. sioners will change after the a The court stated that while Demorali aid Bellefonte, Pa., December 14, 1923. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. — The Brockerhoff house public dining room will be closed all day on Christmas. Raccoon will be the only kind of game legal to hunt after tomorrow, and they will be in season until Feb- ruary 1st. The Pennsylvania State College will close for the holiday season to- day, and will not reopen until Thurs- day, January 3rd. > The Hon. Harry B. Scott, of Philipsburg, has been made chairman for Centre county of the Harding me- morial association. In an automobile accident on Centre Hall mountain, last Friday afternoon, Howard Grove, of Centre Hall, sustained several fractured ribs. The Hon. William I. Swoope has presented a bill in Congress that would provide for the erection of a public building in Philipsburg not to exceed $125,000 in cost. -——A sale of home-made candies will be held at Olewine’s hardware store on Saturday, conducted by mem- bers of St. John’s Episcopal Sunday school, for the benefit of the church school service league. Mrs. F. M. Crawford's Sunday school class will take orders for home- made salted peanuts at 50 cents a pound, and home-made salted almonds at $1.00 per pound. Phone your order to 152-M not later than Thursday, December 20th. Jury commissioners John Deck- er and Joseph Emerick, with Mrs. Donald Potter as clerk, started their job on Monday of filling the jury wheel with names of men and women who will be called upon to do jury service during 1924. Mrs. William McClure was painfully injured, last Friday morn- ing, when she was struck by a car «coming down High street, at the «crossing leading from the Centre County bank building to the old Gar- man property. No bones were broken “but she was badly bruised and suffer- «ed considerably from shock. William R. Phillips, general smanager of the Bellefonte plant of the American Lime and® Stone Co., ayvith Mrs. Phillips and their three «children, are occupying apartments at the Bush house. Since moving to Bellefonte during the late summer Mr. and Mrs. Phillips have lived in the Hugh N. Crider home on east Linn street. J. Linn Blackford opened his new moving picture house, “The Clif- ton,” in Huntingdon, last week. The Monitor of that place says “it’s a won- .derful theatre and that the people of Huntingdon are proud as can be of it.” ‘We congratulate Linn and hope that “his venture will be even more success- MEYERS GOES TO JAIL. t Bootlegging Cases Chief Interest al December Term of Court. officials. it was impossible to have him indicted for bootlegging on the information in his possession, he would impose a sen- tence in the larceny charge that would Violators of the Volstead law were give him to understand that the court the chief attraction at the regular De- cember session of court held this | is beyond intimidation. Mr. Kelly de- nied the charges but the court sen- week, and the court house was crowd- | tenced him to not less than one year ed every day with men and women nor more than two in the western curious to witness the outcome? Prin- | penitentiary. cipal interest centered in the men caught in the state police dragnet on or about October 12th, when a raid- ing squad under command of Capt. Paul Stout, of Lancaster, arrested three Bellefonte men, two at Snow Shoe and one at Penns Cave, on charges of manufacturing and traffic- ing in liquor. The first of the cases were disposed of on Monday evening when John Haldeman, of Bellefonte, plead guilty to the charge of bootlegging and was sentenced to pay a fine of one dollar and undergo imprisonment in the county jail for not less than thirty days nor more than sixty. The next case was that of William Musser, of Penns Cave, who plead guilty to manufacturing and selling liquor of greater strength than the Volstead law prescribes. At a hear- ing before a justice of the peace in Bellefonte early in October Mr. Mus- ser gave bail for his appearance at the December term of court and some time later he left the county and went to Canada. Under pres- sure of his bondsman he return- ed last week and on his way back spent a night in Buffalo, N. Y., where he fell into the hands of a bunch of evil-disposed people and was robbed of $400 in cash and some val- uable papers. He appeared in court, however, on Monday and plead guilty to the charges against him. The court sentenced him to pay the costs of prosecution, a fine of five hundred dollars and imprisonment in the coun- ty jail for not less than one year nor more than two. The case of Jeff Tearney was taken up on