Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 01, 1927, Image 8

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    Demo ita.
Bellefonte, Pa. July 1, 1927.
NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
——August 27th has been set as the
date for the reunion and picnic at
Scotia.
——-Petitions for the various can-
didates for Judge in Centre county
are now being circulated for signers.
During the first five months of
this year twelve residents of Centre
county were prosecuted for violations
of the dog law.
——Hundreds of school teachers
passed through Bellefonte on Sunday
enroute to State Colege for the an-
nual summer session.
One hundred and five tickets
were sold at the Bellefonte depot, on
Saturday night, for the cne day ex-
cursion to Atlantic City.
The latest entrant into the po-
litical arena in Centre county is D.
Wagner Geiss, of Bellefonte, as a can-
didate for recorder on the Democratic
ticket.
There are now 8252 teachers
enrolled in the various extension
teacher training courses offered by
The Pennsylvania State College. Five
years ago there were less than half
that number.
Marriage licenses granted at
Hagerstown, Md., on Monday, includ-
ed these to John F. Boal and Florence
Houser, both of Bellefonte; Henry
Coble, Mt. Royal, and Ida J. Walker,
Beech Creek.
The bass fishing season opened
this morning but as this species of
fish is not very plentiful in Centre
county the legal season for catching
them has not caused much of &' stir
among fishermen hereabouts.
——The sheet asphalt road between
Bellefonte and Pleasant Gap that was
laid only a few years ago, is dis-
integrating so fast that last Fridax
preparations were begun to chip it
with limestone with the hope of pro-
longing its life a few years.
——The radio broadcasting station
of the Pennsylvania State College will
continue with programs during the
summer months. Its new wave length
is 299.8 meters.. Students of the in-
stitute of music education will pro-
vide entertainment at least ‘once a
week.
——The tri-county council Amer-
ican Legion Auxiliary, which includes
Centre, Clinton and Lycoming coun-
ties, will hold a basket picnic at Hecla
park on Thursday, July 28th. All
Legion and Auxiliary members are
invited to attend and take their
friends.
———Ex-sheriff Henry Kline, who
was quite sick for several days last
week, was taken over to Clearfield
last Saturday for examination by Dr.
Waterworth. The decision was that
his ailment was not serious and with
proper care he will-completely recover
his health.
——Jersey Shore railroad shopmen
and their families, to the number of
ene thousand or more, held their an-
nual picnic at Hecla park, last Satur-
day. One of the chief attractions was
a baseball game between the Jersey
Shore and Bellefonte teams of the
Susquehanna league, the shopmen
losing by the score of 2 to 1.
While riding in the Cossack
race at the Farmers—Kiwanis picnic,
at Boalsburg, last Thursday, Wilbur
Wilkins was thrown from his mounts
and sustained what was at first be-
lieved to be serious head injuries. He
was brought to the Centre County
hospital where the trouble gradually
cleared up and he is now getting
along all right. :
+ ——-The Pons—Winnecke comet
which has been circulating around in
the northeastern skies the past week
or so was closest to the earth on Mon-
day night, a matter of 3,500,000 miles
away. If you failed to see it that
‘night you won’t have much chance
‘now as it has been traveling away
from the earth since then at the rate
of 1,000,000 miles a day.
The Logan fire company, which
will hold their annual picnic at Hecla
park on the Fourth, have been unable
to secure the meal privilege at the
park this year, consequently will not
be in a position to use the cakes and
other food items so generously con-
tributed by the people of Bellefonte
in former years. However, the fire
laddies will be around as usual, the
latter part of the week, and will ap-
preciate cash contributions, big or
little.
When workmen dug the pit for
the big oil tank at the residence of
Dr. David Dale, on Spring street, last
week, they came upon an old brick
pavement over three feet below the
level of the present sidewalk. Of
course this is not surprising to old in-
habitants who can easily recall that
the place where the Bush Arcade now
stands was at one time a deep ravine
and High street ran down to a ford
on Spring creek, there being no bridge
at that time.
