Demormaicaldn Bellefonte, Pa., August 17, 1923. sna NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. — A little son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Tanner, on Monday morning, at their apartment in Pet- rikin hall. : — The little daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne D. Stitzinger, of New Castle, on August 4th, has been named Nancy Jane, for its maternal grand- mother, Mrs. J. Kennedy Johnston. Mrs. Stitzinger, before her marriage, was Miss Pauline Johnston. ——An idea of the amount of re- foresting that is being done in Centre county may be had from the recent report of the State Forestry Depart- ment to the effect that during the’ spring months of this year thirty- eight owners of waste land in this county set out 144,165 forest trees. ——Donald Boyd Gorsuch, who would have been a Sophomore at State College at the opening of the school term in September, was drowned while bathing in a dam at his home near Patton on Saturday evening. He was eighteen years old and a son of Mr. and Mrs. Levi G. Gorsuch, former res- idents of Blair county. The next initiation of candi- dates in Penn-Centre Chapter Or- der of DeMolay will be held in the opera house, Bellefonte, at a full cer- emonial session on Tuesday evening, Septembr 4th. The new band will make its first public appearance on the streets of Bellefonte on that date in the preliminary parade. Miss Margaret A. Knight, for the past four years dean of women at ‘The Pennsylvania State College, has tendered her resignation effective at the close of the summer session on Au- gust 18th. She will join her parents at Columbus, Ohio, where her father is head of the American history depart- ment in the Ohio State University. ——A large bank barn on one of the penitentiary farms at Rockview was burned to the ground on Tuesday afternoon, entailing a loss of approx- imately $10,000. In addition to the building and a quantity of farm im- plements 1,600 bushels of wheat, 2,- 500 bushels of oats and 65 tons of hay were destroyed. The loss is covered by insurance. Both Miss Mary Labaree, of the Welfare department, Harrisburg, and Miss Henrietta Baldy Lyon, of Williamsporrt, were in Bellefonte yes- terday on their way to Boalsburg, where they were speakers at the pic- nic of the League of Women Voters of Centre county. The subject of Miss Labaree’s most interesting talk was “Women on the Poor Board.” ——In the neighborhood of five hundred people attended the formal dedication of the new tri-county and State Sunday school training camp grounds near Franklinville, on Sun-' day. A special program of exercises ' was rendered which included address- es by Walter E. Myers, general secre- tary of the State association, and Dr. J. Harvey Brumbaugh, president of Juniata College. ——DMost Bellefonte people know that the Scenic is the best place of every evening entertainment to be found in the town, and strangers vis- iting here always go there to see the best motion picture programs. The product of the best film producers en- ter into the nightly programs, and manager T. Clayton Brown is always watching for something new and un- usual for his many patrons. ——The outlook for student regis- tration at the Bellefonte Academy for the coming school year is very encour- aging. Three young men from a small town in the western part of the State, which has never been represented at the Academy, have registered with a probability of one or two more from the same place. Quite a number of boys have registered who have high standing in various athletic sports so that the outlook for good teams is un- usually bright. ——H. J. Hartranft, the efficient master miller at the Ulsh and Ba- :shoar mill, had his right arm broken just below the elbow last Thursday afternoon. He was applying belt dressing to the elevator belt and in some way got his arm caught in the helt guard. The accident is not only unfortunate for Mr. Hartranft but also for the new milling firm, as they had just gotten started after completing some repairs and improve- ments to the mill. ——One of the biggest festivals to be held in this section this season will be the one at Milesburg on Saturday evening of next week, August 25th, under the auspices of Wetzler’s band. Owing to the fact that the band boys will be busy looking after the welfare of the hundreds who are expected to attend the gathering the services of the I. O. O. F. band, of Bellefonte, have been secured to furnish music for the evening. A Ford touring car will be given away during the evening, and this will surely be a big drawing card. ——Members of the Jaffa Shrine Temple, of Altoona, which includes on its roll many Centre countians, will give a kiddies party and basket picnic at