Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 25, 1927, Image 8

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    Demorealic Wald,
“Bellefonte, Pa,, February 25, 1937.
ee ——————————————e—
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
—— The members of Saint Mary’s
Guild of the Episcopal church will hold
a food sale at Speiglemeyer’s store
Saturday morning, February 26th.
Bellefonte borough councilmen
must have been stormstayed by the
deep snow as not enough of them could
be rounded up for a meeting on Mon-
day night.
——Mrs. Forrest Tanner's section
of the Bible class of the Bellefonte
Methodist church will hold an all day
bake sale at the Olewine hardware
store tomorrow, Saturday.
If this snow lies any length of
time it will be hard on bird and small
game life in the woods and sportsmen
would do well to put out feed to tide
them over until the snow disappears.
The Catholic Daughters of
America will give a St. Patrick’s day
card party on the 17th of March.
Both bridge and five-hundred will be
in play and the admission will be 50
cents.
Robert B. Taylor, who the past
two years has been engaged in the
plumbing ‘business at State College,
has purchased the IL. E. Baird store
room at Pleasant Gap and will con-
vert the same into an up-to-date tea
room.
The 194th anniversary of the
birth of George Washington was not
generally celebrated in Bellefonte on
Tuesday. Flags were exhibited and
the banks and postoffice were closed
but other business places were open as
usual.
Easter this year will fall on
April 17th which is quite late and
does not presage an early spring.
Coming as it will, however, two days
after the opening of the trout fishing
season will enable fishermen to have
trout and eggs for breakfast.
Raymond Ammerman has sold
his store on east Howard street to H.
C. Houck, of Warriorsmark, who will
conduct it in the future. The price
paid was $450, Mr. Ammerman made
the sale because he was unable to give
it proper attention and attend to his
duties as clerk in Montgomery & Co's
store.
Mrs. George F. Harris, who has
bezn a patient in the Centre county
hospital since the fall in her home that
injured her hip, is not suffering as
acutely as she did shortly after the
accident. Her condition, however, is
unchanged. She has several fairly
comfortable days and then one not so
favorable.
The regular monthly meeting
of the Woman’s Club of Bellefonte
will be held Monday evening, Febru-
ary twenty-eighth, in the High school
building. After the regular business
meeting Arthur M. Cowell, of State
College, will speak on “Better Town
Planning.” The public is cordially in-
vited to attend.
¥ The aunual football dance of
the Bellefonte Academy, held in the
Bellefonte armory last Friday even-
ing, was well attended and proved to
be one oi the most brilliant and enjoy-
able social functicns ever given by the
Academy. In spite of the stormy
"weather, many guests from nearby
towns were present to enjoy the dance.
The music was furnished by Joe Buck
and his orchestra, from Penn State
College.
The deep snow of this week
halted temporarily work on the
Keystone Power corporation’s new
high power transmission line down
Bald Eagle valley. During the nice
weather previous to the snow fall a
little over a miie of right of way had
been cleared out in the vicinity of Port
Matilda, ready for putting up the big
poles that will carry the line, and as
soon as the snow disappears and the
weather will permit work will be re-
sumed.
—-—The regular February term of
court will convene next Monday to
continue for two weeks, or until all the
eases listed have been heard. No civil
cases are down for trial the first week
and no very grave criminal cases are
listed. Aniong them, however, is that
aff George Kosut, charged with being
implicated in the death of a man near
Philipsburg early in January, but it
will hardly rise above the crime of
manslaughter, and Kosut may plead
guilty to that.
——George Fiedler, of Lock Haven,
and Miss Drothy Bressler, of Green-
burr, Clinton county, were married at
Rebersburg, Mr. Fiedler’s old home,
one day last week, and when they re-
turned to Lock Haven a big crowd of
callithumpians gave them a rousing
serenade. Some over-enthusiastic in-
dividual threw a stick of dynamite
whieh exploded with a deafening crash
shattering windows in a number of
nearby houses. This, naturally, broke
up the serenade.
——-3Special attention of the resi-
‘dents of Bellefonte is called to the
talk which will be given before the
Woman's club on Monday night by
Arthur M. Cowell, of State College, on
“Better Town Planning.” It is to
Prof. Cowell that Bellefonte is in-
debted for its tree survey which, when
universally adopted, will undoubted-
ly place the town among the most pro-
gressive ones of the community. Ev-
ery property owner interested in im-
proving the conditions of Belefonte
* should make an especial effort to hear
Prof. Cowell. :
Deepest Snowfall in Years Fell Iri-
day and Saturday Nights.
