Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 25, 1926, Image 4

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    Demon tcp
Bellefonte, Pa., June 25, 1926.
Editer
P. GRAY MEEK, . ns re
Te Correspondents.—No communications
published unless accompanied by the real
‘mame of the writer.
“Terms of Subscription.—Until further
.metice this paper will be furnished to sub-
:meribers at the following rates:
Paid strictly in advance - -
Paid before expiration of year - 17
Paid after expiration of year - 2.00
Published weekly, every Friday morn-
S tmg. Entered at the postoffice, Bellefonte,
Pa., a8 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
Joseph Valotta, of Pittsburgh, Saved
from Death Chair.
Joseph Valotta, of Pittsburgh, has
been saved from death in the electric
chair at Rockview through a recom-
mendation by the Board of Pardons,
on Wednesday, that his sentence be
commuted to life imprisonment.
Valotta, who was scheduled to go to
the chair next Monday morning, had
been granted more respites in his
fight for life than any other map in
the history of Pennsylvania.
On October 30th, 1922, he attended
a christening on the South side, Pitts-
burgh, and on his way home he was
followed by a bunch of striking rail-
road shopmen who cried out, “Get the
scab.” Valotta drew a revolver that
he had purchased a few days previous
and shot into the crowd, fatally
wounding Thomas Hopkins. Police-
man Edward Couch made a dash to
capture Valotta and he also shot him,
maintaining at his trial that he
thought him one of the strikers.
At his trial Valotta was convicted
of first degree murder for killing the
policeman and second degree for kill-
ing Hopkins. He was sentenced to
die in the electric chair and the origi-
nal date set was March 24th, 1914.
Valotta was brought to the death
house on March 22nd, and on the night
of the 23rd, only a few hours before
he was to have gone to the chair he
was granted a respite.
Then started a fight for his life |
which has been carried through most
of the State courts and up to the U.
S. Supreme court, as well as repeated
appeals to the Board of Pardons. In
the two years Valotta has been grant-
ed eleven respites, and now has finally
won the fight for his life.
Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers
at State College Next Week.
The Pennsylvania State College
ought to get some good advertising
next week when the summer conven-
tion of the Pennsylvania Newspaper
Publishers’ association is held there
on Monday and Tuesday. It will be a
good opportunity for newspaper men
from Pittsburgh and Philadelphia to
see that those
Pennsylvania, and their educational
institutions not the only ones of merit
in this great Commonwealth.
Headquarters and meetings = of the
publishers will be held at the Centre |
Hills Country club, while the guests
will be quartered in Watts hall and |
Varsity hall. Meals will be served at
the Country club at Tbcts. A golf
tournament will be held on Tuesday
afternoon on the Centre Hills course.
Big programs have been arranged for
both the daily and weekly divisions of
the association and the meetings
promise much of interest to news-
paper men.
But even so, all of them should take
time to visit Bellefonte and see the
town’s magnificent Spring and the big
trout in Spring creek, as well as the
night landing of the mail planes on
the aviation field. These are all things
they cannot see anywhere else in
Pennsylvania and we feel sure that
every man will consider it time well
spent to visit Bellefonte, the home of
sc many Governors.
New Humane Society
Centre County.
Officer for
County health officer J. L. Tressel, of
Bellefonte, has been appointed to rep-
resent the Western Pennsylvania
Humane Society in Centre county.
The Society is a chartered organiza-
tion, has been in existence since 1874,
and has done a very commendable
work. It was organized for the pur-
pose of preventing cruelty te dumb
animals, helpless children and aged
persons, and for the punishment of
those who wilfully violate the laws of
Pennsylvania regarding such offenses.
Allegations of cruelty reported to
officer Tressel wiil be given careful
investigation, and any cases that can-
not be remedied by advice and warn-
ing will be prosecuted in accordance
with the law. The humane work is
not new to Mr. Tressel. He repre-
sented the Society in Washington
county for several years before com-
ing to Bellefonte.
——Both Clearfield and Osceola
Mills are going to have old-time
Fourth of July celebrations. Belle-
fonte has not had a celebration of any
kind for so many years that we have
all forgotten how to celebrate. And
the approaching Fourth has every
promise of being a very quiet day in
town. : ; i re 2 i
cities are not all of |
George C. Johnson Killed by Truck in |
Altoona.
