sa RR Bellefonte, Pa., January 13, 1922. ¥. GRAY MEEK, - - Editor To Correspondents.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. Terms of Subscription.—Until further motice this paper will be furnished to sub- scribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $1.50 Paid before expiration of year - 1.75 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 Published weekly, every Friday morning. Entered at the postoffice Bellefonte, Pa.. as second class mail matter. a IN THE WILDS OF ALASKA. Graphic Description by Dr. Meek of Her Trip Overland by Dog Sled. Cripple, Alaska Ia route from Ruby to Flat, October 31st, 1921. My dear Home Folk: I started out bravely enough to keep a daily record of my doings thinking that in this way I could best help you to visualize Alaska, at least the parts I have been living in, but frozen ink and a “bum” pen made such a very bad combination that, added to my natural desire te just move on, I sure- ly put all my letter writing in that big batch of things we do “tomorrow.” But I'll try to do just a little better today. Last Thursday, after many and var- ious delays, we left Ruby with the mail-carriers. Oh! that you could have seen that get-away and the “lay- outs” as these men call them! The dogs are hitched two by two with one well-trained, intelligent dog in the lead. The harness attach- ed to the collar is held by a strap pass- ing around the body. First came Sig- hard Wiig, a Norwegian by birth but a resident here for twenty years, a rather quiet sort, very nice to travel with—in short a gentleman. He had seventeen dogs in his team with three running loose and seven pups about five months of age. Then came our team (these mail-carriers had loaned us these dogs), eleven dogs in harness with two loose ones behind. The loose dogs had been kept in a summer camp on the Yukon and were now be- ing returned to their owners. The dogs are fed once a day on dried fish with a side dish of beef suet. The third team was held for a day longer to bring along the mail that was re- together and, after the first day, I house and is a good cook. We had saw the reason for this pliable con- | fried grouse, mashed potatoes, car- veyance. Such trails! good gracious! | rots, peas, tomato aspie, pudding, I hadn’t much use for the dogs except | cake and coffee. We played cards un- what a lover of dogs might have but, | til two o’clock, then went to bed right 1 now have great respect for them. | there, leaving this morning at ten- There is a formation or growth of | thirty. By the way, one of the inter- grass up here called “nigger-heads,” | estifig things there is the little green tufts of coarse grass grown up on : house where, carly in the spring, they each other each season until, in some ! plant tomatoes, cucumbers and pep- places, they are two or three feet high with a space between that, in spring, contains water. At this time, these spaces should be full of snow but, since the snow is scarce, the sled slid along on one tuft just to slide off the next. It takes skill to balance these sleds with a thousand pounds of bag- gage on them and you know in how narrow a space two dogs could run, so the sled follows a trail scarcely wider than this paper is long (about eight inches). Truly, a deep-sea ves- sel rides almost as smoothly. The weather was not cold, just clear and crisp, and the trip was broken often enough to be not tiresome. day was only a fourteen mile run and to see the charming little cabin, | with smoke pouring cut of the chim- ney, that greeted my eyes that first evening made an unforgettable pic- ture. The remainder of the nine days we had longer runs—twenty-eight to thirty-two miles. As it was the first trip, the dogs became quite weary on the third day and their feet began to bleed but moccasins of heavy drill were put on the bleeding feet and on we went. By the sixth day, the dogs seemed to come back and, as we stop- | ped for an entire day at Ophir, the The first | | pers. It is like a doli’s house and yet i they have all the fresh tomatoes they want and can use. ELOISE. November 28th, 1921. Business Men’s Association Elects Officers for Ensuing Year. At the annual meeting of the Belle- fonte Business Men’s association on January 4th officers for the ensuing year were elected as follows: Pres- ident, Harry C. Yeager; vice presi- dent, Frank M. Crawford; secretary, G. Oscar Gray; treasurer, John M. Buliock. { Among the various discussions car- ried on during the evening was one pertaining to some method of finanec- ing the