Shrine park, Altoona, on Thursday of next week, to which all Shriners are invited whether kids or not. A hasty glance over the names of the men in charge shows that Howard Holzworth, of Unionville, and M. S. McDowell, of State College, are on the reception committee, and this is assurance that all Centre countians entitled to be there will be properly received and welcomed. Premium Book Out for Encampment. The premium book for the big en- campment and fair at Grange park, Centre Hall, is out. sixty pages and one that should be in the hands of every exhibitor. The date of the fair is only two weeks away and the committee of arrange- ments is rushing to completion the various improvements which will greatly add to the convenience and comfort of both exhibitors and camp- ers. The park will be open to campers on August 30th, and admission charg- ed from that day. Sunday, however, will be free to all, and a fine program has been arranged for that day. Free entertainments and band concerts will be given every day in the week. The stage to be used in presenting the pageant on Tuesday evening, Sep- tmber 4th, and Wednesday evening, September 5th, is now under construc- tion. The pageant will be a big thing, worked out through community ef- forts, under the direction of W. R. Gordon, of the Rural Life organiza- tion, and aided by interested people in a number of localities. It will por- tray the history of agriculture and its future development, the organization of the Grange and many symbolical features and scenes. A large number of men and women, boys and girls will be used to stage this spectacle. No- where in Centre county or Central Pennsylvania has a similar work been attempted. The best talent the coun- ty affords is interested in its prepara- tion, and it is the intention to make it the big thing of this encampment and fair, and free on Grange park. Wednesday of fair week will be Grand Army day, when the entire forenoon will be given over to the men who fought in the Civil war. will arrange their own program, which will include patriotic addresses by good speakers. An educational pro- gram has been arranged for the after- noon, and speakers from the Depart- ment of Public Instruction will talk on present day educational problems. Thursday will be Grange day, and speakers representing both the Na- tional and State Grange will discuss topics of vital interest to farmers gen- erally. Fifty cents admission, good for the week, will be charged all persons four- teen years of age or over; children under fourteen admitted free. Auto admission, 50 cents. All needed sup- plies can be purchased on the park.’ All trains will stop at the park, be- ginning Saturday, September 1st. The Williams’ Family Reunion. The big, mammoth Uncle Tom’s Cabin shows of modern times always have two Topsies and two Uncle Toms, "and now it looks as if Bald Eagle val- ley will have two Williams’ family re- unions tomorrow. . Last week two members of the com- mittee of arrangements of the reunion association visited the Bellefonte newspaper offices and authorized the announcement that the reunion this year would be held at Port Matilda in- stead of the Miles grove, at Martha, where it has been held ever since the organization of the association. In the Philipsburg Journal of Mon- day, however, J. B. Miles and D. C. Fink are out in a statement that the reason the members of the committee announced the change was because one of them could not handle the con- cessions. They further state that re- gardless of the announcement of the gathering at Port Matilda members of | this well known family in the vicinity of Martha will picnic at the old place in the Miles grove tomorrow. They have secured the Wetzler band of Milesburg, have arranged for a ball game and lunch will be served on the ground to all desiring same. All trains on the valley road will stop at the grounds as usual, except the flyer. It now remains to be seen which of the gatherings will draw the biggest crowd. Head-on Collision Near State College Wrecks Two Cars. Just about midnight, Monday, Mr. Sellers, a young hardware merchant of State College, collided with a car occupied by Mrs. F. W. Wieland and her daughter, Miss Mildred, of Lin- den Hall, with the result that the Sel- lers car, a Paige, was smashed almost beyond repair, the Wieland car badly damaged and both ladies painfully in- jured. a The accident occurred on the straight . piece. of highway between the old Centre Furnace mill and the “Evergreens” resort, formerly the Thompson home. The cause of it we have been unable.to- ascertain, but Mrs. Wieland suffered an ugly cut on the head and numerous bruises and abrasions. Her daughter, Miss Mil- dred, who is a graduate of