Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 22, 1926, Image 5

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    _
Ee —
GOT TO GO
NOW!
A Farewell Sale that will be the Climax to the
YEAGER BANKRUPT SHOE STOCK
Sale will be going full blast, Friday and Satur. January 22-23, 1926; the remainder of this Quality Assortment, of Mens, Womens and Childrens Shoes Will Go to the Bargain Block
THIS STOCK MUST GO NO
filled to the brim with Fashion’
be no half-way measure i
Give-Away”’ prices will move a stock, this one s
W is the fact that within 15 days of the opening date of this Climax S
s Latest Creations of Quality Footwear for the entire family.
n our efforts to accomplish the necessary results.
hould go out so fast that you would think it had rollers under it.
It will be the Most Startling,
ale Mr.
The YEAGER BANKRUPT STOCK MUST GO FIRST. We must sell bare to the walls the very last pair of the present contents.
Crowd-Compelling, Bargain-Givin
It’s the One Great Sale you Must Not Miss
Wilbur Baney, the best known shoe man of this entire vicinity, will change over this old location to an Up-to-Date Shoe Store—
There will
Event ever offered heretofore. We've got to sell the shoes. We can’t eat them. So, if “Low-
The full prices here give you an idea of how the stock is going to be sold.
Ladies Rubbers
First Quality U. S. Brand
while they last 19c¢.
Ladies Fibre Silk Hose
With Special Durable Top, all
Sizes and all Shades
Oc.
Ladies High Shoes
25¢.
WATCH THEM
S500 Ladies Pumps
75 Pairs Black and Brown Vici Good- Strap Patent Leather, Vici Kid, Suede Tan and Black, values up to $7.50 For work, Strong Toe and
year Welts, sizes 3 to 7—
formerly $6 and $7 Shoes
Satin and other leathers—
1000 PairsMens DressShoes Mens Heavy Hose
500 Pairs Mens Fibre Silk Hese
Fancy Colors, Double Heels 1 4c
® |
{9300 330 sudsy-wiils 5C. Toes—while ‘they last.
they last.......... tevesacseive o
Ribbed Top, worth 25 cents,
on sale for..
25c¢. 25c¢.
GO at...
tesesesssssesensenns
The Most Fearless,
Every pair of Shoes out on racks and
bins, with large sale tags, telling the
price and sizes in plain figures.
College Service on the
Increase.
Demand for
How demands for service by the
Pennsylvania State College to the peo- :
ple of the State increased in the four
years from 1921 to 1925 is shown in
startling figures set forth in the an-
nual report of the former president,
Dr. John M. Thomas, and other col- |
lege officers, copies of which are now
being distributed to members of the
State Legislature, other state officials,
alumni and friends of the college.
It is shown that the total number
of faculty members engaged in in-
struction, research and extension In
1921 was 575, but service demands in
all three branches were such that even
‘with limited appropriations, Penn
State had to increase the entire facul-
ty to 745 trained men and women for
the work of the past year. Of this
number, the instructors employed
primarily in resident teaching and
administration totaled 314 four years
ago and there are 354 so engaged.
The number of instructors devoting
their entire time to solving problems
for the agricultural and industrial
interests of Pennsylvania increased
from 25 to 37. In 1921 there were
251 people engaged in extension work
alone, but now there are 369 men and
women trayeling. over the State or
teaching night- classes, giving instruc-
tion in educational matters. About
half of these.are working among, the
farm and rural community residents
of 65 of the 67 counties.
= “‘Marriage Licenses.
Joseph Favuzza, of Bellefonte, and
Marie L. Snyder, of Bellefonte.
Milford M. Oyler, of Bellefonte, and
Madeline L. Diehl, of Howard.
Joseph Retorick, of Moshannon, and
Myrtle Naomi Smith, of Moshannon.
Michael Kuzilla, of Grassflat, and
Anna J. Kachik, of Clarence.
Mike I. Rider, of Runville,
Roxanna Etters, of Runville.
Lewis E. Jodon, of Millheim, and
Evelyn A. Foote, of Millheim.
Ralph E. McCartney, of Howard,
and Gladys I. Robinson, of Howard.
to
Real Estate Transferes.
A. T. Hockman, et ux, to R. N.
Harnish, tract in Walker Twp.; $2100.
Daniel Boyer to Lewis A. Hill, tract
in Bellefonte; $350.
