FARRAR.—Robert Farrar, a resi- | dent of Bellefonte tor the past four — Or five years, passed away at ms home on Howard street, at o'clock Monday evening, following ——At a congregational meeting an illness of several months with a ‘of the Presbyterian church, held on complication of diseases. Tuesday evening, W. Harrison Walk- He wasa son of Alfred and Rachael ‘er Esq, was reelected a member of Hodgen Farrar and was born in the board of trustees and John S. Durham, England, 71 years ago. -Sommerville was elected to the board When he was two years old he came to take the place of Charles S. to this country with his parents who Hughes, resigned, located in the vicinity of Pittsburgh ——M. A. Clark, of State College, where he lived until coming to "has made application to the Public Bellefonte. He had been a member of Service Commission for a certificate the Baptist church for many years ‘of public convenience to operate a but since coming to Bellefonte had -motor freight line between State united with the Presbyterian church. ‘College and Williamsport by the way He was a member of the Protected ‘of Centre Hall, Bellefonte, Lock Ha- Home Circle, of Sharon, and St. ven and Jersey Shore. | John’s Masonic lodge, of Pittsburgh. ———Bellefonte has a new industry. Forty-six years ago he married It is not very large, only one man | ‘size, but its product ranks among ' country from Scotland when 22 years ‘the best. It is a handle factory start- of age, and whom he first met in ed in a small building on Cherry | Coal valley, near McKeesport. She alley by Jared Houser, who intends g,rvives with three children. Alfred to make handles of all kinds out of | gar] Farrar, of Farrel, Pa.. Mrs. his own selected woods, | Lillian Clawson, of Smithfield, and ——The committee in charge of ‘Miss Helen Isabel Farrar, at home. “the collection of books for the Mer- | He also leaves one brother and a sis- chant Marines drive have now on ter, Benjamin Farrar, of Homestead, hand 350 books, which they are and Mrs. Jeremiah Henderson, of packing to ship to Philadelphia at Jeannette. “once. It is asked that further dona. | Funeral services were held at his tions be taken to the Y. M. C. A, or late home, at 3 o'clock Wednesday ‘ directly to Mrs. John Blanchard. | afternoon, by Rev. W. C. Thompson, ——The play entitled, ‘Visitors’ burial being made in the Meyers - Day at Hickory Lick School,” which cemetery. was given several weeks ago by the - intermediate Epworth League, will be repeated this (Friday) evening, -at 7:15 o' clock, in the lecture room “of the Bellefonte Methodist church. - Admission, 25 cents. Proceeds for { the junior and intermediate Epworth - Leagues, and the Queen Esther “society. n 1 McMONIGAL.— Daniel McMonigal, a well known resident of Taylor town- ant on Friday evening, following several months illness with complica- tions, He was a son of John and Nancy | Merryman McMonigal and was born Somebody down at Howard Near where he died on March 5th, . . | 1872, hence was 60 years, 1 month ‘has been playing havoc with the ’ “electric lines of the West Penn Pow- 1d 3 days old. He followed farming “ar company with the result that on i Bw vas gilts Succedamul three uo i ee. | Brethren church, had served a num- town ber of years as school director and bess until employees of the company | 444) 4 ‘Geep interest in the welfare ‘located the trouble. One time a of the schools water-soaked rope had been thrown er 20th aR “over the wire and on the other oc- On Wecelfier 1991, Je ried Miss Emma Ewing, who surviv- ‘casions trees had been cut down on- "to the line, es with two sons and two daughters, | Samuel C. and Leland D. McMonigal, -——Seven nurses will compose the 9:28 ship, died at his home at Mt. Pleas- of Mt. Pleasant; Mrs. C. R.. Rohin- 1932 class -of the Centre county hos- | son and Mrs. A. D. Mencer, of Ty- rone. He also leaves one sister and a brother, Mrs. Emma Cowher, of Tyrone, and Rankin McMonigal, of Mt. Pleasant. Funeral services were held in the Mt. Pleasant United Brethren church at 2:30 o'clock on Monday afternoon by Rev. C. W. White, burial being made in the Mt. Pleasant cemetery. { ' McKEE.