Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 27, 1926, Image 8

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    Bellefonte, Pa., August 27, 1926.
—
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
——According to to statistics there are
only 5470 sheep on the farms of Cen-
tre county. In 1890 there were 16,-
806.
— Dr. D.G. Stewart and W. J.
Emerick ‘are having oil burners in-
stalled at their steam heating plants
in their homes on west Linn street.
All G. A. R. men attending the
annual reunion of the Centre county
Veteran club, at Grange park next
Wednesday will be served a free din-
ner by the members of the Ladies
Auxiliary.
The bible cliis of the Presby-
terian Sunday school, of Tyrone, mo-
tored to Graysville, last evening, for
their annual banquet of chicken and
waffles served by the ladies of the
Graysville church.
Mrs. D. Wagner Geiss was
hostess for the monthly meeting of
the woman’s auxiliary of postal em-
ployees, at her home on south Thomas
street, on Monday evening. Fifteen
members were present.
——The contractor on the state
highway on the Mifflin county portion
.of the Seven mountains is making fair
headway at pouring concrete, but
unless the winter is long delayed will
not be able to complete the job this
year.
The Philipsburg Journal says
‘that Joe Pritchard, who has been ser-
‘jously ill for some weeks, has improv-
ed to that extent that he is able to be
up and around in his home, a fact his
.many Bellefonte friends will be glad
to know. i
—North Carolina Alberta peaches
were offered for sale in Bellefonte on
Monday at $2.75 per bushel basket,
but were a drug on the market. It is
too early in the season to can the fruit
and few families cared to invest in a
bushel of peaches for immediate use.
Bellefonte friends of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh N. Crider, of Ventnor, N. J.,
but formerly of Bellefonte, will be in-
terested in learning that they have.
.adopted a twenty month’s old child,
and both are happy in the infantile
addition to their household who will
answer to the name of Jean Crider.
~Miss Anna W. Keichline, of
Bellefonte, is the architect for a club
house being built by the Juniata
‘Country. club two miles above Mount
Union along the Juniata river.
building will be 30x45 feet in size
with eighteen :foot porches opening
into the main club room through five
pairs of French doors.
With the close of his day’s
work, last Thursday, E. E. Ardery
completed his service as a mail carrier
in Bellefonte and retired on the .pen-
sion plan provided by the postoffice
department. Daniel Showalter, for a
number of years parcel post carrier,
succeeded Mr. Ardery and in the fu-
ture will deliver the mail on route
No. 3.
Miss Dorothy Lynd, who, at the
regular meeting of the Bellefonte
school board in June, was elected to
teach spelling and music in the 5th
to 8th grades in the Bellefonte
schools, recently notified the board
that she had decided not to accept the
position and Miss Heffley, of Johns-
town, has been elected to fill the po-
sition.
If current reports are correct
‘Centre county will have an interest-
ing contest for sheriff a year hence.
Report says that former sheriff Harry
Dukeman has aspirations for another
‘term and that Harry Dunlap is laying
his plans for the Democratic nomina-
tion. Should such prove to be the case
neither man can claim a handicap on
account of his size.
Saturday was a wet day for
picnics, and the rain put a crimp in
the Baileyville gathering, the Wil-
liams family reunion, at Martha, and
the big Ku Klux Klan gathering at
Howard. The latter, however, were
not drowned out entirely, as quite a
number of the Kluxers were on hand
but the program arranged for the day
was considerably curtailed.
Announcements were received
in Bellefonte this week of the mar-
riage of Miss Margery Ellen Wilcox
and Joseph Larimer Woodward, which
took place at Omaha, Neb., on Satur-
day, August the twenty-first. Mr.
Woodfard, who is a son of Mrs. Nell
Larimer Weatherly, spent much time
here as a child and has a number of
relatives and friends in Central Penn-
sylvania.
‘The Bellefonte baseball team
defeated Mill Hall, on Hughes field
last Thursday afternoon, by the score
«of 8 to 2. No game was played on Sat-
urday owing to the ra‘n and wet field.
