Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 15, 1929, Image 8

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    —
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Demorralic Waldman
Bellefonte, Pa., November 15, 1929
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
— If you are a World war veter-
an join the Brooks-Doll post of the
American Legion.
This is the last day for the
legal inspection of automobiles. If
you drive your car tomorrow Wwith-
out an inspection label you will be
liable to arrest.
——A big wild cat is making its
home on Bald Eagle mountain, west
of the McCoy works. It’s unearthly
yells can be heard most every night
and the cat has been seen on sever-
al occasions. Hunters have tried for
a shot at it but so far have been un-
successful.
——One man who paid good money
to see the football game, on Monday,
never saw a play of it. Old man
Hootch scored a touchdown on him
before the game started and he was
worse knocked out than any of the
twenty-two players on the field. A
number of others were also stepping
pretty high during the progress of
the game.
——Among the bridge bids open-
ed by the State Highway Depart-
ment, last Friday, were those for the
inter-county bridge over Moshannon
creek, in Cooper township, Clearfield
county, and Snow Shoe township,
Centre county. This bridge is to be
in two spans of 115 feet each. David
Bailey, of Morrisdale, was low bidder
at $70,227.
——This afternoon and tonight the
Cathaum at State College will show
“Married in Hollywood.” It is an all
talking, dancing and singing ro-
mance, featuring Norma Terris and
J.i Harold Murray. Tomorrow (Sat-
urday) night the Cathaum will show
“The Hottentot,” with Edward Hor-
ton and Patsy Ruth Miller. It is an
all ‘talking comedy drma.
——George Arliss in “Disraeli”
will be shown at the Cathaum thea-
tre, State College, next Monday and
Tuesday. There will be matinees at
1:30 and 3:00 each day and no ad-
vance in prices. Mr. Arliss is the
stage’s greatest living actor so that
we need say no more by way of ad-
vising that it will be a wonderful
show. It is an all talking picture.
——At a session of . court, last
Thursday, Margaret Rodgers, of
Philipsburg, and Loretta Davis, of
Munson, entered pleas of guilty to
purloining various articles from the
home of Dr. A. C. Lynn, at Cold
Stream, about a month ago, and
were sentenced to pay a fine of one
dollar, costs of prosecutior and im-
prisonment in the county jail for
three to six months.
——Mr. Al G. Keet has announced
the marriage of his daughter, Helen
Louise, to Mr. James Bergey Stein.
The ceremony was performed in
Harrisburg on Thursday, Nov. 7, and
the young couple will reside at No.
22 North Fourth St. that city. The
groom is a son of Dr. James B., and
Mrs. Stein and lived in Bellefonte
when his father was pastor of the
Methodist church here.
——The Bellefonte school board
has delivered to the State a check
for $17,000 and thus comes into full
possession of the old armory of
Troop L. Until the new armory is
completed east of Bellefonte, how-
ever, the troop will continue to use
the old building for drilling and oth-
er purposes. Work on the new arm-
ory buildings will be started the lat-
ter part of this month.
..~——Patsy Sabit, aged 65 years, at-
tempted to commit suicide, on Sun-
| . . :
day afternoon, but his aim was un- |
steady and the bullet simply cut a
furrow through the flesh on the
back of the head and did not punc-
ture the skull bone. Sabit who lives
down near the old glass works site
has been somewhat erratic of late,
which is given as the possible reason
for his attempt at self-destruction.
——This is the last day of the
hunting season for wild turkeys and
ringneck pheasants. Rabbits and
squirrel will be legal game until the
last day of November, inclusive, and
bear can be killed until the end of
the deer hunting season on Decem-
ber 15th. During the two weeks of
the hunting season upwards of two
dozen wild turkeys have been Killed
in the county while a hundred or
more male ringnecks have formed a
part of the hunter's game bag.
— The Logan fire company was |
called out, on Sunday afternoon, by | oveiang to Bellefonte, himself, then For Jury Commissioner:
a fire at Little Mooseheart, out near
the Jewish cemetery, which proved to
be a one-story kitchen at the home
of Lewis Haupt. The fire had gain-
ed such headway that the kitchen
was burned down but the house was
saved. On Monday evening the de-
partment was again called out by a
fire which destroyed a stable on the
rear end of Mrs. T. C. Shoemaker’s
property, on east Curtin street. The
stable was practically burned down
when the firemen arrived on the
scene.
