® ' WALTER R. MAIN CIRCUS Ih Scenic TO HAVE NOTED ARRAY e OF FORTY CLOWNS. THEATRE ; Where the Better-Class Photoplays are Shown | Each Evening at 6.15 o’clock. { Miss Crouse at the Robert Morton Week--Ahead Program This Saturday (Only) PARAMOUNT PRESENTS Ten Modern Commandments WITH ESTHER RALSTON NEIL HAMILTON The first modern Commandment is “get your man’. And how she lands him! Come and learn about the other nine. Positively the best show in town. Admission 15 and 35¢ 0 Next, Monday, Tuesday, Wedsdy One clowns ever American circus of the greatest arrays of carried on tour by an Walter L. Main circus this year. There are forty of the funny fellows- count ’em, forty and their latest laugh provoking creations are guaranteed to bring forth the keenest merriment of the year. These clowns are all guar- anteed laugh-getters and many have been seen with the greatest amusement organizations to be found in Europe. The role of clown is no easy one. The modern clown is a paradox. He is the same as in the days of the cele- brated Dan Rice, back in the past century, and yet he is a different clown. The explanation? Well in this way he is the same in that he paints his face in vermillion and white and adheres to the time-honored ridic- ulous pattern in his dress. He is differ- ent because of the fact that his work ~ of today is practically all pantomine Wy WILLIAM FoF OR ¢ and he never reverts to the old habit 7 FORBES 8) of clowns of former days who almost dk RALPH LAGLAN y exclusively made up his act of reci- 7, VICTORMS ENON tations, songs, and jokes. is HERBERT PRES The change in the clown’s method [a AGOUETIY i \ of work is the logical result of shift- f PRESS ing conditions in the circus world. In / ZUKOR ek ADOLOW LASKY other days, when cone ring sufficed. CoN the tent was necessarily small, a fact which permitted the clown to be heard distinctly everywhere under the can- vas. At that time one act was quite enough for such a limited audience. And the clown being obliged to con- tribute his share on the program, happilv hit upon the pleasing and suc- cessful idea of singing, joking and re- citing. Nowadays all is changed. Tents have been enlarged for many addi- tional rings and are of huge propor- tions. It is impossible for the clown’s voice to be heard from every point and so naturally he has to act entire- lv in pantomine, or “dumb acting.” There are forty clowns with the Wal- iter L. Main Circus who form the I greatest collection of this sort ever {seen here. The international favor- | ite, Harry La Pearl, heads the list, {and among the foremost in his sup- MILLION DOLLAR CASTE |7ort are Fred Leslie, Chick Reed, Lou i Hershey, Harry Loy, Rube Dyer, Ed- i die Palmer, George St. John, Al De- ' Arman, and Jimmy Jackson. | The Walter L. Main circus will be | seen here on Tuesdav, September 13. The street parade will be given at 11 lhe, ESS Here are just a few of the i performances starting at 2 and 8 p. m. | PINE GROVE MENTION. { i Mrs. Susan Goss is recovering from | a billious attack. {| David Ewing and wife spent Labor day in Pittsburgh. Miss Lydia Neidigh is a guest of Mrs. Catherine Kreamer. Mrs. William Hoy visited relatives in Wilkes-Barre last week. ; Miss Katie Lytle is visiting rela- ‘tives in the Buckeye State. Miss Anna May Musser is spending this week with friends in Centre Hall. ! Miss Helen Behrer spent the early | part of the week with a girl friend at ! Kane. { The Shoemaker brothers are erect- ing a new silo, purchased of H. A. - Grubb. | John McClain and Mrs. Sarah Wie- { land spent Labor day with relatives in i Altoona. By actual count two hundred motor- | ists passed through town, on Sunday, {in one hour. | Some of our farmers have all their { wheat in the ground, while others are i still plowing. | Miss Alice Gingerich and Miss { Adams, of Reading, are visiting Cen- tre county friends. | Mrs. John Bowersox spent the Mid- idle of the week in the Mountain city | doing some shopping. | Major Philip D. Foster and wife ‘have returned from a two week’s so- | journ at Atlantic City. ! Miss Susan Goss, who has been con- | fined to bed the past week with ill- ! ness, is now