_— Bellefonte, Pa., September 18, 1925. re _ NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——A marriage license was grant- ed at Cumberland, Md., last Friday, to Morris Simon Shay, of Howard, and Miss Anna Marie Young, of Belle- fonte. | —A little daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. John Garman, at the Centre County hospital on Sunday, died on Wednesday morning. Burial was made the same day. ——F. P. Blair & Son, of Belle- fonte, will put on their annual $1.50 sale next Wednesday. See their ad- vertisement on another page of to- day’s “Watchman.” ——Miss Daise Keichline has ac- cepted the position of actuary of the Children’s Aid society of Potter coun- ty and will leave to take up the work the middle of October. ——Hugh M. Quigley has resigned his position with the American Lime and Stone Co., to become day super- intendent of lime and kilns at the ‘Whiterock operations. * ——A fine big baby boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Bryan, of Milesburg, last Friday. It weighed «ight and a half pounds and has been named Donald Eugene. - — Alexander G. Morris Jr. has re- signed his position as a quarry fore- man with the American Lime and Stone Co. Alex expects to accept another and more attractive offer for his services. -——Nathan Kofman wants his cus- tomers to know that in celebration of Rosh Hashana his place of business will be closed all day tomorrow and on September 28th, which is Yom Kip- pur, it will also be closed. ——The Bellefonte Lodge of Elks have started preparations for their annual Hollow-e’en celebration which this year will be held on Saturday night, October 31st. Complete details will be announced in the near future. ——John W. Beals, of Philipsburg, has been appointed a forestry inspec- tor to succead the late J. R. Van Dan- iker. The position pays $120 per month and Mr. Beals’ district will in- clude portions of Centre and Clearfield counties. ——Mark Williams, of the Belle- fonte Hardware company, was thirty- five years old on Monday and his wife arranged a surprise party in his hon- or, the affair being held at the Mason- ic camp, near Snow Shoe Intersection. Thirty-four guests were present and the evening was spent in playing cards and other social diversions. ——Rev. S. F. Forgeus, moderator of the Baptist church in Central Penn- sylvania and who for thirty-three years was chaplain of the Hunting- don reformatory, will preach in the Baptist church at Milesburg on Sun- day moining at 11 o’clock. He will also preach in the Baptist church at Blanchard at 7:30 o’clock in the even- ing. iv. ! —=—Miss Helen Harper was taken to the Centre County hospital Thurs- day of last week, suffering from a mild attack of typhoid fever. Mary Elizabeth Sloop, the eldest daughter of Arthur L. Sloop, supervising prin- cipal of the Beliefonte schools, had charge of Miss Harper's room for a few days, Miss Henrietta Quig.ey then being substituted permanently. ——Changes in the railroad person- nel, occasioned by the recent sudden death of . station agent Walter L. Cooke, of Howard, have been announc- ed as follows: C. C. Dreese, transfer- red from Madera to Howard; A. B. Nelson transferred from Blanchard to Madera; P. E. Hicks trans.ei_ed from Martha to Blanchard, and W. A. Shaf- fer appointed agent at Martha. ——Delman McCloskey, of Blanch- ard, is under one thousand dollars bail for his appearance before the Centre county court on the charge of driving an automobile while under the influ- ence of liquor. His arrest followed an automobile accident in which he figured last Friday night when the car he was driving collided with one being driven by John J. Considine, of Lock Haven. ——The primalies are now over and the candidates have been named. Of course every voter will naturally consider carefully which one to vote for but this won’t interfere with your going to the Scenic every evening for an hour or two and being comfortably entertained in watching the motion pictures as they flash across the screen. There is no denying the fact that manager T. Clayton Brown is giving the people of Bellefonte and vi- cinity some remarkable pictures, and the Scenic is the only place to see them. ———The police of Bellefonte have failed to find any definite clues that might lead to the discovery of the men who, on Wednesday night of last week, burglarized the mill of the C. Y. Wag- ner Co., blowing open the safe and stealing about one hundred dollars in cash. At noon on Thursday three men traveling in an automobile attempted to hold up a bank in a small town near Bloomsburg, Columbia county, but be- came frightened before they pulled the job and made a get-away in their waiting machine before they could be captured. It is just possible that this was the same gang that robbed the Wagner mill, as they could easily travel to Bloomsburg between the time the mill was robbed and noontime the next day, when the attempt was made to rob the bank in Columbia county. 