Beworeaicatpon Bellefonte, Pa., June 1, 1928 NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —More new automobiles have been shipped into Bellefonte this spring than ever before in the history of the motor car, and so far the Chevrolet leads all other makes. —During the year 1927 eighty- eight per cent of the farmers in Cen- tre county used commercial fertilizer in the growing of crops. They are credited with having used 5,550 tons at a cost of $133,200. —The Milson and Curtis Construc- tion company, of Philipsburg, were last week awarded the contract for building 4225 feet of concrete State highway in Philipsburg and Rush township for $54,568. ~ —At a meeting of DuBois borough council, last week, it was decided to dispense with the services of both street commissioner and water com- missioner, because of the financial condition of the town. —The property of the late John T. Harnish, at Wingate, sold at public sale on Saturday, was purchased by James C. Furst Esq., for Joseph B. Baker and Jennie Breese Baker, of Pittsburgh, who will make it their summer home. . —Rev. W. B. Cox, presiding elder of this district, will preach and ad- minister the Holy Communion in the Bellefonte Evangelical church on Sunday, at 10:30 a. m. The quarter- ly conference will be held Saturday at 7.45 p. m. —Among the eighty-five young la- dies and gentlemen who will be grad- uated from Dickinson college, at Car- lisle, next Tuesday, are two from Centre county. They are the Misses Janet D. Forcey and Dorothy E. Harpter, both of Philipsburg. —Students preparing for college or other: schools can have tutoring privi- leges: this summer with Miss Mary Shoemaker, who will coach them in French, Latin or the elementary branches. Miss Shoemaker, a student at ' Trinity college, Washington, will arrive home on the 8th of June. 21-2t. —The Bell Telephone company. of Pennsylvania js making good prog- ress in rebuilding the lines broken down: by the big snow storm. The line down Nittany valley is almost completed, new poles, cross-arms, wires and all, and like progress has been made in other sections of the county. —An awning at the Hastings home, on north Alelgheny street, was de- stroyed. by fire, shortly after five o'clock on Tuesday evening, but the flames were discovered and extin- guished before any damage was done to the house. A cigaret stub thrown onto the awning is’ believed to have caused the fire. —At the annual meeting of the Grand Commandery, Knights Tem- plar of Pennsylvania, held at Reading last week, Rufus Strohm, of Scran- ton, but formerly of Bellefonte, was appointed grand warder by the new grand commander, John A. Murphy, of Pittsburgh, who suceceded Boyd A. Musser, also a former Bellefonter. —A bed fire in one of the rooms at the Bellefonte Academy, at noon, on Monday, resulted in calling out the fire department, but the flames were quickly extinguished without much damage being done. The Logans were called out, on Sunday, when lightning struck an old hay barn near the avia- tion field, which burned to the ground. —In his will the late John Ander- son, of Tyrone, bequeathed $25,000 outright to the Howard Gardner post, No. 281, American Legion. He also left $10,000 to the Tyrone Boy Scouts council, the principal to be invested and the Scouts to have use of the 2n- nual income. A like amount, under similar conditions, was left to the P. RR. Y.M.C. A. —John J. Reginold, manager of the Fleisher dollar store since it was opened in Bellefonte two years ago, will vacate the Emerick house, on north Spring street, today and send his household goods to Camden, N. J., where he will establish his future home. Mrs. Reginold and son Jack, have been east for four months, hav- ing gone there for the benefit of the boy’s health. —Harry Kern and his force of men, who are digging a pit at the home of the Parker sisters, on the corner of Howard and Spring streets, in which to bury tanks for oil heaters, have struck a snag they didn’t expect. On- ly a short distance down they ran on- to a fairly solid vein of limestone rock and while they have managed to break some of it, it is quite pos- sible they may have to blast some of it out to get a hole deep enough for the tanks. —A police dog, without any collar or tag, attacked Donald Richards, a school boy of Bush’s Addition, about 8.30 o’clock yesterday morning, while the boy was standing in front of the Ritz theatre, looking at the pictures on the bulletin board. The janitor at the Richelieu heard the boy scream- ing and ran to his aid, breaking