Tomorrow Penn State and
Bucknell will clash on Beaver field, |
State College. Last year and the
year before Bucknell defeated State,
but it ought to be different tomorrow,
notwithstanding the prediction of
Gordon Mackay, sports-writer of the
Philadelphia Record, who says the
blue and white isin for another lac-
ing. Time was when Bucknell was re-
garded as a “push over” for State,
but since Carl Snavely took up his
residence in the coach’s apartment at
Lewisburg the Bisons have become al.
most as big a Jonah for us as the
cockpit of
Pitt Panther.
AIRMAIL PILOT LIVES |
AFTER MOUNTAIN CRASH
Broken Left Arm Most Serious In-
Jury Sustained by Jack Web_
ster, Dean of Airmail
Fliers
A broken left arm, the little finger
on his left hand broken, superficial
cuts and bruises, but still very much
alive is Jack Webster, dean of air-
mail pilots on the New York-Cleve-
land division of the transcontinental
airmail route, after his plane crash-
ed in the Rattlesnake terrain of the
Allegheny mountains with sufficient
force to reduce it to a pile of junk. !
The crash occurred about 2:20
o'clock on Saturday morning and it
was eleven o'clock Saturday night
before Webster was found and taken
to the Philipsburg hospital where,
several hours later, he told the story
of the crash and his nerve-racking
experience to division superintend-
ent Wesley L. Smith and B. P. Lott,
of Chicago, an official of the Nation-
al Air Transport.
According to Webster's story |
when he reached Bellefonte about
midnight, Friday night, it was rain-:
ing quite hard and he landed on the
Bellefonte field. He came into town
and got a lunch at a restaurant then
returned to the field. The rainstorm .
passed about 1:30 and it was 2:05
o'clock when he checked out on the
continuation of his western trip. As
he struck the Allegheny mountains,
however, he flew into a hard rain
and sleet storm with freezing tem-
perature. The wings of his plane
hecame so heavily coated with ice
that he could not keep it in the air
and when he found himself going
down he braced for the inevitable
crash. Fortunately there are no tall
trees on the plateau west of the Rat-
tlesnake and the plane fell ina dense
growth of bracken, or underbrush
which, though the plane was wreck-
ed, doubtless served as a cushion
and broke the force of the fall. |
Webster was knocked unconscious
and when he finally recovered con- |
sciousness it was daylight. He took
stock of himself and naturally was
surprised and overjoyed to discover
that he was still alive, and aside
from 3 broken arm and finger, in
pretty fair shape considering the
wrecked condition of his machine.
Naturally his first thought, after
making sure he could travel, was to |
get out of the mountain and some
place where he could get help to save ,
his cargo of mail, and he started
through the woods. :
Suffering from shock and weak- .
ness, and the pain from his broken
arm, the going was slow and tortu-'
ous. He would travel awhilz then
lie down and rest.
Along toward noon he saw planes
circling in the air and he kucw they
were looking for him but he had no
way of signalling to them. The
pangs of hunger and thirst added to
his physical pain almost overcame
him and he finally laid down and
|
slept for several hours. When he
awoke he continued his journey.
When darkness fell, Saturday even-
ing, he was still in the woods, trav-
eling onward but he did not know
where. It was well onto eleven
o'clock when he finally tottered out
onto the Philipsburg pike, about two
and a half miles northwest of the
paint of his accident. i
On reaching the road he slumped
down on the bank, thankful that he
had made his way out of the woods.
He was there only a brief time
when he heard an automobile ap-
proaching. He managed to signal
the driver and the car stopped. The
occupants proved to be Robert Cus-
tar, John Wilson and Alice Green,
three young people of Philipsburg,
who were on their way to the Rat-'
tlesnake to join in the hunt for the
missing pilot. They quickly loaded
Webster into their car -and conveyed
him to the Philipsburg hospital.
Doctors hurriedly examined him and |
as soon as they determined that his
injuries were not critical they called !