500 MEMBERS IN 4 DAYS. A Big Drive to be Made in Interest of Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. “Five hundred members in four days” is the slogan of a drive to be ‘ made the latter part of this month for membership in the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. This was decided upon at a pre- liminary meeting held on Monday evening. The exact dates for the drive will be September 28th, 29th and 30th, and October 1st. The winter season is approachin when the young people of the town will naturally seek some place of en- tertainment. The only regular places {of amusement in Bellefonte at the present time are the movie picture theatres. While officials of the Y. M. C. A. have no intention of decrying these places they feel that all possi- ble effort should be put forth to inter- est thé young men and women in the Y. The association building was only recently overhauled at considerable expense and is as good a plant as can . be found in any town the size of Belle- fonte, that must depend entirely upon the community for its support. And ; the only sure way of getting such sup- ‘ port is from membership. . { During the summer the people o ' Bellefonte and vicinity entertained in the neighborhood of two hundred fresh air children from New York city, at an expense of approximately two thousand dollars. While this was a worthy charity, the children of Belle- fonte and surrounding community were passed by unnoticed. Charity should always begin at home, and if the people of Bellefonte believe in this adage they will rally to the sup- port of the big drive for membership to be made by the Y. M. C. A. on the dates above given. Another meeting will be held the latter part of this week when the de- tails of the drive will be worked out. At that time committees will be ap- pointed and all necessary plans made. Watch the papers next week for full announcements, but more than all else, decide now to put your shouider to the wheel and help push the drive along. i ! Brook Trout Again Find Home in the Big Spring. It has been years since the last one of the trout that attracted so much at- tention in the Big Spring disappeared from the source of the town’s water supply. Some of them were sneaked out by fishermen, some were removed because they had become diseased and others just disappeared. Almost con- tinuously, since, the question has come up: Why are there no trout kept in the Spring. So insistent has it been since the trout in Spring creek have become the object of such general interest that | Mr. Cunningham, chairman of the Water committee of council, set about to procure, a few trout for the spring. It was. thought that the native brook trout should be the only variety there, so with the co-operation of William Haas, superintendent of the Pleasant Gap hatchery, Fish Commissioner Buller was interested to the extent of presenting. eight beauties to the bor- ough of Bellefonte. As there are no large brook trout at the Gap hatchery it became necessary to bring them all the way from Cory. This Mr. Haas did last Saturday, bringing eight, ranging-in length from 10 to 14 inch- es. Two were carried in a can. They arrived here in fine condition and are having the time of their lives jumping at the flies that skim over the surface of the Spring. Shock Absorbers Being Turned Out in Bellefonte. A new firm which is already begin- ning to make its mark in automobile circles is the Aero Shock Absorber company, located and doing business in Bellefonte. Eben B. Bower is the superintendent and general manager of the company and his assembiing plant is in his warehouse down near the Lamb street bridge, over Spring creek. The company is now turning out upwards of one hundred sets of absorbers a day and has already placed over two thousand sets in Penn- sylvania, New Jersey and Maryland towns. ] ; At present the absorber is manufac- tured entirely for Ford cars, but the local company controls the patent and its field covers the entire United States and wherever Ford cars are sold and in use. As there are now over-twelve million Ford cars on the market they have fertile territory in which to work. Mr. Bower has confi- dence in the attachment he is putting on the market and is looking forward to the time when the absorber plant will be one of the big industries of Bellefonte. Want a New Bank at Howard. Ten citizens of Howard and vicinity have made application for a charter for a new bank at that place to be known as the Farmers and Merchants National bank. The capitalization is