Hopping over the oceans in air-
planes these days is getting rather
common. Taking the air at San
Francisco, at 7.02 o'clock on Tuesday
morning, Lieutenants Lester J. Mait-
land and Albert Hegenberger, in an
army Fokker plane, landed in Hawaii
on Wednesday morning. The water
flight of 2400 miles was made in 25
hours and 45 minutes. About the
time they landed in Hawaii Lieut.
Byrd hopped off at Roosevelt field, N.
Y., for a flight over the ‘Atlantic.
RAILROAD DOOMED
TO THE SCRAP PILE.
Ferguson Township People Protest
Abandonment of Lewishurg
and Tyrone Line.
A hearing was held before the Pub-
lic Service Commission, in Harris-
burg, on Tuesday of last week, or the
application of the Pennsylvania Rail-
road company to abandon that portion
of the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad
from Stover to Fairbrook, a distance |
of approximately fourtean miles. Pro-
tests were presented at the hearing |
from residents of Warriorsmark val-
ley and Ferguson township, in the
western end of Centre county, who are
solely dependent on the road for all
their freight shipments, both out-go-
ing and incoming.
The railroad company, however,
contends that the average daily
freight shipments between Stover ard
Fairbrook, the terminus of the line, is
only two carloads, and on that the
company is losing money. The pro-
testants, however, claim that it is il-
logical to abandon a portion of the
line and that the revenue from the
paying section (that portion of the
road from Tyrone to Stover) is suf-
ficient to make a small profit on the
whole road. The. question, however,
is now before the Public Service Com-
mission and upon its decision rests
the fate of the road.
The Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad
was built through to Pennsylvania
Furnace almost forty years ago. In
fact it was in August, 1879, when it
was opened for traffic. At that time
Pennsylvania Furnace was in full
operation. Several years later the
late Andrew Carnegie took over the
cperation of the furnace and also se-
cured the rights to the iron ore at
Scotia. The road was then extended
to Scotia and subsequently a spur was
run into the Juniata ore mines at
Tow Hill, which had also been leased
by the Carnegie interests.
With the building of the Bellefonte
furnace in the latter eighties the Buf-
falo Run railroad was built through
to State College and a branch line ex-
tended to Scotia. Both Bellefonte
furnaces have gone to the scrap heap
and also Pennsylvania Furnace, The
Juniata ore mines were long ago work-
ed out and the Scotia mines have been
abandoned these many years. In fact
only a very few houses now remain
at Scotia, where ‘once was a thriving
little town, and an effort was made
at the last session of the Legislature to
recreate it as a permanent camp
grounds for the National guard but
Mt. Gretna people voiced such a strong
protest that the bill was killed in com-
mittee.
Thirty years or more ago the Lew-
isburg and Tyrone was a good feeder
for the Pennsylvania but today its
freight shipments are wholly depend-
ent on the farming communities
through which it passes, while its
passenger traffic is nil, owing to the
universal use of motor busses and
automobiles.
Highway Department to Build Cutoff
to State College.
The Watchman has it on good au-
thority that one or more residents of
Lemont have heen informed by letter
from Highway Commissioner James
I. Stuart that the department has
definitely decided to build the much-
discussed “cutoff” north of that town
to shoiten and straighten the main
highway to State College. And this,
‘notwithstanding the many strong pro-
tests made by the business people of
Lemont. The Highway Commission-
er, however, gave assurance that the
present road through Lemont will be
maintained in good shape so that mo-
torists desiring to travel that route
can do so.
As stated several weeks ago the
new cutoff will leave the present road
at or near the road running into
Houserville and will pass through the
Tressler, Frank Wasson and Jesse
Klinger farms, coming out onto the
present road at the west side of the
Klinger farm. The new piece of road
will be a little over a mile long, and
in this distance there will be three
bridges, a stretch of swampy, meadow
land and a deep cut through a hill.