—James McKee, a native of Centre county and at one time a resident of Bellefonte, died at his home in Charleroi, on Friday, fol- lowing an illness of some weeks, He was a son of Dr. James and Suga Beck McKee and was born at Ss town on December 8th, 1862, | hence was in his 70th year. His boy- hood life was spent at the place of pital to be graduated on Monday evening, May 9th. The exercises will ‘be held in the Presbyterian chapel. "The list includes Misses Elizabeth | - Bartholomew, of Mauch Chunk; Sar. | ‘ah Brungard, of Rebersburg; Anna Johnson, of Lock Haven; Sara Lin- ‘denmuth, of Fleming; Dorothy Hoy, ‘of Pleasant Gap; Elizabeth Shuey, ‘of Axe Mann, and Florence Smith, of Bellefonte. "——A concert by a student “orchestra under the direction of Mrs. | Louis Schad will be given in the ‘ Presbyterian chapel, in Bellefonte, Thursday evening, April 21 at eight “o'clock. The orchestra is- composed “of pupils of Mrs. Schad and is or- ganized each year to give music “students an opportunity for ensemble playing. The program will be a va- his birth but along about 1880 he | Confer who died a year ago but sur- ried and interesting one, including came to Bellefonte and engaged in| yiving him are the following chil- ‘works of both classic and modern composers. Admission will be 25 brother, H. A. McKee, who previous made his home; John Sliker, and Mrs. ‘cents and all proceeds over and, ‘above expenses will be given to the Harry L. Hicks, located in the Blair and Ross Sliker, of Niagara Associated Charities. Tickets may be building now occupied by the Stemp- | Falls, N. Y.; Secured from orchestra members or fly furniture store. He lived here gliker and Mrs. M, A. Martin, of fromm Mrs. Schad. ; Friends of Mrs, Albert Rhoads one and later to Charleroi. While | sisters, Mrs. Mary Shirk, of Union- ‘tendered her a delightful birthday the hardware business with his elder to that had purchased the store of | about eight years then moved to Ty- living in Bellefonte he married Miss | CAMP.—Willlam R. Camp died at| SASSERMAN.— George Franklin home in Tyrone, at 8:30 o'clock | Sasserman passed away at his home Sunday evening, following an ill- | on north Water street, Bellefonte, at ness of several months with compli- 6:30 o'clock yesterday morning. It | cations, although his condition did | will be nine weeks today that he suf- not become critical until about ten fered a heart attack and later he was days prior to his death. stricken with paralysis, hence had been He He was a son of John and Martha confined to bed ever since. was a son of James and Clara Shaffer Sasserman and was born in Lock Haven on June 13th, 1875, hence was within two months of being 57 years old. He came to : came to Bellefonte Bellefonte with his parents when he ‘and went into the furniture business ‘was seven years old and this had with the late Frank E. Naginey, un- been his home ever since. As a young der the firm name of Camp & Nagi- man he learned the trade of a bar- ney. He remained here until about ber and followed that occupation un- 1893 when he disposed of his interest til 1915 when he was elected Regis- in the firm to Mr. Naginey and went ter of Centre county on the Republi- | i i i eventually all. In 1 ‘to Tyrone where he opened a store can ticket. He was reelected in 1919 of his own, continuing in business and served until the first Monday ‘until his retirement a number of in January, 1923. | years ago. | He was a member of the Metho- Episcopal church, was a member of forty-nine years he held member- ter member of the Bellefonte lodge of ship in the Masonic fraternity. Fifty- Moose and a member of the Modern Woodmen of America. ! | two years ago he married Miss Alice Thirty-four years ago he married | Bennett, of Milroy, who survives | with one son and a daughter, Harry Miss Emma Sheffler who survives | with the following children: Frank |Jr.,, Miss Martha and Mrs. Frances | Sullivan, at home; Mrs. Russel Lose, | L. Camp, of Tyrone, and Miss Lou ! Camp, at home. He also leaves two 1 | grand-children. 