Bellefonte and notified W. L. Smith
that Webster was there and not dan- |
gerously hurt. Smith and Lott mo-
tored to Philipsburg at once and,
found Webster cheerful and content- '
ed. y |
Webster's crash was first suspect- |
ed when he failea to reach Cleveland |
Saturday morning, after being re- |
ported out of Bellefonte. Inquiry all
along th> route failcd to reveal any
trace of him. Planes were then sent |
out from Chicago, Cleveland and |
New York to patrol the route. Sup- |
erintendent W. L. Smith flew from |
started back over the route and
shortly before noon discovered the
wrecked plane on the Rattlesnake |
plateau. Flying back to Bellefonte |
he reported the find and joined the |
first party that left the field by au-
omobile for the scene of the wreck.
Tt was after the noon hour when
they reached there and located the |
wrecked plane, but their astonish- |
ment was great when they found |
pilot Webster missing. His para- !
chute had been jerked open in the
crash and was trailing out of the
the wrecked plane. In
the cockpit were also found Web-
ster's helmet, his revolver, flashlight
and a broken finger ring which was
wrenched off his little fingerin the
crash. There was blood on his hel-
met and the top of the control pan-
el, but no sign of Webster. The mail
was intact. Some of the men re-
moved the mail and carried it to a
fire trail where it was taken in
charge by postmaster John L. Knise-
ly and Morton Smith, who conveyed
it to Unionville, while the search
was then started for the missing pi-
lot.
It might here be stated that there
were tweny-one sacks of mail and
the wrecked plane fell some three or
four hundred yards from the fire
trail, the nearest spot it was possibie
to reach by automobile, and the half
dozen or so men who had reached
the wreck fell to with willing hands
and helped to carry the mail out;
and it was no easy job, as the
ground is thickly covered with ‘a
tangled growth of underbrush, so!
that it was a hard and tiresome job.
In the searching party were super-
intendent Smith, Mr. Lott, J. C.
Tower, of the Department of Com-
merce; Forrest Tanner, manager of
the Bellefonte field, and several
score of people from Unionville and
the country roundabout. They hunt-
ed until darkness fell, Saturday ev-
BELLEFONTE HIGH WINS
ARMISTICE DAY GAME
The Bellefonte High school foot-
ball team won the Armistice day
conference game, on Hughes field,
from Lewistown by the narrow
margin of one point, the score being
14 to 13, and it was Lewistown’s off-
side playing that gave victory to the
home team.
The day was ideal for the game
and the largest crowd ever seen on |
Hughes field was present to witness
the battle between the young pig-
skin gladiators. ' Various estimates
place the crowd at about four thou-
sand, but they were not by any
| means all paid admissions.
| Lewistown kicked off to Bellefonte
and on the second play Capt. Confer
I —
i
1
1
dsm
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Struble spent the |
week-end and Armistice day with their |
son Willis and his wife, near Pittsburgh.
—Mr. and' Mrs. Myron M. Cobb drove '
to Scranton, Friday, to attend the funer-
al of an aunt of Mr. Cobb, returning
home Monday.
—Mrs. .. Maude . Moquin was . up. from
Lock Haven over Sunday, a guest of Mrs.
Elsie Rankin Helliwell, at the Rankin
home, on east Curtin street. a |
—Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Landsy, of the
Brockerhoff house, have been spending
the week in New York city, attending the |
annual convention of the National Hotel
Men's association. : |
—Mrs. A.C. Mingle and her daugh- |
ter, Miss Roxey, spent the early part of |
the week in Baltimore, on a business and
shopping trip, returning to Bellefonte
TO RESUME WORK ON
BELLEFONTE CENTR
Supplies and machinery are 1
being placed on the ground for
sumption of work on the exten:
of the Bellefonte Central railr
from Struble station to Fairbrc
to connect with the old Lewisb
.and Tyrone branch, purchased by
‘Bellefonte Central
over eight
months ago when it was abando:
by the Pennsylvania Railroad cc
pany. : lin f
As most of the grading on
new section was done last sumr
it is estimated that the work can
completed in a month or six wee
As most of the ties and rails are
ready at State College the worl
ening, then withdrew and made ar- made a run of 65 yards through. the
rangements to go out Sunday morn- | entire Lewistown team for a touch-
ing with a force of at least five down. Shope’s attempt to kick the
hundred men. Deputy warden W. J. goal was blocked but Lewistown was
McFarland, of Rockview, had plan- Offside and the point was awarded to
ned to take out the penitentiary ; Bellefonte.
blood hounds in an effort to trace | Lewistown then stiffened its de-
the whereabouts of the missing pilot. | fense with the result that Bellefone
To stimulate the search a reward of | Was unable to make rapid progress,
$250 was offered to the person or but after see-sawing back and forth
party that found him. for some time Confer again plunged
But Webster finally found his way over the goal line for second touch-
out of the woods and that ended down. Shope kicked the goal.
