EE ————————————————————————— Bellefonte, Pa., November 12, 1926. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Bditor Te Correspondents.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real mame of the writer. Terms of Subscription.—Until further notice at the following rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $1.50 Paid before expiration of year - 17 Paid after expiration of year - =2.00 Published weekly, every Friday morning. Entered at the postoffice, Bellefonte, Pa., as second class matter. In ordering change of address always given the old as well as the new address. It is important that the publisher be no- tified when a subscriber wishes the paper discontinued. In all such cases the sub- geribtion must be paid up to date of can- cellation. A sample copy of the “Watchman” will be sent without cost to applicants. Boyhood Days in 1858. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By Rev. L. M. Colfelt, D. D I was born December 22, 1849, on the banks of Honey Creek near Reedsville, Pennsylvania, Kishaco- quillas Valley, on a farm to which my father retired at the close of his mercantile career. Of those first four years of my life but few things stand out in my memory. Grandfather Charles Colfelt sitting on the porch reading the Bible, my mother bending with anxiety over the cradle of my infant brother, Willie, and saying that he was dangerously ill, the funeral which soon followed and the draping of the hats of my four brothers and myself with crepe and the burning of my uncle’s vast barn about a mile dis- tant constitute the chief items. It was not so much the conflagration that en- graved itself on my memory but the grotesque figure a servant in the household cut when she put on a pair of mens’ high leather boots to wade through the stream and the mud of that stormy night. Upon the burning of that barn hung perhaps the issue of a suit in favor of my mother, in- volving her inhertance of $50,000 from her aunt. The will was not only con- tested but divided the near relatives of my mother in two acrimonious camps. A certain individual, perhaps in the hope if the will was broken he might himself benefit, was particular- ly hostiie to my mother and his testi- mony was chiefly depended upon to prove the mental incompetency of the testatrix. But the incendiary origin of the firing of Davis Bates’ barn and the suspicion that revenge for this active zeal of this brother in his sis- ter’s behalf had inspired it, so incensed him that from an enemy he turned friend and at the trial to the astonish- ment of everybody he testified that he was witness of the instrument and that “the maker of the will was never saner in her life.” validity of the testament. On such small happenings do great events turn. - In this same period of earliest childhood I recall how my father, on mounting a skittish horse to ride to Lewistown was still in sight when a vicious dog, from a neighbor’s yard bit at the horses heels and so frightened him that he threw my father. His foot caught in the stirrup and he was dragged back to the house. Happily the distance was small and he escaped injury. But though a child I was transfixed with terror. Another inci- dent is connected with that period. My father, on a visit to Lewistown, was accosted by a Gypsy woman who asked to tell his fortune. Pronounced religious scruples led him to rank her with the witch of Endor and to say he did not believe she possessed the pow- ers she claimed. She answered “I will tell your fortune gratis so far as to acquaint you with the fact that un- known to you, a man is stealing gro- ceries from your house under your very nose.” In the closet large quan- tities of sugar, coffee and spices were stored. On setting a watch early the next morning, (Sunday), a man liv- ing in my father’s tenant house across the stream appeared and was caught loading a wheelbarrow with supplies. That which stamped the incident on my memory was not the singular ful- fillment of the Gypsy’s warning but the the fact that, the man, fearing arrest, decamped that same day with his fam- ily from thz tenant house and fled. From Kishacoquillas Valley my father removed to a five hundred acre tract of land close to Bedford, drawn thither by the fame of the Springs and the healthfulness of the region. Here, with a slight intermission when my father lived in Canonsburg for the purpose of sending my three older brothers to