Deworrai adn Bellefonte, Pa., February 1, 1924. —— nso NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. Ex-sheriff Henry Kline went to work as a guard at the Rockview penitentiary on Monday. ——The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Y. M. C. A. will hold a food sale in the Variety shop on Saturday, Febru- ary 2nd, at 10 o’clock. Wheat has advanced five cents a bushel in the local market so that the mills are now paying $1.10. Last week $1.05 was offered. Seven more crates of Kansas cottontails reached here this week and were distributed in good rabbit terri- tory surrounding Bellefonte. Guy Bonfatto received his first consignment of southern strawberries on Wednesday and while they looked delicious all we took was “a look.” The American Legion Auxilia- ry will hold a meeting in the Legion rooms next Tuesday, February 5th. All members are urged to be present. A congregational meeting will be held in the Bellefonte Presbyterian church on Sunday, February 10th, for the purpose of selecting a permanent pastor. The Thimble Bee of the ladies of the Reformed chur:h was held yes- terday afternoon in the chapel of the Reformed church. The society met as the guests of Mrs. Harry Yeager and Mrs. David R. Foreman. The Centre county association of Philadelphia will hold a birthday party on Thursday, February 28th, at the Bellevue-—Stratford, Philadelphia, for which invitations will soon be is- sued. On that day the association will celebrate its twentieth anniversary. At next week’s series of far- mer’s meetings E. J. Walters will dis- cuss legume crops, with special em- phasis on alfalfa, sweet clover and soy beans. The meetings will be held at the relatively same time and place as those designated in last week’s pa- per. The old Christ Sharer home- stead at Hannah Furnace has again changed hands, Homer Hess, the re- cent owner, having sold it to C. M. and E. J. Sharer. Mr. Hess quit farming and lumbering to engage in forestry work for the State and will likely make Philipsburg, his old home, his headquarters. Mrs. G. Oscar Gray was hos- tess for the card club of which she is a member, a few of her friends not members, being among the guests. Mrs. Hassel Montgomery entertained with bridge, at her home on east Linn street, and Mrs. Schloss, at the Fauble home on east High street, all enter- taining last night. Real winter weather is here at last but motion picture fans need not stay at home because of that fact, as the Scenic is always comfortable. Some remarkable pictures are being shown every week at that popular place of amusement, and all those who miss them now will never have anoth- er opportunity. That’s why it pays to be a regular. Get the habit. ——Steve Starry, who has been wanted in Philipsburg since March, 1923, was caught in Wilkes-Barre last week and brought to Centre county by a Philipsburg police officer. He was charged with operating an auto- mobile while intoxicated, and possess- ing and transporting liquor. In de- fault of $1000 bail he was brought to the Centre county jail for trial at court, ——The annual sessions of the Cen- tral Pennsylvania Methodist Episco- pal conference will be held in the Pine street Methodist church, Williamsport, beginning March 12th, and to contin- ue over the following Sunday. Bish- op William F. McDowell, of Washing- ton, D. C., will be the presiding offi- cer.. There are at present in the neighborhood of 350 ministers in the conference. Mrs. Martha E. M. Keller, of Philadelphia, oldest factory inspector in the State, and who has reached the age of seventy-two years, was placed on the retired list under the State re- tirement system last week. Mrs. Kel- ler was the second wife of the late Col. D. S. Keller, of Bellefonte, and following her husband’s death moved to Philadelphia. She was appointed a factory inspector in 1897 by the late Governor D. H. Hastings and has served continuously ever since. ——Walter McCullough, who the past year or two has been located at Grand Rapids, Mich., where he held a good position with the Oakland Auto Co., has returned to Bellefonte as a salesman for the Beatty Motor com- ‘pany, and for the present he and Mrs. McCullough will be located at the Bush house. Mr. McCullough is no stranger in Bellefonte, as he spent several years here, first with the State Highway Department and later with the Beatty Motor company so that Ford owners are pretty well