Pn , TWO MOTOR BUS LINES MASONIC GATHERING . HOSPITAL AUXILIARY REPORT. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. February Meeting of the Bellefonte Chapter D. A. R. Demormaiic;iaty Bellefonte: Pa., February 24, 1928 NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —John T. Harnish is reported as ‘being quite ill at his home near Snow Shoe Intersection. —DMiss Marie Doll has been ap- pointed clerk to business manager W. ‘'H. Brown, at the Centre County hos- pital, entering upon her duties there -on Monday morning. —The annual concert of the Belle- fonte community orchestra, under the direction of Mrs. Louis Schad, will be given in the court house Wednesday evening, April 11th. —A Lester Sheffer, of Milroy, is out for a third term in the Legisla- ture from Mifflin county, and Amos ‘G. Cole, of Lewistown, has also thrown his hat into the ring as a can- didate. Both men were former resi- dents of Bellefonte. —A meeting of the board of con- trol of the Central Pennsylvania's Volunteer Firemen’s association was held at Clearfield, last Friday after- noon, and August 1st and 2nd select- ed as the dates for the holding of the 1928 convention in Clearefild. —On her way to Graysville from ‘Hollidaysburg, last Friday, to attend the funeral of her brother, the late «Cyrus B. McWilliams, Miss Mary Me- Williams, a guest at the Presbyterian home, fell at the Tyrone station and fractured a bone in her left arm. She went on to the funeral, however, and returned home on Monday. —>Sam Gordon who had been sen- tenced to pay $25 per month towards the support of his wife and family, failed to keep faith with the Court .and was brought in vesterday and sentenced to one year in the peniten- tiary. The sentence was suspended, however, for as long a time as he continues to pay the $25 monthly. + —L J. Dreese, of Lemont, is rather a plunger when it comes to buying autemobiles. Within the week he bought an Erskine sport coupe for his. daughter, Miss Miriam, and then, so that she would have nothing or her pater, ordered a Studebaker Pres- ident straight-eight state sedan for himself. Both cars were bought through the Beezer agency. —Now that the new State theatre is open and the people of Bellefonte have had an opportunity to see what a wonderful place of amusement it is, it has been drawing crowds every evening. The pictures being shown there are all the best that can be procured and well worth the price of admission. Down at the Scenic pie- tures are shown at popular prices and meeting with the approval of all who see them, ~—While working at the Port Ma- tilda brick works, on Friday after- moon of last week, George Gummo ‘was painfully injured and will prob- ably be laid up for some time. He was working on the end of a tram- “way when a small dump car ran down ‘the track wild. Before Gummo could get out of the way the ear hit him 2nd pinned him against a bumping post at the end of the track. Deep gashes were cut in both thighs. He was taken home where his injuries were dressed by a physician. ——Shortly after eleven o'clock, on ‘Wednesday, Russell Hosterman, hard- ware dealer of Millheim, found it ‘necessary to be in Altoona on short notice to meet a business engagement. ‘There’ were no trains at that time ‘and an auto would not get him there quick enough, so he called up Henry ‘Noll and engaged him to taxi him up by airplane. Henry was Johnny on the spot. He flew to Millheim, took Mr. Hosterman aboard and landed him in the Mountain city in time to meet his engagement. He also had luncheon there and Henry flew him home early in the afternoon. The ‘moral is, if you are in a hurry to go anywhere talk to Henry. —J. D. Mitchell, caretaker of the airmail beacon on Point McCoy, had a narrow escape from carbon mon- oxide poisoning, one night last week, and can still feel the effects of the poison gas. While sitting in the small cabin which houses the gaso- line motor and other lighting equip- ment Mr. Mitchell experienced a sud- den dizziness and other peculiar sen- sations and lost no time in getting out of doors into the air. He grad- ually recovered sufficiently to continue on the job but the fumes from the gasoline motor had been dense enough that he would probably have been overcome in a few minutes had he not gone out into the air when he did. As it was he was slightly ill for several days. —Dr. Ernest Smith, of Spanish "Guinea, West