Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 26, 1926, Image 8

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    Demorrali ald.
Bellefonte, Pa., November 26, 1926.
EE ——————————————————————————————————
NEWS FROM TOWN AND COUNTY.
——The Catholic Daughters of
America will hold their annual bazaar
and food sale Saturday, December 4th.
— At their cafeteria and bazar, on
Friday evening, the ladies of the
Methodist church cleared the tidy sum
of $122.00.
— Isobel Grove, Mrs. Lawrence
McClure, Mrs. Ward Fisher and
Joseph Hoy, are all patients of Dr.
Waterworth at the Clearfield hospital.
——Just 217 people from Bellefonte
took advantage of the second excur-
sion to the Sesqui, in Philadelphia,
which left here at 10 o’clock on Sat-
urday night.
——The Street department did a
good job, last week, in filling up the
deep gutter on the south side of
Allegheny street, between Spring
street and the Diamond.
——Everybody welcome at a chicken
and waffle supper to be held at the
Lutheran church, Bellefonte, Thurs-
day evening, December 2nd, from 5
to 7.30. Adults, 75c.; children, 40c.
——Rev. P. N. Osborne, of Rocky
Grove Presbyterian church, has ten-
dered his resignation, effective Janu-
ary 1st, to accept the position as
chaplain at the Rockview penitentiary.
——Mzrs. John J. Reginold, of Spring
street, went to Philadelphia, on Wed-
nesday of last week, where she en-
tered the Lankanan hospital to under-
go an operation for chronic appendi-
citis.
——State policeman Harry Woomer
is a patient in the Centre county hos-
pital as the result of injuries sustain-
ed in a motor accident near Hecla
park, on Saturday. His injuries, how-
ever, are not considered serious.
——DMr. and Mrs. George A. Kelley
are making preparations to move from
their Spring street home to the home
of Mr. Kelley’s father, H. P. Kelley,
on Linn street; expecting for the
present to rent their home on Spring
street.
——Word has been received in
Bellefonte of the marriage, at Detroit,
Mich., on October 18th, of Fred Robb,
a former Bellefonte boy, and Miss
Pauline Jacquemain, of Detroit. Mr.
Robb is a brother of Mrs. Harry Mur-
torff, of Bellefonte. 1
——A food sale will be held at
Bohn’s store, in Lemont, Saturday
afternoon and = evening, November
27th, by the Ladies Aid society of the
Methodist church of that place. Some
very fine eats will be offered and they
ask the patronage of the public.
——The real estate of the late L.
H. Gettig was not sold at public sale
on Saturday. The best bid received
was six thousand dollars and the heifs
would not leave the property go for
that sum. An effort will be made to
dispose of the property at private
sale.
——Rags” Madeira, former Penn
State foot-ball star and intercollegiate
heavy weight boxing champion while
in college, made his debut as a profes-
sional boxer, in Pittsburgh, Monday
night. He knocked out his opponent,
Jack Rinko, of McKeesport, in less
than two minutes.
The ‘Keystone Power corpora-
tion started work on Tuesday morning
on the construction of their new line
to Zion and Heela Park. Inasmuch as
a number of people at Zion have their
homes already wired and fixtures in
they are anxiously waiting for the
completion of the line to that town.
—On Tuesday afternoon, about five
o’clock, one of the Academy students
drove Mr. Hughes’ Reo car up in front
of the Academy and left the motor run
while he ran into the building. The
vibration of the motor loosened the
brakes and the car ran down the hill
and crashed into the barn of T. Clay-
ton Brown, not only damaging the
barn but almost completely ruining
the car,
——Jack Morrison ard Robert
Baney came within an dce of getting
an involuntary bath, between three
and four o’clock on Monday morning.
Driving out south Water street in
Baney’s car they ran onto the pave-
ment below the falls and knocked off
two of the iron standards and broke
~one of the guard rails. It was a close
call from going down over the stone
wall into Spring Creek.
——On Sunday evening Richard
_ Mabus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
. Mabus, started on a trip to Oak Hall,
driving a Ford car reconstructed into
a “bug.” Out near the Independent
«Oil company’s plant one front wheel
«collapsed and the young man was
thrown from the car, sustaining in-
juries which necessitated his being
taken to the Centre County hospital.