a broom handle over the dog’s head. The lad’s clothing was badly torn but fortunately only the dog’s teeth marks were visible on his leg, the skin not being broken. The jani- tor caught the dog and penned him in the boiler room at the Richelieu and later he was taken out and shot. The dog was said to belong to a Mrs, Gingerich. BELLEFONTE HIGH COMMENCEMENT STARTS. Junior Oratorical Contest will be Held This (Friday) Evening. The annual commencement exercis- es of the Bellefonte High school will begin to function this evening, when the Junior oratorical contest will be held at the High school. Five girls and five boys, with two alternates on the program, will display their ora- torical ability in an endeavor to cap- ture one of the W. F. Reynolds’ prizes. The contestants are as fol- lows: Rose Teaman, Cathryn Irwin, Hel- en Glenn and Jean Smith, of Belle- fonte; Vernadine Williams, of Union- ville, with Evalyn Watson, of Boggs township, as alternate. And the boys, Philip Witcraft, Bellefonte; Frank Wallace, Fred Alexander and Hubert Rossman, Milesburg; William Brach- bill, Bellefonte, and Jacob Bottorf, Bellefonte, as alternate. The baccalaureate services will be held in the Presbyterian church on Sunday evening, at 7.30 o’clock. Rev. Robert Thena, pastor of the Re- formed church, will preach the ser- mon. On Monday the High school glee club will present the play, “The Mi- kado,” in the Richelieu theatre, ma- tinee in the afternoon and a regular performance in the evening. Closing exercises of “the grade schools will be held Tuesday morning at the Richelieu and in the evening the regular High school commencement will be held in the Richelieu. The commencement speaker will be Dr. Thaddeus Bolton, of Temple Univer- sity, Philadelphia. The graduating class this year is composed of seventy young men and women, next to the largest class ever graduated in the history of the school. As a wind-up of commencement week the annual alumni reunion recep- tion and dance to the graduating class will be held in the pavilion, at Hecla park, next Thursday evening. The music will be furnished by Wright's saxophone orchestra, of Columbus, Ohio. Dancing from 9 to 1 o'clock. Refreshments will be served. THE GRADE SCHOOL EXERCISES. The closing exercises of the grade schools of Bellefonte will consist of a delightful entertainment in the Richelieu theatre on Tuesday morn- ing at 9:45. The ticket window will open at 9:15 and the curtain will go up promptly at 9:45. Grades I, II, and III of both build- ings will present a beautiful little ex- travaganza in which they will carry the audience on the good ship “Im- agination” to the Beautiful Land of Flowers. The youngsters of Grade IV, of the Bishop street school, have worked up a rollicking sketch called “Circus Days” with clowns, acrobats, colored animal keeper and all the rest of it, and: promise to hand you a “laugh a minute.” Their counterparts from the Alle- gheny street school are planning ‘to make the fourth graders from Bishop street work hard for their laurels by running a counter attraction in the way of a gypsy festival. The two Fifth grades combined will present a cantata entitled, “Dawn of Spring.” These youngsters have memorized the entire score and hope you will like their two part singing, for they surely deserve a lot of cred- it for their efforts. This ensemble alone is worth several times the price of admission, which by the way is only 15 cents for the entire show. The Sixth grade from the Bishop street school will be heard and seen in the nautical opera, “Billee Taylor,” while the Sixth graders from Alle- gheny street will delight you with a cutting from the “Bohemian Girl.” The morning's entertainment will be concluded by the funniest minstrel show you ever saw, end men, end songs, gags and everything, just like a big one, put on by the Seventh and Eighth grades of both buildings. Don’t forget the time and date, if you want to see all the “kids” of all the grades in this their final ap- pearance in 1928. None is left out, you'll see them all. 9.45 a. m., Tues- day, June 5th, 1928, for 15 cents. Daily Vacation Bible School. Believing the daily vacation Bible school to be good for a community, the members of the Bellefonte Min- isterium met and discussed plans rel- ative to such a school. The High school building has been secured again this year, being chosen because it proved to be very satisfactory last year. The past two years the school lasted four weeks, but this year it has been deemed advisable to have but three