CA A NEC Se A Sl EVD RR fa REISER A SRR RS Shion, CHE STAR TR RSC rR aR, | BOGUS BOND SALESMAN Pres Pemovraiic aldo WEEPS WHEN SENTENCED. sro E. C. McFeaters Given Another Term Bellefonte, Pa., January 25, 1929. of Five to Ten Years in EE SP Ie ST, Penitentiary. /N AND COUNTY. 3 NEWS Sov? TOWN 4D © { E. C. McFeaters, the Pittsburgh — Representative J. Laird Holmes "bond salesman, who in 1922 swindled introduced a bill in the Legislature, on the First National bank of Spring Tuesday, providing for a total appro- Mills out of a considerable sum of priation of $6,211,000 to State Col- money, appeared in open _court, last lege. | Friday afternoon, plead guilty to the ——1In federal court, at Lewisburg charge and was sentenced by Judge on Tuesday, Judge Johnson sentenced Fleming to pay a fine of fifty dollars, Frank S. Miller, of Rebersburg, to costs of the prosecution and undergo fifteen days in jail for violation of the ; imprisonment in the western peniten- liquor law. | ary for not less i te) yosts. = a ; a; 14 : the court pronounced s - le lat le Featers slumped into his chair and ill with an attack of scarlet fever, | wept, his sobs being audible through- and the family home on west Lamb Out the court room. _| McFeaters is the man directly re- Jrrost has. been placed wnder quaran sponsible for a lot of costly litigation in th famous Spring Mills bank ——Deputy sheriff Sinie Hoy mot- in ihe how pring : case against S. G. Walker, who at the ored down to Harrisburg, on Tuesday time of the swindle was cashier of afternoon, to get Robert Knisley, who the bank. For fifteen years prior to was arrested there on a warrant from : : 2 1922 he had been a salesman for a State College charging him with for-! pittoproh bond house and was one of gery. the best on the road. According to ——Four inches of snow fell on statements made in court, on Friday, Tuesday afternoon, the most we have | he made good money, but was not had in this section of the State this | content to live within his income. For winter. At that it would have been | five or six months he indulged in a deeper had it not turned to rain in | regular orgie of selling bogus bonds, the evening. forgery and ctheer swindling opera- ——Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Shives, of | tions which netted him approximately Clarence, take this means of express- | $238,000. Like the prodigal son he ing their appreciation to all those | also induged in riotous living and at who assisted in saving their home at | One time owned five automobiles, one the time of the destructive fire at or more of them being cars costing Clarence on Monday night last week. five thousand dollars. He purchased a home for his father and mother in the Squirrel Hill dis- trict, Pittsburgh, paying part cash ——Three negro murderers of Erie county, who were scheduled to go to the electric chair at Rockview peni- tentiary next Monday morning, have been granted a respite by Governor Fisher until February 25th to enable their case to be heard by the Board of Pardons. # He also bought for the old a $3500 player ance. folks operations were detected McFeaters ——During the year 1928 exactly |ed and taken to Blair county where he 102 residents of Centre county were patients at the Geisinger hospital, Danville. State College headed the list with 56, Bellefonte 23, Centre Hall 9, Rebersburg 4, Millheim and Spring Mills, 3, and Boalsburg, Sny- dertown, Snow Shoe and Moshannon one each. ——Both Mrs. Andrew J. Cook and Mrs. A. Wilsen Norris celebrated their eighty-fifth birthday, this week, Mrs. Cook with an informal neighboz- hood reception yesterday afternoon Thomas Baldridge. He was given a sentence of five to ten years in the western penitentiary. He was a model prisoner and a por- tion of his term was served at Rock- view. His minimum term expired on January 7th and as he was released from the penitentiary he was met at the door by sheriff Harry E. Dunlap, with a detainer warrant, who brought him back to Centre county to answer for his swindling operations here. In court last Friday afternoon, and giving a mortgage for the bal- | piano on the installment plan. When his swindling | left the State but was finally captur- was tried and convicted before Judge : MAN WHO KILLED SEVEN DIES IN ELECTRIC CHAIR. Paul Jawarski, man killer of three States, bandit chief and confessed killer of seven men, paid the penalty of his numerous crimes by forfeiting his