Africa, who has been telling to crowded houses all over the "United States, the thrilling story of + his experience as physician and sur- .geon in the jungles, is to speak in the Presbyterian chapel, Bellefonte, on Tuesday evening, February 28th, at 7.830 Dr. Smith will have with him a number of fascinating African curios, one of them a four pound brass ring, worn as an ornament for many years by an African woman and taken from her neck by Dr. Smith after it had cut deep into her throat. Hand painted slides will illustrate the strange life and customs of the West African people. The general public is very cordially invited to come to hear Dr. Smith who is spoken of as one of the most interesting speakers on the American platform. A silver offering will be lifted. MERGED INTO ONE. Glenn M. Johnston, of Woolrich, Buys Emerick Motor Bus Line. A deal was closed last Thursday evening whereby Glenn M. Johnston, of Woolrich, president of the John- ston Motor Bus Line, became the purchaser of all the equipment of the Emerick Motor Bus Line, operating between Bellefonte and State College, Milesburg and Lock Haven. The Johnston Motor Bus Line at present. operates motor busses between Lock Haven, Jersey Shore and Williams- port, and application has been made to the Public Service Commission for its approval of the Johnston line tak- ing over and operating the lines now covered by the Emerick company. Mr. Johnston did not purchase the real estate but has leased the same and it is his intention to move hers as soon after the approval of the sale has been given as possible, which will probably be early in March. He will occupy the Emerick residence, on Spring street, adjoining the garage, | now occupied by J. T. Storch and family, The purchase price was not : made public. It is understood that Mr. Johnston will retain the employees of the Em- erick Motor Bus Line with the ex- ception of J. T. Storch, who will continue in business with Mr. Emer- ick. Mr. Johnston has been operating bus lines since 1918, and has been quite suceessful, and under his su- pervision the traveling public will be given as good accommodation as it has received in the past. Bill Emerick, president of the Em- erick Motor Bus Line, started opera- tions in Wilkes-Barre in 1912. In June, 1913, he came to Bellefonte and started the line here. In 1914 he was irstrumental in starting lines between Altoona and Hollidaysburg and Phil- ipsburg and Osceola Mills. In Jan- uary, 1915, a line was started at Clearfield which was later sold to the Fullington Auto Bus Co. In June, 1915, a line was started between Ha- gerstown and Sharpsburg, Md., and he also assisted in starting a line be- tween Honesdale and Hawley, in Wayne county. He also operated a line between Barnesboro and Cherry Tree, but all these lines were disposed of prior to 1920, since which time most of his efforts have been devoted to the Bellefonte line. In 1924 he filed an application with the Public Service Commission for permission to operate a line between Harrisburg and Reading, but protests were filed by the Reading Railroad company and the application was re- fused. Mr. Emerick represents the White company in the counties of Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Union and Sny- der and will continue the sale and service of White trucks in that ter- ritory. In this business he will be assisted by J. T. Storch. bt nr A Merchandise Fair Propesed. The asscciated business men of Bellefonte met, on. Wednesday night, to consider holding a merchandise fair here during’ the last week in March or early in April. If the project is carried through it will be held in the Armory, which will be divided into booths, thirty-four be- ing the approximate number that can be laid out on the floor space there. The plans contemplate an exhibit every night, except Saturday, during the week. A good orchestra is to be engaged and numerous merchandise prizes offered so that there will be drawings for them every hour every evening. The idea is not so much a sales en- deavor as it is a desire to promote contact and good-will between the buyers and sellers of the community. | Each exhibitor will make a display of the specially seasonable articles he has to offer for the spring and summer trade and with all grouped together the public will have opportunity to do its window shopping very thoi- oughly in an hour or so, as well as be