Bowral td “Bellefonte, Pa., June 15, 1923. Editor P. GRAY MEEK, - - - ——— ——— To Correspondents.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. { BARNHART.—Mrs. Clara E. Barn- ‘hart, widow of the late Thompson | Mitchell Barnhart, of Bellefonte, died . very suddenly shortly after the noon : hour last Saturday at the home of her i son, Lloyd L. Barnhart, at Braddock, as the result of leakage of the heart, with which she had been a sufferer for several years. Mrs. Barnhart spent most of the spring with her daughter | at Birmingham, Ala.,, coming north JOHNSON. — Claude L. Johnson "died on Monday at his home at State College following a brief illness. He was a son of Josiah and Jennie John- son and was born in Nittany valley sixty years ago. He was a farmer ! NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Emily Crider left Monday for a | visit with relatives and friends in eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. —NMr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Boyle and their two children drove over from Hazleton last Crushed to Death Beneath Steam ! I ; Shovel. 1 | Fred Burns, seventeen year old son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Burns, of Rush township, met a shocking death by occupation and during the past six | week, to spend alumni day at Penn State. |1ast Saturday afternoon by being years had been manager of one of the college farms. { —Nevin Noll returned to Bellefonte on { Tuesday night from Pittsburgh, where he ' crushed beneath a ponderous steam shovel used on the highway construc- | He was twice married, his first wife | had been a hospital patient for several tion job on the mountain, between the , being Lucy Leathers and the second Terms of Subscription—Until further | early last week and spending several ; Sarah Bierly, who survives with two motice this paper will be furnished to sub- scribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $1.50 Paid before expiration of year - 1.78 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 Published weekly, every Friday morn- ing. Entered at the postoffice, Bellefonte, Pa., as second class mail matter. In ordering change of address always give the old as well as the new address. It is important that the publisher be no- tified when a subscriber wishes the pa- per discontinued. In all such cases the subscription must be paid up to date of cancellation. A sample copy of the “Watchman” will be sent without cost to applicants. Many Centre Countians Received Di- plomas at State College Com- mencement. A class of approximately 540 men | and women received diplomas at the commencement exercises of The Penn- sylvania State College on Tuesday, | this being one of the largest classes ever to be graduated from the insti- tution. In addition, 63 men and wom- en were graduated at the mid-year exercises, making the total for the year over 600. About 70 of the grad- uates were women. Included among the graduates was Penn State’s oldest woman student, Mrs. Sarah Shoemaker Farley, of Swarthmore, who is proud of the fact that she has twelve grand-children. Mrs. Farley is 57 years old and before entering Penn State herself put two sons through the institution and another son through medical college. She completed the course in botany, and now expects to continue studying for an advanced degree. The unique courses in the same year was also to be found at Penn State this year. Mrs. Susan A. Porterfield, of State Col- lege, was among the graduates on Tuesday while her son Henry, a world war veteran, needs but an additional three credits and will complete his work this summer. A number of the graduates were world war veterans, including some rehabilitation students sent there by the government. Although other States and foreign countries had rep- resentatives in the graduating class, more than 98 per cent. of the gradu- ates hail from Pennsylvania. The baccalaureate sermon was preached last Sunday, class day exer- cises were held on Monday, and the commencement proper was on Tues- | day. President John M. Thomas awarded the degrees. list of the Centre county students graduated: John Wallace Aiken, State College, edu- cation and psychology; John William Cor- | man, Spring Mills, agricultural education; Ralph Henry Dale, Oak Hall Station, his- tory and political science; Cornelias Var- ney Davis, Philipsburg, electrical engi- neering; James Corl Foster, State College, industrial engineering; George Louis Frear, State College, industrial chemistry; | Frank Easter Gardner, State College, hor- ticulture; George Calvin