—— supper, in cafeteria style, in assembly room of the church (Friday) evening. Prices, 35 cents, children 20 cents. ——Willard Dale, who had housed up at his home on east out and around and will soon be in| shape to fill his place as a tipstaff in the Centre county court. ——Student nurses who have been | admitted to the Centre County hos- | pital training school, on probation, during the past month, are Misses Daisy Hoy and Emily Larimer, of Pleasant Gap; Louise Ryan, of Cole- ville, and Rachel Parsons, of Penn- sylvania Furnace, ——The O. G. missionary society of the U. B. church, held their meet- FAULTS AND FALLACIES OF MOTOR OPERATORS. front of him lision. Sampel's car was damaged to the extent of 35.00 while the Ford truck’ got off with about $5.00 z both drivers admitted to a little negli- | gence they decided to bear their own expense of repairs. Kline, however, was placed under arrest by State highway patrolmen for operating a car without having a 1931 operator's license. On Thursday patrolman Morris | was called to Axe Mann to investi- ing Tuesday night at the home of gate a collision between the cars of | (John A, Shuey and Dr. R. L. Capers, Miss Hazel Rote, of Colevillee The early part of the evening which was | devoted to business was followed by | a delightful social hour, which refreshments were served. | he flashed the required signal, while ——Centre countains who register- {the doctor averred that he did not ed at the Chamber of Commerce in |S€e it. Neither car was badly dam- St. Petersburg, Florida, during the 282d. winter season there were: Rev. and | On Saturday morning Corp. C. L Mrs. F. T. Eastment, Philipsburg; | Gross responded to a call from the Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Lee, State Col- | Penitentiary announcing that an Es- lege; Miss’ Ella Levy, Milesburg; Mr, Sex sedan had been abandoned on and Mrs. John S. Walker and Miss the property of the institution. The which occurred near the cider press. Shuey, who made a left hand turn during | in front of the doctor's car, claimed PHILILPSBURG FISHING SEASON | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | —Mrs. M. C. Breese, of Dowingtown MAN GETS TROUT G Rola | and her niece, Mrs. George Spencer; of NEW TRIAL FOR LARCENY. NOW IN FULL BLAST. “y,,, puty Ray will spend the woek- | Brooklyn, with her sma dawihter and —— gg end with friends in New York city. | maid, have already made arrangements At the December session of court Trout fishing season for 1931 was NE had as a week-end | 10 spend a part of the summer in Belle ' guest, her cousin, Mrs. W. A. Caven, or fonte. expecting to live at The Markland in —Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dorworth Miss Maragret Burnet. 1 and their daughter, Rebecca, are until. | Mes Ewen Bower drove in Jom : spending summer veling in | . . Friday by the | purome. . ae re j lant Week, following a week's visit there many with rother, L. M. Swabb, who has a —Horatlo ue ae In P tau his | been seriously ill for eleven weeks with mits | 22 5 part rd the flu. At the lime of Mrs. Bower's ee = my = A Sth | dwugnter, Mes. Wiliam, Dodds, and BEE lying Pittsburgh, tice wish do tered in Mr. Swabb’s condition, ted to them the question of larceny, ably accounted for in the fact that ars Frank Wieland was over fu | 2 PN I and the juy Itilned 4 vendict of (practically all the mouBtain Streams | Linden Hall. Monday, to spend the day |, colin Ja 12 Liu and dis two guilty. Viard's attorneys promptly 'were completely dried up by the is. Bellefonte 22 2 guest of Mes, PRURK| pons in sotthery Eure ES ‘applied for a new trial and, on Mon- prolonged drouth of last year and | McFurlane, [to America on the Berengaria, sailing ‘day, Judge Fleming announced his fishermen who have a preference for —Miss Blanche Haagan went to Phila- gon Cherbourg on the 2nd of May. ‘decision, granting the motion. _ |such streams did not take out a li- delphia, the latter part of March, re- | Ajnough having devoted some of the Last September Leo Kelley, of cense. Hon of specialists for Cer the observa: | time to travel Miss Linn and Miss Mc- Snow Shoe, was convicted of mali-| Quite a number of Bellefonte “00 Of Specialists for a time. | Socmich have bie i Cielly duriig the cious mischief for cutting down a fishermen went to Fishing creek for —Mrs. John Blanchard is going over greater part of their stay in Europe. 'g on the of H. H. the hile botk creek | 10 New York for a visit of a week or —The Rev. and Mrs. Stuart PF. Gast enes property Fye. opening Spuing more, and will be a guest of her sister. | with their small son, Mrs. Gast's mother {An Soplivation Wa Sade tor anew aud Logars Branch Ha their usual Mrs. Beaver, during her stay | Mrs. Thackery, and her aunt, Miss Bogan, trial when case was called quota. Down lower | —Owing to a recurrence of his illness left on Monday on a motor trip east. for argument, on Monday, attorneys the county both Penn's creek and of long standing L. A. Schaeffer has been | Miss Bogan left the party at Lancaster, for Mr. Kelley withdrew their mo- Elk creek were lined with fishermen. .,.aned to his home on east Curtin the others going on to Mrs. Thackery's tion for a new trial and the court Just as predicted inthe Watchman street, since the fourth of April, {home in Germantown