There are only a few more games to
play before the close of the season on
Labor day, and as it locks now Jersey
Shore will be the winner of the second
period of the season with Mill Hall
and Bellefonte contenders for second
place.
One of the attractions at the
annual reunion of the Centre county
Veteran club, at the Grange park,
Centre Hall, next Wednesday, will be
Prof. E. W. Crawford and his quar-
tette, of Centre Hall, who will sing
a number of the old-time army songs.
This will be a feature worth hearing.
Half .a dozen. or more good speakers
have been invited. Don’t forget that
the G. A. R. button will admit all
wearers te the grounds free of charge.
The.
ARMY AIR ACE
CRACKED UP ON
JACK’S MOUNTAIN. |
Though Badly Injured Sticks to Ship
Twenty-seven Hours Then
Crawled Three Miles to
Public Highway.
Lying on a bed in the Centre Coun-
ty hospital from Wednesday until
yesterday Lieut. Cyrus K. Bettis, one
of the most intrepid aviators in the U.
S. army air service, is badly battered
and bruised as the result of his plane
crashing into the trees on the side of
Jack’s mountain, in the Seven moun-
tain range, on Monday afternoon, but
while serious, his injuries are not re-
garded as critical. His left leg is
broken above the ankle, his nose brok-
en and both upper and lower jaw frac-
tured in two places while the pupil of
his left eye is somewhat contused but
it is not believed the sight will be de-
stroyed.
Lieut. Bettis had a miraculous es-
cape from death, and the nerve he dis-
played in crawling almost three miles
on his hands and knees out of the deep
fastnesses of the mountain was little
short of marvelous.
was one of three army fliers enroute
from the Sesqui-Centennial in Phila-
delphia to Selfridge field, Mich., the
other two being Lieuts. Luther S.
Smith and John J. Williams. On their
course westward they flew up the Ju-
niata valley to Lewistown, thence took
their course across the Seven moun-
tains to Bellefonte. In crossing the
mountains the aviators ran into a
dense fog. Lieut. Smith was able to
keep his course and got over all right,
reaching his destination late in the
afternoon. Lieut. Williams crossed
the mountains safely but losing his
course came down at the Bellefonte
flying field at 12:45 and later contin-
ued his journey to Selfridge field.
Lieut. Bettis not only lost his course
in the fog but evidently became be-
wildered and in flying around sailed
into the south side of Jack’s mountain
near the top. - According to indica-
tions his plane went to the ground
nose first, rebounded and struck the
ground a second time. The motor was
torn loose and lay fifteen feet from
the crumpled wings and fuselage,
while the broken propellers and radia-
tor lay in another direction. How the
lieutenant escaped being crushed to
death is hard to figure out. At that
he was knocked unconscious and was
in that condition for an hour and a
half. He fell at 1:15 o’clock on Mon-
day so that it was close to three
o’clock when he came to and realized
that he was still in the land of the
living, though badly battered up. He
was able, however, to release himself
from his wrecked plane and crawl out
of the cockpit. As the injured flier is
unable to talk his feelings at the time
can only be imagined, but he retained
enough presence of mind to stay with
his ship in the hope that some one
may have witnessed the crash and
come to his rescue.
In fact he stuck to his ship for
twenty-seven hours, or until four
o’clock on Tuesday afternoon, when he
realized that his rescue largely de-
pended upon himself and he decided
to make the attempt while he had
strength enough to do it. Picking out
what he considered the most likely di-
rection he started to crawl on his
hands and knees, through thick and
tangled underbrush and along rocky !
mountain slopes, and in this way he
proceeded until it became so dark he
could not see to go any further. But
he was buoyed up by the fact that he
was near enough to a public highway
to hear motor cars passing. Time and
again he called as loud as he could
with his battered mouth but got no re-
sponse, as his voice could not carry
above the noise of the cars. He lay
on the ground all night and with the
first break of day on Wednesday
morning again started his slow and
painful crawl, finally reaching the de-
tour which runs around the end of
Jack’s mountain, about three miles and
a half above Potters Mills only a few
minutes before Ralph Snyder and
Russell Sweetwood came along in
their car on their way to work on the
state highway. The lieutenant had
crawled between two and three miles,
and it took him five hours and a half
to do it.
