Bellefonte, Pa,, November 18, 1921. | dents, Drove Through Bridge Into ' | NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ! Miss Mary Cooney was taken from the hospital to her home on Bishop street a week ago, but to the present time her condition remains unchanged. | ——The Ladies Aid society of the! Lutheran church will hold a chicken ! and waffle supper this (Friday) even- ing, in the basement of the church. Price, 65 cents, including dessert. ——We said it last week, but would like to repeat it. The ladies of the Reformed church will hold their an- nual Thanksgiving market in Petrikin hall on Wednesday before Thanksgiv- ing. ——Don’t fail to read the opening installment of “The Girl, a Horse and a Dog,” which will appear in next week’s “Watchman.” It is not only worth reading but high class litera- ture. ——Union Thanksgiving services will be held in St John’s Reformed church, Thanksgiving morning at 10 o'clock. Sermon by the Rev. Wilson P. Ard. Offerings for the Bellefonte hospital. W. C. Snyder Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C Snyder, of Snow Shoe, has been recommended for an appoint- ment to the Naval Academy, at An- napolis. He is now a senior at the Harrisburg Academy. Francis Lynde’s latest story, “The Girl, a Horse and a Dog,” will begin in the “Watchman” next week. Subscribe for the paper so as not to miss one installment, as it is worth double the price of a year’s subscrip- tion. The auto license of Samuel Myers, Clinton county detective now serving a term in the Centre county jail for operating a car while under the influence of liquor, has been re- voked by the State Highway Depart- ment. The dance and card party to be given by the Catholic Daughters of America in the Knights of Columbus hall will be held next Monday even- ing, November 21st, instead of Wed- nesday evening, as stated in last week’s “Watchman.” The Woman’s Guild of St. John’s Episcopal church will hold their annual Christmas sale at the parish house on Thursday, December 1st, be- ginning at 2 o'clock. Fruit, fancy work and many things suitable for Christmas gifts will be on hand. Have you subscribed to the American Red Cross? If not, sub-: scribe now, as your dollar will help keep the community nurse, whose services are so helpful to Bellefonte and its immediate vicinity. You may , leave your subscriptions at Schlow’s STATE COLLEGE MAN KILLED IN AUTO ACCIDENT. Thomas D. Gray, with Load of Stu- Creek with Fatal Results. On his way fron: Lewistown to State College with a load of college ‘ students returning from the State- Navy game, early Monday morning, Thomas D. Gray, a well known resi- dent of State College, drove his car through the bridge spanning Kisha- coquillas creek and down into the the creek, a fall of eight feet. Gray was caught under the car, sustaining a broken neck and crushed chest, re- suiting in instant death. W. Stewart Taylor, of Dauphin county, a student, sustained two cuts on left leg, cuts on nose and badly bruised chest. Andrew Musser, of Dauphin coun- ty, escaped with minor injuries. Miss Amelia Schuler, of McCon- nelsburg, sustained a broken left arm above the wrist and bad body bruises. The other students were J. Freder- ick Merz, of Philadelphia; Kerzy Be- vor, of Washington, Pa., Donald Hu- | ber, of Philadelphia, and Ellridge Na- than, of Erie, who suffered minor in- juries and were able to swim ashore out of the six feet of water and also render assistance to the others. Mr. Gray, driving a seven passen- ger Paige car, left State College at two o’clock Monday morning and drove to Lewistown to meet the train arriving there from the east about five o’clock. Immediately upon the train’s arrival he loaded up with the seven students above named. Musser and Taylor were on the front seat with Mr. Gray. Huber, Miss Schuler and Merz occupied the rear seat and Ell- ridge and Bevor were on the folding seats. Mr. Gray was driving along at a moderate rate of speed as he ap- proached the Xishacoquillas bridge. The road at that place has an abrupt curve approximating ninety degrees and whether Mr. Gray had forgotten the curve, mistaken his location or was unable to see it is not known, in any event he failed to make the turn and drove into the bridge, the ma- chine plunging into the creek a dis- tance of eight feet. The machine fell to the left and Gray was caught beneath it in six feet of water. Oth- er cars were on the road and it was only a question of a few minutes un- til Gray’s body was taken from the water and taken to the