3 | Funeral services were held at his Of Bellefonte; Mrs. Robert r “ni, | late home, at two o'clock Wednesday | . nes. 9 . | afternoon, by Rev, Elmer Ilgenfritz, | being mad rand | Mrs, Boyd Cummings, of DuBois, | Writ ve i. ged view | ona Mrs. Cameron Blair, of Tyrone. | ’ . i Il Il STOVER.—Ralph Edmonds Stover, | late home at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow known resident of Aarons- (Saturday) afternoon, by Rev. Stuart 'F. Gast, burial to be made in the | Union cemetery. la well burg, passed away on March 31st, | following a week's illness as the re- | | sult of a stroke of paralysis. ! I He was a son of Moses and Marie _SHOWERS.—James Claude Show- ‘Stover and was born in Haines °'® died at the Centre County hospi- | tal, at 4:15 o'clock on Tuesday after- ue PISS: ot asm, noon, as the result of a stroke of and 2 days. When a young man he |Paralysis sustained just about a ‘learned the trade of a carpenter, an MODth ago. ‘occupation he followed a number of __F¢ Was born at Zion on July 4th, | years, then engaged in farming. He | 1862, hence was in his 70th year. He ‘was a member of St. Peter's Reform- followed farming in Walker town- ed church and the Aaronsburg camp | Ship for a number of years but on P.O. S. of A. | May 27th, 1925, went to work for He was twice married. His first the West Penn Power company and | wife was Miss Maggie M. Stover, who died thirty-five years ago, leaving two sons, Milton E. Stover, of Co- burn, and Lloyd W., cashier of the Phoenixville National bank, at Phoe- nixville, On February 2nd, 1899, he married Ida M. Burwell, who sur- vives with one brother and three continuously until the day he was stricken. He married Miss Mary Gephart, of Zion, who survives with no children. He leaves however, four brothers, Herbert, of Pleasant Gap; Merrill, of Zion; William and Ed- gar in the West. He was a member of the Pleasant | Gap Methodist church and Rev. C.| A. Metzger will have charge of the | funeral services to be held at two | o'clock this afternoon, burial to be made in the Zion cemetery. HERMAN.—Mrs. Nancy Jane Her- man, widow of Clark Herman, died at her home at State College, on March 31st, following an illness of | almost a year with arterio sclerosis, having been confined to her room for fifteen weeks preceding her death. She was a daughter of Levi and | Leah Stover and was born at Aarons- burg on June 15th, 1853, hence had ' reached the age of 78 years, 9 months and 18 days. Her husband died on July 4th, 1927, but surviving her are two daughters, Mrs. W. H. Brown, of Bradford, and Mrs. J. E. Eisenberg, of State College. She also leaves one brother, Allison Stover, of Aaronsburg. She was a member of the Metho- dist church for many years and Rev, A. L. Bixler, of Altoona, had charge of the funeral services which were held on April 3rd, burial being made in the Aaronsburg cemetery. | Reformed church, at Aaronsburg, on Monday of last week, by Rev. G. A. Fred Griesing, burial being made in i i several months with a compli of diseases, James B. Sliker Tuesday of last week, at of his daughter, Mrs. man, in Milesburg. He was a son of Paul Jane Walker Sliker and Centre county on April He followed lumbering a of his life. dren: Mrs. Newman, with whom he Aikens, of Altoona; Taylor, Charles and Sidney Detroit, Mich. He also leaves two ville, and Mrs. Malinda Confer, of He was affiliated with St. John's | College. He also leaves two sisters, | Funeral services will be held at his | had been in the company's