Demortalic foatdmar. = Bellefonte, Pa, August 10, 1928. TOWN AND COUNTY. Wetzler’s Junior band drew another record-breaking crowd at their afternoon concert at Hecla park on Sunday. And while it was swelt- ering hot in Bellefonte it was quite comfortable at the park. —— George T. Bush, Bellefonte’s enthusiastic stamp collector, has re- ceived a complete series of the new five cent air mail stamps from all the important aviation fields in the Unit- ed States, about ninety in number. Former Judge Arthur C. Dale has withdrawn from the law firm of Orvis, Zerby & Dale, and yesterday opened offices of his own on the second floor of the building occupied by the West Penn Power company, on High street, morth of the court house yard. The thunder storm that passei over Half-moon valley, Monday night, did considerable damage in the vicin- ity of Paradise, where there was a veritable cloud-burst. Much fencing was washed out and several corn fields so deluged that they looked as though they had been rolled by a ponderous machine, ——Miss Bessie A. Miles, vice chairman of the Republican party in Centre county, entertained her exeec- utive committee of women at a din- ner at the Brockerhoff house, on Tuesday evening, at which time plaus were made for prosecuting a vigorous campaign among the women of the county in favor of the Republican ticket. NEWS ABOUT The citizens military training camp at Fort Monroe closed, on Sun- day afternoon, and the five hundred young men who were there started home. We note that among those rec- ommended for a prescribed course of study with a view to preparing for commissions in the coast artillery re- serve was Paul L. Haines, of State College. Henry T. Noll, Pleasant Gap’s well known aviator, had a busy time, Sunday afternoon, taking up sight- seers at three dollars per five minute flight. Using the old aviation field, on the Beaver farm, as a landing place, he was almost constantly on the wing from early in the afternoon until twilight. A five minute flight included just one circle over Belle- fonte and back to the field. Workmen making a general cleanup at the home of Fred Smith, ih DuBois, a week or so ago, found a large tin coffee can secreted in the rear of the house. On being opened the can yielded several hundred dol- lars worth of silverware and other stuff stolen from a Philipsburg church over ten years ago. The articles were easily identified by the engrav- ing on them and the property will be returned to the church. We have lived in Bellefonte now going on forty-four years aad have always wondered why the little street leading from Pine street down to south Water street was called “Stony Lonesome.” But we wonder no longer. After watching the ef- forts of employees of the Central Pennsylvania Gas company in dig- ging a ditch for their pipe line up that thorofare we are convinced that no other name would be applicable. _ —Mrs. Katherine Lane Miller, of St. Mary’s, who had been a guest cf Miss Ella Levy at Milesburg for the greater part of the past month, is a granddaughter of the Rev. Samuel Lane, a pioneer Baptist minister, of Maryland, who settled in Huntingdon county, then Bedford county in 1774, and organized a church Aug. 10th, 1775, near Three Springs. In honor of Mrs. Lane, Miss Levy entertained eleven descendants of the Rev. Samuel Lane, the guests from Altoona, Cur- wensville and Huntingdon, represent- ing the third, fourth, fifth and sixth generations. Mrs. Lane, ninety years young, is the last of her generation. Mrs. . Samuel Fox, of Philadel- phia, became frightened at the ap- proach of an auto truck driven by Harry Zimmerman, about 9:30 o'clock yesterday morning, at the corner eof the Bush Arcade, on south Water street, and in her haste to avoid be- ing hit fell down on the brick pave- ment, injuring her right knee. Mr. Zimmerman was able to stop his truck before he touched the woman. Mrs. Fox, with her husband and son, Samuel Fox Jr., and wife, are touring Pennsylvania and had come to Belle- fonte from State College on Wednes- day evening and spent the night here. ‘They were on thir way to look at the big trout in Spring creek when the accident happened. Her injury is not serious. —Huckleberry pickers out on the mountains have had some nerve-rack- ing experiences with rattlesnakes and cepperheads this season, and game protector Thomas A Mosier avers that he never saw snakes so plentiful as they are this year. Personally he has killed to date eight rattlers and eighteen copperheads. The rat- tlers ran from an old fellow with eleven rattles and a button down to one with only two rattles and no but- ton. The rattlers are more plentiful on