life in the electric chair at Rock- view on Monday morning. The one time church cheir singer showed his criminal instincts to the last when he refused to accept the services of a minister during his last hour - on earth and to accompany him to the death chair. Without a wozd of fare- well, and with an apparent grim de- termination to die game he walked to the chair without a tremor. The straps were quickly adjusted and at 7:02 o’clock exccutioner Robert Elliott pushed the switch which sent 2000 volts of electricity coursing through Jawarski’s body. Only one contact was necessary and at 7:06 Jawarski was declared dead by Drs. J. V. Foster, of State College, and Asa L. Hickok, prison physician. Two minutes later Calvir E. James, of Bucks county, was placed in the chair. Two contacts were given him, cne at 7:10 and another at 7:12, and at 7:14 he was pronounced dead. Jawarski, who was 382 years old, was born near Detroit, Mich., and half “his life had been given to a criminal career. Burglaries and murders were committed in Detroit, Mich., Cleve- land, Ohio, and Pittsburgh, Pa. In the latter place he became the leader of the noted Flathead band of holdup bandits which made a specialty of payroll robberies. He was the princi- : pal figure in the holdup of the Pitts- burgh Terminal Coal company’s pay 'roll truck at Mollenauer on December '23rd, 1925, at which time the guard, I. L. Gump, was killed. In due time Jawarski was arrested tried and con- victed, the death penalty being rec- ommended. In August, 1927, in com- pany with Jack Vashbinder, he shot his way out of the Allegheny county ‘jail and escaped. Later he killed | Vashbinder. Last September Jawarski was lo- cated in Cleveland, Ohio, and when i officers attempted his arrest he killed one of them and was himself shot twice but recoverd. He was taken ‘back to Pittsburgh in October. Ap- “peals to the Supreme court and the board of pardons were made in vain ‘and Jawarski finally paid the penalty. {His body was unclaimed and was !buried in the penitentiary cemetery. James went to the chair for the murder, on April 15th, 1928, of Wil- BOROUGH COUNCIL ENACTS Other Business Transacted at the terday. | Meeting Monday Night. Just six members were present at the regular meeting of borough coun- cil, on Monday evening, the absentees being Messrs. Reynolds, Kline and Cobb. A communication was received from J. M. Keichline offering to car- ry the insurance on borough property for twenty per cent. less than any other agent can place it. The com- muication was placed on file. A communication was received from John J. Bower making application for re-election as fire marshall. On mo- tion of Mr. Cunningham he was re- elected. The Street committee presented a PURE MILK ORDINANCE. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL —Merchant Jerry Glenn, of Curtin, was among the business visitors in town yes- —Horton 8. Ray was called to New "York, Tuesday, by the death of his moth- routine report of work done on wvari- ous streets. . The Water committee reported some minor repairs and the collection of $6.00 on the 1925 duplicate, $24.00 on the 1926, $63.75 on the 1927 and $406.25 cn the 1928, a total of $500. The Finance committee reported receipt of a check for $376.64 from Ivan Walker, trustee, on account of the borough deposit in the Centre County bank. The committee also re- ported a balance of $719.78 in the hands of the borough treasurer and requested the renewal of two notes aggregating $3300. The Fire and Police committee recommended the election of the fol- lowing drivers for the two pumpers: For the Logans, Arthur Boob, Robert | Garman, James Bower, Earl Custer and Miles Steele. George Carpeneto, Albert Knisely, For the Undines, ' Basil Doll, Charles Saxion and Ralph Moerschbacher. All other business having been dis- posed of the much talked of pure milk ordinance was taken up and read for the second time by secretary W. T. Kelley. At the conclusion of the reading Mr. Mignot made a motion that it be passed as read and the mo- tion was seconded by Mr. Brouse. On er, Mrs. Sarah Ray. —C. G. Decker, head of the Decker Chev- rolet Co., here has been a patient this week, in the Geisinger hospital, at Dan- ville. —W. C. Coxey, the Bishop street groe- er, went out to Elwood City on Sunday; having been called there by the death of his sister, Mrs. William Fortney. —Miss Mary Saylor is in Wheeling, W. Va. for ap indefinite