employ | land Mrs. W. T. Twitmire drove to Cur- | wensville, Thursday of last week, where | covering that plans have been made for —The Arthur H. Sloops have had as a recent guest Mr. Sloop's sister, Mrs, Stillwell, of Danville, Pa. —The Harry Hoys, with their daughter Madeline, drove in from Wilkinsburg, Saturday, and spent Sunday here with Mr. Hoy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 8S. H. Hoy. —Mrs. William Foster, drs Philip Fos- ter and Miss Minnie Foster, of State i College, were among those who spent a part of Wednesday in the shops of Belle- fonte, | —Mr, and Mrs. Samuel Reynolds will | areive here from Florida on the 3th of ! April, to open their home on west Linn | street, for the summer. | —Mrs. B. E. Widdowson has been on | one of her frequent visits with her sis- ter, Mrs. Glenn Pearce, at Zelienople this week, having driven out Sunday. —Miss Eleanor Barnhart, a Senior at | Syracuse, left Monday to resume her col- ' lege work, after spending her mid-semes- i tion at home with father, | recall Barnhart. he ~The K. E. Kellogs, of east High | street, have been entertaining Mrs. Kel- —Mr. and Mrs. Howard Copley and Mrs. Copley's daughter, Miss Ma rie | of ® othe and sister, who were here Chandler, will leave, today, on a drive to x ohnson City, N. Y.. during the Mr. Copley’s home in Huntingdon, West | " o Va., where they will visit for a week. | ~—Guests entertained at the Charles B. —Miss Eloise Zimmerman, who had “lusser home, during the week, have in- been in Floriéa for the winter, arrived | © Uded Mrs. Musser's mother, Mrs. Motz, home, last week, and is now with the ©f Centre Hall, who was in Bellefonte for family, the Edward Zimmermans at their | 2% Over Sunday visit. home at the old tavern, in Hublersburg. = —The Misses Mary Robb, Helen Hogge —Miss Caroline Valentine arrived in "4 Marjorie Womelsdorf, were here Philadelphia, from Bermuda, early in the | [fom Philipsburg, Sunday, guests of Miss and Mrs. N., E, | month, and is at The Colonial, where she | RODD’'s parents, Mr. Miss Lillias Sharp, who came to this | dist church, the Odd Fellows and for the Bellefonte lodge of Elks, a char- will be until coming to Bellefonte to open | Robb. of Curtin Street. her home, “Burnham Place,” for the | ~—Mrs. Oscar Wetzel, who had been with summer. | her daughter, Mrs. W. F, McCoy, in —Mrs. Paul Kerk and her son, Stanley, | Ambridge, for a part of the month of were up from Paoli again, last week, April, has returned home and opened here with Mrs. Kerk's parents, Mr. and | her home on Wilicwbank street. Mrs. William E. Hurley, for one of | ~—Mrs. Robert Thena, and her daughter their frequent week-end visits. The Kerks | Charlotte, were in Ohio, during the week, were Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hur- having gone out for a visit at Mrs. ley. | Thena's former home with her parents, ~—Mrs. Jay Storch and her two sons, Mr. and Mrs. Kohnle, at Dayton. Jack and Donald, former residents of | —Mrs. Fred Hollobaugh, of Reynolds Bellefonte, were here from State College avenue, went out to Ohio, early last to spend Sunday and the early part of | week, where she spent several days with thea week with Mrs. Storch’s parents, | her niece, Mrs. Doran Dill, at Massillon, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kline, of Bishop | and with her brother, Harry Irwin and street, | family, at Akron, returning home on —Mr. N. O. Drieblebis, of State Col- | Friday. lege, was in Bellefonte for a few hours| —Mr. and Mrs. F. Woods Beckman, of on Wednesday of last week. He came Altoona, who were over night guests of down to get some parts for his son's | Miss Mary and Henry S. Linn, Wednes- tractor. Mr. Dreiblebis has retired and | day, stopped in Bellefonte on the drive is living at the College while his son is home from Williamsport, where Mr. Beck- carrying on on the farm. | man had been to a meeting