps it is, as it is described as the gayest musical hit of the decade with the smartest and greatest dancing chorus on the road. “The Love Kiss” is a musical comedy and produces a laugh a minute between the rise and fall of the curtain. Don’t miss it. ——FEarl Lauver, of Denver, Col, the man charged with having robbed a mail car of $200,000, and after his arrest claimed Centre county as the home of his nativity, has been dis- charged from custody by the Colorada. authorities, as it has been developed that he was not the train robber he was accused of being. The money was stolen by mail agents and a trap set to implicate Lauver. The latter’s re- lease came after the guilty parties were apprehended. J, A.. Collins, of New York city, has exercised his option on the John Yearick farm home south of Bellefonte, better known as the Furey home. Mr. Collins, who represents the Western Maryland dairy, has made several trips to Bellefonte re- cently in the interest of a new milk supply station here and on his last trip took an option on the Yearick farm as a summer home. The fact that he has exercised the option looks as if the Bellefonte milk station is an assured enterprise. ——Next Wednesday evening, April 28th, the Women’s Missionary society of West Susquehanna Classis will meet in St. John’s Reformed church, Bellefonte. Sessions will continue all day and evening on Thursday. Miss Carrie Kerschner, who has been work- ing among the Japanese on the Pacif- ic coast, will speak Wednesday even- ing. Mrs. E. M. Beck, a returned missionary from China, will tell of the condition and needs of that nation, at the Thursday evening meeting. All sessions are open to the public and visitors are cordially invited. | spin out on Humes’ farm on Sunday | morning is entirely due to the bravery and prompt action of Boyd Sampsel. Had it not been for him the pilot | would have been burned to death, and | the very fact that Mr. Sampsel took his own life in his hands when he | saved pilot Murphy not only places him in the ranks of heroes but surely entitles him to recognition at the hands of the Carnegie Hero Commis- sion. Pilot Murphy is a new man in Bellefonte, having come here from Cleveland last Thursday to trail one of the older pilots to Cleveland in or- der to learn the route. The bad weather of Friday and Saturday pre- cluded any attempt to make the trip on those days. With the fair weather trail pilot Ellis to Cleveland, flying light. Immediately after the arrival western fliers made preparations for their trip. Pilot Ellis took off first from the Bellefonte field and circled around awaiting pilot Murphy. The latter took off and after one low cir- cle his machine went into a tail spin at a height of from three to four hun- dred feet and fell to the ground on the Humes farm southeast of the radio station. When the employees at the aviation field saw the plane go into a tailspin they started on the run for Humes’ field but they had covered but a short distance of the space when the plane fell and almost instantly it was envel- oped in flames. A few seconds later the big gas tank exploded shooting the flames in all directions, but fortu- nately the pilot had been saved from the wreck, and that is where Boyd Sampsel got in his work. It seems that Mr. Sampsel had got- ten out his car to come to Bellefonte but for some inexplicable reason de- watch the planes. He put the car in the barn, went over toward the avia- tion field and sat down on a stone fence, taking out his knife and whit- tling a stick. He had not been on that felt like going there Sunday morning. He saw the New York plane come in, phy. Watched the latter particularly and when he went into a tail spin and crashed to the ground he fell just fif- ty-five feet from where Sampsel had been sitting. We say “had been,’ be- cause as soon as he saw the plane was doomed he jumped and ran for the spot but before he could reach it it was already enveloped in flames. He never hesitated but ran and jumped tdpon the plane grabbing hold of the pilot’s seat. He took hold of Murphy by the coat collar and one arm and tried to jerk him out but found he was strapped in. He still had his open knife in his left hand and reaching down in the pit he felt the straps and with one slash of his knife severed both straps but in doing so burned his hand so badly that the knife dropped from his fingers. He of Sunday Murphy was scheduled to | of the mail plane from New York the | cided not to do so but go over and | part of the farm in a year but just] watched Ellis take off and also Mur- | gemmen ig alive today with good chances of | rily bef ching Gordon from the south reported for work at yecovering from serious injuries sus- ljand. Shortly hofore reaching his plane developed trouble either be- cause of a loose connecting rod or for