Demon alc, Bollefonte. Pa. Febeuary 20, 1075, NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——Nineteen tickets were sold in Bellefonte for the Washington, D. C., excursion on Saturday night. —— Mrs. A. O. Furst entertained twenty-four of her friends at tea, at her home on Linn street, Tuesday afternoon. ——The American Legion auxiliary will hold a kitchen shower in the Le- gion rooms, on Howard street, Thurs- day evening, February 26th. The pub- lic is invited. ——Only four councilmen reported for the regular meeting on Monday evening and as this number did not constitute a quorum no official busi- ness was transacted. Mrs. Mary McClellan, of Phil- ipsburg, celebrated her one hundredth birthday anniversary last Friday. She was a native of Binghamton, N. Y., but has lived in Philipsburg for sev- enty-nine years. ——The Bellefonte Central Rail- road company has filed an applica- tion with the water and power re- sources board, in Harrisburg, to build a bridge on its line between Bellefonte and State College. A conference of the Reformed ministers of Centre and Clinton coun- ties was held at the Reformed parson- age, Bellefonte, yesterday morning, under the leadership of the Rev. Dr. F. A. Rupley, of Lewistown. ——At the annual meeting of Group Six,. Pennsylvania Bankers’ associa- tion, held in Altoona last Thursday, Robert Watson, of Huntingdon, was elected president, and John D. Meyer, of Tyrone, secretary and treasurer. ——Looking over the list of guests Governor Pinchot has invited to ac- company him on the $10,000 junket to President Coolidge’s inauguration we failed to see the names of Miss Re- becca Naomi Rhoads or Judge Arthur C. Dale, of Bellefonte. ——The building committee of the board of trustees of the Centre County hospital announces that the new extension to the hospital will be constructed under the supervision of Benj. Bradley Jr., Materials are now being contracted for and the work will begin immediately. ——Maurice Baum, manager of the Nittany and Pastime theatres, at State College, is having plans made by architects Hodgens & Hill, of Phil- adelphia; for the erection of a new theatre ‘at State College which will have a seating capacity of fifteen hun- dred people. The building, which will be of steel and reinforced concrete, will have a frontage of 59 feét and a depth of 115, and will be three stories high, : date for the bi-monthly meeting of the Central Pennsylvania Greeters’ association which will be held at the Brockerhoff house, Bellefonte. . The Greeters are an organization of hotel men throughout the central part of the State. There are in the neighbor- hood of one hundred and fifty mem- bers but it is not likely that all of them will be present at tonight’s meeting... : —The State Highway depart- ment announced this week that all the bids for new highway construc- tion in Centre county, as published in the Watchman last week, have been accepted by the department and con- tracts will be awarded subject to the! legalizing of the road bond issue. As there is every reason to believe that this will be accomplished by the Legislature it will mean unusual ac- tivity in new road work in Centre county this year. The regular monthly meeting of the Woman’s club will be held at ‘the High school building, at 7.30 o'clock on Monday evening of next week. Mrs. T. H. Winters, wife of Commander Winters, of the U. S. Navy, who spent some time in the Philippine Islands, will give an in- formal talk on phases of life in Manila. No member will want to miss this treat. The discussion on immi- gration by the club members will be postponed until the March meeting. The public is cordially invited to hear Mrs. Winters at 8.15. George Grove, who lives on the Hartman farm, just south of Belle- fonte, had a fall, last Thursday night, that was at first thought to have caused serious injury. The hay-bal- ing crew was moving in to his barn and Grovc was taking a spreader out of the barn floor. He was at the tongue and when he struck the ice on the barn bridge was thrown violently. When he didn’t get up others ran to him to find that he could neither move nor speak. It was some time before he came around enough to be gotten into the house, but had recovered enough to get out again Friday morn- ing. By way of Pittsburgh comes the announcement of the marriage at Asheville, N. C.,, on Wednesday, of Miss Martha McIntyre and Robert W. Russell, both of Pittsburgh. Miss Me- Intyre is a daughter of the late Dr. and Mrs. James C. McIntyre, for a number of years residents of Belle- fonte. The bride spent her girlhood life here and is well known by many Bellefonte people. Among those who went south for the wedding