Bewaillidp Bellefonte, Pa., May 23, 1924. m— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——A marriage license was issued at Hollidaysburg, on Tuesday to Pat- rick F. Torsell and Miss Pearl Breon, both of Bellefonte. Philipsburg people are making arrangements to entertain the county convention of the Christian Endeavor Society on Tuesday, June 3rd. ——A sale of Memorial day flowers will open Tuesday, May 27th, at Mil- ler’s hardware store, Bellefonte, and continue throughout the week. 21-1t As has been their custom for a number of years past the Bellefonte Lodge of Elks will entertain the old soldiers at dinner at their home on High street, next Friday afternoon following the Memorial exercises. In the neighborhood of thirty- five second hand Ford cars were sold at the public sale held by the Beatty Motor company last Saturday. A few of the latest models brought fair prices but the majority went at ridic- ulously low figures. All the cars had been put in good running order prior to the sale. ——The circus has come and gone but the Scenic can be found at its reg- ular place of business, dispensing its usually big programs of entertain- ment and amusement to its many reg- ular patrons. Only the biggest and best motion pictures filmed are shown at the Scenic and if you want to see them all you must be a regular. Bellefonte friends of Mrs. M. A. Landsy will be interested in learn- ing that she has so far recovered from an operation she recently under- went at the University hospital, Phil- adelphia, that she was able to be moved to her mother’s home in that city last week; and will probably re- turn to Bellefonte early in June. The Blair county club of The Pennsylvania State College will hold a reception dance in honor of the Penn State baseball team in the Logan room of the Penn-Alto hotel, Altoona, Monday evening, May 26th. Gieg’s Rainbow orchestra will furnish the music for the dancing which will be from nine until one o’clock. The sub- scription will be $2.00 per couple. Boy Scouts of Troop No. 1 will present a play entitled “The Boy Who Went,” together with two short farces by comedians of the troop, on Monday evening, May 26th, at 8:15. Admis- sion will be thirty-five cents. Those who remember the successful minstrel shows the boys have put on the past three years will be prepared for the enjoyable sort of evening in store for those who attend. The venerable Daniel Eberhart became quite ill while attending serv- ices at the Lutheran church on Sun- day morning and had to be removed to his home on east High street. Heart affection was agsigned as the trouble. celebrated his 91st birthday anniver- sary and naturally any illness is just: cause for concern on the part of the members of his family and friends. Dr. W. C. Shuster, chiroprac- tor with offices in the Cohen building on High street, has leased the apart- ments in the McClure building, on Bishop street, to get possession June 1st. The doctor has just returned from a trip to the eastern part of the State and rumor has it that he is to become a benedict in the near future, the young lady who will add to his happiness being Miss Esther Green, of Media. Miss Martha Haines has ten- dered her resignation as stenographer in the office of the American Lime & Stone company, effective June 1st, in anticipation of her marriage a week later to L. F. Lindenmuth, of Allen- town. The wedding will take place at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. M. H. Haines, on east Curtin street. Mr. Lindenmuth is a graduate of State College and now holds a good posi- tion in New York city. The Woman’s club will give a benefit card party at the Meek resi- dence, west High street, tomorrow (Saturday) evening, May 24th, to which the public is invited. Bridge, five hundred and flinch will be played and an admission of 35 cents charged. The Club is responsible for the rent of room used for the State chest clin- ic on Tuesday afternoons and, in ad- dition to a pleasant evening, your presence will contribute to a commu- nity project. ——John W. McKelvey, of Belle- fonte, has been elected a member of the Student Senate at Dickinson Col- lege, where he is a member of the Sophomore class. McKelvey was chosen as the representative of the Sigma Chi fraternity on the student governing body of the College by a popular student vote. This is one of the highest elective honors conferred by the student body at Dickinson and carries with it considerable responsi- bility. McKelvey has been active in a number of organizations. After a rather interesting sea- son of sports and hikes the Hi-Y boys held a closing banquet last night, the only social event in which the mem- bers have indulged. Their guests in- cluded their leaders and men from State College who have given them some