the reason that the engine was loose on the frame and being in the moun- tain district he decided to make the first landing possible in order to in- vestigate the cause of his trouble. A little clearing near Gordon attracted him and he dropped for it, but as it was surrounded with trees he couldn’t see that it was also filled with stumps and they caused the accident in land- ing mile distant so that it was some time before any one got to the scene and when they did arrive they found Kra- der unconscious beside a tree some distance from his wrecked plane. When he came too he said that he had | struck and was getting away from the | danger of a possible fire when he was overcome. His injuries are principally bruises and cuts about the face, wrist and shins. Tom Redding, of Snow Shoe, heard of the accident and motored to Gor- to the Mountain House, where he was given attention and sent to this place in the afternoon by motor. Mr. and Mrs. John N. Lane, having decided to occupy the entire | house in which they are now living, { Mrs. Rachael Harris will vacate the part she has been occupying by the | first of May. Mrs. Harris at present {is undecided as to what she will do, ‘owing to her inability to procure a | house. | Stewart Hampton can really be | placed in a class of his own in Belle- fonte. Another little son was born in : the family on April 9th which weigh- ed ten pounds and has been named Jack Pershing Hampton. But what : gives class to Mr. Hampton is the fact ! that this is the seventeenth child in the family, and all living. nM A ————— What a delightful change in the weather yesterday. For the first time this spring it cleared up nice and warm and at last there is hope (as i Dr. Munyon used to say) of the weather settling into a condition where the farmers can get to work | with some feeling of assurance that they will get their spring crops in. | ——The annual rummage sale will be held in the Harter building to the left of the court house on High street, in the rooms formerly occupied by: the i dispensary. The sale will open gn | Saturday, May 1st, at 2 o’clock p. m. i The public is asked for contributions of clothing, furniture, bric-a-brae, ete. | Proceeds will be for the Bellefonte | hospital. ene——— eee. i A recruiting party from the ar- my station at Williamsport will be in | Bellefonte the balance of the week | with headquarters at the postoffice. { They will issue victory buttons and | French souvenir pamphlets to any A. ‘ achievements turned into history at 2 | Pittsburgh this week holding court, and The nearest habitation was half a gotten out of the pit as soon as he don for Krader whom he brought back , i : » ! may be detained there through the most meeting of women held at the High | y Week 2 gh the school building last Saturday—morn- | —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kase, of Sun- Ing and afternoon—but phoenix-like | bury, were in Bellefonte for a week-end there arose from the ashes of the dis- | visit with Mrs. Kase’s parents, Mr. and banded organization the League of | Mrs. Spigelmyer. Women Citizens, and if the women _ figs Mary H. Linn returned to Belle- are able to carry out all their good in- | fonte early in the week, after spending a tentions—and they generally manage | month with relatives at Swarthmore, Haxr- to get by with most of them—the old- ; risburg and Lewisburg. time politicians will have to revise — Josiah T. Zeigler, who went to Juniata their schedule when the women are several weeks ago has returned to his finally granted the right of franchise. | home in Bellefonte, evidently concluding | At the opening of the morning ses- that this place is good enough for him. sion Mrs. Robert Mills Beach, chair- | —Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Boozer, of Centre | man of the Suffrage party, told of the | Hall, spent. Friday in Bellefonte, Mr. organization of that association in | oozer looking after some business mat- 1915, and the work it had since done, an Me iid visiang na Biot : : : —George D. Fortney, one o e enter- a he Paton » pt | prising young farmers of Harris township, Ya | was a business visitor in Bellefonte on Sat- horted the women to stick together ! urday and a caller at the “Watchman” of- when they finally get the ballot, as fice. only in that way can they become a | —Mrs. Jacob Bottorf, of Lemont, is a power in politics and be instrumental ' guest of her daughter, Mrs. John I. Ole- in accomplishing any good. | wine, it being Mrs. Bottorf’s first visit to Following the chairman’s brief re- ! Bellefonte since her illness several months port a motion was passed disbanding ago. the Suffrage party and another mo-| —Dr. H. M. Hiller, of Swarthmore, was tion to organize a Centre county | among those from over the State who were branch of the League of Women