Stopping their car they picked up
the injured flier and putting him in
the car brought him to the Centre
County hospital. They had not heard
of Lieut. Bettis being lost and
thought the man a mail aviator until
they reached the hospital. A physi-
cian was quickly summoned and Lieut.
Bettis’ injuries given proper atten-
tion. When brought to the hospital
his clothing was all rain-soaked but
he was fully conscious and has since
continued so.
It is a matter of interest to note
that when the lieutenant was brought
to the hospital the physician summon-
ed to attend to his injuries was Dr.
Dale, who served as an army surgeon
during the world war, being stationed
at Evacuation hospital no. 8, in
France. On Wednesday night Capt.
A. W. Smith, of Philadelphia, who is
the flight surgeon at the Sesqui-
Centennial, arrived in Bellefonte,
and went direct to the hospital
to see Lieut. Bettis. The patient was
somewhat restless during the fore part
of Wednesday night but from eleven
o’clock on to yesterday morning rested
quite well.
On Wednesday E. L. Wilhelm, Wal-
ter S. Hamline, Jacob Miller and Guy
M. Baumback, four mechanics from
the government flying field at Middle-
town, came to Bellefonte in a big
The lieutenant
army truck to remove the wrecked
plane. The plane was equipped with
two machine guns and those, as well
| as the valuable instruments, were re-
moved on Wednesday by Lieut. Smith
and brought to: the Bellefonte flying
field, while Snyder and Sweetwood,
the men who brought Lieut. Bettis to
the hospital, stood guard over the
wreckage until it was removed.
Lieut. Bettis is a native of Carson-
ville, Mich., and has been stationed at
the Sesqui in Philadelphia since May.
He was the winner of the 1925 Pulit-
zer race and was returning to Self-
ridge field to take part in a cross-
country flight. When he failed to
reach Selfridge field by Tuesday
morning two army fliers from Middle-
town were - sent here to scour the
mountains for the missing flier; and
on Tuesday evening Lieuts. Smith and
Williams returned | here from Self-
ridge field and scouted over the Seven
mountains until dark but failed to lo-
cate the wrecked plane.
As soon as Lieut. Smith was appris-
ed of the extent of Lieut. Bettis’ in-
juries on Wednesday morning, he ac-
companied Snyder and Sweetwood to
the Seven mountains to retrieve the
wrecked plane.
LIEUT. BETTIS TAKEN TO WALTER L
REED HOSPITAL, WASHINGTON,
BY PLANE YESTERDAY.
In order that he may have the best
possible care Lieut. Bettis was taken
to the Walter I. Reed hospital, in
Washington, yesterday. A big trans-
port plane, of the Douglas Cl type,
converted into a hospital ship, was
sent here from Bolling field, reaching
here shortly before ten o’clock in the
morning. It was in charge of pilot
Ira Eaker. Bettis was swung in a
hammock to the top of the passenger
department, the plane leaving the
Bellefonte field at just exactly 12.42
o'clock. Capt. E. W. Smith, flight
surgeon at the Sesqui grounds, in
Philadelphia, had charge of the injur-
ed lieutenant on the trip to Washing-
ton.
Thirty-Seven High School Graduates
Will Enter College.
Thirty-seven young men and wom-
en, graduates in the 1926 class of the
Bellefonte High school, have matric-
ulated for higher education in the col-
lege of their choice and will enter at
the opening of the different institu-
tions in September. Naturally the
largest number of them will go to
State College, in fact just fifteen have
enrolled there. The list who will go,
with the colleges they will enter, is as
follows:
Penn State College—Malcolm Wag-
ner, Albert Grove, Donald Mallory,
Gilbert Shope, Andrew Wetzei,
Michael Hazel, Charles Mensch, El-
mer Decker, Charles Bullock, Rudolph
Poorman, Martha Chambers, Frank-
lin Schad, Donald Best, Harold Hoag
and Mary Robb.
