Bellefonte, Pa., September 4, 1925. EE ET Sa) NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——Cider presses in Centre county have been put in operation but they will not be overtaxed in squeezing out the juice this year. — Harvey S. Griffith quietly cele- brated his eightieth birthday, Sunday, at his home on Pine street, members of his and Mrs. Griffith’s families be- ing their only guests. ——1In less than two weeks the trial heats for Judge of Centre county will be run at the September primaries. There will be five starters and at this time it is a perplexing question as to which two will qualify for the finals in November. ——The Beatty Motor Co., received a demonstration touring car of the new Ford model, on Wednesday, and exhibited it at the Granger's picnic yesterday. The most noticeable change in appearance is that of being much lower than the old type. ——The big Odd Fellows gathering at Hecla park next Monday, (Labor day), will mark the close of the pic- nic season, not only at that well known resort but in Centre county. Whether an Odd Fellow or not you will be welcome at their picnic on Monday. ——Mrs. Johne Meese, of Logan street, Bellefonte, celebrated the eigh- ty-first anniversary of her birth on Wednesday and her daughter, Mrs. J. Will Conley, arranged a bit of a sur- prise by having her aunt, Mrs. Hiram Lucas, now ninety-one years old, up from Howard for the day. ——Miss Sarah Carson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Carson, of Bishop street, Bellefonte, fractured the small bone above the ankle of her right leg, last Thursday afternoon, while playing in the yard at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Armstrong. She has been confined to bed ever since and the injury will keep her out of school for some weeks. ——1If all reports can be relied up- on Centre county farmers are due to harvest a big corn crop this year. Not only is the corn well set on the av- erage farm but the ears are big and well filled. In fact one farmer who owns a farm on Tadpole, told the writer that his corn ears are growing so big that they have busted open the husks from tip to butt. ——Having sold his farm at Lin- den Hall county commissioner James W. Swabb is planning to move to Milesburg this fall, to the home re- cently purchased there from Edgar T. Burnside. Mr. Swabb is a justice of the peace in Harris township and when he leaves that place he will nec- essarily be obliged to surrender his commission as a country ’Squire. ——Miss Roberta D. Carnes, of Bal- timore, who was widely advertised as the chief speaker at a series of meet- ngs which were to have been held in Jentre county this week, as well as one of the prominent lecturers at the annual county convention of the W. C. T. U. to be held next Tuesday and Wednesday, was compelled to cancel all her engagements owing to sudden illness. ——The Miller Construction com- pany has completed over twelve miles of the sixteen mile stretch of state highway between Snow Shoe Intersec- tion and Port Matilda, and with fa- vorable weather they hope to have all the concrete poured by Saturday, Sep- tember 26th. On the upper stretch, between Port Matilda and Bald Eagle, J. M. Hutchinson, the contractor, is now pouring concrete at the rate of 600 feet a day, and also hopes to com- plete his job before cold weather sets in. ——The evenings are growing no- ticeably longer and also cooler, and the best place in Bellefonte to spend them in congenial entertainment is at the Scenic, watching the motion pic- tures. Manager Brown has booked for a year ahead the best pictures of the leading film makers in the United States, which is assurance to the hun- dreds of Scenic patrons that only high class pictures will be shown at that old-established motion picture thea- tre. To see them all you should be a regular attendant. ——Word was received at State College, this week, of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Carvel Sparks, of Pedricktown, N. J. The child, who has been named Anne Katherine, was born Saturday, at the Underwood hospital, of Woodbury, N. J. Mrs. Sparks, before her marriage, was Miss Ethel Sparks, the only child of the late Dr. Edwin Erle and Mrs. Sparks, of State College, and with whom Mrs. Sparks now makes her home. Mr. Sparks was a graduate of Penn State, of the class of 22. ——James C. Furst Esq., is doing his bit to relieve the housing strin- gency in Bellefonte. He has purchas- ed the small plot of ground along north Water street, north of Lamb street, including the old oil and tool house of the defunct Central Railroad of Pennsylvania, and is