Cit- | in Centre county during the past week; at- izens was carried unanimously. The “°° ‘organization was perfected by the i) Lory Donel Seinte. of Washis : : 2 —Miss Mary Belle uble, o ashing- A al ton, D.C. is with her brother at State + . College, having come to Centre county to Bellefonte; vice chairman, Mrs. John | spend a part of the month of April, while M. Shugert, Bellefonte; secretary, | resting after a winter of very strenuous Mrs. Joseph Massey, Bellefonte; | work. treasurer, Miss Mary Gray Meek, | — Mrs. John G. Love and her daughter, Bellefonte; directors, Mrs. S. W.! Miss Katherine, are in Bellefonte, return- Gramley, , Millheim; Mrs. Frank | ing the early part of last week to open Gardner, State College; Miss Blanche their home for the summer. Mrs. Love and Budinger, Snow Shoe; Mrs. H E.; Miss Love had spent the winter in Atlan- Holzworth, Fleming; Mrs. James ‘ic City: Leathers, Howard; Mrs. Ww. Ww. Kerlin, | — Leo Levi was called to New York on Centre Hall, and Mrs. Ella Wagner, Tuesday by the critical illness of his fatn- tracted here by the opening of the fishing | Milesburg. The object of the League was set forth as working to secure an increase of the mothers’ assistance fund, in- crease in the salaries of school teach- ers and the passing of a mandatory law requiring the election of women ‘directors on every school board in { Pennsylvania. At the present time | there are twelve hundred school di- ! rectors in the State, only eighty-two ! of whom are women. Other questions to be considered are citizenship, child welfare, food supply, social hygiene, women in industry, election laws, ete., unification of law, and research. Speaking in behalf of the mothers’ assistance fund Miss Mary Bogue, state supervisor, said that the child _ can be the greatest asset or the great- est liability. Nine years ago Missouri was the first State to adopt mothers’ assistance and since that time thirty- nine States have fallen in line. In Pennsylvania 1835 families are being cared for. Owing to an appropriation of only $600,000 five hundred women had to be dropped and there are now four thousand families on the waiting list, half of whom are influenza wid- ' ows, largely young mothers with chil- “dren. Mrs. G. G. Pond, of State College, a member of the board of directors for the distribution of the fund in Centre county, stated that Pennsylvania stands high in the rating of allow- ances, the maximum being twenty dol- i eh Moses Levi, who is a patient in one of { the New York hospitals. Mr. Levi's con- | dition is such that no hope is felt for his ‘recovery. —D. E. Snyder, one of the push-ahead i farmers of Harris township, was in Belle- fonte on Monday and his big complaint now is the kind of weather we have had pal through April, the result being that ! farmers are away behind with their work. —Dr. and Mrs. Coolidge, of Palo Alto, California, are expected in Bellefonte ear- ly next month, coming east to spend the summer with relatives and friends | Pennsylvania. Mrs. Coolidge is a sister of Mrs. Schaeffer, Mrs. Ray, John and A. L.! McGinley. | Mr. and Mrs. George E. Lentz, of Har- risburg, and their daughter, Miss Mildred, were in Bellefonte Sunday and Monday, as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Shaffer. Mr. and Mrs. Lentz came here from Jersey | Shore, where they had been for a short visit with Mr. Lentz’s mother. —Samuel Robinson, for many years one of the most reliable workmen of Belle- fonte, has accepted a position in the Ga- = department store of Altoona, and will leave Sunday to begin work at once. His family will remain in Bellefonte for the present, expecting to join him later. i _Mrs. Maurice Runkle and her daugh- | ter, Dorothy, were guests for several days : the after part of the week of Mrs. Runkle’s | cousin, Mrs. Edward Miller, in Altoona. | Mrs. Runkle went over Friday, Mr. Runkle | joining her there Sunday, returning to- | gether to Bellefonte Sunday evening. — Mrs. Jacob Levi and her three-year-old | daughier, Beatrice, left a week ago to re- turn to their home in New York city, after in | then grabbed Murphy by the arm and | E. F. men desiring same. Their pri- coat collar, pulled him out of the pit | mary object is the enlistment of re- and threw him backward out of the | cruits for the Twenty-ninth infantry flames at the same time jumping from ; of the regular army, a purely Penn- 3 a five week’s visit here with Mrs. Levi's lars per month for each child. In! parents, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Cherry. Centre county assistance is being giV- | Mrs. Levi's visit was made in Bellefonte ‘ en to eleven mothers and thirty-six { while convalescing from a severe attack of children at a monthly expenditure of | influenza and pneumonia. the burning plane. He then took Murphy by the