nicely entertained while doing it. The fair, of course, is contingent on securing enough exhibitors to bear the cost of it, which is estimated at about $1500.00. Recent Births, Another little son was born to Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Storch, at the Centre County hospital, last Thursday even- ing. The little fellow has been named Donald Richard and in due time will make a fine playmate for Jackie. If any mistakes were made at the P. R. R. freight depot in Bellefonte, last Friday, they should be over- looked, because on that morning chief clerk Harry Smith became the father of a little daughter. Ordinarily this is not an unusual event, as such events are expected with due regular- ity in all households, but when the fact is considered that Mr. and Mrs. Smith have been married twenty-two | years and this is their first child it is more than unusual, it’s remarkable. The little girl has been named Bar- bara Ann. ER hn] —Last Friday afternoon two of the big Fokker monoplanes were set down on the Bellefonte landing field long enough to be replenished with gas and oil. The ships were piloted by Floyd Bennett and Bernt Balchen, two of the fliers who accompanied Rich- ard E. Byrd on his flight to the North Pole, and also over the Atlantic last summer. The planes were being tak- en to Winnipeg, Canada, for Cana- dian purchasers, and it was Balchen’s second trip west with one of them. A CELEBRATION OF 60th ANNIVERSARY. A brief item in the Watchman last week, made mention of the winter con- ‘clave of the Knights Templar of this district held here on Wednesday, but the gathering was one of the greatest in Masonic circles held in Bellefonte in many years, and was attended with peculiar significance inasmuch as it, was, also in celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the constitution of Constans Commandery, No. 33, Knights Templar. Because of this fact Boyd A. Musser, of Scranton, grand commander of the Grand Lodge | of Pennsylvania, was present in per- | son and had his entire staff here, which included John A. Murphy, of | Pittsburgh, deputy grand commander; B. Frank Myers, of Wilkes-Barre, generalissimo; James H. Chickering, of Oil City, grand captain general; Clyde P. Love, of Harrisburg, grand senior warden; Maurice E. White, of Norristown, grand junior warden; Milton S. McDowell, State College, grand standard bearer; William §. Conwell, of Brownsville, grand sword bearer; Charles I. Derick, of Bell- 1 wood, grand warden; Roswell S. Me- ' Mullen, of Carbondale, grand captain of the guard; Louis U. Strassberger, , of Philadelphia, grand marshal; Ben- jamin F. Seiger, of Erie, grand her- "ald, and George Benner, of Curwens- ville, division commander. | District No. 10 is composed of Lew- "istown No. 26, Bellefonte No. 33, . Huntingdon No. 65 and Moshannon ‘No. 74, of Philipsburg. The cere- monies began at two o'clock on | Wednesday afternoon. The full form | opening was impressively exemplified | by Constans Comamndery. The Or- {der of the Red Cross was put on by | Huntingdon, and the Order of Malta in full’ form by Moshannon Com- | mandery, Philipsburg. | At 5.30 o'clock a Virginia ham | (baked) repast was served in the I banquetting hall of Masonic temple, | the ceremonies being resumed at 7.30 | when Lewistown Commandery exem- i plified the work of the Order of the Temple. Among the candidates was Milton S. McDowell J r., of State Col- lege, who received all the orders, which had special significance be - cause of the fact that his father is a member of the Grand Commander’s staff. : Upwards of one hundred visiting Knights were present, quite a number being here from outside the district, and all were lavish in their expression of appreciation for the entertainment given. Constans Commandery was consti- tuted in 1868 by Constance Curtin and D. G. Bush. It has had sixty years of unqualified success and quite a number of men on its rolls have at- tained prominence in the life of ithe State and nation. The committee who had charge of last Wednesday’s gathering was composed of Louis S. Schad, John J. Light, Lief Olsen, W. B. Rankin and George T. Bush. ——e eee to | { Cathclic Fair and Bazaar a Great Success, | The big fair and bazaar held by the ladies of the Catholic church in the Knights of Columbus hall, four days {last week, was one of the most suc- | cessful events of the kind ever pulled [off in