ETE Demorratic; ata Bellefonte, Pa., December 2, 1921. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——The large addition to the Meth- odist church at State College is fast nearing completion. The board of directors of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. are now plan- ning to open that institution on New Year’s day. ——The Bellefonte Academy stu- dents will hold their pre-vacation dance in the Bush Arcade hall on Fri- day evening, December 9th. | i i i } 1 1 DEER KILLED YESTERDAY. ! Reports Indicate Splendid Luck on Opening Day of the Season. The first report of a deer killed yes- . terday was telephoned to this office ; | : : i i i quietly celebrated her eighty-first birthday anniversary at her home on ' north Spring street on Wednesday. ‘his deer at his home in Pine Grove — Thanksgiving is past and with | Mills by 8:30 o'clock. only twenty-three days remaining un- | left in which to do your holiday shop- . ; i left the mountains and sought safety ping. at the entrance of the Bush house on Monday, which looks as if manager Lewis Daggett believes that winter is approaching. The Ladies Aid society of the Methodist church will hold a food and home-made article sale Saturday, De- cember 10th, at the Bellefonte Hard- ware company. ——The numerous rains for the til Christmas there is not much time | section is literally overrun with hunt- | “in the open fields. The storm doors were put ub, of Pine Grove, was returning home by the “Watchman’s” Pine Grove Mills correspondent, and the lucky man was Mr. J. D. Tanyer, an old and experienced hunter of that town. He does not belong to any organized hunting party but generally goes out alone. Yesterday morning he shoul- dered his trusty gun and went up on Tussey mountain south of Pine Grove Mills, getting onto the ground by day- | light. He had not long to wait for at half-past seven he espied a big buck coming his way and brought it to: Miss Rachael Marshall very earth with one shot. It proved to be a five pronged animal and a fine spec- | imen in every way. Mr. Tanyer had | 1 Of course the mountain up in that | 1 ers and the result is a number of deer | { Capt. W. H. Fry, ‘from a professional trip to Graysville past few weeks have filled the cis- | terns, springs and streams almost bank high so that there is no dearth of water anywhere in Centre county. ———Governor Sproul has appointed Eugene H. Baird Esq. of Ridgway, (ing with the various hunting camps, | Elk county, as successor to the late | Judge McCormick, of the Elk and Cameron county judicial dis- trict. The Christmas sale of The Bas- ket Shop is now going on at the Pot- ter-Hoy hardware store. Flower bas- ket filled with dyed thistles, value $2.00; special for Saturday and Mon- day, $1.25. : ——The Navy having defeated the Army last Saturday by the score of 7 to 0 all interest in football now cen- tres on Penn State’s post series game with the University of Washington at Seattle tomorrow. ——Miss Sara Malin, of Howard street, still represents W. J. Evenden and Sons, the well known Williams- port florists, and would be pleased to have your order for cut flowers or de- signs for any occasion. : Tickets for the Academy or- chestra pre-vacation dance to be held in the Bush Arcade hall Friday even- ing, December 9th, will be $2.00. This will be a public dance and good music is guaranteed. Hours, 9 to 1. ; ——A covered dish social will be held in the Methodist church at six o’clock this (Friday) evening, in con- nection with the regular business meeting of the missionary societies. All members and prospective mem- bers are urged to be present. Take vour purse; a pleasant and profita- ble time is anticipated. Daniel Eberhart was eighty- eight years old on Tuesday and cele- brated the day by assisting his son- in-law, Harry Badger, with the fami- ly butchering. Mr. Eberhart is stiil in good health and although he may not have been as spry as some of the men at the butchering he did his share of the work about as good as any of them. Washington Camp No. 887, P. 0. S. of A., Beaver Commandery No. 68, P. O. S. of A, and Camp No. 52, P. 0. of A., will attend divine worship at the United Evangelical church next Sunday morning, December 4th, at 10:30 o’clock. The members will meet at the lodge room at 10:15 and march to the church in a body. A full turn- out is desired. ——The deer hunters are now out in the mountains following the trail of those fleet-footed animals, but amusement hunters are following the trail to the Scenic. There they