Bellefonte, Pa., October 22, 1920. EE ———————————————— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY — The Charles F. Cook sale of household furniture on Saturday amounted to over eight hundred dol- lars. — The thimble bee of the Reform- ed church will be held this (Friday) afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wil- liam Fishburn, near Bellefonte. A good turnout is desired. — Having sold his house on north | Spring street to prothonotary Roy Wilkinson Charles F. Cook will in the future make his home with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shivery, on Willowbank street. ——A construction crew is now en- gaged in putting together the iron bridge which will carry the Lewisburg railroad across Spring creek, just south of the P. R. R. passenger sta- tion in this place. ——A partial eclipse of the sun will occur on November 10th, and will be visible here. The sun will enter the eclipse at 8:57 o'clock, reach its maximum at 9:58 and end at 10:05. Don’t forget the date. —— The regular meeting of the Woman’s club will be held in the High school building Monday evening, Oc- tober 25th. Dr. Lucretia V. T. Sim- mons, of State College, will talk on “Woman’s Opportunity in Suffrage.” A large turnout should be present to hear her. — The fifth annual farm products show will be held in Harrisburg Jan- uary 24th to 28th, 1921, and announce- ment is made at this time to enable farmers and others to prepare their exhibits now. Centre county will be looked to for a good exhibit and should take some of the State honors. ——Frank Hoag, an experienced milk and creamery man, of Little Val- ley, N. Y.; has been engaged by the Western Maryland Dairy to take charge of their milk station in this place as soon as it is completed. Mr. Hoag has been in Bellefonte this week looking for a house in which to move his family. — A dispatch from Pittsburgh last Thursday announced that Dr. William W. Woods, of Boalsburg, this county, who was arrested last week on a federal warrant charging a viola- tion of the Harrison anti-narcotic act, had been released on a $1500 bond after a preliminary hearing. The doc- tor, who was charged with selling a narcotic in violation of the law, denied being guilty. ——Centre county football teams were stars on the Diamond again last Saturday. The Bellefonte Academy defeated the Carnegie Tech reserves on Hughes field by the score of 19 to 0, while up at State College the Penn State team defeated North Carolina 41 to 0. Tomorrow Lebanon Valley will play State at State College which will be the final game before the! Penn. game at Philadelphia on Octo- ber 30th. W. H. Klepper, of Lock Haven, will be the revenue collector for Cen- tre county under a new ruling of Col- lector Kirkendall, of Scranton. Mr. Klepper has heretofore had charge of the district composed of Clinton coun- ty and Jersey Shore but the latter town has been taken off and Centre county added instead. Mr. Klepper will collect war tax, income tax and all other revenues for the United States government. — Judge Henry C. Quigley wasin Lock Haven several days the early part of the week holding court for Judge McCormick. The latter was taken suddenly ill on Monday morn- ing after a jury had been drawn on a case and was compelled to go home. At Judge McCormick’s request court officials got into communication with Judge Quigley and he accepted the emergency call and went to Lock Ha- ven on the 1:27 p. m. train. — George W. Loner, for many years a resident of Stormstown, but who since his retirement fifteen years ago has made his home with his grandchildren in Altoona, celebrated his eighty-fifth anniversary at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Far- ber, in the Mountain city, on Monday. Mr. Loner is a veteran of the Civil war and only recently attended the annual G. A. R. encampment in In- dianapolis. His three children, Mrs. Anna Way, Miss Lydia Loner and H. L. Loner, all live in Altoona. — Centre county friends of Miss Nellie C. Smith, daughter of ex-Reg- ister J. Frank Smith, will be interest- ed in learning that she completed her course in nursing at the University of Pennsylvania hospital, Philadelphia, last week although the commence- mencement exercises of the class will not be held until in November. But her good fortune came in a request from Dr. de Schwinetz, the widely known eye specialist, that she remain at the University hospital as his as- sistant in the eye operating room and ward, and she accepted the position. There was a big wreck on the Bellefonte Central railroad last Fri- day but it was not a train wreck nor any fault of the company. Two load- ed cars and an empty got away from the men on the siding at the