es Church Services Next -Sunday BOALSBURG LUTHERAN CHARGE. Services for Sunday, June 7: Boalsburg—Sunday school 9 a. m.; Preaching services 10.30 a. m. No Christian Endeavor. Shiloh—Sunday school 9.30 a. m. Pleasant Gap—Sunday school 9.30 a.m, W. J. Wagner, Pastor. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday school at 9:45; morning worship at 10:45, topic, “The Marks of a Christian.” Evening worship at 7:30, topic “The Son of Consolation.” William C. Thompson, Pastor. ST. JOHN'S REFORMED CHURCH. Services next Sunday morning at 10:45, sermon, “The Holy Trinity.” Evening service at 7:30. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Ambrose M. Schmidt, D. D. Pastor. BOALSBURG REFORMED. Boalsburg, church school 9:15 a. m. Catechetical class, Saturday at 7 p. m. Pine Grove Mills, public worship at 10:30 a. m. Pine Hall, church school 9:30 a. m. Children’s day service 7:30 p. m. Rev. W. W. Moyer, Pastor. ce seer eee lee. W. S. Williams Awarded Contract to Build New Richelieu Theatre. On Wednesday W. S. Williams was awarded the contract for the erection of the new Richelieu theatre on the site of the old Wilson property, on High street, and work on razing the old brick house was begun yesterday. The new theatre will be erected by Charles H. Richelieu and Howard J. Thompson, and both gentlemen stated to a “Watchman” representative on Wednesday that it will be a $100,000 play house. It will face sixty feet on High street and extend back to the present garage on the alley. The building will be of fireproof construc- tion and finished and equipped throughout on a plane with all up-to- date theatres. Construction of the building will be pushed as rapidly as possible so as to have the theatre in shape for the opening of the fall sea- son of shows. a S The Rev. Charles Homer Knox landed a 22% inch trout, on Tuesday morning, that weighed 41 lbs. He caught the beauty on minnow in the lime-kiln dam, just below town. ——The High school alumni dance in the armory will-be held this (Fri- day) evening. The Banjo-Saxophone | orchestra, of Harrisburg, will furnish the music. ——— i e—— Next Week the Great Races. Four of the world’s fastest automo- biles, piloted by drivers of interna- tional renown, have just been added to the entry list of the June 13 classic here at the Altoona speedway by Fred Duesenberg, widely known sportsman and automotive engineer. Three drivers of the four-car team have been already named. These are Peter DePaolo, the illustrious nephew of the famous Ralph DePalma; Phil Shaffer, one of the most sensational drivers of the roaring road, and Pete Kries, whose rapid climb to the heights of renown in racing has been one of the remarkable events of the year. With these three premier pilots selected and announced by the famous sportsman owner of the cars, keen in- terest has been aroused in racing circles over the man who will be chosen for the fourth car. The wheels of one of these super-speed mounts is one of the most coveted in motordom as the late Joe Boyer won last year’s India- napolis contest with one of these ma- chines. All of the fast entries will pass the qualifying lap tests, conducted by Fred J. Wagner, internationally known starter, at a speed predicted around 130 miles an hour, with the average for the long, 250-mile grind forecast at above 120 miles an hour. Every inch of the huge mile-and-a quarter board oval has been rigidly inspected and the special crews of steel workers are rushing the comple- tion of the heavy steel band at the outer rim, required by the A. A. A. contest board as a further precaution to keep wrecked cars from dashing over the top of the steep curves to crash to the ground, forty feet below. Real Estate Transfers. Jennie S. Keichline, et bar, to Hen- ry Tibbens, tract in Bellefonte; $55. Charles Smith to William R. Smith, et al, tract in Haines township; $1. John I. Thompson, et al, to William A. Baumgardner, tract in Ferguson township; $200. S. B. Stine, et ux, to S. B. Stine, Inc., tract in Rush Twp.; $1. Robert N. Markle, et ux, to Cyrus R. Gearhart, tract in Bellefonte; $2400. Ada J. Beezer to Lloyd F. White, tract in Spring Twp.; $4,000. L. C. Thompson, et al, to H. Chester Thompson, tract in Taylor Twp.; $725. Sarah H. Fareons, et bar, to Archie Rodes, tract in Philipsburg; $1500. Orlanda W. Houtz, et ux, to Charles W. Heverly, et ux, tract in State Col- lege; $10,000. I. G. Gordon Foster to Peter P. dame et ux, tract in State College; 1. J. Arthur Fortney, et al, to William H. Fry, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $3200. Amos H. Copenhaver, et al, lo Rzlph A. Smith, tract in Taylor Twp.; $1. H. P. Kelley, et ux, to Cora B. Rice, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Hannah Walker to N. G. Pletcher, et al, overseers, tract in Howard Twp.; $1. E. R. Taylor, Sheriff, to