were the ‘bride's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. McIntyre, of Wil- liamsport; the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, and Miss Catherine M. Patterson, of Pittsburgh. This (Friday) evening is the! NEW AVIATION FIELD SELECTED FOR BELLEFONTE. Ninety Acres Leased from Four Property Owners Out Beyond Nigh Bank. All doubts as to the air-mail land- ing field being retained in this section were set at rest on Monday when &n- nouncement was made that leases had been signed on Saturday for a new field out beyond Nigh bank. The new field will consist of ninety acres, the land having been secured from Mrs. G. P. Gentzel, H. F. Garbrick, W. C. Smeltzer and Mrs. Alice Garbrick. It is practically a square plot of ground and fairly level so that not a great amount of grading will be re- quired to put it in shape. A little draining may be necessary along one side to insure the field being dry and solid at all seasons of the year and during all kinds of weather. It is of ample size to afford the big planes plenty of room to come down and take off from all points of the compass. No trees or buildings are near enough to the field to either obstruct the view or the flight of the pilots from any angle. While the present aviation field is nearer Bellefonte than the new field will be it is only a two way field and was not deemed suitable for night fly- ing, which is to be inaugurated on or about the first of April. Because of this fact work will be started as soon as possible to put the new field in shape. An entirely new hangar will be erected, and according to the specifications it will be 59x100 feet in size, much larger than the one on the present field. It will likely be built by the same contracting firm that erected the hangar on Hadley field, New Jersey, the eastern terminus of buildings will be new and of a per- manent character. The field will be marked with im- mense beacon lights and border lights will likely be used to outline the land- ing runways. The introduction of a night airmail service will not elimi- nate the present day service but will be in addition thereto. This will naturally means a big increase in the force of employees at the Bellefonte field, as there will be a day crew and a night crew. The air mail route is to be plainly marked with huge signal lights erected every twenty-five miles, and it is understood that Bellefonte will have charge of these lights and all emergency landing fields between Tamauqua on the east and Clarion on the west. This will require the ser- vices of a repair crew whose duties it will be to see that all signal lights are kept in shape for continuous ser- vice at night. i There will be eleven of these land- ing fields, all: of which will be under the direct’ supervision .of: the Belle- fonte field. ~Twe of the fields will be located in Centre county, one at Snow Shoe #nd one at Woodward. Each field will have a caretaker whose bus- iness it will be to look after the lights and see that it is always in shape. Each field will be marked with beacon and border lights to guide the pilots in the event they find it necessary at any time to come down on any of them. = The emergency fields will be only about half as big as the landing field in Bellefonte. The leasing of the ground for the new field is assurance that Bellefonte is firmly established as a station on the air-mail route, and if commercial flying becomes an established fact under the provisions of the Kelly bill recently passed by Congress the pos- sibilities of Bellefonte as an aviation centre cannot now be foretold, but i they are very promising. ' Philadelphia Firm Buys Spring Mills Creamery. The Breyer Dairy and Ice Cream company, of Philadelphia and New | York, has purchased the property and | business of the Penn Milk company at ! Spring Mills, generally known as the i Spring Mills creamery, and took pos- | session on Monday. The company owns and operates seven or eight milk receiving stations in Pennsylvania, and is reputed to be the largest ice cream’ manufacturer in the country. t also has two milk bottling plants of large capacity near = Philadelphia, where milk is bottled for distribution in that city. Their purchase of the Spring Mills creamery will naturally opén a market for all the milk the farmers of that section of Pennsvalley can produce. It is also rumored that the Sheffield Farms company, of New York city, which now operates the milk receiving stations in Bellefonte, Howard and Jersey Shore, is after the creameries at Coburn and Centre Hall, and if these deals go through it will mean the fostering of big dairy interests in !both Brush and Pennsvalleys. It | might also necessitate the running of a Sunday train over the Lewisburg railroad in order to handle the Sun- day milk supply. At the present time practically all the milk received at the Bellefonte station is utilized in manufacturing cream for the New York market. The cream is separated at the plant and a large part of the milk after the cream has been removed is hauled to Milton by trucks where it is used in the manufacture of powdered milk. mse — Arthur H. Sloop, superintend- ent of the schools of Bellefonte; N. R. Sparks and Carl C. Saulsbury, of State College, were the Centre coun- tians who won prizes in the Public Ledger's fourth cross-word puzzle contest, They were awarded $1.00 each: the air-mail. All the other necessary Frank Clevenstine Has Bought the : "Noll Store at Zion. i The general mercantile business which the late Boyd A. Nell had built up at Zion, during the thirty-two i years he conducted it, has been sold by his administrators to Frank Clev- enstine, who took charge on the 7th. The new merchant is also a farmer, being in charge of the Decker farm adjoining Zion. He will not give up the soil for the yard stick and scales, however. He is fortunate in having enough capable help in his own family to run both enterprises and as the i store is only one field distant from the farm house there will be little incon- ! venience in getting from one to the ! other. W. C. T. U. Drive for Members . The W. C. T. U. is putting on a | “whirlwind campaign” for member- | ship this week all over the State of Pennsylvania. ing in line in her usual good style. i The different Unions are responding and Bellefonte inaugurated her cam- paign with a tea at the president’s : (Miss Rhoads) home last Friday at ‘ which much interest was aroused. On this occasion, after the business meet- _ing, delightful music was rendered by | Miss Cobb on the piano and Miss Eleanor Barnhart on the violin, ac- ' companied by Mrs. Schad. Refresh- ments were served and a general social hour followed. The member- ship campaign is to be an intensive ‘one, lasting from the 12th to the 22nd, and all good citizens, both men and “women, are urged to give thoughtful , consideration at this time to the ne- cessity for enlisting on the side of law enforcement. Membership in the W. C. T. U. is denominated active and honorary, the active being women and honorary men. involved is signing a pledge and paying a dollar a year dues. At the County W. C. T. U. execu- tive meeting, recently held in Belle- fonte, it was decided to hold the coun- ty convention at Unionville next fall. High School Senior Play. On Tuesday evening, February 24th, the Senior class of the Belle- fonte High school will present “Ming Toy.” This play is an adaptation of “East is West,” which ran for two solid years in New York and which is still on the road. Great care has been taken in the selection of the charac- ters, and, although only Seniors are in the cast, it promises to be one of the outstanding dramatic presenta- tions of the season. Due to the fact that no suitable scenery could be found for the production, it was nec- essary to have it made to order. It has been several years since, B. H. S. has had a play given entirely by Seniors. These who recall the plays given in other years by the graduating class will remember that each class bent every energy to give the best play ever. This year the Sen- iors are determined to reach a dra- matic high point that will stand for years to come. It is a golden oppor- tunity for the people of Bellefonte to see one of the most successful plays ever written. This play is Chinese- American in character, with far more tension than the play “Wo Hung’s Tea Room,” given here two years ago. Go to the: High school auditorium next Tuesday at 8 o’clock, prepared to spend a pleasant evening. ’ §4- Why the Service Was Interrupted. The electric service of the Keystone Power corporation was interrupted last Friday for about seven hours, due to a break in the Penn Central Light and Power company’s transmission line. A woodsman cutting trees near the right-of-way, felled a tree which struck the high voltage line, tearing down all the wires. Due to the bad condition of the roads leading into this section, an incorrect report was given to the local company as to the time that would be required to repair the break. Several repair crews were sent out by the Penn Central company, as well as one from the Keystone company, as soon as the real source of the in- terruption was determined. The tree not only tore down the power lines but the private telephone line as well, so that it was noon be- fore word was received that the break