now at work converting the old building into a new bungalow. The building has been raised and placed on a concrete foun- dation. A concreted cellar will be put underneath and the kitchen, laundry and bath room built in the rear. A large porch will be built on the front, a new roof put on and when complet- ed and dressed up in a new coat of paint Mr. Furst will have for rent a very desirable bungalow for a small family. fide : # Suid ing Too Much Moonshine. Paul McMahon, of Houtzdale, 39 years of age, died at Martha Furnace last Friday morning, and the verdict of the coroner’s jury ascribed as the cause of death acute alcoholism. Mahon went to Martha on Monday of last week and got a job with the Mil- ler Construction company, which has the job of building one section of the state highway through Bald Eagle valley. He put up at the company quite a number of the men housed at that place engaged in a drinking bout. Raw moonshine flowed quite freely and according to all accounts a num- ber of the men were, literally speak- ing, paralyzed with drink. At five o'clock on Friday morning McMahon was alive but completely beyond all comprehension as to his whereabouts. He laid down on the floor, lapsed into unconsciousness and died. Sheriff E. R. Taylor was notified and he in turn called Dr. W. R. Heaton, of Philips- burg, coroner of Centre county. To- gether they investigated the death of McMahon but couldn’t find any indi- cations of foul play, and the coroner’s jury, composed of Joseph Shawver, Roy Stiver, George Stiver and P. E. Hicks, of Martha; R. T. Smith and J. W. Smith, of Bellefonte, returned a verdict of death from “acute alcohol- ism.” The fact will be recalled that sev- eral weeks previous Jack Gill died near Julian following a drinking bout and in an effort to unearth the source of the constant flow of moonshine into the highway construction camps in that section sheriff Taylor and state police arrested five men and brought them to the Centre county jail. They were James J. McDonald, of Boston; Patrick Nolan and John Bambo, an Austrian, of Philipsburg; Wharton Weller, of Martha, and Francis O’- Rourke, of Pittsburgh. Several of the men were considerably under the in- fluence when they were brought to jail and refused to divulge the source of supply, but late Friday evening four of them gave the name of the man who has been supplying the camps with moonshine. Knights Templar Had Eventful Trip to Philipsburg. Members of Constance Commandery No. 33, Knights Templar, of Belle- fonte, who went to Philipsburg for the district field day drill and exercises last Thursday, had a rather eventful trip. The most of them started on their journey in “Miss Nittany,” the Emerick Motor Bus company’s big bus. They went to Warriorsmark and crossed the Bald Eagle mountain to - Bald Eagle to connect with the con- crete highway to Sandy Ridge. When they reached Bald Eagle the J. M. Hutchinson highway gang had just gotten their forms set to pour con- . crete on the Bald Eagle highway and demurred on leaving them cross the , road, notwithstanding the fact that they had failed to put up signs at cither Warriorsmark or the Cross Roads warning motorists that the {road was closed. Finally, however, they allowed the big bus to cross, but i several individual cars that followed Miss Nittany were not permitted to cross and were compelled to return to | Warriorsmark and go around by Ty- rone. i Of course this took time but when ' they finally got around to the Triangle they found Miss Nittany stranded as the result of burned out bearings. The driver secured a bus from Tyrone to | take his load of Knights on to Phil- ipsburg, but by the time they reach- ted there luncheon was over and the ‘parade had marched to Scott field. The Knights got there in time, how- ever, to take part in the drills and get | their dinner in the evening. In the | meantime J. T. Storch, manager of ‘the Emerick company, went to the ' Triangle and made repairs to Miss Nittany so that the bus could be used to bring the Knights home. When “Near Beer” Was Really Near Beer. On Saturday evening, August 22nd, two state policemen stopped the au- tomobile of Arthur C. Thomas as that gentleman was returning to his home at Paradise from a trip to Philips- burg. They made a search and found eleven or twelve quart bottles which Mr. Thomas averred were near beer. The officers, however, were somewhat skeptical and confiscated the bottled goods. Bringing it to Bellefonte a bottle was turned over to chemist Da- vid Washburn for analysis and that gentleman found that it was really near beer, analyzing