Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 20, 1923, Image 8

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    Demorvaic; atc.
Bellefonte, Pa., July 20, 1923.
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
More than half of the school
children’s summer vacation is over
and the school bells will be ringing
before they realize it.
The condition of Mr. Jared
Harper, who was taken to the Belle-
fonte hospital on Tuesday for an op-
eration, was reported as fairly com-
fortable yesterday.
—— Henry Noll’s aeroplane is prov-
ing quite a diversion for residents of
Pleasant Gap and vicinity, and every
evening can be seen sailing through
the air over the town.
——Leonard Hollabaugh, of Phil-
ipsburg, was brought to the Centre
county jail on Tuesday to answer to
the charge of desertion and non-sup-
port preferred by his wife.
; George Harpster is suffering
from a partially crushed foot, the re-
sult of dropping a large piece of iron
on it while at work Wednesday, at the
American Lime and Stone plant.
——The Albright Brotherhood of
the Evangelical church will hold a
festival and cake walk on the match
factory lawn, on Phoenix avenue, Fri-
day evening, July 27th. The public is
invited. Music by the Odd Fellows
band.
——Tryop B, of the 52nd Machine
gun squadron, will arrive home to-
morrow morning from its two week’s
camp at Mt. Gretna. While in camp
Herbert S. Miller was appointed cap-
tain of the troop and Harry E. Sager
first lieutenant.
——Joseph Katz, who several weeks
ago sustained a broker leg while play-
ing baseball, has so far recovered that
he left the hospital last week and is
able to entertain his young friends at
the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. S. Katz, on High street.
The next meeting of the Sus-
quehanna trap sheoters’ league will
be held at Northumberland on Wed-
nesday, July 25th. The State College
team, which won the championship in
1915 and 1916, is Centre county’s only
representative in the league.
The Odd Fellows band is in
great demand this summer for picnics
and festivals and every week has two
or more engagements to fill. Belle-
fonte people, however, miss their
weekly concerts which were so grati-
fying the past two or three years.
Centre county bank building became
quite active on Tuesday afternoon
and sent out its clamorous tones for
almost an hour. It is the only real ac-
tivity that has been manifest to the
public since that institution closed its
doors over fourteen months ago.
Next Wednesday afternoon the
Red Cross Well-Baby clinic will be for
children of the African M. E. church.
All the church denominations have
had an afternoon and, while the quo-
ta was far below what it should have
been, quite a number of new patients
were thus added to the regular list of
clinic patients.
The Spencer shows which held
forth on the old fair grounds all of
last week were not as well patronized
as the carnival held here a few weeks
ago under the auspices of the American
Legion, but it probably had the effect
of keeping out of the town the much
larger carnival company originally
scheduled to show here this week. The
Spencer shows left on Sunday for Re-
novo. > :
The members of the Woman’s
Auxiliary of the clerks and letter car-
rier’s union, of Bellefonte, entertain-
ed all the employees of the Bellefonte
postoffice at a chicken and waffle din-
ner at the G. E. Haupt place, last
Thursday evening. The honor guest
was postmaster John L. Knisely. The
dinner was a success in every particu-
lar and every one present had a most
enjoyable time. : 4
——Prof. J. Orvis Keller, head of
the department of industrial engineer-
ing at The Pennsylvania: State Col-
lege, is preparing to give a short
course in industrial organization and
administration at that institution
from August 27th to September 8th.
It is designed especially for executive
heads of industrial enterprises and
will be part of the usual summer
course training. " :
Bricklayers are now at work on
the walls for the new Heverly build-
ing on the northwest corner of the
Diamond, while a force of men are
still digging out the foundation for
the Dr. Parrish building. The work
on the entire block, however, is not
progressing very fast and unless
greater speed is made within the next
few months the snow flakes will fall
before the buildings are enclosed.
——The Hazel-Schaeffer reunion
The old burglar alarm on the !
will this year be held at Grange park, !
Centre Hall, on Thursday, August
23rd. The reunion was originally
scheduled to be held at Madisonburg
in June but on the date set it was im-
possible to get into the grove where
the gatherings have always been held,
consequently it had to be postponed,
and the committee of arrangements
has now decided to hold it at Grange.
park.