University . of Pittsburgh—James
McCullough, Joseph Herman. :
Drexel Institute—Grace Cohen.
Jefferson Hospital—Ruth Wetzel,
Laura Shuey.
- Lock Haven Normal—Elsie An-
drews, Ruth Lucas, Mittie Barton,
Helen McClellan, Pearl Grove, Mary
E. Hoy, Beatrice Mokle, Laura Laird.
i Saint Vincent College, Emmetsburg,
; Md., Evelyn Rogers.
Mount St. Joseph, New York—-
Mary Parrish.
| Beckley College, Harrisburg—Grace
| Clevenstine, Randall Keller, David
| Hall."
i Irving College—Mary Woodring,
Kathryn Meyer.
Temple University-—David Geiss.
St. Joseph College, Baltimore—Ma-
ry Callaghan.
Notice!
To the friends of the new Metho-
| dist church now building at Snow
Shoe:
Any one wishing to purchase a me-
morial window for the new church,
kindly send check made out in favor
of the Snow Shoe Methodist church
for $125.00, with memorandum of me-
morial which is to be inscribed on the
glass. The above price carries twenty
letters, and additional letters ten
cents each. These windows are being
subscribed for very fast, and orders
will be entered as received. Check
must accompany order, and mailed to
0. J. Harm. The inscriptions are
blown in the glass making a perpetu-
al finish, and are of the best leaded
glass, in beautiful designs.
O. J. HARM, Member of Official Board.
Supervisors and Auditors Meeting at
Grange Park.
A meeting of township supervisors
and auditors will be held in the au-
ditorium at Grange park on Tuesday,
September 2nd, at 10 o’clock a. m., for
the purpose of deciding on the time
for holding the annual convention in
Bellefonte and mapping out a pro-
gram for the meeting. A full turn-
out is desired.
HARRY AUSTIN, Pres.
——The last picnic to be held at
Hecla park this summer will be the
big Odd Fellows reunion from the
counties of Blair, Centre, Clearfield,
Clinton and Lycoming, which will be
held on Labor day, September 6th.
This is always one of the biggest
gatherings of the year. Two of the
closing games of the Susquehanna
baseball league will be played at the
park that day and there will be a
lengthy program of other sports, Odd
Fellows and their friends are already
making their. plans to attend this out-
ing.
Grange Picnic Grounds Open and |
~ Final Program Announced.
Yesterday morning, | August 26th,
marked the opening of the annual
Grange Encampment to campers—
tents then being in readiness, floored
and furnished with one bunk, one table
and one bench.
Saturday, August 28th, is the official
opening day, when everybody will be
welcome and everything in full swing
at the Grange Encampment and Cen-
tre County Fair for 1926.
Again a word in explanation of the
new form of tickets: A book ticket
with leaves for four days, beginning
Monday, August 30, and no admission
without ticket. The ticket for the
day will be removed from the book at
the gate and if re-admission is desired
that day it will be necessary to secure
a pass-out check at the gate which
on presentation will permit re-en-
trance.
Exhibitors and concessionists in
general have engaged all space set
apart for the purpose and a larger and
more complete show in all departments
is assured for this year. Entertain-
ment and amusement freely provided
for young and old. Music by Hawaiian
troupe, vocal and instrumental. Ball
games. Play ground for small chil-
dren. Basketry. First-aid tent in
charge of Red Cross.
An exhibition horse show by Na-
tional Guard Troop B, 52nd Machine
Gun Cavalry.
All needed supplies can be ordered
and will be delivered to tents.
All trains stop at Grange park.
Information bureau at headquarters.
PROGRAM.
Saturday, Aug. 28— 6:30 p. m., Concert.
