errs Eee ni SOCIAL LIFE IN CHINA. How the Governor Entertains His People and Foreigners. Chungking, China, Oct. 19, "24. Dear Home Folks: It is so long since I have written you that I hardly know where to be- gin telling events. Since I wrote last, a group of us foreign women have been entertained at the home of Governor Yong Sen. He has here in Chengtu five wives, all of whom are studying English with Mrs. Freeman. Mrs. Freeman had them all in to her house to tea one day, and, of course, there were for- eign women there, too. Well, the Governor’s wives then invited all of us to their home to a feast on Saturday of that same week. We went, and en- joyed it very much, but I can’t get used to the idea of one man having so many wives. They are apparently all good friends, but I'm sure they must be unhappy sometimes. That evening, after we had finished our feast, which began about three o’clock and lasted until after six, the Governor took us all to the “movies.” They have a “movie” house here in the city and they say they sometimes show some very good pictures. I had never been there before, but that night they showed a picture depicting Chinese life and produced by Chinese actors. It was really very clever and it was interesting to see the reaction of the Chinese audience. It was a very mod- ern picture and the Chinese applauded and called out just as our American: audiences do when something strikes them as particularly thrilling or in- teresting. : Fs ! The whole foreign community were the guests of Governor Yong on the tenth of this month, the day in China which corresponds to our 4th of July at home. He reviewed his soldiers, some 20,000 of them, on one of the pa- rade grounds here in the city. We saw the soldiers parade and then were served a luncheon by the Governor. When he entertains foreigners he al- ways serves foreign food which con- sists of cold meats, bread, butter, jam and little cakes and cookies. It is never very good and we would much prefer to have a good Chinese meal. But he can serve the kind of foreign {food he does for less than it would cost him to put on a good Chinese feast. But, although we didn’t enjoy the food, we did enjoy seeing the sol- diers parade. They really did re- markably well, though, of course, their training isn’t to be compared with that of our western soldiers. That evening, the 19th, all of the school boys of the city, and some of girls, had a lantern parade. We went up on Doug Da Gai, “Big East Street” to see it. Each student car- ried a lantern and they were the clev- erest things. They were made of pa- per in some attractive figure. Some ! of them represented flowers of differ- ent kinds, some birds and animals, | and some were made to represent dif- ferent articles such as aeroplanes, trains, ete. It certainly was interest- ing, though we were just about dead tired after we had stood and watched these thousands of students pass by. Last night we were out in the coun- try for supper and to see the opening concert put on by the Saturday night. club. Miss Brayton, one of our W. F. WM. S. girls who lives across the street, was the principal artist and she was assisted by Dr. Yates, of the Baptist Mission, and Mrs. Brace, wife of a Y. M. C. A. worker. It was a fine concert and we thoroughly enjoyed it. We took our examination in the first ten chapters of John last week. Mr.- Moncrieff gave it to us by having us prepare two chapters each day. It was a very thorough examination and we had to spend a good deal of time in preparation. My grade was 90. The previous week 1 had taken an exam- ination on the 214 radicals in the Chi- nese language and passed it with a grade of 96. Each character in the language has in it one of the 214 rad- icals so it is necessary for us to know thoroughly most of the radicals and also the number of the radical, which is a great help in looking up charac- ters in the dictionary. Although Chi- nese is difficult, it certainly is inter- esting. I expect to take an examina- tion in the first five hundred charac- ters next week. In the first year of our course we have to be able to write five hundred characters. Some of the characters are very difficult and I'll have to study hard this week to be! able to pass my examination. I want to make 100 in this exam. I wish you could see our little beg- gar boy. We have bought him suita- ble clothing and fitted him out so that he looks very fine indeed. He is going to school every day now and seems to be perfectly happy. When he entered the hospital his whole body was