Demonic ald Bellefonte, Pa., June 15, 1923. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND “OUNTY. — Charles A. Morris is a surgic- al patient in the Bellefonte hospital. — Naturalization court for Centre county will be held in Bellefonte next Monday. : Summer will officially begin on Thursday of next week, which is sup- posed to be the longest day in the year. : ——All told eight black bears cap- tured in Potter county have been re- leased in the Seven mountains for propagating purposes. ——The weather last Friday was almost cool enough for frost but at that no extremely unusual occurrence for the early part of June. ——The American Legion Auxiliary will hold a regular meeting in the Le- gion rooms next Tuesday evening. All members are urged to be present. ——The wedding of John F. Woods and Miss Julia A. Waite will take place at St. John’s Catholic church, Bellefonte, next Tuesday morning. ——The Ladies Aid society of the Methodist church will hold a social in front of the church, Friday evening, June 22nd, at which time ice cream, cake, candy and salted peanuts will be sold. ——A little daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Storch, at the Bellefonte hospital on Tuesday morn- ing, and which died at birth, was bur- ied in the Union cemetery on Wednes- day morning. ——A little son was born the latter part of last week to Mr. and Mrs. Ben Curry, of Pittsburgh. Mrs. Curry be- fore her marriage was Miss Abbie Cook, a daughter of Charles F. Cook, of Bellefonte. ——The Legislature on Wednesday passed the Edmonds bill providing for a new eastern penitentiary, and also passed an appropriation bill for $450,- 000 to rush completion on the Rock- view penitentiary. ——A festival will be held on the Bellefonte Academy lawn, on Tues- day evening, June 19th, by the Ladies’ Aid society of St. John’s Episcopal church. Strawberries and other deli- cacies will be served. ——Members of the Boy Scouts are looking forward to their festival to be held in front of the High school building Tuesday evening, June 28th. The Odd Fellows band will play and a good time is assured to all. It is hoped that the public will support this | effort of the boys to raise money for their camp. ——The brick building on the cor- ner of Allegheny street and Pike al- ley, which for a number of years has housed the Keystone Gazette printing | plant and A. E. Schad’s plumbing es- tablishment, is now being torn down to make way for the new buildings to be erected by Charles F. Mensch and Dr. C. M. Parrish. ——Announcement has been made at the State Department of Agricul- ture that the seventeen year locusts have made their appearance in some ' portions of the State. Millions of the insects have been seen in various sec- tions of Centre county and dense swarms of them are in evidence in the Barrens up in Huntingdon county. ——Ives L. Harvey, who recently invested in a large plantation near Charlottsville, Va., has decided to con- tinue in business in Pennsylvania and has become interested in a new brick company recently organized at New Hope, Bucks county, where he will probably locate permanently, if he can dispose of his farm in Virginia. ——Practically all danger of forest fire for this spring is at an end and last Friday the fire wardens who have kept a close watch on the state forests from the various steel towers through- out the State were withdrawn. The woodlands have become so green and damp that there is little danger of fire until the leaves begin to drop in the fall. ——Frank Kern, the laundry man, passed into a class all of his own as a fisherman, last Friday afternoon. With the weather cold and so unpro- pitious that the average piscatorial shark wouldn’t have thought of going out he went down onto Bald Eagle creek and came home with seven trout that aggregated 102 inches in length. ‘The largest was 19% inches. Airplanes are now no novelty to “the people of Bellefonte but the atten- tion of many residents of the town was attracted by the evolutions of a machine between six and seven o’clock on Monday evening. The ship was an . S.E.