Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 12, 1925, Image 4

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    ——— TE —— Er ————]
EST.
Bellefonte, Pa., June 12, 1925.
P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Editor
AE EER
Te Correspondents.—No communications
published unless accompanied by the real
mame of the writer.
Terms of Subscription.—Until further
motice this paper will be furnished to sub-
ecribers at the following rates:
Paid strictly in advance - -
Paid before expiration of year - £195
Paid after expiration of year - 2.00
Published weekly, every Friday morn-
ing. Entered at the postoffice, Bellefonte,
Pa., as second class matter.
In ordering change of address always
glve 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
subscribtion must be paid up to date of
cancellation.
A sample copy of the “Watchman” will
be sent without cost to applicants.
$1.50
Political Announcements.
FOR JUDGE OF THE COURTS OF
CENTRE COUNTY.
I am a candidate for President Judge of
the Court of Common Pleas, subject to the
decision of the Democratic voters at the
primaries, Tuesday, September 135th.
Should I be nominated and elected, I
will bring to the office an experience in the
trial of causes and in the general prac-
CLARK.—Mrs. ‘Annie G.
widow of George Clark, passed away
on Friday morning at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Charles Hartsock, at
Matternville, as the result of general
debility, aged 92 years.
Her maiden name was Annie Osmer
and practically her entire life was
spent in Centre county, her girlhood
in College township and all her mar-
ried life in Buffalo Run valley. She
was a member of the United Brethren
church at Paradise and a devout chris-
tian woman. Her husband died fifteen
years ago but surviving her are ten
children, namely: J. Elmer Clark, of
Waddle; George, of Tyrone; James, of
Bellefonte; Mrs. Frederick Williams,
of Unionville; Mrs. H. K. Mattern, of
Tyrone; Mrs. Francis Jackson, of Ju-
niata; Mrs. Frank Pennington, of
State College; Mrs. George B. Gum-
mo, of Buffalo Run; Mrs. Charles
Hartsock, of Matternville, and Miss
Grace, of State College.
Rev. Stahl, of the United Brethren
church, had charge of the funeral
services which were held at 10:30
o’clock on Monday morning, burial be-
ing made in the Houserville cemetery.
i ?
GRIEST.—T. Elwood Griest, for
many years a well known resident of
Unionville, passed away at noon last
Saturday, at New Smyrna, Fla., where
he had been making his home for sev-
Clark, :
A Suggestion to Creditors of the Centre County Bank. -
On Monday, May 25th, nearly three. weeks ago, the Supreme .court
of the United States handed down its opinion in the Centre County
bank case.
The effect of the ruling, so far as hope to depositors of
getting any of their funds was concerned, was to place them in almost
the same position in which they found themselves when the institution
closed its doors May 13, 1922.
We are not advised as to what steps are to be taken now. The
committee selected by the creditors to represent them has not met, so
that it seems reasonable to infer
procedure at the moment.
that there are no definite plans of
To us the most striking phase of the misfortune that befell when
the Centre County bank closed has been the utter dearth of construc-
tive suggestion, either during the three years preceding the ruling or
during the three weeks that have elapsed since it was handed down.
It seems that some thought, some
plan, might have been offered that
would point the way to a more satisfactory settlement of the whole
affair than interminable, needless and costly litigation.
We believe
such a plan could and would have been forthcoming had not the pe-
culiar involvement of the situation deterred several whose interests
were wholly impersonal and solely for the creditors.
all water that has run past the mill.
that should interest the creditors of the Centre County bank now.
is what can be.
However, this is
It is not what might have been
It
Their real interest lies not in recriminations for what has becn
done, but in constructive thought of what yet is best to do.
The time
has come for them to view their situation free from any other than their
own personal interests and unbiased and uninfluenced by the interested
and timorous motives of others.
Again
. -Orr—Witmer.—Earl 8S." Orr and
Miss Grace E. Witmer, both of Belle-
fonte, were married . on Wednesday
afternoon of this week at the Pres-
byterian manse of the Market Square
church, 127 State street, Harrisburg,
by the pastor, Rev. Dr. George E.
