Bellefonte, Pa, November 27, 1931. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. — A marriage license was issued at Hagerstown, Md., on Saturday, to Richard S. Vonada, of Nittany, and Miss Vivian M. Poorman, of Belle- fonte. — The Woman's Guild of St John's Episcopal church will hold a food sale at the Variety shop at 10.30 o'clock tomorrow (Saturday) morning. The patronage of the public is solicited. — Penn State will show 17 head of sheep and 30 swine at the Inter- national Livestock exposition in Chicago November 28 to December 5. This livestock was shipped to Chicago November 23. ~The Catholic Daughters of America will hold a card party, in their rooms jn this place, tonight, Friday, Nov. 27. Playing will start at 8:30. Refreshments will be served and everybody welcomed. At the inter-collegiate meat judging contest at Kansas City, Mo., last week, the team from the Penn- sylvania State College took fifth place. There were five college teams entered. The contest was held at the American Royal live stock show and judging was done in classes of meat carcasses and cuts, including beef, pork and lamb. — The regular monthly meeting ‘of the “Woman's Club” of Bellefonte ‘will be held in the jury room of the court house Monday evening, No- ‘vember the thirtieth, at 7:15. All members are urged to be present. After the business has been disposed ‘of the members will hear Dr. Champlin, of State College, talk on the subject, “Building a Better World.” ———Hunting licenses thus far is- sued in Pennsylvania indicate that this year will be a record breaker in the numbers seeking legal right to hunt game in the State. The large increase can very probably be attributed to the fact that so many out of regular employment have nothing else to do and prefer to spend their idle time in wholesome | and thrilling sport in the woods. Mrs. O. G. Morgan intends disposing of her late husband's coal business in this place. According to present plans she will have sale of the personal effects at the City coal yard so as to give up the Mor- gan lease on it by December 15. Nathan Kofman, the owner of the property, has several prospective lessees, but in the event of not be- ing able to agree upon terms will operate it himself. ——Roast pig was served the ‘twenty-five prisoners in the Centre county jail by sheriff Harry E. Dun- lap for their Thanksgiving day din- ner, and if all of them stay there Jong enough they might get turkey inas- for their Christmas dinner, much as that will be the last holi- ‘day meal sheriff Dunlap will serve in the jail. Roast pig was also ‘served to the hundreds of prisoners at Rockview penitentiary. Governor Pinchot, last Thurs- day, appointed Aaron D. Leitzell, of Bellefonte, and Edward E. Harnish, of Wingate, maintenance superin- ‘tendents of state highways at a sal- ary of $1860 a year. ‘native of Penn township and prior ‘to going to work for the highway ‘department had been employed asa guard at Rockview penitentiary. Of late he has been working in Clear- field county and will likely be locat- ed there in the future. Harnish ‘county force. ——Sunday night, Bellefonte Methodist church ‘filled in every pew and many chairs’ to hear Dr. G. W. Reese, surgeon- in-chief of Shamokin State hospital and his Welsh miners’ quartette. Apart from the superiority of his address was this, the central and supreme fact—a professional man, with wide fame, Christ as a Saviour, relating his ex- perience, disclosing himself as a man of prayer and appealing to his hearers for their accepting Jesus. ——Charles Tabel, proprietor of Leitzell is a Nov. 22, the witnessing for COUNTY AGRICULTURISTS HELD ANNUAL MEETING IN COURT HOUSE SATURDAY The fourteenth annual meeting ‘the Centre county Agricultural Ex- tension Association was held in the | court house, on Saturday, with ses- | sions both in the morning and after- noon. While most every section of the county was represented the at- tendance was not as large as antici- pated. At the business session, in the morning, C. E. Peters, of Storms- town, was re-elected president of the Association for the ensuing year. The reports of county agent R. C. Blaney and Miss Jean M. Alexon, home economics worker, showed a very appreciable increase in the work of the past year over that of 1930. The increase in farm con- | tacts was 413. There were approxi- mately 