Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 01, 1921, Image 8

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    Diemer Alia
Bellefonte, Pa., July 1, 1921.
ET ———
ALL ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
No paper next week.
Don’ forget the circus on the
“High school grounds this evening.
i Remember the Business Men’s
picnic at Hecla park, on Thursday,
August 18th.
—Miss Madge Carner, of Hub-
Iersburg, has been elected a teacher
in the public schools at Bellwood.
The frame work of the new
roof on the Bellefonte Academy is
now up, which is evidence that the
contractor is making good headway.
.- ——A little daughter was born last
Friday to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Young, at the home of Mrs. Young's
parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk, in
Bellefonte.
The bass season opened in
Pennsylvania today and will continue
until December 30th. The only bass
fishing in Centre couny is in Bald Ea-
gle creek below Howard.
~ ——The wedding of Miss Sara
Strohm Shuey, youngest daughter of
Mz. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey, and William
Robert Worth, of Solvay, N. Y., will
take place Tuesday, July 5th.
——The “Has Beens” have practic-
ally completed a permanent camp on
Fishing creek 16x22 feet in size and
‘expect to open it either today or to-
morrow for their usual month’s out-
ing.
: ——Mrs. H. E. Fenlon entertained
Tuesday evening with cards, and Mrs.
L. T. Munson last night, in compli- |
"ment to Mrs. William Dix, of Dayton,
Ohio, who is spending a month in
‘Bellefonte.
) Dr. J. L. Seibert and Andrew
McNitt are each driving new Franklin
runabouts, received on Tuesday morn-
ing through the Wion garage. The
cars are identical in make, and of the
latest model.
It will be worth your while to
go out to the High school grounds this
evening and see the monkeys and the
elephant, and all the other attractions !
of the big circus being put on for one
night only by the Y. W. girls.
——Mrs. R. V. Pugh was so unfor-
tunate on Monday as to trip on the
step at her porch on Curtin street, fall
and fracture her hip. Inasmuch as
she is eighty-eight years of age her
injury is considered quite serious.
The: First National bank of
Hastings was robbed of approximately
one thousand dollars at noon on Mon-
day by two unmasked men who held
up the tellers and made away with the
counter money. The men escaped in
an automobile.
——E. D. Felice, the fashionable la-
dies tailor in the Garman house block,
has been compelled to retire from bus-
iness, beginning today, on account of
ill health. He is now undergoing
treatment and hopes to be able to re-
open his shop in the fall.
——The police were summoned to
Gamble’s mill about 9:30 o’clock on
Monday evening by the suspicious ac-
tions of two men who were evidently
trying to break into the office. When
the officers reached the mill, however,
the men had made a getaway and
could not be located.
John Walker, of Rush township,
was run down by an automobile driv-
en by Adolph Rough, of Munson, at
Retort on Saturday night, and so bad-
ly injured that he died at the Cottage
State hospital, Philipsburg, on Sunday
morning. A coroner’s jury returned
a verdict of accidental death.
The State Department of
Health, in anticipation of Fourth of
July accidents, has restocked its anti-
toxin stations throughout the State. |
Those for Centre county are Runkle’s
drug store, Bellefonte; Ray D. Gilli-
land, State College, and the G. F.
Troutman & Co. drug store, Philips-
burg. ;
——Monday evening, July 18th, the
famous Orphans’ band from the Tress-
ler Orphans’ home, at Loysville, will
appear in Bellefonte under the direc-
tion of the Lutheran church. The con-
cert will be free but an offering will
be lifted for the benefit of the Home.
The band this season includes forty-
two boys, ranging in age from ten to
sixteen years.
A lady of our acquaintance: is
righteously indignant because a ru-
mor is being circulated to the effect
that she has made a barrel of dande-
lion wine. She draws the line at the
imputed reputation of being such a
wholesale home brewer and wants
it distinctly understood that she didn’t
amake a barrel at all. She made only
forty-five gallons.
The Ladies Aid society of the
Centre Hall Methodist church will
hold a lawn and porch social on the
property belonging to the late Mrs.