weeks, same to begin Mon- day, June 11th, and close Friday, June 29th. The ministers will appre- ciate a hearty co-operation on the part of the parents, whether they hold membership in any church. or not. The aim of the school is to help you and your child. —Centre countians who graduated at the State Teachers college, at Lock Haven, this week, included Alice E. Bauder and Nell P. Williams, of Fleming; Helen M. Behrer, State Col- lege; Russell W. Bohn, Boalsburg; Louise S. Bowes, Edythe I. Hoy, Von- da Johnston, Beatrice Mokle and Ber- tha Wolf, Howard; Russell Bowser, Blanchard; Rowena IL. Glossner and Victor O. Peters, Beech Creek; Helda A. Heaton and Rhoda L. Rogers, Nit- tany; Vivian E. Packer, Centre Hall, and Lois I. Stephens, Beech Creek. Railroad People Go to Washington to ACADEMY MINSTRELS SHOW | Complete Hearing. The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion and the Public Service Commis- sion of Pen sylvania ought to be able to render just decisions in the pend- ing cases of the Bellefonte Central Railroad company, if the time spent in taking the testimony counts for anything. The hearing began before Public Service Commissioner Charles Young, in Bellefonte, on April 4th and con- tinued two days. It was resumed on Wednesday of last week, again before Mr. Young and continued until Thurs- day noon, when the final testimony was heard in connection with two of the applications of the Bellefonte Central—one for permission to take over and operate the Fairbrook branch, recently abandoned by the Pennsylvania Railroad company, and the other for permission to construct a new road from Struble station to Fairbrook. On Friday morning the hearing started before examiner Rice, of the Interstate Commerce Commission, on the application of the Bellefonte Central for traffic rights over that portion of the Fairbrook branch from Stover station into Tyrone, a distance of less than three miles. ing continued until Saturday noon, then adjourned to reconvene in Wash- ington, D. C., at nine o’clock next : Monday morning. As there is not | much more testimony to take it is likely it can all be heard before noon- time Monday. The first week in July has been ten- tatively set as the time for oral ar- TO A CROWDED HOUSE. Beauty Contest Novel Feature of An- ~ nual Appearance of Student Minstrels. - The new State theatre was crowded last Thursday night when the stu- dents of the Bellefonte Academy staged their annual minstrel show. For years this entertainment has been a feature of the: student life of | the boys at the historic old “school in the mountains,” but never before do we recall such a large audience having assembled to greet them. Quite a surprise was sprung on the audience when the Bellefonte Kiwan- ians took charge of the house and staged an impromptu minstrel show of their own. Acting as interlomator Robert F. Hunter drafted his actors from among Kiwanians in the audi- ence. None were permitted to escape and he succeeded in assembling a full complement of choristers, end men and soloists, and they didn’t give a bad account of themselves at that. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —The two sons of Mrs. William Der- stine, Frank M., of Altoona, and Jesse, of Ambridge, came to Bellefonte, Tuesday, to be with their mother for Memorial day. —Mrs. Ebon Bower's condition is so much improved, that it is thought she will be able to .leave the hospital this week.and be taken to her home on Howard street. —Mr. and Mrs. John Nighthart and Mr. and Mrs. William Nighthart went over to Lewistown, on Sunday, to attend the fun- eral, on Monday, of Mrs. William Night- ka, Kansas and Missouri. —Mr. and Mrs. George Dennithorn and their son, Charles McCurdy Dennithorn were here from Pittsburgh this week, vis- iting with Mrs. Dennithorn’s mother, Mrs. Scott and the McCurdy family. —Mrs. Murdock Claney will drive ‘up from Narbeth this week, for one of ber short and frequent visits with her mother, Mrs. William McClure, expecting to be in Bellefonte only for the week-end. —Miss Jennie Potts returned to her home in Stormstown a week ago, after a three months’ visit in Philipsburg ,K with the Paul Gray family. For a part of the time while away Miss Potts was a pa- tient in the Philipsburg hospital. —Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cox, former resi- After they had been chased from the stage the real show began. This hear- . The Academy talent was augment- eb by five of the premiers of the State College Thespians and from the open- ing ensemble