Bellefonte, Pa., August 20, 1926. ES Sn BELLE-FONTE. Written years ago, for the “Watchman,” by Will H. Truckenmiller. Loved by Indian hunter In the long ago, Mystic music hearing In the water's flow. : Oft his campfire glimmered, In the dusky night, Thy clear depths reflecting Back the ruddy light. Health, and long-life drinking From thy limpid stream, Thou wast to him the fountain Of the Spaniard’s dream. When the crimson maples Foretold winter soon, And above the mountains Hung the harvest moon; Sought the Indian maiden In thy depths to trace, Though it be but faintly, Her true lover's face. Ah! well, they have vanished, ~ Many years ago, And the white man’s coming Laid the forests low; Built his busy city Built his iron road, Chained the passing river Bade it bear his load. But still thy waters flow Pure and sweet as then To comfort and to cheer The weary sons of men. DRESSING THE MOVIE STARS. Do you remember a motion picture —last year I think it was—called “Too Many Kisses?” rather a hectic title, I admit. However, we won’t worry over that; because we are not going to talk about the kisses in that picture but about the dresses. I had a curious experience in con- nection with this particular screen drama. It was filmed at the huge studio of Famous Players in New York City; and one day, when they were “shooting the scenes,” I hap- pened to be there for luncheon. The studio restaurant is an extra- ordinarily interesting place; especial- ly when, as sometimes happens, sev- eral pictures are being made gimulta- neously in different parts of the great building; for everybody—famous stars, directors, photographers, elec- tricians, extras, the whole amazing medley of people——goes to this one big room for luncheon. And they go just as they are. At one table you may see Gloria Swan- son in a gorgeous evening gown that cost as much as the little “extra” girl, at the next table, earns in a whole year. You may see Thomas Meighan, immaculate and handsome, in one cor- ner—and a stage carpenter, in over- alls, in the opposite corner. Well, this play that I speak of, “Too Many Kisses,” was laid in the Basque country. You may have seen the picture; but even so, you have no idea of what those costumes really were, because they, of course, photo- graphed only as black and white. If only you could see them as I did! Every table in the restaurant was crowded. And oh, such colors! The place fairly quivered with marvelous blues and greens, orange and red and violet. The air seemed to be full of shattered rainbows. The colors not simply blazed and shone. They danced and sang! I wonder if I can make you feel the thrill of it. I had a curious sensation of excitement, of romance, of adven- ture. The very atmosphere seemed to be charged with some electric current. Every one was affected by it. The room buzzed with talk and with laughter. People seemed eager, alert, responsive, full of enjoyment. That was many months ago, but I never have forgotten that hour of subtle excitement. Thinking it over, I believed I understood the secret of the spell under which we all came. And finally, a few days ago, I went to see the man who had created that spell. He is Mr. H. M. K. Smith, the cos- tume director for Famous Players at their New York studio. Before he took this position he was with Lady Duff Gordon, known throughout the world of fashion as “Lucille,” the fa- mous dressmaker of New York, Lon- don and Paris. He took me through the studio wardrobe department, opened door after door and showed me racks hung with wonderful gowns and evening wraps—thousands of dollars’ worth of finery in a single small compart- ment! He must have bought a mil- lion dollars’ worth of clothes during the past few years. From the wardrobe, we went down- stairs to the restaurant for luncheon. The same restaurant—but how differ- ent from what it was on that day when it seemed full of shattered rain- bows, so bright and brilliant. Gloria was there; but for the pic- ture they were making now she wore the tawdry finery of a poor New York shop-girl. There were others like her. And somehow I had a feeling of dir- ty streets, of crowded subway trains, of ugly tenement houses. Turning my back on it all, I told Mr. Smith of the day I had lunched there when the place was a riot of lovely color. “I have thought of it many times,” I said to him. “In the picture all those colors would be either black, white, or the intermediate tones. Why did you go to the trouble and expense of dressing even the ‘mob’ in all that glory? He smiled and said quickly, “How did you say you felt when you were here that day?” “Well,” he said, “that was the way I wanted the actors to feel! That was the way they had to feel in that pic- ture. If we had dressed them in blacks and whites and grays, we should have got the same photograph- ic effects. But we could not have got the same spirit in the people! They . would have acted black and white and gray. Do you understand what I mean?” x I certainly did; for that was pre- cisely the way I had figured out the spell which I myself had felt that day. “There's an old proverb,” x. not making fine birds. But, ina sense, that isn’t true; for fine feath- woman knows this. You remember the famous epigram: | the consciousness of being well dress- ed gives a sense of tranquility which religion fails to bestow.’ ~ “There is good sound psychology back of this. Women ought to real- ize it, for they can turn it to wonder- ful use. You may have seen a picture called ‘Clothes Make the Pirate. It was a story of a meek, henpecked lit- tle tailor who became a roistering buccaneer, simply by being thrust in- to a pirate’s garments. Well, I can tell you that clothes do not simply make the pirate. They make the wom- an! “You know the kind of part that Lois Wilson has always been given in motion pictures. She is cast as the ‘good girl;’ the noble and virtuous young heroine; charming and appeal- ing, but not—what shall I say ?—not exotic. She is always the daughter of poor but honest parents. Some- thing of that sort. And she does it beautifully. “Well, a year ago I was in London. So was Miss Wilson; and I called on her at the Savoy. I assure you that if I never had seen her except on the screen I shouldn’t have recognized her! She wore the loveliest negligee, one of those alluringly beautiful things that quite take your breath away. “She seemed—and this is the point I want to make—an entirely differ- ent person. As I watched her I said to myself, ‘I should like to try an ex- periment. If, instead of a minister’s daughter—which was to be her next part in a picture—she could be cast for a - passionate peacock sort of role,’ ” he laughted, ‘and could be dressed in passionate peacock plum- age, I wonder if the mere act of dress- ing the part would create in her the spirit of the part.’ “The way a woman dresses controls, to an extraordinary degree, her mood. Not only that, but it also dictates our own attitude toward her. Do you re- member that sports costume I showed you upstairs 7” 1 did remember it. A gay, capri- cious little dress of lively blue taffeta, with clustered stripes in bright col- ors. “You laughed when you saw it,” he went on, “but were you laughing at the dress?” ~ “N-no,” I said; “I just laughed be- cause—well, because I felt like laugh- ing. “Precisely!” he exclaimed. - “It was a gay, impudent, amusing little dress. A costume is like a bit of music. It can be as tragic as a dirge; as dull as a five-finger exercise; as shrill and strident as a screaming phrase of jazz; as tender as the lilt of a love song. And when you see a girl or a woman dressed in any one of these ways, you feel just as the correspond- ing bit of music would make you feel when you heard that. “Some women know these things instinctively. But if they haven’t this intuitive knowledge, they ought to study other women’s dress, to find out the feeling it gives them. I “Is it altogether a question of col- ors?” I asked. ' “Not at all!” he said emphatically. “Black and white could be as impu- dent and as amusing as that gay lit- tle taffeta dress you saw. But colors are undoubtedly the most important source of these effects. | “If I were a woman, I should study the psychology of colors. We all have strong likes and strange antipathies in regard to them. You, yourself, have these preferences and prejudic- es; and you shouldn’t let yourself be nersuaded to wear a color toward which you feel an antipathy. , “Billie Burke was once making a picture here, under a director who had a strong liking for an ugly, sickly shade of green. He was a good deal of a dictator, as well as a director, and insisted on this shade for one of her costumes. + “But when Miss Burke put on the dress, for the scene in which she was to wear it—she simply quit! Know- ing the psychology of clothes as I do, I think she was entirely justified. She felt such an inward antagonism to- . ward the color that she could not re- lease herself from its influence.” { “But,” I said, “suppose I do not like a color which appeals to other people. Shouldn’t I wear it for its effect on them 7” | “No; you should not!” he declared. “You want to impress yourself on ' people; not merely your outward ap- pearance. If you wear what you dis- (like, you will be inside a barrier | through which you personally cannot 1 break. When Shakespeare said, ‘To thine own self be true,’ he wasn’ , thinking of clothes; but every woman ' might well put that sentence up over i her mirror.” | “How about the famous motion- picture stars?” I asked. “Tell me about dressing people for the movies. {Do the stars choose their own cos- , tumes 7” | “Only in a few cases,” he said. | “As a rule, I decide on the costumes “for the entire cast. We have our own | designers and our own workrooms. I ‘also order from the leading dress- { making establishments in New York. | Often I go to Paris to study the ad- vance styles. To women all ovar the country many of our pictures-are not simply plays; they are style shows! | Consequently I must try to give them the very latest fashions. “The situation here in America is an extraordinary one. For instance, did you see this advertisement in the morning paper? A New York