to be $50,000, which will be made up of one thousand shares of stock of a par value of fifty dollars. It hasn’t been such a long time ago , that the only banks in Centre county , were located in Bellefonte, Philips- | burg, Centre Hall and Millheim. Now [there are two at State College, two in | i Centre Hall, two in Millheim, one at Rebersburg, one at Spring Mills, one ! at Port Matilda, one at Snow Shoe and ' one at Howard, with a new application for a second one at the latter place. And they all seem tc be flourishing and in a healthy condition. pl ———————————————— ———————————————————————E—————— + : Mr. and Mrs. John Tyson, of ' Lewistown, are receiving congratula- , tions on the birth of a daughter. Mrs. | Tyson was formerly from State Col- i lege and well known in that locality as Miss Ruth Meek, the younger daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Meek. .——Some unknown person has again started the rumor that the avia- tion field is to be moved from Belle- fonte because of the dangerous air pockets in this locality. Right here it might be said that the pilots who have been flying the route from New York to Cleveland since the airmail was in- thing as “air pockets.” There are air currents which are naturally influ- enced by the alternating mountains and valleys, but the mountains extend from Virginia to Canada and the pres- other point would be. All these facts were taken into consideration when the present route was laid out and Bellefonte selected as the place for the landing field in Pennsylvania. The matter was again fully considered when the question of a new field arose six months ago, and the fact that the Postoffice Department spent upwards of one hundred thousand dollars in equipping the present field should be the most decisive evidence that there is nothing in the rumor that the Belle- fonte field is not as good as can be found anywhere. ee ——The “Watchman” last week told of the finding of the stolen Ford coupe of Charles E. Gates in Altoona, but when that young man went up to that city on Thursday to bring it home he found it so badly wrecked that it could not be driven to Bellefonte. In fact it had to be towed to the Ford plant for repairs. While there is no definite knowledge as to who stole the car sus- picion points to two young men who left. Bellefonte at three o’clock on the morning of the night the car was stolen, skipping their hotel bill and having passed a worthless check for $25.00 the day previous. On arriving in Altoona they parked the car close to police headquarters and there it stood until the Altoona department partment about the stolen car. And when Mr. Gates went up on Thursday take the names of the young men sus- pected of having taken the car, telling the owner that he ought to be satis- fied to get the car back, even though it cost considerable to repair the dam- age done. Mr. Gates went up on Sun- day and brought his car back to Belle- fonte. In the meantime an effort will be made to discover who took the car. 1 Buffalo Run Woman Badly Burned i While Boiling Applebutter. While boiling applebutter on the farm of Miss Annie Gray, in Buffalo Run valley, last Friday, Miss Léttie Cupp, housekeeper for Charles Bloom, who occupies the farm, was so terribly burned when her clothing caught fire that she is now in a serious condition in the Centre County hospital. Miss Cupp was stirring the applebutter in the big copper kettle when the wind blew a spark from the hot fire against her dress. Her clothing quickly ig- nited and before she realized what had happened she was virtually a living torch. The only one at the house at the time was her small nephew and he was too young to render any assist- ance in extinguishing the flames. . Fortunately Miss Cupp retained enough presence of mind to throw her- self on the ground and roll over and over until the flames were extin- guished. The little nephew then went to the nearest neighbor, a considera- ble distance away, and summoned help. A physician was called and after rendering first aid brought the woman to the hospital. Although her suffering has been considerably reliev- ed she is still considered in a serious condition. Another Closed Bank to be Reopened. Several months ago the Producers and Consumers bank of Philadelphia, closed its doors. Already plans are under way for its creditors to reopen it. When it failed the creditors were informed that they could hope for not more than sixty cents on the dollar, then some one suggested almost the same plan this paper suggested to the creditors of the Centre County and they got busy. They went even fur- ther than we suggested that creditors of the closed local institution might go. They decided to leave all the money ‘they had in the bank