Wednesday afternoon, he hav- ing entered a plea of not guilty, but after the Commonwealth had offered its evidence in the shape of the testi- mony of the state police who told of purchasing liquor from Mr. Tearney, and presenting the liquor in evidence, he changed his plea from not guilty to guilty. The case of Fred Meyers occupied the attention of the court most of Wednesday afternoon. State police told of purchasing a quart bottle of whiskey from Mr. Meyers about ten o'clock on the evening of October 11th, which, when analyzed, proved to be from forty to forty five per cent. alcoholic content. Mr. Meyers, in his own behalf, testified that he was not in Bellefonte on the evening of Octo- ber 11th, having taken a young wom- an to her home in Unionville. The woman in question and her father substantiated Mr. Meyers’ testimony, while two other young women testi- fied that on the evening of October 11th they were out joy riding with | the state policeman who claimed to ful than he anticipated when going pave purchased the whiskey from into it. have put on holiday reduction sales svhich have attracted large crowds, avhile the high-class pictures at the Scenic always draw big audiences. Hundreds of Bellefonte people are regular attendants and thus they see all the good ones. If you are not a regular get in line and see all the fop-notchers. ———Sheriff-elect E. R. Taylor an- mounced on Wednesday that he had selected his deputy in the person of John L. Dunlap, of Bellefonte. At the recent election Mr. Dunlap was elect- ed a member of Bellefonte borough council, from the West ward, but be- ing an office holder of this character will not disqualify him from serving | as deputy to sheriff Taylor. —1If Centre county is to partici- pate in the State-aid road fund dis- tribution the county commissioners will have to make their desire known to the Highway Department on or be- fore December 31st, otherwise the money that would come to this county will revert to the fund and be pro-rat- ed among those counties from which applications have been filed. Officials of the Department realize that in most counties in the State the person- mel of the board of county commis- first ‘Monday in the new year, but notwith- standing this fact they are asking the present board to decide the question . or lose the money. ——To the friend in Philadelphia, whom we've never seen or met, who concluded a most cheering Christmas letter to us with the hope that we'd get a roast of venison and the sherry io dress it with and that our private tbootlegger would come through with :a “quart of twenty-year old to add to -the joys of it all,” we want to make a confession. Long ago we kenned that | | Meyers, and that the policeman was Many merchants in Bellefonte | so badly intoxicated that one of the girls had to drive the car home. The ! case went to the jury at five o’clock and after being out about an hour they returned a sealed verdict which was presented to court yesterday morning in which they found Mr. Meyers guilty as indicted and he was promptly sentenced to pay a fine of five hundred dollars, costs of prose- cution and undergo imprisonment in the county jail for not less than one year nor more than two. : Mr. Tearney was called before the court yesterday morning and because he has a wife and family of nine chil- dren to support, and works every day, Judge Quigley told him he would sus- pend sentence upon the payment of costs, provided he would walk the straight and narrow path for a per- iod of two years; if he failed to do so, however, he would call him up and give him the same sentence he gave Meyers. X Gasper Paulik, of Snow Shoe, one of the men arrested in the October raid, was sent to jail for three to six months. Other cases heard during the week included that of the Commonwealth vs. George Sweigart, charged with forcible entry and assault. This case was from Rush township where Mr. Sweigart is constable. The prosecu- tor, Mrs. Moore, stated that the con- stable had forced his way into her home without being fortified with a search warrant. Mr. Sweigart plead guilty to the charge but explained his action by stating that he had been asked to go there by two young men who charged their sister was in the house with a married man. As no great harm was done sentence was suspended upon the payment of costs, and Mr. Sweigart was given thirty days in which to make the payment. Commonwealth vs. Thomas Golden, the time was nearing when Judge ' charged by his wife with assault and Quigley would have to treat wough so we got another job for our private bootlegger. He’s been