m———————————————————————e eS Demorai aan —_—— Bellefonte, Pa., December 8, 1922, WEWS ABOUT TOWN AND CQUNTY. ~— Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s — Read the opening chapters of «The Blind Man’s Eye” in next week’s “Watchman.” You will find them in- tensely interesting. — The “hit-and-miss” sewing bee will meet on Saturday afternoon, at the Y. M. C. A., at 2 o'clock. With or without rags hit it, not miss it. — The regular session of Decem- ber term of court will be held next week. No very important cases are up for trial and the sessions will hard- ly last the week through. — A blind man’s eye is naturally supposed to be a bad eye, but by read- ing the new serial to be started in this paper next week, “The Blind Man's Eye,” you will probably learn more about it. — Former postmaster S. W. Smith, of Centre Hall, has been awarded the contract for carrying the mail from the railroad depot to the postoffice in that town, making his first trips on Wednesday. — According to manager Elliott Lane the “Watchman” was misin- formed last week as to the cause of the fire at the Imperial gas tanks on Tuesday, which he says was not caus- ed by a cigarette stump but by a spark from the electric pump. -——Don’t forget to attend the sale to be held by the Weman’s Aid society of the Presbyterian church, in the chapel, next Thursday afternoon and evening, December 14th, beginning at 2:30 o'clock. You will find there aprons, fancy and plain; all kinds of fancy articles, home-made bread, cakes, and candy. At a recent meeting of the Cen- tre county Farm Bureau executive committee a resolution was adopted providing for putting the Bureau on a paid membership basis. Accordingly an amendment to the constitution which will permit this change in the present organization will be voted on at the annual meeting December 23rd, 1922, — Penn State went down in de- feat at the hands of the Pitt panthers on Thanksgiving day by the score of 14 to 0. The State warriors held Pitt during the first half but were unable to keep up the good work and the Pittsburgh kickers scored in both the third and fourth periods. State’s team will now begin work for its trip to the Pacific coast. ——The brick work on J. O. Hev- erly’s new building on Allegheny street has been completed and every effort will be made to get it under roof before snow falls. With that ac- complished and heat installed the in- terior can be completed during the winter. The foundations for the Har- ter building adjoining the Heverly building have been completed but the brick work will not be done until next spring. Only fourteen more shopping days until Christmas but that is no reason why you shouldn’t spend your evenings at the Scenic watching the motion pictures. Two hours enter- taining relaxation every evening will relieve your mind of the vexatious worries of holiday buying and you can start out with renewed energy and | fresh for another day in the shops. Remember every evening’s program is worth seeing. ——Special gift boxes of food, clothing, candy, toys, dry goods, books, etc., will be shipped Thursday, De- cember 14th, by St. John’s Lutheran church, to the Tressler orphans’ home, a Lutheran institution at Loysville. Members of the congregation and others who wish to contribute any- thing to this splendid piece of holiday work may leave their gifts in the church basement Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday of next week. One of the largest legal papers ever entered for record in Centre county is a mortgage for four million dollars executed by the General Re- fractories company in favor of the Commercial Trust company, of Phila- delphia, to secure bonds for that amount issued by the company in tak- ing over the various brick plants in this and other counties. The mort- gage fills over one hundred and fifty typewritten pages in the docket. It has been entered for record in Centre, «Clinton, Clearfield, Blair and Hunt- “J/ingdon counties, as well as in counties iin Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois and * Wisconsin. The total of the recording ; i5es will run into thousands of dol- ‘lars. ~—The painters have almost fin- ished their work on the interior of the First National bank of Bellefonte then all that will remain to do will be a thorough cleaning out and placing «of the new furniture, From all ap- pearances the remodeled bank will be _in shape to take over before Christ- “mas and it goes without saying