Lillian E. Alexander, next Monday,
July 4th. The ladies will serve all
seasonable refreshments, and will ap-
preciate all patronage by the public.
"The object is to raise money to help
remodel their church, and the hearty
support of all should be given them.
— Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schad and
Mrs. Russell Blair left yesterday for
Atlantic City, where Mrs. Schad will
appear on the Steel pier Sunday, J uly
3rd, as soloist with the Symphony
orchestra. Having been an ardent
student of the violin since a child and
under the instruction of J. W. Leman,
achieved for herself a reputation
among musicians throughout Pennsyl-
vania, and this unsolicited honor ac-
corded ther, does not come as a sur-
prise to “her many admirers. Mrs.
Schad has consented to appear later
in the season at Ocean City.
| MURDER IN PHILIPSBURG.
Raymond Shaw Shot by Frank Bene-
dict. Slayer in Centre Coun-
ty Jail
| Following close on the alleged mur-
der of George M. Marks, at Hannah
Furnace, a shooting occurred in Phil-
ipsburg last Friday evening and the
| result thereof was the death of Ray-
'mond Shaw, of Blue Ball, Clearfield
, county, and the arrest of his slayer,
Frank Benedict, also alleged to be a
| resident of Clearfield county, who is
now in the Centre county jail await-
ing trial on the charge of murder.
| The shooting occurred in front of
the Continental hotel, on west Pine
' street. Definite information as to the
' cause of the shooting has not been ob-
tainable. So far as can be learned the
two men were in the bar-room of the
"hotel. Benedict was the first to go
' out and stood on the pavement. When
' Shaw went out of the hotel Benedict
is alleged to have pulled a revolver
from his pocket and without a word
fired pointblank at him. The latter
did not drop but staggered back into
the bar-room and exclaimed to the |
bartender,
Shaw was hurried to the McGirk san-
itorium while Benedict calmly walked
down to the railroad where he was ar-
rested by state policeman Sterling.
Various stories have been in circu-
lation as to the cause of the shooting, '
such as a feud if several years’ stand-
ing, a dispute over who should pay
for the drinks in the hotel, but there
is nothing authentic about either ru-
mor. To a newspaper man who ques-
tioned him Benedict said he shot Shaw
because the latter was going to fight
him.
! At the sanitorium it was found that
‘ Shaw had been shot in the left side of
he abdomen, the bullet making thir-
teen perforations in its passage
through the body then lodged in the
| right side. The bullet was a 32-cali-
bre. The shooting occurred about six
'o’clock on Friday evening and Shaw
(lived until 8:12 o'clock Saturday
morning. Following his death coroner
| Heaton empanelled a jury and view-
ed the remains, the jury returning a
| verdict in effect that Shaw came to bis
death by a gunshot wound inflicted by
| “another party.” Shaw was twenty-
i five years old and bore an excellent
| reputation. He is survived by his
| wife, one brother and three sisters.
i Benedict, who claims to be a Hun-
. garian, is thirty-five years old and
;unmarried. -. He has been in this
country seventeen years. Inquiry at
Clearfield brought out the fact that
Benedict was known as a man of quar-
relsome nature and rather difficult to
get along with. He was unnaturalized
but had taken out his firt papers just
recently. He was held in Philipsburg
until Saturday afternoon when he was
brought to Bellefonte and locked in
the Centre county jail. = ;
League of Women Voters to Hold
Convention.
i of the League of Women Voters for
Centre county, will in the next few
‘days issue her official call for an an-
‘nual convention to be held in the High
"school building, Bellefonte, on Friday
| of next week, July 8th. There will be
! two sessions, from 10 to 12 a. m., and
to 4 p. m. A box luncheon will be
| served in the domestic science room
vat 12:30. .
i Miss Martha G. Thomas, state
treasurer of the organization, will «
speak in the afternoon on what the
' League has accomplished and its pres-
| ent needs. Much of the legislation
' for which the organization stood has
been enacted, but considerable work
has been planned for the coming year.
{ Every woman interested in her rights
of franchise should attend this conven-
tion.