dis- tributing temperance tracts for nine months or more and though our camp is right on the banks of Spring creek it’s as dry.as the desert of Sahara and we have no hope of ever glimps- ing “a quart of twenty-year old” again unless it be in a museum. We did get the roast of venison, however. Samuel McWilliams Hess sent the deer meat, with the compliments of the Modocs, of which hunting party te is such an enthusiastic member. We had the currant jelly and fell to the low estate of using a substitute for sherry but the dinner was fine be- cause gathered with us round the ta- ble were the spirits of such hearten- ing ‘well wishers as the unknown one: 4n Philadelphia and Sam Hess, ‘em battery and desertion and non-sup- port. After hearing two witnesses the court eliminated the charge of as- sault and battery and ordered the de- fendant to pay fifty dollars a month for the support of his wife and two children and to give a bond as assur- ance for faithfully carrying out the order of the court. John Kelly, a young man of How- ard, plead guilty to the charge of stealing two automobile tires from William Weber, of Howard. When called for sentence on Wednesday afternoon the court stated that he had information from a reliable source that he (Kelly) had also been engag- ed in bootlegging in Bald Eagle val- ley, and that he had made the asser- tion that the court would not dare im- pose sentence upon him because he ! | Civil cases tried included the Pick- ering Coal & Clay company vs. Cen- tral Refractories company. Verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $431.14. William P. Bell vs. D. R. Wilson, an action to recover damages resulting from an automobile accident. Verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $174.10. Wilhelm Krause vs. John Bergen, an action in ejectment. Verdict for the defendant. Mrs. David H. Custer Killed by Acci- dental Gun Shot. Mrs. Lulu M. Custer, wife of David H. Custer, who lives a short distance above Snow Shoe Intersection, was in- stantly killed between nine and ten o'clock on Wednesday morning when a shot gun in the hands of her eigh- teen year old son Harold was acci- dentally discharged, the entire load hitting her in the left side just be- low the heart. Young Custer was on the point of starting out to hunt and had gotten as far as the kitchen door. The gun he had taken was new to him and he was examining the mechanism when it was suddenly discharged and his mother, who was standing near, dropped to the floor, dying instantly. The son was naturally horror-strick- en and with other members of the family rushed to their mother’s side, hoping that the shot was not fatal and that Mrs. Custer had only lost consciousness, but their hopes were in vain. The son is heart-broken over the accident. Mrs. Custer was fifty years old on August 8th and was a daughter of Uriah and Mary McHenry Conley. In addition to her husband she is surviv- ed by eight children, namely: Ar- thur G. Custer, of Baltimore; Mrs. Joseph Davidson, of Wingate; Earl, at home; Mrs. Budd Monsel, of Belle- fonte; Harold, Nellie, Clark and Paul, at home. She also leaves one brother and one sister, Clark Conley, of Pitts- burgh, and Mrs. E. C. Warren, of St. Paul, Minn., as well as the following half-brothers and sisters: Miss Mina Goheen, of Julian; Isaiah Conley, in Iowa; Howard, of Johnstown; Miss Venie Conley, of Fishertown, Bedford county, and Miss Annie, of Sewickley. Rev. M. C. Piper will have charge of the funeral services which will be held at two o’clock tomorrow after- noon, burial to be made in the Stover cemetery. A lp ——————— ——Solid mahogany candlesticks, with glass tops, at $1.00.—W. R. Brachbill. 49-1t Mother and Son Dead as Result of Auto Wreck. Mrs. Walter Lobb, of Brisbin, was instantly killed and her five year old son Alvin so badly injured that he died inside of five hours, in an auto wreck on Sunday evening, when the train on the New York Central rail- road struck the Lobb machine on the Butler crossing, near Philipsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Lobb with their five children and fifteen year old Bella Hicks, were on their way home from a motor trip to Clearfield. As they neared the railroad crossing Mr. Lobb’s vision was obscured by the bright headlights of cars going in the opposite direction, and he failed to see or hear the train, which was run- ning behind schedule time. The pilot of the engine struck the front of the automobile just as it covered the track. The machine, a big King Eight car, was thrown about fifty feet and com- pletely wrecked. The train was stop- ped as quickly as