the Allegheny mountains than any- where else while the copperheads are more numerous on the mountains near Coburn. Notwithstanding the fact that the reptiles are so plentiful there have been no fatal cases of snakebite in the county. | GAMBLE MILL PROPERTY PURCHASED BY BOROUGH. Bid of $38,500 Accepted by Referee in Bankruptcy Subject to Approval of Court. The bid of $38,500 submitted by borough solicitor N. B. Spangler to Lee Francis Lybarger, referee in bankruptcy, for the Gamble mill property for the borough of Belle- fonte went unchallenged at a meet- ing of the creditors in the office of W. Harrison Walker, on Tuesday morning. No other bids were sub- mitted and after considerable discus- sion of the means of financing the purchase the bid was accepted by the referee subject to the approval of the court. Now that the purchase has been made it is only right and fair that the citizens and taxpayers of Belle- fonte should know all about the deal. First, the borough could not become an outright purchaser because it did not have the necessary cash to make it and has reached the approximate limit of its borrowing power. Under such circumstgnces it was necessary to provide other ways and means of financing the proposition. As stated last week Mrs. Gamble now holds a mortgage aginst the property for $25,000. bank in Williamsport, the Lycoming Trust Co., she has consented to allow $20,000 of this mortgage to stand for an indefinite number of years. This left a balance of $20,000 to be ar- ranged for, as extra money will be needed for the legitimate expenses of the deal. Under an act of assembly a non- profit sharing company can be form- ed to take over the plant and lease it to the borough with an option to pur- chase. Such a company must be legal- ly chartered by the court as a hold- ing company, and that is what will be done in this instance. The three men composing the company are James R. Hughes, George Hazel and J. Kennedy Johnston. The Bellefonte Trust company will finance the pur- chase to the extent of the necessary $20,000; the loan to be secured by a certificate of attachment on the wa- ter funds duly executed by the bor- ough. This certificate was authoriz- ed by resolution of council at Monday evening’s meeting, and was properly signed and attested and ready to turn over to the bank on Tuesday. It will probably be a week or ten days before aproval of the court can be obtained and the deal closed up. Then the holding company will exe- cute its lease to the borough and the property will come under municipal control. The borough now has two offers for the machinery in the mill, and as there is no intention to lease the plant as a mill the machinery will likely be disposed of as soon as the borough eomes into legal possession. In the meantime almost nine thous- and dollars of the purchase price was paid over on Tuesday. The principal purpose in the pur- chase of the plant was to give the borough complete control of the wa- ter situation in Bellefonte. If the court approves the sale it will forever obviate all danger of a private own- er drying up Spring creek by using all the water for commercial power purposes. Of course the borough also has in view a utilization of the er that can be generated at the mill for making electricity to operate the electric pumps at the big spring. But this will not take place for another years, at least. At the present time there is no intention to make any change in the street lighting, but if the time ever comes when the borough deems it expedient to put in its own street lighting system, officials claim there is ample water power at the mill to furnish the current. As stated above payment for the plant is to be made out of the receipts of the water department. At the present these receipts approximate $21,000 yearly. The operating ex- penses last year were a little over $16,000, but this included the laying of considerable new pipe. Under or- dinary circumstances council figures that the water receipts will ex- ceed the expenditures by about $5,- 000 a year, and on this basis the plant can be paid for in ten or twelve years, without any increase in tax. Details for the completion of the purchase will be worked out at the adjourned meeting of council next Monday evening. Hairy John’s Park Scene of Sunday Dinner Party. Hairy John’s park, in the Wood- ward Narrows, was the scene of a very delightful dinner party, last Sunday, those present being as fol- lows: Mrs. Elmira Lutz, Mrs. Marion Coll and daughter Virginia, F. E. Johnstonbaugh, Miss Harriet Johns- tonbaugh, Mr. and Mrs. David Tress- ler and children, Ethel, Thomas and Hazel, all of