The new road will of course relieve
heavy traffic through the village of
Lemont but the people of that town
fear that it will also relieve them of
considerable business that they are
now getting.
RE —
Building a Highway Through Bear
Meadows.
The State Highway Department has
a force of men at work with caterpil-
lar tractors and road plows, steam
shovels, ete., opening up a right-of-
way for a state highway through the
Bear Meadows into the State lands in
the deep fastnesses of the Seven
mountains. The road goes in at or
near the McFarlane farm, just below
Boalsburg, passes through the histor-
ic bear meadows and crosses toward
Belleville, Mifflin county. Just how
deep into the mountain the road will
be built is not yet known. It is un-
derstood, however, that it will be of
the regulation width of twenty feet,
and when graded will be macadamized
and oiled.
——Max Kofman, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan Kofman, who is under-
going treatment in a New York hos-
pital, had another bad spell last Fri-
day which necessitated the return of
his mother to New York. Mr. Kof-
man has been with his son almost
constantly since he was taken to the |
hospital,
No Paper Next Week.
tom the Watchman will not be pub-
lished next week. The employees
will take a week’s vacation from their
arduous work and the editor will
make another try at catching a mess
of trout on Fishing creek. But the
office will be open to all our friends
and those in charge will be glad to see
any one and all who may find time to
drop in. The next issue of the Watch-
man will appear on Friday, July,
15th.
Community Nursing Service for Month
a of June.
- The second of the series of mental
health clinics was held in the Red
Cross, office, in Petrikin hall, on June
15th. Dr. Willey, psychiatrist, and
Miss Hackbush Ph. D., of the State
department of mental welfare, con-
ducted the clinic, examining six chil-
dren. . These patients were referred
to, the clinic by various welfare or-
ganizations of the town as a more
reliable means of meeting the needs
of each individual. Miss Janet Potter
and Miss Prescott were a great help
in the success of the day by using
their cars to convey patients to the
examiners.
During the month the community
nurse, Miss Anna Fairfax McCauley,
was kept: on the go all the time, as is
evidenced from the following report
of her work: Twelve visits in the in-
terest of babies under one year of
age; six pre-natal visits; two visits to
communicable disease patients; five
pre-school visits (instructive); thirty-
six nursing visits to eight sick pa-
tients; eighteen hours of industrial
nursing for the American Lime and
Stone company; attended conference
on industrial nursing held in Harris-
[ burg; attended monthly meeting of
{ Children’s Aid Society of Centre coun-
‘ty and an executive’ session of the Red
! Cross chapter.
State College Man Goes to Harris-
burg
R. H. Bell, who has been assistant
director of agricultural extension
work at State College, has been ap-
pointed director of the bureau of
plant industry in the Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture at Harris-
burg. -
In his new position Bell will have
charge of the nursery and apiary in-
specfion work, the European - corn
borer and Japanese beetle control, and
the potato wart and seed control
work. 3 bet
A native of Huntingdon : county,
Mr. Bell grew up on a farm. - He
i taught country school four years and
then attended the Pennsylvania State
, College where he was graduated from
| the agricultural school in 1910. After
four years in horticultural research
, work at the college he became county
agent of Lycoming county in 1914. In
1919 he returned to State College as
extension fruit specialist and a year
later was appointed assistant director
of agricultural extension.
! Bellefonte High School’s New Athletic
N\ Coach.
Nellefonte people interested in ath-
leticx at the High school naturally
regretted the loss from the faculty of
coach J. N. Riden, when it was an-
nounced that he had decided to’ accept
an offer to go to Sunbury the coming |
year. Mr. Riden’s successor will be
C."C. Bream Jr., of Gettysburg, who
recently graduated at Gettysburg col-
lege. :
Mr. Bream is an all-around athlete,
having played on his college football,
baseball and basket ball teams. . In
| fact he was the only ‘three letter man
in that college. In the football game
against Dickinson last year he made
a run of 90 yards for a touchdown.