S. Cleve Brungart, et ux, to Mabel
0. Doers, et al, tract in Miles Twp.; $1
L. E. Kidder, et ux, to Theodore D.
Boal, tract in Harris Twp.; $1.
Abraham Weber to Norman KE:
Lighthamer, tract in Howard Twp.;
$1200.
Thomas McCartney, et al, to Fred
Watkins, tract in Curtin Twp.; $600.
Fred Watkins, et ux, to Orvis M.
Fetzer, tract in Curtin Twp.; $1.
W. E. Brennen, et ux, to Mary E.
Glasgow, tract in Benner Twp.; $6200.
John L. Holmes, et al, to Curtis N.
Neidigh, tract in State College; $11.
William Grove, et ux, to William
Gentzel, tract in Gregg Twp.; $110.
William B. Gentzel, et al, to A. W.
Gentzel, tract in Gregg Twp.; $800.
Bertha M. Rupp, et bar, to Ray V.
Watkins, et al, tract in State College;
$7100.
Frank L. Llewellyn, et ux, to Bertha
M. Rupp, tract in State College; $1000.
A. Leland Beam, et ux, to May V.
Watkins, tract in State College; $8000.
Willam R. Ripka, et al, to A. W.
Senies, et al, tract in Gregg Twp.;
110.
—The Jonses had been through the
trying ordeal of a fire.
All the neighbors gallantly turned
out and gave every assistance that
lay in their power, finally putting up
the Jonses themselves for the night.
However, things weren’t so bad as
they looked and the following day the
Jonses found that they could return
to their home.
Accordingly they did so, and having
settled down, they wondered what
could be done to show their appre-
ciation of their neighbors’ kindness.
At last they hit upon a brilliant idea
and inserted an advertisement in the
local paper: It read thus:
“Mr. and Mrs. Jones wish to ex-
press thanks to their many friends
and neighbors who so kindly assisted
tory has
at the burning of their residence.”
KEEP UP SEARCH
FOR PIRATE GOLD
Another Expedition After Buc
caneers’ Hoard.
The dispatch of a British expedition
“equipped with the latest scientific
appliances” to lift pirate treasure
from the island of Cocos seems to
indicate that the romantic life will
never lose its peculiar appeal. Wheth-
er the buccaneers ever buried any
treasure or not, and whether they
were stupid enough to leave it buried
it they did, are questions which his-
never satisfactorily an-
swered. It has nothing to do with the
persistence of those golden, those
glowing legends; the spirit of the un-
fortunate Kidd will doubtless never
be laid along the New England coasts,
and people will never be convinced
that anything so fascinating as pirate
gold could also turn out to be whollr
fictitious.
The scientific appliances, of course,
may fail to turn up the expected £14,
000,000, but the Britishers will at
least secure the less flithy .lucre. of
‘romantic adventure.” The' very name
of Cocos island, like so many of those
“lovely and alluring names which still
turn a- chart: of the West Indies into
a literary. experience, brings up the
swhole picture: : “Cocos, ‘lying in a ‘con:
‘venient isolation west of Panama, was
one of the centers for the magnificent
operations which followed upon Henry
Morgan's demonstration that
scuttle and cities to sack. John Mase-
field’s account of the Seventeenth-cen-
tury buccaneers devotes several chap-
ters to the famous expedition which
crossed the Isthmus of Darien, de-
scended upon Panama, and then went
on to harry the Pacific coasts of South
America. It was the richest period
in the buccaneering trade, the cargoes
were fabulous, the daring was unbe- |
lievable, and the final proceeds some-
times almost seemed to be worth it.
One can almost see the island,
sleeping in a blue sea behind a palm.
fringed beach, heavy with memories
of the great period. Perhaps it does
not .really look that way. Perhaps
there is not really any gold there;
and perhaps, at any rate, if one ac-
tually touched its shores the glory
would. fade and leave only the mos
quitoes. . Mr, Beebe may .be an au
thority. “But one feels that the sci-
entific appliances are the least impor-
tant part of the expedition’s equip
ment. :
Restored French Empire
J
in the
Pacific there were still richer ships to
Church Services Next Sunday
ST, JOHN'S REFORMED CHURCH.
Sunday school, 9.30 a. m.