Wetzler’s band of Milesburg
is planning to hold a big festival
on Saturday, August 25th, at which
time they will give away a Ford tour-
ing car. The band is in need of addi-
tional equipment and has taken this
means of securing money with which
to get it.. A big ball game will be held
at Milesburg the same afternoon un-
der the auspices of the band, and in
the evening there will be a festival
and cake walk.
ANOTHER BIG REAL ESTATE
DEAL. :
Decker Bros. Buy Garman Property,
Corner High and Spring Streets.
The Decker Bros., agents for the
Chevrolet automobile, closed a deal on
Monday for the purchase of the Gar-
man property on High and Spring
streets, the sale price being $22,500.
They will be given possession on Au-
gust first and as soon thereafter as’
possible will start work on the erec-
tion of a two story fireproof garage,
on the vacant lot extending from
Spring street back to the rear of the
McClain block.
While only tentative plans for the
garage have been made it is impossi-
ble to give details of the building, but
it will be constructed of concrete and
brick and made as absolutely fireproof
as possible. The main entrance to the
garage will, of course, be on Spring
street, but a rear entrance will also
be provided in the rear of the Holz
property.
Inasmuch as the present tenants in
the Garman building hold yearly leas-
es the purchasers will not interfere
with their possession until next
spring. At that time the building will
be remodeled, the lower floor to be
converted into a show room and office
space while the second and third floors
will probably be continued as apart-
ments. A big elevator will be install-
ed in the garage proper and the sec-
ond story used for the storage of new
cars.
The Decker Bros. only a year ago
purchased their present garage on
south Water street but their business
has outgrown the capacity of that
building and they were compelled to
lock for another location. For a time
they had the Valentine property on
the northeast corner of High and
Spring streets in view but finally de-
cided on the Garman property as the
more advantageous and better suited
to their purposes.
They have sold many cars since lo-
cating in Bellefonte and on Monday
and Tuesday unloaded four carloads of
Chevrolet coupes and sedans which
‘will enable them to make delivery of
some of their orders which now total
between thirty and forty cars.
Potato Growers to Make Auto Tour
of Inspection.
Potato growers of Centre county
are planning to “strike” on Thursday,
July 26th, and join with the farmers
of ten other counties in an auto tour
and potato field day. The trip will in-
clude stops at representative fields of
spuds in Blair, Centre and Hunting-
don counties, a basket lunch in a sha-
dy nook, and will wind up with an in-
spection of the potato fields at The
Pennsylvania State College.
The delegation will gather at the
John B. Campbell farm, two miles
east of Tyrone, at nine o’clock. There
a potato and alfalfa rotation will be
viewed. Pleasant View farm is the
next. stop where the results of using |
acid phosphate fertilizer will be seen.
The famous “hog and potato” two
year rotation will claim the attention
of the group at the Milo Campbell
farm, near Baileyville. Mr. Campbell
uses the rotation scheme of ten acres
of “spuds,” followed by ten acres of
“porkers.”
LUNCH IN SHADY GROVE.
By noon the string of autos are ex-
pected to arrive at the farm of A. C.
Kepler, near Pine Grove Mills. Thir-
ty acres of potatoes, the largest acre-
age in Central Pennsylvania, will be
the attraction. Basket lunch, with
plenty of shade and spring water, will
halt the tourists for a short time in
the Kepler grove.
The tour will wind up at the Col-
lege farms where seed source tests,
variety tests and other experimental
work of interest to every potato grow-
er will be inspected and explained by
‘E. L. Nixon, the “potato wizard” of
Pennsylvania. Reports indicate that
large delegations will come from Mif-
flin, Union and Bedford counties, and
auto loads are expected from Fayette,
Jefferson and Clinton.
Every member of the Centre coun-
ty potato club is planning for this op-
portunity to learn something about
potato growing and to get better ac-
quainted with the boys.
Two Injured in Auto Wreck.
.‘On- Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs.