Graham, State College, landscape architecture; BE. R. Bai- ley, Philipsburg, industrial engineering; Mrs. Ada May Hall, State College, domes- tic science; Gilbert Washington Hancock, ! Philipsburg, chemical agriculture; Wen- dell Vance Harpster, Philipsburg, civil en- gineering; Miss Gladys Roush Hazel, Boalsburg, vocational home economics; Frederick William Hecker, State College, industrial engineering; Richard Holmes Hoffman, Howard, natural science; Ebert Ellwood Hollobaugh, State College, natur- al science; Robert Malcolm Hoy, Belle- fonte, commerce and finance; Miss Ruth Inez Kapp, State College, education and psychology; Jesse Guy Klinger, Lemont, dairy husbandry; William James Lowry, State College, dairy husbandry; Allan Mc- Clellan, Bellefonte, agricultural education; William McAlevy McMahon, State College, agronomy; Miss Kleanor Beryl North, State College, modern language; Miss :Re- bekah Lois North, State College, modern language; William Henry Payne, Belle- fonte, agricultural education; Clarence Sellers Platt, State College, poultry hus- bandry; Mrs. Susan A. Porterfield, State College, modern language; Eldon Kingsley Rumberger, Philipsburg, animal husband- ry; William David Tate, Philipsburg, com- merce and finance; Miss Margaretta Way, State College, modern language; Howard Eavenson Wetzel, Bellefonte, mining engi- neering; Miss Lyndell Whitehead, State College, home economics; Heston Hart Hile, State College, mechanical engineer- ing; William Wetzel Sieg, Bellefonte, met- allurgical engineering. ¢ fp dpi et Bellefonte Academy Had Successful Year. The Bellefonte Academy closed a successful year last week. About thirty young men, representing the States of Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, West Virginia and Pennsylvania were given diplomas. The scholastic stand- ard was unusually high for the year, while the football, basket ball and track teams were winners as usual. The track team won silken banners or silver cups at the Penn relays, in Phil- adelphia, and the Carnegie Tech and University of Pittsburgh meets, in Pittsburgh. Headmaster Hughes says that he has a very strong faculty secured for next year, and is expecting great things also in the athletic life of the school under the direction of Carl G. Snavely, the new athletic coach. Those who think they know what they are talking about declare that Mr. Snavely is the best “prep” school coach in the country. situation of a mother | and son both completing their college i Following is a | | days with her youngest daughter at | Canton, Ohio. She went to the home of her son on Friday and was appar- i ently in the best of health. In fact | she was laughing and chatting with | the family almost up to the time she i was stricken, her death following in i less than five minutes. | Mrs. Barnhart was a daughter of | David and Frances Spayd Solt and { was born at Zion on March 11th, 1859, i hence was a little past sixty-four i years of age. Her girlhood life was | spent at Zion but practically all her | life after her marriage to Mr. Barn- : {hart on September 5th, spent in Bellefonte. | ber of the Presbyterian church and a | splendid woman in every way. Mr. ! Barnhart passed away in 1916 but sur- _viving her are five children, namely: Mrs. Charles Thomas, of Birmingham, Ala.; R. Bruce Barnhart, burgh; Lloyd L., of Braddock; Dean, of Pittsburgh, and Mrs. Paul Irwin, | of Canton, Ohio. She also leaves one sister, Mrs. L. H. Musser, of Belle- fonte. The remains were brought to Belle- fonte on the 1:27 p. m. train on Mon- day and taken to the Musser home on Howard street where funeral services were held at three o’clock on Wednes- day afternoon by Rev. E. E. McKel- vey, after which burial was made in the Union cemetery. i Il i RUBLE.—Mrs. Margaret Ellen Ru- ble, widow of Simon P. Ruble, died on May 30th at the home of her son, 1876, was following a brief illness. She was a daughter of John and { Jane Livingstone Lee, and was born in Potter township, Centre county, on November 2nd, 1845, hence was in her | seventy-eighth year. She married Mr. Ruble on December 24th, 1863, and for nineteen years they lived in Pennsvalley. In 1887 they went west and located in Iola, Kan., later mov- | ing to Caney, where Mr. Ruble died in 11906. Since that time Mrs. Ruble had | made her home among her children, | eight of whom survive, as follows: James L., of Parker, Kan.; J. C. and | Dr. E. L., of Kansas City; Mrs. G. W. | Stevens, of Warrensburg, Mo.; Miss : Mary Ruble, of Kansas City; Mrs. ! Bertha Warren, of Burbank, Cal; | Mrs. L. A. Bass, of Portland, Oregon, ‘and Mrs. R. O. Bagby, of Kansas | City. She also leaves five brothers | and one sister, namely: John Lee, of Coleville; Frank D., of Centre Hall; Hiram, of State College; Felix, of De- ‘ troit, Mich.; James, in Iowa, and Mrs. Emma Stamm, of Erie. | first. | Il Il DEAN.