= Bellefonte, Pa., March 21, 1930. CE ———— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. Considerable news of local in- terest will be found on page 2 of this issue of the Watchman. Si — The Ladies Aid society of the Lutheran church will hold a bake sale Saturday, April 12th, at Schaef- fer’s hardware store. ’ ; ¢ ’ ———The new linoleum recommend- ed by the recent grand jury has been put down in the several offices in the court house where it was badly need- ed. ; ; ——The Missionary society of the Bellefonte Methodist church will hold an all day food sale at the Bellefonte Hardware Co. store, tomorrow, Sat- urday the 22nd, ——L. A. Schaeffer, who became suddenly ill at his home on east Cur- tin street yesterday morning, and whose condition for a part of the time since has been regarded as se- rious, is showing some improvement, The Philipsburg High school debaters won the decision in their contest with the State College Hi orators, at Philipsburg, last Friday night. The same evening the Philipsburg negative debaters lost the decision to the Bellefonte affirm- ative group. The latter contest took place here. ——Giving as their one hundredth play, “Francesca da Rimini,” the Penn State players will mark their tenth anniversary on Saturday with their most ambitious venture in many years. The play, which is also known as “Paolo and Francesca,” is laid in medieval Italy, giving the students an opportunity to develop its attend- ant pageantry in brilliant colors. Six- ty students will take part in the production. ! — After being closed down since the first of December the Bellefonte Lime company’s quarries at Salona were put in operation last week. During the shutdown a larger crusher and other new machinery were in- stalled and the plant is now in shape to turn out more crushed stecne for road-building purposes than ever before. J. Linn Harris, of Lock Haven, has personal charge of the plant. - ——At a regular monthly meeting of the Woman's Missionary Auxili- ary of the Presbyterian church, held at the home of Mrs. S. M. Nissley, on Tuesday evening, the following of- ficers were elected for the ensuing year: President, Mrs. Joseph L. Ruakle; vice president, Mrs. Thomas Beaver; secretary, Mi:s. Charles Beatty; treasurer, Mrs. Charles Hughes; secretary for literature, Mrs. Eleanor McDowell. * ——On Monday afternoon Harold Tressler, Leonard and Kenneth Smeltzer, High school boys, started for home in Tresslei’s car. They drove east on Linn street and in at- tempting to turn south on Wilson street the car upset and rolled over twice. Leonard Smeltzer sustained a “broken leg and painful bruises and was removed to the Centre County hospital. The other two boys escap- €d with’ minor cuts and bruises. . ——The three men who last week were canvassing Pennsvalley selling chicken protection to farmers at $12.50 per, abandoned their efforts to catch the gullible, last Friday, and departed for other and more fertile fields, though it is reported that they were able to clean up over two hundred dollars in the few days they worked the valley. Now it remains to be seen just how se- curely their protection will protect. . Forty-four of Frank Wetzler’s band boys gathered at the Penn-Belle, Monday evening, to do honor to their friend and leader. They came from all over Central Pennsylavna, from as far west as Pittsburgh, and it was a happy night for all of them. The su:prise banquet they gave Mr. Wetz- ler last year left so many pleasant memories that it was decided to make an annual event of it. There was splendid food, good singing by the band’s quartet and many remi- niscent after dinner talks. ——MTrs. Haldis Larsen, of Brook- lyn, N. Y, has announced the en- gagement of her daughter, Miss Erna Gulbrandsen to Mr. William B. Troup, of Bellefonte. Mr. Troup is the eldest son of Mr, and Mrs. Calvin Troup, of south Thomas street, this place, a graduate of the Pennsylvania State College and one Hf Bellefonte’s very highly esteemed young men. He is at present con- nected with the New York city plant of the Baldwin Locomotive works. No date has been set for the wed- .ding, but it will probably be cele- brated in the early fall. On her way to services in St. John's Catholic church, on Sunday evening, Mrs. Thomas Shaughnessy, of east Howard street, was hit and knocked down with a car driven by Arthur Houck, mechanic at the Decker-Chevrolet garage, at the Al- legheny and