W. B. WILSON DROWNED IN SPRING CREEK, SATURDAY. | Bem orcas Jia Evidently Fell in Stream from Old = Bellefonte, Pa., April 1, 1927. ssa. nT ——— NEWS ABOUT TOWN This is All Fool’s day, so be careful you are not made one of them. —The weather dope is all upset. March came in like a lamb and went out like one. ——V. J. Bauer was admitted to the Centre County hospital as a medical patient, on Mcnday morning. One hundred and eight tickets were sold at the Bellefonte depot, on Saturday night, for the Sunday excur- sion to Pittsburgh. 26 were sold at Milesburg. W. E. Ridge and family have returned to Bellefonte from Orviston, where they have been located since leaving this place several years ago. Mr. Ridge has accepted a position with the Titan Metal company. A little son born on Sunday morning to Rev. and Mrs. A. J. Kil- patrick, of St. John’s Episcopal church, died on Sunday afternoon, and on Monday the rector took the little body to Philadelphia for burial. AND COUNTY. —-—Harry E. Gerberich, who spent : the winter at the Brockerhoff house, has taken a room with George Hazel and family, in their apartment over the Hazel & Co. store, on Allegheny | street, and will be located there in the future . ——Roberta Eleanore is the name of a little daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Struble, on March 24th, at Kirkville, N. Y. Mrs. Struble will be remembered by residents of Belle- fonte as the former Mrs. Charles C. Keichline. —On March 27th, 1901, George H. Hazel and Miss Emma Wagner were married at the home of the bride’s parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. Adam Wagner, and on Sunday they quietly celebrated the twenty-sixth anni- versary of the event at their home on Allegheny street. ——The chicken season is now on and thousands of the little fuzzy fowls are being shipped daily from the Hockman hatchery, at Hecla, and the Kerlin chicken farm, at Centre Hall. The latter is anticipating an output of several hundred thousand chicks dur- ing the hatching season. ——A little daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Gates, of Johnstown, on Sunday evening. Both Mr. and Mrs. Gates are’ natives of Bellefonte and their many friends here are pleased to learn of this addition to their family. The new arrival has been named Martha Marie. The Penn State Thespians will present the musical comedy “Girl Wanted” during the Easter vacation. They will open here on April 19 and then show at Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Philadelphia, Johnstown, Greensburg and Pittsburgh. The first showing at ‘the College will be on the night of April 30th. Howard and State College, is sales manager for an immense merger of | rock asphalt properties in Kentucky and Alabama, with headquarters in Louisville. The merged plants will have a capacity of three thousand tons a day, which is said to be the world’s largest production under one corpor- ate management. ‘+—The unusual programs of mo- tion pictures at the Scenic continue to attract large crowds every evening. This is because the pictures shown there cannot be seen anywhere else in this locality, and as they represent the best productions on the market movie fans make it their business to see them. If you are not a regular, fol- low the crowd to the Scenic every ev- ening. The public sale season in Cen- tre county is about over for this year and farmers who have changed loca- tions are settling down on new farms for another year of hard labor. Horses brought only an average price this spring, very few teams reaching the four hundred dollar mark. Pigs and cows were in better demand. Cows sold as high as $190 and three and four months old pigs up to $18 and $20. No record prices were made in farm machinery. .——Herman Harju, a native of Finland who lives down near the American Lime and Stone company plant, recently invested in a new Studebaker car and on Sunday invited George Aisnen, a fellow countryman, to.take a ride with him. They went down Nittany valley and on one of the sharp.curves where several serious ac- cidents have happened in past years Hagju lost control of the car and ran inte the fence, knocking down sixty- seven feet of wire fence, posts and all. The two men escaped serious injury but the car was pretty badly dam- aged. ——The remains of George H. Mus- ser, who died at Ilewisburg, W. Va, ont Wednesday of last week, arrived in Bellefonte on Saturday morning and were taken to the D. IH. Shivery home, on Willowbank street, where they re- posed until Sunday afternoon. Fun- eral services were held in the Meth- odist church, at Milesburg, at three o'clock Sunday. afternoon, after which burial was made in the Meyers’ ceme- tery, in Buffalo Run valley. Mr. Mus- ser was a member of the Mileshurg Presbyterian church but services could not be held there owing to the base- A. C. Leathers, formerly of Nail Works Bridge. William B. Wilson, an employee of the American Lime and Stone com- pany, was drowned in Spring creek, near the old fair grounds, on Saturday afternoon, evidently having fallen