get lots of enjoyment every evening in watching the motion pictures. Amuse- ment hunters constitute a large crowd and if you are not one of the regulars join the throng and go to the Scenic. From a Pittsfield, Mass., paper we learn that Philip Barnhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. James K. Barnhart, of Bellefonte, is achieving quite a repu- tation as a basket ball player. He is a member of the Elm Five, of Pitts- field, which recently defeated the Berkshire Industrial school team at Canaan, N. Y., by the score of 29 to 21, and Barnhart made seven floor baskets for the winners. ——The ambulance was called into service on Wednesday morning to re- move one of sheriff Harry Dukeman’s prisoner’s Joseph Garis, who was tak- en from the jail to the Bellefonte hos- pital for treatment. Garis has not been in good health for some time and recently his aliment was diagnos- ed as cancer of the stomach. As it was impossible to give him proper care and treatment in the county jail he was removed to the hospital. ——Frank Palma, an Italian of Lackawanna county, was electrocuted at the Rockview penitentiary on Mon- day morning for the murder of Michael Sposite in April, 1920. Pal- ma was brought to Bellefonte by the sheriff of Lackawanna county on the 8:10 train Saturday afternoon and taken by automobile to the peniten- tiary. He went to the death chair protesting his innocence of the crime of which he was convicted, maintain- ing that the deed was done by two of his fellow countrymen. Clinton, | and about half-way between Pennsyl- vania Furnace and Pine Grove he saw a large buck with a magnificent pair | of antlers out on the state road. The ' deer, of course, had been chased off ! the mountain, but after wandering around through the fields in that sec- | tion finally made for the mountain | again. ! While it was impossible yesterday to get any accurate report of the num- ! i ber of deer killed owing to the fact | that there is no way of communicat- | some of which are miles deep in the mountain fastnesses, it is quite prob- able that many deer were Killed. | { From Colyer came word that day | hunters from that place got one buck | early in the morning and one was | killed by the Potters Mills crowd of | day hunters. A new hunting party from Pitts- burgh, captained by Paul Ward, a for- mer Centre countian, is in camp at the old McCormick gap and have visions of getting their share of venison. A number of Bellefonters, not hunt- ers, will probably visit some of the hunting camps over Sunday, Col. W. Fred Reynolds expecting to go to the camp of the Woodward Rod and Gun club, in the Woodward Narrows, of which editor Thomas H. Harter is a member. Small Game Season Closed, Deer Sea- son Open. The legal season for small game, such as pheasants, wild turkey and squirrel, closed on Wednesday and yesterday the deer season opened. Of course it is still legal to kill rabbits and bear up to December 15th, and raccoon are in season up to and in- cluding January 31st, 1922. So far as the small game season was con- cerned, the kill in this section was nothing to brag about. While game seemed to be fairly plentiful the weather was bad for hunting through most of November and very few hunt- ers had the temerity to brave the ele- ments with only a slim chance of bag- ging any game. At that, quite a num- ber of wild turkeys were killed in Centre county, but no hunters report- ed any great luck with pheasants, while squirrel have become so scarce that hunting them isn’t any sport at all. The scarcity of squirrel is di- rectly ascribable to the wholesale de- struction of nut bearing trees, and woodsmen are now advocating the planting of groves of hickory nut and walnut trees. They will not only fur- nish food for squirrels but in future years will afford a valuable timber crop. Anent the opening of the deer cea- son, hunting parties from other sec- tions of the State began to drift into Centre county last week, but the big- gest inrush was on Sunday. Some five or six hunting parties came in on the Pennsylvania-Lehigh train from the western part of the State on Sun- day afternoon and lost no time in get- ting away in automobiles for their respective hunting camps. While Bellefonte does not now have a reg- ularly organized hunting club quite a number of residents of the town are members of clubs in various parts of the county and they are all out for their annual hunt. a Sm ———— Tip Top Merry Makers Again, Orth and Coleman’s Tip Top Merry Makers which