there to help them in the work of recouping their losses ultimately. And they will be recouped. This is only one of many banks that have failed in Pennsylvania since the Centre County closed its doors and been reopend on firm footing and i with good management that will eventually work out its problems. { The creditors of the Centre County might be better advised if they were to follow the example of people in other communities than they are by listening to some who are profiting by their dilemma, others who hope to profit by it and others who “don’t want a third bank in Bellefonte.” { Wanted, Young Woman to Learn Linotype Operation. A young woman with common school education will be given an op- ‘portunity of learning to operate a linotype machine by calling at this of- fice. We will have a permanent po- sition to offer one who becomes pro- ficient enough to handle it. stituted declare that there is no such ent route is no worse than one at any , received notice from the Highway De- the man at the police desk refused to | “Buddy” Nighthart Accidentally { Drowned in Hughes Swimming - i Pool. Edward Nighthart, thirteen years old, and more familiarly known among his playmates as “Buddy,” was I accidentally drowned in the swimming ‘pool on Hughes field on Wednesday afternoon, the body not being recov- ered until between eleven and twelve ‘ o’clock Wednesday night. The child was among a group of boys who had gone to Hughes field to watch the Bellefonte Academy- football team at practice. rowed a scootér from one of his play- mates and scooted back and forth across the field. When football practice ended all the boys followed the players from the field and returned home. Not see- ing “Buddy” on the field the boy who “had loaned him the scooter naturally supposed he had returned home and about six o'clock went to the Doll home, where the lad lived, to get his scooter. But “Buddy” had not return. ed home. A search was then institut- ed around the town but no informa- tion as to his whereabouts being ob- tained a searching party was formed to go to Hughes field. The swimming pool seemed the most likely place to look and several men plunged in and began a search. In the course of half an hour the body was found, the hands of the drowned boy still clutching tightly the handle- bar of the scooter. The only explana- tion of the drowning is that the boy had been riding on the concrete wall of the swimming pool, scooted over the edge into the water, and being unable to swim was drowned. A cor- oner’s inquest returned a verdict of accidental - drowning. . Edward Nighthart was a son of Charles and the late Mame Doil Nighthart. His mother died over six years ago and shortly thereafter he and his older brother, John, were placed in the Catholic school at Cres- son. They returned home about two months ago and have been making their home with their aunt and uncles, Mrs. Rose Doll Pearl, George and Frank Doll. No arrangements for the funeral have yet been made. Chapter of I. W. L. Organized in | oef Bellefonte. In response to a call sent out last week a goodly number of those inter- “ested in out of door life met in the ar- : bitration room of the: court house ' here, last Friday evening, and organ- {ized a chapter of the Izaak Walton ! League of America. It had been anticipated that one of the national officers of the League , would be present for the institution of the new chapter, but as such was not the case there was little done further than to elect the following officers: President, G. F. Musser; secretary, Charles Brachbill; treasurer, J. J. Kil- patrick. The executive committee has not been named by the president up to this writing. The annual convention of the Penn- sylvania Chapters of the League will be held in Williamsport the latter part of this month and Bellefonte will be well represented. The Izaak Walton League is grow- ing all over the United States. Its ob- ject is conservation of forests and streams and keeping the out of doors clean. Within a very short time for- ty-one chapters have been organized in Pennsylvania and there will be more. This is very significant. Es- pecially to Centre county sportsmen. ’ With Pennsylvania organizing under the potential leadership of a great na- tional organization it is going to make the matter of fish and game distribu- tion by the State one of vital interest to us. That is, the more organizations there are working for their own dis- tricts the more will a militant one be necessary here in Centre county if we are to be properly taken care of. Home for Sick Children to be Built Near Lewisburg. The various Presbyteries in Central Pennsylvania have undertaken the | erection of a home in Union county | for the care of convalescent orphan or