shoulders to pull him away from the plane but had gone less than two rods when the gas tank exploded throwing gasoline over both men. The clothing of both Sampsel and Murphy was on fire and Sampsel took a few seconds to extinguish his own clothing then gave his attention to Murphy who had called to him “for God’s sake don’t let me burn.” his coat but unable to get his clothing loosened turned him on his back and putting his foot on his chest tore the clothing away from him. By this time Mr. Sampsel’s brother Charles had arrived but both men were out of all further danger. Murphy was able to get up and walk a short distance but soon collapsed. When the men from the aviation field arrived they picked him up and carried him to the radio station and from there sent him to the Bellefonte hospital. At the hospital it was found that his worst injury was the fracture of several ribs over the heart and possible internal punctures. He also had a bad cut across his forehead and was burned on the face and hands and hips. considered rather critical at first there is reason to believe at this writ- ing that he will recover. Sampsel got a bad burn on the left side of the face, on his left hand and on his back from his burning sweat- er, but he has been around every day since and will be none the worse for his experience. Just what caused the plane to goin a tailspin is not definitely known. To the men on the field it looked as if Murphy had not gotten up sufficient speed to carry him along, while he avers that his machine took fire in the air which caused him to lose control of it. The machine, of course, which was No. 91, was totally destroyed. It might also be added that this is the first serious accident.to happen near the Bellefonte field. Murphy, who is twenty-nine years old, is from Cata- raugus, N. Y., but had been working in Cleveland for some weeks past. [ ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” With his hat he managed to extin- guish the flames on the fur collar of i While his condition was | !sylvania oragnization stationed at ; Camp Benning, Ga. Enlistments are also open to High school graduates in the balloon and airship divisions. i ——On Sunday afternoon Fred M. Mayer, the new lessee of the Brocker- {hoff mill at Roopsburg, was driving | out Willowbank street and just after passing the United Evangelical church he reached back in the tonneau of the car for something with the result that he lost control of the steering wheel and the car ran off of the paved high- way into the deep gutter at the side just at the intersection of Reynolds avenue. The left front wheel hit a tree standing there and the car was pretty badly banged up. Fortunately none of the passengers in the car were injured, aside from a good shaking up. ——Bellefonte fans will have an opportunity to witness a good game of baseball on Hughes field this (Fri- day) afternoon, at 3:30 o’clock, when the Susquehanna University nine will cross bats with the Bellefonte Acade- my team in the opening game of the season. The Academy has an unusu- ally strong team this year and will give the college lads a good contest. The Academy defeated Susquehanna | by the score of 2 to 1 on the occasion of their last meeting. The price of ad- mission will be only 25 cents and the time of the game should appeal to all business men. A large crowd ought to swoop down on Hughes field and help to boost the home team. cles! streets of Bellefonte yesterday morn- the Bellefonte hotels, either. It has been such a long, long time since such ed considerable excitement. Every- body stopped to look, doubtless be- cause it was a reminder of the times that used to be and which we had all supposed had been wiped out forever. But evidently there is still something around that will give a man a jag if he drinks enough of it, and the man pull- ed in yesterday morning evidently had his share as he had a beaut on. —Shades of the prohibition ora- | A man was arrested on the’ ing and put in the lockup for being drunk. And he didn’t get it at any of an arrest has been made that it creat- | $210, on an appropriation of $2750. At the afternoon session Miss An- na Hoy spoke on the necessity of an “increase in teachers salaries and Mrs. | Beach in speaking on the objects of the League of Women Citizens stated . that primarily it was to educate the , women to vote intelligently, and to this end she urged study classes. Mrs. Lucretia V. P. Simmons, of State College, in a very interesting | talk to the women, stated that the | League should not be considered in connection with any political party. . Its work should be for the welfare of the community in general. Twenty | million women are sure to be given the right of franchise ere long and they should stand for principles above party politics or their influence will not