State Col- lege and at present connected with the corps of instructors of the Spring Mills vocational school, was injured but not seriously. Mr. Sellers was not hurt. Tennis Tournament. The Bellefonte tennis association is planning to hold a tournament on the courts on east Linn street the latter part of August, the exact dates to be announced later. Entries will be limit- ed to members only, and should be in the hands of the secretary not later than August 22nd. An entrance fee of 25 cents for each event entered will be charged. Prizes will be awarded in each of the following events: Men’s singles, ‘men’s: doubles, women’s singles and women’s doubles. It is a book of | They | Program. It is possible to determine by a harmless process known as the Schick test whether or not a person is likely | to get diphtheria if exposed to the | disease. Persons who are proved by | this test to be susceptible to diphthe- ria can be protected against the dis- ease by the hypodermic injection of a harmless fluid—an injection each week for three weeks. now conducting a diphtheria preven- tion program throughout the State offering the treatment free for chil- dren between the ages of six months and six yars. In Bellefonte, the first clinic will be held next Tuesday, August 21st, in the Red Cross health centre, beginning at 1 p. m. with Dr. Seibert and Dr. Da- vid Dale in charge. Miss Daise Keichline has had charge of the cam- paign and is assisted by the following committee: Miss Rose Beezer, Mrs. W. Bickett, Mrs. Gregg Curtin, Miss Eva Grove, Mrs. Elsie Rankin Helli- well, Mrs. J. R. Hogentogler, Miss Marian Morrison, Mrs. Dale Musser, Mrs. Charles Schaffer, Mrs. Blanche Schloss, Miss Mary Underwood, Mrs. David Washburn. Members of the committee will visit the homes of chil- dren of the prescribed age and leave permit blanks to be signed by parents who desire for their children the bene- fit of protection against diphtheria by the injection of toxin antitoxin with- out cost. These blanks must be re- turned to Miss Keichline not later i than tomorrow noon. : Trainmen Have Thrilling Experience. | ' A dense growth of weeds along a ; r 2 2 smoker given in the band room in the railroad siding at the Buffalo Run ! plant of the American Lime & Stone company caused a bad wreck, last { Friday afternoon, and endangered . the lives of the entire train crew on | the Bellefonte Central railroad. As | it was James Rider, engineer, suffer- ed painful injuries, and William Sweitzer, conductor, and Samuel Mec- Murtrie, fireman, were badly shaken up in jumping from the train. The train was on its way to Belle- fonte from State College with six loaded cars. At the Buffalo Run plant i the men stopped to take on a car of stone. The siding into the plant is up quite a grade and the dense growth of weeds along the track was crushed on the rails beneath the wheels of the engine. When the engine and loaded car of stone started down the grade the wheels began to slip owing to the crushed weeds and there was nothing the trainmen could do to prevent it. | Realizing that a collision with the | cars on the main line was inevitable Sweitzer and McMurtrie jumped from the car. Rider stuck to the throttle, however, until almost the 1ast, whén he, too, jumped. The engine and ear { of stone crashed into the other cars | with sufficient impact to buckle the tender, wreck a box car and derail al- | most the entire train. Almost imme- | diately the boiler exploded, and the ‘escaping steam and water saved the wreck from burning. It took two days to open the road for traffic. i * Unknown Man Steals Pay Check. | On Monday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Corman, who live back of Zion, went up onto the mountain to pick huckleberries and while they were away some unknown individual en- tered their house and stole Mrs. Cor- man’s watch, her wedding ring and Mr. Corman’s American Lime & Stone company pay check for $43.18. On Tuesday morning Mr. Corman came to Bellefonte and going to Schaeffer's hardware store asked Charles Schaeffer to trust him to a lantern until next pay day, giving as the reason that his pay check had been stolen the day before. Mr. Schaeffer looked somewhat surprised and told him that he had cashed his check late Monday afternoon, and that the check bore his endorsement. To prove it he produced the check and, while it had Mr. Corman’s name on the back of it, it was not his signa- ture, but a forgery. The individual who had the check cashed was a young man, but Mr. Schaeffer is not certain he would be able to identify him. He came into the store just be- fore closing time on Monday evening and had the check cashed on the pre- tense that he needed the money before the banks would open on Tuesday morning. 