Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 25, 1926, Image 5

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PINE GROVE MENTION. The ladies were guests of the mem- | Florence Butler motored to Cumber-
ee bers. A splendid supper was served |land, Md., on Monday, where they were
Roy Close and mother took a motor | and a good program of music and | principals in a double wedding. On
run to Altoona on Sunday. brief speeches followed. their return He Some evening Joy
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Burwell are off Fred Fry and wife and George Bur- | Were given a wedding supper and re-
on a motor trip to West Virginia. well and wife spent Sunday afternoon ception at the A. L. Wieland home, at Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432
Dr. Frank Bailey came up from
Milton and spent Sunday with his
mother.
J. Hall Bottorf, Mrs. G. R. Dunlap
and Mrs. Charles Smith are all on the
sick list.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Foster have re-
turned home from a motor trip to
Michigan.
Mrs. S. W. Pletcher and friend at-
tended their class reunion at Cornell
last week.
Mrs. Robert Smith, of Miami,
Florida, spent Friday at the Clifford
Close home.
Prof. G. D. Gardner and wife left
on Friday for a three months sojourn
in California.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Miller, of
Dayton, Ohio, are visiting Centre
county friends.
Fred Corl, who has been confined to
bed several weeks with illness, is now
much improved.
Prof. Al Walters and wife are now
snugly quartered in the Mrs. Sarah
Grapp home at Erbtown.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bailey Campbeil
spent several days last week with
friends at State College.
J. E. Peters is having his home done
over with a new coat of paint. J. H.
Everts is swinging the brush.
Roy Gates, wife and daughter Mar-
garet, of Lewistown, spent last week
visiting relatives in the valley.
Prof. Elder Rumberger, of Tennes-
see, were entertained at the C. E.
Close home one day last week.
Clark Koch left last Friday for
Chester, Pa., where he has secured a
job on the DuPoint stock farm.
Mrs. Jessie Elder has been com-
missioned postmistress here as suc-
cessor to David Barr, deceased.
E. B. Homan and wife and Mack
Fry and wife motored to Mooresville
and spent Sunday with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. McCormick, of
Circleville, were Sunday visitors at
the E. C. Musser home on Main St.
Miss Helen Neidigh, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Neidigh, had a bad
fall the other day, breaking her arm.
A delightful social meeting was
held by Pennsvalley lodge I. 0.0. F,
in their hall last Saturday evening.
INGROWN NAILS
Are as Common as Corns
Correct them Painlessly with
No-Grow-In
At Drug Stores,
or by Mail (postpaid) so cts.
WwW. H. GARMAN
P.0.Box 232 71-26-4t Bellefonte, Pa.
at the Allen Burwell home, near Ty-
rone.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bloom, of
Milesburg, spent the latter end of the
week at the H. M. Walker home, on
Main street.
Samuel Markle, of State College,
has returned from a two week’s visit
with friends in Harrisburg and Me-
chanicsburg.
P. O. S. of A. camp, No. 620, will
meet this (Friday) evening, for the
election of officers. A good turnout
is requested.
Mrs. Daniel Irvin, accompanied by
Mrs. G. C. Meyers and two daughters,
motored to Pittsburgh on Saturday for
a week’s visit with relatives.
Misses Margaret and Anna Groh,
daughters of the late Rev. W. H. Groh,
are here from Carlisle for a brief
visit among Centre county friends.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Dale and daugh-
ter Edith, of the Branch, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Kocher, of Graysville, were
visitors in town on Saturday evening.
Postmaster R. E. Musser, of Penn-
sylvania Furnace, and Mrs. David
Tressler, of State College, were both
taken to the Lock Haven hospital on
Monday. ~
William Goheen Thompson, son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Thompson, of this
place, was married at Harrison, Ind.,
last Saturday, to Miss Ruth Smith, of
that city.
A splendid entertainment is billed
for the I. O. O. F. hall tomorrow even-
ing at 8 o’clock, by members of the
Warriorsmark M. E. church. Price,
25 and 35 cents.
Marcellus Sankey, of Middleburg,
who attended young farmers™ week
exercises at State College last week,
spent one night here as the guest of
Mrs. Viola Smith.
Charles Foster, of Danville, accom-
pained by Mrs. John W. Stuart, Mrs.
Baker, Mrs. Reed and Margaret Lytle,
were callers at the J. Will Kepler
home, on Saturday.
Charles Goss, of Harrisburg, a pas-
senger conductor on the Middle divis-
ion of the P. R. R,, is here on a two
weeks vacation, whipping the streams
for his share of trout.