Fortunately no bones are broken and
while he suffered considerably from
shock and a general shaking up no
serious consequences are anticipated.
——There were just 1253 paid ad-
missions to the two nights perform-
ance of “Cheer Up,” at the Richelieu
theatre Thursday and Friday even-
ings, and after all bills were paid and
a division made with the promoter,
the sum of $505 was left to turn over
to the Kiwanis club for their under-
privileged child movement. It is un-
derstood that the project the Kiwanis
has “in view is a clinic for crippled
children to be held in Bellefonte, the
money te be spent in bringing here
an eminent specialist to have charge
of any cases brought to the clinic.
HUNTERS PREPARING
FOR THE DEER CHASE.
Hundreds of Armed Gunners will Trek
to Centre County Mountains
Within Next Few Days.
The 1926 deer hunting season will
open next Wednesday and the next
few days will witness a general exo-
dus of hunters to the mountainous
districts of Centre county, all eager
to be on the ground, with camp all in
order, for the morning of the opening
day. Naturally the greatest number
of Centre county hunters will flock
to the Seven mountains, and the big
influx from all sections of the State
will also go into that locality, where
most of them either have permanent
camps or their regular camp sites
where they have been pitching their
tents year after year. The Seven
mountains have been the most prolific
field for deer hunting the past four
or five years, and it is only natural
that the man who wants a good chance
to get his deer should go where they
are the most plentiful. And, accord-
ing to reports, there is no end of deer
in that locality, the only question will
be the number of bucks of legal
status.
But the Seven mountains are not
the only deer refuge in the county.
They are in the Barrens, in the Nit-
any mountain chain, on Brush moun-
tain and on the Alleghenies, though
the latter are not populated as thick-
ly now as they used to be ten and
twenty years ago. But the hunting
party that goes into the Barrens,
from Waddle up to the old Juniata ore
mines, is just as likely to run across
a deer as the man in the Seven moun-
tains. Little Sugar valley is also an-
other good deer country, and the Mec-
Mullen—Yarnell crowd will probably
be found there this year as they have
the past four or five seasons.
Every season during the past three
years a monster buck, the monarch
of the forest, has been seen in Green
valley below Pleasant Gap, and a
number of hunters have made a try
at bringing him to earth, but he seems
to bear a charmed life. He is deserib-
ed as having a ponderous pair of ant-
lers that seemingly have a spread of a
yard in width. A huge deer supposed
to be the same buck has been seen in
that locality during the summer, and
we are constrained to wonder if any
hunter will prove the lucky shot this
year.
Reverting to the Seven mountain
region, motorists who have crossed
from Bellefonte to Lewistown within
the past month; going by way of the
detour, have counted as high as forty-
two deer seen in going one way, while
it is nothing unusual to see anywhere
from half a dozen up. Of course the
most of the deer are probably does
but there will naturally be a fair per-
centage of bucks.
On Tuesday morning trainmen on
the westbound train on the Lewisburg
railroad counted seventeen deer at
Cherry Run, and among them were
several fine bucks. In fact the men
aver that hardly a day passes that
they do not see a number of deer as
the train speeds through that section.
While every man cannot get his
deer the Watehman wishes all success
and would like to have every hunting
party make an effort to get to this of-
fice next Wednesday evening, without
fail, a report of their first day’s hunt.
If out of reach of a telephone but in
touch with a game warden ask him
to report your kill.
Young Men Offer Blood to Save Sick
Companion.
The Watchman last week referred
to the very serious condition of Joseph
Hoy, in the Clearfield hospital. He
is suffering with tuberculosis of the
bone and this week it was decided by
the physicians at the hospital that
blood transfusion was the only thing
that would prolong his life. When this
fact was made known six young men
of Bellefonte and Milesburg, members
of the Bellefonte chapter of DeMolay,
to which Joseph belongs, volunteered
to give of their blood to save the life
of their young friend. The six were
Andrew Runkle, Clarence Thompson,
Joseph Herman, James Bower and
Hoy Royer, of Bellefonte, and Willis
McClellan, of Milesburg.