3 Officers have been working on the case but having no description of the man have made but little headway at this writing. ——Texaco gasoline, the volatile gas. More power, more miles, less carbon. That is why you should use Texaco. Ask your dealer. 32-1t Vicious Bull Chased Man Up a Tree. Returning from a trip to Washing- ton, D. C., John Ferguson, of Altoona, got off the early train at Milesburg on Sunday morning and later walked to Bellefonte to meet his mother-in- law, who had returned on the same train and gone to the home of Mrs. Richard Lutz, on east Howard street. Coming up the state highway Mr. Ferguson was attacked by a vicious bull that was apparently roaming at large without any keeper and to get away from the infuriated animal’s rushes he was compelled to climb a tree. Some men passing along the highway chased the bull away and Mr. Ferguson was able to leave his perch in the tree and complete his trip to Bellefonte. ——— fe —————— ——Every housewife should try the new oil “Crystalite Kerosene” in her gas stove. Ask your dealer. 32-1t The: State Deparment of Reskh is, the movement for better and more of Grange Free Immunization from Diphtheria Director Bryant Honored by His Band ' when the toast master announced that just a dream of a cornet. | i , efforts. ‘former members of the organization, | Willis Wion thirty-two persons sat - his new instrument to express the joy That the I. O. O. F. or Bellefonte band, whichever you prefer to call it, is the best musical organization that the town has ever boasted is univer- sally conceded; this in the face of the fact that Bellefonte has had, in times passed, several very superior brass bands. There has been progress in music, as in everything else, and all that the critic needs to convince him that the I. O. O. F. band has kept abreast of it is to sit out a concert by our pres- ent organization. It is not a large band, but it is a good one, both in mar- tial and concert appearances and on the occasion of engagements away from home wins such praise that we are convinced that our judgment of it is not warped by town pride. There is a reason for all of this. Its members love music, they find profitable and pleasant recreation in their practice, they play because they enjoy it themselves and hope that others do and have a thought only of the pleasure they give every one, for none of them receive a cent for their These are the fundamentals underlying the success of the Odd Fellows band. Without them no band can maintain a proper esprit de corps but something more is needed. A good leader or director must be in charge to mould the fundamentals in- to organization. Because the band has a good lead- ¢r it is a good band and because every member of it has the utmost confidence in and respect for the abil- ity of Sam Bryant to direct there was a great surprise in store for him last Monday night. The occasion was an informal little I. O. O. F. building. All present and with three outside guests, were invit- ed. Upon the invitation of manager down to a table, daintily spread with just such food as men enjoy when they rub shoulders in good fellowship. It wasn’t an elaborate banquet. No attempt at such a thing. It was mere- ly a nifty little feed for the band boys and instead of a night of solid rehear- sal. After it was over Mr. Wion transformed himself from manager to toast master and called for post-pran- dial effort from many sources. All responded in a happy, helpful vein, the gist being that the band is too splendid an organization for Belle- fonte to look on indifferently. Then the surprise of the evening came his fellow band men valued so highly the services of their director that they thought something more than the small remuneration he receives was necessary to properly express their appreciation. Forthwith he produced from some mysterious quarter a hand- some black leather case and in it was A Conn, | Victor, with all the accessories. Then you should have ‘seen Sam. Modest, diffident, unassuming by nature, he was completely overcome. We learned then why Sam hasn’t “played in” much with his band late- ly. He wore his own horn out play- ing for the pleasure of Bellefonte and felt unable to buy a new one. The nearest he could get to it was a piec- ture of the one presented him which he had carried about with him for a year or more. No wonder that this unique music master whose artistic temperament few know anything of couldn’t speak or even play a note on and gratitude that was welling in him. Some night, however, you’ll hear Sam singing out his soul to those splendid fellows who have made him so happy. And when you do maybe you’ll catch the spirit and realize what a good band