Aside from his athletic prowess Mr.
Bream is regarded as the type of
young man who can teach and inspire
youth to its best endeavors. For
four years he has had charge of the
playgrounds and child entertainment
.in Gettysburg and the people of that
city are loathe to see him leave.
| Little Girl Had Narrow Escape in
! : Auto Accident.
I
ps
“ter
Betty Shope, eight year old daugh-
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shope, of
Altoona, had a narow escape from
| serious injury in an auto accident, at
Port Matilda on Sunday. The family
were visiting at Port Matilda and as
the girl was in the act of crossing the
state highway she was struck by a
car said to have been from Bellefonte,
The girl was knocked down but the
driver of the car was able to stop his
machine just as the wheel of the car
touched her neck.
She was unconscious when picked
up and was brought to the Centre
County hospital where she regained
consciousness while being examined
by a physician. For several min-
utes she was temporarily blind but
soon regained her sight and except
for some body bruises and shock was
little the worse for her experience
She was taken to her home in Altoona
on Sunday evening.
——The weather is still cool enough
to enjoy the evenings indoors, and for
good entertainment and amusement
go to the Scenic and see the ‘motion
pictures. The big programs shown
there cannot be seen anywhere élse in
Bellefonte. The pictures are all new
and up-to-date, the very best produc-
tions of the leading studios ‘in this
country and abroad. And ‘the only
way to see them all is‘to be a regular.
In accordance with an old-time cus-
BOALSBURG:HORSE SHOW
Forty, Mounts Participated in Horse-
manship Contests.
Five thousand people from Centre
and adjoining. counties motored to
Boalsburg, on Sunday afternoon, for
the first horse show of the Central
Pennsylvania Horse Show association
{held on the parade ground of Troop
la, (Boal Troop) 52nd machine gun
battalion, which was given in connec-
tion with the meeting of the officers’
club. Forty of the best mounts in
the mounted military organizations of
Bellefonte, Boalsburg, Lewistown,
Lock Haven, Tyrone, Altoona and
Clearfield were entered. Major H.
Laird Curtin, squadron commande:
and president of the association, was
in charge. it,
Among the military dignitaries
present were Major General Charles
Muir, who commanded the Twenty-
eighth division in France during the
World war but now retired; Major
General W. G. Price and Brigadier
General E. C. Shannon, of Columbia,
Pa. Prior to the contests the latter
i officer made an inspection of men and
| horses entered in the various con-
| tests. ie
The jumping contests included four
| classes, commissioned officers, non-
, commissioned officers, privates and the
free-for-all, and to the casual obsery-
, er the privates produced the best class
, of riders. The winners in the several
events were as follows:
! Officers’ class—First, Lieut. Harry
. Billett, of Troop C, Lewistown; sec-
ond, Lieut. Gay E. Duncan, Troop C;
third, Capt. Herbert S. Miller, Troop
|B, Bellefonte. °
| Non-commissioned officers’ class—-
First, Sergt. McAlerny, Troop A,
+ Boalsburg; second, Sergt. Hesford,
‘Company A, 125th mounted engineers,
. Altoona; third, Sergt. Charles Os-
borne, Troop C.
i Privates class—First, private How-
ard, Headquarters troop, Bellefonte;
| second, private Orner, Troop C, Lew-
{ istown; third, private Little, Troop B,
| Bellefonte. SL
| . Free-for-all—First, Sergt. Osborne,
i Troop C; second, Sergt. Steltz, regu-
i lar army instructor, Lewistown; third,
private Little, Troop B, Bellefonte.
As Trogp. C. undoubtedly had the
most paints to..its credit the trophy
cup will likely be awarded to that
organization. The prize in the free-
for-all, $20 in cash, went to Sergt. Os-
borne, of Lewistown troop.
