Bruni falda Bellefonte, Pa., July 27, 1923. smo NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. — Tuesday’s rain, while not suf- ficient to wet the ground to any con- siderable depth, freshened up the gar- dens, revived withering vegetation and clarified the atmosphere. — Following the intense heat of eant will be given in the open air on Saturday and Sunday morning the | Grange park, September 4th and 5th. mercury dropped on Sunday evening and night until it was almost cold enough for frost on Monday morning. __A call has been sent out for the millers in Centre, Clinton and Lycom- ing counties to meet at Lock Haven next Monday for the purpose of or- ganizing a tri-county millers’ associ- ation. — The cherry crop has run its course, raspberries were limited and of inferior quality, owing to the dry weather, but blackberries, which are beginning to ripen, give promise of a better crop. — At the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania State Clothiers” asso- ciation, held in Williamsport last week, John M. Bullock, of Bellefonte, was re-elected second vice president. Next year’s meeting will be held in Washington, Pa. A crew of bill posters from Lewistown were in Bellefonte on Tuesday, in a big motor truck, adver- tising the Lewistown fair which will be held August 21st, 22nd and 23rd. The big Blair county fair will be held the week previous. The county commissioners are advertising for sealed proposals for the removal of an iron bridge from over Spring creek, in Benner town- ship, to a point in Boggs township, south of Snow Shoe Intersection, to span Bald Eagle creek. At Milesburg’s gala day, on August 25th, when Wetzler’s band will give away a Ford car, there is to be ‘an afternoon of sports and an evening of cake walks and other enjoyable di- vertisements. The ball game in the afternoon will be between Port Matil- da and Milesburg teams. — Miss Gertrude A. Taylor has tendered her resignation as teacher of English in the Bellefonte High school. She has not been in the best of health of late and her decision to give up teaching for the present was made up- on the advice of her physician. Her successor has not yet been chosen. ——The Pennsylvania State College announces the resignation of Miss Pearl MacDonald, director, and Miss M. Jane Newcomb, an assistant pro- fessor of the home economics exten- sion staff, effective August first. It is rumored that the two women will em- bark in a commercial enterprise at Ann Arbor, Mich., Miss MacDonald’s old home. — The vacation season will soon run its course but the Scenic will go along every night in the week, rain or shine, summer or winter. A splendid evening’s entertainment always ready for all who may attend. Motion pic- tures of unusual interest make up each evening’s program. Every one new and up-to-date, no old stuff palmed off on Scenic patrons. If not a regular, get the habit. —About the usual number of au- tomobile wrecks occurred on Saturday night and Sunday, though so far as could be learned they were not attend- ed by any fatalities or serious injury. Three wrecked Ford cars were trailed in by the Beatty Motor company, two of which were put out of commission near Pleasant Gap. One of the cars belonged to Fred Herman and another to a foreigner of Coleville. State College business men took a motor run last Thursday by way of Bellefonte, Lock Haven and Jersey Shore to Williamsport, where they stopped for dinner, thence by Muncy, Milton, Lewisburg, Mifflin- burg and the Pennsvalley Narrows home. Quite a number stopped at Hairy John’s park, near Woodward, for supper. About one hundred and forty men and women made the trip. —Workmen are now engaged in putting down a concrete crossing over ‘the gutter and raising the pavement :at the entrance to the Logan fire com- ‘pany building on Howard street. In order to make the much needed im- provements it was necessary to re- move the big tree standing outside the curb at the corner of the building, but as the tree was badly decayed there was danger of it falling down most ‘any time, so its removal could not be avoided. ——About 10:30 o'clock on Wed- nesday morning Fred Hodges and “another man from Reading, traveling in a Ford coupe, were driving down Nittany valley and between Zion and Hecla park the one side of a big elm tree standing by the roadside fell down right across the top of their car. The entire top was smashed but aside from a few minor cuts and bruises neither of the men was seriously hurt. Mr. Hodges had his car towed to Bellefonte for repairs. ——A really big festival with a live band—watermelons and cakes for prizes—ice cream, peanuts, soft «drinks, “hot dogs,” balloons for the kiddies, and other attractions, is scheduled for Saturday night, August 18th, on the island on south Water street above the falls. The fes- tival