Bishop street crossing. ‘Mr. Houck was driving east on Bish- op street and failed to see Mrs. Shaughenssy until too late to stop, although he did everything possible to avoid hitting her. Mrs, Shaughn- essy sustained a fractured left wrist, a number of minor cuts and bruises and suffered considerably from shock, ‘She was taken to the Centre County Hospital where she 1s improving very satisfactorily. | western Texas have been operating Recently agents of several land companies who are exploiting south- in Centre county. Their’ stories of opportunities lying along the Rio Grande sounded so much like fairy tales that suspicion ‘and curiosity urged us to make an excursion in- to the Lone Star State to check up on the gentlemen. Accordingly, we boarded ‘The Spirit of St. Louis” at Altoona on Saturday evening, March 8 and ar- rived at the Missouri Metropolis about 1:20 Sunday afternoon. It was raining but the sun was shining bright in St. Louis and the air quite balmy, though vegetation seemed ‘little in advance of that in this section. There we took the “Sunshine Special” over the Missouri Pacific and had our first glimpse of Texas shortly after awakening in Texarkana. Peach trees. were in blossom on all sides and men were working out-of-doors in their shirt sleeves. ‘The sky was over-cast and the landscape had a drab appearance brightened, here and there, by the purple blooms of the iron trees. The soil is mostly white sand, the ground rolling and swampy and most of it covered with a low, scrubby growth that reminded us much of “The Barrens” of Centre county. The country is sparcely settled and on the run of 172 miles to Palestine we saw few horses, only two pigs, but many cows, All of the latter seemed to be Jerseys. They were in poor condition and looked rough. However, when one considers that cattle winter out- side in that country and the for- age is thin they looked no worse than stcck that winters about the straw-stacks in northern barn yards. About midway between Tekarkana and Palestine the soil turned to a red shaley appearance and we were told that we were in a great to- mato growing section. On all sides we saw plowed fields and in most of them hot-beds in which the young tomato plants were growing preparatory to being set out. There was evidence that the soil was | growing better. Cotton is also grown in that section. Most of the laborers in the fields were colored and mules were the motive power for their implements, though we did see a few tractors. Houses are mostly one-storied shacks and they are few and far between. The small towns looked like all that was need- ed to complete a . perfect setting for a movie “Western” was for Tom Mix to come galloping up Main street and toss the reins of Tony's bridle over the hitching post at the general store. We arrived at Huston at 5 Mon- day evening and had dinner at the Rice hotel, Huston is 815 miles out of St. Louis. It is a fine city of several hundred thousand population and is said to be growing rapidly. It has a ship canal from the Gulf of Mexico and as eighteen railroads converge there it is one of the largest ports, in point of tounage shipped and received, in the United States. The city has many parks, public play grounds, schools and hospitals. One of the most notable of the latter is a magnificent insti- tution in which no patients who are earhing more than twenty dollars a week may be treated. That spirit of real helpfulness extends into the field of education also in Huston, for Rice college is it any young man given standard of scholarship have a full college coarse at no other expense than his subsistence. | The curriculum of the institution ° any calling in the field of science, | arts and engineering. i Leaving Huston Monday night at, 9 it was a run of 347 miles to Har- | 6:45 Tuesday morning. There J left the train for a stay of days as the guests of the Al Lloyd Parker Securities Co. were taken by motor to the club house of the Company, a short drive f.om the town of Le Feria, and that hospitable place was home during our stay. { After breakfast the party of; thirty-two was broken up into small units each of which were assigned to carsdriven by Texas enthusiasts. Possibly all the others were equally fortunate, but we thought ourselves specially so after a few hours of association with our guide, Dr. Beuhler. He is a native of Phila- delphia, but his professional life we