Sunday's searching party. Webster | Lewistown took a brace and
who, as stated above is the dean of through: a succession of end runs
the airmail fliers, has been in the | and forward passes, aided by a cost-
service most of the time during the ly fumble on the part of Bellefonte
past nine years. He is 36 years old worked the ball down to Bellefonte’s
and lives at Plainfield, N. J. He has five yard line where they lost it on
cracked up at least once before dur- i downs. Bellefonte attempted to kick
ing his flying career but at that out of danger but the kick was
time escaped serious injury. . | blocked and Tallon fell on the ball
His accident, on Saturday morn- : back of the goal line for a touch-
ing. is the first bad smashup in this
mountainous section since Charles
H. Ames was killed in a crash on
Nittany mountain in October, 1925,
four years ago, which is a pretty
good record for that portion of the
mail route which has been termed
“Hell’s Acres.”
Webster's wife came to Bellefonte
on the mail plane from New York,
on Sunday afternoon, and was taken
to Philipsburg by automobile to be
with her husband. According to
physicians at the hospital there is
no reason why he shouldn’t make a
speedy recovery from his injuries.
A force of men under direction of
manager Forrest Tanner dismantled
tha wrecked plane, on Sunday, and
hauled it into the Bellefonte field. It
will be shipped to Cleveland, Ohio.
ELEVEN YEARS OF PEACE
CELEBRATED ON MONDAY
Eleven years of peace, the anni-
versary of the signing of the Armis-
tice which put an end to the World
war after forty-one months of car-
nage and destruction, was duly cele-
brated in Bellefonte on Monday
morning by Brooks-Doll post, No.
33, American Legion, assisted by the
Legion Auxiliary, Veterans of For-
eign Wars and a large squad of
Troop L, N. G. P. Led by the Legion
bugle and drum corps the parade
lined up in four ranks just prior
the zero hour, 11 o’clock.
On the stroke of eleven, bells toll-
ed and for two minutes the large
crowd stood in silence, which was
finally broken by a salute of eigh-
teen guns by a firing squad of Troop
L. Post commander Francis Craw-
ford opened the services and prayer
was offered by Rev. Robert Thena.
“to
Rev. Thena also made the address, |
a splendid, patriotic talk which was
listened to with careful attention by
the large crowd of spectators.
In the afternoon the Legion bugle
and drum corps
for the football game, and in the ev-
ening the Legion, Woman’s Auxiliary
and invited guests, to the number of
140, had their annual banquet at the
Penn Belle hotel and wound up the
day with a dance in the auditorium
at Hecla park.
NOT MUCH CHANGE
IN OFFICIAL VOTE
The official count of the vote poll-
ed at the election in Centre county
on Tuesday, November 5th, did not
vary much from the totals as pub-
lished in the Watchman last week.
The count was made, last Ths
under the supervision of Judge M.
Ward Fleming, and the result is as
follows: ;
For Superior Court:
x Hi Keller, B, i..covnocanmmmmommm
Thos. J. Baldridge, R....
Henry C. Niles,
For District Attorney:
ohn G. Love, R. £
Philip H. Johnston, D.....................
C. Gates,
J. C. Condo
HORSES AND COWS BURN |
IN LARGE BARN FIRE
Two horses, six cows, all the
year’s crops and many farm imple-
ments were burned in a fire which
completely destroyed the large
barn on the C. W. Simpson farm,
near Pennsylvania Furnace, at an
early hour on Sunday morning. The
loss is estimated at $9000, partially
covered by insurance. {
Mr. Simpson has no knowledge as
to how the fire originated. It was
discovered about 2:30 o'clock in the
morning and had already gained
such headway that it was impossible
to save the stock or anything in the
building.
——State highway patrolmen have
received orders that beginning to-
morrow, Saturday, Nov. 16, all per-
sons operating motor cars which ‘do
not bear the “approved, inspected”
windshield sticker are to be arrested.