played here on Thanks- giving day are billed for a return en- gagement at the Garman theatre for three nights, beginning next Monday. This company made such a hit here last week that Manager Toner has ar- ranged to bring them back. They will present three new musical comedies during their engagement, a change of play each evening. There are twenty- five people in the company, including some of the best comedians, singers and dancers now appearing in musical comedy. A car load of special scene- ry is used in mounting the plays and the wardrobe ranks with the best pro- ductions. All of the plays are clean and wholesome and the big American Beauty chorus is one of the feature attractions. The opening bill will be “Aladdin from Broadway,” a delight- ful musical comedy in two acts and seven scenes in which there are twen- ty-two catchy musical numbers. Coming ——The Ladies Aid society of the Milesburg Presbyterian church will hold their Christmas bazaar and food sale December 9th and 10th in the Harshberger building in Milesburg. — Special attention is again call- ed to the regular mid-year conference of Sunday school workers which will . be held in the United Brethren church, ‘ Bellefonte, to morrow (Saturday). Sessions will be held at 9:30 in the morning and 1:30 in the afternoon. Lunch will be served at the church. Among the speakers will be State sec-. retary W. G. Landes and Miss Emma G. Lemen, State children’s division superintendent. .Every county officer, district officer, pastor and Sunday school superintendent in the county should be present. ——State College is a long ways from Seattle, Wash., but that fact holds no terrors for the student body when it comes to following the for- tunes of its victorious football team; consequently arrangements have been ‘made to receive tomorrow’s game with the University of Washington by tel- egraph, just as the plays are made. A special wire will be run to the ar-- mory where the report will be receiv- ed. Owing to the difference in time it will probably be five o’clock before the report will begin. But the hour will make little difference to the stu- dents and others who will be on hand to hear the report of the game. Who Cashed the Checks? On September 22nd, Willis Bath- gate, a driver of one of the trucks de- livering milk to the Western Mary- land Dairy in Bellefonte, lost two checks, one for $48.46 made out to W. N. Fishburn, and one for $36.00 made out to John Reish, both Benner township farmers, and as no trace of the checks could be obtained the West- cin Maryland Dairy was notified {and they in turn notified their bank in Baltimore and stopped payment cn the checks. Last week both checks were cashed at Tyrone banks, probably by the man who found them. At one bank he rep- resented himself as Mr. Fishburn and at the other Mr. Reish. Though de- tectives have been working upon the case they have not found any trace of the man who secured the money. African Student Wins Scholarship at State. A native of Liberia, a country on the west coast of Africa, has been given the first award of the foreign student scholarship at The Pennsyl- vania State College. He is K. W. G. Donma, a member of the Junior class in the school of agriculture. The col- lege trustees only recently authorized the giving of a foreign scholarship each year to some needy student drawn to Penn State from overseas. It carries a valuation equivalent to $175 a year for the recipient. : Among the 3100 students at Penn State this year, fourteen come from outside the United States. They in- clude one from Japan, three from Chi- na, one from Africa, one from Cana- da, one from the Philippine Islands and seven from Porto Rico. Twenty States representing all sections of the country from Maine to California, are also represented in the student body. Dedication of Moose Hall Postponed. Members of the Loyal Order of the Moose No. 1565, of Clarence, prepar- ed an elaborate program for the dedi- cation of their new hall last Saturday. A big parade was to take place at one o’clock which was to include the Moose Lodge, the Moose Jr., the Moose Le- gion, the Narodne, the Yednota, the Amerikansky Russky and several bands of music, but the hard down- pour of rain all day so discouraged the committee in charge that they postponed not only the parade but the entire program of the dedication un- til some date after New Year’s. In this connection it might be add- ed that quite a number of members of the Bellefonte Lodge of Moose went out to Clarence in two