"Bellefonte, Pa., November 16, 1923. fr i ———————— —_—— ». Editer GRAY MEEK, » Te Corresponients—No. communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. Terms of Subscription.—Until further wotice this paper will be furnished to sub- scribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $1.50 Paid before expiration of year - 175 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. Wilson’s Armistice Day Speech. No utterance of public official or private citizen within a period of re- cent years has so stirred the public mind and conscience of the country as the brief message delivered by for- mer President Woodrow Wilson at his home in Washington on Saturday evening, in celebration of the anni- versary of Armistice day. “The an- niversary of Armistice day,” he said, “should stir us to great exaltation of spirit because of the proud recollec- tion that it was our day—a day above those early days of that never-to-be- forgotten November which lifted the world to the high level of vision and achievement upcn which the great war for democracy and right was fought and won.” ” But the radiant record of achieve- ment was subsequently tarnished when we “turned our backs upon our asscciates and refused to bear any re- sponsible part in the administration of peace or the firm and permanent establishment of the results of the war, won at so terrible a cost of life and treasure,” which, he characteriz- ed “a sullen and selfish isolation which is deeply ignoble because manifestly cowardly and dishonorable.” It was an expression of the malice which en- vy had formed in the mind of Henry Cabot Lodge and was adopted by par- tisans in the Senate as an instrument to promote sordid political interests. It was a sacrifice of humanity and pa- triotism to bigotry. vi In “fighting President Wilson” by preventing the ratification of the cov- enant of the League of Nations these partisans won a brief victory, which is certain to turn into an enduring de- feat. They have confused the poH- tics, commerce and industry of the civilized world and set back the tide of progress for years. It was a vic- tory that will cause tears te flow from eyes of children yet unborn and as time passes each recurring anniver- sary of Armitstice day will bring it fresh to mind and more severe con- demnation. Woodrow Wilson has tru- ly said it “must always be a subject of deep mortification to us” which *we shall inevitably be forced by the moral obligations of freedom and hon- or to retrieve.” Pennsylvania Day at State College. That golden tornado which swept up from the South as the chief at- traction at the Pennsylvania day ex- ercises at State College last Saturday did not prove to be even a stiff breeze when it struck the gridiron on Bea- ver field and after the struggle was over the score read, State 7, Georgia Tech 0. But the score did not tell the tale by any means. The visitors were outclassed by Bezdek’s band and costly fumbling on the part of the State players lost them two if not three more touchdowns. . The crowd was probably three- fifths as large as that at the Navy game three weeks previous, but among the visitors were hundreds of young ladies from all parts of the State, guests at the numerous house parties held over the week-end. The day’s program also included a battal- ion drill by the college cadets and a soccer contest between the State and Navy teams, State winning by the score of 3 to 1. Alleged Bank Swindler Caught. Edgar C. McFeaters, of Pittsburgh, but at one time a resident of Tyrone, was arrested in Cumberland, Md., on Tuesday of last week and taken to Al- toona to answer a charge of unloading a lot of worthless stock on the First National bank, at Juniata. McFea- ters, it is alleged, unloaded over one hundred thousand dollars’ worth of worthless stock on banks and private investors in central Pennsylvania, among his victims being two banks in Centre county. He operated rather extensively in this section some eigh- teen months or two years ago then ‘suddenly disappeared and although officers had been on his trail ever since he was not apprehended until last week. County Institute for S. S. Y. P. Workers. On Monday afternoon and evening the young peoples leaders and pastors of the county will meet in the Meth- odist church for instruction in Y. P. work. Miss Esther I. Williams will be in charge. ——Daniel Heim last week tender- ed his resignation as superintendent of the Bellefonte silk mill and has been succeeded by Clarence Weitzel, of Shamokin. Public Meeting for the Hospital Monday Night. Come and Have Your Say as to the Future of the Institution. For a year or more