" burgh, on Sunday, Bellefonte, Pa., October 6, 1922. {mm NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND TQUNTY. — Having served out their sen- tences four men were discharged from the western penitentiary at Rockview on Monday morning. — The Odd Fellows band jour- neyed to Pine Grove Mills on Sunday afternoon and gave a sacred concert on the old Academy grounds. — Miss Martha L. Haines has ac- cepted a position as book-keeper in the billing department of the American Lime and Stone company’s offices in this place. — Roy C. Noll has been elected treasurer of Whiterock Quarries to succeed John Curtin, who resigned following acceptance of a position with the American Lime and Stone company. Auditor General Lewis is pre- paring to distribute among the var- jous counties of the State the fund accumulated by the state tax on for- eign insurance, Centre county’s share of which is $2368.26. — Twenty-six women workers in the Republican ranks attended the dinner given at the Nittany Country club, last Friday evening, by Hon. Harry B. Scott, of Philipsburg. Var- ious portions of the county were rep- resented in the guests present. One hundred and sixty-five people went from Bellefonte on the Niagara Falls excursion on Saturday night. The train left the Bellefonte depot at 11:15 Saturday night and returning reached here shortly before two o'clock on Monday morning. Two cars of anthracite coal, chestnut and pea, arrived in Belle- fonte Saturday evening for the Belle- fonte Fuel and Supply company, the first to arrive since the settlement of the strike. It is quite probable that shipments will become normal in the near future. Miss Jane C. Miller is repre- senting the Curtis Publishing Co., in Bellefonte, and would greatly appre- ciate your kindness in sending her your subscription for the Ladies Home Journal, Saturday Evening Post, and Country Gentleman. Checks should be sent to Crider’s stone building, Bellefonte, Pa. The legitimate theatrical sea- son is here but that will not affect the standard of the motion pictures shown at the Scenic. Regular patrons of that popular movie show will always find something to their liking on each evening’s program. The Scenic will always be comfortable, whether the evenings are cool or hot. ——The Bellefonte Academy foot- ball team won their opening game on Hughes field last Saturday by defeat- ing the Potomac State school, of Key- ser, W. Va,, 27 to 0. The visitors were entirely outclassed and were never in danger of scoring. Tomor- row the Academy will play the State reserves at State College. The Centre county conference of women’s clubs will be held in the P. 0. S. of A. building at Howard on Saturday, October 21st, as near ten o'clock as possible. Representatives from the various women’s organiza- tions throughout the county are urged to be in attendance to give reports of their activities and to offer sugges- tions for future progress. An inter- esting program will be provided. The public will be welcomed. A box lunch- eon will be served. On Monday afternoon sheriff Harry Dukeman took two men to the western penitentiary at Pittsburgh. They were John Nedric, sentenced to from one to two years for felonious assault upon John Fedora, and W, Howard, alias Dr. Bowers, sentenced to from five to six years for stealing a team of horses from John A. White, of Benner township. Howard was an escaped conwict from the Rockview -peniténtiary and sentence was sus- ~pemded on that charge. — Robert W. Sutton, the largest individual share holder in the Sutton- Abramsen Engineering company, of this place, died at his home in Pitts- after a short ill- ness with pneumonia, aged 43 years. Mr. Sutton was prominent as a law- yer and president of the board of di- vectors of the Homeopathic hospital «of Pittsburgh. He was a brother of J. Blair Sutton, who is the president of “tise local company. in which his broth- @r had so large an interest. —— Henry A. Blakely went to the death chair at the Rockview peniten- tiary on Monday morning for the mur- der of Edward Kummer, a farmer of Tarentum, in April, 1921. Blakely was an ex-convict at the time of the mur- der, having served time at the Rock- view institution in 1918. He was brought to the death house last Sat- urday by automobile and was the most unconcerned man in the party. No one claiming the body he was bur- ied in the penitentiary cemetery. — Mr. and Mrs. Winfield P. Meek- er, of Pine Glenn, have sent out cards announcing the marriage of their daughter, Viola Pearl, to Mr. Merrill J. Hagan, son of Mr. and Mrs. John ¥. Hagan, of Spring Mills, on Satur- day, September thirtieth. Although neither are residents of