Hawes. Immediately following the
ceremony the young couple continued
their journey east and will spend ten
days at shore resorts.
The bride is a daughter of Mrs. Ol-
iver Witmer, of north Spring street,
and is a very prepossessing and intel-
ligent young lady. For several years
past she has held the position of sec-
retary in the Bellefonte Trust com-
pany, which she resigned effective
June first. Mr. Orr is a son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Orr, of Howard, but
has been a resident of ‘Bellefonte for
some years. He now holds the very
responsible position of assistant treas-
urer in the Bellefonte Trust Co., and
‘has the confidence and esteem of a
| host of friends. Upon their return
| from their wedding trip Mr. and Mrs.
{ Orr will reside at 322 north Spring
: street.
Shoemaker—Stevenson. — Thomas
Collins Shoemaker, son' of Mrs. T. A.
Shoemaker, of Bellefonte, and Miss ,
i Katherine Stevenson, a daughter of !
; Mr. and Mrs. George Stevenson, of
| Waddle, were married at the parochial
| excellence
x ——
Bellefonte Academy Closed Successful
Year Last Friday.
After one of the most successful
years in the history of the institution
the Bellefonte Academy closed its
school year last Friday, and the last
of the boys departed for their homes
on Monday morning. Eight new
prizes were established during the
year by friends of the Academy, which
proved an incentive to the students in
their scholastic work. The prizes and
the winners are as follows:
The James Potter Hughes mathematical
prize of $10, Graham Hughes, of Belle-
fonte.
The Dr. W. J. Copeland prizes, consist-
ing of two prizes of $10 each for excellence
in American history, and a $20 gold medal
for the most useful athlete during the
school year, Milford Davidson, of Charles-
ton, N. H.; Andrew Yerina, of Claridge,
Pa., and Franklin Hood, of Monaca, re-
spectively.
The Dr. E. P. Schatzman prize of $10
for excellence in chemistry, William Lind-
beck, of Jamestown, N. Y.
The Dr. E. P. Schatzman prize of $10 for
in German, Frederick Seitz,
Freeport, Pa.
The Potter-Hoy Hardware Co., Senior
English prize of $10, Leon Kutz, Le-
Moyne, Pa.
The F. P. Blair & Son Sophomore Eng-
lish prize of $10, Andrew Yerina, Claridge,
Pa.
tice of law in our local and appellate | €ral years, as the result of chronic > or eid ‘residence of St. John’s Catholic | The Montgomery & Co. French and
courts, of more than thirty-three years: tes The quicker the creditors accept the fact that they must take a i . ! Svanis Ha
and an administration eed } with gastritis. i i church, Bellefonte, last Saturday | Spanish prize.of. 410," Marion Irvine, Fort
loss the quicker they will be in a frame of mind to weigh the advan- | Worth, Texas.
tage of not permitting that loss to become greater and to consider pos-
sible means of recouping part or all of it. Because it seems to us that
they should be in that mental attitude today—after three years of
fruitless litigation—we want to offer a suggestion. Asking only that it
He was a son of Gideon and Martha
Griest and was born at Mechanicsville,
Adams county, seventy-six years ago.
As a young man he came to Centre
county and located at Unionville
fidelity, economy and to the best of my
ability.
Your support and influence in my behalf
will be much appreciated.
NEWTON B. SPANGLER.
I hereby announce my candidacy for
| morning, by Rev. Father Downes. Im-
! mediately following the ceremony a
| wedding breakfast was served the ™ ° “7
| young couple and a few invited guests | ro i ol v or pes hee eRsaY nie
at the home of Mrs. T. A. Shoemaker, |". ¥ Creed, Denyer, Col, with
The Jdmes R. Hughes classical prize of
| $10, Mark Richelsen, Buffalo, N. Y.
Judge of the Courts of Centre county, sub-
ject ‘to the decision of the Democratic
voters as expressed at the primary election
to be held Tuesday, September 15th, 1925.
In the event of my nomination, and finally
my election in November, all of my time,
energy and efferts will be devoted to
SERVICE and the best interests of those
who may have business before the Courts
of our county; and I now, without reser-
vation, solemnly pledge a courteous,
prompt, honest, economic and efficient ad-
ministration.