8.00 p. m.—Play in auditorium; 10 and
20 cents.
Sunday, Aug. 29th—2.00 p. m., Harvest
Home Services, Special music. Everybody
invited.
Monday, Aug. 30th—Exhibitor's Day.—
Placing exhibits.
6:30 p. m.—Concert.
8:00 p. m.—Play in auditorium;
20 cents.
Tuesday, Aug. Slst—Exhibitor’s Day.
3.00 p. m.—Baseball game.
6:30 p.”m.—Concert.
8:00 p. m.—Pay in auditorium; 10 and
20 cents.
Wednesday, Sept. 1st—9.00 a. m., Judg-
ing exhibits. !
10:00 a. m.~Judging contest.
11:00 a. m.—Judging contest.
11:00 a. m.—Business meeting Veteran's
Club. Concert.
2:00 'p. + m.—Concert.
gram.
3:00 p. m.—Baseball game.
4:00 p. m.—Horse show, west end of
Park.
6:30 p. m. —Concert.
8:00 p. m.~—Play in auditorium;
20 cents.
Thursday, Sept. 2nd—Grange Day.
10:00 a. m.—Horse show,. west end of
10 and
Educational pro-
10 and
| Park. i .
11:00 a. m.—Concert.
2.00 p. m:—Grange program; Hon. E. B.
Dorsett and others.
3:00 p. m.—Baseball game.
6:30 p. m.—Concert.
8:00 p. m.—Play in auditorium; 10 and
20 cents.
Friday, Sept. SrdClosing Diy
Four Hecla Park Young Men Injured
in Auto Accident.
Melvin Miller, of Hecla park, suf-
fered a fractured skull and badly lac-
erated knee in an auto accident in
Lock Haven, on Monday night, and
three companions were also more or
less injured. Malcolm Clevenstine
sustained cuts on the head and face,
Harold Levan a big bruise on the left
side of his face and Alvin Stump a
bad cut on the left leg.
Miller is the junior member of the
Hecla Milling company which oper-
ates the old mill at Hecla ‘park. On
Monday a part of the mill machinery
broke and he decided to go to Muncy
and get the necessary part from an
old mill there, taking with him the
three other young men as companions
on the trip. On the return trip the
party ran into a heavy fog at Avis and
were unable to see any great distance
ahead of the car. On reaching Lock
Haven they failéd to notice the new
traffic signal at Church street and
Bellefonte avenue, running head on
into the standard.
All the young men were thrown
from the car, which was badly dam-
aged. Miller was taken to the Lock
Haven hospital for treatment, his con-
dition being regarded as serious.
Penn State Alumni to Hold Meeting,
The third annual “Summer Party”
for alumni of The Pennsylvania State
College will be held tomorrow at
the Centre Hills Country club near
State College. Prominent alumni will
gather for a day devoted to the inter-
ests of the college. Special attention
is to be given to the newer phases of
research work which the college is un-
dertaking as a service to the agricul-
tural and industrial people of the
State.
Edward K. Hibshman, assistant to
the president of the college, is in
charge of the arrangements for the
outing. The morning will be devoted
to visits to research activities in en-
gineering, chemistry, agriculture and
ceramics or clay products. Alumni
association activities will be taken up
in the evening.
Walton League to Meet Tonight
A meeting of the Izaak Walton
League will be held in the arbitra-
tion room at the court house, Belle-
fonte, this (Friday) evening, August
27, at eight o’clock. Matters of ex-
treme importance concerning fish and
game will be discussed. Please at-
tend this meeting. .
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Ray have had as a
guest the past week Mr. Ray's mother,
Mrs. F. D. Ray, of Chicago, Ill
—Miss Martha Geiss will leave next
month to spend the winter in Phiiadelphia,
where she will enter the Temple Universi-
ty to take the teacher training course.
—Mrs. Charles R. Kurtz and her two
children, Lois Jr. and Frederick, are home
from Canada, after having spent the vaca-
tion at Crystal Beach, at their summer cot-
tage on Lake Erie.