that «every member of the force will be glad $0 get back. The marked changes which have been made in the interior arrangement almost doubles the work- ing space behind the counters as well } as the lobby of the bank for the ac- commodation of its numerous patrons. Practically all the interior finishing is in marble and bronze, while the floor in the working portion of the bank is of cork. Every equipment will be the most modern obtainable so that the bank will compare favorably with any institution in the central part of the State. MANY BUCKS SLAUGHTERED. Biggest Kill of Deer Ever Recorded in First Week of Season. Twenty-five or thirty years ago, be- fore the days of the drastic game laws | for the protection of deer, the old Gentzel hunting club would come in with a wagon load of deer, the spoils of several week’s hunt in the Green woods. This year a dozen hunting parties got their limit of six deer the first few days of the season hunting in the Seven mountains and the total slaughter is perhaps greater than in any season two decades ago. Of course in those days anything in the shape of a deer was fodder for the hunter’s gun, but with bucks the only legal deer to kill the does are pre- served for propagation purposes, and that is the big reason why the kill of bucks is so large. And it is almost impossible for a buck to escape. In Centre county alone al- most 5,500 hunter’s licenses have been granted and, while not every man who took out a license is out after deer, it is a safe guess that the big majority of them will be on the trail at least a portion of the time during the season. In addition, hunting parties from al- most every section of the State from Philadelphia to Pittsgurgh are scat- tered over Centre county mountains, and it is a wily buck, indeed, that is able to evade the horde of hunters and live through the fifteen days of the season. | Of course, with such an army of | hunters in the woods some does are | sure to fall prey to the over-anxious | hunter, and the number so far this i year is in excess of any former years. In fact so many does have been killed | in one way or another that the Belle- { fonte hospital is overstocked and on { Monday three deer were sent from i Bellefonte to Philipsburg for use at | the Cottage State hospital. Up to i last Saturday three does had been re- | ceived in Bellefonte consigned to the hospital, and on Saturday five more i and two bucks with invisible spikes | were brought in. Monday added four i more, one of which was a buck, the seventh killed by a hunting party in ' mistake. While the party was not li- | able for the fine they were compelled under the law to surrender the deer. ; Two of the does brought in had brok- en necks the result of becoming en- | tangled in wire fences while fleeing | from the hunters. Most of the ille- | gally killed deer were from the Seven mountain section, although two or "three came from the Alleghenies. i All the deer brought in for the hos- pital were sent to Gettig’s meat mar- ket to be skinned and dressed and it i might be of interest to the public to know that every deer skin, head, etc, must be sent to the Game Commission in Harrisburg with the tag attached telling where they were found and by , whom. If the butcher wishes any of the skins for tanning or any other purpose he can buy them from the Game Commission for $1.50 apiece. At this writing it is impossible to give an accurate count or even esti- mate of the number of deer that have been killed, but the following will show the success of some of the hunting parties: | The Bradford hunting party, of , Centre Hall, got their limit on Mon- ' day and returned home Tuesday. The Sweetwood party, of Georges valley, also got their limit on Mon- ! day. The Decker valley hunters encamp- ied at the John Decker farm, got their limit on Monday. ] | The Coburn crowd, hunting on the lower end of the Seven mountains, got their limit the first day of the season. The Woodward Rod and Gun club hunted all day on Friday, and while | they saw many deer did not get one. | On Saturday they bagged three. Ed- {itor T. H. Harter, of Bellefonte, was | with the club on its first two day’s hunt. The Roaring Run club camped on the mountain south of Pine Grove Mills, had their limit by Saturday noon. Two of their deer were four pronged bucks, two three pronged, one two pronged and one a spike buck. The Charter Oak crowd and a party from Hollidaysburg each had two on