will be under the auspices of the Otterbein Brotherhood and they ,say arrangements are being made to handle a large crowd if the weather is nice. Better plan to take your family in the automobile and * have a good time—help along a wor- thy organization. ’ THE BIG GRANGE PICNIC. ——A burning flue on a house on east Curtin street called out the fire Fiftieth Anniversary to be Celebrated department just before noon on Mon- at Grange Park This Year. In celebration of the 50th annual encampment and fair of the Centre county Pomona Grange, the purchase of a fine addition to Grange park and the establishment of the first Grange in Centre county, the committee is planning for the week of September 1-7 an interesting program. First in importance, a Grange pag- Several hundred people, men and women, boys and girls, coming from various Granges, committees and schools of Centre county, will take part. This pageant will be historical and educational, combining both national and Grange history with achievements of agriculture in the past, and, in symbolical scenes and tableaux, the solution of many of the farmer’s pres- ent-day problems. The pageant will be under the diree- tion of W. R. Gordon, of the “Rural Life Organization,” and beginning the first of August, he will give his entire time to its work. No effort will be spared to make it the greatest success in every way. Many Grange officials have signi- fied their intention to be present dur- ing the week. The Secretary of Ag- riculture has accepted an invitation, and a number of men and women of great prominence in the early history of the Grange in Pennsylvania proba- bly will be there. Amusements and entertainments of a high grade will be furnished for young and old. There will be several baseball games between teams of the Centre county league, and plenty of music. A State College church will present in the auditorium, Thursday evening, a play of real worth. The small children will have a play- ground arranged for them. The camp will be enlarged and some changes made necessary by its growth, made in the arrangement. The camp- ers whose location may be changed will be notified in advance and given an opportunity to choose another. The exhibits promise to be superior to those in past years, and a county so large and fertile as Centre should avail itself of the opportunity to show to visitors from surrounding counties the quality and variety of crops it produces. Liberal premiums will be paid. The Centre Oil and Gas Company Is Doing Business. The storage yards having been com- pleted, office equipped and supplies received the Centre Oil and Gas Co. began doing business at its plant on the old car works property last week. Up to this time business has been so satisfactory as to greatly encour- age the young managers of the new enterprise. They are handling the extensively exploited Texaco products, both motor and industrial oils, as well as gasoline and as their initial instal- lation of storage tanks has a capaci- ty of 40,000 gallons they will be pre- pared, always, to supply the public need of these high grade oils. Their business will be entirely wholesale and deliveries will be made day, but no especial damage resulted. ——The handsome new house of the | Farmers and Merchants National bank of Tyrone will be opened with a pub- ‘lic reception tomorrow, between the hours of 2:30 and 9 p. m. — Residents of Milesburg have been patronizing their own Chautau- qua this week, the Redpath organiza- tion holding forth there on Tuesday, Wednesday and yesterday. — On Wednesday morning a small boy on Curtin street threw a chunk of ice at Catherine Kilpatrick, hitting her on the cheek and cutting a gash half an inch deep. Several stitches were required to close the wound. — A three and a half foot black rattlesnake, sporting ten rattles, has been an attraction this week in the show window of the Bush house cigar store. The reptile was caught out back of Snow Shoe by Arthur Wilson, who brought it to Bellefonte. — A number of business men of Centre Hall will give their baseball team a real treat next week by taking them on an auto tour to Pittsburgh on Monday, where they will do the theatres at night and on Tuesday go to a big league ball game, returning home that night. ——The boys of Troop No. 1, Boy Scouts of America, in charge of the scoutmaster, the Rev. Malcolm May- nard, left on Monday for a two week’s stay at Camp Kline, on Pine creek. Mail should be sent to Camp Kline, Jersey Shore, Pa. Vistors’ days will be Wednesdays and Sundays, and the Scouts hope that many of their friends will go to see them. The camp loca- tion is one of the finest in the State. Many boys from Williamsport are also in camp for the two week’s period. — Legal investigations into the affairs of the R. L. Dollings company have not revealed