They went to Clearfield, on Monday,
in the Runkle and Royer cars and.all
submitted to the blood test, which
showed that of Joseph Herman and
of the sick young man and the two of
them tossed a penny to see which one
should have the privilege of supplying
the blood and it fell to the lot
of McClellan. Young Hoy had
a blood transfusion early in the sum-
mer to which he made quick response
and it is hoped the same result will
follow this one.
Rockview Penitentiary Raises Big
Crop of Potatoes.
While practically every farmer in
Centre county had all kinds of trou-
ble this fall getting their potatoes out
of the ground, and quite a number of
them have still some to raise, the
overseers on the prison farms at the
Rockview penitentiary kept plugging
away digging their tubers rain or no
rain, with the result that they got
their entire crop out, and it was some
crop at that, something over eleven
thousand bushels. And none of the
potatoes showing any indication of rot
or brown. spots. :
tampa fees tema—
——Harry Langdon in “The Strong
Man,” at the Scenic next Monday and
Tuesday.
Willis McClellan to be similar to that |
Christmas Cards.
"We have three very fine lines of «|
Christmas Cards which we would
be pleased to have you call and
They can be had in lots from 25
up, either engraved, embossed,
printed or blank, so that you can
write your own greeting and give
it a bit more of the personal touch.
Two of the lines are from the
most exclusive makers of Christ-
mas Cards in America. The other
includes cards less expensive but
just as useful in carrying your
greeting—for, after all—its the
fact that you thought of your
friend at the Christmas Season
that counts—not the price of the
card that carries your thought.
Come in and see our Cards.
They are all attractive. We will
not sell them, however, in assorted
lots or accept orders for less than
.
——For mother, let the gift be
worthy of your thoughts of her. Solid
mahogany Martha Washington serv-
ing tables, Windsor chairs, spinnet
desks, tea wagons, gate-leg tables and
easy rockers at W. R. Brackbill’s.
1-47
School Children to Rebuild “Pennsyl-
vania House.”
School children of Centre county
are in their annual campaign for
orphan children in the Near East Re-
lief schools in Greece, Palestine and
Armenia. The pupils of our schools
have been supporting a group of
refugee orphans there the past years
and the interest thus aroused in the
people of Bible lands was reflected in
all their school work. Geography,
history, and other students benefited
directly from the keen interest which
the children have in this philanthropy.
This year sympathy in the Near
East has been further stimulated by
the recent earthquakes,which centered
in the great city of orphans maintain-
ed by the Near East Relief in Cen-
tral Armenia. ‘One of the buildings
severely damaged by the quakes was
“Pennsylvania House,” a large dormi-
tory housing 500 of the refugee or-
phans who are supported by the Penn-
sylvania schools.
The earthquakes resulted in 500
deaths and the destruction of 12,000
Armenian homes, but fortunately none
of the children in the American or-
phanages were killed, and only a few
were injured. The earthquakes began
on October 22nd, shocks continuing
with gradually diminishing violence
for more than three weeks. During
this period, the number of shocks
averaged five per day. It is now be-
lieved that the worst is over, although
slight tremors will no doubt recur
from time to time for several months.
Already, in the midst of severe win-
ter weather, the children of the Amer-
ican orphan city are beginning to ig-
pair the damage to their buildings.
Funds that Pennsylvania school chil-
dren will raise this year will go for
repairing the earthquake damage and
caring for children made homeless in
this great catastrophe.
Em , —
——“We’re in the Navy Now,” with
Beery and Hatton, at the Moose
theatre next Friday and Saturday,
Admission,15 and 35 cents. 47-1t
Uncle Tom’s Cabin Coming.
The Mason Bros. “Uncle Tom’s
Cabin” will appear at the Moose thea-
tre on Monday, November 29th, mat-
inee and night. No play ever written
is better known in all parts of the
United States to all classes of people
than “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” not even
the plays of the immortal Shakes-
peare, for the play of slavery has been
given in every village and hamlet in
this broad country, and it has been
estimated that it is being played
somewhere in this land of ours on
every day in the year. Mason Bros.
have given it a handsome mounting,
and as played by their company, the
play leaves nothing to be desired,
either in scenery or players. A large
company of negroes are with the com-
pany and will be seen in plantation
pastimes and festivities. :
The role of Uncle Tom is in the
hands of Frank Finney. The company
is a large one numbering thirty peo-
ple, 5ix Siberian bloodhounds and a car
of special scenery. Prices, matinee, 15
and 50 cents; night, 35, 50 and 75
cents.