Bellefonte, they are well known here as Miss Meeker has been the Red Cross com- munity nurse for the past six months and Mr. Hagan is in the.employ of the Beatty Motor Co. After a motor trip of a week they will settle in Belle- fonte, where Mrs. Hagan will contin- ue her work as Red Cross numse. a UNVEILING OF MONUMENT. Milesburg’s Big Celebration will be Held October 15th, 20th and 21st. Plans are fast maturing for the big home-coming and unveiling of the soldier’s monument at Milesburg which will be held on Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday, October 19th, 20th and 21st. While the complete pro- gram has not yet been made up Fri- day will be the big day. On that date the mounment to the soldiers of Miles- burg and Boggs township who served in recent wars will be dedicated with elaborate ceremonies. While several prominent men have signified their in- tention of being present the speaker for the occasion has not yet been se- lected. The ceremonies, however, will in- clude a big parade composed of five units of cavalry of the National Guard of Pennsylvania, American Legion posts and ex-service men, a number of bands, the rehab students and cadets, of State College, civic organizations and school children. Immediately following the parade the monument will be unveiled and dedicated. The tablets bearing the names of the soldiers were received last Fri- day and have been placed in position on the monument. That same evening the committee of arrangements se- lected the dates for the dedication. Inasmuch as the dates for the big time are only two weeks away the committee is working hard to get everything in shape for that time and is being assisted by John B. Payne, commander of the Brooks-Doll post of the American Legion. Ex-service men everywhere are asked to report at Milesburg on that occasion. Steve Zimmerman Acquitted. Considerable interest centered around the trial last week of Steve Zimmerman for causing the death of Joe Surovice, at Clarence. The trial took up all of Thursday, the jury re- tiring at five o'clock. It was almost midnight when they reached a ver- dict, which was sealed and returned at the opening of court on Friday morn- ing. The verdict of acquittal seemed to meet with the approval of the ma- jority of those who heard the trial. Zimmerman, according to the evi- dence, was a member of the miner’s union and had gone out on a strike with the other miners. He has a wife and eight children to support and lat- er when he got an opportunity to go to work he took it. This, he alleged in his testimony, which was corrobo- rated by other witnesses, resulted in considerable feeling against him. In the fight which resulted in the killing of Surovice on May 18th, Zimmerman testified that he had been attacked by two men whom he had disposed of when Suroviee came up in a threat- ening attitude and believing he, too, was going to attack him struck him with the iron bar; not with the inten- tion of killing him but as a means of self-defense. Surovice’s skull was fractured and he died as the result of his injuries. le Rally Day in St. John’s Lutheran Church. Annual Rally day will be observed in St. John’s Lutheran church with a series of splendid services, featured with addresses by S. S. Aplin, secre- tary of the Y. M. C. A., and Dr. John I. Woodruff, of Susquehanna Univer- sity. At the 9:30 a. m. Sunday school hour, special music will be rendered by the orchestra, the school and the pri- mary department. Mr. Aplin will speak on the subject, “What Does the Sunday School Mean to You?” At 10:45 a. m. Dr. J. I. Woodruff, dean of the department of English at Sus- quehanna University, will speak on “The Challenge of the Sunday School.” Dr. Woodruff is an educator, lecturer, orator, and ex-member of the State Legislature. At the 7:30 ves- per service Dr. Woodruff will preach the sermon. Visitors will be welcome at any or all of these meetings. Music Club Notes. The total receipts from the three musical teas given by the Bellefonte music study club were $88.90. Of this amount $60.00 will be given to the Bellefonte hospital and $20.00 will be devoted to paying the club’s dues to the State Federation of Music Clubs. Thus it will be seen that the music club is not to be just a local organization, but one having the ad- vantages of a federated alliance with others throughout the State. And that these advantages are not to be mythical is evidenced by the promise from headquarters in Pitts- burgh to send gratis a very fine pian- ist and singer for the opening of the club, which will be on October 13th, in the Presbyterian chapel. On that oc- casion the public will be