Bellefonte, Pa., August 31, 1923. | ————————————— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND €OUNTY. — Gerald Kenneth, infant son of Homer and Laura Justice, of Cole- ville, died last Saturday at the paren- tal home. He was born May 9th, 1923. Interment was made in Meyers cemetery. —A little daughter born to Dr. and Mrs. C. J. Newcomb, of Pitts- burgh, on Monday of last week, has been named Cyrene Newcomb. Mrs. Newcomb, before her marriage, was Miss Edna Mallory, of Bellefonte. ——A freight wreck on the Bald Eagle railroad, about two miles above Unionville on Sunday evening, block- ed the tracks and held up traffic sev- eral hours. Three box cars in the middle of a train left the track and were piled up rather indiscriminate- ly. —— Mrs. Joseph L. Montgomery gave a stag dinner of thirty-five cov- ers, at the Country club, Tuesday evening, at which Isaac Lobe Straus, of Baltimore, was the honor guest. Judge Henry C. Quigley assisted Mrs. Montgomery’s son Gordon, as acting host. ——There will be a meeting of the Executive committee of the Red Cross next Tuesday afternoon, September 4th, at 4 o’clock, in the W. C. T. U. room. A full attendance is desired that plans for the annual drive may be discussed and other important bus- ness disposed of. ——The furniture and household equipment of Rev. David R. Evans was shipped on Wednesday to the pastor’s new appointment at Kearny, | N. J. Rev. Evans, wife and two chil- dren, David and Mary, left by auto- | mobile early the same morning, ex- pecting to make brief visits with friends in the northern part of the State on their way to their New Jer- sey home. ——The world is full of absent minded people but one of the most pronounced cases heard of lately in this vicinity is that of a traveling man who stopped at one of the Belle- fonte hotels, one night last week, and on going away the next day left his: false teeth lying on the bureau in his room. As he couldn’t come back for his teeth the hotel proprietor sent them to him by mail. ——Mrs. Benjamin Bradley was dis- missed from the Bellefonte hospital ten days ago, and is now rapidly con- valescing at her home on Curtin street. While under observation for more than two months at the hospital, Mrs. Bradley’s condition at times was regarded as critical, so that in order to insure a complete recovery she will be taken to Buffalo to be under the care of specialists, just as soon as it is deemed advisable. ——Charles Sandstrom, of Arnot, Tioga county, an employee of the new Blanchard-Moshannon Coal company, opening up operations near Karthaus, was badly injured on Saturday when a heavy chain on the mine machinery broke, throwing him some distance. He was hurriedly taken to the Cot- tage State hospital, Philipsburg, where it was found that the man was suffering with a punctured lung, five fractured ribs and other injuries. ——The twenty-eight hour trans- «continental airmail test was in effect but four days last week, instead of - five, as originally planned. The test proved conclusively that a twenty-. eight hour schedule between New York and San Francisco can be main- tained under proper weather condi- tions. The only thing that may en- ter into the consideration is the en- durance of the pilots, whether they will be able to stand up. under such long flights. ——Four cases of “Four Roses,” real genuine Kentucky whiskey, dis- tilled in 1913 and guaranteed one hun- dred proof, stood on an express truck at the Bellefonte depot for four hours on Saturday without attracting any special attention. Of course the whis- key, twelve gallons in all, was in tran- sit under government permit and was plainly marked “for medicinal use only.” It’s destination was not Belle- fonte but another town less than twenty miles away. ——The farewell reception given to Dean and Mrs. W. R. North, in the Methodist church, Tuesday evening, was one of the enjoyable affairs of the week. The interesting speaking pro- gram, in which Mr. and Mrs. North, Rev. McKelvey and C. C. Shuey each had a part, followed by a delightful social evening will be one of the pleas- ant remembrances of Bellefonte the Norths will take with them into in- terior China; and the purse of fifty- six dollars presented them by a few «of their friends, will possibly be a suggestion to those interested in the missions of China, that a direct con- ‘tribution to these good people will be .very effective in its results. Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKer- 7 non, of Pittsfield, Mass., announce the :engagement of their daughter, Alice ‘Grace, to Philip Slaysman Barnhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. James K. Barn- hart, of this place. Miss McKernon is a: graduate of the Emma Willard school of Troy, N. Y., class of 1917, and the Russell Sage College of Troy, class of 1921. Mr. Barnhart is a graduate of The Pennsylvania State College, class of 1920, and is now em- ployed as a chemist by the General Electric Co. The announcement was made this week'at a luncheon given for a'few of Miss McKernon’s friends by her sister, Mrs. E, Brith Myrick, of Pineville, Kentucky. The wedding vwill take place in the spring. ESCAPED PRISONERS DRAW | SALTY SENTENCE. Men Who Attempted Jail Delivery | Taken Back to Pen on Saturday. Two weeks in solitary confinement in the concrete cells of the death house at Rockview broke the turbu- lent spirits of two of the prisoners who four weeks ago pulled off a des- perate attempt at jail delivery in Bellefonte, and on Saturday morning they came into open court, meek as lambs and plead guilty to the several charges presented against them, re- | ceived their sentences and the same | day were landed 1m the old Riverside ! penitentiary in Allegheny. | The two men &re Arthur Price and . Clair Jamison, who escaped from the | western penitentiary at Rockview in ‘June, and who were in the Centre county jail pending disposition of , their cases. On Thursday, August ' 2nd, the above two men and Edward i Fiddell, also an escaped prisoner from the penitentiary, made a desperate at- tempt to escape from the Centre coun- ty jail. Jamison succeeded in getting out into the corridor but was prevented i from escaping through the bravery of the sheriff’s daughter, Miss Marion ' Dukeman, and her mother. Miss { Dukeman clutched the desperate man | by the coat and clung with determin- ied tenacity until her father appeared , upon the scene. Mrs. Dukeman, with rare presence of mind, locked the jail ' door then got into the scrimmage in | time to grab an iron bar with which Jamison was belaboring her husband. In the meantime Price had beaten up { Timpco Carpella, the trusty turnkey, so badly that he is still suffering quite severely. Not content with being i frustrated in their first attempt at es- ! cape the men tried it again the fol- lowing night and had almost dug out i of their steel cell when discovered. It was then that they were sent to solitary confinement in the death | house at Rockview. Knowing the dangerous character | of the two men, when they signified their willingness to plead guilty to ! the charges against them, the court | decided to impose sentence early Sat- iurday morning so that the trip to : Pittsburgh could be made entirely ! during daylight. Consequently it was just 8:30 o'clock when they were brought before Judge Quigley. i Arthur Price was the first man to face the court. He is twenty-three ! years old and is from Oklahoma. In April, 1921, he was in Philadelphia, having just been discharged from the U. S. navy, and as a means of getting easy money held up a taxicab. He “was caught in the act, was convicted and sent up for from three to five years. He had just nine months to serve when he escaped from the peni- , tentiary in June. When he faced the ,court.on Saturday he faced three charges, breaking and escaping from the penitentiary, attempted escape from the Centre county jail, and ag- gravated assault and battery. On the first two charges he was given from two to four years each and on the last charge one to two years, the sentenc- es to run consecutively, which would have given him from five to ten years, but after further consideration of his case Judge Quigley on Wednesday afternoon remitted the sentence on the last two charges so that he will only have to serve from two to four years for breaking and escaping from the penitentiary, in addition to the nine months yet to serve on his old sentence. When Clair Jamison faced the court he stated to the judge’s inquiry that he had twenty-three months yet to serve of a sentence of from three and a half to five years imposed upon him at New Castle for breaking and en- tering. Jamison denied g that he meant to injure the sherif? seriously when he hit him with an iron bar, but admitted that Miss Dukeman and her : mother “helped some” in preventing his escape. The first two charges against him were the same as those against Price, and the sentence im- posed the same, but the third charge "against him was felonious assault and battery and on that count he was giv- en from three to five years, making his total seven to thirteen years. Sheriff Dukeman, accompanied by constable Howard Smead and Lester Wyland, of Howard, took the two men to Pittsburgh on Saturday and deliv- ered them to the officials of the west- ern penitentiary. The men went along without a protest of any kind. Edward Fiddell, the third man im- plicated, has so far steadfastly refus- ed to plead guilty and is still confined in the death house at Rockview. He