to the fipal curtain the show moved with a professional air. While every number, song or special- ‘ty was put over with more of a pro- fessional than amateur finish, and de- served the enthusiastic applause it | received, William Fisher's singing of , “Rain;” Herbert Beezer’s clever inter- | pretation of “Hot Tomalie Molly,” | . dents of Bellefonte, drove here for a Mem- | orial day visit with Mr. Cox's mother, | Mrs. Lucy Anne Cox, of the Allison apart- ments. It has been Mr. Cox’s custom for a number of years, to make a visit back home at this time. —Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Noll, of Pleas- ant Gap. and their two daughters, Jane and Madeline, will motor to Harrisburg, on Saturday, to meet Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Gruber, of Atlantic City, who will come that far by train on their way here for a visit of two weeks with Mrs. Tillie Noll, of Pleasant Gap. —Mrs. James B. Lane, who had been gument by both sides, the argument with his dance interlude, and Ernest : with her sister, Mrs. Shaffner, at Summit, to be made in Washington, D. C. As these hearings were held in what is termed the finance department of the Interstate Commerce Commission, it will take precedence over the ordi- nary run of hearings, and it is quite problematical that a decision will be handed down before the end of July. A —— A ———————— Federal Match Co. Sending Out Sam- ple Boxes of Matches. The Federal Match company re- cently installed at its Bellefonte plant a machine for making and packing penny boxes of matches to compete with the penny in the slot safety matches now used so generally throughout the country. The com- pany has succeeded in producing a match which they believe superior to the ‘well known safety match, and are packing them in boxes which can be used in the penny-in-the-slot ma - chines. To introduce them they have sent out five hundred sample boxes to wholesale dealers all over the United States. Each sample box contains one box of No. 5 matches and nine- teen of the small penny in the slot boxes. They were packed in a neat wooden box about ten inches long and five inches square. As one item of the cost of this means of intro- ducing the new match it might be added that the express alone on the sample boxes was in excess of three hundred dollars. : The demand for the product of the Bellefonte plant is steadily increasing and they have shipped more matches the past month than in any month since the plant was built. Desertion and Non-Support Cases. At a session of court, last Thurs- day, devoted almost entirely to the hearing of desertion and non-support cases, the following were disposed of: James McCartney, of Snow * Shoe, who has been before the court repeat- edly on a non-support charge since 1922, was ordered tc pay over at once to the parole officer for the use of his wife the sum of $100 and stand com- mitted until the sentence is complied with. Mr. McCartney raised and paid the money within twenty-four hours. Paul Weaver, of Bellefonte, was or- dered to pay $10 a month for the sup- port of his child, and in a case against his cousin, Nerr D. Weaver, an order of support was refused. Edward J. Snyder was directed to pay $18 a month towards the support of his wife and children. : In the case of Guy Coll, whose case was reported in the Watchman last week, the court has filed a written order that he is to continue the pay- ments of $25 a month for the support of his daughter and is to have the benefit of her custody over the week- ends twice a month during the school term and at such times and for ‘such periods during vacation time as the probation and parole officer may deem just and proper. Col. McCaskey to be Commandant at State College. Col. Walter B. McCaskey, of Fort Douglas, Utah, has been assigned to State College as commandant of the cadets, according to a report received on Saturday. When he arrives at that institution he will find a much differ- ent college from what it was when he was a student there in the early nineties and was a star back field man, Col. McCaskey graduated at State College in 1896 and two years later enlisted in the Pennsylvania National Guard. He is a graduate of the in- fantry-cavalry and tank schools con- ducted by the regular army and served with distinction during the World war. He was discharged in 1920 with the rank of Colonel but promptly re-enlisted as a second lieu- tenant and has been promoted for ef- ficiency in service until he is again a Colonel in the regular army. Vavra's