stay, having gone down on account of illmess in the family of her brother-in-law, Elmer Burchey. —Samuel Hart was here from New York last week, for a two day's visit with his sisters. Hart, at their home on Spring street. —Mrs. Harvey Wetzel, who is at her former home at Bethlehem, wént down unexpectedly last week, called there by the illness of her mother, Mrs. Hummel Vaite. —Miss Emma Long, a member of the Stewart family of west Linn street, re- turned to Bellefonte, Sunday, following a three week's visit at her former home, in Philipsburg. —-Miss Iimily Crider is among those from Bellefonte now in Philadelphia, hav- ing gone down the early part of the week to be under the cahe of her physician for a short time. —Mrs. Louise Van Tries Harris has had a3 a house guest this week, Mr. Harris daughter, Mrs. McClure, of Philadelphia, as a house guest this week. Mr. Harris’ have become a custom. —Mr. and Mrs. Horatio 8S. Moore are planning to spend the month of February at Atlantic City, expecting to leave this vveek for the shore where they will be at Galen Hall during their stay. —Mr. Mrs. Ralph T. and Smith, Mr. "and Mrs. Clarence Williams and Mr. and an aye and nay vote the six council- ! men present voted in favor of the ordinance and it was declared legally passed. Mr. Emerick then stated that in re- gard to the publication of the ordi- nance Charles E. Dorworth had offer- ed to give the entire cost for same to . Monday, for a day’s visit with his many | the Bellefonte hospital if it were given to the Bellefonte Republican for pub-- lication, and he made a motion that it be given to that paper. Mr. Brouse Mrs. Robert Willard, motored up to St. Mary's, on Sunday, for a brief visit with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rhinesmith. —Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Flemng with their son, Judge M. Ward Fleming and Fleming, drove to Williamsport, Tuesday, to attend the funeral of Mrs. Eugene 4. Fleming, a sister-in-law of W. I. Fleming. -—In contemplation of entering the U. S. Army Cadet Flying school, William T. Iieinle left yesterday for Washington, D. C., to take his entrance examination. Wil- ilam has been with the Central Pennsyl- vaunia Gas company of Bellefonte. —James Krape, a former resident of Bellefonte, came up from Spring Mills, friends about town. James, spce leaving here, has been with J. Gross Shook, on his dairy farm near Spring Mills. —Mrs. Frank Bradford came over from the Misses Harriet and Elizabeth : Mops. | and Mrs. Norris at a dinner given by Mrs. Beach and Miss Blanchard Wednesday evening, at their home on Linn strect. ——Governor Fisher, on Monday, submitted his budget to the members’ of the General Assembly and in it he designated an appropriation of $2,250,000 for new construction work at State College. This will be in ad- dition to the usual appropriation for support. In the budget is also an in- crease of almost five million dollars for support and construction work at the State's penal institutions. ——This has been a bad season for transplanting young trout from State hatcheries to the various trout streams. All the streams have been unusually low and during the past month some of them frozen dry, so that planting trout was out of the question. The result is that there is a good stock of trout in the Bellefonte hatchery to put out in the spring be- fore the opening of the fishing sea- son. ——The Centre county Woman's Auxiliary of the Centre County hospi- tal will hold its annual meeting at the hospital next Monday, at one o'clock, with a luncheon. Almost forty ac- by the committee in charge. Dr. M. J. Locke, Miss Eckert and Miss Hars- man will be speakers at the luncheon. It is hoped that the luncheon-meet- ing will result in renewed interest in the instituticn among the women of Centre county generally. According to health officer George Glenn there are forty cases of measles among the school children of Bellefonte. There is also one case of diphtheria, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nepp, in the Richelieu apartments, and a case of scarlet fever at the Hartsock home, on Bish- op street. The latter is the sixteen year old son, who contracted the dis- ease while helping to care for a younger brother, who also had the fever but has recovered. ——Quite a number of people made a hurried trip out to the aviation field, last Saturday morning, by the report that Col. Charles Lindberg