200 more office calls, by farm- of Donald Tierney, 17-year-old son i ers seeking various types of infor- mation. The number of meetings held during the year was 154, with an attendance in excess of 13,000. From the reports it is quite evident | that extension work has come to be 'a very important feature in agricul- ture in Centre county and that many farmers are dependent upon it as the source of their most val- uable information. At the noon hour in the neighbor- hood of fifty delegates went to the Y. M. C. A. for a good, old-fashion- ed sauer kraut dinner. The afternoon session was more largely attended than the one in the ‘morning, about two hundred people being present. P. T. Brown, of the State Department of Agriculture, Harrisburg, discussed the corn borer situaticn in Centre county, explain- ing that the infestation has in- creased to 2': per cent. The speaker very briefly explained the most successful control measures. Prof. H. N. Reist, of the agricul- tural economics department at State College, gave an interesting talk on the farmer's tax problems, bringing to light facts which have been estab- lished through intensive study dur- ing the past few years, and which verified opinions heretofore advanc- ed by many farmers that the tax ‘system should be re-adjusted. Prof. 'Reist stated that we are operating under a system established one hun- Ared and fifty years ago. It is not adequate, due to the changed condi- tions. We are living in a machin- ery age. Government systems have increased tremendously, and to the ‘point that land is not productive enough to carry it's proportionate share of the increase in taxation necessary to meet the demands of increased expenditures. As the closing part of the meeting |the Boalsburg banjo band gave an ‘hour's delightful concert, which was ‘enjoyed by all who had the pleasure 'of hearing it. BELLEFONTE'S NEW PUMP NOT WHAT IT SHOULD BE. The new water wheel and pump ‘installed at Gamble's mill is not what it was guaranteed to be and the mmnufacturers should be re- quired to make it right. When the pump was installed, last December, ‘a perceptible knock was evident in the speed increaser but the me- ‘chanics who set it up declared that ‘would disappear after the pump was in operation several months. Instead of disappearing the knock became more pronounced and two week ago the pump had to be shut down for repairs. When the speed increaser was taken apart by a | mezhanic sent here to fix the pump 'it was found that the roller bear- lings, which ought to last several | years, were worn the result of the knock above al- luded to. The mechanic worked on | the pump four days, then put it to- | gether in the hope that he had over- come the trouble, and left town. But the knock is still there and can be heard very plainly by anyone walking past the building. At no time since the pump has ‘near the volume of water it was guaranteed to pump, although the wheel is using eighty per cent. of the flow of Spring creek. ‘what is wrong with the wheel we Half Moon Gardens, has just been s.e not mechanic enough to know, admitted to an international associ- ation of florists which gives him a nation-wide hook-up in the delivery of flowers to all the principal cities and towns in the United States and Canada. It is an exceptional serv- ice. If you want to present flow- ers for any purpose to a friend in Dallas, Texas, for instance, all you need to do is decide what kind and how many and call Half Moon Gar- dens. They'll see that they are de- livered within twenty-four hours. Miss Mary Fleming, daughter of Judge and Mrs. M. Ward Flem- ing, had a narrow escape from se- rious injury, about 1.30 o'clock on Wednesday afternoon, when she was hit and knocked down by an auto- mobile. She came out of Baum- gardner's restaurant and walked around back of Miss Mary Bickett's car, for the purpose of getting in- to it, when she was hit by a car driven by John Bower, who was driving down High street. She was taken to the Centre County hospi- tal where it was found that her in- juries consisted of a bump on the head and a cut on one leg. "but it is quite evident that it is not up the manufacturers. DR. C. D. CHAMPLIN WILL | LECTURE IN COURT HOUSE. | Dr. Carrol D. Champlin, professor |of education in the school of educa- tion and psychology at the Pennsyl- vania State