NEW ADVERTISEMENTS OUSE FOR RENT.—6 room. House on Half Moon hill Bath, electric Hght and water. Inquire of Charles dann, llefonte, Pa. 77-8-3t OUSE FOR RENT.-~-7 room house Hd on west Bishop street. Bath, hot- air heat. No g . Apply toW. i. Miller, Bellefonte, Pa., 77-10-3t OR RENT.—Quaker Manse in Belle- f fonte. Possession given at once. Inquire of James R. Hughes at lellefonte Academy. 77-10-2t ~ TORE ROOM.—Large store room in 9 the Hayes building, north of Alle- gheny St., Bellefonte, for rent. nquire of Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, Belle-- mte, or phone 332 77-16-41 | XECUTOR'S NOTICE.—TC ne unaer K signed executors of the last will and testament of Hannah W. Smith late | {f Bellefonte, Centre county, deceased, ereby notify all persons knowing them- elves indebted to sald estate to make nmediate payment thereof and those aving claims to present them, properly uthenticated, for settlement. A. C. SMITH. W. H. SMITH, 7-7-6 Executors. | OTICE OF PRIMARY ELECTION. \N ~-In accordance with an Act o > Assembly known as the Uniform ‘rimaries Act, approved July 12th, 1913, nd supplements thereto, notice is here- ww given that a Primary Election will e held Tuesday, April 26th, 1932, at shich time the polls will be opened rom 7 o'clock A. M. to 7 o'clock P. M. | yr the purpose of nominating candi- ates for the following offices to be oted for at the General Election tobe ! eld on Tuesday, November Sth, 1932. One President of the United States. One United States Senator. One State ‘Treasurer. One Auditor General. i Three Judges of the Supreme Court. On Representative in Congress. One Representative in General Assem- ly. There will be elected by the Republi- an party the following delegates to he National Convenuon to be held in *hicago. Ill, in June next, from the 3rd Congressional District of Pennsyl- ania, composed of Centre, Clearfield ana flair Counties. Two Delegates. Two alternate Delegates. There will also be elected by the Re- wblican voters of the State at the com- ng Primary Election. Sewen Alternate Delegatestat-Large, o the Republican National Convention. There will be elected at said Primary dlection by the Republican voters ot ‘entre County. One member of the Republican State ‘ommittee. One chairman of the Republican Coun- | y Committee. One Vice Chairman of an County Committee. There will be elected by ratic party at said Primary Election he following delegates to the National sonvention and party officers. Delegates o the National Convention of the Demo- ratic Party to be held in the City of *hicago in the State of Iliinois, in June ext. Twenty-third Congressional Dis- rict, including Centre, Clearfield and lair Counties: Sixteen Delegates-At-Large. Sixteen Alternate Delegates-At-Large. Two District Delegates, There will be elected by the ratic voters of Centre County: Demo- One member of the Democratic State | ‘ommittee. One Chairman of the Democratic Coun- y Committee. One Vice Chairman of the Democratic tounty Committee. There will be elected by the Prohibi- ion Party the following delegates to he National Convention from 23rd Con- tressional District of Pennsylvania, com- yosed of Centre, Clearfield and Blair Jounties. Five Delegates-At-Large. Five Alternate Delegates-At-Large. There will also be elected by the srohibition voters at said Primary Zlection. One Member of the Prohibition State ‘ommittee, JONH 8S. SPEARLY (SEAL) H. E. HOLTZWORTH (SEAL) J. VICTOR BRUNGART (SEAL) Attest: Chas. E. Freeman, Clerk. 77-10-3t WE NOW HAVE Straw For Sale $1.00 Per Hundred Special This Week Punxsutawney Coal $5.45 Per Ton DON'T FORGET OUR Dustless Cannel Coal Kofman’s Coal Yard BELLEFONTE Phone 319 the Republi | the Demo- | PINE GROVE MILLS Miss Estner Corl is at present , ‘holding down a nice job in State | College. { H. L. Harper, our plaster con- | tractor, is busy on a job at Rock | Springs. Our active young barber, Roy Eyer, is off duty with an attack of the grip. Mrs. Sarah Everts is quite ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. C. Martz. James S. Miller and wife, of the Glades, spent Saturday evening | among friends here. Loyd Ripka, of Boalsburg, was | here Thursday looking after his real | estate west of town. Maxwell Ward and sister Annie, | of Baileyville, transacted business {in town Saturday evening. Mrs. Isaac Harpster is a patient {in the Philipsburg hospital, having | undergone quite a serious operation. | Paul Sunday went over to Belle- | ville, Thursday, and bought a fine mare at the Peachey sales stables. Miss Edna Poorman, of State Col- | lege, was entertained at dinner, on | Sunday, at the Grover C. Corl home. Stockman J. W. Keller, of Mc- | Alvey's Fort, passed through town ion Monday with a fine span of { mules. Harry Gearhart is all smiles on account of the arrival of a new | girl at his home. She has been named | Patsy. Henry C. Dale, with the Sheffield ' Farms, at Mifflinburg, visited friends on the branch and in Bellefonte last | Saturday. Aaron Tressler, oil agent of Bai- | leyville, is making a trip through | the valley demonstrating the quality | of his oils. | Dr. Hugh L. Fry departed Thurs- | day for his home in Nashville, Tenn., | after spending ten days among | friends here. Mrs. Madaline Harm and interest- | ing daughter, of Neff's Mills, are | spending the week among friends in this section. Charles Gates, head clerk at the LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS | OTICE.