Bellefonte; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Uhl and Mrs. Emma Uhl, of Pleasant Gap; Mr. and Mrs. Willis Poorman and sons, Daniel, Orvis, Glenn and Junior; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garner and son Adam and Everett Wheelan, of State College; Miss Min- nie Makin, of Pittsburgh; Mr. and Mrs. Uriah Housel, Miss Jean Housel, Miss Mabel Housel, Mr. and Mrs.Mal- colm Housel, Mrs. Laura Holdeman, Mr. and Mrs. Ickes and sons, Donald, Charles and Malcolm, John Ferguson, Belvadean Ferguson, and Harvey Hol- liday, all of Altoona. Through ber pow- I. C. C. Decides in Favor of the Belle- fonte Central. The Interstate Commerce Com- mission, yesterday morning, handed down its decisions in the several Bellefonte Central Railroad company | cases in which everything asked by ‘that company was granted, that is, | the right to take over the abandoned { portion of the Fairbrook branch, the right to build a connecting link be- tween Struble station and the Fair- brook branch, at Pennsylvania Fur- nace, and trackage rights over that ' portion of the Fairbrook branch from : Stover station to Tyrone. Now that the I. C. C. has decided favorably for the Bellefonte Central the Pennsylvania Public Service Com- mission will likely follow suit in the near future, and then the Bellefonte Central company will begin activities on enlarging its system. : Following close upon news of the above decision application was made vesterday for permission to extend the Bellefonte Central down through Little Nittany valley to Mill Halli, which bears out the announcement made by the Watchman almost six months ago. Liquor Law Violators Sentenced by Judge Fleming. A a special session of court, on Sat- urday morning, five liquor law viola- tors plead guilty and were sentenced by Judge Fleming. Four of the num- ber are from Rush township and were taken in a recent raid conducted by county detective Leo Boden. i They were Angelo Pantana, sen- | tenced to pay the costs of prosecution, $100 fine and three months imprison- ‘ment in the county jail. i. Timco Capello, $200 fine, costs of . prosecution and four months in the county jail. | Louis Nuvak, $400 fine, costs of i prosecution and six months in the i county jail. i Martha Yacovich, $300 fine, costs i of prosecution and three months in the Allegheny county workhouse, the ; imprisonment portion of the sentence i to be suspended upon the payment of | the fine and costs, owing to the ad- { vanced age and ill health of Mrs. Ya- covich. The fine and costs were paid _on Saturday and the woman was re- leased. { Mary Blackhart was before the i court charged with the operation of {a motor vehicle while under the in- fluence of liquor, the first time a wo- man appeared in the Centre county court on such a charge. She was sen- | tenced to pay a | prosecution { thirty days in the Allegheny county | workhouse, to which institution she 1 was taken on Monday. Boyd Benner, of Philipsburg, plead ' guilty to being the father of an ille- , gitimate child and was given the usual : sentence imposed in such cases. Firemen to Go to Ebensburg Next Year. Central Pennsylvania volunteer i firemen will hold their annual conven- ‘tion at Ebensburg next year. Such i was the decision of the delegates in i session at Clearfield, last Wednesday, after Charles M. Schawb, the noted steel manufacturer, had made a plea for the Cambria county town and of- fered as an inducement to contribute $500 for prizes to be competed for i by the firemen. The officers elected for the ensuing year are as follows: President, Emil O. Wilkinson, of Ebensburg; vice presi- dents, Howard Richards, Philipsburg; William Snyder, Tyrone; A. J. Musser, son, DuBois; treasurer, Hon. Harry B. Scott, Philipsburg. The State College fire company won | a prize of $25 for the best appearing | motor driven apparatus traveling the longest distance to the convention. Near East Relief. On July 1st the amount raised by Centre county toward its quota of $8861 for completing the work of Near East Relief, was $6161, which makes a deficit of $2700. The three districts which went over the top in their allot- ments of the quota were Unionville, Boalsburg and Bellefonte. As a failure in any part will seriously affect the children under our care, and we have until, June 1929, to complete the quota, the Centre county committee has de- cided to send out appeals to the county sometime in the fall or winter. In the meantime the committee hopes that the chairmen in the districts will make arrangements for completing our share of what is said to be the finest and largest piece of construc- tive work ever done in the world. M. H. LINN, Chairman, Mrs. ROBERT M. BEACH, Secretary, CHARLES M. McCURDY, Treasurer. Saylor—Hoy.