Fifty Years an Odd Fellow.
| A pleasant little incident that
brightened up the corners around the
home of W. H. Derstine, on Bishop
street, recently, was the presentation
to him of a handsomely jeweled Odd
Fellow’s insignia in commemoration
of the fiftieth anniversary of Mr.
Derstines’ membership in the order,
which happened on June 1st.
Now Bellefonte lodge has a quintet
of semi-centenarians. C. T. Gerber-
ich, Isaac Miller, Henry Armagast and
Harvey Griffith have all been wearing
the gold and red medalion suspended
from the three links of gold for some
time, and to their number is added
William H. Derstine. And, inciden-
tally, when one stops to recall just
what kind of men these five have been
and are yet in our community there
need not be much speculation as to
why the local Odd Fellows had such
a long and unsullied existence here.
“Daughters” Elect Officers.
At the last meeting of the Belle-
fonte Chapter Daughters of the Amer-
ican Revolution the following officers
were elected for the ensuing year:
Regent—Miss Helen E. Canfield Overton.
Vice Regent—Mrs. William Frear.
Recording Secretary—Mrs. John Porter
Lyon.
Corresponding Secretary—Mrs. D. A. An-
derson. :
Treasurer—Miss Kate Dunlop Shugert.
Historian—Mrs. John I. Olewine.
Registrar—Mrs. James A. Beaver.
Board of Management—Mrs. W. W. Rog-
ers, Mrs, C. W. Stoddart, Mrs. A. O. Furst,
Mrs. E. E, Sparks, Mrs. E. H. B. Callaway,
Mrs. P. H. Dale, and Miss Eliza Morris.
——Ladies’ $6.00 white Polar cloth
pumps reduced to $2.98 at Yeager’s.
26-1t
——A little daughter was born to
attorney and Mrs. M, Ward Fleming,
of Philipsburg, on June 20th.
SE —.———..
“That fellow shot me.”
|
Mrs. Robert Mills Beach, chairman
~ No Paper Next Week.
During the past six months the en-
1
I
1
i
tire force in the “Watchman” office
i has worked with unswerving fidelity
every day and from week to week in
order that the readers of this paper
would always get it on time. The con-
stant grind is beginning to pall and
everybody is going to take a vacation,
consequently no “Watchman” will be
‘issued next week. The wilds of Fish-
ing creek and the lure of the wily
trout are calling and the piscatorial
members of the force will go into
camp on that stream. Other members
| have planned extended trips to Centre
Hall and Aaronsburg, others to Hec-
la park, but enough will remain at:
home to keep the office open every
"day for the transaction of business,
land friends will be welcome at any
‘time. Don’t expect a paper next week
but look for your next number of the
| “Watchman”
‘July 15th.
on Friday morning,
| ——A plate luncheon is served from
12 to 2, main dining room, at the Bush
house, 65 cents. 66-26-4t
——Methuselah lived 969 years. Did
he institute a reform? Did he make
the world better? Was he a leader of
men? What did he do? Subject at
the Bellefonte Methodist church Sun-
day evening at 7:30.
The young ladies class of the
Lutheran Sunday school at Pleasant
Gap will hold a social in Noll’s grove
on the evening of July 4th. Music
will be furnished by the State College
band. Ice cream, cake and other good
things will be on sale. Everybody in-
vited. Just the place to round out the
glorious Fourth.
——While Bellefonte has been ex-
periencing a spell of unusually hot
weather it does not interfere with the
quality of the motion pictures shown
at the Scenic, and the big exhaust fan
in use there keeps the room about as
comfortable as any other place in the
town. Then the interesting pictures
“hold the attention of the audience
from start to finish, so that no one has
occasion to remember how hot it is.
Try it and see.
destroyed by fire two months ago.
The new buildings will be of concrete
foundation, steel framework and
sheeting, hence absolutely fireproof.