semi-orphan children. A farm four miles west of Lewisburg, in Buffalo valley, has been donated by Mrs. Jane Harrison as the location for the home and plans are now being prepared for a $75,000 building to be e d there- cn. This will be the first home of the kind to be erected in Pennsylvania and within the territory which the home will serve are 432 churches and 95,000 church members. The capaci- ty of the home will be from forty-five to fifty children. Definite plans for the prosecution of the work will be made at the fall meetings of the var- ious Presbyteries to be held next month. Tomorrow, the Jewish New Year. At sunset tonight the Jewish New Year, known as Rosh Hashana, will be- gin and all stores in Bellefonte owned by members of the Jewish faith will be closed from sunset, 6 o’clock, to- day until sunset, 6 o’clock tomorrow. of these stores should bear in mind that they will be open tomorrow only after 6 o’clock in the evening. ——————————————————— ——The condition of W. J. Emerick, who has been at the sea shore the past six weeks, is very much improved. His temperature is down to about normal and he feels decidedly better in every way. In fact his im- that he returned to his home in this place Wednesday afternoon. While there “Buddy” bor-' Persons contemplating visiting any provement has been so encouraging Era NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | —Mr. and Mrs. G. Willard Hall, of Har- risburg, were here Wednesday, for a short time with Mrs. Hall's father, G. R. Spigel- myer, stopping enroute on a drive to Erie. —Mr. and Mrs. William Tressler, of Howard street, have gone to Syracuse, N. Y., for a visit of a week or more with their son, the Rev. Robert Tressler and his fam- ily. —Mrs. Louis Daggett arrived here from Wyncote, Tuesday,.for a visit with Mr, Daggett’s mother, Mrs. Wells L. Daggett, before she leaves to spend’the winter in Elmira. —Mr. Mills, pastor of the U. B. church, with two of his official board, Christ Young and Darius Waite, have been at- tending a church conference at Latrobe, this week. —Miss Helene Williams, treasurer, and Elizabeth Meek, chairman of the tubercu- losis committee, attended the Christmas Seal conference at the Lycoming, in Wil- liamsport, on Thursday. —Thomas Fleming Jr., with the Fire- stone Tire Co., of Akron, Ohio, has been in Bellefonte this week, back home for =e | short time with his father, Thomas I'lem- ing, of Reynolds avenue. en Willowbank street and gone to Wash- ington, Pa., to spend a month or six weeks | with her daughter, Mrs. McCoy. Mrs. Wetzel left Bellefonte Saturday afternoon. —Albert Ammerman is making his an- nual fall visit back home, a guest of his sister, Mrs. Compani, of south Allegheny street. Mr. Ammerman came from Phila- delphia, Sunday, expecting to remain a week. —MTr. and Mrs. James R. Driver and Mrs. Driver's daughter, Miss Margery Way, spent last week at the family bungalow at Waddle, having had as guest during the time there, Mr. and Mrs. Millhiser, of Wil- merding. —Mr. and Mrs. Mark Williams, with Miss Pearl Royer, of Niagara Falls, and Miss Winifred M. Gates, as motor guests, drove over to Huntingdon on Saturday evening for a Sunday visit with Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Sutherland. —Mrs. Austin McMullen, of Coleville, will go to Clearfield next week to attend the fair and for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Roy Stone. During her absence one of Mr. McMullen’s daughters will come to have charge of the house. | —Deimer T. Pearce, former sealer of weights and measures in Centre county, and now head of the Pearce Milk Co., at , State College, was in town for a little while ion Monday, but it wasn’t politics, it was business that brought him to town. —Bruce and Karl Dreibelbis, of State College, with their sister, Miss Dorothy, passed through Bellefonte last week on a drive to Williamsport, where Miss Drei- | belbis entered the Commercial College of that city, as a student in its regular busi- . Ness course. —Harry Peters, who spent a fourteen day’s furlough at the home of Mr. and { Mrs. Harry Clevenstine left on Monday to report at the Brooklyn navy yard. The young sailor boy has been attached to the U. 8. ship Wyoming and came to Bellefonte from Rhode Island. —Mrs. M. A. Kirk left Bellefonte Tues- day to go to Meadville, Pa., where she will be for the remainder of the month with her daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Young. Mrs. Kirk's visit at this t is pfincipally to see her new grand-son, Philip Miles Young, who is now about a month old. a | —Capt. W. H. Fry, of Pine Grove Mills, was up at Altoona, on Saturday, attending the big gathering of G. A. R. men at Lake- mont park, and met many old comrades whom he had