college, I spent for the most part, my youth up to my 17th year when I also was sent to Jeffer- Ton college. Here amid the foot- hills of the Alleghenies, I lived an ideal boy's life in the country. My father farmed on a large scale and we five boys when not going to school as- sisted always in the lighter labors of the soil. My toil consisted largely in planting and setting up corn and other crops in the springtime, following the hay pitchers with the rake, riding the 2-seated mower to clean out the knives, hand sheaves to the knee- placer in the mows, tramp hay, pick potatoes, gather apples and turn the grindstone. School always came first but on Saturdays and vacation time in summer, we were not allowed to while our time away in idleness. But we had abundant time for diversion and there was not a ripple or deeper haunt of fish in the stream we did not know for the two miles my father’s lands bordered the waters. There was not a chestnut, hickory, walnut, butter- nut, wild plum ot mulberry tree for miles that we did not locate and gath- er. As for the raspberries, blackber- ries, wild strawberries, huckleberries, ete., they were all abundant in their season and drowned in rich cream were greatly relished. Cherries, plums, peaches, pears and apples of every de- scription grew ad libitum. As many as 300 bushels of the latter were placed in the cellar in layers of leaves This decided the | in great boxes and all had free access. But the most enjoyable season for us lads was in winter with its skating, coasting, sleighing, snaring rabbits and partridges as well as gunning for larger game, pigeons and ducks in monster flocks and wild turkeys and even deer on the mountains. I have heard the wild cats scream. I have seen deer come down from the moun- tains and leap the fence to browze with the cattle till the dogs frightened them and never did I see a more beau- tiful sight than those deer running in full view across a 60 acre meadow, antlers high and waving, until they reached and plunged into the stream and disappeared in the wooded hills beyond. But while I had many pets of my own, chickens and lambs, the joy of my heart was to have my very own horse that I reared and rode and drove and speeded tomy heart’s con- tent. The joy of life was to race with my brothers on steeds we trained and tended as our own peculiar property. There was much rivalry as to who had the fastest nag. Those were days of which I could sing with Harry Lauder, “I never had lots of money but I had lots of fun.” In fact, all the money we had must needs be made by ourselves. The first money I ever earned was during the Civil War, tramping hay in the hay press in my father’s barn, the hay having been purchased for the mules used by the Robert Hare Powell Fur- nace, Saxton, Pennsylvania. With it, I bought an excellent silver watch, the wearing of which, bought with my own money made me a proud young- ster. The next money of any conse- quence I had in my boyhood was from sheep which my father generously al- lowed me to pasture on his lands and feed out of his bins. My father en- dorsed a note of mine for $25 in Ja- cob Reed’s bank, Bedford. With it I bought 15 ewes at less than $2 apiece. I was now revelling in wealth. From imagined surpassed Jacob’s record in the house of his uncle, Laban. Those 15 ewes had 27 lambs. The Civil War was now on and the members of the flock I sold brought $5 apiece so that I was now revelling in wealth. From these possessions in live stock I pur- chased a mare and soon was gladden- ed with a dear little colt. Hogs and pigs followed. Thus did my father wisely develop self-help, a love of familiar animals and of farm life that commingled with the very marrow of my bones. But of all the animals, none captivated me like the lambs and many an hour I was in the Seventh Heaven, watching them gambol and race to and fro as the sun went down in the western sky. All this life of a boy from nine to thirteen years old was simply en- chantment. What happy hours listen- ing to the meadow larks chanting on the wing their orizons at the gates of the morning and the black-birds sing- ing to the accompaniment of the bab- bling brook as they swung to and fro in the wind-rocked branches of the willows! What thoughts of the Infi- nite, which cannot be uttered when lying on a pile of sweet scented hay of a summer’s evening looking up in- to the stars and dreaming dreams that rivalled