—Philip P. Saylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Saylor, of Bellefonte, and Miss Kathryn M. Hoy, daughter of Mrs. George N. Hoy, of Howard, were married on Saturday evening, at the parochial residence on Bishop street, by Rev. Father Downes. The young couple took an auto wed- ding trip to Pittsburgh. The bride- groom is bookkeeper for C. F. Tate in his plumbing business. ——The Davey Tree Expert Co., representatives will be in this vicinity for several days and will be glad to inspect the trees of any of their old clients or of any other tree owner. The representatives can be reached by writing C. L. Halverson, care of this office. 31-1t* fine of $50, costs of . and imprisonment for Barnesboro; secretary, John E. John- | GRANGE PARK NOW A PLACE OF ACTIVITY. Final Preparations Being Made for Big Encampment and Fair. In one week, Tuesday, August 14th, the leadership conference will open on Grange Park and continue in ses- sion four days, and in three weeks the great Grange Encampment and Centre County Fair will be in full swing. Work is being rushed so as to be in readiness for both events—the big- gest in central Pennsylvania. Two new barns have been erected, one for dairy cattle and the other for hogs, and we can point to both buildings with pride in construction and ap- pearance as well. The old dairy barn will be adequately equipped for Grange and other special exhibits, for which there has been heretofore no room for proper display. All other improvements undertaken are about completed as planned and tents are staked and floors laid preparatory to tent erection this week. An unusually interesting prograr has been arranged both for day and evening. This has been given some space in the premium book which is now being distributed. It contains much information of value to exhibi- tors, campers and the public gener- ally. And it is urged they make themselves familiar with the rules and regulations governing the fair, which are given full explanation. The superintendents in the various departments report interest and ac- tivity and promise a big and complete display along the lines, filling build- ings set apart for that purpose and the usual space on the grounds with superior products of farm, garden and orchard. In addition, farm machin- ery, automobiles and tractors will be made a big feature of the fair. Applications for space from better and larger concessions are coming in rapidly and this department, always interesting and entertaining, will be above criticism in every respect and add the necessary tinge of variety to the fair. A The Boys’ and Girls’ Livestock Judging contest will be made an im- portant feature of Wednesday; in- creased prizes paid and ribbons awarded. The Junior Farmers will camp in their building on Grange Park and under their new director, W. S. Jefferies, an unusual program of in- teresting activities has been arranged. Speakers for Wednesday and fot i Thursday have been secured and in- clude Hon. E. B. Dorsett, Master of Pennsylvania State Grange; Prof. L. H. Dennis, Director of Vocational Ed- ucation in Pennsylvania, who will take as a topic for his address, “The F. F. P.;” W. Harrison Walker, Esq., of Bellefonte, and Hon. J. Laird Holmes. For evening entertainments, five subordinate Granges of Centre coun- ty are preparing plays of superior merit. These will be presented in the . auditorium and a small admission fee charged. Bands from different parts of the county have been engaged and prom- ise an abundance of music. A un- ique arrangement has been made in the base ball game program which will culminate the last day in a game between the winners of all the previous games. Free admission to the park on Sun- day and a suitable program has been ‘arranged for the afternoon and even- ing. All tents will be wired, and tent rent including light, will be $7.00 for | 12x12 ft. size, and $8.00 for 14x14 ft. 1 size Tents owned by private individ- ‘uals will also be wired and when of : similar size, ground rent will be $4.00 ‘for the week. An additional charge ‘for larger size tents. No effort is being spared by the committee in making arrangements for pleasure, comfort and convenience of the visitor to the fair and the camper on the grounds alike, and this 1928 Encampment and Fair promises to equal, if not surpass, its previous exhibitions. Everything Ready for Motor Club Picnic Next Week. All arrangements have been com- pleted for the big Motor Club picnic to be held at Hecla park, Wednesday, August 15th, by the Centre County- Lock Haven