maintains that he will stand trial at the September term of court and it is known that he has been in communi- cation with , at least two attorneys away from Bellefonte. Fiddell was sent up from Cambria county for rob- bery but his real home is Chicago, I11., where he is reputed to have been a member of the stockyards gunmen. It is further reported that Fiddell’s criminal ancestry dates back a centu- ry or more and that he has spent twenty-four out of thirty-eight years of life behind the bars. He is now in good shape to considerably increase this record. ——Walter S. Jackson, of State College, has secured a position with the state highway department in Bellefonte. For the time being he will be located in the local office. He was formerly employed by The Penn- sylvania State College, in the bac- teriological division of the dairy de- partment. ——The banks, the postoffice and most of the business places in Belle- fonte will be closed next Monday, La- bor day. Reichert Drew the Ford Car Then | Are You Interested in the Bellefonte | Sold It. Ticket No. 252 drew the Ford tour- ing car that was given away at the festival of Wetzler’s band at Miles- burg last Saturday night. It was held by Robert Reichert who works at the Titan Metal plant and lives on Logan street, Bellefonte. . The festival was an afternoon and evening affair nd the amusement of- fering of the afternoon was the ball game between Port Matilda and | Milesburg.. Port won by the score of 11 to 9. The evening entertainment was more or less curtailed by the break- down of the lighting service and nec- essarily the receipts from the stands were much reduced. With it all, how- ever, the band realized exactly $984 on the undertaking. The drawing for the automobile oc- curred at 11 o’clock at night. Stubs of every ticket held were placed in a box, then it was announced that the fifth one drawn out would contain the name of the person to whom the car would be given. The four first ones drawn were replaced in the box so that they would have a chance to be fifth and then out came the fifth bear- ing the name and number of Mr. Reichert. About 2500 tickets had been distrib- uted for the drawing. Monday morning the winner went to the Beatty Motor Co., and sold the car back to them and the same after- noon they turned it over to a custom- er who had been clamoring weeks for a delivery. Burned Out Transformers Put Belle- fonte in Darkness. The burning out of two big govern- ing transformers at the Milesburg plant of the Keystone Power corpora- tion, on Saturday night, plunged all of Bellefonte in darkness and, in fact, cut off the service of their entire cir- cuit, The first transformer burned out shortly after seven o’clock and it took probably half an hour to make repairs. At 8:15 o'clock the second transformer burned out and it was 9:30 o'clock before repairs could be made and the light again turned on. The burning out of the transform- ers naturally compelled the closing down of the plant and Bellefonte and every community depending upon the company for light was plunged into darkness. In fact it was a case of the much despised tallow candle again coming into its own. Most of the stores in Bellefonte kept open and did a little business with the aid of can- dles and lamps but several business places closed when it became known that it was uncertain how long the light would be off. The Scenic, naturally, was compel- led to close down and when the lights finally did come on most everybody had gone home. The absence of light played havoc with the big festival of the Wetzler band, at Milesburg, which naturally failed to make near the amount of money they anticipated. . On Monday afternoon trouble de- veloped on the supply line which fur- nishes juice to people and industries in the western section of town with the result that all the machinery was at a standstill for an hour and a half. Old Wall on New Parrish Building Collapsed. An accident that cannot be regard- ed in any other light than that of a Providential nature occurred about ten o’clock on Monday night, when the old wall of what is to be the Parrish building, Allegheny street and Pike alley, collapsed. The wall was left standing when the old building was demolished. It | seemed in good condition and Mr. Parrish was advised that it could be used as part of the new structure he is building. All day Monday workmen were busy right under it laying joists for the first floor and had it fallen while they were there probably many of them would have been crushed under the tons of brick. As it was the heavy joists of the first floor were snapped off like match sticks, the centre foun- dation wall pushed out of alignment and the corner column carrying the steel beam that is to