the present condition and the future service of the Bellefonte hospital have been discussed, privately, by those most active in their interest in the institution and publicly in the newspapers of the county. Constructive criticism has been very general and all of it has led the board of managers of the hospital to the conclusion that the public is interested. Just to what extent the interest manifested will go is the uncertain element in the matter. On July 1st, 1902, the petition for a charter for the Bellefonte hospital was presented to the court. The first meeting of the Board was held August 5th, 1902. The hospital was then a small brick building at the rear of the present home of Mrs. Amelia Holz, on Spring street. It had been built by the late Dr. R. G. H. Hayes as a sanitorium and after conducting it as a private venture for a short time he offered it to the community with the result that it was taken over. Miss Alberta Jones was employed as the first superintendent at $40 per month, though a Miss Epley acted as temporary superintend- ent for a short time before the arrival of Miss Jones, The admission f the first patient is recorded in a minute dated September 8, 1902, and Le was an employee of the Amrican Lime and Stone (lo. Almost at once the board discovered that the quarters of the hos- pital were inadequate and that steps should be taken to secure a more commodious building with ground sufficient to permit enlargement should that be necessary. In November, 1902, progress in this direc- tion had been made to the point where two properties were under con- sideration. One, the James McClain home, on the corner of Curtin and Armor streets, and the other, the McKee property, the present loca- tion of the hospital. Then the Cruse property on east Linn street was offered and its purchase authorized by the board, a deed drawn and the transfer about completed when the deal was rescinded and the Mc- . Ke nroperty finally bought on January 1st, 1903. ile hospital was conducted for two years wholly on funds solic- ited locally. After that time it applied to the Legislature for aid and was given a small maintenance allowance. From that time to the present it has continued to function, serving all parts of the county and growing cach day in usefulness, yet lagging in the addition of facilities with which to meet the growing demands on it. ' © With the loss of nearly half of its annual allowance from the State has come a problem as to its continued maintenance as well as a general conviction that material changes in its physical condition should be made. Inasmuch as it is a public institution and its board feels that it should be guided as nearly as possible by the public impulse the ques- tion of what is to be done in the present emergency is one that should be taken up with the public. Accordingly a meeting has been called for the court house in Bellefonte on Monday night, November 19th. At that time it is hoped there will be a representative gathering from all districts in the coun- ty served by the hospital. Then the matter of a drive will be discussed openly and frankly. Nobody will be asked for subscriptions, but everybody will be asked to express his or her opinion of the practica- bility of a drive. “In order that all may have a clear idea of what is under considera- tion before thev come to the meeting we might add that several weeks ago a special committee was appointed to make a survey of the hos- pital as to its needs for increased efficiency and more economical op- eration. That committee secured the advice of a very high authority on hospital operation, Mr. Henry C. Wright, of New York, who came here and after a thorough examination of the institution made quite 2 lengthy report. This report was unanimously endorsed by the com- mittee and sent to the board of managers with the recommendation that it be adopted and acted upon at once. The board approved the report in principle, but with the reserva- tion that its approval be not final until the public had been fully taken into its confidence and acquainted with the meaning of the whole movement. Will you come to the meeting Monday night? It is your hospital. You should say what in your judgment is best to be done with it. You should be as frank with your board as it is being with you. Read Mr. Wright's report below and get your own ideas as to what is under consideration. nt a portion of Wednesday, Octo- hg Yih, Joh, examining the existing plant of the Bellefonte hospital, and there- after made a verbal report to the Board of Managers, which in substance is here in- corporated : lowing major defects: 1. Location of Administrative Office. FINDINGS.