Bellefonte. Notwithstanding the fact that articles valued at sev- eral hundred dollars were given away | the net proceeds of the bazaar were. [ $2600. The leading prize winners were as follows: First prize, a gold watch, John iJ urkovie; second prize, davenport (table, Andy Sinco; third prize, im- perted tea set, John Kushwara; ton of | coal each to Miss Alice Dorworth, Mrs. Alfred Beezer and Mr. McGhee; fitted suit case, Mrs. Fred Vogt; man’s traveling bag, Henry Kohl- becker; silk kimono, Mrs. Fred Vogt; hall light, burgess Hard P. Harris; shawl, Col. W. Fred Reynolds; $10 worth gas, Miss Anne Fox; fifty gal- lons gas, A. Fauble; motor oil, John Garis; auto reel light, Miss Louise Carpeneto; auto tire, Joe Cushing; oc- casional chair, Miss Mae Toner; hat box, Mrs. Lide Toner; linen table cloth and napkins, Mrs. Catherine Garbrick; child’s rain coat and cap, M. C. Hansen. Of course, there were a lot of smaller presents given away but the above are the principal ones, The ladies of St. John’s Catholic parish wish to thank all the friends who helped to make their bazaar so wonderfully successful. They wish, especially, to thank the business houses for the beautiful donations, and they remember with deep grati- tude the non-Catholic friends who at- tended and patronized the bazaar. Concert at Milesburg Tonight. Mrs. F. C. McClure, of Indiana, Pa., who has attained quite a reputa- tion as a soloist and reader, will give an entertainment in the Presbyterian | church, at Milesburg, this (Friday) ' evening, at 8 o’clock. The admission will be 35 and 15 cents. Mrs. Me- i Clure is no stranger in Mileshurg. As | Miss Elizabeth Stroop, before her ' marriage, she was, the primary teach- ler in the Milesburg schools, and be- | cause of this fact all her friends should go and hear her. In this way {they will also be helping the cause {of the church. —Lester L. Meek, of this place, who | is now with the Prudential Insurance | company, was one of a number who took examinations in Williamsport last Saturday with the hope of qual- ifying for a license as agent. Annual Report of the Woman’s Aux- iliary of the Centre County Hos- pital for 1927. The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Cen- tre County hospital is composed of members from the different towns of Centre county, nct including Rush township or Philipsburg. There are two kinds of members, active mem- {bers who pay a membership fee of $1.00 and associate members who pay a fee of 50c. We have now a mem- bership, including both classes, of ap- proximately 900 members. The Auxiliary is a very important branch of the hospital. It supplies all linens used at the hospital and nurses’ home. From January 1st, 1927, to January 1st, 1928, the following linens were delivered to the hospital and nurses’ home: 283 Sheets 72 Pillow Cases 3 Counterpanes 12 Ether Squares 48 Abdominal Bands 2 Delivery Jackets §4 Blankets 6 Covers for Car- riers 18 Yards Pillow 12 Covers for Wheeij Ticking Chairs 2 Leather Pillows 120 Diapers 108 Bed Shirts 4S Baby Dresses 10 Doctor's Gowns 24 Baby Shirts 6 Nurse's Gowns SO Tea Cloths 140 Wash Cloths 9 Table Cloths 60 Huck Towels 60 Napkins 56 Turkish Towels 82 Dresser Scarfs 120 Operating Towels 3 Pairs Scrim Cur- 10 Operating Points tains We have on hand the following lin- ens to be delivered to the hospital as needed: 4 Operating Points ST Sheets 4) Ether Squares 72 Pillow Cases 3 Abdominal Bands 335 Bed Shirts 2 Delivery Jackets 4 Doctor's Gowns 56 Diapers 4 Nurse's Gowns 92 Tea Cloths 216 Wash Cloths 5 Table Cloths 143 Huck Towels 76 Napkins 75 Operating Towels The Auxiliary furnishes the pins for the nurses of the graduating” class each year, and also takes care of the commencement and reception for the graduates and friends. The nurses are all remembered at Christmas time by the Auxiliary. . The Auxiliary finished the .room known as the “Doctor’s Room?” at the hospital. Installed the electric lights, purchased curtains and furnished more than half of the amount of mon- ey necessary for the furniture for said room. The treasurer reported the follow- ing for the year: Balance Jan. 1st, 1927..% 694.53 Total rec’pts during year 1905.80 $2600.33 Cost of Limens........... $ 652.78 Nurses Commencement and Christmas .............. 52.95 Cost of two Rumamge Sules,............00 re. 18.95 lug for Nurse's Home... 24.00 Furniture for Doctor's A PRE 617.28 Donations to Hospital. .... 