Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 11, 1929, Image 8

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    4 gE is | -
Bellefonte, Pa., October 1, 1929.
« —
_—
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
: ——Only six truck growers lined
up at the Bellefonte curb market, on
‘Wednesday morning, and-it won't
be long until the market will close
for this year.
«ed his position as. chief electrician
for the American Lime & Stone Co.,
a job he has filled most efficiently
during the past six years.
——W. Harrison Walker Esq., was
signally honored by his alma mater,
last week, when he was elected a
member of Incorporators of Dickin-
son School of Liaw at Carlisle.
. ——Paul W. Waite, of Half Moon
valley, is a ‘member of Penn State’s
dairy cattle judging team, and has
gone to St. Louis, Mo., where the
national dairy exposition will open
tomorrow. The State team of four
men will compete in the judging
contests there.
——Melvin Gillette, fifteen year
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Gil-
lette of Clarence, sustained a bad
flesh wound on the right knee, on
Tuesday, when a shot gun he was
handling was accidentally discharg-
ed. He was brought to the Centre
County hospital for treatment.
——Two trucks and a car confis-
«cated by police officials some months
ago for. carrying contraband liquor
‘were sold at public sale, on Saturday,
by order of the court. E. J. Gehret
bought one of the trucks for $85;
‘Henry Kline paid $130 for another:
«one and Clarence Ziegler bought the
«car for $5.00.
——Landlord M. A. Landsy has
‘had the word “Bellefonte” painted on
the roof of the Brockerhoff house, in
letters ten feet high and eight wide.
Also an arrow pointing the way to
the aviation field and the figure “3”
to indicate the distance in miles. The
sign was painted for the benefit of
airplane pilots new to this route.
With Penn’s cave, the Wood-
ward cave and Veiled Lady Cavern
right at their doors Centre county
people are evidently fed up on un-
derground attractions, as not one
ticket was sold at the Bellefonte de-
pot, Saturday night, for the Penn-
sylvania railroad’s Sunday excur-
sion to the Luray cavernsand Grand
caverns in Virginia.
Trustees of the Pennsylvania
State College have granted indefinite
leave of absence to Dr. Gerald L.
Wendt assistant to president Ralph
D. Hetzel in institutional research.
Dr. Wendt was dean of the school
of chemistry and physics at the
college from 1924 to 1928. He plans
to devote himself for some time to
private business interests.
Many appointments to posi-
tions that will run from one to two
years will soon be made by the gov-
ernment. The work will have to do
‘with the coming census and salaries
will range from $1260 to $1440 per
year. Applications will be received
by the U. S. Civil Service commission
until Nov. 2, 1929. Positions are open
to both men and women. Full in-
formation can be obtained from any
post master.
——Announcements were received
in Bellefonte this week of the mar-
riage of Wallace James Ward, teach-
er of physics and chemistry in the
Bellefonte High school, and Miss
Lucille Stetler, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William H. Stetler, of Ripley,
N. Y. the wedding having taken
place on August 21st. Mrs. Ward
had previously engaged to teach at
Union City, Pa., the coming school
year, and will make good her con-
tract.
Miss Margaret Jones, daugh-
ter of Mrs. Louise Jones, of Belle-
fonte, and who is a trained nurse in
Pittsburgh, was quite seriously injur-
ed in an auto accident in that city,
one day last week, according to word
received in Bellefonte on Monday. A
trolley car ran past a red light signal
and wrecked the auto in which Miss
Jones was a passenger. She sustain--
ed various cuts and bruises aswell
as concussion of the brain, but is
now improving.
——On Sunday afternoon J. Dor-
Sey Hunter, of Bellefonte, walked out
‘to the Advent cemetery, on “The
“Divide,” and just as he reached the
point where the roads fork, one lead-
‘ing to Runville and the other to Yar-
‘nell, he saw a mother bear and three
half grown :cubs crossing an open
field nearby. Several dogs were giv-
ing tongue on the ridge nearby and
the old bear was leading her cubs
- put of the neighborhood where the
«dogs were. Mr. Hunter watched them
“for several minutes before they left
“the field and disappeared in the
‘Woods to the north.
E. E. Widdowson has a force
of men at work building quite an
extensive addition on the : rear of
his property, on north Spring street.