Following close upon last week’s
springlike weather came the deepest
snow-fall experienced in Centre county
in some years. It began on Friday
evening and continued throughout the
night, and Saturday morning about
ten inches of snow covered the ground.
Saturday evening it again began to
snow and by Sunday morning another
eight or ten inches was added to that
of Friday night.
While the writer did not measure
the total fall he did a lot of shoveling
and judging from that estimates the
total fall at not less than eighteen
inches, although one Bellefonte man
who measured the snow avers it was
only fourteen, and another claims
there were 22 inches. John A. Way, of
Stormstown, is authority for the state-
ment that the fall was eighteen inches
up there while auditor H. H. Stover
says it measured nineteen inches in
Brush valley.
Whether eighteer inches, more or
less, it was enough snow to impede
traffic on the railroads and render side
roads well nigh impassible. State
highways were kept fairly well open
to traffic by constant use of highway
snow plows, but at that the Samuel
Musser mail truck was unable to get
through with the mail from Tyrone to
Bellefonte on Monday morning.
The day crew at the Bellefonte avi-
ation field who went on duty Sunday
morning were marooned at the fiel
and were unable to get back to Belle-
fonte until another crew went out by
sled on Monday forenoon and relieved
them. The county snow plow was also
called into service to open the roads
out to the field and also make a land-
ing runway for the planes.
The heavy fall of snow is just an-
other bit of evidence that the laws of
compensation always prevail, ground-
hog or no groundhog. We are due to
have a certain amount of snow every
winter and if it don’t come down grad-
ually it is almost sure to come in a
big fall, such as that of the past week.
Telephone Linemen Sent from Belle-
fonte to Help Repair Snow Dam-
age in East.
The big snow storm of Saturday
night and Sunday did many thousands
of dollars damage to the lines of the
Bell Telephone company of Pennsylva-
nia in the vicinity of Philadelphia and
in New Jersey. In the neighborhood
of fifteen hundred poles, with their
load of cables and wires, were blown
aown. In order to repair the
damage as quickly as possible an
emergency call was sent out over
the entire district for every available
construction crew and lineman to go
to the eastern part of the State.
The two crews which have been
working in Bellefonte for months past
loaded up, bag and baggage, and in
their big trucks left for Philadelphia |
on Monday afternoon. It took them
almost two days to reach the eastern
part of the State owing to the deep
snow on all the highways.
One of the crews was from Wil-
liamsport and the other Altoona, and
they have been in Bellefonte doing
some new cable work and dismantling
the pole line of the cld Penn State com-
pany. A new cable was strung from
Bellefonte to Howard, thence to Lock
Haven. Of the old pole lines of the
Penn State company they have been
all torn down with the exception of
the cable line between Bellefonte and
Pleasant Gap and the rural line run-
ning out the back road past the brick
school house. In Bellefonte all the
cables have been taken down hut the
poles are still standing. These, how-
ever, will’ be removed in the near
future, which will take a lot of the un-
sightly poles off the streets and alleys
of the town.
Wild Life Pictures at Moose Theatre
This (Friday) Evening.
Every man and woman interested in
the propagation and conservation of
wild life, the birds in the air, game in
the forests and fish in the streams,
should go to the Moose theatre this
(Friday) evening and see the motion
picture taken under the direction of
the State board of Game Commission-
ers and which will be shewn under the
auspices of the Pleasant Gap Camp No.
176, United Sportsmen of Pennsylva-
nia. The picture will be shown at 10.30
o’clock.
The Game Commission had a two-
fold object in view when they had this
picture filmed. One was the proper
conservation of wild life and the
other was the bringing about of a
better understanding between hunters
and land owners. If every hunter
would pay proper regard to the rights
of owners there would be much less
land posted with “no trespass” signs.
Members of the Pleasant Gap Camp
are all law-abiding sportsmen and are
continually working for the mutual
interest of hunters and farmers. Go
and see the picture tonight and we
feel sure you will be interested.