738.18 $2000.44 Balance on hand, - January Ist, A028, $ 500.89 The sewing for the hospital has been done by women from the fol- lowing towns: Aaronsbur , Millheim, Spring Mills, Centre Hall, Boalshurg, State College, Lemont, Unionville, Zi- cn, Pleasant Gap, Rockview and Belle- fonte. The mending is done at the hospital each week during the year by mem- bers from the different churches in Bellefonte. Respectfully sumbitted, Mrs. W. HARRISON WALKER. Secretary. ef eee. Two Young Men Injured When Train Hits Auto. Herman Fye, aged 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Fye, of Boggs town- ship, was very seriously injured and Walter Jacobs, aged 21, was also painfully hurt when the automobile in which they were riding was run down by a fast freight train on the Bald Eagle Valley railroad crossing at the Milesburg station. The car in which the young men were riding, which belonged to and was being driven by Fye, was rolled along the track for some distance and literally smashed to pieces. How either man escaped instant death is little short of a miracle. The accident happened about seven o'clock in the morning, and as it was plenty light enough to see at that time, it is inexplicable why the driv- er of the car did not see the moving train in time to stop his car. It is just’ possible that he failed to look for a train at that time in the morn- ing. Both young men were brought to the Centre County hospital for treatment, iets pp State College to Get Sunday Mail at Last. For the first time in the history of the Pennsylvania State College, stu- dents and residents of the town are to have Sunday mail service begin- ning February 26, postmaster George Glenn, of that place, has announced. At present there are no mails in or lout of State College from Saturday evening to Monday morning, and the new arrangement follows a petition from the student council and college officials. Mail will arrive on Sunday | morning and be made available to box holders, and there will be an out- | going mail closing at 5:45 in the af- ternoon, the same as week days. The | action is regarded as a great conven- ience to students and residents. ————— i or——————— —A Union prayer service for Missions, will be observed Friday evening, at 7.30 in St. John’s Re- formed church. Everybody welcome. AREER —DMiss Stella Cooney is with Miss Louise McMullen, who has been ill at her home at Hecla for several weeks. —J. P. Fretz, manager of the new State theatre, was an overnight business visitor to Towanda, the early Dart of the week. —Miss Janet Potter spent yesterday in Williamsport, having gone down to con- sult Dr. Haskins with regard to her eyes. —Mr. and Mrs. William Furey were in from Pittsburgh, for an over Sunday vis- it with Mr. Furey’s mother, Mrs. Mor- ris Furey. —George Ingram, manager of the Belle- fonte Fuel and Supply plant, bas been ill at his home on east Lamb street for the past ten days. —Mr. and Mrs. John Sommerville ar- rived home, Tuesday, from their motor trip to Florida, the most southern point vis- ited being Miami. —DMiss Ella Young, of Phoenix avenue, is entertaining Mrs. James O'Bryan, of Pittsburgh. Mrs. O'Bryan was in Belle- fonte for the week. —James H. Potter left Monday, to spend several weeks at Atlantic City, ex- pecting this visit to the shore to be of benefit to his health. —DMiss Harley Simmonds, of Beech Creek, is in Bellefonte spending the week- end with her sister, Miss Verna Smith, at the D. Paul Fortney home. —Mr. and Mrs. Gillespie and their son, who spent the past week-end in Belle- fonte, were here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Fretz, at their home on east Bishop street. —Miss Mary Cooney has been in Tyrone this week, called there by the death of her cousin, John McDonnell, whose body will be brought to Bellefonte tomorrow for burial. —Mrs. Louis Grauer is. spending the af- terpart of the winter with her son, Ed- ward and her two sisters, in Philadelphia, having gone east a month ago expecting to be there until spring. —Mrs. Richard Lutz; has had as a house guest during the week, Mrs. Laura Holderman, Mr. Uriah H. Housel and John F. Ferguson, all of Altoona. Mrs. Lutz, who has been ill at-her east Howard street home, is slowly growing better. —DMrs. Albert E. Blackburn is here from Philadelphia visiting with her mother, Mrs. J. L. Spangler and Col. Spangler, at their home