Charles F. Cook, tract in Spring Twp.; $284:41. Dr. North Writes of the Farms, For- ests and Home Life in China. Szechwan, China, Oct. 1, ’24. Dear Home Folks: This part of Szechwan, like every other part that I have yet seen, is most interesting. Perhaps you may be interested in some of the products of the region and some details of the life of the people. It is difficult to tell about these things in such a way that you can vizualize them, for Chinese life is so totally different from life at home, although the Chinese people are, as I have remarked in some of the let- ters that I have written to America, “folks.” It is in the outward appear- ances that they differ. Just now corn is the principal crop about here. When we reached the mountains about four weeks ago, it was a sickly looking crop, but it has grown so rapidly that now it is higher than my head where the soil is good and the land well situated. Every- where on these mountain slopes one sees corn. If the fields were only larger and level, one might almost im- agine himself in the great middle western corn belt. I have yet to see what the size and quality of the crop is, but I expect to find it far below that of home. And the Chinese know something of modern agricultural ideas, even though they arrived at their knowledge by some other than the scientific road. Between the hills of corn are planted beans. And I had thought that these nitrogen-bearing plants were a discovery of us Yanks! In many places, especially along the borders of the corn fields, are plant- ed hemp and indigo. These are still small. The difference in seasons between the mountains is shown by the fact that when we came up here a month ago they were harvesting the hemp on the plain. Other crops are grown up here, but some of them are as yet un- known to us. Oné is some sort of po- tato that I have not identified. So far as I have observed the corn is used only for feeding animals, although I cannot understand what reason there is for so large a crop of it, for ani- mals in Szechwan are scarce. Cows are used hardly at all, and horses are rare. Probably the enormous number of hogs, the only exception to the rule on animals, is the explanation. The Chinese eat much pork, but beef is little used except by the Mohamme- dans, who do not eat pork. In this region the Mohammedans make up a comparatively small percentage of the population. Occasionally near the foot of the mountains, where the mountain streams can be dammed, there are a few small rice fields, but these are ap- parently only to supply the families raising the rice. It is little less than amazing to see to what heights and on what slopes these people raise crops. , Some of these mountains rise at least ‘ carious existence. 2,000 feet above the plain, and their steep slopes are cultivated almost to the very top. In amengst the rocks one finds corn and hemp and indigo, along with beans, maintaining a pre- It is a sight to re- veal the poverty of the Chinese and their dogged determination to wrest a living from Mother Earth. Fruits are also grown. first arrived we were eating lequats — pi bas the Chinese call them—a sort of small apple with thin, peelable skin, and huge seeds. They are delicicus, although it takes a number of them to make a meal. These were followed by peaches, not so large as the ones at home, but still very good. Wild straw- berries were had when we first arriv- ed, but they were very seedy. Now we i are getting red and yellow plums, ap- : ples and blackberries, all inferior to the home varieties, but still good eat- ing. What China needs in this partic- {ular is not more fruits, but the devel- opment of what she already has. There are two principal varieties of the apple. One is a crab, and the oth- er is a small apple about like what we are accustomed to call “pie apples” at home. Much of the forested region is found along the ridges and the steepest slopes of the mountains. There is a ‘large variety of trees, most of them unfamiliar to me, though I recognize some of them as relatives of the American varieties. The growth is largely small, the large tree general- ly making an impression on the land- scape by its relative size. There are several kinds of evergreen about here. One is cedar, another some kind of fir, and a third a sort of spruce, as nearly as I can determine. Then there is the “chi” tree, from which is obtain- ed the very hard varnish wihch the Chinese use on their furniture. It is also exported and is used, I am told, as the basis for such home products as “Chi-namel.” It is practically in- destructible, being impervious to wa- ter. One can always distinguish these trees by the scars on their bark, where they have been slit to get the sap. Much of this land that ought to be growing large forests is covered with scrubby growth, like some