cov- | ered with itch, and his head was full of sores, a disease which is very com- mon out here and is called “Lai Dze,” —1I don’t know the medical name for it. It is a disease which is very diffi- cult to cure and takes months and months to get rid of. Our boy has gotten rid of the itch, but has to take treatment every day for this scalp disease and has to have his head shaved once a week. His head is im- proving, though, and we’re hoping that before long it will be entirely cured. You certainly wouldn’t think Le was the same little beggar that we put into the hospital last year. He costs us less than five dollars Mex. a month for his food, clothing and school supplies. I must send you a picture of him when Bill gets one printed. Bill spent last night out in the country. There was a meeting of the English faculty and he was included. I went across the street and spent the night with Anne Flessel. She was the only one at home at her house, so we kept each other company. Bill came home this morning and reported that he had his hat stolen. Last year he Jeft his good brown hat over across the street on the tennis court and when he went to look for it the next morning it was gone. So he’s been wearing that pepper and salt one that he bought at State College, now that’s taken and he has nothing left but his cap. You can get foreign hats here in the city, but Bill says he won't buy one; he’s going to go without a hat. I'm afraid ‘when cold weather comes, though, he'll have to buy one. He has also lost his umbrella. I think he left ‘| that somewhere, but he can’t remem- ber where. He’s..so absent minded about some things, it’s no wonder he loses them. This afternoon we have foreign church here in the city. I went to Chinese church this morning and list- ened to a foreigner preach in Chinese. I understood almost everything he said. I suppose it’s because he spoke foreign Chinese. The fighting at Shanghai is not af- fecting us. We continue to live peace- ably up here, though I don’t know how long we will continue to do so. Don’t worry about us, though. We are well and ha : boy Mrs. W. R. NORTH. Circus Men are Busy in Winter. A big organization of the caliber cf the Walter L. Main show does not run its season, dissolve and disperse. In the winter the entire establishment is maintained. Only the performers and the working-men are dropped, and with the former this is generally a mere suspension of service for con- tracts are frequently made for several years. Owners, managers, contract- ing agents, treasurer and book-keep- ers and others find no idle moments. Railroad cars, suffering from the hard effects of a season’s campaign, need painters and carpenters; new acts and novelties must be secured to keep abreast of the times; a new route must be laid out and considered ard to do this the management must know the population and character of every town, have information of the busi- ness conditions, vicissitudes of the year, etc. : The question of transportation is the most careful one involved. For instance up in agricultural Vermont, Windsor county, nestles the village of White River Jet. It boasts of a week- ly newspaper, a public school and a national bank. Its population does not exceed 1,500. Yet, the Walter L. Main shows, and a few others of the big tented organizations make an an- nual pilgrimage thither because it is a local trade center, three railroads converging upon it, in addition to two rivers. Ordinarily the town would not afford enough patrons to pay for the feed of the horses and elephants, but the throngs conveyed there by train and boat always fill the tents. Not in any way does the Walter L. Main show of the present season re- semble the show of other years. Men, women and horses with the great in- stitution number almost 700. Ten acres of ground is utilized for the tents. At night the big show is trans- ported from town to town aboard two special trains. The Walter L. Main shows will give performances at 2 and 52 m, in Bellefonte, Saturday, June Real Estate Transfers. ! Apna T. H. Henzsey, et bar, to C. | E. Marquardt, tract in State College; | $1600. Adam H. Krumrine, et ux, to Orin J. Farrell, et ux, tract in State Col- lege; $1. Jacob Bottorf, et ux, to Jonathan | | Musser; tract -in - Ferguson Twp.; 1 $800. J. Musser, et ux, to Peter Shecke, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $1075. Peter Shecke to William F. Reber, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $800. H. Clyde Krandel, et ux, to Rachel F. Myers, tract in State College; $900. Sarah