Saturday evening. Among the lucky hunters on the oth- er side of the mountain was Lester Sheffer, of Milroy, who got a fine buck on the opening day. A party of Blair county hunters got three the first two days hunting in the neighborhood of Pennsylvania Furnace. Controller Ray Smith and Dr. Fred Robinson, of State College, joined Al Grazier and party of Tyrone friends, twenty-four hunters in all, in a day hunt near the Grazier place in Hunt- ingdon county. They got three before noon on Friday and one in the after- noon. But one of the best stories of all has to do with a half dozen State Col- lege students. When the reports came in on Friday regarding the good luck the hunters were having many of the students decided to get some venison for themselves. Se bor- rowing guns they trudged over to the Seven mountains on Saturday and by noon six of them were back at the Col- lege each with a buck. L. H. Gettig and party returned from the Seven mountains on Tuesday afternoon with their limit of six bucks. During the first two days of the season they got only one but on Monday they bagged four and on the first drive Tuesday morning got the other one. The Slack party, of Centre Hall, came out of the woods on Tuesday with six deer, having shot two the first day, two on Saturday and two on Monday. They were located at Stone mountain. Day hunters from Centre Hall and vicinity to the number of eighteen have so far brought in three deer, one of which was shot by Charles Arney. The Modock club, of Boalsburg, bagged seven deer in the first eigh- teen hours of the hunt. The extra deer was shot by mistake on the last drive and was promptly reported and turned over to a game warden for de- livery to the Bellefonte hospital. With his usual luck Samuel M. Hess brought down the biggest buck, one with ten points. Two of the others had eight points and two six. Up in the western end of the coun- ty James Kline has the honor of bringing in the first deer on the open- ing day, a six pronged buck by 8:30 o’clock in the morning. The Woodrow Wilson club, mostly from Pine Grove Mills, got their lim- it and were home by Saturday night. The Pine Grove Rod and Gun club have 3. y The Grazier crowd in Kail Hollow, The Roosevelt Juniors at the Me- Cormick springs 6. Shamokin hunters on Stone moun- tain, 2 deer and a bear. The Lightner crowd at Old Monroe furnace 5. 2 The Holmes party, of State College, The State College Rod and Gun club 3. The Pine Hall crowd 2. The Scotia crowd 1. The Gearhart party 1. Bellwood hunters 2. The Fleetfoot club 3 deer and a wild cat. This club entertained a large crowd at a chicken and duck dinner on Sunday at their camp south of Shin- gletown. The Riley crowd, have 5. The Raymond crowd 6. The Zeigler party 6. The Cadman group 1. The Fillmore party 6. Day hunters who got their deer in- clude Ed Isenburg and Mr. Manning, who both shot their buck on the Ham- ill Goheen farm near Baileyville on Saturday morning. Guy and Fred Rossman each got one. The best story of the season comes from Potters Mills. A party of hunt- ers stopped at the hotel there and on the opening day went about a mile in- to the mountain and shot a buck. They carried it back to the hotel and while they were dressing it another buck came down off the mountain and got caught in a wire fence. One of the men in the party shot it and it was carried in. About ten minutes later another buck came down on the other side of the town and it also got caught in a wire fence. Another member of the party shot it, so that the crowd got three without any hard work. While it is impossible to give the correct number of deer killed during the first week Forester McKinney re- ports in his district alone, in the Sev- en mountains, 113 bucks and 9 does have been brought to earth. Harry Peters, a Ferguson township youth, shot a buck on Tuesday near the Glades school house. The Sunday—Rossman crowd came in on Tuesday with their limit of six. The Waddle hunting club came in from the Bear Meadows with six. The total deer killed in the Coburn district is given as 25; in the Wood- ward district 17 and in the Brush mountain district 22. There is hardly any question but that the Seven mountains are today the best deer territory in Pennsylva- nia. Years ago the Alleghenies were the favorite hunting grounds but hunters don’t meet with the success there that those do who go to the Sev- en mountains. As an example, the Redding party hunting on Pine Run have only 