Your vote, influence and friendly sup-
port is most earnestly and respectfully so-
licited.
W. HARRISON WALKER.
As a candidate I respectfully announce:
That if it be the plesaure of the Demo-
cratic women and men voters of our coun-
ty to nominate me for the office of Judge
of ‘our Courts at the September 15, 1925,
primaries, I shall appreciate it highly.
And if it be the will of our voters to
elect me to said office at the general elec-
tion, I shall consider it as a call of duty to
serve all of our citizens in a practical, im-
partial, just and economic manner without
fear or favor; and shall maintain our laws
by example, as well as by precept, govern-
on no uncertain principles which our
sincerely patriotic citizen demand from
all public officials.
I sincerely trust that I may have YOUR
hearty. co-operation.
J. KENNEDY JOHNSTON.
FOR JURY COMMISSIONER.
We are authorized to announce that
James C. Condo, of Gregg township,<is a
candidate for nomination for Jury Com-
missioner on the Demecratic ticket, sub-
ject to the primaries of the party to be
held Tuesday, September 15th.
Mr. Condo will appreciate your support
and assures faithful and honorable service
sheulq he be nominated and elected to that
office.
THE NOSE.
Let other bards their tribute pay
To blue eyes, gray eyes, hazel eyes, brown
eyes, black eyes,
And the love-light, lustre, gleam and fire in
them;
Or descant on rosy cheeks,
Juscious and cherry-ripe lips
And the perfect pearls in the mouth—
I sing the nose!
Mine be this delicate and forbidding theme
Shied at by other poets and poetasters.
Scorn not the nose!
By that foremost feature—
Gesichtsvorsprung the Germans call it—
Napoleon chose his generals,
For it is in truth a surer index of charac-
ter
Than the changing and deceptive eyes.
O the multitudinous noses
Adhering to the millions of faces on earth!
The varying shapes and hues—no two
alike:
Greek, Roman, Irish, Negro noses:
Straight, bridged, hooked, retrousse,
Bulbous, bibulous, squat and flat,
Some too large and some too small, °
And the inconsequential neutral nose
Which makes no impression on anybody.
But these are not my theme.
I know a nose
Different from any of them
And superior to them all.
You cannot classify it:
It is a type by itself—Sui generis.
Measure it—describe it—
Photograph it, if you will,
It transcends all your efforts
To do it justice.
A micrometer cannot detect the slightest
inconsistency;
A Michael Angelo would go into raptures
over it.
I have called it
A nixie, elfish, impish nose,
Saucily amiable,
Captivatingly audacious,
Enchantingly defiant,
Bewitchingly wilful,
Fascinatingly fearless—
And so on and so on
Through all the gamut of the lexicon;
But all the words in the language
Fail to exactly express the truth.
In fine, it is her nose,
And if any man or semblance of man
Casts any aspersions on it
Or denies that it is the most charming
And only perfect nose in the universe,
By the jumping Jehosaphat
I shall arise and slay him!
PLINTHOURGOS.
ly lp
——The Curtis Publishing compa-
ny, of Philadelphia, having absorbed
the North American, is now reaching
out and cornering the paper supply.
For some time past they have been
heavy stock-holders in the Castanea
Paper Co., at Lock Haven, and the
New York and Pennsylvania company,
operating mills at Lock Haven and
Champlain, N. Y. Now they have ac-
quired a controlling interest in the pa-
per mills at Johnsonburg, and the
product of all the above mills will be
used by the Curtis people in the pub-
lication of their various periodicals,
where in due course of time he became
engaged in the mercantile business
and for many years his store was the
leading cne in that thriving little vil-
lage. Some years ago he sold out to
the Stere brothers and when his
health became impaired went to Flor- |.
ida to make his home.
On April 21st, 1875, he married
Miss Martha C. Russell who survives
with one daughter, Mrs. Robert Lov-
ering Mudgett, of Coronado Beach,
Fla. The remains were brought north
and taken to Unionville on Tuesday
evening and funeral services held at
two o'clock yesterday afternoon by
Rev. Charles L. Baldwin. Burial was
made in the Unionville cemetery.