George C. Johnson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Johnson, of Bellefonte, is
dead at his home in Altoona as the re-
sult of being run down by a big truck
on Wednesday morning. The acci-
dent happened at 11.10 o’clock in the
morning and Johnson died at the Al-
toona hospital at 12.30 o’clock.
Mr. Johnson was a plumber by
trade and was employed by Elway &
Chamberlain. At the time of the ac-
cident he was on his way to Sixth
avenue and Second street where he
was engaged in installing bathroom
fixtures. At the intersection of
Eighth avenue and Seventh streets he
stepped from the curb right in front
of a truck driven by Thomas Francis,
of Jugtown. He was knocked down
land one wheel passed over his body
but the driver was able to stop his
truck before the rear wheel touched
him. Johnson was picked up and
taken to the Altoona hospital where
it was found that he had sustained a
fracture at the base of the skull,
caused no doubt when his head struck
the pavement.
The unfortunate man was a son of
Curtis and Augusta Ward Johnson
and was born in Bellefonte on July
26th, 1881, hence was almost forty-
five years old. He learned the plumb-
ing trade in Bellefonte and eighteen
years ago located in Altoona. He was
a member of the Presbyterian church,
the Mountain City lodge I. O. O. F.,
Altoona Encampment and the Modern
Woodmen of America.
Surviving are his wife, Jessie M.
Johnson, and three children, Harold,
Laura and Ralph, all at home. He
also leaves his parents, living in
Bellefonte, and four sisters, Mrs.
Charles Smith, of State College; Mrs.
Oscar Lonebarger, of Spring town-
ship; Miss Hannah, at home, and Mrs.
Robert Gehret, of Bellefonte.
Former Bellefonte Resident Takes
Own Life.
William H. Frank, a well known
resident of Hollidaysburg but who a
number of years ago lived in Belle-
fonte, committed suicide on Sunday
morning by hanging himself to a
rafter in the attic of his home while
the members of his family were at
church services. Ill health was as-
signed as the cause. Mr. Frank was
alone in the house at the time he com-
! mitted the deed. When the family re-
turned from church Mr. Frank was
not in evidence and failed to answer
when called. An investigation dis-
| closed his lifeless body hanging in the
| attic. :
{ Mr. Frank and family came to
! Bellefonte thirty-five years or more
| ago, shortly after the building of the
| Bellefonte furnace. He was an ex-
|pert furnaceman and had charge
| of the furnace a number of years. The
family lived out near Coleville. On
I leaving here he moved to Hollidays-
burg. Of late he had been employed
lat the plant of the Penn Central
{ Light and Power company and a
broken arm sustained at that plant
brought on a spell of impaired health
{which was probably the controlling
i factor in his act of self-destruction.
He is survived by his wife and five
| children; one brother and six half-
{brothers and sisters. Burial was
made in the Greenlawn cemetery,
| Hollidaysburg, on Wednesday morn-
ing.
Penna. Railroad Accident Cost Six-
teen Lives.
One of the worst accidents that has
{ occurred on the Pennsylvania railroad
iin years took place at Gray’s Station,
! three miles east of Blairsville, short-
{ly after midnight, last Wednesday
night when the Cincinnati limited
ran into the rear end of the
Pittsburgh express which had been
stopped on the main track to re-
pair an air hose. Fifteen people were
killed outright and one died later,
bringing the toll of death to sixteen
with thirty or more injured. The
property loss will reach close to half
a million dollars.
When the Pittsburgh express stop-
' ped on account of a leaking air hose
i the rear brakeman was sent back the
| required distance to post flares and
| torpedoes and he is supported in his
declaration that the signals were
properly placed by the fact that the
flares were found burning after the
wreck. On the other hand the fire-
man on the second engine of the Cin-
cinnati limited, which was hauled by
two engines, declared that he did not
see any signals. The engineers of
both locomotives were killed as was
the fireman on the front locomotive.
|
Philipsburg Child Killed by Auto.