three and We ' had been spent in Indianapolis, where he was a very eminent specialist in sanitation. In fact, during his service in the army he had investigated conditions all over the very territory we were then traversing because they had an im- portant part in the mortality rate at the two great government posts in Texas. Fort Brown at Browns- ville and Fort Sam Huston at San Antonio. Incidentally we think statistics show that those two posts rank second and third in healthful- ness among all the army posts in the country. But to get back to the business of our trip. We were in Texas to | investigate the truthfulness of the stories its boomers have been tell- | ing Centre countians. We were pordered on the 1a word of discontent. then in Cameron county which is |Opportunity Lies Along the Rio Grande Being the Story ofa Short Journey into Southern Texas, a Land Where Wealth Fairly Oozes from the Ground. south by Mexico We dont’ recall its area in square miles, but as we drove continuously for three days and never once got out of it, it certainly must be as large as some New England State. The ground "is as level as the top of a billiard table, much of the territory is virgin, covered with mesquite, ebony and cactus, Both the mesquite and ebony are low, gnarled growths that have no com- mercial value, except for fire wood and because both are so hard they: are excellent for that purpose. The soil is practically all silt, for what is popularly known as “The Valley” down there is in reality nothing but the delta of the Rio Grande. For centuries the floods in that river have been through southern Texas and de- positing there the rich soil of the lands in its vast drainage basin to the north. The silty soil is very dark and contains just enough sand to make it loamy and therefor work with the least difficulty. An Irish- man would be plumb out of luck-in Cameron county, Texas, for we didn’t see a stone, even the size of a pea. Government analysis gives the silt content at 43 to 62 per cent. They hadn’t had a rain since Jan- uary, but we heard no complaint on that score because everything is irri- gated. Water is gathered in great basins and conducted by canals to the various sections as they are cleared and planted. However, the annual rainfall over that section is about 26 inches, somewhat below the average for the United States. For drinking purposes wells are resorted to and all of the water for domestic use goes through a process of filtration. The climate is equable. That is, they have no extremes. They have an occasional day in summer when temperature might register 101 de- grees but as there is little, if any, humidity such a day is not intoler- able. Occasionally they have a frost and just recently they suffered the first freeze in many years, Always there is a breeze and when a “north- er” doeg not make its unweicome ap- pearance the air is balmy from the Gulf. Stoves, except for cooking, are almost a curiosity. Fire places ae used in the homes and a few mesquite logs are burned on cool mornings or evenings just to take the chill out of the house. Though our heavy winter overcoat had felt quite comfortable here when we left we discarded it at Houston and at Brownsville bare legged children were playing in what would be Au- gust clothing in Bellefonte. We were told that coal is indeed a rarity in that section. They have oil'and nat- ural gas a plenty so that it is not needed. In consequence of this build- ings look bright and clean and one might wear a collar for an entire week without its becoming as soiled as it would in one day here. We be- lieve this because our hands, natur- ally the grand American dirt catch- ers, were so clean all the time we we.e in Texas that we had consider- able doubt as to whether they real- ly were our own. Living conditious are pleasant and wholesome. Texas is far in advance of many States in her public school systems. We saw splen- cutting new courses those people look so well and happy, | but they can’t subsist on climate. They must have material things as ' well. There are no great industrial enterprises in “The Valley,” . other than the storage and packing houses, and they, like the people, would not be there were it not for the greatest source of natural wealth, the soil, we have ever seen. We haye been inthe most fertile sections of the eastern States, we have been a]l over the south, on both coasts of