-5, an English model used during the world war as pursuit planes, and - which are now known as “sky writ- cers.” It was piloted by Lieut. Collier, who was on his way to Washington, from Dayton, Ohio, © On account of the large trade interests of the American Lime & Stone company in the Pittsburgh dis- trict, they have found it necessary to establish a Pittsburgh office, and Mr. C. B. Nicholson will be placed in charge of that district, which will be known as their western division. For the present, however, Mr. Nicholson will divide his time between Bellefonte and Pittsburgh, but will later move to Pittsburgh permanently. Mr. Irving Warner, who has been general man- ager of the plant here during the past year, will, it is reported, be succeeded by Mr. Phillipps, of Washington, D. C., as general manager, while he will become engineer of construction for all of the plants of the American- Warner interests. WORLD MISSIONS’ CONFERENCE. Program of the Meetings to be held in Centre County on Sunday. | | Plans have been completed for the World Missions’ conference to be held in Centre county on Sunday and Mon- day. All protestant denominations are co-operating in this splendid movement, and the most prominent representatives and speakers will be sent here by the different mission boards to present to the people of this county the program and needs of the i foreign fields. The church people of Centre county should feel proud that their county has been selected as the first rural field on which a united effort of this kind has been launched. The cam- paign is purely educational, and no one will be asked to make any special contribution. It is an opportunity to hear some of the leading men of the protestant church of today right in this community. Sunday morning in Bellefonte the Episcopal congregation will be ad- dressed by Dr. A. M. Sherman; the Methodist and Presbyterian by Dr. Frank Bible; the Evangelical and United Brethren by Bishop A. T. How- ard, and the Reformed and Lutheran by Dr. L. B. Wolf. In the afternoon Dr. Turner will speak at Snow Shoe, Bishop Howard at Unionville, Mrs. Harold Smith at Gray’s church, and Dr. Sherman at Port Matilda. In the evening the same churches that held services in the morning, with the ex- ception of the Episcopal, will be ad- dressed by Drs. Rupert, Wolf and Turner. State College will have four speak- ers for the morning services, while Mrs. Harold Smith will address a union meeting in the evening. At 2:30 p- m. the Lemont meeting will be ad- dressed by Dr. Landes, and a service will be held at Pleasant Gap at 10:30 a. m. Pine Grove Mills will have an even- ng gathering addressed by Dr. Lan- es. Blanchard will have a morning serv- ice, Howard an afternoon meeting, and Milesburg will be reached in the evening. The speaker for this service will be Rev. Paul Schaffner. Rev. L. S. G. Miller will speak in the Millheim Lutheran church Sunday morning and in Aaronsburg Reformed Sunday evening. Rev. J. G. Rupp will preach at St. Paul’s in the morning, and at Millheim Evangelical in the evening. Rev. F. T. Cartwright will appear in the Woodward Evangelical church Sunday morning and at Re- "bersburg Reformed church in the evening. Rev. Rupp will also speak in the afternoon in the Reformed church at Coburn. Rev. Chu Sem Miao will speak at Zion in the morning, Hublersburg in the afternoon and at Nittany in the evening. oo : a Boadlsbiirg will have an evening service with a prominent speaker. Dr. Casselman will be at Centre Hall in the morning, Tusseyville in the afternoon and Sprucetown at night. Dr. Coleman will speak at Georges | Valley in the morning, Farmer’s Mills in the afternoon and Spring Mills in { the evening. A mass meeting for women will be {held in the Bellefonte Presbyterian chapel Monday at 3 p. m., and another similar gathering for women at State College at the same hour, while the 6:30 p. m. A men’s dinner will be served in the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. at 6:30 Mon- day evening, at 75 cents per cover. The speakers will be Drs. Williams and Casselman. A dinner for men will also be served at Spring Mills Monday at 6:30 p. m., and the speak- ers Drs. Wolf and Cartwright. Big Benefit Baseball Game. The regularly scheduled ball game between Millheim and Bellefonte, on Hughes field tomorrow (Saturday) afternoon, at 2:30 o’clock, will be a benefit for Samuel Weaver, one of the players on the Bellefonte team who recently broke his leg while playing in one of the league games. Mr. Wea- ver, who is mechanician at the avia- tion field, is now in the Bellefonte hos- pital and, of course, will be unable to work for six weeks or two months, and the Bellefonte Baseball associa- tion has decided to make tomorrow’s game a benefit for him. This is one reason why all the fans in town should be present on Hughes field to see the contest, while another reason is that the Bellefonte team still leads the league and the players should be given all the encouragement possible. Last Thursday’s game between Belle- fonte and State College is still unde- cided. The State team was twenty- five minutes late in reaching Hughes field and because of this fact the game was stopped in the first half of the fifth inning on account of rain. At the time the score stood 5 to 3 in fa- vor of Bellefonte. Not counting this game, however, the standing of the clubs up to yesterday morning was as follows: Won Lost P..C. Bellefonte - 4 0 1,000 Millheim - - 2 2 500 Centre Hall - 1 3 250 State College - 0 2 .000 ——R. B. Montgomery, who has been working at his trade as a paint- er and paper hanger in Philadelphia, the past three or four months, will lo- cate there permanently. He came to Bellefonte last Saturday and has been spending the week here, but will re- turn to the Quaker city next Monday and take his family with him, having secured a furnished apartment at 1100 S. 52nd street. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Anderson, of Logan street, gave a surprise par- ty on Monday evening for their daugh- ter, Miss Adaline K. Anderson. A number of guests were present and the young people had a delightful time. Very few Spanish-American war veterans from Centre county at- tended the annual reunion held at Huntingdon last Saturday. In fact the absentees included Col. H. S. Tay- lor, of Bellefonte, who has probably not missed a meeting of the regiment since its organization as a reunion as- sociation. rr ————— A se — ——Readers of the “Watchman” will miss our usually interesting Pine Grove Mills letter this week because of the fact that the man who wields the pencil in that neck-o’-woods, Capt. W. H. Fry, left on Monday night for Greensburg to attend the annual State encampment of the G. A. R., as a rep- resentative of the Capt. Campbell Post No. 272. There is no place like home, likewise no place like the Scenic, Bellefonte’s well known motion pic- ture show. Read the program of the offers for next week and you cannot fail to be impressed with the quality of the pictures to be shown. Two hours of delightful entertainment, the best to be had from the leading film makers. If not now a regular, get the habit. W. H. Frain, who for sixteen years has been shipping clerk for Kline Bros. store, in Altoona, has re- signed his position, sold his home in Juniata and on Monday moved to Madisonburg, this county, where he has purchased a home and also a tract of timberland nearby, and will embark in the lumbering business. Mr. Frain is a son of the late Isaac Frain, for many years a resident of little Nitta- ny valley. Shortly after the noon hour last Saturday workmen for the Key- stone Power corporation undertock to burn the insulation off of a lot of cop- per wire, but unfortunately piled it too close to the rear door of the old elec- tric light building on Lamb street, with the result that the building caught fire. The fire department was called out and they quickly extin- guished the flames with the chemical apparatus. The damage was small. ——Twenty-nine petitions are on file for citizenship papers for the reg- ular term of naturalization court, which will be held next Monday. This does not include some five or six oth- er petitions which were called for a hearing at the last naturalization court, but continued because the péti- ioners for some reason or other failed to appear. These petitions will ‘be valid next Monday, if the petitioners | appear with their proper vouchers and witnesses. ——During the progress of a severe rain and thunder storm which swept over lower Bald Eagle valley last Thursday evening lightning struck the barn on the Nathaniel Pletcher farm, in Howard township, setting it on fire with the result that it was burned to the ground. All the stock was gotten out but quite a number of farm imple- Spring Mills meeting will be held at : ments were destroyed with a quantity of grain and feed. Mr. Pletcher esti- mates his loss at about $4,000, with : only $1,200 insurance. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Col- lier, of Harrisburg, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Hazel Collier, to John Gray Glenn, of Brooklyn. The bride to be is a graduate of the Central High school, Harrisburg, and Goucher Col- lege, Baltimore, having received her degree at the latter institution on Monday of this week. The bride- groom elect is the second son of the late Rev. George M. Glenn, of Centre county. He is a graduate of Dickin- son Seminary and Wesleyan Universi- ty, and is an instructor in the Poly- technic preparatory country day school, in Brooklyn, where he has been living with his mother. A Tack Fiend Again at Large. Tacks, tacks, tacks, not the kind of tax that Governor Pinchot has been so insistent on soaking on the already over-burdened public but the kind that plays the devil with automobile tires, were in evidence by the hun- dreds on High street, Bellefonte, yes- terday morning. The tacks were of the bill poster or roofing variety, five- eighths of an inch long, and literally covered the street from the eastern side of High street bridge to the rail- road. Inasmuch as the tacks were scattered broadcast, they could not have gotten there by