The framework of the main building
is in place and the sheeting being put
on. A quantity of new machinery has
been received to replace that damaged
by the fire and it won’t be many weeks
until the plant will be in better shape
than ever.
| ——Have you tried a chicken dinner
at the Bush house, served every Sun-
day, $1.00 per plate? 66-26-4t
——Announcements have been re-
Richard Stockton Roberts and Miss
Vega Amend, both of Pasadena, Cali-
fornia, the wedding having taken
place in that city, Saturday, the
eighteenth of June. Mr. Roberts has
many friends in Bellefonte, made dur-
ing his different visits here with his
the Humes and
His mother, Mrs.
Luther Roberts, and her daughter,
Miss Elizabeth, spent much of the
winter in Bellefonte. i
parent’s relatives,
Hughes families.
——Baseball fans will very likely
have a treat in store for them on the
occasion of the annual picnic of the:
Bellefonte Business Men’s Association
at Hecla park on August 18th. From
all indications the big game of the day
, will be between the Eagle silk mill
team of Shamokin, and the twenty
{ thousand dollar nine of Philipsburg.
No attempt will be made to cover up
! the fact that the silk mill team will be
i just what its name implies, and all the
loyal supporters of the Philipsburg
nine will surely be invited to come
over and see the contest.
——Centre countians have no cause
to complain of lack of rain this week.
Beginning on Monday there has been
a succession of hard storms every day
which have covered the entire county.
In fact in some places so much rain
fell that fields were washed out and
corn and wheat flattened to the
ground. On Tuesday lightning struck
the C. C. Shuey home on Bishop street,
but fortunately it was a cold stroke
and did little damage. One barn up
in Ferguson township was struck and
burned to the ground. During the
hard storm on Wednesday afternoon
lightning struck the Shiloh church,
knocking off a portion of the steeple
and ripping off some of the weather
boarding. The damage done will
amount to several hundred dollars.
——At the special dinner Saturday
night, which is considered the social
function in the camp life at the
Hughes’ camp, on Snow Shoe moun-
tain, Mr. Hughes announced the en-
gagement of his niece, Ottilie Hughes,
and William Ashbaugh, of Washing-
ton, Pa., a member of the class of
1921, Bellefonte Academy. For the
occasion, great preparations had been
made, the party concluding their mer-
ry-making at the Snow Shoe park,
which had been placed at their dispos-
al for the evening. Miss Hughes is
the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Hughes, but has made her
home with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. James R. Hughes, since entering
the Academy. No definite time has
been set for the wedding as Mr. Ash-
baugh will enter the University of
Pittsburgh in the
school work. :
——The Titan Metal company is
making good progress in erecting
their new buildings to replace those
ceived in Bellefonte of the marriage of -
fall to continue Ris |
HR
Linn Fromm Loses Eye in Peculiar |
Accident.
Theodore Linn Fromm, chauffeur
for the American Lime and Stone
company, had the sight of his right
eye totally destroyed and was
otherwise injured in a peculiar acci-
dent late last Thursday afternoon. |
Fromm had driven the car down to the
office when he discovered that the mo-
tor was not working right. On mak-
ing an examination he discovered a
defective battery connection. Going
into the office he asked Mr. Morris for
a piece of wire. The only wire in the
office suitable was that attached to
a dynamite exploder. Mr. Morris of-
fered to cut off a piece of the wire but
Fromm demurred, saying he would
take it out to the car and measure it
first, as there was no use in wasting
more wire than was needed.
Mr. Morris thereupon cautioned
“him to be very careful as an exploder
was a dangerous thing to handle, es-
pecially for a man who knew nothing
about it. He also told him not to cut
it himself but after measuring it take
it in to him and he would cut it.
Fromm went out and in order to get a
correct measurement fastened one end
of the wire to the battery then car-
ried the wire to the tail light, which
had been out of service, and there is
where he made the fatal mistake.
He thus created a complete circuit
and the result was the explosion
of the exploder. Most of the con-
tents of the exploder struck Fromm
on the breast, inflicting painful
wounds while one sliver struck him
in the right eye, puncturing the pupil
and destroying the sight.
Hearing the explosion Mr. Morris
ran out of the office and saw Fromm
stumbling away from the machine
and with his hand over his eye. He
ran and caught him and at once saw
the seriousness of his injuries, so got .
him to the hospital as quickly as pos- |
sible. He is getting along now as well |
as can be expected. Fromm is mar-
ried and lives on north Spring street.