J) i!
NEFF.—Miss May E. Neff died on
Tuesday morning at the home of her
mother, Mrs. James Neff, on east
Bishop street, as the result of tuber-
cular empyema of the left lung, her
death being hastened no doubt by in-
juries she sustained in an automobile
accident on the night of May 22nd. It
will be recalled that on the night in
question Paul Weaver, Roy Shaffer,
Miss Neff and Mitzi Bodenshoff mo-
tored to Hecla park to attend a dance.
Returning home Weaver, the driver
of the car, ran into a telephone pole
at, the intersection of the road from
the park with the state highway. The
four young people were ‘injured but
Miss Neff’s injuries were not believed
serious until the past ten days, and at
her request she was removed from the
Centre County hospital to her moth-
er’s home.
She was 20 years, 7 months and 2
days old. Her father is dead but her
mother survives. Burial was made at
Zion yesterday.
il i]
BRANNEN.—Mrs., Ella Brannen,
wife of William Brannen, died at her
home in Altoona on Tuesday, follow-
ing several month’s illness. Her
maiden name was Ella Pennington,
and she was born at State College on
February 14th, 1859, hence was in her
sixty-seventh year. Surviving her are
her husband and the following broth-
ers and sisters: Harry R. and James
E. Pennington, of Altoona; Clayton
E., of South Altoona; Mrs. Kate
Daugherty and Mrs. Sallie Beck, of
State College; Mrs. Eva Furst and
Miss Mary Pennington, of Buffalo
Run. Mrs. Brannen was a member of
Grace Methodist church, Altoona, and
her pastor will have charge of the fu-
neral services which will be held at
two o’clock this afternoon, burial to
be made in the Rose Hill cemetery,
Altoona.
1 il
BRILL.—Rev. William W. Brill, a
superannuated Methodist minister
who has lately been on the teaching
staff of the Bloomsburg State Nor-
mal school, died in the Bloomsburg
hospital, on Monday, following an ill-
ness of one week. He was seventy
years old and was quite well known
by a number of Bellefonte people. He
married a Miss McMurray, of Belle-
fonte, who survives with two sons and
one daughter. He also leaves two
brothers and one sister. The remains
were brought to Bellefonte on the
Lewisburg train yesterday morning
and taken direct to the Union ceme-
tery for burial.
—Contractor W. S. Williams is
sure making the dirt fly in his work
of demolishing the old Wilson prop-
erty and preparing the foundation for
the erection of the new Richelieu the-
atre on High street. A force of thir-
ty or more men are on the job and
this number will likely be increased,
as Mr. Williams’ contract calls for the
completion of the building within
three months and he is to get a bonus
of fifty dollars a day for every day
less than that time that he turns over
the structure completed.
——Hard P. Harris, chairman of
the Elk’s kiddies’ picnic transportation
committee, requests all those who can
and will contribute cars for conveying
the children to the park to have same
in front of the Elks home as prompt-
ly as possible on the morning of the
18th,
Te ihe heat Arle
be considered by them as wholly
worth a bit of unbiased thought.
one for their benefit and, at least,
It will be criticized, of course. It
will be laughed at by some. Others will say it can’t be done and still
others, from under cover, will douse it with cold water.
Each group
of doubters will have a motive and the motive is certainly not to the
best interest of the creditors of the Centre County bank.
The Centre County bank always was a useful institution in Belle-
fonte. It is doing it scarcely full justice to say that it did as much for
the industry and business of the town as any other financial institution
in it. Why not revive it?
The creditors, themselves, can. reopen its
doors, make it their depository, their trustee and in a very few years
put it well on the way of paying back to them every cent of the loss
that now is certain.
Of course there are those who will advise that it can’t be done.
They represent two types:
One, that doesn’t want it to be done and
another without enough constructive energy to undertake it.
We have before us the plans which George H. Earle Jr., used when
he revived the Real Estate Trust Co., of Philadelphia. When it failed
creditors were offered five cents on the dollar for their deposits.
Mr.