On Sunday afternoon Betty Grace
Lucas, two year old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Reuben Lucas, of Philips-
burg, was struck by a big Buick sedan
driven by Benjamin F. Thompson, of
Ridgway, and so badly injured that
she died shortly after being removed
to the Philipsburg State hospital. The
child’s mother had gone across the
street to a neighbors and it was fol-
lowing her, running cut in the street
right in front of the car. The
driver was exonerated of blame.
—Mr. W. I. Fleming received word
on Wednesday of the death of his
brother, William H. Fleming, at his
home in Mosette, Mo. He was a
veteran of the Civil war and seventy-
nine years old. He was a native of
Lycoming county, but had lived in the
west about fifty years. = x
Chto et A ERR ERS RSE,
Yougel—Way—Margery Anna Way,
only daughter of Mrs. J. M. Driver, of
this place, was married to Mr. A. E.
Yougel, of State College, at eight
o’clock on Wednesday morning.
‘The ceremony was performed at the
Methedist parsonage by the Rev.
Homer Charles Knox. There were no
attendants and immediately after a
breakfast at the home of the bride’s
mother, on North Allegheny street,
the young couple left for a motor trip
of two weeks which will take them to
Buffalo, Niagara Falls, across into
Canada and home through the Adiron-
dacks, where they expect to camp for
a few days; having taken a light camp
outfit with them. 5
The bride is an exceedingly charm-
ing and capable young lady, a gradu-
ate of the Bellefonte High school and
for several years has been the ac-
countant in the Bellefonte Hardware
Co. Her husband has been acting
chief of police at State College while
taking a course of study at that insti-
tution. He was formerly connected
with the State constabulary. Both of
them will continue in their present
positions until the latter has complet-
ed his studies.
We wish them great happiness.
. Rosenberger—Jodon.—The home of
Mr. and Mrs. William Jodon, on north
Allegheny street, Bellefonte, was the
scene of a pretty wedding, at ten
o'clock yesterday morning, when their
daughter, Miss Mary Kathryn Jodon,
became the bride of Clyde Grant Ros-
enberger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Grant Rosenberger, formerly of State
College, but now of Ft. Wayne, Ind.
About fifty guests were present to
witness the ceremony which was per-
formed by Rev. Homer C. Knox, of
the Methodist church. The attendants
were Miss Marion Hartsock, as maid
of honor, and John Russ, of Harris-
burg, best man. A wedding break-
fast followed the ceremony and later
Mr. and Mrs. Rosenberger left by
automobile to drive to their new home
at Ft. Wayne, Ind.
The bride during the past four
years has been one of the efficient op-
erators in the Bell telephone ex-
change, in Bellefonte, and is a pre-
possessing and capable young woman.
The bridegroom is a graduate of State
College in the pre-legal course class
of 1926, and is a member of the Phi
Sigma Kappa fraternity.
Zeckman—McCormick.—Cyril ~~ M.
Zeckman, of Pittsburgh, and Miss
Dorothy K. McCormick, daughter cf
Dr. and Mrs. S. S. McCormick, of
Hublersburg, were married at St.
John’s Lutheran church, at Jersey
Shore, at noon on Monday, by the pas-
tor, Rev. Park W. Huntington, the
ring ceremony being used. Both the
bride and bridegroom are graduates
of Susquehanna University, class of
1921. Following her graduation Miss
McCormick accepted a position “as
head of the history department in
the Windber High schoc! where she
taught until the close of the term
several weeks ago. Mr. Zeckman is
sales manager for a large brick com-
pany, with headquarters in Pitts-
burgh.
Immediately following the cere-
mony on Monday Mr. and Mrs. Zeck-
man, accompanied by the Rev. and
Mrs. Huntington, motored to Wil-
liamsport where they had luncheon at
The Lycoming. The young couple
then left on a wedding trip by auto
through New York State before tak-
ing up their residence in Pittsburgh.
McClellan—Welty.—Charles McClel-
lan Jr., and Miss Rebecca Sophia
Welty, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Reuben F. Welty, of east Howard
street, were married at the Methodist
parsonage at 5. 30 o’clock on Wednes-
day evening by the pastor, Rev.
Homer C. Knox. The attendants were
Miss Ione Garbrick, of Mill Hall, a
cousin of the bride, and George Mec-
Clellan, a brother of the bridegroom.