building of new homes, owing to the woeful shortage of desirable homes in Bellefonte, but no definite conclusion was reached. i A resume of what the association has been a leading factor in accom- plishing for Bellefonte since its or- | ganization was given, but in doing so i the association did not assume to take ‘all the credit nor belittie the efforts of other organizations or individuals. Included in the list was the bringing DR. WILLIAM FREAR. Some two months or more ago Dr. William Frear, of State College, while discussing with a friend a recent ill- ness he had experienced remarked that he had never worried as to the out- come. That his affairs were as much in order as it was possible to have | them and as to death, he viewed that merely as a transition from this life to life immortal. That the overpow- ering dread of death that character- izes the feelings of the great mass of humanity is because of the fear con- nected with it, but that he had no fear and was ready to go whenever God in his wisdom saw fit to terminate this life. What a blessing to his family and friends that his life hag, been such that he had no apprehension as to when the call might come, because it came very suddenly last Friday night. Of late he had been in com- paratively good health and had not missed a day from his office and regu- lar duties, until Friday, when he re- mained at home because he was not feeling up to capacity for work. Be- {ween midnight and Saturday morn- ing he suffered a stroke of apoplexy and passed away before a physician could reach his bedisde. Di. Trear was one of the best ag- ricultural research men in the coun- try. He was born at Reading, Pa., on March 24th, 1860, hence was only in his sixty-second year. His parents were Rev. George and Malvina Row- land F'rear, his father being a Baptist minister. He was educated at the public schools in his home city then Those who knew him loved him be- cause of his many virtues and the simplicity and genuineness of his character.” Dr. Frear’s death is a serious loss to the College, and marks the passing away within twenty months of three of th¢ leading men of that institution, Dr. G. G. Pond, who died in May, 1920; Dr. H. P. Armsby, who passed away in October and now Dr. Frear, the latter the dean of faculty mem- bers. Funeral services were held at his late home at the College on Monday afternoon by Dr. Samuel Martin and on Tuesday morning the remains were taken to Wilkes-Barre where final services were held that afternoon and where the interment was made. il i BRADFORD.—George W. Brad- ford, a life-long resident of Centre Hall, died on Tuesday at the home of his son Albert, at Phoenixville, as the result of a stroke of paralysis sus- | tained the same day. i Deceased was a son of William and | Catherine Bradford and was born | near Bealshurg sixty-six years ago. | For many years he lived on a farm i between Centre Hall and Potters | Mills. He was a member of the Re- | formed church, the I. O. O. F. and the |K. G. E. He married Miss Mary | Bohn who survives with the following | children: Albert, William and Mrs. Jerome Auman, all of Phoenixville; | Daniel, of Willard, Ohio; Mrs. John { Marks, D. M. and Paul, of Centre | Hail. He also leaves the following : brothers and sisters; W. Frank Brad- finish was nearly as good as the start. | to Bellefonte of the Eagle company The road-houszs ranged in variety silk mill which, when in full opera- from a cabin, with two bough-filled j tion, employs approximately one hun- bunks and a prospector to give one dred women and seventy-five men, their food, to a very nice place about i with an annual pay roll of $120,000. on a par with the hotel at Centre Hall. | The reorganization of the Abremsen But there was no difference in price | Engineering company by the intro- as it was one dollar for a bed either a duction of local capital which enabled bunk, with a dirty cotton comfort and | them to purchase the plant outright a hard pillow, or an iron one with |and become established on a more per- woven-wire springs, sheets and warm manent basis under the S¥m name of comforts; one-doliar and a half for the Sutton-Abremsen’ Engineering breakfast and the sane for the late | company. The placing of signs on the dinner that we always had as soon as main highways we landed. The food was excellent | fonte, the dollar day campaign, guar- and any bed seemed ood after a day | anteeing of the Chautauqua for next in the open and (hc exercise from |year; the guaranteeing of Building those rocking sleds. | and