There will be no extension of time.
led the parade of |
High school students to Hughes field |
, down. Lewistown lined up in forma-
lion to kick the goal from touch-
i down but instead of doing so rushed
the ball across for the extra point
{and the first period ended with the
| score 14 to 7 in favor of Bellefonte.
This ended the scoring until well
i along toward the end of the fourth
! period when Lewistown, through a
succession of line plunges and end
| runs, put the oval over for another
| touchdown. Again they fooled the
! Bellefonte players by rushing the
| ball over for the extra point after
lining up for a kick, but the team
| was off-side and the point was not
; allowed. Score 14 to 13 in favor of
. Bellefonte.
| That ended the scoring and Belle-
fonte had the ball almost in midfield
when the whistle blew for the end
of the game. Bellefonte made 15
first downs to Lewistown’s 6 during
the game, and outplayed Lewistown
most of the time.
Unfortunately there was consider-
able slugging and roughness during
most of the contest. Lewistown was
the most aggressive in this respect
but Bellefonte was not entirely
| blameless. In the fourth quarter
Capt. Confer was compelled to retire
from the field because of an injured
shoulder, and several other Belle-
fonte players had to get out of the
game because of injuries. Just how
serious the injuries may prove to be
ing of this article.
Bellefonte will play its last home
game of the season on Hughes field
tomorrow, with Morrisdale. This,
however, will not be a conference
game.
BELLEFONTE ACADEMY
| OFF FOR NEW YORK GAME
| The Bellefonte Academy football
team left, yesterday, for New York,
city where they will play the New
York University Freshmen this af-
ternoon. This will be the fifth game
between these two teams, the Acad-
emy having won three out of the
four already played and scored a
total of 58 points te the Freshmen’s
13. The Academy will remain in
New York as guests of New York
University at the Varsity game to-
morrow afternoon.
The Academy's last home game
on Hughes field will be on November
ern Maryland Freshmen,
aggregation. Regular admission price
for this game will be $1.00, with
ladies and students 50 cents.
The Academy went over to Du-
Bois, last Saturday, and played the
Bingville Independents, winning by
the score of 48 to 0.
W. C. T. U. INSTITUTE
AT CENTRE HALL
The Woman’s Christian Temper-
ance Union of Centre county will
hold an institute in the Methodist
church, at Centre Hall, on Thursday,
November 21st. At that time a re-
view will be made of the work of
the past year and plans formulated
for the future.
Mrs. W. A. Broyles will preside.
Mrs. Ella B. Black, newly elected
State president, has been invited to
be present and to greet old friends
in Centre county Miss Beulah Har-
nish, who won the diamond medal
declamatory contest at Warren, has
been asked to repeat the reading on
“Influence,” so that the Centre county
public may hear her.
For the rest, the program will cen-
ter largely about certain questions,
and those who have attended the
| Centre county meetings before know
| that the program will be unified, in-
| structive, and varied. Local treas-
'urers are to have a table together
at noon.
The meeting will begin at 10
o'clock and will close promptly at
4:30 in the afternoon. The public is
invited.
——Rev. and Mrs. M. H. Craw-
ford, of Milesburg, celebrated their
silver wedding anniversary, last Fri-
day.
Wednesday afternoon.
—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saxon were ov-
er to Mount Alto recently, and found
their son’s condition very much improved.
James has been a patient at Mount Alto,
for a month or more.
—Miss Rebecca Forbes and Miss Kath-
leen Seibert drove here from Chambers-
burg, Saturday, in Miss Seibert’s car,
visiting here over the week-end as guests
of Miss Forbes’ sister, Mrs. John A.
Woodcock.
—Miss Caroline McClure, who has been
with her sister, Mrs. Murdock Claney,
at Narberth, for a year or more, was home
for a week-end and Armistice day visit,
with her mother,
and her daughters.
-——Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Darlington, with |
Mrs. Blanche Houser Ferguson, as a
driving guest, motored to Pittsburgh,
Sunday, remaining there for the night
and too see the Armistice day parade,
returning Monday afternoon.