1. The Chambers—Uzzle party 2. The Houser party 1. The McCloskey gang 3. Viehdorfer party at Pine Glenn 2. The Yarnell—McMullen party in Sugar valley have 1. The Weaver crew, of Hublersburg, came home from the Bear Meadows on Wednesday with 6. Yesterday a resident of Pine Grove Mills whose name could not be learn- ed telephoned to the Bellefonte hos- pital and asked if they would take a wild turkey. He stated that there was a big gobbler in his back yard and if they could use it he would kill it and send it down. Just how the gobbler got there is unknown at this writing but if it reaches the hospital according to the man’s promise it will be refrigerated and kept for the Christmas dinner at that institution. of Boalsburg, — Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s Furniture Makes Better Homes.” “Better Spinet desks, gate-leg sewing, dav- enport and card tables, tea wagons, Windsor chairs, cedar chests, floor and table lamps, candlesticks, “Hoosier” kitchen cabinets, Globe-Wernicke book cases, smoker’s cabinets, all make ac- ceptable X-Mas gifts—At W. R. Brachbill’s. 48-1t Some weeks ago we published the fact that the people of Buffalo Run valley had organized a community club and intended to install a radio station. The work is being done by a Pittsburgh firm and it is expected that the installation will be finished to- morrow so that messages can be re- ceived on Sunday evening. Thanksgiving Donation to Hospital Very Generous. The management of the Bellefonte hospital very gratefully acknowledges most generous Thanksgiving dona- tions from the people of Bellefonte and Centre Hall. The Bellefonte do- i nation included the following: Union services, $41.40; cash, $99.14; 2 boxes Mellons food, 202 glasses jelly, 17 cans cherries, 25 cans tomatoes, 27 cans peaches, 42 cans pears, 3 cans shortening, 2 cans quinces, 5 cans apricots, 26 cans corn, 28 cans peas, 2 cans pickles, 8 cans canned milk, 1 can rhubarb, 9 cans beans, 6 cans beets, 3 cans salmon, 1 can plums, 31% pounds soup beans, 8 packages corn- starch, 55% pounds sugar, 42 heads cab- bage, 23 bushels of potatoes, 1% pounds lima beans, 5 bushel apples, 2 bottles grape juice, 2 quarts apple butter, 2 pounds salt, 220 pounds cornmeal, 114 barrels flour, 6 cans Dutch cleanser, 1 pumpkin, 10 pounds sausage, 4 pounds liverwurst, 6 chickens, 10 pounds scrapple, 11% pounds rice, 2 packages egg noodles, 10 packages post toasties, 5 packages Mother's oats, 1 pound crackers, 7 loaves bread, 28 cakes soap, ¥% peck onions, 25 cans cocoa, 24 cans beets, 3 cans tuna fish, 10 cans blackberries, 6 cans huckleberries, 2 cans mixed pickles, 6 cans relish, 5 cans spiced crabapples, 1 quart applesauce, 3 packages jello, 6 cans pineapple, 2 cans sauerkraut. 5 packages cornflake, 5 packages shredded wheat, 2 packages puffed rice, 2 packages cream of wheat, 14 pounds coffee, 2 pounds tea, 5 pounds Karo syrup, 2 stalks celery, 2 pounds butter, 2 cakes chocolate, 4 pack- ages spaghetti, 2 packages maccaroni, 3 pound tapioca, 3 bottles catsup, 1 dozen sheets, 1 dozen pillow cases, 25 yards tow- eling, 30 pounds lard. Thanksgiving Donations from Centre Hall. Cash, 50c., 3 bushels apples, 31% bushels potatoes, 61 glasses jelly, 1 head cabbage, 1 peck beets, 1 pound rice, 5 pounds lima beans, 1 jar relish, 5 pounds sugar, 1 jar applebutter, 1 ean cherries, 3 cans crab- apples, 10 cans peaches, 4 cans pears, 1 can apples, 5 eans plums, 1 can elderber- ries, 5 cans tomatoes, 1 dozen oranges. ——Santa Says Buy It At Fauble's “Orphans of the Storm.” The lavishness and splendors among the aristocracy of the French Revo- lutionary period are historically por- trayed in “Orphans of the - Storm,” the new D. W. Griffith picture sensa- tion adaptation of “The Two Or- phans.” Glittering courts, splendid dream- like fetes in silvered gardens, foun- tains of wine, cathedral doors and far away spires, corot-like forest vistas, squalid underground vaults, great public squares maddened hordes dancing the Carmagnole in the lawless streets of Paris, silk clad grand-dames with monumental white wigs, barricade battles between hun- gering mobs and bayonet-bristling lines of infantry, frenzied dashes of cavalry through narrow lanes; and peaceful countrysides. Of all these, “Orphans of the Storm” is a marvel- ous panorama—take it on the word of already convinced reviewers. In Bellefonte Friday and Saturday, December 8 and 9. Matinees at the Scenic, nights at opera house. Im- ported orchestra. See other adv. for particulars. —— Genuine reed chairs and rock- ers, with upholstered seats and backs, X-Mas special $10.90.