Sheldon Haines and two little children,
and Lee Burkland, of Ridgway, were
victims of an auto wreck near Pine
Grove Mills when their Ford coupe
skidded on the wet highway and col-
lided with another car. Mrs. Haines
had both collar bones broken and Mr.
Burkland was injured internally, while
Mr. Haines and two children escaped
injury.
Mr. Haines and Mr. Burkland are
agents for the Fuller Brush company
and had been in Altoona attending a
meeting of the district agents held
there the latter part of the week.
Leaving Altoona on Sunday it was
their intention to motor to Wilkes-
Barre and were on their way when
they met with the disastrous accident.
Their car was completely wrecked but
all were brought to Bellefonte and the
injured taken to the Bellefonte hospi-
tal. Mrs. Haines was able to leave
that institution on Tuesday and oc-
company Mr. Haines and their two
children to her home in Nanticoke.
Mr. Burkland’s injuries, however, are
of such a character that he is still un-
der treatment at the hospital, though
his condition is not regarded as crit-
ical.
The Haines family formerly lived in
Bellefonte, Mr. Haines being the man-
ager of the Western” Union tele-
graph office prior to accepting an
agency for the Fuller Brush company.
——Ladies’ Phoenix and Holeproof
silk hose, $2.25 grade, reduced to
$1.37.—Sim the Clothier. 28-1t
——One hundred and sixty school
teachers taking the summer course at
State College took a trip to Philips-
burg and Morrisdale, last Saturday, in
motor busses and cars. At the latter
place they went down the slope of the
Cunard coal mine and took first hand
lessons in mining. The party was
composed of young men and women,
and the latter showed no hesitation
in going down the mine slope.
——The next big gathering will be
the annual picnic of the Associated
Business Men of Bellefonte, which will
be held at Hecla park on Thursday,
August 16th. Ordinarily this is one
of the largest gatherings of the picnic
season and the committee in charge is
arranging a very attractive program
for the day, which will include base-
ball, swimming, boating and other
sports. Keep the date in mind and
help swell the crowd when the day ar-
rives.
——On Friday afternoon Louise
Peron, four year old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Peron, and Harry
Ganoe, six year old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Ganoe, both of Houtzdale,
were coasting down a hill in their lit-
tle express wagon. At a street cross-
ing they ran into an automobile and
the little girl died within an hour of
the injuries sustained while the boy
is in the Philipsburg hospital, serious-
ly, though not fatally, injured. The
driver of the car was held blameless
for the accident.
——Several weeks ago the “Watch-
man” told of an old bear and two cubs
that were frequently seen in the
neighborhood of Runville, but it seems
that these are not all the denizens of
the forest that are domiciled in that
locality. Within the past week or ten
days a huge bobcat was seen prowling
around in the edge of the forest while
rabbits are unusually plentiful and al-
most as tame as house cats. A good
sized flock of young wild turkeys has
also been seen and quite a number of
pheasants.
——Ladies’ Phoenix and Holeproof
silk hose, $1.75 grade, reduced to
$1.15.—Sim the Clothier. 28-1t
In these days when most young
people spend a large portion of their
time planning vacations, picnics and
about everything else but work it is
real refreshing to hear that there are
a few old-timers left who are not
afraid of work, and among this num-
ber ‘can be mentioned our life-long
friend, Capt. W. H. Fry, the “Watch-
man’s” loquacious Pine Grove Mills
i correspondent. The captain was 81
i years old on Wednesday and spent the
day in the wheat field helping to gar-
ner his crop of golden grain. More
; than that, he has made a full hand in
{ the haying every day and at night
| responded to calls for his services as
a veterinary. Of course, nine out of
ten people in Centre county know
Capt. Fry almost as well as we do, but
it. is worthy of more than passing
mention that at his age he is able to
make “a hand” in the harvest field and
at anything else that comes his way.
young in body as he is in spirit.
————————————————
——The announcement last Satur-
‘day that Ohio stockholders had peti-
tioned the court at Columbus for the
' appointment of a receiver for the R.
L. Dollings Co., stockbrokers of Ohio
and Pennsylvania, has been cause for
i considerable speculation among the
i thousands of stockholders all over the
The company has a branch
| country.