——Closing out all fireworks at cost,
Friday and Saturday. 10c goods at
5¢.; 5c. goods, 2 for 5.—Sourbecks.
: 26-1t
Harry Fogleman Badly Scalded at
State-Centre Co. Plant.
Harry Fogleman, one of the engi-
neers at the big power plant of the
State-Centre Electric company at
Milesburg, was badly scalded last
Thursday night when the four inch
steam pipe running from the battery
of boilers to the big turbine engine
burst with a loud explosion and a roar
of steam that could be heard all over
Milesburg.
The accident happened between
eight and nine o’clock in the evening.
Mr. ‘Fogleman was not in the boiler
‘robm at the time but as soon as he re-
alized what had happened he started
for the boiler room to turn off the
valve on the pipe. In going down the
steps he ran into a shower of steam
and. hot water but he went through
and turned the valve. He was later
brought to the Bellefonte hospital for
treatment. Although very painful he
was not seriously scalded and has been
getting along as well as can be ex-
pected.
As a result of the accident the plant
was shut down until repairs could be
made and it was well on toward eleven
‘ o’clock when the big engine was start-
ed and the current again turned on.
But for two hours or longer Bellefonte
| and the entire territory served by the
' State-Centre company was in dark-
ness, save for candles and kerosine
. lamps requisitioned to tide over the
emergency. »
{ ——Big reduction sale on ladies’
‘white pumps and oxfords at Yea-
‘ger’s. 26-1t
—Workmen on the Academy
"swimming pond on Hughes field are
' making good headway and expect to
‘have the same completed by the
' Fourth of July, or shortly thereafter.
{ The concrete banks surrounding the
| pout were completed last week and
| the bottom is now being put in. A
i temporary pipe has been laid from the
borough water main to the pool as a
| temporary means of supplying it with
fan but headmaster James R.
| Hughes has made arrangements for
{ the drilling of a well on Hughes field
in the hope of finding an adequate
| supply of water to keep the pond filled
| constantly. If a good well can be tap-
' ped Mr. Hughes will install a windmill
pump and by keeping it in almost con-
| tinual operation will be able to keep
i the supply of water in the pond up to
I any height desired. A drain pipe will
run from the pond to the borough sew-
er on Bishop street to take care of the
| overflow or excess water, and also as
'a means of draming the pond for
cleaning, etc.
——John Dubbs, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dubbs, of Bellefonte, got
the index finger of his right hand in
the electric coffee grinder at Weaver’s
grocery, on Saturday morning, with
the result that it was torn off at the
first joint. He was taken to the hos
pital to have the finger properly
dressed. The young man works in the
grocery store and as the result of the
injury was off duty several days.
For Sale—Household furniture, in
excellent condition, consisting of fine
French gray oak dining room suite,
rugs, beds, chairs, curtains, kitchen
utensils, oil stove with oven, porch
furniture, ete. Inquire at once at
Casebeer’s Store. 26-1t
mm————ip———
——Ladies’ $6.00 white Polar cloth
oxfords reduced to $2.98, at Yea-
ger’s. 26-1t
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Capt. E. R. Taylor went out to Pitts-
burgh on Monday to spend a few days vis-
iting his sisters.
—Miss Hannah Newman returned to Al-
toona Sunday after a ten day's visit here,
as a guest of Mrs. Martin Fauble and her
family.
—Mrs. William B. Dix, who has been vis-
iting with her sister, Mrs. L. T. Munson,
will return to her home in Dayton, Ohio,
the latter part of next week.
—Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Morgan, of Phila-
delphia, have been spending the week with
Belleforite friends, having motored up on
Monday and expecting to leave for home
today.
—Miss Anna M. Miller, the very efficient
office nurse for Dr. M. J. Locke, left yes-
terday for Erie, Pa., to spend her two
week’s vacation with her cousin, Mrs.
Chester Louden.