Church services, morning 10.45 and
evening 7.30. Holy Communion will be
administered at both services by the
Rev. A. O. Eshelman, of Reading, Pa.,
who will also preach the sermons.
BOALSBURG REFORMED CHURCH.
Services for Sunday, January 24.
Boalsburg—Sunday school, 9 a. m.;
Christian Endeavor 7 p. m.
Shiloh—Holy Communion 10.30 a.
m.; Sunday school 9.30 a. m.
Pleasant Gap—Sunday school 9.30
a. m.; preaching service 2.30 p. m.
ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH.
9.30 a. m. Sunday school, 10.45 a. ni.
Holy Communion, 7.30 p. m, Holy
Communion with sermon: “The Lord
Is Thy Keeper.”
The preparatory service to the Holy
Communion will be held on Friday
night at 7:30 o'clock.
Rev. Clarence E. Arnold, Pastor.
BOALSBURG REFORMED.
Boalsburg—Church school, 9.15 a.
m. Morning worship, 10.30 a. m.
Pine Hall—Church school, 9.30 a.
m. :
Houserville—Public = worship, 2.30
. Mm.
‘Rev. D. R. Keener, pastor of the
Centre Hall Reformed charge, will
with the pastor. ;
Rev. W. W. Moyer, Pastor.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
TOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.—The an-
S nual meeting of the stockholders
of Whiterock Quarries will be held
at the offices of the Company in_Belle-
fonte, Pa., on Monday, January 25, 1926,
at ten o'clock a. m., for the election of
directors for the ensuing year and to
transact such other business as may prop-
erly come before such meeting.
g
L. A. SCHAEFFER,
71-2.3t. Secretary.
UDITOR’'S NOTICE.—Notice is here-
A by given that the undersigned has
been appointed Auditor to make
distribution of the funds remaining in
the possession of the Administrater of, etc.,
of Charlotte A. Bloom, late of the Borough
of State College, deceased, and that the
. said Auditor has fixed Tuesday, February
the 2nd, at ten a. m. in his office on the
third floor of Temple Court, Bellefonte,
Pa., for the time and place where he will
hear all in interest and perform the duties
of his appointment aforesaid.
ELLIS L. ORVIS,
71-2-3t. : ) ‘Auditor.
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a
S write of Levari Facias issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas ef
Centre County, to me directed, will be ex-
posed to public sale at the Court House
in the borough of Bellefonte on :
| SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1926
+ At 1.30 p. m,, the following property:
| All that certain piece or tract of land
| situate in Penn Township, Centre County,
The phrase, ‘“coup-d’etat,” is gen: | Penna. bounded and described as follows:
erally applied to the successful effort
! Beginning at a stone, thence along land of
Jacob Sankey, et al, South 30 degrees
made by Louis Napoleon, December 2, | East 218 perches to a Pitch Pine; thence
1851, to subvert the republic of France,
and to establish a dictatorship in its!
The conspiracy was planned perches to stones; thence South 60 degrees
by Napoleon, Persigny and De Morny, |
stead.
and carried out by C. de Maupas, min-
ister of police, St. Arnaud and others.
The legislative assembly was dissolved,
universal suffrage established, and
Paris was declared in a state of siege.
The election of a [president for a
term of ten years was proposed, 83
members of the assembly were ban-
ished, and 575 persons were arrested
for resistance to the coup d'etat and
conveyed to Havre for transportation
to Cayenne. The coup d'etat resulted
in the restoration of the empire De-
cember 2, 1852.—Kansas City Star,
Make Home in Street Car .
Two discarded cable cars are the
home of the A. S. Brewers, in Seattle.
The cable car dwelling is entered from
its original side-front door, which opens
into the living room, made of the
combined front platforms, which are
larger than those of a regular street
car. Cable cars used on Seattle hills
have three compartments each, front,
middle and rear, with a door on either
side, and windows lining both sides.
In the Brewer home, the bedroom oc-
cuples the middle compartment and
the bath the rear in one car, each with
the original sliding doors. In the
other car the dining room has the mid-
dle compartment and the kitchen the 16,
rear,
‘along land late of Albright Swineford
North 60 degrees East 7.4 perches to
stones; thence North 30 degrees West 295
West 140 perches to a Hickory; thence
; along land formerly of G. W. Stover and
Amos Alexander South 30 degrees East
147 perchases to stone on South side of
Penns Creek; thence along land of Joseph
Sankey, et al, North S80 degrees East 26
perches to North side of Penns Creek;
thence along North side of Penns Creek
to the place of beginming, containing 172
acres neat measure,
Being the same tract which William
Eisenhuth, et ux, by deed dated April 1st,
1871, recorded in Centre County in Deed
Book Volume “1,” No. 2, at page . 374,
granted and conveyed to Sarah Jane,
Catherine and Angeline Eisenhuth, the
said Catherine and her husband, B. F.