Loan association shares to an I wish I could describe the country | amount approximating $10,000, and through which we passed but if you | which has been an important item in remember the drive to Snow Shoe i the erection of several new homes; where all the big timber has been tak- | the weekly band concerts during the en off leaving only scrub pine you summer and the big business men’s will have a good idea of what I saw. ! picnic at Hecla park. Mountains on all sides and small] After reading the above there can streams but all so barren and infer- | be but one conclusion, and that is that leading into Belle- took a course at Bucknell University, | ford, Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, W. S. Lewisburg, where he graduated in !and D. W. Bradford, Mrs. Frank Ish- 1881. He took a post-graduate course i ler and C. E. Bradford, of Centre at Harvard and also Illinois Wesleyan | Hall; Mrs. Sarah Bohn, of Coburn; C. University, receiving the degree of | H., of Pittsburgh, and P. C. Bradford, Ph. D., in 1883. From the time of his | of Lemont. graduation at Bucknell in 1881 until | Funeral services will be held in the hs i pion in tions at Reformed Fuel 5 Bolgnz omer Sucknell and in e was made an | Yow morning by Rev. 5S. C. Stover, , assistant chemist of the United States burial to be made at that place. Department of Agriculture. In 1885 | 4 uy he became professor of agricultural KERSTETTER—Mrs. Nannie Ker- chemistry at The Pennsylvania State | stetter, widow of Harry Kerstetter, Coll dt as | died at the home of her brother, Frank ollege an WO ears later was: died at the nome © er brotner, rran ant director as chemist of the | Seibert, at Point Lookout, near Phil- agricultural experiment station, posi- | ipsburg, on Sunday morning, follow- ‘tions he held until his death. His en- | ing a lingering illness with sarcoma , tire life was devoted to research work | of the breast. : in connection with agriculture and his! She was a daughter of James and abilities in this line attracted more Annie Seibert and was born in Belle- than State-wide attention. In 1905 he | Yonse on March 24th, 3h hones was was made chemist for the State De- | 67 years, 9 months and 15 days old. partment of Agriculture and some Yer i who was a blacksmith at years ago he was prominently men- | the Huntingdon reformatory, died tioned as successor to Dr. Hugh Wiley | twenty-six years ago but surviving tile that, with the few people we saw or met, one feels this is, indeed, a big country and I wonder why it seems to belong so to the past. Yes, I know miners are not home-makers, but take and move on. These camps are di- | minishing, the gold has been dredged ported to have been sent down the riv- er but had not arrived when we left. This man was a young Scotchman but, ! also, an old resident of Alaska and an old hand with dogs. He drove nine- teen dogs with two or three “dog- » 3: boarders” running loose and caught ry,n the streams, the wood burned : 1 up with us on the second day. The |g. nid tur ord | : yo | for we paid twenty-one dollars a cord | sleds to which the dogs are hitched | today for wood to burn to keep us are long, strong, well-built affairs. The | warm. Gardens can be made, pota- big ones are fifteen foot long and six- | toes, turnips and cabbage raised but : ] E ig x teen to eighteen inches wide (dia-| pose! miners preferred to have them gram), an upturned, curved bow at | shipped into the towns. So a little the front that, striking trees, enables | cabin without yard or garden and the the sled to glance off, or, nosing into | ;ountry poorer than when they came the bank, the dogs can more readily | js what remains when they leave. Of pull the sled to the top of the bank |. ype I have not been on the other and, since there are many small! IE ore a b | is much better land, agriculture has hy YO 00 & Ip 18 vob 1d and lation is i S- The sled with which we started was Fe ton ord ahd populeiion Is fnercs only a foot shorter than the big sleds; | he ix : : > { I had hoped to get on my way this Thsrae was exactly like them. The | ov week, since Flat is only half way river stands at the back on the ex- |i, Ayxiak, where is located the govern- tended runners, holding onto handles | ment hospital that I have promised to at each side and uses a heavy brake | ,,1 after this next year. Whether I (diagram) to help control the teams. | ij stay longer than this winter re- He calls “Haw” or “Gee” for left or | aing for the future to tell. It is a right and the leader understands, So { ative