store, with branches in Brooklyn and New- ark, is selling copies of a Jean Patou model at fifteen dollars apiece. “Patou is one of the leading design- ers. Yet our ready-to-wear manufac- turers copy a Patou model, sell the frocks to dealers all over the country, and for the insignificant sum of fif- Smith went on, “about fine feathers | ers make you at least feel fine. Every | ‘To a woman, |: “The gown was of silver brocade, {| Every Inch a Real Home A ceptionally well planned Colonial house. The living-room extends on one side the dining-room, set off only by twe small . china closets, and on the other into sunroom. The whole effect is one of ciousness and hospitality. Another outstanding feature is the down- Is This Colonial Type oe —— LIVING-ROOM forty feet long—tha is practically whpt one has in-this ex- ma a = 3 == YE A 0 [rcHeNERS ° On js HALL f= into DINING LIVING er a roo 17-8187 Doty spa- e epee TESTE L PLAN CULING HUISET 6-6 - ! so triplicates.” “For Bebe Daniels’ picture, ‘The Palm Beach Girl,’ I had to provide a i ‘double’ for one dress, and two dou- bles for each of two other dresses. “In the scene where the first of these three was to be worn, Miss Dan- | ‘iels had to put her head out of a car window just as a switch engine came ‘along. The engine was to discharge : a huge puff of thick coal smoke, black- ing her face and her dress. A dupli- | cate of the dress was made, so that | she-would have a clean one in reserve. 4 “In another scene she is fishing | from a small boat when a big tarpon | takes the bait and drags her over- {board. She has other adventures | equally disastrous to her costumes; is i lost in a swamp, for instance, and be- | comes hopelessly mud-stained and be- | draggled. Maude Turner Gordon, { who plays Miss Daniels’ aunt in the ' picture, shares these adventures. instead of six dresses for them in those few scenes I furnished sixteen!” “Couldn’t you use cheaper materials for the costumes which were to be ru- ined 7” 1 asked. “Not in this case,” said Mr. Smith, “because the action was so close to the camera that the difference would have shown in the picture. In case of a long shot, we can use a less expensive duplicate dress. And if only a part of i the costume—a sleeve, for instance— is to be torn or injured in any way, i we provide a duplicate of that part of ‘ the dress, not of the entire costume. “In advance, I always make a care- | ful analysis of a scenario to provide for any possible accidents, as well as i for the emergencies which the story ! calls for. Suppose a string of pearls stairs bed-room, which can be used as sick-room, guest chamber, playroom —imitation, of course—is to be worn. or ‘sewing room, as occasion arises. The stairways are compactly arranged I know by experience that the string and well out of sight. There are closets and storage space enough to please may break. So instead of buying one, the most sist heat The cost CERNING acquisitive housekeeper. White, cream or grey paint may be used on the siding with shutters, trim and roof in harmoniz- | eyed people who would spot the least ing colors. The walls and roof are made to re- and cold by insulating with celotex. of building may be kept down by ex- cavating only half of the house, aking care to insulate the unexcavated half with a layer of | celotex in order to heat the house easily in the coldest weather, A further saving may be effect- ed by‘finishing off the walls of the second floor rooms with celotex instead of lath and plaster. Left either plain painted, stained or finished with a dainty stencil such walls are extremely effective and durable: ©, Celotechnic Institute, Chicago, 1928. teen dollars a girl in Podunk—if there is such a place—can own one. “This is nothing unusual. The man- ufacéturers, and also the women’s mag- azines, take the latest fashions into every corner of the country, no matter how remote. The result is that Amer- ican girls and women are amazingly up-to-date in their dress. “But I have one criticism to make of them: their dress is too standard- ized. Everybody wants to wear what everybody else is wearing. In buy- ing ready-made clothes, they fail to achieve individuality. “That is why I practically never go to a shop and buy from the stock in hand. If I did, and an actress should wear the dress in a picture, girls’ over the country would go to the mov- ies and say, ‘Oh, I’ve got a dress made just like that myself! “I try to show them the fashions— but individualized to suit different types of girls and of women. Take Alice Joyce, for instance, an actress with exquisite taste in dress. I can leave the choice of costumes to her without a moment’s uneasiness. I take only one precaution: I go with Miss Joyce to her couturiere, Frances, to make sure that there shall be some features of the costume which will not appear in those which Frances makes for other costumers. In other words, when you see a dress in one of our pictures, I want it to have touch- es which make it unique. “Gloria Swanson has her own de- signer, Rene Hubert, whom she brought over from Paris after the production of ‘Madame Sans Gene. She is probably the most remarkable of the film stars in the range of parts she ean act. She can wear anything! And it isn’t because she has great | beauty or a perfect figure, Other stars surpass her in both those re- spects. But Miss Swanson has what- ever we mean by ‘it.’ I suppose ‘it’ is an immensely vital personality. i “She is one of the busiest persons I know; so busy that she never will | take the time for fittings. Her cos- | tumes are made on a dummy model, a replica of her own figure. “Bebe Daniels is just the reverse. When we have to do her costumes for a new picture, she and I have a beau- tiful time going the rounds of the shops and dress-makers, looking at materials and studying designs. ¢ 1 “There is a bit of pleasure in plan- ning her wardrobe. She loves it so much herself! And I believe this is one secret of what you might call suc- cessful dressing! The woman who- really loves clothes, who puts her mind and heart into choosing them, is almost certain to be well dressed. The woman who has a sort of con- tempt for clothes—well,” he laughed, “she generally wears clothes which are beneath contempt!” “What was the most expensive dress ever worn in one of your pic- tures ?”” I asked. “It was the wedding costume pro- vided for Gloria Swanson in a picture called ‘Her Love Story,’ ” he replied. heavily embroidered in pearls and di- amonds; imitation of course. The train, which was five yards in length, was lined throughout with gold cloth and bordered with a twelve-inch band of ermine. “The dress and the train cost $5,000; but, in addition, she wore a wedding veil of antique Brussels lace, valued at $15,000; a coronet of dia- monds from Cartier’s, valued at $30,- 000; and a necklace, earrings and brooch worth $10,000; so that $60,000 represented the cost of the costume and the accessories. “The dress was designed and made here in our own workrooms. We rent- ed the veil, paying $200 a day for the use of it while we were making the scenes in which it was worn. Miss Swanson herself bought the necklace, earrings and brooch from the jeweler; and he loaned her the coronet. “That, of course, was a very excep- tional costume, for the scene was sup- posed to be a royal wedding. How- ever, the gowns worn in a modern so- ciety picture are sometimes almost as costly. We made one costume for Miss Swanson, an afternoon ensemble of gray cloth, which cost $4,500 with- out accessories. By accessgries 1 mean hat, gloves, shoes and hosiery. We furnish all these. We even fur- nish lingerie, if it is to show in the picture. “The high price of this one after- noon costume was due to the fact that it was elaborately trimmed with real chinchilla. Sometimes we can use fur that is not what it seems to be; but we often use the genuine thing. If it is a fur coat, with the price running up into thousands of dollars, we usu- ally rent it from the furrier. But as you saw from your glimpses into our wardrobe, we buy outright quantities of the most beautiful and costly furs. As for the dress materials, they are the finest we can procure. The aver- age cost of dresses for a society pic- ture is from $250 to $750 each. As for evening wraps, the cost runs from $350 to $1,250, according to the ma- terial and the kind of fur used as trimming.” “I should think the stars would like to keep some of these costumes and wraps for their own personal ward- robes,” I said. “Sometimes they do want one that particularly pleases them,” said Mr. Smith. “In that case, they can have it at fifty per cent. of its cost. “A great many people imagine that we sell our used costumes to second- hand dealers; but we never do. In the first place, they would not pay us enough. It is more practical and bet- ter economy to keep them. “A star or a leading actress does not wear the same costume in two pic- tures. But the girls or other women who take minor parts can appear in dresses which have been worn in a previous picture. We do a lot of mak- ing over, too. A gown of beautiful and expensive fabric is ripped to | pieces, and the materials are used in making other dresses. “Not, of course, for one of the stars! They have a complete new outfit for each picture. But the ma- terials can be used for less important people. When you realize that for a picture like ‘Monsieur Beaucaire,” for example, we have to supply as many as 750 costumes, you will uwlerstand that we can use all the silks and vel- vets and laces we possess. “The costumes for ‘Monsieur Beau- caire’ cost $60,000; and we had to have special shoes, shirts and even handkerchiefs. We rented $85,000 worth of antique jewelry. We have, by the way, a stock of jewelry of our own which is worth $10,000, although the stones are, of course, paste. For ‘Madame Sans Gene,’ all the jewelry was made to order in Paris and was copied faithfully from genuine pieces of that period. The costumes cost about $125,000, because so many of them were court dresses.” “In some pictures,” I said, “there is a scene where a perfectly good dress is ruined. Sometimes the actress, all dressed up to the queen’s taste, has-fo fall