undertaker at Lewistown. The injured students were given medical attention at the Lewistown hospital and all able to do so continued their trip to State Col- lege in other cars. Thomas D. Gray was a son of G. W. !F.and Harriet Feister Gray and was | born at Fillmore fifty-eight years ago. When he grew to manhood he engag- ed in farming at Fairbrook and while i living there was married to Miss An- ——The Penn State football team conquered the victorious Navy eleven on Franklin field, Philadelphia, Satur- day, by the score of 13 to 7. The game was played in a hard rain and the field was literally a sea of mud. ! State’s next game will be with Pitt, | on Thanksgiving, then the trip to the Pacific. coast for the after season game with the University of Wash- ington at Seattle. Sani ——The first real snow storm of the season occurred on Saturday and Sun- day. Snow fell most of the day and while it melted in the lowlands about as fast as it fell the mountain tops were covered, in some places to a depth of six inches. The weather has continued cold all week and those far- mers who still have corn in the fields are likely to get cold fingers before it is all husked and housed. consummated for the sale of five hun- | dred acres of coal land in the vicinity | of Karthaus to the Portage Smoke- | less Coal company. The tract includes ° the present holdings of Thomas Bow- man and J. L. McMonigal and lands was not only appropriate to the occa- ‘to his last resting place 'lington cemetery. A soldier, no one fof a few days with her mother, Mrs. i knowing from whence he came or | Isaac Thomas and family. ——A deal has practically been ARMISTICE DAY CELEBRATED | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. George Williams is spending a IN BELLEFONTE. ! month with relatives in Lock Haven. Services in Court House in Morning | _ w. Frank Bradford, of Centre and Parade in the Afternoon. | Hall, spent Wednesday in Bellefonte, : i shopping and visiting with friends. Armistice day last Friday was du-| —Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Griffith left on ly observed in Bellefonte. All stores Monday to spend the winter with Mr. and and business places were closed the Mrs. Claude Dawson, in Philadelphia. entire day. Public services were held | —Miss Elizabeth Gephart went to Wil- in the court house at 11:15 o'clock, | liamsport Tuesday to be a guest of friends which were attended by a fair-sized | for 8 week, while under the care of Dr. audience. Rev. M. DePue Maynard, | V2oValin. rector of St. John’s Episcopal church, | —Miss Cecelia Haupt went oven to Cur- was the speaker. His k thr wensville on Tuesday to ply her calling as P talk th oughout a seamstress at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Thompson. —Miss Frances Hutchison, of Bellefonte, and Miss Caroline McCloskey, of Potters Mills, visited Mrs. John K. Ray, at Ty- rone, on Wednesday. —Mrs. Lida Thomas Gibson will come up from Philadelphia this week for a visit sion but replete with beautiful senti- ments. He asked his audience to forget where they were and pic- ture themselves in Washington following that unknown soldier in Ar- how he met his death, save that it was | —LeRoy Fox, of Lock Haven, with his with his face to the front and in the | two sons, George and Richard, spent Sun- defense of his country. He plead for day in Bellefonte with the boys’ grand- loyalty not. only to the Stars and | mother, Mrs. Henry Haupt. Stripes but loyalty to the young men! —Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Peters are con- who carried them to Europe and | templating closing their house in Union- brought them back unsullied, and : ville, in anticipation of spending the win- they hold under option which include the McCloskey, Yothers, Potter, Gil- liland and Heckendorn tracts. The consideration has not yet been made public. ——Included in the awards an- nounced by the State Highway De- partment on Wednesday under the townships, Gregg township, Centre road eastward from the property; $316.01, for the road from a total of $1047.11. mm —— ee ——Sheriff Dukeman now has sev- enteen regular boarders in the Centre county jail, the greatest number of prisoners enrolled there in last Thursday but that afternoon the five Bellefonters sentenced to serve a jail term by the federal court at Scranton for stealing the whiskey from the Bellefonte postoffice were brought here and entered as regular boarders. They are Robert Montgom- ery, who was given a year’s sen- tence; Joseph Garis, John Morrison, Orrie