into the stream from the old nail works bridge, but as no one saw the accident there is no certainty as to just how it happened. Wilson was a fireman at plant No. 20, of the American Lime and Stone company, and Saturday being pay day, he got a fellow employee to look after his work while he came to Belle- fonte to get his check cashed. He in- variably had it cashed at Robert Roan’s store and it was about four o’clock when he appeared there, made a few small purchases and got the money on his check. At the time he told Mr. Roan that he wasn’t feeling very good and had asked another man to do his work. But he evidently re- turned to the plant as the regular fire- man who succeeded him went on duty at 4:49 o’clock and relieved Mr. Wil- son, He then started for home, carrying his dinner bucket. Some time between five and six o’clock Michael Sopica, a boy who lives down near the old nail works location, saw Wilson sitting on | the bridge, on the south side where there is a broken guard rail, with his fect hanging over the side of the bridge. When he looked again the man was gone, and one report is to the effect that the boy saw him floal- ing down stream but was unable to do anything himself and went for help. The water at that point in the creek | is said to be five feet deep and Wil- son’s body floated down some five hun- dred yards to a point opposite the home of Peter Kane, where it lodged and was discovered about six o’clock and rescued from the stream. Justice John M. Keichline held an inquest on Sunday morning about ten o’clock. The jury consisted of E. M. Wagner, Wilbur A. Hugg, R. A. Byran, John W. Smith, D. L. Gordon and W. R. Cliff, and after considering all the evidence bearing on the unfortunate affair returned a verdict of accidental death by drowning. Mr. Wilson was a son of John and Nora Brown Wilson and was born in Bellefonte on February 9th, 1878, hence was 49 years, 1 month and 17 days old. He married Mrs. Margaret Gummo who survives with no chil- dren. He leaves, however, eight step- children, Mrs. D. L. Gordon, of Miles- burg; Harry, Elmer and L. T. Gummo, and Mrs. Clair O’Shell, all of Bell- i wood; Alonzo, Hamill and Russell i Gummo, of Bellefonte. He also leaves i his father and stepmother, living in Bellefonte, and one sister, Mrs. Mary i Cole, of Philipsburg. Rev. Lehman had charge of the fun- jeral services which were held at 2 o’clock on Tuesday afternoon, at the D. L. Gordon home, burial being made [in the Treziyulny cemetery. Trout Fishing Season . Will Open in Two Weeks. ; Two weeks from today will mavk the opening of the trout fishing sea: "son and we personally know a number { of men whose fingers have been twitching for some days in anticipa- { tion of the event. Of course the aver- lage fisherman has a favorite pool on i onz of the many trout streams in the county and naturally that is where jhe will hike to for his first try for | a strike. ; | Twenty years ago the late Col. | Emanuel Noll invariably spent the i opening day of the season down at 1 Paddy’s mountain, catching mountain i trout in Paddy’s run. The trout were {not large but averaged from six to i nine inches, but he always came home { with the limit, a basket of as nice ( trout as any man would want to see. [A number of other Bellefonte fisher- {men also haunted the mountain i streams and the trout they brought home were tidbits worthy a king’s taste. : "Nowadays, however, the ambition of most fishermen is to .make a record catch of big trout-and this can only: be done in such streams as Logan’s branch, Spring creek and Fishing creek. The largest number of fisher- men go to Fishing creek in the belief that the best catches are possible there. But invariably the man who spends the day on Spring creek comes home with the best catch. But there wouldn’t be any use in telling where the best fishing will be, even if we know it, for when the eventful day arrives the average fish- erman will go where he pleases, any- way. Pensions will be Paid Monthly. Because of the filbustering during the last few days of the 69th Congress no pension deficiency bill was passed and as the regular appropriation has expired there was some uncertainty as tc the monthly payment of pensions to the old soldiers. On Saturday, however, the Watchman received a telegram from Con- gressman J. M. Chase in which he stated that arrangements have been made whereby all pensions will be paid every month, as usual, so the old veterans need have no worry on that score, rc——— le e———— : For Sale.—A 6 piece solid cherry parlor suit, uphostered in leather. ment being flooded with water, so the Methodist church was used. Write P. 0. Box 266, Bellefonte. 