—Mr. and Mrs. William B. Lyon and two
daughters, of east Howard street, depart-
ed on Sunday for Cleveland, Ohio, for a
week or ten day’s visit with their daugh-
ter, Mrs. Harry Williams.
—After a brief visit with her mother and
brothers in Bellefonte Miss Ellen Hayes
left on Sunday morning for Pike, New
Hampshire, where she will be one of the
instructors at Camp Tahoma.
—Musser and Miss Eleanor Gettig, of
Bellefonte, and Mr. and Mrs. George K.
Meyer, of Boalsburg, were in Altoona on
Tuesday attending the wedding of Miss
Phoebe Elizabeth Gettig to Glenn V. Wise,
of Lenark, Ill
—Prothonotary Roy Wilkinson motored
over to Philipsburg on business on Mon-
day and took with him Mrs. Wilkinson's
mother, Mrs. Parker; Miss Winifred M.
Gates and George W. Zeigler, the Belle-
fonters returning home on Wednesday.
—Mrs. Henry Meek, of Altoona, in
Centre county for her annual visit. The
several months she usually spends here is
divided between her two brothers, John
M. and Peter Keichline, of Bellefonte, and
relatives in Ferguson township, her for-
mer home. ‘
—~Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stuart and
their family have taken a house at State
College in anticipation of spending the
summer there, and in camp in the moun-
tains near Shingletown. Mrs. Stuart's in-
definite stay in Centre county is being
made for a visit with his mother, Mrs.
John Stuart.
—The Misses May Taylor and Janet Pot-
ter left Monday for Chambersburg, Miss
Daise Keichline joining them there Tuecs-
day. The two former went down as del-
egates to the convention of Sunday school
workers, while Miss Keichline will be in
charge of the infirmary during the period
of the convention.
—The Misses Katherine and Madaline
Bent left Bellefonte Monday for Washing-
ton, D. C., to attend the ordination of their
uncle, Rev. I'rancis L. Archdeacon 8. J., to
the Jesuit Order, which took place at thc
Georgetown University, Wednesday, June
20th. The Misses Bent will remain east for
a visit with relatives and friends in Wash-
ington and Baltimore.
is
—
—Miss Mary M. Blanchard left Monday
for Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
—Mr. and Mrs. Max Rosenthal, of
Wilkes-Barre, are guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Beezer.
—Judge Henry C. Quigley went to Cape
May on Monday to attend the annual meet-
ing of the Pennsylvania Bar association.
—Mr. and Mrs. George Robinson, of
Hartford, Conn., have been guests for a
part of the week of Miss Adaline Olewine,
—Mrs. Blanche Fauble Schloss left for
Quebec this week to join her sister-in-law,
Miss Schloss, for a tour of eastern Canada.
—Rev. M. DePue Maynard and James
Cook are entertaining the choir boys of the
Episcopal church at the Kerns cabin, on
Spring creek, this week.
—Mrs. 8. H. Griffith went to Wildwood,
N. J., last week, to spend the month of
July with her daughter, Mrs. Green, at her
co‘tage at that very popular resort.
—Mrs. Jerry Galaida left the early part
of the week for Woodlawn, where she will
visit for an indefinite time with Mr. Gala-
ida, who is employed in Beaver county.
—Mrs. Irank Mullen, who makes her
home when in Bellefonte, with her cousin,
Dr. Joseph Brockerhoff, left Saturday to
spend some time with her daughters in
Altoona and Pittsburgh.
—~Chester Barnes accompanied his moth-
er and sister, Mrs. Howard Barnes and
Mrs. Henderson on their return drive from
Philadelphia this week. Mr. Barnes will
be in Bellefonte for the summer.
—Mr. and Mrs. W. Harrison Walker are
entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Johnston Hall
and daughter, of Titusville, who drove to
Bellefonte by motor on Monday and will
remain until the latter part of next week.
—Mrs. Robert Wray, and her daughter
Jane came here from Baltimore Wednes-
day, expecting to spend July and August
in Bellefonte with Mrs. Wray's mother,
Mrs. Sara Brown. Mrs. Wray’s son, Rob-
ert Jr., has been with his grandmother for
a month.