Philipsburg: Child Killed by Auto Fri-
day Evening.
Ella Irene Deakin, seven year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Deakin, was struck by an automobile
driven by Edward J. Orwig, of Clear-
field county, last Friday evening, and
injured so badly that she died within
three hours. The girl was in the act
of crossing the street when she stum-
bled and fell down right in the path
{ of the machine. The driver did all he
| possibly could to stop but was unable
to avoid hitting the girl.
She ‘was taken to the Philipsburg
hospital © where an examination was
! showed that she had sustained a frac-
tured skull and internal injuries. The
accident happened at seven o’clock and
she ‘died at 9:30. The parents, two
brothers “and three sisters survive,
Burial’ was ‘made’ in the Philipsburg
cemetery on Monday afternoon.
— i ae
Youth Killed in Airplane Crash On
Way to Bellefonte.
Last Saturday’s papers carried an
account. .of the death in an airplane
crash, near. Pottsville, on Friday, of
James T. Walker, of St. Louis, Mo.,
who . two. weeks ago graduated at
Princeton, N. J. The plane was pilot-
ed by, George, L. Lambert, also of St.
Louis. The young men were on their
way . from Princeton to Bellefonte,
having arranged to meet two young
ladies, of Lock Haven, here. The lat-
ter had come up to the aviation field
to await the arrival of the young fliers
and were there when they received
word of the accident, though they
were not informed at the time of the
death of the young aviator. But the
mother of: one of the young ladies
came to Bellefonte from Lock Haven
and imparted the sad news, then took
both girls home.
et a
State College Student Killed in Coal
: "Mine. x
While working in the mine of the
Morrisdale Coal Company, at Morris-
dale, on Tuesday, Hugh Brown, 19
years old, came in contact with «
high-voltage wire and was electrocut-
ed. Brown was working near the
entrance of the mine replacing 3 cay
which had jumped the track. During
the ‘progress of the work he fell
against a trolley wire a few feet
above 'the ground and was dead when
released by fellow workmen.
Brown, whose home was in Morris-
dale, was a graduate of the Philips-
burg High school and spent the past
year as a Freshman at State College.
He had gone into the mine to work
during his vacation in order to get
money to continue his college career.
His parents. are both dead but he is
survived by three brothers and one
sister.
* lly — ——
———The Howard band, in an effort
to make some money to replete its
treasury, will hold a picnic and festi-
val tomorrow afternoon and evening.
One of the attractions will be a ball
game between the Howard and Centre
Hall teams. The patronage of the pub-
lic is solicited. 0 tae
DREW A LARGE CROWD. '
—
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Mabus and their
family have been spending two weeks in
camp, at Hecla. *
—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris and fam-
ily left, on Tuesday, for their summer
sojourn at Kennebunkport, Maine.
—Mrs. James K. Barnhart went out to
Seward, Pa., on Saturday, for a brief visit
with Dr. and Mrs. W. 8. Campbell and
family
—Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Kuhn will motor
to Williamsport to spend their Fourth of
July vacation at Mrs. Kuhn's former home
in that place.
—The Rev. and Mrs. Homer (. Knox
will have as Fourth of July house guests
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Parks and their two
children, of Halifax. ’
—Mr. and Mrs. Fullmer, of Howard St.,
with their daughter, Lucy and Evelyn
Shilling, were among the excursionists to
Atlantic City Sunday.
—George T. Bush, of Bellefonte, attend-
ed the Golden anniversary celebration of
Syria Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine,
in Pittsburgh, on Saturday.
—-J. N. Riden, the Bellefonte High
school's athletic coach the past two years,
is spending ten days at the Lewistown Boy
Scouts camp in the Seven mountains.