of the Wil- —Mrs. David Brown, who has been in |llamsport Real Estate company. a critical condition with doubie pneumo- —Mr, and Mrs, H. C, Angell, of Phil- nia, at her home in Bush Addition, moved | ipsburg, with Mrs, Virginia Bigelow and to Bellefonte, last week, from Milesburg, H. C. Achumity, made up a motor party where the Brown family had been mak- | that was in Bellefonte for a part of yes- ing their home with Mrs. Brown's par-’ terday. Mr. Angell is assessor in Rush ents, Mr. and Mrs. Letterman. | Twp., and was here on business at the —Miss Mary Parrish, with her two K Commissioners’ office. aunts, the Misses Anne and Alice Fox, | -~Mrs, Calvin Troup is back home from drove to Washington, Sunday, to see the ', month's visit with her son Willlam bloom of the white cherry blossoms. The | ang her two brothers, Dr. Finley and w. bloowni of the pink blossoms, which comes | 5. Bell, all of whom live in the vicinity two weeks later, has for years attracted | .o Now York. Mrs. Troup went down to | many tourists to the capital at this ses-| join the family party given as a birthday | son. celebration for Dr. J. Finley Bell, at | —>Miss Caroline Valentine arrived in| Englewood, N. J. | Philadelphia, from Bermuda, early in |the month, and was at The Colonial, in | woMEN THE MOOSE | Philadelphia, for several weeks. She will oF arrive in Bellefonte this evening, and BELLEFONTE CHAPTER make a short stay at ‘The Markland" while her home is being made ready for ~—Mr. and Mrs. C, C, Shuey, their daughter, Miss Rachael, Mrs. Krader Mrs. Krader and Miss Shuey gave a benefit vocal and organ recital that night, under the auspices of the Ladies Ald society of the Methodist church of that Mrs. Grant Pifer, of Wilkinsburg, who came In, Sunday, to join her sister, Mrs. Ely, wife of the Rev. George B. Ely, blic is i of Arandtaville. Pa, for 5 visit with Bim iTS invited to the night meeting. Hoy family in and about Bellefonte, will | ae heloute Snaptse has a return to Pittsburgh today. Both Mrs, | Pp : the m Pifer and Mrs. Ely have been house |3T€ Preliminary to a drive for mem- guests of their sister, Mrs. Clayton Roy. Dership. . Miss Smith will be the er, visiting from there with other mem- bers of the Hoy family. ! ~Mrs, James R. Hughes, who has been a surgical patient in the Centre County hospital for the past seven weeks, and I for a part of that time in an extremely critical condition, is now so rapidly re- taking her to the Green home, on Linn street, before the first of May. Mrs. Hughes will be with her sisters, Miss NOME for adults at Moose Haven, Emma Green and Mrs. Dinges, while Florida. : : convalescing from her illness, Miss Smith has a Margaret Moore. of Lemont, who | passed away several years ago. They had no children and his only survivor | is one sister, Mrs. Mary McKee Love, of Tyrone. The remains were taken to Tyrone ‘party at her home on east Lamb “street, last Thursday evening. Mrs. ‘Rhoads received a large number of lovely gifts as reminders of her natal day. Refreshments were served and various games made up the evening's | | Orviston. Funeral services were held at the | Nero home by Rev. Howard E. | Oakwood, burial being made in the Treziyulny cemetery. | I I i in PATTON.—John T. Patton, known resident of Warrlorsmark, , ... '." Samuel, a student at Penn died on Sunday afternoon as the re- gq ... then came on here to spend the sult of injuries sustained in a fall ,,..