Briarly plant of the American Lime and Stone company and running wild down to the main line of the Belle- fonte Central tore up a lot of the track and demolished things in gener- al. The incident caused considerable excitement at the time but fortunate- 1y no one was injured and the dam- age was all repaired by some extra hard work. i + BIG HALLOWEEN JUBILEE. Rousing Demonstration to be Held in Bellefonte Monday Evening, No- vember 1st. | Bellefonte is to have a rousing big | Hallowe'en demonstration this year, | and because Hallowe’en falls on Sun- | day night the jubilee will be held on | Monday evening, November 1st. This fact was definitely decided upon at a meeting held at the Elk’s club on Monday evening at which time com- mittees were appointed and prelimi- nary arrangements made fora. big time, the likes of which has never be- fore been attempted in Bellefonte. John M. Shugert was selected as chairman of the general committee with G. W. Rees chairman of the Fi- nance committee; Homer P. Barnes chairman of the Decoration commit- tee, and William H. Brown chairman of the Parade committee. Naturally the parade will be the big feature of the evening and the plans as outlined now include cash prizes, first and second, for the most patriot- ic costume, male and female; the best fancy costume, male and female; the most comical costume, male and female; the best characterization of any well known character—national state or local; the best costume got- ten up by a High school or Bellefonte Academy student; the best costume from the grades or parochial school; ‘the best float, etc., while various merchants will offer prizes for indi- vidual efforts of those who take part, so that there will be plenty of induce- ment for both old and young to take a very active interest in the parade. A full list of the prizes, route of parade, ete., will be published next week, and as evidence that there will be no par- tiality in the awards the following well known gentlemen and ladies have been selected to act as judges: Judge Henry C. Quigley, ex-Judge Ellis L. Orvis, Col. W. Fred Reynolds, A. Linn McGinley, Miss Helen E. C. Overton, Miss Mary Gray Meek, Mrs. Elizabeth Callaway, Mrs. John N. Lane and Miss Mary Blanchard. Two bands have already been secur- ed for the evening, the I. O. O. F. band, of Bellefonte, and Wetzler’s band, of Milesburg, while it is just possible others will also be in line. And just here we want to lay partic- ular stress upon the fact that the big demonstration is not to be confined to residents of Bellefonte. It is to be a free pitch in for everybody. Miles- burg and Pleasant Gap have already agreed to send big delegations to Bellefonte and other towns as well as the surrounding community are invit- ed to participate. The parade will be the big feature, and it will take place about eight o’cleck in the evening. Following the parade there will be block dancing on the newly-paved por- tion of Bishop street, between Alle- gheny and Spring streets, the music Watch next week’s particulars. papers for full Getting the State Roads Open. the construction work on the improve- ments to three of the highways lead- ing into Bellefonte. A month or so ago, due to bad weather conditions and delays in receiving materials, it looked as if we would have to go thromgh another winter without hav- ing any of them completed. Now the prospect is much more hopeful. With a continuation of this fine weather contractor Murphy will com- plete the Bishop and Pine street pav- ing by the middle of next week. This will throw all that section into use and connect Pine street up with the new State College and Lewistown high- way. It has been completed through to the old Barnes toll-gate above Pleasant Gap which is as far as the asphaltum covering will go. From there to the “watering trough” on the mountain the road is to be of side-hill brick, which will require a lighter base than was laid for the asphaltum. No work will be done on the mountain [this fall. The asphaltum has now been laid to the “black barn” and with good weather for a few days longer will be completed to Pleasant Gap so that both the Rishel hill and Gap roads to the College are assured for uninterrupted use. The Bald Eagle road from Miles- burg to the Intersection will probably fail of completion this fall. There is no need, however, of making the long eight-mile detour through Moose Run in going up and down the valley. A short detour through Kohlbecker’s orchard above Milesburg has been opened so that now the valley road is really in use clear through to Tyrone. The Bush House Will Open a Res- taurant. Last Saturday night the old Bush House bar breathed its last. No long- er will