Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, December 10, 1926, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Demonia.
Bellefonte, Pa., December 10, 1926.
A A SSE,
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
——G. Edward Haupt has been
given the contract by the Pennsylva-
nia Railroad company to tear down
the house formerly occupied by H. J.
Hartranft and fill up and level off the
cellar. He is now at work on the job.
——The Board of Pardons last week
refuser the application for a pardon
of James Horvath, of Westmoreland
county, an inmate at Rockview who
has completed a course in mining
engineering under instruction of min-
ing professors at State College.
——Edgar T. Burnside has bought
the entailed Cameron house on north
Spring St., in which Mrs. Nellie
Barnes, of Washington, D. C., had a
life interest. He expects to remodel it
into a duplex. It is the property re-
cently vacated by the Fred Craft fam-
ily.
——Keefer & Nolan, hardware mer-
chants of State College, have bought
the store of the Penn State Hardware
company for $14,500, from C. E. Mey-
ers, taking possession yesterday. They
will run the two stores until the first
of the year then combine them into
.one at the present location of the Penn
State Hardware company.
——And now, it is rumored, the
Bellefonte council is considering the
purchase of a tractor and scraper at a
cost of over two thousand dollars for
the purpose of scraping snow from
the middle of the street to the sides of
the thoroughfare. It won’t get rid of
the snow but merely pile it up where
it will be more of a nuisance that if
packed down on the street.
—While Bellefonte is now in
the throes of real winter all the pave-
ments leading to the Scenic are free of
snow and you can’t find a better place
to spend the long, chilly evenings than
there watching the motion pictures
and listening to the music produced
on that wonderful pipe organ by Miss
Berenice R. Crouse. Combined they
make up a program of entertainment
always interesting and enjoyable. By
watching the weekly programs always
printed in the Watchman you can keep
informed on the pictures to be shown
every night in the week.
——We’re willing to admit that the
man who prophesied that winter would
set in early knew what he was talking
about, but we hope the individual who
says it will stay late is simply a
numbskull of a weather prophet. With
a ten inch snow fall on Sunday and the
mercury hovering around anywhere
from 4 to 18 degrees below zero Tues-
day morning, according to location
and the make of the thermometer, we
feel confident that the old-timers
couldn’t refer to anything more wintry
like for this time of year.
sooner it gets it over and done with
the better we'll like it.
——A Chevrolet coupe belonging to
F. S. Bloom, of the American Lime
and Stone company, was stolen on
Tuesday night of last week. Mr.
Bloom notified the State highway pa-
And the {to where the animal lay and
| CNETRE COUNTY'S HUNT
YIELDS OVER 600 BUCKS.
A Score or More of Illegal Deer
Also Fall a Prey to Too
Eager Hunters.
While it has been an utter impos-
sibility to get anything like an ac-
curate account of the deer killed in
Centre county during the past nine
days of the open hunting season esti-
mates of game wardens and hunters
place the number in excess of six
hundred, with a probability that the
total will reach 750 by the close of
the season. The heavy snow fall of
Sunday has greatly impeded the work
of the various game wardens in keep-
ing tab on the many camps in the Al-
leghenies and Seven mountains with
the result that they are unable to give
anything like a correct estimate. How-
ever, game protector Thomas G.
Mosier states that from information
he has received he feels confident
that five hundred bucks were killed
the first two or three days, and that
the total number will run over seven
hundred by the end of the season.
The deep snow and extreme cold of
Monday had the effect of driving many
hunting camps from the mountains,
but quite a number were ready to
come out, anyway, as they had killed
their limit of deer. Every day this
week hunting parties have been pass-
ing through Bellefonte on their way
home from the Seven mountains with
from one to three deer strapped onto
their automobiles, and very few hunt-
ers have returned entirely empty
handed. While the Seven Mountains
have been the most prolific field for the
hunters the Alleghenies this year have
also yielded up many deer, while the
Nittany mountains and the Barrens
have also furnished their full quota.
As an evidence of how plentiful the
bucks were in the Seven mountains
the Pitcairn hunting club went home
on Tuesday with four nice ones. In
conversation with one of the hunters
the writer was told that they ought
to have shot the limit on the first drive
on Wednesday morning. They had
enough of good shots but missed them.