Following the ceremony a wedding
dinner was served at the home of the
bride’s parents” to the bridal party
and fifty invited guests, and later the
young couple left on a motor wedding
trip to Gettysburg, Philadelphia and
points in southern Pennsylvania, ex-
pecting to return home tomorrow.
During the past year or so the bride
has been employed as a stenographer
in the offices of the Bellefonte Central
Railroad company. The bridegroom,
who is a son of Charles McClellan,
has a good position as clerk in the J.
Zeller & Son drug store. For the
present the young people will make
their home with the bride’s parents.
Rigby—Rupp.—Rev. Joseph Gor-
don Rigby, pastor of the Methodist
charge at Pine Grove Mills, and Miss
Dorothy Pauline Rupp, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rupp, of State Col-
lege, were married at the home of the
bride’s parents on June 2nd, Rev. A.
E. Mackie performing the ceremony.
Following a brief wedding trip they
went to house-keeping in the Metho-
dist parsonage at Pine Grove Mills.
Spencéer—Burlingame—Mrs. Mar-
garet Burnet Burlingame was married
to Mr. George Spencer last Saturday.
The ceremony was performed in the
apartments of the bride’s mother, Mrs.
M. D. Burnet, 55 east 72nd St., New
York city. :
Mrs. Burlingame spent her girlhood
in Bellefonte and is a grand-daughter
of the late Gov. Andrew G. Curtin.
Grove—Lucas.—Frederick Benjamin
Grove and Miss Christine Gertrude
Lucas, both of Bellefonte, were mar-
ried at the parsonage of the -Evangel-
jcal chureh in Lock Haven, last Thurs-
day afternoon, by the pastor, Rev.
Edward Crumbling. They will make
their home in Bellefonte.
Samuel Shallcross Purchased Home
of Miss Rebecca Rhoads.
An important real estate deal this
week was the purchase of the new
bungalow home of Miss Rebecca
Naomi Rhoads, on West Linn street,
by Samuel H. Shallcross, of the Amer-
ican Lime and Stone company. The
consideration has not been revealed.
The sale of her home in Bellefonte
was made by Miss Rhoads with the in-
tention of going to Washington D. C.,
to live. In fact she is in the national
capital this week, and it is said, look-
ing for an apartment for her future
abode. The Shallcross famly are to
have possession of the property in the
near future, expecting to make some
minor repairs and move there by Au-
gust first from their apartment in the
W. C. Chambers house, on east Cur-
tin street.
Bellefonte Jumps to Second Place in
Susquehanna League.
By winning two games last week,
that from Renovo on Thursday by the
score of 4 to 0, and from the Wil-
liamsport P. R. R. on Saturday 10 to
5, Bellefonte again jumped to second
place in the Susquehanna league.
Saturday’s game was won principally
through the timely hitting of Belle-
fonte’s stickmen and the ragged work
of Williamsport’s infield. Jersey
Shore leads the league with Renovo
as the tailenders. Following is the
standing of the clubs:
W. L. Pc
Jersey Shore ..... visited 6 1 857
BeHefonte: ..:..ivoiniev ivan vius b 2 .714
Mill Hall ............cc.c0ive.es 4:2 667
Williamsport P. BRB. R. ......... 3 4 428
Kew-Bees ...... saints vee 2 770,980
RENOTO a ese vrssinnrenssnses 1 7 343
Chester Emel Lands the Boss Trout
of the Season.
Chester Emel, of Beaver street, this
place, has caught the biggest trout
reported so far this season.
Fishing with a night crawler in
Spring reek, near the nail-works
bridge Wednesday afternoon, he hook-
ed a giant brown trout and had the
time of his life before he had the fish
landed.
Immediately after being taken from
the water it measured 27 1-4 inches
and weighed 8 lbs. Three hours later
it had lost 3-4 of an inch in length and
2-3 of a pound in weight.
Prof. Kocher to Leave State College.
Prof. A. L. Kocher, for fourteen
years head of the department of archi-
tecture at the Pennsylvania State
College, has resigned to becoine head
of the McIntire School of Architecture
and Fine Arts at the University of Vir-
ginia. While his loss will be feit
keenly at Penn State his new oppor-
tunity is regarded as recognition for
the great advancement he has attain-
with the department there.