anything very en- couraging for the stockholders, and as it looks now many people are doom- ed to lose considerable money through the financial manipulations of the firm. During the greater part of last year the Altoona branch of the com- pany had agents in Centre county selling their various stocks but how much they succeeded in placing in this section has not been disclosed, al- though it is believed to be considera- ble. — A short circuit in the big Hud- son Six automobile of Grant Hoover, of Williamsport, caused a fire, on Sat- urday, which not only destroyed the car but burned the large barn on his farm back of Unionville, together with his year’s hay crop and some farm im- plements. Mr. Hoover had driven to his farm from Williamsport and park- ed the car in the barn. A little later he took a walk in the nearby woods and when he returned the barn was in flames. With the help of neighbors he managed to get some of his farm machinery out of the barn and save the house, though the flames commu- nicated to the nearby woods and it took some hard work to extinguish the to all parts of the county, a powerful, large capacity tank motor being part | of the equipment to insure prompt ' service. The members of the new firm are, Frank M. Crawford, his son-in-law, Horace J. Hartranft, and his son, | Francis H. Crawford. The latter two | are the active members and as both | the young men are well known here | and enjoy enviable reputations for integrity and business energy they are likely to make quite a success of the enterprise. Mr. Hartranft, since his graduation from State College, some years ago has spent his time in the Texas and Oklahoma oil fields, and is regarded as an expert in petroleum and its by-products. of A. Frolic in Gentzle’s Woods. The first annual frolic of Washing- ton camp, P. O. S. of A., will be held in Gentzle’s woods, two and one half miles east of Pleasant Gap, on the back road to Zion, on Saturday even- ing, August 4th. The Camp is planning for a big time and invites the public ‘to partic- ipate. A ten acre field adjoining the woods has been secured as a parking place for motors, a dancing platform is being erected and the grounds will be lighted by electricity from a porta- ble plant. The Odd Fellows band and an orchestra will furnish the music. P.O. S. Milesburg Baptists to Call a Minister. Since the departure of Rev. Thomas the Baptist congregations at Miles- burg and Eagleville have been without a pastor. With a view to filling the vacant pulpits invitations to ministers have been sent out and a series of tri- al sermons arranged for. Next Sun- day Rev. M. E. Hare, who comes from the vicinity of Scranton, will preach in the church at Milesburg at 11 o’clock in the morning and conduct an evening service in the church at Ea- gleville. All are invited to join with these congregations at worship. A freight wreck at Paddy Mountain, on the Lewisburg branch of the Pennsylvania railroad last Satur- day, blocked traffic to that extent that the afternoon passenger train west did not reach Bellefonte until about ten o'clock at night. Work train gangs cleared up the wreck on Sunday so that the road was open for traffic forest fire. —— The Penn-Centre chapter of the Order of DeMolay has secured a tem- porary meeting place in the hall in the Bush Arcade, where they gather regularly every two weeks. Twenty new applications for membership are now on file and it is quite possible that a full ceremenial will be put on about the middle of August. Twenty--four members have already been enrolled .for the DeMolay band, and as every one of the boys has his own instru- ment they practice regularly every Friday night under the leadership of Frank Wetzler, of Milesburg. They already have scheduled their first en- gagement and will furnish the music at a Masonic picnic at Curwensville on Thursday, August 23rd. Their tem- porary uniforms will consist of white trousers, dark sack coats and DeMo- lay caps, though it is ultimately hoped to have a complete Turkish patrol uni- form. Monthly Report of Red Cross Nurse. The report of the Red Cross nurse, Mrs. Merrill Hagan, for the month of June is: Nursing care visits - - - Investigation visits - - - - 53 6 Miscellaneous visits - - - 3 Visits to schools - - - - 3 Total - - - - - 205 Office internes - - - - - 3t Individuals advised at office - - 6 Approximate number hours in office 39 Well babies under supervision - 62 During this month the Red Cross conducted Child Health week with a: afternoon devoted to weighing, meas- uring and having a physical examina- tion made of children under school age from the various church congrega- tions. Dr. LeRoy Locke gave his services Wednesday, Dr. Seibert, Thursday, Dr, Coburn Rogers, Friday. Altogether there were examined: From the Catholic church, 16 chil- dren; from