——A number of property owners
in the Oak Hall district of College
township are preparing a petition for
presentation to the court asking for a
relocation of the boundary line between
College and Harris townships so as to
place them in Harris township instead
of College. They assign as the prin-
cipal reason more convenient High
school advantages for the children.
The distance from Oak Hall to Boals-
burg is only a little over a mile, while
it is three miles to State College.
——DMrs. Carolyn Dale, justice of
the peace at State College, who has
been given some notoriety in the past
by grand juries ignoring bills pre-
sented to them on cases returned by
her and placing the costs upon her,
telephoned this office yesterday that
in every case so disposed of the court
has reversed the action of the grand
jury and ordered all such costs to be
paid by the county.
——Standing room is at a premium
quite frequently of late at the Scenic.
The exceptionally high class pictures
being shown there night after night
are a big attraction for the movie
fans. Some of the pictures are shown
her in advance of the larger cities,
which is evidence that they are new
and up-to-date. And the Scenic is
the only place in Bellefonte where
they can be seen. To see them all
you must be a regular.
———Special for tomorrow, Saturday,
only. 27x54 inch Rag Rugs Thc. 25x
50 at 60c. 24x48 at 55c. 18x36 at 35c.
F. W. West Company. 8-1t.
The Penn State glee club won
the first annual intercollegiate glee
club contest at Carnegie music hall,
Pittskurgh, last Friday night. Six
college clubs competed, Penn State,
Carnegie Tech, Bucknell, Washington
and Jefferson, Juniata and Pitt. Cax-
negie Tech was awarded honorable
mention. The award carries the priv-
ilege of attendance at the national
contest to be held in New York March
12th, by the intercollegiate musical
council.
A concert will be given by Mrs.
Louis Schad on Tuesday evening,
March 1st, in the Presbyterian chapel,
for the benefit of the Woman’s Mis-
sionary auxiliary. Mus. Schad will be
assisted by the Kies—Tone quartette
of Williamsport, who have given con-
cert tours and come very highly rec-
ommended. Their accompanist is Mrs.
Carol Evenden, a pupil of Madam
Bloomnfield-Zeisler. Mrs. Schad will
play the violin. The program is a
very delightful one. Tickets are be-
ing sold at 75 cents, the concert to be-
gin at 8 o’clock.
The Postoffice Department re-
cently advertised that a competitive
examination would be held on Febru-
ary 19th for the position of postmas-
ter at Mingoville. Charles C. Work-
man is the present postmaster and
during his term the salary of the of-
fice has been brought up from a few
hundred a year to in the neighborhood
of $1600, due almost entirely to the
Hockman chicken farm. Three people
took the examination on Saturday,
both Mr. and Mrs. Workman and Earl
Yarnell. Mr. Workman’s term does
not expire until July 1st.
———Last summer Elmer Pillings,
keeper of the Rush township game
refuge, found two young fawns in the
woods that had either been abandoned
by their mother or the latter killed by
pot hunters. In any event he took the
baby deer to his home and under his
care and treatment both lived and
have now grown into good sized deer.
They are quite tame and will follow
their keeper as well as others for
something tempting to eat. Of course
they have not yet matured but the
time will come when they hear the
call of the wild and then back to the
forest they will go.
Special for tomorrow, Saturday,
only. 27x54 inch Rag Rugs Thc. 25x50
at 60c. 24x48 at 55c. 18x36 at 35c. F.
W. West Company. 8-1t.
Bellefonte friends of August
Glinz will regret to learn that he has
been quite ill for some time and has
been in the hospital since the begin-
ning of February, having undergone
an operation on February 2nd. How-
ever, information comes from his
home at Newport, R. I, that he is
improving slowly and it is hoped is
now on the way to permanent recov-
ery. During his illness he has had
the best of care that could be given
him at the hospital as well as the
cheering encouragement of his wife
and daughter, Mrs. Walter Crytzer,
of New Kingston, who went to New-
port to be with her father as much as
possible.
Special for tomorrow, Saturday,
only. 27x54 inch Rag Rugs T5c¢. 25x50
at 60c. 24x48 at 55c¢. 18x36 at 35c. F.
