a a a i ————— - Why the Academy was Defeated. Bellefonte Academy was defeated by the Syracuse Freshmen at Syra- cuse last Saturday by the score of 6- 0. The defeat was not altogether un- expected because coach Snavely had witnessed the Syracuse lads’ victory over Cortland, N. Y. Normal on Sat- urday, October 8rd, the week before and came home with the report that they were a classy bunch this year, an equal match for the Academy in weight and experience and considera- bly further advanced in development than his own proteges. The Syracuse boys won the game on the merits of their team work. A few pointers, however, can be given to satisfy the loyal fans of the Academy that the lo- cal team was not disgraced. A muddy field generally proves ad- vantageous to the home team. The mud and wind made a successful pass- ing game such as Hood plays impossi- ble. Syracuse made a lucky short pass after three minutes of play which resulted in the only score of the game. Players of either side found tackling runners a hard proposition because of the slimy field. Williams made a for- ty yard run in the second half but never called his play again. In the last three minutes Hood shot a long pass down the field and Whitmore was set to receive it back of the goal line - when Sankovic, not seeing Whitmore tried to get it, only to spoil the pass for Whitmore, and lose a touchdown for the Academy. "The game was valuable in showing Coach Snavely who his four best back- field men are, and in proving to the players that they are not unbeatable. This fact will cause the team to work harder and more unitedly in the re- maining hard games to be played. They did not play the game of which they were capable, but due allowance must be made because of the unfavor- able weather conditions. ermm————— ree. Bellefonte High School Wins Another. In a driving, stinging gale that had its origin somewhere in the region of the north pole, Millheim lost a game of football to the local lads last Sat- urday by the score of 26 to 0. Numb- ed hands were the direct cause of sev- eral fumbles and poor handling of the ball and a high wind made kicking and passing a matter of chance. There were opportunities a-plenty for either side to recover loose balls and snare wandering passes, but many of these went unheeded. On several occasions the spectators were uncertain whether they were watching a football game or a game of soccer. The Red and White played the most consistent football but they lost chances to score more points because of fumbles or lack of punch at the critical moment. €oach Riden’s team was crippled through the absence of nearly one- third of his squad who were with the State: troop. The combinations he had worked together were broken up and this naturally affected the smooth- ness of his machine. The huskies from Millheim were playing the game every minute, trying to smash through the line and waiting for the break to come which the weather seemed to promise. Their attack was often smothered before it got started and their forward passes were generally thrown to the world at large. They had the heavier team but were not as well schooled in the fundamentals of the game as their opponents. Waite scored two touchdowns for Bellefonte, while Best and Moerschbacher each scored one. B. H. S. scored once in each quarter. Bellefonte vs. Tyrone. After a lapse of two years Belle- fonte and Tyrone will again resume athletic relations this Saturday, when the latter’s football team will attempt to down the local High school eleven. Two years ago Tyrone handed the Red and White its only defeat of that season and the sting still remains. This is the first hard game on the B. H. S. schedule and a victory will mean a lot to the team. Coach Riden has been working his boys hard this week in preparation for the game. With the return of the troop, the squad is once more at its full strength. The combinations that have worked to- gether all season were broken up for a week and it has been necessary to readjust them. Tyrone is confident of repeating its victory and expects to do so by a big- ger score than the last game. Belle- fonte will have a team on the field that will fight every minute. It will be a real test for the Red and Whites, for if the boys can establish a defense that will stop the fast Tyrone backs they are assured of a commendable record during the present gridiron season. The remainder of the sched- ule which includes Altoona, Yeager- town, Jersey Shore, Huntingdon, Ju- niata and Johnstown, is the hardest in years that a local eleven has been called upon to face. The game will be played at Hughes field and will start at 2:80. Go out and give your school some support. tensa fp es Bucknell to Play Here This Afternoon. Bellefonte