solo “Among My Souvenirs” sort of stand out in our memory. I The olio was the vehicle on which the specialty artists rode to fame 2s amateurs. The piano and violin duet by Joseph Frabutt and Richard Schlaudecker was quite an artistic presentation. Huberta May Prince, the charming juvenile, made another hit with her graceful dancing and re- markable stage poise. And Thomas Riggs and Joseph Frabutt put on an act “The Melody Boys” that was good enough to “stop” most any show. It is not necessary to comment on the work of Kennedy, Shuster, Hol- derman, Whetstone and Neff, that quintet of State College thespians. ‘They would be headliners with any theatrical aggregation. THE BEAUTY SHOW. The beauty contest was effectively staged. The setting was designed to display the pulchritude of the fair contestants to the best advantage. The entrants were as follows: Philipsburg, Miss Carrie Dunn, Miss Vivian Westwood. Boalsburg, Miss Dorothy Whitecar. Pleasant Gap, Miss Grace Millward, Miss Louise Eckenroth. Bellefonte, Misses Ruth Bottorf, Hilda Watson, Lida Thompson, Min- nie Miller, Mary Penington and Lil- lian Pennington. The judges were C. R. Lauer, W. T. Griffith and Burritt L. Haag, all of Lock Haven. The names of the con- testants were not revealed. They were known only by numbers and the judges called for a second pageant before they could come to agreement as to the winners. First prize, $25, was awarded to Miss Hilda Watson, of Bellefonte. Second prize, $15, to Miss Grace Mill- ward, of Pleasant Gap. Third prize, $10, to Miss Minnie Miller, of Belle- fonte. John F. Garthoof will Retire as Mail Carrier Monday. John F. Garthoof, who for a little over twenty-one years has made his regular rounds daily as a mail car- rier on route No. 2, Bellefonte, will make his final trips Monday and when his day’s work is at an end he will go on the retired list. While he has been a regular carrier for twen- ty-one years he worked as a sub-car- rier about four years prior to going on as a regular so that he has credit for practically twenty-five years’ service in the Bellefonte postoffice. He will be succeeded on route No. 2 by William Geisinger, who has been a sub for several years. The oldest appointee in point of service in the office at the present time is John T. Bair. He is about completing his first extension of serv- ice and has been granted a second ex- tension, so that he is good for several more years. W. C. Chambers is al- so completing his first extension and has made application for a second ex- tension, which will probably be grant- ed to him. As a testimonial to his years of faithful service in the postoffice Mr. Garthoof will be the honor guest at a reception and dinner at the Evergreen club, at Wingate, next Monday even- ing. The Ladies Auxiliary of the postal employees will have charge of the affair and will be assisted by post- master John L. Knisely and the em- ployees association. Centre County Sabbath School Con- vention. The ‘annual Centre county Sabbath school convention in connection with the one hundredth anniversary of Sabbath school work at Spring Mills, will be held at Spring Mills, June 4th and 5th.. All Sunday school workers and friends are invited to assemble there on this occasion, which promises to be helpful and inspirational. Each school in the county is entitled to two regularly elected delegates, who will have a voice in all the business of the convention. Go and take a friend | N. J., since leaving here a month or more ago, will spend the month of June at Rye i Beach, New Hampshire, as a guest of ' Mrs. Clara Milliken Evans. Mrs. Evans is [a native of Bellefonte and lived all her girlhood life here, the Milliken home being | that now occupied by Mrs. Louisa V. Har- ris. —George McClellan went to Baltimore, Saturday, and brought his mother back to Bellefonte on Sunday. Mrs. McClellan had been a surgical patient in the Kelley pri- vate hospital for a month or more, and is now slowly convalescing at her home on Curtin street. Her daughter, Mrs. Mc- Groarty, who had been with her mother for the greater part of the time she was in Baltimore, returned home Thursday of last week. —Minot Willard, with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hudson as guests, motored in from Pittsburgh, Saturday, to spent the night with the former's mother, Mrs. D. W. Willard, of north Thomas street. It was the first visit of the Hudsons to Centre county and they were so much impressed with the scenery about here that they made two trips to the top of