€ -— "Bellefonte, Pa., December 4, 1925. P. GRAY MEEK, Editor _ Te Correspondents..—No communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. Terms of BSubscription.—Until further motice this paper will be furnished to sub- . ecribers at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance Paid before expiration of year 1.75 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 give 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 Register Harry Rossman Injured in Auto Accident. Register Harry Rossman sustained painful injuries in an automobile wreck near Wallaceton, Clearfield county, on Saturday afternoon, but is thankful that he escaped anything more serious. Going on a business trip to Clearfield he took with him as far as Philipsburg Fred J. Healy and Lincoln H. Swartz. The snowfall in Clearfield county, on Friday, was very much heavier than it was here, so that the roads were well covered. On his return trip from Clearfield Mr. Ross- man was in the act of making a sharp turn in the road near Wallaceton when his car skidded. He attempted to run into an old lumber road into a tract of woods, but unfortunately hit a stump. His car turned over and his feet went out through the glass of one of the side doors. His injuries consisted of a cut on the face, a sprained back and badly wrenched hand. His car, a Maxwell Six, was pretty badly damaged and had to be towed into Philipsburg for repairs. The three men returned home by train on Saturday evening. The Sunday be- fore this accident Mr. Rossman took his family on a drive to Lock Haven and stopped at Mill Hall. Just as Mrs. Rossman got out of the car to go into the house of a friend she was hit by another passing car, though fortu- nately not seriously hurt. On the date of the Penn State-Notre Dame foot- ball game Mr. Rossman was run into on his way to the College, and now this last accident almost convinces him that a hoodoo of some kind is hanging over his car. RANKINS HAVE BAD SPILL. On Wednesday afternoon of last week W. B. Rankin and daughter, Miss Mary, in the latter’s new Jewett ; car and with Mrs. J. D. Geisinger as a motor guest, started for Harrisburg to spend Thanksgiving. Before leav- ing Bellefonte they put chains on the car but when they reached Lewistown the road was so dry that the chains were removed. At that place they took on board a State College student who was on his way to Philadelphia. Motoring through the Juniata val- ley they struck small patches of ice on the road which made driving treacherous and because of this Miss Mary, who was at the wheel, observed extra precautions. Several miles be- yond Liverpool there was an icy stretch of road and the car skidded back and forth across the road several times then ran into the bank and up- set. The top of the car was partially torn off and Mr. Rankin, Mrs. Geis- inger and the State College student were thrown out while Miss Mary was pinned fast beneath the steering wheel. The accident happened about six o’clock and the road was full of mo- torists at the time, so that it was only a minute or two until a crowd was on the scene. Miss Rankin was quickly released from the wrecked car and strange as it may seem her only in- juries were a few bruises on her side. Mr. Rankin sustained a slight cut and several small bruises, but nothing serious, while Mrs. Geisinger and the State College student were uninjured. The car was badly wrecked. A passing motorist took them into Harrisburg and later the car was towed into the Jewett agency in that city for repairs. Miss Rankin carried accident insurance and the cost to her for putting the car in as good condi- tion as it was before the accident will not be great. reife New Record Made on Tyrone Division of P. R. R. A new record was established on the Tyrone division of the Pennsylva- nia railroad on Tuesday of last week when all former records for the move- ment of trains and cars were shatter- ed. On that day a total of 2,940 cars were handled over the division, 2,489 of this number being hauled over the Bald Eagle Valley portion. This movement was represented by 51 freight trains, and in connection 44 passenger trains were handled over the division or a grand total of 99 trains. The record previous to this was made on December 16, 1920, when years a well known resident of Belle- fonte, passed away on Monday night, at his home on Pine street, following