of the cut- over and burnt-over land in Pennsyl- vania. Little real work has yet been done in the matter of reforestation, although just below us on this slope is the beginning of a nursery belong- ing to the Chengtu Agricultural Col- lege. The wood that we buy here is most of it not more than two or three inches in diameter, an explanation of the lack of real forests. Most of the trees that have attained a considera- ble growth are tall and spindling, be- cause of the custom of cutting off all lower branches for fire wood. I am often reminded by these trees of the trees in France, tall and slender for the same reason. In fact, the wood used here is like the fire wood I used to see in France. But probably the greatest wealth of these mountains is their coal. On al- most any slope about here one or more mines can be seen. They are found at almost any height, and run back, apparently for some distance into the hill. Yesterday I asked one miner how far the mine extended, and if I understood him correctly, he said eight li, or between two and three miles. The coal is a fine bituminous, sometimes almost a charcoal, where the pressure seems to have been less. It is very hard to transport, and there- fore is transformed generally into | coke. Charcoal is also produced here, When we but I have not yet happened upen any of their ovens. The people themselves are general- ly warm-hearted and good-natured. They live in houses with mud walls and thatched roof, many of them with only two or three rooms for the whole family. The whole family works. I have seen an old woman hoeing corn by moonlight. They begin early in the morning and continue until late at night. In general the farmers are better dressed than the coolies, part- ly because they make a little better living, perhaps, and partly because they are as a class not so addicted to opium as are the coolies. The wom- en have bound feet, usually, but they are much more loosely bound than those of city women. Some of them are quite as natural as the feet of American women, and usually much larger when they have a chance. As a whole they appear to be a healthy lot of folks, although hard work and exposure to the elements, coupled with ignorance break down their health too early, in many cases. Out here it is not uncommon to see the pigtail, although it has disappear- ed in the cities and the country near them. It is an interesting sight to see the old men and women—the young- er ones too, for that matter—sitting down along side the field for their smoke. When one first sees it it seems perhaps a bit shocking, unless one has frequented the Great White Way or Greenwich Village; but one soon comes to take it as a matter of course. The old women can stand just as black tobacco as can the men. I have even seen girls not more than fifteen years old smoking leaf tobac- co that I know would have made me turn green and sickly. One day I found a six year old girl smoking her mother’s water pipe. These last two instances were not, however, among the mountain farmers. And so I could go on, but I must stop. BILL. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. \ TOCKHOLDER’S MEETING.—The an- nual meeting of the stockholders of the Centre Building and Ioan association for the purpose of electing of- ficers and directors and the transaction of such other business as may come before them, will be held in the arbritation room at the Court House on Friday evening, June 12th, 1925, at 8 o'clock. 70-22-3t CHAS. F. COOK, Sec'y. ——1If it’s readable, it is here. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS ARMS AND PROPERTY—Wanted F Everywhere. 3% Commission. Write for Blank. Smith Farm Agency, 1407 W. York St, Philadelephia, Pa. 70-11-1 yr. XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa- mentary having been granted to the undersigned upon the estate of Susy C. Taylor, late of Unionville borough, deceased, all persons knowing thmselves indebted to said estate are requested to make prompt payment, and those having claims against the same must present them, duly authenticated, for settlement. CLARA B. LEATHERS, Executor, !'S. D. Gettig, Fleming, Pa. ) Attorney. 70-18-6t* OTICE.