Morrison and John Showalter, all of whom are due for a six month’s stay. ——Sunday was a bad day for au- tomebilists crossing Nittany moun- tain. The road was covered on the rear wheels of their machines were either stuck on the heavy grades or slipping from one side of the road to the other. One man from Burn- township award act for the improve- ment of highways and bridges by | county, was awarded $626.03, for the | Gentzell | Spring Mills north, and $305.07, for the road from Handboard hill south, some years. The number was twelve up to | with | about two inches of snow and drivers who attempted to cross without chains | loyalty to the church as the great in- spiration to all mankind. The speak- er so timed his talk as to close his peroration just as the town clock struck the second stroke of twelve and for a period of two minutes the audi- ence stood with bowed heads in silent prayer. The service closed with prayer by Dr. Schmidt and the bene- diction by Rev. Maynard. The parade arranged by the Ameri- can Legion for two o'clock in the afternoon was curtailed in size by a steady down-pour of rain, but was ‘held, nevertheless. It included the Odd Fellows band, Brooks-Doll Post American Legion, members of the Red Cross, Catholic Daughters of Ameri- ‘ca, Wetzler’s band of Milesburg, the Undine and Logan fire companies. At the conclusion of the parade Wetzler’s band braved the rain and gave a brief concert in the Diamond. At 2:30 o'clock the Yeagertown football team met the American Le- gion team on Hughes field, and not- ‘ withstanding the rain and muddy field played each other to a standstill, neither team being able to score. A big dance was held by the Amer- ican Legion in the armory at night in i connection with their carnival, which {drew a large crowd. While the Amer- {ican Legion boys have not been ‘able to figure up the net results of | their dance and carnival because of ‘the fact that all their bills have not yet been received, they estimate their profits at upwards of eight hundred i 32. i Italian, Principal in Shooting Affray, Caught in Wilkes-Barre. There is an old saw that “murder : dollars out of gross receipts of $2137.- | ‘na Bowersox, a daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Franklin Bowersox. A number i of years ago he moved from Centre to , i i - Columbia county and occupied a farm tion, will be on exhibit in the W. C. T. | near Bloomsburg, but two years ago U. rooms in Petrikin hall today after | he sold-out. dnd Moved to-State Col- ten o'clock. The women in charge are lege desirous of having the public see this | Ho is survived by his wife and four generous contribution and ask that as ! children, Ralph W., of Williamsport; & 5 381 isi S S . . . any as possible wish thess rooms Carl, of Berwick; Franklin, a Senior during the day. ; at State College, and Edith, at home. ” Doth Torah ge Bick Bu fhe | He also leaves one brother and four man’s All society. 01 ihe treshys: sisters, namely: Zane Bh Gray, of So Bd Ranier un Dimas fo ons, 9 €1C., ae £ sock, o ormstown; Mrs. Gran {Fray emeen, peSimuing 25 250 | Hoover, of Williamsport; Mrs. Frank ig is eer re [Can ate snd Mrs Teens Bay, of = e College. membrances and at the same time lay | He was 2 life-long member of the in something good to eat for Sunday. ! Methodist church and his pastor had ——Deputy Attorney General Ww. IL i charge of the funeral services which Swoope, of Clearfield, will deliver the were held at 2:30 o’clock on Wednes- address at the annual memorial serv- day afternoon, at his late home at ices of the Bellefonte Lodge of Elks ' State College, burial being made in on Sunday afternoon, December 4th. the Pine Hall cemetery. Mr. Swoope is very ’ well known in | Bellefonte, having begun his career ! : : ; as a practicing attorney here, and the | Cheap Grain and High Priced Eggs. public is invited to turn out and hear | qu. 1ethods and principles of feed- him. | ing laying hens were clearly brought ——The members of the Y. W. C. | out at meetings last week held at A. club have leased the room in Cri- ; thirteen farms in different sections of der’s stone building at one time occu- | Centre county. County agent J. N. pied by William Derstine’s tailor | Robinson had arranged these meet- shop, where they will establish per- | ings in order that the farmers could manent headquarters for the winter. | learn how to feed so that the best re- Quality Shop or Yeager’s shoe store. The donations made to the Woman's Guild in their recent collec- ham, in a big Cole machine, went | will out,” and invariably the murder- down over the mountain about thirty | er meets up with justice in some feet shortly after starting down the way. While in this instance the crime other side. The car stayed right side | fortunately is not that of murder, yet up and after Charles Bilger pulled it might have been and Tony Popello, the machine back onto the road the | the principal in the shooting affair man cranked up and went his way, that happened at Milesburg over two only he drove a little more carefully. { years ago, has finally been caught, —_— up in Wilkes-Barre, and sheriff Har- ——Mr. and Mrs. John O. Stover, ry Dukeman went to that city Wed- of State College, feasted on wild tur- | nesday night to bring him back to key last Sunday, the bird, a twelve ; Centre county to answer to the charge ! pounder, having been furnished by 'of aggravated assault on the person The membership of this club has in- | ereased to that point where the ladies | deemed it advisable to open their own club rooms. ——The Young People’s society of | the Milesburg Methodist church will | hold a Thanksgiving bazaar in the | Harshberger building, November 21, 22 and 23. Delicious home made | eakes, pies, doughnuts, bread, rolls and candy will be on sale for Thanks- | giving and beautiful and practical | gifts for Christmas, including an as- | sortment of Oriental goods. | ——William Fredericks, who was | stricken with paralysis while working for the borough six weeks or more ago, is so little improved that there is practically no hope of his ever re- | covering to that extent that he will be able to work again. For years Mr. Fredericks had supervised all the work in the water department and was a valuable man for the borough. Hard P. Harris, district attor- wey James C. Furst, Charles M. Me- Curdy and Dr. J.J. Kilpatrick spent a partion of last week over in Decker valley on the hunt of small game. They met with poor success but Messrs. Harris and Furst had the sat- isfaction of seeing a large buck which stood within fifty feet of them for five minutes or longer. Mr. Harris avers that the buck was fat and sleek and would probably weigh close to two hundred pounds, but the deer killing season was still three weeks away. sults could be obtained. Mr. H. D. Monroe, poultry special- ist from The Pennsylvania State Col- | lege, showed in what proportion a far- mer could mix his own grains in or- der to derive the greatest value for them. With the price of grain so low, a farmer must do everything possible to break even on the grain crop. The high price of eggs and poultry products opens up one way in which some of the grain may be dis- posed of at a fair price by feeding to the poultry if it is correctly done. A bulletin on feeding laying hens is available at the Farm Bureau office for the benefit of those who were not able to attend one of the meetings. renner sete eee. The Bellefonte Chautauqua. Because of the delay in obtaining the required number of guarantors for the 1922 Chautauqua, there was no opportunity of easily calling to-' gether the members for the election of new officers, and therefore, Rev. Malcolm DePue Maynard and Cecil Walker have very kindly consented to hold over for 1922 their former of- fices as chairman and treasurer. Wal- ter Cohen has consented to be vice chairman and Nevin Cole, secretary. This committee, with the ticket sell- ing chairman, will attend to the busi- ness of putting over the 1922 Chau- tauqua, and will not call together the grneral body of guarantors, except by request. | vegetables, ice cream, cake, ete. Nat- John W. Miller, an old-time hunter ! ‘and a sure shot, whether it is wild! turkey, rabbits or deer. Of course the feast included all the extra fix- | in’s, such as cranberry sauce, various urally Mr. Miller was the guest of : honor and included in those invited to help enjoy the feast were Mrs. Alice Miller, Mr. and Mrs. McMahon and son Edwin, and aunt Mary Brungard, of Zion. The afternoon was spent in a social way generally, with plenty of choice music, and everybody had an enjoyable time. ——John D. Decker, jury commis- sioner of Centre county, expects to close the deal this week for the sale of his old homestead in Decker val- ley to a hunting party from Greens- burg and Jeannette. The price, it is reported, is $5000. The Decker home- stead is located in the heart of Decker valley and is in one of the best game sections in the Seven mountains. In fact deer are almost as plentiful in that locality as sheep, and the pur- chasers