Elmer Young, a former Pine Grove
Mills boy but now a successful mer-
chant at Petersburg, was here for a
few hours on Friday while on his way
home from a trip to Bloomsburg.
Charles Thompson, a well known
coal dealer of Johnstown, was a caller
at the J. Will Kepler home on Friday
while on his way home from attending
commencement at State College.
Mrs. Randall. Miller, of ~Millheim,
entertained . her Sunday school class
of young ladies at Tussey lodge, on
Point Lookout, over the week-end and
Sunday. On Sunday she was joined
by her husband and also had as guests
Misses Sue and Sadie Dannley. The
party returned home on Monday.
Washington Butler and Miss Mary
Wieland, William Bachman and Miss
Cornerstones of Success
n the shop, as in the home and school, clear vision is
the ally of clear thinking.
essary for intelligent doing
cess.
progress.
Dr. Eva
And clear thinking is nec-
the cornerstone of suc-
Bellefonte
Wednesday—1.30 to 4.30 p. m.
Saturday—9.30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
71-22tf
Do not let defective eyesight hinder your ~
B. Roan
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
State College
WONDERFUL
Cooks Without. Water
Can be Used on Gas, Electric
Coal or Oil Stoves
Prepares meat and vegetables in their own juices without adding a
single drop of water and without any danger of burning or scorch-
ing. Requires no watching—leaves more time for other tasks. All
the delicious natural flavors are retained. Acts just the same as a
hired girl to the house-wife —takes all the worries out of the kitchen
for her.
Advanced Premium
Advanced with the First Order
of GREAT AMERICAN Tea Products
FOR DEMONSTRATION SEE
J. W. GIBBONY
at the G. F. Musser home, No. 30 West Logan Street,
BELLEFONTE X
PAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAANAAAAAAAAAAANAAANA
That's the opinion of Every Happy Housewife who owns
one of these Usetul American Cookers.
Tadpole.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Wieland and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rosenberg were
at Danville on Wednesday attending
the funeral of thirteen year old
Bertha Snyder, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Snyder, who died on
Monday after three weeks illness with
the flu. Her parents, two brothers and
two sisters survive.
Pennsvalley lodge No. 276, I. O. O.
F., will place flags and floral tributes
on the graves of deceased members
at 6.30 o'clock tomorrow evening.
Members are requested to meet at the
lodge room and, headed by the Citi-
zens band, will march in a body to the
cemeteries. J. Kennedy Johnston, of
Bellefonte, will make the address.
Sixteen of the Walker clan were en-
tertained at the cosy home of Stine
Walker, on Sunday. Among the
group was a Civil war veteran, Chas.
Walker, of Huntingdon, who served in
the 49th Pennsylvania regiment under
Col. Bill Irvin. The old Vet is past the
four score mark but still going strong.
One of the features of Sunday’s gath-
‘ering was the big dinner served by
Mrs. Walker.
AARONSBURG.
Samuel Breon spent Saturday with
his daughter, Mrs. Clinton Bunson,
near Belleville, Mifflin county.
- Mrs. Carrie Smith, of Millheim,
spent a day recently with her two sis-
ters, Mrs. A. S. Stover and Miss Liz-
zie Yarger.
Mrs. Harvey Musser Sr., of Akron,
Ohio, has arrived in town and expects
to spend the summer in the old Mus-
ser hemestead.
Mrs. Rupp, of Elderton, Pa. is the
guest of her son-in-law and daughter,
Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Daubenspeck, at
the Lutheran parsonage.
Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Tomlinson have
had as guests during the week their
two grand-daughters, children of Dr.
Charles Tomlinson, of Milton.
Sunday evening, the 27th inst., the
Reformed Sunday school of this place
will observe their annual Children’s
day service. All are welcome.
A number of people were in attend-
ance at the Children’s day services,
Sunday evening, in the Evangelical
churches of Coburn and Woodward.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Smith had as
guests recently Mrs. Smith's sister,
Mrs. Walters, her daughter, Mrs.
Owens and small son, of Pitman, N. J.
Mrs. Manuel Gilbert and their chil-
dren have gone to Youngstown, Ohio,
where they are guests of Mrs. Gil-
bert’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Stover, and their
mother, Mrs. A. M. Bower.
After a short visit with his two
brothers, George and T. C. Weaver, C.
A. Weaver went to Huntingdon, Fri-
day, to spend a short time with his
sister, Mrs. Bell. From there he will
leave for his home in Bethlehem.