hospital, not 1a 1 off one goes with a whizz. Yater on, inive Yuspinl now So yor) lange an i is, indeed, at the “jumping-off” place when the snow is deep (we have had | B 4 S a4 only a few inches thus far), the driver | ona Ln wondering howl dhl Mee le sits on the front of the sled and guides | jg me that the trails are too soft and jt withalils, * = # 5 = =» v | the river not frozen for travel and I Flat, Alaska, November 9, 1921. | must wait until “sharper weather” ere Again I start and will try to finish I can hope to move. Can you believe by tomorrow since the mail will start that here in Alaska, November twen- | back Friday morning. One mail a | ty-sighth, this state of things could week and that brought in by dogs. I °° i am beginning to think that I must! The day before Thanksgiving, a have some dogs for, in a country man, originally from Ohio, but twen- where we must either travel by dog- ty-two years a resident here, came in- sled or on foot, one surely feels cut off | to our cabin and asked where we were But I won’ | going to eat our Thanksgiving din- | ner. when not owning dogs. stop to talk dog just now. The “get-away” from Ruby was |IoO plans, he suggested that he buy the : spectacular since, as usual, most of | chickens, (raised here at five dollars the people were down to see us off and | apiece but, of course, we are not sup- wish us “safe-journey.” The dogs posed to know the price) and we could were excited and barking madly and, | cook the meal. We agreed and then just here, let me tell you that pande- | another “forlorn” man came along monium is the one word applicable | and offered to cook it if he could join about the stable when dogs are being | us. We had stewed chicken with ex- harnessed for the trail. The ones that | cellent dumplings, cream gravy, mash- go are joyous, so proclaim their joy | ed potatoes, peas, hot biscuit and but- loudly; the ones that stay seem to be | ter, celery, fruit salad of oranges, ! side of the mountains; that, I am told, A wireless came today inform- | When we told him we had made | ‘the Bellefonte Business Men's asso- “ciation is proving a factor in the bus- iness life of Bellefonte and every bus- iness man should belong to it. BE ——.—. , “Gorgeous” Only Way to Describe “Queen of Sheba.” In keeping with all the accounts and traditions of splendor and mag- nificence attending the arrival of the Queen of Sheba at the court of King Solomon, more than three thousand years ago, is the spectacular photo- drama “Queen of Sheba,” which will be shown at the Pastime theatre, tate College, Monday and Tuesday, January 16th and 17th. The sensa- tional success of this remarkable Wil- liam Fox super-special in its open- ing run on Broadway, New York, is "easily understood by all who see the the picture. Scene after scene of extraordinary power and splendor keeps the audi- ence gasping with surprise and admi- ration. Betty Blythe was a regally beauti- ful Sheba, Fritz Lieber an effective and convincing King Solomon, Nell Craig a dashing and fascinating Prin- cess Vashti, and other members of the notable cast gave excellent portray- als. i As a stupendous spectacle, “Queen of Sheba” is unsurpassed. As a pho- .toplay presenting a great love story with the utmost power of appeal, it is a dramatic triumph of the screen. “Queen of Sheba” will be remember- | 30 Tong Gey 1ahS) OF the Scroon She United States, president of the So-: _cials of the season are forgotten. eee cel eee eet. Thieves Busy at Pleasant Gap. Residents of Pleasant Gap have as pure food chemist in the United States Department of Agriculture. Among the research projects to | which Dr. Frear devoted considerable ‘time was the development of tobac- "co culture, and his efforts in this di- rection resulted to the great financial advantage of ail tobacco growers in Pennsylvania. Just recently he had been at work on the development of a ; new strain of tobacco which also promises marked improvement in the crop. In addition to numerous bulle- tins issued in connection with his work Dr. Frear’s writings have been | confined to scientific reports of his various researches and work done at the experimental station at State Col- , lege. From 1892 to 1894 he was ed- itor and proprietor of Agricultural ; Science, a journal devoted to the ex- ploitation of research work and later he had been a contributor to scientific journals and agricultural reports. While his life work was naturally in connection with the important po- sition he held at State College he still found time to