TWO MEN MEET Farewell Surprise Party in Honor of Stormstown Boys and Girls Organize NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. _ —Philip D. Reynolds has returned to Demonic Watcwan, i i Bellef by om a em h b WITH TRAGIC DEATHS. Mrs. Mary Barnhart Rogers. i a Pig Club. i Walter Zeigler, of Sunbury, will spend ellefonte, fr fiv onths business Bellefonte, Pa., May 28, 1926. A farewell surprise party was given, | The Stormstown boys and girls pig | trip to Florida. —— ; a I the week-end in Bellefonte a guest of his Jason Underwood, of Unionville, In- 1 : : on Monday evening, to Mrs, Mary breeding club was organized on b —W. J. Engold, drove in from Canton 5 istion. ’ y . : cousin, Miss MeQuis Ohio, Saturday to spend the week-end with stantly Killed by Train. —Mrs. Hugh M. Quigley returned to Miss Mary Saylor. NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. Jason Underwood, a well known and lifelong resident of Unionville and vicinity, was instantly killed, at 4.10 Barnhart Rogers, bride of W. Mary Barnhart Rogers, bride of W. O. Rogers, of Bath, Maine, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thursday evening of last week with "twelve members under leadership of George Peters. The object of this club is to teach the boys and girls Bellefonte Tuesday, following a two weeks visit at her former home in Lancaster. I —DMrs. Scott Houser and her family drove over from DuBois Saturday, for an —Miss Lois Foreman, of the class of 26, University of Columbia, New York, arrived home Thursday morning. The Linn Stere family has moved into the house on east Howard St., recently vacated by Harry Shutt. —Mahlon Foreman has been home from Chicago, visiting with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. D. R. Foreman. some of the better methods of pork production and also give them a chance to make some money for them- John Barnhart, just north of Belle- fonte. Mrs. Rogers will graduate at State College at the June commence- o’clock last Thursday afternoon, by be- ing struck by a freight train on a crossing in that borough. Mr. Under- over Sunday visit with relatives in Centre county, —Miss Ruth Garman, who has been in | —] - 3 . f, Th bik Ty wood, who was unusually hard of | ment, and immediately thereafter she selves. Brooklyn since last fall, will return home rr a Sy ig lh an Bellefonte paper las hearing, lived at the hotel in Union- | and her husband will go to Chicago, The pigs were purchased from tomorrow and take charge of the Dim DRronts, Mr and Mrs, Sonn Knots r nounce that Fisher was nominated for ‘Governor over Beidelman. ——The Bellefonte Academy base- bail team defeated the Syracuse Uni- versity freshmen, on Hughes field last Friday afternoon, by the score of 17 to 6. Lantern for the summer season. —Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Heverly, of Howard street, are entertaining their daughter, who with her three children, is here from Lancaster for an indefinite time, —W. R. Brackbill made one of his fre- quent visits to Watsontown, having gone down to spend Sunday with his daughter, Mrs. N. F. Wagner and her family. IIL, where Mr. Rogers contemplates : members of the Ligonier Valley As- receiving his doctor’s degree in math- ' sociation in Westmoreland county. ’ ematics at the close of the summer They are all pure-bred Poland China session at the University of Chicago. , Sow pigs of exceptionally good type Mrs. Rogers was delightfully sur- ‘and breeding and range in weight prised by the number of friends who from 321 to 46% pounds. The boys participated in the pleasures of Mon- and girls drew their pigs by lot, each day evening’s gathering and was pig was weighed and they will keep deeply impressed by their hearty ex- | complete records on cost of feed and ville and was on his way home from the station. A freight train going west stood on the main track and when he reached the crossing Mr. Un- derwood’s attention was directed to that train and he failed to see or hear another freight pulling in on the side track with the result that he stepped right in front of the ponderous engine. —DMiss Lillian Sheffer is entertaining Miss Doma Krumrine, of Altoona, at her home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Sheffer. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. P. Gray, after having spent the winter in St. Petersburg, Florida, have returned to their home at Stormstown for the summer, —DMrs. Blaine Mabus, who had been a Howard J. Thompson is at the head of a company of men who have : : : : : : ; —Mrs. M. C. se arri taken an option on the purchase of the | He was killed on the spot, his body | pressions of regret at her leaving methods of caring for them during i 0 Pes and Ta Rellsiouie | patient in The Gelacr hovel Lo Dan- Bellefonte Fuel & Supply company, (being badly crushed and mutilated. Bellefonte and also with their good the summer. a wget of her. sister, Moo George I. |Yille, for a month, was brought to her During his life. Mr. Underwood had home on Pine street, Tuesday. traveled about the country consider- ably but was killed within three hun- dred feet of the spot where he first saw the light of day. He was a son of Jesse and Susannah Underwood and was born in a little wishes for her future happiness. This fall a round-up will be held at Harris, at her home on east Linn street. The guests present included Misses which time the pigs will all bei wi Fleming, Myron M. Cobb, Dr. Nellie Kimport, Freda Edmiston, Caro- | brought into one central point and |g a Nisstey and George T. Bush were line McClure, Esther Johnson, Mrs. judged by a competent judge on type | among those who were in York the foro. M. R. Johnson, Misses Cecille, Julia ' and quality. Daily gain will be i part of the week, for the Masonic con- and Anna Ward, Beatrice Lyons, Mrs. " checked up also report books. 60 clave. Pearl Wasson Bathurst, Rebecca points will be awarded on the indi-{ mrs Charles Cruse has spent much of in this place. ——The cornerstone of the new «Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, «of the Altoona diocese of the Cath- -olic church, will be laid in Altoona on Sunday at 8 p. m. The Girl Scouts of Troop 1, of —-Mrs. Barry, who is here from Philadel- phia for a Memorial day visit, has been a guest of Mrs. George Waite, on Phoenix avenue, since her arrival last Saturday. —Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bower are enter- taining their daughter, Mrs. Allen Ww. J. . > . ’ : s : s Woche, of New York city. Mrs. Woche . lle | Wealty, Mrs Pauline Sasserman Sul- vidual, 30 points on daily gain and 10 ! the past week in Williamsport, called y will held a bake sale at the {108 house in what is now Unionvi Ys . Y ; ) Tt, before h ; he ATi Bellefonte, e borough on April 3rd, 1846, hence had livan, Miss Rachael Shuey, Miss Ellen illness of her sister, Mrs. be org, er marriage, was Miss Margaret Variety shop Saturday, May 29th, at 10 o'clock. The proceeds will go to- ‘ward the troop’s camping fund. Mr. James R. Hughes offers for sale two beautiful lots located on the extreme right of his athletic field on east Bishop street. These lots face the north and are most desirable. the winner of the contest will be de- | Maitland, who is a patient in one of the cided. At the time of the round-up hospitals of that city. prizes will be presented to the winner | —Mrs. Charles H. Young and her three of the contest. The boys and girls children, are expected here from Meadville formed their organization by electing ' ¢*F!¥ in the week, for their annual sum- the following officers. President, mer visit with Mrs. Young's parents, Dr. +13 : i and Mrs. M. A. Kirk. Harold Builick, Warriors Mark; vice- | —Mrs. Ethel Wetzel McCoy, who had “points on report. From these results ! there by the reached the age of 80 years, 1 month | and 17 days. He was a laborer by oc- cupation and an industrious and con- | scientious citizen. He was a lifelong member of the Society of Friends, up- right and four-square in all his deal- ings with his fellowmen. Hassinger, Mrs. Twitmyer, Mrs. J oyce Showalter Carey, Mrs. Madaline Stover Spearley, Mrs. Marjorie Hill Miller, Mrs. Eloise Smith Bottorf, Misses Nina Lamb and Amy Heil- hecker, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Grove, and Mrs. Hassinger. —Mrs. Charles Heisler, who has been a resident of Beaver Falls since leaving Bellefonte two years ago, is back home for 4 summer visit, being at present a guest of her niece, Mrs. William Rider. —Mrs. A. EB. Budinger, among those from Centre county, who spent the winter 4th. ——LKiwanis clubs of State Col- lege, Tyrone, Altoona and Philipsburg have formed a four club baseball league with a schedule of twelve games to be played during June and July. toona. ——Because of a collision of auto- mobiles near the Rockview peniten- tiary, on Sunday, Mrs. Charles Gar- ner, of College township, had Wallace Markle, of Bellefonte, reckless driving. At a meeting of the High school ‘alumni association, on Monday even- ing, it was decided to hold a reception -and