Florida, all through the garden spots of Colorado and up into the Willamette valley of ‘Oregon, but nowhere have we seen such soil as lies many feet deep all over the delta of the Rio Grande. | Some have suggested that it could be shipped north and sold as fertil- izer. Verily, we believe it could, Farms there are rarely larger than ten or twenty acres. They need not be because we saw numbers of one acre plots that are producing, an- nually, more than a 140 acre farm we know of in Centre county that is supposed to be doing fairly well. They grow oranges, grape fruit, limes, cabbage, beans, carrots, toma- toes, turnips, onions and strawberries principally. Most anything they stick in the ground pops up almost while one turns around. We saw Athol ; trees that were plunted from twigs ljust a year ago. They are now twenty five feet high. Why, repu- , table land companies will sell you 10 lacres of ground, clear it for $35.00 (an acre, sell you grape fruit bud | balls at $2.00 per, plant an orchard for you and guarantee it to be pro- i ducing in three years, with profitable ‘bearing in four years. After fifth year any reasonably cared for orchard will pay for the entire in- | vestment in one crop, if the season {and market are favorable. | It does sound like a fairy story, doesn’t it? It's true, however, be- cause we went to the trouble of talk- jing with many persons who were not { connected with or particularly inter- ested in the land company that was our host. As grape fruit trees are (known to live twu hundred years think of what such an orchard means ? But besides the fruit they have the ; vegetable farming and cotton. Cot- ton is the summer crop. They get iit in after the potatoes are out— ‘they were lifting potatoes while we were there—then tue ground goes into tomatoes, beans or any other vegetable for the Christmas markets north. When they are matured an- | other crop is started at once. In | fact they grow three and some times four crops a year. All crops are sold in the field or on the trees, The grow- er has no worry harvesting them. The packers who buy them do that. Wild ducks of every variety were on every lake or lagoon we saw. The brush is said to be full of deer Gulf is There are closed seasons in Texas, but’ over in Mexico where a small fee obtains a permit’ to hunt every day in the year offers lure to the man who loves the out-of-doors, a gun and a dog. Quail and turkeys there are plentiful as starlings are becoming here. . We regret that press for space in this issue makes it impossible to tell you more of what we saw. Perhaps it is just as well, for in such a land only seeing is really believing. Before closing, however, we want Al Parker Securities Co. Its owners are Al and Lloyd Parker, Virginians, , we believe by birth, and men whom the . and wild turkeys and fishing in the only twenty miles away. | ‘NEWS PURELY PERSONAL —Among Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Dale’s recent guests was Mrs. Dale's father, T. D. O'Neal, of Johnstown. —Latimer Curtin, of Philipsburg, has spent much of his time recently at Cur- tin owing to the extremely critical condition of his mother, Mrs. Jennie Hol- : ter Curtin. —Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Fauble, wha went over to New York, Saturday night on the excursion, remained there for the week to do the season buying for the Fauble stores. —Mrs. Albert E. Blackburn, of Phila- delphia, is spending a week in Bellefonte with her mother, Mrs. J. L. Spangler, who is slowly recovering from her re- cent indisposition. . —Mrs. Charles Smith is here from Jer- sey Shore, a patient in the Centre County hospital. Mrs. Smith, before her mar- riage, was Miss Elizabeth Hazel, only daughter of M. J. Hazel, of Bellefonte. —Mrs. John Love, of Reynolds Ave., who has been spending the month of | March with her son, Edward and his family, at Breckenridge, Pa., expects to return home about the first of April. —C. C. Shuey, James Rine and Cy- rus Solt are among those of the Metho- dist church of Bellefonte who will be in Harrisburg, during the present ses- sion of conference, of the Williamsport district. —Miss Katherine Seibert, who drove up from Chambersburg the after part of last week, continued her visit in Belle- fonte until the middle of this week, be- ing a guest during the time of Mrs. John A. Woodcock. —Mrs. James C. Furst returned home, late last week, from a ten