The building will be used partly as
a work room for his undertaking
business and also as a garage. A
high concrete retaining wall was put
down at the rear of his property and
the entire lot will be filled up and
graded and in this work Mr. Widdow-
son has struck a sreak of unusual
fuck. The Rhoads Bros. in tearing
down the old barn on the Valentine
property and digging out the foun-
dation for the new postoffice building
‘have many cubic yards of waste ma-
terial to dispose of and they are tak-
ing advantage of the short haul and
dumping it into Widdowson’s yard,
which is a very convenient arrange-
ment all around.
Frederick Daggett has resign-
{20 to 0. The visitors came to Belle-
. fonte primed to win and fought
| HARRY C. MUSSER IS
i
APPLYING FOR panos}
An application will be made to
‘the Board of Pardons, at its Octo-
ber meeting next week, for a par-
{don for Harry C. Musser, of Centre
county, convicted in September,
1924, of second degree murder for
killing his uncle, William: E. Mus- |
ser, and sentenced to serve not less
than ten - nor more - than twenty
years in the western penitentiary.
The case was the last one of any |
importance tried before the late:
Judge Henry C. Quigley and at- |
tracted unusual -attention. William |
Musser was murdered in a seclud-
spot in little Sugar valley on the
evening of July 20th, 1924. The
body was found the next day (Sun-
day) by D. O. Dorman, of Nittany
valley. Harry Musser and Herbert
Heaton, who had been seen in Belle-
fonte with William Musser on the
evening of the 20th were arrested
charged with the murder, and Sey-
mour Stover was arrested as an
accessory after the fact.
The case went to trial on Sep-
tember 25th before Judge Quigley.
District attorney Arthur C. Dale
was assisted in the prosecution by
John G. Love Esq., while Musser
was represented by 8S. D.° Gettig
and N. B. Spangler. Musser was
tried first and the case was given to
the jury on the afternoon of Sep-
tember 29th, which was Monday.
After being out several hours the
jury returned a verdict of “guilty
and recommended to the mercy of
the court.” Judge Quigley sent them
back with instructions to name the
degree of guilt. Shortly after ten
o'clock at night they returned a
verdict of “guilty of murder in the
first degree and recommended to
the mercy of the court.” Again the
Judge sent them back with instruc-
tions that they could not under the
law make any recommendations.
t was after twelve o'clock when
they again reported and this time !
their verdict was “guilty’ of murder
in the second degree.” Incensed at
the jury for changing their verdict
from first to second degree Judge
Quigley administered a scathing re-
buke and then promptly sentenced
Musser to not less than ten nor
more than twenty years in the
penitentiary, the maximum sentence.
Musser is probably the only man in
the State who heard a jury . pro-
nounce him guilty of murder in the
first degree and two hours later lis-
tened to the same jury say he was
guilty only of second degree mur-
der.
Whether his application for a
pardon will be contested before the
Board, at Harrisburg next Wednes-
day, has not yet been determined.
ALTOONA HIGH DEFEATS
BELLEFONTE KICKERS.
Before a crowd of eight thou-
sand football fans in the new
Mansion park stadium at Altoona,
on Saturday, the Bellefonte High
school football team went down in
defeat before the more experienced
Altoona kickers, in the first con-
ference game of the season, by the
score of 20 to 6. Defeated though
they were the Bellefonte play-
ers fought valiantly to the
end of the game. During the
game Bellefonte made nine first
downs to eight for Altoona. Capt.
Confer and fullback Kelly were the
principal ground gainers for Belle-
fonte. To-morrow Bellefonte High
will play at Mount Carmel.
The Bellefonte Academy defeated
the Villa Nova Freshmen, in a hard
fought game on Hughes field, Sat-
urday afternoon, by the score of
hard all through the game. The
Academy made two touch downs
through playing straight, hard foot-
ball, while one touchdown was made
when an Academy player intercept-
ed a forward pass and evading the
Villa Nova backfield made a long
run to the goal line. Twice !
Villa Nova got within scoring dis- |
tance but the Academy line held,
and they lost the ball on downs.
The Academy will journey to New
York where they will play the New
York University Freshmen tomor-
row.
Up at State College, on Saturday,
Penn State defeated Lebanon Val-
ley 15 to 0 in a game that gave coach
Bezdek an opportunity to try out a
number of men, and itis quite prob-
able that more changes will be
made in the lineup for the game
with Marshall College tomorrow.