Prof. Kocher has a number of
friends in Bellefonte who will regret
his departure from this community.
Two Surprise Parties.
A surprise birthday party was given
G. Oscar Gray Wednesday evening,
by Mrs. Gray at their home on west
High street. Forty of their friends
were their guests, cards being the
entertainment of the evening.
Mrs. Gilbert Boyer was hostess last
night at a surprise party given for the
school set, in celebration of her
daughter, Elizabeth Labe’s, sixteenth
birthday. Being of the enthusiastic
dancing age, the time was spent prin-
cipally in dancing.
On Wednesday afternoon, Miss
Caroline M. Valentine gave an exhi-
bition of forty of her paintings, in her
studio, at Burnham. They were chief-
ly her last winter's work done at
Taormina, Sicily, where she and her
sister spent the winter. Street scenes,
Mt. Etna, the Greek Theatre, the
Mediterranean coast, Almond or-
chards in bloom etc. Also several
pictures done while at Pau, France,
of the snow capped Basses Pyrenees;
others of Capri, Burmuda and Ogon-
quit, Maine. = Miss Valentine con-
siders Taormina the most beautiful
spot in the world. There will he
another exhibition to-night.
——Only thirty-one days of the
trout fishing season remain and so
cold has been the weather up to this
time that there really hasn’t been any
ideal fishing since the opening of the
season on April 156th. Of course a
few persistent fishermen, who have
haunted the streams day after day,
have been fortunate in landing some
trout but very few have reached the
limit on any one day.
Wheat continues to tumble in
price and nobody cares much, but the
farmer who either forgot to or
wouldn’t sell his last year’s crop when
a dollar-eighty could have been got-
ten for it.
RHODES.—Mrs. Margaret Rhodes,
widow of the late Spencer Rhodes.
died at her home in Indiana, Pa., on
Tuesday evening of last week. She
was fifty-eight years old and a daugh-
ter of Levi Munson, of Philipsburg,
at one time sheriff of Centre county,
and a sister of the late L. T. Munson,
of Bellefonte. Burial was made at
Indiana: 3 A
Centre County Junior Farmers Hold
Field Day and Picnic at State
College.
Young farmers from every part of
the county assembled at State Col-
lege last Thursday for the purpose of
competing in the State wide live stock
judging contests and for holding their
annual picnic. The entire forenoon
was taken up by the judging contests
in which two boys and two girls took
part as representatives of the county.
The final results show that Centre
county stood high. The vocational
team in poultry and the vocational
team in swine were right up among
the top notchers. The young farmer’s
team consisting of boys and girls not
in vocational classes, placed 2nd in
general livestock. The Spring Mills
vocational school team was third in
dairy cattle.
Our boys know good livestock when
they see it, as was shown by their
ability in the judging ring last Thurs-
day. As a reward for their fine show-
ing, the whole Center county group of
over sixty boys were taken down on
Spring creek for a fine picnic dinner
and an afternoon of sports.
A brief meeting of the Junior
Farmers’ Association was held imme-
diately after dinner. Plans were made
for the opening of their club house at
Grange Park as soon as it is complet-
ed late in August.
The boys were divided into two
groups. The boys from the western
section of the county consisting of
Boalsburg, State College, Pine Grove
Mills, Penna. Furnace, Port Matilda,
and Stormstown; the eastern section
was composed of Centre Hall, Spring
Mills, Pleasant Gap, Bellefonte, Hub-
lersburg, Howard, Millheim, Rebers-
burg, and Aaronsburg. Horse shoe
pitching, and base-ball were the main
events of the afternoon. Points were
awarded for all events. The west won
by the score of 36 to 26.
John B. Payne, county vocational
supervisor, had generad charge of the
field day and judging.
The following members were pres-
ent:
Omar L. Tice, of Howard.
Kenneth Wert, Harold Callahan,
John
Shuey, John Kline, Jane Ross, and Bruce
Sharer, of Boalsburg.
Kenneth Thomas, John Royer, Ralph
Hunter, William Neidigh, Walter Johnson,
Fred Markle, James Sents, Paul Hunter,
William Krumrine, Harold Sunday, Carl
Dreibelbis, Willard Ralston, Russell Bren-
nan,and Ross Norris, of State College.