acquaint- ed with him. ——On Wednesday of last week Mrs. Belle Dewey and Mrs. H. C. Shu- ey, of Tyrone, celebrated their 66th birthday anniversary at the Dewey home. Both ladies were born in Pennsvalley on the same day; went to school together and most of their married life has been spent within close touch of each other. A number of years ago they began to celebrate their birthday anniversary, the big event being held one year at the home of Mrs. Dewey and the next at the home of Mrs. Shuey. This year thir- ey-seven guests were present at the gathering. WARD KRAPE FAMILY BURNED OUT. Joel Struble Farm Home Destroyed by Fire. The large house on the well known Joel Struble farm, on the back road to Zion, lately the property of How- ard Struble, was completely destroyed by fire, last Friday night, together with all the adjoining outbuildings. During the past seven years: the property has been occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Ward Krape, who just re- cently entered into an agreement with Mr. Strubie to purchase the farm but the legal transfer had not yet been made owing to Mr. Struble’s dapart- ure for Florida. On Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Krape and their four children went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Hock- man, some two miles down the valley, to attend a bible class meeting. They returned home about 10:30 o’clock and their eldest child, a little girl, ran to the house, unlocked the door and opened it. As she did so she was con- fronted by a dense volume of smoke. As no fire was visible Mrs. Krape thought she had left the stove door open too far but the smoke was so dense that neither she nor her hus- band could get in to investigate. Mr. Krape then ran around the house and discovered smoke curling along a big chimney that led from a fireplace in the kitchen. A further examination revealed a small hole burned in the weather-boarding at the chimney. With no means of fighting the fire Mrs. Krape ran to the home of Lyman White nearby and called Bellefonte, asking the help of a fire company, but for some reason neither of the companies responded. It was fifteen or twenty minutes later when the fire broke out, and a short time later the entire house was in flames. Neighbors and residents of Zion hur- ried to the scene but there was little they could do except help to save the stuff stored in outbuildings. Every- thing in the house was destroyed ex- cept one rocking chair. The family dog was in the house and she was also a victim of the flames. The fire evidently originated from a defect in the old chimney. The total loss is estimated at five thousand dollars or more. Mr. Stru- ble had $1500 insurance on the home and Mr. Krape had only recently placed another $1000 on it. He also had $500 insurance on his furniture and clothing. The house was built seventy-four years ago and was one of the largest and best in that sec- tion. Of course it will be rebuilt but plans for doing so have not yet been made. As soon as Bellefonte friends of the Krape family learned of their unfor- tunate plight they gathered up a good supply of comfortable clothing which was given to them, and for which they wish the “Watchman” to thank the donors. Mr. Krape at present is staying at the Lyman White home while Mrs. Krape and children are with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thom- . as Heltman. Escaped Prisoners Sentenced. Frank Richie, Robert Morton and Frank Campos, the three prisoners who escaped from the Rockview peni- tentiary on Wednesday night of last week, were captured in the neighbor- hood of Coburn at noon on Friday. The men were seen and recognized by D. M. Kerstetter who, with the assist- ance of others, rounded them up then telephoned the penitentiary officials. The check for the reward for the men’s capture will be sent to Mr. Ker- stetter. At a special session of court at 11:30 o’clock on Monday morning, Morton and Richie plead guilty to breaking and escaping while Campos refused to plead. Morton, who was sent up from Cambria county for forgery, has a year and five months to serve on his old sentence. He was transferred to Rockview from Pitts- burgh on December 10th, and when called for sentence told Judge Quig- ley that he escaped from the Rockview institution because he preferred be- ing in Pittsburgh. The court said he would accommodate him and gave him from a year and nine