change present conditions. De- mand to know a candidates principles ‘before giving him support. Mrs. Simmons strongly advocated women on school boards. She stated that . $4,200,000 had been appropriated to | animal husbandry in 1919 and only | $280,000 for child welfare. She also advocated a national budget and a more systematized expenditure of public moneys generally. Mrs. Edward E. Kiernan, of Somer- | set, stated that the object of the | League was to remove the ignorant | voter through a systematic course of education. She expressed her idea of the League as a clearing house be- tween politicians and public office, | and urged those present to make it a point to see that every woman was in- formed on the soundness of the ballot. ee fp Aes ee ee | ——A big freight wreck occurred on the Bald Eagle Valley railroad, this side of Blanchard, early Wednes- day evening when sixteen cars of coal were piled up. The track was com- pletely blocked and it was necessary to transfer the passengers on the night train east. The regular train | returned to Bellefonte, was held here for the night and sent down yesterday morning with provision for the work- men engaged in clearing up the wreck and to transfer the passengers on the morning train west. Fortunately no person was injured in the wreck but it was quite destructive in property valuation. | Mrs. R. L. Capers went out to Pitts- burgh last week for a little visit with her husband’s relatives and on Tuesday she | was brought home across country by Rev. Stacey Capers who, with his wife and four children, motored to Bellefonte from Pitts- burgh. They spent two days in Bellefonte and returned home yesterday. —Miss Mary Struble, of Zion, and Mr. and Mrs. James Holmes, of State College, are contemplating coast. Plans leaving very soon on account of the health of Miss Struble, who will go directly to San Francisco, where she will be for an indefi- nite time with her brother, Jacob Struble. —Mrs. John Kline returned to Bellefonte Monday, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Mary, who had gone to Philadelphia er. tient and under treatment in one of the city hospitals for two months, but is now partly on the way to a permanent recov- ery. Frank and Edward Jr., who had spent the winter here and at Jacksonville, with Mrs. Houser’s sister and mother, Mrs. Fraok Bartley and Mrs. Harter, returned to their home in Meadville, Saturday. Mrs. M. LE. Renner was also a guest of Mrs. Bartley last week, leaving with Mrs. Houser to re- turn to her home in Altoona. —W. L. Malin came home from the Cres- son sanitorium last Saturday evening, benefit of his health. During his stay at the sanitorium he gained twenty-two pounds in weight, but recently he devel- oped an attack of sciatica which pulled him down a few pounds and he came home on the advice of the physicians at the san- itorium in the belief that the change would be beneficial. —A very great stranger in Bellefonte yesterday was Fenton Conroy, of Philadel- phia, who was in town just for the day, looking after some business concerning his mother’s property near Coleville. It has been more than twenty years since he has been in the old home town. The Conroys were a well known family here when Mr. Conroy was one of the foremost of the op- eratives of the Bellefonte glass works. Mrs. Conroy, before her marriage, was Miss Jennings and they lived in what was known as the fair ground gate house. There the family lived until Mr. Conroy died and later they moved to Philadelphia. Fenton is now head of a department in Gimbel's store in Philadelphia and as he left here when only eleven years old was unable to find many of his boyhood chums. a trip to the Pacific have been made for their ' Saturday to make the trip with her moth- | Mrs. Kline had been a surgical pa-! —Mrs. Edward Houser and her two sons, | where he has been the past year for the! JERR, . —Joseph Nolan, of Pitcairn, spent Sun- ; day with his family in Bellefonte. —Jacob Gross, who has been seriously ill for the greater part of the past year, { was seen at his place of business on Mon- ! day. ! Miss Janet Potter was discharged : from the Philipsburg hospital several days | ago, after being a patient #here for one i week. | —Mrs. D. R. Foreman spent a day dur- ing the past week in Tyrone, going over to see her mother, Mrs. Smith, who is ill at the home of her son, Fred Smith. —@G. Fred Musser spent Sunday with Mrs. Musser, who is under treatment at a sanitorium at York. Mr. Musser went from there on a business trip to Philadel- phia. —Frank McClain was in Bellefonte the after part of last week, stopping here over night on his way to Phoenixville, where he has accepted a position, beginning work Monday. —While visiting in Bellefonte the after part of last week, Mrs. George W. Klump and her sister, Miss