Nittany mountain before they were content with that view alone. —Jesse Cox, possibly a little grayer around the temples but as chipper and alert as in the days when he conducted one of the best liveries in Bellefonte and did a little horse ‘trading on the side, act- ed as official chaperon to two carloads of friends who motored to Bellefonte from Reading, on Sunday. They spent two days in Bellefonte, or rather the county, as most all their time was devoted to motor trips to every point of vantage within twenty miles. They left for home on Tuesday afternoon. —I‘or the annual Memorial day party of the Furey family, given in celebration of Mrs. Morris Furey’s birthday, Mr. and Mrs. William Furey and their daughter Virginia, .and Mr. and Mrs. Raukin Furey were here from Pittsburgh; Mrs. Kerstet- ter from Curwensville; Mr. and Mrs. Hi- ram Lee from State College and Mrs. King from Centre Hall; Mr. and Mrs. George Furey and their son, Gray, of Bellefonte, joining them here. The party took break- fast with Mrs. Furey at her apartment, on east High street, then drove to Milroy for the birthday dinner. —After delivering the commencement address to the graduating class of the Miles township High school, at Rebers- burg, on Tuesday evening, and the com- mencement address at Emporium, last evening, Dr. George P. Bible left for his summer lecture work with the United Chautauqua, - with offices in Des Moines, Iowa. His opening date will be in Stan- ton, North Dakota, and in their eighty- seven appearances he, and the quartette with which Le travels, will cover the wes- tern part of the Dakotas, Towa, Nebras- ka ,Kansas and Missouri. —Mrs. Harvey Yarrington, of Richmond, Va., and her daughter, Mrs. James Oliver, of South Bend, Ind. will leave today to go out west, after spending the week at the Brockerhoff house, while here for a visit and for Memorial day. Mrs. Oliver had been at her former home in Rich- mond, with her mother, who was accom- panying her on the drive back to South Bend, and stopped in Bellefonte enroute to Indiana. Mrs. Yarrington is the form- er Miss Roberta Alexander, a native of the town and a resident until she was mar- ried, leaving then to go to make her home in Richmond. —Mr. and Mrs. E. A. McGill and their son, Arnold, who drove in from Bellevue, last week, for a Memorial day visit at Mrs. McGill's former home in Millheim, stopped in Bellefonte for an hour or more on their way over. Mrs. McGill is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Harter, na- tives and well known residents of Centre county for many years, her visit back home at this time being to look after the family burial plot at Millheim. Both Mr. and Mrs. McGill are graduates of Penn State and their time while east was spent there, and with Mrs. McGill's maternal relatives at Altoona. —Mrs. George Musser, of Bellefonte, and her sister, Mrs. William Alexander, of Unionville, arrived home, Tuesday, from a six months’ visit in the South. Their first stop on going down last fall, was at Look-Out mountain, Tenn, where they both spent some time with Mrs. Alexan- der's son, James and his family. From there they went to Thomasville, Ga., to the home of Mrs. Musser’s son, Ralph M, Musser, who is overseer of the game pre- serve on one of the largest plantations of the State. While in Georgia they made two trips into Florida, visiting all plaees of interest along the west coast. Having had a delightful visit, they naturally are with you. very enthusiastic over the South. —L. H. Musser is north from Florida, to spend some time with his relatives in Centre county. —Mrs. J. Will Conley, accompanied her daughter, Mrs. Wallis, to Pittsburgh a week ago, expecting to be there indefin- itely. —James Cook is here from Colorado, to spend the month of June with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Cook, at their home on west Linn street. —The Ramsey family, of Altoona, and the Raymonds, of Bellefonte, were mem- bers of a family party, entertained at the Dunlap home on Thomas street, Sunday. —Mrs. George Kerstetter, of Harrisburg, was back to her girlhood home here for Memorial day and a little visit with her sisters, Mrs. Geisinger and Mrs. Harry Yeager. —Mrs. W. C. Thompson and her son David, returned, Saturday from a six months’ trip to Albuquerque; N. M. and California, where they had beeen for the child’s health. —Mr. and Mrs. G. Murray Andrews have returned to Bellefonte, after spend- ing a year and a half in England, with relatives of Mr. Andrews. Enroute home Mr. and Mrs. Andrews