Wise: DEE Sunday morning. Bellefonte, Pa., January G1 1922. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——DR. W. Funk has tendered his resignation as president of the Titan Metal company but the same has not vet been accepted by the board of di- rectors. Miss Edith Houser resigned her position with the Gamble Milling Co. to accept one with Lauderbach- Zerby Co., beginning work in her new position on Tuesday. The Christmas offerings of the congregation and Sunday school of St. John’s Reformed church, for the Beth- any Orphan’s Home, at Womelsdorf, amounted to $110.00. ——The Thimble Bee of the ladies of the Reformed church will be held Friday afternoon, this week, at the Reformed parsonage, and be enter- tained by Mrs. Schmidt. Mrs. George S. Green entertain- ed at the Nittany Country club last week, in honor of her two daughters, Eleanor and Jane, both members of Lock Haven’s younger set. ——Having disposed of Hecla park to W. C. Rowe, of Bellefonte, Mr. and Mrs. George Smith returned to De- troit, Mich., on December 20th, where Mr. Smith has accepted a position. The Carpeneto family have again taken over the fruit store in the Brockerhoff house block which for several years past has been conducted by Joseph Carpeneto. The store will in the future be in charge of George and Louise Carpeneto. The Pennsylvania rzilroad com- pany announces that for the conven- ience of passengers stop-over privi- leges will be permitted at certain im- portant points on the Pennsylvania system. Full information can be ob- tained from the conductors on trains. Rev. David R. Evans, of Wells- boro, will fill the pulpit in the Pres- byterian church en Sunday, morning and evening. Holy communion will be administered at the morning serv- ices and in the evening he will preach on the subject, “The Undeveloped Talent.” Col. Henry W. Shoemaker, of McElhattan, was on the program for the January meeting of the Bellefonte Chapter of the D. A. R., held at the Bush house, Tuesday, at which Mrs, R. G. H. Hayes, Mrs. Clevan Dinges and Miss Kate Dunlop Shugert were hostesses. The condition of Mrs. D. G. Bush, which has been extremely crit- ical for the past three weeks, is so much improved that her recovery is now looked for. In celebration of her eighty-fifth birthday, yesterday, Mrs. Bush was the recipient of many gifts and numberiess messages of congrat- ulation. Mr, and Mis. Gideon Payne are occupying the furnished apartments of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kessler, in Petri- kin hall, having leased them for three months. Plans for their own home will be completed during that time, where they will go upon leaving the Kessler apartments. Mr. Kessler, whe was with the Titan Metal people, has gone to Cleveland. Mz, and Mrs. William Tressler, who have been living with their son Samuel, on Curtin street, since the death of his wife several years ago, are planning to go back to their own house on Howard street. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schlow, in leaving the Tressler house, will go to the second floor apartment in their own building, now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Craft. Announcement was made last week of the marriage of Frederic Daggett, son of Mrs. W. L. Daggett, and Miss Eleanor Bower, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bower, the cer- emony having taken place in Lock Haven on April 12th, 1921. The young couple very successfully kept the fact of their marriage a secret unti! Christmas eve, when they made the announcement to the bride’s par- ents, The first of a series of new art windows to be placed in St. John’s Reformed church was dedicated last The window is ‘beautiful in coloring and shows cen- tral a large figure of the Christ, in ‘the attitude of blessing. The window is the work of Rudy & Co., of Harris- burg, and reflects great credit upon their workmanship. The window is the gift of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Clev- enstine, — Several weeks ago we made the surprising announcement that Frank Hess, former Philipsburger, had de- cided to go to California to make his future home and start his son in a fruit growing venture. A letter from him yesterday informs us that he and the boy were in Chicago on the 22nd ult. on the way west and that Mrs. Hess will visit with Centre county friends until they have found a home and located. After two week’s shut-down, for the purpose of taking a complete inventory, the Titan Metal company will resume full operation Monday, January 9th. The melting department of the plant has already been placed on twenty-four hour operation in or- der that sufficient ingots will be on hand continuously for the manufac- ture of