day's trip to Philadelphia. Having gone from here to Williamsport, Mrs. Furst was joined there by her sister, Miss Mabel Harrar, who was with her for the visit east. —Nevin Noll was up from Philadelphia, last week, to see the minstrel show. Hav- ing always been so closely identified with the recent home talent productions of Bellefonte, the visit back was to see what was being developed since he left. —Mrs. Reilly returned to Pittsburgh, the forepart of the week, following a visit here of several days with her aunt, Mrs. H. E. Fenlon, who has been ill since before Christmas. Mrs. Reilly is better known in Bellefonte, perhaps, as Miss Lucetta Brew. —Miss Anne Shaughnessy arrived home the early part of the week, called here by , Miss | Shaughnessy, who is in charge of nurses ' her mother’s accident Sunday. at the Hospital of White Plains, N.Y., is now taking care of her mother, at the Centre County hospital. —Mrs. Hiram Fetterhoff Bellefonte the first of April her own home at Pleasant Gap, pecting to be there permanently. Fetterhoff has had charge of the Harry Holz home ever since he has occupied an apartment in the Dr. Rogers house. —Mrs. E. M. Broderick, of State Col- lege, has been here for much of the past week, called to Bellefonte by the ill- ness of her uncle, T. B. Hamilton, who is suffering from one of his severe heart attacks. Both Mrs. Broderick and her brother, Clarence Hamilton have been with their uncle. —Mr and Mrs. Myron M. Cobb, of : west High street, were among those from , Bellefonte who took advantage of the ex- | cursion Saturday night, to spend Sunday { with members of their family, in New | York, Mr. and Mrs. Cobb’s day was spent | with their son, Warren L. Cobb, at pres- ent with one of the leading banks of the city. —Lloyd Flack, of Blairsville, motored to Bellafonte on Sunday for a short | rion with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Flack, of Logan street, and to be here for the Undine Fire Company's St. Patrick's day banquet on Monday eve- i ning. Lloyd is a merchant in Blairs- , ville and we are happy to say that he will leave ex- evidently to say an unsoliciated word about the is getting on splendidly. _ —Among those from Bellefonte who ; went over to New York, Saturday night , on the excursion, were Mr. and Mrs. did looking High school buildings in we found out to be among the most ! John J. Bower, J. M. Cunningham, Mr. all of the small towns. Gas, electric- highly esteemed citizens in thé Rio and Mrs. Oscar Gray and Miss tity, telephone and telegraph service Grande Valley. There was evidence | Ward, Mrs. Harry C.- Yeager, Miss Julia is extended in every direction, even on all sides of their public spirited. | Isabelle Johnson and Miss Mary McCul- row there will probably be a prosper- ous settlement. Mexicans are em- ployed generally as laborers. In the day, the latter if they have been with their employer for a year or more. Mexican women work both in the fields and as domestics. In the ficient and dependable and get from . $3.50 to $4.00 per week. Our belief that they are personally untidy was completely exploded. We were told that a Mexican laborer must have clean overalls every day and the ones we saw bore testimony to the state- ment. We talked to many people engaged in many lines of activi®y there and from no one did we hear Everybody seemed to be happy and well. In a land where roses bloom all the year round and poppies, primroses and myraid other flowers grow wild; where insect pests are unknown, flies so few that swatters are drugs on the market and potato bugs are nev- er seen who couldn't be happy. Business is good, there is no un- employment there, no “for rent” or “for sale’ signs were present to sug- gest that underneath a smiling at- : mosphere of prosperity there might We talk- | ed to men who had gone to Texas on | crutches so cripped with rheumatism be real financial problems. that they had been forced to give up their business in the north. They are now more suple than we are. told us that his blood pressure was so high that he dispaired of Nving longer than four months. Since he has been in Texas it has gone back to normal. Certainly he looked the pic- ture of health and his place evidenced the punch he must have in him now. Of course it is the climate and the favorable living conditions that make A for- | mer St. Louis broker, who has one of the show citrus groves near La