Allen conveyed to Sarah Jane and Ange-
line Eisenhuth by deed subsequent in date.
Excepting and . reserving therefrom the
portion heretofore conveyed to Charles
Harmony, John Elmer, Jacob J. Gilbert,
Martin Kerstetter, Sarah Garman, and
Catherine Allen, Also excepting and re-
serving the two tracts conveyed to Daniel
Eisenhuth and George Eisenhuth and ex-
cepted and reserved in deed from William
Eisenhuth above recited.
Seized and taken in execution and to be
sold as the property of Sarah Jane Eisen-
huth and Angeline Eisenhuth, Mortgagors,
and Caroline Baker, Ellen Elmer, Catherine
Smith, Clara Stover, Agnes Martin, Sallie
Hassinger, Mrs. Tom Nale, Sumner Eisen-
huth, Alvin Eisenhuth, Lizzie Sheasley,
James M. Kerstetter, Ralph R. Kerstetter,
(Leonard F. Kerstetter, Thomas R. Ker-
stetter, Boyd HB. Kerstetter, Torrence W.
Kerstetter, Orvis A. Kerstetter, Lester KE.
Kerstetter, Paul C. Kerstetter, Dorothy L.
Kerstetter, minors, who have for their
Guardian ad litem F. V. Kerstetter), heirs
and legal representatives of Sarah J. Eisen-
huth and Angeline Eisenhuth, Deceased.
Sale to commence at 1.30 o’clock p. m. of
said day.
Shen Office, Bellefonte, Pa., January
E. R. TAYLOR,
71-4-3t heriff
W. J. Wagner, Pastor.
preach at ‘both services in exchange
Loss-Taking Drive in High Grade Shoes Ever Staged! Be Sure to be there Friday and Saturday to Get Your Share. Look for (he Big Sign ‘‘Bankrupt, Sale’”
Yeager’s Bankrupt Stock
BUSH ARCADE, WEST HIGH STREET ......... BELLEFONTE
Mr. Wilbur Baney will announce
within a few weeks the opening date
of the new store. Watch for it.
COMING l....’Pussyfoot” Johnson
The world-renowned Reformer, Journalist, Author, Globe-Trotter ; famed as a de-
tective—will tell story of his world-wide observations. A man who needs no intro-
duction, but is known the world over and needs only t6 be announced.
A Great, Optimist. who sees the whole world moving towards Prohibition after
having seen practically every part of the globe and enjoyed interviews with Kings,
Princes, Statesmen, Churchmen, and leaders of all classes of society.
' You are Invited to See and Hear Him..... FREE TO ALL
Community Rally at. the Presbyterian Church, Bellefonte, Pa.
REV. W. C. THOMPSON, Pastor
nate WEDNESDAY JANUARY 27, 1926, at. 8.00 p.m.
CIPS ASAD ANS NITES PPPS
SCENIC THEATRE
3 Big Days....3 Big NIgA(S January 295, 260 and 27
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
: Hailed by the World as
the Greatest of Love Stories
ERICH VON NS I fr
STROHEIM'S
in this gorgeous screen production of the stage play the
production
world will never forget.
SEE THIS PICTURE! YOU'LL BE SWEPT BY THE
MAGIC OF VON STROHEIM TO A LAND WHERE
PASSION FLAMES AND LIFE IS GAY!
as the Widow
JOHN GILBERT
as the Prince
Ty
pe
a
From HENRY W.SAVAGE’S
stage success F+ TRANZ LEHAR,
VICTOR LEON and LEO STEIN
Scrcen adaptation and scenario by
ERICH VON STROHEIM and
BENJAMIN GLAZER.
A Metro
Goldwyn
\ mq rhyme
Mz: tl
id 3
ICTURE
RY
Matinee Each Day...... .2.30 p.m.
ADMISSION FOR ALL SHOWS—CHILDREN 20 cents, ADULTS 35 cents