the Episcopal, 6; from the Evangelical, 1; from the Hebrew, 1; from the Lutheran, 2; from the Meth- odist, 5; from the Reformed, 2; from the United Brethren, 7. The Red Cross nurse, Mrs. Merrill Hagan, will take her annual vacation during the month of August. Her regular patients will be looked after by a nurse from the Bellefonte hospi- tal. The regular office nurse will be omitted but emergency calls will be taken by the supply nurse at the hos- as usual on Monday morning. pital. Highway Employees’ Salaries In- creased. Governor Pinchot pleaded lack of revenue for cutting down legislative appropriations to hospitals and de- serving State institutions and within a week after his pronouncement Paul D. Wright, secretary of highways, an- nounced substantial increases in sal- aries throughout his department. In doing so he established three classes of maintenance superintendents, as follows: Class A positions carry a salary of $225 a month and head those districts which spend $200,000 to $500,000 a year; class B superintendents are those whose districts spend from $100,000 to $200,000 a year, and the salary is $200 a month, and class C positions are in those districts which spend less than $100,000 a year and have a monthly salary of $175. Inspectors, assistant inspectors, ete., were given increases, those for the Bellefonte district being as follows: V. H. Wintle, chief inspector, increas- ed from $150 a month to $165; F. X. McGovern and D. J. Sugrue, assistant inspectors, $70 to $115; C. P. Lyon, assistant inspector, $65 to $115; W. W. Seltzer, inspector, $140 to $150; C. M. Hitchcock, inspector, $115 to $135. A Pleasant Party on Fishing Creek. Mrs. John Holt, whose finesse in the art culinary and graciousness as a hostess has made the Union hotel, at Unionville, one of the best places in the world for the traveler to stop for refreshment and rest, entertained quite a large party of her guests and friends at the Meek fishing camp on Fishing creek last Wednesday. It was really her second annual outing and proved equally as delightful as the first though lacking the thrill occa- sioned a year ago by one of the wom- en members of the party falling into the creek and having to borrow from the others enough clothes to wear un- til her own were dried in the sun. Mrs. Holt’s guests were Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph, with their son and daughter, of Pittsburgh; Mr. and Mrs. Blackwood, and their son and Mr. Frank Sampson, of Pittsburgh; Mrs. McClelland, of Unionville, and Miss Sara Holt. Mr. Holt, of course, was at the camp to receive them and show its hospitali- ty by serving a dinner to his wife and her guests so bountiful and palatable that almost it might be said that when it comes down to the preparation of good food there is no competition in the Holt family. Delightful Wedding Reception. One of the most delightful country homes in the western end of Centre county is that of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Goheen, of Pennsylvania Furnace, and it never presented a more fascin- ating picture than it did yesterday afternoon when Mr. and Mrs. Goheen were hosts at a reception given in honor of their son, Jonathan McWil- liams Goheen and wife, who are just on the last lap of their honeymoon. The reception was held on the spa- cious lawn, which was crowded with handsomely gowned women and many gentlemen friends of the bride and bridegroom. Guests were present from Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Ty- rone, Altoona and various other towns, and also included most of the neigh- bors and friends of the Goheen family in and about Pennsylvania Furnace. One hundred and fifty invitations had been issued and the number present considerably exceeded one hundred. Among the guests were the bride- groom’s brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Goheen, of Florida, who reached home yesterday morning. The refreshments, also served on the lawn, were delicious and abundant, and Mr. and Mrs. Goheen received many remembrances of the occasion. Mrs. Goheen, before her marriage two weeks ago, was Miss Margaretta See- ger, one of Tyrone’s most prepossess- ing young ladies. Mr. Goheen is em- ployed by the William F. Gable Co., of Altoona, but he and his wife will make their home in Tyrone. Big Barn Burned. The big barn on the William Wertz farm in Spruce Creek valley, on which the Spruce Creek club house is locat- ed, was burned to the ground last Friday, together with all its contents, which included most of this year’s crops of grain and hay, many farm implements, harness, and all adjoin- ing buildings. The men were hauling wheat at the time and were in the barn floor unloading a wagon load of grain. The first knowledge they had of the fire was when the flames seeth- ed above the wagon load of wheat. The man on the wagon jumped through the sheet of fire to the barn floor and those in the mow made a quick escape. The harness were cut from the horses hitched in the wagon and they were gotten out in safety. The men were using a sheaf eleva- tor in unloading the grain and the fire is believed to have originated from an overheated part of the machinery. The barn was one of the largest in Spruce Creek valley, containing four mows and two barnfloors. Mr. Wertz car- ried insurance in several companies but not enough to cover his loss. He will rebuild at once. ——Now that a new board of prison inspectors has been appointed for the western penitentiary the regular offi- cials and guards at the Rockview in- stitution have hopes of soon getting the two month’s pay due them. The amount approved by the Governor for the support of the western penitentia- ry for two years was $550,000, which is less than the amount granted two years ago. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. Walter Cohen and her sister, Mrs. Lentz, of Lock Haven, left Sunday morn- ing for Atlantic City, with plans for a two week's stay at the Shore. — Mrs. Thomas Mallory, of Altoona, spent several hours in Bellefonte Tuesday, on her way over the country for a two day's visit with her sister, Mrs. Dale. —Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hart motored here from Canada early in the week, for their summer visit with Mr. Hart’s mother and sisters, at their home on north Spring street. —Mrs. William Houser and her three children are here from Meadville, visiting with Mrs. Houser's mother, Mrs. Charles Moerschbacher, and with Mrs. Amanda Houser. —Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Renner came over from Altoona, Saturday night, for a week- end visit with Mrs. Renner’s mother, Mrs. Harter, of Jacksonville, and other relatives in this section. —Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Eisenhauer and children motored to Beavertown on Satur- day and remained over night with Mr. Ei- senhauer’s parents, returning home on Sunday evening. —Miss Bertha Laurie will come here from New York on the 2nd of August, with plans for spending her two week’s vaca- tion in Bellefonte. While here Miss Laurie will be the guest of Mrs. George R. Meek and Mrs. J. M. Curtin, at the home of her mother, Mrs. George Harris. —Mr. and Mrs. G. Murray Andrews will spend the month of August along the coast of Maine as has been their custom always, when in America. While absent from Bellefonte, their home will be in charge of Mrs. J. Shurie Wilkie, a member of Mrs. Andrews household for many years. —Miss Mary Struble, who has been with her cousin, Miss Olive Mitchell, at her home on Spring street, since leaving the hospital a month or more ago, is now at Oak Hall for a short stay with Mrs. James Gilliland. Miss Struble is here on a sum- mer leave of absence, owing to ill health. —Mrs. Margaret Bayard Bowen, whe had been a guest of her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Cassidy, left Tuesday morning for Williamsport, for a short visit with her brother, James Bayard, and will go from there to Tyrone, to spend several days with Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bayard, before return- ing to her home in Canton. —Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Ichkowitz and their two younger children, Freda and Joseph, spent a part of the month of July with relatives in New York city returning to Bellefonte last week. Mr. Ichkowitz had gone east on business, while Mrs. Ichko- witz and the children spent the time with members of Mrs. Ichkowitz’s family. —The Misses Anne and Caroline Valen- tine will return to Bellefonte in September, expecting to occupy their home at Bunr- ham Place, after the 15th of the month. The year the house has been occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Irving Warner and family, the Misses Valentine have spent mostly in travel, with a stay of several months at Bermuda and Nantucket, Rhode Island. —Mrs. James B. Lane, with a party com- posed of Miss Anne Shaffner, of Summit, N. J.; Mrs. Stewart, of Clearfield, and Miss Grace Mitchell, are on a two week’s motor trip through New York State and New England. The car and driver are Mrs. Lane’s for the trip, through the courtesy of her son Richard, of MeKeesport, who has supplied his mothor with a car for the summer for a number of years. —Cornell Showers, with his wife and child left Tuesday morning, accompanied by Mr. Showers’ mother, Mrs. S. E. Show- ers, for the drive back to Philadelphia, where Mrs. Showers will visit with her son and his family for two weeks or more. Mr. Showers had been here on a fishing trip, his wife and child visiting the while at his former home. Miss Eva Showers, who has been in Bellefonte on a visit home for some time, will remain here during her mother’s absence. —Mrs. William McClure returned Mon- day from a week’s stay at Narberth, where she had gone with her daughter, Mrs. Mur- dock Claney and her small child who were leaving Bellefonte to join Mr. Claney, now permanently located in Philadelphia. Mrs. Claney came from Wilkinsburg a year ago, this being the most available place for Mr. Claney, then a bank examiner of this dis- trict and during the time spent here, she and the children lived with her mother, Mrs. McClure, on Bishop street. —Prothonotary Roy Wilkinson went down to Harrisburg, on Thursday of last week to meet his mother, who had been visiting friends in Philadelphia, and ac- company her back to Bellefonte. Mr. Wil- kinson also had as a guest over Friday night his cousin and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur James, of Wilmington, Del., whom he had not seen for fifteen years. Mr. James is connected with the Luckenbach Steamship company, which operates boats from Philadelphia through the Panama canal. —Mr. and Mrs. Israel Baum, of Manhat- tan, Kan.; Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Reesman, of Princeton, Ind., and Miss Dorothy Has- sell, of Columbus, Ohio, were Bellefonte ar- rivals on Sunday for a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sim Baum and with Mr. and Mrs. Will Katz. They all came in Israel's car, who motored from his home in Kansas to Princeton, Ind., where he was joined by Mr. and Mrs. Reesman, while Miss Hassell was taken aboard at Columbus. Miss Hen- rietta Hassell and her father, Jacob Has- sell, expect to come to Bellefonte on Sun- day to join the family gathering. —Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Woodward and their two sons drove to Bellefonte a week ago, from their home in Reading, the trip being made to take Mrs. Woodward’s fath- er, Robert Miller, to his daughter's home for an indefinite stay, or while he is con- valescing from his recent six week’s ill- ness. During their stay the Woodward family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mor- decai Miller, at the old toll gate, leaving from there Wednesday morning for the drive back to Reading. Mr. Woodward is a mining and metallurgy engineer, having graduated from Penn State in 1912, and is now in the brass foundry business at Reading. —Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Wetzel, of Beling- ton, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wetzel, of Buffalo, N. Y., are members of a family party Mrs. Henry Wetzel has been enter- taining at her apartments in the Cadillac building. After a visit of a week, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wetzel will leave tomorrow to. return to New York State, while Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Wetzel, who have been in Belle- fonte for two weeks, will start on the drive back to West Virginia, accompanied by Mr. Wetzel’s mother. The length of time Mrs. Henry Wetzel will spend in the south de- pends upon the condition of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Malcolm C. Pifer, who is in ill health at her home in Howard. —John D. Sourbeck left Monday to spend the month of August with his daughter, Mrs. Bellringer and her family, at Jamai- ca, 1. 1. —Miss Margery O’Moly, of Scranton, has been a guest of Miss Margaret Mignot, at her home on east High street, since Tues- day. Miss O’'Moly was a school friend of Miss Mignot at Mary Woods College. —John Rockey, who will be remembered as one of the well known farmers of Buf- falo Run, came up from his home in Jer- sey Shore on Sunday for a visit of a few days with his nephew, Harry Bowersox, of east High street. —Mr. and Mrs. Alters Ulsh and Mrs. Ulsh’s father, Mr. Day, were over Sunday guests at Ingleby, the summer home of Mr. Ulsh’s aunt, at Paddy Mountain, where their son John has been for the greater part of the month of July. —Mrs. Louis Cabasino, of Corona, L. I, and her three children, who have been oc- cupying the Totsock home for a month or more, expect to continue their visit here with Mrs. Cabasino’s mother, Mrs. Thomas Totsock, until the latter part of August. —Mrs. Paul L. Coates, of Parkesburg, Pa., who is now a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Linn McGinley, arrived in Bellefonte early in the week for a visit home, expecting Mr. Coates to join her here later, for a stay of a week or more. —Mrs. Lloyd Homan, with her sons Leonard and Claude, who had been here for a visit of two weeks with her sister, Mrs. Charles Lose, of High street," and Mr. Homan's sister, Mrs. Edward Gillen, of Bishop street, returned to their home in Pittsburgh Wednesday. —Mrs. Harry Hazel, with her son and daughter, Clarence and Dorothy, are here frim Pittsburgh for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Charles Lose, and