accident but were undoubtedly the work of some vandal who sowed them on the street with evil, intent. A year or two ago tacks of a simi- lar variety were scattered broadcast at the entrance to one of the leading Bellefonte garages, but the culprit who did the job was never detected. Just who the vicious individual is that scattered the tacks on High street may be hard to determine, as he evi- dently did the job in the small hours of the night when the streets were ab- solutely deserted. But he made a good job of it, as a number of hand- fuls of tacks were picked up yester- day morning. Every effort should be made to determine how the tacks got on the street, and if it develops that they were thrown there with malicious intent, and the perpetrator of the out- rage can be discovered, he should be dealt with according to law. Abandoned Baby Girl found at Clay- ton Walters Home. Somewhere in Centre county, and presumably within a radius of a few miles of Bellefonte, is a woman de- | wednesday, after a two week's visit here void of all human instincts, a woman | who deliberately abandoned her sup- posedly three weeks old infant to the tender mercies of strangers, and the child is now being cared for at the Bellefonte hospital. The baby girl was found in bed at the home of Mr. Clayton Walters, near Axe Mann, last Wed- nesday evening, and how it got there, and who left it, is a mystery. Miss Walters avers that the only time dur- ing the day that she was out of the house was while she was milking the cows in the evening. At that time both the front and rear doors of the house were open, so that it was easy for any one to gain admittance. On the evening in question Mrs. Wallace White went to the Walters home just about the time the latter finished her evening work. The iwo women then went out on the front porch and sat down for a nice, neigh- borly chat. While sitting there Mrs. White remarked that she heard a ba- by crying but Miss Walters scoffed at the idea because there “wasn’t a baby near the house.” A little later, when Mrs. White got up to go home, she again heard the erying of a child and she insisted in making a search of the house. Miss Walters secured a can- dle and the two women went up stairs, and searched all the bedrooms but the spare room without success. The door of the spare room was shut but they opened it and looked in, and there on the bed, lay a baby. All it had on was a napkin, band and a little sack. No other clothing of any kind was in evidence. The child was evidently hungry and the two women prepared some milk and fed it, then called a physician. He examined the baby and gave it as his opinion that the little girl was about three weeks old, and perfectly normal. In order to give it every care possible the physician took it to the Bellefonte hospital, where the | child is getting along all right. Up to this writing not the least clue has been obtained as to the babe’s parent- age or how it was smuggled into the Walter’s home. Over a Thousand Kiddies Attend Annual Picnic. Over a thousand kiddies were guests of their big brothers, members of the. Bellefonte Lodge of Elks, at the sec- ond annual kiddies day at Hecla park yesterday. When the registration closed on Monday evening just 956 | children had their names on the roll at the Elks home, but the gathering was not confined to that number, as every child who reported at the Elks yesterday morning was taken, and while no official count was made it is estimated that the crowd numbered more than a thousand. In fact the Elks had secured 900 caps for the oc- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —NMiss Jeannette Wier, of Freeport, Pa., is a house guest of her uncle, A. G. Mor- ris and his daughter, Miss Lida. —Mrs. H. B. Mallory returned to Altoona with her sister, Mrs. Coxey, nd two broth- ers, Curtis and M. R. Johnson. —Mrs. Glen Sutherland came to Belle- fonte from Pittsburgh, two weeks ago, for an indefinite stay in Bellefonte with her ' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hartswick. —Mrs. G. Murray Andrews is again in Bellefonte, having entirely recovered from her recent illness, during which time she was under treatment in Philadelphia. -—Mrs. James McCafferty, who had been with her children in Harrisburg and Wil- mington, Del, has returned to Bellefonte, expecting to make this her home in the future. —Miss Isabella Hill, an instructor in English at the Bellefonte Academy, re- turned to her home at Norwich, Conn., a week ago, to spend the summer vacation with her mother. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris and their two sons, Alexander and Robert Jr., are contemplating going to Kennebunk Port, Maine, to spend July and August, at Mrs. Morris’ former home. —Mrs. A. Howard Tarbert and her small daughter, Audrey Anne, left yester- day to return to their home at York, fol- lowing a two week’s visit here with Mrs. Tarbert’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Coxey. —Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Seibert are in Phil- adelphia, having gone down to attend the fortieth reunion of Dr. Seibert’s class, in the medical school of the University of Pennsylvania, to be held there tomorrow. —Dr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Glenn, of Bradford, with their daughter and grand- child were among those who were back to State for commencement, and for a short visit at Mrs. Glenn's former home, at Boalsburg. —Mrs. Satterfield has been entertaining Mrs. Bailey, of New Castle, during the past week. Mrs. Bailey came here from Carlisle, where she had been attending the Dickin- son College commencement, her son being a member of the class of 23. —Mrs. Charles Heisler will sell her household goods on the 30th of June, and leave immediately afterward for a visit with the different members of her family, before going to make her home perma- nently with her sister in Beaver Falls. —Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Sample and their son Edgar drove to Centre county last week from Bethlehem, for a ten day’s vis- it with Mrs. Sample’s sisters, Mrs. Philip Foster, of State College, and Mrs. G. Fred Musser, of Bellefonte. The return drive will be made Saturday. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore, of Phila- delphia, left Saturday on a trip across the continent, intending to spend some time with their daughter, Mrs. W. H. Dahl and her family, at Minneapolis; with Mr. Moore's parents, at Missoula, Montana, and with friends on the Pacific coast. —Mrs. George M. Glenn will return to Halfmoon valley early in the week, to spend the summer with her sister, Miss Esther Gray, and her son, Randolph F. Glenn. Mrs. Glenn has been in Brooklyn during the winter with her son John, an instructor in the Polytechnic preparatory ! school. —Mildred Lentz was a guest for a week of LaRue Schaeffer, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Schaeffer, returning to Harrisburg Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lentz and their daughter Mildred have arranged to leave tomerrow for a casion and there were not enough to | summer visit at Sturgis, Mich., expecting cover the craniums of the boys and to be gone until in July. girls. The beautiful, sunshiny morning brought the children out bright and early, in fact some of them were on hand before seven o'clock, although the hour for starting to the park was 8:30. Seven of the big busses of the Emerick Motor company had been commandeered to carry the children to the park, and a large number of pri- vately-owned cars were used, but it in order to safely convey all the youngsters to the park. Once there bedlam broke loose. ~ A large number of Elks went down as guardians of the elder of the children while the services of a dozen or more women were secured to look after the smaller tots. The Odd Fellows band enliven- ed the gathering with a very gener- ous supply of music. The Elks pre- sented each one of the children with an airplane balloon as mementoes of the day. The noon luncheon was prepared and served by the kitchen committee of the Elks and included minced ham sandwiches, fruit, ice cream and cake and all the lemonade the children could drink. : At 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon the Elks’ flag day exercises were held at the park with all the children paying close attention. The address was de- livered by Rev. M. DePui Maynard, of the Episcopal church. ——Two weeks ago the “Watch- man” published an item relative to the burning of an Overland car on the highway at Rock Springs, in which it was stated that the car had been “gone over” in the Rossman garage only a few minutes previous and turn- ed out as all right. We have since learned that the car, which was a Studebaker and not an Overland, had not been inside the Rossman garage and had not been gone over at all. The driver did stop outside the garage and get two quarts of oil, but nothing more. This explanation is made be- cause of the fact that it is not the wish of the editor to have any item construed in a way that might reflect on any man or the business ir which he is engaged, and we have every rea- son to believe that Mr. Rossman and his assistants are capable and enter- prising workmen who, when turning a car out as all right, know that it is right. The Lauderbach-Zerby compa- ny is putting a concrete floor in its Bellefonte wholesale store, which is built over the race leading to the Gam- ble mill. Wood floors last but a short time