possible and train crew and passing pedestrians gather- ed up the dead and injured and con- veyed them to the Cottage State hos- pital. Mrs. Lobb was dead when they reached there and physicians stated that she had probably met instant death. The little boy died about mid- night. While all the others are pain- fully injured hospital authorities ex- pect them to recover. New Year’s Eve at the Penn-Alto. Last year’s New Year’s eve party at the Penn Alto hotel in Altoona was such a pleasureable event that the management of that hotel is planning even a bigger affair for the enjoyment of those who want to journey to Al- toona to see the old year out and the new in. A New York, a Boston and the reg- ular hotel orchestra will all be play- ing, as the dining room, the lounge and the mezzanine gallery will be giv- en over to diners and revelry. -A number of professional entertainers have been secured to contribute a bit to the merriment and some evening is in store for those who make reserva- tions early enough to be certain of a table. Atcherson—Heaton.—Harry Atch- erson, of Fort Myer, Va., and Miss Anna V. Heaton, of Bellefonte, were married at the Methodist parsonage in Bellefonte on Thursday, December 6th, by the Rev. E. E. McKelvey. Mur. Atcherson is in the service of the government, and they hope to make their home in Philadelphia. ——Wednesday the treasurer of the Bellefonte hospital received a check from the Elks for $1406.06. It repre- sents the net receipts from the Hal- had furnished liquor to court house low-een carnival. AMONG THE HUNTERS. A Small Fortune Spent on the Trail of Deer. Almost six thousand hunting licens- es were issued in Centre county this year which means a preliminary ex- pense of practically $6,000 before the army of hunters start for the woods, and with this figure as the basis of calculation the man with a statistical mind might be able to figure out what the people of Centre county have paid this fall for a few weeks of the sport of hunting. And should he succeed in doing so we feel confident that the total would be of such magnitude as to make the old-time hunter gasp with astonishment. Twenty-five and thirty years ago hunting parties consisted of from six to eight men, all expert in following the trail, and about all they took to camp was plenty of bread, bacon, sau- sage, a ham or two, some potatoes, and plenty of coffee. But today it is different. Take the Fisher party, of Boalsburg, which camped at Sinking creek in the Bear Meadows district, their provender included eighty pounds of sausage, three fresh hams and three cured hams, several sides of bacon, a quarter of beef, white bread, nut bread and graham bread, oranges and grape fruit, prunes, tea and cof- fee, flour, sugar, lard, two turkeys and a number of chickens. In fact their bill for “eats” was just $353.35. They have a two story house for a camp and it is fully equipped with beds, cots and mattresses, dishes, ete. Of course the Fisher party has a memberhip of from twenty to twen- ty-five men, but if the expense of each party of that size has been any- thing near that of the Fisher party it would indicate an expenditure of any- where from fifty to seventy-five thousand dollars. Of course nobody will attempt to compute the returns for this big outlay. In fact it can’t be computed in dollars and cents. While the majority of hunters nat- urally try their best to get deer and other game as trophies of the chase it is the outing in the mountains and open air that appeals to all of them. The brief spell of free, untrammeled life, away from all the conventional- ities, and with nothing to worry about. By the time this issue of the “Watchman” reaches its readers most of the deer hunters will have broken camp and be either at home or on their way there. So far as deer is concerned it has been a successful season. While it is practically im- possible to get an accurate count of the bucks killed in Centre county the various game wardens agree that the number is the greatest for many years, probably in excess of four hun- dred. Quite a number of parties got their limit the first week, while others went home with three, four and five deer. Wilmerding hunters who had their headquarters at Walter Gherrity’s, went home on Saturday with three fine bucks. The Tuscarora club, of Juniata, went home from the Seven mountains last Thursday with four deer. The DeForest club, of Altoona, hunting in the Stone creek region, went home with five on Friday. Two bear were killed on Wallace run, in the foothills of the Alleghe- nies, the latter part of the week. One weighing 184 pounds