could not be repaired until late in the afternoon. Immediate steps were then taken to put the Milesburg station in- to operation. By one o’clock a por- tion of the local lighting load was put on this plant, but before the larger generators could be started the break was repaired and general service was resumed at three o’clock. This has been the longest interrup- tion of its kind experienced by the lo- cal power company for a number of years. In order that interruptions of this kind will be eliminated in the fu- ture, steps are now being taken by the local office of the Keystone corpora- tion to put the Milesburg station into service as quickly as possible, in case of future interruptions. ——The regular February meeting of the Woman’s club will be held in the High school building, Monday night, February 23rd. Instead of the discussion on Immigration as had been scheduled, Mrs. Winters, wife of Lieut. T. H. Winters, of Annapolis, will tell the club of her life in the Philippine Islands, at Manila. The evening promising to be a very de- lightful one for the club, it is hoped as many as possible will be present. Mrs. Winters is spending a month in Bellefonte with her uncle, James R. Hughes, at the Academy. at ——————————————— Centre county is fall- | The only obligation | SUICIDE OF HERBERT KREITZ. Killed Himself Last Friday After Quarreling with Aunt and Assaulting Uncle. At noon-time last Friday Herbert Kreitz, colored, who made his home with his uncle and aunt, Thomas Johnson and wife, in the rear of the Centre county jail, quarreled with his aunt over the loss of his discharge papers and becoming very much excit- ed, his uncle, Walter Delige, who was upstairs in bed, threatened to inter- fere if he didn’t desist. This, evi- dently, further enraged the young man as he grabbed a stove shaker, ran upstairs and struck Delige on the : head above the right temple, as he lay i in bed. The blow cut a deep gash and blood flowed freely, and evidently under the | impression that he had inflicted ¢ | mortal wound Kreitz left the house. He went out Allegheny street as far as the school house, and evidently went down Lamb street to Water | street and turning about made his way "to Roopsburg and up Spring creek. | He went to the home of Foster Fan- nen, above the Roopsburg school house, and asked Mrs. Paul Fannen to loan him a gun to shoot a skunk that was sitting along the road. Without a thought Mrs. Fannon gave “him her husband’s .38 special revolver and a small handful of cartridges. Kreitz promptly left the Fannen home and returning to the main road pro- ceeded up Spring creek. Christ Beezer saw him pass his place about 1:25 “o'clock and some five or ten minutes later he reached the Al Hartle farm. . Mr. Hartle noticed him because of his peculiar actions. He ran a few steps, stopped and looked around, then walk- ed a short distance and again ran a few steps. Reaching the corner of Miss Helen | Beezer’s bungalow he stopped and .| after a few seconds Mr. Hartle saw him fall to the ground. He did not, however, hear any gunshots. As the man did not get up he called the Rock- view penitentiary and asked if any prisoners had escaped, telling of the man lying on the bank of Spring creek. He also called the sheriff’s office and notified the sheriff. He then went over to where Kreitz lay and seeing a pool of blood realized that he was dead. Sheriff Taylor went up Spring creek as quickly as possible and found assistant warden C. C. Rhoads and Mr. Rhinesmith, of the penitentiary, already there. They had no difficulty in identifying the body of the dead man as that of Herbert Kreitz. ‘Squire acting coroner took with him as a jury to view the body Homer P. Barnes, Ralph Smith, Herbert Beezer, Paul McGarvey, James Rine and Dan Ber- nard. ‘Dr. Sebring was also summon- ed and an éxamination revealed the fact that the man had shot himself five times in the breast, one of the shots puncturing the left lung. The above facts developed at a hearing held before the coroner’s jury, in the library of the court house, on Satur- day morning, as the result of which they returned a verdict of suicide. Kreitz was a veteran of the world war, having served with the army in France where he was slightly gassed. After returning to Bellefonte he work- {ed for. a year or two as janitor at Temple Court and of late had been working part of his time at the Brock- erhoff house. Recently he tried to en- list in the army but could not find his discharge papers, and it was the loss of those that precipitated the quar- rel which led to his suicide. He was 81 years of age and his parents being dead his only immediate survivor is one brother, Lewis