—Miss Ella Burkholder, of Centre Hall,
and senior at Penn State, was a member
of the all day party entertained by Mr.
and Mrs. D. Wagner Geiss, Thursday of
last week. : ! :
—Miss Eliza E. Morris is here from (o-
lumbia, 8. C., a guest at the home of her
brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Alex-
ander G. Morris, at their apartment in th
Brouse building. :
—Dr. and Mrs. A. M. Schmidt arrived
in Bellefonte Monday evening to be house
guests of Mrs. Jared Harper, while here
spending a part of the month of July with
their many friends in Centre county.
—Paul and Mahlon Foreman, Jack Yea-
ger and John Bower, Jr., left on Monday
in the Foreman car on a drive to New
York, on pleasure bent. They anticipate,
however, seeing all of their friends in and
about the city.
~—Mrs. Adolph Loeb, who is now at At-
lantic City with a nurse, is expected in
sellefonté within a short time, on her way
back to her home in Chicago. Mrs. Loeb
has been in ill health for the greater part
of the past year. :
—Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Corman have
been in from Akron, Ohio, on a visit te
their former home at Snow Shoe. Mr.
Corman came in two weeks ago for a wed-
ding in the family, Mrs. Corman joined him
later. They will réturn to Ohio Monday.
—Mrs. James B. Strohm and daughter,
Mrs. Lola Person, of Trenton, N. J." and
Mrs. William Kerr and daughter, Mrs.
Elmer Williams, of Chicago, ‘all of whom
have been visiting friends at Centre Hall,
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. Wagner
Geiss last Thursday.
—Mrs. Bruce S. Burlingame arrived
here, Friday, from Casanovia, N. Y. to
make one of her frequent visits with her
mother, Mrs. H. C. Valentine. The illness
of her aunt, Miss Mary Valentine, who has
not been well for several weeks, is partly
the reason for Mrs. Burlingame's visit at
this time.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis M. Bottorf, with
their daughter and two sons, Mary Kath-
erine, Jacob and Robert, left vesterday on
a drive to Columbus, Ohio, for a visit with
Mr. Bottorf's brother-in-law and sister,
the Rev. and Mrs. Robert Reed and their
family. Mr Bottorf and his family expect
to be gone for a week.
—Mr. and Mrs. Charles MeClellan Jr.,
returned home a week ago from a drive to
Youngstown, Ohio, where they had spent
a week visiting with relatives. Among the
friends whom they were with during
their stay was Mrs. Hollabaugh. formerly
Miss Esther Johnson, of Bellefonte, who is
anticipating a July visit to Bellefonte,
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. I.
Johnson.
—Miss Mary ickenroth has gone to
Reading to spend the month of July with
her sister, Mrs. KE. . Carpenter Jr., in-
tending to return to accept a position in
the engineering department at Penn State
the first of August. Her mother, Mrs.
Kdward KEckenroth, now completing
plans for making her home at State Col-
lege, also, consequently the FEckenroths
will move there from Bellefonte very short-
ly.
— Betty Gates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward L. Gates, of Johnstown, is ex-
pected in Bellefonte tomorrow to spend
the month of July with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. IL. Gates and Mrs.
Salinda Shutt, as well as other relatives.
Mrs. Gates and her two younger children,
Edward Lindley and Martha Marie ex-
pect to come to Bellefonte about the mid-
dle of the month while Mr. Gates will join
them later for his week’s vacation,
~—Mr. and Mrs. Irvin O. Noll, of Lands-
downe, are here for part of the summer
with Mrs Noll's mother, Mrs. Martin
Fauble. Mr. Noll is devoting his vacation
to work on his Doctor's degree and has
found that the summer course in French
at The Pennsylvania State College is so
exceptional as to offer just the opportuni-
ty he sought. So that while it is in ses-
sion Mrs Noll will have the advantage of a
nice long visit home and he that of com-
bining study with the pleasure of the
visit, as well.
is
--The Misses Louise and Eleanor Barn-
hart, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. James K.
Barnhart, left Bellefonte last Friday for a
month’s vacation. Going to Newark, N.