improving. { Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Koch spent the Ilatter end of the week at Sunbury, | mixing business with pleasiire. | Mds. Minnin Wieland and family, of i Spruce Creek, were visitors at the M. | C. Wieland home, last Thursday. | Mrs. J. S. English and Mrs. Minnie Hess were guests of Mrs. Obenholtz on a motor trip to Altoona, last Fri- { day. Mrs. J. V. Thompson returned to Feature on at 6.15 and 9 p. m. each even- | her home in Galton, Ill., last Thurs- day, after a brief visit among friends | | | i | i 1 ! { Sa NOAH BEERY 4 on Gurannar! Qutures ing. Please be sure and see it from the be- Pe : h ike ginning. After spending three weeks among ‘friends here comrade John Moore, wife and daughter returned to their ‘home in Chester, last week. The old Adults b0cte, $i ! warrior had made plans for attending Miss Crouse will play the original music score for this attraction. Children 25cts is found wi yo js fond yon the § pal states that Miss Mary McFar- 1 the national G. A. R. encampment at Grand Rapids, Mich., next week, but feeling hardly able to make the trip he decided to return home. Rev. John Wagner and family, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are spending their vacation among Centre county rela- tives. Mr .and Mrs. Frank Frebs spent Sunday at the Huntingdon hospital, where Mrs. Krebs is an observation patient. Mrs. Sallie Burwell and two daugh- ters, Mary and Ethel, were Sunday visitors at the Allen Burwell home, at Tyrone. Luther Rider, one of the up-to-date farmers of Gatesburg, has taken the agency for the Globe silos and ensil- age cutters. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Taylor and youngsters spent several days recent- ly with Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wallace, at Huntingdon. C. M. Fry and wife and Theodore Ritchie, wife and daughter Ruth are on a vacation trip to Watkins Glen and other mountain resorts. Dr. John M. Keichline and wife, of Huntingdon, made a motor trip through here on Thursday, greeting a number of their old friends. Mris. Mary Gregg, who recently un- derwent an operation for the removal of a goitre, at the Clearfield hospital, is now on the road to recovery. Rev. and Mrs. Samuel Martin re- | turned from their months vacation last week, and on Sunday the minister filled his regular appointments. Word from the Centre County hos- lane, who recently underwent an oper ation, is getting along very nicely. After a two week’s visit at the John Corl home, at Struble, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Corl and children have returned to their home in Philadel- phia. Mr. and Mrs. J. Irvin Keller and several friends motored in from Pitts- burgh and spent Labor day among friends here and on a trip to Penn’s Cave. Dr. A. L. Carter and wife have moved from State College to the Lone Star State. Dr. Carter has been con- nected with the English department at State College. Harry Behrer, wife and two daugh- ters, Maude and Helen, and Mrs. John McCormick, of Circleville, have re- turned from a two weeks motor trip through Canada. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Dale, their daughter Virginia, Miss Irene Pletch- er and Miss Hazel, of the Branch, were callers on friends in town, Sat- urday afternoon. Mrs. J. B. Williams, of Tyrone, her | sister, Mrs. Prophet, of Oakland, Cal., and Dr. and Mrs. Henry Clay Camp- bell, of Philadelphia, were visitors in the valley last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Hess have return- ed from a three week’s trip through the west, having spent part of the time in the Rockies and in Yellow- stone National park. Miss Ida Sunday, who recently un- derwent an operation for appendicitis, at the Centre County hospital, was discharged on Friday and is now con- valescing at her home here. Michael Snyder and wife, of Pitts- burgh, spent Labor day in motoring through the valley, with Harry Bailey as guide, and were much impressed with State College and Penn’s Cave. Prof. Samuel P. McWilliams and wife, of Washington county, spent several days last week among the Grangers, at Grange park, where they met most of their old friends and rela- tives. Mr. and