months to three and a half years in addition to serving out his old sentence. Richie, who is from Westmoreland ‘county, was convicted of assault with intent to kill in 1921, and sent up for four years and eleven months to five years, and had been at Rockview only a little over two months. He is also due for a much longer stay in Pitts- burgh as the court gave him from two and a half to five years for escap- ing. John Leonard, the eighteen year old youth of Cloverdale, who recently passed a number of forged checks at State College and Bellefonte, plead guilty to forgery and was sentenced to the Huntingdon reformatory on one indictment, sentence being suspended on the other indictments. Morton and Richie were taken to Pittsburgh on Tuesday morning by sheriff E. R. Taylor and John Garis. Boal Bus Line Abandoned. The Boal bus line that for a year or more has run from State College to Lewistown, by way of Boalsburg, made its last trip over the route on Tuesday. Reasons for the suspension of serv- ice are given as lack of business enough to make it self-supporting. ——20% is a tremendously big dis- count when you remember that it is taken from our regular low marked prices during W. R. Brachbill’s Feb- ruary furniture sale. 5-2t Orlo Breon Drowned in Elk Creek Dam. A tragic event in Millheim on Mon- day morning was the death, either by drowning or freezing, of Orlo Breon, son of William H. and Jennie Breon, of that place. The lad left home shortly after eight o’clock to go to school but for some reason or other tock the opposite direction and at- tempted to cross the ice on Elk creek dam. For some weeks past he had ‘been trapping muskrats and it is just possible he went to the dam to look at his traps. . In any event he never reached school and when he failed to return home for dinner a search was insti- tuted. Inquiry elicited the fact that he had not been at school and dozens of people turned out to look for him. Shortly after one o’clock his body was found clinging to a rail that lay across an open channel in the dam. The body was only about half submerged in water and when removed and ex- amined by a physician very little wa- ter was found in the lungs which led to the supposition that the boy had attempted to cross the dam, fell into the open channel but was able to grab the rail and thus keep from going un- der the water and ice. But he was un- able to crawl out and no person hap- pening along to rescue him perished with the cold. He was a bright and winsome boy and his death is deeply deplored by all who knew him. In addition to his parents he is sur- vived by one sister, Florence. Rev. C. B. Snyder, of the Evangelical church, will have charge of the fun- eral services which will be held at ten o’clock this morning, burial to be made in the Millheim cemetery. ——Ladies’ silk and wool hose re- duced Friday and Saturday. $3.00 hose at $1.95. All shades.—Sim, the Clothier. 5-1t Penn State Glee Club Here Next Thursday. Under the personal direction of Prof. Richard W. Grant, the Penn State glee club of fifty members will appear in concert in the Garman op- era house Thursday evening, Febru- ary Tth, at 8:15. This musical organ- ization is one of the best college glee clubs in the eastern United States and will give a great program, varied enough to please all. The entire club will sing, among other numbers, “The Trumpet Calls Away,” by Dow; “Who Killed Cock Robin,” “Morning Hymn,” by Henschel; “Shadow March,” by Prothero; “Bedouin Song,” by Foot, and “Italian Street Song,” by Herbert. Miss Betty Croll will sing several soprano solos, and A. R. Fink, violinist, will play “Hejre Ka- ti,” from the Czarda, and “Spanish Dance,” by Rehfeld. The famous varsity quartette will sing a number of fine selections. Sev- eral of the numbers to be sung by the club will be used the following week in the inter-colegiate contest in New York city, and this rendering in Belle- fonte will be the first time the club has produced the songs in public. The entire program ranges from the heavy, serious numbers to the light, humorous selections and promises to be a brilliant musical event. Tickets on sale at 75 cents each. Benefit of Lutheran Brotherhood. ——Annual February furniture sale, Feb. 1st-Feb. 16th, 20% discount from the original price tags, at W. R. Brachbill’s. 5-2t “Listen to Me” a Musical Hit. Theatre goers who are alert to ap- preciate merit in a musical