—Mrs. Hannah Dean, widow {of A. Dean, died last Friday at the | | home of her daughter, Mrs. Elias | Shoemaker, near Pine Grove Mills, as | the result of a stroke of paralysis sus- | tained on Memorial day. She was a daughter of Charles and Margaret Geisinger and was born at MecConnellstown on March 18th, 1839, hence was past eighty-four years of age. Most of her life was spent in Huntingdon county but since the death of her husband six years ago she had ‘made her home with her | Mrs. Shoemaker, in Ferguson town- ship. She was a member of the Bap-, tist church and a woman of saintly character. Surviving her are the fol- lowing children: Watson Dean, of Al- toona; Charles, of Huntingdon; G. Dean, of Mt. Union, and Mrs. Elias Shoemaker, of Ferguson township. brother and one sister. She was a mem- | of Pitts- | Dr. E. L. Ruble, in Kansas City, Mo., | Burial | was made at Caney, Kan., on June y V ¥ 2 : tive of Pennsylvania. His father was" daughter, She was one of a family of ten chil- | dren and the only survivors are one He also leaves two brothers and one ! sister, Frank Johnson, of Wilkins- burg; Elmer, of Altoona, and Mrs. Joseph Dunkle, of Snydertown. Bui- ial was made at Hublersburg on Wed- nesday afternoon. i II HARRIS. — Mrs. result of a stroke of apoplexy. She | was seventy-seven years of age and one of the oldest members of the Mill Hall Presbyterian church. Mrs. Har- ris only recently returned to Mill Hall from spending the winter with her only daughter, Mrs. Willis Hartsock, at Harrisburg. In addition to her daughter she is survived by one sis- i ter, Mrs. W. A. Carver, of Oak Park, Ill. Burial was made in the Cedar Hill cemetery. [| il SMITH.—Catherine Smith, the six- i teen months old child of Nevin and Nellie Miller Smith, died very unex- pectedly at 5:45 o’clock on Saturday | tack of convulsions. The little girl had apparently been in good health up ‘until a short time before she passed away. In addition to the parents one | sister, Pauline, survives. Rev. W. P. Monday afternoon, burial being made in the Sunnyside cemetery. etm———— ee Booming Boulder, Colorado. | We easterners have always been i i somewhat skeptical of the western cy- | | clones but after the visit paid us on | morning by Charles R.! | Tuesday Streamer, a former Lutheran minis- . ter but now secretary of the Chamber i of Commerce, of Boulder, about the westerners entirely foreign {in the east. : presented an open sesame when he mentioned John Andy Hunter, a na- | tive Centre countian, State Collge and now one of the lead- ing professors in the University of Colorado. Any friend of Andy can always get a hearing in the “Watch- man” office hence we knocked off long ' enough to give Mr. Streamer a chance to tell us what a wonderful place Boulder is and any man or woman who is planning a “see America first” trip, ining the exact area of the brood in should not fail to include Boulder on their itinerary. Mr. Streamer, by the way, is a na- | also a minister in the Lutheran church "and for a number of years preached in Philipsburg, and later at Martins- | burg, Blair county. His son was also pastor. of the Martinsburg church five years before going west. In his work as secretary of the Chamber of Com- merce of Boulder he conceived the eastern booster trip in connection with a visit back to his native land. He has with him his four children, Phoe- be, Paul, Charles and Mary Elizabeth, and they travel in a Buick car, aver- aging over three hundred miles a day on the rip east. Mr. Streamer claims the western roads are superior to those in the east and being of clay and gravel not so tiresome to the motorist. His entire trip, as planned, will cover 4500 miles and he expects to be back in Boulder by the first of July. i meee lp eee | Vacation School. i Bellefonte is to have a daily vaca- Brief funeral services were held at | tion church school which will begin | Harris, widow of the late Samuel Har- | ris, died recently at her home at Mill Hall following a week’s illness as the | morning as the result of a severe at- | ! Ard had charge of the funeral serv- | ices which were held at 2 o’clock on Col.,, we’ must confess to an easy breeziness | Of course Mr. Streamer ! graduate of | weeks. | —Mrs. Frank Warfield went to Silver and her family. —Miss Mary Smith is entertaining