Kreitz, of Altoo- na. Burial was made in the Union cemetery on Sunday. Dental Health Week to be Observed in Bellefonte. The State authorities have desig- nated February 22nd to 28th as den- tal health week and have called upon all cities, towns and communities to observe the same. The object of the campaign is to give the public proper information on the importance of car- ing for the teeth and mouth.. Min- isters are requested to announce the activities of dental health week, and the co-operation of all schools, clubs, civic societies and associations is urged. Bellefonte will observe the week and Dr. Hummer, assistant to Dr. Kilpatrick, will have charge of all demonstrations and give talks on the importance of taking proper care of the teeth. Demonstrations will be from 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 p, m., and from 2:30 to 4:30 p. m. Many people in Bellefonte, es- pecially parents of school children, will recall the work of the dental hy- gienist in the public schools the past year or two when a large percentage of school children were found pos- sessed of defective teeth. It has be- come an established fact that bad teeth makes for impaired health and the mouths of children, especially, should be carefully looked after. Be- cause of this fact residents of Belle- fonte are requested to take an inter- est in the observance of dental health week and attend the demonstrations which will be held".in the various schools. a ——This (Friday) evening the Sen- iors will give a dance at the High school building. It will be called the “La Belle Dance,” and whatever bal- ance remains after the expenses arc met will go toward the annual. The musie. o’clock. Dancing will begin at eight S. Kline Woodring was notified and as | Penn Center Eight will furnish the | | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Marie Conaghan left Saturday for New York city, with plans for spending a month or more there visiting with friends. —Miss Louise Carpencto and Miss Mar- garet Mignot went over to New York the early part of the week, visiting there for several days with friends. : —Mrs. John I. Smith went to Lancaster Monday, for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Decker. Mrs. Smith has planned to remain east until some time in “March. —Mrs. J. M. Curtin, with her son Henry, i are expected here from Pittsburgh today ‘for an over Sunday visit with Mrs. Cur- | tin’s mother, Mrs. George F. Harris, of Linn street. —W. H. Smith, local division manager of the Penn State Telephone Co., went to | Lancaster, Tuesday to be present at a ‘ State managers convention held there on | Wednesday. —Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Williams came down from Altoona Sunday morning to spend the day with friends in town. Most of their time was spent with John Love and his family, of Reynolds avenue. —H. J. McCann, of Salona, was in Belle- | fonte Tuesday morning, looking after some business relative to his coming big sale. { Mr. McCann is giving up farming to go to | state College to live, having in anticipa- tion a position there. ! —Charles F. Cook, of Bellefonte; John Barnhart, of Spring township and Mrs. P. | ©. Womelsdorf, of Philipsburg, attended ; the Pennsylvania school directors conven- {pon in Harrisburg on Wednesday and Thursday of last week. —Mr. and Mrs. G. H, Fike, of Bush's Ad- ; dition, were pleasant callers at this office yesterday morning. They had been in town marketing and dropped in here on their ‘way home to be sure of a mental feast for another year to add to the feast of more material things with which their basket was bulging. -—Miss Miriam Beck was up from Nitta- ny Tuesday and, in addition to looking after the usual amount of visiting and i shopping, added to that some business for her grand-father, John H. Beck. Mr. Beck has arrived at that time in his life when he does not come to town as frequently : as he once did, a very noticeable thing to ; his friends. —Kermit L. Noll, of Zion, was in Belle- fonte Monday morning looking after some i business relative to the estate of his fath- | er, the late Boyd A. Noll. He was return- ‘ing to Lewisburg after an over Sunday { visit with his mother. Mr. Noll is a Sen- { ior at Bucknell, where he has been special- ‘izing in music with the thought of devot- ing his talent to the pipe organ. —Miss Martha Van Rensselaer, of Itha- ‘ea, N. Y., was a guest at the Bush house | for several days of the week, called to | Bellefonte by the death of her aunt, Miss Sarah Owen. Miss VanRensselaer is head of the home economics department at Cor- nell, and as a pioneer in this work was adjudged several years “ago one of the