—The hospital is administer- ed with considerable difficulty and loss of motion owing to the fact that the admin- istrative office is on the ground floor, on which there are no patients. The ambu- lance entrance is on the first floor, on which floor also is the operating room, and patients are on the first, second and third floors. . wy A superintendent in na small hospital must supervise practically everything, and > : i f the superintendent : the effort required o I | stretchers. in going from her office on the lower floor to the ambulance. entrance, operating rooms, and patients on the various floors, is very taxing. RECOMMENDATIONS. The adminis- trative office, particularly in a small hos- pital, should be so located that the super- intendent, without moving from the office. can keep track on the major operations of the hospital, such as the coniing of visit- ors. the arrival of patients, whether walk- ing or by ambulance, the preparation for operations, the easy access to the various services for patients, : To fulfill these conditions, it would be necessary in the Bellefonte hospital to lo- cate the administrative office on the first floor.” The operating room is located at the rear of the hosnital, adiacent to the one rear entrance. The public should not be allowed to come in by this entrance, nor should ambulance patients be brought in there. It would not seem practicable to relocate the operating room or the X-rav room, and without a relocation it would seem necessary to create a .new entrance to the hospital on the first floor. I would accordingly recommend that an adminis- trative office be created in the space now occupied by the drug and bath rooms. and that an entrance proch he built in front of this administrative office and adjoin- ing the end of the male ward, and an en- trance door be cut through from this porch into what is now the male ward, and that ward nwsed as f# waiting room. A door could then be cut from the waiting room into the administrative office, with clear glass in the door for observation. Also, put glass panels in the other two sides of the ndministeative office. so that there mav he observation on four sides of the office. The office thus located would be well centralized in a position to control all entrances to the hospital. and the movement to the operating room. I would recommend closing the present front en- trance. y . 2. Ambulance Entrance. 3 FINDINGS. At the present time, all ambulance patients are brought into the door ‘whieh i= at the rear of the corridor adjacent to the operating room. Not fre- quently there come with these ambulance i i The existing hospital plant has the fol- : movements that may take patients, friends and relatives. The pa- tient and those who may be with him, thus come in adjacent to the operating room, and may encounter the various lace in and out of the onerating room. his is very ob- | jectionable. RECOMMENDATIONS. No one not di- rectly connected with the operating pro- cedure should be allowed in the vicinity of an operating room. To obviate this difficulty, I recommend that the X-ray room be removed from its present posi- tion, and a door cut into the outer wall of the space now occupied by the X-ray and this space used ax an ambulance admit- ting room: and that a doorway he ent through into the hall in the rear which will connect with the corridor in the hos- pital, making free passage for wheel This lack of entrance would pass the rear of the administrative office. 3 X-Ray Laboratory. FINDINGS. The X-ray limited in size: room is too Plate work can be done with a fair degree of ease, but fluoroscop- ic and treatment work would be difficult to carry on. Larger facilities are needed. RECOMMENDATIONS. The X-ray lab- oratory, removed from its present position, I would recommend he placed in the room now used as the administrative office, with dark room facilities in a portion of the room now occupied as a store room across the corridor. the remaining portion of that room to be used as an drug room in place of the drug room which would be displac- ed by the removal of the administrative office. 