In fact, while they got but four bucks
they missed a total of twenty-four
good shots.
The Fisher hunting club, over near
the old Cadman place, got their limit
in two days and missed thirty-nine
good shots. This tells the story of
how plentiful the bucks are. Several
hunting parties laid down the rule
when they went into the woods to
shoot nothing less than four prongers,
and with that they bagged their limit
in two days.
: A GOOD STORY.
Many hunting stories have come in
from the mountain camps, one of
which has to do with Clayton Wagner,
of Centre Hall, who shot at a big buck
in the Seven mountains and saw it turn
several somersaults. He went down
was
dumbfounded to see that it had no
horns. Conscience stricken in the be-
lief that he had shot a doe he stood
and watched the animal struggle in
what he supposed were the throes of
death, but was soon amazed and re-
lieved to see it jump up and run away.
trolmen as soon as he discovered the
theft but did not seek the aid of the
local police until Thursday. The same |
evening Mr. Bloom’s car was stolen |
two young men tried to make way |
with the car of Anthony Volyneh, al-
so of north Spring street. They push-
ed the car down to the Lamb street
bridge but could not get it started.
It was probably the same young men
who stole the Bloom car.
Jack Gold, a Crawford county
prisoner who made his escape from
the Rockview penitentiary on August
18th, was captured in Canada last
week and brought to the Centre coun-
ty jail. Gold was employed in the
tailor shop at the penitentiary and
donning a guard’s suit he had mend-
ed left the shop and walked out of the
stockade without attracting any no-
tice. The escape was made between
two and four o’clock. Gold was serv-
ing a sentence for larceny, breaking
and entering and receiving stolen
goods. He will now have to serve an
additional sentence of three to six
years.
Ex-Sheriff Henry Kline is in
the Centre County hospital with a
badly injured leg as the result of an
accident at the plant of the Chemical
Lime company, about four o’clock on
Menday afternoon. Mr. Kline is plant
boss and for several days previous
they had been having trouble with
their stone cars jumping the track and
he decided to make a personal inves-
tigation. Jumping a car he road
- down the incline but one of the car
wheels broke and Mr. Kline was
thrown off. His right knee struck an
iron pin, cutting an ugly gash in the
flesh and fracturing the knee cap. He
was taken to the hospital where he is
now under tratement.
——Fred Carter, of Philadelphia,
head of the State Humane Society,
came to Bellefonte last week and on
Thursday and Friday, in company
with George Glenn, county agent,
visited half a dozen sections in Cen-
tre county from which complaints had
been received relative to the mistreat-
ment of animals. In most every in-
stance they found the complaints well
founded, horses being poorly fed, bad-
ly housed or not housed at all, and
ill-treated in other ways. The own-
ers were given the alternative of tak-
ing proper care of their stock or fac-
ing presecution and they chose the
former. There are a number of other
cases in the county which will also be
He then went back to where the ani-
mal was standing when he shot and
was completely chagrined to find a
set of five pronged antlers which his
shot had knocked from the deer’s
head.
ONE HUNTER LOST.
Considerable excitement was oc-
casioned down near Zion last Friday
night by the announcement that
George Carson was lost in the Nittany
mountains. Men and boys hunted for
him until midnight then decided to
wait until Saturday morning. But at
that time George turned up. He had
simply spent the night in another
camp.
Mrs. August Korten, of Sunbury,
came into the eastern end of Centre
county, shot a three pronged buck ut
carcass back with her to Sunbury.
Of course with so many bucks killed
there was bcund to be some does and
up to Wednesday of this week game
protector Mosier had record of twen-
ty—either does or spike bucks. Seven-
teen men who had made illegal kills
came forward and admitted the fact
and paid their fine of one hundred dol-
lars.
Among the reports of kills received
at this office are the Albert Bierly
party, of Milesburg, four deer, and the
Lloyd Smith party from the same
place, five deer, both hunting in the
Seven mountains.
The Forest Aikens party, of Miles-
burg, hunting in the Alleghenies, have
two deer and a bear .