cordially wel- comed. Afterward, at the bi-monthly meetings, members only will be ex- pected. ee ma— eee ee Alpiners Hike to Snow Shoe. Fifty or more members of the Penn- sylvania Alpine club met at Milesburg last Saturday morning and hiked over the Allegheny mountains to Snow Shoe, going by way of Moose run and visiting the “ant city” enroute. At Snow Shoe the majority of the hikers camped out and Saturday evening had a camp fire, the principal speaker be- ing Major Robert Y. Stuart, commis- sioner of forestry. Col. Henry W. Shoemaker, the president of the club, was in charge of the hike. The entire party returned home by train on Sum- day afternoon. A TA A A Bs LR OT SL ATER —— The Thimble Bee of the ladies of the Reformed church will meet at the home of Mrs. Harry Meyer, corner Spring and Lamb streets, this (Fri- day) afterncon. — Miss Helen Calderwood, who came here from Tyrone with the American Lime and Stone company, has been transferred to the office at the company’s plant at Union Fur- nace. ——The Susquehanna river at Wil- liamsport was within a quarter of an inch of the low water mark on Mon- day. The record was made over one hundred years ago so that the present condition is lower than any resident of that city has memory of. — Mrs. Walter Armstrong enter- tained Mrs. McKelvey’s bible class of the Methodist church, Tuesday even- ing, at her home on Bishop street. The special and free will offering taken during the evening, which amounted to fifty dollars, is to be equally divided between the Centenary fund and the church home for children, at Mechan- icsburg. — The many Bellefonte friends of Harry Schreyer, of Chicago, will be glad to know that he is now on a fair way to permanent recovery, after suf- fering the amputation of his right arm as the result of a bad case of blood poisoning. Mr. Schreyer, years ago, was in business in Bellefonte and since leaving here has returned for frequent visits, so that he has kept in touch with his old friends and the town generally. —Last Thursday evening Eli Rol- ley, who conducts a meat market at Karthaus, was on his way home from Philipsburg with a truck load of meat and ice, and in the vicinity of Wood- land his truck ran off the road and up- set. A piece of glass from the brok- en windshield severed a vein in Rol- ley’s neck and he almost bled to death before a physician could reach him. He was later taken to the Clearfield hospital for treatment. em —— i —— ——Last week Bellefonters who keep pretty close tab on the big trout in Spring creek discovered one that was almost entirely covered with a fungous growth, evidence that it was pretty badly diseased. Game warden Mosher’s attention was called to it and on Friday, after securing permis- sion from the burgess to discharge a firearm within the borough limits, he shot the trout as it lay in the stream just opposite the Bush house. The first shot missed the trout but on the second try he punctured it right back of the head. The dead fish was taken out of the stream and buried. ——Since becoming president of The Pennsylvania State College Dr. John M. Thomas has gotten consid- erable space in the newspapers of the State in advocating changing the Col- lege into a State university, but on no occasion was he able to cop the space that Hugo Bezdek and his football team did on Sunday with almost a full page in the Philadelphia Public Ledger and the Pittsburgh Gazette- Times. The college team, by the way, defeated William and Mary college on Saturday by the score of 28 to 7, the visitor’s score being made on a fum- ble in the first few minutes of the game. ree peer ——Gifford Pinchot, the forester candidate for Governor, visited Belle- fonte last Friday afternoon and if it hadn’t been for the big trout in Spring creek he would have found little en- tertainment during the half hour he spent in town. Escorted by Republi- can county chairman L. Frank Mayes Mr. Pinchot and his party came here from State College and stopping at the Bush house the candidate was at once taken out along Spring creek to see the trout. The ex-forester is an enthusiastic fisherman and naturally waxed jubilant at the sight of the trout. In a few minutes, however, he returned to the Bush house probably anticipating a rousing reception but the gathering was so small that it didn’t take long to look them all over and evidently considering the trout the greater attraction he returned for another look at them. The Pinchot party was accompanied by a half doz- en newspaper men and not one of them had the temerity to mention the reception in Bellefonte in their re- ports. —— “Once a Moose always a Moose,” may not have originated