not seen in a number of years. Only a few veterans from Centré county were present at the gathering. | —Miss Winifred Dunlap, who is on a three week’s visit with relatives in Wel- lington, Ohio, left Saturday, as a driving guest of her aunt and cousins, with whom she is now visiting. The party had been here from Ohio to see the Dunlap family, of Bellefonte, and relatives at Spring Mills. : —Mrs. Ebe, with her small son and her sister, Miss Augusta Shoemaker, drove over from Pittsburgh, Sunday, Mrs. Ebe and the child remaining here for a visit with Mrs. Ebe’s mother, Mrs. Thomas A. Shoe- maker, and with Capt. and Mrs. Philip Shoemaker, at Linden Hall. Miss Shoe- maker returned to Pittsburgh, Monday. —Mrs. A. B. Cromer is with her father and sister, W. Homer Crissman and Mrs. Broderick, this week, she and Mr. Cromer having been driving guests of the Broder- icks on their return trip from Norfolk, ar- 'riving in Bellefonte, Sunday. Mr. Cromer left Monday to return to Virginia, while Mrs. Cromer remained for a week’s visit. —Emily Parker arrived here from New Brunswick, Monday, for a visit with her aunts, the Misses Elizabeth and Emily Par- ker, and with her grandmother, Mrs. Scho- field, before going on to Chambersburg to renter Wilson College. Yesterday Emily, with her aunts, went over to Somerset for several days and next week they will all go to Chambersburg. —Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cunningham, of Halfmoon Terrace, are entertaining | Miss Genevieve Kelley, of Scranton, who | arrived here on Labor day for a visit of | several weeks. Miss Kelley is a musician of exceptional accomplishments having ! taught in the school for the blind of New ' Jersey and also in the International Cor- ‘ respondence school of her home city. —Miss Humes and Miss Sara Caldwell, of Bellefonte, and Miss Nora Thompson, of Port Matilda, will leave Tuesday to go to Philadelphia, expecting to remain there until Saturday, when they will go on to Atlantic City to spend three weeks at Had- don Hall, as has been their custom for a number of years. Mrs. Charles Gilmour will go to Philadelphia, Thursday, and after spending several days there with her daughter, Miss Margaret, will join Miss Humes and her party at Atlantic City. i —Mr. and Mrs. Percy Miller will drive to Centre county next week, from Punxsu- tawney, for a visit of several days with Mrs. Miller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Beck, at Snydertown, intending upon their return to take with them Mrs. Miller's sis- ter, Mrs. Nevin Hoy, whose health for some time has caused the family considerable concern. Since the beginning of her illness Mrs. Hoy has spent much of her time at Snydertown and the visit to Punxsutawney is now being made that the change may fur- ther benefit her health. Mr. Beck, who also has been ill for some time is slowly growing better, the improvement being such as to permit a short visit to Belle- fonte, this week, which was greatly en- joyed by a favored few of his friends. —Mrs. Oscar Wetzel has closed her home | —Mrs. William Derstine will go to Ju- niata tomorrow, to spend a week with her son Frank and his family. : —MTrs. Mary Miller, of Hagerstown, is a guest of her sister and brothers at the Stewart home on Linn street. —Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Wian returned home Sunday, following a week's visit with W. P. Kuhn and other friends in Williams- port. : —Mrs. John Sebring accompanied her sister, Mrs. Mann, to Philadelphia, Mon- day, expecting to be there with her for | several weeks. —Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Bradley had as ‘over Sunday guests Miss Mary and James MacLarep, who drove here from Philadel- -phia, Saturday. —Mrs. Ida Gill, of Huntingdon, is visit- ing in Bellefonte, a guest of her mother and sister, Mrs. H. K. Miller and Mrs. Lawrence McClure. —Miss Mary Ward, of Pine Grove Mills, has been here for a part of the week, sew- ing at the home of Mrs. Edith Knoff, on east Howard street. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lose, of east High street, are entertaining their daugh- ter, Mrs. Carter Thornberg, of East Pitts- burgh, and her daughter, Catherine Eliza- beth. —Mr. and Mrs. James H. Potter, their daughter, Miss Janet, and Col. W. F. Rey- nolds were those from Bellefonte who at- tended the Williams—Sommerville wedding at Jersey Shore, Saturday. —Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Widener, William R. Miller, Mrs. Lee and daughter Frances, all of Wilmington, Del., were guests dur- ing the week of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clev-~ eunstine and Mrs. A. Catherine Nitchman. —>Miss May Crider, who has been in Bellefonte with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Burns