! office in Altoona, and has been repre-
| sented in Centre county by Edward
B. Felty. Just how much stock was
| placed among Centre county people is
not known but it is rumored quite a
number of people have investments
with the company. July 15th was reg-
| ular dividend day but instead of divi-
dend checks investors received a let-
ter setting forth in brief the nature of
the action taken against the company
"in the Ohio courts and that under the
| circumstances payment of dividends
had been deferred until the court act-
ed upon the petition for the appoint-
ment of a receiver. A hearing on the
petition will be held in Columbus to-
day.
——Ladies’ Phoenix and Holeproof
silk hose, $1.50 grade, reduced to 99
cents.—Sim the Clothier. 28-1t
——The three seventeen ton trans-
formers of the Keystone Power cor-
poration have been safely landed on
their concrete foundations at the big
transforming station being erected
along the road between Bellefonte and
Roopsburg. Their transfer from the
railroad to their permanent location
was slow and laborious work, owing
to their extreme weight and unusual
size but was accomplished without an
accident or mishap of any kind. While
the transformers compose the inte-
gral part of the new station there is
an abundance of other attachments to
install before the wires can be con-
nected which will give Bellefonte and
outlying sections the additional ad-
vantage of a current supply direct
from the Warrior Ridge plant of the
Penn Central Electric company. When
this is accomplished, however, electric-
ity users will be safeguarded against
any accident at the Milesburg plant of
the Keystone Power corporation which
might result in the shutting off of the
current,
————— pr —
———AIll ladies’ silk hose greatly re-
Sim the Clothier. 28-1t
duced during our mid-season sale.— |
Bellefonte Chautauqua Will Open Its
Sessions Tomorrow.
Chautauqua will open its regular
summer engagement in Bellefonte to-
morrow (Saturday) with the two
o'clock session, and a splendid pro-
gram of worth while events is in store
a great institution covering thousands
of cities and towns throughout the
of the most potent influences for civic
betterment and community improve-
ment existing today. The Bellefonte
engagement of five days should have
the support of every man, woman and
child who has the best interests of the
town and community at heart, and who
is vitally concerned in all agencies
that uplift and tend toward progress.
The program this season will bring
to our town some of the very best mu-
sical, dramatic, and platform talent in
the lyceum world. The entertainment
features will be bright and clean and
cheerful, while any one of the lec-
tures will be worth the price of the
whole season ticket. The show,
“Crossed Wires,” is billed as a dra-
matic triumph, and the parts will be
carried by seasoned players. In this
varied program the people of the town
and county will have the opportunity
of hearing and seeing talent that oth-
erwise they likely would never have
the privilege of enjoying.
The sale of season tickets will pos-
itively close at two o’clock Saturday,
and there will be no tickets sold at cut
prices. If you buy a season ticket
you will be helping meet the guaran-
tee, but if you do not and there is a
deficit then that amount will have to
be paid equally by the seventy-five
public spirited citizens who obligated
themselves for the whole amount of
qua possible in Bellefonte this year.
Single admissions paid at the gate do
some tickets. The little town of Pic-
ture Rocks, Lycoming county, has sup-
ported an $1800 Chautauqua for many
years, and the village has only 600 in-
habitants. Why can’t Bellefonte, the
town that boasts of its culture and
traditions, also support this same pro-
ject to the extent of $1300?
The following persons have been
canvassing the town and will be glad
to see that you are supplied with the
tickets you need: E. F. Young, J. D.
Gunsallus, Earle Teaman, William
Osman, Linette Billett, Elizabeth
. Hartman, Ruth Teaman, Eleanor Get-
'tig, Edith Houser, Nell Gehret, Mrs.
Ward Fisher, Mrs. M. C. Hansen, Mrs.