rods and forgings, for which the company has just received large orders ‘for early shipment. Comple- tion of the new office early next week will effect the consolidation of the city and mill offices. THE OLD AND THE NEW. Old Rellefonte Council Held Final Session, New Council Organized. The old Bellefonte borough council held its final session on Monday even- ing with every member in attendance. W. C. Coxey was present and made complaint about the partial closing of who recently purchased a lot in that section and fenced in over half of the street. On motion of Mr. Harris the borough manager was instructed to see that the street is opened to its full width of forty feet. Chief fire marshall John J. Bower submitted his report for the past year, calling attention to the fact that the department has but 1850 feet of hose, with but 1150 feet in good condition. A communication was received from John S. Ginter, of Tyrone, treasurer of the Pruner Orphanage, informing council that the money received from the sale of the Pruner block in Tyrone and the property in Ness county, Kan., had been invested in Liberty bonds long ago, and that he had only recent- ly received the money from the sale of the woodland in Bald Eagle valley. The Street committee reported the collection of $152.50 by the borough manager on the Spring street state road account. The Water committee reported the borough limits. the 1920 water taxes. The Fire and Police committee pre- sented the burgess’ check for $16.2 for fines three months. The Finance committee presented showing a balance on hand on Janu- ary 2nd, 1922, of $22,230.31. The com- mittee also asked for the renewal of notes for $1,700, $2,000, $3,000 and $2,500, all of which were authorized. On motion of Mr. Richard $2,000 was transferred to the sinking fund. Secretary Kelly stated that the new fire department ordinance passed at the last meeting of borough council had been vetoed by burgess W. Harri- son Walker, who submitted ten lengthy reasons for so doing, which were read by the secretary. After hearing the reasons Mr. Richard stat- ed that he didn’t consider them suffi- cient for killing the ordinance. Mr. Cunningham stated that the commit- tee had spent considerable time in preparing the ordinance and it had been carefully drawn by the borough solicitor, and he made a motion that it be passed over the burgess’ veto. Mr. Harris seconded the motion and on a roll call every member voted aye and the ordinance was passed. opening of north Water street and was instructed to have the same plac- ed on record. The ordinance provid- ing for the opening of said street was then read for the second time and passed finally. Mr. Brouse, of the West ward, nom- inated Darius Waite as a member of council from that ward as successor to John L. Knisely, recently resigned. Mr. Cunningham seconded the motion and Mr. Waite was clected. The secretary presented a list of exonerations of taxes requested by collector J. Kennedy Johnston cover- ing the period from 1915 to 1921, in- tion and report. Bills to the amount of $7,588.09 were approved for Harris the old council adjourned sine die. Burgess Walker then administered the oath of office to the incoming members, W. J. Emerick and Benja- min Bradley, of the North ward; Thomas Hazel, of the South ward, and Darius Waite, of the West ward, H. Brouse and J. M. Cunningham, of the West ward. He also administered the oath of office to David Barlett, re- elected borough auditor, after which he called the new council to order and announced that he was ready to hear nominations for prseident. John S. Walker was the only nominee and he was duly elected. W. T. Kelly was elected secretary without opposition. A communication was received from Thomas Howley requesting the ap- pointment as policeman for the ensu- ing two years, the same being refer- red to the Fire and Police committee. President Walker announced that until the new committees are appoint- There being no other business coun- cil adjourned. Real Estate Changes Hands. Clarence Rine has purchased the property of Medio Torsell on west High street, the consideration being $3,300, conditioned on permitting Mr. Torsell to occupy his present shoe re- pair shop for a period of two years. Earl C. Hoffer and Augustus Hev- erley have closed a deal for the A. C. Mingle double house on the north side of east High street, opposite the court house, now occupied by the families of H. N. Meyer and Charles Harrison. meee ene ——Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Fryberger, of Philipsburg, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Doro- thy Steiner Fryberger, to Frederick Gerberich Hoffer, son of Mrs. Ella J. Hoffer, of that