take considerable inter- est in civic affairs and local business interests at the College. During the days of the old University Inn he was secretary and treasurer of the compa- ny; he also held similar positions in , the State College Water company, ' treasurer of the Westmont Coal com- | pany and president of the Hillside Ice company. He was an ex-president of the Association of American Agricul- tural Colleges and Experiment Sta- tions, president of the Association of Official Agricultural Chemists of the ! ciety for the Promotion of Agricul- i tural Science, member of the Amer- | ican Chemical Society and Deutche ' Chemiche Gesellschaft, and chairman been pestered for some time past by of the executive committee of the Na- considerable petty thieving which has tional Pure Food and Drug Congress. become almost as prevalent as an ep- | Following in the footsteps of his dren, and one of the last depredations tist faith. He was a Republican in day night when some one broke into preferment. He was a member of the the pool room of Ray Noll and stole a | Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, and pres- idemic of measles among school chil- father Dr. Frear adhered to the Bap- of this character took place on Satur- | politics but never aspired to political wailing in a minor key about their | disappointments, but it all goes to- | gether. The mail comes down the Yukon on | boats while the river is open but, |! when it closes, dog teams are the only means available. Since the passage ! from Seattle to Seward is always open, mail is sent there, thence up the | railroad to Tanana and then down the Yukon. When the river is frozen over it makes a smooth highway for dog- teams. As the river was full of float- ing ice so that no boats could move and offered no footing for dogs, the mail was held at Tanana and we wait- ed for that “water” to stop moving but, after six days, one mail-carrier was ordered off. The second one, George Clark, a Scotchman so “Scot- ty” for short, was held a day in the hope that the last mail, which had been brought down the river on the other side, could be brought across be- fore he left on the two-hundred-and- fifty mile trail to the two, Iditarod and Flat, and other lonely hamlets of the interior. The parts of the sleds are all lashed pineapple, apples, celery and nuts, but he made a boiled dressing and it was none too good, coffee and chocolate. Although we had prepared plum pud- ding with hard sauce, they all decided they had enough without it. A bad accident occurred last week when a man was feeding wood into a circular saw, slipped and his arm went in taking it off about three inch- es above the wrist. Of course they ran for me and I had to go to work and sew the stump up. It has not been behaving nicely since but I am hoping that the end will be a better stump than it now gives promise of. For some reason he bled very little. I have “doctored” men with bad hearts, ba backs, bad stomachs, arms, babies with any and all complaints, pulled a tooth the other night and I am wondering what will come next. Last night we were invited in to Iditarod, eight miles, for dinner; so two men came along with their dog teams and, tucking us in, off we went. Our hostess, Mrs. Buttons, is a very vivacious, young woman of perhaps twenty-eight, with a pretty little small glass show case containing about $150 worth of merchandise. Mr. Noll closed his room about eleven o’clock and went home. About a half hour later an alarm was spread broad- cast that the pool room was being rob- i bed. Men hurried to the building only to find that the robbers had made good and gotten away. The case car- ried off contained two gold watches, ten gold rings, an automatic revolver, fountain pens, pearl necklace, and oth- er articles amounting in value to about $150. The next morning the case was found in some brush about one hundred feet from the pool room. The necklace and several fountain pens were all that remained of the contents, about fifteen dollar’s worth all told. The same night or night pre- vious H. S. Thompson, an employee of the penitentiary who makes his home at the Gap, claims that some one stole a quarter of beef from his larder. There is a pretty well grounded suspicion who some of the thieves are but so far no arrests have been made. ——The Central Pennsylvania Odd Fellows association will hold its regu- lar anniversary meeting in Tyrone this year, on Friday, April 28th. ident of the State College Chapter of the honor fraternity, Phi Kappa Phi. He was a member