—Mahlon Foreman came home last week
from the University of Illinois, where he
took the summer course, expecting to re-
turn at the opening of college in Septem-
ber to complete his school work.
—Mrs. W. U. Irwin and daughter, Miss
Catherine, are up in Buffalo, N. Y,, this
week, visiting with Alfred Irwin and fam-
ily. They left Bellefonte last Saturday
and Suntemplared a stay of a week or ten
days.
—Mr. and Mrs. George Tanner's week-
end guests were Mr. and Mrs. Klinger, of
Hazleton, who drove over for their first
visit since Mr. and Mrs. Tanner came to
Bellefonte to make their home. Mrs. Kling-
er and Mrs. Tanner are sisters.
—Mrs. Grauer, widow of the late Millard
Grauer, of Chicago, was here from Satur-
day until Wednesday, a guest of Mr. Grau-
er's brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Grauer, at their apartment in the
Lyon & Co. building on Allegheny street.
—Miss Josephine White, who left Belle-
fonte two years ago to go to Macon, Ga..
where she had been associated with the
Morris Lime and Stone interest since that
time, has gone to Tulsa, Okla., to be with
her sister, Mrs. Peabody, expecting to lo-
cate there permanently.
—Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Whittaker, of
Cleveland, Ohio, spent last week mingling
among their former friends in Bellefonte;
Mr. Whittaker looking little changed from
the time when he used to guide the iron
horse up and down Nittany valley over the
old Central Railroad of Pennsylvania.
—Mr. and Mrs. James D. Seibert had as
a week-end guest, Mr. Seibert’s sister, Mrs.
William Kirk, of Hammond, Indiana, who
after her visit in Bellefonte went to Pitts-
burgh to spend a short time with her sis-
ter before returning west. Mrs. Kirk, be-
fore her marriage, was Miss Caroline Sei-
bert.
—Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. McEntyre and
their small child and Mr. McEntyre's sis-
ter, Miss Lou McEntyre, of Wilkinsburg
and St. Petersburg, Florida, were recent
guests at the Nittany Country club, stop-
ping there for several days last week on a
drive to Williamsport, the McEntyre’s for-
mer home.
—Mrs. John Kreamer and her daughter,
Miss Helen, who had been here for a week
visiting with Mrs. George Waite, of
Phoenix Ave. and relatives at Coleville, re-
turned Sunday by motor to their home at
Trafford. Mrs. Kreamer is one of the most
prominent women of Trafford, being tax
collector of the place.
—John Carver was here from State Col-
lege this week, visiting for several days
with the John Halderman family and oth-
er relatives, it being his first visit to Belle-
fonte in a year. Mr. Carver returned home
Wednesday, with his nephew and wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Carver and their
daughter Grace, who drove down to take
their uncle home.
—Mrs. W. C. Cassidy ‘and Mrs. Jack
Decker went to Pittsburgh this week for
a visit with Mr. and Mrs. John George, in-
tending to go from there with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Vernon to be guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard George at their summer
home on Buckeye Lake, Ohio. Mrs. Cas-
sidy and Mrs. Decker will be gone until
some time in September.
-—Mrs. Lucretia Williams Hummel and
her son, V. Lorne Hummel Jr., returned to
their home at Wayne, Pa., Tuesday, fol-
lowing a visit of several months with her
mother and sister, Mrs. George Williams
and Miss Helene, at their home on Curtin
street. Mrs. Hummel was called to Delle-
fonte by the illness of her mother, who
continues in a critical condition.
-—Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Stevens, with their
two children, and Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
Stevens, with their child, drove to the
Stevens family home at McConnellsville,
Sunday, where Mrs. R. L. Stevens and her
children will visit until Labor day; the
men and Mrs. Vincent Stevens joining her
there at that time for a visit of several
days, will bring her back to Bellefonte.