on Allegheny street. Mrs. Hastings, who had been a house guest of the Spanglers for several weeks, returned to Harrisburg, Saturday. —Mrs. Miller is here from Hagerstown for a visit with her brother, William Stewart and the family, at the Stewart home on West Linn street. Her coming to Bellefonte at this time was that she might be with Mr. Stewart for a while before he leaves next week to return to Seattle, : ~—Henry 8. Linn went to Philadelphia, Tuesday, for the annual meeting and luncheon of the Society of Cincinnati held at the Bellevue. Mr, Linn has spent the week in Philadelphia and will spent Sun- day with his sisters in Williamsport, ex- pecting to return to Bellefonte the early part of next week. —Miss Sue Garner was a guest of friends on a drive from Philadelphia on Wednesday, the other members of the party going on to Centre Hall, where they will be with friends until Sunday. Miss Garner is spending the time in Bellefonte with her sister, Mrs. Bottorf, at the Bot- torf home on Spring street. ~—Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Young and their three children. will leave Harrisburg next week, to return to Meadville to make their home, the change carrying with it a promotion for Mr. Young, it being their second time in Meadville as well as Har- risburg. Mrs. Young is known better here prokably, as Miss Lois Kirk. —Mrs. Kline, wife of the well known shoe man, Earl L. Kline, of State College, spent a part of Saturday afternoon trans- acting business and doing some buying in Bellefonte. Mrs. Kline is now entertain- ing her mother, Mrs. W. H. Roush, of Altoona, who will be at State College for the greater part of the late winter. —Miss Anna Cook went out to Pitts- burgh, Friday, taking with her her niece, Barbara McDowell. Barbara, who had been in Bellefonte with her grandfather and aunt, Chas. ¥. Cook and Miss Anna, since last fall, will remain there with her mother, while Miss Cook will visit with her sister for several weeks, before re- turning home, —Mrs. Grant Pifer came in from Wil- kinsburg, Monday, for a ten days’ visit with her sisters and brothers here, with Mrs. Wagner, at Boalsburg, and with rel. atives of her husband, the late Grant Pi- fer, at Howard. Mrs. Pifer being an ac- tive member of (he Eastern Star, was among the out-of-town guests at the ban- i quet last night. —Mrs. Emery Woomer and her grand daughter, Dolores Weaver, were over from Tyrone last week, for a day’s visit with the child's paternal grand-parents, Mr. “nd Mrs. George Weaver and with Mrs, Woomer's daughter, Mrs. Furman Byers, of Burrows street. The child which is less than a year old, is Mr. and Mrs. Weaver's only grandchild. —Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Grove drove to Bellefonte Tuesday from Pittston, to spend a week or more here with Mr, Grove's parents, Mr. and Mrs, D. A. Grove, and his two small daughters, who have made their home with their grandparents, since the death of their mother several years ago. Mr. Grove is now superin. tendent of one of the big construction companies working on the State highway in Luzerne county, following a period of SIX years service with the Highway de- partment. —Among the Watchman office callers, on Wednesday, was John B. Griffin, a well known business man, of Tyrone, who, with Mrs. Griffin, took advantage of the Wash- ington birthday holiday to take an auto- mobile ride to Bellefonte sand through Buffalo, Run and Halfmoon valleys, Mr. Griffin is a son of the late J. Hile Griffin, of Stormstown, who during his life was the Democratic leader in Half- moon township, and the son has inherited many of the political and business traits of his revered father. —————————— —With president John S. Walker confined to his home with illness, and several other members indisposed in various ways, not enough borough councilmen reported for the regular meeting on Monday evening. It was illustrative of the harmony “within the ranks” that this unit, the Bellefonte chapter D. A. R., had for the entertainment feature of its February program an address on “National Defense,” the address was delivered by Capt. Weeks, the officer in command of our local cavalrymen —for it is fully twelve years since the national society D. A. R. took a stand for national defense, not for militarism, so-called, but for protection through armament or rea- sonable preparation. The D, A, R. believe that