College, has been se- cured by the Woman's Club, | Bellefonte, to give a lecture in the | court house, next Monday evening, i i THREE BELLEFONTE BOYS PICKED UP BY POLICE IN PHILADELPHIA. of his son of | Jeff Tierney, of Bellefonte; cousin, Frank Tierney, 18, Mrs. Emma Tierney, and Miller, 17, also of Bellefonte, were arrested in Philadelphia, last Wed- while streets the from Philadelphia. In the car were found two load- ed .32 caliber revolvers with an ex- tra supply of ammunition, a 12- guage shotgun, a twent y-gallon can partly filled with milk, a bag, full of cans of tobacco, a carton of bread, a 5-gallon drum of gasoline and various other articles. According to Bellefonte police the boys left here during the second week in November and according to confessions made to Philadelphia police had motored east and south through Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia and north through Dela- ware. Practically all the stuff found in their car is said to have been stol- en during the trip. Bellefonte police had the young men under suspicion of having committed several gaso- ‘line thefts before leaving Bellefonte. ‘nounced it is said that they will be very low and when paid monthly They are being held in Philadelphia under the firearms law. ————————————— NEW B. AND L. ASSOCIATION PERFECTING ITS PLANS The Penn-Centre Building and Loan Association, a new corporation under the laws of Pennsylvania, which is to have its central offices in Bellefonte, is moving right along with its plans for beginning busi- ness. The corporation has an authorized capitalization of $5,000,000 and will operate under the watchful eyes of the State Banking Department. Its plans of operation are generally the same as those of other Associations of the sort, but a feature to be stressed is that of having the bor- rower take out life insurance in an amount equal to the borrowing, so that should he die before his install. | ments have all been paid the Asso- ciation will be secured and the home or other property on which the loan has been made would be saved to the family or kin of the person tak-| ing out the loan. While rates on this insurance have not been an- under the regular B. and L. plan will add very little to the subscrip- tion rate. For the present the offices of ‘the association will be next door to the Standard gas station on Spring street, and will remain there until all the plans are completed and a permanent office building is secured. The following is a list of the offi- |cers and directors of the new or-| ganization: INTERESTING MEETING OF MISSIONARY SOCIETY. The annual national missions and Thanksgiving services of the Wom. an's Missionary society of the Belle- fonte Presbyterian church was held in the chapel at 3.30 o'clock last | Friday afternoon. The president, Mrs. John Porter Lyon, opened the meeting by an- nouncing the hymn entitled, “Praise to God and Thanks We Bring.” Following this singing, which was led by Mrs. Paul Beaver with Mrs. Elsie Heilhecker at the piano, Mrs. william C. Thompson conducted an impressional devotional service in which the thought of a “world in need” and the Christian's duty of sharing was stressed. The business part of the meeting | consisted of the reading of the min- utes of the previous meeting by the secretary, Miss Kate D. Shugert; the report of the treasurer, Mrs. Charles E. Gilmour; the reading of a letter concerning a Christmas box (prof- ered by the president of the Na- tional Mission Schools supply com- mittee, Mrs. J. D. Hunter) from Miss Bessie L. Thompson, who is doing volunteer work as a member of the staff of the Patie C. Stock- dale school for mountainers at Col- cord, W. Va.; the presentation for signatures of a disarmament peti- tion; a special report by Mrs. H. G. Witter, leader of the little boys’ mission band, “The World-wide Friendship Club,” and the brief mention by the president of the cen- tennial celebration at Huntingdon, on November 5th, of the organiza- tion of the Western Foreign Mis- sionary Society, at which Dr. Robert E. Speer and Dr. Francis Shunk Brown, secretaries of the church board of foreign missions, were present. Now and then we hear people, who, while somewhat in the man- ner of the classic Mark Antony dis- claim speaking ability, hold our rapt attention—so, one Mrs. William A. Alexander, of Lewistown, as