——A class of fourteen new mem-
bers was confirmed in St. John’s Epis-
copal church, Bellefonte, on Sunday,
by Bishop J. H. Darlington, of Har-
rishurg.
Meeting of Woman’s Club.
The regular monthly meeting of the
Woman's club of Bellefonte will pe
held in the High school building on
Monday evening, November 29th.
Members of the Civic club of Pleasant
Gap, which was recently organized,
will be entertained by the club. Be-
PRISONER PREFERS DEATH.
TO LIFE IN PENITENTIARY.
Climbs 150 Foot Smokestack and
Plunges Head First Down
the Inside of It.
Preferring death to life in the peni-
tentiary Nick Rost, a Washington
county prisoner at Rockview, climbed
the iron ladder to the top of the big
smokestack at the heating plant of
the new cell block, on Friday evening,
then plunged down, head first on the
inside of it where his dead body was
found on Saturday afternoon. The
smokestack is 150 feet in height but
the man’s entire fall down to the
clean-out door back of the boilers
would be about 170 feet.
Rost, a native of Austria, was sent
up from Washington county for twq
and a half to five years for voluntary
manslaughter. His short term was
up on October 26th, but he was being
held for a portion of his maximum
term. He was present at the supper-
time roll call on Friday evening but
when the final check in was made at
nine o’clock that night he could not
be found. Naturally the thought oc-
curred to prison officials that he had
made his escape and the detail of state
police in Bellefonte was notified and
penitentiary guards dispatched to var-
ious points on a search for the man.
On Saturday morning a thorough
investigation was made to ascertain,
if possible, how the man got away but
not a clue could be discovered. There
wasn’t a cut in the wire stockade and
it didn’t seem possible that he could
climb over the twelve foot barbed
wire enclosure, so that considerable
mystery surrounded his disappear-
ance. The mystery was intensified on
Saturday forenoon when a fellow
prisoner informed deputy warden Mec-
Farland that Nick had declared to
him that he “would kill himself.”
Search around the prison grounds,
however, failed to reveal Rost, either
dead or alive.
And the mystery of his disappear-
ance went unsolved until after two
o'clock on Saturday afternoon. The
fireman at the heating plant was an-
noyed because of a poor draft on the
fire under his boilers. Going to the
rear of the big battery of boilers he
opened the cleanout door under the
big smokestack and was horrified to
find the body of a man in a crouched
position, head downward. Prison of-
ficials were promptly notified and the
body removed from the stack, and it
was then discovered that it was the
the body of the missing prisoner. He
had evidently climbed up the ladder
under cover of darkness and had made
his fatal plunge unseen.
Rost was 383 years old and so far as
known had no relatives in this coun-
try. An inquest was held for the
purpose of officially determining the
death as suicide, after which the body
was buried in the penitentiary ceme-
tery.
——For Dad or Jack we have twen-
ty-eight different styles of smoker's
cabinets. An easy rocking chair and
foot-stool, a reading lamp or a Globe-
Wernicke book case. W. R. Brach-
bill’s furniture store. 71-47.
Prospective Airmail Bidder Visited
: Bellefonte Last Week.
E. C. Dickerson, of Chicago, said
to be the oldest airplane pilot in the
United States and the man who was
largely instrumental in organizing the
companies which are now carrying
airmail from Chicago to Seattle,
Wash., and Chicago to New Orleans,
was a Bellefonte visitor last Thursday
night. He made a flight here from
Chicago and on Friday morning con-
tinued on to Hadley field, N. J. Mr.
Dickerson, it is said, is a prospective
bidder for the carrying of the night
airmail between New York and Chi-
cago and his purpose in making the
flight last week was to obtain first
hand knowledge of what pilots are up
against in such weather conditions as
prevailed on Thursday and Friday.