—Among the guests Mr. and Mrs. Lief
Olsen, of Curtin street, have been enter-
taining during the past week have been
the former’s uncle, Mr. George Anderson,
of Cleveland, Ohio, who arrived last Sat-
urday; Miss Minnie Olsen, of Youngstown,
Ohio, who was here from Sunday until
Wednesday, on her way to the Sesqui; and
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Klasgie, of Cleveland,
who are stopping off here for a few days
on their way home from Philadelphia.
—The Hon. Peter L. Hamilton and Mrs.
Hamilton, who had been at the home of
Mrs. McGarvey, on Spring street, while on
a three week's visit to Bellefonte, left Sun-
day for Texas. Judge and Mrs. Hamilton
came here from Porto Rico, where they
had lived for thirteen years, during which
time Mr. Hamilton had served as U. S.
Judge under Taft and Wilson. Both are
natives of Mobile, Ala., but they will now
make their home at Dallas, Texas, where
Judge Hamilton has accepted a position
as dean of the law school in the M. U.
University. Mr. Hamilton was a student
at the Bellefonte Academy in 1874, enter-
ing when he was but fifteen years of age,
and it was memories of those boyhood
school days that influenced Mr. and Mrs.
Hamilton in coming to Bellefonte for their
three week’s visit.
—Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Ward, with their
son, J. B. Jr, and his wife, all of Wash-
ington, Pa., were in town Monday morn-
ing on their way to Mill Hall to visit the
elder Mrs. Ward's family, the Boops. The
party motored in from Washington, on
Friday, to Mr. Ward's former home at
Pennsylvania Furnace, and timed their vis-
it so that they would be here for the Bai-
leyville picnic, next day. But the rain
ended the picnic before it began and while
the Wards were disappointed at the loss
of the chance to meet s0 many of their
friends at one time they did the next best
thing and spent their time, until Wednes-
day, motoring to visit as many as they
could find time to call upon. Mr, Ward is
a son of the late Simon Ward, of Pennsyl-
vania Furnace and is an engineer in Wash-
ington, while his son is in the electrical
business.
—Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Runkle and their
daughter Dorothy, will return this week
from a ten day’s motor trip to Ocean City.
—Miss Florence Gray, a teacher in the
Altoona High school, is spending part of
her vacation with her brother, G. Oscar
Gray and family, on west High street.
—Mrs. Philip Beezer and her daughter,
Miss Helen, spent a part of last week on §
business motor trip through West Virgin-
ia, their objective point being Huttonvlle.
—Miss Janet Potter is again in Belle-
fonte, after a four months trip abroad with
the Countess Santa Eulalia, of Ashbourne;
Pa., whose guest she was while in Bu-
rope’ ;
—Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Schad and
their son Franklin, with Mrs. Ray White
and her small daughter as motor guests,
left Sunday morning on a drive to Gary,
Indiana.
~—Mrs. Gideon Payne and her daughter
Millicent are at Central City, Somerset
county, having gone over Monday, to be
guests for a week of Mr. and Mrs. Rufus
Lochrie.
—Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Barnhart’s week-
end house guests included Mrs. Barnhart's
sister, Mrs. H. J. Loeb, of Punxsutawney
and Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Orris and their
family, of Bellwood.
—Mrs. C. A. Renner, who had been with
her mother, Mrs. C. M. Harter, on the
Harter farm near Jacksonville for a part
of a week returned to her home in Al-
toona Wednesday afternoon.
—Mr. and Mrs. Edwin VanKenren, of
Bethlehem, who were motor visitors to
Bellefonte the latter part of last week,
were guests while here of Mrs. Della Mil-
ler and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lyons.
—Wilbur F. Harris has been here from
Harrisburg during the week, for a visit
with his brother, Hardman P. Harris.
The two men will drive to Harrisburg to-
day in the latter’s new Packard car.
—Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hunter's Au-
gust house guests have included their eld-
est daughter, Mrs. E. D. Foye, who with
her three children was here from Cata-
wissa for one of her frequent visits home.