W. West Company. 8-1t.
Readers of the Watchman who
weekly peruse the breezy column of
“Pine Grove Mentions” would not
realize that the writer, Capt. William
H. Fry, has been laid up the past six
weeks with injuries of the right hip
and back sustained in a fall on an icy
pavement on January 13th. How he
manages to gather so many interest-
ing items regarding the folks of his
neighborhood is a mystery, but it
shows his remarkable determination to
follow along regardless of any and all
handicaps. Capt. Fry, by the way, is
now in his eighty-fourth year, which
to any ordinary man would be a suf-
ficient excuse to sit back and take
things easy. But he is endowed with
an unusual amount of vital energy and
has been so active all his life that he
just can’t sit still and keep quiet. He
has his own room in his comfortable
home at Pine Grove Mills where he
manages to keep fairly busy during
the daytime, and although he is im-
proving slowly he still has to have as-
sistance in going from one part of the
house to another.
Mail Delivery Suspended on Half
Moon Hill.
Thirty-seven houses and as many
families on Half-Moon hill are with-
out free mail delivery because the road
up there is so bad that Uncle Sam has
directed his carrier not to risk travel-
ing over it. Seven of the homes are
in the borough and thirty in Spring
township.
The borough has no street opened on
Half-Moon hill and since the abandon-
ment of the old road over the hill lead-
ing up the Buffalo Run valley, many
years ago, there has been no road from
the borough line out over the hill. That
section has been built up in recent
years, many nice homes are located out
there and some of their owners have
automobiles. The result of the in-
creased traffic because of the building
that has been done has been to cut the
trails the people up there used so bad-
ly that they are now practically im-
passable.
Last fall they petitioned to have a
township road opened and a board of
viewers was appointed. It made a
survey of the situation and was im-
pressed with the feeling that some-
thing should be done but the location
of the township school house is such
as to block what the viewers regarded
as the best location for a road. Con-
sequently they failed to recommend
one but did suggest that the super-
visors and school directors of Spring
township might acquire from the Bush
estate land enough on the south side
of the school building to make up for
the land on the north side of the build-
ing that would have to be used as
road way for the most feasible route
out over the hill. The chairman of the
board of viewers told us on Tuesday
that if this were done the road would
undoubtedly be granted.
Whatever the difficulties it is cer-
tain that something ought to be done
for these people.
homes there, they pay taxes, are good
citizens and deserve a road-way and
the need is emphasized when it has
come to the point that their mail de-
livery has been cut off because they
have none.
Mrs. W. R. North Has Arrived Safely
at Shanghai, China.
Last Saturday Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Shuey received a letter from their
daughter, Mrs. W. R. North, in which
she conveyed the cheering intelligence
that she and little Billy had reached
Shanghai in safety after a rather
thrilling trip ‘down the Yangtse river.
But she had not heard from her hus-
band, Dr. North, for over ten days and
the only knowledge she had of his
probable whereabouts was conjecture
that he also was on his way down the
river, as all foreigners had been order-
ed to leave the interior of China.
..{. Readers of the Watchman will recall
that several weeks ago we published
the fact that all foreign women and
children had been ordered out of
Chungking, where the North’s have
been located the past year or more,
and that Mrs. North and Billy were
then on their way down the Yangtse
river with a number of other women
missionaries and children. The urgent
manner of their leaving Chungking
prevented them taking along any-
thing save the most necessary articles
of clothing requisite for their comfort
on the trip.
This was one reason why the men
all remained behind, to not only pro-
tect their property but pack as much
of it as possible to take along with
them out of China, should they have
the time and be permitted to do so.
From the tone of the letter of Mrs.
North she really left so empty handed
that when she arrived at Shanghai she
was badly in need of clothing, and per-
haps money, although it is very prob-
able that every care possible will be
extended by the American consul at
Shanghai. Mrs. North stated that
there is talk in Shanghai of sending
all of them to Manilla, but she hopes
they will be permitted to remain in
Shanghai until Dr. North reaches that
city.
———Special for tomorrow, Saturday,
only. 27x54 inch Rag Rugs 75c. 25x
50 at 60c. 24x48 at 55c. 18x36 at
35c. F. W. West Company. 8-1t.
Check Forger Again Reaps Reward
in Bellefonte.
Last Thursday afternoon a man
dressed as a day laborer walked into
the Nittany shoe store, made a smail
purchase and presented in payment a
$23 check bearing the signature of
Blair Fisher. Mr. Fisher is a young
farmer at Snow Shoe Intersection and
his real signature on a check would
be taken in most any store without
question. The check was accepted at
the Nittany shoe store but later it
was detected to be a forgery. The
man also succeeded in having one for
the same amount cashed at the Martin
restaurant. Police chief Dukeman
was put on the trail Friday morning
but the man had left town, having
gone out on the early morning train
over the Lewisburg. .