Mr. Dickerson stated while in Belle-
fonte that if he decided to put in a
bid and was successful in securing the
contract, that he would fly his ships
over the present course of the night
airmail, retaining the landing fields
in Bellefonte and at Cleveland and
Bryan, Ohio.
——DBrighten up the home at
Christmas time with a Junior floor
lamp with washable, hand painted
shades of genuine linen at W. R.
Brachbill’s furniture store. 71-4)
—Word has reached this office that
Aaron C. Kepler, of Ferguson town-
ship, has been handsomely remember-
ed in the will of his uncle, the late
Aaron C. Kepler, of Lancaster. In
fact rumors place his legacy as high
as half a million dollars. We hope it’s
true. We always like to hear of
foreign money coming to Centre
county and if the potato wizard of
Ferguson township gets his hands
ginning at eight-thirty o’clock, short ive Pn i
talks will be given on the subject ‘on half a million he is likely to rev
“Child Welfare Work.” > | olutionize potato growing in that end
The Rev. |
Reed O. Steely, Mrs. Reed O. Steely, °F the county.
Miss Helen E. C. Overton and Miss |
“Your Home Comes First.”
* 47-1t. ' next Friday and Saturday.
Anna McCauley, the community nurse,
will discuss their phases of the work.
All who are interested in what is be-
ing done toward helping the child of
to-day become the useful citizen of
to-morrow are cordially invited to at-
tend this meeting.
——Adolph Menjou and Alice Joyce
in “The Ace of Cads,” at the Scenic
47-1t
| Overstuffed and
: suits, bed-room and dining furniture
reed living-room
for Xmas giving make happier homes.
W. R. Brachbill furniture store. 71-47
A ————— A i tras—————.
——Mrs. Dorothy Bible Schad is.
| organizing a community orchestra and
at the first rehearsal, on Monday ev-
ening, twenty-six members turned out
for practice.
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Miss Anne Keichline is visiting in
Philadelphia, a guest of Miss Helen Shel-
lenberger.
—Miss Blanche Underwood has been
visiting for a week with her brother, Irvin
Underwood and his family, in Erie.
—N. A. Staples, district highway en-
gineer, made a business trip to Philadel-
phia and Harrisburg early in the week.
—Dr. David Dale has been in Philadel-
phia for a part of the week, having gone
down for the University--Cornell game yes-
terday.
—Jerome Harper was in Bellefonte over
Sunday, home on his monthly visit with
Mrs. Harper, at Mrs. Charles Smith's on
Bishop St.
~—Mrs. Harold Kirk and Mrs. Augustus
Heverly will go to Lewistown today to at-
tend a bridge luncheon to be given by Mrs.
Amos Cole.
—Miss Florence Sebring, of Williams-
port, bas been a guest of Miss Adaline
Olewine within the week, at her home on
north Allegheny street.
—Miss Myrtle Clemens, who had been
visiting with the Clemens family in Centre
county for the past year, left Saturday to
return to her at Wichita, Kansas.
—Miss Anna Badger, with her mother
and sister, Mrs. Harry Badger and Mrs.
Robert Willard, will motor to Williams-
port to-morrow for a day in the shops.
—Mrs. J. E. Ward had as guests of
honor on Thanksgiving day Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Ward, of Chicago, and their small
daughter, who is Mrs. Ward's only grand-
child.
—Mrs. Harvey Weaver, who is at present
with her mother, Mrs. George Hockenberry,
at State College, was in Bellefonte on
Wednesday for several hours, some busi-
ness interests necessitating the trip dawn.
—Dr. Thomas Morgan was here from
Philadelphia in consultation with Dr. Co-
burn Rogers on the illness of the latter's
mother, Mrs. Evelyn Rogers, whose illness
has been regarded as critical for several
weeks.
—Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Beatty and
their youngest son, William, have been on
one of their frequent visits to Pittsburgh
this week, having driven out Monday for
the week and to see the Penn State-Pitts-
burgh game yesterday.
~—Mrs. Sara Brown, who has been here
from Renovo for a week, is making her
annual fall visit in Bellefonte expecting to
remain for a part of December. During
her stay she has been with Mrs. Frank
Warfield, at her apartment in Petrikin
hall.