want the property not only as headquarters during the hunting season but as an attractive place to spend a portion of the time during the hot summer months. It is under- stood that Mr. Decker will be per- | mitted to retain his home there as long as he lives. ——Members of the old Union | church at Philipsburg celebrated the 101st anniversary of its organization last Saturday evening and among the speakers was Mr. T. R. Hamilton, of Bellefonte. Mr. Hamilton, by the way, is in his eighty-sixth year, and he told his audience of how he made ! a trip to Philipsburg by driving over | the mountains when he was sixteen { years old, almost seventy years ago. Te frequently saw and talked to | Hardman Phillips, the founder of the | town, and remembers the old screw factory, Philipsburg’s first industry. Some years later he went to Philips- ! burg and worked on the first saw mill i located there. On leaving there he { took a consignment of lumber sawed at the mill to Nebraska, hauling it over the mountain to Tyrone, going from there to Pittsburgh by train, then down the Ohio and up the Mis- sissippi river. Mr. Hamilton’s talk was much enjoyed by the people of Philipsburg. | Harry Dukeman has been sheriff he ‘modation of all State College students of Willis Showers, of Bellefonte. Popello, who lived near Bellefonte and worked in the limestone quarries, was one of the young Italians called for service in the world war by the | Centre county board. For a year or more prior to being called he had been enamored with a young woman of Milesburg and, it is alleged, had given her money and costly presents. But after he had gone to the training camp the young woman accepted the attentions of Willis Showers. Popel- lo eventually returned home and on the evening of October 8th, 1919, he met Showers and the girl near the latter’s home in Milesburg. Without any warning he drew a gun and fired five shots at Showers. His aim was poor, however, as not one of the shots I did any particular harm. One went through the lobe of Shower’s left ear, one cut him over the right thumb, one hit the left lapel of his coat, another went through his left trouser leg, while the fifth shot flew wild. Popello at once took to his heels and made his escape. Ever since has kept up a hunt for Popello and finally located him in Wilkes-Barre. On his request the authorities there placed him under arrest and the sher- iff will bring him back here for trial. n—————— eee ements. Special Train to Pittsburgh for State-Pitt Game. The Pennsylvania Railroad compa- ny will run a special train to Pitts- burgh next Thursday for the accom- and the public generally desiring to attend the State-Pitt football game Thanksgiving afternoon. The train will start from Lemont, leaving there about seven o'clock a. m. It will leave Bellefonte at 7:35 a. m., and is sched- uled to arrive in Pittsburgh about 12:30. The return train will leave Pittsburgh at 11:30 p. m., and will ar- rive at Bellefonte about four o’clock Friday morning. The tentative fare for the round trip will be about $6.32, probably a few cents more or less. This train will enable any one desir- ing to do so to go to Pittsburgh, see the big game and take in a theatre before starting home. —————— en ——— ——Only one more week until Thanksgiving. Verily Christmas will be here before we realize it. . ter with their children in Juniata. | —W. R. Brachbill and his daughter, | Miss Louise, returned Tuesday night from | Philadelphia, where they had been for a | bart of the week on a business trip. | —Mrs. G. O. Benner, of Centre Hall, spent a few hours in Bellefonte on Satur- | day on her way up to Martha to spend | Sunday with her sister, Mrs. O. D. Eberts i and family, —Mrs. John Leepard, with her two sons, | Robert and Edmund, and daughter Ruth, ‘motored in from their home in Akron, | Ohio, last week for a visit among Centre ! county friends. —Mr. and Mrs. J. Witmer McCormick, of Columbia, South Carolina, were arri- vals at Centre Hall last week, called there by the illness of Mrs. McCormick's fath- er, David J. Meyer. —Miss Agnes McCalmont will return to her home on College Hill, Cincinnati, next week, after a three month’s visit here with her cousin, Miss Jane McCalmont, and oth- er relatives in Centre county. —Mrs. Martin Hogan has closed her home in Unionville for the winter, as has been her custom for a number of years, and gone to Tyrone, where she will be with friends during the cold weather. -—Robert ¥. Hunter went to Philadel- phia last Friday where he took