motor clubs. The prizes to be given in the various athletic events are now on exhibit in Belle- fonte and as they are all worth com- peting for, will, without doubt, bring out a lot of contestants. The list of events and prizes are as follows: Rifle shooting contest—silver lov- ing cup. Boys’ swimming contest—first prize, pen and pencil set; second prize, bathing suit. Girls’ swimming contest—first prize, mesh bag; second prize, vanity case, Canoe tilting contest, bath role. Running races—boys, baseball glove; girls, tennis racket. Canoe race, with paddles, bath robe. Quoit pitching contest, box of ci- gars. : Nail driving contest for ladies, van- ity case. Boy Scout craft contest, $20 in gold. Bathing beauty contest—first prize, mesh bag value $20; second prize, wrist watch. The above contests, together with baseball, dancing, speaking, band con- certs and flying circus should attract an unusually large crowd. Every- body is invited, whether a motorist or not. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Elliott Hollabaugh, of Coleville, will leave, Sunday, for a visit of a week with friends in Altoona and Pittsburgh. —Mrs. Mary Hadley and daughter, Miss Helen McCoy, of Passaic, N. J., are visit- ing Mrs. Hadley’s mother, Mrs. Harry Turner. —Miss Ruth Glenn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Glenn, left on Sunday, for York, Pa., where she enrolled in the Thompson school for its regular business course. —Mrs. Harry Garber will return to her home at Flushing, L. I., today, to have her apartment opened and ready for her moth- er, Mrs. Callaway, upon her arrival home , from the Mediterranean cruise on August 20th. Mrs. Garber has been in Bellefonte with her sister, Mrs. George B. Thomp- son for a month. —Mrs. Gilbert Mellvaine, with her daughter Lucy and Mrs. Ernest Taylor, will motor up from Downington, tomorrow, for a visit with Mrs. Joseph Baker, Mrs. Mellvaine’s sister, at her camp at Snow Shoe Intersection. Mrs. Taylor will give part of her time, while here, to Mrs. J. MacM. Curtin who is summering on east Linn street. —Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Derstine and their two daughters, Dorothy and Betty, will come in from Ambridge this week, to visit for the remainder of the month with Mr. Derstine’s mother, Mrs. William Derstine and other relatives in Centre county. Mrs. Derstine’s other son, Frank M., of Juniata, is now only able to resume his work with Kline Bros., of Altoona, after an enforced sick leave of a month. —PFrederick Noll, district sales manager of The Reuben H. Donnelley corporation, of New York City, has been in Bellefonte during the week visiting his mother, Mrs. Cora C. Noll, of Howard St. Frederick's business is managing the compilation of business directories of big cities and hav- ing just sent that of New York to press there is a little lull which he is taking ad- vantage of for a vacation before starting on the new directory for Brooklyn. —Among the Watchman office visitors, on Saturday, was J. W. Corl, of McKees- i port, who was in Centre county for a few days visit and. to see his sister, Mrs. Al Garner at State College, who has been quite sick for several weeks. Mr. Corl was born and grew to manhood in Fergu- son township but finally migrated to the western part of the State and located in McKeesport. He is now a sort of general utility messenger between McKeesport and Pittsburgh and has very little idle time for pleasure or recreation. —Alfred Martin, who was a boy in Bellefonte when boys knew as little about . being “cake eaters” and “tea hounds” as they did of automobiles and aeroplanes, is in town this week visiting his relatives, the descendants of the Hamiltons. Mr. and Mrs. Martin have been living in Mor- gantown, W. Va. with their daughter, since the death of her husband and his i appearance when he called here indicated | that Morgantown climate must be quite as agreeable to him as was that of his former home in Pittsburgh. —An unusually interesting visitor in town is Wm. H. Jackson, actively con- nected with the police department of the city of Philadelphia. Mr. Jackson left Centre county in 1872 and had not been back prior to this visit. As fa hoy he was brought here from Girard college by John Mattern, of Half-Moon valley, and bound to Isaac Gray, in whose home he remain- ed until he had attained manhood’s es- tate. Naturally there are few of those j whom he remembers living, but he had a longing to visit the scenes of his boy- hood life and came up to spend a few days ‘here and up Half-moon valley. i —Mrs. Henry Taylor's house guests , within the month, have included her sons, Samuel §8., of