was head- ed this way and would probably come down on the Bellefonte field. But while he flew from Cleveland to New York he didn’t stop in Bellefonte nor come near enough for his plane to be seen. On Saturday afternoon two of the big Ford passenger ships came down at the Bellefonte field and re- mained until Sunday, when they con- tinued on their way east. ——According to gossip on the streets yesterday it will not be sur- prising if the present receivers of the Centre County Banking Co., are re- lieved of their duties very shortly and the settlement of affairs taken back into the Federal courts. In such an event the creditors will be called to- gether to choose a new receiver or re- ceivers. The case of George R. Meek, alledged partner, on the merits of the question as to whether he is or is not a partner, has been docketed for a hearing in Scranton at the March term of the U. 8. District court. McFeaters was represented by former | liam Howard Dunstan, a pharmacist Judge James C. Furst, who as district | of Doylestown, because he claimed the attorney in 1922 had prepared the in- | latter refused to pay him a bill of His case,’ dictment against McFeaters. Array- | $139 for bootleg whiskey. ed against him were district attorney John G. Love, N. B. Spangler and S. D. Gettig. In behalf of McFeaters Mr. Furst told the court that when he was sentenced by Judge Baldridge, in Blair county, the court had taken into account the total sum of his swindling operations and now he did not think it consistent to require him to under- go additional punishment. He fur- ther stated that during his term in the penitentiary his mother had died, his father was old and crippled and Me- Feater’s assistance was badly needed for his care and that of an aged aunt. On these grounds he asked for a sus- pended sentence. Mr. Spangler opposed giving Me- [eaters a suspended sentence on the ground that his various - swindling operations had caused much suffer- ing to a number of Centre county peo- ple and costly litigation which is still in the courts. In pronouncing sentence Judge [Ileming said he could not condone the man’s crime by giving him a suspended sentence. That if there are goed grounds for 4 5 Lim having been sufficiently punished ceptances have already been received | z xD the Board of Pardons is the proper place to go. He further stated that while he would not assist in any inter- cession for a pardon, neither would he present any opposition. Prior to taking up the McFeaters case Charles Williams, of Philipsburg, who plead guilty to a violation of the liquor law, was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and undergo imprisonment in the Allegheny county work house for not less than eighteen months nor more than three years. Howard Chambers, of Snow Shoe, convicted at the September term of court on the charge of aggravated assault and battery, and for whom a new trial was refused, was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and serve three months in the county jail. Williams was taken to the Alle- gheny county work house on Saturday and McFeaters to the western peni- tentiary at Pittsburgh on Monday. Catholic Daughters Install Officers and Observe Anniversary. A double significance marked the regular meeting of the Catholic Daughters of America, held in their club rooms in the Lyon building, last Thursday night. It was the annual installation of officers for the ensuing vear and a banquet in celébration of the 9th anniversary of the institution of the chapter. Official guests pres- ent included Miss Frances Maher, of Kane, State regent and vice supreme regent of the order, and Miss Helen Merritt, of Tyrone, district deputy. Officers installed were as follows: Grand regent, Mrs. G. Oscar Gray; vice regent, Mrs. Heverly; prophetess, Mary Woods; monitor, Mrs. Richard Brouse; financial secretary, Agnes Hartle; treasurer, Ethel Carpeneto; sentinel, Adaline Anderson; trustees, Mrs. Waite and Mrs, Catherine Gar- brick. : | also, was taken to the Supreme court and the board of pardons but without l avail. James’ body was claimed and | was shipped to Doylestown for bur: “ial. | Eight newspaper men from Pitts- burgh, Cleveland, Detroit and New | York witnessed the electrocution, at- character of Jawarski, who had al- ways maintained that he would find some way to cheat the electric chair, and there was always a suspicion {that at the last minute he might at- i tempt