into the water. Or the action may be so violent that the frock is hopelessly torn and mussed up. I know that a director does not take the scenes in their regular sequence. Sup- pose, after that dress is ruined, he wants to take—or to retake—a scene in which the actress must wear the same costume in all of its original freshness. What then?” “That is all provided for in ad- vance,” Mr. Smith assured me. “If a dress is to have its troubles anywhere in the course of the play, an ahgolute duplicate is provided before we start making the picture, In fact, we some- | I buy half a dozen. “In every audience there are lynx- change in a costume which should be identical in various scenes. As we can’t depend on the actors to remem- ber every detail, every item to be worn is given to each performer. “When a man, for instance, is told to report for a certain scene, his list wear; the kind of hat, collar, necktie, shirt, coat, waist-coat, trousers, hos- iery and boots. If he is to carry a walking stick and to have a watch and chain, this is all set down on the list. Even the kind of handkerchief is specified; also how he is to carry it. If, in one scene, he had it in his sleeve, and it wasn’t there in another scene, a surpirsing number of people would notice that it was missing. If an actress should wear a certain scarf in one scene and a different scarf in another, when she is supposed not to have left the room, a million women would detect the inconsistency. “I spoke of the psychology of color in achieving a certain mood. There is also a psychology of perfume! I often make use of it in my work as costume director. “A few years ago, in a picture called ‘The Secret of Forgotten men,’ certain characters were to represent women of doubtful reputation. I carefully planned their dresses, hats, and so on, to fit that type of women. But when they put on their regalia and presented themselves for my in- spection, some subtle quality was lacking. They seemed just what they were: good women, dressed up to im- itate their unfortunate sisters. “While 1 was puzzling over the problem, I had a sudden inspiration. Hurrying to the nearest drug store, I bought an atomizer and some cheap studio, I sprayed it liberally over the good bad ladies, and sent them down but the psychology of that perfume, affecting not only the women them- plied the subtle quality which was “There is one fact in connection with dress which I always have real- ized, but never so forcibly as now. A woman’s costume should fit not only herself—her physical type and her temperament—but it should fit her en- vironment also. A dress which is beautiful and effective in one room will be all wrong in another kind of room.” “Do people ever write in and crit- icize the clothes worn in a picture?” I asked. “Sometimes,” he replied. “The stars receive all kinds of ‘fan letters,’ as they are called, and occasionally they refer, either in praise or in crit- icism, to clothes. “In the production, ‘The King on Main Street,’ one of the characters was a prim New England spinster with very decided ideas about modesty in dress. For a certain scene she had to resurrect an evening gown of the 1900 period; an elaborate black lace dress, with a very tight waist, trim- med profusely with velvet ivy leaves! “After the picture was shown, she received a letter from a ‘fan’ of 32- vanced years, living in Connecticut, congratulating her on her good taste. There are similar letters from other old-timers whenever we show a pic- ture that goes back to the days of their youth.” “What was the most difficult cos- tume order you ever had to fill?” I asked. “It was for the glass slippers to be worn by Betty Bronson in ‘A Kiss for Cinderella.’ : The director, Herbert Brenon, wanted them to be actually of glass. But it seemed an impossible undertak- ing, so we experimented with prac- tically every other transparent sub- stance we could find. However, we also consulted all the leading glass manufacturers. “While we were still negotiating, Mr. Frederick Carter returned from Paris. He had been sent there by Herbert Hoover, of the United States Department of Commerce to study the glass exhibits at the Exposition des Arts Decoratifs. He heard of our problem and undertook to have it solved, under his direction, at the Corning Glass Works. “Impressions were taken of Miss Bronson’s feet and were sent to Corn- ing. There Mr, Carter turned out two So, ! a careful list of | informs him exactly what he is to | And | strong perfume. Coming back to the ' to the set. You may not believe it, selves but also the other actors, sup- | ! times have not only duplicates but al- pairs of exquisitely wrought glass | slippers, with French heels three and | one-half inches high. It took six | weeks to complete them. Meanwhile, | we had been forced to proceed with | the picture and had used transparent celluloid slippers. However, the glass ‘ones were made and fitted perfectly. i They are now in our possession and i are probably the only pair of ‘custom- made’ glass slippers in existence. | Some time we may be able to make use of them, for this business of dressing the movie stars makes de- , mands, sooner or later, for everything | that has ever been worn, either in ‘ fact, fiction or fairy tales.”