Hornbaker, Mrs.
ranft, Lois Foreman, Verna Ardery,
Mrs. Donald Gettig, Mrs. Harry
Charleson, Evaline Troup, Mrs. Nevin
Cole, Ada Marshall, Esther Johnson,
Hazel Johnson, Helen Boyer, Helen
' Robb, Winifred Gates, Catherine Love,
i Louise Taylor, Martha Haines, Mae
"Taylor, Mary Musser, Mrs. Clarence
Williams, Mrs. Reed Steely, Mrs. Le-
‘Roy Keeler, Miss Katherine Allison,
Mrs. Louis Schad, Mrs. John Stein,
Blanche McGarvey, Margaret Dunlap,
‘ Mary Shelton, Mrs. Max Gamble, Al-
ice Waite, Mrs. Harry Garbrick, Miss
Crawford, Coleville; Mrs. J. R. Bar-
lett, Pleasant Gap; Mrs. Fox, Union-
ville; Kenneth Noll, Zion.
I" At a meeting of the guarantors and
the reports showed tickets sold to the
amount of $524.00. As this is not half
I the guarantee a strenuous campaign
| for the sale of tickets will have to be
I'carried on if the entire guarantee is
to be raised by noontime tomorrow.
A CALL FOR JUNIORS..
i The junior Chautauqua superintend-
lent has issued a call for all children
| who wish to be enrolled with the jun-
tiors to assemble at the High school
building this (Friday) evening at 6:45 |
'o’clock for the ' junior parade: As
' many children as can conveniently do
so are asked to appear in costume.
| The Odd Fellows band will lead the
: parade. 33 }
Good Football Material Assured for
Bellefonte Academy.
The athletic committee of the Belle-
fonte Academy will soon have the
football schedule for the coming sea-
son completed. The opening game
will be on Hughes field and will be
with either the Altoona Indians or the
Bellwood eleven.
Coach Carl G. Snavely has already
secured the bulk of his squad from
which the first team will be chosen.
The boys rank among the best athletes
in New York State, Ohio and Pennsyl-
vania, among the number being Black-
burn, O’Neill, Breen, Mosko, O’Brien
and Archibald, veteran players who
will be the nucleus around which the
team will be built. The list of new
"boys will include some widely known
"High school athletes and young play-
"ers from several of the best independ-
ent teams in western Pennsylvania.
! The opening game will be plenty
hard enough to test the metal of the
new candidates and will determine the
"lineup for the second game which will
| be with the Penn Freshmen, at Phila-
delphia. The latter team has always
been considered as the hardest fresh-
men team in the country to beat. A
victory over them, which is a possibil-
ity, would mean a great deal for the
Bellefonte Academy, probably more
than any other game to be played.
——The regular movie fans, who
never miss a night at the Scenic, see
all the high-class motion pictures
shown at that popular place of enter-
tainment. If you are not a regular
you probably miss the very pictures
you would most appreciate. Only the
best films obtainable are shown at the
Scenic, and every evening’s program
is worth seeing.
for these who attend. Chautauqua is |
United States and Canada, and is one |
the guarantee so as to make Chautau- |
not help make up the guarantee. |
Play fair with your town and buy
William Hurley, |
Mrs. W. P. Ard, Mrs. Horace Hart-'
i NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Mrs. But’ erworth came in from Wil-
kinsburg Tuesday, for a visit home with’
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Knisely.
—Miss Ida Greene went to Erie this
her brother, Elmer
until the early part
i week to visit with
i Greene and his family,
of August.
—Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Derstine and two
daughters, of Ambridge, Pa., are spend-
ing their summer vacation with friends in
Bellefonte.
—Miss Celia Haupt and her nephew,
Richard Fox, of Lock Haven, have been
spending a part of the week in Snow Shoe,
having gone out on Monday.
—Ruth, the elder daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George Miller, went to Williamsport
the early part of last week for a visit, as
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Mallalieu.
—Mrs. A. B. Sutherland, of Huntingdon,
spent the week-end with friends in Belle-
fonte and at State College, while her hus-
band, who is steward at the Huntingdon
reformatory, was in Harrisburg on a busi-
ness trip.
—Mrs. Della Miller, with her three
daughters, Mrs. Calvert, of Williamsport;
Mrs. Wetzler, of Milesburg, and Mrs. Guy
Lyons, of Bellefonte, and their children,
are occupying the Potter-Hoy hardware
camp, near Curtin, this week.