HOSPITAL MEETING
ON MONDAY EVENING
Six trustees for the Centre Coun-
ty hospital are to be elected at the
annual meeting of that institution to
be held at the ‘court house on Mon-
day evening of next week, at 8 o'clock.
A full report of the progress of the
hospital during the past year will be
read by manager W. H. Brown, to-
gether with other routine reports.
Trustees whose terms will expire
are William J. Emerick, Edward R.
Owens and Calvin Troup, of District
No. 1; John L. Holmes and Prof.
Thomas E. Gravat, of District No. 2,
and J. R. Miller, of District No. 4.
The public is cordially invited to at-
tend this meeting.
— Patients at the Centre County
hospital feasted on wild turkey, on
Sunday. The bird, which had been
illegally killed in Decker valley, was
presented to the hospital by game
protector Thomas Mosier.
FRENCH MARIONETTES
TO BE SHOWN HERE.
Owing to an opendate: on October
30th the Bellefonte public schools
‘have been able to secure the largest
traveling marionette stage in the
world for exhibition in Bellefonte “af-
ternoon and evening of that date.
Until a few years ago marionettes
were. presented. on very small stages
ranging from six feet to ten.:
twelve to eighteen inches high. The
| result was that for years the mar-
ionettes made appearances’ only in
the vaudeville theatres where they
were regarded as a novelty that
‘could be looked at for .a period of
eight or ten minutes.
In the past seven -or eight years
a number of companies have at-
tempted to enlarge the idea of pre-
sentation, but it was not until Jean
Gros, producer of the famous Jean
Gros Marionettes, bravely started to
tour with his stage, that covers about
thirty feet of space, that the Amer-
ican public was able to realize that
marionettes could be taken seriously
as an integral part of the theatre and
capable of presenting truly great
plays with effectiveness.
Whereas other companies have car-
ried up to two thousand pounds of
baggage the French marionettes
have astounded seasoned theatre
managers by daring to carry over
four thousand pounds, representing
a complete miniature theatre, minia-
ture however only in the thought
that the equipment is set upon an-
other stage.
A complete lighting equipment is
carried, backdrops, wings, spotlights,
curtains of every description, famous
transformation scenes and over one
hundred and fifty puppets.
With the company is also to be
found Mr. Gros’ marionettes-phone,
not to mention singers and actors. It
is interesting to note that while the
art of working marionettes is perhaps
the most difficult work in the theatre,
that these artists have been working
together for years and through their
long effort they are able to accom-
plish effects with the figures which
other companies have vainly at-
tempted to copy.
When Mr. Gros presents Uncle
Wiggily, Skippy and the Illuminated
Ballet at the Richelieu theatre on
Wednesday, October 30, both after-
noon and evening, he will conclude
the program at the evening perform-
ance by showing ' the audience just
home the marionettes are operated.
Don’t fail to take the children to see
them.
EASTERN STAR TO MEET IN
AUDITORIUM AT HECLA
The annual meeting of the order
of the Eastern Star for District No.
10, will be held in the spacious audi-
torium at Hecla Park on Friday, Oc-
tober 18th, with a business session in
the afternoon and a reception to the
State officers in the evening.
District No. 10 includes nine chap- |
ters in the central part of the State,
No. 350, of Bellefonte; No. 275, of
Lock Haven; No. 321, of Williams-
port; No. 28, of Jersey Shore; No.
322, of Renovo; No. 207, of Centre
Hall; No. 387, of Philipsburg; No. 379, |
of Clearfield, and No. 388, of State
College. Mrs. Daisy Barnes Hender-
son, of Bellefonte, is the district dep- |
uty grand matron and is in charge
of the arrangements for the meet- !
ing. The Bellefonte chapter, of which |
Mrs. Bertha W. Runkle is worthy
matron, will be host to the gather.
ing.
In the entire State there are over
two hundred officers in the various
chapters and quite a number are ex-
pected to attend the meeting, among
the number being Mrs. Jessie R. Ber-
lin, of Allentown, worthy grand ma-
tron of Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Ade-
line W. Barnes, of Pittsburgh, worthy
grand secretary. All told about four
hundred members of the order are
expected to attend the meeting.