in the State-Navy game on Saturday then went over to New York to see his son, B. Gra- ham Hunter, whose health has not been very good of late. —Mrs. Fred Garner, of State College, and her son Adam, were motor guests of ‘Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Rossman on a drive to | Bellefonte yesterday. The time wkile here | was spent in the stores and in looking : after some business. i —W. Gross Mingle, of Philadelphia, was a Bellefonte visitor the latter part of last | week, having come over from Reedsville to look after a little personal business. He . had gone to Reedsville to join his wife, | both of them returning to Philadelphia { early this week. 3 —Charles Lukenbach drove in from De- troit, Mich., during the past week, expect- ing to spend several months here with his mother, Mrs. A. Lukenbach, and his sis- ter, Mrs. M. B. Garman. Mrs. Garman has arranged to keep her home on Curtin street open during the winter. —Collins Shoemaker, whe has finished his apprenticeship with the Westinghouse people, spent the week-end here with his mother, at the home of Dr. Joseph Brock- erhoff. Collins left Monday to return to Pittsburgh to complete his arrangements for joining a business firm near Canton, Ohio. —Mrs. Ellen Miller and her sisters, Mrs. Laura McCormick and Miss Caroline Mec- Closkey, of Potters Mills, visited Mrs. Margaret Hutchison several days the past week. Mrs. McCormick returned home on Monday, while Mrs. Miller and Miss McCloskey remained in Bellefonte until today. —Dr. Edith Schad, who left Bellefonte three months ago, to make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Gail Chaney, in Pitts- burgh, spent the week-end here with her father and sister, John P. Harris and Mrs. Warfield. Dr. Schad is continuing her professional work in Pittsburgh, as med- ical examiner for the Y. W. C. A. —Mrs. C. U. Hoffer was an arrival in Bellefonte on Monday evening, having come here from Windsor, Ontario, where she spent eight weeks with the L. C. Wetzel family. She spent two days here visiting her father, C. T. Gerberich, and ber daughter, Miss Louise Hoffer, then continued her journey to her home in Philipsburg. —Mrs. Carl A. Olsen, who with Mr, Ol- sen and their daughter, went to Pittsburgh two weeks ago, will remain there under the care of specialists until after Christ- mas. Mr. Olsen having returned to Belle- fonte has had with him in his apartments in Petrikin hall, his son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lief Olsen, who have closed their home in the Kelley flats until Mrs, Olsen's return. —Mrs. Jacob Bottorf, of Lemont, has been with her daughter, Mrs. John I. Ole- wine, for the past month, having closed her home when her younger daughter, Miss Ella Bottorf, left for Ames, Iowa. Miss Bottorf went west on account of ill health, and expects to visit with her sis- ter, Mrs. Robert Reed, for six weeks, dur- ing which time she will be under the ob- servation of specialists. —Mrs. William Dawson accompanied Mr. and Mrs. 8. H. Griffith to Philadelphia Monday, where they all will visit for an indefinite time. Mrs. Dawson, who was only recovering from one of her severe at- tacks of neuralgia, went down to be with her physician for several weeks and for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Moore, while Mr, and Mrs. Griffith will spend the winter months with their chil- dren in Philadelphia and Camden. as has been their custom for a number of years. —Mrs. Herbert Kerlin, who had been in Bellefonte since the middle of June, left Saturday morning to return to her home in New York city. Mrs. Kerlin came here on account of ill health, occupying the home of Mr. Kerlin’s mother, the late Mrs. F. P. Blair, on Howard street, during her five month's stay. Leaving greatly bene- fitted in health and an enthusiast, as all strangers are, over Centre county, Mrs. Kerlin has planned to return next sum- mer. + office. —Mr. M. F. Calderwood, of near Canton, Ohio, arrived in Bellefonte on Wednesday on 2 visit to his son, M. F, Calderwood Jr. Mr. Calderwood is a Civil war veteran and a native Pennsylvanian, but for some years past has made his home in Ohio. —DMiss Martha Witmer, of Philadelphia, will come to Bellefonte next week to spend Thanksgiving and for a visit as a guest of Mrs. John G. Love. A part of Miss Wit- mer’s time while here will be given to Mrs. James B. Lane, whose guest she has al- ways been during her frequent visits to Bellefonte. —Miss Mary Runkle stopped in Belle- fonte this week for a short visit