Clay Jones, Ralph Poorman, Russell
Weaver, Harry E. Eckenroth, Wilbur R.
Kerstetter, Kenneth Love, Ray C. Corman,
Paul Kerstetter, and Myles MeGargle, of
Bellefonte. R. D.
Gilbert Flaning, of Penna. Furnace.
Ernest Wagner, Eugene Burkholder,
Emery Floray, Eugene Colyer, Russell
Colyer, Fred Luse, George Luse, and Ken-
neth Slack, of Centre Hall.
Milford Hazel, Maurice Whitmyer, Orvis
Hosterman, and Guy Beahm, of AaMNns-
burg.
Isabella Way, Lester Cashner, and
Harold Bullock, of Stormstown.
Fred Hayes, Russell Heckman and
Clarence Crow, of Hublersburg.
George Etters, of Oak Hall.
Paul M. Haines and Ralph Rossman, of
Millheim.
Paul Crow, of Nittany.
Myles MeClellan, of Linden Hall
David Schenk, of Howard.
County Judging Team Wins 2nd Place.
Centre county won the distinction
of placing second in the general live-
stock judging contest at State College
last week. The team was selected
from the members of the Stormstown
Poland China pig club by an elimina-
tion contest conducted by R. C.
Blaney, county agent.
The team was made up of the fol-
lowing members: Harold Bullock,
Lester Casper and Isabelle Way, all
of Port Matilda. First prize was won
by the Columbia county team with a
total score of 969, while the Centre
county team placed second with a
total score of 968.4 points or a differ-
ence of .6 of a point.
Harold Bullock, a member of the
Centre county team, placed first as
an individual. In doing this Bullock
placed first over a group of thirty
boys representing different parts of
the State. In this contest the boys
and girls judged four classes of live-
stock, including beef, cattle, hogs,
horses and sheep.
——W. C. Fields in “It’s the Old
Army Game,” (meaning never give a
sucker an even break) at the Scenic
next Tuesday and Wednesday. 26-1t
——Sixty or more members of the
Bellefonte lodge of Odd Fellows made
a fraternal visit to the Lock Haven
lodge on Tuesday evening.
——Sunday was fathers’ day but
so far as we were able to observe it
was not generally observed in Belle-
fonte.
——Good sturdy assorted aster
plants at 25cts. per dozen. Telephone
your order to this office.
Two Well Known Men Join College
Staff.
The coming of Dr. Wheeler P.
Davey, internationally known re-
search physicist, to join the faculty
of the school of Chemistry and Phys-
ics at the Pennsylvania State Col-
lege, has aroused great interest
among the industrial people of Penn-
sylvania. Dr. Davey has been in
charge of physical research at the
General Electric Company’s labora-
tories, and is noted for his contribu-
tions to the field of electrical science.
The college also has engaged Dr.
Emil D. Reis, formerly in charge of
motor fuel research for the Standard
Oil company, as associate professor
of chemical engineering. Both will
start their duties in September.
In the Churches of the County.
ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN CHURCH.
9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10.45
a. m. Morning services: Sermon:
“The Other Man’s Faults.” 7.30 p.
m. Evening service; Sermon: “A
Great-Hearted Friend.”
Clarence E. Arnold, Pastor.
BOALSBURG REFORMED CHAKGE
Pine Hall—Church school 9.30 a. m.
Boalsburg—Church school, 9.15 a.
m.; annual Memorial services for Odd
Fellows and Rebekahs, 7.30 p. m,
Houserville—Public worship 10.30
a. m.
W. W. Moyer, Pastor.
THE EVANGELICAL CHURCH.
Worship and sermon for children
10.30 a. m. Infant baptism at this
service. Children’s Day entertainment
7.30 p. m. The public is cordially in-
vited. All welcome.
Reed O. Steely, Minister,
Ninety Pounds Pasture Daily, is Cow’s
Limit.