—August Glinz went to New York last
week, expecting to sail in the near future
for Hamburg, Germany, where he has
some property interests demanding his at-
tention. In the meantime Henry Kline will
, continue in charge of the Garman house.
—~Carroll Chipley is with her mother,
Mrs. Gregg Curtin, having come to Belle-
fonte at the close of school in June, in-
tending to remain here until September.
Carroll is at school in Philadelphia, living
during that time at her mother’s former
home.
—Miss Theressa Shields, assistant su-
| perintendent of the Cottage State hospital,
| Philipsburg, spent several days last week
at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
, Michael Shields, in Bellefonte, and on Fri-
day left for New York to take an advanced
course in nursing.
| —Mrs. R. S. Brouse left Tuesday for
Brooklyn, her plans being for a two
month's stay with her daughter, Mrs. F.
W. Topelt, and for Mr. and Mrs. Topelt's
| return to Bellefonte with her in Septem-
ber, at which time they will make their
usual summer visit home.
—Mr. and Mrs. Ira Proudfoot are guests
{ of Mrs. Proudfoot’s sister and brother,
| Miss Mary and Frank Gross, at Axe Mann.
, Mr. and Mrs. Proudfoot came in from Me-
‘ Kees Rocks, Saturday, and after a day's
visit in Altoona, came on here to spend the
remainder of the month in Axe Mann.
—DMiss Betty Lockington, after spending
a short part of her vacation at home with
her parents on east High street, left Sat-
turday for a visit with friends in Philadel-
phia, and with Dr. and Mrs. Brower, at
| Spring City. Miss Lockington is instruc-
(tor in French in the Wellsboro High
school.
—J. E. Gates, of Monongahela City, with
| his three daughters and son, have been oc-
cupying the Masonic camp this week.
| Homer came here from Renovo Friday and
| Spent the week-end with the Calvin Troup
family, while two of the sisters followed
! Monday, the third one arriving in Belle-
| fonte the same day, from Milton.
—DMiss Blanche Hagan is at Oil City for
‘a two week’s visit with her brother Harry.
+ Miss Hagan left Bellefonte Saturday, meet-
| ing her nephew, Harry Jr., at Lock Haven,
4 Who made the trip back home with his aunt.
The boy had been for a visit with his
{ grandfather, John F. Hagan, at Farmers
Mills, and from there had gone to Sha-
mokin.
—Irene Freidman, the elder daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Louis E. Freidman, of New.
York city, who is in Bellefonte with her
grandmother, Mrs. Herman ‘Holz, and her
Truly, despite’ his years, he is still as ticket sellers on Wednesday evening ' son Harry, for the summer, will be joined
here next month by Mrs. Freidman and
her younger daughter, Hermine. Mrs.
| Freidman and her two daughters will then
be guests of Mrs. Holz until the opening
of school.
—Templeton G. Cruse, of Pittsburgh,
with his son, Andrew Cruse and wife, of
New York, were week-end visitors with
friends in Bellefonte. Andrew is a grad-
uate of Annapolis and is au officer on the
Wyoming, although he has been on detach-
ed duty the past six months. He and his
wife were returning from a western trip
and took advantage of a brief extension of
| furlough to stop off in Bellefonte.
—Mrs. James McDonald, of Cleveland,
and her daughter Mary, who had been vis-
iting with friends in Tyrone, came over to
Bellefonte Monday, spending the day here
‘as guests of Miss Celia Haupt. Mrs. Mec-
Donald, before her marriage, was Miss Ella
Utz, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
1 Utz, and was born and lived all her earlier
life here. The visit Monday was Mrs. Me-
Donald's first time back to Bellefonte since
leaving twenty-three years ago.
—Dr. Ellen Culver Potter, of Philadel-
phia, Commissioner of Public Welfare of
Pennsylvania, accompanied by Miss Spen-
cer, head of the child’s welfare depart-
ment, were guests at the Bush house last
Friday night. The two ladies traveled in
one of the Commonwealth's big cars and
were on a trip through this section of the
State taking an official look at the State
institutions, having visited the western
penitentiary at Rockview and going from
here to Laurelton.