she brought to the afternoon meeting her “Bits from Synodical” (the two day conference lately held at Wilkes. Barre) was accorded an undivided attention as in simple, direct, radi- ant style she gave the gist of the messages, the kernels of the good things, heard at the Pennsylvania Synodical sessions. And no less keen was the pleased appreciation of her singing of two negro spirtuals, after brief prefa- | | tory remarks giving the scriptural | reference for the themes and con- [Toraing outstanding qualities of this | type folk song, it's religious fer- ents for Thanksgiving while Mrs. War- |vor, it's superior rhvth: : i . | giving with the children’s grand-mothe pe ythmic charac- | field will spend the time with her sister, 'Mre John Porter Lyon, of Curtin stree teristics, it's harmony. At the close of the meeting sup- per was served to more than seven- Br eames: NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. J. O. Stutsman was in Belle- | fonte last week, looking after some busi: erty. —Joseph R. Cook, of Cleveland, Ohio, and Miss Caroline E. Rankin, of Holli- | daysburg, were Thanksgiving guests at | the Charles F. Cook home, on east High | street. —Morris Kelley and his two sisters, the Misses Mary and Abbie Kelley, left the Mrs. John P. Lyon house on Curtin street the latter part of last week, and are at present living at the Garman House. —At the family dinner given yesterday by Mr. and Mrs. Ebon Bower, the guests included, Mrs. Bower's sister, Mrs. Le- nore V. Burd, of Millheim, and Mr. Bow- er's parents, who now make their home in Bellefonte. Mrs. Grant Pifer came in from Wilk- insburg, Monday, expecting that her Thanksgiving visit with her brothers and sisters, the Hoy family, would be one of ‘a week or ten days. Mrs. Pifer also will visit with her sister, Mrs. Wagner, at Boalsburg. —Mrs. William Graham was up from Williamsport, for the week-end and early part of the week, a guest for the time of several of her friends here. Mrs. Graham. the former Miss Esther Fulton, was a teacher in the uchools of Belle- fonte last year. —Mr. and Mrs. up from Camden, Thanksgiving and Frank Godshall drove Wednesday, to be week-end guests of Mrs. Godshall's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lamb and the Wilbur Baney family, all of whom celebrated the Thanksgiving day together. —Harry Flack and James Carpeneto were in Portage, Pa., last Monday, for the funeral of John L. White, who was one of the prominent business men of that place and a relative of Mr. Flack's deceased wife. Mr. White was born in Bellefonte seventy-eight years ago. —-Miss Martha Johnston, a first year student at Westminister college and a college friend, Harold Burton, drove te welleionte last week, to spend the week- end here with Martha's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Johnston and the family, re- turning to school Sunday afternoon. —After spending two months with his brother Malcolm, at Perth Amboy. N. J., and in New York looking for a job, Jack Yeager returned home the latter | part of the week, convinced that there are about five hundred job hunters in that city for every job that bobs up. —Mrs. Robert F. Hunter | daughter Henrietta drove to Philadel- phia, Wednesday, spent Thanksgiving | day there with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace | Kelley, and if their ptans carry, will return to Bellefonte today. Mrs. Kel- ley was formerly Miss Martha Hunter. —Mr. and Mrs. James Craig, with their Mrs. Frank Warfield, motored to Pitts- burgh, yesterday morning, the Craig family to be guests of Mr. Craig's par- | Dr. Edith Schad. —Mr., and Mrs, C. C. Shuey and their | daughter Rachel, with Miss Emma Waite ness relative to her Curtin street prop- | and her two children and Mrs. Craig's mother, | —Judge M. Ward Fleming has be down at Media, Delaware county, tf week, holding court. —Miss Mary H. Linn and her brothe Henry 8S. Linn, were in Willilamspo: yesterday, dinner guests of their sister |the Misses Sallie and Bessie Linn. | —Miss Lillian Harrar, of Williamspo: a sister of Mrs. James C. Furst, h | been a guest of the Furst family wh ‘making a visit to Bellefonte the pa two weeks. —Robert V. Lyon was in Bellefon overnight, Wednesday, a guest at T Markland having stopped in Bellefonte « his way home to Buffalo, from a trip Baltimore. —Mrs. Richard Lane