—To the Stockholders of Whiterock Quarries: The Stock- ! holders of Whiterock Quarries are | hereby notified that by call of its Board i of Directors a meeting of the stock- holders of Whiterock Quarries will be held at the general office of the com- pany in Temple Court, Bellefonte, Penn- sylvania, on the 26th day of April A. D. 1932, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, to take action on approval or disapproval of a proposed increase of the indebtedness of this Company from One hundred seventy five thousand dol- lars ($175,000.00) to Two hundred twenty five thousand dollars ($225,000.00) and to take requisite action, if approved, to authorize the proper officers of this Com- pany to execute and deliver its First Mortgage Gold Coupon Bonds in an aggregate principal amount of Two hun- dred twenty five thousand dollurs ($225, 000. 00), and to secure the same, its mortgage upon its property to the Trustee named in said issue of bonds as the Trustee thereof. WHITEROCK QUARRIES RAY C. NOLL, Secretary. 77-9-0t. HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of a writ of Alias Levari Facias issued out of the Court of Com- mon Pleas of Centre County, to me directed, will be exposed to public sale at the Court House in the Burough of Bellefonte on FRIDAY MARCH 25, 1932 The following property: All ‘that certain messuage, tenement and lot of ground, situate and being in ty, State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to wit:— On the East by lot of W. J. Musser; on.the North by Lamb Street; on the West by lot of Al Landis; on the South by an Alley. The lot having a frontage of about 47 feet between the corner posts, and extending back from Lamb Street to an Alley, 150 feet, to a uniform width. Being the same premises which James { C. rurst, bXxecutor of the last will ana Testament of John P. Harris Sr., de- ceused by his deed dated the sth day of April, 1925, and récorded in Centre County in Deed Book 134, at page 22, granted and conveyed the same unto Harry Ward and Rosa Ward, his wife. gold as property of Harry Ward and | Rosa Ward. Sale to commence at 10:00 o'clock A. M. of said day. Terms Cash. | JOHN M. BOOB, Sheriff, | Sheriff's Office. Bellefonte, Pa., March 1, 1982, 77-10-3t Never Before Has So Much Human Rapture Been Breathed and Blended in One Picture. Now You A Motion Picture Event!! Samuel Goldwyn Presents RONALD COLMAN in Sinclair Lewis’ “ Arrowsmith” HELEN HAYES and RICHARD BENNETT You've Read About It! WITH Heard About It) Can See It!!! | 8 9 1 m (C STATE COLLEG amr | Monday and Tuesday Mar. 7 and 8 Matinees at 1:30 Evening Showings Begin at 6 and 8 | Guit filling station, Tyrone, ! the Borough of Bellefonte, Centre Coun-' Seized, taken in execution and to be | T. missionary band, held at the W. |S. Ward home, Mrs. Gertrude Mil- {to be held in Altoona, April 10th. | carriage building business spent a few days with his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gates. | J. Foster Musser and family, of the Branch, motored to Altoona, on | Saturday, pleasure. Claude Williams is going around with a bad cut on his face, receiv- ed by a kick of the crank while cranking his car. Mrs. Etta Corl visited with friends in the Mountain City and found her son Clayton recovering nicely from his recent illness. Prof. Frank B. Gardner, of State College, came over Thursday to see how things are moving along on his experimental farm. Waldo Homan, of Oak Hall, pass- ed through town, Monday, enroute to Mifflin county in quest of a team of mated sorrel mares. Samuel Reed and Carl Lightner, of Diamond valley, were here on Wednesday afternoon swapping yarns with old cronies. Earl Bickel, tenant on the J. E. McWilliams farm came home with a fine horse, last Thursday, bought at the Dodd horse sale. Miss Virginia Dale, of the faculty of the Jenkintown High school, spent the week-end with relatives here and at State College. Mail carrier Ira Harpster is housed up with a severe case of the flu. During his absence W. E. Weaver is handling the mail matter. Mrs. W. G. Gardner, who is in quite feeble health, tripped over a bucket of boiling water a few days ago and badly scalded