the genial, corpulent form of boss mixologist, Daily Justice, be seen in a setting of polished mahogany and cut glass. The days of “What will it be boys?” as you put your foot on the rail and looked dry, are over. The bar room is now being re-ar- ranged and decorated for use as a res- taurant which will be open from 5:30 a. m. to 12 midnight. The same serv- ice as that of a regular dining room will be given in the restaurant, which will be opened about November 1st. — There will be no services held in St. John’s Reformed church next Sunday, except Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Rev. Dr. Schmidt left on Mon- day for Norristown to attend the ses- sions of the Eastern Synod of the Re- formed church. He expects to be gone about ten days. to be furnished by the bands present. i eee — For the purpose of pre-empting the dates the ladies of the Milesburg Presbyterian church announce that they will hold a Christmas bazaar on Friday and Saturday, December 10th and 11th. Posters will be put up later giving full particulars as to place, etc. Douglas Fairbanks in his latest show, the “Mollycoddle,” with a thriller climax, will open the Garman opera house to movies Saturday, Oct. 23, and Monday night, Oct. 25. New screen, lenses, etc. Also a two-reel Harold Floyd comedy. Don’t miss this opening. : 42-1t Earl S. Stewart, baggagemas- ter on the Middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad, was bitten on the thumb by a dog he was carrying into the baggage car last Friday which he claimed belonged to “C. C. Cook, Bellefonte.” The man was bit- ten as the train was running between Huntingdon and Petersburg and was given treatment when he reached Al- toona. BE — Three More Colored Prisoners Escape. On Monday evening James W. Her- ron, of the western penitentiary, was luxuriating in an easy chair at his home in this place when there was a call on his telephone and he was in- formed that two colored prisoners who | had escaped from the Rockview insti- tution in the neighborhood of two years ago had been caught that day in Omaha, Neb., and would be return- ed to the penitentiary. He was in the act of patting himself on the back over the good news when there was another telephone call and he was in- formed that three other colored pris- oners had just made their escape from the pen. The three men got away after sup- per and while no trace of them could be found on Tuesday on Wednesday they were reported as being on Mun- cy mountain and prison officials and state constabs put forth every effort to round them up but failed. Wednes- day night Clarence Rine and several other men were engaged in loading a car of matches at the plant of the Pennsylvania Match company when a strange negro stuck his head into the car door. He was without a hat or cap and from the usual description sent out wore the customary prison garb. Just what the intentions of the man were will never be known, be- cause as soon as he saw that more than one man was at work there he took to his heels and ran down the railroad, disappearing in the dark- ness. Of course it is generally believ- ed that the man was one of the es- caped prisoners, but he didn’t stop long enough to be personally intro- duced. TWO CAUGHT. On Wednesday afternoon J. erly and Toner Aikey were I along the mountain above Sunnyside when they noticed two colored fellows dodging around in a corn field below. Thinking at once of the escaped pris- . Hev- !oners and of the reward of $50 for This community has been inconven- ienced for nearly eighteen months by | their capture the hunters made for the corn field only to see the convicts crawl into a fodder shock. With guns up they approached the shock and called for the culprits to come out and surrender, which they did and were later taken to jail by sheriff Duke- man. Series of Lectures by Dr. Sparks. Dr. Edwin Erle Sparks, of State College, has consented to give a series of six free lectures under the direction of the school of liberal arts in the old chapel at State College on “The First Lady of the Land.” The lectures will be given on Tuesday evenings, begin- ning promptly at seven o’clock and ending on or before eight. Students and citizens are cordially invited to attend. The dates and subjects will be as follows: November 9, Home Woman. November 16, ness Woman. November 23, ty Woman. November 30, Louisa Catherine the Englishwoman. December 7, Rachael Jackson, the Fron- tier Woman. December 14, Mary Well-born Woman. be ———Motion pictures will be shown every Saturday night in Garman op- era house. 