support the sec- ond story was bent so that it will have to be rebuilt. The collapse of the wall occurred right in the midst of the hard rain Monday night and may have been caused by it or it might have been due to the fact that the new basement was dug some depth below the footings of the old wall. Whatever the cause it very fortunately occurred just at a time when no human lives were en- dangered. me pn Osceola Boy Candidate for Carnegie Medal. James W. Carroll, fourteen year old son of William P. Carroll, a P. R. R. freight conductor of Osceola Mills, is a candidate for a Carnegie medal of honor because of his heroic rescue of a young companion. . Carroll was a member of a band of Boy Scouts camping between Philips- burg and Clearfield. George Lingle, another member of the party, went down into an old well to clean it out. He was overcome by gas and Carroll quickly tied his handkerchief over his nose and mouth and went into the well to rescue young Lingle. He fastened the rope around Lingle’s body and other Boy Scouts pulled the two boys out of the well. Carroll col- lapsed on reaching the top but soon revived. Lingle was rushed to the Clearfield hospital where he was final- ly brought back to consciousness and his life saved. Hospital. | Every one interested in the future of the Bellefonte hospital is urged to attend the corporation meeting to- ‘night. In order that the people of Centre county, especially those living in Bellefonte might more conveniently attend the annual meeting its place has been changed from the hospital to ithe arbitration room in the court! house and the time will be 8 o’clock. - While- only such persons as have contributed to the support of the hos- ! pital during the current year are eli- gible to vote at this meeting its board of management is very desirous that ‘every one should attend and very “probably will move to suspend for to- "night the constitutional restriction on voting. ; It is not the intention to make an appeal for money. It is the wish, however, that enough interested per- sons will be in attendance to secure a fair impression as to what the public thinks as to the conduct and future support of the institution. The time is approaching, January 1st next, when a new program of financing will have to be put into practice. As is well known the aid at present received from the State has been cut, effective January 1st, 1924, 'to $5,000 per year. This will be $4,- 1000 per year less than the hospital is now receiving. As it has been run- ning behind, for the past two years, from $1500 to $2000, it will be appa- rent that Centre county will have to give at least $6000 more per year to- , wards its support hereafter than it has ever done before. A very careful survey of the oper- ating costs reveals no means of cur- , tailment in expenses to meet this defi- cit. The only saving that could be ef- fected by admitting fewer patients would be in food stuffs and that would be inconsequential, since professional supervision, light, heat and other fixed overhead costs would have to go on materially the same. Certainly there must be unanimity in the thought that we need the hos- i pital and believing that such is the case its Board would like to have the benefit of your counsel and co-opera- , tion in solving the problem of its fu- | ture. Won’t you come to the meeting to- night and lend what assistance you {can by way of suggesting a practical | plan for the support of the institu- ition. It is a great burden for a few | and many hands would make light work of it. GEO. R. MEEK, President of the Board. American Legion to Conduct Most "Popular Working Girl Contest. The working girl is coming into her own at last. The Brooks-Doll Post of the American Legion will shortly put on a most popular working girl voting contest, to include Bellefonte and vi- cinity, the winner to get a free trip, with all expenses paid, to San Fran- cisco atthe time of the national con- vention of the American Legion in October. - The Legion boys expect to have their plans mapped out so that com- plete details can be given next week. It is understood, however, that the various industrial concerns and busi- ness places in Bellefonte will be in- vited to nominate one of their em- ployees as a candidate in the voting contest. This, however, will not pre- vent any working girl from entering. A free trip to San Francisco and re- turn will doubtless be very enticing to most any working girl, and the Le- gion boys will furnish the opportu- nity. . Similar contests will be conducted all over the State so that there will be plenty of company for the success- ful contestant. The start for San- Francisco will be made October 8th, and the trip last until November 1st, so that the girls