her foot. Grandmother Bailey, widow of for- mer County Commissioner John G. Bailey, is quite ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. W. H. Glenn. Miss Nora Goheen and Mrs. C. M. Powley were honor guests at an old fashioned quilting party at the James Pfoust home, last Thursday. C. M. Powley has repossessed the old homestead farm in the valley, but who the tenant will be the com- ing year has not yet been made pub- lic. Mrs. Calvin Trostle, of White Hall, entertained some of her friends | at a sumptuous dinner, on Friday, which was followed by a quilting bee. Luther Peters, poor director, made a trip over the township, last week, | looking after those in need of help. He is the right man in the right place. William Gummo underwent an operation for appendicitis, at the! Lock Haven hospital, last Thursday, mixing business with and is reported as getting ulong | nicely. Charles L. Stover, implement dealer of Millheim, accompanied by! John Filbert, of Philadelphia, was here on Saturday drumming up trade. Paul Williams, of Graysville, is making locomotion go on crutches owing to torn ligaments in his heel, the result of getting his foot caught | in a wagon wheel. Prof. David Anderson, of Iowa | State College, called on his various | friends in this vicinity in the begin- ning of the week, having come east on a business trip. John Gearhart, a jackie on the cruiser Saratoga, was called from his furlough here for imperative duty at once to go with the fleet into the Pacific ocean. F. Glenn Rogers, county superin- tendent of public schools, was here, on Saturday, consulting with our school directors relative to the new community school building. James A. Ault, of Neff's Mills, a recently discharged patient from the Clearfield hospital, where here on Saturday and feeling fine. Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Irvin, of Penn- sylvania Furnace, entertained forty members of the men's Bible class of the Baileyville Sunday school at; their home last Thursday evening. The public sale of the property of the late Much of the household stuff went as antiques and brought good prices. On going to the barn one morn- ing last week, C. Edward Frank | found his best cow drowned in the | watering trough, having either fall- | en or been thrown in on it's back and unable to get out. At a recent meeting of the I. W. ler and Mrs. Mabel Harmon were elected delegates to the convention The Pine Grove grammar school | | will present a two act play, “Patty Saves the Day,” in the I. O. O. F. ‘hall on the evening of March 5,at 8 o'clock. Price, 10 and 25c., the proceeds to go to the benefit of the school fund. i William - Meyers, who a : of years ago conducted a lucrative in our! town, but now living at Alexandria, | Huntingdon county, spent a few days last week looking up old friends in| | number this section. The P. O. 8. of A. held their mid- | winter banquet in the IL O. O. F.| hall, last Friday evening. John T.| Taylor Esq. of State College, was | the speaker, and delivered a patriot- | ic address. Every place at the table | ‘was taken and there was little of | | the chicken left when the banquet | ended. | | A A large Benson milk truck, used to haul milk collected on Ferguson | | township farms to Huntingdon, up- | he | had an inward goitre removed, was Ira Harpstes, last Saturday, drew a large crowd. YOUD PICK REGARDLE/S OF PRICE!" Latest Refinements MADE POSSIBLE by the present low cost of materials used in manufacture. We urge you to place your order NOW — for we believe that $109.50 will be the lowest price ever available to you for an electric range with so many features. Don’t let the low price mislead you. This range is made of the very finest materials. Beauti- ful colored—porcelain enamel—All Ivory, Green and Ivory, Gray and White, or Ivorytone — on heavy Armco sheet metal and a rigid cast iron frame. Double-insulated oven, with temperature control and special Heat Distributor, Chromalox platform heating elements, Come in TODAY! ‘““Wear-Ever"’ Aluminum Purchase an electric range NOW-—from us or any other dealer—and receive a special 4-piece set of “Wear-Ever” alu- minum-—valued at $10.05 —at no extra cost! Also a Complete Line of Westinghouse, Hotpoint and Electrochef Models. | set on the highway on Spruce Creek | | hill dumping its fifty cans of milk | (over a 400 hundred foot embank- ment down onto the railroad track. | The driver, James Moore, |a fractured leg and bruised arm. | The rear of the | damaged. i hl suffered | J} | truck was badly | Starts Mar.5 Closing Out Sale! Starts Mar.5 All Merchandise Must Go — GIGANTIC REDUCTIONS Banjos, Phonographs and all Music Merchandise Come Early! Pianos and Radios Violins, Ukes, Guitars, CASES AND STANDS MUST GO ALSO Harter’s Music Store BELLEFONTE, PA. Get Your Choice! i =,