—Miss Margaret Brockerhoff will come to
Bellefonte tomorrow to spend her vacation
with her uncle and brother, Dr. Joseph and
Henry Brockerhoff. Miss Brockerhoff, who
is working in vocational therapeutics, is
under Dr. Furbush, director of public
health work in Philadelphia.
—Miss M. Eloise Schuyler, an instructor
in the West Philadelphia Girls’ High
school, arrived in Centre county on Tues-
day and will spend one week of her vaca-
tion visiting friends at Centre Hall. The
, most of her time, however, will be spent
—Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Hunt, of Renovo,
were in Bellefonte Friday, having come
over for a day's visit with relatives and
friends of Mrs. Hunt; from here they in-
tended going to Buffalo to spend several
days. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt's elder son,
John, who is a member of the 1921 class of
the Renovo High school, had béen in Wil-
liamsport for the week, taking his entrance
examinations for Lafayette, where he will
do his’ preliminary work for a medical
course.
—Philip S. Barnhart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James K. Barnhart, who 'spent his
two week's vacation at the home of his
parents in this place, left last Saturday to
resume his work with the General Electric
company at Pittsfield, Mass. He was ac-
companied by his mother and sister Elea-
nor as far as New York city where they
spent a day or two then went up the Hud-
son river as far as Albany and from there
to Schenectady for a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Harper, Mrs. Harper before
her marriage being Miss Martha Barnhart.
—J. E. Gates, of Monongahela City, and
his four children, Homer, Katherine, Mary
and Lulu, were guests for several days the
early part of the week of Mr. and Mrs.
Calvin Troupe, at their home on south
Thomas street. Upon leaving here Mr.
Gates and his family went to Renovo to vis-
it with relatives until Monday, expecting
then to return to Bellefonte to occupy the
new Masonic camp at the Intersection.
During the week they will be in camp,
Mrs. Troupe and her children will be Mr.
Gates’ guests, Mr. Troupe joining them
there when his business permits.
—We notice at the head of a group of
gentlemen, every one of whom looks a live
wire, the smiling countenance of a former
Bellefonte, our good friend “Bill” Moore.
The photos of thirty of them are repro-
duced in “The Kardexer,” the publicity
sheet of the Kardexer company, of Tona-
wanda, N. Y. Under the caption “The
Chief Looks 'Em Over” Mr. Moore, the
general sales manager, is placed at the
head of the group of men who are manag-
ing the eight divisions into which the Unit-
ed States are divided for the sales of this
wonderful new filing system. ' Judging
from his expression in this latest pose he
is still exemplifying his old motto that
“the man worth while is the man with the
smile.” And he must have succeeded in
having a lot of his force adopt the same
slogan for most of them are grinnin’ like
they had found getting Kardexer business
something worth while.
—While in Bellefonte on ‘business on
Wednesday George D. Gregory, of Grego-
ry Bros. State College, paid the “Watch-
man” office a brief visit and related a por-
tion of his experience on a recent trip back.
to his native land for the purpose of vis-
iting his mother. Upon his arrival in
Greece he observed rather ominous signs
of army mobilization and at once called on
the U. 8. consul to find out what he
thought of the situation. The consul
promptly told him that if he was a native
of Greece and had a business in the United
States he'd get back there as soon as he
could. Mr. Gregory took the hint and
promptly applied to the Greek authorities
for the surrender of his passport and then
got the shock of his life. That official pa-
per cost him ten dollars in the United
States but to get it back from his brother
Greeks he was compelled to deliver over
four hundred good American dollars. But
he did so and just twelve days after he
landed he was back on ship headed for
heme, without getting to see his mother
and friends and the very day he embark-
ed army mobilization orders were issued.
Mr. Gregory got back to State College sev-
eral week ago and he is glad of it because
he is a naturalized American citizen and
before coming here had served his native
country in the Balkan war. :
on a trip to Illinois and Iowa.