will have at least ten days to take in the sights of the Gold- en State. While working girls are naturally busy girls, any one who is anxious to take this trip should make her prep- arations to put on a big fight to prove her popularity. Longevity of Centre County People. Mention was made last week of Mrs. Susanna Spangler having cele- brated her ninety-fifth birthday anni- versary at her home at Centre Hall, and on Monday of this week Mrs. Nancy McMeen celebrated her ninety- fourth anniversary at her home at Curtin. Mrs. McMeen is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lipton, and was born at Milesburg, her entire life hav- ing been spent in Boggs township. Coincident with the above it might be mentioned that on October 31st Mrs. Barbara Rumberger Rider will celebrate her ninety-third anniversa- ry at the home of her daughter, Mrs. W. E. Ellenberger, in Tyrone. Al- though now a resident of Tyrone Mrs. Rider was born in west Ferguson township and spent all her life until quite recently at Gatesburg. She is the last surviving member of a family of fifteen. Her mother lived to the age of ninety-five and one sister was ninety-seven years old at her death. Mrs. Rider is an aunt of George Washington Rumberger, of Union- ville, who is still very active at the age of eighty-six. ——A picked team of Bellefonte ball players went to Hecla on Sunday and played the nine at that place, the Nittany valley diamond eaters win- ning by the score of 10 to 8. The pro- ceeds of the game, $100.00, were used to pay the hospital expenses of Sam- uel Weaver, the Bellefonte team play- er who sustained a broken leg early in the season. ED SSS, NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Dr. Eloise Meek left Monday night on a business trip to New York. —John Porter Lyon went to Detroit on Wednesday, to drive in a Studebaker car, for tho Beezer garage. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hunter and their family are on a motor trip through New York State and the Thousand Islands. —DMiss Marie Sherry is in Pittsburgh, a guest of her brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Sherry, for her two week's va- cation. —Mrs. Sara Satterfield is planning for a trip to Atlantic City, expecting to be among the excursionists next week, going down for a short stay at the Shore. —The Charles Hughes family will drive home tomorrow from Annapolis, where they have been occupying a cottage dur- ing the months of July and August. —Philip 8. Barnhart and Seldon Heath will motor to Bellefonte this week from Pittsfield, Mass., for a vacation visit with Philip’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Barn- hart. —DMrs. Frank Montgomery and her sis- ter, Miss Hassell, are back in Bellefonte, after their annual summer visit of a month to their former home in Philadelphia and Atlantic City. —Mrs. H. M. Wetzel and her daughter, Miss Mildred, are in Bethlehem, at the former’s former home and with her moth- er, where they will spend Miss Mildred’s two week's vacation. —Samuel H. Gray, who with Mrs. Gray and their two children, recently moved from Mount Union to Pittsburgh, has re- signed from the General Refractories Co., to go with the Jones and Laughlin Steel company. —Col. and Mrs. James McClain and their daughter Eliza drove here from Spangler, late last week, Mr. McClain returning home Monday, while Mrs. McClain and the child remained for a visit with her mother, Mrs. J. L. Spangler. —G@George Denithorne, of Pittsburgh, vis- ited over the week-end in Bellefonte with Mrs. Denithorne, who is spending several weeks here with her mother, Mrs. Scott, and with her uncle and aunts, Charles M. McCurdy and the Misses McCurdy. —Miss Elizabeth Cooney has been east for the past two weeks, for a summer rest at the Shore, intending to terminate her vacation in a buying trip to New York. While in New York Miss Cooney will at- tend the fall openings of exclusive milli- nery. J —Mrs. David Auchmuty, of Albany, N. Y., arrived in Bellefonte Monday for a visit of several weeks with her sisters, Mrs: Ingram and Mrs. Haines. Mrs. Auch- muty, who spent all her girlhood life here is well known to many persons in this locality as Miss Clara Schrom. —Mrs. Frank B. Hackett joined Rev. Hackett, pastor of the United Brethren church, in Bellefonte, Wednesday of last week, having come here from Dayton, Ohio, where she had just completed her course in the Theological Seminary. Mr. and Mrs. Hackett were schoolmates at the Seminary. —Among the Bellefonters who motored to Frenchville on Wednesday of last week for the big annual picnic were Rev. Father Downes, Mrs. Odillie Mott, Mrs. Al Hev- erly, Mrs. Christ Beezer, Mrs. Bruce Gar- brick, Mrs. Joseph Abt, Mrs. Allen Waite, Mrs. Harry Yearick, Mrs. Luther