an illness of about five years. He was a son of Thomas and Mary Louise Jackson and was born in Phil- adelphia on December 2nd, 1861, hence was within two days of being 64 years old. When but fifteen years of age, or in 1876, he came to Bellefonte with his parents, his father coming here as head of the tailoring department in the Goldsmith stores. His education was completed in the public schools of Bellefonte. Following Grover Cleveland’s inaugu- ration as President in 1885 friends of Mr. Jackson secured for him an ap- office at Washington where he remain- ed two cr three years. On his return to Bellefonte he filled various cleric- al positions until the election of Cyrus Brungart as sheriff of Centre county, when he secured the appointment of deputy sheriff, a position he filled with such exactness and ability that he was retained by sheriff W. M. Cronister and also sheriff H. S. Taylor, serving ‘nine years continuously in that office. About sixteen years ago he accept- ed a position in the Centre County bank where he remained ten years, or until failing health compelled his re- tirement. He was a member of the Bellefonte Lodge of Elks and the Lo- gan fire company. In politics he was a staunch Democrat and filled the po- sition of secretary to the county com- mittee for a number of years. Mr. Jackson was of English parent- age and was most punctilious and gentlemanly at all times and under all circumstances. Suave and genial by nature he had many warm friends who, though they have missed his companionship for a number of years will still regret to learn of his death. On October 7th, 1908, he married Miss Elizabeth Hazel, who survives dith one sister, Miss Lidia Jackson, of Bellefonte. Funeral services were held in the Catholic church at ten o’clock yesterday morning by Rev. Father Downes and burial made in the Catholi¢ cemetery. Il II GRAY.—Mrs. Ella M. Gray, widow of the late John F. Gray, died on Mon- day evening, at her home in Altoona, following an illness of seven months as the result of a stroke of paralysis. She was a daughter of George and Lydia Mattern and was born in Half- moon valley on June 29th, 1860, hence was in her sixty-sixth year. A good part of her married life was spent in Bellefonte and at State College, but of late years some of her time had been spent with her daughter, in Al- toona. Her husband has been dead for a number of years but surviving her are the following children: G. Os- Pittsbtirgl; “Mrs. Myrtle L. Corl, of Philadelphia, and Florence E., of Al- toona. She also leaves two brothers, D. Blanchard Mattern, of Altoona, and G. Stewart Mattern, of Los An- geles, Cal. Mrs. Gray was a member of St. Paul’s Methodist church, of State Col- lege, for many years. Funeral serv- ices were held at her home in Altoona on Wednesday evening and yesterday the remains were taken to State Col- lege where burial was made in the Pine Hall cemetery. 3 1 | SHAMP.—John Wesley Shamp, a well known resident of Marion town- ship, died at his home at Jacksonviile about five o’clock last Friday evening as the result of a stroke of apoplexy, sustained about ten o’clock the same morning. He was a son of Frank and Mary Royer Shamp and was born in Marion township on August 6th, 1858, making his age 67 years, 2 months and 21 days. He was a laborer by occupa- tion and a good citizen. He married Miss Rachel Sayers who survives with the following children: Foster Shamp, at home; Ward, of Clearfield; Mrs. Winfield Deitz, of Jacksonville; Mrs. Boyd Carner, of Hublersburg; Mrs. Perry Forander, of Mill Hall, and Mrs. Jacob Weaver, of Hublershurg. He was a member of the Evangel- ical church and his pastor had charge of the funeral services which were held on Monday afternoon, burial be- ing made at Jacksonville. il ll BARTLETT.—Judson Miller Bart- lett, aged five years, died at the home of his parents at 88 State, Perth Am- boy, N. J. The body was laid to rest in the family plot of his great grand- parents, Homer G. and Myra J. Bart- lett, in the cemetery of the Union church, at East Sidney, N. Y. The services were conducted by Rev. El- wood, of Unadilla, N. Y. The Bart- lett family were well known in the eastern part of Centre county, they having lived at State College prior to. Mr. Bartlett’s becoming principal of the schools of Haines township. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Judson Bartlett, and two sisters, Eleanor and Alice, survive to mourn the going out of this bright little life. ® % 0 il WORRICK.—Following an illness of several years Dorothy Betty Wor- i rick died at the home of her parents , at Snuuyside on Thanksgiving day, as , | the result of acute dilatation of the JACKSON.—Harry J. Jackson, for | pointment in the congressional post- | car Gray, of Bellefonte; Spencer J., of: a total of 2,820 cars, were handled, heart. She was a daughter of Peter 2,318 of which were handled over the | and Emily Worrick and was born on valley portion. September 9th, 1906, hence was 19 Tyrone Division has justly earned the reputation of being the greatest single track railroad in the world. The above movement was remarkable and must be a revelation to experienc- ed transportation men. However, the division has not reached the peak of the business that can be handled by the facilities at hand here. years, 2 months and 17 days old. Fu- Howard Casper, on north Thom- as street, following a year’s illness with myocarditis. She was a daugh- | Shultz and was born on July 16th, 1870, hence was 55 years, 4 months and 15 days old. The funeral was held yesterday, burial being made at Cur- tin. y il I! SPIGELMEYER.—W. J. H. Spigel- meyer died suddenly from the effects of a stroke of apoplexy, at his home in Howard early Monday morning. Funeral services were held in the Evangelical church of that place last evening at 7:30 and this morning the body will be taken to McClure, Sny- der county, for burial. Deceased was about 53 years old and came to Howard about six years ago and launched the Centre County Shirt Factory which has become quite an industry under his management. He was a consistent member of the Evangelical church and is survived by his widow, a daughter, Miss Annie, and one son, Paul. ‘ i I BOGDAN.—Frank Bogdan, who for some years has operated a small farm near Pine Hill, in Potter township, was stricken with apoplexy while sit- ting at the dinner table, on Monday, moved from his chair. He was 67 years old and is survived by his wife at home. . The funeral was held yes- terday morning, burial being made in the Zion Hill cemetery, near Tussey- ville. Adams County Murderer Electrocuted on Monday Morning. Philip A. Hartman, a veteran of the world war who on the afternoon of October 14th, 1924, held up the cash- ier of the Abbottstown state bank in Adams county, compelled him to hand over all the money in sight, $1,561, and later shot and killed state troop- er Francis L. Haley, was electrocuted at the Rockview penitentiary on Mon- day morning. Before going to the chair Hartman admitted the killing and stated that he had pulled off the robbery single-handed and alone and was solely responsible for the murder of the state trooper. Brought to Rockview on Saturday by sheriff John C. Shealer, of Adams, county, the condemned man was ac- companied by Edgar Hildebrand, a third year student at Gettysburg the- ological seminary, who spent most of Sunday with him as his spiritual ad- viser. - Mr. Hildebrand and the prison chaplain, Rev. C. E. Kalb, accompa- nied Hartman to the death chair. He was apparently calm and resigned to, his fate and did not utter a word after he left his cell. Only one contact was’ necessary, and it was made at 7:02, Hartman being pronounced dead at] 7:09 by Drs. C. J. Newcomb and C. A. Whitcomb. The body was claimed by! relatives and was sent to Annville, Lebanon county, for burial. Hartman was born and raised at Annville and was twenty-six years old. During the world war he served in a hospital unit and saw service over seas. Returning heme he married and had apparently settled down to a life of industry until the spring of 1924 when he quit his job as a tele- phone lineman and went to Ohio where he entered upon a life of crime. When he became a suspect he stole an autc- mobile and made his way to New York State where he had the car li- censed in his own name. Then he came into Pennsylvania and a few days later pulled off the robbery of the Abbottstown bank with the sub- sequent murder of trooper Haley. After shooting the trooper he contin- ued into the mountains of Franklin county where he abandoned his car after setting it on fire. Two days later he surrendered to the authoritie in Reading. ; He was tried and convicted in the Adams. county. court in January and was sentenced to die in May. The original date for his electrocution was fixed for November 2nd, but his case was carried to the board of pardons and he was granted a respite to No- vember 30th. Hartman is the third man from Adams county to go to the electric chair, the other two being in 1921, and is the 151st man to be elec- trocuted in Pennsylvania. nner ——Buy him a smoker’s stand or cabinet, $1.00 to $21.