score will quickly realize why LeComte and Flesher’s extravaganza, “Listen to Me,” coming to the opera house on Tuesday evening, February 5th, was successful from the opening perform- ance. Independent of the fact that it carries an excellent cast, supported by a youthful chorus that can dance and sing, an exquisite display of scen- ic splendor, marvelous novelties, gor- geous costumes, and an absorbing fantastic story beautifully unfurled, is the reality that its score of music- al gems is a theme of critical admira- tion. “Listen to Me” has been lauded by all who have seen it. Some have adored its spectacular wonders, oth- ers have admired the lavish array of scenery and costumes, others highly praising the cast and chorus, while many have been thrown into ecstacy over the beautiful fantastic story, but all have appreciated the score of etherial musical gems. Tuesday Uulucky Day for Areo Mail. A heavy fog and extremely low vis- ibility in the Allegheny mountains section played havoc with the areo mail on Tuesday, both the westbound and the eastbound planes being forced down in the vicinity of DuBois. The westbound plane was piloted by A. D. Collins and in attempting to make a landing in the fog he collided with the top of a tree with the result that his machine turned turtle and landed on its bark. Fortunately the pilot was uninjured but the plane was consider- ably damaged. The eastbound plane was piloted by C. Eugene Johnson and he managed : | bled into a deep ditch at the side of to land without any perceptible dam- age to his machine. west mail was forwarded from the DuBois postoffice. Mechanicians and parts from the! Bellefonte aviation field were sent to | DuBois to get the ships in shape for service. —All shades of ladies’ silk and wool hose reduced Friday and Satur- day. $2.00 hose at $1.45.—Sim, the Clothier. 5-1t ‘ nett, Spring Mills; C. Y. Wagner, J. | B. Payne and J. N. Robinson, Belle- Both east and | Centre County Made Record at State | Farm Products Show. Quite a number of Centre county farmers spent a very profitable and instructive few days at Harrisburg last week attending the State farm products show. The best of Pennsyl- vania’s farm products and finest live- stock brought together at that time was a real inspiration to any one in- terested in any line of farming. It demonstrated the height of perfec- tion reached by our most progressive farmers and encourages every one to renewed effort in hope that some time he may have the honor of producing the winning exhibit in at least one of the many hundred classes. John Kline, of Boalsburg, one of our local club boys, won first on his potato exhibit in district 3, six county clubs competing. This is a real hon- or and a fitting climax for his sea- son’s work in the Centre county pota- to club. Edwin Way, of State College, plac- ed second in dairy cattle judging, fif- ty-six boys from all sections of the State competing. Carl Beahm, of Aaronsburg, placed seventh in potato judging. Charles Campbell, of Pennsylvania Furnace; Eugene Burkholder, of Cen- tre Hall; Russell Heckman, of Hub- lersburg, and Owen Smith, of Smull- ton, were other boys representing the county judging teams. All state-wide farm organizations held their meetings at that time, which made it very interesting and conven- ient to attend both the show and those meetings on the same trip. At the banquet and annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Berkshire Breed- er’s association, W. F. Rishel was elected vice president. Mayes and Confer, of Howard, placed first in Central Pennsylvania and fourth in the State on their exhib- it of Class “A” milk, with a score of 97.565, the other three higher scores being 98.80, 98.65, 98.45. Their sample showed only 100 bacteria per cubic centimeter, the best of any sample exhibited. It will be appreciated how small this is when you remember that 200,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter is the legal limit. A few of the Centre countians who attended were John W. Miller, J. G. Miller, Pine Grove Mills; Homer Grubb, J. J. Markle, John Parsons and Kenneth Thomas, State College; A. C. Kepler and wife, Pine Grove Mills; J. A. Wright, John Kline, James Bohn, Boalsburg; Rodney McClellan and Fred Ross, Linden Hall; Kenneth Wert, Tusseyville; Fred Hayes, Hub- lersburg; W. F. Rishel, Centre Hall; J. Will Mayes, Howard; Frank Ben- fonte. ——Twenty-five year guaranteed coil bed spring, February sale price, $6.40.