Miss | Gladys Hazel, of Niagara Falls, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. i Smith, on Curtin street. | —Mr. and Mrs. Guy E. Swartz, of Red- I'ford, Mich., are making their annual visit | back home, being guests while in Belle- Letitia Blanche fonte of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Seibert. | Mr. and Mrs. car. Swartz came east in their Brief History of 17-Year Locusts. The seventeen year locusts, known to scientists as Brood No. 14 of the periodical cicada, have made their ap- pearance in many sections of Penn- sylvania, including Centre county, aud according to the Department of Agri- culture will infest nineteen counties in the State. While Brood 14 is general- ly accepted as making its appearance every seventeen years not since 1874 have locusts been so plentiful in Cen- tre county as they are this year. That year dense swarms of them infested , woodlands and overswept orchards, | doing considerable damage to young trees. The visitation of the locust in olden times was generally looked up- on as the scourge of death because of . the prevailing opinion that their sting | was fatal and that they would attack human beings, but this belief has long | been dissipated. : Special interest is manifest in the appearance of this brood as it is the { first one noted or recorded in litera- | ture by the European colonists on this | continent, although the officials of the { Bureau of Plant Industry, explain that lit is likely the Indians long had ob- served the periodical occurrence, be- cause at that time they associated it with pestilence. Brood No. 14, as this particular branch is known, appears | as far west as Illinois, south to Geor- gia and up the Atlantic Coast into Maine. is principally to small trees. The dam- | age to large shade trees is slight, ac- cording to the Bureau of Plant Indus- try, but very small trees frequently are damaged severely by egg punct- ures made by the females. Small limbs are weakened so they may be broken by winds. If the insect ap- pears in numbers, the bureau advises that large young fruit and shade trees be protected with mosquito bar or oth- er thin, light material. The bureau is interested in deter- Pennsylvania and is asking that spec- imens be sent in by persons who find them. Due to the destruction of the , forests, the experts say, the range and abundance of each successive brood is being much reduced. Child Health Week. For the week beginning next Mon- day, June 18th, the Red Cross health center will be open every afternoon from 1 o’clock until 5, where babies | and children up to the sixth year may be taken to be weighed and measured by a nurse and then subjected to a careful physical examination by one of the physicians in attendance from 3 to 3:30. One out of every four children en- ters the public school with physical defects which should have been eor- rected in the pre-school age. Health week is to help parents find the weak- nesses and defects in their children— | as soon after birth as may be—that : they may be more easily corrected. | Treatment will not be given. Those | children needing attention will be re- ' ferred to their family doctors. For the various church congrega- Actual damage done by the locusts | | summit and the big fill. The boy and his elder brother, Olie Burns, worked ' children: Mrs. Frank Stover, of Belle- | Spring, Maryland, Monday, for a visit on the shovel. Shortly before five fonte, and Jasper, of Detroit, Mich. there with her niece, Mrs. Mary W. Child : o’clock the shovel was being moved into a new position and although no- body saw the accident it is the gener- al supposition that he fell and was caught by the heavy roller before he | could get out of the way. The ma- | chine passed over the boy, literally ; crushing him flat. i He was born at Newtown and is sur- vived by his parents, one brother and three sisters. Burial was made in the { Umbria cemetery on Tuesday after- | noon. ! The Bellefonte United Breth- ‘ren Sunday school will hold their an- | nual picnic at Hecla park Tuesday, ' June 26th, in conjunction with the Olive Branch school, of Coleville, and the Pleasant View school. All mem- bers and friends of these schools are invited to attend. Busses will leave each of the above named places at 8:30 a. m. Gherrity—Schneider. — W. Walter Gherrity, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Gherrity, of Bellefonte, and Miss Ade- laide Carmen Schneider, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schneider, of Tyrone, were united in marriage at a seven o'clock mass yesterday