13-1t China. Among the list of Americans report- ed last Friday to have made their es- cape from the trouble zone in China and are safe aboard an American war- ship was Mrs. Marion Fisher Keen, widow of the late Dr. Charles E. Keen, until his death a year ago head of the language school at Nanking Univer- sity. Mrs. Keen’s eight year old daughter Marguerite is also with her. Mrs. Keen is a daughter of Rev. W, E. Fisher, of New Berlin, but who for many years was pastor of a church in Centre Hall, where the greater part of Mrs. Keen’s life was spent. only sister is Mrs. Charles E. Beury, wife of the president of Temple Uni- versity , Philadelphia. The Keens went to the Orient in 1903. NO WORD FROM THE NORTHS. Up to this time no word has been ! received by Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey from Dr. and Mrs. W. R. North and their little son Billy, and while they naturally have considerable apprehen- sion as to their welfare it is highly probable that they are all right. The ! last letter they had from Mrs. North was written in January and she had then reached Shanghai from Chung- king, while Dr. North was on the point of setting sail down the river Yangtse. As that is over two months ago they both are probably out of China by this time or safe on some American vessel. Mrs. North stated in her last letter that there was a prob- ability of their being sent to Manila, and the fact that no other word has been received from them may be due to the strict government censorship, respondence is permitted to go into or out of China at this time. NORTHS WELL IN SHANGHAI C. C. Shuey, on Wednesday, received { as it is reported that no private cor- ! | a letter from the New York office of | the West China Union University in which it was stated that Dr. Mrs. W. R. North and little son Billy are in Shanghai and well. follows: Dear Mr. Shuey: 2 We have had no direct word in these offices concerning the from the advices we have received we have every reason to believe that they are either safe in Shanghai or on a ship bound for America. I am sure that you have no cause for worry con- cerning them. “Conditions in China are certainly pretty bad, but let us still have faith in the great majority of the Chinese people. The radicals seem to be hav- ing their own way for the time being, but there are still multitudes cf peo- ple in China who are perfectly friendly. And we must still endeavor to work Her ! and The letter | Norths, but! ! Centre County Woman Safely Out of KEYSTONE POWER CORP. REDUCES SERVICE RATES. Domestic and Commercial Users Ad- vised of New Schedules in Ef- fect May 1st. Much greater use can be made cf electric service for a wide variety of uses in Centre county and vicinity ac- cording to an announcement made by the Keystone Power Corp. to its con- sumers. The new reduced rates will become effective May first. In the new domestic schedule but i forty-five kilowatt hours use is requir- ed to reach the three cent rate, as compared to seventy kilowatt hours under the old schedule. Under the commercial schedule the second block of four hundred kilowatt hours at six and a half cents has been greatly re- duced by the substitution of a one hundred kilowatt hour block at five cents. Under the new schedule the commercial consumers get the benefit of the three cent energy rate after the use of two hundred kilowatt hours in stead of five hundred kilowatt hours as under the old schedule. | Great progress has been made by | the Power company during the last | few years in improving its facilities ‘and its operation. According to its i representatives the regyctions have been the result of these improvements and increasing use of service by all 'classes of consumers. The Power , company expects this voluntary reduc- { tion to result in a further increase in i the use of electric service on account of the low rates now made available to | its consumers. ee We have a very useful Auto- Strop Safety razor all done up in a i neat little velvet lined metallic case, to i give to everyone who sends or brings ‘a new subscription to the Watchman. P. R. R. Wants to Abandon Portion of L & T. Railroad. The Pennsylvania Roalroad com- pany has made application to the Pub- lic Service Commission for permission to abandon and tear up its tracks on the western end of the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad from Stover station to Fairbrook, a distance of eighteen and three-tenth miles, and farmers and shippers in Warriorsmark valley and the western end of Centre county are preparing to enter a vigorous pro- test against it. As this is the only railroad running through that section of country its abandonment would take away the only means of freight ship- ment the people there now enjoy. On the other hand the advent of the with or for them, keeping in mind all | automobile, auto trucks and motor the time that our own governments have given the Chinese much cause for their bitter anti-foreign feeling. P. S.