just 48-100 per cent. of alcohol. Needless to say it was returned to Mr. Thomas. Ford Coupe Stolen. Some time between one-thirty and five o’clock on Wednesday morning some unknown person stole the Ford coupe of Charles E. Gates from in front of Crider’s Exchange. Mr. Gates is on night turn at the aviation field this week and was in town on an errand at 1:30 o’clock and at that time his Ford was one of five or six stand- ing in a row in front of the Exchange building. When he returned home at five o’clock in the morning it was gone. The car is a 1922 model and bears license tags No. B-13,487. ———————————————— ——Chief fire marshall Robert Kline has been confined to his home the past two weeks with a rather ser- ious attack of lumbago, but is now enough improved that he is able to be up and around the house. boarding house and on Thursday night Highway Workman Dies from Drink- , Shenandoah Wrecked and Twelve of Crew Killed. While passing over eastern Ohio early yesterday morning on her flight to the Pacific coast the giant govern- Me- { ment airplane Shenandoah, flew into a wind storm and broke in two. One- half of the ship fell near Ava, in No- ble county, and the other half floated five miles further before it fell. Twelve of the crew, including Com- mander Lansdowne, are dead. sneer eee fp tee eee. Rev. Dr. Schmidt Resigns His Belle- fonte Pastorate. At a meeting of the board of offi- cers of St. John’s Reformed church, on Monday evening, Rev. Dr. Ambrose M. Schmidt submitted his resignation to take effect on November 2nd. As he had given no intimation of his in- tentions and not a member of the board anticipated such a contingency, the doctor’s actions naturally took the officers very much by surprise and they asked for time for consideration. Rev. Schmidt, however, informed them that his action had been taken after deep and complete consideration of the matter, and that he had only the kindliest feeling for his church and congregation in tendering his resig- nation. Dr. Schmidt’s reason for making his resignation effective November 2nd is that that date will complete his twen- ty-fourth year as pastor of the Belle- fonte church. In that time he has seen pastors come to and go from every church in Bellefonte. Hardly a year passed without one or more changes but he stood through them all, the dean of the ministry of Bellefonte. He has baptized children, seen them grow | to manhood and womanhood, has offi- ciated at their marriage and baptized their children. Of the twenty-seven young men who went forth from the Reformed church for service during the world war twenty-four of them had been baptized by him as children. Dr. Schmidt will leave Bellefonte without any other field of labor in view. He and Mrs. Schmidt plan to go to Washington to spend the winter with Dr. Schmidt’s sisters, and if a call to duty comes he will respond. L. H. Wion Retires as Agent of At- lantic Refining Company. When he quit work at 5:30 o’clock an Monday evening Longer H. Wion completed twenty-five years’ service as agent for the Atlantic Refining company in Bellefonte and also went onto the retired list. He has been succeeded by Harry Ulrich, who has been with the company a number of years and has the knowledge and ex- perience to carry on the business. Coincident with Mr. Wion’s retire- ment he was guest of honor of the oil men in this district, which includes Bellefonte, Coburn, Lock Haven and Jersey Shore, at a dinner at the Inn at Nittany, on Saturday evening. Sev- enteen oil men were present. Arthur Smith, of Lock Haven, superintendent in charge of the district, presided and when the inner man was satisfied pre- sented Mr. Wion with a substantial smoking set, including a box of cigars and a jar of Prince Albert tobacco. Mr. Wion contemplates taking things a little easy from now until spring when he expects to get into something not too hard, but with suf- ficient work connected with it to keep him occupied. : Big Bankrupt Sale of Shoes Starts Today. Mr. D. B. Fowler, of Williamsport, has been in Bellefonte this week get- ting everything in shape for his big closing out sale of the bankrupt stock of shoes in the Yeager shoe store, in the Bush Arcade. The sale will start this morning and will continue until the stock is cleaned out. Every pair of shoes has been marked at a price that makes them a bargain, and this offers a good opportunity to the peo- ple of Centre county to lay in a sup- ply of shoes for the winter season. Mr. Fowler will have assisting him during his big sale Mr. Wilbur Baney, who for many years was Mr. Yeager’s chief clerk, and