¢ at Dr. Keichline’s former home, down the stairs in his home on Fri- | with the John M. Keichline family, on well| —Dr- and Mrs. John Keichline were (over from Huntingdon, Saturday, to see subject will be well worth hearing, —The Bellefonte Academy baseball team will open its season in a game ‘with the Altoona High school team, which will be played on Hughes field, entertainment, The guests included | Mrs. Annie Taylor, Oscar Zimmer- | ‘man, Leonard Rhoads, Minnie Rob- | ‘erts, Anna Fortney, Elsie Startzell,| ‘Elizabeth Rothrock, Irvin Tate, Har- ry Boyer, Elmer Breon, Margaret Howard, Sophia Heckman, Wilbur ‘Rhoads, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Rhoads, | Mr. and Mrs. Winn Jodon, Mr. and Mrs. George Jodon and daughter, Mary Elizabeth, Mrs. Helen Roberts, Mrs. Beulah Lucas, Mrs. Pearl Gor- ‘don, Mrs, Julia McNichols and daughter, Betty, Ruth Gates, Albert Rhoads and daughters, Betty and “Claire. ——The young women employees *©f the Bell Telephone company gave 7aderewell surprise shower at the ex- «change in the Bush Arcade, on Mon- ‘day evening, to Mrs. Christine Wea- “ver Currier, one of the efficient op- ‘‘erators there who will leave the lat- ter part of the week with her hus- band, Daniel L. Currier, for their new home in Charleroi, where Mr. ' Currier has been transferred as as- ‘ sistant manager for the West Penn ! Power company. Bridge, five hundred wand other games were in play. Re- %reshments were served and Mrs. Currier received many beautiful and wmseful gifts which wili help to embel- Tish her new home at Charleroi. Guests present included Misses Trena Pletcher and Elfreida Confer, of | Howard; Marie Rafferty, Betty Er- | hard, Edith Corl, Florence Zerbe Katherine Bracko, Ruth Howley, Catherine Williams, Helen Foreman, Mary Toner, Leonore Taylor, Ella ‘Young, Emma Waite, Grace Herr, Mary McClure, Hilda Haupt, Sara Haupt, Sara Love, Lillian Penning- ton, Sara Condo, Mrs. Sue Eyre and ‘Mrs, Daniel Currier ,of Bellefonte. i i and Irene Hartman, of State College; | where funeral services were held on Sunday afternoon and burial made in the Eastlawn cemetery. I Ji CROFT.—Mrs. Jennie Croft, wife of Thomas Croft, died quite sudden- ly at her home at QOrviston, Satur- ‘day night, following less than an was born at Aaronsburg on March hour's illness with a heart attack and asthma, having been a sufferer with the latter disease for several She was a daughter of William and | Jennie Watkins and was born in Boggs township 51 years ago. Most of her married life had been spent at Orviston. She is survived by her husband and one son, Hugh; also her mother and the following brothers and sisters: Oscar and Richard Wat- kins and Mrs. Olive Bullock, of Ak- ron, Ohio; Fred, of Howard; Mrs. Emma Showers, of Bellefonte, and Mrs. Ada Felmlee, of Orviston. Rev, Harry Martin had charge of the funeral services which were held at noon, on Wednesday, burial being made in the Fairview cemetery . - I BUFFINGTON.—Mrs. Eliza Mor- ris Buffington died at her home in Tyrone, last Friday morning, follow- ing three week's illness with compli- cations developing from an attack of influenza. She was a daughter of Charles L. and Sarah Jane Morris Buffington and was born in Milesburg. She had been a resident of Tyrone for many years. Her only survivors are two sisters, Mrs. Blanche Hamer, of Ty- rone, and Mrs. Albert Gardner, of Punxsutawney. She was a member of the Presbyterian church and Rev. Joseph A. Speer had charge of the funeral services which were held on Sunday afternoon, burial being made in the grandview cemetery, Tyrone. | Charles, Norma J. and Ida M., all at day night. | Bishop street. Sunday morning Dr. and Benjamin and | Mrs. Keichline, with the former's mother as a guest, returned to Huntingdon where Mrs. Keichline has been spending the week with her grand children. —Miss Sara and John Gilliland, of Oak | Hall, drove to Annville, last week, to at- tend the funeral services of their uncle, Thomas Stein, who was taken there for burial from Allentown where he died from the results of a fall down an ele- vator shaft at the Phoebe home. Miss Gilliland and her brother remained for a short visit with their aint, who was for- merly Miss Sara Campbell, an older sis- ter of their mother, Mrs. James Gilliland. —Mrs. Arthur C. Dale went to Harris- burg, Saturday of last week, joining Mr. Dale there to go to Philadelphia, where she has been spending the week with him. Her sister, Mrs. Charles Miller, who with Mr. Miller, drove over from Wind- ber the day Mrs. Dale left, has been in charge of the Dale children and the house since coming to Bellefonte. The Dales, at present, are contemplating building a summer home near the Penn Grove school house, in Union township. —Martha Schroeder Beck, Jr., of Pitts- burgh, a student at Trinity college, Washington, drove up to State College, for the week-end, and from there visited with some of her mother's friends in BARTZ.