42-1t Martha Washington, the Abigail Adams, the Busi- Dolly Madison, the Socie- Adams, Todd Lincoln, the Anna Howard Shaw Memorial. The committee of the Anna Howard Shaw Memorial is asking every wom- an of America, who will cast her vote on November 2nd, to remember that Anna Howard Shaw lived and died to give it to her, and to express her grat- itude by contributing something, much or little, to the Memorial. The money is to go to establish a depart- ment of political science at Bryn Mawr College, and a department of preventative medicine at the Wom- an’s Medical College in Philadelphia. Send or give contributions to Miss Mary Gray Meek, treasurer. Mrs. ROBERT MILLS BEACH, Chairman Centre County. Notice to Women Voters. Every afternoon between three and four o'clock, from Monday, October 25th, to November 2nd, in the grand jury room at the court house, Belle- fonte, women will be instructed in marking their ballot. These classes will be given by a committee of the League of Women Voters and will be strictly non-partisan. Mrs. ROBERT MILLS BEACH, Chairman Centre County. | The Democratic Rally a Rousing | Success. Women comprised nearly half of the crowded audience that greeted the speakers at the rally for Cox, Reose- velt, the League of Nations and peace, held in the court house here on Wed- nesday evening. Jt was an epochal meeting in lo- cal politics. The old time zip and hurrah was gone. It was a genteel, thoughtful, appreciative audience that had come to hear issues discussed that are far beyond the prejudices of par- tisanship. There is in the minds of forward looking people today little real care as to which party has the of- fices, for after all that is really back of most partisanship. People who think are wondering today as to what governmental heritage they will have to hand to their children tomorrow and probably that thought was upper- most in the minds of the majority of those who heard Judge Goodale, of Washington, and Mrs. R. Fleming Al- len, of Williamsport. Judge Goodale is an independent Republican, a judge of the courts of the State of Washington, who has come east to carry the message of his convictions on the desirability of the League. His discourse was wholly ju- dicial, presented in the simplest and | most convincing manner, much after i the fashion of a charge from the bench. The Judge roused his audience to great enthusiasm when he referred to the proneness of us all to forget the real achievements of the present ad- | ministration. He said: “As an Inde- pendent I would be untrue to myself, unjust to the great mind that is di- recting the affairs of our nation if I did not say that for real, constructive beneficial legislation the first four vears of President Wilson’s adminis- tration will be recorded in history, vea, within the lives of most of you, as having been without parallel in the history of the world.” Such a state- ment coming from an Independent Re- publican thrilled the Democrats, es- pecially, in the audience and was greeted with prolonged applause. Mrs. Allen, a winsome, attractive young matron followed Judge Goodale with a forty-five minute talk that sim- ply charmed her hearers. In a clever woman’s way, without malice yet with biting force at times she argued for Cox and the League from many new and convincing angles. At all times she held the interest of the vast gath- ering and when she concluded even the men expressed regret that she had | not talked longer. | Mrs. Allen’s father was once 2a | Methodist preacher at Centre Hall. Her maiden name was Bennington. Her sister assisted Col. J. L. Spangler in the conduct of an Academy at that place. Later the family moved south so that she was born below the Ma- son and Dixon line and came back to | Pennsylvania to marry as a Democrat. a meeting James D. Connelly, of Clear- field, the Democratic candidate for Congress in this district, was intro- duced. Mr. Connelly is one of the ed- itors of the Clearfield Progress, a pa- per started and conducted primarily in the interest of the working classes, and having come up from the ranks himself his heart is still in the right place, and that is the principal reason of his candidacy, a fact he made plain in the few minutes he spoke on Wed- nesday evening when he said that it was high time that the laboring man and the great body of so termed com- mon people had representation in Con- gress, and that is what he proposed to give them. chairman Gray and the party to be proud of. In fact, as we looked it over and considered the intellectual it we thought there was very much ‘truth in Mrs. Allen’s declaration to some of her friends who were pitying her for being a Democrat in Pennsyl- vania, when she replied: “I am proud to be a Democrat in this State, for all know that we stand for something more than machine politics.” Badly Injured by Fall