The business session will be held |
at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon, a,
luncheon at six o'clock to be served
by caterer Mateer, of State College,
and a reception for the grand of:
ficers in the evening.
CURFEW RINGS AT “Y”
AT 8 EACH EVENING:
In order to cooperate with home,"
school and social conditions in the
lives of the younger boys and girls
of the community the Y. M. C. A.
has found it necessary to announce
that the building will be closed to
all Junior and Cadet boys and girls
after the hour of eight each evening,
with the exception of Friday, when
the children may remain until nine.
This rule will affect boys and girls
under the age of fifteen. The par-
ents are asked to cooperate. Your
and girls under fifteen have not
been at the “Y” after eight o’clock.
In view of the fact that Hallowe'en
will soon be here, let’s not forget to
plan another evening at the ¢Y’s”
annual Hallowe'en party. The date
will be announced later. The invita-
tion is for every person in the com-
munity. :
Mrs. Lucetta Davis, of Mun-
son, and Margaretta Rodgers, of
Philipsburg, were brought to the
Centre county jail, last week, in de-
fault of $800 bail to await trial at the
next term of court on the charge of
larceny. The two women were arrest-
ed on the alleged charge of stealing
from the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. C.
Lynn eleven sheets, fifty towels a lin-
en tablecloth, fifty-four napkins, an
electric iron and seven chickens. A
quantity of the stolen property was
found in the home of the Davis wo-
man. :
The.
| puppets were small, generally. about.
CENTRE WILL NOT VOTE
ON VOTING MACHINES
The question of adopting voting
machines in Centre, county will not
be submitted to. ‘the voters at the.
November election, according to the
decision of the county commissioners
this week. : io)
It will be recalled that the voting
‘machine amendment, when submitted
to the voters a year ago, was de-
feated in Centre county by about 900
majority, even though it carried in
tthe State.
in the State the right to petition the
county commissioners to put the
question of the adoption of the ma-
chines up to the people at the forth-
coming election. Only one district
in the county has filed a petition, the
Third ward in Philipsburg. Because of
this fact the voting machine question
‘will no be carried upon the ballots to
be printed for the November election,
but a special ballot will be printed
for Philipsburg only, which will en-
able the voters there to express their
sentiments in favor or against the
machines.
MOVE FOR COUNTY HOME SEEMS
DOOMED
The movement inaugurated some
time ago to submit to the voters, this
fall, the question of establishing a
county home to take care of all the
dependent poor in the county seems
doomed to failure. Up to Tuesday
of this week not a sufficient number
of signers had been received to the
petitions asking that the question be
placed upon the ballot.
Under the law two thousand signa-
tures of legalized voters are neces-
sary before the question can be sub-
mitted. Only a few districts in the |
county displayed any favorable in-
terest in the matter, while the ma-
jority are against it.
P. O. S. of A. TO ERECT
GREAT ORPHANAGE IN STATE daughter and son, Mrs. Farrell and How-
The latter fact gave to.
the voters of every election district
|
Bid i EE Lr
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. |
—L. A. Schaeffer has been at Atlantic
City for the past ten days, and will in all
probability continue his stay there until
the after part of next week.
—The Rev. R. R. Lehman was a guest
of the Rev. Homer C. Knox at the par-
sonage, last week, while stopping here
over night, on his way from Northumber-
land, to spend several days with former
parishioners at Unionville. =
—Mrs. Sara Brown returned, Wednes-
day, to Cleveland, where she makes her
home with her daughter, Mrs.
Wray. Mrs. Brown is a former resi-
dent
cupying an apartment in the Baum home,
during her three months stay.
—Dr. Joséph Brockerhoff went to Phila-
delphia the fore part of the week, expect-
ing to be there until yesterday. From
Philadelphia Dr. Brockerhoff went on to
Atlantic City yesterday for one of ° his |
frequent visits to the shore, but with no
plans as to the length of his stay.
—Miss Margaret Stewart and her sister,
Mrs. Miller, will leave today for Wilkes-
Barre, where Mrs. Miller will make a
short visit with her brother, Dr. Walter
Stewart, before returning to Hagerstown,
while Miss Stewart will spend the re-
mainder of October in Wilkes-Barre.