Academy will line up against the strong Bucknell Freshmen team at Hughes field, this (Friday) afternoon, October 16th, at 8 p. m. The defeat at Syracuse revealed to coach Snavely the strongest combina- tion he can place upon the field this year to maintain the football reputa- tion the Academy enjoys. Go out and see what a fine machine the new ar- rangement will make. Gaudet, who has been the mainstay and the point winner of the reserves in both games they have played, will, doubtless, be ER seen on the Academy Varsity lineup for the rest of the year. He isa Massachusetts boy and came here with a wonderful reputation as a back field man. Admission to this (Friday’s) game will be fifty cents. Don’t miss it. There will be but one more game played at home this year—that with the Altoona Apprentices, on Saturday, November 21st. It must be remembered that all op- ponents are scouting Bellefonte this year and are making it very hard to spring the surprises that Bellefonte did last year. Three Types of Trees Removed in Thinning. Nearly every Centre county wood- lot has trees in it which should be cut, besides those already dead. A green or living tree which should be remov- ed does much more to interfere with the annual growth of timber in the woodlot than the dead one. A dead tree should be removed in order that the wood in it can be kept from decay- ing, but its removal does not stimu- late the growth of its neighbors. The first trees to be removed in thinning are those which have wide spreading crowns and short scrubby trunks. These trees shade many times their share of the woodlot and crowd out the young seedlings which will make real timber in the future. It is a wise move when you cannot use such trees for fuel or for marketable product, to simply kill them by girdling and let them fall by decay. A dead tree never injures the growth of others near it. The second class of trees to cut in- cludes those with defective trunks, where the agencies of decay will af- fect the annual growth. Rotten wood is never usable for any purpose. Inherently slow growing trees com- pose the third group which should be removed. Some of them are dog- wood, beech, yellow birch, rock oak, and on some dry sites, white oak. These trees fall down when it comes to producing’ wood in volume. How- ever, where nothing else but these are on the ground, leave the straightest and tallest specimens. Where trees are growing up in dense stands and are beginning to die out because of extensive competition, it is a good practice to thin them so that the crowns will have three or four feet of clearance; take out the mis- shapen, the defective and the slower growing species in order to liberate those that are left. By following the above directions the woodlot owner will get a return immediately in either fuel wood or marketable timber, and will improve rather than injure his future timber returns. C. R. Bashore, of Bethel community, Berks county, has aver- aged not less than $50 net per acre for the wood he has cut in improving his stand. The growth in many cases can be doubled, which means that marketable timber of better quality can be produced in much less time. It is possible to produce at least one cord of wood per acre each year by thinning as suggested. Discard Old“Ewes; Save Young Ones for Breeding. With grade ewes scarce in number and high in price many Centre county sheepmen are tempted to take a chance on carrying the old ewes through the winter and getting lambs from them next year. Our better shepherds feel that this is an expensive gamble. They choose the wiser course of letting the old, light-shearing broken-mouthed ewes go to the butcher and replacing them with a few of their best ewes. There is strong temptation in many quarters to market the ewes and try to weather with the old flock. The time has been reached in the fleece wool country, when the only way the sheep population can be maintained or increased is by saving ewe lambs because the range men are not ship- ping good, young breeding ewes on the eastern market in any large number. Let us cull grade flocks this month before turning in the rams. We can hardly afford to carry over the old ewes that will never live to see April 1, 1926. # CENTRE HALL. Mrs. Harry Shirk is quite critical- ly ill at this writing. E. L. Bartholomew, of Altoona, spent Monday in Centre Hall. L. L. Smith and Ralph Hagan re- turned from their trip to Florida, on Tuesday. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. James C. Goodhart, on Monday morning. Mrs. Mary Stahl and Miss Jennie Stahl are on a trip to Lock Haven and Middleburg. The Stork left a wee auto mechanic at the home of Walter Hosterman, one day last week. The High school pupils will spend Friday afternoon at Spring Mills— Community day. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Lambert are making preparations to go to Flori- da for the winter. Harry Reeder, sister and sister-in- law, from California, spent Tuesday at the F. P. Geary home. Rev. and Mrs. Hazen and baby, Nor- ma Jane, visited among their people in Centre Hall, on Tuesday. Mrs. William Slick and son Jeffer- son motored to Ohio on Sunday. They took with them Mrs. Elmer Runkle. On Friday, Miss Rebecca Derstine returned to Philadelphia, where she has been employed for several win- ters. . Mrs. Robert M. Smith, who has been in the Geisinger hospital, at Danville, since last Thursday, shows some im- provement, Miss Grace Smith accompanied their western guests to Lebanon, Lan- caster and Philadelphia. She will be away for several weeks. Word reached here on Wednesday, from Miss Ann B. Osler that her fath- er had died on Tuesday morning. Miss Osler will be remembered as a popu- lar teacher in our High school last year. Church Services Next Sunday BOALSBURG LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pleasant Gap—Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Holy Communion 10:30 a.m. Preparatory service Friday, 7:30 p. m. Shiloh—Sunday school 1:30 p. m. Preaching service 2:30 p. m. Boalsburg—Sunday school 9 a. m. Christian Endeavor 7 p. m. W. J. Wagner, Pastor. ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH. 9:30 a. m. Rally day in the Sunday school. 10:45 a. m. Rally day address to the Sunday school and congrega- tion. Prof. Battenhouse, of State Col- lege, will speak. 7:30 p. m. evening service; sermon: “The Four Corners of a Bed.” Rev. Clarence E. Arnold, Pastor. ST. JOHN’S REFORMED CHURCH. The Holy Communion will be cele- brated next Sunday morning at 10:45 and in the evening at 7:30. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Ambrose M. Schmidt, D. D. Pastor. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday school at 9:45. Morning worship at 10:45; the - Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper. Evening worship at 7:30; topic, “The Waste of Life.” William C. Thompson, Pastor. Marriage Licenses. William Scaife and Helena Lopens- ky, Philipsburg. Roy C. Peterson, Saltsburg, Lottie E. Meiss, Bellefonte. SSE. and ammn— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. EN WANTED.—Apply to construec- M tion department of the American Lime and Stone Co. Bellefonte, Pa. 70-41-3t ANTED.—Man with team or car to sell Whitmer’s quality line Medi- cines, Extracts, Soaps, Spices, Toi- let articles. Big profits. Denton made $124.40 one week. No experience necessary. You do business on our capital. Write for Centre county and full particulars today. THE H. C. WHITMER COMPANY, T70-41-3t * Columbus, Indiana. XECUTRIX NOTICE.—Letters tes- E testamentary on the estate of Anna L. Parker, late of the borough of Bellefonte, Centre county, Pa., deceased, having been granted the undersigned, all persoas knowing themselves indebted to said estate are hereby netified to make im- mediate payment of such indebtedness and those having claims will present them, properly authenticated, for settlement. EMILY PARKER, Executrix, 70-40-6t. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS HFERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of an Alias writ of Fieri Facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county, to me directed, will be exposed to public sale at the Court House, in the borough of Bellefonte on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7th, 1925, at 1:30 o'clock p. m., the following prop- erty: All the undivided interest of Robert R. Miller in and to all that certain messuage, | tenement and tract of land situate in the township of Worth, county of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de- scribed as follows, to wit: Beginning at a post by a pine on line of land of John IL | Thompson; thence North 56 degrees West 145.5 perches to a post; thence North 36% degrees West 38 perches to a maple; thence by land of John I. Thompson south 6514 degrees West 6.5 perches to a hick- ory: thence North 813; degrees West 6.8 perches to a hickory; thence South 764 degrees West 30 perches to stones; thence South 1014 degrees West 30 perches to stones; thence South 1014 degrees West 65 perches to red oak; thence South 63% de- grees Hast 164.4 perches to post; thence rth 5514 degrees East 60 perches to the place of beginning. Containing 80 acres and 81 perches. Together with all the de- fendant’s personal property. Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of Robert R. Miller. B. R. TAYLOR, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte Pa., October 14th, 1925. 