dance for the graduating class in the armory on Friday evening, June On Monday evening chief of police Harry Dukeman found a Chey- rolet coupe up above Unionville, which several days previous had been re- ported stolen by H. L. Lewis, of Al- arrested for The Centre Fish, Game and On February 27th, 1873, he married Miss Nora Wilson, who preceded him to the grave, but surviving him are the following children: J. Lloyd Underwood, of Pitcairn; James Q., of Chicago, Ill.; Anna E., of Unionville; Harry W., of Clearfield, and Oliver B., of Cleveland, Ohio. He also leaves four brothers and one sister, Isaac Underwood, of Bellefonte; Warner, of Woodbury, N. J.; Mrs. Mary A. Way, of Bellefonte; William I., of Philadel- phia, and Zephaniah, of Sunbury. His was the second death in a family of six brothers and one sister. Rev. Oakwood, of the Presbyterian church, had charge of the funeral services which were held at four o’clock on Saturday afternoon, burial being made in the Oak Ridge ceme- {tery west of Unionville. CHRISTIAN SINGER, OF BLANCHARD, DROWNS IN SUSQUEHANNA RIVER. Christian W. Singer, a well known resident of Blanchard, was found drowned in the Susquehanna river, Safety Made an Issue at American Lime & Stone Co. Industry each year is taking an enormous toll upon the life and wel- fare of America’s greatest assets— her workers. Even in the mine of the American Lime & Stone company, which proved itself one of the nation’s safest places to work by receiving honorable mention in last year’s safety ful accidents. accidents is entirely too high, _acci- dents minor in their nature, but pain- ful nevertheless. It is the aim of the American Lime & Stone company to cut these injuries to gn absolute min- imum. June, “A No Accident Month.” contest, there are far too many pain- | The number of men receiving minor ; | president, Lester Casher, Port Matil- | da; secretary and Treas. Jas. Fisher; Warriors Mark; They decided to hold several meetings during the summer to receive instructions in caring for | and managing their pigs. They are very enthusiastic about this project and indications point toward some real Poland China hogs being raised in the Stormstown community this summer. Bull Snakes Make Good Rat Catchers, Say State College Specialists. The Pennsylvania State College, lo- cated on one of the highest points in upper Pennsvalley, Centre county, is a wonderful educational institution. Not ' content with turning out the best en- gineers and men of equal rank in | other professions members of the Plans are being made and all efforts faculty are continually pursuing vari- directed toward making the month of ,ous lines of investigation with the There idea of discovering will be a flag raising and a ten minute that may prove of benefit to the talk on “Safety” given to the men at ' great human family. something new been here for a visit of four weeks with her mother, Mrs. Oscar Wetzel, of Willow- bank St., returned to her home in Am- bridge, Pa., last Thursday. ! —Mrs. Joseph Thal was a guest of her mother, Mrs. Hess at Potters Mills, for an all day visit Tuesday, having driven over in the early morning with Mr. Thal, re- turning by motor in the evening. —Mrs. Julia Powers Taylor will return i to Philadelphia this week, following a three weeks visit in Bellefonte with her sisters, the Misses Anne and Eva Powers, at their home on east Lamb street. | —Mrs. Robert A. Miller, of Tyrone, was [in town on Monday; having come down , to attend the funeral of the late Mrs. ‘Hezekiah K. Hoy. Mrs. Miller is a very intimate acquaintance of the Hoy family. —John Brown, of Oil City, was back home for a week-end visit, spending the time while in Bellefonte as a: guest of his sister, Mrs. Clarence Rhoads, at her apart- ‘ment in the Potter Hoy hardware build- ing. —Mr. and Mrs. H. Laird Curtin accomn- panied Mr. and Mrs. Potter to Baltimore Monday driving home in the Potter car in Florida, is on her way home from §t. Petersburg, expecting to arrive in Snow Shoe about the first of June, to open her home for the summer. —Mrs. Gregg Curtin and her small son are east for a ten days visit with Mrs. Curtin’s sister at Lansdowne. They had ex- pected to spend this time together in Bellefonte, but illness making it impossi- ble, Mrs. Curtin went to Philadelphia in- stead. —John Tonner Harris, general manager of the Bell Telephone Company of Cr an- sylvania for the central district of Penn- sylvania, was in Bellefonte Wednesday on a business trip. While here he was a guest of his