came in from M Keesport, Wednesday, and was lat joined by Mr. Lane for a Thanksgivi: visit with the latter's mother, M: James B. Lane, at her home on ea | Linn street. —Dr. Lee B. Woodcock, of Scranto his brother, the Rev J. R. Woodcock, Syracuse, and their cousin, Byron Woo ‘cock, were all Thanksgiving day dinn | guests of Mrs John A. Woodcock, her Petrikin hall’ apartment, —Mrs. Louise McClintick came ov from Huntingdon, last week, to vis ! with her mother, Mrs. Kellerman, at t! Petrikin hall apartment of Mrs. Franc Musser, while Mrs. Musser and her 5 were with friends in New England. —Mr. and Mrs. W. F McCoy and the daughter, Amy Jane, were guests ‘honor at the Thanksgiving dinner giv | by Mrs Oscar Wetzel, having driven from Ambridge, Wednesday afternoo expecting to be in Bellefonte until Su day. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward Shields, Reading, were among the Thanksgivi: ' home-comers. The drive over was mas that Mr. Shields might spend sever | days hunting, while Mrs. Shields and ti two children are visiting with the Shiel and Galbraith families. —Miss Besse Miles, of Milesburg, vi chairman of the Republican county cor i | mittee, ha: been elected a member of ti board of directors of the Pennsylvan Council of Republican Women. Mi Miles was in attendance at the two-d: meeting of th: Council in Harrisbw last week. —Mrs. George B. Thompson is no visiting in Lansing, Mich.,, having drive out early last week with Mrs, C. ° Stahley following the latter's visit of month or more at Centre Furnace, wi! Mrs. Stahley's sisters, the Misses Thom, son. Mrs. Stahley is a daughter of ti late Mr. and Mrs. James Thompson. —Mr. and Mrs. John Hartswick, tal ing with them their grand-daughte Betty Anne, daughter of Mr, and Mr | Millard Hartswick, drove to Pittsburg | Wednesday, to be with Mrs. Sutherlar and Harold and LeRoy Hartswick, the | three children, for a Thanksgiving visi | Their plans are for returning home Sw day. | —Mrs. Doeblebower and her daughte | Eleanor Lyon Doeblebower, drove vu | from Drexel Hill to join the young | Doeblebower child, John, for Thank John is spending the winter with h grand-mother and at school in Bellefont {go that Mrs. Doeblebower's visit will t ty members and guests by a com. and Miss Anne Confair as motor guests, only for the school vacation period. mittee of which Mrs. George Gamble was chairman. $13.75 buys a 2-inch post steel out and anew set The wearing out of the bearings was undoubtedly been in use has it thrown anyways Just | to the standard guaranteed by President, Dr. C. J. Newcomb, pound cotton mattress, sizes 3 feet Bellefonte, Pa., physician, president 3 inches and 4 feet 6 inches width. and treasurer of Nuco Drug Co. of —W. R. Brachbill's furniture store. Pittsburgh, Pa., president and treas- 47-1 urer of Zellers’ Drug Co. | Vice president, Van S. Jodon, E,) EAL Bellefonte, Pa., president and gen- 1953 X-Mas S SALE eral manager of Bellefonte Central WILL BEGIN TODAY. Railroad Co., director of Farmers’ A RB ih LR design picturing the holiday Secretary, Leonard A. Breon, Bellefonte, Pa., general insurance and real estate. Treasurer, Walter A. Hugg, Miles- lected for the Christmas seal of 1931 to commemorate the 25th an- niversary of the sale of the seals to fight tuberculosis. An old-time burg, Pa, mershan . stage coach is shown, drawn by Direc Blaine Mabus, Belle- four horses prancing thro fonte, Pa. purchasing agent White- y ugh She rock Quarries Co. Paul R. Emerick, Bellefonte, Pa., merchant and sales- man. Johnston & Johnston, Attorneys. passenger blows his horn to blazon Dstigmas greetings to the country- The sale of this coach seal, which is the only one whose proceeds go for health work, will begin today under the auspices of the Bellefonte ‘tuberculosis committee. | sistance is needed in the great cam- eck, a total of 355000, which is|P3ign being carried on to combat | this most dreaded disease. It is bout $1,500 more than was | svout & Rl This amount 2 not only preventable but curable in clusive of the First National bank, i> *27°% Tages, Allowed 10 Jun it's course takes more lives of Philipsburg. The Peoples Na-, tween the ages of 15 and 45, the tional at State College, the Farm- er's National, of Millheim and the hot uss) period in life, than any First National of Rebersburg, |other disease. De sho i eee) Christmas seals provide funds for First National, Bellefonte ..... $15,000 | the tuberculosis prevention and | Bellefonte Trust Co 19,000 health promotion movement. Itis Farmer's National, Bellefonte 2,500 hoped that each one receiving stamps | First National, State College 12,000 can see their way clear to remit CHRISTMAS SAVINGS WILL BE PAID NEXT WEEK. Centre county banks will pay out in Christmas savings funds, next First National, Spring Mills .... 