big busses and various private cars to take part in the program and because of the steady rain, which continued during Satur- day night the drivers of the various busses and cars felt apprehensive about coming over the mountain dur- ing the night, hence they all remained at Clarence and Snow Shoe until day- light Sunday morning, when they came home without a mishap. emma eemeemee fpeleeem. Health Week December 5th to 11th. In connection with the 1921 Christmas seal sale, and in line with the suggestion of the National Health Council, the week of Decem- ber 5th to 11th, inclusive, will be ob- served as Health week throughout the State, with special emphasis on Fri- day, December 9th, as tuberculosis day in the schools and Sunday, De- cember 11th, as tuberculosis day in the churches. There will be presented health talks anc stories by the teachers and health plays by children in the schools. Pas- tors have been asked to speak on the menace of tuberculosis and there will also be health talks by Sunday school superintendents and teachers on De- cember 11th. As the health-education work of the Tuberculosis committee of Bellefonte continues through the school year no special program has been arranged for next week. Height and weight charts have been completed for all grade pupils; tooth brushes have been supplied to children needing them and Fun Loo, the new health clown, will give a second performance next week in the High school building. The lit- tle pamphlet “To the Children of America,” will be used as a reading lesson in all grades on Tuberculosis day. The Bear Meadows to be Preserved to Posterity. About six weeks ago the Pennsyl- vania State Forestry Commission ap- pointed a committee of fourteen peo- ple to investigate the Bear Meadows tract in the Seven mountains and re- port upon the question of preserving it in its present condition as a State preserve. On Tuesday Dr. Edwin E. Sparks and Prof Frank D. Kern, of State College; Col. J. L. Spangler, Miss Mary Gray Meek, Mrs. John | Porter Lyon and James R. Hughes, of Bellefonte, all members of the committee, with Dr. Joseph T. Roth- rock, of West Chester, a member of the State Forestry Commission, and Forester Roy Morton, of Petersburg, met at the hotel in Boalsburg to de- cide the future of the Bear Meadows. It had been the intention of the com- mittee to go into the mountains and view this wonderful natural tract of land but an eight inch snow fall in the mountains on Monday night rendered the trip inadvisable if not impossi- ble. One of the questions up to the com- mittee to decide was whether the tract in question was the “Bare” Meadows or “Bear” Meadows .and Dr. Rothrock set all doubts at rest when he stated to his certain knowledge they were “Bear” and not “Bare.” He gave as the derivation of the name the fact that the mountains in that section were at one time well populated with bear and the meadows composed a favorite feeding ground as well as a place where the bear gathered to wal- low in the marshy peols of water. In fact he stated that he personally had seen bear wallowing in the pools. This settled the question and the com- mittee decided that the six hundred acre tract should be henceforth called the “Bear” Meadows, but gave it the additional name of “Nature Plant Preserve,” by which it will hence- forth be known. The committee de- cided to recommend that the tract be preserved as it is now to all posteri- ty, and that it be placed under the joint supervision of the Pennsylvania Department of Forestry and the bo- tanical department of The Pennsylva- nia State College. The chief reason for the preserva- tion of this tract of ground is because of its wonderful botanical display of flowers, plants, ete., the like of which cannot be found anywhere else in the State, and probably not in the United States. It is the only place known where huckleberries grow on trees, not bushes, but trees more than twen- ty feet in height. The State Forestry Department is now constructing durable highways into the Meadows from Centre, Mifflin and Huntingdon counties, the one from Centre county entering through Galbraith’s Gap. Comparatively little small game is to be found in the tract, but there are some deer and occasion- ally bear seen there. The report and recommendation of the committee will be presented to the Forestry Commission at its next meeting when it is expected that definite action will be taken in regard to the preservation of the Bear Meadows. Telephone Lineman Injured. William