brother, burgess Hardman P, Harris. —Mrs. Harry Shutt and her family, former residents of east Howard street, this place, left on Wednesday for Sea Bridge, Florida. Mr. Shutt departed for the same place a week ago in quest of a house as they expect to remain there in- definitely. —Mrs. Walter Kaufman, of Atlantic City, is here to spend the early part of Jume with her sister, Mrs. William Tressler on Howard street and other relatives in this noon, on June first On July first, a permanent safety organization will be put into opera- tion. This organization will be com- posed of one man from each unit of the Bellefonte plant, who will serve for two months then be succeeded by a fellow worker. The organization will be headed by a permanent chair- man—an engineer, who has made a study of safety problems and who has about a mile east of Lock Haven, ipsburg, anticipates starting work in shortly after three o’clock on Sunday the near future on the construction of afternoon. The body was discovered that big fish dam on Moshannon creek, ' by John Bowers, of Lock Haven, who near Beaver Mills. { was walking along "the bank of the ——A portion of the wall which river looking for driftwood. He holds up the terrace at the nurses Promptly notified Mayor Sterner and home, on Willowbank street, collapsed the latter called district attorney on Monday and fell out onto the pave- William Hollis. The body was re- ment. As a result most of it will be Moved from the river and conveyed torn down and rebuilt. to an undertaker’s in Lock Haven |" And the latest thing they have dis- (by the way of Philadelphia, where Mr, covered is that snakes, and especially | Curtin stopped to look after some busi- bull snakes, make excellent rat Sips ness. falo Run valley, It all came about in this way: In the —Miss Mary H. Linn, Mrs. Robert Beach { —Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bible, of Altoona, nature study laboratory at the Col- ~and Miss Mary Miles Blanchard have been | are spending the summer with friends in lege were two Texas bull snakes, more at Harrisburg this week, visiting with | : 3 Mifllinburg. Mr. s. Bible re] generally known as the pine snake. ee me McCormick, ou eplden” known ig ony Ne Bie Se Nl They are about five feet in length and the McCormick summer home just outside until several years ago, when they left to he city. 5 3 : absolutely harmless. About two ‘Me He i ii make their home with their daughter, Mrs, weeks ago Prof. George R. Green, Mrs. Jennie Brown McEvoy is with her Hartsock, in Altoona, : TC. y d 1 y : head of the nature study department, brother, T. C. Brown and Mrs. Brown, at —Mrs. M. A. Dreiblebis, of State Col. Forest Protection association, of Phil- locality. Mrs. Kaufman will be remember- ed by many as Miss Sadie Meyers, of Buf- Mrs. Me- An examination for clerk-car- | where it was promptly identified as rier will be held at the Bellefonte | that Postoffice on June 9th. It will be open of Mr. Singer. The manner of his death, however, to both males and females. Applica. is unexplained. The last person to see tion blanks and full information can ‘Mr. Singer, so far as now known, was be obtained at the postoffice. ——The regular monthly meeting «of the Woman’s club will be held on May 31st, in the High school building. As this is the «date for the annual election of officers 2a large attendance is requested. If your automobile needs a thorough greasing take it to Forrest L. Bullock’s shop, on Water street, ' and have him apply “Leadoline.” For- rest will do it conscientiously and you will be pleased with the results. Monday evening, Lemont Kress, sixteen vear old son lof Mrs. Rockey Kress, of Island. He was on his way to Lock Haven and met Singer walking toward the Island. That was about seven o’clock .on Wednesday morning of last week. Whether he accidentally fell into the | river or was the victim of foul play is not known. No marks were found on ithe body and no money or valuables .in the pockets of his clothing. | Mr. Singer was a son of William | Singer, of Blanchard, was fifty-five years old and the last of the family ——A slight fire on the roof of the in that section, his only survivors be- William McClure quickly damage. stead of “Frank.” ——The best motion pictures made | are to be seen at the Scenic every night during the week except Sun- All of them are late releases and up-to-date films. patronize the Scenic because they know they will see something that hasn’t been shown before in Belle- fonte, and the only way to see them all