—Estate of William T. Fetzer, Jofe of Boggs township, deceas- In the Orphans’ Court of Centre County, Penna. Notice is hereby given that Alice C. Fetzer, widow of the said decedent, has filed in the said court her petition claim- ing her exemption to the value of $500.00 as provided by Section 12 of the Fiducai- ries Act of 1917, out of that certain lot or piece of land situate in the township of Boggs, county of Centre, and State of FSiasyivants, bounded and described as ollows : Beginning at a white oak, it being the corner of A. and A. Fetzer and James (Cokely, thence by land of said Cokely South 35 degrees Kast 60 perches to stones; thence by land of R. A. Poorman perches to stones; thence by land of and Stanley Watson North 55 degrees East 40 perches to stones; thence by land of S. Watson North 35 degrees West 60 Claude Cook South degrees West 40 perches to the place of beginning. Con- taining 15 acres. Having erected there- on a two story frame dwelling house, a stable and other outbuildings and being the same premises which Mary Butler by her deed dated July 16th, 1903, and recorded in Centre county, in Deed Book 91 page 129, conveyed unto William T. Fetzer the decedent. And also W. T. Stanley by deed dated July 16th, 1903, and recorded in Centre county in Deed Book 89 page 197, conveyed to W. T. Fetzer, the decedent. And that the same may be approved by the Court on Friday, July 3rd, 1925, un- less exceptions thereto be filed before that time, WM. GROH RUNKLE, Attorney for Petitioner. IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 101 Seuth Eleventh St. PHILADELPHIA. Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 64-34-tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY Scenic Theatre Weeks-Ahead Program SATURDAY, JUNE 6: All Star Cast in “PHE ADVENTURER,” with Tom Moore, Pauline Stark, Wallace sure to please. Also, 2 reel Century Cemedy. MONDAY, JUNE 8: Jeery and Raymond Hatton. A comedy, “Meller entertaining melodrama Don't niiss it. A highly ,’ and human interest. LAURA LaPLANT in “THE BUTTERELY,” is a melodrama of a girl with a’ desire for a wild life, and the conse@Wéntes that énsue will intérest yo. Also, Pathe News and Crossword Puzzle. TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9 AND 10: NAZIMOVA in “MY SON,” a seven Pickford, and is full of human interest. Murray do gocd work. A picture tries to make her son grow strong and good and nearly fails. sunshine Comedy, THURSDAY, JUNE 11: VIOLA DANA in “THE NECESSARY EVIL,” reel mother love picture with Jack Tobart Bosworth and Charley that will please most fans. A mother Also, 2 reel a human interest picture founded upen the story ef “Uriah’s Son,” from the book by Stephen Ben- nett. Also, Pathe News and Pathe FRIDAY, JUNE 12: Review. JACQUELINE in “SKY RAIDERS,” is a good melodrama of the air in which Capt. Nungesser, the French Walton and Walter Miller. Thrills, Also, iast episode of the serial, “IDAHO.” aviator, features, together with Gladys buman interest and a good show. MOOSE TEMPLE THEATRE. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 5 AND 6: ANITA STEWART in “BAREE, SON OF KAZAN,” a fine story by James Gliver Curwood, with the famous dog actor. Comedy, and the third episode of the Benny Leonard Series. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 12 AND 13: DOUGLAS McLEAN in “NEVER SAY DIE,” is an exceliert farce comedy, one of his best, with a different Comedy. A good show. Also, 2 reel story and lots of thrills. Also, 2 reel UAE AOS EASA ANS AAS A a Wa A Yt Te Graduation and Wedding Gifts of Pearls. Pin, Cuff Buttons, or Watch Chain. For the Bride Silverware of the Latest and Newest Patterns. Brassware, Fancy China. Lamps and Clocks. NAT ATLA ATA T AV AV AAT sme sna smn | o~ For the Girl Graduate—A beautiful Watch, Ring, Bar Pin, or String For the Boy Graduate—A serviceable Watch, Ring, Scarf Everything of the Latest Issues F. P. BLAIR & SON JEWELERS Bellefonte, Penna. N\A ————————— SE se, This Bank Has a Large Business We Have it and Hold it Because We try to do business in the right way, be- cause we represent the things that count— Perfect. Security to depositors High standards Quick and proper service Conservatism And a desire to help along We welcome new accounts, however small, and we give REASONS for coming here. The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. a an A OE A SL TT FTIR TITIAN Ths 2 2 & 4 8 a 4 4 a oa 4 & A & 4 & 4 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 A oa a & J In Our Vault our valuables are protected every minute against loss from fire or theft. The cost for this protec- tion is so small, you should not be without it. You can rent a Private Lock Box in our Safe Deposit Vault for $2.00 and up per year. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. CANS UE ANNAN TRIN NUN ON NANA UR ARAN VER RUAN MERA RAV MG RAY 4 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Te Le Se ST TE ES EEN ERA AAA) TENN TRE \ ed a Si > ZR a — A 4 Z 2] 2 oI |i 7 A 1%. A ba 3 7 = LJ i — 2 hie 2 4 Q \ ZC IT NN e have obtained a line of Beau- tiful Summer Underwear at the most reasonable prices imaginable. It contains everything one will need for Summer and vacation days. LATA TATA TL Cool Night-Gowns from 98c. to $1.98 Pretty Step-Ins from 49c. to $1.25 Bloomers (a whole raft. of them) 50c. Princes Slips—all sizes and colors—from $1.00 to $2.00 in Cotton, and from $4.50 to $5.50 in Silk wav Negligees in a Beautiful Array of Colors Hazel & Co. SMS a