suicide, but such was not the case. amount of press matter sent out from Bellefonte in the four days from the time Jawarski death house until after his execution totaled 40,000 words, not counting several thousand by telephone. exceeded by over 5000 the amount sent out at the time of the electrocu- { 35,000 words were the total, and was second only to the press matter dis- i patched in October, 1926, when pilot ! Charles Ames crashed to his death on Nittany mountain, when the total was 47,000 words. : Woman’s Club Meeting The regular January meeting of the Woman's club of Bellefonte will be held in the auditorium of the High school building next Monday evening, January 28. Mrs. Bertha Lee Broyles, of State College, who was to have been at the November meeting, will be present and address the audience on the subject. “Peace.” We hope she will be greeted by a large attendance of members and friends. MRS. D. A. GROVE. Academy Boxing Bout This Evening. The Bellefonte Academy boxing team will have their first home bout in the local armory at 8:30 o’clock this (Friday) evening, with the fistic battlers of the Shamokin High school. The Academy team this year has a number of clever glove artists and it is a treat to see them in action. Ring- side seats for the bout will be $1.00, with general admission 50 cents. Ev- ery man and woman interested in this manly sport should be on hand early. During the past week deposi- tors of the defunct Centre County Banking company received from Ivan Walker, trustee of the estate of Mary C. Harris, a ten per cent. dividend of their claims against the company which, added to a fifteen per cent. dividend received almost two years ago makes a total of 25 per cent. It is understood that the trustees ap- pointed by Judge Dale have in their possession funds sufficient to justify another distribution of 15 per cent. but their authority for making a dis- tribution has been in doubt pending litigation in the federal courts. tracted there because of the notorious ! With eight writers on hand the was brought to the! This | tion of the Four Horsemen of Phila- delphia, on January 7th, 1927, when | Centre Hall, Friday morning, in the train, { on one of her occasional visits to Belle- fonte, spent the greater part of the day in the shops, then returned home in her car, which came for her during the late afternoon. —Mr. and Mrs. Fred Healy are both home from Baltimore. Mrs. Healy, who seconded the motion and it was pass- ed without a dissenting vote. The new ordinance, by the way, provides for the abolition of a local board of health and its health officer and the appointment of a man to act jointly as milk inspector and health Lofficer. The ordinance will become ef- 4 entered the Johns Hopkins hospital for {fective the first of April. a slight operation, at the time Mr. Healy Bills totaling $622.50 were approv- was discharged, having joined the family ed for payment after which council | Saturday. Mr. Healy had been a patient “adjourned. {in the hospital since November. | —Mrs. Elmer E. Sager was up from ' Philadelphia the forepart of the week, looking after her property interests on {non Thomas street. Mrs. Sager return- : {ed home Wednesday, to prepare to ac- Ever mindful of the fact that a ' company Mr. Sager on a trip to Florida, i community is judged by the quality of where they anticipate spending the re- the young people which it turns out mainder of the winter. into the world, Bellefonte Y. M. C. A,,! —Rev. Dr. A, M. Schmidt came up is daily endeavoring to solve the from Philadelphia, on Sunday, to assist yDrotioms and mest fhe etds of the Rr Roe youth in this vicinity. Clean and ‘day afternoon. Once in Bellefonte he na- wholesome recreation is the aim and i turally remained over until Tuesday in full and happy lives the goal. order to have an opportunity to see as Sports tend to develop character, many of his friends as possible. self-reliance, self-assurance, coopera- | ney : : -—Mr. and Mrs. John Sommerville, who tion and manliness. With these things in be in New York for . an indefinite | Clean, Wholesome Recreation Offered at the Y. M. C. A. (in view, teams have been chosen in time, left Bellefonte, Saturday and went the different classes, giving an intra- to Mrs. Sommerville’s former home in ! mural tournament in .each of the di- Milton. After a day's visit there, Mr. . Sommerville went on to New York, where his wife will join him at the end of this week, with no plans as to the length of their stay in the city. visions of gymnasium periods. On January 1st the first round of . these tournaments closed and as a re- , ward to the winning team in each | —Dr. Edith Schad, who is here from class, the three losing teams gave a Toledo, Ohio, came in Saturday, for a banquet to the winners. These ban-- | {isit of several weeks with her sister, quets were held in the Association ars. Frank Warfield and her daughter, building as follows: | Mrs. James Craig and her family, all of Grade school Girls.