with Sam Haupt but he gave it proper em- phasis the night many years ago when the Bellefonte lodge was proper- ly ineprporated with a big banquet at the ¥ ockerhoft house and Sam had incorporated to that extent that he was obliged to cling to one of the lamp posts in front of the hotel while promulgating the above declaration, which was the first thing that came to our mind last Saturday when we re- ceived the September issue of “The Kardexer,” the monthly publication of the American Kardex Co., and saw almest the entire front page covered with a picture of W. A. Moore sup- porting a monster pair of moose ant- lers. My. Moore was one of a party from southern New York who reeently returned from a hunt near the Arctic Divide, in Canada, and the picture shows their camp with the trophies of the chase. The fact that Mr. Moore was the central figure of all the tro- phies leads us to conclude that he was the Big Sachem of the party, as he once was the big chief at the Nittany "Iron company plant in this place. EM Re —————————————————————— Low Water and Raccoons Depopulat- ing Trout Streams. If the present unusual drouth con- tinues much longer many of the small trout streams in Centre county will be entirely depopulated, not because the fish are being left high and dry on the rocky beds of the stream but be- cause of the depredations made by raccoons on the finny tribe. It is a well known fact that coons like fish about as well as a colored gentleman likes possum but when the streams are well supplied with water they are not always able to satisfy their appe- tite. The present dry spell is as pro- nounced in Centre county as in other parts of the State. The last rainfall of any consequence was on the 4th of September and there was not enough of it at that time to affect the moun- tain springs and streams. The con- sequence is many of them are so near- ly dry that only the deeper pools are still in evidence. This is particularly the case with Laurel run, which flows out of the Bear Meadows, past the Nevel place and through Tusseyville. It has always been well stocked with mountain trout. But now a good portion of the stream is almost dry and the trout have all gathered in the deeper pools. And unfortunately the pools are not deep enough to afford protection to the fish and the raccoons are, literally speaking, scooping them out by the paw-full. It at first was a puzzling situation to the game wardens in that locality and they were finally driven to desperate means to save the trout. At intervals along the stream they have blown out deep holes with dyna- mite and these when filled with wa- ter will afford hiding places for the trout until the stream is again filled with water. While Bellefonters cannot realize what it means to be short of water, as itis one of the favored spots in the State, Milesburg people are down to a limited supply and many farmers in the county have been hauling water for weeks past. The weather man has promised local showers for this week but it will take several days steady rain to affect the springs and low streams. : Canine Sagacity. On Thursday afternoon a gang of telephone linemen who are working in this part of the State drove into Bellefonte and with the gang was Foster McGovern, a Bellefonte man. The gang also had a dog, which is part airedale, and as they intended hanging up here a day or two McGov- ern took the dog to his father’s home in Crider’s stone building and asked them to keep him. Some time during the evening the dog got out of the house and disappeared and all efforts to locate him in that locality proved unavailing. Finally members of the family thought of the linemen’s truck and going to Beatty’s garage the dog was found on the truck and no amount of coaxing could persuade him to leave it. Food was given him and he stayed there until the men re- turned. It then developed that it is one of the dog’s regular duties to guard the truck when the men are at work. It matters not how far away they go the dog stands guard and will not al- low a stranger to touch a thing. When he is off guard duty, however, he is just as playful and companiona- ble as any dog could be. His actions in Bellefonte showed wonderful ca- nine sagacity, because he was a stranger in town and how he found his way from the McGovern home to the truck at the Beatty garage is inexpli- cable. A Plea for Near East Relief. All Centre county has heard the cry that has come across the sea from devastated Smyrna. Near east re- lief, according to the newspapers, is being apportioned among the refu- gees, but to do much good it must have substantial backing. Earlier in the year the committee, for