is to be a regular. You are al- ways sure of getting your money’s day. worth, ——Today is circus day in Belle- fonte, and thousands of people will likely come to town to see the wild animals perform their various stunts. This will be the first appearance of Christy Bros. in Bellefonte but they come with endorsements of giving a ‘worthwhile show. They will also give a free street parade this morning in ‘which will appear many of the wild animals which will perform in the five rings this afternoon and evening. Fifteen thousand day old chicks were sent out in one shipment from the Mingoville hatchery one day last week. This was probably one of the largest shipments made this year but every day’s output runs into the thou- The chicks are all shipped by parcel post and go up into the New England States, down south and into the middle west. Thousands of chicks are also being shipped from the Ker- lin hatchery, at Centre Hall, but the demand is always equal to the output. sands. on the ing distant corner of Bishop and Spring streets, ' Wednesday morning, called out the |! fire department but the flames were . extinguished and did little Movie fans relatives. Burial made at Blanchard on Tuesday. was Ben and John Were Boys Together. We know of no one who will be In the Watchman of May 7th j more pleased by the choice of the Re- appeared an item regarding an auto- mobile accident in Centre Hall in which we were misinformed as to the names of the drivers of the cars. The correct names were George White, of ‘Centre Hall, instead of “John,” and William Klinger, of Pleasant Gap, in- publicans of Pennsylvania of a candi- date for Governor than our owa townsman Benjamin Shaffer, of east High street. Away back in the last century, Ben was just a lad of eight years and went to live with Wilson Taylor, then a very prominent lawyer in Indiana, Pa, and a member of Congress in 1872. On the next lot to the Taylor home George F. Hamilton had a tin shop and Ben loved the snips, and the charcoal forge, and the rolls and the solder iron and all the other things a boy could play with in the shop. Loved them so much that he stuck about that place until he was eighteen and had the trade that made a man of him and led to the comfortable i status he has now, that he is on the other side of the hill. When Ben left the Taylor home an- other boy went into it and that boy was John S. Fisher present candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. They were great pals and it isn’t any won- der that Ben is enthusiastic over the honor that has been accorded his chum of years ago. Ten Centre Countains to Attend Mil- itary Training Camp. Ten young men from Centre coun- ty will spend the month of July at the citizens’ military training camp at Camp Meade, Md., according to an announcement from the headquarters of the Third corps area of the U. S. army. The young men are Richard J. Detwiler, of Smullton; Philip F. Fos- ter, Theodore S. Fowler, William F. Holmes, Edward S. Mairs and James L. Martin, State College; Everett T. Laughlin, Philipsburg; Ray C. Grif- fin, Harry D. Rothrock and Raymond L. Williams, all of Port Matilda. the welfare of the men deep at heart. Every effort is being put forth to make the Bellefonte plant a safer place for the men. ——Coming to the Scenic theatre next Tuesday and Wednesday, “The Volga Boatman,” a Cecile DeMille great super special. Admission, 15 and 35 cents. Don’t miss it. 22-1t Centre County Boy Wins Assembly Nomination in Blair County. One of the gratifying results of the nomination on the Republican ticket date for the Legislature in the second legislative district over Kenzie S. Bagshaw, who nation. Mr. Hartsock is a son cf J. W. Hartsock, of Waddle, and for [twenty years has been employed ' in ‘the ticket office of the Pennsylvania railroad company. A coincidence in his nomination is the fact that he is a cousin of A. C. Thompson, of Philips- burg, who won the nomination for As- Centre county. Bellefonte people will watch with considerable interest for Mr. Hart- sock’s success in his campaign, as he is connected with this place through his marriage, on January 17th, 1911, to Miss Nora Loveland, of Bellefonte, a niece of Mrs. J. Kennedy Johnston. Mr. Hartsock recently built and fur- nished a nice home in Eldorado, a sub- urb of Altoona, where he and his family now reside. ———Cecile DeMille’s greatest success, “The Volga Boatman,” at the Scenic next Tuesday and Wednesday. Admission, 15 and 35 eents. 