Beer atc "Bellefonte, Pa., October 12, 1923. EE ————————— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND ©OUNTY. Keep in mind the bazaar to be held in the Presbyterian chapel Thurs- day, November 15th. — Governor Pinchot has named Friday, October 26th, as fall Arbor and bird day in Pennsylvania. Yes, we will have big eats. Hot dogs, sandwiches, doughnuts, cof- fee. Hallow-een. Woman’s Club. — The ladies of “the Milésburg Presbyterian church will hold their annual Christmas bazaar December 7th and 8th, in the firemen’s hall. ———While playing with some boy «companions, last Friday, Kenneth Ul- rich, eight year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ulrich, fell and broke his right arm. Frosty mornings with the ther- mometer six degrees below the freez- ing line, have characterized the weather of the past week in this sec- tion of the State. D. M. Walters, of Altoona, who has opened an auto repair shop at Pleasant Gap, has moved his family into half of the house recently pur- chased by Arthur Houck from G. Nor- man Good. Rev. T. W. Young will hold ‘services in the Presbyterian church, both morning and evening on Sun- day, at the usual hours. The Holy Communion will be administerred at ‘the morning service. . ——Judge Henry C. Quigley has set Friday, October. 19th, as the date for a special session of court to hear surety of the peace and non-support cases, quite a large list of which will be called up for disposal. The storm doors were put up at ‘the Bush house entrance on Tuesday mering, and a decided improvement made by cutting out the solid panels in the double doors at the ladies en- #rance and replacing them with glass. Included in the delegation of Pennsylvanians appointed by Gover- mer Pinchot, last Friday, to attend the mational convention of the Anti-Sa- loon League at Birmingham, Ala, December 17th to 20th, is Miss Rebec- «a N. Rhoads, of Bellefonte. ——Gettysburg and Penn State will «lash on the gridiron on Beaver field, at State College, tomorrew afternoon. The battlefield kickers have shown «wonsiderable strength in the two games already ‘played, and while State ought to win the game by a fair mar- in the visitors will likely make it in- ‘deresting. Mr. G. R. Spigelmyer, who re- «ently sold his house on Howard street to the Methodist congregation, nade sale of his household goods on Saturday and in the near future will zmake his home with Mr. and Mrs. DhHard Hartswick, street from where he has lived for many years. Today there is to be another wisit of inspection to the new opera- #ioms of the Blanchard-Moshannon Mining company east of Karthaus. _All stockholders and any others who imay care to accompany them are in- wited. The party will be guests of #he company at a “real dinner” and will ieave here about nine o’clock this morning in order to reach the opera- &ien by noon. Rev. E. Roy Corman, of Cres- sona, Pa., has accepted a call to the pastorate of the First Reformed church in Sunbury, Pa., as successor £0 Rev. Charles E. Roth, who goes to Reading. The item is interesting to Centre countians because of the fact that he is a native of Spring Mills, this county, and Mrs. Corman is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Fisher, of Centre Hall. A summer camp now in the course of erection on a small island one mile above the Masonic camp at the Snow Shoe Intersection, will have a joint ownership of eleven families, iincknding the John M. Bullock family, that of John Payne, Wilbur Baney,. ¥rank P. Hoag, G. Oscar Gray, S. Clande Herr, Harry Murtoff, Edward Owens, Van Jodon, Rev. DePui May- -mard and Mark Williams. : -Football is now the prevailing ‘sport while the motion pictures at the Scenic is the one dependable source of enfertainment in Bellefonte. Every evening in the week, excépt Sunday, £big programs of superior films are = ghown at this popular place of amuse- « myenit, andl the big attendance every « evening iis proof positive that the pic- ‘mres are appreciated by the regular . patrons. Be a regular and see all the . good ones. -Miss Gertrude Taylor, who on