—Mrs. Ruth Bartz, wife of Paul Bartz, died at her home in Youngstown, Ohio, on March 29th, following five day's illness with pneu- monia She was a daughter of Clarence E. and Hannah Hackenberg Musser, and near 1845, 20th, 1900, hence was 32 years of age. She is survived by her husband and four small children, Marion, home. She also leaves her parents and the following brothers and sis- ters: Mrs. John Tressler, of Belle- fonte; Samuel and James Musser and Mrs. Elmer Long, all of Aaronsburg, ahd Mrs, Raymond Wingard, of near: t19. | of Ber tec or Coburn. y ney | following a funeral services held in the Li:ther- Bellefonte, lingering an church, at Aaronsburg, on April illness. She was born at Julian fifty- 2nd, by Rev. L. V. Lesher, burial eight years ago and her only surviv- being made in the Aaronsburg ceme- Ors are her adopted daughter, Mrs. rg e Bathurst, and one sister, Mrs. Etta 1 | Holt, of Julian. She was a member GUISER.—Andrew Guiser, well of the Methodist church and the P. known shoemaker, of Madisonburg, O. of A. passed away on April 2nd, as the| Funeral services were held in the resuit of general debility. He was Methodist church at two o'clock on a son of John and Anna Maria Sunday afternoon by Rev. Horace Guiser and was born in Wurtemburg, | Lincoln Jacobs, assisted by Rev. C. died at noon, last Thursday, | Bellefonte. On the drive back to Wash- Germany, on February 2nd, 1847, | C. Shuey, the remains being taken hence was 85 years and 2 months old, to Julian for burial in the cemetery | When a small boy he came to this there. coun with his nts. When he | i holy learned the ~—— Troop No. 3, Boy Scouts of trade of a shoemaker, an occupation America, will hold its installation he followed all his life. He was twice married. His first church this coming Sunday evening! wife was Miss Mary Smeltzer and at the regular 7:30 service, This is the second Miss Julia Dorman. The a new Scout Troop for Bellefonte, latter is his only survivor. Funeral having been started in February. services were held in the Lutheran The ceremony will be in charge of chuch, at Madisonburg, on Wednes- Mr. Kenyon Woody, of day of last week, by Rev. E, N, Fry, | who is Scout executive of the Junia- burial being made in the Madison- | burg cemetery. | district belongs. J !burgh to do six month's work in the | Ellis O. Orvis, a period of practical work (ceremony in St. John's Episcopal | ta council to which the Bellefonte ||amented father was long superintendent Saturday afternoon April 23rd, at 2:30 o'clock. Admission will be 25 Tiler 8 ® ington she was accompanied by William H. Keller II, who was here from Pitts- law offices of his uncle, the former judge required before his admission to the bar. —Dr. and Mrs. A. L. Miller, of Wil- liamsport, were in Bellefonte Wednesday evening. Dr. Miller is district superin- tendent of the Methodist church and was | 16-11 here to preside at the quarterly confer- | ence that was held that evening. Neither | ——ee—— — | Dr. nor Mrs, Miller are strangers In Bellefonte Grain Markets. Bellefonte, for he was in the Bellefonte | Wheat ... resssnneseeerests. a Furnace Co's office here while preparing | Corn A for the ministry and Mrs. Miller spent Sus x her early life at State College, where : e Bariey .... A Buckwheat KR ] of farms, grounds and buildings.