Smith and son John, and Miss Mayme Gross, of Axe Mann. —Katherine Kase is with her grandfath- er, G. R. Spigelmyer, having come over from Sunbury to accompany Mr. Spigel- myer to Harrisburg, for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. G. Willard Hall, before they left last Friday on a two weeks visit to the Toronto Exposition. Katherine usually spends a part of her summer vacation at her grandfather’s home. —After a five week’s visit in Cleveland, Mrs. H. C. Yeager motored to Bellefonte Monday, a driving guest of her niece, Miss Josephine Bentley. Mrs. Yeager and Miss Bentley were accompanied by the latter's brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bentley, of Peoria, Ill, who had been vis- iting in Cleveland. The party left Thurs- day, on their return trip to Cleveland. —Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Hubbell and their family will leave today for the drive to Mrs. Hubbell’s former home in Rochester, where she and the children will spend the fall and early winter with her mother, Mrs. Hayden. Mr. Hubbell’'s absence in Harrisburg and State College in his exien- sion work, necessitates their giving up their home here and makes it inadvisable to locate permanently anywhere at pres- ent. —Following a two week’s visit here with his sisters, the Misses Weaver, of Howard street, H. C. Weaver returned Monday to his home in Harrisburg. Mr. Weaver, who had been in the Bell Telephone service for seventeen years, was put on the cempa- ny’s retired list the first of August, so that the visit back home to Bellefonte in com- pany with his brother, J. C. Weaver, of Philadelphia, was among the frequent ones his leisure will now permit. —Mr. and Mrs. 8S. A. Bixler, of Boston, visited with friends at their former home in Lock Haven during the past week, com- ing on to Bellefonte for a part of a day. Mr. and Mrs. Bixler had been called to Mill Hall by the .death of Mrs. Bixler's uncle, George C. Sanderson, of Orlando, Florida, who died at the Jefferson hospi- tal, in Philadelphia, Tuesday night, while north on his annual summer visit; his body having been taken to the home of his brother, William Sanderson, of Mill Hall, where the funeral was held Tuesday. —The Misses Sara and Laura Waite have been guests of their sister and broth- er, Miss Ella and Darius, at their home on south Thomas street. Miss Laura, who is instructor in home economics in Pied- mont College, north-eastern Georgia, had come north for a tonsil operation, which she underwent at the Bellefonte hospital two weeks ago, and will remain here dur- ing her convalescing period. Miss Sara, instructor in English in the schools of Hazleton, was home only for a few days, stopping in Bellefonte on her way back from spending a part of her vacation at the Shore. —Mrs. M. H. Haines entertained a house party over the week-end at her home on Curtin street. Her guests were Mrs. Os- car Cherry, of Philadelphia; Mrs. Jack Mec- Kelvey and two children, of Pittsburgh, and Mr. and Mrs. George Black, John Black and Charles Houser, of Clearfield, Mrs. Haines’ daughter, Mrs, Catherine Cherry and her son Harold, have been spending the summer here and it was for a visit with them that Mrs. Oscar Cherry came up from Philadelphia. Mrs, McKel- vey had been visiting in Clearfield and mo- tored here with the other guests from that place. —Miss Margaret Kaufman, a nurse “in the Carlisle hospital, has been spending her week’s vacation with relatives in Belle- fonte. —Mrs. George Vetter, with her son Jack, of Pittsburgh, is making her annual visit with her sister, Mrs. Johnstonbaugh, at Axe Mann. —Mr. and Mrs. Harry Charleson spent from Saturday until Tuesday at their home at Reynoldsville, having made the trip by automobile. —Mrs. Carrie Showers, who has been en- tertaining her nephew and his family within the past week, left with them yes~ terday for their return drive to Rochester, where she will be their guest for several weeks. —Mrs. James Dawson, of DuBois, and her two children, Katherine and Earl, have been in Bellefonte during the past week, house guests of Mrs. Satterfield, while visiting with relatives of both Mr. and Mrs. Dawson. —Mrs. F. A. Fink returned to her home in Altoona Tuesday, after spending the month of August with friends in Centre and Clinton counties. Visits were made by Mrs. Fink to Lock Haven, Mill Hall, Belle- fonte, Pleasant Gap and State College. —Mrs. Daniel Hall, of Unionville, left Wednesday with her niece and her niece's daughter, for Columbus, Ohio, intending to go on from there to Missouri. Mrs. Hall's plans are for visiting with rela- tives in the west for the greater part of the winter. —Robert Vorhis, of Bloomsburg, for five years a well known resident of Belle~ fonte, and