Up in the Pine Grove Mills section
the Wilson crowd eame out on Satur-
day with 3 deer; the Weber club re-
turned home with 6, and the Fleetfoots
have 5 and are still in camp. The
Rossman club came out with 6, two of
them 3 points, two 4 points and two 5
points. The Gephart crowd got their
limit the first day.
Stump hunters up in that section
who got their deer are Raymond Kline,
an 8 pointer; Harry McCracken, a 3
pointer; Eddie Weaver, a school boy,
a 4 pointer; Robert Bloom, George
Bohn, Mr. Ellenberger, Homer Grubb,
an 8 pointer which weighed over 200
pounds. :
A Reading party headed by Capt.
Homer C. Fluke bagged three on
Thursday and Friday and returned
home on Saturday.
The Newburg Rod and Gun club, of
Altoona, took home six deer on Tues-
day as the result of their hunt in the
Seven mountains.
looked after.
Down at Madisonburg, last Friday
a distance of 150 yards and took the |
| morning, W. M. Martin, of Sunbury,
was shot in the leg by another mem-
ber of his hunting party. Fortunate-
ly it was only a flesh would and not
serious.
Among the kills in the Seven moun-
tain district the Camp Adams crowd
reported 5, Sweetwood party 6, Elys-
burg Gun Club 4, Camp Red Lion 4,
Lamar party 4, Garden Springs party
and Spring Mills hunters 2 each.
Down in the Paddy Mountain dis-
trict the Shady Nook club got 5, Mt.
Carmel party 4, day hunters at Ingle-
by 9, Coburn day hunters 6, Penn’s
Creek club 4, the Herndon crowd 4,
Mohawks, of Altoona 4, Poe Mills
club 4, Schuylkill Rangers 3, Keystone
club 3, Nittany hunters 6, Selinsgrove
party 4, Decker gun club 4, Cambria
county hunters 5, Yeagertown hunters
4, Sunset club of Centre Hall 4, Terre
Hill club 6, Lancaster party 5, Mc-
Allisterville party 5, Thompsontown
party 6, Ickesburg party 5, Slack
party 4, Juniata club 5, Bradford
party 6, Palmyra party 5, Red Lion
club 6, Zerby party 5, Heaton party 6,
Mexico gun club 6, Manheim party 6,
Pleasant Gap hunters 4, Johnstown
crowd 5, Frazier party 5, and many
others from one to three.
Out at Pleasant Gap day hunters
on Nittany mountain, two of the lucky
shots being a fourteen year old boy
and a woman, the latter Mrs. George
Horner, who shot a four-pronged buck
in her garden.
Safety I'irst Picture to be Shown at
Moose Theatre.
The motion picture is being utilized
more and more every day to illustrate
and demonstrate various facts in busi-
ness and every day life. For some
time past the industries in and around
Bellefonte have been waging a cam-
paign to make their plants accident
proof as well as fool-proof. Safety
committees have been formed whose
duties are to see that all machines
are properly guarded and posted with
warning signs. The most important
thing, however, is to educate the em-
ployees along the lines of safe prac-
tices.
As a means of so doing a safety
motion picture entitled, “Help Your-
self,” will be shown in the Moose
theatre on Tuesday evening, Decem-
ber 14th, under the direction of A. C.
Hewitt, secretary of the quarry sec-
tion of the National Safety Council,
and chairman of the American Lime
and Stone company’s safety commit-
tee. The picture has been loaned for
of Highways and will be presented
conjointly by the American Lime &
Stone Co., the Chemical Lime Co.,
Sutton-Abramsen Engineering com-
pany, Titan Metal company and the
Whiterock quarries, and employees of
all the above are urged to go to the
avoid accidents.
A —————— re ————————
Desertion and Other Cases Heard in
Court on Wednesday.
At a special session of court, on
Wednesday, the following cases were
heard and disposed of:
Edward Blaick, charged with
larceny, breaking and entering. This
case grew out of the robbery of the
Henszey home, at State College.
Defendant plead guilty and was
| sentenced to the penitentiary for one
and a half to three years.
William Rees, desertion and non-
i support, was ordered to pay fifty dol-
‘lars a month to the support of his
wife and five children.