twelve famous women of America. —Mrs. Clara Bottorf, of Runville, is vis- iting at Mount Carmel with her daughter, Mrs. Leona Thompson, and her two sons, the latter of whom returned to their moth- ! er last September, after making their home in Runville with their grand-parents for | six years. Mrs. Bottorf' and her grand- ' daughter, Ruth Shope,” of Snow Shoe; ‘left | Wednesday, expecting to be there over the week-end. { —Mrs. Robert M. Beach went to Phila- ! delphia Wednesday, expecting to return , Sunday. Monday Mrs. Beach will accom- pany Mrs. A. Wilson Norris to Harrisburg ‘to attend some pre-Lenten social functions | during next week and the first week in March Mrs. Beach will go again to Phila- delphia to attend a penal convention, be- { fore which she will lead a discussion on i the Laurelton Home, of which she is a member of the board of directors. —Mrs. A. B. Sutherland, of Huntingdon, was a guest the past week of Miss Wini- fred M. Gates, in Bellefonte, and friends at Rockview and Pleasant Gap, having come over last Thursday to attend the an- nual banquet of the Eastern Star at the { Bush house that evening and remaining for the regular monthly meeting of the Chapter on Monday evening. Mr. Suther- land came over Thursday evening and re- mained until Friday afternoon when he was compelled to return home, as his work as assistant superintendent of the Hunt- ingdon reformatory necessitated his pres- ence there. —Mrs. James Noonan arrived home Mon- day, from New York, where she had been called three weeks ago by the death of her i brother-in-law, Frank E. Seymour Sr. ! Saturday night. Miss Geraldine Noonan { and Miss Emily Crider went over on the | excursion for a day in the city and to | come home with Mrs. Noonan, all three returning to Tyrone Sunday night. It | being necessary for Miss Noonan and Miss { Crider to be in Bellefonte early Monday, : they motored over to Bellefonte as guests of Mr. Widowson, and when near Pine Grove the car skidded, turning around several times, then struck a telephone pole, with the result that Miss Noonan is in bed with torn ligaments in her foot, a cut on her arm, which required sewing up and other bruises. Nene of the other oc- cupants were injured. —T. R. Hamilton spent half an hour with us Monday evening. It was the eve of his 89th birthday anniversary and, nat- urally, he was reminiscent. We have writ- ten so often of Mr. Hamilton's remarkable appearance, for one of his years, that it would seem needless to do it now that another milestone has rolled around. Tor, | so far as any change in vigor is concerned the year seems to have caused no more in him than a minute does to some of the rest of us. Since the death of Mr. John P. Harris he is the town’s oldest native born resident. He left here when he was twen- ty years old, for Nebraska City, Neb. There was no railroad west of Pittsburgh then, no great cities dotting the plains of the Middle west. It was all frontier coun- try. He stayed at Nebraska City, logging and building, for two years, then pushed on to Colorado, where he was one of the party that made the first discovery of gold in the Central City section. After pros- pecting a while he returned home, went to Wilkes-Barre and bought a planing mill He was quite successful there, but the wander-lust got him again and with three companions started for California. His ex- periences on that trip would make a thrill- ing story, for he rode through “Death leaving his bones to bleach with these of less fortunate adventurers who had un- dertaken to cross that waste of 150 miles where not an animal, reptile or insect could live. Valley” on horseback and barely escaped | 7 A — ————. —Miss Blanche Underwood will go to Erie today, where she will be a “guest of her brother Irvin and his family over Sun- day. —Miss Frances Geppert has been trans- ferred from the P. R. R. freight offices in Clearfield to a similar position in the com- : pany’s office at this place. { —Dr. Franklin Bowersox, genial, whole- souled and happy as is his nature always, came up from Millheim, on Wednesday, to look after some business matters in this place. | —Miss M. H. Snyder has been spending the week in New York, attending some of the special millinery showing, and in the wholesale houses, selecting her early spring stock. Her niece, Miss Jeannette Cooke, has been her guest there, having gone over from Washington, D. C., where - she is in training for a nurse. —Mr. and Mrs. Basil Mott, Mrs. Odillie , Mott and the latter's niece, Mrs. Luther { Smith, drove to Williamsport yesterday, ‘ to be all day guests of Mr. and Mrs. James | Bayard. Mrs. Bayard is Mrs. Mott's sis- ter, and