very instructive talks during the season of their activity. The members are taking an interest in the foreign Y. M. C. A. work for boys and at their last meeting voted to contrib- ute twenty dollars towards the cause. A refreshment booth was conducted on circus day to help raise money for their treasury. Mr. Eberhart only recently ANOTHER VICTIM OF TYPHOID EPIDEMIC. Mrs. William Young, of Coleville, Passed Away Wednesday [ 1 Morning. The typhoid fever epidemic at Cole- ville and vicinity resulted in another death at 2:15 o’clock on Wednesday ' morning when Mrs. Margaret N. Young, wife of William Young, passed away at the Bellefonte hospital. She had been ill for almost three weeks but was not taken to the hospital un- til Tuesday, when her condition was regarded as extremely critical. She was a daughter of Thomas and Mary Peece and was born in Miles- burg forty-seven years ago. In addi- tion to her husband she is survived by the following children: Mrs. Flor- ence Emenhizer, of Orviston; Mrs. Clarence Flack, of Port Matilda; Mrs. Carrie Hockman, of Bellefonte; Ray- mond, James, George, Clarence, Clar- ice and Betty, all at home. She also leaves two sisters and four brothers, Mrs. Fannie Emenhizer, of Yarnell; Mrs. Elizabeth Long, of Snow Shoe; Harry, Thomas, Joseph and John Peece, of Coleville. Mrs. Young was a member of the Methodist church and Rev. E. E. Mc- Kelvey will have charge of the fun- eral services which will be held at one o'clock this afternoon, burial to be made in the Meyers cemetery. The death of Mrs. Young is the sec- ond to occur since the outbreak of ty- phoid fever three weeks ago, Miss Helen Wolfe having died last week, and there are still three very serious cases, Miss Pearl Leathers, Clarence Young, a son of Mrs. Young, who died on Wednesday morning, and John Rossman. Five new cases were ad- mitted to the hospital this week, namely: Robert Davis, John Ross- man, Margaret. Rodavick, Thurman Davis and Mrs. Margaret Young. This makes a total of twenty-two cases admitted up to Wednesday noou. With two deaths and two patients discharged left eighteen in the hos- pital at that time, but two other cases have likely been taken to the hospital by this time which will make a total of twenty there and twenty-four all told as the result of the epidemic. It is the worst siege of typhoid ever known in Centre county and is entire- ly ascribable to the fact that so many people had used the water from the infected springs before the disease de- veloped. But the promptness and thoroughness with which the local representative of the State Board of Health acted when the source of in- fection was discovered undoubtedly saved many people from becoming in- I fected. In a recent issue the “Watch- man” told of the blowing up with dy- namite of the concrete reservoir used as a supply for Collins’ Row, but the authorities were not content to stop there. They secured the service of a traction engine and connecting a steam pipe from the engine to the service pipes at that place forced live steam through the entire system for a period of five hours. Great quanti- ‘ties of slime and dirt were blown out and after the pipes were thoroughly | cleaned a service pipe was connected with the Coleville water line and since then the people living at that place have had the benefit of the water from the Bellefonte spring. Inasmuch as it is now about twenty days since the source of the infection has been destroyed it is likely that the epidemic has almost run its course and few new cases are likely to de- velop. Let Us be One of Them. The clean up and paint up campaign now being waged all over the country, has been an established activity in more than 7,000 American cities for {many years past, and as the very defi- nite advantages of improved sanita- tion, lower fire risk, and increased beauty and pleasantness of civic cleanliness have been made apparent, the campaign has grown in scope and importance. It has done this because it enlists the active interest and co- operation of citizens of all classes in all walks of life. Bellefonte will entertain many buy- ers and visitors from out of town within the next few months, and the opportunity to establish a reputation as the cleanest, livest and most pros- perous community in the entire State is one that this newspaper does not believe will be overlooked. The object of this campaign is to clean up and paint up Bellefonte in- doors and out. To do away with filth, rubbish and unsightly, neglected prop- erties. In short, to “dress up” the town and to keep it so in anticipation of the thriving business which local merchants believe is in store for this year. The clean up and paint up cam- paign not only puts the community in good sanitary condition, but makes it possible to keep it