—W. R. Brach- bill, 48-1t Elk’s Memorial Services. The Bellefonte Lodge of Elks was organized about fifteen years ago and since that time thirty-three members have passed away. In accordance with the usual custom memorial serv- ices were held for the deceased mem- bers, in Petrikin hall on Sunday after- noon at three o'clock. Grand exalted ruler G. Oscar Gray presided and mu- sic appropriate to the occasion was furnished by a selected choir. The ad- dress was delivered by Rev. David ER. Evans, pastor of the Presbyterian church. In his talk he eulogized the order in general for its charitable and benevolent character and spoke par- ticularly of the good work done by the local lodge year after year. He also spoke of the contemplated drive for the Bellefonte hospital and suggested that it would be a great help if the Bellefonte lodge would assist in the drive. ——1Is it neckwear you are consid- ering? Then be sure to see the Fau- ble store. The largest assortment in Bellefonte. Priced from 50c. to $2.00. The best values in town. 48-1t Two Men Electrocuted. The eastern and the western parts of the State were represented in a double electrocution which took place at the Rockview penitentiary on Mon- day morning. The first man was Wal- ter Troy, a former railroad policeman, of Pitsburgh, who was convicted of murdering his wife after trying to blame the crime on his eight year old son Albert. He was taken to the chair at 7:12 and pronounced dead at 7:19. The second man, was Harry Way, a twenty-three year old colored man of Lancaster, who killed Zacharias Kel- ler, a retired evangelist and horse dealer, at Mount Joy. He was taken to the chair at 7:25 and pronounced dead at 7:81 by Dr. Hoch. The bodies of both men were claimed and were shipped to their homes for burial. — Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s ——The Basket Shop has opened its Christmas sale at the Potter-Hoy hardware store with an unusual assortment of baskets at very moder- ate prices. 48-1t ERG TE CR, TR NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —_ Edward Grauer, of Philadelphia, spent his Thanksgiving at home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Grauer, of Linn street. — Mrs. Fussel returned to Philadelphia the early part of the week, after a short visit here with her sister, Mrs. Frank P. Blair. — Mrs. Nora Ferguson returned home on Monday from a Thanksgiving and over Sunday visit with friends at Black Hawk and Centre Hall — Mrs. Salina Shutt returned home on Sunday from spending the Thanksgiving season with Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Gates and family, in Johnstown. — Mrs. John Ostertag and her son, George Gamble Ostertag, were among the Thanksgiving guests entertained by Mr. and Mrs. George M. Gamble, of Linn street. —Mr. and Mrs. G. Oscar Gray drove to Williamsport Monday, where Mr. Gray, as grand exalted ruler of the Bellefonte or- der of Elks, attended a meeting of the local order. — Mrs. Robert A. Miller and Miss Marion Wilson, of Tyrone, were among the out of town visitors to Bellefonte Tuesday. spending a half day here looking after some business and in the shops. — Mrs. Richard Lutz, of east Howard street, had as week-end guests her sister, Mrs. Holderman, of Altoona, and her grand-son, Belvidean Ferguson, both of whom came to Bellefonte Friday. Mr. and Mrs. John Semmerville mo- tored over from Robertsdale late on Thanksgiving day and spent the evening with friends here, leaving early the fol- lowing morning on the return drive. — Mrs. James B. Hay, of Erie, joined the house-party being entertained by Mrs. Harry Curtin, at her home at Curtin this week, having come to Centre county to spend a part of the week with Mrs. Mec- Minn. Mrs. Robert Gill, of Japan, who has been a guest in the home of her cousins, Dr. and Mrs. Ambrose M. Schmidt, is now visiting friends in New York, Washington, and the South; expecting to return to Bellefonte later in the season. — Mrs. Nathan Bachman was a guest for the greater part of the past week, of her daughter, Mrs. Carrie Stone, in Philips- burg. Injuries from a fall compelled her to give up her work for the present and created an opportune time for the visit. —George Nicholson, of the American Lime and Stone company, who with Mrs. Nicholson has lived at the Bush house since