Albert Houck, of Bald Eagle, charg-
led with desertion, was discharged.
worthless checks for a total of $90.00
‘at the Meek’s restaurant, in State Col-
| lege, was sent to the Huntingdon re-
' formatory.
Jack Gold, breaking and escaping
from the Rockview penitentiary, was
| given a one to two year’s sentence in
the penitentiary.
Roy Huff, charged with reckless
driving, case was nolle prossed.
In the case of Charles Travis, also
arrested for reckless driving, a com-
pulsory non suit was ordered.
A compulsory nonsuit was also
ordered in the case against J. F.
Krouse, charged with a violation of
the automobile laws.
Among the Sick at the Hospital.
The venerable Daniel Eberhart, 93
taken to the Centre County hospital,
last Thursday, suffering with kidney
and bladder trouble. Owing to his ad-
vanced age and feeble condition phy-
sicians deem it inexpedient to perform
an operation so confine their treat-
ment to local applications for relief.
Samuel Richards, another of Belle-
fonte’s aged citizens, is also in the
hospital for treatment for a compli-
cation of diseases and his daughter,
Mrs. Hoy, of Pitcairn, has come to
Bellefonte to be near him.
On Monday night Harry Williams
had a bad fall up in the region of the
Moose home, fracturing his skull and
cutting a deep gash on the top of his
head. He bled profusely and was
taken to the hospital for treatment.
Fortunately the skull fracture is not
serious and yesterday he was reported
as getting along all right.
——Rev. Mr. Archibald M. Judd,
secretary of the Diocese of Harris-
copal church, Bellefonte, at the Sunday
morning service at 10.45 o’clock.
killed eight deer in Greensvalley and
this showing by the State Department
theatre and see for themselves how to |
Ernest Frank, alias Robert Conrad, |
‘an eighteen year old youth who on!
El of this week passed three
years old on November 29th, was |
burg, will preach in St. John’s Epis- |
FIRE BADLY DAMAGES
M. R. JOHNSON HOME.
Exploding Water Heater Cause of
Most Destructive Blaze.
The very comfortable home of Mil-
'ton R. Johnson and family, on north
Spring street, Bellefonte, was so badly
damaged by fire, late Saturday after-
noon, that it will cost thousands of
dollars to repair it. The fire originat-
ed from an explosion of a kerosene
water heater used for the bath room.
The heater was located in the kitchen
and after lighting it Mrs. Johnson
went upstairs to take a few minutes
rest. She had been lying down and
almost asleep when something impell-
ed her to get up and go down stairs.
As she did so she saw flames of fire
| eating through at the bottom of the
kitchen door. On opening the door
she was horrified to find the interior
of the kitchen a mass of seething fire.
Calling Miss Hazel, who was up-
stairs lying down, she ran to the tele-
phone and gave a call for the fire
companies, but in her excitement for-
got to say where the fire was. This
naturally occasioned some delay and
by the time the companies arrived on
the scene the entire rear portion of
the building was in flames and the fire
| was eating under the roof of the main
part of the house. With such a start
it looked as if the entire building
would be destroyed but the firemen
| worked hard and confined the blaze to
| the upper part of the house though
i the kitchen annex was damaged be-
yond repair.
All the parlor and living room fur-
l.niture was removed and some from the
I second floor but a portion of it was
burned or so badly damaged by water
{ that it is beyond repair. The Misses
‘Johnson had most of their things
stored on the third floor and they were
‘all burned. While Mr. Johnson has
! not, had time to figure up his loss, it
is estimated that it will be from ten !
{to twelve thousand dollars, with an
| insurance of approximately six thous-
‘and. Of course the home will be re-
built but the kind of weather we are
{now having will delay starting the
work. In the meantime the Johnson
i family is scattered among friends.
They have requested us to make this
public acknowledgement of their
gratitude for the assistance friends
and neighbors so cheerfully gave dur-
ting the fire and since.
Three Centre County Hospital Nurses
Graduate.
Having completed their course in
nursing at the Centre County hospital
three graduates were awarded their
diplomas at commencement exercises
held in the court house last Friday |
evening. The three young ladies are
Misses Edna Witmer, of Bellefonte;
Iva Glass, of Altoona, and Rachel
Leitzell, of Port Matilda.