of Washington Grange Patrons of Husbandry, the Odd Fellows and very prominent in Masonic circles, being a past master of Bellefonte Lodge No. 268 F. and A. M., a past high priest of Bellefonte Chapter No. 241 Royal Arch Masons, a past eminent commander of Con- stans Commandery No. 33, Knights Templar, as well as a member of the fa Temple Nobles of the Mystic Shrine of Altoona. In 1900 Dr. Frear was married to Miss Julia Reno, at Greenville, Ky., who survives with four children, George Lewis, a junior in the College; Mary Reno, a Sophomore; Elizabeth, a junior in the High school, and Wil- liam, in the grade school. Commenting upon his life work the Altoona Tribune says: “In the per- formance of his duties in connection with the enforcement of the food laws of the State he was prompt, exact, conscientious and accurate. He con- cerned himself chiefly about the spe- cial business toward which education and inclination directed his energies. He was a loyal American always. Williamsport Consistory and the Jaf- ‘her are the following brothers and : sisters: Mrs. Carrie Kirk, of Ham- "mond, Ind.; Mrs. E. C. Newlin, of Pittsburgh; James D. Seibert, of Bellefonte; Harry, of Barneshoro; Al- fred and Frank, of Philipsburg. Funeral services were held at her late home at 7:30 o’clock on Monday evening by Rev. C. F. Kulp, of the Baptist church, and on Tuesday after- noon the remains were brought to Bellefonte and taken direct to the Union cemetery for burial. If Il PORT.—G. W. Port, a well known home on east Howard street on Tues- day afternoon of last week as the re- | sult of a stroke of paralysis sustained ‘the Friday previous. He was 73 years, 3 months and 11 days old and was born near Clarion, Pa. He came to Bellefonte twenty-eight years ago and for some time thereafter was em- ployed as a teamster. Later he was chosen caretaker at the Union ceme- tery a position he filled for eighteen years. He was a member of the Pres- byterian church and a good citizen. His wife died seven years ago but sur- viving him is one son, Blaine Port. He also leaves a brother and four sis- ters. Burial was made in the Union cemetery on Friday afternoon. Il Il STICKLER.—Henry Stickler, a well known resident of Bellefonte, died on Saturday night after a linger- ing illness. He was born in Belle- fonte seventy-six years ago. He was married to Miss Emma Rebecca Sym- monds who survives with the follow- ing children: James, of Bellefonte; Mrs. Vera A. Welsh, of Williamsport; Mrs. Margaret Auman, of Lykens, ‘and Mrs. Pearl McGrew, of Thomas- “ville. He also leaves one brother and two sisters, Edward, of Champaign, I1l.; Mrs. Joseph Getford, in Missouri, and Mrs. Strait, in Ohio. Burial was made in the Union cemetery on Tues- day afternoon. u Il BUZZELL—Mrs. Alveretta Feister ! Buzzell died in Philipsburg Wednes- day morning after an illness of sev- eral days. Mrs. Buzzell was born in Winterset, Ohio, in June, 1851, but has lived in Philipsburg since the early seventies, being among the well-known older residents of that place. She is survived by her husband, two daugh- ters and a son, Mrs. Harriet Merrill, of Ben Avon; Miss Fannie, at home, and Dr. Edgar Buzzell, a dentist of Philipsburg; and one sister, Mrs. Em- ma B. Smith, living in Kansas. Fun- eral services will be held Saturday . afternoon, burial to be made in Phil- | ipsburg. il I ! VALLANCE.—William T. Vallance, for many years a resident of Belle- fonte, died at his home in Winburne on Wednesday of last week, aged 78 | years. He will be remembered by the | older residents of Bellefonte as the faithful watchman at the old Ardell Lumber company during his residence in Bellefonte. He left here some fif- ‘teen or more years ago and moved to ' Winburne. His wife is dead and two "of his children, Sarah and Harry, are iin Rochester, N. Y.; Margaret is at “home, while the whereabouts of the ‘ others could not be learned. Burial was made at Winburne last Friday. resident of Bellefonte, died at his! eS Sy BOWERSOX. — The venerable Franklin Bowersox, for many years a resident of Ferguson township, died ‘at the Glenn sanitorium at State Col- lege at eight o’clock on Wednesday evening of diseases incident to his ad- ; vanced age. He was born at Middleburg, Sny- . der county on March 11th, 1838, hence i had reached the age of 83 years and "10 months. His boyhood days were spent at Middleburg and when not : quite twenty years of age, or on Jan- uary 12th, 1858, he was united in , marriage to Miss Catherine Ocker rand two months later the young couple came to