Into Juniata River. Mrs. William Kirk, of Hammond, Ind., a sister of borough manager James D. Seibert, of Bellefonte, was badly injured on Saturday evening when she accidentally tumbled down the embankment into the Juniata riv- er at the Tyrone station. Mrs. Kirk had been in Philipsburg visiting her brother, Frank Seibert, and sister, Mrs. Nannie Kerstetter, and was on her way to Bellefonte to visit her brother James. She left Philipsburg Saturday morning and went to Tyrone but missed the Pennsylvania-Lehigh com- ing to Bellefonte at noon. In the evening she returned to the Tyrone depot about 6:30 o’clock and under the supposition that the Bellefonte train departed from the Lehigh station started to walk across the small patch of lawn between it and the main de- pot. It was quite dark at the time and she failed to see the embankment with the result that she walked over the edge and tumbled down into the Juniata river, a distance of at least twenty-five feet. Her cries attracted the attention of passersby who noti- fied railroad officials and the woman was quickly rescued from her perilous position and removed to the Pennsyl- vania station. . First aid was promptly administered after which Mrs. Kirk was sent to the Altoona hospital. There it was found that her right wrist was broken in two places, her left wrist fractured and a painful bruise on her forehead. While her in- juries are serious her recovery is an- ticipated. HR Rtting elinfix 06 OFF evening's Altogether the meeting was one for | touch the speakers were having with | | expected to NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. — Miss Anna M. Miller went to Salona on Friday evening, for a visit over Sunday with her parents. — Mrs. Charles Miller is here from Ohio, east Beaver street, —Mrs. David Kapp, of State College, ac- companied by her sister, passed through Bellefonte Tuesday on their way to visit with relatives in Renovo. —John McDermott, who is now in Phil- adelphia, went down a week ago, expect- ing to be there with his sister, Mrs. An- drew Harris, for the winter. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller, of Lock Haven were over Sunday guests of Mr. Miller's mother, Mrs. Jonathan Miller, at her home on Reynolds avenue. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Boozer, of Centre Hall, spent Monday evening in Bellefonte, Mr. Boozer attending to some business ani Mrs. Boozer calling on friends. — Miss Vera Willard, a nurse in the ar- my hospital at Denver, Col.,, came home last week to spend a month with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. D. I. Willard. —Miss Elizabeth Malin Shugert has been in Windber this week, visiting at the home of her fiance, Rufus H. Lochrie. ding to take place at an early date. —Mr. and Mrs. Nelson E. Robb went to Washington last week, where Mr. Robb represented the Bellefonte Trust company at the convention of bankers in session there. —Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fulton, of Pitts- burgh, and their son Joseph, and Mrs. Annie Rerick, of Ridgway, spent Sunday in Bellefonte with Mrs. Fulton’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Daley. — Mrs. Edward L. Gates and daughter Betty and Mrs. E. C. Tuten and son John were guests of Mrs. J. J. Hamilton on a motor ride from Philipsburg to Bellefonte and return last Thursday evening. ——Charles Taylor, for a number of years instructor in plumbing at the Huntingdon reformatory, spent a day in Bellefonte last week, visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor, at their home on Spring street. —Mrs. D. Wagner Geiss went to Centre Hall Saturday, called there by the illness of her mother, Mrs. George L. Goodhart, whose condition has improved so rapidly that Mrs. Geiss hopes to be able to bring her to Bellefonte this week. —C. BE. Cline, his daughter, Miss Emma Cline, and his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Ray- mond Cline, made the return drive to Wil- liamsport Tuesday, after a visit of several days with Mr. Cline’s elder daughter, Mrs. andolph Glenn, on the farm near Briarly. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cooke arrived in Bellefonte a week ago, returning to make their permanent home here, after having sold their properties in Baltimore. The Cooke family will occupy Mrs. Cooke's for- mer home, the Snyder house, on Academy Hill —Mr. and Mrs. John Blanchard Tuesday afternoon for Ohio, Blanchard expects to remain for months. During Mrs. Blanchard’s absence her two children, Evan and Jean, will be with their aunts, Mrs. Beach and Miss Blanchard. left —Harvey McClure, manager of the Ohio ! spent the | Electric R. BR. Co., at Lima, week-end here as a guest of his parents, | Mr, and Mrs. James McClure. Mr. McClure had been to Atlantic City attending a : convention of street railway men, stopping ‘in Bellefonte on his way back. _ Tdward L. Powers, accompanied by ! his son Ralph, returned Wednesday to his i home in Bryn Mawr. Mr. Powers, on ac- ! count of ill health, had been in Bellefonte with his sisters, Mrs. Julia Connelly and Mrs. James Nolan for more than a year, his son joining him here Monday. — Mr. and Mrs. J. Kennedy Johnston with their daughters Catharine and Mar- garet; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herman and two sons, Richard and Joe, and Miss Herman, motored to Carlisle last Saturday to visit Hugh and Philip Johnston, students at Dickinson College, returning home on Sun- day. Miss Catharine Derstine and Mrs. Jer- ry Galaida will close their home on east Lamb street next week and with Mrs. | Wednesday to join Mr. Galaida at Wood- lawn, Pa., expecting to spend the winter there. Mr. Galaida is back on the state police force and expects to be stationed at woodlawn indefinitely. — Mrs. A. R. Bonnell, of Philadelphia, spent part of last week as a guest of Mrs. Satterfield, in this place, and also visiting friends at State College. She will proba- bly be better remembered by Bellefonte people as a laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Minsker, who some years ago lived on Curtin street, Bellefonte, at which time she was a student at the Bellefonte Acad- emy. This was her first visit to the town in twenty years and on her way home she stop for brief visits with friends in Lock Haven, Jersey Shore and ‘Wiliamsport. —Chaplain T. W. Young, of the western penitentiary, went out to Pittsburgh on Tuesday and on Wednesday morning offi- ciated at the marriage of a couple who are among his warmest friends. ‘While in Pittsburgh he also baptized three children and it might be noteworthy to state that years ago he baptized the parents of the children and also officiated at their mar- riage. Last week the “Watchman” told of Mrs. Young going to California for an ex- tended visit with her son. Leaving Belle- fonte about the first of October she went to Pittsburgh for several week's visit with her children and from there will go to Denver, Col., to visit her brother, then to Leadville, Col., to spend a short time with her niece, Mrs. Nichols. In company with Mrs. Nichols she will motor to Los Ange- les and spend the winter with her son. — The Hon. Charles H. Rowland was in Bellefonte Saturday. Mr. Rowland had been quite ill during much of the summer; in fact so many tales as to his condition reached this place that his many friends here had genuine alarm, hence the pleas- ure at seeing him looking quite himself again. We know that he is himself, for on the occasion of a short call at the “Watch- man” office he started right in to give the paper 1 for being so Democratic and then wanted to pay for it ten years in ad- vance because he likes everything else about it so much. If that kind of carryin’ on isn’t a sign that the former Congress- man is just the same delightfully, face- tious gentleman he has always been we'll quit the newspaper business and get into something there's money in, as he suggest- ed. A man can’t be himself if he isn’t fair- ly well and Charley was sO nearly that on Saturday that if he is wasting much mon- ey on doctor bills he's doing it merely to kid the profesh along. visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Jodon, on 1 Their | where Mrs. | two | Galaida’s little son Jerry will leave on! { —Miss Blanche Underwood is spending | her ten day's vacation at Haddon Hall, Atlantic City. | _Mrs. Charles Heisler spent last week in Altoona, a guest of her brother, Austin Bartley and his family. Miss Margaret Haupt returned last | week from a week's vacation spent with relatives at Moshannon. _ —Mrs. W. W. Prince, of Crafton, has been a guest of her daughters, Mrs. Pot- ter and Mrs. Beaver, since Tuesday. — Mrs. Wycliffe Gardner, of Mackeyville, was a guest for a part of the week of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Irwin. — Ellis Keller spent a few days in Belle- fonte with his parents the after part of last week, returning to Pittsburgh Sun- day. — Leo Brown is home from Detroit on a vacation of several weeks, which will be spent in Bellefonte with his father, Ed- ward Brown. __Mrs. Charles Schreyer returned to Al- toona Tuesday, after having visited for several days here with her aunt, Mrs. Bell, and other relatives. __Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beatty motored to Atlantic City this week on a short va- cation, leaving their little family in charge of Miss Josie Decker. __Miss Hannah Newman and