Mr. Hazel’s mother, on Lamb street. Harry will join his fam- ily here today and accompany them home the early part of next week. —Margery Way, the only daughter of Mrs. J. R. Driver, is home from a three week’s visit with her aunt, Mrs. F. M. Musser, of Eldorado, a suburb of Altoona. Mr. and Mrs. Driver and their daughter have been occupying the third floor apart- ment of the Willard home, but this week moved to the Twitmire property, on east Lamb street. —Mrs. Thomas E. Mayes and her two children have been visiting here and with Mr. Mayes’ family, at Lemont, and when leaving will go direct to Ohio to spend some time before returning to their home in Johnstown. During her stay in Belle- fonte Mrs. Mayes has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evey, at their home on east Bishop street. —Mrs. J. R. Burley, of Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Mongan, of Hagerstown, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Mongan, of Wilmington, Del.; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Parrish, of Conemaugh; Mrs. Martin Bumbarger and Miss Jennie Mal- lory, of Altoona, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, of State College, were in Belle- fonte on Wednesday for the funeral of the late Dennis ‘Mongan. —Miss Anne Shaughnessy, accompanied by her brother, Thomas Shaughnessy Jr., came to Bellefonte from Philadelphia, Sun- day. Miss Anne, who is a nurse in train- ing at St. Agnes hospital, came at this time to be home while convalescing from her recent operation and illness. Both Miss Shaughnessy and her brother have been with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaughnessy, on Howard street. —Mrs. Elsie Rankin Helliwell returned home Wednesday from a two week's visit with friends in Philadelphia and Atlantic City. The same day Mrs. Preston Lytle and her small daughter arrived in Belle- fonte, to be heme with her father, William B. Rankin, until Mr. Lytle is located in Bellwood, where he has been transferred from Pittsburgh, by the P. R. R. Co., and where they expect to make their home. —Mr. Daniel Eberhart with his daugh- ter, Miss Mary, have just returned from a two week's visit with their son and broth- er, John Eberhart, of Punxsutawney. Showing the difference in atmospheric con- ditions in communities so close together as Bellefonte and Punxsutawney it is only necessary to state that it rained every day but three while the Eberharts were there, whereas in Bellefonte not a drop fell dur- ing their absence. — Mrs. Margaret Hutchison, of Howard street, has as her guests Mrs. Annie Mc- Clelland Cleveland, and daughter Madie, of Chicago, Ill. Mrs. Hutchison and Mrs. Cleveland were school girls at Potters Mills in their youth, both being natives of Potter township; Mrs. Cleveland being a daughter of Robert McClelland and a rela- tive of the Wilson, Potter and Van Tries families, all prominent in that part of Cen- tre county in its early history. —Miss Jeneatte Cooke will come to Belle- fonte from Atlantic City, next week, to be with her parents and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cooke and Miss Snyder, through the month of August. Miss Jeannette has resigned her position at the North Ameri- can home for crippled children, intending to enter the nurses training school in the children’s hospital in Washington, D. C., for a three year’s course, and will leave here the first of September to begin the work. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner and their son, Robert Jr., were over night guests, Tuesday, of Mr. Gardner’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Keichline, being on their way home from a month’s motor trip through New York State, Canada, New England and Pennsylvania, on which they had covered twenty-eight hundred miles. From here they went to Ferguson town- ship, for a short time with Mr. Gardner's relatives, then to Altoona for a day with his sister, Mrs. T. M. Gates, and then di- rectly to their home in Pittsburgh. —On Sunday W. H. and Richard Brouse, G. Fred Musser and Thomas Hazel, of Bellefonte; W. H. Noll Jr., of Pleasant Gap, and Richard Grubb, of State College, left Bellefonte in the new Cadillac car William Brouse secured in Altoona and motoring to Williamsport headed for New York State. Taking in Rochester, Pen Yan and other towns in the grape belt they journeyed to Niagara Falls where they spent most of Monday taking in the sights. The return trip was made on Tuesday, the party reaching Bellefonte about midnight. They covered about 330 miles without a single mishap or a minutes’ delay from any cause. Additional perhonal news >n page 4, Col. 6. Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. ‘Wheat - - - $1.00 Corn - - - - - - 90 Rye ~ - - - - - 90 Oats - - - - -ilie 50 Barley - - - - - - 80 Buckwheat - - - = - a5