Y., they were joined by two girl friends
on a motor trip to Schenectady, where
Miss Eleanor stopped for a visit with her
sister, Mrs. John Harper, the others going
to a summer camp for girls on a lake in
New Hampshire where they were joined
by three other college friends. Before re-
turning home the Misses Barnhart will
visit their brother, Philip 8. Barnhart and
family, in Springfield, Mass., while Miss
Louise will also attend the wedding of a
girl friend at Newark, N. ¥.
—Dr. and Mrs. Albert ‘EK. Blackburn
drove over from Fishertown Sunday,
where they had been for a short time
visiting at Dr. Blackburn's former home.
The Doctor, with his daughter, Bliza and
Miss Daisy Brisbin, then left Monday for
the drive to Philadelphia, Mrs. Blackburn
remaining here with Col. and Mrs. J. L.
Spangler for her usual summer visit. Miss
Brisbin and Miss Fliza Blackburn had
both been guests at the Spangler home
for a part of June, while Albert Blackburn
Jr, who is at summer school at Penn
State, expects to spend much of his time
with his grandmother and Col. Spangler
during the remainder of the summer.
‘
‘
—Miss Blanche Malene, of Milesburg,
" spent Sunday with fFiends in Lock Haven.
—Mrs. E. H. Richard has béen enter-
taining her cousin, Mrs. Krebs, 6f Norrig-
town.
—Mrs. A. B. Sutherland, of Huntingdon,
was a guest on Sunday of Dr. and Mrs.
C. J. Newcomb, at Rockview.
—Miss Lucy Potter went to Atlantié,
City, yesterday, intending to spend a part
of July there and with friends in Phila-
delphia.
—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fisher, of Centre
Hall, and Mr. and Mrs. John Mitchell, of
Lemont, were in town shopping yesterday
morning.
—Mrs. 8. M. Nissley and her mother,
Mrs. Miller, returned to Bellefonte within
the week from a weeks visit with relatives
in Washington, D. C.
—Mr. and Mrs. Roy Uhl, of Pleasant
Gap, took advantage of the Atlantic City
excursion on Sunday to make a brief visit
with friends at the shore.
—Mrs. Margaret H. Orwig came to
Bellefonte, Monday, from State College, to
be with Mrs. Newcomer Snyder, on east
Curtin street, for an’ indefinite time.
—Mrs. Kilpatrick, of New York city,
who spent a part of last week at the home
of her step-son, Dr. J. J. Kilpatrick, on
Curtin street, returned last Saturday.
—John Bair and his son “Jimmie” are
spending Mr. Bair’s vacation at thew
former home in Philadelphia, having gone
down last Thursday and will return today.
—Miss Annie Miller, of Salona, has been
spending this week in Bellefonte with Mrs.
R. G. H. Hayes, while Mrs. Hayes’ daugh-
ter, Miss Ellen, is absent on a business
trip.
—Charles McCurdy Seott, of the First
National bank, left for St. Louis, Mo., last
night. There he will join a college friend
for a motor trip through Michigan during
bis vacation period. 3
—Mrs. W. H. Dahl and her two sons
are expected here within a few days,
coming east from Minneapolis for a visit
with Mrs. Dahl's uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. T. Clayton Brown.
—James Cook, who has been spending
the month of June in Bellefonte, with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cook, is ar-
ranging to leave July 10th, to return to his
home near Colorado Springs.
—Mrs. Saul Auerbach and her little
daughter Lenore will arrive from New
York today to spend part of the summer
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Cohen, of North Spring street.
—Mr. and Mrs. Linn Blackford were
over from Huntingdon, Tuesday, on one
of their frequent drives to Bellefonte, here
to spend a part of the day with Mrs.
Blackford’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Garthoff
and other relatives. :
—Mr. and Mrs. J. Dorsey Hunter have
been entertaining Mrs. Hunter's brother
and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rerick
of Evansville, Ind., who have been a
motor trip east visiting relatives. Mg. and
Mrs. Rerick arrived in Bellefonte Sunday.