—Brachbill’s Fur- niture Store. 48-1t Escaped Prisoner Recaptured. Edward Goss, of Venango county, who escaped from the Rockview pen- itentiary with two other men on the evening of July 19th, 1924, was cap- tured the latter part of last week in Lincoln, Neb. At the time of his es- cape Goss was serving a term of four to eight years. Parole officer Gaff- ney left on Monday morning for Lin- coln to bring the man back to Centre county. James Stanley Lee, one of the pris- oners who escaped on July b5, 1925, and was captured in Philadelphia last week, was sentenced by Judge Dale, tence and an additional sentence of two and a half to five years, and was | taken out to Pittsburgh the same day | by sheriff E. R. Taylor. ——George Thurston Smith, head ter of William H. and Sarah Saylor and expired before he could be re-- and one daughter, Mrs. Willis Jordon, : Lowery Biddle, of Beech Creek, Dies from Kick of Horse. Lowery Ernest Biddle, a native Cen- tre countian but for a number of years past a well known farmer near Beech Creek, died at an early hour on Friday “morning as the result of injuries sus- | tained on Wednesday when he was | kicked by one of his horses. At feed- ing time on Wednesday noon he had gone into the horse stable when one of the animals kicked him. Not re- turning to the house a young girl whom the Biddies had taken to raise went to the barn to see if anything had happened to Mr. Biddle. She found him lying unconscious behind one of the horses. Running into the house she told Mrs. Biddle and both returned to the barn. They found Mr. Biddle with a broken jaw and badly lacerated face as the result of the! kick. Securing assistance he was car- ried into the house and his death on Friday morning was caused by heart failure, no doubt superinduced by his _ injuries. | He was a son of John and Mary Badger Biddle and was born in Buffalo Run valley on April 4th, 1852, hence was 73 years, 7 months and 21 days old. When five years of age he was ‘the victim of an attack of inflamma- tory rheumatism which affected one of his legs with the result that it was de- ‘ cidedly shorter than the other, render- . ing him a cripple. for life, but despite { this handicap he was able to perform ‘the most exacting kind of labor and i proved a very successful farmer. On { Charles C. Keichline Writes Enter- tainingly of Florida. Centre countians will be interested in the following letter which we have just received from Charles C. Keich- line, who is located at Lake Worth, Florida. It will be recalled that Mr. Keichline sold his business on High street and went to make his home in the land of flowers on February 1st. His reference to there being one real estate agent to every eight residents of Lake Worth is interesting. Lake Worth, Fla., Nov. 26, "25. Dear “Watchman:” Your inquiry as to how promptly the “Watchman” is delivered to sub- scribers in this place has been receiv- ed and I regret to have to say that the mail congestion here is so great that deliveries of newspapers, especially, are very uncertain. At present we are about three weeks behind with the distribution of papers. The conges- tion is awful. It is not conceit at all that prompts me to say that if it had not been for me very few papers would have been read here during the summer. I was off sick two weeks and not a paper could be worked while iI was away. When I got back they had a truck load of them from all over the country to be worked through gen- eral delivery so I was put out in the lobby and made a second class office and have been doing my level best to get things cleaned up. | But to leave the subject of mail con- gestion and get to something more in- teresting. It does me a lot of good to hear from my Bellefonte friends and ' 1 want to tell them that the only prop- leaving Centre county he located on a ©r impression of what is going on in Fi in Nittany valley, four miles: Florida is tobe had by taking the | west of Mill Hall, where he lived thir. | ‘ime and Toney and coming Sows bo or rere To a sen hh 7 