place. east Logan street by Harry Keeler, ' laying of a 13 inch water pipe out | Howard street and the collection of | $32.68 for its extension beyond the Report was also: made of the collection of $238.35 on: collected during the past the report of the borough treasurer ! | The secretary presented the deed,’ fully signed, for the land for the unanimously ! clusive, and the same was referred to | the Finance committee for investiga- payment. The: minutes of the meeting were then read and approved and on motion of Mr. as well as the re-elected members, W. ed at the next meeting of council the ; old committees will remain in force. i ——The regular meeting of the Bellefonte Parent-Teacher association will be held in the High school room Monday, January 9th, at 8 p. m. There will be music and interesting speak- ing. Although the attendance has been fine more should be present to hear the splendid talks which are giv- en; more fathers especially should at- ; tend. PS SE —— , ——“Watchman” readers will this , week miss the breezy little “Week Ahead Program” of the Scenic thea- tre and opera house movies. Manager Brown has been uncertain as to the ‘merits of the advertising; whether the program was read with interest . by Scenic patrons, and to settle the | matter he asks all who read or watch- ed the program weekly to either tell him or write him a card informing {him of the fact, and if the same has | been appreciated he will gladly con- tinue it. ———— i, Valentine—McClellan.—Israel Val- | entine, of Millmont, Union county, and { Mrs. Carrie L. McClellan, of Spring | Mills, were married in the library of the court house, Bellefonte, at eleven o’clock on Tuesday morning, by Rev. Dr. Ambrose M. Schmidt, of the Re- formed church. Several of the offi- cials in the court house were present a8 witnesses to the ceremony. Snyder—Newcomer.—John Snyder : Sr., of State College, and Mrs. Anna : K. Newcomer, of Bellefonte, were married at the Reformed parsonage .on Thursday, December 29th, by the { pastor, Dr. Ambrose M. Schmidt. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder will make their home at State College and the house hereto- fore occupied by Mrs. Newcomer on cupied entirely by C. W. Heilhecker and family. meetin. ble and Miss Mary McGovern, both of : Bellefonte, were quietly married at | | the parochial residence on Bishup | street, on Monday morning, December | 26th, by Father William Downes. Im- | mediately following the ceremony Mr. {and Mrs. Fauble left by automobile jon the first stage of a wedding jour- | ney which included a trip to Cuba, : for which place they sailed from New { York on December 31st. The bride is well known in Belle- { fonte, having been engaged in the in- , surance and real estate business the Mr. Fauble is pro- ! past few years. | prietor of the Fauble stores in the ‘ Brockerhoff house block and is one of Bellefonte’s leading = business men. They expect to return and be at home to their friends in their already fur- | nished house. rooms in the Brockerhoff s—————————— Goheen—Lowther.—A wedding of interest to readers of the ‘“Watch- man” in the western end of Centre county was that at noon on Monday, iat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas | S. Lowther, in Indiana, Pa., when ' their daughter, Miss Margaret Helen | Lowther, became the bride of Capt. | John P. Goheen, of Tyrone. The cer- emony was performed by Rev. Elliott S. White, D. D.,, of the Methodist church, in the presence of a large number of guests. The bride is an accomplished musician and most charming young lady. The bride- ‘groom is a son of Mrs. Ida M. Goheen, of Tyrone, and a grandson of the late John B. Goheen, of Ferguson town- ship, this county. He is captain of , Troop B, of Tyrone, and only recently | returned from Fort Riley, Kan., where he completed a course in special cav- alry training. e——————— eres Musser—Handley.—Ralph M. Mus- ser, only son of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Musser, of Boggs township, and Miss Birdie A. Handley, of Lewisburg, { W. Va., were married at sunrise on Monday morning of this week at the ‘home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Musser came to Bellefonte on their wedding trip on the 3:10 p. m. | train on Tuesday and were at once ! driven to the Musser home on the farm below Milesburg where they will spend the week. Sixty-five guests | were present at a big reception and | dinner given in honor of the young | couple yesterday. The bridegroom is a graduate of | Smte College and was filling the po- | sition of farm agent in Tioga county | at the time the United States entered | the world war. He promptly enlisted { for service overseas and served with | the engineers. During the past year { he has been serving as county agent { of Greenbriar county, West Virginia. | He is an energetic and progressive | young man and the “Watchman” joins | with hosts of friends in wishing him and his bride a long and happy life. A Wonderful Picture. “The Four Horsemen of the Apoc- alypse,” which will be shown at the opera house Tuseday and Wednesday nights, January 10th and 11th, has been pronounced one of the greatest pictures ever filmed. It was six months in the making, cost an even million dollars and twelve thousand people were employed at various times from the time it was started un- til completed. The picture is a screen version of Vincente Blasco Ibanez’s wonderfully interesting book of the same title, which is now in its two hundredth edition. Half a million feet of film was used up in the orginal screening. This extraordinary length was cut down to twelve reels of a thousand feet each, which now make up the picture. A splendid orchestra furnishes appropriate music during the showing of the picture. Every- body who can do so should make it a point to see this wonderful picture. east Curtin street, will likely be oc- | Fauble—McGovern.—Adolph Fau- | eee] — BANK ROBBERS CAPTURED. i Karthaus Bank Looted by Two Res- idents of Philipsburg. Within forty-eight hours from the time two men held up cashier Avery Shope and robbed the First National bank at Karthaus of $6,280, both men were arrested and proved to be Harry t Kinkead and Raymond Shope, both residents of Philipsburg. On Monday of this week the two men plead guilty and were sentenced by Judge Bell, at Clearfield, to not less than seven nor more than twelve years in the west- ern penitentiary. Up to the present a little over three thousand dollars of the stolen money has been recovered. Suspicion was first attracted to Harry Kinkead by his lavish ex- penditure of money the day following the robbery, and he was promptly ar- rested. After considerable question- ing he finally confessed and implicat- ed Shope. The latter had gone to Brookville in the Hudson car used by the two men on their trip to Karthaus and he was arrested there on Friday morning. Morgan Shope, a brother of Raymond Shope, was also arrested on Friday and on Saturday two other Philipsburg men, Summerfield Test and William Fryberger were taken in- to custody. According to the story of the two principals in the affair Test and Fry- berger helped to plan the robbery but failed to show up when the time came to do the deed, and Kinkead and Shope did the job themselves. They further admitted that neither Test nor Fry- berger shared in the proceeds. Under the circumstances the two men were released from jail but held in one thousand dollars bail each as acces- sories before the fact. Morgan Shope 1 was given $350 of the stolen money to pay a pressing debt and he was dis- charged under a suspended sentence, as it was proven he did not know where the money came from. The robbery of the bank occurred on Wednesday morning, December 21st, and by the evening of the 24th all the men were under arrest and over half of the money recovered, but up to this time the two principals have not disclosed the whereabouts of the balance of it. Kinkead is a native of Philipsburg but spent most of the summer in Pittsburgh. He returned to Philips- burg early in the fall and had been working at the new Curtis park. Shope had for some time before his arrest been an employee at the Cen- tre and Clearfield Railway company. He is married and has two small chil- “dren. i i Some Holiday Unfortunates. | On the Saturday morning before | Christmas E. C. Cooke fell on the icy . pavement near the Gazette office and ! broke his arm. { Having completed her Christmas - shopping and about ready to leave for her home Mrs. Cyrus Gearhart fell on the pavement in front of the Benner . property, on High street, about nine : o'clock on the evening of December 24th and broke her right leg just above the ankle. She was taken to the Bellefonte hospital and is now get- ting along all right. While carrying in coal at a house on east Bishop street, on Tuesday afternoon of last week, Wm. Keeler, an employee of the Bellefonte Fuel and Supply company, slipped on the ice, fell and broke his arm. On Tuesday ' of last week John Slack, of Centre Hall, slipped on the ice and fell while on his way from the house to the stable to feed the chick- ens, and broke the large bone in his right leg a short distance above the ankle. Chinaman Electrocuted. Chung Tao, of Reading, was elec- trocuted at the Rockview penitentiary on Tuesday morning and was the first of his race to be put to death in the electric chair in Pennsylvania. Chung was brought to the