very prominent in its musical circle, was here Monday on an over night business trip, representing a horseshoe nail factory, for the north-eastern section of the United States. —Miss M. C. Snyder and her niece, Miss Jeannette Cooke, went to New York, Tues- day, to attend some early openings and to select Miss Snyder's fall millinery stock. From New York they will go to Washing- ton where Miss Cooke will enter a child's nurse special training school. —Mrs. 8S. H. Griffith accompanied her grand-daughter, Gertrude Dawson, to Phil- adelphia, Wednesday, and went from there directly on to Wildwood, N. J. to be at the cottage of her daughter, Mrs. White, during the month of September. Mr. Grif- fith will probably go east later to join his wife. —Mrs. McClure Gamble went to Newark, N. J., Saturday, for a week with her moth- er and brother, Mrs. Joseph Ceader and Joseph Jr., expecting at the end of that time to go with her mother and a party to Canada, where they have planned to spend the greater part of the month of September. —Dr. and Mrs. W. U. Irwin and their daughter Katherine returned late last week from their trip through east- ern Pennsylvania and a week’s stay at the Shore. While at Atlantic City they ran over to New York for a week-end visit with their son Boyd, who is in business in Gotham. —Mrs. D. I. Willard, who left Bellefonte the latter part of last week, has been spending the week with cousins in Buf- falo, where she will be met by her broth- er for the trip to Montreal. Mrs. Willard’s plans are for an indefinite visit in Canada, as a guest of her four brothers, two of whom live in Montreal and two in Toron- to. ; —Mrs. Person and Mrs. Hicks stopped in Bellefonte Monday evening for a few hours with Mrs. D. Wagner Geiss, on their way home to Trenton, following a visit in Cen- tre Hall with Mrs. Jamés: Strohm. Mrs. Person had joined Mrs. Hicks in Centro Hall on her way east from Chicago, in or- der to make the trip back to New Jersey together. —George VanTries, who had spent a week in Bellefonte with his sister, Mrs. Louisa V. Harris, left Friday to join Mrs. VanTries in Tyrone, expecting to return from there to their home in Pittsburgh. Mrs. VanTries had been here with her hus- band for several days, leaving to spend the remainder of the time at her former home in Tyrone. : —Vernon Allen, who left Centre county nineteen years ago, and during that time was in communication. with none of his relatives in this locality, returned unex- pectedly last week, from New York for a short visit back home. The greater part of his ten day’s stay was spent with his uncle, George Hughes, of Axe Mann. Mr. Allen has planned for a ‘second visit to Centre county this fall. t —Mrs. Grant Pifer, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. H. K. Hoy, returned Friday of last week to her home in Wilkinsburg, following a week’s visit here with her sis- ter, Mrs. Clayton Royer and her family. Mrs. Hoy, who is eighty years of age, went to Wilkinsburg, intending to be there and with her daughter, Mrs: Shuey, at Pros- pect, Ohio, for an indefinite time; having since the death of Mr. Hoy made her home with her children. —The Misses Grace, Vida and Minnie Wetzel, of Akron, Ohio, and Mrs. Harold Flagg, of Youngstown, arrived here Sun- day after a motor trip from their homes. The Misses Wetzel are at the home of their aunt, Mrs. Oscar Wetzel, of Willowbank street, while visiting the many friends at their former home here. Mrs. Flagg's for- mer home is in Lock Haven, whither she continued her journey after the arrival here. They expect to remain for about ten days. ' —Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Twitmire’s July and August guests were, Miss Mary Sims, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. John Brachbill with their’ three children, and Mr. and Mrs. Foster and their son,, all of Williamsport; Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Mul- holland with their nephew, and Mr. and Mrs. 8S. B. Riling, of Altoona; Mr. and Mrs. McKeehan and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Twitmire, of Sunbury; Miss Helen Sto- ver, of Collingswood, N. J., and Dr. and Mrs. Wilbur Twitmire, with their three sons, of Lancaster. Mr. Foster is a grand- son of the Rev. Milton K. Foster, a for- mer pastor of the Bellefonte Methodist church. Additional personal news on page 4, Col. 6. SA ————————— Twenty Bricklayers Wanted. : $1.40 per hour, 2 years work. Ap- ply Foscheid Bros., American Viscose houses, Lewistown, and bring tools. {und 68-34-1t BH a —— Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by €..Y. Wagner & Co. ‘Wheat - - - - - - $1.00 Corn = = ww. ww. = 90 BYs "= = "= "au - .90 Oats - - - . 50 Barley ®» = clwiie - lm 80 Buckwheat - - - = - (1