—Winning team whom have been ill, during the recent the Pansies, Capt. Cleta Beck. At- cpidemic, which has been sweeping over tendance 32. Banqueted by the Lilies, (he country. Dr. Schad’s stay, following Violets and Roses. ; her usual custom, will be indefinite. Cadet Boys.—Winning team the! —Among those in Bellefonte for the fun- Wildcats, Capt. James Decker. At- poral of the late Miss Helen Mingle, on Mon- tendance 24. Banqueted by Bears, Say : i a. a Serensed; > . : Gros y » . . Mr. Lm s.—Winning team ! Mingle was born and grew to manhood at : , Centre Hall and before going east spent Vassar, Capt. Irma Sloop. Attend- | a few years in business in Bellefonte. He ance 33. Banqueted by Bryn Mawr, is now in business in Philadelpha but Wellesley and Drexel. {lives in New Jersey commuting morning Junior Boys.—Winning team Army, (and evening via the bus route. Capt. Homer Knox Jr. Attendance —John Knox and Miss Blanche Filson, 39. Banqueted by Notre Dame, Yale drove up from Harrisburg, Sunday, to and Southern California. | spena the day at the parsonage, where a These banquets were enjoyable af- | family dinner was given in celebration of fairs, provided in the covered dish (Mrs. Knox's birthday, the immediate style. Thanks are tendered the moth- | mRTmbers wr me famly being do un i : + ' guests. ile here John, the est 8 ers who aided the boys and girls in ;of the Rev. and Mrs. Knox, announced making them a success by their gen- | that according to present plans, he and erous help at home. | Miss Filson will be married at Easter. The second round of tournaments | ; —Deputy Sheriff, 8. H. Hoy, accom- tarte : 1 has heen s 4, Jew teams being ! panied by Mrs. Hoy and their daughter- chosen. Names of the teams and (in-law, Mrs. Harry Hoy, of Wilkinsburg, captains are: . drove to Harrisburg, Tuesday on official Cadet Boys.—Princeton, Elwood j,giness and experienced quite a bit of Furst, captain; Dartmouth, Blaine giscomfort on the return trip, by Being Mabus; Harvard, Edward Maloy; caught in the snow storm of that after- Bucknell, Richard Gray. | noon. Mrs. Harry Hoy came in Sunday Junior Boys.—Yellow Jackets, Ken- and will be with Mr. Hoy’s parents, until neth Miller; Celtics, Paul Beck; All- 'he drives in tomorrow to join her and Americans, Robert Morris; Swedes | fake her home Sunday. H. Rossman. —Capt. W. H. Fry, of Pine Grove Mills, High School Girls.—Navy, L. Mor- \ accompanied his son, G. Mac Fry, on a gan; Army, M. Baum; Marines, 1. motor trip to Bellefonte last Saturday : : : : w_ | afternoon, and while the latter was at- Pola Southern California, Sis Cur | tending to some business matters the n. . . . 4, ' captain made calls on some of his friends. Grade Girls—Robins, L. Ulrich; , Between caring for the sick during the Larks, H. Woomer; Wrens, M. Wil- day and attending banquets at night he son; Orioles, J. Cohen. | has been kept pretty busy of late, but it These tournaments will end about doesn’t seem to affect his health as he is April 20th, when the winners will be looking better than he has for several banqueted by the losers. years. | —Mrs. George Kerstetter, of Harrisburg, ‘was here for an over Sunday visit with her sisters, Mrs. Geisinger and Mrs. H. C. Yeager, at the latter's home on Spring | Street. —After spending the Holiday season, and making an after Christmas visit with her uncle and brother Dr. Joseph and Henry Brockerhoff, Miss Margaret Brock- erhoff is planning to return to Philadelphia the first of February. —John G. Dauberman, well known Cen- tre Hall buiness man and farmer, was in town yesterday; having come over to at- tend the meetings of the school director's j association of the county. Mr. Dauberman ‘said that while the question of the water supply in Centre Hall has given them some concern, the situation is not nearly as serious as is the case in some other towns where the supply has been