clean. Unless the work of cleaning up and painting up is kept up by systematic efforts the year around little perma- nent good is accomplished. It is im- portant that the initial intensive work be general and thorough. Then the follow-up work can be carried on ef- fectively, and the danger of unsani- tary conditions returning is removed. Civic cleanliness and paintliness means a lowered fire risk, increased sanitation, and a better place in which to live and work. ——Comparatively few farmers were among the crowd in Bellefonte on Monday for the afternoon perform- ance of the Walter L. Main show, ev- idence that the great majority of them were too busy trying to get their spring crops in the ground to take time off for a circus. Ee — — DD ————————————— Flowers for Memorial Day. Miss Jennie Morgan announces that today and tomorrow she will have on display at her store in the new Hev- erly building a line of flowers, suita- ble for Memorial day tributes. Also ! potted plants for window boxes and gardens. 21-1t Y Women’s Auxiliary to Sell Flowers. The Women’s Auxiliary af the Y. M. C. A. will put on a sale of flowers : for Memorial day. The first shipment will arrive and be on sale on Satur- day, May 24th. A splendid variety of potted plants has been ordered from the firm which supplied the carload at Easter, and are guaranteed. The supply consists of the follow- ing: Ivy geranium, hydrangeas, heli- otrope, fuchia, geraniums, small be- gonias, ferns, vinca vines, lantanas. Stewart Brothers Acquitted by Fed- eral Court. In the federal court at Pittsburgh last week, a jury returned a verdict of not guilty in the case of Joseph and Goldman Stewart, of Rush township, charged with using the mails in a scheme to defraud. The men were arrested in February on complaint of Mike Patrick, who received several letters threatening him with violence unless he deposited a sum of money at a designated place. George Stew- art, step-son of Joseph Stewart, ad- mitted having written the letters but alleged that he had been compelled to do so by the two men. The lad is only fifteen years old and he proved such 2 poor witness before the federal court that his evidence was not deem- ed sufficient to convict the men of the charge against them. Al shades of ladies’ silk hose, special Friday and Saturday at $1.00 21-1t per pair. Sim, the Clothier. Walter L. Main Show Well Attended. The Walter L. Main show, which has always been a favorite in Belle- fonte, proved its ability as a drawing attraction last Monday, when the big top was completely filled at the after- noon performance and a fair-sized crowd was present during the even- ing. Both performances were up to the standard, some of the acts being especially fine and daring. The show came to Bellefonte from Sunbury, reaching here about seven o’clock on Sunday morning. Instead of unloading near the passenger de- pot the cars were shifted to the Amer- ican Lime & Stone company track running into the Armor Gap quarries and the unloading took place on the state highway, near the show grounds. This was not only much more conven- ient for the show management but kept all the noise and bustle off the streets of Bellefonte. However, many people went down to the grounds to see the show unload and witness the putting up of the various tents. The parade on Monday morning was the one free attraction witnessed by a large crowd. The horses, trappings, cages and wagons were all spic and span and it proved one of the pleas- ing spectacles of the show. A Happy Family Reunion. A rather unique family reunion took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Clevenstine, over the City bakery, on Tuesday afternoon and evening; unique because of the fact that while Mr. and Mrs. Clevenstine have never been blessed with any children of their own they played dad- dy and mamma to a number of boys and girls during their occupancy of the Pruner Orphanage and so well did they live up to the adopted rela- tionship that every one of the young- sters of those days are now young men and women widely esteemed in their home localities. And that they continue to revere their foster “par- ents” is evidenced by the fact that every one of them made it a point to attend the reunion. hr The gathering took place during the afternoon which was chiefly de- voted to an exchange of greetings, ete. At six o’clock dinner was served and eighteen people sat down at one large table laden with every good thing imaginable. In the centre of the table, an immense cake bearing the date “May 20th, 1924,” in icing, formed the big decoration. And such a happy time! Originally there were three girls and three boys. Two of the young ladies are graduate nurses but one forsook her calling for a hap- py matrimonial venture, while the third is