—Miss Winifred M. Gates went out to
Pittsburgh, on Saturday, for a two day's
visit with Mrs. Mary K. Bowers, stop- |
Mrs. William McClure |
laying the track will be started
soon as the roadbed is in conditi
| While it is not likely the road
ibe completed this winter it will
iso far advanced that the work «
{ be rushed through early next su
'mer, when the line will be opel
through to Tyrone.
|
Campbell—Buck.—Charles Can
| bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M
' Campbell, of Fairbrook, and M
{ Evelyn Buck, daughter, of Mr. a
{Mrs. C. M. Buck, of Warriorsms
| valley, were married at the Metl
dist parsonage, at Warriorsmark,
110 o'clock Tuesday morning, by
pastor, Rev. Owens. They were .
| tended by the bride's sister, as mq
; of honor, and Paul Campbell, bro:
jer of the bridegroom, as best m:
| Immediately following the ceremo
| the young couple left on an at
i wedding trip to eastern cities.
i For several years past the bri
marched to the Diamond where they {is not known at the time of the writ.
23rd, when they will meet the West- |
a strong
ping in Johnstown on her return trip to
spend Armistice day with her brother,
Jdward L. Gates and family.
—Mrs. Harry Garber arrived here from
Flushing, N. Y., a week ago, on one of
her occasional visits back home with her
sister, Mrs. George B. Thompson, at the
Bush apartment in the Arcade and to
look after some business interests.
—Dr. Edith Schad returned to her
home in Detroit, Monday, following a
seven week’s visit here with her sister,
Mrs. Frank Warfield, and with her broth-
ers, J. Linn Harris, in Lock Haven, Dr.
Edward Harris, in Snow Shoe, and John
P., in Altoona.
—John McWilliams, of Pine Grove Mills,
among the very well known retired
farmers of Ferguson township, who has
been serving as juror this week, was
accompanied to Bellefonte, Wednesday,
by Mrs. McWilliams, she having spent the
time in the shops, while Mr. McWilliams
was in court.
—Mrs. Jennie Curtin will be able to be
brought to her home at Curtin, from
Philipsburg, this week, it is thought.
Mrs. Curtin went over six weeks ago, to
see her son Latimer, who has been ill
for some time, with sleeping sickness, and
became so ill herself, that it has been im-
possible to bring her home.
—Mrs. Harry Taylor, of east Linn
street, who has been with her twelve-
year-old son, Edmund, at Mount Divit,
for three months, will remain there until
the boy has recovered. According to the
rules of the institution no child under
sixteen can be there under tr2atment
without having some one with them.
| —Miss Alice Dorworth, accompanied by
her nephew, Billy Dorworth, will go to
Baltimore this week, where the child will
be under the care of specialists for a
time. Miss Dorworth’s trip will be made
partly to see her sister, Mrs. Sloop, who
has been a hospital patient in Baltimore
for three weeks, continuing the treat-
{ ment of her eye.
—Messrs. O. M. Bowersox and M. L.
Larrison, of State College, spent last
Sunday motoring leisurely through Big
! Valley. Mr. Larrison is a North Caro-
linian and inasmuch as this is the first
| year of residence at the College the trip |
, was taken so that he might have a view
‘of one of the notable agricultural valleys
lof Central Pennsylvania.
| —Mrs. Blanche Fauble Schloss left
Bellefonte the early part of the week, to
spend the winter with her sister, Mrs.
| Irvin O. Noll, at Lansdowne, with no
definite plans for the future. Mrs.
Schloss had been in Lansdowne since the
! death of her mother, Mrs. Martin Fauble,
{ but had returned to Bellefonte for the
| Fauble sale two weeks ago.
| —Mrs. Richard Lutz is anticipating go-
ing to Pittsburgh, late this month, ¢x-
pecting to spend the winter there with
her daughter, Mrs. Coll. Having secur-
ed a house in Pittsburgh, Mrs. Coll is
now in Bellefonte helping her mother
prepare for a sale of her household
goods, after which they both will leave
Bellefonte as soon as possible.
—Howard Struble and his sister, Miss
Mary, of Zion, with Miss Jane Baker, of
Wildwood, N. J., left the early part of
the week on a drive to California, where
they expect to spend the greater part of
the winter. With them was Mrs. Harry
Garbrick, who will leave the party at Sa-
lina, Kansas, where she will visit with
the family of her uncle, Harry Struble.
—Mrs. DeGolyer arrived here from
Evanston, Ill., Wednesday morning, call-
ed to Bellefonte by the illness of her
mother, Mrs. Louisa V. Harris, who is
suffering from the effects of a broken
hip, the result of a fall in her home on
Allegheny street, Monday evening. Mrs.