coming here from Tyrone the early part of the summer, is now at Cambridge Springs, where he has planned to spend a part of the month of December. —Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Meek, of State Col- lege, are at Nanticoke, where they are spending a week with Dr. and Mrs. J. I. Hill, Mrs. Hill being their elder daugh- ter. Mr. Meek is rapidly convalescing from his recent operation, with every indica- tion of a recovery to his normal health. — Mrs. W. F. Reeder returned to Belle- fonte Monday night from Knoxville, Tenn., where she had been with her sister, Mrs. Borches, since leaving here a month or more ago. The adjusting of some business matters necessitated Mrs. Reeder’s return here before she left for her home in Pasa- dena. : — Mrs. Alice W. Griest, of Unionville, went to York .last week to attend the fun- eral of a cousin, and from there will go to Adams county, for a few days, to make ar- rangements for her return there in the spring. She has sold the Dr. Russell home and will vacate it about the first of April. — Mrs. Rachel Harris, who had been with her sons in Hagerstown and Baltimore for the past six weeks, was called home last week by the sudden death of Mrs. Calvin Sanders, at Vicksburg, Tuesday. Both sons, Charles, of Hagerstown, and George, of Baltimore, accompanied Mrs. Harris to Bellefonte. — Included in the house party entertain- ed last week by Mr. and Mrs. John Love, of Reynolds avenue, were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Williams, Miss Alberta Bryan and John Love, Jr., all of Altoona. The party came to Bellefonte for Thanksgiving, re- maining here as Mr. and Mrs. Love's guests until Sunday. —Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Aplin and their three children are anticipating spending Sunday in Williamsport, where they will be guests during their stay, of Mr. and Mrs. Townsend. Mr. Townsend has in charge the Keystone Players, a course of entertainment now being given under the auspices of the local Y. M. C. A. —Irvin O. Noll, of Lansdowne, made his annual visit home last week, dividing his short vacation between his friends in Pleas- ant Gap, Milesburg and Bellefonte. It has been a custom of Mr. Noll for several years to come back home for a part of his winter vacation, as his summers are spent with boys in camp, in the mountains of New York. —Since coming to Bellefonte several months ago from Columbia county, Mrs. Luther Lansbury has been with her sis- ter, Mrs. Hines, on east Linn street. Mrs. Lansbury’s home in Espy was broken up shortly after Mr. Lansbury’s death, conse- quently she will spend an indefinite time with members of her family in Centre county. —Mrs. Thomas Hodges, of Syracuse, was home to spend Thanksgiving with her mother, Mrs. Harry Curtin, at Curtin. Mr. Hodges joined her there Sunday for a vis- it of a few days, before returning togeth- er to New York State. The baptism of Mr. and Mrs. H. L., Curtin’s youngest son, James H. Potter Curtin, took place Sunday afternoon, Mr. Hodges acting as god-fath- er to his young nephew. —Mrs. Mary M. Swartz, who had been in Bellefonte for a week, with her niece, Mrs. James D. Seibert, left early in the week to return to her home at Somerset. Mrs. Swartz was a guest on the drive of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, H. C. Barnhart, who motored here from Stoyestown, Sunday. The three weeks she had spent in Pleasant Gap, before coming to Bellefonte, had been with her brother, James Noll. —Mrs. W. C. Stoddart and Miss Helen Stull, of Wyncote, arrived in Bellefonte Monday, the former for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Harry Keller, and other rela- tives here, while Miss Stull has been a guest of Mrs. Lewis Daggett, at the Bush house, during her stay. The tea given by Mrs. Ellis L. Orvis and her daughter, Mrs. Harvey, Tuesday afternoon, from four to six, was in compliment to Mrs, Stoddart. Miss Stull’'s mother was also a member of the party, and a guest of Mrs. Daggett. —Mrs. Chauncey F. York, of Detroit, has been visiting in Bellefonte during the past week, a guest of her sister, Mrs. William C. Rowe. —H. W. Smith, division manager of the United Telephone and Telegraph company, spent a part of last week locking after some business in Lancaster, relative to the company. —Mrs. H. M. Hiller, who is now living at the Green Hills Farm hotel, at Over- brook, has been spending a part of the week in Bellefonte, looking after