Jacob’s as he rested upon #is pills of stones! I'think in those days with the mountains all girt so close about up und down which the fogs chased each other and the shadows played “hide and go seek” athwart the narrow valley and through the ra- vines, I learned to sense keenly the the meaning of the Basque in Spain when he says “The Mountain is my Mother!” Many a night I have been so enamoured with the scene that it was a positive trial to be compelled to come into the house for sleep. Several incidents stand out in this period, one of them nearly fatal to myself. My father sent two of his men with four horses up the country with a Conestoga wagon with’ its great deep wagon bed for the purpose of breaking two colts, each hitched on what was called the offside. I, then 9 years old and my brother, 11 years, climbed up into the wagon, un- known to our parents to enjoy the fun. Several miles from home, we arrived at a steep hill with a house on the crest. veral fierce dogs rushed out and frightened the colts. The one man had, gotten out of the wagon pre- viously to draw the lever and scorch the wheels. But the whole team, now thoroughly terrified, rushed down the hill dragging the saddle horse, on which the driver sat, from his feet. He had great difficulty extricating himself. At the foot of the hill the saddle horse scrambled to his feet and the whole four, now without a driver or locker, ran like mad for over a mile with us two urchins in the bed shout- ing tc them to stop but only adding wings to their terror, while the boards comprising the bed were rattled loosc by the terribly stony road and we could only stand on cross-sleepers and hold on to the sides of the bed. The jostling caused me to lose my hat and this distressed me more than the imminent peril I was in. They now.ran down a hill a quarter of a mile long. At its foot was a bridge without rail- ings about 10 feet above the brook. The unguided horses crossed the bridge safely but two wheels of the big wagon went on the bridge and two off and the gigantic wagon with its great deep bed rolled completely over us two boys. My brother was unhurt. When I came to my senses I was sit- ting in the stream on the boards that came from the bottom of the bed and my brother was vainly pulling me to my feet. Two of the horses were standing upright and two were on their backs struggling but helpless- ly entangled. Kind hands lifted and carried me to the house now occupied by Mrs. Joseph Stayer. A doctor was sent for and found the extent of the damage was a hole as big as a quar- ted of a dollar in the top of my skull which kept me an invalid for three honthy and is plainly visible to this ay. : At this period an event unrelated to myself occurred which made an im- pression on my boyish imagination. The great droves of cattle and sheep that by tens of thousands raised the dust on the highways for miles at a time and which often pastured by night on my father’s lands were fast disappearing. The Conestoga wag- ons, ‘most picturesque of all, with great hooded bows and feed troughs swinging behind, with their six horses to a wagon, 5000 of them that in their heyday built vast hostelries and barns from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh were all being improved off the face of the earth by newly built railways. The fate of the very last one was tragic enough. Samuel Barnhard, a celebrat- ed teamster, was driving his six- horsed Conestoga wagon from Hope- well, the terminus of the H. & B. R. R. to Bedford, loaded with 10,000 lbs. of valuable merchandise. When he ar- rived at the Narrows bridge over the Juniata, a mile east of Bedford and had reached the middle of the bridge, he heard the timbers cracking. With a leap to his two leaders, he lashed them forward. The fifth chain that attached them to the tongue broke and he and his two front horses es- caped while the other four and the loaded wagon went crashing down in- to the deep river, 20 feet below. Strange to relate, a young country- man, 19 years old, George Croyle by name, witnessed the disaster and leap- ing into the river swam to the strug= gling, frantic horses and cut them loose, saving the whole team. There were no medals for heroes in those days but surely this youth deserved one. The gigantic wheels of this wag- on lay for several years at the bottom of the Narrows bridge on the river bank and the diameter of the hubs was so great that I recall calculating that I could easily crawl through them with room to spare! CRAWSHAW.