Earle stepped into the breach, pointed a way out and the creditors re-
organized the bank with his aid. We happened, later, to be made ex-
ecutor of one of them who had joined in the reorganization plan so that
we know that in seventeen years he not only recoured all of his losses,
but made a handsome profit beside.
The story of the Real Estate Trust Co., is not an exceptional one.
Many other banks in Pennsylvania have failed since then, re-opened
their doors and made good to those who stuck to them. :
The recuperative power of a banking institution is amazing. Of
course all of the creditors of the Centre County bank wouldn’t and
couldn’t go into it, but think of.what an institution several hundred of
them could make if they set themselves to the work of working a bit
for themselves by restoration of good will to the institution.
Why should not the Centre County bank be re-opened by its cred-
itors?
They could do it without liability for a cent more than they
have in it at present. Or if they don’t want to re-open it themselves it
is not beyond the range of possibility that others would do it for them,
give them the opportunity of going in or letting it alone and also of
becoming their trustee to work out the assets of the old institution to
the best advantage of all of them and at the least possible cost.
We have made this suggestion merely with the hope that it may
crystalize thought on some plan that will get the creditors some-
where, give them an opportunity to get in control of their funds as
soon as by any other method they may employ, and offer them the
hope of recouping the losses they
termine to work for themselves.
5
Trial Flights West Will Soon be
Made.
The new aviation field is now the
favorite night-time attraction for res-
idents of Bellefonte and the surround-
ing community. Hundreds of people
motor there almost every evening: to
see the planes come in and depart.
Practically all the pilots have made
the flights from New York to Belle-
fonte and return and none of them
have experienced any difficulty in fol-
lowing the trail or making night land-
ings. Within the next week or ten
days the beacon lights will be all up
between Bellefonte and Cleveland,
and the new field at the latter city
equipped with lighting arrangements
similar to the Bellefonte field, and
then test flights will be made between |
Bellefonte and Cleveland.
One of the pilots who flew to Belle-
fonte on Sunday night had a rather
thrilling experience on his return trip.
He was flying along in the vicinity of
Sunbury when a large dark object
suddenly loomed in view ahead of him.
Grabbing his controls he quickly veer-
ed to one side and then made the dis-
covery that the “big object” in the air
was the Los Angeles on its return trip
from Cleveland.
Work at the Hospital Making satis-
factory Progress.
The walls of the addition to the
Centre County hospital are completed
to the square and within a very short
time the structure will be under roof.
The work has progressed to the
point where plumbing and sewage 'in-
stallations ean be undertaken. At the
meeting Tuesday evening the contract
was made for a new electric elevator.
There is an opening for several
young ladies in the training school for
nurses at the hospital.
mee——— reese.
Curb Market to Open Tomorrow.
The curb market is to be opened at
7 o'clock tomorrow morning on the
Diamond. For years Bellefonte has
been without direct touch with the
growers of garden truck in this viein-
are certain to bear unless they de-
ity and the attempt to revive the old
curb market is largely experimental.
Of course it will take several weeks
to discover whether enough producers
will appear and, enough customers
also, to make it mutually desirable to !
continue the market.
! Valotta Granted Another Respite.
i Joseph Valotta, convicted and sen-
tenced to death in Allegheny county
for the murder of policemen Edward
C. Couch and Thomas Hopkins, has
: been granted another respite from the
. death chair, this time from the week
"of June 29th to that of January 11th,
1926. This is the ninth respite
granted Valotta and the length of the
stay was made necessary because his
case is now pending before the United
States Supreme court, which adjourn-
ed on Monday until October. Valotta
was brought to Rockview last sum-
mer but was saved from electrocution
only a few hours before he was to
have been taken to the death chair.
His case was carried to the federal
district court which decided in his fa-
vor on a question of constitutionality
of rights and from this decision the
State and county appealed to the
United States Supreme court.
Christian Endeavorers Hold Conven-
tion at State College.
The 28th annual convention of the
Christian Endeavor societies of Centre
county was held in the Lutheran
church, at State College, last Friday.
Officers for the ensuing year were
elected as follows: President, Frank
Andrew Nordbury, Philipsburg; cor-
responding secretary, Mrs. Nevin E.