this fact should appeal to all old customers of the store, as that gentleman will be able to supply them with just what they have been accustomed to wearing in the style and make of shoes. Whether you are in immediate need of shoes or not, this bankrupt sale will be a money- saving opportunity that no one should let pass by. ———— i ——— De Floromo Turned Over to Peniten- tiary Authorities. Thomas De Floromo, of Patterson, N. J., a paroled prisoner from the western penitentiary, who became in- volved in the toils of the law when he came here on August 7th and demand- ed to see three Italian prisoners at Rockview, and was arrested for ille- gal transportation of liquor, was turn- ed over to the penitentiary authorities at Rockview, last Friday, on a war- rant charging him with the violation of his parole. He was taken back to Pittsburgh on Tuesday and will have to complete his sentence which will not expire until next March or April. ——J. Kennedy Johnston, candidate for Judge, believes in the christian principle, which is the basis of the “Golden Rule,” and he does not and has not made false statements for the purpose of deceiving the voters of Centre county. 70-35-2t a b Veteran Railroad Agent Dies -at Wheel of Automobile. While on his way to the Granger picnic at Centre Hall, yesterday morn- ing, Walter L. Cook, for years Penn- sylvania R. R. agent at Howard, col- lapsed at the wheel of his automobile and died before medical aid could reach him. With his wife and daugh- ter he had left Howard after having ‘had some difficulty in getting his car started and reached a point in the gap just beyond Huston when he was stricken, but sudden as was the call he apparently, by instinct, closed the throttle of his machine and the car stopped without leaving its tracks. Dr. McCormick was hastily summoned and gave it as his opinion that death was caused by a heart attack. Deceased was a son of Robert Cook and was about 70 years of age. He is survived by his widow, one daughter, a brother, former sheriff Robert Cook, and two sisters, Miss Alice, in Indian- apolis, Ind., and Mrs. R. B. Long, whose present whereabouts are un- known. It might be interesting to the public to know that Mr. Cook’s death will bring to an end the Cook agency | was established the agency has been |in the Cook family.. He was a mem- ber of the Christian church. Arrange- | ments for the funeral had not been 1 made at this writing. Prisoner Who Escaped in 1924 Cap- | tured at Braddock. John Adriana, of Allegheny county, a prisoner who escaped from the Rockview penitentiary on the night of ; April 19th, 1924, was caught at Brad- dock on Monday of last week, where "he was taken unawares by officers . while visiting his brother. Adriana i did not submit tamely to arrest and the result is he was shot four or five times before being captured, and was then taken to the Braddock hospital for treatment of his wounds, being soon as he is able to stand the jour- ney, which prison officials believe will be some day this week, he will be brought to Bellefonte for sentence then returned to the penitentiary. Adriana was sent up from Alleghe- years for robbery, and had served only a little over three months of his term when he made his escape on April 19th, 1924. On that evening, under cover of darkness, he and Charles Henry ‘Wasser cut their way through the wire stockade and took French leave. Instead of making for the mountains they walked to Bellefonte, stole two raincoats from Oscar Ziin- merman’s garage and then took a Ford car standing in front of the Decker Bros. garage on south Water street. Going over the Seven moun- tains the car was abandoned near Reedsville for lack of gas. Wasser was caught within a week but Adri- ana escaped detection until last week. Under the law his punishment for es- caping will be a duplicate of his orig- inal sentence, and as he had served only a short period he has ahead of him close to five years minimum, and almost ten years maximum. Adriana’s capture after almost sev- enteen months of liberty ought to be a warning to other inmates that the road of escaping to permanent free- dom is a rocky one to travel. Out of more than one hundred and fifty pris- oners who have escaped since Rock- view penitentiary was started, only twenty have not been recaptured and brought back for sentence, but sev- eral of that number are now doing time in other places for crimes com- mitted after their escape. , Corporal Raymond Lingle’s Remains Found in France. The remains of Corporal Raymond Powell Lingle, who was killed in ac- tion in the battle of the Aisne-Marne, France, on