70-41-3t on (Caldwell &Son Bellefonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating By Hot Water Vapor Steam Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished soso NO BARRIER TO Columbus bus. this Bank. : “ Fl - “ 1 ~ Z| =) ) : 2 Z 4 5 ; A 7 Z “4 jo) 2 4 lv} TTS CILTR he sea was no barrier to Colum- So financial operations present no barrier to him who" conducts his business through THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Scenic Theatre Weeks-Ahead Program SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17: PRISCILLA DEAN in “THE CRIMSON RUNNER” is a dandy fast action picture in which the heroine is an Apache leader who robs the rich to help the poor. The plot and work of the director makes it a worth-while picture. Also, Educational comedy, “All Aboard.” MONDAY, OCTOBER 19: BLANCHE SWEET in “WHY WOMEN LOVE,” is a picture adaptation of the famous Robertson story, “The Sea Woman,” and is a wide-awake melodra- ma and will please those who like a combination of a sea story and a woman. Many thrills. sop’s Fables. A fine two hour treat. A good show. Also, Pathe News and Pathe Comedy and Ae- TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20 AND 21: ALMA RUBENS in “FINE CLOTHES,” is really an All Star, with Lewis Stone, Percy Marmon, Eileen Percy, Raymond Griffith and William V. Mong, in the cast, and is a story of a discontented wife who loves fine clothes and complications ensue. Also, 2 reel Mack Sennett Comedy. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22: LIONEL BARRYMORE in “THE WRONG DOERS,” is a seven reel Astor production in which some mystery stuff and clever acting by this star make an interesting picture. Also, Pathe News and Pathe Review. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23: BOB CUSTER in “GALLOPING VENGEANCE,” is the regular western wild riding show that pleases all lovers of wild west stuff. Also, next to last episode of “PLAY BALL.” MOOSE TEMPLE THEATRE. THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 23 and 24: “THE IRON HORSE,” the great American piomeer play. See papers for particulars. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30 AND 31: JACK HOLT and BILLIE DORE, in “WILD FORSE MESA,” a spectacular film version of this fine Zane Grey story which has much that is new in west- erners. Will please all. Algo, 2 veel Comedy. RIAA APS AAPA AA BAP PPPS PTS ARMS AND PROPERTY—Wanted Everywhere. 3% Commission. Write for Blank. Smith Farm Agency, 1407 W. York St, Philadelephia, Pa. 70-11-1 yr. aS ——— IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 101 Seuth Eleventh St., PHILADELPHIA. Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 64-3¢-tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY nd A) The McCracken Farm in Ferguson Twp., to be sold at The McCracken Farm, located on the State Highway, 3 miles west of Pine Grove Mills, will be offered at Public Sale, on Wednesday October 21st, 1925 at 2 o'clock P. M., on the prem- ises. It contains 160 acres, more or less, 110 acres cleared land. Has a fine brick dwelling, bank barn, fruit, and running mountain spring water at the buildings. Public Sale 70-38-4t Autumn Modes Especially Designed for the Larger Woman et us show you what stunning garments are here— decidedly of the latest mode and so becoming to the larger woman. You will be delighted with ‘the slenderizing effect they give—a silhou- ette that is smart and distinctive. We Have the Becoming Jabot Front We have a truly slenderizing Frock mode of silk caton crepe with the pleated Jabot effect—at $19.75 and $25.00. Long Graceful Lines in Coats The Flares so smart this Fall—when placed at the sides and rear are lines the larger woman will appreciate because of the narrowing effect they give to the waistline. The Coat des- cribed is of a fine Brown Needle Point (Fur Trimmed) at $47.50. Dress Your Windows According to the Fashion for Fall ith the coming of Autumn the home-maker’s thoughts turn Draperyward, for she knows how important it is to have her windows throw an atmosphere of charm over the room as well as shut out the greyness of Winter. Glass Curtains, as well as Side Draperies, are being used in many new and attractive ways for Fall. Here one may not only choose Curtains and Draperies, but also learn the smartest ways to hang them. Our Rug De a men has a large shipment : p of New Rugs—in the Most Beautiful Patterns. You wall profit by looking here for values—and will be delighted with their beauty. Hazel& Company South Allegheny Street . . . . BELLEFONTE, PA. “Just what I wanted— a Bulova Watch” If you want HER to have the best—give her a BuLovAa WATCH design of the BuLova WarcH lends chasm to even the daintiest wrist. Burova Quali graved case, wi 2: $28.50 white gold filled en- teed 15 jewel ovement Burova F. P. Blair & Son Jewelers..... Bellefonte, Pa. A,