with the Misses Daise and Anne Keichline on her way home to Youngstown, from Washing- ton, D. C. Miss Runkle had gone to the capital for Armistice day and occupied a seat in the amphitheatre at Arlington, on that memorable occasion of the burial of the unknown soldier. Miss Runkle is the only daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Ja- cob Runkle, former residents of Belle- fonte. te —— COME TO BELLEFONTE FOR DOLLAR DAY. An Invitation from W. Harrison Walker, Burgess of Bellefonte, Pa., to the People of Centre County to Come to Bellefonte, Pa, on “Dol- iar Day,” Wednesday, November 23rd. On behalf of the retail merchants of Bellefonte, it gives me great pleas- ure to extend to the people of Centre county a cordial invitation to come to Bellefonte on their “Dollar Day,” Wednesday, November 23rd. More than forty progressive merchants in our town are busy arranging their stores for this event and each prom- ises many surprises for the “Dollar Day” visitors. Some of the merchants tell me that they are going to sell merchandise that sells for two and three dollars at one dollar. Come to Bellefonte Wednesday, November 23rd, and see the “Dollar Day” wonders. 45-1t Prisoners Steal Booze Stored in Cen- tre County Jail. Even the Centre county jail is not a safe place in which to store booze, a fact demonstrated on Sunday night when the prisoners, who had the run of the corridors until 9:30 o’clock, stole some of the liquor stored in one of the cells and after drinking it re- filled the bottles with coffee they had surreptitiously saved from their meals and replaced the bottles in the case. The theft was discovered when the sheriff went into the jail at 9:30 o'clock to lock the prisoners in their cells. His attention was at once at- tracted by the smell of whiskey and though he searched every man he fail- ed to find any of the stuff. Then he investigated the cell where the booze was stored and discovered that some of the prisoners, with a piece of base board torn from the floor to which was tied a hook made from a brace torn from one of the beds, had man- aged to draw a case of whiskey to the barred door, through which they got the bottles. Five quart bottles were found which had been emptied and filled with diluted coffee. The booze was the same that had been removed from the postoffice cellar to the jail for safe keeping. : Big Holiday Attraction. At the opera house next Thursday. November 24th, (Thanksgiving day) the Tip Top Merrymakers will offer for your approval “The Honeymoon- ers,” a two act musical comedy with twenty-three song numbers, seven scenes and a chorus of pretty, snappy girls. Some of the well known stars are Joe Burkhart, Lew Orth and Al Coleman. This trio of singers and dancers are literally knocking them off their seats everywhere. The scen- ery and the costumes are all new, and the chorus is not bad to look at. This show is pronounced by theatre goers to be the best popular priced music- al comedy of the season. A special matinee will be given at 2:30 p. m., and the seat sale will open at the Mott Drug Co. on Monday. Pre-war prices will prevail, 50, 75¢c. and $1.00, plus tax, matinee and night. A ————— ete es ——— ——DMrs. Harry E. Garbrick, of Coleville, and Mr. and Mrs. Epley Gentzel, of near Bellefonte, were guests at a pleasant family reunion held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Gentzel, at Juniata, from Saturday until Monday. The affair was given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stru- ble and son James, of Salina, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Struble went to Kan- sas from State College forty years ago and this is their first trip back to their native heath. Naturally they will prolong their trip sufficiently to visit all their friends in Centre as well as adjoining counties. ee sme eens ——Dr. LeRoy Locke has leased the W. A. Peters property in Union- ville and located there on Tuesday for the practice of his profession. RE. ——Geiss’ bazaar sale will be held Saturday, November 19th, to begin at 10 a. m., the time having been chang- ed from Tuesday to Saturday. Will have horses, pigs, young cattle, chickens, a carload of cabbage, new phonograph records and many other articles. S. H. Hoy, Auctioneer. 45-1% ste lg Lost.—Gold wrist watch with black ribbon band, between Spring St. and High school. Reward. Return to “Watchman” office. 45-1¢ —————— fe ————— Lost—Between Curtin street and armory, Friday night, small fur neck piece. Please return to “Watchman” Reward. 45-1t*