stopped for a month in Philadelphia. —Mr. and Mrs. C. “Duffy” Dugan and their three daughters, Anna May, Arlene and Geraldine, were here from Lakemont, Tuesday, to spend the afternoon in the Union cemetery looking after their lot. Mrs. Dugan expected to be in Bellefonte Wednesday also. —The Rev. J. R. Woodcock came here from Syracuse yesterday, expecting to be with his mother, Mrs. John A. Woodcock until Saturday. His trip to Central Penn- sylvania wus made at this time, that he might be at the Birmingham Seminary for Commencement. where he preached the baccalaureate sermon. —Mrs. Charles Heisler has been with her niece, Mrs. Rider on Spring street, since Saturday, having come over from Beaver Falls for her annual Memorial day visit back home. Mrs. Heisler is a native of Bellefonte and lived here all her life until going to make her home with her sister in Beaver Falls two years or more ago. —Mrs. Leopold Levi and her daughter, Hermine, who have been here from Colum- bus, Ga., for two weeks with her mother and Mr. Levi's mother, Mrs. Myron Cupp and Mrs. M. C. Levi, expect to be in Belle- fonte for the greater part of the summer. According to their present plans, Mr. Levi will drive north the latter part of August for a visit, and will then be accompanied home by his family. —A. Stewart Bailey, of Pine Grove Mills, was in town yesterday looking after mat- ters pertaining to the estate of his sis- | ter, the late Nannie Bailey. Mr. Bailey is | one of the men in charge of Aaron Kep- ler’s potato acreage up in Ferguson town- ship and is of the opinion that potatoes are a very profitable crop even if one does have to take very special care if he wants to grow them right. —Mrs. W. A. Lathrop, a former resi- dent of Snow Shoe, but now of Wilkes- Barre, is expected in Bellefonte, Wednes- day of next week, to be a house guest of ‘Miss Margaret Stewart, at the Stewart home on west Linn street. Mrs. Lathrop is known to many persons in this locality through her long residence in Snow Shoe, during the time her husband was super- intendent of the Lehigh Valley Coal Co. —Mrs. E. H. B. Callaway was with her daughter, Mrs. Harry Garber, when she brought her husband's body here from Flusking, L. I, Tuesday, for burial in the Bush family lot in the Union cemtery. Mr. Garber’s brother, Ralph and Mrs. Gar- ber, of Butler, were also in Bellefonte, on Wednesday, for the burial services. Mrs. Callaway and Mrs. Garber, who have been with Mr. and Mrs. George B. Thompson during their stay, will return to Long Island, Sunday. —Mr. O. C. Harvey, of State College, is having this week off from his business at that place, but he’s not enjoying it. He is a juror at court and putting in time between panels is what irks. Mr. Harvey is interested in the baking and confec- tionery business at the College, being a member of the State College Bakery firm. It will be recalled that some time ago the Harvey and Harrison and Rodgers inter- ests there were merged into one big con- cern and the change has proven to be a very successful move. ————— eens. —A new rural delivery route will be established at the Bellefonte post- office today, to extend down the Jack- sonville road to Curtin’s gap, through the gap into Bald Eagle valley and west to a point beyond Wingate. Re- turning to Wingate he will go north on the Snow Shoe road to above Run- ville then cut across to Yarnell and from there back to Bellefonte. The postoffices at Runville and Yarnell will be abandoned, but for the pres- ent, at least, Wingate will continue as a postoffice. —While cutting the grass at her home in Bush’s Addition, last Thurs- day afternoon, Mrs. Andrew Dubbs fell down into the roadway, a distance of about eight feet. She was taken to the Centre County hospital where it was found that she had suffered a fracture of a cheek bone, a broken right wrist, contusions about the left hip and lacerations of the face. Public Sale. Friday, June 1, 1928, at the Robert McCullough farm, Jersey Shore, Pa., of 100 head of dairy cows—Jerseys, Holsteins and Guernseys—fresh and close springers, all T. B. tested. I have two carloads of Wisconsin cows that show everything you are looking for in a dairy cow. One carload of Tioga county cows, all in milk, that will freshen this fall. One carload of Bradford county cows, mostly heifers, and all raised by one dairyman. Lunch will be served. Lee R. Lari- mer, Jersey Shore, Pa. Bellefonte Grain Markets. Qorrected Weekly by 0. Y. Wagner & Ce. Wheat - - - - - 1.75 CORR Jiunviaadeatisinss sienna seeeiives 1.10