by a Tyrone party and the other by a party from East Liberty. It weighed 140 pounds. The Foster party, of State College, came home from Stone creek last week with their limit of six. The Woodward club broke camp last Saturday, having bagged their sixth deer on Friday. Among the former Centre countians back for the hunt was Prof. S. C. Mil- ler, assistant superintendent of the schools of Chester, Pa. He came up for the first three days of the season and spent them at his father’s camp over at Monroe Furnace, just over the mountains from Pine Grove Mills. Last year Prof. Miller bought a new .300 Savage rifle and came up here to try it. The very first shot brought down a fine buck and he hadn’t fired another shot from it until last week when the second one was aimed at a buck that fell dead in its tracks. The Yarnell-McMullen hunting par- ty, located in Little Sugar Valley, got their second deer on Wednesday after- noon, a two point buck. But even this will hardly account for their failure to get a big black bear on Monday. A half dozen or more of the hunters had bruin entirely surrounded and four of them took two shots apiece at the bear, which in the case of one of the men was at a distance of only about fifty feet, but notwithstanding this fact the bear broke through the cordon of hunters and got away. And now some of them are blaming their hard luck on a monster white buck that has been ranging that series of mountains the past eight years. The animal has been seen and shot at a score of times, even at close range, without bringing it down, and some old hunters claim that it is impervious to bullets. In fact, it is claimed as a ‘real hoodoo by a number of hunters. rs ——— A ——— Genuine Tennessee cedar chests as low as $15.00.—W. R. Brachbill. 49-1t Hospital Benefit. On Friday night, at 8:30, in the I. | 0. 0. F. lodge room, the ladies of | Crystal Spring Rebekah lodge will present a hospital benefit recital, to be given by Mrs. A. M. Krader and Miss Rachael Shuey. This program will be open to the public. No admis- sion will be charged but a silver col- lection will be lifted. EWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Dr. 8. M. Huff and wife, of Newark, N. J., spent last week among relatives in Milesburg and calling on friends in Belle- fonte. — Miss Celia Haupt went over to Cur- wensville Monday afternoon, expecting to remain for the week with Mrs. Howard J. Thompson. —Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Griffith left Tues- day for Philadelphia, where they have planned to spend the Holiday season with their children. — Mrs. Washington Irvin and her daugh- ter, Mrs. Fred Hollobaugh, spent yester- day in the stores of Altoona, doing their Christmas shopping. Mrs. Walter Lilly, of Lewisburg, has been a guest during the week of Mrs. John 1. Olewine and Miss Adaline, at their home on north Allegheny street. —Mrs. M. I. Gardner was an arrival in town yesterday; having come over from Clearfield for one of her frequent visits with her mother, Mrs. Cyrus Strickland. —George Harpster was an over Sunday visitor with his daughter and family, at Mill Hall, and while there saw the carcass of one of the very few elks killed in the State this season. — Mrs. William B. Wallis, of Pittsburgh, will come to Bellefonte this week to cel- ebrate her birthday with her mother and grandmother, Mrs. Conley and Mrs. Meese, remaining here for the Holidays. Mr. Wallis will join Mrs. Wallis for Christmas. —Mr. and Mrs. John T. McCormick, of State College, spent Tuesday in Bellefonte, shopping, looking after some business and visiting. The greater part of the time, however, was spent with Mrs. McCormick's sister, Mrs. Hutchinson, at her home on Howard street. — Mrs. Murdock Claney, of Narberth, and Miss Caroline McClure, of Wilkinsburg, were called to Bellefonte last Saturday, on account of their mother's accident. Mrs. McClure's injuries at first were thought to be very serious, but more hope is now felt for a speedy recovery. — Mrs. J. D. Lambert and her daughter, Mrs. Labb, who came to Bellefonte two weeks ago for the funeral of James Noll, went to Tyrone Tuesday morning for a day’s visit with Mrs. Lambert's brother; intending to leave from there during the afternoon for their home at Larimer. —Paul Foreman, a student at Franklin and Marshall College, will arrive home this evening to spend his holiday vaca- tion with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Foreman. Their son Mahlon will come home tomorrow from the University of Michigan and their daughter, Miss Lois, will arrive on the 20th. —Miss Hilda L. Haupt, head operator in the Bell telephone exchange in Bellefonte, attended a meeting of the supervising em- ployees of the Bell company in the Cen- tral Pennsylvania district held at Altoo- na on Tuesday. One of the speakers pres- ent at the meeting was general traffic man- ager John Tonner Harris, of Philadelphia, but who was born and raised in Bellefonte. —Prof. J. A. Hunter, for some years head of the department of mechanical en- gineering at the University of Colorado, located at Boulder, has been east this week. Returning from a business trip to New York he stopped off for a visit of a few days with relatives and friends at State College and spent part of yesterday with his cousin Robert I". Hunter and family in this place. —Mr. and Mrs. Lycurgus Lingle, of Cen- tre Hall, spent Tuesday in Bellefonte, do- ing some Christmas shopping. Mr. and Mrs. Lingle expect to leave next week for New York State, where they will be until after Christmas with their son James and family. The principal reason for going at this time is to see their first and only grand-child, a little daughter who arrived in their son’s family two weeks ago. —Mrs. Robert A. Miller and her cousin, Mrs. Fred Giles, both of Tyrone, spent a short time in Bellefonte Wednesday after- noon, on their return from a day's visit with the Jamison family, at Mrs. Miller's former home at Spring Mills. Mr. Miller and Mr. Giles are with the P. R. R. Co, consequently their families are among the fortunate ones who can make frequent vis- its with the away from home friends. —A very interesting caller at the “watchman” office Wednesday was Irvin TT. Harrison, of Pleasant Gap. Mr. Harri- son has been employed at the Whiterock operations for three years or more and is one of that company’s most trusted em- ployees. He didn’t tell us what brought him to town, specially, but since he is a bachelor we know he wasn't worried like the most of us are just now over what to get the little folks for Christmas. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Young and their two daughters, Evalyn and Jean, of Charleston, W. Va., are expected in Belle- fonte late next week, to be Christmas guests of Mrs. Young's parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk. Mr. and Mrs. Young are moving to Mr. Young's former home in Clearfield, where he has accepted a posi- tion in his line of work as a sanitary en- gineer and it is there they expect to make their home as soon as their household goods arrive from Charleston. —Among those in attendance at court during the fore part of the week were Wil- liam Woods, of Osceola, and John Bergen, of Munson. They were here for the de- termination of a case that has been in court for a long time. It involved the ti- tle to some property along Moshannon creek near Osceola that Mr. Bergen bought at tax sale. A verdict in his favor was rendered by the jury and so he and Mr. Woods, his principal witness, went home happy on Wednesday afternoon. —Mrs. Joseph Metz will leave Bellefonte today to join her son at their home in Princeton, Ind., for Christmas; expecting to remain there until early in the new year, when she will return to Centre coun- ty. Mrs. Metz is better known in this lo- cality as Miss Fannie Baum, and has been here for a ten week's visit with her broth- ers and sisters in Bellefonte and State Col- lege. Upon her son’s return to school at Columbus, after the Holidays, Mrs. Metz will continue her winter's visit here. — Mrs. Robert F. Fay, with her daugh- ter, Patty Lane Fay Jr. who had been in Bellefonte since early summer, left two weeks ago to return to their home in Cal- ifornia. The trip out was made over the southern route; Mrs. Fay’s plans included stops in Philadelphia, Washington and New Orleans, for a short visit with friends in each place, expecting then to go direct home, arriving in Santa Monica about De- cember 11th. Mrs. Fay and the child ac- companied Mrs. John Lane east when she , was summoned to Bellefonte early in the summer by Mr. Lane's illness, the child and her mother remaining here with Mrs. Fay's parents since that time. Nr ———— — s,m ———————————————— —Miss Freda Baum returned home a week ago from a month's visit with her sister, in New York city. —Mrs. John Jacobs, of Boalsburg, who was in Bellefonte on a shopping expedition on Wednesday, was a very pleasant caller at the “Watchman” office. —Mrs. Ralph E. Kirk and her daughter, Mary Katherine, are guests of Mrs. Kirk's mother, Mrs. D. I. Willard; having come in from Grindstone Tuesday. —Mr., and Mrs. Edward Cohen arrived in Bellefonte a week ago, having driven here from their home in Baltimore for a visit with Mr. Cohen's brother, Walter Cohen and his family. —Mrs. George Stuart and her son Ken- neth spent a day in Bellefonte last week with Mrs. Stuart’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James Seibert. Mrs. Stuart stopped here on her way home to Cameron, after attending the funeral of her father, the late Harry Seibert, at Barnesboro. —Arthur E. Ward, of Jersey City, was an over Sunday guest of his mother, Mrs. J. E. Ward. Being on a business trip to West Virginia and through western Penn- sylvania it is probable that Mr. Ward will plan his return to the east so that he may spend Christmas in Bellefonte with his mother. —Mrs. Joseph Ceader came here from Newark, N. J.,, Monday and has been a guest of her nieces, the Misses Cooney, for the week. Upon the return home today of her daughter, Mrs. McClure Gamble, Mrs. Ceader will spend the remainder of the time with her; the plans for her stay in Bellefonte, however, are indefinite. —Mrs. G. A. MacMillen was in Belle fonte Tuesday between trains, stopping off for her daughter, Mary Mott MacMillen Jr., who had been here with her grand- mother, Mrs. Odillie Mott, for several months. Mrs. MacMillen went directly from here to New York, intending to drive from there back to her home in Detroit, Mich. —Mrs. A. Clyde Smith returned home from Clearfield Wednesday night, bring- ing with her her daughter, Miss Miriam, who had been under the care of Dr. Wa- terworth for three weeks; on account of recently discovered spine curvature. The treatment will require Miss Smith to be perfectly rigid on her back for three months. —Miss Kate Gummo, who is making her first visit home from Germany in twenty years, was in Bellefonte for several hours Wednesday afternoon; having driven here with her niece, Mrs. Dunlap, from Pine Grove Mills. Miss Gummo spent much of her girlhood life in Bellefonte, later going to California and finally left this country to make her home with her aunt in Ger- many; but on account of the confiscation of all her property there, came home to. live the rest of her life with her people. Not a Bath in Four Years. A man who gave his name as John Chezkok, and his home Unionville, was arrested at Cresson, last Thurs- day evening, as a suspicious charac- ter. When searched at the station house it was discovered that he was wearing six pairs of trousers, seven. shirts, two suits of underwear, two vests, a coat, a heavy pair of shoes and artics. He wore a heavy beard and claimed to be only twenty-six years old. He claimed to be on his way home from a visit to Pittsburgh and confessed that he had been ar- rested forty-six times in the past three months while “looking for work.” His hands and face were so dirty that Cresson officials asked him when he had taken a wash and he re- plied: “Oh, not so bad this time; washed last time in July, but have not taken a bath all over for about four years.” And yet he claimed to live in Unionville. The gift she will appreciate, a Hoosier kitchen cabinet.—W. R. Brachbill. 49-1t Harding Memorial Association of Centre County. The part to be taken by the citizens of Centre county in the erection of a memorial to the late President, War- ren Gamaliel Harding, has taken form in the appointment of officers, the following having been named by the national Harding Memorial asso- ciation: Chairman, Harry B. Scott, Philips- burg. Vice chairmen, Hardman P. Harris, Bellefonte; M. Ward Fleming, Phil- ipsburg; J. Laird Holmes, State Col- lege; L. Frank Mayes, Lemont. Secretary, W. I. Fleming, fonte. Further details in connection with this undertaking will be announced in the near future. Belle- Report of Needlework Guild. The Bellefonte branch of the Nee- dlework Guild of America reports the collection of 694 articles for the year 1923. In the distribution 344 of these ar- ticles, consisting of towels, pillow cas- es, sheets, wash cloths and infant ap- parel were sent to the Bellefonte hos- pital. ] The remaining articles comprising stockings, underwear, etc., were dis- tributed by the directors. JANE W. CURTIN, Secretary. — A ——————————. The party who took the spare tire from Sim Baum’s car is known. If same is not returned at once pros- ecution will follow. 49-1t —C———————— — The ideal Christmas giff, a Globe Wernicke book case—~W. R. Brachbill. 49-1% For Rent.—A private garage. In- quire at this office. ———————————— Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y, Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - $1.00 Shelled Corn - - - - -- 1.00 Rye - - - - = - 90 Oats = - - - - - 45 Barley - - - - - - 60 ' Buckwheat - - - - - 00