we are much more in the way of having peace if it is known that we are in a position to protect our own, to equip our defend- ers in an emergency. During the business part of the meeting the regent, Mrs. William Frear, of State College, presiding, Miss Helen E. Overton, an ex-regent of the chapter and an honorary State regent, reported a proffer of a num- ber of volumes of Civil war records —the offer was accepted; Miss Kate D. Shugert, an ex-regent (chapter) reported for the magazine committee several new subscriptions to the So- ciety’s monthly publication; Mrs. John I. Olewine, historian, announced gifts of books, and delegates were elected to the Continental Congress to be held in Washington, D. C., in April. The hostesses who entertained so pleasantly on this occasion, at the Brockerhoff house, were Mrs. John Curtin, Mrs. David Dale, Mrs. A. O. Furst, Mrs. J. C. Furst, Mrs. W. F. Reynolds and Mrs. W, Wayne Rogers, the two latter in absentia, EE Centre County Library Extension Committee Meets at Court House. At a meeting of the county li- brary extension committee, held in the library of the court house, Tues- day afternoon, the commissioners and county superintendent were both there to hear Julia Wright Merrill, of Chicago, executive assistant in li- brary extension, in the United States and Canada, and Anna McDonald, head of library extension in Pennsyl- vania, discuss the question of a rural public library for Centre county, The members of the committee present were Mrs. Arthur W. Cowell, chairman, Mrs. J. Ben Hill, Mrs. F. W. Haller, Mrs. David Duncan, of State College; Mrs, Harm, of Boals- burg; Mrs. Randolph Miller, of Mill- heim, Mrs. Julia Parsons, of Union- ville; Mrs, George W, Magargel, of Pleansant Gap; Mrs. J. Will Mayes, of Howard; Mrs. Beach and Mrs. John S. Walker, of Bellefonte. From here Miss Merrill and Miss McDonald went to State College to continue their talk before the Wom- an’s club in open meeting, the same evening. Thirty-one women from Bellefonte and Pleasant Gap were guests of the State College club and were very deeply interested in the subject as presented concerning the rural public library service. rr — ete. Eastern Star Banqueted at the Bush House Last Night. The ladies of Bellefonte chapter, Eastern Star, held their annual ban- quet at the Bush house last night. It was purely a social affair, so that rone of the district or State officers were present. Covers were laid for one hundred members and their friends and after the various courses of the elaborate menu had been served George H. Ha- zel, who had been selected by the la- dies to act as toast master, called for order and introduced the several post- prandial speakers who were on the program. John Knapik’s “Imperial” orcestra played during the hours the party lingered at the tables and the later part of the evening was devoted to cards; the spacious halls of the hotel having been given over to pro- vide room for the many tables that were in play. : The committee in charge comprised Mrs. Earl Hoffer, Mrs. Ebon Bower, Mrs, J. - 1. Barlett, Mrs. Millard Hartswick, Mrs. Fred Hollobaugh and Miss Caroline McClure. eee. Irvin—Deitrick—Miss Mary Dei- trick, of 1214 Memorial Ave., Wil- liamsport, and Mr. Charles Arthur Irvin, of Julian, were married at the parsonage of St. John’s Lutheran church, in Williamsport, by the pas- tor, Rev. A. W. Smith, on Tuesday, February 14. Immediately after the ceremony the bride and groom departed for a wed- ding trip to eastern cities after which they will return to Julian to reside. The groom is agent of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad at that point and is the youngest brother of Dr. W. U. and E. P. Irvin, of this place. —— eee SALE REGISTER. SATURDAY, MARCH 3.—Matthew W. Goheen, executor of estate of Wil- liam M. Goheen, decd will sell at bis late home in Boalsburg, a full line of household furniture, including one New Iistate heatrola, one Dockash range, two bedroom suites, carpets, rugs, etc. Sale at 12.30 p. m. MARCH 20, Tuesday, at the home of Mrs. Leah H. Smith, on the McFarlane farm, 1 mile east of Boalsburg, 5 horses, 24 head of cattle, 10 hogs, barred-rock chickens and a full line of farm im le ments. Also some household goods. ale at 10 a. m, L. PF. Mayes, auctioneer. tet Bellefonte Grain Markets. Oerrected Weekly by 0. Y. Wagner & Ce. Wheat Oats Corn Rye Barley Buckwheat - - - .