—Mary Woodring, who is taking her
first year at Irving college, is home
spending the Thanksgiving vacation with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Kline Wood-
ring. Miss Woodring has had the honor
of being elected president of the Freshman
class.
—Mr. and Mrs. W. BE. Clark, of east Linn
street, and their three children, were
among those who drove to Pittsburgh this
week. Both Mr. and Mrs. Clark being
natives of Pittsburgh their time while
there is being spent with members of their
immediate families.
—Mrs. James A. Straub and her little
seven months old daughter, Mary Alice,
of Buffalo, N. Y.,, came to Bellefonte on
Sunday and will spend the winter at the
home of the child’s grandfather and aunt,
Elmer C. Straub and ‘Miss Anne Straub,
on east Linn street. !
—Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Kilpatrick and fam-
ily have been spending the week in Phila-
delphia, guests at several dinner parties
given by the Clayton family of whom
Mrs. Kilpatrick is a member. During their
stay in the city they have been house
guests of these relatives.
—W. F. McCoy motored in from Am-
bridge, on Saturday, and spent Sunday
with his wife and daughter, at the home of
Mrs. McCoy's mother, Mrs. Oscar Wetzel.
Mrs. McCoy who has been in Bellefonte
for two months or more, will return to her
home in Ambridge within the next few
days.
—Mrs. G. Murray Andrews returned to
Bellefonte, Monday, and opened her home
on Allegheny street, which had been closed
during her six weeks absence in Philadel-
phia. Mr. Andrews accompanied her here,
but returned next day to New York to
complete arrangements for their sailing for
England, in December, to spend the winter.
E—————
—Leo Gummo, of Rib Lake, Wis. and
his sister, Mrs. Walter Woklebeer, of
Thorpe, returned home this week. Mr.
Gummo and Mrs. Woklebeer had come in
two weeks ago with the body of their
aunt, the late Miss Kate Gummo, who
died while on a visit to the Gummo home
in Wiseonsin. The time while here was
spent mostly with relatives whom they had
never seen until their visit east.
—R. H. Anthony, Freight Claim agent of
the P. and L. BE. R. R., and Mrs. Anthony,
came in from Pittsburgh last Saturday,
Mr. Anthony being an over night guest at
the Bush house while Mrs. Anthony joined
her mother, Mrs. Katherine Furey Hunter,
at Pleasant Gap. Mrs. Hunter, accom-
panied by Mrs. Anthony had come to Cen-
tre county two weeks before for a visit at
the John Larimer home and Mrs. Anthony
had returned to be with her mother on the
trip back to Pittsburgh.
—Bellefonte had two distinguished visi-
tors, last Friday, in the persons of Thom-
as A. Edison and Henry Ford. The two
gentlemen were en-route from Washing-
ton, D. C., to Chicago and had luncheon
at the Brockerhoff house, where Mr. and
Mrs. Edison were over night guests sev-
eral months ago. They traveled in a Lin-
coln car but if Mr. Ford took a glance
around the Diamond when he arrived in
Bellefonte he no doubt saw plenty of
Fords parked upon the street.
rote aeieraapes
——Gardner B. Grove, Centre Hall,
recently shot an eagle on Nittany |
mountain which measured seven feet
one inch from tip to tip of wings, and
three feet from the tip of the beak to !
the tip of the tail. When Mr. Grove
got hold of the big bird he found its
talons covered with blood, evidence
that it had been feasting on some bird
or animal, but he was unable to find
the remains.
——Harry L. Camp, well remem-
bered by many friends here, is now
located in Providence, R. I, after a
number of years residence in Lynch-
burg, Va.
i ————————————————————————_——
Bellefonte Academy Downed by the
Pitt Freshmen. %
The strong Bellefonte Academy
football team lost its first game of the
1926 season to the Pitt Freshmen, at.
Lock Haven, on Saturday. Two
thousand people saw the game and the
general opinion was that the best
team won, although some critics were
disposed to think that the Academy
did not put up its best game. The
score was 20 to 0, all the points being
made in the first half. In the second
half the Academy took a brace and for
a time displayed considerable aggres-
siveness but they were not able to
make much progress against the Pitt
defense. In the very beginning of the
game the Pitt yearlings uncorked a
few criss-cross passes that completely
outwitted the Bellefonte players, and
it was this play that enabled them to
score three touchdowns.