The court room had been very
i tastefully decorated for the occasion
‘and John Blanchard, Esq., presided.
Prayer was offered by Rev. Robert |
| Thena, of the Reformed church, after
{ which there was a violin quartette by
i four lady violinists. Rev. Father
| Downes made the address
young graduates, extolling the profes-
sion in which they have engaged and
commending them for their selection
of such a noble calling as their aim in
life.
Mrs. VanZant, of State College,
sang a soprano solo, being accom-
panied on the piano by her husband
after which Mrs. Louis Schad gave
two violin selections. The diplomas
were awarded by Mr. Blanchard.
Centre County Supervisors Meet in
! Convention on Tuesday.
Centre county road supervisors are
not proof against a heavy fall of snow
as was evidenced on Tuesday when
only forty-one out of the total of
ninety in the county attended the an-
nual convention in the court house.
Snow-blocked township roads kept the
majority at home.
that fact it was a very interesting
“meeting and some splendid talks were
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
~—Mr. and Mrs. Edward Struble spent
the fore-part of the week in Harrisburg.
—Mrs. Agnes Shaughnessy Atcheson will
leave to-day at noon for a week-end visit
with friends in Elmira.
—The Misses Emily and Elizabeth Park-
er are home from a visit with their broth-
er, J. Neff Parker, at Des Moines, Iowa.
—Mr. and Mrs. James D. Seibert had as
guests during the week Mr. and Mrs. D. E.
Woomer and their daughter Jean, of Lib-
erty, Pa. :
—Mrs. Philip Beezer and her daughter,
Helen drove to Virginia, the early part of
the week, to attend the funeral of the late
H. M. Sutton.
—Miss Louise Carpeneto went to Clear-
field, Monday, to be with her mother, Mrs.
Louis Carpeneto, who was operated on at
the Clearfield hospital that day.
—DMrs. David Dale departed Wednesday,
for her former home at Gettysburg, where
she will spend a week with her brother,
Judge Donald McPherson and his family.
—Mrs. Sara Brown, who had been with
friends in Bellefonte for the past three
weeks, making her annual winter visit, re-
turned to her home at Renovo, Wednesday.
—Mr. and Mrs. R. J. P. Gray closed
their home in Stormstown on the 29th
and departed for St. Petersburg, Florida,
where they will spend the winter, as has
been their custom for some years.
—Mrs. Frank McFarlane went to Phila-
delphia, Wednesday, with plans for spend-
ing Christmas and the Holidays there with
her sister, Mrs. Kinsloe and her family,
and with her brother, Edward Rankin.
—DMrs. Harry Curtin, of Curtin, is with
her son, J. M. Curtin and his family, in
Pittsburgh, having gone out hoping the
change might be of benefit to her in re-
covering from several months of ill health.
—Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gettig, and their
three children, left last week to make their
home in Washington, Pa., where Mr. Get-
| tig expects to locate permanently. The
i Gettig home on north Thomas street is at
present unoccupied.
—Miss Annie McLaughlin returned to
: Bellefonte, Monday, after a two week’s visit
with her sister, Mrs. Schell and her family,
at Tyrone. Miss McLaughlin had gone
over the day before Thanksgiving to make
her visit at this time owing to ill health.
—Miss Roberta Noll is a guest of her
sister-in-law, Mrs. Charles Noll, having
i come up from Cheltenham for the funeral
j of her aunt, the late Mrs. Sarah Satter-
field, which was held yesterday from the
home of her niece, Mrs. John Payne, on
east Linn street.
| —Mrs. M. A. McGinnis was here from
| Pottsville, last week, for a visit of several
days with her father, the Hon. James
! Schofield, whose condition for the past
week has been unchanged. Since Mr.
Schofield’s collapse, two weeks ago, he has
| not been able to leave his bed.
—Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes returned to Belle-
fonte, Friday of last week, from a two
| weeks visit with her daughter Ellen, at
| Syracuse. Miss Anna Miller also returned
| the same day, she having been on a three
| weeks visit to her home at Salona during
the time the Hayes apartment was closed.