means to a community and to you. Man Killed in Clay Mines at Milesburg. ! Isaiah MacDonald, an employee in the clay mines at the Milesburg brick plant, was almost instantly killed about 10:30 o’clock on Tuesday morn- ing by a fall of clay. He was load- ing clay in a drift on the W. S. Ir- vin farm, just back of the brick plant, when the bank of clay suddenly caved in without any warning, knocking him down and almost completely burying him beneath the heavy mass. In fall- ing his head struck the wheel of an automobile standing nearby, fractur- ing his skull. Other workmen dug him out as quickly as possible but death had already resulted. He was forty-three years old and a native of Clearfield, though he had lived in the vicinity of Milesburg for a number of years. - He married Miss Ella Poorman, of Boggs township, who survives with nine children, as follows: Herman and Velma, of Grampian; Harry, Donald, Annie, Isaiah, Winfield, Pauline and Nettie, at home. He also leaves his mother, living at Grampian, nine brothers and two sisters, most of whom live in Clearfield county. Funeral services will be held at his late home at ten o’clock this (Friday) morning, burial to be made in the Treziyulny cemetery. Reformed Church Being Improved. Taking advantage of their pastor’s mid-summer vacation the members of the Reformed church of Bellefonte are having a number of decided improve- ments made in their edifice. A new central heating plant is being install- ed at an approximate cost of $2,500. The interior of the .church will be freshly frescoed and the Ladies Aid society have assumed the burden of putting a new carpet in the church at a cost of $1,200 or more. EN NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mrs. David A. Barlett and two children went out to East Liberty, last Friday, for a week’s visit with friends. —Mrs.” James Darcy, with her small child, of “Vashington, D. C., is making her customary summer visit with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cunningham. —Mrs. Edith Knoff and her brother, Fred Meyer, spent the greater part of the past week at Olean having driven there for a visit of several days with their brother and his wife. —Mrs. Ross Pillsbury and her two daughters, Martha and Ruth, have been north from Florida, visiting at State Col- lege with Mrs. Pillsbury’s mother, Mrs. Martha Edminston. —Mr. and Mrs. Gideon C. Payne had as a guest last week Miss Annetta Brown, of Summit, N. J., the young lady leaving on Saturday for a visit with friends in Scran- ton before returning home. —Dr. and Mrs. Ambrose M. Schmidt left on Monday for Johnstown where they will visit their son, William 8. Schmidt and wife, expecting later to spend a few days with friends in Pittsburgh and vicinity. —Mrs. Lewis Grauer has had as a guest the past two weeks Mrs. Millard F. Grau- er, of Chicago, Ill. Having spent her allot- ted time in Bellefonte she will go to Al- toona today to visit friends before return- ing home. —Miss Mary Struble is spending two weeks at the Struble farm, near Zion, in charge of the house while her cousins, Miss Mary and Howard Strubie, are on a motor trip to Wildwood, N. J., where they are visiting with relatives. —Mr. and Mrs. Ira M. Arthur, of Har- risburg, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hogentogler. Mrs. Hogentogler returned home from Pittsburgh on Satur- day bringing with her her nephew, Joseph Fulton, who will spend some time in Belle- fonte. —Misses Martha and Edith Underwood, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. J. Irvin Under- wood, who have been guests for several weeks at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Underwood, left for their home in Erie in the beginning of the week. —Mr. and Mrs. Lewis drove here from Philadelphia last week, to spend several days in Bellefonte with Mrs. Lewis’ step- mother, Mrs. Louisa V. Harris, who has never entirely recovered from the effects of the fall she had on the street two months ago. —Rev, E. E. McKelvey and family, with Miss Dorris Moore as a driving guest, left on Wednesday to motor to Ocean Grove where they will spend a week or ten days. They will return in time for the pastor to fill his church appointments on August 26th. —Judge Henry C. Quigley left on Mon- day evening for New London, Conn., to witness the yacht races between the New York and Philadelphia yacht clubs. While there he will be a guest on the yacht of Philip R. Johnson, vice commodore of the Philadelphia club. —Wailliam Houser, of Meadville, came to Bellefonte on Friday to join his wife and family for a brief visit and accompany them home. Inasmuch as it has been eight years since his last trip here he found many of his old friends gone and quite a number