2,000 and thus help to finance the battle First National, Centre Hall 1,200 agains the disease. First National, Howard 3,000 Community Bank, Port Matilda .. 1,400 Mrs. ROY WILKINSON, Chairman THE PREACHER WANTS HIS SIGN RETURNED. —Daniel O'Leary, a member of the Undine Fire company, was in- jured in a peculiar manner shortly | bed, four band link spring and fifty festivity of colonial days was se- | of | grabbed a hand fire extinguisher. lat 8 o'clock, on the topic, “Building la Better World” This subject ‘should be of great interest to every ‘one, especially to the business and | professional man or woman. It is |a subject of vital importance today land as many as possible should (avail themselves of the opportunity to hear Dr. Champlin's views on the | Lopic. | The doctor has addressed many | audiences and all have been favor- 'ably impressed with his interesting talks. No admission will be charg- |ed and everybody is invited to goto the court house and hear him. ‘ i | broke a small bone in one of his after the noon hour, on Sunday. The company went out to extin- guish a flue fire at the Benner home on Reservoir hill. When the pump- er stopped O'Leary jumped off and As he did so the driver of the pumper started the machine and O'Leary attempted to jump on. In the attempt he slipped and fell and legs. The injury will keep housed up for several weeks. i ~The Cold Spring dairy, on | north Water street, was slightly | damaged by fire, last Friday after- | noon, which originated from an oil | stove and burned up along a parti-| tion to the roof. The damage was |about $300, which is covered by in- | surance. : During an absence of Dr. Horace Lincoln Jacobs, pastor of the Belle- fonte Methodist church, someone re. ‘moved a personal house sign that was hanging on the bay window of his residence on Howard street. Inasmuch as it was a gift from a friend now deceased it has a senti- mental value to the minister far in excess of its replacement cost. In consequence of this Dr. Jacobs will him give a reward and ask no questions mys Mabel Morrison, of if it is returned. Food sale, baked or canned, will be held at the Variety shop, Saturday, December 5th, under the auspices of the Willing Workers class, Lutheran church. The en- tire proceeds of the sale will be giv- en to the Associated Charities for their work. |day at the Children's home. A niece of | Me. and Mrs. Shuey, Miss Mulholland, | who is in charge of the home, entertain- led the party during their stay. —Mrs. E. C. Bolton, a niece of Miss Helen E. C. Overton, and her son, came up from Atlantic City the early part of last week and spent three days dismant- ling Miss Overton's apartment at the Academy, and storing the furnishings. Leaving here Friday, Mrs. Bolton went to Wilkes-Barre and was home Sunday by Miss Overton, who will be at the Shore indefinitely with the | Bolton family, at F-2 Preston Apt., Cor. Atlantic and Penna. Avenue. —A post card received here Tuesday indicates that Lucy Hall, who left her home in Union township two weeks ago, enroute to Seattle, Washington, to reside permanently with her daughter, has changed her mind. The card is post snow. > Aloft on the upper deck a marked at Conemaugh, Pa., and states —Guests whom Mrs. | “I will see you soon, as I think I would | sooner live where I know people.” It {is evident that Lucy did stop off en- route as she intended to do, with a friend in Conemaugh una it is very like- ly the friend was able to dissuade her | from making what most of her friends ‘here regarded as a very unwise venture. Yo i Ur as-| __ialter W. Perkins, parole officer at | ‘the Pennsylvania training school at | Morganza, and Mrs. Perkins, were here for several days, the after part of last | week, for one of their occasional visits | Perkins’ girlhood friends in! ‘with Mrs, | Bellefonte. Although having left here formerly Miss Grace Fellenbaum, has