Mrs. family motored Herbert Goss and in frorn Pittsburgh land Charles Goss and lady friend i a. m., and doors open to the immense | i menagerie at 1 and 7 p. m., with the | spent Labor day with their mother, | Mrs. A. F. Goss. motored up from Harrisburg and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Collins motored in from Pitcairn, the latter part of the week for a visit at the W. A. Collins home. On Sunday they went to Hub- lersburg to visit old friends remain- ing to spend Labor day with the Odd Fellows at Hecla park. Rev. J. S. English and family are home from their vacation in the Adirondacks and Rev. C. W. Rishel has also returned from his vacation. The latter will administer the Lord’s Supper in the Methodist church Sun- day afternoon at 3 o’clock. The Charter Oak ball team journey- ed to Gatesburg, on Saturday, and played the nine of that place, the lat- ter winning by the score of 6 to 4. During the game Robert Harpster was hit on the head by a ball which put him out of the game. The same day the Pine Grove sluggers journey- ed to Altoona and played a team of that city, winning 6 to 4. Over one hundred members of the Neidigh clan were present at the third annual reunion held at the Holmes park, on Saturday. The morn- ing hours were spent in exchanging greetings and the mess call at 12 o’clock disclosed one of the most bountiful dinners ever seen at such a gathering. In fact there was such a supply of good things that most of the people remained for supper. John Henry Neidigh is the present dean of the family. The Ferguson township schools opened on Labor day with a good at- tendance and a full corps of teachers, as follows: Pine Grove grammar, Harold Albright; Pine Grove primary, Mary Burwell; the Branch, A. L. Bowersox; Pine Hall, Miss Ruth Ward; Krumrine, Ralph Walker; Cen- tre, Earl Neidigh; Marengo, Zela Rudy; Baileyville, Miss Moyer; Glades, Maude Miller. The schools at Oak Grove, Gatesburg, White Hall and Kepler have been closed. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. DMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. Letters of administration on the estate of Elizabeth R. Dunlap, late of Fer- guson township, Centre county, Penna. deceased, having been granted to the undersigned, all persons knowing them- selves indebted to said estate are hereby notified to make immediate payment there- of and those having claims should pre- sent them, properly authenticated, for set- tlement. KATHRYN M. DUNLAP, Adm’x,, W. Harrison Walker, Pine Grove Mills, Pa. Attorney 72-34-6t 71-16-t£ LUMBER? Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432 W.R. Shope Lumber Co. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing sab an ib SCENIC THEATRE Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday WITH SAMUEL GOLDWYN ALICE JOYCE WILLIAM POWELL A NEILHAMILTON NORMANTREVOR HERBERT NOAH BEERY RALPH FORBES BRENON MARY BRIAN VICTORMSLAGLAN propuction Matinees Daily at 2 p.m. FEATURE ON 6.15 AND 9 P.M. Be Sure and See it From the Beginning ! Sept. 12-13-14 BY ARRANGEMENT EAD men stand to arms! The fallen are spirited away! A fortress disappears in fire! What mysterious power moves here? These happenings—strange and terrible—are but a part of the life of the famous French Legion in the heart of the burning Sahara. The only production of its kind ever filmed. OOOO DOOTOO DO we IRONUOUOUTE Admission 25 and 50 Cents NEW ADVERTISEMENTS IRA D. GARMAN JEWELER 101 Seuth Eleventh St. PHILADELPHIA. Have Your Diamonds Reset in Platinum 64-3¢-tf EXCLUSIVE EMBLEM JEWELRY Wait for the NEW FORD The new Ford car will be one of the speed- iest, most alert cars on the road. You will be delighted with its low. smart lines and beautiful colors. BEATTY MOTOR CO. BELLEFONTE NITTANY MOTOR CO. STATE COLLEGE Heverly Apts. Bellefonte. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate 20% 7.286m J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent OR SALE BABY CARRIAGE.—Large wicker carriage in good condition. Inquire of Mrs. Ogden Malin, 72-34-2t A RR ERE REAL AER ERERERE Ee SE EU SUE UELEU Sh ; u Decker Chevrolet Co. BELLEFONTE, PA. 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