also married. Two of the boys are still in the Clevenstine home while the other one is now home on a furlough after a cruise in the West Indies as a sailor on the U. S. ship Wyoming. Those who were present at the gathering included Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Clevenstine, Miss Bertha Haverstine, of the Rahway (N. J.) hospital; Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Robbins, of Tyrone; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Por- taris, with their baby Billie, of Coal- port; Bruce Wilson and Stearl Gun- sallus, at home, and Harry Peters, of the U. S. navy. Other guests were Mr. Clevenstine’s mother, of Hublers- burg; Mrs. Nitschman, a sister of Mrs. Clevenstine; William Weiler, wife and son, formerly of Hanover, and Rev. Dr. and Mrs. A. M. Schmidt. For Sale.—One solid oak—side icer, porcelain-lined refrigerator, in per- fect condition, and one white enameled child’s crib. Inquire at this office. 20-tf ——All shades of ladies’ silk hose, special Friday and Saturday at $1.00 per pair. Sim, the Clothier. 21-1t satisfaction and prices ; {A Serious and Expensive Community | Problem. | i Edward Parks, fifteen years of age, who was committed to Glens Mills about five weeks ago by Judge Quig- ley and who disappeared from his home at Mrs. Harry Turner’s before he could be taken there, was found by i Sheriff Taylor, Tuesday night, hiding in the home of his grandfather, James i Parks, in Brown Row, Bellefonte. | Two years ago when Edwards mother was committed to the home for incorrigible women at Muncy, her four children were taken in charge by the Children’s Aid society and Ed- ward was placed with Mrs. Turner, where he had the best home he had ever known, was well clothed, sent regularly to school and Sunday school and was on a fair road to become a respectable young man. His grand- parents, not contented with seeing the boy happy and well cared for, did everything possible to lure him back to them and finally connived to have him run away, which he did the night after his hearing before Judge Quig- ley. In company with his uncle, he walked to Beech Creek, arriving there at three o’clock in the morning and ‘remained until last Sunday night when he returned to Bellefonte and :was in hiding at his grandparents’. Sheriff Taylor had traced his where- abouts to Beech Creek, thence to Bellefonte and Tuesday evening went out at ten o’clock to the Parks home in Brown Row. The grandparents stoutly denied that the boy was in the i house but sheriff Taylor and chief of police Dukeman searched it and found Edward up stairs in bed with his un- cle. He was arrested and taken to jail and will be taken to Glens Mills next week. The happenings in the Parks family in the last two years have been—Sa- rah and Anne sent to Muncy, later ' transferred to Laurelton; William and Edward, illegitimate sons of Anne, sent to Glens Mills; Jim, brother of Anne, sent to the penitentiary for three years for stealing, Hoag, another brother, recently before the court for stealing. And to the com- munity it means $800 a year for keep- ing two boys in Glens Mills, $800 for keeping two women in Laurelton, the board of an inmate of the penitentiary for three years, and the elder Parks with a son and daughter at large, all serious menaces. Some notorious record for one family to attain. Expensive as it may be to take care of these people in State institutions, it is yet cheaper than to leave them at liberty to corrupt the morals of a community by stealing, breeding more of their kind and, probably, most ser- i ious of all, spreading disease by their notoriously immoral indulgences. The proper solution of such problems is indeed food for serious reflection. Bellefonte Academy News Notes. The Bellefonte Academy minstrels were the big attraction at the Moose Temple theatre last night, and while the “Watchman” went to press too early to give an extended notice of the performance, we have every rea- son to believe that the boys made good the reputation won in past years. They played to a full house and all those who were unable to reserve seats for the initial performance will have an opportunity to see the show tonight. Get your tickets early today so that you will run no risk of disap- pointment. Immediately following to- night’s performance the minstrel dance will be held in the armory. The Challis Collegians orchestra will fur- nish the music and there will be danc- ing from 11 to 3 o’clock. Academy athletes have had a busy and successful week. Last Friday the baseball team, one of the best in the history of the school, by the way, went to Bloomsburg where they defeated the Normal team by the score of 8 to 1. On Saturday they played the Dickinson Seminary nine, at Williams- port, winning that contest by the overwhelming score of 18 to 1. The Academy track and field team took a leading part in the interscho- lastic sports at State College, on Sat- urday and won the second place silver trophy cup, scoring twenty-five points to Harrisburg Tech’s twenty-six. Welch, of the Academy, broke two records, the javelin and discus throw, while Gwinn broke the record in the hammer throw. Welch was the high point scorer in the meet, making a to- tal of twenty points and winning four first places. The Academy nine will play the Pitt Freshmen on Hughes field this (Friday) afternoon. Game will be caled at 2:30 o'clock and every fan in Bellefonte should see the contest. Nominations for Y. M. C. A. Directors At a meeting of the Board of Direc- tors, held on Tuesday evening, the re- port of the nominating committee for election of board members was receiv- ed. The election will be held on Thursday, May 29th, at the Y. M. C. A. The following nominations were presented: To serve three years: H. M. Mur- torff, R. B. Tinsley, R. L. Mallory, John P. Smith, Frank M. Crawford. To serve two years: John G. Love, James R. Hughes, Calvin Troupe, W. J. Emerick, John Payne. Miss Ruth Garman has return- ed from her sojourn in Brooklyn and tomorrow will open her Dim Lantern tea room at the end of the state high- way on the road to Snow Shoe. Since closing the tea room last fall exten- sive repairs have been made and Miss Garman is now equipped to take care of all the hungry and thirsty travel- ers who find it convenient to patron- ize the tea room. I... a... ee —————— NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mr. and Mrs. George H. Seidel and Dr. Fred R. Seidel, of Hazleton, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Willard Barnhart. 3 —Mrs. R. D. Foreman, who spent the winter at the hotel in Millheim, has re- turned to Centre Hall and opened her comfortable home for the summer. —Mrs. Joseph L. Montgomery is again occupying her apartments at the Bush house, having arrived home Monday night | from Philadelphia, completely recovered from her recent nervous collapse. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walker are con- templating a motor trip to Philadelphia and will have with them as their guest, Mrs. Walker's sister, Mrs. Louis Schad. Their plans are for going down late this week or early next. —Mrs. Emma Hughes Dunkle, of Pitts- burgh, has been among the guests at the Academy this week, having come in for the minstrel show and for a short visit with her brothers, James and Charles Hughes and their families. —Mrs. Stanley B. Valentine, of Wil- liamsport, and .her young son Richard have been with the child's grandmother, Mrs. Harry C. Valentine and the family for a week or more, spending the time here while Mr. Valentine is on a business ! trip west. Their plans are for returning home this week. —Mr. and Mrs. M. Ward Fleming, their youngest child, Winifred Jr.,, and Mrs. Fleming's mother, Mrs. Donaldson, have been here for a part of the week with Mr. Fleming's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. IL Fleming. Mr. Fleming drove over each day to attend court, the family accompa- nying him at different times. —Mr. and Mrs. Russel Blair, with Mrs. Wilbur Baney as a motor guest, left Belle- fonte Tuesday morning for Harrisburg, where they were joined by friends for the drive to Philadelphia for several days of business and pleasure in the city. Mrs. Baney, during her stay, her sister, Mrs. Godshall, in Camden. —Mrs. E. B. Callaway, who left in Feb- ruary on her second trip around the world, expects to land in New York today, called ‘home by the illness of her daughter, Mrs. Thompson, who is east under the care of specialists. Mrs. Callaway will spend some time with Mrs. Garber, at College Point, and with Mrs. Thompson, before returning to Bellefonte. —Mrs. Guy W. Bange, well known in this community as Mrs. Belle Shaner, with Mr. Bange and their two sons, Frank Shaner and Philip Bange, left Hanover last week on a two month’s trip to the Pacific coast. Their plans will include a stop at the Grand Canyon, from there to Los An- geles, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Yellowstone Park, then wherever their fancy may lead. —Miss Hibbs, who had been with her cousin, Mrs. E. H. Richard for the greater part of the past year, left last week to re- turn to Norristown, to open her home there for the summer. Mrs. Richards’ niece, known to many in Bellefonte as Miss Margaret Aull, will come here with her two children in June, to be at the Richard home for the summer, or while their new home is being built in Philadel- | phia. —Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Schreyer, of Chicago, have been spending the week at the Nittany Country club and visiting among their many Bellefonte friends, hav- | ing motored down from Tyrone last Satur- day where they were guests for several days of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Garman. This is Mr. and Mrs. Schreyer’s first vis- it to Bellefonte in eight years and natural- ly their old acquaintances were glad to see them. —Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Otto, of Johns- town, who had been guests of the latter's sister, Mrs. Fred Krafts, of north Spring street, since the preceding Wednesday, re- turned home last Friday. As Bellefonte was the home, not so long ago, of both of them their time while here is necessarily always too short, for they have so many friends to see that there is never enough of it to permit getting around so wide a circle. —Jerome Harriman is the name of the gentleman who looks after the interests of the press with the Walter L. Main show, and while he disclaims any lineal connec- tion with the one-time renowned railroad magnate, E. H. Harriman, we feel sure that the latter was no more courteous in his day than the Main show representative is at the present time. In fact it was a real delight to do business with him and the “Watchman” will look forward to his return a year hence. —George D. Fortney, of Harris town- ship, was a “Watchman” office visitor on Tuesday morning and it was rather a sur- prise to learn that he was a witness in a case in court, because Harris township people are so upright and law-abiding that we couldn’t figure out how any of them would get into court, but it developed that the case he was a witness on was from Rush township and not Harris. Of course, like all farmers, he begrudged the time he had to be away from home, owing to the late planting season. —Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Krebs, of State College, with their grand-daughter, Miss Mary Bell, of Spruce Creek, were among the Saturday throng in Bellefonte. Mr. Krebs is employed on the College farms and gave us the surprising information that notwithstanding the fact that they are putting out four hundred acres of spring crops up there they had all their oats sowed. Mrs. Krebs has not been in good health for a year or more and Miss Bell has made herself a great comfort to them by taking entire charge of the house- hold affairs since her grandmother's break- down. —1It is not often that we are honored with a visit by three generations of the same family at one time. That was our good fortune, on Saturday evening, when Samuel Corl, his son Clarence, and the latter's son Clarence Jr., dropped in for a little chat, while the wives of the two men were taking in the sights of the town on an unusually crowded Saturday evening. It makes us appear older than we feel when we admit that we knew grandpa Corl well when a young man about State College in the days when that place was so small that students knew all the folks in the country about nearly as well as they knew one another. Grandpa isn’t a bit older than we are, but it sounds just a bit queer to find ourselves a contempo- rary of persons in the catagory of such venerability. Father, son and the darling grand child are all together on their farm near Pine Hall, where generations of Corls have lived before them and done their part in developing sturdy, upright citizenship that has long characterized that section of the county. will visit with | } —@G. Oscar Gray and Robert M. Foster | were among those at Harrisburg Tuesday, attending the Democratic State convention. —Max Kofman, the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Kofman, went to Harris- burg last week, where he expects to be employed during the summer. —Mr. and Mrs. R. J. P. Gray have re- turned from Florida, where they spent the | winter in St. Petersburg, and re-opened their home at Stormstown for the sum- mer. ! —Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Storch and Miss . Hazel Hurley will leave this morning on a motor trip to Philadelphia where they will be week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kerk and family. —Mrs. Robert Irwin was with her son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Gardner, at Mackeyville, last week, hav- ing gone down with the hope that the change might benefit her health. —Mrs. George I. Denithorne, of Pitts- burgh, has been among the visitors in Bellefonte within the week, here for one of her frequent visits home with her mother, Mrs. J. B. Scott, and the McCurdy family, —James A. Fox, who went to Philadel: phia, two weeks ago for treatment by spe- cialists, is reported as getting on so fine that he expects to be home again in a few days and back on his job as pharmacist at the Parrish drug store. —Miss Anna Miller will return to her "home in Salona early in the week, expect- ing to spend the summer there with her mother and sister. Miss Miller has already made arrangements to go to Emporium in the fall, to be there indefinitely with an aunt. —Mrs. Cyrus Goss, who with her two grand-children had spent the winter at “The Inn,” at State College, has returned | to her home in Pine Grove Mills. With Mrs. Goss at present, are her son and his | wie, Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Goss, of En- glewood, who are in Centre county for a | two week's visit. {| —Mrs. T. B. Budinger returned to Snow ! Shoe the early part of last week from St. | Petersburg, Florida, where she had been with friends for the winter. Upon open- ing her home Mrs. Budinger was joined by her daughter, Miss Blanche, who had been in Brooklyn, but who will be for the present with her mother in Snow Shoe. —D. E. Washburn, chemist with the American Lime & Stone company, will re- turn Saturday from a business trip to Washington and the Hot Springs, Va. having gone to the latter place to attend a convention of chemists. Mrs. Washburn will go to Madisonburg tomorrw, as has been her custom each week since the ill- ness of her father, Mr. Keller. —Dr. David Dale and W. C. Coxey will leave tomorrow in Dr. Dale's car on a two week's fishing trip in Canada. They ex- pect to motor to a point ninety miles north of Toronto, where they will take a boat for a water trip of seventy miles to Hol- low Lake where they will join W. E. Seel and a party of Harrisburg friends for the two weeks at Mr. Seel’s camp. | —Mrs. C. U. Hoffer, her daughter, Miss ! Anne, and her grand-daughter, Susanne | Hoffer, drove over from Philipsburg Sat- urday, for an over night visit in Bellefonte. During their stay Mrs. Hoffer was a guest of her brother, Harry Gerberich, at the Conley home, while Miss Anne visited with Miss Janet Potter, and Susanne was with her aunt, Miss Louise Hoffer, at Dr. M. A. Kirks. 3 —Mrs. Stewart Pearce, with her son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Pearce, drove in from Conneaut, Ohio, arriving in Belle- fonte Wednesday, for a visit of several days with Mrs. Pearce’s sister and broth- er, Mrs. L.. A. Schaeffer and A. L. McGin- ley and their families, along with other relatives. During their stay they have been house guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Schaeffer. —Among the Centre Hall people who were in town on Monday for the show was Frank M. Fisher, and though he had with him his nephew, John Haney Keller, young son of Rev. and Mrs. John Keller, of South Carolina, he was candid in stat- ing that the boy was not an excuse by any means. He came over deliberately to see the show and just brought the boy along to give him a chance to enjoy it too. —Mr. and Mrs. Alter K. Ulsh, with Mr. Ulsh’s brother-in-law, Mark Hemminger, of Scranton, as a driving guest, drove to Bellefonte Saturday, from Ingleby, where Mr. and Mrs. Hemminger and their two children expect to spend the summer. Mr. Ulsh, who was on a business trip relative to his recent sale of the mill property, is now permanently located in Millersburg, where he and Mrs. Ulsh are devoting much of their time to the planning of their new home. —Mr. and Mrs. John Sommerville were guests at the Bush house for several days the after part of last week, while here for a visit with friends and relatives of Mr. Sommerville. Mr. and Mrs. Sommerville, who are now making their home with Mrs. Sommerville’'s sister in Milton, had been to Winburne and through Clearfield coun- ty on a visit with the Sommerville family, making the trip back to Milton in their car. Following a winter in New York, they are now planning to sail on the 15th of July for an indefinite stay in Europe. —Mrs. Robert H. McDowell, of Mersene, Turkey, was an arrival here on Wednes- day morning; expecting to spend the sum- mer with her father and other relatives in Bellefonte. Mrs. McDowell, before her marriage, was Miss Eleanor Cook, daugh- ter of Charles F. Cook. It will be recalled that she went to Turkey five years ago to do Near East Relief work and the “Watch- man” published letters from her at the time, revealing in part the terrible suffer- ings of those she went over to minister to. While there she married Mr. McDowell who is the representative in Turkey of an American importing firm. — All kinds of household goods will be sold at public sale at the home of W. W. Bible, east Bishop street, Saturday, May 31st, at one o’clock p. m. 20-2 ——All shades of ladies’ silk hose, special Friday and Saturday at $1.00 per pair. Sim, the Clothier. 21-1t ——TFire and Lightning insurance at a reduced rate.—J. M. Keichline. 69-7-12t* Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner , Wheat - - 05 Shelled Corn - - w wim 90 Rye = = - - wc 90 Oats = = - - «- « « 55 Barley = = - - ei 60 Buckwheat « « = = 90