Bridgeport, Conn., who i made a short visit here with his mother, , enroute west on a busines trip. Charles i J. Taylor, instructor in plumbing at the In- " dustrial School at Huntingdon,was in Belle- fonte for the past week-end, and I. Rey- , holds Taylor, with Mrs. Taylor and their two children, of Akron, Ohio, who are just home from a year’s stay in Los Angeles, where they were located, while ‘Mr. Taylor was doing special work for the Company, in the Pacific coast district. The Samuel Taylor family have been prevented from making their annual sum- mer visit to Bellefonte, by the illness of Mrs. Taylor, who has been ill for a month or more with rheumatic fever. —On Sunday what has been a most de- | lightful three week’s outing for quite a party of Akron, Ohio, people will be brought to a close when they start to mo- ‘tor homeward. They have been largely i composed of the family of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Irwin, son of Mrs. Susan Irwin, of “Reynolds Ave., and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Florey, of Pleasant Gap. The : first of the party to arrive were Miss Eve- lyn Irwin, her friend Merton Shelley and her sisters Mrs. Clarence Dyer, her son Clarence Jr., and Mrs. Ernest Maddox. i They came two week’s ago last Sunday. Last Sunday Mr. Dyer drove up bringing | with him Mrs. Harry Irwin and her sons Donald and Harry Jr. After a visit at j the Irwin home in this place and at the ! Florey home at Pleasant Gap the entire party took a cabin in the Seven moun- i tains for the days remaining before their scheduled departure on Sunday. —Almost we have been persuaded to “think that this has been “Old Home | Wee ” in Bellefonte. Rarely have we met { so many of the residents of years long gone ‘who have drifted back to have a look at { Bellefonte and count the friends who have not yet taken their ride up Howard street. Among them is Stewart Laird. He dropped into the office Monday morning, We 'hadn’t seen him for forty-two years, yet ~we knew him instantly. As a boy Stewart i lived opposite us. He is the oldest son { of Robert Laird and learned his trade as ‘an electrician with the first electric light- ing company in Bellefonte. Now he is with the largest electric power generating company in the world and has charge of one of its greatest plants just outside of | Minneapolis. He and Mrs. Laird are on an | extended trip as guests of the Northern States Power Company and they are in | the position of the fellow who didn’t know ‘where he was going but was on his way. | He left Minneapolis with orders to report | from Chicago, there he got orders to re- port from Pittsburgh. At iPttsburgh he | was ordered to report at Bellefonte. Here he received orders to report at Atlantic City and so it goes. A nice vacation, isn’t it, when you don’t know where you're going, but your expenses are all paid wherever it might be. —Dr. H. A. Blair was over from Cur- | wensville, Sunday, to spend a part of the {day in Bellefonte with his father, F. P. ! Blair, who has been in ill health for a year or more. —Mr. and Mrs. John John Brachbill with their son Charles are here from Wil- i liamsport for a visit of a week with the { formers mother, Mrs. W. T. Twitmire and i other relatives. —Miss Emily Parker, who had been ill ‘at her home on Howard street, for sev- eral months, entered the Centre county hospital last week, for treatment, and it is now thought she is slowly improving. —DMiss Lovina Emerick, of New York, | purchaser of the Christ Beezer home, on Spring creek, is here visiting with her nephew, for whom she bought the proper- ty, and who is now occupying the place. —Harvey Schaeffer, Fred Herman, Al Heverly and Charles Wagner motored to Canada last Sunday to spend a week of investigation as to whether fish are as hard to catch up there as they were here during the season. —Miss Mary Staples Chambers, with the Edison Electric Co., of New York city, will leave Sunday to resume her work, af- ter a six weeks vacation visit in Belle- fonte with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Chambers, of Curtin street. —Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kirk are on a drive to Auburn, N. Y., having gone up for a week’s vacation visit with two of Norman’s classmates at Penn State. Their two sons, Norman Jr., and Vernon are with their grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Kirk, during Mr. and Mrs. Kirk's absence. —Marie Chandler returned home Satur- day from North Wildwood, N. J., where she had spent her vacation, as a guest of her great aunt, Mrs. S. H. Griffith and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Green. Enroute