—Mrs. John McCreight and Mrs. James
C. Moore, who are guests at the F. W,
West home on Curtin street, accompanied
Mr. West to Bellefonte Monday, on his re-
turn home from a business trip to Indi
ana.
—Miss Anna Miller, who had spent a
part of the summer at her home at Salona,
returned to Bellefonte Wednesday to be
for an indefinite time with Mrs. R. G. H.
Hayes, at her apartment in the Hayes
building on Allegheny street.
-—Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Hartranft return-
ed Sunday from Montgomery, where they
had gone the week previous to attend the
fortieth reunion of the Hartranft families.
About one hundred and fifty of the clan
were present on this occasion.
—Thaddeus. Cross spent the after part
of last week at Jamestown, N. Y., visiting
with his sister, Mrs. James McBlain, hav-
ing driven up with his son Andrew, of
Mill Hall, Thursday, returning to the
Cross farm, south of town, Sunday.
—Mr. and Mrs. 8. A. Bixler, of Waban,
Mass, were in Bellefonte the early part
of the week for a short visit with relatives
and friends of Mrs. Bixler, having come
here from their former home in Lock
Haven. Mrs. Bixler is known in Bellefonte
as Miss Marguerite Potter.
—Miss Mary Moore, of Spokane, Wash-
ington, is now in Centre county for an ex:
tended visit with her sister, Mrs. Abram
Weber, of Howard. Miss Moore is a
daughter of the late Agnew C. Moore, of
Milesburg, and has many friends in Centre
county who recall her as a most charming
young woman.
—Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy and their
daughter Jane, and Mrs. John VanPelt and
her daughter, Rachel, drove to Hagers-
town, Md., Friday, where Mrs. VanPelt and
Mrs. McCoy with their children, will spend
some time with their brother and his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harris. Mr. McCoy
returned to Bellefonte Sunday.
—Sam McGinley and Bill Haines spent
their two week’s vacation on a drive in
Sam's car through New York State and in-
to Canada, visiting Niagara Falls and all
places of interest enroute. Their longest
stop was made at Homer, N. Y., where they
visited for four days with Sam’s sister,
‘Mrs. Harold B. Thompson and her family.
—Mrs. William A. Lyon, after spending
a month in Bellefonte, left yesterday for
York, expecting to go on from there to
spend several days at the Sesqui. Mrs.
Lyon's plans include a visit to Providence,
R. I, where she will spend sevéral weeks
with her son Edward and his family, ex-
pecting to return to Tampa, Fla. about
October first.
—Mrs. Edmund Blanchard, of Pampa,
Texas, arrived in Bellefonte on Tuesday
afternoon and will be a guest at the home
of Miss Blanchard and Mrs. Beach, on
Linn street,’ until tomorrow when she will
go east to visit friends in Philadelphia.
Later she will come to Bellefonte for a
longer stay before returning to her home
in the southwest. i
—Miss Cleleland Driscoll, of Pittsburgh,
was here last week, a guest of her aunt,
Miss Josephine McDermot; coming to
Bellefonte from Snow Shoe, where she had
been visiting with Miss Pauline Budinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shutte and thar
daughter Margot, also of Pittsburgh, and
near relatives of the McDermot family,
have been house guests of Miss Josephine
McDermot and her brothers this week.
——The Block dance and carnival
for the benefit of the local base ball
team, that was held here Wednesday
evening, raised $480.00 gross. Of this
probably $250.00 will be net. Prof.
Wesley Spangler’s show was an out-
standing attraction and convulsed the
440 people who visited it.
BE
——Announcement has been made
of the engagement of Miss Dorothy
Mallory, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Mallory, and Marvin Rothrock,
son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rothrock,
both of Bellefonte.
Bellefonte Grain Markets.
Corrected Weekly by C. ¥. Wagner & Co.
Wheat - - wl wh - $1.26
Oats « - wile - 35
Rye - = me 80
Corn wR me £5
Barley - - - - - - J0
Buckwheat - - = - - A (