her bus- iness interests here. ! —Mrs. George P. Bible is in Bradford on a short visit with her sisters, Mrs. Ri- ley and Miss Mary Bradley, who has made her home in Bradford since leaving Belle- fonte more than a year ago. —Mrs. Joseph Beezer and her daughter Martha were Thanksgiving guests of Mrs. Beezer’s mother and sisters, Mrs. Daniel Heckman, Mrs. G. C. Spicher and Miss Della Heckman, at Wilkinsburg. —Miss Bess McCafferty has returned to Pittsburgh for the winter, after having occupied her house on east Lamb street during the summer and fall. It has been Miss McCafferty’s custom for several years to spend the winter with her sister, Mrs. ‘| Debler. —Mrs. S. M. Wetmore, of Florence, N. C., and her sister, Mrs. H. M. Crossman, of Norristown, are expected in Bellefonte within a few days, for a visit with their mother, Mrs. J. Y. Dale, who is ill at the home of her son, Dr. David Dale. It was hoped that Liuet. Col. Frederick A. Dale, of Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., could join the family party, but his transfer to Ontario makes his coming doubtful. Mrs. Cross- man arrived in Bellefonte last night. : When you are thinking what to give Him, think of Fauble’s and then forget it until you get here. We will make it easy for you. 48-1t ——=Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s Centre County Man buys Airplane for $500. Henry Noll, proprietor of Noli’s garage at Pleasant Gap, has invested in an airplane and is the first man in Centre county to own a flying ma- chine, The main reason for his buy- ing the same was most likely the fact that he got it dirt cheap, paying just $500 for it. It is a Curtiss plane man- ufactured in Canada and more gener- ally known as “Canuck” or “Canadian Jenny.” The machine was purchased from a Mr. Fleming, at Brookville, who had used it for exhibition pur- poses. Mr. Noll secured the services of aviator Slim Lewis to bring the plane to its new home and they both went to Brookville on Sunday. Lewis gave the machine a pretty thorough exam- ination and finally decided it would fly to Bellefonte, but he refused to allow Noll to come along as a passenger. He left Brookville shortly after three o’clock on Monday afternoon and it was a quarter after five o’clock in the evening when he landed on the avia- tion field. He came through without any mishap but averred he could al- most have pulled the machine as fast as it flew. The machine is in fair shape but the motor has done about one hundred hour’s service and needs overhauling. It-is still at the avia- tion field as the new owner will prob- ably want to take some lessons in fly- ing before he tries it out. ——Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s Penny—Showers.—The home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Showers, of Bellefonte, was the scene of a pretty wedding, at noon last Thursday, when their daugh- ter, Miss Gertrude Showers, was mar- ried to Clarence Penny, of Pittsburgh, the ceremony being performed by Rev. Wilson P. Ard. The young couple will make their home in Pitts- burgh. — Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s re ——— A —————. Vonada—Snook.—Frank P. Vonada, of Madisonburg, and Miss Minnie T. Snook, of Millheim, were married at the Reformed parsonage in Bellefonte, on Wednesday morning of last week, by the pastor, Rev. Dr. Ambrose M. Schmidt. —————— eerie. —Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s — “Orphans of the Storm,” the famous picture of the year by D. W. Griffith, at opera house Friday and Saturday nights, December 8th and 9th. One show, 8:15. Reserved seats for nights at Mott’s. Pittsburgh or- chestra. Matinees at Scenic, 2 p. m. Prices all shows, children 28c., adults, 55c. A big show. Don’t miss it. 47-2t ——How about shirts, have you got them on your list? Wonderful as- sortment of all the different grades of dress shirts at Fauble’s. Always ap- preciated; doubly so if they have the Fauble brand. 48-1t Mahogany finished piano lamps with silk shades, two lights, pull chain sockets, X-Mas special $14.75.—W. R. Brachbill. 48-1t Put hosiery on that list and write Fauble’s opposite. 48-1t ————— en ——— A big show, “Orphans of the Storm,” Dec. 8 and 9. 47-2 a————— lp —————————— — Santa Says Buy It At Fauble’s Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - = - - $1.20 Rye - = Wlolaliobe BLS New Corn - - - - - 70 Corn, ear = we ey .60 Oats - - = - i. - 40 Barley. - - ~~ = =~ = 60 Buckwheat - - - = - 75