Mr. and. Mrs. Ray Auman and
their children, of Youngstown, Ohio, |
are at present guests of Mrs. Auman’s
mother, Mrs. J. G. Eisenhauer. Mr.
Auman was called east at this time
by the serious illness of his brother,
Harry Auman, of Millheim, who has
for some weeks been a patient in the
Centre County hospital.
Friday of last week C. Earl Bell,
Mrs. C. C. Bell, Mrs. F. B. Patton, and
Margaret Bell, of Huntingdon, motor-
ed to town, bringing with them Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Hull, who had been
their guests for a few days.
While in Huntingdon they spent a
short time with Mr. Hull’s brother-in-
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Adams.
PLEASANT GAP.
The Klinger family have returned
home from a week’s vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wells are ie-
joicing over the arrival of a young
son.
Children’s day exercises will be held
in the M. E. church Sunday evening,
at 7.30.
The John Millward family, of
Osceola Mills, spent Sunday at the
Frank Millward home.
Mrs. Fink and children, of Tyrone,
spent a few days last week with her
sister, Mrs. Boyd Spicher.
Miss Lizzie Gill returned hdme,
Sunday, after a very pleasant visit
among friends in Lock Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rimmey and
little son Bobby, of Olean, N. Y., spint
the week-end with the former's
father, Charles Rimmey. :
Miss Pauline Noll, of Philadelphia,
is spending her vacation here with her
mother. Miss Johnson, a friend of
hers, accompanied her home.
Edward King, of Valley View, has
joined the aggregation of stone con-
tractors at Whiterock. Mr. King has
the reputation of being a reliable and
trustworthy worker.
Mr. and Mrs. David Crum and little
daughter returned to their home in
Linesville on Sunday, after spending
their vacation with Mrs. Crum’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Kerstet-
ter.
Never reprove a child in the pres-
ence of strangers, to do this injures
its feeling of respect, and is an an-
noyance to the visitor also. While it
frequently happens that a word of
timely admonition is necessary, re-
proof should be left until alone with
the child.
OAK HALL.
Mr. Irvin Korman was a Sunday
caller among relatives in this vicinity.
William Tressler and Ralph Dale
spent Monday evening at Centre Hall.
William Bohn is in a critical condi-
tion at this writing. Mr. Bohn suffer-
ed a stroke several weeks ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lowder and
daughter, Anna May, motored to
Ridgway, Saturday, and remained
make payment, and
71-16-tf
LUMBER?
W.R. Shope Lumber Co.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing
for several days with Mrs. Lowder’s
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Troupe.
Mr. and Mrs. Bridenbaugh, of Union
Furnace, were recent callers at the
home of their cousin, R. C. Lowder.
The Ferree family, of this place,
enjoyed a two days camping trip at
the Riley cabin in the Bear Meadows.
Mr. and Mrs. David Gilliland and
family, accompanied by Misses Eliza
and Alice Gilliland, enjoyed a picnic,
Sunday, at the Alexander home near
Unionville.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward McCalmont,
of Philadelphia, are being entertained
this week at the home of Mrs. Mec-
Calmont’s brother, N. B. Martz.
Misses Ruth and Grace Martz are
enjoying a ten days vacation with
relatives at Philadelphia.
- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
00D FOR SALE.—$1.00 for a one
ton truck load at the Academy
athletic field. Wood from old board
fenc2 replaced by wire fence. T1-26-tf
OR SALE—Billiard room, six tables,
F good condition, long term lease,
good location. For particulars ad-
dress
HOFFMAN'S BILLIARD ROOM,
71-26-1t Lewistown, Pa.
OR SALE OR RENT—Residence and
F Garage, 203 east Linn St., Belle-
fonte. Inquire of H. N. Crider,
112 south Harvard Ave. Ventnor, N. J.
71-9-tf.
reliable man in Center County to
build a profitable, independent
business selling Whitmer Products house
to house. Products highest quality and
guaranteed. Car or wagon and team need-
ed. Real opportunity fer right man to
make $10 to $20 daily. Salesmanship
taught FREE. Write
THE H. C. WITMER COMPANY,
T1-24-5t* Dept. 24, Columbus, Indiana.