USE TE » ? State is a scene of constant develop- i Creek, where he had since lived. Some ! » n > . thirteen years ago Mr. Biddle suffered a sun stroke and his health had not been of the best since that time. | His survivors include his wife and | five children, G. O. Biddle, of Jersey | Shore; Allen E., of Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. Milford Gunsallus, of Beech | Creek; Mrs. Roy Jones, of Milesburg, ' and Paul E,, at home. He also leaves ' these brothers and sisters, Rev. | Fletcher Biddle, of Tyrone; Hyland Biddle, of Osceola Mills; Mrs. Laura Thompson, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and | Mrs. Maggie Colter, of Homestead. ment, going on with such mad haste | that traffic facilities are utterly inad- equate to keep pace with % | So far this has been a delightful trip for me. One that I never will forget and the position I have had this summer has enabled me to make lots of friends. One gets to know people from all over the United States and many of them are very interesting in- deed. ) The roads are so good down here that trips are delightful in any direc- tion you go. Along the ocean front is my favorite, for it is smooth and level as a floor and as you roll along catch- ing occasional glimpses through the Funeral services were held on Mon- day afternoon by Rev. A. A. Price, and burial was made in St. Pauls ; cemetery, in Nittany valley. palms of white-caps rolling in and { great ships sailing majestically on the horizon it seems to one who has been used to shoveling snow, heaving coal i i be a dream. | Two Men Killed in Pennsy Wreck on The climate could not be better; the Sunday. | nights cool and the days warm. It’s | what brings the northerners here and and carrying ashes that it surely must . | Two men were killed on Sunday in is the reason they are investing in real one of the worst wrecks on the Penn- €State so frantically. Why, over in! sylvania railroad in years which took | est Palm Beach they have six thous- | place in Altoona, when a runaway pin Eig al estate REen(s, One for every freight train sideswiped another train i wornans op will i) y. om ; at Seventeenth street, within three y so rd store one day, the next it is a real es- hundred yards of the Altoona passen- tate office and a few days later plans ger station. The killed were F. C. will be in the making to érect a great Scheline, engineer, of Sharpsburg, building on the site. Really houses | and H. H. Tauber, fireman, of Aspin- &8oW up while you walk around a Henry Meyer—An Appreciation. The recent death of Henry Meyer is profoundly felt not only in his birth- place, Rebersburg, and in his native Centre county, but wherever human hearts have been ‘influenced by his perfect life, _He was ry teacher; when he offi- ciated as County Superintendent of schools I had the pleasure of accom- panying him on several of his tours, visiting schools and examining appli- cants; I was with him on some fishing excursions, and frequently in his home was entertained in the most unconven- tional manner and had exceptional op- portuities to become acquainted with his domestic and private life. I can therefore appreciate the noble and beautiful traits of his character and heartily affirm that he was one of the best men that ever lived, and I do not wonder that the members of his family say unqualifiedly the best. It is when you go fishing with a man that you find out just what his quality is. Then social restraints are relaxed and the inner nature freely unfolds itself. At such times Mr. Meyer displayed his lively sense of humor; laughed heartily at a good joke; poured out his inexhaustible supply of local history and folk lore, or threaded the intricate mazes of philosophical problems. For in his youth he had mastered the metaphys- ics of Sir William Hamilton (1788. 