—Mrs. Arthur C. Harper and her two
sons, Arthur Jr. and James, came here
from Brooklyn early in the month, to be
with the boy’s aunts, Mrs. A. G. Morris Jr.,
and the Misses Barnhart, during their
week's stay at “The Evergreen,” the Ma-
sonic camp. From Wingate Mrs. Harper
came to Bellefonte for a short visit with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Barn-
hart, expecting to leave Sunday with Mr
Harper, for Scranton, where he is doing
summer work, and from where he will
come tomorrow, for a day’s visit in Belle-
fonte. Mr. Harper and his family have
planned to spend the summer in Scranton.
—Following the family house party en-
tertained by Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Bul-
lock last week, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bul-
lock returned to their home at Akron, Sat-
urday; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Entriken, with
their two children, left Sunday morning to
drive to Parkesburg, where they will spend
a week and thén return to their home at
Belleville, N. J.; while Mrs. Birckhead
Rouse and her children are continuing
their visit, expecting Mr. Rouse to drive
here for them early in August. Katherine
Bullock had been with her sister, Mrs. En-
triken, since school closed and was with
the Entriken family on their drive to Belle-
fonte. Mrs. Bullock’s sister, Mrs. C. E.
Carnahan, and her daughter, of Oakmont,
were also members of the Bullock family
party.
—Mrs. Orrin Williams, of Pittsburgh, is
a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Weaver,
at their home on Mill street.
—The Misses Gussie and Maude Reeder,
of Shamokin, are guests of their cousin,
Mrs. William Bilger and family, on north
Spring street. =
—Mr. and Mrs. Fred Craft and their
small son left in their car, Sunday morn-
ing, for a week's visit at Mr. Craft's for-
mer home in Buffalo.
—Mrs. Donald Gettig and her two chil-
dren have been in Washington, Pa., for a
week or more, guests of Mr. Gettig’s sis-
ter, Mrs. Wynn Davis.
—Mrs. Frank Peek, of East Aurora, N.
Y., arrived in Bellefonte Tuesday after-
noon, called here by the illness of her sis-
ter, Mrs. Benjamin Bradley Jr.
—Mr. Charles F. Beatty, with his two
small daughters, left Tuesday for Pitts-
burgh, where the children will spend some
time as guests of their grandmother.
—Mrs. Joseph Zeigler, of Buffalo, and
Walter Zeigler, of Sunbury, will be guests
of their cousin, Miss Mary McQuistion,
while in Bellefonte for a week-end visit.
—John Marks is arranging to leave Sun-
day on a drive to Somerset county, for
Mrs. Marks and their son Keith, who have
been visiting in Derry and Berlin for
three weeks.
—Betty Stauffer, the elder child of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Stauffer, of Hazleton, has
been with her aunts, the Misses Cooney,
since Miss Margaret Cooney’s return home
two weeks ago.
—Dr. M. A. Kirk is spending the week
with relatives in Clearfield county, his
plans when leaving Tuesday including vis-
its to Kylertown, Clearfield, and his birth-
place in Brady township.
—Mrs. A. O. Furst, with Mr. and Mrs.
John Curtin and several of their children,
will drive to Overbrook this week, for a
week-end visit with Mrs. Furst’s sons, Wil-
liam S., John and Walter.
—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Badger and their
daughter, Miss Anna, will drive to Lewis-
town, Sunday, for a day’s visit with Mrs.
Eby, and to bring home Wilbur Badger,
who has been with Mrs. Eby for two
weeks. :
—Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin and their
son Harry drove in from Pittsburgh yes-
terday to join Betty at her grandmothers,
Mrs. George I". Harris, where Mrs. Curtin
and her two children will spend two
months.
—Mrs. John Dolan, of Philadelphia, is a
guest of her sister, Mrs. James Toner, be-
ing here for the month of July. Mrs. Do-
lan was born and lived all her girlhood life
in Bellefonte and was well known as Miss
Annie Luft.