22-1t Nearhood’s Garage, at State College Ravaged by Fire. The brick and concrete garage of G. Melvin Nearhood, at the western end of State College, was completely gut- ted by fire at an early hour on Tues- day morning. The fire was discovered about 1.30 o’elock and the entire in- terior of the garage was already in flames so that it was impossible to save any of the contents. Fortunately Mr. Nearhood did not have any new cars in stock, but five second hand cars were burned. Only the walls of the building were left standing and they may be damaged by the heat. Mr. Nearhood carried some insurance but not sufficient to cover his loss. The barn on the Mike Furl property, in Boggs township, was burned on Monday with some feed and farm im- plements. It was insured for five " hundred dollars. Drlimories An lair, county was the “weeks the snakes have had the range of Samuel Gray Hartsock as a candi- | of the laboratory they have rid it sought a - renomi- | door shut on the head of one of the sembly on the Democratic ticket in | took the bulls out of their box and allowed them the run of the labora- tory. The snakes promptly glided behind the row of boxes containing the liz- ards, turtles, toads, groundhogs, rat- tlesnakes, copperheads and other live specimens. The laboratory was in- fested with rats and mice attracted by the food supplies of the wild life spec- imens. quietly like cats, but at periodic in- . tervals a shrill squeak would be heard and the bull had made away with an- other rat. As dessert they devoured a nestful of baby mice. entirely of rats and nice, but an un- | fortunate incident occurred a few days ago. A high wind blew an inner bulls and it was later found dead by Professor Green. Two Auto Accidents, but No One Injured. Late last Thursday might several young men were returning to Belle- onte from a trip to Snow Shoe and were evidently traveling pretty fast. The driver was unable to make the curve just this side of the Dim Lan- , term, at Runville, and the ear ran up on the end of the concrete abutment and came to rest at an angle of about forty-five degrees. Both license plates had been removed and the wrecked car was abandoned for the night. On Friday, however, it was towed into Bellefonte. On Sunday evening Dave Neweomer, driving a new Nash coupe, started on a drive up Bald Eagle valley. When he neared the Weaver crossing he- yond Milesburg he observed a freight train approaching and alse saw a number of cars parked there waiting for the train to pass. Partially blind- ed by the lights on other ears he at- tempted to pull to the side of the road and ran into the Ford car of Charles Gordon, in which were Mr. Gordon, his wife and three children, Mrs. Gor- don was thrown against the tap of the car by the impact and sustained a slight bruise on her forehead, but nothing at all serious. No one else was injured. Both cars, however, were more or less damaged. ——The Bellefonte fire department was called out at four o’clock on Mon- day morning by a small blaze in the old house of the defunct Steam Heat- ing company, on the corner of Lamb and Spring streets. The fire had made small progress when the com- panies reached the scerie and was | quickly extinguished before any real ‘damage was done, The bulls stalked their prey In the two | their home on Spring stree?. Evoy came here from Columbus Ohio, but upon leaving will go to her new home at Wilkinsburg. i —Philip Mignot, only son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mignot, of east High street, was Dr. Waterworth, regarding his health. His . condition is the result of an attack ef the ‘ grip two months ago. , —Mr. and Mrs. J. Claude Dawson, of Philadelphia, with their son and daughter, { were in Bellefonte for an overnight visit 'with Mr. Dawson’s mother, Mrs. Harvey ; Griffith, having come up by train Satur- day returning home Sunday afternoon. —Mrs. W. J. Ammerman is here from Homestead, visiting with her sister, Mrs. Jacob Hoy. Mrs. Ammerman arrived in . Centre county, last Thursday, for her an- nual Memorial day visit, a custon to { which she has adhered since leaving, nine years ago. —E. T. Hall, tax collector for Union township, was in Bellefonte early Tuesday morning, looking after some business rel- ative to his office and to his farm near Unionville. Mr. Hall is a Democrat and has been collector for the township for eleven years, his late election being with- out opposition. —A motor party which included Miss Jean B. Knox, Miss Beatrice Ostrander, Theodore Rush, one of State College young: business men and Richard