——Special for tomorrow, Saturday,
only. 27x54 inch Rag Rugs The. 25x
50 at 60c. 24x48 at 55c. 18x36 at
35c. F. W. West Company. 8-1¢.
Robert Knox, son of Rev. and
Mrs. Homer C. Knox, lost a signet
ring on Sunday evening which he had
been given as a Christmas present.
On the signet are the letters R.P.K.,
which should assist the finder in re-
turning the ring to the owner.
They have built.
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Miss Nina Lamb was among those who
spent the week-end out-of-town, having
—Mr. and Mrs. George A. Beezer had as been with friends in Johnstown.
guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Sheffer, of Williamsport.
—Jerome Harper made one of his regular
week-end visits home with Mrs. Harper,
leaving Monday to return to his work in
New York State.
—Mrs. Edward Eckenroth is entertaining
Mrs. Austin, of Lancaster, who since com-
ing to Centre county, has been visiting at
her former home at Blanchard and with
friends here.
—Mrs. R. 8. Pillsbury, of Jacksonville,
Fla., is visiting her mother and sister at
State College; having come. north at this
time to attend the funeral of her sister,
the late Mrs. Mary Edmiston Baisor.
—Miss Carrie Bailey, of Philadelphia,
who is a guest of her sister, Mrs. M. A.
Landsy, at the Brockerhoff house, was
called to Bellefonte by Mrs. Landsy’s ill-
ness, from which she is now slowly re-
covering.
—Mrs. Keichline, wife of Dr. John Keich-
line, of Huntingdon, was an over Sunday
guest of her husband’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Keichline on east Bishop street,
having come to Bellefonte Friday, remain-
ing here until Monday.
—C. Y. Wagner, head of the milling firm
of C. Y. Wagner & Co., went down to Har-
risburg, Wednesday afternoon, to be gone
until today. He went to attend a meeting
of the State Millers Insurance Association,
of which he is a director.
—Henry S. Linn, who has been in Phila-
delphia for several days of the week, went
down Monday night to attend the annual
luncheon and business meeting of the
Pennsylvania Society of Cincinnati, held at
the Bellevue-Stratford, Tuesday.
—Mr. and Mrs. John Sommerville return-
ed a week ago from a months visit in New
York city. Having left here the middle of
January, Mr. and Mrs. Sommerville made
a short visit with the latter's sister, in
Milton, going from there on east.
—Mr. and Mrs. Edgar D. Rearick, of Al-
toona, togk advantage of the holiday Mr.
Rearick had on Washington's birthday and
came down to spend the day with his sis-
ter, Mrs. J. Dorsey Hunter and her hus-
band at their home on Curtin St.
—C. A. Ferguson, employed as a ma-
chinist near Pittsburgh during the past
several months, came home last Friday
owing to a threatened attack of pneumonia,
and will spend a week or two with Mrs.
Ferguson at their apartment in the Decker
building.
—Isaaec Ward has returned from his trip
to the Pacific coast and is again in what
he calls “God’s Country” up at Pennsyl-
vania Furnace. We know just what Isaae
means, for we've seen a good bit of this
country ourselves and no place ever looked
just as good to us Centre county.
—Mrs. Henry Kaphnus returned to Belle-
fonte Saturday from a ten days visit in
Philadelphia, where she had been called
by the death of a brother-in-law. Mr. and
Mrs. Kaphnus and their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Preston
Smith are residents of east Curtin street.
—Miss Charlotte Powell left Bellefonte
Wednesday of last week, to go to West
Chester, for a short stay with her nieces,
Mrs. William Hoopes and Miss Josephine
White, expecting then to join Mrs. James
B. Lane for a visit to Atlantic City, intend-
ing to spend several weeks at the shore.
—E. 8S. Moore, one of the well known
residents of Ierguson township, was a
Bellefente visitor on Thursday afternoon
of last week and a caller at the Watchman
office. He didn’t have anything especially
new to tell us but did comment upon the
spring-like weather we were having at
that time, but we'll bet most anything that
it isn’t looking very springlike up in Fer-
guson township this week.