Harris was taken to the Centre county
hospital several hours after the accident.
James Harris, of Philadelphia, also came
to Bellefonte immediately upon hearing
of Mrs. Harris accident.
_Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Lyon and
their two sons, Godfrey and Billy, Mrs.
John Rummel and Mrs. Alfred Irvin,
drove here from Buffalo, Friday, in Mr.
Lyon's car remaining in Bellefonte until
Sunday. The greater part of Mrs. Irvin's
time was spent with Mr. Irvin's mother,
Mrs. Eliza G. Irvin, at Julian, while the
other members of the party spent the
time with friends, in Bellefonte. Mr.
and Mrs. Lyon drive down quite fre-
quntly, but Mrs. Rummel, who was form-
erly Miss Maude Campbell and a native
of Bellefonte, was making her first visit
back in twenty years.
— A big dairyman’s meeting was
held in the I. O. O. F. hall, at Pine
Grove Mills, on Wednesday evening.
The purpose of the meeting was to
hear several gentlemen from Detroit,
Mich., expound the virtues of the
various kinds of feeds for dairy cows.
has been a successful school teac
er. The bridegroom has been |
| father’s mainstay on the farm a
it is on the old homestead at Fa
{brook they will make their hon
taking over the farm when Mr. a
| Mrs. Campbell move to their n¢
home at State College, where thi
two younger sons, Paul and Jam
| are college students. The taking o
ier of the farm by young Campb
| will make the fourth generation «
{ Campbells fo till its broad and fe
| tile acres.
Bullock—Bullock—A quiet we
ding took place in Grace and §
Peter’s Episcopal church, Baltimoi
on Armistice day, when Charles 1
Bullock, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jol
M. Bullock, of Bellefonte, and Mi
Kathryn Bullock, daughter of M
and Mrs. Forrest Bullock, former
of Bellefonte but of late living wil
her sister in Baltimore, were ma
ried by the church rector. ;
The wedding was a complete su
prise to the young friends of ti
bride and bridegroom. Mr. Bulloc
went to Philadelphia for the U. of !
-Penn State game, on Saturday, ar
Miss Bullock went over from Balt
more and met him there. It wi
then they decided to get married ¢
Monday. Both young people ai
graduates of the Bellefonte Hig
school and for some time past M
Bullock has been employed in tt
drafting department of the Amer
can Lime & Stone company, Bell
fonte. He returned home on Tue:
day, but inasmuch as his wife hs
been working in Baltimore she wi
not join her husband here until nea
the Holidays.
remanent fA —
| CHRISTMAS SEAL SALE :
TO OPEN NOVEMBER 2
The annual sale of Christmas See
stamps will open in Bellefonte th
day after Thanksgiving, Novembe
29. Miss Helen E. C. Overton i
chairman of this year’s sale commit
tee and information concerning i
may be had from her.
The cause is so worthy that we al
should join in an effort to make 192
the banner year of sales results.
——The farmer who plants hi
seed at the proper time is the on
who will have the best crops, an
the merchant who places his adver
tisements in ample time is the oni
who will get the bulk of the business
And that is what J. Dorsey Hunte
is doing. Read his holiday advertise
ment in this issue of the Watchman
then visit his store early todo you
Christmas shopping. You will fin
something there for every membe:
of the family.
— More than 6000 adults are re.
ceiving industrial training in thei
home towns through the engineering
extension department of the Penn
sylvania State College this year. The
work being offered is largely techni
cal and is receiving the cooperatiox
of various industries, some of the
courses being conducted in the
plants themselves.
rrr A ———
— Exceeding their estimate by
almost 25 per cent. the student Y
M. C. A. of the Pennsylvania State
College has closed its annual sub-
scription drive among students witk
$4400 pledged and in cash. A final
report will be made on contributions
after members of the faculty have
been solicited.
——The annual Christmas bazaar
will be held in the Episcopal church
| Thursday, December 5, opening at
1 o'clock. All kinds of fancy work,
bake sale, etc. 45-3t
Bellefonte Grain Markets.
| Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co.
{ WROBEL .cssossrmsssisssssmsmsmsssssans sesrvsvessonn Biosssresiia $1.16
Corn 1.00
Oats 50
Rye 1.00
PATIEY coincisnismmrssmmmienssseissmicsimesssisismesss oT
Buckwheat .. 90
i