4, Utility Facilities. : FINDINGS. What is ordinarily termed “ntilitv facilities” in a facilities for sterilizing utensils, making poultices. soaking out linen, washing rloves, caring for solutions, ete., are very inadenunte in this hospital. The lack of such facilities makes the work much hard- er for the nurses, and involves considera- ble loss of time RECOMMENDATIONS. The inadequate utility service can be overcome by putting a utility room in a new wing to be ree- ommended, which will be of service on the first floor. On the second floor, take one of tho bath rooms and transform it into a utility room by the installation of a hospital, that is, utensil sterilizer; replace the present lav- atory with a sink, with ample drain- hoards; install a two-hole gas plate, and provide cupboard space for solutions and supplies. No recommendation js made for. the third floor utility room en thé supposition that patients will be removed from that floo=. Kitchen. Loi FINDINGS. The kitchen’ facilities, and the means for distributing food are very inadequate, involving an undue amount of labor withont the satisfactory result of od condition. ; : RECOMMENDATIONS. There is no ad- getting .the food to. the patients 18.8 heat. equate-space in the existing hospital for a kitchen. It seems necessary to build a new structure which will include a kiteh- en on the ground floor, with services on the other floors to ‘be referred to later. In order to accommodate a sufficient number of private rooms, it will be neces- sary to make this wing 45 to 50 feet long, and it would be advisable to have it ex- tended to the northeast, or, on the oppo- site end of the main building from the present fire escape. On the ground floor of this building, place a kitchen, diet kitch- en, storage rooms for the kitchen, with new dumbwaiter service by which the food may be transported to the floors above. 6. Dining Room. FINDINGS. The nurses at present dine in the dining room of the wooden build- ing adjoining the hospital. The dining facilities are reasonably serviceable at the present time, while the kitchen is in that building. If the kitchen be re-located it will be necessary to re-locate the dining room. RECOMMENDATIONS. to operate but one kitchen. Nnrses should be fed from this kitchen. For ease of” op- eration, the dining room should adjoin this kitchen. I would therefore recommend that the room on the ground floor now used as a waiting room be used as a nurs- es’ dining room. When the new wing is built, it will adjoin the kitchen. I would further recommend that the room now used as a diet kitchen be used as a super- intendent’s and staff dining room. A door can be cut through from this dining room to the corridor, or through the outer wall sto the kitchen. 9. Children’s Service. FINDINGS. There is no children’s serv- ice, and consequently it is necessary to distribute children more or less among adults, which is always unfortunate. RECOMMENDATION. Children cannot It is advisable less they are grouped together. They should not be in wards with adults, and they need different utility, food and bath- ing services than are needed by adults. I would recommend that the first floor of the new wing. above the ground floor, be devoted to children (not less than six beds), maternity (four to six beds) and a nursery. This groups together classes of patients which are more or less related and can be handled as a unit. 8. Private Rooms. FINDINGS. Conferences with the su- perintendent, members of the medical staff, and members of the Board of Man- agers, seem to indicate that there is press- ing need for additional private rooms. RECOMMENDATIONS. To overcome the shortage in private rooms, I would recommend that the third or top floor of the new wing be devoted to private rooms. Forty-five to fifty feet should accommo- date six or seven private rooms, depend- ing upon the space reserved for utility services and a stairway. This number of rooms appears to be all that will probably be needed. 9. Nurses’ Residence. FINDINGS. The nurses are now housed in two separate houses, one on the extreme lower part of the ground, and the other adjacent to and adjoining the hospital. The: separation of the nurses into two groups makes it difficult to properly su- pervise chem, and’ is objectionable from everv standpoint.’ Moreover, the wooden building adjoining the hospital, owing partly to the fact that it abuts a blank wall in the hospital, has inadequate light and ventilation for nurses, and several nurses are sleeping in one room, with beds closely crowded together. RECOMMENDATION. facilities for nurses much needed. Better residence are obviously very Nearly all modern nurses’ homes are built with single rooms for nurses, with appropriate common rooms which minister to the comfort and cheer of the nurses. Such facilities cannot be adequately provided except building, especially designed. Owing to lack of funds, it may not be feasible and advisable for the Bellefonte Board to at- tempt a new building for a nurses’ resi- dence. Under these circumstances, it would be advisable to move the present building that adjoins the hospital to the rear portion of the lot, and to reconstruct it, making as many single rooms as feas- ible. . 