Bossart, a senior at the Bellefonte Academy, drove to. Mr. Bossart’s home at Mount Pleasant Sat- urday, to make an over night visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bossart. —Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lambert, of Johns- town, with two motor guests, stopped im Bellefonte Saturday afternoon for a short time, on a drive to Mifflinburg, where Mr. Lambert's daughter, Alice, is at scheeol. The visit at this time was made that they might attend some of the early commenee- ment exercises at the Mifflinburg academy. —Mr. and Mrs. John George with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vernon, of Pittsburgh, will be Memorial day visitors to Bellefonte, motor- ing in tomorrow to be guests of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Cassidy over Sunday. According to present plams, Mrs. Cassidy will accompany the party om the drive back to Pittsburgh. —This morning Mrs. Osear Wetzel, of Willowbank St., will leave for a visit of a few days with her son Merle at Norris- town. The trip is an unexpected one for her. Geo. McClelland one of the Bellefonte Central R. R. offices, is taking his mother, Mrs. Charles McClelland, of Curtin St., and his aunt to visit friends in Harris- burg and as he expects to run on down from there to have a day or so with Merle he invited Mrs. Wetzel to join the party. —Miss Esther Glenn arrived in Bellefonte Tuesday from Ashville, 8. C, spending several hours here before going on up Buffalo Run for a short visit with her mother and aunt, Mrs. George M. Glenn and Miss Esther Gray, at the latter's farm. Miss Glenn had been teaching in the south during the winter, and will leave this week to accept a position in Cleveland, Ohio, stopping for commencement at the Ohio Wesleyan College, from which she graduated in 1925, taken to Clearfield Wednesday, to consult y lege, was in Bellefonte recently, on her way to Williamsport for a week-end visit with her daughter, Miss Dorothy Dreible- bis. Miss Dreiblebis is a student at the Williamsport Commercial college, where she is taking a regular business course, —Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Rankin and their two sons of Camp Hill, Pa., and Mrs. Elsie Rankin Helliwell, of Atlantic City, are expected here to join the William B, Rankin family for Memorial day. Mrs. Helliwell will go to Camp Hill and from there motor to Bellefonte with her brother and his family. —G. Murray Andrews left Bellefonte on Wednesday for Canada, from where he will sail for his former home in England, called there by the death of an uncle. Mr. An- drews will probably remain in England for a part of the summer, as he had antici- pated making this visit before receiving word of his uncle's death. . —Dr. and Mrs.John W. Coolidge arrived im Bellefonte yesterday, from Los Angeles, with plans for spending some time in the east. Stepping here for a week with Mrs. Coolidge’s sister and brother Mrs. L. A, Schaeffer and A. L. McGinley, they will then go on to New York to see their son Carl, who is at present in business chere, Their plans are for returning to Bellefonte later to eontinue their visit. —HEdgar T. Swartz, formerly a resident and well known in Bellefonte, with Edw. Murray, Dr. T. A. Lorenzo and George L. Glenn, all of Punxsutawney, stopped here for luncheon last Monday, on their way from Punxy to Stroudsburg. None of the gentlemen have the reputation of being “fast,” but the fact that they made the run of 120 miles to this place in three hours indicates that they do step some on oceasion. —Among the relatives from a distance who were here for the funeral of the late Mrs. H. K. Hoy, on Monday afternoon, were: Rev. and Mrs. Wagner, of Boals- burg; Rev. and Mrs. Ely and their three children from Arendtsville; Mrs. @rant I. Pifer and Robert Hoy, of Pittsburgh; Rev. and Mrs. Harkins, Mp. and Mrs. Franklin Fishburn, Mr. and Mrs. Themas Fishburn, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Korman and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. George Meyer, all of State College; Mr. and Mrs. Miles Hoy, Mr. and Mrs. John Hoy, of Tyrone; Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Meyer, Mr. Jacob Meyer, of Boalsburg; and Mr. Sam- uel Moyer, of Hershey, Pa. W. C. McClintie, $22.50 Suit Man. At the Garman house, Saturday, May 29, day and evening. Also fine line of Palm Beach suits. 71-21-2t ————— i —————————— ——Grains of Health at Brouse's store. e———— Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. Wheat. ~ - -