Crawshaw, a telephone lineman in the employ of the Com- mercial Telephone company, was tak- en to the Bellefonte hospital on Wed- nesday evening for treatment for in- juries sustained when a pole on which he was working broke and fell to the ground, landing on top of him. Craw- shaw had gone up a pole opposite the Chemical Lime company’s plant in Buffalo Run valley to make some mi- nor repairs just before quitting time Wednesday evening. He fastened his belt around the pole and was just in the act of starting work on the line when the pole broke off at the ground and fell down. Crawshaw was una- ble to get his belt loose and therefore could not jump and save himself, and the result was the pole fell across the fleshy part of his right leg. He was brought to Bellefonte and taken to his lodgings over Twitmire’s store and a physician summoned. The latter was unable to discover any broken bones but as Crawshaw was suffering considerable pain it was deemed advisable to remove him to the hospital. Statement of Elks Hallowe’en Carni- val Expenses. The total expenditures of the Elk’s big, Hallowe’en carnival were $711.85, but the receipts, including the two dollar assessments contributed by members of the organization, were not only sufficient to pay all prizes and meet all obligations but leave a bal- ance in the treasury of $339.55, which sum will be held as a reserve fund to help along with next year’s carnival. The statement of the treasurer as handed to the “Watchman” for pub- lication is as follows: Balance from 1920 Carnival........ $ 823 Elk’s individual subscriptions...... 338.00 Harvest Queen Contest............. 705.17 otal Receipts. ..........ov0seevss $1051.40 Total Expenditures............... 711.85 Balance in Treasury.............$ 339.55 ——Among the candidates for the mat team at Penn State this season is Katsutoshi Naito, a Japanese student now in his second year at State. He is training in the 145 pound class and is said to be a master of Jiu jitsu and quick as a flash. lenin as ——The ladies of the Lutheran church will have home-made candies on sale at Hazel’s grocery store to- morrow (Saturday) afternoon. Pro- ceeds for the benefit of the church. CARE BSAA RL RR ER 8 ———— NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. M. F. Hazel visited with Mr. Ha- zel in Pittsburgh, and with relatives in Altoona last week. —Jesse Derstine, of Ambridge, Pa. spent Sunday in Bellefonte with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Derstine. —V. J. Bauer, of Somerset, came to Bellefonte Tuesday, being a guest while here, at the home of his brother, John Bauer. —C Clarence Hamilton, of New York, was the guest of honor Thanksgiving day, at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, T. R. Hamilton. —Mr. and Mrs. George Glenn had as guests the after part of last week, Mrs. J. E. Stover and Mrs. James Dawson and her son, all of DuBois. —The Misses Anne and Caroline Valen- tine left this weck for New York city, ex- pecting to sail for the Bermudas, where they will spend the winter. —Mrs. Robert DeGolyer, of Evanston, Ill, is in Bellefonte for a visit with her mother, Mrs, Louise V. Harris, at her home on Allegheny street. —Mrs. C. D. Young has closed her home at James Creck, Huntingdon county, expecting to spend the winter with her daughter, Mrs. James Isett. —Miss Mary IH. Linn visited with friends in Harrisburg during the past week, hav- ing gone down to be there at the time of Marshal Foch’s visit to that city. —Lee Larimer, with the president of the First National bank of Jersey Shore, were in Bellefonte between trains yesterday morning, on business relative to the bank. —Irvin O. Noll, one of the professors in the boy’s high school in West Philadel- phia, spent Thanksgiving with friends at Pleasant Gap while Mrs. Noll visited her sisters in Harrisburg. —Dr., Coburn Rodgers and Miss Stella Cooney accompanied Miss Mary Cooney to Philadelphia Sunday, where Miss Cooney will remain with her sister until there is a permanent improvement perceptible. —Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Baum, of State College, with Mrs. J. Harvey Hile as a driving guest, motored to Bellefonte yes- terday. Mr. Baum spent the few hours while here looking after some business in- terests. —The Misses Thelma Hazel, Estelle Grauer and Mildred Wagner, all second vear women at Cedar Crest College, Allen- town, were home for Thanksgiving, hav- ing come to Bellefonte Tuesday, remaining until Sunday. —Mrs. J. R. Driver was in Bellefonte