morn- ing in St. Matthew’s Catholic church, in Tyrone, by Rev. Father Loony. The young people were attended by Miss Miller, an intimate friend of the | bride, and Robert Gherrity, brother of ' the bridegroom. members of the families and a few | invited guests witnessed the cere- i mony. After a wedding breakfast at | the home of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. | | Gherrity left on a week’s wedding trip | east. {and lovely young woman and is well known among the younger set of Ty-! The bridegroom is a graduate | of the Bellefonte High School and is | , rone. a steady and industrious young man, being at present the efficient clerk in Mott’s drug store. Cook—McKinney.—Marshall Cook, youngest son of Mr. Charles F. Cook, | of Bellefonte, and Miss Fern McKin- i ney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. ' McKinney, of Juniata, were married at six o'clock last Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Ev- erts, at Cleveland, Ohio, by Rev. Mr. Wilson, of the Methodist church, the ring ceremony being used. Following a wedding dinner Mr. and Mrs. Cook | left on a wedding trip which will in- | | clude Niagara Falls, Juniata, Belle- | fonte and other points of interest. i The bride is a graduate of Juniata | College, class of 1918. Following her | graduation she taught school three | years but the past two years has been | employed in Cleveland. | groom is a graudate of State College | and is now employed by the govern- ! ment in the veterans’ service depart- ‘ment in Pittsburgh, where they will ‘make their future home. Shallcross—Patterson.—Miss Mar- "quetta Patterson, daughter of Mr. and ! Mrs. E. V. Patterson, of Juniata, but ‘who for some time past has been a nurse in training at the Bellefonte hospital, and Dr. Charles Shallcross, a young dentist of Bellefonte, were "married at the Presbyterian parson- ' age in Huntingdon on Saturday even- . Rev. | ling, June 2nd, by the pastor, | Daubenspeck. Their marriage is the { culmination of a little romance which | had its inception while the bridegroom | | was a patient at the hospital. Dr. and Mrs. Shallcross spent their honey- i moon in the east and will be at home i to their friends in Bellefonte on and "after July first. i Only the immediate | The bride is an accomplished ! The bride- | the Shoemaker home at noon on Sun- | next Monday, June 18th, at 9 a. m., in the remains were taken to Hunting- | weeks. These schools have become tions special afternoons have been ar- | Dick—Shambaugh.—Rev. LeRoy H. day by Rev. J. S. English, after which | the Y. M. C. A., and continue for six don county for interment. Il Il EVES.—Myrs. Margaret Eves, wife died on Monday evening following a year’s illness with sarcoma. She was a daughter of George and Mary Meiss and was born in Halfmoon township fifty-seven years. ago. Thirty-nine years ago she married David Eves who survives with the following children: Mrs. Frank Lykens, of Tyrone; Mrs. Edward Gummo, of Stormstown; Mrs. George Laird and Mrs. Challis Laird, of Port Matilda; Albert, of Marengo; Herman and Florence, at home. She also leaves three sisters and one brother, Mrs. C. H. Weston, of Ty- rone; Mrs. Miles Wrye, of Loveville; Mrs. W. H. Ghaner, of Benore, and William, of Philipsburg. Funeral serv- ices were held yesterday morning, bur- ial being made in the Friends ceme- tery, in Halfmoon township. B i KLING.—Miss Kathryn Mabel Kling, a well known resident of How- ard dropped dead last Thursday while at work drying the dishes after eating dinner. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joel Kling and was born at Jacksonville almost fifty-six years ago. She never married but is survived by the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Waltex Yearick and Samuel Kling, of Howard; Calvin, of Jackson- ville; Oscar, Percy, Mrs. Blanchard Mattern and Elmer, of Altoona; Mrs. Earl Yearick, of Hublersburg; Mrs. George Ertley, of Jacksonville, and Newton, of Scottdale. Funeral serv- ices were held on Sunday morning, burial being made at Hublersburg. of David Eves, of Halfmoon township, ! | very popular over the country and are | meeting a long felt need in the line of religious training for children from 6 to 11 years of age. The several prot- ‘estant churches of the town are put- | ting on this work. Each session will begin at 9 o’clock and last till 11:30 each day except Saturday and Sun- ‘day. Efficient teachers of the differ- ent churches will have charge of the work. All children of the above age are welcome Without charge. It is hoped that this work will prove to be