Carrie Swartz, of Wil- liamsport, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Seig. —Mrs. E. E. Sparks, of State College, : state regent of the D. A. R., and Mrs. D. © H. Hastings, of Harrisburg, are the two " members from the Bellefonfe Chapter at- tending the National congress in session , at Washington this week. | —Mrs. Wallace H. Gephatt, of Bronx- ville, N. Y., is with her parents, Mr. and ! Mrs. F.H. Thomas, having come to Belle- fonte Sunday for a week’s visit. During Mrs. Gephart’s absence her house and | children have been in charge of Mrs. Jen- nie Parsons. —Miss Nancy Hunter, accompanied by | her cousin, Miss Miriam Reber, will come | to Bellefonte this week for a week-end vis- 1 it with Miss Hunter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunter. Miss Hunter is a | regional director of vocational training, ! at Bloomsburg. —Mrs. C. U. Hoffer and her daughter-in- ! law, Mrs. Richard Hoffer, and her two | daughters, will leave California for the | east, Sunday. Going directly to Washing- , ton, D. C., to join Mr. Hoffer, who is in : the government aviation service, Mrs. Hof- fer and the children will remain there, { while Mrs. C. U. Hoffer will return at once ' to Centre county. Red Cross Nurse Now Here. Miss Mae Peterman, of German- ' town, has arrived in Bellefonte and | has started upon her duties as com- munity nurse, working under the di- i rection of the local Red Cross. At | present Miss Peterman is examining all school children, and it is her pur- pose to go to the parents and bring | directly to their attention whatever , defects she may have discovered. After this piece of work is complet- i ed she will act in the capacity of vis- iting nurse in this community, and | will be subject to call through local | physicians, the Red Cross, or by indi- : viduals themselves. Miss Peterman’s ! office will be located in the W. C. T. U. . rooms, in Petrikin hall. Wanted—Girls to Train for Nursing. The Bellefonte Hospital Training School for Nurses has four vacancies ‘ for which young ladies with common . school education will be accepted at once. Write to Miss A. E. Eckert, Supt. of Bellefonte hospital, Belle- fonte, for application blanks if you : have any desire to equip yourself for . professional nursing. | ——An unusual opportunity, the historic Elizabethan May Day Fete, ‘at Bryn Mawr, on May 7th and 8th, is offered those who might find the opportunity to attend. It is an inter- ' esting, educational event and quite "worth the trip to see. Tickets can be “had at this office. —Oh, boy! What a shame it was for the police to lock up that drunk , yesterday. It surely was a “beaut” i and such things are rare and beauti- ful as orchids these days and it’s a crime to hide them away. ; Rubin and Rubin Coming. Rubin and Rubin, Harrisburg’s lead- ing eyesight specialists will be at the ' Mott drug store, Bellefonte, on Mon- | day and Tuesday, May 3rd and 4th. ! As usual, there will be no charge for examining your eyes, neither will any drops be used in the examination. 17-2t i : i ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” | | i The Best Advertising Medium in Cen- tral Pennsylvania. A strictly Democratic publication with independence enough to have, and with ability and courage to express, its own views, printed in eight-page form—six col. umns to page—and is read every week by more than ten thousand responsible peo- ple. It is issued every Friday morning, at the following rate: Paid strictly in advance...... $1.50 Paid before expiration of year. 1.75 Paid after expiration of year.. 2.00 Papers will not be sent out of Centre county unless paid for in advance, nor will subscriptions be discontinued until all ar- rearages are settled, except at the option of the publisher. Advertising Charges. A limited amount of advertising space will be sold at the following rates: Legal and Transient. All legal and transient advertising run- ning for four weeks or less, First Insertion, per line............. 10 cts. Hach additional Insertion, per line.. Local Notices, per line.............. 20 5 Business Notices, per line........... 10 cts. No discount allowed on legal advertise- ments. Business or Display Advertisements. Per inch, first insertion............. 50 cts. Fach additional insertion per inch..25 cts. The following discounts will be allowed on advertisements continued for Four weeks and under three mos.10 per ct Three mos. and under six mos....15 per ct Six mos. and under 12 moS...... .25 per ct Twelve months......... Sasso ve ene 50 per ct Advertisers, and especially advertising Agents are respectfully informed that mo notice will be taken of orders to insert ad- vertisements at less rates than above, nor will any notice be given to orders of par- ties unknown to the publisher unless ac- companied by the cash.