Cole, Bellefonte; recording secretary,
Miss Miriam Beck, Nittany; treasurer,
J. Merrill Johnson, Beech Creek.
The society of the Presbyterian
church at Centre Hall was awarded
the banner for the largest number of
delegates present at the convention,
and Centre Hall was selected as the
place for holding the 1926 convention.
—1If it’s readable, it is here.
Hezler, State College; vice president,
! on west High street.
The same morning Mr. and Mrs.
| Shoemaker left by automobile for
| Washington, D. C., where they occu-
| pied the apartments of Col. Theodore
| Davis Boal during their brief stay in
| the national capital, which was cur-
| tailed to a few days owing to the in-
tense heat, and they returned home
{on Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs.
| Shoemaker have gone to housekeeping
lin the west side of Mrs. Shoemaker’s
| house, which was furnished and ready
i for their occupancy.
|
|
| Sexton—Williams.—The home of
: Mr. and Mrs. James Williams, at Mill-
| brook, was the scene of a pretty wed-
i ding, at six o'clock on Wednesday
! evening, when their daughter, Miss
Ruth E. Williams, was united in mar-
riage to Everett P. Sexton, of Pitts-
burgh. A few intimate friends were
| present to witness the ceremony,
| which was performed by Rev. M. C.
! Piper, of Milesburg. The attendants
| were Miss Martha and Carroll Hoy,
| the bride being given in marriage by
i her father. The bridegroom is a grad-
uate of the University of Pittsburgh
‘and holds the responsible position of
book-keeper for the Westinghouse
| Airbrake company. Mr. and Mrs.
. Séxton left “yesterday ' morning - for
{ Akron, Ohio, where they will spend a
| week with the bride’s sister, Mrs.
' Eric Martz, before taking up their
. residence in Pittsburgh.
I
1
{ Clark—Anderson.—Charles Edward
i Clark, son of Mrs. Catherine Clark, of
| Bellefonte, and Miss Emma G. Ander-
i son, of Tyrone, were married in the
| First English Lutheran church, in Ty-
yone, at eight o'clock on Tuesday
‘morning, by the pastor, Rev. E. M.
| Morgan. Immediately after the cer-
! emony Mr. and Mrs. Clark left on a
wedding trip to the New England
: States and upon their return will take
| up their residence in Tyrone where the
i bridegroom is in the employ of the
Pennsylvania railroad company.
Howard—Thomas.—Martin Howard
and Miss Lulu Thomas, both of Belle-
| fonte, were married at Hollidaysburg
on Monday, June 1st, by a justice of
the peace. The bride is the youngest
daughter of the late Isaac and Mrs.
Thomas, of Thomas street. The bride-
groom is a carpenter in the employ of
contractor W. S. Williams. For the
present the bride will live at her home
until a suitable house can be found
when they will go to housekeeping.
emma emer eee
Heller—Cowher. — Leonard Heller,
of Avis, and Miss Edith Cowher, of
Sandy Ridge, were married at the
Methodist parsonage, on Howard
street, on Saturday, by the pastor,
Rev. Homer C. Knox. The young
couple will reside at Avis.
———Coming from Lewistown to
Bellefonte on a motor-cycle, on Sat-
urday, Edward Witmer, son of Charles
Witmer, collided with an automobile,
in the vicinity of Old Fort, and receiv-
ed a nasty fall. He was brought to
the Centre County hospital where it
required six stitches to.close an ugly
gash in his left leg. No bones were
broken but he was badly bruised and
suffered from shock.
——The Hockman chicken hatchery
at Mingoville is now in full swing and
every day large shipments of chicks
are made through the Bellefonte post-
office. An idea of the growth of this
hatchery can be had from the fact
that they ship from sixty to ninety
thousand chicks a week. As the sea-
son runs from ten to twelve weeks it
means upward of a million chicks a
season.
At a hearing before ’Squire S.
Kline Woodring, yesterday morning
Howard, Gordon, Blair and Stanley
Walk, four brothers, of Hannah Fur-
nace were held in $500 bail each, for
breaking open a tool box of the Bell
| Telephone company construction gang,
at Hannah Furnace on the night of
May 28th, and stealing various tools.
graduate course
honorable mention for Edward Brunner,
of Steubenville, Ohio.