lack of funds, was forced to cut down its appropriation for the or- phanages. Now this additional bur- den has come. Hundreds of new ref- ugees! Words fail as one tries to picture this awful calamity. One man cables, “I have seen terrible sights until my senses are numb, but the sight of 200,000 people, mostly women and children, being penned up and burning, and those escaping being driven to a barren and devastated country for starvation, is past all comprehension.” Every dollar sent to Charles M. Mec- Curdy, First National bank, Belle- fonte, treasurer for Centre county Near East relief, will be forwarded at once to headquarters, and will be used for a relief which must be immediate. Women Voters Hold Convention. Only a fair crowd was present at the annual convention of the Centre county branch League of Women Vot- ers, held at Camp Boal, Boalshurg, last Friday. Murs. Kocher, vice pres- ident, presided and the minutes of the last meeting were read by Mrs. Hamm, the secretary. The treasurer’s report was read by Mrs. R. S. Brouse, of Bellefonte. A box luncheon was served at noon and later brief talks were made by candidates Fred B. Kerr, J. Frank Snyder, W. I. Betts and Miss Zoe Meek. A letter of regret NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —James H. Potter, president of the Pot- ter-Hoy Hardware Co., is at Atlantic City, where he expects to spend the month of October, taking a much needed rest. —Miss Anna Hall, tax collector for the borough of Unionville, was in Bellefonte Tuesday afternoor, making her returns to the treasurer of her school tax for Sep- tember. —After spending the summer on Dr. Kirk’s farm, just south of Bellefonte, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kirk and their two chil- dren, moved into town Thursday, expect- ing to spend the winter at the Dr. Kirk home, on west High street. —Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Saunders, of Vicksburg, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Garthoff and Miss Irene McGinley will motor to Altoona tomorrow to be over night guests of Mrs. F. A. Fink; Mr. and Mrs. Saunders being host and hostess on the drive. —Mrs. George E. Lentz and her daughter Mildred came here from Harrisburg Tues- day, Mrs. Lentz remaining over night, as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey P. Schaef- fer, while Mildred continued her visit for the week, with Larue Schaeffer. —A party which included Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Miller and Frank D. Miller, of Bell- wood, and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Graffius, of Spruce Creek, drove to Bellefonte last week, visiting while here with their aunts, the Misses Jane and Margaret Miller. —Rev. David R. Evans, pastor of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church, and Rev. T. W. Young, former chaplain of the western penitentiary, motored to Port Royal on Monday to attend the regular fall meeting of the Huntingdon Presby- tery. —Miss Zoe Meek, Democratic candidate for the State Legislature, stopped in Belle- fonte for a few hours Tuesday, leaving here with Col. Kerr, Mr. Snyder and Mr. Betts, to be present at the series of meet- ings to be held in the southern part of the county this week. —Miss Anna M. Miller, who was obliged to give up her position in Dr. Locke's of- fice in the spring, owing to the illness of her parents and sister, returned to Belle- fonte from Salona, last week, and is now with Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, on Curtin street, with whom she will spend the winter. —Charles R. Beatty, proprietor of the Ford agency, of Bellefonte, and Mrs. Beat- ty, returned home Saturday from a two week’s stay at Mount Clements and De- troit. While absent Mr. Beatty underwent a nose and throat operation in the Ford hospital at Detroit, resting and recuper- ating at Mount Clemens. —Among the delegates in attendance at the forty-eighth annual convention of the American Banker's association in New York this week is Nelson E. Robb, of the Bellefonte Trust company. Mr. and Mrs. Robb left Bellefonte on Sunday morning and during their stay in New York have been quartered at the Pennsylvania hotel. —Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler, of Belle- fonte, were among the five hundred or more people present at the dedication on Saturday of a marker at Fort Fetter, on the John 8. Vipond farm, near New Port- age junction, Blair county. The speakers included State Senator P. W. Snyder, Thomas Lynch Montgomery, Dr. J. E. Scott and Charles M. Schwab. —Mr. and Mrs. James P. Parsons will re- turn to their home at Toledo, Ohio, today, after a