A cow giving an average of 35
pounds of milk a day would have to
consume 175 pounds of good pasture
every day to maintain her yield and
keep in good condition, according to
the Larrowe Institute of Animal Eco-
nomics. Since few can eat more than
90 pounds of grass in one day even
from the most luxuriant growth, a
big portion of the 35 pounds of milk
she gives comes right off her back un-
less the pasture is supplemented with
a grain ration.
“All grass, regardless of condition
or location, is well over one-half wa-
ter,” states the Institute. “In ordin-
ary field grasses this percentage runs
from 53 to 77. Sweet clover is 75 per
cent. water, Alfalfa ranges from 70
to 80 per cent. water. From any pas-
ture a cow gets not more than 2 to 5
per cent. of protein and a fraction of 1
per cent. of fat; and of all the grasses
she eats, only 15 to 30 per cent. is
made up of the very necessary carbo-
hydrates. Because grass does not con-
tain enough of the feeding elements
a cow needs in proportion to its bulk,
the cow cannot keep on producing to
the limit of her capacity on pasture
alone. Supplementing the grass with
a grain ration, however, keeps her
from using up her bodily reserve.
BOALSBURG.
Mrs. John Wright has been quite
ill for several days.
Jerre Dunklebarger and Robert
Reitz, of Tipton, spent Saturday night
at home.
A special service for the I. O. O. F.
will be held in the Reformed church on
Sunday evening.
Miss Gladys Hazel is spending
some time at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hazel.
Mr. and Mrs. Baker and the Misses
Margaret and Anna Groh, of Carlisle,
were visitors in town Sunday.
Frank Hosterman went to Ohio last
week where he will be employed dur-
ing the Penn State vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Meyer spent a
day last week with their niece, Mrs.
John Dreiblebeis, in Ferguson Twp.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hosterman
and Mrs. Jared Mayes and daughter,
of Milton, were week-end visitors in
town.
Gecrge Homan is building an up-to-
date garage out of the store house
formerly occupied by the Bricker
Bros.
Mrs. Ellen Stuart, of State College,
Miss Belle Reed, of Clearfield, were
guests of Mrs. E. E. Stuart Monday
and Tuesday.
Barney Goodlander, of Sunbury, ac-
companied by his son, wife and two
boys, visited at the home of Henry
Reitz on Sunday.
The ladies class of the Reformed
Sunday school will held a bake sale
on the church lawn, afternoon and
evening of July 3rd.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Rockey accom-
panied their son Willard, wife and
daughter, to Centre Hall, on Saturday
to attend the Grove reunion.
A number of people motored from
Milton, Sunday, to attend the dedica-
tion of the monument erected at Boal
camp in memory of Col. Fetzer, of
Milton.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Denning and
son Jim, Miss Jones, of Philipsburg,
and Mrs. Grace Smith and daughter,
of Washington, D. C., were callers at
fe home of Mrs. E. E. Brown on Sun-
ay.
Marriage Licenses.
William R. Kerfoot, of Clearfield,
and Irgra Mabus, of Clearfield.
George H. Kline, of Kittanning, and
Clara Thompson, of Kittanning.
Howard B. Harpster, of Clayburg,
and Mary S. Williams, of Clayburg.
John H. Clunt, Warriors Mark, and
Irene C. McKivison, Warriors Mark.
George Korkus and Kathryn Shuti-
ka, both of Clarence.
James B. Royer, of Centre Hall, and
Ida Mae Rearick, of Spring Mills.
Earle H. Peck, of Nittany, and
Nellie L. Stein, of Zion.
Jerry J. Roan and Margaret E.
Kline, both of Bellefonte.
Edgar Hummel and Hannah Long,
both of Philipsburg.
Joseph Davis and Mary Ellison, both
of Philipsburg.
Maurice W. Green and Edith W.
Whitehill, both of Oak Hall.
Cyril M. Zeckman, of Pittsburgh,
and Dorothy K. McCormick, of Hub-
lersburg.
Steve Kadash and Mary Minarchick,
both of Philipsburg.
Clarence Spicer, of Bellefonte, and
Phylma Hoy, of Philipsburg.
George A. Crawford and Vera M.
Homan, both of State College.
Albert E. Yougel, of State College,
and Margery Anna Way, of Belle-
fonte.
Clyde G. Rosenberger and Mary
Kathryn Jodon, of Bellefonte.