—F. W. Topelt, of Brooklyn, will join
Mrs. Topelt, in Bellefonte to-morrow to
spend his two weeks summer vacation here
as a guest of Mrs, Topelt’s mother, Mrs. .
S. Brouse. Mrs. Topelt has been in Belle-
fonte for two months.
—M. IL. Altenderfer was in Bellefonte
yesterday between trains, on hig way
from Jersey Shore to Sunbury, where he
will visit for a week or two, with his
daughter, Mrs. Charles R. Wynn, Mr,
Altenderfer upon leaving Sunbury will go
to his new home at Norwich, N. Y.
—Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler Scudder, and
their daughter Hortense, drove here from
Philadelphia, Saturday, Mr. and Mrs.
Scudder making the return drive the be-
ginning of the week, leaving their daugh-
ter in Bellefonte, at the home of Mrs.
Charles Smith, on Bishop street. Mrs.
Scudder, before her marriage, was Miss
Hortense Seixas,
—Mrs. Albert Hoy
daughter, Louise Harris, will come to
Bellefonte tomorrow from Chester, to be
guests, for a part of the month of July,
of Mr. Hoy's sisters, the Misses Anna and
Mary Hoy and Mrs. Reynolds. Nannette,
Mrs. Hoy's elder . danghter, has gone to
Maine, to spend July and August at a
summer camp for girls. :
—Mr. and Mrs. Myron M. Cobb had with
them for two days of the week their son,
A. C. Cobb, with the Nickle Plate R. RB.
Co., at Conneaut, Ohio. Mr. Cobb motored
in with friends, Sunday, returning to his
work Tuesday. Warren, a younger son
who is spending his school vacation at
Lome, will be employed by the Keystone
Power during the summer.
and her younger
—Mrs. Margaret Hutchinson, of east
Howard street, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
John T. McCormick, at State College, for a
couple of weeks. Mrs. Hutchinson will
celebrate her eighty-eighth birthday anni-
versary on the 12th of July and is re-
markably active for her years. Mrs. Mc-
Cormick’s guests this week also include
Mrs. Ellen Miller and Miss Caroline Me-
Closkey, of Potters Mills.
—Mrs. William McGowan and her
daughter, Miss Agnes, will leave on Sun-
day for Rochester, N. Y., where they ex-
pect to visit for a week or ten days with
Mrs. McGowan's sister, Mrs. King. Dur-
ing their absence the McGowan home,
west of town, will be in charge of Mrs.
Barry Case, of Washington, D. C., who
with Mr. Case will drive to Bellefonte
today to spend the first two weeks of July
at Mrs. Case's former home.
—Mrs. James B. Lane, with her grand-
daughter Aurelia, drove to Gettysburg,
Monday, in one of Richard Lane's cars.
Aurelia stopping there for a visit with
friends while Mrs. Lane went on to Sum-
mit, N. J. for her sister and daughter,
Mrs. Charles Shaffner and Miss Anne.
Mrs. Lane, with the Shaffners will then
80 to Gettysburg for Aurelia, the party
coming to Bellefonte from there to be
guests of Mrs. Lane at her home on Linn
street.
—“Jim"” Harris will return to his home
in Reading, Sunday, terminating his one
week vacation of the year. “Jim” left
Bellefonte almost twenty-years ago and
regrets it had not been thirty, as his
business progress would have been pro-
portionately that much greater. At pres-
ent he is in charge of the boy's depart-
ment at the “Crowell & Kech” store, of
Reading, one of the largest and best
known men’s clothing houses in Pennsyl«
vania. During his stay in Bellefonte Mr.
Harris spent his time with his brother,
Mardman P. Harris, and with Mrs. Harris’
‘mother, Mrs. Charles Smith.
eesti
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