her sister, Mrs. William Grauer, of Altoona, were in Bellefonte last week on a short visit with their aunt, Mrs. Martin Fauble, and her { family. i Mrs. H. 8S. Taylor has been in Pitts- burgh this week, called there by the crit- jcal illness of her step-daughter, Miss Ma- ry Taylor, whose condition is but slightly improved. — Mrs. Thomas Shaughnessy Jr., was awarded first prize for her costume at the ! masquerade dance given by the Daughters of the Isabella, in their club rooms Mon- day night. Miss Belle Weaver left for Harrisburg Saturday, expecting to spend her vacation there and in Philadelphia, with her broth- ers, H. C. Weaver and J. C. Weaver, and their families. — Mrs. J. A. Riley, who has been in Bellefonte for the past ten days visiting with members of her family, will return to Bradford today. Mrs. Riley is convales- cing from a recent illness. — Mrs. John I. Olewine is contemplating spending the early winter with her sister, Mrs. Reed, at Ames, Iowa. Mrs. Olewine's present plans are to leave for the west ‘about the middle of next month. ; —Dr. James B. Stein, of the First Meth- odist church of Altoona, and a former pas- tor of the Bellefonte church, spent a short time here the early part of the week, in the interest of the Home for the Aged, at Ty- rone. {i —Mnr and Mrs. W. T. Hunt and Mr. and { Mrs. Roy Conkling, of Renovo, were in Bellefonte Tuesday for the funeral of ex- ‘ Sheriff Woodring; Mrs. Hunt and Mrs. | Conkling being Mr. Woodring’s only | daughters. | —Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ward are spend- ing a week with Mr, Ward's mother, Mrs. | J. E. Ward, stopping here on their way ! home to Morristown, N. J., from a week’s | visit at Mrs, Ward's former home in ! (Greensburg. —DMrs. BE. E, Mitchell, of Minneapolis, stopped in Bellefonte over night, on her way west from a visit with relatives in the east. While here Mrs. Mitchell was a guest of her cousins, Miss MeCalmont, Mrs. Walker and Miss ‘Shortlidge. —Dr. William 8. Glenn and his wife, Dr. Nannie Glenn, of State College, motored to Bellefonte yesterday to meet Dr. Nannie Glenn's sisters, Mrs. Herr, of Ashland, Ohio, and Mrs. Steele, of Derry, Pa., who will be their guests for a week or more. —George W. Sherry left Tuesday after- noon to spend a week or more visiting with a sister and brother at St. Mary's, and a sister at Kane. Since his retire- ment Mr. Sherry has much leisure time, a part of which he hopes to give to members of his family and old friends. ? — Mrs. David J. Kelly came from York this week, called here by the death of her | brother, Frank Shugert. Mrs. Kelly was [joined Wednesday by her son, Theodore, { who has been for several months at the | Cresson sanitorium, where he is rapidly recovering all his former vigor. —_Mrs. Robert McCullough, Mrs. Nearing and Mrs. Berges, of Jersey Shore, motored to Bellefonte Saturday, to be all day guests of Mrs. E. B. Callaway, who in com- pliment to the party entertained with a card luncheon and supper, the women re- turning to Jersey Shore the same evening. _ James H. T. Ryman, of Missoula, Montana, and a former resident of Miles- burg, spent ten days in Centre county, called here by the illness of his sister, Miss Ryman, of Milesburg, who is a pa- tient in the Bellefonte hospital, suffering from a fractured shoulder. Much of Mr. Ryman’s stay here was devoted to friends of long standing, who were hostesses or his guests at a number of functions, or on drives over the county. Mr. Ryman left Tuesday to return west. American Legion Notice. Don’t forget the regular meeting of the Brooks-Doll Post, No. 33, Ameri- can Legion, to be held in the court house on Tuesday evening, October 26th, at 8 o'clock. Every member is requested to be present to arrange an Armistice day program. Go and take a new member with you. —— The Y. W. C. A. club of Belle- fonte is making arrangements for a big time at their next monthly meet- ing, which will likely be held at the home of Mrs. R. C. Weston, on Linn street. At that time the members of the losing team in the big member- ship campaign will entertain the win- ners and they are now engaged in planning an attractive program. iio mera initonn Carpenters Wanted.—At new milk station. 9 hour day, 75c. per hour. . 42-1% For Sale.—Sixty houses and lots.— J. M. Keichline. 65-40-3m ee ——— Sale Register. Friday, November 12.—W. BE. Rumberger 1 sell at his home on the Jacob Beh- wat farm one-half mile west of Waddle, livestock, farm implements, and some household goods. ip! eo rday, Nov. 6.—At residence oO rs. i Meese, Bellefonte, household and stable equipment, including three burn- er oil stove, domestic sewing machine, light and heavy harness. Sale at 1:30 p. m.