—W. R. Brachbill. 5-2t Why the Juice Failed to Operate. Tuesday afternoon at 1:45 o’clock, the electric current suddenly snapped off, leaving Bellefonte and neighbor- ing communities without light and power. Immediate investigation re- vealed the fact that the trouble was on the Penn Central line and due to some one at Warrior's Ridge having chopped down a tree which fell across one of the high tension lines, drag- ging it to the ground. Due to the icy condition of the road, it was fifty minutes before a lineman could complete his trip to the switch at Corncrops Mills and relieve the trouble. Under more favorable weather conditions the trouble would have been corrected with scarcely any delay, since the line is so constructed that in trouble cases of this kind it is but a matter of pulling a switch on the crippled section, thereby cutting it off for repairs, while the rest of the line goes on conveying light and pow- er. The fact that this power line is so constructed gives proof of the effi- cient service that the Keystone Pow- er Corporation is striving to give to it’s consumers. House Heating Plant Explodes. The heating boiler in the home of Andy J. Lytle, at State College, ex- ploded last Sunday morning and is a total wreck. The accident occurred shortly after Mrs. Lytle had gone to the cellar to stir up the fire. The water pipes were frozen during the night and when she opened the fire box door the furnace blew up covering her with water and ashes, though she escaped without injury except to her clothing. Some ten years or more ago Mrs. Lytle had a similar experience when she attempted to stir up the fire in the kitchen range. It was literally blown to fragments and she was thrown through a window onto a porch roof suffering injuries from which she did not recover for weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Harnish Hurt in Auto Accident. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Harnish, of Boggs township, were both injured in an auto accident at Cresson, last F'ri- day, when their machine skidded on the William Penn highway and tum- the road. Mr. Harnish had several ribs fractured and was cut and bruis- ed, while Mrs. Harnish sustained nu- merous body bruises. The top was torn from the car and windshield broken. ——The date for the annual foot- ball dance of the Bellefonte Academy has been changed to the evening of February 29th, instead of the 22nd, as originally announced. i NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. J. McC. Davis, of Tyrone, was in Bellefonte Wednesday for a short visit home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gher- rity. —Editor and Mrs. Thomas H. Harter went out to Franklin, on Tuesday, to at- tend the funeral of the late W. Harry Cox. —Mr. and Mrs. A. Fauble will leave on Sunday, for a sojourn of a few days in New York city, while Mr. Fauble does some spring buying. —Mrs. R. D. Foreman closed her home at Centre Hall this week, in anticipation of spending the remainder of the winter at the hotel at Millheim. —Mrs. Gross Mingle, of Philadelphia, is home this week on a visit with her father, Capt. George M. Boal, and other members of the family at Centre Hall. —Mr and Mrs. Robert B. Taylor Jr. ar- rived in Bellefonte Monday, for a visit home with Mr. Taylor's father, R. B. Tay- lor, at his home on Spring street. —Thomas E. Mayes, of Johnstown, was here early in the week to spend a short time with his brothers at Howard and Le- mont, and with friends in Bellefonte. —Mrs. M. I. Gardner, of Clearfield, was here for several days early in the week, for one of her occasional visits home with her mother, Mrs. Cyrus Strickland, at her home on Bishop street. —Miss Louise McMullen, of Hecla, is contemplating going east next week, ex- pecting to spend a part of the month of February with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, at Narberth. —Spencer Garman, who has been home with his father, William Garman, and the family for a month, left Monday for Clear- field to resume his work on the engineer- ing corps of the state highway. —Mrs. A. Howard Tarbert, of York, was an arrival in town on Wednesday; having come up to be with her mother, Mrs. W. C. Coxey, for a few days while the latter is a surgical patient in the hospital. —Dr. Joseph Taylor, of Pittsburgh, was summoned home during the week on ac- count of