—Mrs. Daisy Barnes Henderson, district |
deputy’ of the Order of Eastern Star, and |
Mrs. Heverly were in Williamsport, Tues-
day night. The visit, an official one, was
a trip of inspection by Mrs. Henderson,
who was the recipient® of some choice
flowers given her by the Williamsport
chapter.
—Mrs. Violet Barnhart Morris is
home from New York on a month's va-
cation, which she is spending with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Willard Barn-
hart. Mrs. Morris is in her first year
training in one of the larger hospitals of
the city expecting to locate there per-
manently.
—Mrs. Charles Workman, of Hecla, and
{ her nephew, ‘“Buddy’’ Jones, are visiting
i Mrs. Workman's sister, Mrs. James Mec-
Suley, in Pittsburgh, having gone out
Tuesday to see Miss Margaret Jones, who
is ill in Mercy hospital, as the result of
an automobile accident a week ago, in
which she was quite severely injured.
—Mrs. H. M. Wetzel accompanied her |
ard Wetzel, as far as Bethlehem yester-
It was expected that a national’ day, expecting to spend a week or ten |
home for P. O. S. of A. would be pro- |
jected at the recent national encamp-
ment of the Order in Columbus, Ohio. !
Pennsylvania being the largest
|
State in the Order anticipated that |
there would be concurrence in the
movement, but since such was not :
the case this State is going ahead
with its own home and orphanage
program.
The beginning will be made this
month with a visitation to some of |
the larger cities of the State for the
' presentation of a stupendous patriot-
ic spectacle.
The spectacle will be made up of
high grade first line performers who
have been engaged at the highest
I prices. A cast of twenty-five people
will travel with the company and in
addition the celebrated Bob Bennet’s
orchestra of international fame, hav-
ing played before King George of
England and other foreign rulers has
been engaged for the entire itinerary.
| In all, this project will present to
| the patriotic people of Pennsylvania
the highest type enertainment ever
| produced under fraternal auspices.
The points nearest Bellefonte at
j Yio the presentation will be made
illiameport on October 28.
Altoona, on October 29.
| uvielions have gone out to all of
! the 110,000 members of the Order in
the Loan and Centre county
| Camps will likely all be represented.
ow STATE ROAD TO
BELLEFONTE PROJECTED.
For some time past there has been
| considerable agitation for an im-
proved State highway from White
Deer, on the Susquehanna river,
‘ through White Deer valley to Logan-
| ton, in Sugar valley, thence to Cedar
Springs and up Nittany valley to
Bellefonte. The road would natur-
ally follow the old White Deer turn-
: | pike to Loganton, a distance of twen-
ty-five miles, thence to Cedar
‘Springs. From the latter place to
Bellefonte the road is already im-
! proved.
That the project is likely to be
put through in the near future is
evidenced from the fact that a crew
| of men, under direction of forest
ranger L. M. Stone, began work, on
Monday, with a complete equipment
.of road making machinery, on widen-
ing the old pike from Mill Run, about
a mile west of Loganton, eastward
to the dam of the Watsontown Water
company, touching Tea Springs, the
route traversing a most picturesque
country. This road when built will
be of great advantage to the gener-
al public, touching as it does points
in Union, Clinton, and Centre coun-
ties. It will be a direct line from
the West Branch river to the Centre
county capital, and a short and di-
rect way through that section of the
State.
ST. MARY'S CHURCH GIVING
SERIES OF CARD PARTIES.
The congregration of St. Mary's
parish, Snow Shoe, are giving a
series of ten card parties which are
held in the church auditorium. At
the end of the series the winner of
the highest number of games will be
presented with a beautiful - table
lamp as a special prize. The second |
of the series was held last evening
and was sponsored by Mrs.
McLaughlin and Mrs.
Burns. Prizes are awarded at each
party and refreshments served.
Watch for notice of next gathering.
——The Undine Fire company will
receive their new Mack truck to-
morrow, and next Tuesday it will be |
given an official test.
|
M J!
Emanuel |
days there with her mother, who. will
: shortly celebrate her ninetieth birthday.
i The others will continue on from Beth |
lehem to their home at Coalwood, West
Virginia. |
—DMiss Elizabeth Morris, who will
come east from Searcy, Arkansas, about
the middle of the month, is expected in
| Bellefonte early in November to spend
several weeks with her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris. Miss Mor-
ris visited here after going to Macon,
but it is her first visit east since leaving
Macon to go to Searcy.