a great blessing to the children and that the parents will give it their hearty support and see that their chil- dren are at the Y next Monday morn- ing at the right time. Amm———— A — Sang for the Shriners. Mrs. Grapp, dramatic soprano, of Pittsburgh, formerly Miss Sarah Kep- ler, of Pine Grove Mills, was the prin- cipal performer at a musicale held at Wardman Park Inn, Washington, D. C., on Saturday, June 9th. Mrs. Grapp went to Washington especially to sing at the great Shrine conven- tion held in that city last week. The nobles of Medina Temple, Chicago, presented her with a handsome plati- num Shrine pin set with diamonds, as a token of their appreciation of her rendition of selections from Schubert, and also gave a pin to her sister, Mrs, Meade, wife of Professor Devoe Meade, of Maryland University. “Wouldn’t You,” a recent composition by Miss Wilmuth Gary, a musical composer of Washington, dedicated to Mrs. Grapp by the composer, was es- pecially appreciated by the audience. ranged as follows: i Monday, Episcopal, Lutheran and Reformed. Wednesday, Presbyterian, i Evangelical. Thursday, Methodist, "African Methodist. Friday, Roman Catholic, United Brethren, Hebrew. Parents not connected with any of the above churches are welcome to take their children on any afternoon convenient. Change in Date for Presbyterian Day. The committee having charge of the arrangements for Presbyterian day at Lakemont Park, Altoona, have found it advisable to change the date from Wednesday, June 27th, to Tuesday, June 26th, since by making this change in date, it will be possible to have as the speaker for the afternoon meeting, Rev. Charles F. Wishart, D. D., moderator of the General Assem- bly. Further announcement will be made later as to the other exercises on Presbyterian day and it is earnestly hoped that the change in the date will be carefully noted, and that Dr. Wish- art may confront an audience on Tues- day, June 26th, that will be a credit to Huntingdon Presbytery. The annual basket picnic of the Centre county association in Philadel- phia will be held at Belmont Mansion, Fairmount Park, Saturday, June 23rd. Every native Centre countian is in- vited, whether a resident of Philadel- phia or only a visitor there. a———————{————— ——The Banjosaxo orchestra of eight pieces, of Harrisburg, will fur- nish music for a dance at Hecla park Thursday, June 21st, 8 to 12 o'clock. i Dick, of Scranton, and Miss Clare Re- becca Shambaugh, who for some time past has been private secretary for Dr. E. E. Sparks, at State College, were married last Thursday evening at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Shambaugh, at York, Pa., by the bridegroom’s father, Rev. C. J. Dick, of Farrandsville. The young couple will take up their resi- dence at Scranton where Rev. Dick is pastor of an Evangelical church. Lucas—Miller.—A belated wedding announcement is that of Forrest M. Lucas, a son of Mrs. Ida M. Lucas, of Unionville, and Miss Grace M. Miller, of Tyrone, who were married at Miles- burg on May 12th by Rev. J. F. An- dreas, of the Methodist church. The bridegroom is a telegraph operator on the Tyrone division of the P. R. R., with headquarters at Tyrone, and it is in that place they will make their home. Ulrich—Rote.—Paul M. Ulrich, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ulrich, of Al- toona, but formerly residents of Pennsvalley, and Miss Alma Viola Rote, of Coburn, were married on Wednesday afternoon of last week: at the home of the bridegroom’s parents by Rev. James M. Runkle. The board of advisors of the recently instituted Penn-Centre chap- ter Order of DeMolay are quite en- thusiastic over the prospects for the organization of a band among the chapter members. The young men are enthusiastic and there is good reason to believe that a band of from thirty to forty members will eventually be organized. Church Services Next Sunday. ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Services for the week beginning June 17: Third Sunday after Trinity, 8 a. m. Holy Eucharist. 9:45 a. m. church school. 11 a. m. Mattins and sermon by Very Rev. A. M. Sherman, of Wuchang, China. 7:30 p. m. even- song and sermon. Service Thursday morning omitted. Visitors always welcome. Rev. M. DeP. Maynard, Rector. ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH. “The Friendly Church.” Third Sunday after Trinity. Sun- ; day school 9:30 a. m. World Missions I services both morning and evening. The Lutheran and Reformed congre- gations will unite in union services. At 10:45 in the Reformed church Dr. | L. B. Wolf, secretary of the Foreign | Mission Board of the Lutheran church Will deliver the address. At 7:30 p. im. in the Lutheran church Rev. Cas- i selman, of the Reformed Mission | board, will speak. Visitors welcome. i Rev. Wilson P. Ard, Minister i CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY. Christian Science Society, Furst building, High street, Sunday service 11 a. m. Wednesday evening meet- ing at 8 o'clock. To these meetings all are welcome. An all day free reading room is open to the public every day. Here the Bible and Chris- tian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. We hope all the members and their friends will attend services next Sun- day to hear the great speakers who will be in the different churches. We will have union services with the Presbyterians at both hours of wor- ship. At 10:45 both congregations will meet in our church and at 7:30 in the Presbyterian. A new speaker for each service. : Sunday school at 9:30; juniors 2; teen agers and Epworth League 6:30. Monday, 6:30 supper in the Y. M. C. A, for all the men of the town. Tickets, 75 cents. Great speakers for this hour. i Tuesday night class 7:30; Wednes- day evening prayer and Bible study, i 7:30. Sunday school picnic June 28th, at Hecla park. E. E. McKelvey, Pastor. Telegraph Operator Saves Child's Life. John W. Saxton, telegraph opera- tor at the Unionville station of the P. R. R., jumped into the hero class last Friday afternoon when he saved the life of two year old Andrew Robinson, son of John Robinson, a trackman, near the Unionville signal tower. The Lehigh-Pennsylvania express was a few minutes late and the engi- neer was endeavoring to make up lost tim. It was just 3:35 o’clock and the heavy train was within five or six hun- dred feet of the tower when Saxton i saw-the child leave its home and tod- dle toward the railroad. The child : walked right onto the tracks. There 1 was no time to flag the train, so Sax- i ton plunged down the tower steps ran ' to the tracks and at the risk of his i own life, pulled the child to safety | just as the ponderous locomotive thun- . dered past. BIRTHS. ' Weber—On May 8, to Mr. and Mrs. John W. Weber, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Anna Louise. Markle—On May 12, to Mr. and Mrs. William F. Markle, of State Col- lege, a daughter, Mary Louise. Justice—On May 9, to Mr. and Mrs. Homer E. Justice, of Bellefonte, a son, Gerold Kenneth. Miller—On May 13, to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. 0. Miller, of Bellefonte, a son. Miller—On April 7, to Mr. and Mrs. ' Alfred E. Miller, of Spring township, a son, Lee Samuel. Hessler—On April 11, to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hessler, of Spring township, i a daughter, Mary Pauline. i Kane—On April 11, to Mr. and Mrs. Chas E. Kane, of Bellefonte, a son, Joseph Harry. ! Moyer—On April 11, to Mr. and { Mrs. Ralph W. Moyer, of Pleasant : Gap, a daughter, Helen Pauline. Moscufe—On May 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Antena Moscufo, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Elena. Smith—On May 6, to Mr. and Mrs. Geo.” E. Smith, of Bellefonte, a son, Joseph LeGrand. Martin—On May 12, to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. W. Martin, of Spring town- ship, a daughter, Alice Rebecca. Neffi—On May 18, to Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Neff, of Hublersburg, a son, Harold LeRoy. Wion—On May 20, to Mr. and Mrs. Willis E. Wion, of Bellefonte, a son, Donald Andrew. McCoslin—On May 19, to Mr. and Mrs. George K. McCoslin, of Spring township, a son, George Henry. Bullock—On May 20, to Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Bullock of Spring township, a son. Dawson—On May 22, to Mr. and Mrs. Victor P. Dawson, of Bellefonte, a son, Joseph Gilbert. Baney—On May 24, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baney, of Bellefonte, a son, John. Ceti—On May 25, to Mr. and Mrs. Amelio Ceti, of Benner township, a son, Darley. Gates—On May 24, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gates, of Nittany, a daughter, Virginia Irene. Port—On May 28, to Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Port, of Bellefonte, a son, George Washington. Bathgate—On May 24, to Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bathgate, of Centre Furnace, a daughter, Lois Anne. Shuey—On May 30, to Mr. and Mrs. George F. Shuey, of Benner township. a son, George Washington Jr. Olsen—On May 27, to Mr. and Mrs. Leif A. Olsen, of Bellefonte, a daugh- ter, Ruth Elizabeth. | ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.”