of changes in the town. —J. C. Weaver, of Philadelphia, and H. C. Weaver, of Harrisburg, were Bellefonte arrivals the latter part of last week, com- ing here to visit their sisters, the Misses Weaver, on Howard street. The former returned home on Monday while the latter continued his visit throughout the week. —Wayne D. Stitzinger drove to Belle- fonte from New Castle Tuesday, returning Wednesday, accompanied by Mrs. Stitz- inger’s mother, Mrs. J. Kennedy Johnston, and his son George, who had been with his parents for a week or more. Mrs. John- ston’s visit to New Castle at this time was to see her namesake and first grand-daugh- ter, who was born there, August 4th. —Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Hartranft went down to Hughesville on Tuesday to be on hand for the thirty-sixth reunion of the ! Hartranft family held at the Boak park, between Hughesville and Muncy, yester- day. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hartranft mo- tored down yesterday morning to be pres- ent at the reunion. Mr. Hartranft Sr. will return home today but his wife will con- tinue her visit among her home folks. —Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Hagan drove to Mrs. Hagan’s home in Burnside township a week ago, Mrs. Hagan having gone out to spend a part of her month's vacation with her parents. Mr. Hagan joined her there Monday and drove with her to his home at Farmers Mills, yesterday, where they, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hagan, of Shamokin, are members of the family par- ty being entertained at the John F. Ha- gan home. —A “Watchman” office visitor early Monday morning was Mr. Ira 8. Bierly, of Peoria, Ill, who came east for the es- pecial purpose of attending the Bierly family reunion held at Mill Hall on Wed- nesday of this week. Mr. Bierly, who was born at Tylersville, Clinton coumty, went to Illinois fifty-three years ago and this is only his second visit “home” in more than half a century. At present he is connected with the Y. M. C. A. at Peoria. —Michael Shaughnessy, a one time resi- dent of Bellefonte, made his first visit back home last week in forty-five years, spending several days here with his broth- er, Thomas Shaughnessy Jr., and other relatives, leaving Tuesday for a visit with members of his family in Lock Haven, and .with his sister in Erie, before returning home. Mr. Shaughnessy, who is now sev- enty-eight years old, left here when sev- enteen, and at that time was working on the canal boat running between Bellefonte and Lock Haven. Since then he has lived in all parts of the south and west; finally locating permanently in Cincinnati, Ohio, his present home. —Quite a party of Kansans were ar- rivals here Tuesday morning for an ex- tended visit with friends in Centre coun- ty. They were Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Bow- ersox, of Reserve, and Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Bierly, of Hiawatha. Mr. Bowersox is a son of Mrs. C. J. Bowersox, of Rebers- burg, and came east for a reunion of the family which is to be held on September 6th in celebration of the eightieth anni- versary of his mother’s birth. Of her eight children, four girls and four boys, all are living and will be home for the re- union, most of them with their families. He is a contracting carpenter and gets back to Centre county every few years. Mr. Bierly is also a carpenter and his vis- it at this time is to attend the reunion of his klan which was held at Mill Hall Wed- nesday. While he is related to the Centre county family of that name, he was born and raised at Tylersville, Clinton county. ‘All conveniences. —Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gephart and. fam- ily, of Bronxville, N. Y., are expected in Bellefonte tomorrow for their customary summer visit. —Dr. and Mrs. W. U. Irwin, with their daughter Catharine, are in Philadelphia and Atlantic City for a week, having gone east on Tuesday. —Edward L. Gates came in from Johns- town on Wednesday to join his wife and family for a several day’s visit with the home folks and to accompany them home tomorrow. —Mr. Charles Hillibish and mother, of Northumberland, and Harvey Kantz and sister, Miss Ida, of Freeburg, were week- end visitors at the Mrs. Oscar Wetzel home on Willowbank street. —Mrs. Laura Holdeman and son-in-law, John Ferguson, of Altoona, spent Friday in Bellefonte as guests of Mrs. Richard Lutz, leaving on the 8:10 train the same evening for a brief trip to Baltimore and Washington, D. C. —Harry Wetzel, of Harrisburg, spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. H. M. Wetz- el, on Thomas street, coming here in time to see his brother Howard before he left on Monday for Pittsburgh