the illness of his mother, who now makes her home with her daughter, Mrs. William D. Zerby, on Linn street. —NMiss Augusta Shoemaker was home from Pittsburgh for a week-end vist with her mother, Mrs. T. A. Shoemaker. Ac- cording to her plans, Miss Shoemaker will come to Bellefonte for a day or two each month. —After an enforced vacation of five months, owing to ill health, John Garman returned to Grampian yesterday, to go back to his work with the P. R. R. Co. John left feeling very much benefitted by his winter visit home. —~Our friend G. H. Fike dropped in for a little chat on Wednesday afternoon and we were grieved to learn that he has had his carpentry tools laid away for some months due to the after effects of a rather severe attack of shingles. —Mrs. William Lyon and her son Ed- ward, of Providence, R. I., returned from Danville, Wednesday, to remain in Belle- fonte fer a short time while looking after the settlement of the late Jacob Lyon es- tate. Mrs. Lyon and her son Robert ar- rived here from Buffalo, Monday. —Miss Ida M. Bell, of State College, made one of her rare visits to Bellefonte on Tuesday. It seems that State College holds so much of interest for its residents that once they get rightly settled there they become so content that their trips to Bellefonte are few and far between. —Among a number of relatives who have been all day guests of Mrs. Nora Fergu- son during the month of January, were Mrs. Charles Lytle, her two daughters, Mrs. Huey and Miss Luella, and Mrs. John Lytle, and her daughter Sara, all of Ju- niata, who came to Bellefonte with Mrs. Ferguson. —Miss Elizabeth Cooney will go to Phil- adelphia tomorrow for her annual mid- winter visit east, expecting before her re- turn to do some advanced season buying for the early spring trade. Mrs. Frederick Daggett will join Mrs. Cooney next week for a week with Mrs Frank Godshall, who is well known here as Miss Florence Lamb. —Trood D. Parker, a former Bellefonte boy, now making good in Clearfield, was back home a week ago for one of his be- tween-train visits. Trood left here to go to Clearfield about ten years ago, in that time he has married, has three children, is vard assembler for the P. R. R. Co., with a job printing office on the side, and with it all, looks the part of a happy, satisfied man. —Miss Florence Finnegan, so well known in Bellefonte, her former home, has so far recovered her health as to be able to re- sume her work and is now connected with the Settlement Music School, Southwark, Philadelphia. It will be recalled that Miss Finnegan spent several months here and at State College, last fall, while recovering from the breakdown caused by too close application to her work. —Miss Adaline Olewine went to Hunt- ingdon Saturday, to be over Sunday with Mrs. Ray C. Gilliland, of State College, who has been spending much time there since entering her son Robert in the J. C. Blair memorial hospital. The lad is but ten years of age and so serious is his ill- ness that the specialists in charge of the case have given the family only little en- couragement as to his recovery. —Miss Sarah Bayard was in Bellefonte from Saturday until Wednesday, a house guest of Miss Humes and the W. B. Ran- kin family. Miss Bayard stopped here on her way back east from a visit with her sister, Mrs. Bowen in Canton, Ohio, and upon leaving went to Williamsport to spend a little time with another sister, Miss Ursula Bayard, who has been a hos- pital patient there for more than two months. Following the visit in Williams- port, Miss Bayard expects to return di- rectly to her home in Atlantic City. Ladies’ silk and wool hose re- duced Friday and Saturday. $3.00 hose at $1.95. All shades.—Sim, the Clothier. 5-1t Miller—Lutz.—Torrence D. Miller, of Beech Creek, and Miss May Isa- bella Lutz, were married at the Methodist parsonage on Howard street, at eight o’clock on Monday evening, by the pastor, Rev. E. E. Mc- Kelvey. Furniture for every room, suites and individual prices, at an even 20% discount from the regular low marked prices during W. R. Brachbill’s February sale. 5-2t Among the Sick. ! On Sunday Miss Emma Kinne, of Milesburg, slipped on some ice on her porch, fell and sustained serious injuries. She was brought to the | Bellefonte hospital and an X-ray ex- | amination revealed the fact that she t had sustained a fractured hip bone. It is a matter of very great re- gret to this