—Just had a letter from James McCurdy saying Norths in Shanghai and well.” : Signed JAMES M. WARD. Divisional -Organizations Established for Bell Telephone Company.. Effective May 1st, two divisional or- ganizations’ will be’ established in the central area’ of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania. These di- visions will be known as the northern and southern divisions. The northern division will embrace the Scranton, Wilkes-Barre and Wil- liamsport districts and the following ' appointments have been made: R. I. | Waltman, division commercial man- ager; T. M. Snedden, division plant manager; L. W. Gavett, division traf- fic manager. er The southern division will embrace the Harrisburg, Reading and Altoona districts, and appointments are as fol- lows: E. G. Mateer, division commer- cial manager; W. T. Wooters, division plant manager; D. H. Witmer, division traffic manager. Bellefonte is in the Altoona district. . Mr. John Tonner Harris, general manager, in making this announce- ment, stated that the continual growth of the business makes it desirable to ! have a divisional organization in the field, which will permit of more ex- peditious handling of the many prob- lems involved in meeting the require- ments of service demanded by the subscribers and patrons of the Bell company. ——We have a very useful Auto- Strop Safety razor all done up in a neat little velvet lined metallic case, to give to everyone who sends or brings a new subscription to the Watchman. Queen Esther Rehearsals. Rehearsals for the sacred cantata, “Queen Esther,” which will be given as a High school benefit in the Riche- lieu theatre on May 12th, will be held as follows: April 1st, at 8 p. m., in the High school auditorium. Sunday, April 3rd, at 2.30 p. m., in the Methodist church. Tuesday, April 5th, at 8 p. m., at the High school. Friday, April 8th, at 8 p. m., for principals only, in the Methodist church. Sunday, April 10th, at 2,30 p. m., in the Methodist church. And every Tuesday at 8 p. m. and Sunday at 2.30 p. m., thereafter, for both choruses and principals, and every Friday at 8 p. m. for principals only. ——The B. P. O. E. of Bellefonte will hold a meeting for election of officers for the coming year at their club house on next Monday evening at 8 o’clock. : busses have resulted in such a deple- tion of the railroad’s patronage that the company is operating at a loss and for that reason desires to abandon the road. The case will likely be threshed out before the Public Service Com- mission in the near future. ——We have a very useful Auto- Strop Safety razor all done up in a neat little velvet lined metallic case, to give to everyone who sends or brings a new subscription to the Watchman. Four Bids Submitted for Carrying Air Mail. Four bids were opened at the Post- office Department, in Washington, last NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —-Mrs. Julia Shuey, of Lemont, was in town on a shopping trip on Tuesday. —Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Kilpatrick have as a guest, at their home on east Curtin street, Miss Edith Siberling, of Philadelphia. —Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rankin and their two children were here from Camp Hill, for an over Sunday visit at the Wil- liam B. Rankin home. —Miss Mildred Jones has been in Pitts- burgh this week visiting her sister, Miss Margaret, having gone out on the special excursion on Saturday night, —Mrs. John M. Shugert has been at Waynesboro, Va., during the past week, spending the spring vacation with her daughter Molly, a student at Fairfax Hall, —Mrs. Ogden B. Malin and her son ex- pect to leave to-morrow to spend two weeks at Mrs, Malin’s former home in New Jersey. Mr. Malin will join her there later. —Miss Anne Keichline and her mother, Mrs. John Keichline, drove to Huntingdon Friday of last week, for an over night visit with Dr. John M. Keichline and his family. —Mr. and Mrs. Willard Barnhart had as week-end guests their son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. Fred Seidel, of Hazleton, who drove to Bellefonte Sat- urday. —Mrs. George M. Glenn, who spent the winter with her son in Gettysburg, will re- turn today to her summer home on the Gray farm in Patton township, where she will be with her sister, Miss Esther. —Mr. and Mrs. Walter Furst, of Phila- delphia, were guests of Mr. Furst’s mother, Mrs. A. O. Furst, and his brother, Judge James C. Furst, while in Bellefonte for a visit of several days during the week. —Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Butterworth were in from Wilkinsburg for one of their oc- casional Sunday visits with Mrs. Butter- worth’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Knisely, at their home on Thomas street. —D. B. Colyer, general superintendent of the airmail service, made his first visit to Bellefonte on Wednesday, coming in on an army ship about the middle of the afternoon and leaving on the night train east. —Miss Roberta Noll arrived here from Allentown Tuesday to look after some business relative to the renting of her Bishop street property. During her stay Miss Noll will be a guest of her sister-in- law, Mrs. Charles Noll, of Howard street. —William Bible, of New York and Chi- cago, a nephew of George P. Bible, spent Sunday in Bellefonte with the Bible family. Mr. Bible is well remembered here from his very interesting talks given in the Presbyterian church on his work in China. —Robert V. Miller returned to