July 30th, 1918, have been found, and advices received from the War Department by relatives in Belle- fonte state that they will be exhumed and brought to the United States and will be sent to Bellefonte for final burial. Corporal Lingle was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Lingle, of Bellefonte, but went forth to battle for his country from DuBois, where he was located at the outbreak of the world war. In France he served as a member of Company M, 110th infant- ry. When the Germans made their last fateful drive on the Aisne-Marne late in July of 1918, United States troops were thrown in to stem the tide of advance. How well they suc- ceeded is a matter of history, as the onrush of the Germans was not only checked but they were thrown back with heavy losses in killed, wounded and prisoners captured; and that was the beginning of the end of the great war. Unfortunately many United States soldiers made the supreme sacrifice and among them was Corporal Lingle. In fact he was the first soldier born and raised in Bellefonte who was killed in battle on French soil. He was buried in the forest on the Aisne river and although his grave was marked it was not discovered until quite recently. And now comes word from the War Department that the remains will be sent to Bellefonte for interment. Just when they will reach here is, of course, indefinite, but when they do they will be buried with the honors of war in the Lingle plot in the Union cemetery. —————— A dec ——Mrs. James A. Beaver is quite ill at her home on Curtin street, suf- fering from an attack of shingles. at Howard, as ever since the station | kept under guard day and night. As ny county for two and a half to five | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Rachel Stutsman left Tuesday to return to her work at Detroit. Her sister, Miss Ruth, will join her there next week. —Anne Dodd Dale, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. David Dale, was an over night guest of a schoolmate, in Snow Shoe, Friday of last week. —The Rev. Homer Knox and his fami- ly arrived home Monday, after spending the month of August in camp along the Susquehanna river. —Miss Elizabeth Cooney is making her annual visit to Atlantic City, from where she will go to New York to do her first buying for the winter trade of the Hat Shop. —Miss Evaline Troup has resigned her position with the local Bell Telephone Co., and went to Harrisburg, Sunday, to enter a commercial school for a course in pri- vate secretarial work. —DMiss Bertha Laurie and Mrs. J. M. Cur- tin were guests of Mrs. George FF. Harris on a drive to Houtzdale, Wednesday, where Miss Laurie spent the day with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Laurie. —Mrs. E. 8S. Maloy and her two children have been visiting at Mrs. Maloy’s former home in Philadelphia. Dr. Maloy took his family east in his car ten days ago and will return for them at the expiration of their visit. —Mrs. Harry Walkey and her son “Jim- , mie” will go to Reading Monday, for a two ; week's visit with Mrs. Walkey’s sister, Mrs. E. C. Carpenter. As now planned, Mr. Walkey will drive over for them at the ! end of their visit. | —Mr. and Mrs. William E. Seel have re- ‘turned to their home at Paxtang, after having spent the greater part of the past year traveling in Europe. Mrs. Seel is probably better known in Bellefonte as Miss Jennie Fauble. —Mr. and Mrs. William Katz and their daughter Mary left Monday morning, on a drive to Boston, their destination being the Sargent school, near Cambridge, where Mary is a student of physical culture, in preparation for an instructor. —Jack Decker and Malcolm Yeager ar- rived home Sunday, for a week's visit with their parents, the drive from New Jersey having been made in the former's car. Jack is now located at Bayonne, N. J. while Malcolm has continued at Perth Amboy. —Mrs. L. A. Krumm, of Watsontown, and Miss Mildred Krumm, of St. Louis, were in Bellefonte last week from Wed- nesday until Saturday, guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Hartranft, at their home on , north Thomas street. Mrs. Hartranft is a ' niece of Mrs. Krumm. —Mrs. C. U. Hoffer and daughters, the Misses Anne and Louise, motored in from | Philipsburg, on Sunday, and spent part of the day with friends in town. Returning ; home they took with them Mrs. Harold | Kirk, who will spend a week or ten days with her sister, Mrs. Earl C. Tuten. | —Miss Fthel Dale left yesterday to re- turn to Colorado to resume her work as instructor in the schools near Denver. Miss Dale is going back to do high school work