Charles McCurdy Scott, of the First
| National bank force, has been in Baltimore
since Wednesday, having gotie to the
Oriole city for the wedding of Fendall
, Marbury, who was one of his room-mates
at Princeton. The marriage will be cele-
brated tomorrow and Mr. Scott will be one
' of the ushers.
{ —Mr. and Mrs. 8. S. Hoy, who are such
; frequent visitors to the Clearfield hospital,
| have been very much encouraged this week
{oy the improvement in their son Joseph.
to the ,
The boy has shown improvement since the
fourth blood transfusion last Friday,
which leads them to hope that this change
for the better is to be permanent.
—Mrs. J. Will Conley has closed her
home on Logan street to go with her
daughter, Mrs. W. B. Wallis, to Atlantic
City, where they expect to spend the great-
er part of the winter. Mr. Wallis has been
transferred from Pittsburgh to an eastern
territory and during their stay at the
Shore will commute from there over his
business district.
.—Mr. and Mrs. William §. Furst, of
Overbrook, with Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery
, as driving guests, motored to Bellefonte
‘an Friday to spend the week-end with Mr.
Furst's mother, Mrs. Austin 0. Furst and
the John Curtin family. The party spent
the early part of their stay motoring over
the county, leaving here Tuesday for the
; return trip to Philadelphia.
—The Rev.
tor of the U.
Notwithstanding | Bellefonte, Monday, on his way to Harris-
| burg, where he was one of two delegates
| to represent the United Brethren church
W. C. Winey, a former pas-
B. church, passed through
made by members of the association | of Pennsylvania at the Federal confer-
“and representatives of the State High-
, way Department.
Officers elected for the ensuing year
‘were as follows: President, Newton I.
Wilson, of Loveville; first vice presi-
dent, A. C. Thomas, of Patton town-
| ship; second vice president, Andrew
i Corman, of Gregg township; secre-
| sary, Harry Breon, of Benner town-
| ship; treasurer, Harry I. Hoy, of Mar-
ion township.
Rev. Daniels at Spring Mills.
| The P. O. S. of A. camps of Centre
: Hall, Spring Mills, Aaronsburg and
Woodward, through their district
president and State camp, have se-
cured the services of Rev. Harry
! Daniels, of Mechanicsburg, chaplain
of the State Camp of Pennsylvania,
who will speak in the Grange hall, at
Spring Mills, on Tuesday night, De-
cember 14th. His subject will be
“Uncle Sam’s Ills, Their Causes and
Cure.”
Rev. Daniels is a very fluent and
forceful speaker and is well versed in
what our country and community
needs are. Every man, woman and
high school student should hear him,
no matter whether they belong to the
Order or not. It’s an opportunity to
hear something worthwhile. No ad-
mission charge. A good program of
singing and orchestra music has also
been arranged.
——Ladies felt slippers, all colors,
55c—Nittany Shoe Store. 49-1t
ence of churches held there this week. Mr.
Winey is now located in Johnstown, and
has a church enrollment of eight hundred
active members.
—Andrew J. Cook, with Mrs. Cook and
: their daughter, Miss Margaret, left on Sat-
{urday for Manitou, Colorado, where they
| will spend the winter with James Cook
| who is now permanently located in that
State. The Cook family have now estab-
lished the custom of closing their Linn
street home for several months at this time
of the year, living during the time at the
“Cliff House,” at Manitou.
—DMr. and Mrs. Toner A. Hugg, of Miles-
burgh, had as guests last week George A.
David and Bennan C. Throu, of Scranton,
who came to Centre county for the opening
of deer hunting season. Mr. Davis is a
son of Lieutenant Governor David J. Davis
and both he and Mr. Throu are world war
veterans, having served in France. They
and Mr. Hugg hunted in the Seven moun-
tains and on the Alleghenies in the hope
that they would be fortunate enough to
bag a nice buck or a bear but they failed
to get a shot at either one and were com-
pelled to return home on Sunday empty-
handed.
—————————sectita—
Very impressive memorial ser-
vices were held by the Bellefonte
Lodge of Elks, on Sunday afternoon,
honoring the six members who have
died during the year as well as the
total of sixty-two who have passed
over since the institution of the lodge.