love for the town. Her parents were Mr. and Mrs. William Fellenbaum, who lived on Bishop street, in the house now occupied by the Martin Cooney family. —Miss Anne M. Keichline will go to Washington, D, C., next week, in accept- ance of an invitation extended by Presi- dent Hoover to participate in the chief executive's conference on home building and home ownership to be held Decem- ber 2nd to 5th, inclusive. Others from Centre county who have been invited and will attend are Prof. John R. Brack- en and C. W. Wild, ot the department of landscape architecture at the Pennsyl- | vania State College, and Miss Edith P. | Chace, head of the home economics de- | partment, | homemaking extension | same institution. | —Mr. and Mrs. Vesta D. Culveyhouse, | of East Orange, New Jersey, were ar- | rivals here on Tuesday and spent a day | or so with ..rs. Culverhouse's cousin, Bishop street. | They were accompanied by their son | Donald Culveyhouse and his wife and | daughter, Elsie. Twenty-seven years | ago the Culveyhouses left Bellefonte and | have since lived in Jersey Shore, Utica, 'N. Y.. and East Orange in which places he followed his trade as a master paint- er and decorator. Before her marriage | ates. Culveyhouse was Miss Rebecca HM specialist at the | Bidwell. a daughter of the late | Bidwell of this place. accompanied many years ago Mrs. Perkins, who was developed to a marked degree the char acteristics of a native, that of a great and Miss Flora E. Morton, M. (drove to Mechanicsburg, Monday, for a _ yes w. F. Entriken, of Bellevill | N. J., who had been with her mothe | Mrs Forrest L Bullock, at the Clearfiel hospital, for ten days or two weeks, re | turned home on Monday Mrs. Bulloc was operated on, last Thursday, an | her ailment was the result of the di placement of a kidney, probably the re sult of a fall she sustained a numb¢ of years ago. Dr. Waterworth, wh performed the operation, gives hope: encouragement for her recovery. —O. Earl Kline, who has been he: for three weeks expects to return to h work on the N. A. T. fleld in Chicag some time next week. He came into rt place several men at the Bellefonte lanc ing field while they are away on vacatio and will fly back to Chicago just as soo as Forrest Tanner, superintendent of th loca! field who is now in that city, r turns. Mr. Kline is looking well an enjoyed the opportunity of getting bac to his old home here for a visit. | Emma Bathga! | entertained, at her home at Lemont dw ing the month of October, included he sister, Mrs. John I. Bennett, of Yorl | Pa.: Mrs. Bathgate's son-in-law an daughter, Mr and Mr William Strau: baugh and their famil,, of Cedar Cres Md. The guests all spent a part « their time with Mrs. Strausbaugh's si: ter, Dr. Eva Roan, at State College. Fe the past week or ten days Mrs. Bathgat has been ill at her home at Lemont. —Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Burlingame, wh drove here from Cazenovia, N Y., tw weeks ago, and went on +0 Bala-Cynwy« Thursday, for an over Sunday visit wit Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Hodges, returned t Bellefonte Monday. On Tuesday M: Burlingame drove back to Cazenovi: leaving Mrs Burlingame here with he | mother, Mrs. H. C. Valentine, who: | guest she will be until next week. Dur ling that time her sister, Miss Rebecc | Valentine, will visit with Mrs Hodge: | at Bala-Cynwyd. | Miss Mary Chambers, of New Yor | city, and her sister, Mrs. J. Spence | Clinger, with the latter's small daugt ter, Mary Jane, drove here from Drex: "Hill, two weeks ago, for a visit wit | their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Williar | Chambers. At the end of a week's sta | Miss Chambers took her sister and niec back to their home near and returned to continue her stay Bellefonte. Miss Chambers’ visit is business one, purely in the interest « | her work in New York. Philadelphl! i ————————————_————————— ——1In order to make floor spac | for display of Christmas noveltie ‘we offer five Shearman Bros. qualit living room suites and three dinin room suites at 33 1-3 per cent. dis count from the regular price tags | _W. R. Brachbill's furniture store 471 | i WHEAL commmenessssrmmsssmsmsmsmsssssissssssssssssssssssssssssenes +8 Corn 5 Oats 4 | Rye a | BAPIOY coovooresemsssesmmmamnssssasssss-srsssssssssssssssssessssses A | BUCKWROAL ees morse + i