death house on Saturday by sheriff Edward Deem, of Berks county, and at least four dep- uties. Ordinarily he would have met his fate on Monday morning, but that being a legal holiday the mandate of the law was not executed until Tues- day morning. Chung’s downfall was the result of a poker game. According to the story he won all the money and then was accused of cheating by Joe Lee, a fel- low countryman. A fight ensued and Lee was killed, having been stabbed eighteen times. Chung was arrested for the murder and at his trial denied the killing. Later, however, he con- fessed to his spiritual adviser that he had committed the crime but did it in self defense. Chung was attended to the death chair on Tuesday morning by Rev. S. P. Erisman, pastor of Grace United Evangelical church, of Reading. Big Reduction Sale Now On at Mont- gomery & Co’s Store. One of the biggest reduction sales that has been put on in Bellefonte for some years is that now going on at Montgomery & Co’s, in Bellefonte. Wonderful reductions have been made in clothing of all kinds, as well as gent’s furnishing goods. Any person in need of clothing or anything in that line should visit the Montgomery & Co. store on Allegheny street and see their remarkable offers. Consult their advertisement on the sixth page of today’s paper and see the reductions made. ——A little daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Haupt, of Belle- fonte, on December 20th. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Katherine Love went to Pitts- burgh Monday to spend several weeks with friends. —Mrs. Rachel Harris has gone to the Brockerheff house, where she will spend the remainder of the winter. —Miss Margaret Cooney, who had been home for her Christmas vacation, left Mon- day to resume her work at Bethlehem. —Frank Derstine, of Junidita, spent a part of Christmas day in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Derstine. —George Wolfe, a former resident of Bellefonte, but now of Toronto, Canada, spent the Holidays with friends in Belle- fonte. —John A. Lane Jr. went to Philadelphia before Christmas expecting to spend three months there in the interest of the Bas- ket Shop work. —Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Henszey, of State College, left last week for a trip south, ex- pecting to spend a part of the month of January in New Orleans. —Mrs. Hiram M. Hiller and her daugh- ters, Margaret and Virginia, were guests for the Christmas holidays of Mrs. Hiller’s sister, Mrs. Bubb, in Williamsport. —JFrancis Thomas, private secretary to the head master at Chestnut Hill Acade- my, has been visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Thomas, during the Christ- mas vacation. —Miss Anna H. Hoy, Mrs. Robert M. Beach and Miss Mary H. Linn were guests for a part of last week and for the New Year day, of Mr. and Mrs. John Sommer- ville, at Robertsdale. --Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester A. Bixler, of Boston, spent a day last week in Belle- fonte, guests of Mr. and Mrs. James II. Potter, coming up here from Lock Haven, where they had been for a Christmas vis- it. --Miss Margaret Brockerhoff returned to Philadelphia this week to make some final preparations for her trip to the Orient, after spending three weeks here with her uncle and brother, Dr. Joseph and Henry Brockerhoff. —Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Seel, of Paxtang, will leave today to spend January and February in San Francisco, it being their second winter on the Pacific coast. Mrs. Seel is well known in Bellefonte as Miss Jennie Fauble. —Mrs. M. A. Kirk and Florence Love spent part of last week with Mrs. Kirk's sister, Mrs. Daniel Rhinesmith, in Clear- field, going Saturday to friends in Tyrone and to visit at the Home for Aged, where several Centre countians are now located. —Mrs. Chauncey F. York, of Detroit, Mich., who was called to Bellefonte two weeks ago on account of the death of her father, the late Col. Emanuel Noll, will leave this week to join her husband at their winter home mear Tampa, Florida. —Mrs. Robert Morris and her younger son, Robert Jr. came here from Kenne- bunk Port, Maine, before Christmas, to join Mr. Morris and their elder son, Alexander, at the home of A. G. Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris and their sens will be in Bellefonte indefinitely. —Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Brooks, who have been with friends at Pleasant Gap during the Holidays, came here early in the week to give a part of their time to Mrs. Brooks’ sisters, Mrs. Chambers and Mrs. Troup. While here Mr. and Mrs Brooks have been house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Troup. —Miss Della Cross, who had been here on a visit with her sister, Mrs. Hugh 8. Taylor, Jr., left Monday for her werk at the Wernersville sanitorium, Florida. Miss Cross is associated with the Wernersville Galen Hall sanitorium at Wernersville, but spends a part of cach year at their Flori- da and the middle south health retreats. —Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cromer, of Bald- winsville, N. Y., came to Bellefonte on the eve of Christmas to spend ten days here with Mrs. Cromer's father, W. Homer Crissman, and the family, before going on to Pittsburgh for a visit at Mr. Cromer’s former home. From Pittsburgh Mr. and Mrs. Cromer will return to Baldwinsville. —Miss Georgia Daggett, who has been in Bellefonte with her aunt, Mrs. Wells L. Daggett, for the past four months or more, left this week for Cleveland, Ohio, to vis- it with her sister, Mrs. Maynard Murch Jr., until spring. At the expiration of her visit in Cleveland, Miss Daggett will re- turn to New York to resume her work at the Fordham hospital. —1Ineluded in Mr. and Mrs J. L. Spang- ler’s Christmas Holiday house party were James A. McClain, who returned to Spang- ler Saturday, Mrs. McClain and their daughter, Emily Eliza, following Monday; Miss Bargaret Brisbin, who left Monday to return to her work as head of ene of the divisions at the Philadelphia Navy vard; Eliza Blackburn, Mrs. Spangler's grand-daughter, and Margaret Hiller, the elder daughter of Mrs. H. M. Hiller. —E. H. Miller, of Philadelphia, spent Christmas with his brother Morris in this place. Ed has been with the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. so long that he could be retired next month if he wanted to take advantage of his quarter century opportu- nity, but nothing doing in that line. He is well, likes his work and is young enough to give his employers another twenty-five years of the kind of intelligent, faithful service that those of you whe know the venerable Isaac Miller might expect any of his sons to render. —John P. Harris is on a two week's vis- it with his son, Dr. Edward Harris and his family in Snow Shoe. Mr. Harris and his daughter, Mrs. Warfield, were Christ- mas day guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Linn Harris, in Lock Haven, Mr. Harris going from there to Snow Shoe, while Mrs. War- field left for Pittsburgh. Mrs. Warfield’s time in Pittsburgh was divided be- tween her sister, Dr. Edith Schad, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gail Chaney, and Mr. and Mrs. William Craig, who are vis- iting with the former's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Craig and their small son went to Pittsburgh before Christmas. —Mrs. David Haines had quite a house party over Christmas and her home on north Water street was aglow with holi- day cheer for her daughter Lucy, Mrs. King, and her grand-son Charles Haines Jr., came up from Sunbury, and her son, Charles Haines, came in from McKeesport to complete the family party, as his daughter, Miss Peggy, makes her home here with her grandmother. They all left the fore part of last week. Mr. Haines brought with him Mrs. Newcomer, the la- dy with whom he boards in McKeesport. She had never visited this part of the State and took this seasonable opportu- nity to see what kind of a place the old home town of her ‘star boarder” really is. —Mrs. W. C. Cassidy went to Philadel- phia last week, for a two week’s visit with Mrs. Thomas Moore. —NMrs. Elsie Rankin Helliwell, of Atlan- tic City, is visiting with her father, Wm. B. Rankin, and the family. —Miss Mary Musser spent last week with friends in Harrisburg, having gone down to attend a mid-winter dance. —Miss Hannah Newman came here from Altoona yesterday, and while in Bellefonte will be a guest of Mrs. Fauble and Mrs. Schloss. —Mr. and Mrs. James C. Furst and their two sons spent the New Year's day with Mrs. Furst’s mother and sisters in Wil- liamsport. —George Herron, of Pittsburgh, was the guest of honor during the Holiday season at the home of his son, James W. Herron, of Curtin street. —Mrs. C. D. Tanner returned Wednes- day from a Christmas visit with her daughter, Mrs. Hugh Boyle a8 the fam- ily, at Hazleton. —Frederick Noll spent Monday after- noon in Bellefonte, stopping here on his way back to Donora, from a visit with his mother, in Clearfield. —Mrs, Harriet Ray Smith and little daughter Dorothy spent the holiday sea- son with friends in Philadelphia, Reading and Shoemakerville, returning home the fore part of this week. —Mrs. W. A. Eichinger, of Tulsa, Okla., is visiting in Bellefonte, a guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Knisely. Mrs. Eichinger came east this week and will be with Mr. and Mrs. Knisely for two