Feria, located there, In'into the remote brush country, forit hessand we heard nothing but praise | 6. Miss McCulley remained in New who maintains a 'is growing so rapidly that where on- | of their manner of dealing with peo- can 'ly one pioneer isliving today, tomor- ' ple. In fact square shooting seems ‘to be their fetish. They are now developing the Mon- te Grande section. It is a garden comprehends preparation for most fields they get $1.25 or a $1.50 per spot and investments there must cir- ‘tainly yield wonderful returns. The Parkers resort to no high pressure ' salesmanship. They are genial hosts ‘and we saw no shading of cordialty lingen in which city we arrived at latter work they become very pro- as between guests who bought lands | and those who didn’t. | Nothing is needed in the Rio Grande valley but people. That is ‘why they would rather sell land to home seekers than to those who merely seek speculative values, In . this connection let us say that we be- ‘lieve we saw the beginning of what will turn out to be the greatest boom ‘in realty that any section of our coun- "try has ever seen.. And it will not (be like that of Florida, either, be- | cause “the Valley” is being develop- ed for production purposes, not as a | play ground, though part of it will , undoubtedly be devoted to that pur- ! pose. | If you are interested go down and | see for yourself. The four thousand { mile trip costs only your car fare 'and meals from your home town to | St. Louis and back. After you reach | St. Louis you are the guests of the | Al Parker Securities Co., and your | money is no good. Charles E. Glenn, of Brownsville, Texas, born at State College and ‘graduated from the College there, is a Parker agent in Centre county. He is organizing a party to leave on Saturday, March 29th. He can be reached any time before then at the State’ College hotel or through this office. Talk it over with him. Any- thing he tells you about the land we will vouch for because we believe the imagination of no human being has yet been developed to the point where it could over portray the pos- sibilities that liein the delta of the Rio Grande. - York for a visit with Mrs. E. B. Spangler and her family. i —Miss “Kitty” White and Miss Price, { the former a daughter of Dr. F. K. White, of Philipsburg, spent Friday af- ternoon of last week in Bellefonte, get- ting signatures to Dr. White's petition for State committeeman, on the Democra- tig ticket. As Dr. White has many good friends on this side of the mountain, the work of the young women was accom- plished in a very short time. —Messrs. J. M., Edward and William Cunningham and William H. Garman were among the Bellefonters who went over to New York on the excursion last Saturday night. The Cunningham brothers went to spend the day with the family of their brother ‘‘Mertie”. who lives in that city. Mr. Garman went for a visit with his daughter, Miss Ruth, who is living in Brooklyn. —Included in the Sunday guests whom Mr. and Mrs. John Garthoff entertained were J. L. Blackford, Mrs. Blackford, their son Phil and Max Rhone, of Hunt- ingdon; Mr. and Mrs. Heimbach, their son Marlyn, C. M. Sanders and Mrs. Rus- sell Taylor, of Pittsburgh, and Mrs. Grace Keefer and her daughter Lucille, of State College. All were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garthoff, except Mrs. Keefer and her daughter. —Mrs. W. J. Emerick, Miss Margaret Stewart, Mrs. Jacob F. Hoy and Mrs. David Washburn, drove over to Ridgway, Monday afternoon, in the Emerick car, representing the Children’s Aid society of this district, at the convention held there Tuesday Mrs. Hoy had spent Sunday at Ridgway also, visiting there with her daughter, Mrs. Vincent Stevens and her family, who moved there from Bellefonte only a short time ago. —A Watchman office visitor, on Wed- nesday, was C. A. Peters, of West Liberty, Iowa, who has been visiting friends in Pennsylvania since the early part of January. This week he has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arbor Eberts, of east Howard street. Mr. Peters was born on Dix Run, in Union township, and went west thirty-eight years ago. He is a carpenter by trade and looks as if the west agrees with him. to go to” Mrs. - —Mary Curtin, injured in a coasth accident five weeks ago, will be tak home this week from the Centre Coun hospital. . 2h « !| —Mrs. Salinda Shutt went out to John town, Thursday of last week, to spend week or two with Mr. and Mrs. BEdwa L. Gates and family. “ —Dr. R. M. Beach continues fll at} home on Linn street, with little improv ment in his condition since the beginni of his sickness three weeks ago. —The Cameron Heverly’'s week-end w spent at Mackeyville, guests of Mrs. He erly’s aunt apd uncle, Mrs. W. H, Gar ner and Mr. Gardner, on their farm ne that place. .* | SUA —The Rev. M. DePui Maynard, form rector of St. John's Episcopal church Bellefonte, was back Friday night to tal charge of the lenten services in the chur here. Mr. Maynard is now rector Grace Episcopal church, at Ridgway. ! wi : 1 * ’ ? ' NEW A. AND P. STORE : IN MODEL FOOD MARKE On last Wednesday evening Ti Great - Atlantic and Pacific Tea Ct opened a new up-to-date food ma ket in the old post office room | the Brockerhoff hotel building. Tt new food market is fully equippe to handle a full line of meats, se foods, poultry, fresh fruits an vegetables in addition to its forme ‘ne of fancy and staple groceries The store has been very attra tively remodeled and the latest d signed equipment for handlin meats, dairy products and produc has been installed. All refrigeratio is mechanical which insures a un form temperature at all times fc the preservation of fresh meat butter and other perishable food Officials of the A.& P, claim the this new market is one of the fines installations that the company ha made in recent years. Mr. Edward R. Miller, who for merly resided in Bellefonte, will b in charge of the meat departmer while Mr. G. G. Baughman, wh was formerly in charge of the ol store, will be in charge of th grocery department. “THE LOVE PARADE” AT THE RICHELIEU ‘Settings rich beyond the dream of the most visionary of interio decorators have been provided fo Ithe talking screen's first origine musical = romance, “The Lov Parade” which plays at the Riche lieu next Monday, Tuesday an Wednesday, with a midnite shov Sunday nite at 12:01. “The Love Parade” is a tunefu extravaganza of the intimacies an intrigues about the throne of a ver modern mythical kingdom, or rath er queendom, with Jeanette Mac Donald playing the queen an Maurice Chevalier starred as he military attache, who is recalle from a foreign capital for havin been involved in numerous scanda lous affairs with the lovely ladie of the diplomatic circle. Victor Schertzinger wrote th ten big hit songs and Ernest Lubitsc) directed this - highly musical an: sophisticated comedy. GAS BANDITS MURDER FORMER BELLEFONTE} George Kuhn, a former resident o Bellefonte, was shot to death and hi son Andrew was wounded in the hij by gas bandits who attempted t hold up and rob their filling statio at Hollyhill, Florida, last Thursday The Kuhns meved to Florida abou ten ‘years ago. -Mr. Kuhn was a so1 of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kuhn anc was born in Bellefonte. He marriec Miss Sarah Burris who survives wit} three children. He also leaves on: brother, Clement Kuhn, of State Col lege. Burial was made in Florida or Sunday, BELLEFONTE WOMAN’S CLUB The next meeting of the Woman’: club will be held Monday evening March 24th, at the home of Mrs Samuel Shallcross, on west Linr street. The business meeting will be. gin at 7:30 o'clock, and at 8:30 the meeting will be open to the public with an entertainment by local mu. sicians, namely: Mrs. Louis Schad Mrs. Samuel Shallcross and Mrs Robert Walker. There will be a talk on “Carmen,” with victrola records. The regular time of the meeting has been changed due to the recital at State College by Lawrence Tib- bett, America’s greatest baritone. ——The Troop L minstrels hac good houses, last Thursday and Fri. day nights, and the net receipts for the two performances were $644, which were divided evenly between the troop and the John B. Rogers Producing company. ——Harl C. Musser is offering his home, on east Curtin street, Belle. fonte, for sale in contemplation of moving his family down onto his farm in Marion township. PUBLIC SALES MONDAY, MARCH 31—On the R. F. Glenn farm in Buffalo Run valley, one horse, 11 head pure-bred Holstein cattle, one Holstein bull, full line of farm im- plements and household furniture. Sale a 10 o'clock a. m. L. Frank Mayes, auc- tioneer. — — Bellefonte Grain Markets Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. WHORL .occrrcsrivsmmmssssmssmemessromusssssismeens - S308 Corn 80 Oats 80 Rye 80 Barley Nn Buckwheat 8