to enter Carne- gie Technical Institute. —Dr. William 8. Glenn and his wife, Dr. Nannie Glenn, of State College, drove here Tuesday; Dr. Nannie leaving for La- trobe, to meet and return to Centre coun- ty with a brother from Oklahoma, who is visiting with relatives in the east. —David K. Geiss, of Philadelphia, arriv- ed in Bellefonte on Wednesday for his an- nual visit with his son, D. Wagner Geiss and family. Having spent most of his life in Pennsvalley his trip to Centre county is generally timed to enable him to take in the big Grange encampment and fair at Centre Hall. : —A. E. Kerlin, his son, W. W. Kerlin, proprietors of Kerlin’'s Grand View Poul- try farm, Centre Hall, and Mr. Peterson, attended a convention of chicken growers in Washington, D. C., last week, returning home on Monday. They were met in Belle- fonte by Mrs. A. E. Kerlin and Mrs. W. W. Kerlin, and small son, Billy. —George C. Krape, wife and son Philip, of Johnstown, visited among their old friends at Spring Mills and vicinity the past week. Mr. Krape is a trolley conduc- tor in Johnstown and as evidence of the tenacity with which he conducts is the fact that it has been twenty-one years since he has been back to his old home town. —Frank Cole, of Philipsburg, was among the relatives who came here from Lock Haven, Friday of last week, with the body of Bruce Cole, remaining in Belle- fonte long enough to see a number of his friends. Mr. Cole lived all his early life in Halfmoon valley, going west from there and later returning to locate permanently in Philipsburg. —The Bellefonte women who attended the picnic of the Centre county League of Women Voters, yesterday, at Boalsburg, were Mrs. Robert Mills Beach, Mrs. D. I. Willard, Mrs. John P. Lyon, Mrs. Alter Ulsh, Miss Elizabeth Meek, Dr. Eloise Meek, Miss Lucy Potter, Miss Daise Keich- line, Miss Grace Mitchell, Mrs. Clement Dale and Miss Ethel Dale. —Mr. and Mrs. William Lyon, of east Bishop street, are entertaining their daughter, Mrs. Williams and her husband, who are here from their home in Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Williams were guests of honor at a six o'clock :dinner given by Mrs. Ralph Eyer, Wednesday evening. Other out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. ‘Ward Showers, of Pleasant Gap. —Mr. and Mrs. James Caldwell with Col. Jas. Taylor and Miss Ruth Bertram, drove to Philadelphia Sunday night, that Mr. Caldwell might enter the University hospital, to be under the observation of Dr. Spiller, an eminent neurologist for a week or two. The remainder of the party returned to Bellefonte Tuesday night, Mrs. Caldwell expecting to go back to the city later to return to Bellefonte with her husband. —A family business party meeting in Bellefonte, Wednesday, to transact some legal business, brought together the four Jamison sisters, of Spring Mills, who are now Mrs. Joseph Peters, of Pleasant Gap; Mrs. Fred Martin, of Martinsburg; Mrs. R, E. Hockman, of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Robert A. Miller, of Tyrone, the latter two being twins. The nearby sisters came to meet Mrs. Hockman, who drove to Centre county a week ago with Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Hockman and Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hockman, of Mingoville, following their week's visit with her in Philadelphia. Family parties have been arranged for Pleasant Gap, Spring Mills and Tyrone, during Mrs. Hockman’s three week’s visit, after which Mrs. Miller will leave with her husband for a trip to Boston and through New England. Additional personal news on page 4, Col. § Miss Sara Graham, who last spring returned to Bellefonte, from Lewistown, wishes to announce that she is about to organize a class in piano playing, expecting to begin her work at once. Children wishing to join the class can see Miss Graham at Mrs. J. C. Harpers, 111 east Howard street. : 31-3t ——Texaco gasoline is the volatile gas with a record: More power, more miles, less carbon. Treat your car right by feeding it Texaco. It’s the best gas on the market. Ask your dealer. 32-1t For Rent.—Three rooms suitable for light housekeeping for man and wife. Apply at this of- fice. 32-1t ———————e———————— Wanted.—A good home for a boy of eleven years. Apply to Mrs. Mary Waddle, president Children’s Aid so- ciety, Brant House, Bellefonte. —— A ———————— ——1If you have never used “Crys- talite Kerosene” in your gas stove, try it. It beats all others. Ask your dealer. 32-1t Room for Rent.—All conveniences. Two men preferred. Call 27-W. Bell phone. 32-1t Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - - $1.00 Corn - - . - - - 90 Rye - - - - - 90 Oats. « «eo. = - .50 Barley - BD - - - 60 Buckwheat - - - = 5