The Rensselaer gold medal for best stu-
dent in science and higher mathematics,
Ira Cunningham, Apollo, Pa.
It might be interesting to note that
eight of the prize winners were mem-
bers of last fall’s football team, which
refutes the general impression that
football players are not good stu-
dents; and it was a prize winning
team, at that, as they did not lose a
game and were not scored on during
the entire season, their record being
456 points scored to nothing against
them. The baseball team this spring
won all of its twelve games played.
Patrons of the Academy will be
pleased to learn that all of the teach-
ers of the past year will return in
September with but one exception.
Mr. Elmer Reiter will take up the
study of medicine in Pittsburgh and
his place will be filled by Howard
Thomas, an assistant in the labora-
tory work in science at Bucknell Uni-
versity the past year.
Forty-one students finished their
course at the Academy, most of them
anticipating going to college in the
fall, their selection being as follows:
State College—Herbert Bilger, of Belle-
fonte; James Corbett, Pittsburgh.
University of Pennsylvania—Lewis
Dorsett, Sayre; Stuart Lucas, Jamestown,
N. Y.; Alton Palmer, Jersey City, N. J.
University of Pittsburgh—Albert Dime-
olo, Coraopolis; Albert Guarino, Greens-
burg; James Rooney, Pittsburgh; William
Schatzman, Pittsburgh.
Carnegie Tech—Harold Beachler, Pitts-
burgh; Ira Cunningham, Apollo; George
James, New Cumberland; Walter Morrow,
Valencia, Pa.; Frederick Sauer, Pittsburgh.
Allegheny College—¥Frank Tucker, Cora-
opolis; James Miller, Pittsburgh; Wendel}
Blackburn, Yonkers, N. Y.
Syracuse University—Elmer Carlson,
Jamestown, N. Y.; Leon Kutz, Lc¢Moyne,
Pa.
Georgetown University—Bernard De-
Long, Birmingham, Mich.; Eugene Leon-
ard, Hawley, Pa.; William Morocco, Pat-
terson, N. J.; Francis McLain, Warren,
Ohio; Adolph Panceni, Burgettstown, Pa.
Kenyon College—Edward Allen,
Ohio.
Piqua,
Williams College—Irving Copeland, El-
mira, N. Y.
U. 8. Naval Academy—James Hughes,
Bellefonte.
Southwestern University of Texas—Mar-
ion Irvine, Fort Worth, Texas.
University of New York—William Lind-
beck, Jamestown, N. Y.
University of West Virginia—Joseph
Lynch, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Sunday Ras-
chella, Clarksburg; Richard Shoup, Mor-
gantown.
Colgate—Addison Parsons, Binghamton,
N.Y.
Bucknell—Joseph
N. J.
Amherst—Sumner Wilson, Johnson City,
N. X.
Princeton or Williams
Scoville, Pittsburgh.
No college selected—Alvin Blinn, Morris-
ville, Pa.; Frederick Clevenstine, Belle-
fonte; John Gilliland, McKeesport; Haven
Goulding, Pittsburgh; Ted Griffin, Bing-
hamton, N. Y.; Daniel Richard, East Liver-
pool, Ohio; Mark Richelsen, Buffalo, N.Y;
Frederick Seitz, Freeport; Malcolm Clev-
enstine, Bellefonte.
Petroni, Patterson,
College—Paut
High School Graduates Have Picked
Their College.
Among the recent graduates of the
Bellefonte High school who have elect-
ed to take a college course are the fol-
lowing:
Frances McKelvey will go to Wilson
College, Chambersburg.
Betty Zerby to Smith College, Nor-
thampton, Mass.
Henry Stere to Bucknell Universi-
ty, Lewisburg.
Ralph Alexander, Harry Tice and
William Harvey to State College.
John Emel and Basil Martin to Sus-
quehanna University.
Mary Elizabeth Sloop, Elmer Deck-
er and Gilbert Shope will take a post
in the Bellefonte
High school.
——Most people are willing to take
a man at his own estimate when he
figures it below par.