—By Mary | B. Mullett. | PATIENCE—AND THE SLICE OF THE MELLON. Some men are undone by their van- ity. Others by their stubbornness. | And still more by impatience. I have a new theory which seems to explain why the farm makes such an excellent training ground for success- ful men. A boy who is raised on a farm knows how to wait. He plows the ground in the fall for the crop he wiil reap the next summer. He plants trees now for the fruit he will pick in five years. The hog that will win the championship at the State fair in 1938 will not be born for more than ten years, but some farmer lad has al- ready begun to breed that hog. He is now choosing its ancestors. This willingness to wait with pa- , tience, to let time and the law of av- , erages work for you, is a distinguish- ing quality of great men. The insurance business is a monu- , ment to what compound interest will do if favored by time and patience. , The distinguishing quality of great , Scientists is patience. The patience of trout fishers is classic. Noted de- i tectives are marked for patience—for | their willingness to collect evidence bit by bit until they have a chain which cannot be broken. The patience of Lincoln is legend, and is one rea- son why his memory is cherished so dearly. Of course, I can’t say that I adnetre | bovine patience. There is such a | thing as alert patience, gcdly pa- tience, or if you prefer, satanic pa- tience. Men have grown indecently rich by fencing off a chunk of vacant land and waiting patiently for a city to grow up around it. Others have grown i wealthy by letting six per cent. com- pound interest work for them while they slept and waited. This form of patience is all right for those of the proper temperament, but I can more easily admire and com- mend the patience of men like Luther { Burbank who can wait twenty years {to transform a thistle into an edible , plant, or men like Charles Goodyear | who dragged himself through a life of i poverty and at the very end succeeded . at last in vuleanizing rubber. City life makes men too impatient, to their misfortune. A delay in an expected promotion or an increase in salary causes them to sacrifice three or four years of effort. ; Farmers boys come along, lacking the ability and agility of city boys, but endowed with generous patience. They don’t expect to pick fruit the first year. They hang on, and on, and Yhen a melon is cut they get their slice. fi A New Entrant for the Altoona Races. In connection with the announce- ment of the 250-mile speed classic to 1 be held by the Altoona Speedway As- | sociation on Labor day, the manage- , ment has arranged for the appearance iof Frank Lockhart, of Los Angeles, California. : That Lockhart is perhaps the most ‘noted of the younger pilots on the | American roster is shown in press dis- patches accorded him recently follow- ing his sensational victory on the In- dianapolis bowl. Being the recipient of $42,000 for a single afternoon’s driving, he immediately assumed a prominent place in the racing world. So marked was his advance follow- ing his graduation from the dirt tracks of the country, that thousands of eager fans awaited his recognition by the contest board of the American Automobile association. Now that he occupies fourth place standing with the official body, there appears no end to the many offers he has received to drive on the grand na- tional circuit. For a while Lockhart was unable to determine just what course he would pursue. It remained however, for the veteran Harry Mil- ler, dean of the racing motor indus- try, to win the valorous Lockhart on his famous racing team. The deal made with Miller offers Lockhart greater prestige, since it is known in racing circles that the vet- eran manufacturer is preparing a special mount for the coming event in Altoona. The car should excel any- thing in rear wheel driven construc- tion. This car will team with the fa- mous two cars of front wheel drive design, piloted by the two oldest driv- ers in the game, Earl Cooper and Dave Lewis. Both these cars have been victorious at Salem, N. H., and Atlantic City tracks. The trio repre- sents a very unusual combination, and should add to the intense interest which is steadily surrounding the coming event, : Orphans to Get More Learning. Extensions of the course to permit a third and fourth year at the Sun- bury High schools was decided upon at Friday’s meeting of the Central Pennsylvania Odd Felows Orphans’ Home Association at the orphanage, near Sunbury. More than 200 orphans are students in the schools, and the new plan will give them a chance to complete either business or college preparatory cours- es. The officers elected were: Roy D. Beeman, Harrisburg, president; E. E. Chubbick, Monroeton, and W. G. Lentz, Catawissa, vice presidents; L. M. Dice, Marysville, secretary, and Robert Davis, Mt. Carmel, treasurer. Mr. and ‘Mrs. Kimber A. Hartman were continued in charge of the home.