W relate oppertunity is offered a
ed executor of the last will and
testament of Aaron W. Reese, late
of Port Matilda, Centre county, Penna.,
deceased, hereby notifies all persons know-
ing themselves indebted to said estate to
make immediate payment and those hav-
ing claims to present same, properly
authenticated for settlement.
i F. P. REESE, Executor,
101 Sth St. Tyrone, Pa.
E a eee NOTICE—The undersign-
71-22:6t
XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa-
E mentary having been granted to
the undersigned upon the estate of
A. Y. Wagner, late of Belletonte borough,
deceased, all persons knowing themselves
indebted to said estate are requested to
those having claims
against the same must present them, duly
authenticated, for settlement.
C. Y. WAGNER,
GEORGE H. HAZEL,
Gettig-& Bower,’ Executors,
Attorneys. 71-22-61
of administration on the estate of
Mary C. Leathers, late of Union-
ville Boro., Centre county, having been
granted the undersigned, all persons
knowing themselves indebted to said estate
are hereby notified to make immediate
settlement thereof and those having
claims against the same should present
them, properly authenticated, for payment
A DMINISTRATRIX NOTICE—Letters
CLARA LEATHERS, Administratrix
71-25-6t Unionville, Pa.
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a
S writ of Levari Facias issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of
Centre county, to me directed, will be ex-
posed to public sale at the Court House
in the Borough of Bellefonte, on
SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1926,
the following property:
All that certain messuage, tenement and
tract of land situate in Philipsburg Bor-
ough, Centre County, Pennsylvania,
bounded and described as follows:—
BEGINNING at a point on the Southern
line of Pine Street, between North Centre
and Second Streets, which point is the
intersection of said Southern line of Pine
Street and line drawn through the Eastern
wall of a brick building now being erected
on the Southern part of the residue of
premises of the grantor and which point
is 44 feet, more or less, from the corner of
said Pine Street and an Alley in an East-
erly direction; thence along said Pine
Street in a Westerly direction. a distance
of 44 feet, more or less to the Eastehn line
of an Alley, parallel with North Centre
Street, and in a Southerly direction, a
distance of 90 feet more or less, to line of
lot of H. H. Hewitt; thence along the line
of same and parallel with Pine street, a
distance of 44 feet, more or less, to the
Western wall of a brick building now
being erected on other lands of the grantor
herein, and thence in a Northerly direction
along said Western wall of brick building
now being erected on other lands of the
said ‘grantor herein and continuing on the
same course thereof, a distance of 90 feet
more or less, to point on the Southern
line of Pine Street and the place of begin-
ning. Having erected thereon a frame
barn or stable. Being the same premises
as were sold and conveyed unto the mort-
gager herein by Wm. M. Bower, et ux, by
deed of even date, not yet recorded.
Seized, taken in execution and to be sold
as the property of Harry L. Harper.
Sale to commence at 1.30 o’clock p. m. of
said day.
E. R. TAYLOR, Sheriff.
Sheriff’s office, Bellefonte,
Pa., June Tth, 1926. 71-25-3t.
Dairymen---Notice
A special sale of Mayer’s
Dairy Feed—a Ready-
Mixed Ration, 22% protein
$40.00 per Ton
Delivery Charge $2.00 per Load
Frank M. Mayer
BELLEFONTE, PA.
71-11-tf
OR SALE.—Red Cross Range in fine
condition. Selling
stalling electric range. Inquire of
Mrs. Geo. Bible, E. Curtin St.
—The “Watchman” gives all the
because of in- | hoo when it is news. Read it.
71-26-1t*
J. McC. Davis, Owner.
Water Street Inn
Spring Chicken with Hot Biscuit
Rag Carpets and Rugs
MADE TO ORDER 101 Saath Eleventh Bt.
Also Chairs Re-Caned PHILADELPHIA.
=" All Orders Promptly Filled
E. Logan St., Bellefonte. GEO. W. JOHNSTON
A. W. KEICHLINE
REGISTERED ARCHITECT
M. C. Luke, Manager
BELLEFONTE, PENNA.
71-11-6m*
SUNDAY
IRA D. GARMAN
Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum
64-3¢-tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY
Attention! Parents, Boys and Girls!
Public School Savings Department
Is Open Every Wednesday Throughout (he Summer Yacation Months
as when you were attending school.
Bellefonte Trust Co.
Don’t Forget
THAT OUR
ome in and make your deposits weekly or
mail them to us with your bank book.
Credit will be given to you the same
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Bellefonte, Pa. :
flot Weather Clothes il Faubles
TE ETT S——
Palm Beach Crash, Tropical Worsteds—the Best. and Largest,
Assortment we have Ever Shown. Tailored to hold their
shape and good looks until completely worn out. Priced hon-
estly. Let. us show you HOW GOOD this Clothing can be.
“A. Fauble