months. —Mrs. H. B. Shattuck and Mrs. H. H. Havner, of State College, were among the out-of-town members of the D. A. R. in Bellefonte Tuesday for the January meet- ing of the Chapter, held at the Bush house. —Miss Helen Bartholomew, of Centre Hall, and her niece, Elizabeth Bartholo- mew, were in Philadelphia the after part of last week, spending several days there under the care of Dr. McCluney Radcliffe, an eye specialist. —Mr. and Mrs. David Blackburn enter tained Mr. and Mrs. William Rachau, of Bellevue, Ohio, during their recent visit te Bellefonte. Mrs. Rachau, before her mar- riage, was Miss Meyers, a graduate nurse of the Bellefonte hospital. —Mrs. Harry Garber, of College Point, L. I, has been in Bellefonte for the past ten days, called here by the serious illness of her grandmother, Mrs. D. G. Bush. Mrs. Garber will be with Mrs. Bush at her apartments in the Bush Arcade, for an in- definite time, —Jack Montgomery, who is now home with his mother, Mrs. Joseph L. Mont- gomery, will leave early in the week for New York, for a try-out as a movie actor, with the Ralph W. Ince Film Co., to ap- pear in three pictures, among which will be “Who Cares.” Jack has the opportu- nity, so that all he need show is histrionic ability enough to start him on the way to screen success. —Miss Florence Finnegan, who has been a guest of Mrs. R. 8. Brouse within the past week, came here Saturday from Phil- adelphia, for a visit of a few days before going to take up her new work at Carlisle. Miss Finnegan is a daughter of Mrs. Stephen Finnegan, and spent all her girl- hood life in Bellefonte, leaving here with her mother and sister several years ago, to make her home in Philadelphia. Fer some time Miss Finnegan has been asso- ciated with the State Welfare work in Philadelphia, devoting her time for the past three years to the Children’s Aid. A transfer to the tuberculosis department has now been made, which work she will take up upon going to Carlisle. —During the holiday week we just stole enough time from the mechanical depart- ment of this plant to sit out in the front office for a few hours and act like the uewspaper game was so soft that all one need is to keep his face and hands clean, throw a little bull and paw in money. After about four months of intensive nos- ing into type cases, ink kegs and roller washing it seemed like “a little bit of Heaven.” So many agreeable callers came in all wreathed in seasonable smiles and radiating good feeling. Among the near- by agricultural “blo¢’ ’ who loafed and swapped yarns with us for a few moments were Wilbur Tibbens, who is on the Shu- gert farm at Pleasant Gap; E. J. Gentzel, who is carrying on on his father’s big farm below Pleasant Gap; and Henry Hoy, who makes a specialty of raising beautiful flowers, good crops and serving pure milk to a Bellefonte route. Then eame Ollie Campbell, of Barnesboro. He and his wife had been here for a few days at her former home at Pleasant Gap. Following him J. F. Zeigler and Peter Keichline, of Bellefonte, dropped in and with twe such stalwart old Democrats laying themselves open to confab we nearly died of disap- pointment because there was a Republican lurking round in the back office and we couldn’t open up with our friends for fear he would get mad and chuck the job he was at,, for in that event our little delu- sion of being boss around here would have ended right then. O. H. Nason, farmer, lumberman and road builder of Martha, was next with a display of photographs of a hunting camp where deer and bear galore were hanging. Just when we effervesced with congratulations Orrie admitted that the picture wasn’t of his camp, but that of the crowd located near his in the moun- tain. He had to get a picture of their kill because his own had none to take. We used to hunt with Orrie and we recall that he was always in our class—a dandy hunt- er—with the accent on the hunt. The last caller was J. H. Heberling, of Tyrone, who merely ran in for a moment while the train that was carrying him to his for- mer home in Eagleville for a short visit, was dischanrging passengers. When he left we remembered something that had been forgotten down under the big press and our sun went behind a cloud of grease, printer's ink and paper scraps for the rest of the day. A Rl Iowa Horses to be Sold at Centre Hall. Tomorrow, Saturday, January 7th, 33 head of fine Iowa horses will be sold at auction at the hotel stables at Centre Hall. In the consignment are ten mated teams of bays, blacks and grays rang- ing from 2800 lbs. to 3300 lbs per team. The sale will be under the direction of C. C. Hallman, of Lancaster, and if you are looking for some good big an- imals Mr. Hallman has them. 67-1 wr