—Mrs. Charles Noll is storing her furni-
ture, in anticipation of going to Phila-
delphia, to make her home with her son
Nevin. The Harrison home on Spring
street’ which she will vacate by the first
of November, is being advertised for
lease by November 1st., Dr. Richard
Noll and his wife intending to move in-
to one of the Mark Williams houses.
—Miss Myrtle Fiedler, who is now east
from Seattle, Wash., arrived in Bellefonte,
Wednesday, for a visit with relatives and
friends, and will be a house guest while
here of her aunt, Mrs. Tabel, at Half
Moon gardens and the A. C. Mingle fam-
ily. Miss Fiedler is the only daughter
of the late James Fiedler, the family
having been residents of Bellefonte for a
number of years.
—James I. McClure will be eighty-two
years old tomorrow, Columbus day. Four
hundred and thirty-seven years ago Chris-
topher discovered America, so that it is
really an eventful day. At eighty-two
James is discovering that there is a great
“kick” in life if one only knows how to
get it. He spent the most of the sum-
mer in a bathing suit at Atlantic City
and grew so fond of the crowds and the
excitement that he is thinking « of Spend
ing the winter there.
—Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cromer landed
in New York, Monday, and will be there
for a short time, while Mr. Cromer is
in business conference relative to his three
years work in Japan, after which they
will come directly to Bellefonte, for a
visit with Mrs. Cromer’s father and sis-
ter, W. Homer Crissman and Mrs. Brod-
erick. The Cromers left the States in
May of ’26, having spent three years in
Tokyo, where Mr. Cromer was in charge
of the building of a bank, put up by the
Stewart contracting company, of New
York city, the past summer being spent
in completing a trip around the world,
visiting places in the Orient and Europe,
wherever their fancy might lead.
—Wednesday we had the pleasure of
chatting for a few moments with an old
friend whom we don’t see often and one
who is an outstanding illustration of
what good judgment will do for anybody
who has the will to work and the wit to
see that he shares in its results. We re-
fer to B. F. Homan, of State College, who
was in town for an hour or so with his
son, D. J. Homan, of Freeport, Ill. Mr.
Homan has been retired and living at
State College for twenty years or more
and hasn’t a thing in the world to worry
him. His son came east ten days ago for
his first visit in ten years and expects to
leave next Monday. He farms in Illinois
and specializes in dairy products and ,
hogs. The gentlemen were on their way
to Zion for a call with some kin folks
and from there were going to Centre Hall
for a short visit with others of the family
connection.
—A Lawrence Kocher, formerly head of
the department of architecture and pro-
fessor of architectural design at the
Pennsylvania State College, and Robert L.
Davison, of The Architectural Record,
New York, spent Saturday and Sunday
with ‘Henry S. Linn. Mr. Davison is in-
terested in prison building, consequently
visited Rock View. The men stopped here
enroute to Pittsburgh to consult with
specialists at the Mellon Institute, con-
cerning the making of cheaper brick for
specially designed houses. It seems that
President Hoover has become interested
in a contention that under prevailing
prices no person working for the aver-
age wage con afford to build a four room
house. Also; that capital can not build
of Bellefonte, and had been .oc- |
a four room home and rent it at a rate
that the average wage earner can afford
to pay. The challenge has gone out and
architects all over the country have tak-
en up the study of the problem with a
| view to designing a house that will be
within the reach of a person of modest
means who desires to own a home.
i
—Mr.” and’ Mrs. Horatio’ S. Moore ha
had as guests this week, their son-in-ls
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William .
Dodds and their small son, of Tarentu
—A week-end family reunion was he
at the J. Willard Barnhart home, «
east High street, the guests includin
Mr. and Mrs. Harper, of Brooklyn, D
‘and Mrs. Seidel, of Hazleton and Mr
Morris, of New York City.
—A party of women including Mr
‘Charles R. Kurtz, ' Mrs. Bower, Mr
Violet Morris, now home from New Yor
and Mrs. Fred Kurtz, of Lewisburg, we:
Robert “2aSt this week on a motor trip, Philade
'phia being their objective point.
—Donald Best will sail from Hoboke
N. J., today for Rio de Janiero, Brazi
| to associate himself with an Americs
! chain store in South’America. Sin¢
graduating from Drexel, Don. has bee
in business conference relative to his thre
stores.