Centre county and set- tled on a farm near Millheim. Forty- rone years ago they moved to Fergu- { son township where they lived on a { farm until fourteen years ago when | they retired to a cosy home in Pine Grove Mills. Mr. Bowersox was among the most thrifty and progres- sive farmers of the county and in the years that he tilled the soil acquired a substantial competence that ena- bled him and his wife to pass their de- clining years in comfort. They also reared a large family of children, fourteen in all, and the eleven still living are substantially situated and an honor to their deceased parents and upbringing. Mr. Bowersox was a life-long member of the Methodist church and a ruling elder for many years. His wife passed away on June 19th, 1921, but surviving him are the fol- lowing children: Mus. John B. Rock- ey, of State College; Mrs. Charles Weaver, of Millmont; Mrs. T. D. Gray, of State College; Edgar O., of Phila- delphia; Oscar, of State College; Mrs. Gordon Harper, of Fairbrook; Dr. Frank Bowersox, of Millheim; Elmer, in Fort Worth, Texas; John, of Penn- sylvania Furnace; Mrs. John Dry, of Millmont, and Prof. A. L. Bower- sox, of Pine Grove Mills. He also leaves twenty-eight grandchildren and twenty-three great grand children, as well as two brothers and three sisters, namely: Mrs. Tessie Huminell, in Kansas; Curtis, Adam Sarah Bowersox od Mrs. Mary Reddinger, all of Middi~burg. iin anda Seavey The remains were taken tv his home at Pine Grove Mills where funeral services will be held on Saturday moining, burial to be made in the cemetery at that place. Hi ii SUNDAY.—The many friends of Mrs. Sarah Sunday, wife of Elmer Sunday, of Tadpole, were shocked to learn of her unexpected death in the Clearfield hospital on morning. She recently submitted to an operation for the removal of a tu- mor and was getting along so well that it was thought she would be able to be taken home in a few days. Tuesday night, however, she suffered a collapse and her death followed in a few hours. Mrs. Sunday was a daughter of David H. and Elizabeth Kustaborder and was born in Ferguson township about fifty years ago. All her life had been spent within a few miles of the place of her birth. She was a member of the Lutheran church and an excellent woman in every way. Surviving her are her husband and one son, William Sunday, as well as four grandchildren. She also leaves three sisters, Mrs. John Harpster, Mrs. John Barto and Mrs. George Barto, all of Ferguson township. The remains were taken to her old home at Tadpole yesterday where funeral services will be held at ten o’clock to- morrow morning, burial to be made at Gatesburg. Wednesday ——Weather statistics show that in a normal season the snow fall during the winter season amounts to a cer- tain number of inches, and it would seem as if we got our full allotment on Wednesday. Snow began falling about five o’clock in the morning and the snow god must have been using a coarse sieve, as it drifted down in clouds all day and up to six o’clock in the evening. Fairly accurate meas- urements where the snow had not drifted showed a strong twenty inch- es. It is the deepest snowfall this section of the country has experienced at one time in many years, and while traffic was greatly impeded on the state highways and public rcads, and trains were somewhat late, the wind fell after the snow was all down and it did not drift as bad as anticipated. A report from Ferguson township states that the fall up there measured twenty-eight inches on the level and practically blocked all the roads. Sev- eral auto parties were caught in the deep snow and had to be rescued, none the worse for their adventure, however. Early Movings. Mr. and Mrs. Hassel Montgomery have reserved apartments at the Bush house, which they will take possession of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Craft, who are now occupying the second floor apart- ment in the Schlow building, have leased the house on Spring street va- cated by Geo. R. Meek and his family, and will move there before the first of April. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Musser, now living in the McQuistion house on Thomas street, have leased the house on Lamb street to be vacated by Geo. Harpster; the IMarpster family will go to the William McClellan property, while Mr. and Mrs. Sunday, who are now occupying it, will move to Pleas- ant Gap. Mrs. McClellan will make her home with her children for the present. ——The borough auditors are now at work auditing the borough ac- { counts.