10. Heating Plant. FINDINGS. The heating plant for the hospital is so located that a large amount of” dirt resulting from its operation gets into the operating rooms and rooms ad- jacent, noise developed by the heating plant in its present location cannot be overcome as long as it remains where it is. Space wus provided in the existing laundry and power house for one or more heating boil- ers. It would seem advisable to provide heating facilities at this point as soon as finances will warrant. 11. Balcony. rue 3 FINDINGS. The patients have no serv- iceable sun airing balcony. Sueh a facili- ty is very much needed for the welfare of the patients. RECOMMENDATIONS. I would recom- mend that a balcony with abundant win- dows that can be opened or closed, be built on the end of the building now oc- cupied by the fire escape. ESTIMATED COST, A new wing can be built for approxi- smately $50,000. A new stairway, balcony, and the various other reconstructions rec- i ommended, including new furnishings, ., should be covered by an additional $25,000. | If a new nurses’ home be not built, it ! seems probable that all of the reconstruc- | tion and new construction I have recom- ! mended in this report would be covered i by 875,000. On motion, after full discussion, it was unanimously resolved as follows: 1st. ~The report of the committee rand the accompanying report of Mr. ! Henry C. Wright as to the findings ! 1 1 i { ‘ t i t and recommendations of Mr. Wright, lers and one sister, John W., Nora : the financial needs for other purposes, and the total amount of funds need- ed, meet with the hearty approval of the Board. 2nd. The President of the Board is authorized and directed to arrange with the local newspapers for the pub- lication of the committee’s and Mr. Wright’s reports and this resolution, in the issues of these papers for next week, and to arrange for and an- nounce in the local newspapers of’ next week ‘the holding of a public meeting of the citizens of Centre county, at a time and place to be fixed by the president, to consider and pass upon these reports and, if approved at this meeting, to consider the best plans fo; oxzanization of an efficient drive to raise the needed funds. 3. The final action of the Board upon the committee’s recommenda- tions as to the amount of the drive, and upon the questions involved in the organization of the drive, is post- poned until after this public meeting. Trial List for December Court. Following is the trial list for the December term of court as announced by prothonotary Roy Wilkinson: George M. Emerick vs. Use of H. S. Branch Feigned issue, non assump- sit. W. F. Case & Sons Mig. Co. vs. H. L. Flegal. Assumpsit. Pickering Coal & Clay Co. v=. Cen- tral Refractories Co. Assump-it. + George E. Homan vs. John MT hil- ips. Replevin. William P. Bell vs. R. D. Wilron. Trespass. I. J. Dreese vs. B. A. Severcool. Re- plevin. Thomas W.. Young vs. Samuel Se- her. Trespass. ." Helen T. Wilson vs: A, T. Sellers. Trespass. James H. Cullen vs. j Rowland. Trespass. J. Irvin Wagner "ers. Trespass. Charles H. vs. James Leath- be adequately ‘and properly cared for un-. in a. new | $21. COMMENDATIONS. © The, Airt dnd; DELIGE.—Mrs. Sadie Delige, who held the record as a long-time patient in the Bellefonte hospital, having been taken there shortly after the in- stitution was opened in 1903, and been there continuously ever since, died on Saturday night as the result of chronic rheumatism, having been almost helpless for some time past. She was aged about sixty-five years but little information could be obtain- ed about her early life. She always maintained that for .a number of years during her young wom- anhood she was a ring performer in a well known circus but no data could be obtained to confirm her story. According to her story it was while with the circus that she met and mar- ried a colored man named Delige. They had one son, George, who lives in the west. She is also credited with having two sisters living in different portions of Centre county. During all the time she was in the Bellefonte hospital her bills were paid by the county, and the total for her main- tenance and treatment there ran into thousands of dollars. The remains were buried in the Union cemetery on Tuesday afternoon at two o’clock, the county commission- ers officiating as pall-bearers. Il STAMM.