in the building owing to the con- tinual dampness from the water in the race. —Fred Gingerich, who holds a good posi- tion with the Clearfield Trust company, with his wife, and Miss Nancy Rhinesmith. also an employee of the Clearfield Trust company, as guest, motored to Bellefonte on Sunday, Miss Rhinesmith spending the | day at the home of her uncle and aunt, ‘Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk, while Mr. and Mrs. Gingerich visited relafives at Curtin. —DMiss Adaline Olewine was a motor guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gilliland, of : : State College, on a drive, Wednesday. to was necessary to make several trips . Dauphin county, where they joined a camping party for a week. During Miss Olewine’s absence, Mrs. John Olewine will have with her for a part of the time, her niece and nephew, Angeline and Robert Reed, who are visiting with their grand- mother, Mrs. Bottorf, at Lemont. —Miss Mabel Allison drove to Bellefonte Wednesday of last week, to meet her aunt, Mrs. Martha Higman, upon her arrival here from Chicago, to spend the summer at Spring Mills. Miss Allison has also as a house guest another aunt, Mrs. F. K. Fow- ler, who came here with her niece from Toronto, a month or more ago, with plans for visiting in Centre county until July, at which time she will return to her home at ‘Whittier, Cal. —Mrs. F. E. Wieland and her daughter, ' Miss Mildred, .nstructor in English in the Spring Mills vocational school, spent a part of the day in Bellefonte last Saturday. Miss Wieland was doing some shopping in anticipation of a trip east, to attend the wedding of a friend. Her school closing today, she will leave tomorrow for Phila- delphia, and upon her return will at once enter the teacher’s summer training school at State College. —W. R. North, dean of Dickinson Semi- nary, and Mrs. North, will spend July and August in Bellefonte, with Mrs. North's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey, while preparing for their contemplated trip to China. Mr. North has volunteered for five vear's service, and will go out under the board of foreign missions of the Methodist church, to teach in one of the colleges of the church, their final destination being sixteen hundred miles inland. —Dr. William 8. and Dr. Nannie Glenn, of State College, with Dr, and Mrs. Reuben H. Meek, of Avis, and Dr. M. A. Kirk, of Bellefonte, as driving guests, left State College early yesterday morning for Johnstown, where they will attend the State convention of Kclectics in session there. From Johnstown they have planned to drive to Milwaukee, for the National convention of the same great body of phy- sicians, expecting to be gone for ten days or two weeks. —Charles Hughes, with his daughter and son, Virginia and James, and their aunt, Miss Daisie Graham, all left Bellefonte Wednesday, on a trip east. Miss Graham and her niece went directly to New York, intending to go from there to Annapolis, while Mr. Hughes and his son went to at- tend the former's class reunion at Prince- ton, expecting to join the others later. The children will remain in Maryland all summer with their aunt, Mrs. Frank Bas- sett; Miss Graham will return home the first of August and Mr. Hughes will go from there to look after his summer work. —Miss Bethel Cottrell, of Erie, Pa., was the guest of her brother, Thane Cottrell, at the Brant House, over Sunday. —Miss Hibbs, of Norristown, arrived in Bellefonte Wednesday, to be here a part of the summer with her cousin, Mrs. E. H. Richard. —Miss Evaline Troup, one of the Bell Telephone operators, will leave tomorrow on an eight days’ vacation, which she ex- pects to spend with her father’s family at Hanover. —Mr. and Mrs. G. Oscar Gray motored over to Philipsburg on Monday, taking home their aunt, Mrs. Charles Smith, who had been their guest since Wednesday of last week. —Mrs. Ivan Walker, who motored to Philadelphia with Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Foster, following their visit here with Mrs. Foster's sister, Mrs. Chaney Hicklen, re- turned home Monday. —Mrs. H. H. Stiles, of Altoona, and Mrs. Mary Newlin, of Spruce Creek, who were in Snow Shoe Wednesday, organizing a missionary society in the Presbyterian Sunday school of that place, spent the night in Bellefonte, guests of Miss Mary H. Linn. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zimmerman, Misses Amy Saunders, Alice Ryan and Nellie McAllister, composed a party from Shamokin who attended the State College commencement and spent some time the past week in Bellefonte as guests of Mrs. John Smith. . ; —Mrs. Clement Dale and daughter, Miss Marian Ethel Dale, spent a week in Bal- timore attending the thirty-second annual commencement of Goucher College, of which Miss Dale is a graduate. The class this year included one hundred and sixty- eight young women. —Miss Mary Blanchard, with her niece, Jean Blanchard as her guest, will leave Monday, to spend the remainder of June in Atlantic City, while Mrs. John Blanch- ard will accompany Mr. Blanchard to New York, next week, to see him sail, going from there to visit her mother, Mrs. Mer- riman. —Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes returned Thurs- day from Easton, where she had been for Lafayette College commencement, her yoirngest son, Thomas, being a member of the class of 23, Mrs. Edmund P. Hayes, who has been in Bellefonte with Mr. Hayes’ mother since February, will leave today to join her husband in Pittsburgh. —Minot IL. Willard, son of Mrs. D. I. Willard, is home for a visit of several weeks. Minot enlisted in the Navy in July, 1922, and after completing the course in the Yeoman school at Hampton Roads, was transferred to the. U. 8. 8. Bridgport, at present in the Boston navy yards, where he expects to remain for several months. —Mrs. C. J. McHugh, of Pittsburgh, came to Bellefonte yesterday from Tyrone, where she had been visiting for a week with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lukenbach. While here, Mrs. McHugh will be a guest of her sister, Miss Emma Montgomery, who but recently returned to Bellefonte from Pittsburgh, where she had spent sev- eral years with her sister. —Bruce Hagan, who came east from Detroit on the 3rd of June, with the body of his wife, who was buried at Farmers Mills, left here Tuesday to go t6 Shamo- kin, from where he will return to Michigan. Mr. Hagan's ten days spent in Centre county were divided between his parents at Farmers Mills, and Mr. and Mrs. Mer- rill: Hagan, and his sister, Miss Blanche, in Bellefonte. —Mrs. Newell McCalmont, of Pittsburgh, and her two daughters, Betty and Isabella, are spending a week in Bellefonte, guests at the home of Mr. McCalmont’s sister. Mrs. John Hartswick. Mrs. MeCalmont came in for the commencement at Penn State, her daughter Dorothy being a mem- ber of the class of 23. When returning home they will be accompanied by Mrs. McCalmont’s son, a Freshman at College. —Miss Florence Finnegan was called to New Jersey Monday, owing to the illness of her mother, who had a stroke of paraly- sis at the home of her younger daughter, Mrs. Burns, at Nutley. Miss Finnegan had been visiting with Mrs. Brouse for two months while recovering from a nervous breakdown and had accepted a position as stenographer at State College, working but a part of a day when she was summoned home. —Relatives here for the funeral of the late Mrs. Thompson Barnhart, Wednesday, included Mrs. Charles Thomas, of Ensley, Alabama; Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Barnhart and daughter Gail, of Wilkinsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Irvin, of Canton, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Barnhart and their two chil- dren, Madaline and Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Barnhart, of Braddock; Conrad Lesch, of Philadelphia, and Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Lesch, of Altoona. —George T. Bush will leave today for Boston to attend the triennial convention of the Society of the Sons of the Revolu- tion for the United States, which will be- gin on Sunday, June 17th, with commem- orative services of Bunker Hill day and continue for two days, to be followed with trips to Plymouth Rock and other adjacent points of Revolutionary interest. Ms. Bush is one of the twelve delegates se- lected from Pennsylvania to represent this State. —Mr. and Mrs. James F. Fortney, of Amboy, Ill, arrived in Centre county on Tuesday, from Washington, for a two week’s visit back home with Mr. Fortney’s sister, Mrs. Patterson, at Boalsburg, and Mrs. Fortney’s relatives in Bellefonte, she being a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Noll. Mr. and Mrs. Fortney left home the first of March, spending the four inter- vening months in travel through the south and along the eastern coast, arriving at Washington for the Shriner's convention. They remained there for a visit, coming from there to Bellefonte. Mr. Fortney left Centre county twenty-nine years ago, this being his third visit back. Additional personal news on page 4, Col. 4. A —————— fy —————— Notice. I respectfully desire to inform my customers of the removal of my store from Allegheny street to the room on High street formerly occupied by D. I. Willard & Son. A. E. SCHAD. Plumbing, Heating, Spouting, Roof Painting. 68-23-4t* Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - - $1.20 Corn - - - - - - 90 Rye - - - - - - 50 Oats - - - - - - 50 Barley = = « « ao 60 Buckwheat - - - a5