—John Curtin Jr., the oldest son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Curtin, went to Overbrook
Monday to join his uncle, William S. Furst
and his family for the drive to New Hamp-
shire, where the boy will be a guest of the
Furst family during his vacation, at their
summer home on Lake Winnepesaukee.
—R. P. Barnhart, superintendent of
schools at Mt. Jewett, was an early Mon-
day morning caller at the “Watchman” of-
fice. He and his family will spend their
summer vacation at Curtin, but Mr. Barn-
hart will also spend some time at the sum-
mer session for teachers at State College,
and was on his way there on Monday.
—Mr .and Mrs. J. J. Soafer and their ba-
by Betty, came here from Philadelphia,
Sunday, Mr. Soafer leaving his wife and
child for a visit with their = aunts, the
Misses Anne and Eva Powers, while he re-
turned to the city Monday. Mrs. Soafer’s
mother, Mrs. Massey, will join her daugh-
ter in Bellefonte later in the summer,
—Irene Freidman, the elder daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Louis KE. Freidman, of New
York city, accompanied her cousin, Mannie
Joseph, to Bellefonte this week, remaining
here for her summer visit with her grand-
mother, Mrs. Holz and her son Harry. Mrs.
Freidman and her younger daughter will
join Irene in August; Mrs. Emil Joseph
and Mrs. Wallach coming at the same
time, to be guests of Mrs. Holz.
—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schlow’'s guests
this week have included Mrs. Schlow’s
cousin, Miss Clara Breiger, of New York
city, and Dr. Nathan, of Philadelphia, who
lectured before the teachers in the summer
school course at State College, both Wed-
nesday and Thursday evenings. Dr. Na-
than was entertained by Mr. and Mrs.
Schlow while in Centre county, driving
from Bellefonte for his engagements at
Penn State.
—J. Orvis Keller, who has accepted the
position of associate professor of Indus-
trial Engineering, at Penn State, is spend-
ing the month of July doing special work
at the Westinghouse plant in South Phila-
delphia. Mr. Keller had been at the State
College at Ames, Iowa, coming east from
there several weeks ago. Mrs. Keller has
been at her former home at McConnells-
burg, Pa., since the death of her sister,
early in the summer, and will not come to
Centre county until after Mr. Keller's re--
turn from Philadelphia. :
—Mrs. H. N. Crider is entertaining her
aunts, Mrs. James Ferguson, of California,
and Mrs. E. L. Carpenter, of New York
city, who are in Bellefonte for a two week's
visit. Mrs. Carpenter will go from here to
Bedford Springs for the summer; Mrs.
Ferguson expecting to spend a month there
with her sister before leaving for the west.
Mrs. Crider’s sister, Mrs. Harold Biddle,
of Pittsburgh, and her three children, will
be in Bellefonte for the week-end and
Fourth, joining the party being entertain-
ed by Mr. and Mrs. Crider.
—Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Haller, of Spring
creek, left yesterday for Priladelphia,
to spend their five day's vacation as guests
of Mrs. Haller’'s brother, M. E. Donovan,
master mechanic of the American Engi-
neering Co. The principal reason for Mr.
and Mrs. Haller’s vacation at this time,and
also for their going east, was Mr. Haller's
love of sport and his good fortune in se-
curing a seat on the fourth row from the
arena in the Dempsey-Carpentier fight to-
morrow. Mr. and Mrs. Haller will spend
a short time at the sea shore before return-
ing home.
—“Mannie” Joseph; who will be remem-
bered by many here as the youngset son
of the late Emil Joseph, merchant and
financier of this place, was in town during
the early part of the week visiting his aunt,
Mrs. Herman Holz. Mannie has left the
road and is now associated with his broth-
cer Edmund’s law firm in New York city.
He has charge of the finance and credit
department of the firm which carries on a
business in realty and motor financing
running into the millions annually. He is
grown a man, of course, but sticking out
everywhere one can detect the pleasing
manner and other little characteristics
that made Mannie one of the little boys in
Bellefonte of whom everybody was fond. .
He left here Tuesday for Atlantic City,
where he expected to tarry until tomorrow
when he will run over to Jersey City for
the fight before going home.
(Continued on page 4, column 6).