—Mrs. Edna S. Stamm, wife of Frederick Stamm, died at her home at Millmont on Thursday of last week following a brief illness. She was a daughter of Andrew and Su- san Harter and was born in Marion township forty-two years ago. In ad- dition to her husband she is survived by the following children: John, Nev- in, Anna, Belle, Robert, Hugh, James, Philip and Franklin P., all at home. She also leaves these brothers and sisters: Mrs. Elias Breon and Mrs. Lawrence Hile, of Axe Mann; Frank- lin P., of Louiville, Ky.; Clementine, of Marion township; Harry E., of ! Bellefonte; Albert, of Renovo, and , George, of St. Louis, Mo., as well as | one half-brother and three half-sis- j ters, namely: Jacob Sharer, of Cen- i tre Hall; Mrs. Susan Buck, of Nes- | breth, Pa.; Mrs. Sadie Woomer, of, | Chicago, and Mrs. Emma Dale, of { Lemont. Burial was made at Boals- burg, on Sunday. If I STERE.—John Cyrus Stere, senior member of the firm of J. C. & J. B. Stere, merchants, of Unionville, died {on Sunday morning as the result of a stroke of apoplexy, following an ill- 'ness of several years. He was a son i of John and Ann Eliza Stere and was born in Clearfield county almost sev- enty-three years ago. As a young man, however, he located in Union- ville and some years ago purchased the A. J. Griest store which he and ; his son have conducted very success- fully. san Blair, at Milesburg, who survives with the following children: Harry M. and J. B. Stere, both 6f Unionville, and Mrs. Victor L. Wagner, of Jersey: Shore. He also leaves one sister and two brothers, Mrs. Catherine Amme:r- man and William Stere, of Union township, and Philip, of Akron, Ohio. Burial was made in the upper ceme- { tery, at Unionville, on Wednesday . afternoon. 1 il SOLT.—Word was received in ! Bellefonte on Tuesday by the Mongan ‘family of the death in Altoona, at two o'clock that morning, of Dennis i L. Solt, a son of John L. and Anne | Daley Solt. After going through a i siege of typhoid fever double pneu- | monia developed and his death fol- ‘lowed within a week. He was born in Bellefonte on July 10th, 1907, hence :was 16 years, 4 months and 3 days old. When five years old the family i moved to Altoona and that had been his home ever since. For some time : prior to becoming ill he had been em- ployed in the transfer department of j the P. R. R. shops. In addition to his ! parents he is survived by two broth- "Jane and Ernest, all at home. Burial i will be made in Altoona this (Friday) i morning. il I | MARTZ.—George William Martz, | the little son of Roy and Ada Martz, ‘died at their home at Lewistown last Thursday morning, following four day’s illness with diphtheria. He was four and a half years old and in ad- dition to his parents is survived by an older sister. The Martz family, until last spring lived in Potter township, this county, and have many friends there who sympathize with them in their bereavement. The remains were . brought to Centre county Friday | morning and buried in the Zion Hill : cemetery, near Tusseyville. i if i { NOLL.—The funeral of Mrs. Tra- ‘cy Noll, wife of Emanuel Noll, who died at her home in Milesburg on Wednesday of last week, following i several week’s illness, was held on . Saturday afternoon. Rev. Brown of- ficiated and burial was made in the Treziyulny cemetery.” Mrs. Noll was 38 years old and leaves her husband and eight children, Nita, Eleanor, Elizabeth, May, Frederick, Willard, "Wayne and Caroline. She also leaves her mother, three sisters and one | brother. i : BIBLE.—Mrs. Nancy . W. Bible, i wife of Jacob R. Bible, died at her i home near Phoenixville on November 4th, as the result of an attack of pleuro-pneumonia. She was a daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Decker, and was born near Centre Hall sixty vorrs ago. She married Mr. Bible eig’/een years ago and he. survives with no children. She leaves, how- ever, onn sister and three brothers, Mrs. ‘'W. O. Rearick, of Milroy; Frank W. and James L. Decker, of near Cen- i tre Hall, and Morris, of Williams- port. Burial was made at Phoenix- ville. } In 1879 he married Miss Su- | | club. | A New Issue of Bell Telephone Stock. An ‘issue of $20,000,000 cumulative preferred stock was offered the pub- lic by the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania on November 14, ac- cording to an announcement made re- cently. The price of the stock is $100 per share. It will draw an annual dividend of 632%, payable quarterly. The stock may be paid for in full, or if desired it may be purchased on the installment plan at the rate of $10 per share per month. Interest will be allowed on installment pay- ments at the rate of 6% per annum. This issue of stock will be prefer- red both as to assets and dividends over the $60,000,000 of the