Bellefonte last week from Reading, where he had been for the winter with his daughter. Mr. Miller will occupy his room in the McClain block only for a short time as he intends giving up housekeeping for him- self. —Mrs. J. A. Dunkel has returned to Bellefonte and is now a guest of her brother, James R. Hughes, at the Academy. Mrs. Dunkel has been with her daughter in Chicago, and with Mr. Dunkel, at Jun- iata, since leaving Bellefonte before Christ- mas. 1 —Among the school girls who have been home the past week on a brief vacation are Misses Mary Woodring and Catherine Mey- er, from Irving College, Mary Robb, from Wilson College; Betty Zerby, from Smith College, and Carrol Shipley, from Swarth- more, —Mr. and Mrs. David W. Keller were here from Philadelphia, over Sunday, having come up to see Mr. Keller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ephriam Keller, at Pleasant Gap, and Mrs. Keller's father, Harper Rice, of Bellefonte, who is now a patient in the Centre County hospifal. —Miss Winifred M. Gates, chief elerk of the Bellefonte division of the Keystone Power corporation, represented the eor- Thursday, for carrying the air mail on the eastern section of the transconti- | nental line between New York and Chicago, as follows: ; E. F. Stewart, of New York, 35 cents a pound, with the stipulation that he be given all the first-class mail, or a minimum of 10,600 pounds a day each day. The North American Airways, Cleveland, Ohio, $1.23 a pound. The National Air Transport Co., Chicago, $1.24 a pound. The Colonial Air Transport Co., New York, $1.68 a pound. The North American Airways com- pany, of Cleveland, the second lowest bidder, if awarded the contract; will use all the present airmail pilots and probably retain the present force at the various landing fields. Award of the contract will likely be made in the near future. New Churches at State College to be Centers for Students. People of the Pennsylvania diocese of the Protestant Episcopal church have contributed between $150,000 and $160,000 for the erection and partial endowment of a new church building in State College whick is planned as the center of activities for Pennsyi- vania State College student members of that church. Approximately $90,000 will be used for a new church building adjacent to the present one-story structure to be fitted as a parish house. There are about 209 Episcopal students now en- rolled at Penn State. The Society of Friends of Pennsyl- vania has provided a new meeting house for the 54 students of that faith, and a Baptist church is nearing com- pletion which will be enjoyed by the 86 students of that faith. ——The Decker Bros. have received a new Chevrolet pumper and chemical truck which Sinie H. Hoy intends demonstrating in some of the smaller towns in the county. It has a capacity of four hundred gallons a minute from two streams and would be suitable for towns with a limited water supply. Demonstrations will probably be given at Pleasant Gap, Centre Hall, Boals- burg and Millheim, poration at a convention of the accounting section of the Pennsylvania Eleetric asso- ciation held at the Penn-Alto hotel, in Al- toona, on Monday and Tuesday. ; —The Misses Emily and Xlizabeth Parker, who closed their home on Howard sireet shortly after Christmas, te spend the remainder of the winter at Atlantic City, are now in New Drunswiek, N. J, with Mrs. G. Ross Parker and her family, expecting to return to Bellefonte from there next week. —DMrs. Mary XK. Bowers and mother, Mrs. Keen, left Bellefonte on Sunday ufter- noon for their new heme in Pittsburgh, having sent their household - goods by a moving van on Saturday. They had been residents of Bellefonte one year during whieh time Mrs. Bowers was connected with the Keystone Power corperation. —Miss Helene Williams has had as a guest for the past two weeks, at her home om Curtin street, her aunt, Mrs. Williams, of Beech Creek, who eame up to be with Mrs. George Williams until a nurse could be secured. Miss Rossman had been with Mrs. Williams for the past year but was obliged to leave to enter the Clearfield hospital as a surgical patient. —Robert Knox and Ralph Wasson were motor guests of John Hecker, a chemist of the Titan Metal company, on a drive to Harrisburg Saturday. Mr. Hock- er was going back home for an over night visit with his family, while the boys went down to spend the night with some of Robert's friends. The party returned to Bellefonte Sunday afternoon. —Mrs. EB. M. Broderick, of State College, who was called to Bellefonte by the critical illness of her father, the late Thaddeus Hamilton, was obliged to pro- long her stay here, owing to the condi- tion of her uncle, Thomas Hamilton. Mr. Hamilton became very seriously ill shortly after his brother's death, with little change as to improvement since that tiie. —While visiting with her son, Wynn Love and his family, on east High street, Mrs. Annie Love was stricken with paral- ysis, Wednesday of last week, her condi- tion being serious. Mrs. Love makes her home with her