—William Crawshaw, ! an electrician in the employ of the American Lime and Stone company, died at the Bellefonte hospital, on Wednesday evening of last week, fol- lowing a brief illness. He was a son of Thomas and Elizabeth Crawshaw and was born in England on August 3rd, 1873, making his age 53 years and 3 months. When he was but a boy his parents came to this country and in 1880 they located in Philips- burg. It was there that William grew to manhood and studied electricity. About ten years ago he came to Belle- fonte as an employee of the telephone company, but during the past year or more had been working for the Amer- ican Lime and Stone company. He never married but is survived by one brother, Thomas Crawshaw, of Philipsburg, and the following half- brothers and sisters: Emanuel Craw- shaw, of Lewistown; Joseph Swift, of State College; Mrs. William Simler, of Philipsburg, and Mrs. Alice Myers, of Norristown. The remains were taken to Philipsburg where funeral services were held on Saturday afternoon, at the William Simler home, by Rev. F. T. Eastment, burial being made in the Philipsburg cemetery. | HASSEL — Jacob Hasse of Colum- bus, Ohio, but well known in Belle- fonte, died at Detroit, Mich., last Thursday, as the result of a heart at- tack. sustained two days previous while on a business trip to Detroit. He was 61 years old and had spent the greater part of his life in Colum- bus. He married Miss Rose Baum, of Bellefonte, who was burned to death four years ago, but surviving him are three children, Mrs. David Rubenstein and David Hassel, of Columbus, Ohio, and Miss Dorothy Hassel, of New York City. He also leaves three sis- ters, Misses Clara and Ella Hassel and Mrs. Swartz, all of New York. The remains were brought to Belle- fonte on the 1.20 p. m. train, on Sat- urday, and taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sim Baum, on north Alle- gheny street, where funeral services were held at 10.30 o’clock on Sunday morning. Rabbi Mantiband, of Wil- liamsport, officiated and burial was made in the Jewish cemetery. Out of town people here for the funeral in- cluded the three children, two sisters, Mrs. Swartz and Miss Clara Hassel, and Miss Harriet Wolfe, of New York city. i KEEN alee Keen, oi known farmer of Penn township, died on Oc- tober 30th following several months illness as the result of a stroke of | paralysis, aged 69 years, 9 months and 5 days. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Keen, was born in Penn town- ship and spent his entire life there. He married Miss Emma Wert who survives with the following children: George Keen, Mrs. Ollie Keen, Harry and Mrs. Jennie Walker, of Millheim; Mrs. Carrie Allen, of Freeport, Ill; Mrs. Sarah Schaeffer, of Centre Hall; Mrs. Elizabeth Vonada, of Spring Mills; Mrs. C. C. Bryan, of North Bend; Mrs. Frank MecCrina, of Wil- liamsport; Mrs. Hattie Beahm, of Aaronsburg, and Homer, at home. He also leaves one sister, Mrs. Lizzie ! Keen, of Millheim. Funeral services were held in the Lutheran church at Millheim on Tues- day morning of last week, burial be- ing made in the Millheim cemetery. | Il GARBER Henry F. Garber died at his home in Tyrone on Monday night as the result of an attack of heart trouble. He was a son of Francis and Lydia Garber and was born near Zion, Centre county, on February 9th, 1878, hence was in his 49th year. In 1918 he married Anna Levy Beyer who survives with one stepson, Homer Beyer, and two sisters, Sister Antoninus, of Potts- ville, and Mrs. August Armor, of Bellefonte. He was a member of St. Matthew’s Catholic church, of Tyrone, the Ty- rone lodge of Moose and the Independ- ent Order of Foresters. Funeral ser- vices were held in St. Matthew's church, at Tyrone, at nine o’clock yes- terday morning, after which the re- remains were brought to Bellefonte for burial in the Catholic cemetery. Jury List for December Court. The jury list for the December term of court, which will convene on the second Monday, December 13th, was drawn last Saturday. Only five women were drawn for the first week and two for the second. The list is as follows: LIST OF GRAND JURORS. Alters, Harry, clerk......c.co0eees Bellefonte Anderson, Fred, shipping clerk...Liberty Auman, Uriah G.,shop-keeper....Penn Twp Bryan, John, foreman................ Rush Bush, Geo.' T., agent...........: Bellefonte Brockerhoff, H. A., gentleman...Bellefonte Confer, Antes G., laborer....Howard Twp Decker, C. N., farmer........vsssss Walker Fink, Geo. G., clerk........... Philipsburg Grove, W. E,, laborer.......... College Twp Glenn, Jerry, clerK.......o00viveneas Curtin Gates, Edward, painter...... S. Philipsburg Hurd, John, clerk.............. Philipsburg Hugg, Charles, agent...........co00ee Rush Hazel, Alfred, mechanic......... Unionville Houck, J. C., salesman.......... Bellefonte King, Charles, laborer.............. Spring Kerstetter, Ammon, carpenter...... Spring Meyers, Wm. M., farmer............ Harris Moore, Hiram, foreman...... S. Philipsburg Meyer, C. H., lumberman........ Penn Twp McDowell, H. T., retired..... Howard Boro Walker, W. Miles, agent........ Bellefonte Yarnell, Clayton, farmer..,.... Spring Twp LIST OF TRAVERSE JURORS FIRST WEEK. ; Bowes, Harmon, Farmer........... Liberty Bittner, C. R., pattern maker.State College | Breon, Wallace E., farmer...... Penn Twp : Catherman, Fred, carpenter....... Millheim | Cupples, LeRoy, laborer.............. Rush Cronemiller, R. E., machinist....Bellefonte Cole, John H., laborer........ Philipsburg Dixon, Ray, laborer................ Taylor Durst, Howard W., farmer......... Potter | i Davidson, James, farmer............ Boggs | DeLong, Chauncey, farmer......... Liberty | Deitrick, J. A, farmer,...........:ss Miles i Dawson, Mat, barber............ ass" Rush Eberts, 0. D., merchant............ Huston : Fisher, Grant, farmer.......... Half Moon Furey, George, merchant........ Bellefonte i Gardner, Luther,shipper............. Curtin { Hoy, Roy, Iarmer.....cicvissssvres Walker { Hurrell, Mrs. Winifred, H'k’r.State College Hosterman, T. A. manager....Centre Hall Hoover, Samuel, farmer........ Union Twp Herr, Mrs. Nellie, housekeeper. ..Bellefonte Harris, W. H., laborer......c.s..s.. Harris Jones, P. D., herdsman...... State College Jodon, Thomas, laborer............. Spring -| Kerstetter, J. W., poultryman..Penn Twp Kaufman, Earle, laborer............ Boggs Koch, G. W., coal dealer......... Ferguson Lingle, Wm. H., farmer,........,:s Potter Morris, Robert, agent........... Bellefonte Malone, I. J., creameryman..... Penn Twp Musser, Harry, carpenter..... College Twp Musser, Wallace F., laborer.......... Gregg Martin, J. B., plumber....... State College Orndorf, O. W., farmer............ Haines Poorman, Fleming, farmer.......... Boggs Peters, Lewis Jr., mechinist......... Boggs Quick, James L., laborer..Snow Shoe Twp Rossman, Harvey, farmer............ Gregg lipka, Stewart, farmer........ Spring Twp Ripka, E. 8., inn Keeper.......... Millheim Rote, 8. G., lumberman........ Penn Twp Reifsnyder, John, carpenter......... Harris Stover, G. C., laborer........ State College Steele, Aaron, painter...... S. Philipsburg Warner, W. P. clerk.......... State College Stanley, William, laborer........... Boggs Strouse, John H., harness maker.Ferguson Saylor, Miss Mary, seamstress. ..Bellefonte White, Lloyd, farmer........coeeeee Spring Williams, Grant, carpenter...State College Way, Ellis G., mechanic........ Unionville Wagner, C. Y., mill owner...... Bellefonte Yocum, Harry, clerk.......... Philipsburg LIST OF TRAVERSE JURORS SECOND WEEK. Ayers, Russell, laborer........ Philipsburg Arnold, Rev, Clarence, minister. .Bellefontc Bechdol, Lloyd, farmer...... Howard Twp | ! Brow, George, merchant...Snow Shoe Twp i Byron, Winifred, housekeeper.Philipsburg | Bates, James, clerk...... Snow Shoe Twp i Brewer, J. O., book-keeper...... Bellefonte Bailey, L. E., carpenter........ Philipsburg Carner, J. M., laborer.............. Walker { Cowher, James, blacksmith...Port Matilda Confer, James, farmer.......... Union Twp Dieh)l, Harry H., painter........ Milesburg | Eckenroth, William, farmer......... Spring Everhart, Samuel, farmer...... College Twp Fryberger, C. T., agent........ Philipsburg Fulton, John C., Ins. agent....Philipsburg Glenn, Randolph, farmer............ Patton Grove, Hiram R., farmer........... Benner Gramley, Cephas L., gentleman....... Miles Goheen, John B., laborer........ Ferguson Hough, Harvey, farmer...........ce.. Miles Haagen, Harry, farmer.............. Boggs Homan, Geo. L., farmer............. Harris {| Harper, Paul, barber.......... Philipsburg | Hoy, Harry, farmer................ Marion | Hafer, Philip R., laborer....State College Hamilton, John J., gentleman. .Philipsburg Koon, G. H., truck driver....State College Kerstetter, James M., laborer..Penn Twp Regel, Mrs. Lizzie K., H'k'r.. Howard Twp Snyder, John J., manager....State College Sommers, James, carpenter...¢..... Spring Shope, Fleming, laborer............. Boggs Thomas, D. R., farmer.......... Half Moon Thompson, A. C., salesman....Philipsburg Thomas, George P., farmer... Howard Twp Welch, J. A, farmer........ceevveeeé «Curtin Young, Christ, manager.......... Bellefonte Yearick, Clyde, farmer............. Marion meme neecasere fp perenne — Bazaar, Bake Sale and Baked Bean Supper. The Susanna Wesley society of the Milesburg Methodist church will hold their annual bazaar and bake sale, in the basement of the church, Friday and Saturday, November 19th and 20th. They will have on sale a nice line of fancy work and plain sewing; also cakes, pies, homemade bread, ice cream and candy. A baked ham sup- per will be served Friday evening, only. Everybody invited. ————————— ——The American Railway Express Co., has entered into a contract with the National Air Transport Ine. to carry express by airplane over the New York to Chicago air mail route. The service is expected to be in full operation by April 15, next. Korman, F. David, farmer.......... Haines Klinger, Edward, mechanic...... Bellefonte ; Lucas, James, farmer........c..oeeees Boggs Lenker, James, merchant...... College Twp Lohr, Saul, farmer.............. Snow Shoe Musser, John F., stone cutter..... Millheim Mingle, G. Edward, farmer........ Haines Neidigh, N. C., laborer........... Ferguson Orwick, John, farmer............... Taylor Resides, William, farmer............ Union Reese, Geo. W., retired....... ...Bellefonte ee — Second Annual High School Fair at Hublersburg. The boys of the Hublersburg High schoo! will hold their second annual fair in the High school building at that place, on Wednesday, Nov. 17. The program promises to be very instructive in the development of ag- riculture. It will include exhibits by all the one-room schools and the High school in the township. These exhibits will be from the adults and the boys and girls of the entire town- ship. They will consist of corn, po- tatoes, fruit, grain, poultry, eggs, canned goods and fancy work, baked goods and school work. Ribbons will be awarded to the winners of first and second places and a valuable prize will be given to the one-room school having the best exhibit. Competitive games will take place in the morning with a basket picnic in the High school building at noon. At 1 o’clock a song leader will conduct Community singing. At 1.15 a series of short talks will be given by H. C. Knandel, Head of the Poultry Dept., State College; S. G. Rogers, County Superintendent of Schools, and R. C. Blaney, County Agricultural Agent. At 2.15 prizes will be awarded. At 2.30 the High school boys and girls will stage volley ball games with the Centre Hall High school boys and girls as their opponents. WORTH TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS TO HAVE SHOW ALSO. On Friday, Nov. 19, the schools of Worth township will hold their Junior | fair at Port Matilda. The Rev. Homer C. Knox, of Bellefonte, will be the speaker for the occasion. All the schools of the townships will contri- bute to the exposition and during the afternoon the Port High school boys and girls will contest in an out door | basket ball game. Honor Roll in the Aaronsburg High School. J. R. Harvey, principal of the High school at Aaronsburg, has issued the first “honor roll” of the new school year. It has to do with only the two upper classes of the school. In the Senior class Leroy Warntz is first, Martha Smith and Lee Pressler second, Earl Rider and Kermit Orwig third, and Stella Hazel fourth. In the Junior class Paul Bower and Hazel Winkleblech are first, Tammie Stover second, Martha Stover and Marion Weaver third and Eleanore Ruppe fourth. BOALSBURG. Miss Beulah Fortney is visiting the Sesqui. Rev. Wagner is attending confer- ence at Pleasant Gap. Miss Elizabeth Meyer, of Mifflin- ville, was a. week-end visitor in town. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Charles’ Miller, of Marietta, are visiting Rev. and Mrs. Moyer. Mrs. Maude C. Johnsonbaugh, of State College, was a week-end visitor at the home of Wm. Brouse. Prof. O. F. Smith spent part of last week in Philadelphia, having accom- panied a class of Penn State students to visit different medical institutions. i The Women’s Missionary society of the Lutheran church will hold their cannual Thanksgiving bake sale on | Wednesday afternoon, November 24th. Rev. Kirkpatrick will conduct pre- paratory services in the Presbyterian church this Friday evening at 7.30. Communion services on Sunday moin- ing at 11 o'clock. ene sess fp Apes —— —Get your job work done here. — Clarence Zeigler, an employee of the Potter-Hoy Hdw. Co., in this place, had a collision with a Whiterock Quarries dinkey engine, on Tuesday afternoon, that might have ended Clarence, but it only wrecked the Ford truck he was driving. He was hauling’ a load of stone in Pleasant Gap and did not notice the dinkey approach- ing the highway crossing until it was: too late to stop. He hit it broadside. ——John Harter and Nevin Bartley, of this place, and Jos. Neff, of Jack- sonville, were hunting for squirrels on the mountain, in Curtin’s gap, Tuesday afternoon, when they dis- covered an entire coon family on one tree. They shot them all, a mother coon and three half-growns. Two Weeks After Christmas. You wake up bright and early Christmas morning. You open the stockings. Christ- mas presents on Christmas morning are the most wonderful, beautiful things in the: world. Under the soft light of Christmas candles, every present looks like a priceless treasure. On the day after Christmas, you begin to look at your presents more carefully. It is easier to decide which ones you like Lest. One week after Christmas, your prefer- ences are very definite. Two weeks after Christmas, you bave to stop and think a minute to remember what some of your friends gave you. Why not give your friends a Christmas present that they cannot forget, and would not if they could? The Youth's Companion comes once every week—fifty-two times im: a year. For $2.00, what present could you possibly buy that would be more useful, more used, and better appreciated ? Just send your order to the address. below and Santa Claus will take care of delivering the Companion to your home or to a friend. Subscribers will receive: 1. The Youth's Companion—52 issues in 1927, and 2. The remaining issues of 1926. All for only $2. 3. Or include McCall's Magazine, the: monthly authority on fashions. Both publications, only $2.50. THE YOUTH’'S COMPANION S N Dept., Boston, Mass. Subscriptions Received at this Office, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OR SALE.—Four Ford Trucks, with: Anthony Dump Body and Ruxstell axles. Inquire of American Lime: DMINISTRATRIX NOTICE.—Letters. A of administration on the estate of Thomas S. Hazel, Dec’d., late of the- Borough of Bellefonte, Centre county, Pennsylvania, having been granted the un- dersigned, all persons knowing themselves. indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment thereof and those having claims should present them prop- erly authenticated, to ELIZABETH N. HAZEL. Gettig & Bower, Attys. Administratrix. 71-4516t Bellefonte, Pa.. Boys’ Shoes $2.85 Boys Dress and School Shoes sold for $2.85 at YEAGERS TINY BOOT SHOP are equal in quality to any shoes sold at $3.50. This low price is made possible by the very low cost of operating our store. Please note that this is YEAGER’S TINY BOOT SHOP advertisement. Not Yeager’s Old shoe store. rs Ti 71-35tf ~~ Public Sale! Kofman & Co., will offer at Public Sale at their place of business, opposite the P. R. R. Passenger Sta- tion in Bellefonte, on Tuesday, November 16th Beginning at 1:00 P. M. the following personal property; to- wit: ~ WELL MATED TEAM OF HORSES 5 and 6 years old, weight 2800; will work anywhere. Big Lot of Stable Equipment One hand-made set of Double Harness, brass mounted com- plete Housings and Collars; one set of Double Harness, new Bridles, new Collars; one set of Single Harness, new with leather Collars. L. F. MAYES, Auct. TWO VERY GOOD CONKLIN WAGONS almost new, special made beds; also Scraper, Plow, Harrow, Wagon Top, Automobile Trailer, Garden Cultivator, 3 or 4 A-1 Bosch Dixie Magnetos, Potato Fork, 5-gal. Oil Can with pump, Churn, 1-gal. Freezer, Wringer. Seven Automobiles and Trucks one 1925 Ford Dump Truck, one 1925 Ford Coupe, one Ford Touring, one Studebaker Big Six 7-pass. Touring, one Stude- baker Special Six 5-pass. Touring (Shugert Estate), one Studebaker Special Six Roadster, one model 22 one-ton Inter-- national Truck. Two Dwelling Houses in Brown Row, South Potter St., recently bought from the Bush Estate. : KOFMAN & COMPANY PVAAAAAAAAA VAAN SSNS SIS IIIS SINS