several days early in the week for a visit with her daughter, Margery Way, at the Brant House. Mrs. Driver was on her way from Waddle to join Mr. Driver at her new home at Grampian. —T. A. Lucas, principal of the Business College at Perth Amboy, N. J., who had been with relatives at Howard for Thanks- giving, spent Friday in Bellefonte, a guest of his aunt and cousin, Mrs. John Meese and Mrs. J. Will Conley. —Mrs. Payne is contemplating spend- ing the winter in Roanoke, Va., as has been her custom for several years. IIXx- peciing to leave immediately after Christ- mas, she will be south with her daughter, Mrs. Paul B. Seanor, until spring. —Mrs. P. ¥. Gherrity and her aunt, Mrs. Thomas McCafferty, are visiting with Mrs. Gherrity’s daughter, Mrs. James Da- vis, in Tyrone; having driven over with Mr. and Mrs. Davis and their family fol- lowing a Thanksgiving visit to Bellefonte. —Mrs. Eben Bower spent the early part of the week in Millheim with her sister, Mrs. H. J. Burd, whose husband has been ill during the fall. Mr. Burd’s condition for the past several wecks has been such as to cause the family considerable alarm. —Mrs. Satterfield returned Saturday from a ten week's visit with friends in northwestern Pennsylvania, New York, Philadelphia and Atlantic City. Mrs. Sat- terfield has many friends in New York city, it having been her home for fourteen years. ; —Mrs. Frank Harlacher and her daugh- ter, Miss Susan, who have been on their farm near Stormstown since the early summer, have closed their home and gone to Greenwich, Conn., where they will spend the winter with Mrs. Harlacher’'s elder daughter. —Mrs. W. A. Odenkirk, of Centre Hall, was a pleasant caller at the “Watchman” office Monday, having accompanied her sister-in-law, Mrs. Robert C. Meyer and child, this far on their way home to Al- toona after a brief visit at Centre Hall. While in Bellefonte Mrs. Odenkirk visited the stores and did some shopping. —Dr. and Mrs. S. M. Huff spent the after part of last week in Centre county, Mrs. Huff having come here from Jersey Shore, where she had been for a two week's visit with her sister; Dr. Huff join- ing her in Bellefonte Thursday. Much of Dr. Huff's time was given to his mother in Milesburg; the remainder being spent with his many friends in this community. —Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Wagner, of Mis- soula, Mont., are spending two weeks in Bellefonte with Mr. Wagner's mother, Mrs. A. Wagner, of Bishop street. During their stay here they will sell at private sale all of Mrs. Wagner's household goods, in anticipation of her making her home with them in Montana, and with her daughter, Mrs. Lockwood, in Chicago. Mrs. Wagner will go with them as far as Chicago, when they leave to return west, about the middle of the month. —Mrs. M. R. Sample, of Philadelphia, who has been in Centre county for a visit of two weeks with her sisters, Mrs. G. Fred Musser, of Bellefonte, and Mrs. Phil- ip D. Foster, of State College, returned home yesterday. Mrs. Musser had expect- ed to accompany her sister to Philadel- phia, but upon the advice of her physi- cian postponed the trip for a week or ten days, when Mr. Musser will take her down. Mrs. Sample’s visit to Centre county at this time was to attend the Furst-Foster wedding at State College, a week ago. ——————— een — ——Sidney A. Rhyne, alias “Whitey Morris,” who lived within the shadow of the electric chair in the death house at the Rockview penitentiary for four months, was transferred from Rockview to the hospital of the eastern penitentiary on Saturday. A hopeless paralytic, Rhyne never lost hope of escaping the extreme penalty of the law but his condition is such that he will have little enjoyment of the life given him when the pardon board granted a commutation of his gentence to life imprisonment. ————] { Furst—Foster.