to Belle- fonte, she stopped in Philadelphia for a short stay with her cousin, Gertrude Daw- son. —The Rev. J. R. Woodcock was again in Bellefonte for several days of the week, stopping on his way home to Syracuse, from Chambersburg, where he preached in the Presbyterian church of that place, last Sunday. His mother, Mrs. John A. Woodcock, is now slowly recovering from her recent illness. —William B. Troup, with The Carbon- dale Machine Co., of Carbondale and his fiancee, Miss Daisy Wynd, of Tunkhan- nock, have been here for the week, visit- ing with William’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Troup, of Thomas street. William has been with the Carbondale people since leaving Bellefonte, shortly after his grad- uation. —Mrs. A. C. Read was here from Phila- delphia for a part of the week, visiting with her son, A. C. Read Jr, a surgical patient in the Centre county hospital and to go with him back to State College. The boy, a member of the clas of 1928, was doing special summer work when stricken with appendicitis and will return to com- tinue the work. —Mrs. George M. Gamble is entertaining her daughter Mrs. W. T. O’Brien, who with Mr. O'Brien and their children, drove from Phillippi, W. Va.,, Wednesday, expecting to spend the remainder of August in Belle- fonte and with relatives in Snow Shoe. Mrs. Gamble’s son “Mac”, of Vermilion, Ohio, has also been home during the week for a short visit. —Mrs. Morris Furey, of Bellefonte, and her daughter, Mrs. Hiram Lee, of State College, will return home tomorrow from a ten days trip to the Thousand Islands, having spent most of the time while away, at Alexander Bay, N. Y., which borders the St. Lawrence river. The remainder of their time was given to seeing Watkins Glen and visiting with friends in Wil- liamsport. —Mrs. Elsie Rankin Helliwell was a guest of her brother, Walter B. Rankin, on a drive from Camp Hill, Sunday. Mrs. Helliwell, who had beeu visiting with her brother and his family for a week, ex- pects to spend the month of August in Bellefonte with her father, William B. Rankin and his daughter, Miss Mary, her apartment in Atlantic City having been sub-letted for that time. —Henry Keller Jr., came up from New Brunswick Sunday, to join Mrs. Keller and their son, Henry III, at State College, where they have been with Mr. Keller's mother for several weeks and to accom- pany them back home today. On the trip they will have with them as far as Allen- town, Mrs. Keller's aunt, Mrs. McGinnis, who is going east to spend ten days with Mr. McGinnis, he having been located there since leaving Bellefonte in the spring. —Mr. and Mrs. Karl Beck, of Avalon, left yesterday for the drive home, follow- ing a visit of almost two weeks in Cen- tre county. Mrs. Beck, formerly Miss Laura Harrison, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison, is a native of the county, lived here all her girlhood life, and both she and Mr. Beck are grad- uates of Penn State. Being located at State College during their stay, they visit- ed daily with Mrs. Beck's friends in Belle- fonte, and spent much time motoring through this section of the State. —Mrs. M. E. Brogan, her son Howard, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Metzgar with their daughter Doris, all of Pittsburgh, are guests this week, of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Garbrick, at their home in Coleville. Among Mr. and Mrs. Garbrick’s over Sun- day guests, were the latter's two brothers, Walter Crissman, of Pittsburgh and Wil- liam Crissman, of Hartford, Ind., who on the return drive home were accompanied by their mother, Mrs. H. C. Crissman, a resident of Pittsburgh, but who had been for a month with her daughter, Mrs. Gar- brick. —John Roan was up from Philadelphia to spend the week-end, with members of the family here and at State College, the visit however being made primarily to see his mother, Mrs. Jerry Roan, who has been in ill health for the greater part of the past year. During his stay, Mr. Roan was a guest of honor at a number of family functions, among them being a picnic supper, given by the Harry Roan family, in the woods west of Pine Grove Mills, Sunday evening. Mr. Roan left from Bellefonte, Tuesday morning, to re- turn to Philadelphia. Additional perconal news on page 4, Col. 4 nn ——— rs. Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by O. Y. Wagner & Ce. Wheat ...cviisieniencersassrrasnssers 135 COT sevecseescessesnsanssnrrnnriseses hil ORLB svesconssnresscrsrsasansrrssessnee ill) BYO ceivserssceasiensvcinsnsnnsicasaci S18 Barley 1.00 Buckwheat ..cceoeeresassssssscssccces 1.00 @sesssseassnsnsssetssssacsnee