daughter, Mrs. Charles Har- rison and Mr. Harrison, on Howard street. Her oldest daughter, Mrs. George Sym- monds, of Punxsutawney, is now in Belle- fonte taking care of her mother. y ———The time will soon be here when we wont have to heave the coal shovel every time we go into the house, but that will offer little relief because the old lawn mower and garden tools will then have their inning. A ——————————————————— ———————————————— Y’s Krax from the Bellefonte Y. In the junior class basketball free throw tournament, Saturday morning, Dick Robb and Bob Wilkinson won fist and second places, respectively. Both boys tied with four baskets out "of ten shots and in the throw off Robb made three out of six shots and Wilkin- son made two out of six. Both boys were presented with miniature gold basketballs. On Monday evening, in the interme- diate boys class tournament Carl Fish- er and Richard Sager were the win- ners of first and second places. Fisher netted ten out of fifteen throws from the foul line while Sager sank eight. Both of these boys were awarded miniature gold basketballs for their prowess. In the junior girls game tourna- ment, which was finished on Monday, the Reds, led by Miss Anna Mary Troupe, won from the Blues, captained by Miss Florence Cohen, by the score of 64-60. Points were awarded for at- tendance, deportment and winning of the various games. As was announced last week the annual election for five men on the board of directors of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. will be held on Monday, April 4th. The following men have been nominated, with five to be elect- ed: R. L. Mallory, B. L. Weaver, J. O. Stutsman, S. M. Shallcross, H. M. Murtorff, Hugh Quigley, C. H. Riche- lieu, N. A. Staples, E. J. Teaman, Horace J. Hartranft. Any senior member of the association (over 18 years of age) is entitled to vote. The ballot box will be open at the “Y” until 7:30 o’clock Monday. The Y., as has been the custom for several years past, will hold an Easter flower sale the week before Easter. ——e—————————— ——Charged with assault with in- tent to kill, threatening and resisting an officer, carrying concealed deadly weapons and violation of the liquor laws, a man was brought to the Centre county jail, from Philipsburg, on Tues- day, to await trial at the next term of court. He was entered as Alexander Roach, of Newport, R. IL, but it de- veloped ‘at his hearing before Squire Hancock, in Philipsburg, that he was as handy with names as he was with violations of the law, having been known as George Alexander, Alex Rodgers and Frank Miller. In a drunken orgy, near Ophir mine, Rush township, on Sunday night, Roach shot Joseph Krupa in the hand, mangling two fingers, while another bullet grazed his head. —-An automobile smashup occurred shortly after four o’clock on Tuesday afternoon, on High street just east of the bridge. F.C. McKinley, of Miles- burg, driving a Jewett car, was on his way up High street just as Nathaniel Krape, of Pennsvalley, in a Chevrolet, came down street. The lat- ter attempted to turn out south Water street and .ran headon into the side of the McKinley car. The only dam- age done the latter was a broken run- ning board, while the left front wheel of the Chevrolet was smashed and the left front fender badly bent. + —— ——DManager ' Maurice ‘Baum will celebrate the first anniversary of his beautiful new theatre, The Cathaum, at State College, next week. He has arranged an outstanding program for the entire week of April 4 to 9 with a change each night. That it is an outstanding program is attested by the fact that it includes. four first Pennsylvania showings. : Cantata. The beautiful Lenten cantata,” “The Seven Last Words of Christ,” by Du- bois, will be sung by an augmented choir of thirty voices on Good Friday night, in Saint John’s Episcopal church. Women employees in Bell tele- phone exchanges in some of the larger towns in Central Pennsylvania have adopted a. regular uniform of dark blue silk crepe, with white collars and cuffs, but the innovation has not yet been introduced in the Bellefonte ex- change. 8 m—— Quality Flowers. Mrs. Geo. A. Miller will hold her tenth annual flower sale, at Miller’s hardware, on Allegheny street, begin- ning Wednesday, April 18. Only the choicest of potted plants and cut flowers will be offered. 72-13-3t ———— A ———r———. ——We have a very useful Auto- Strap Saftey razor all done up in a neat little velvet lined metallic ease, to give to everyone who sends or brings a new subscription to the Watchman, A ——— A ——————— ——We have a very useful Auto- Strop Safety razor all done up in a neat little velvet lined metallic case, to give to everyone who sends or brings a new subscription to the Watchman. ——The Girl Scouts will hold a bake sale tomorrow, April 2nd, at the Variety Shop. All orders will be de- livered. ——————— i reetm—— Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Ceo. Wheat - - - - - - $120 Bye = '= ‘= ‘= ‘wee 90 Oats - - - - - - - 40 Corn ele we maw MS Barley Pw ee ew TY J0 Buckwheat - - - - - 00