—Mrs. Louise Kellerman McClintic re-
turned to her home in Lewistown, Monday
afiernoon, after a week-end visit with the
family in Centre county. Mrs. McClintic
went to State College I'riday, where her
mother, Mrs. Kellerman joined her, both
being guests until Sunday of Mrs. F. R.
Musser. They then came to Bellefonte,
spending the remainder of Mrs. MeClintie's
time with the Charles Kellerman family on
Bishop street.
—Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lambert, of Johns-
town, are on a trip south, their objective
point being Buckeye, Texas, where they
have been visiting with Mr. Lambert's
mother. Enroute south they spent some
time with friends in Cleveland, Chicago
and New Orleans, and before returning
north, will go into Mexico and stop in
both Galveston and Huston. Mrs. Lambert
is better known in Bellefonte, as Mrs.
Robert Sechler.
—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hadley and
their daughter Helen, were in Bellefoute
from Sunday until Tuesday with Mrs.
Hadley’s mother, Mrs. Harry Turner. Since
leaving Erie, Mr. and Mrs. Hadley have
made their home in Clifton, N. J., where
Mr. Hadley has bought his wife a very
lovely home and from where he commutes
to his work, with the Erie R. R. Co., in
New York city. Mrs. Hadley before her
marriage, was Miss May Turner.
—Dr. William S. Glenn and is wife, Dr.
Nannie Glenn, arrived here from Palm
Beach the early part of the week, called
home by the death of Dr. William Glenn's
brother, the late Reuben M. Glenn, whose
body was brought to State College froin
Texas and buried at Pine Hall yesterday.
Dr. Glenn and his wife have been spend-
ing the winter in the south, and will leave
to-day at noon to return to Florida, with
plans for remaining there until spring.
—=8. M. Campbell, who conducts a high
class furniture store in Millheim, was a
business visitor in Bellefonte on Wednes-
day and a caller at the Watchman office.
He motored up from his home town and
while there was plenty of snow on the road
from Millheim to Old Fort the going was
not bad, and when he struck the state
highway he found it pretty well cleaned
off, so that motoring to Bellefonte was not
such a hard job, considering the depth of
the snowfall.
—O0. H. Nason, of Julian, was a Belle-
fonte visitor on Saturday and from the
way he was hobnobbing with some of the
politicians might lead to the conclusion
that he is thinking of running for office,
but he wouldn't admit such to be the
case. Orie, by the way, is offering for
sale all his property in Bald Eagle valley,
which includes a nice farm between Martha
and Julian, his gas station and old home-
stead at Julian. If he succeeds in dis-
posing of these properties it is just possi-
ble he will locate in Philipsburg where
most of his children are now living and
where he owns considerable property.
i
i
—Mrs. Willard Van Camp of Pittsburgh
and her small daughter, have been here
during the week visiting with Mrs. Van
Camp's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evy
of Bishop street.
~Dp, and Mrs. E. H. Harris, of Snow
Shoe, were in Bellefonte Wednesday after-
noon. We know they were shopping be-
cause we saw them go to their car laden
with many packages.
—Mr. and Mrs. Harry Murtorff had as
a week-end guest, Mrs. Murtorff’s nephew,
George Graham of Wilmerding, who came
in for a visit with his grandmother, Mrs.
Robb, a winter guest of the Murtorff's.
—Mrs. Jack Decker will be among these
to take advantage of the excursion to
New York tomorrow night, going over for
a visit with her son Jack at Perth Amboy,
and to spend a short time with Mrs. Mon-
ish in New York.
—dJ. M. Curtin, of Pittsburgh, was here
to spend Sunday with Mrs. Curtin, who
has been in Bellefonte the greater part of
seven weeks with her mother, Mrs. George
Harris, who has been ill. Their son Harry
was also in Bellefonte during the week.
—DMisses Helen Beezer and Geraldine
Noonan will leave today on a motor trip
to Providence, Md., to spend the week-end
as a guest of Mrs. Robert Mackey, former-
ly Miss Helen Wise, who will return with
them for a visit with Bellefonte friends.
—Mrs. Olewine and Miss Adaline Ole-
wine went over to Lewisburg, Wednesday,
for the funeral of Walter P. Lilly, a broth-
er-in-law of the late John I. Olewine. Mr.
Lilly, who was a resident of Bellefonte at
one time, died at his home in Lewisburg
Sunday.
—DMiss Ann Wagner and Miss Ruth
Deitrick, both students at Cedar Crest Col-
lege, near Allentown, have been home for
the midwinter vacation spending it in
ellefonte with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
C. Y. Wagner and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Deitrick.
—Mrs. George KE. Rothrock, who had
been for the greater part of the winter,
with her husband in Beaver Falls, return-
ed Sunday to Bellefonte, to open her home
on Howard street. Mr. Rothrock is work-
ing on a plastering contract and has been in
Beaver Falls for some time.
—Miss Grace Cohen, a student at Drexel
in Philadelphia, has been home during the
week, having come up to see her mother
who kad not been well. If her health per-
mitted, Mrs. Cohen expected to go to Lock
Haven to day, for the funeral of her sis-
ter, Mrs. Poser, who died at her home in
Huntingdon Tuesday.
—Relatives from out-of-town, who were
here for the funeral of the late Louis J.
Graver, Wednesday afternoon, included his
son Edward, Mrs. Grauer’s two sisters,
Mrs. Jonas Lichten and Mrs. Alfred Gor-
don and a nephew, Harry Lichten, all of
Philadelphia: Norman Grauer of Philips-
burg; Miss Ida Grauer and Miss Hannah
Newman, of Altoona.
Some of those who have Entertained.
Mrs. Charles R. Kurtz was among
the hostesses of the week, entertaining
Thursday night with cards, at her
apartment in the Richelieu building.
The women of the card club of Mill-
heim, were Mrs. Harry N. Meyer's
guests Wednesday afternoon, eight
members having driven over for the
game.
Mrs. W. U. Irwin entertained Fri-
day night at her home on Allegheny
street, for her daughter, Katherine,
the high school social set being her
guests.
At Mrs. Philip L. Beezer’s Saturday
evening card party, five hundred was
in play.
Mrs. Harry Walkey was hostess for
an informal auction bridge game Sat-
urday night.
Mrs. Mark Williams is one of the
hostesses of this week, having enter-
tained Tuesday and will entertain
again tomorrow, with bridge luncheon,
at her home on east High street.
Committees Appointed for Business
Men’s Association.
On Tuesday evening of this week F.
L. Richards, the newly-elected presi-
dent of the Bellefonte Business Men’s
Association, met with the other elec-
tive officers and appointed the fol-
lowing committees to serve during the
year:
Executive—George H. Hazel, chairman;
Frank M. Crawford, W. J. Emerick.
Financial—-N. E. Robb, chairman; Mark
S. Williams, Lewis S. Schad, C. Y. Wag-
ner, O. A. Kline.
Publicity—Russell Blair, chairman;
Harry Yeager, John J. Regenold, M. A.
Landsy, Walter Cohen
Membership—F. W West, chairman;
Ward Fisher, O. A. Kline, Robert Davison,
Dorsey Koons.
——Former sheriff Henry Kline
who has been in the hospital so long
as a result of an accident that injured
his knee is progressing very slowly.
His general condition is said to be en-
couraging. :
——Merchant William S. Brouse
has so far recovered from his long ill-
ness with pneumonia as to be able to
get to his store for a short time daily.
Sale Register.
March 14, Monday, at the residence of
Frank Donovan, 1 mile east of Axe Mann,
a full line of farm implements, 4 horses,
20 cows, 22 head young cattle, 40 shoats
and pigs. 18 head of cattle are grade
Guernseys. Sale starts at 10 a. m. sharp.
L. F. Mayes, auctioneer. 72-7
March 21—Monday—on the Dr. L. E.
Kidder farm, 2 miles east of Boalsburg, W.
BE. Kline will sell farm implements, 6
horses, 1 colt, 17 cows, 18 head cattle, 22
sheep, 30 hogs, chickens, house hold goods,
etc. A clean up sale. Cattle are t. b.
tested. Sale starts at 10 a. m. L. F. Mayes,
auctioneer.
nn nnn A —————————.
Bellefonte Grain Markets.
Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co.
Wheat - - - = =81L3
Bye = = =""''="'"®uw w'w 80
Oats - =- = = = ‘= « 40
Corn wi Haft dwt hel Cerine Bolen 8
Barley © =~" = = « = = 70
Buckwheat = = = = = 20