visit of two weeks with Mrs. Par- son’s sisters and brothers, the Caleb Kep- hart family, at Fillmore. Mr. Parsons is with the New York Central R. R. Co., and while Mrs. Parsons frequently returns to her former home, Mr. Parson's visits are limited to her summer vacation. —Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Valentine have completed plans for making their home in Williamsport, where Mr. Valentine has ac- cepted a position with the Industrial Trade Cor. Mr. and Mrs. Valentine had been in Bellefonte for a visit of several weeks, going from here to Williamsport, and later to Syracuse, from where they are shipping their household goods to their new home. —Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Garthoff’s guests within the past week included their neph- ew, Victor Walker, with Mrs. Walker, and Mr. and Mrs. Loose, of Bucyrus, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. J. Linn Blackford and their family, of Huntingdon; Mr. and Mrs. Blackford having driven over for a week- end visit with Mrs. Blackford's parents, and Mr. Blackford’s sister, Mrs. Keefer. —Mrs. Grier Foresman came here from Jersey Shore a week ago, spending several days in Bellefonte with her aunt, Mrs. D. @&. Bush. Mrs. Foresman, who is from Philadelphia, was up-State visiting with herg, mother, Mrs. Sides. Harry P. Bush arrived in Bellefonte the same day, for a two week’s visit with his mother, having stopped here on his way home to Medford, Oregon, from a six month’s business trip to South Ameriea. —Mr. Calvin Riley, of Boalsburg, was a Bellefonte visitor Wednesday. He motored down with John Patterson, grocer of that place, who was serving as a juror at court. Mr. Riley said that his eommunity is on very limited water rations and that the supply is daily diminishing. In fact their stream has gone so low that they can’t im- pound sufficient water in the day time to run their electric light plant more than three hours at might. 2 —Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swearer, of Phoe- nixville, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne DeHa- ven, of Malvern, spent Sunday in this place, being guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C. Bingaman, of Howard street, for part of their stay. The gentlemen are superin- tendents at the Chas. Warner Co., plant at Cedar Hollow and were here on a motor trip. They departed Monday to spend a night at the Malvern hanting elub camp in the Seven mountains on their way home, —Mrs. Ada Weaver Fairlamb, of Phila- delphia, and her younger sister, Miss Jen- nie Weaver, of Lock Haven, were week-end guests of their brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. George Weaver. Mrs. Fairlamb, who is a daughter of the late George Wea- ver, was born and with the family lived all her early life in Bellefonte, leaving to go to Philadelphia, where she has since lived. The short visit here was made from Lock Haven, where she had been with her sisters, Mrs. Crissman and Miss Weaver. —Mrs. H. K. Hoy, who has arranged to make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Clayton Royer, will spend the greater part of this winter with her other chil- dren. Having left Wednesday with her daughter, Mrs Shuey, of Prospect, Ohio, the two will visit for the remainder of this week with Sine H. Hoy, on his farm i ~~... ok ee ——— — —T. J. Hamberger, coach at the Belle fonte Academy, was a guest of friends in Lock Haven over Sunday. : —Miss Mira Humes, accompanied by Miss Sarah Caldwell, left Tuesday to spend a part of October in Atlantic City. —James C. Furst is representing the First National bank of Bellefonte, at the Bankers’ association in New York this week. : —Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Sagel, of Philadel- phia, have been with Mrs. Sagel’s mother, Mrs. Isaac Thomas and the family for the past week. —Miss Kelso has recovered sufficiently from her recent illness to resume her High school work, having returned to Bellefonte early in the week. —Miss Mabel Allison, of Spring Mills, was in Bellefonte yesterday, looking after some business relative to the settlement of her father’s estate. —Miss Veda Wetzel, of Akron, Ohio, is visiting her many friends in Bellefonte, making her headquarters at the home of Mrs. Oscar Wetzel. —Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Harper return- ed home early in the week, from Philadel- phia, and a visit with Mr. and Mrs. James Harris, in Reading. —DMrs. Haines, who had been in Philips- burg visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Black, is again in Bellefonte, having re- turned home yesterday. —After spending a good part of the summer in Bellefonte Miss Sue M. Garner, professional nurse, returned to her work in Philadelphia yesterday. —Mrs. W. F. Reeder and Mrs. D. H. Hastings went to Erie Sunday, where they have been attending the State conference of the D. A. R., held there this week. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hartranft and child, and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Kline, of Watsontown, were Saturday and Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Hartranft. —The Rev. Wilson P. Ard and J. F. Garthoff will return today from Newport, where they have been attending Synod this week as representatives form the Luther- an church of Bellefonte. —Dr. Fred Seidel, coach of the Lafayette football team, came over from Easton Saturday for a week-end visit with Miss Sara Barnhart. Dr. Seidel was a former Bellefonte Academy student. ’ —Mrs. Maurice Baum, of State College, and Miss Mary Musser, of Bellefonte, are guests at “The Normandia,” in Philadel- phia, having gone east Sunday, to spend several weeks in Philadelphia. —Mrs. Hudson W. Love, of Pittsburgh, was in Bellefonte Wednesday, looking after some business. Mrs. Love is visiting relatives at Oak Hall and Centre Hall, and will spend several weeks in Centre county. —Dr. and Mrs. Pickle, of Williamsport, and their two sons, Wilbur and Harry, motored to Bellefonte Saturday for an over Sunday visit with Mrs. Pickle’s fath- er and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Twit- mire. —Mrs. R. M. Beach will motor to Har- risburg, Saturday, with Miss Anne Me- Cormick, intending to go from there to Reading to visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. Norman Sherer, while attending the State conference of Women’s clubs in session there next week. ——Mr. and Mrs. George 8. Grimm stop- ped in Bellefonte for several days the ear- ly part of the week, on their way home to North Tonawanda, from a visit with their daughter, Mrs. John D. Kistner, at Mil- ton, where Mrs. Grimm had been for eight weeks. During their stay here Mr. and Mrs. Grimm were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Massey. McKinley—Rome.—A wedding of interest to Centre county people took place in St. George’s Episcopal church, West End, Pittsburgh, last Thursday evening, when Mr. and Mrs. Freder- ick Rome gave in marridge their niece, Miss Elizabeth Hartman, to Gray L. McKinley, of Milesburg, the ceremony being performed by the pas- tor. The bride wore a gown of dark blue canton crepe, with a gray faun velvet hat and a corsage bouquet of buff roses. Her attendants included as matron of honor Mrs. Rome, gown- ed in black satin, and Miss Minnie Horbury as bridesmaid, who was dressed in beaded canton crepe and carried pink roses. The wedding march was played by Miss Amy Wag- ner while Miss Emma Twigg sang “Oh, Promise Me.” Immediately fol- lowing the ceremony a wedding dinner was served at a nearby hotel and later Mr. and Mrs. McKinley left on a brief wedding trip. After November first they will be at home to their friends at 1459 Woodstock avenue, West End. mr——— meses Metzler—Bennett.—A noon wed- ding at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Bennett, at Port Matilda, last Saturday was that of their daughter, Miss Gladys Bennett, and Roy J. Metzler, of Sharon. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. H. Upham in the presene of a housefull of in- vited guests. The attendants were Miss Frances Metzler and Gilbert Bennett. Following a brief wedding trip the young couple will take up their residence at Sharon. ——The Catholic Daughters of America will give a dance in the ar- mory Friday evening, October 20th. en mn fy pee Feature Dance. Bush Arcade, Friday evening this week, from 9 to 1. Ladies free, gents $2.00. Music by Getkins Novelty or- chestra, direct from Walton roof, Philadelphia. 39-1t* ——————— el —————— ——For the advanced models in fall and winter hats, and also Phipps hats, there will be an exhibit Wednes- day, October 11th, at Miss Snyder's, No. 5, Bishop street, Bellefonte. 39-1t a——— pe ——————— Bellefonte Grain Market. near town; from there they will go to from Thomas Beaver was read. The Boalsburg, for a stay of several weeks | Corrected Weekly by C. ¥. Wagner & Co. convention adjourned in time to per-| with Mrs. Wagner, then about the first of | New Wheat _ - - = = = = 1.00 mit of all who cared to do $0 to go to | November Mrs. Hoy wiki go to Turbotville | fae; Pr bushel, = = = = 5 State College for the Pinchot meet- { to spend three mor.'hs with her daughter, Barley, per bushel = = «tal i ‘orn - - - - % = ol ing. Mrs. Ely.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers