Bellefonte, Pa., July 4, 1924. EE ———————————————— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——The ladies of the Reformed church spent Thursday afternoon of this week at the nurse’s home, sew- ing for the hospital. No very serious auto accidents were reported in Centre county on Sunday, notwithstanding the fact that all roads were congested with travel. Spring Mills Lodge I. O. O. F. is considering the proposition of or- ganizing a band within its ranks, that is, if the preliminary expense is not deemed prohibitive. « The summer session for teach- ers will open at State College on Mon- day, with optional courses of six, eight or ten weeks. An attendance of two thousand is expected by Dean Chambers, who has charge of the sum- mer school. Motorists and others who trav- el the Black Moshannon road between Philipsburg and Snow Shoe are con- templating petitioning the county commissioners to have the road im- proved. While the road is used ex- tensively it has been greatly neglect- ed the past few years and is badly in need of repairs. ——Joseph Shaughnessy, who fell on the pavement in Tyrone five weeks ago and broke his knee cap, is still confined to the Bellefonte hospital, where he is undergoing treatment. He is unable to bear any weight upon the injured leg and his physiciaan has de- cided to put the knee in a cast which will probably enable him to get around with the use of crutches. Any man in Centre county who is in need of summer clothing should consult the advertisement of the Fau- ble store on the seventh page of to- day’s paper. Some of the biggest bargains ever offered in any Belle- fonte store will be found therein. As this sale will last but ten days you will have to act quickly if you want to get the advantage of the big re- duction in prices. Members of the old Troop L, who served in France during the world war, will be interested in the announcement that one of their num- ber, Frank W. Cadwallader, of Phil- ipsburg, was married at Selinsgrove last week to Miss Katherine Keiser, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Keiser. Mr, Cadwallader is a cousin of A. Clyde Smith, of Bellefonte, and he and his bride will live in Philipsburg. -——Scenic. patrons will find a two weeks ahead program published in the “Watchman” this week, and every pic- ture will be worth seeing. In fact ‘each and every one should appeal to fall lovers of the screen and the only way to be sure of seeing all the good ones is to be a regular. After tomor- row night the opera house will be closed for several weeks while the in- terior is being repaired and painted. Postmaster Brumbaugh, of Al- toona, has received permission from the Postoffice Department to send all airplane mail to Bellefonte for trans- portation west instead of to Cleve- land, Ohio, as other towns and cities in the State have been requested to do. Hence letters mailed in Altoona up to six o’clock or a little later in the morning can be sent to Bellefonte on the morning train and reach here in time to be put on the mailplane west at 12:20. Mrs. Susan Spangler, of Centre Hall, who had quite a sick spell early last week, is reported as resting com- fortably the past few days and her condition is not regarded as being un- duly serious. Mrs. Spangler, who is the mother of Col. J. L. Spangler, of Bellefonte, will be ninety-six years old on August 2nd, if she is spared until that time, and is probably the oldest person in Centre county. Up until her sick spell last week she had enjoyed remarkably good health for one of her advanced age. —Just twenty-four more days of legal trout fishing remain until the close of the 1924 season, and the man who has not yet caught his share had better get busy. Of course few fish- ermen have hogged the limit this year, as weather conditions have been unusually favorable for the trout ever since the opening day on April 15th. While the trout season is nearing its end the bass season opened on Tues- day. The only stream in Centre coun- ty where this species of fish is found is in lower Bald Eagle creek, but they are plentiful enough there to afford good sport to bass fishermen. Some of the streams in nearby counties are ‘well stocked with bass and a number of Bellefonters make annual pilgrim- ‘ages to their favorite retreats. rele Metal signs pointing the direc- tion and giving the distance to sur- rounding towns were erected in Belle- fonte during the past week by the State Highway Department, and will be erected at all important junctions and cross sections of state highway in the éoiinty. While not an innovation by any means it is something that will prove of inestimable value to the traveling public. Every day dozens of autoists passing through Bellefonte have been compelled to stop and in- quire how to get out of town, and now, when they become acquainted with the fact that signs have been put up they will experience little difficulty in locating the right street. One sign in the Diamond points the way to Ty- rone and Altoona, and Lock Haven and State College, while one on Bish- op street points the way to Lock Ha- ven and Lewistown. Out at the High school building another sign has been erected and also one at Spring and Linn streets. ; Fast Air Mail Inaugurated Tuesday. on Some five years or more ago post- master Paul Brosius, of Lock Haven, sent invitations broadcast over cen- come to that town and witness the maiden voyage of the pathfinder areo- plane, which would fly westward seek- ing suitable landing places for post- office aviation fields, as the govern- ment was about to establish an air- mail route between New York and Chicago, and he had beaten everybody to it by having Lock Haven selected as the site for the landing field in this section. The writer was among the crowd that journeyed to Lock Haven to see the “flying machine” come in, but we failed to see it. The ship was so late in reaching that place that we were probably home before it arrived there. The aviator, the late lamented Max Miller, looked the Lock Haven field over and promised to report on its availability later. On his next trip, several weeks later, he landed in Belle- fonte, and he was so much more fa- vorably impressed with the facilities offered here that this town was rec- ommended instead of Lock Haven. But the above is only a prelude to the fact that on Tuesday, when the first fast airmail plane reached Belle- fonte among the crowd at the avia- tion field to witness its arrival and de- parture were more Lock Haven peo- ple than there were residents of Belle- fonte, all having motored up to wit- ness a sight which has become such an everyday occurrence here that the hum of the airplane motor creates no excitement whatever. Apropos of the inauguration of the thirty-four hour mail between New York and San Francisco, W. L. Smith, one of the veteran fliers, drove the first plane from New York to Chica- go. It carried 450 pounds of mail and reached the Bellefonte field almost on the minute of its scheduled time, 12:20 p. m. The plane was replenished with oil and gas and was off again in less than ten minutes. Through mail only was carried on this ship. A second ship followed within fifteen minutes carrying what is deemed the local pouches. One hundred or more let- ters were taken on from the field post- office. Those were placed in packages for Cleveland, Chicago and contigu- ous points, and in a few minutes the plane was on its way west. The first plane east did not pass through Belle- fonte until Wednesday, but it carried San Francisco mail which left there on Tuesday morning. Two Young Men with Stolen Car Arrested in Bellefonte. On Sunday evening sheriff E. R. Taylor received a telephone message from Centre Hall to be on the lookout for a big Jordan car with Connecticut license tags and carrying two young men. The car had been stolen at Meriden, Connecticut, by the young men who were on their way west. Meriden authorities had traced them to Lewistown but the officers there got the word after the young men had left that place on their way across the Seven Mountains. Lewistown officers telephoned to Centre Hall but too late to catch the men there. They had just left for Bellefonte after trading a spare rim for gasoline. As soon as sheriff Taylor got the message he jumped into his car and ac- companied by chief of police Harry Dukeman drove down to Milesburg and back and out the state highway towards Axe Mann, and also down past the aviation field without getting any trace of the car, but when he re- turned to Bellefonte he found it parked in front of the Bon Mot, next to the “Watchman” office. The young men were nearby and they were promptly taken into custody and es- corted to the Centre county jail. They gave their names as Clifford Luding- ton, aged 20 years, and Clyde Murray, aged 19, and told the sheriff that not- withstanding the fact that they had driven right through cities and towns lice until they reached Bellefonte. But this would lHkely have been the end of their journey, if they hadn’t been picked up so soon after reaching here, as they were out of gas and had only a dime between them. They admitted having stolen the car and Meriden of- ficers were notified of their capture. The Fifth Annual Business Men’s Picnic. The Associated Business Men of Bellefonte will hold their big free bas- ket picnic at Hecla park on Thursday, August 14th, all day and evening. It will be the fifth annual gathering and the committee in charge is working to make it different from any former pic- nic and much larger in every particu- lar. One of the main features will be an auto show and an auto obstacle race in which Ford cars will be made to talk nutty and climb trees. Joking aside, the race will be one of the big- gest freak features ever seen, and will be worth coming many miles to see. Other features will be boxing bouts for prizes, wrestling contests, a pov- erty parade, morning and afternoon ball games between two teams of the Centre county league and as a novelty daylight fireworks. Also boating and swimming and all sorts of conces- sions. Free band concerts will be giv- en at stated intervals throughout the day and an excellent orchestra will furnish music for dancing in the pa- vilion from morning until late at night. Eating stands on the grounds will furnish meals to all those who do not wish to take baskets with them. Remember the date, August 14th, and make your plans to spend the day at the park. : tral Pennsylvania inviting people to : they had not been molested by the po-- : No Paper Next Week. The “Watchman” force will take a ' vacation next week consequently no paper will be issued. The next num- ber of the “Watchman” will appear on July 18th. We trust all our read- ers will have a glorious time today celebrating the Fourth in a purely American patriotic manner, even though it be “safe and sane.” ——Farm agent Ralph C. Blaney and bride have returned to Bellefonte from their honeymoon trip and are living with Mrs. C. D. Tanner, in Pet- rikin hall. Mr. Blaney was married to Miss Dorothy E. Ostermayer, at Haddonfield, N. J., on June 15th and before coming to Bellefonte spent some time at the seashore resorts. Their marriage was the culmination of a romance begun while both were students at The Pennsylvania State College. ——Our good brethren of the Unit- ed Evangelical church are making slow progress on the work of build- ing the much needed addition to their church. The building committee ran up against a big proposition in dig- ging out the hill in the rear of the church, as most of the excavation was through an unusually solid vein of limestone rock. They have now reached that point where they have begun work upon the walls for the extension and their efforts will soon begin to show more marked progress. ——A youthful elopement this week was that of Miss Anne Taylor, fifteen year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Taylor, and Charles Ross- man, aged seventeen years. They left Bellefonte shortly after dinner on Tuesday, Miss Taylor taking most of her clothing with her. Their going away together was not discovered un- til several hours later and Bellefonte police were then asked to find the young people, if possible, and bring them home. At the time this item was written, however, they had not been located. : ——The county commissioners have given their consent to the erection of a permanent band stand on the lawn in the rear of the jail. The stand will be located close to the railing sur- mounting the concrete wall in the rear of the court house which will in a measure protect the musicians from being closely surrounded by children and others who habitually get as close as they can to the band. There is no denying the fact that this will be an ideal place for the weekly band con- certs, The lawn is big enough to ac- commodate most any size crowd while it will be away from the noise of pass- ing automobiles, which is always very trying on the nerves of the members of the band, especially in rendering concert music. : Boys Should Register Now for Camp Kanesatake. August 5th to 26th is the time al- lotted to Centre county boys for their three week’s outing at Camp Kane- satake, the beautiful grounds of the Tri-County and State Sabbath School association in Huntingdon county, and inasmuch as all registrations must be made prior to July 26th all boys be- tween the ages of ten and sixteen years who desire to go should lose no time in getting in their applications. All applications must be mailed to “S. S. Aplin, Camp Kanesatake, Franklin- ville postoffice, Huntingdon county, Pa.,” and should be accompanied by a check for $6.00, one week’s board. The camp has been wonderfully im- proved since last summer. Twelve cabins have been erected and wooden floors put in all tents. A big dam has been constructed which affords good bathing and swimming. Athletic fields have been laid out and the din- ing hall enlarged to meet all possible demands. S. S. Aplin, general secre- tary of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A., will be in constant charge of the camp and this is assurance that the boys will be carefully looked after. “Beany” Bathurst Injured in Auto Accident on Railroad. Ralph Bathurst, of Curtin, but more familiarly known as “Beany,” is in the Bellefonte hospital with a fractur- ed rib, right collar bone broken and head injuries as the result of an auto accident on the Bald Eagle Valley railroad crossing just below the Cur- tin station early last Friday after- noon. “Beany,” who works for Major H. Laird Curtin, had taken the family Overland sedan to drive to one of the Curtin farms which necessitated his crossing the railroad. As it was not time for any regular train to pass he likely was not as careful as he should have been and did not notice a draft of four locomotives, three dead and one alive, going east until he was al- most upon the track. He could not stop and failed to get across with the result that the car was struck and badly demolished. Mr. Bathurst was thrown aside with the wreckage and was picked up unconscious. He was brought to the Bellefonte hospital and for thirty-six hours his condition ap- peared quite serious but on Sunday he began to improve and his permanent recovery is now only a question of time. Ordinarily when Mr. Bathurst made such trips he took with him the chil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Curtin, but at the last moment on Friday something turned up to prevent their going, and it almost seems providential, for had they been in the car all would prob- ably have been badly injured if not filled, z Centre County Saturday Night. i The devastating and death-dealing storm which swept over the northern | "and eastern portion of Ohio and west- | ern Pennsylvania late Saturday after- | noon extended over two-thirds of this State before it spent its violence, but fortunately was not as destructive "hereabouts as further west, although considerable damage was done in the way of uprooting trees in orchards, ete. The storm struck Bellefonte shortly | before ten o’clock on Saturday night | and for almost half‘an hour blew a terrific gale. A big shade tree in front | of the George Kelly home on Spring street was blown down, falling across the street to the Methodist church. The tree, however, had been almost entirely rotted off at the ground, only a few roots holding it in place. One of the tall trees on the terrace at the Humes home on Allegheny and How- ard streets was split in twain and the falling portion completely demolished a nice bed of tomatoes in the garden. On Spring street a large branch was blown from one of the shade trees in front of the Holz property, falling across the street and landing on the big cable of the Bell Telephone com- pany, where it lay until Monday morn- ing. Almost every street in Belle- fonte had its quota of limbs blown off the shade trees and in many in- stances these fell upon wires of the Keystone Power corporation and tele- phone companies, putting both the electric light and many telephones out of commission. The same condition prevailed throughout Centre county, falling limbs causing the telephone compa- nies considerable damage and annoy- ance. Up the Buffalo Run and Half- moon valleys the storm was unusual- ly severe and very few orchards es- caped without having from one to four or more trees blown down, while the ground was plentifully strewn with broken off limbs. Nittany and Pennsvalleys also felt the force of the storm, but so far as can be learned at this writing no buildings were dam- aged. The storm was accompanied by thunder and lightning and followed by rain which continued all night. It was the first severe thunder storm we have had this summer. Through Nittany valley the storm was not nearly so disastrous as was the one that swept through there at noon on the Wednesday previous. Many trees were uprooted but no great damage was done to buildings or fences. In and about Hecla park the devastation seems to have been greatest. A number of trees in the Park were blown down and in McMul- len’s orchard several apple trees were laid low. A beautiful locust that stood in front of McMullen’s lodge was blown over, wrecking the northwest corner of the front porch. : | Prospecting for Coal Mountain. on Nittany Wouldn’t it be surprising if Belle- fonters should wake up one of these fine mornings and learn that a coal mine had been opened up almost at their doors? And such a thing is a possibility notwithstanding the fact that geologists have long ago declar- ed it not even a probablity of locating coal in this exact section of the State. Just at present two prospecting oper- ations are being conducted on Nittany mountain, not far from Pleasant Gap. One by Ray Noll, on lands owned by the Nolls to the east of the mountain road, and one by Harry Breon on his farm purchased from the Harry Zim- merman estate. The story that led up to the pros- pecting is as follows: Mr. Breon had water piped from a small stream on his farm to his barn for the use of his stock, but there wasn’t fall enough to carry the water to a new trough he erected. So he dug a ditch to the headwaters of the stream, a good spring at the foot of the mountain, for the purpose of laying a pipe from the spring to his barn. The next morning the water was covered with an oily, green, substance which he thought might indicate oil, but upon inquiry of people who are supposed to know was informed that the indica- tions were more favorable for coal than oil. Consequently he sought advice of an experienced coal man who, after looking the ground over, advised him where to dig if he desired to prospect for coal. Mr. Breon now has men at work sinking a shaft and has struck a vein of slate similar to the outerop- pings and coverings of all coal depos- its. This slate has been compared to the slate covering the B vein in the Snow Shoe region and is pronounced identical. Of course, no coal has yet been found but Mr. Breon feels hope- ful he is on the right track. In fact it was the good prospects of Mr. Bre- on that induced Ray Noll to start prospecting at another point on the mountain. I ———— A ss — ——The jury in the condemnation proceedings brought by the Bellefonte school board against the defunct Bellefonte Gas and Steam Heating company held another session on Mon- day morning and heard additional tes- timony pro and con. After consider- ing the testimony the viewers will make a report, but as it looks now the case will eventually get into the courts and probably result in long drawn out litigation before the issue is deter- mined. ——— A ————— ———At their regular meeting next Monday evening the Bellefonte school board will elect teachers to fill the several vacancies yet remaining in EE ——— z : = Storm Swept on’ the Bellefonte corps of teachers. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Beatty have been at Atlantic City for a part of the week. —The Calvin Trrupe family are antici- pating a drive to Hanover today, to be guests until Sunday of Mr. Troupe’'s rela- tives. —Gordon Montgomery will come up from Philadelphia today, to spend a short time with his mother, Mrs. Joseph L. Montgomery. —Mrs. Donner, of Buffalo, a close friend of Mr. and Mrs. G. Murray Andrews dur- ing their residence in Philadelphia, was Mr. and Mrs. Andrews’ guest during late June. —Dr. and Mrs. Weston are anticipating a visit from their daughter, Mrs. Philip Haler, and her daughter Marcia, of North- side, Pittsburgh, who will be here for a July visit. —Mrs. Charles Keichline has been at the Page bungalow on Cherry run, for three weeks. Mr. Keichline and Mr. and Mrs. Page have planned to join her there for the Fourth. —Lee Walker, who was home from San Domingo to spend his vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Miles Walker, was unexpectedly called back to the Island the early part of the week. —Mr. and Mrs. G. Willard Hall drove here from Harrisburg Saturday after- noon, visited over night with Mrs. Hall's father, G. R. Spigelmyer, and left early Sunday morning for the drive back home. —Mrs. C. T. Hennigh came here from Lancaster, last week, taking with her Miss Adaline Olewine on the drive back to Lan- caster. Miss Olewine remained there with Mrs. Hennigh for a short visit, returning home Sunday. —Miss Bailey, of Philadelphia, a sister of Mrs. M. A. Landsy, is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Landsy at the Brockerhoff house. Mr. Landsy is at present quite ill at his apartments in the hotel, having been con- fined to his bed since Sunday. —Miss Ella Levy had as an over night guest this week, Mrs. Beers, who went to Milesburg from Altoona, where she_had been visiting her daughter. Mrs. Beers spent a part of a summer in Bellefonte with Dr. Edith Schad, a number of years ago. —Mrs. Field and Miss Stone are guests of Miss Humes, having come here from Coatesville, Wednesday. Mrs. Field, as Miss Hale, spent her girlhood life in Belle- fonte, her father, Judge Hale, owning and occupying the residence where Col. and Mrs. J. L .Spangler now live. —Mrs. Charles T. Noll, who for some years past has made her home in Clear- field, has given up her residence in that place and gone to Pittsburgh, where she will make her home indefinitely. Mrs. Noll has two sons in or near Pittsburgh and she will thus be near them. —Miss Sara Waite has been here with her sister and brother, Miss Ella and Darius Waite for several days of the week. Miss Waite is an instructor in one of the mountain schools of the south and is now north for her vacation, the visit being made here on her way to Pittsburgh. —Miss Anne Shaughnessy, in training at St. Agnes hospital in Philadelphia, came home Tuesday to spend her two week’s va- cation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaughnessy. John Shaughnessy, of Ridgway, is also expected in Bellefonte to be with the family for the Fourth and a week-end visit. —Miss Margaret Stewart, who went to the coast a month ago to spend the sum- mer with her brother William and his daughter, Mrs. Patterson, at Seattle, left with Mrs. Patterson, Wednesday, to spend some time visiting some of the well known places in eastern Alaska, Mr. Stewart's fishing interests being included in their plans. —A driving party comprised of James R. Hughes, Mrs. Luther Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Summer, Charles and Virginia Hughes, and Marion Irvine motored to Waynesboro Thursday of last week, re- maining there for an over Sunday visit with Mr. Summer's family. The party stopped in Gettysburg and several places of interest enroute. —Miss Martha Geiss and Miss Helen Brown, members of the class of 1924 Belle- fonte High school have been given schools for the winter. Miss Geiss will have the Hoy school along the Boalsburg pike, while Miss Brown will be in charge of one of those on the Halfmoon hill. Both young women are attending the summer school for teachers at Penn State. —William C. Cassidy will leave Sunday to spend a part of the vacation week with his mother, Mrs. R. A. Cassidy and the family, in Canton, Ohio. Mrs. Cassidy having accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Moore on their drive back to Philadelphia Tues- day, will be their guest there for ten days, then meet Mr. Cassidy in Tyrone on his return from Ohio, arriving home at the same time. 3 —George W. Weaver, a retired farmer of Howard, was a ‘“Watchman’” office caller on Wednesday, having come up to Belle- fonte with his two daughters, Misses Blanche and Pearl, who took the examina- tion as drivers for their automobile. Mr. Weaver, by the way, has been a constant reader of the “Watchman” for forty-six or more years and that in itself is evidence of his true-blue Democracy. —Mr. and Mrs. Harry English, of Pitts- burgh, are here for an over Sunday visit with Mr. English’s sister, Mrs. Morris Fu- rey. Mr. English has but recently return- ed from a two month's stay on the Pa- cific coast, where he was sent by his phy- sicians following a serious operation, from which it is expected it will take a year or more to recover. Mrs. Furey only return- ed Saturday from a tvo week’s visit with her brother in Pittsburgh. —Mr. and Mrs. George M. Gamble’s Fourth of July house party will be a fam- ily one, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. O’Brien and their younger child having arrived from Phillipi, W. Va., Wednesday evening and Mr. and Mrs, Ostertag, of Harrisburg, with their son George, joining them here yesterday. When returning home Mr. and Mrs. O’Brien will take with them their son, W. Thomas Jr., who has been in Bellefonte with his grand-parents for some time. —Mrs. Thomas A. Shoemaker was called to Pittsburgh Monday, by the sudden death of one of Mr. Shoemaker’'s closest friends, Job Burton, and remained there for the week with her daughters, Mrs. Ebe and Miss Augusta Shoemaker. En- route home Mrs. Shoemaker will stop with friends in Ebensburg. Philip, who accom- panied his mother, returned Wednesday. Mrs, Shoemaker’s second son, T. Collins, with the Beatty Motor company, is in Philadelphia for the week, for a military examination, —Boyd Irwin is home from New York to spend his vacation with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. U. Irwin. —Mrs. Wells L. Daggett is in Cleveland with her niece, Mrs. Maynard Murch Jr., for a visit of several weeks. —Mrs. George Hazel and her daughter, Frances, will return home the beginning of the week, from a two week's stay in At- lantic City. —Mrs. Eward L. Gates, daughter Betty and son, Eward Lindley Jr., of Johns- town, arrived in Bellefonte yesterday for their annual summer visit. Sheriff E. R. Taylor and Pete Lyon took Charles Himes, of Miles- burg, and Donald McCloskey, of Phil- ipsburg, to the Glen Mills home yes- terday morning. —Mrs. John Musser is spending the Week in Centre Hall with ber sister, Mrs. John Slack, who is not recovering as rap- idly as it was hoped she would, from her recent long illness. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore motored up from Philadelphia Sunday, for a short visit with Mrs, Moore's sister, Mrs. T. Clayton Brown, leaving early Tuesday morning on their return drive. —Miss Mollie Musser, who spent the greater part of the month of June with relatives and friends in Bellefonte, return- ed Wednesday, to Millheim, where she now makes her home with her sisters. —Henry 8. Linn went to Williamsport Wednesday morning, spent the day there with his sisters and then went to Phila- delphia to attend a business meeting and luncheon of the Cincinnatus society. —Miss Sara Lowrie, of Warriorsmark, and Mrs. J, Milo Campbell, of Penna. Furnace, drove to Bellefonte Monday to spend several hours with friends, Mr. Campbell the while looked after business about town. —George Ross Parker Jr., accompanied his cousin, Elizabeth Larimer, home from New Brunswick, Sunday, to spend the summer vacation with his grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Schofield, and with his aunts, the Misses Parker, of Howard street. —Irene Freidman, of New York city, is here with her grandmother and uncle, Mrs. Holz and her son Harry. Irene is here for the summer, as has been her custom since a small child, and will be joined late in July by her mother, Mrs. Louis Freidman and her younger daughter, Hermine. —Mrs, Miles Wetzel arrived in Bellefonte the after part of last week, coming here from her home at Chicago Heights, to spend several weeks, visiting with her own family, the Barnharts, and among her hus- band’s relatives. Mr. Wetzel will proba- bly join Mrs. Wetzel for his vacation, re turning to Chicago together. —Mrs. Massey and grand-daughter, Betty Soper, have been with Mrs. Massey's sisters, the Misses Annie and Eva Powers this week, coming here Monday for a Fourth of July visit. The child's mother, Mrs. Anna Massey Soper, has been east on a visit, but will leave with her two children to return to California next week. —Mrs. Elizabeth B. Wagner, of Watson- town, left Bellefonte Tuesday, with her grand-daughter and brother-in-law, Frank Wagner, of Sotuh Dakota, expecting to spend the month of July at Madison, with Mrs. Wagner's only son. Living here for four years with her daughter, Miss Bertha Wagner, Mrs Wagner is known to many in Bellefonte. —Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin and their son Harry drove in from Pittsburgh, on Saturday, for their annual summer visit here with both the Harris and Curtin fam- ilies. Mrs. Curtin and the two children will spend much of the summer in Belle- fonte, while Mr. Curtin returned to Pitts burgh and will take his vacation here dur- ing the latter part of July. —Harry T. McDowell was up from Howard on Monday and while we can’t say it had been so long since we have seen him that we scarcely recognized him we can say that we were mighty glad to see him. While he changes little in appear- ance he does change in habits for he doesn’t come to Bellefonte nearly so often as he did some years ago. —E. M. Huyett recently returned to Cen- tre Hall from one of the popular health sanitoriums of Ohio, where he had been under treatment for two months. Mr. Huyett’s health is showing such marked improvement that there is every indica- tion of a complete recovery. By his occa- sional visits to Bellefonte since his retire- ment, Mr. Huyett has kept in constant touch with his many friends and business interests here. —Miss Bertha B. Wagner, of Watson- town, well known through her four year's residence here, while instructor in the household arts department of the schools of Bellefonte, has opened a tea room, known as the Nittany Lion, on west Col- lege avenue, State College. Miss Wagner's reputation here and throughout her own home country will insure her much for- eign trade, while acquaintance with her art in cooking should carry with it all the local trade necessary to make her venture a success. ~—Mrs. William B. Wallis’ came to Belle- fonte a week ago to see her mother and grand-mother, Mrs. Conley and Mrs. Meese, following her arrival home from a four month’s trip with Mr. Wallis through the southwest, up along the Pacific coast to British Columbia, then east over the Canadian Pacific R. R. Mr, Wallis being on a business trip, left Mrs. Wallis at De- troit to go from there to attend a conven- tion of iron men, at Milwaukee, she con- tinning the trip over the Lakes arrived home last week. (Other personal news on page 4 Col. 6.) ——Miss Mollie Musser is offering for sale 1 cherry drop-leaf table, 1 walnut drop-leaf breakfast table, side- board, a bed-room set, coal stove, used but a few months, and some chairs. Persons interested can communicate with Miss Musser at Millheim, with regard to this furniture, which is in storage in Bellefonte. EC — A ————— ——Opening of the Nittany Lion tea-room on west College Ave., State College, Thursday, July 3. Telephone your order and bring your friends. Bertha B. Wagner, manager. 27-1t S———— A — Bellefonte Grain Market, Corrected Weekly by C. XY. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - $1.05 Shelled Corn =< «+ « « 90 Rye - - - - - - 90 Oats « « « = = 055 Barley « « « - 60 Buckwheat « = 90