Crider, since her graduation from Pierce business college, in the spring, has returned to Philadelphia to accept the po- sition of stenographer with a brokerage firm of that city. —DMr. and Mrs. George L. Van Tries mo- tored to Bellefonte last week from Pitts- burgh, for one - of their frequent visits back home. During their stay Mr. and Mrs. Van Tries have been house guests of the former's sister, Mrs. Louisa V. Harris, at her home on Allegheny street. © —Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Lane will stop in Bellefonte for an over Sunday visit with Mr. Lane's mother, Mrs. James B. Lane, on the drive back home to McKees- port from Mercersburg, where they have been to enter their eldest son, James, for a year at the Mercersburg Academy. —Richard 8. Brouse Jr. went to Brook- lyn, N. Y., on Sunday to spend the week with his sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Topelt, expecting to motor to Belle- fonte tomorrow with the Topelts and his mother, Mrs. R. 8. Brouse, who has been in Brooklyn the past month or longer. —Miss Elizabeth Glenn and her brother Thomas O. Glenn Jr., drove to State Col- lege from Bradford, Wednesday, to enter Thomas at Penn State as a Freshman. Miss Elizabeth is a member of the class of 1925. Miss Glenn and her brother are children of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Glenn, of Brad- ford. —Miss M. H. Snyder went east the ear- ly part of last week for her first selec- tion of winter millinery stock, her trip east including Washington, Philadelphia nd New York. At Washington Miss Sny- er visits with her niece, Miss Jeannette Cooke, who accompanies her on the buy- ing trip to the other cities. —Mr. «and . Mrs. M. A. Landsy, of the Brockerhoff house, went to Philadelphia, on . Monday, for a week’s visit at Mrs. Landsy’s former home and to do some fall shopping. The trip was taken at this time in order to welcome home from a trip to Europe one of Mrs. Landsy’s sisters, which was made the occasion of the Bailey fam- ily reunion. —Charles Mallalieu, formerly manager of the Bell telephone business in this district, but now located in Williamsport, was in Bellefonte for a short time Tuesday morn- ing while on ‘his way to State College. Mr. Mallalieu severed his connection with the Bell company some time ago in order to enter what he regarded as a more prom- ising field in the insurance business. —Mrs. Hamilton Otto, who was a motor guest of Mr. and Mrs. Allen S. Garman, on a drive last week from Niagara Falls, was an over night guest of Mrs. Smith and her father, 8. D. Ray, during her short stay in Bellefonte. Mrs. Otto went from here to Philadelphia for a short visit with her daughter, Mrs. Smith, expecting to return to Bellefonte later to continue her visit. —Mrs. Odille Mott arrived home Satur- day, from her trip to the Pacific coast. Having left here on the 11th of July, Mrs. Mott went directly to California, where she visited for a month with friends, the re- mainder of her time being spent in stops enroute east, the longest one of which was with her daughter, Mrs. A. G. McMillan, at Detroit, from where she visited many of the leading organizations of the C. D. of A., of the middle west. —Mrs. John Wert and her daughter, Miss Mary, were in Bellefonte last Thurs- day, having motored over to meet Mr. George Trevorow, of Pittsburgh, who arriv- ed by train and returned with the ladies to spend a few days at their country place near Tusseyville, where Mr. Wert is looked upon as being one of the foremost farmers and successful men. Both Miss Mary and Mr. Trevorow are Seniors at State and re- turned there this week for their last year in college. —It seemed something in the nature of a family reunion in this office last Friday morning when three generations of the Tressler family, of State College, dropped in for a little call while waiting for the bus. There was Mrs. E. 8. Tressler, her daughter, Mrs. J. E. Miller, and the latter's daughter, Miss Elizabeth Miller. The la- dies had beer shopping a bit and that be- ing done they made the call here. Since women have gotten into politics we never fail to inquire as to their reactions to the game men played alone so long and we are often surprised to discover that many of them are quite abreast of the situation. Such was the case with our callers of Fri- day. They seemed well informed on the judicial contest up there and the returns of the primary proved it. Miss Elizabeth Miller is a Sophomore at State this year. Additional personal news on page 4 Col. 4 Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat - - - - - - $1.50 Oats - - - - - - « 40 Rye - - - - - = - 110 Corn - - - - - - 1.10 Barley “=~ - - - - - 1.00 Buckwheat - - - - - 1.00