—House guests whom Mr. and Mr
H. C, Yeager entertained during tt
week, included, Mrs. Yeager’s sister, Mr.
George Kerstetter and her son, Walto
of Harrisburg, Mr. and Mrs. George /
‘ Mead and Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Reynold.
of Bethlehem.
—Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Sample,
; Uniontown, and Mr. ‘Sample’s siste:
| Mrs. George Eaton, of Freeport, Ill., wh
who were in Centre ‘county, last weel
' visiting among old friends in Ferguso
township, the place of their birth, sper
several hours in Bellefonte, on Saturday
as guests of Mrs. Frank McFarlane.
—Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, who is now er
tertaining her son and his wife, Mr. an
Mrs. John Hayes, of New York City, i
preparing to leave the first of November
to spend the winter in Atlantic City
Her apartment in the Hayes building wi:
be occupied, during Mrs. Hayes’ absence
by L. A. Schaeffer and his daughter, Mis
Helen, whose home on Curtin street wil
be closed for the winter months.
Elder—Ralston.—Henry S. Elder
son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward El
der, and Miss Catherine Ralston, :
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willian
Ralston, both of Pine Grove Mills
were married at six o’clock on Wed
i nesday evening, in their own newly
furnished home, at Pine Grove Mills
| by Rev. John S. English. The young
, couple were attended by Miss Alice
! Ralston, sister of the bride, as maic
of honor, and Earl Musser, best man
The ring ceremony was used.
Immediately after the ceremony
Mr. and Mrs. Elder left on an autc
wedding trip to Ohio. On their re.
turn they will go to housekeeping ir
their own home on east Main street
Pine Grove Mills. The bride is ar
&ccomplished young woman and has
been employed as a stenographer at
State College. The bridegroom is in
the insurance business at the College
and is making a success of his work,
The young couple have the best
wishes of a host of friends for their
future success and happiness.
tr EE
——The Rev. Forest O. Conser,
who has been a Presbyterian min-
ister in India for six years, will
speak in the First Presbyterian
church, Bellefonte, on Sunday morn-
ing, at 10:30. Mr. Conser is station-
ed at Sangli in Western India. It
is seventeen miles from the equator
and the mercury may go as high as
160 deg. F. However, it isa dry heat,
Here Mr. Conser supervises the ac-
tivities of twenty-three schools and
five churches. The area within
which he works is 2,300 square miles
made up of seventy-five villages. Ag
Mr. Conser is engaged primarily in
the evangelistic phase of the mis-
sionary enterprise he must constant-
ly itinerate among these villages.
‘Recently the response from high
caste Indians has been unusually en-
couraging. Mr. Conser says the mis-
sionaries are being invited to visit in
the better Indian homes.
——The Centre county teachers’
institute will be held next week,
which will mean a week’s vacation
for all the school children. The in-
stitute of today is a much different
gathering from the institute of a
quarter of a century ago. In those
days all the teachers spent the week
in Bellefonte and the evening lec-'
tures and entertainments were the
drawing card of institute. But the
high cost of lecturers in these days
makes that feature prohibitive, and
with no evening entertainments most
of the teachers come to Bellefonte
in the morning in automobiles and
return home at the close of the after-
noon session. ]
tt ———— i ———————
——The Woman's Auxiliary of the
Centre County hospital will hold a
rummage sale for the benefit of the
hospital, in the Valentine property,
corner of High and Spring streets, on °
Wednesday afternoon, October 23rd.
All those who have anything to do-
nate are requested to send articles to
the Valentine house on Tuesday af-
ternoon, October 22nd. If unable to
send them call Mrs. Richard Brouse,
telephone 603-R, and packages will
be called for.
+ ——Clayton A. Shope, of Avis, but
formerly of Milesburg, is in the
Clearfield hospital recovering from
injuries sustained when a motor
driven construction car in which he
was riding on the Beech Creek rail-
road was wrecked near Mahaffey by
a truck driven by Amos Tate, of
Curry Run. Shope is employed as a
signal repair man by the Beech
Creek Railroad company.
——The American Legion auxili-
ary . will hold a bake sale at the Va-
riety shop Saturday, October 12th.
Bellefonte Grain Markets.
! Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co.
Wheat $1.25
Corn 1.10
Rye 1.10
Oats . 60
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