this winter, a position to which she was but recently elected. Her summer vaca- | tion had been spent with her mother, Mrs. Clement Dale. —Hon. James Schofield and his daughter, Mrs. Charles Larimer, went to Philadelphia, Wednesday, where Mr. Schofield entered the Jefferson hospital to Be under the ob- servation of gpecialists. Mrs. M. A. Mec- Ginnis, of Pottsville, met her father and sister in Philadelphia, to be with them during their stay. | —The Misses Nan and Mary Hoy will have as guests for a fortnight Miss Mae ‘ Chandlee and Miss Nannette Blakeley Hoy, i of Philadelphia, the young ladies arriv- ling in Bellefonte on Monday. Coming by train to Lock Haven they were met there by Miss Nan Hoy and brought to Belle- fonte by automobile. —Mrs. Louis Friedman and her daugh- ter Hermine, who have been with Mrs. Freidman's mother and brother, Mrs. Holz and Harry, since the last of July, will re- turn to New York about the middle of the month. Irene, Mrs. Freidman's elder daughter, left Bellefonte several weeks ago to go to Patchogue, L. I., to visit until school opens. —Miss Anne Keichline drove to Mounds- ville, W. Va., last week, with Miss Belle Lowery as a motor guest. Miss Lowery had been here with Miss Keichline for sev- eral days and was returning to her work. Miss Daise Keichline went out to New Cas- tle last week to spend the week-end with Mrs. Wayne D. Stitzingery - expecting to join her sister for the drive back to Belle- fonte. —The Rev. John R. Woodcock and his two children, William and Anna, were here last week for a visit with Mr. Woodcock’s mother, Mrs. John A .Woodcock, who ac- companied them back to Alexandria, Sat- urday, for an over Sunday visit, Mrs. Woodcock having driven over for them. The Woodcock family and Mrs. William Thompson returned to their home at Syr- acuse the early part of this week. —Dr., E. H. Yocum, who was here from Northumberland, Sunday, to take charge of {he morning service in the Methodist church, and of the union open air meeting in the evening, was a house guest during his stay of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shuey. Dr. Yocum was called to Woolrich unexpect- edly, Monday, by the sudden death of Thomas Gray, one of the town’s prominent residents and a former parishioner. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hamilton arriv- ed in Centre county, from New York, Wed- nesday, and on account of having Anne Broderick with them, drove directly to State College. Their two weeks in Centre county will be divided between Mr. Ham- ilton’s sister and her family, Mr, and Mrs. E. M. Broderick, of State College, and his father, Thad Hamilton, of Bellefonte. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton and their niece were accompanied by Mr. Hamilton's brother, Clarence, also of New York. —Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Sample, with their son Edgar, who had been here for a visit of ten days with relatives of Mrs. Sample at State College and in Bellefonte, started on their return drive to their home in Bethlehem on Wednesday. Since leaving Philadelphia, several years ago, Mr. Sam- ple has been manager of the Bethlehem branch of the plumbing fixture concern he was connected with in Philadelphia for so long. While he says business is inclined to be a bit slow just now he was quite en- thusiastic over the marvelous advance that has been made in plumbing fixtures and methods of installation since the days he was starting in the business. While at State College they were guests of the Phil. D. Fosters and here they visited at the G, TF. Musser home. —James B. Krape is now visiting with relatives at Spring Mills, having complete- ly recovered from his recent long illness. —Dr. Richard Noll is home from Pitts- burgh for a visit with his mother, Mrs. Charles Noll. Dr. Noll has but recently graduated from the dental school of the University of Pittsburgh. —Lewis Harvey motored here Wednes- day, for his children, Mary and Ellis Har- vey, whom he took to his home at Villa- nova, yesterday for a short visit before the opening of their school. —Mrs. Herbert Sheffer and her daugh- ter, Miss Lillian, are at Ardmore for a vis- it with Mrs. Sheffer's son Frazier and his family. Miss Sheffer went east Monday, her mother following on Tuesday. —Mrs. E. B. Callaway landed from her summer cruise to Norway, two weeks ago, but has made no arrangements for coming to Dellefonte at present. Mrs. Callaway is with her daughter, Mrs. Garber, at College Point, L. 1. —Joseph W. Undercoffer, baggage mas- ter at the P. R. R. depot in Bellefonte, re- turned on Saturday