—Philip Gross, with the Curtis Publish-
ing company, of Philadelphia, arrived home
Sunday, on a leave of absence due to inl
health. Phil will be with his mother, Mrs.
Jacob Gross indefinitely, until his health
justifies him in resuming his work.
—Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Knisely and their
family, of Clearfield, and Mrs. Wilson, of
Johnstown, are home visiting with Mr. and
Mrs. Jacob Knisely. Mrs. Knisely had
been with her daughter in Johnstown for
a week, accompanying Mrs. Wilson to
Bellefonte Tuesday.
—Mrs. Margaret Bayard Bowen, of Can-
ton, Ohio, and her sister, Miss Caroline
Bayard, of Scotland, Pa., arrived in Belle-
fonte Saturday to spend a week or more
here with the many friends of the Bayard
family, both women having been one time
residents of the town.
—Mr. and Mrs. Russell Blair have been
entertaining Mrs. Blair's aunt and cousin,
Miss Mary Bradley, of Bradford, and Gay
Bible, of Philadelphia. Miss Bradley, who
since leaving here has been with her sis-
ter, Mrs. Riley, in Bradford, came to Belle-
fonte Sunday, for the funeral of Mrs. F. P.
Blair, returning home Wednesday.
—Mrs. J. I. Underwood ,of Erie, with her
three daughters, Martha, Edith and Jean,
arrived in Bellefonte yesterday, having
come for their customary summer visit
with the children’s grand-parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Isaac Underwood. From here Mrs.
Underwood and her daughters will go to
Johnstown, for a short stay before return-
ing home.
—Mrs. LeRoy Plumb and Miss Anne Fox,
who have been with their sister, Mrs. How-
ard Gearhart, in Millville, N. J., expect to
return to Bellefonte this week, and upon
the advice of her physician, will bring Mrs.
Gearhart with them, should her condition
permit. Miss Fox went east two weeks
ago, and in addition to her visit at Mill-
ville, has spent several days at Atlantic
City.
—Lee H. Walker, eldest son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. Miles Walker, was an unexpected
arrival in Bellefonte on Wednesday on his
annual summer vacation, a fortnight of
which he will spend at his home here.
Mr. Walker arrived in the States two weeks
ago from Santo Domingo, where he has
been located the past eleven years, but
stopped off in Philadelphia for a minor
operation at the Jefferson hospital.
—Mrs. John M. Keichline, her grand-
daughter, Susanne, and Miss Helen Shel-
lenberger, of Philadelphia, were guests of
Miss Anne Keichline on a drive to Hunt-
ingdon early in the week. The trip was
made to take Mrs. Keichline for a visit to
her son, Dr. John Keichline, while Susanne
was returning home after a month’s visit
in Bellefonte. Miss Shellenberger has been
Miss Keichline’s guest since the middle of
June,
—Among Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Weston’s
guests for the month of July have been
both of their children, Mrs. Philip J. Ha-
ler, of North Side, Pittsburgh, and her
daughter, Marcia, and Richard Weston and
his wife of Media. Mrs. Richard Weston’s
brother, Horace Ruth, of Pittsburgh, join-
ed the party for a week-end visit. Mrs.
Haler and her daughter will continue their
visit through July, while Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Weston returned to Media Wed-
nesday.
—DMiss Louise and Lawrence McMullen
entertained a party of Pennsylvania rail-
road officials at the Nittany Country club
during the past week, their guests includ-
ing, Charles 8. Krick, general manager of
the road, and Mrs. Krick; James C. John-
son, general superintendent of the systems
telegraph lines, and Mrs. Johnson; E. B.
Hunt, chief of relief, and Mrs. Hunt, all of
Philadelphia, and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Stuart, of St. Davids, Mr. Stuart having
been a former official.
Additional personal news on page 4, Col. 4
Bellefonte Grain Market.
b
Corrected Weekly by C. XY. Wagner & Co.
‘Wheat - - - - - - $1.00
Corn - - - - - - 90
Rye - - - - - - 90
Oats wr oem wi - - - po
Barley - = = = - = 60
Buckwheat - - - = - a5