H. Kennedy to Joseph H. Sharpless Jr., tract in Rush township; $2,100. Charles Richelieu, et ux, to Howard J. Thompson, tract in Bellefonte; $10,- 500. Charles B. Thomas, et ux, to J. Clyde Thomas, tract in Taylor town- ship; $1. J. K. Johnston, et ux, to Lawrence Williams, et ux, tract in Bellefonte; $2,101. J. N. Henszey, et ux, to William R. Gordon, tract in College township; $6,500. Miles M. Hall to A. B. Hall, tract in Union township; $1. Irene McGinley to Mary E. Gill, et bar, tract in Huston township; $1,000. Jerusha C. Beightol to Herman | Schieffer, tract in Burnside township; | $2,000. Mathias M. Shank to Julia E. | Shank, tract in Snow Shoe township; $1. : Charles W. Wilcox, et ux, to Fred G. Gearhart, tract in Philipsburg; $1. Susan P. Gregg to Andrew Gregg, tract in Boggs township; $1. Bellefonte Cemetery Association to an Wian, et al, tract in Bellefonte; Horace A. Kaufman, et al, to Ly- man H. White, tract in Walker town- ship; $10,800. J. H. Glossner, et ux, to MecNitt- Huyett Lumber Co., tract in Marion township; $1. William M. Lowery, Exr., to Sher- man E. Lowery, tract in Spring town- ship; $900. Rachael J. Schad, et bar, to Walter R. Eberhart, tract in Spring township; $600. Fred McClincey, et ux, to James K. McClincey, et ux, tract in Unionville; $1,000. Sadie Tressler, et bar, to John G. Payne, et ux, tract in Walker town- ship; $1,900. Catherine Bollinger to Lucy Bol- linger, et al, tract in Ferguson town- ship; $25. A Marriage Licenses. Thomas C. Shoemaker, Bellefonte, and Kathryn M. Stevenson, Waddle. Leonard F. Heller, Avis, and Edith P. Cowher, Sandy Ridge. Carl E. Cronemeyer and Rae F. Holahan, State College. Everett P. Sexton, Wilmerding, and Ruth E. Williams, State College. Lester C. Poorman, Spring Mills, and Helen E, Hastings, Howard. Arthur Garbrick and Mabel M. Cor- man, Zion. . Earl 8S. Orr and Grace E. Witmer, Bellefonte. a overt. spree prs NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —AMiss Ella Young, of the local Bell Tel- ephone exchange, is spending a week at Port Allegheny, with her sister, Mrs. Ber- nard Holland. Miss Rosamary Simler, al- so of the Bell exchange, will leave today for a week's vacation, which she will spend at Pittsburgh and Atlantic City. —Miss Anne Wagner Keichline will leave today for Williamsport, where she will be joined by Miss Helen Shallenberger, of Philadelphia, for the drive to Cornell to attend the reunion of the class of 1911, of which both were members. Miss Keich- line expects to return to Bellefonte Sun- day. —————— ete mee. The Hollabaugh Dinner was a Success. The complimentary dinner given to | the champion relay team of the Belle- / fonte High school, at the Nittany _ room, last Thursday evening, by E. L. Hollabaugh proved a decided success. The party assembled in the Diamond here and after all the motors had been decorated with the red and white col- ors of the High school proceeded on the journey to the rendezvous, escort- ed by two motor-cycle officers. Among the guests present were Hon. Arthur C. Dale and wife, W. S. Williams and wife, Lucile Smith, James McCullough, Kathryn Bullock, John A. Emel, Merrill Waite, Marian Eckenroth, James R. Shope and wife, W. H. Kline, Thelma S. Hazel, Ed- ward R. Miller, S. Marjory Hill, L. Russell Hill, Anne Ward, Franklin Schad, Eloise Zimmerman, Gale Mitchell, Carl Moerschbacher, E. Spencer Garman, Erwin E. Collins, G. L. Furey, Mrs. Harry Crissman, Lois Crissman, Allison H. Haollabaugh, Mrs. Ivan Hollabaugh, Ivan Hollabaugh, Mitzi K. Eckenroth, Fritz Furey, Philip J. Gross, James H. Harter. eee pease see. A rumor that the big dirigible, the Los Angeles, would sail over Bellefonte between ten and eleven o’clock on Sunday night caused a gen- eral concentration of residents of the town at the new aviation field, many of them contending that the ship would come down on the field. Of course there wasn’t the remotest pos- sibility of a landing, as such ships an- chor to huge iron masts and do not come to earth as do aeroplanes. But the hundreds of people who motored to the field intent on glimpsing the airship were doomed to disappoint- ment, for while they were intently gazing into the heavens hoping to get sight of the Los Angeles, it was fly- ing eastward over Lock Haven and Castanea. i For good, reliable news always read the “Watchman.” Church Services Next Sunday BOALSBURG REFORMED. Boalsburg—Church school, 9:15 a. m. Confirmation service, 10:30 a. ni. |... Catechetical class, Friday, 7 p. m. Il- lustrated lecture on Bunyan’s Pil- grims Progress, 8 p. m. i Houserville—Public worship, 2:30 p. m. Rev. W. W. Moyer, Pastor. ST. JOHN'S REFORMED CHURCH. Services next Sunday morning at 10:45 and evening at 7:30. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Ambrose M. Schmidt, D. D. Pastor. EVANGELICAL CHURCH. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Children’s sermon 10:30 a. m. Children’s day exercises at 7:30 p. m., to which the public is heartily invited. Everybody welcome. Reed O. Steely, Minister. BOALSBURG LUTHERAN CHARGE. Services for Sunday, June 14: Pleasant Gap—Sunday school 9:30 a. m.; preaching service 10:30 a. m. Shiloh—Sunday school 1:30 p. m.; preaching service 2:30 p. m. Boalsburg—Sunday school 9 a. m.; Children’s service 7:30 p. m. W. J. Wagner, Pastor. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday school at 9:45. Morning worship at 10:45, annual Children’s day service will be held. Evening worship at 7:30, sermon by the pas- tor. William C. Thompson, Pastor. A To Put Wings on Middies. Beginning with the class of 1926, all midshipmen attending the Annap- olis naval academy must learn to fly before receiving diplomas. They have to qualify either as pilots or observ- ers, according to an order issued by Secretary Wilbur. “The Baptism of the Rings,” a tra- ditional ceremony in which members of the second class are required to jump off thé academy "seawall into deep water with their clothes on, has been abandoned. Last year one mid- shipman was drowned in the ordeal. —— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS OR SALE.—Electric washer, compar- atively new.—T. B. Hamilton, N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. 24-1t* ARMS AND PROPERTY—Wanted Everywhere. 3% Commission. Write for Blank. Smith Farm Agency, 1407 W. York St., Philadelephia, Pa. 70-11-1 yr. S 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. OTICE.—Estate of William T. Fetzer, late 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 Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: 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 degre East 60 perches to stones; thence bogfand of R. A. Poorman perches to stones; thence by land of and Stanley Watson North 355 degrees East 40 perches to stones; thence by land of 8S. 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 Bock 91 page 129, conveyed unto William IT. 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, i925, un- less exceptions thereto be filed before that time. WM. GROH RUNKLE, Attorney for Petitioner. 101 SBeuth Eleventh St., PHILAD.LPHIA., Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 64.34-tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY Bellefonte June 20 Yam MAIN CIRCUS {TYR LEE AND MORE, Wve EAA ¥ Yi AN oo Freseaed Absolutely and Always On Fcucs | A PEERLESS PROGRAM OF PRE-EMINENT PERFORMERS Everything New, Nove); Cosfly and Convincing. The Real Stars of the Circus Firmament. Every Promise 40 the public Unfallingly Fulfilled. Free to All, One Mile of Magnificent Parade Daily 2 Pert Dilly. = After Doon pe an ard I nfleocn end Nth, vars Graduation and Wedding Gifts , For the Girl Graduate—A beautiful Watch, Ring, Bar Pin, or String of Pearls. For the Boy Graduate—A serviceable Watch, Ring, Scarf. ' : ; Pin, Cuff Buttons, or Watch Chain. For the Bride Silverware of the Latest and Newest Patterns. Brassware, Fancy China. Lamps and Clocks. Everything of the Latest Issues F. P. BLAIR & SON JEWELERS Bellefonte, Penna. WA TA Tu Via Pa PA PA PTA AR We Have One Million Dollars LOANED IN THIS DISTRICT iF In a hundred different ways this money is at work. It is building houses, establishing homes, buying and stocking farms. It is helping men in business, developing our natural resources, opening new lines of endeavor. Showing in a Multitude of Ways the Magic Power of Money ...... If you are Thinking of Buying a Home Maybe we can Help you The First National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. he big four factors of our success- ful banking career are experience, resources, ability and facility. They all combine in making a per- fect union of satisfactory banking Your Checking Account is Invited THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM W J ede SS EE Ss SS NE SN AE ANN CIN AN ANCA ERA AA) rr .OOOL.... Summer Underwear 7 Il + TN dl i A ARR E # 0 A AA | __I at TTL Dr tN Q 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. TAAL TA TAT AT LWT 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 : SONATAS ST Nh MBP Negligees in a Beautiful Array of Colors Hazel & Co.