office, where he has been so long esteemed as a real friend, to learn that Abram Markle, of State College, is in the hospital suffering with a malady from which he may not recover. Mr. Markle has been unwell for some months, but only recently way the gravity of his condition real- ized. Miss Ella A. Gates, of this place, was found unconscious in her apartment in Crider’s Exchange yes- terday morning. She had been in her usual health on Wednesday and there was evidence that she must have been stricken without any premonition of illness. She had not regained con- sciousness at the time of our going to press, though there were symptoms that give hope that her affliction, whether it was apoplexy or paralysis, was clearing up a bit. Y Notes. | The second series of games will be closed on February 4th. A breathing spell will be taken before the opening of the third series. On Thursday even- 'ing, February 7th, the Tyrone Y. M. C. A. team will roll against the local team on the alleys here. The com- mittee plans to make this another so- cial event and have a supper served and a meeting for the discussion of bowling matters for the remainder of the season. The local team defeated the State College team by 24 pins on the local alleys Thursday of last week. A return match will be played shortly. The Hi-Y club will have their open session and tea on Sunday, February 3rd. Chief Olmstead, of the State College Y. M. C. A.,, and one of the college athletes will speak to the boys. Three units have been organ- i ized, with leaders, for the various ac- tivities of the club; one will have charge of the supper arrangements and serving. The board of directors had their regular monthly meeting last Friday evening and received the reports of the secretary and the treasurer and discussed important matters relative to the Y work. A joint meeting of the directors and trustees will be held shortly. Facts. The usual custom pursued by the larger city stores in “February Sales” is to mark up furniture thirty- five to forty per cent. above the reg- ular price and then advertise a fifty per cent. reduction. The February sales of W. R. Brachbill, Bellefonte, always have been honest. Select the furnishings desired and deduct twen- ty cents on the dollar from the origi- nal price tag gives this February sales price; and no inferior goods made for special sales purposes are on his floor. This year the annual twenty per cent. discount sale opens February first, and positively closes February six- teenth. There are no spectacular methods used during this period, just a plain 20% reduction from fairly priced merchandise to stimulate buy- ing during the fore part of February, always a dull month in the furniture business. 69-5-1t W. R. BRACHBILL, Bellefonte. Whiterock Names Officers. At a meeting of the directors of the Whiterock Quarries company in the Centre County bank building on Mon- day evening the following officers were named from the board of direc- tors, which succeeded itself: Presi- dent, W. F. Reynolds; vice president, A. Fauble; treasurer, Ray Noll; sec- retary, L. A. Schaeffer. A special meeting was held last night for con- sideration of persons for general man- ager and assistant general manager of the company to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Edward Rich- ard, who was president and general manager. rennet po ——The marriage of Miss Henriet- ta Hassel, of Columbus, Ohio, and Jack Reubenstein, of Chicago, which will take place Monday at the Desh- ner hotel, in Columbus, will be of in- terest to many persons in Bellefonte, owing to the circle of friends here, made while visiting with her mother’s family, the Baums, of Bellefonte, and State College. Miss Henrietta is the elder daughter of Jacob Hassel and his wife, the late Mrs. Rose Baum Hassel. ——-Ladies’ silk and wool hose re- duced Friday and Saturday only. $2.00 hose at 95c. All shades.—Sim, the Clothier. 5-1t ——Save twenty cents on the dol- lar during W. R. Brachbill’s February furniture sale. 5-2t Sale Register. Friday, March 21.—At residence of Lee R. Markle, (old Colyer farm) one-half mile east of Old Fort, horses, cattle, farm im- Jiomenis general clean-up sale. Also ot of household goods. Sale at 9 a. m. L. Frank Mayes, Auc. * Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - - $1. Shelled Corn - - - - Rye - - - - = - Oats - - - - - Barley - - - - - - . 2333835 Buckwheat - - - - -