the trip was made as a first visit ; since Mr. Bayard’s accident, through which i he lost the sight of one of his eyes. —Henry S. Linn went to Williamsport Tuesday, for a day with his sisters, going on east from there for a week in Philadel- phia and New York. It has been his cus- tom for a number of years to make this trip in February, that he may attend the annual meeting of the Society of Cincin- nati, of which he is a member. The So- ciety’s meeting and luncheon will be held Monday, at the Adelphia. i —Among those from a distance who were here for the funeral of the late John P. Harris were Mrs. A. Scott Harris and her daughter Nannie, of Pittsburgh; Wil- liam Harris and Miss Elizabeth, of Lock Haven; Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Harris, Mrs. Charles Beck and Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Loveland, of Lamar; Mr. and Mrs. Gail I. Chaney and Frederic Schad, of Pittsburgh; Mr. and Mrs. John P. Harris Jr., Miss Hel- en and John H. Harris, of Newton Ham- ilton; Dr. E. H. Harris and Edward H. Jr., of Snow Shoe; Mr. and Mrs. J. Linn Har- ris, of Lock Haven; Dr. Harold L. Harris, of Beaver; burgess H. W. Todd, of Phil- ipsburg; John D. Meyer and F. K. Luken- i bach, of Tyrone; Hon. John T. McCormick, of State College. —Last Saturday night a very unusual : thing happened. We had an hour or so ! with nothing to do and longed for compan- ionship. Just then two very agreeable | gentlemen from State College dropped in to prove that there is something in mental telepathy. Following them came H. E. Garbrick, so we had our wish gratified by having an hour that offered lonely pros- pect converted into one that was anything but that. Mr. Garbrick, you know, farms on the Gentzel place below Pleasant Gap, and some of his acreage is included in the new aviation field. Getting into the air business isn’t. wholly a new thing to him because he has been in it in another way for some time. He is the artist who fur- : nishes the air for the big Sousaphone that Js such an important instrument in the Odd Fellows band. Manchester—Taylor.—Miss Louise Jane Taylor, eldest daughter of Col. and Mrs. H. S. Taylor, and William C. Manchester, of Detroit, Mich., were quietly married at the home of the bride’s parents, on east Linn street, at two o'clock on Wednesday after- noon, by Rev. W. C. Thompson, pastor jof the Presbyterian church. They were attended by Miss Margaret Tay- lor, a sister of the bride, and Eugene Leonard, a school mate of the bride- groom at the Bellefonte Academy. The bride is a graduate of the Belle- fonte High school class of 1924. Mr. Manchester was in his second year at the Academy, leaving that institution at the end of the semester to get mar- ried. Immediately following the cere- mony the young couple left on a ten day’s wedding trip east and upon their return will occupy an apartment in the Taylor home for the present. ——Mutt and Jeff, those two frol- icsome and always popular comics, are returning to their own again. At any rate they are underlined to hold forth at the Moose Temple theatre, Wednesday evening, March 4th, with the usual matinee. This will mark their second appearance in the flesh hereabouts and the event as a conse- quence is of more than passing im- portance. Mutt and Jeff are so well known that any further reference to their fame or standing in the commu- nity as simon-pure exponents of gen- uine jollity and fun would be super- fluous. Watch next week’s paper for further announcements. Patriotic Memorial Services. The Patriotic Order Sons of Amer- ica, Washington Camp, No. 887, of Bellefonte, will observe Washington’s birthday Sunday, February 22nd, by attending church services in a body. The address will be delivered by Rev. J. A. Mills, pastor of the United Brethren church. All members are respectfully requested to meet at the P. O. S. of A. hall at 10 o’clock and march in a body to the church. Go, and take a brother with you. Fraternally yours, HARRY A. ROSSMAN, Rec. Sec. At a hearing before the Public Service Commission, in Harrisburg on Monday, on the application of W. J. Emerick, of Bellefonte, for a certifi- cate of public convenience to operate a motor bus line between Reading and Harrisburg, counsel for existing car- riers protested that there is no neces- sity for the proposed bus line, and that it would result in decreased rev- enues for the trolley and railroad companies if the permit is issued. The Commission will give its decision at a future date. ‘Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - $1.80 Corn - - - - - - = 120 Rye - - - - - - - 1.20 Oats - - - - . - B55 Barley - - - - - - 1.00 Buckwheat - - - - - 1.10