Rev. Robert Thena made the address
and music was furnished by a male
quartette. Mrs. Alberta Krader also
sang a solo while Miss Berenice
Crouse presided at the organ.
Christmas Cards.
We have three very fine lines of
Christmas Cards which we would
be pleased to have you call and
see.
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
Academy Football Team Making
Ready for Texas Trip.
Ten inches of snow and zero weath-
er is not conducive to football prac-
tice but the Bellefonte Academy eleven
is using other means of keeping in
trim for their interesectional game
with Randolph College, at Cisco,
Texas, on Christmas day. The team,
with coach Carl G. Snavely and head-
master James R. Hughes, will leave
Bellefonte, twenty or more strong, on
Friday or Saturday of next week and
travel by easy stages for their desti-
nation in the Lone Star State.
The men will go primed to the
minute to give a good account of
themselves, but ardent supporters of
the team must not feel cock-sure they
will win, just because they cleaned up
the Sherman High school with ease
last year. Their Christmas game will
be with the first team of Randolph col-
lege, and it will be no disgrace to them
if they are beaten. But they are
going down with the determination to
win, if possible, and whatever the re-
sult the Texans will know that they
were in a football battle.
——————— ee e———————
Airmail Flare Burns Farmer’s Barn.
On his way from Cieveland to Belle-
fonte with the night airmail early
last Saturday morning, pilot Bernard
ran into a freezing mist of rain and
snow north of Mercer in the western
part of the State and was compelled
to make a forced landing. He knew
he was near an emergency landing
field so lighted a flare and threw it
overboard. The wind blew the flare
against the barn on the farm of S. F.
Tait, setting it on fire and the light
from the burning barn enabled the
pilot to make a perfect landing.
Bernard then aroused the Tait fam-
ily and assisted them in rescuing the
livestock from the barn but the en-
lire structure including, wheat, corn,
oats, hay and farm machinery, went
up in smoke, entailing a loss of about
$5,000.
The west-bound plane in charge of
pilot Chandler was forced down about
fifteen miles from Mercer and in mak-
ing a landing the plane was somewhat
damaged but the pilot escaped injury.
Births
Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy Locke are re-
ceiving congratulations on the birth
of their first son, who was born on
Monday of last week at their apart-
ment in the Roan home, on north Alle-
gheny street.
A little girl, their second daugh-
ter, was born Wednesday of last week
to Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Cliff. Mr. Cliff
is superintendent of construction at
the Bellefonte American Lime and
Stone plant.
A daughter, who has been named
Charlotte Ophelia, was born to the
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Thena, Monday
of last week, at the Centre County
hospital. Rev. and Mrs. Thena have
now three children, the little Miss
however, is their first daughter.
Spangler — Winkleman.— Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Winkleman, of Linden-
hurst, Long Island, announce the
marriage of their daughter, Mary
Antoinette, to Jackson Joseph Spang-
ler, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Spangler, on November 6th,
1926, at the church of Good Shepherd,
207th Street and Broadway, New York
city. The Rev. Father David A. Ken-
nedy officiated. The Spanglers were
former residents of Bellefonte but for
some years past have lived in New
York city.
——DMen’s felt slippers, 69c.—Nit-
tany Shoe Store. 49-1t
W. C. McCLINTIC.
$22.50 Suit Man.
will be at the Garman House on Fri-
day and Saturday, December 10-11,
day and evenings. This time try a
Richman suit and overcoat. 71-48-2t
————— en —
~——DMiss Elizabeth Cooney is offer-
ing the entire winter stock of the Hat
Shop at such greatly reduced prices,
that no one should overlook this unus-
ual opportunity for buying midwinter
millinery. 49-1t
——Ladies felt trimmed slippers,
65c—Nittany Shoe Store. 49-1t
re ——————— pm t——————
Bellefonte Gram Markets.
Corrected Weekly by C. ¥. Wagner & Co.
Wheat - - - - = -81.30
Bye =~ = « ‘vw wu wu ‘a 90
OBlS = = ele oe ew dg
Corn wile Ve ellie 83
Barley = i= =e iw a 70
Buckwheat - - - - = 90
S—