1856,) and his logical mind knew how to winnow truth from error. What- ever the business in hand or the sub- Jeet under discussion, you were deeply impressed by the fact that he was pure-hearted and could not descend to any vulgarity. In his make-up the intellectual pre- dominated over the emotional. I do not remember ever to have seen him really excited; calm was he, deliber- ate, quiet. Yet he was a man of deep feeling, and his family and host of friends bear witness to his strong and steadfast love and friendship. ‘Sunshine was he in the wintry day And in the mid-summer coolness and shade.” He hated shams and pretensions; he was unswerving in his devotion te principles which had proven sound and: had therefore deliberately espoused. _ Eighty-five years he lived—a long: life, full of goodness, wisdom, help- fulness—everything that goes to the making of the ideal man. And crown. ing all his activities and virtues was a certain divineness which is difficult to describe but is none the less felt as a reality. It is this that constitutes the silver lining in the clouds of our sorrow and goes far in retrieving our ! personal loss; it is this—the best part. of every great and good man—that ives on, a spiritual value not subject to the destroying power of death. In this we glory; we cannot think of him. as being buried, but as having ascend- ed into the realm of life eternal. “Tho’ world on world in myriad ages roll Round us, each with different powers And other forms of life than ours, What know we greater than the soul? On God and Godlike men we build our trust.” St. Louis. , CC Z BIRTHS. on Saturday, to serve out his old sen- Alas neral services were held in the Cath- | of the novelty manufacturing plant at olic church at ten o'clock on Saturday the Linn and McCoy works, was tak- morning, burial being made in the en to the Centre County hospital Catholic cemetery. Tuesday, where he is now in an ex- “ it tremely critical condition, Mr. Smith's CASPER.—Mrs. Alta Shultz Cas- mother and other members of the wall, Square, ion I have a nice little bungalow down here. My cousin Curt Goss is with me and we have fine times. We had southern turkey for our Thanksgiving dinner today and while it was all that could be desired I couldn’t help think- , ing of dear old Bellefonte and wishing for a glass of that good water to top the eats off with. | We have quite a lot of Bellefonte and State College people here. Every day I meet some one I know. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Musser and Miss Cooney , arrived today. They stopped on their fore eight o’clock in the morning. Ac- cording to reports, a freight train ‘east-bound, became uncontrollable after leaving Kittanning Point, and gathering speed on the steep down- ward grade, sideswiped another freight train just under the Seven- teenth street bridge, in Altoona, and in an instant had made kindling wood of a dozen box cars. The wreckage was piled up thirty all around. The brakeman, who escaped death with but slight injuries to his foot, said that the blast had been blown for handbrakes shortly after the train had left Kittanning Point. He and the conductor had worked desperately to put them on but as they swept into the Altoona yards no particle of speed had lessened, he said. According to one account thirty- nine out of fifty-eight box cars were completely wrecked. The engine of the runaway train had been complete- ly turned around facing the west, from which direction it had come, and was lying on its side, its wheels high in the air. The coal tender was on its back, and was lying some distance from the locomotive. Three wrecking crews were requi- sitioned to clear up the wreck but it could be opened to permit of the pas- sage of passenger trains. Er ——— A ra —— The Magic Carpet. Once upon a time in the mystic land of Persia, there was found among the treasures of a king, a wonderful car- pet. One had only to sit on it, wish fo be somewhere, and away the carpet would fly till the wished-for place was reached. For hundreds of years it carried kings and princes upon the most amazing adventures. No one knows what finally became of it, but it may be that its last threads went into the make-up of the first Youth’s Companion. For, like the magic car- pet, the Companion for 1926 carries you to the land of your heart’s desire —aup into the Maine woods with the lumbermen; out on the western plains where the war-like Navaho Indians live; far up into the gold regions of ka; and away on the Southern Seas in search of treasures and lost is- lands. All you need for such extraor- dinary adventures is a young heart and a Youth’s Companion. Don’t lose time in getting started; subscribe now and receive: 1. The Youth’s Companion—52 is- sues in 1926, and 2. The remaining issues of 1925. All for only $2.00. ; 3. Or include McCall’s Magazine, the monthly authority on fashions. Both publications, only $2.50. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, per, wife of Henry Casper, died on family have beén here with him dur- Tuesday at the home of her son, Mr. ing the past two weeks. The accident happened shortly be! was "2:45 o'clock before one track across the street from me and Ray- mond Dale and family are visiting them, so when the Mussers came along we had quite a gathering from Bellefonte. While the crop is rather short the oranges and grape fruit are very fine this season and to eat them right off the trees is when one gets the real fla- vor. We have an orange tree in our own back yard so we don’t have to go far when we want one. Your friend, C. C. KEICHLINE. ——The gift she will love, a Ten- nessee cedar chest, $13.50 to $48.00.— W. R. Brachbill’s Furniture Store. © 48-1t McDowell — Russell. — Willard K. McDowell, cashier of the First Na- tional bank of Howard, sprang a great surprise on his friends Monday when he journeyed to Harrisburg, where he was married to Miss Mabel Russell, of Lock Haven. The groom had always said there would be no pompous ceremony or fuss when he entered the marital state and true to his word he and his bride- to-be journeyed to the capital where Dr. George Edward Hawes, formerly pastor of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church, performed the ceremony. Mr. McDowell was back in the bank on Tuesday. They will reside in Howard but as yet have made no definite plans. Weaver—Auker.— Willard Weaver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Weaver, of Port Matilda, and Miss Ruth Eliz- abeth Auker, a daughter of Mr, and Mrs. H. J. Auker, of Juniata, were married at the Methodist parsonage in Juniata, on Wednesday evening of last week, by the pastor, Rev. W. W. Banks. Following a wedding trip east the young people will locate in Juniata where the bridegroom is em- ployed in the shops of the Pennsylva- nia railroad company. ——27x54 inch rag rugs at 79c., at Brachbill’s Furniture Store. 48-1t ——Rev. Reed 0. Steely left on | Tuesday on a business trip to Glen 70-48 8. N. Dept., Boston, Mass. Mills, returning home yesterday. { Aukerman—On October 30, to Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Aukerman, of . Spring Mills, a daughter, Mary Lou- ‘ise. { Costo—On November 18, to Mr. and | Mrs. Mike Costo, of Bellefonte, a. daughter. | Spicer—On November 17, to Mr. and Mrs. Toner Spicer, of Bellefonte, a son. | Garrett—On November 15, to Mr. and Mrs. Adam Garrett, of Marion township, a son, George G. Corman—On November 12, to Mr. or more feet high with cargo strewn ! way to Miami. The McGirks live just and Mrs. Clyde T. Corman, of Belle- i . fonte, a son. Gordon—On November 6, to Mr.. “and Mrs. John F. Gordon, of Belle-- | fonte, a daughter. | Benner—On November 8, to Mr. ‘and Mrs. Russell Benner, of Belle-- fonte, a daughter. McMurtrie—On November 8, to Mr. and Mrs, Samuel M. McMurtrie, of Bellefonte, a son. Corman—On November 3, to Mr.. and Mrs. Carroll Corman, of Belle- fonte, a son, Carroll Corman Jr. Gardner—On November 4, to Mr.. and Mrs. Raymond Gardner, of Spring township, a daughter. Gherrity—On November 15, to Mr.. and Mrs. W. Walter Gherrity, of: Bellefonte, a daughter, Mary. Gummo—On November 16, to Mr.. and Mrs. Robert B. Gummo, of Ben- ner township, a daughter. Bryan—On November 23, to Mr.. and Mrs. Mack A. Bryan, of Belle- fonte, a son, Mack Allen Jr. Rider—On November 24, to Mr, and. Mrs. Reuben S. Rider, of Benner township, a daughter, Martha Jane. Solt—On November 27, to Mr. and Mrs. William Solt, of Spring town-- ship, a daughter, Virginia Grace. Olsen—Mr. and Mrs. Lief Olsen are: receiving congratulations on the birth. of their first son, and being the first. grandson in both the Coxey and Olsen families the event was more than an ordinarily happy one. The child was born Sunday and has been named “Bobby.” Program for coming Week Y.M.C. A.. Friday, Dec. 4: 5:30—Men’s gym class 7:30—Men’s Gym supper 7:30—Bowling; Sycamore vs. Governors. Chemical Lime vs. Saturday, Dec. 5: 9:30 A. M.—Junior boys class Monday Dec. 7: 7:00 P. M.—Intermediate boys 8:00 P. M.—Basketball practice 7:30 P. M.—Bowling; Clerks vs. Electric Supply Co. vs. DeMolay Tuesday, Dec. 8: 4:00 Junior girls 7:30 Men's class Wednesday, December 9: 4 :00—Junior boys 7:00—Intermediate boys 8:30—Bowling; Sycamore vs. Chem. Lime vs. Match Factory Titan: Pirates
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers