Scenic Theatre HOME OF BELLEFONTE'S. GREATEST PHOTOPLAYS Each Evening at 6:13 Miss Crouse at the Morton Organ WEEK AHEAD PROGRAM This Saturday Only PARAMOUNT PRESENTS ZANE GREY'S “Open Range” with “Betty Bronson and “Lane Chan- ler.” The amazing story of a happy- go-lucky cowpuncher who saves his home town from raiding Indians by stampeding a herd of stolen cattle through the howling besiegers ! Thrills ? More than ever before ! Zane Grey—ever new and ever ab- sorbing ! You liked his others—such stories as “The Vanishing American,” “The Thundering Herd” and “Born to the West” and you'll like his latest— “OPEN RANGE !” Indians attack a defenseless frontier town and shoot burning arrows into the houses! All seem lost when—but see “OPEN RANGE” at the Scenic this Saturday. Zane Grey has never written a better Western ! Also Fox News Reel and a scream- ing two-reel Comedy. Pre-war Prices—10 and 25c. Next Monday & Tuesday PARAMOUNT PRESENTS RICHARD ARLEN, FORD STERLING and DORIS HILL —IN “Figures Don't Lie” Here we have Paramount's most beautiful blonde, Esther Ralston, and her pals in her latest release. This is a film that is going to make every tired business man sit up and take notice. Esther Ralston as a hard “woiking goil”, who proves to her absent-mind- ed boss that “Figures Don't Lie”, and we don’t mean it when you see her in a one-piece bathing suit, Its a clean, clever comedy. : Also ..Paramount’s .famous ..News Reel and a red-hot two-reel Comedy. Only 10 and 25c. Wed,, Thurs. & Friday UNITED ARTISTS PRESENT WILLIAM BOYD MARY ASTOR and LOUIS WOLHEIM INS “Two Arabian Knights” “Two Arabian Knghts” explodes laughter that will be heard round the world. Here is intense American hu- mor—the chrystallization of native wit, resource, daring and paradox! Imagine two doughboys, “Brains” and “Good Looks”, astray in hostile territory during the war making holiday and love while fleeing through prison camps and darkest Arabia— danger and death on every side. Imagine them—one a New York un- derworld character and the other an aristocrat from Fifth Avenue—hating yet aiding each other. And both smitten with the same girl! Here is a colossal comedy! ‘Two Arabian Knights” will break laugh records, and give the world a climax of howls, giggles, chuckles, aches and quakes. We personally guarantee this entire production to be exactly as adver- tised—a knock-out comedy. Don't dare to miss it. Admission 15 and 35c. Matiness Wednesday and Thursday. Coming Attractions “Clara Bow” in “Hula”. W. C. Fields in “Running Wild". “IL.es Miserables”. i “One Woman to Another”. | And that Aint’ All : i more dollars were realized PINE GROVE MILLS. T. F. Jones made a business trip to Renovo last week. Farmer Merrill Homan has invest- ed in a Deering tractor. C. M. Dale made a business trip to Bellefonte last Thursday. Mrs. Annie Houser, of Oak Hall, i visiting the George Burwell fam- ily. Next Tuesday will be election day. Get out the vote and success will be ours. ; Mrs: Charles Fenstemacher, of New Jersey, is visiting her father, A. J. Lytle. Waler Johnson and family are now snugly located in the Methodist par- sonage. J. H. Laird has trapped 22 foxes and 16 skunks, and has had 20 of his traps stolen. Mr. and Mrs. R. E- Homan and baby, of Reading, are visiting friends in the valley. Mrs. R. T. Hafer was called to Mil- ton, last week, owing to the illness of her father. Hallowe’en was rather quietly ob- served here and no damage was done by the youngsters. Miss Ellen Gilliland spent last week in Harrisburg as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Bell. Comrade A. D. Noll, cf Milroy, spent last week as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Bowersox. Everybody who owned a gun or could borrow one hiked to the woods on Tuesday morning. Robert W. Reed, who was quite ill with pneumonia last week, is now on a fair way to recovery. W. A. Collins and grand-daughter visited relatives in Pittsburgh the early part of the week. Communion services will be observ- ed in the Presbyterian church at 10:30 o’clock on Sunday morning. Mrs. Will Swagert and daughter Florence, of Mount Union, were Sun- day visitors at the S. E. Fleming home- Herbert Goss and wife motored over from Petersburg and spent the latter end of the week with Mrs. A. F. Goss. John Dale, of Altoona, has been visiting Centre county relatives the past week. He is 93 years old and quite brisk. Our mutual friend, W. C. Meyers, is confined to bed with an attack of the grip, and under the care of a trained nurse. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Martz have re- turned to their home in Lake City, Ohio, after a ten days visit with friends in town. Frank Noll and lady friend, ac- companied by the Calvert sisters, all of Altoona, spent Sunday at the S. A. Homan home. Miss Ruth Miller came down from Altoona and spent Sunday with her grandfather, P. S. Dale, finding him improved in health. Mrs. W. A. Martin and Misses Grace and Maud Musser, of Axe Mann, were visitors... at. the Harry Musser home last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Markle, of Al- toona, visited the D. W. Thomas home on Sunday. Mr. Thomas has been ill for some weeks but is now recovering. George Woods, wife and George the 3rd, motored in from Wilkinsburg for the game at State, on Saturday, and spent the night at the Dr. George F. Woods home. During the heavy fog, last Friday night, a big buck was hit by an auto and killed on the state road above town. The carcass was sent to the Centre County hospital. Wallace Albright, tenant on the Ed Corl farm, last week bought the Al- bert Hoy farm, adjoining the Corl farm, for $5000. He will take pos- session April first, 1928. The Gummo hunting party are fix- ing up the George Miller property, west of town, for a hunting lodge. ‘George Burwell has been housed up with a siege of the grip. A. C. Kepler raised the biggest crop of potatoes this year ever grown in Centre county. From a field of 25 acres he took up 9600 bushels. He graded the tubers, receiving $1.40 a bushel for No 1 and $1.20 for No. 2. Some time ago a young faun be- came entangled in a wire fence and the man who released it tied a bell on its neck. Some weeks later it was seen with a herd of sixteen deer in a field above Shingletown. Sara Hess was ten years old last Thursday and her mother gave a par- ty in her honor at the family home on the Branch. A number of her young friends were present and the evening proved a delightful one. Sara received many nice presents. - Early in the summer farmer Simp- son, of Tadpole, found a young faun in his grain field which was almost dead from starvation. He took it home, fed it and took care of it, and now it has grown quite large and be- come so much of a pet that it stays close to the farm buildings. Returning home from a days hunt Milton Wieland was surprised to find his home filled with guests and the festive board spread with a feast fit for a King. It was his 45th birth- day and his wife planned the affair as a pleasant surprise for him. Mr. Wieland received quite a number of useful gifts. The Hallowe’en social neld in the I. 0. O. F. hall on Saturady evening was largely attended. The Ladies Circle of the Methodist church was in charge and they had something do- ing every minute of the time. Re- freshments of various kinds were on sale. Robert Corl won a big cake by guessing the number of seeds in a pumpkin. Prizes were awarded for best costumes, the winners being J. A. Tressler, Mrs. J. S. Miller, Dora Graham and Eva Davis. Thirty or for the church. ——Vote for Stover and Garbrick for County Auditors. | | Marriage. Licenses. = Merrill ‘Rice and Blanche Meese, both of Bellefonte. : William S. Walker and Kathryn Ann Watson, both of Milesburg. Norman Shawley and Laura De- Witt, both of Milesburg. Andrew Lentuorski Jr., of Cambria Heights, and Rose Matis, of Belle- fonte. : Benjamin F. Booth, of Fort Monroe, Va., and Jennie M. Wert, of Belle- fonte. Harold C. Weaver and Nannie J. Walk, both of Tyrone. Melvin D. Snare and Mary Wilson, both of Milroy. ——Vote for Herr for Prothonotary. ——Vote for Herr for Prothonotary. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OR RENT—Two houses in Milesburg. Inquire of Toner A. Hugg, Miles- burg, Pa. RE wi, FS o Oh, Yes! Call Bellefonte 432 B2 = £ W.R. Shope Lumber Co. T1-16-t¢ dnd : Lumber, Sash, Doors, Millwork and Roofing ——Vote for Herr for Prothonotary. | \|—porme—a——rrrene ———— in NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. I N OR SALE. — Slightly used and 2 shares for Tar 0 ei yrdson VOTE FOR — - Half Moon Gardens. T2-41-tf o NOTICE. [ Notice is hereby given that an applica- 0 ¢ ¢ tion will be made to the Board of Pardons at its meeting to be held in the Supreme 72-43-3t | Court Room in the Capitol at Harrisburg, FOR ANTED.—A compenent cement fin- isher. Apply to Construction of- fice, Western State Penitentiary, Rockview. 43-1t Revised Sealed Proposals. Revised sealed proposals will be receiv- ed by the Spring township, Centre Coun- ty, School District, John H. Barnhart, Bellefonte, secretary, until November 1927, at 7:30 P. M., for the follow: ng: (1). For a system of Heating and Ventilating. (2) For a system of Plumbing. (3) For a system of Electric Wiring. A ceitified check will he required for each bid for the following amounts: Heating and Ventilating $250.00; Plumb- ing $150.00; Electric Wring $50.00. Each check must be made payable to the treasurer of the School District, and will be forfeited in case the bidder who is awarded the contract fails to execute said contract and furnish satisfactory Bond. Plans and Specifications may be secured from the office of Hersh & Shollar, Architects, of Altoona, Pa., on the re- ceipt of a deposit check of $15.00, check to be forfeited in case the contractors fails to place a bonifide bid. The Board of Directors reserves the night to reject any or all bids. 10-28-2t JOHN H. BARNHART, Secy. FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate 20% ! 71.28.6m J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent Pa., on Wednesday, November 16, 1927 at 9:00 o’clock a. m., for the pardon of Frank W. Pace who entered a plea of guilty in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Centre county, Pennsylvania, at No. 54 Septem- ber Sessions, 1924 of said Court to the crime of breaking and escaping peniten- tiary and sentenced to imprisonment in the Western Penitentiary for a period of not ss than two years. nor more than Jour years. FRANK W. PACE, FOR Dry Cleaning and Pressing Phone Stickler & Koons 8 West Bishop Street Bellefonte, Pa. 72-37tf bounty Commissioner He will see to it that you get 100 cents return for every dollar of public money expended — Vote for Dunlap for Sheriff. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OR RENT.—The Mrs. J. Will Conley ! home on Logan street, possession to be had immediately following the sale on Nov. 19. 42-tf. Free six HOSE Free Mendel’s Knit Silk Hose for Wo- men, guaranteed to wear months without runners in leg or holes in heels or toe. A new FREE if they fail. Price $1.00. YEAGER’'S TINY BOOT SHOP. garage at 203 east Linn St. Belle- F OR. SALE OR RENT.—Residence and fonte, Inquire of HUGH N. CRIDER, 112 So. Harvard Ave. Ventnor, N. TJ. 72-32-tf Ordinary Phonograph Music Here is a visualization of music as played by an ordinary phonograph. It is faraway++formlese++ a mere outline of thin sound, unshaded and incomp| Edisonic Close-up Music Here is a visualization of the same music as Re- Created by the new Edisonic. The music, like this picture. is close up, is complete. There is full detail ++ form to every sound. There is depth, perspective, beauty . . . the living artist seems ° 8 present in the room. * ° ee 0 wu «CLOSE-UP. \ “Close-up” Music is rich—lavish in volume Ir brings you the elusive individuality of each instrument, you are conscious almost of the personality of each musician! Banjo, trampet, clarinet, and sax—each speaks out to you, not as orchestral instruments submerged in ensemble sound, but silhouetted and precise as a solo! « « « Do you like jazz? Then hear it on the Edisonic! Listen to its moaning blue notes, its: sparkling phrases, its background of pulsing bass! All, all are there! ...Do you prefer the classics? The Edisonic brings them to you as their composers would have you hear: them—and with all the elusive shadings of the interpreting artist . . . The Edisonic has been perfected by Thomas A. Edison on the 50th Anniversary of his invention of the phonograph. It marks a new epoch in the science of musical re-creation . . . and in the enjoyment of music in the home. We invite you to come in and hear the new Edisonic — the instrument that brings perfect music to you whenever you want it, as long as you want it, without even the annoyance of changing a needle! The astounding EDISONIC Harter’s Music Store..... Bellefonte, Pa.