—The home of Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Foster, at State College, was the scene of a beautiful i wedding at noon last Friday when | their youngest daughter, Miss Helen ' M. E. Foster, was united in marriage | to Stanley Scott Furst, of Connells- ‘ville. The interior of the Foster home was rich in floral decorations 'and about fifty guests were present | to witness the ceremony, which was ‘ performed by Rev. Samuel Martin, of | the Presbyterian church. The bride looked lovely in a gown of blue panne velvet with a hat to match and a bou- quet of orchids, roses and lillies of the valley. She was attended by Miss Juliet Grazier, who wore a gown of blue charmeuse and carried a bou- quet of orchids, pink roses and lillies of the valley. The best man was the bridegroom’s brother, Robert S. Furst. Immediately following the ceremo- | ny a delicious wedding breakfast was served and later in the day Mr. and Mrs. Furst left for their home in Con- nellsville. The bride is a graduate of the 1920 class at Penn State in the do- mestic science course. The bride- | groom graduated the same year in the electrical engineering course. He is ‘at present engaged in teaching histo- ry and civics in the Connellsville High school. Among the guests at | the wedding were the bride’s brother and sister, Harold Foster, of Chicago, and Mrs. J. S. Crandall, of New York. Flynn—Morgan.—A very pretty wedding was solemnized at Snow Shoe on Tuesday of last week when Vin- cent P. Flynn, of Williamsport, and Miss Monica G. Morgan, of Snow Shoe, were married by Father J. F. Connelly, pastor of St. Mary’s Cath- olic church, of Snow Shoe. The young couple were attended by Miss Cathe- rine Morgan, a sister of the bride, and Arthur Kerin, of Moshannon. Immediately following the ceremo- ny a wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride’s father, Mr. James J. Morgan, and later in the day Mr. and Mrs. Flynn motored to Wil- liamsport where a reception was ten- dered them at the home of the bride- groom. Mr. Flynn holds a good po- sition in one of the large stores in Williamsport and it is in that city the young couple will make their home. The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. Flynn wish them unbounded hap- piness and prosperity. rete perenne Donations for the Hospital. The Bellefonte hospital board wishes to thank the Catholic Daugh- ters of America for one dozen bed shirts, and the Needlework Guild for ten sheets, sixteen bath towels, twen- ty-six wash cloths, twenty-four pillow cases, four infants woolen shirts, four fants woolen bands, two infants sweaters, two infants sacques, three pair night clothes and four pair hose. A large contribution of vegetables was received from the Boalsburg schools. The people of Bellefonte sent in a liberal donation of vegeta- bles, fruit and money. Local People Who will Go on Clark’s Tour. Those from this locality who have joined Mrs. Callaway’s party of fifty- eight, sailing on the S. S. Empress of Scotland from New York on February 4th, on the Clark Mediterranean and Orient cruise are: Mrs. James B. Lane, Mrs. A. Wilson Norris and Mrs. D. H. Hastings, of Bellefonte; Miss Margaret Brockerhoff, of Philadel- phia; J. C. Condo, of Spring Mills; his brother-in-law, Rev. M. A. Ken- nelley, of Lewistown, and Lloyd Rod- gers, of Huston, a former instructor in the schools of Bellefonte, but now of Detroit, Mich. The three month’s cruise will in- clude stops at the Madeira Islands, Gibraltar, Algiers, Cairo, Egypt; Cai- fa and Smyrna, in Asia Minor, from where there will be an overland trip to Jerusalem, Constantinople, Athens, Naples, Rome and Monte Carlo. Some of the party will extend the time by a trip across Europe from Monte Carlo, returning to America within four months. eames ——Last Friday afternoon as Mrs. Abner Rider, Mrs. Warren Minnemy- er and Mrs. Roy Keeler, all of Cole- ville, were driving south on Thomas street to attend the funeral of the late Franklin Lockard their horse fright- ened at the train and ran away. Mrs. Minnemyer and Mrs. Keeler jumped and in doing so threw down the robe so that when Mrs. Rider attempted to jump her feet caught in the robe and she fell over the dash board in the rear of the horse. The wheels of the buggy passed over her, painfully bruising her face and body. She was carried into a house on Thomas street and a physician summoned. An ex- amination disclosed the fact that no bones were broken and that her inju- ries were not serious, and she was conveyed to her home in Coleville. meee penne ene. ——Johnny Mignot dropped in here Wednesday evening and told -us that he had seen a five-pronged buck last Friday afternoon, up at the Briarly operation of the American Lime and Stone company, where he is working. He said the buck came right down to the opening, never paying any atten- tion to the noise of the air compres- sor or anything else. He is going to take out a license now so if you hear of deer meat up at Mignot’s you may guess where it came from. It is our opinion, however, that Johnny might just as well go hunting that buck with a salt shaker as a gun and it don’t cost any license fee to hunt with salt shakers.