evening from his two week’s vacation which was spent with his daughter, Mrs. Moeslin, in Broklyn, and at Wildwood, N. J. —Miss Helen MacDonald, of Downing- town, who worked as dental hygienist in our schools half of last year has returned to work in the schools of Bellefonte, State College and several other places in the county for the school year. —Miss Theresa Shields has resigned her position as assistant superintendent of nurses of the Altoona hospital, to accept that of superintendent of nurses at the Philipsburg hospital and will go to her new work the first of October. —Mrs. A. C. Smith and her daughter, Miss Miriam, arrived home last night from the Clearfield hospital, where Miss Smith had been a patient for six weeks. Miss Smith's condition is thought co be respond- ing to the three blood transfusions made recently at the hospital. —Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell I. Gardner, of Clearfield, with their son Harold, were in town Wednesday on their way home from a motor trip of 700 miles over New York and Pennsylvania. Their principal objec- tive in New York was Watkins Glen and all were feeling fine because they made the tour by easy stages. —The Misses Betty and Sara Stevenson, U. 8. government nurses who have only re- cently returned from service in the Phil- ippines, have been assigned to duty in the government hospital in Denver, Col. The Misse; Stevenson are daughters of Mr. and Mrs. George Stevenson, of Waddle, and graduates of the Bellefonte hospital train- ing school. —A. H. Waring, of Philipsburg, was in Bellefonte over Wednesday night having come over here from spending the day with his Grand Army comrades at the Granger's picnic. Sixty-two years ago last month Mr. Waring tramped through Bellefonte on his way to the front. He was wounded several times, once so severely that he was sent to the hospital in Washington to die, but he didn’t and yesterday, at 84, he look- ed and acted like he had never known in- jury or illness. —A very pleasant caller at the “Watch- man” office on Saturday was Mr. E. W. Mayes, of Huntingdon, who with his wife and five children were on a motor trip to his old home at Clintondale, in Nittany valley, where a family reunion was held on Sunday. Mr. Mayes holds the responsible position of assistant to head farmer KEl- mer E. Beck, at the Huntingdon Reforma- tory, and this fact is sufficient to justify the assertion that he is a busy man from the first day of January to the last of De- cember. Fixing the Status of a Deer Hunter. The W. C. Shoemaker deer kill- ing case from Ferguson township had a further airing before ‘Squire S. Kline Woodring, on Tuesday evening. Additional evidence was taken and the case then continued until two o’clock tomorrow afternoon when ar- gument will be made by S. D. Gettig and John G. Love Esgqs. Mr. Shoe- maker is a member of the Horse Head Rod and Gun club and hunted with that organization last fall. They killed six deer but he did not get a shot. Later he went out as a day hunter and killed his deer and the question at issue is whether he is guilty of having broken the game laws. - The proceeding against him is an amicable one to test the law. Community Nurse Begins Work. Miss Anna McCauley, of Front Roy- al, Virginia, arrived on Tuesday to be- gin her work as community nurse. The nursing service, after being in op- eration for four years, was discontin- ued in July, 1924, owing to the resig- nation of Mrs. Pearl Meeker Hagan and it should be a matter for congrat- ulation to the community that it is to be resumed. There will be a meeting of the nursing committee next Mon- day afternoon at 4 o’clock, in the W. C. T. U. room, after which rules gov- erning the new nursing service will be made public. ——Earl Yarnell, son of ex-sheriff George H. Yarnell, of Hecla, went to work on Monday morning with the general construction and maintenance crew of the aerial mail service. This crew works on the entire route be- tween New York and Chicago, travels in motor trucks and is entirely inde- pendent of the maintenance men on each division, ———————— ef ————— ——J. Kennedy Johnston realizes that his opponents are using the same misleading methods as were used ten years ago, but their conduct does not alter his principles; he is opposed to resorting to deception. The office of Judge demands an honest candidate if we are to elect an honest official. 70-35-2t re—————————————— Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat = = = $150 Oats - - - - - - 40 Rye - - - - - - = 1.10 Corn - - - - - - 1.10 Barley «= = &.ie. wie 1.00 Buckwheat - . - - - 1.00