It is only fair to the Academy team
to say that they couldn’t have been
caught in worse physical condition
anytime during the season than they
were on Saturday. Eight of the reg-
ular players were handicapped with
injuries, some of whom never got into
the game and the others played only a
small part of the time. Had all the
men been in the pink of perfection the
story might have been different.
The Academy game booked for
Scranton yesterday was cancelled and
the final game for the season will be
with the Dean Academy, of Boston,
Mass., at Williamsport tomorrow.
The Academy has booked a game
with Randolph College, at Cisco,
Texas, for Christmas day and Mr.
Hughes is in correspondence with two
other teams, one in southern Texas
and one in Oklahoma, for a game on
New Year’s day; all of which means
that the Academy team will get an-
other trip to the south-west during the
Holidays. >
Capt. C. L. Arnold Signally Honored.
Capt. C. L. Arnold, U. S. N., who
still considers Bellefonte his home, has
lately been the recipient of very unu-
sual honors from his superiors in the
Navy. He is in command of Destroyer
Squadron 12 and has just been advised
that his Squadron has been awarded
premier position of all Squadrons and
Divisions for exceptional battle
efficiency and competition for indi-
vidual ships during the recent naval
maneuvers.
Having won all three of the big
prizes Capt. Arnold has received a
letter of thanks from President Cool-
idge and a letter of commendation
from Secretary of the Navy, Wilbur.
Capt. Arnold, it will be remembered,
is a son-in-law of J udge and Mrs. Ellis
L. Orvis, of this place, having married
their eldest daughter, Anne, now de-
ceased.
SE —— ee ————
The Presbyterian’ congregation
of Philipsburg, which has been with-
out a regular pastor since the death
of Rev. John T. Scott last June, has
extended a call to Rev. Ralph W.
Illingworth Jr, of Fredericktown,
Ohio, who has accepted and will go
to Philipsburg about the middle of De-
cember. The young divine is but
twenty-seven years old and a son of
Rev. Ralph Illingworth, a former
Methodist minister, and a brother of
Henry 8S. Illingworth, of Ferguson
township, Centre county.
———— lp ———————
——For the Kiddies Christmas we
havedoll-carriages, children’s rockers
and high chairs, cribs, bassinets, baby
walkers and strollers. W. R. Brach-
bill’s furniture store. 71-47
——While Christmas shopping will
occupy the minds of many people now-
a-days it is always best to take a lit-
tle diversion every day, and the best
place in Bellefonte to do so is at the
Scenic watching the motion pictures.
They will divert your mind from the
worries of the day and you'll be en-
tertained and amused to that extent
that you'll go home refreshed and
ready for a good night's sleep. The
best pictures are always shown at the
Scenie. :
——————— lp ee——————
——Though a little belated an-
nouncement was made this week of
the marriage of John Rosenhoover, of
Bellefonte, and Miss Margaret Brooks,
of Philipsburg, the wedding having
taken place in Cumberland, Md., early
in June. Mr. Rosenhoover has been
located in Altoona for some time past,
where he was in the employ of the
Bell Telephone company, but he has
returned to Bellefonte and anticipates
embarking in the bakery business in
the near future.
——Reserve your Hoosier Kitchen
Cabinet and Globe-Wernicke Book
case for Xmas delivery now. Licens-
ed agencies for Bellefonte at W. R.
Brachbill’s furniture store. 71-47
For Rent.—On or after Dec. 1st,
Mrs. H. C. Valentine house on W. Cur-
tin St. Apply to Mrs. Valentine, Bell
phone 337-R. 46-tf
——Wallace Beery and Raymond
Hatton in “We're in the Navy Now,”
at Moose theatre next Friday and
Saturday. Admission, 15 and 35 cents.
47-1¢
———————— eee mee—
Bellefonte Gran Markets.
Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co.
Wheat - - - - - - - $1.30
y wo wl ee Ci 90
Oats Bie ee - 40
Corn ieee we 85
Barley - Gmail wl ie i - 70
Buckwheat - - «= - 90