effected by the prolonged dry weather. —Miss Mildred Wieland, an instructor in the schools of Altoona, came over home yesterday morning, called here by the jll- ness of her mother, Mrs. Frank BE. Wie- land, of Linden Hall, who is a patient in the Centre County hospital. Mr. and Mrs. ; Wieland and their daughter, only recent- ly returned from their Christmas visit with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brouse, at Norris- town, where Mrs. Wieland had been with ; her elder daughter, since the birth of Mrs. , Brouse second son in November. ALTOONA TO CELEBRATE GREATER POPULATION. i On January seven of this year, the ‘ city of Altoona officially annexed sur- { rounding territory of such size as to double the size of the city and in- ‘creased the population to almost 90, { 000, making it the seventh largest city in the State. : | Members of the Altoona Booster : Association are going to feature a big trade event in celebration of the | expansion of their city. The event has been termed A Greater Altoona Day and will be held on next Wed- nesday, January 30. | As stated in the advertisement of ' the Booster Association appearing in this issue, the Booster merchants are going to offer extraordinary values and they mention the fact that the sale is for all of the people in Central Pennsylvania, as well as for Altoona people and all are invited to attend “and share in the good values. | Altoona Booster merchants firmly i believe in the trade at home policy and suggest that people give their local merchants first consideration at : all times depending on Booster Stores { for the things their home stores can- not supply. “Greater Altoona Day,” next Wednesday, will be a good time to shop for the home and personal needs that cannot be had in the home town stores. Big Basket Ball Schedule at Y To- morrow Night. Saturday evening, January 26, will bring the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. bas- ket ball team into the middle of its 28-29 season. The Y quintette will meet, on its own court, the fast Hill- top Y Red Birds, of Pittsburgh. This team is the representative team of L. C. Heineman’s former post, Hilltop Young Men’s Christian Association, of Pittsburgh. It has the reputation of being a fast moving and clean playing team and should give the lo- cals a great game. As preliminaries to this game the Junior Five, of Tyrone, will meet the Hi-Y Five. This should be interest- ing as the Hi-Y boys are in the pink of condition and have, one of the fastest and smoothest teams repre- senting their club in many years. As another attraction the girls are endeavoring to bring a team to Belle- fonte. This will be a test game as i the girls have not been in action yet this season, but have shown their ability to make baskets and play a fast game in their practices. Saturday evening will no doubt be basketball night for the fans of Belle- fonte. The first game will begin at 8:15, the main attraction beginning 9:45. This should give the business’ men a chance to see one of the finest games this season. ——Centre county trappers realiz- ed $701 in bounties for their work during the month of December, the largest amount paid to any county in the State, according to a report from Harrisburg. Thus it will be seen that this county not only ranks among the highest in its quota of game animals and birds but also high in its fur- bearing animals. With $701 received as bounties Centre county trappers will probably realize three or four times that amount for their pelts, which is not a bad month’s return, and the trapping season is not half over. ——If you have not yet bought a ticket for the High school play, “Go- ing Up,” which will be given in the Richelieu theatre next Tuesday even- ing, you should do so at once. It is reported as being one of the best at- tractions ever offered by the High school. I —————— ee ——— ——Russell Rider has purchased the pool room and cigar store in the basement of the Richelieu theatre from Robert F. Hood, and will have charge of same in the future. The young man has been a clerk in the store for several months. Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by O. Y. Wagner & Oe. Whent ...oivuiviicraciiviininiiee $1.35 Corn viv Mesa iet urns nantes hve esieae 80 Oats ....:0n0d ak viivys vivir eees B50 RYS ‘sesvsissnsssnasidesninissvinisences 330 BAIEY “craniierivsnsseninivernse sei son BO Buckwheat .....cssesveeritaivininises 0