company’s common stock all of which is held either directly or indirectly by the American Telephone & Telegraph Company, the parent company of the Bell system. The prospectus points out that the company operates more than 800,000 telephones in Pennsyl- vania with a force of more than 21,- 500 employees. There are 433 cen- tral offices and more than two and a half million miles of wire in the sys- tem of Pennsylvania. The proceeds of this new stock is- sue will be used to retire the -indebt- edness incurred in the construction of existing revenue-producing plant and to build additional like plant. The maximum number of shares which may be applied for is twenty, that limit being fixed because the company desires as many as possible of the telephone users of Pennsylva- nia to become stockholders and thus acquire a direct financial interest in the company. Under existing laws dividends on this stock will be exempt from the normal Federal income tax and the stock will be exempt from the pres- ent Pennsylvania State tax of four mills. Inquiries and applications may be made at any of the exchanges of the company. alte Sl 2 Little Child Killed by Train. Eugene Hobart Barger; the ‘twen- ty-one month’s old son of Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Barger, who live near the Penn’s Cave station, was instantly killed by the passenger train west on Tuesday evening. The child had wan- dered away from home and going on- to the railroad lay down right over one rail. The train, with engineer Harry Page at the throttle, was thun- dering along at about forty miles an hour and rounding a slight curve the engineer was horrified to see the child lying on the track just a short dis- tance away. Notwithstanding the fact that he closed the throttle and threw on the air it was impossible to stop the train or even make an attempt to save the boy, whose life was literally ground out beneath the ponderous wheels of the locomotive and train. In addition to the parents one brother and one sister survive. Funeral serv- ices were held yesterday morning, burial being made in the Georges Valley cemetery. J Lag On November 20th and 21st the Centre county Farm Bureau, with the assistance of H. D. Monroe, poultry extension specialist, will hold poultry meetings in different sections of the county. Winter feeding, poultry dis- eases and other management prob- lems will be discussed. With eggs at a very high price every poultryman should be interested in learning how to produce them most economically. The schedule follows: Tuesday, November 20, at Pp. ‘m,, at farm of Frank Dashem, near Tusseyville, Wednesday, November 21st, at 10 a. m., at farm of W. H. Weaver, west of Madi- sonburg. Wednesday, November 21st, at 2 p. m,, at farm of L. G. Peters, near Meek's church. Poultry Meetings. a Deal—Hartsock.—Harold H. Deal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Deal, of State College, and Miss Hazel Hart- sock, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hartsock, of Stormstown, were married on November 3rd, by Rev. Carruthers, at his home at State Col- lege. The young couple took a motor wedding trip to the eastern part of the State and are now arranging to go to housekeeping at State College. Bartley — Corman. — Charles L. Bartley, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Bartley, and Miss Miriam J. Corman, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Corman, both of near Bellefonte, were married on Sunday evening at the home of the bridegroom’s parents, the ring ceremony being used. ——The Bellefonte Lodge of Elks, at their Hallow-een carnival, cleared exactly $1924.86, which will be turn- ed over to the Bellefonte hospital. 1928 Methods Give Record Potato Yield. How many Centre county farmers would like to harvest 518 bushels of potatoes from a single acre. This feat las been accomy..ished by Alex Mitciell, of Luzerne county. And lis entire patch rolled out the “spuds” at praelicuily the same rate as the measu.ed acie gave him the record yield. Alex is now a m:nber of the honorary 400 bushel notato This, in brief, is how he did it. Last year the field was in cauliflower and this spring he gave it two heavy applications of manure. Mitchell is a firm believer in the use o’ manure and he put it on se thick that in some places it was necessary tl it in- to the furrow ' when the field was plowed. He also has great faith in good, disease-free seed, which he se- cured through his local county agent from Michigan. Peaskv was the va- riety he planted. T'e third factor in his suecess, he says, ie spraying. The spuds were sprayed nine times during the growing season. '