where Mrs. Gast suspended sentence upon the pay- two weeks ago the catch of trout —Miss Margery McGovern is at present | and the child will visit for several weeks, ment of the costs, which amounted was probably the smallest in years. visiting with her sister, Mrs. Fauble, Mr. Gast expecting to return to Belle. to $226. (Patsy Bathurst reported seventeen where she will be until recovered from fonte before Sunday. Mrs. Thackery's One of the cases argued, on Mon- | caught on Logan's Branch, which her illness of several weeks standing. leaving Monday terminated a visit of day, was the application for a new was the largest catch heard of. —Alfred Cohen and a friend from | eversl wetks here with her daughter and trial for C. A, Krape, convicted of Other fishermen on the same stream | Lewisburg. spent the week-end and fore- | ing from two to half a dozen, Part o week with friends in Wil- | . lo Pebruy tem A i did not get a rise. The lsmsburg, Va. having driven down in THE LONG, LONG TRAIL of his store building at Spring Mills same condition prevailed on Spring Alfred’s car. OF LIME DUST NUISANCE. —Mrs. Harold Kirk is with the family | - in the spring of 1929. A court de. creek, Of course the cold weather of her brother, Amos Cole, in Lewist | It is now over a since cision in the matter will be handed doubtless had something to do with . en WR, Year 2 wo. down later. |the small catch, but it is also quite On Tuesday Judge Fleming heard likely that the trout are gradually (argument in the injunction proceed- becoming scarcer. ings instituted by H. H. Fye against] About two o'clock Wednesday |the Central Coal and Coke company morning chief of police Harry Duke- ‘to restrain them from driving over man, patrolling Spring creek in his ‘his land in going to and from their 'car, came across two men on the | mine in Snow Shoe . The pavement, opposite Beezer’s garage, {court dissolved the preliminary in- acting rather suspicious like. He ‘junction but ordered the case put Stopped his car and found the men down for trial as there are certain to be John Wilson and Hayes Daugh- facts in evidence which warrants it enbaugh. Wilson had a line in the this week, where she is under the care! of specialists for surgical treatment for | Bellefonte appealed in person to the a sinus ailment. | borough council to take some action —Charles Allison drove down from | toward dispelling the lime dust nui- Toronto, Saturday, for a day's visit with | sance which is proving such a bug- his sister, Miss Mabel Allison in her new | y home at Millheim, leaving Sunday night | ear 30 redidants of the northern to return to Canada. | 8e¢ of the town. The dust —Mrs. Thomas Hull and her daughter, °OMes from the hydrating plant of Miss Jennie, returned to their home in the American Lime and Stone com- Aaronsburg, last week, after spending Pany. At the time complaint was the winter in Huntingdon with Mrs. made to council the matter was re Hull's niece, Mrs. Patton. |ferred to the Special committee and man resident of the North ward of Annie Treaster, Bellefonte. ——Lawrence Redding, proprietor | of the Mountain house, at Snow | Shoe, was in Bellefonte, on Friday, | the first time in a number of weeks. | car was taken to the Larimer gar- age, at Pleasant Gap, and later it developed that it belonged to an Oak Hall man. The car was taken from High street, Bellefonte, by Abraham Coble, driven to the peniten being submitted to a jury. The case of Mrs. Bertha Foster, of State College, claiming compensa- tion for the death of her husband, the late Phil D. Foster, scheduled creck but Daughenbaugh had not yet made a cast. Both men were placed under arrest. At a hearing ! before 'Squire Woodring, the same | afternoon Wilson pleaded guilty and He is just recovering from a long | nd abandoned When he Heard for argument, was not heard at this being unable to pay a fine of $100 siege of illness and his many friends will be glad to know that he is now 'DAt an information had been lodged | time. on the upgrade and is looking for- ward to a complete recovery in the | near future. | ——Gilbert F. Noll has his new! wall paper store on High street opened and is ready to receive those | who contemplate having any papering or painting done. Gilbert is a very | mechanic, uses nothing but the best materials and is so courte- | ous always that doing business with | against him before ’'Squire Tressel, | Coble appeared of his own accord and plead guilty to taking the .car. He was also charged with operating a car without license. He was held in $400 bail for court. i rr —————— on ——————— | WORK OF REFORESTATION | IN CENTRE COUNTY. | Conservation of forests has been |drilled into land owners in Centre ‘and costs, imposed by the ‘Squire’ his case was continued one week to give him an opportunity to raise | the money. | Daughenbaugh was discharged as there was no evidence to show that ‘he had thrown his line into the Between 9 and 10 o'clock Satur- county during the past few years creek. day night, Nittany mountain, when he ran into the point of the mountain as he Which the native timber has been James Heimbaugh, of until they have come to realize that Burnham, wrecked his by | oh only way it can be done sucess- MANY TROUT MISSING coupe at the watering trough, on fully is by scientific reforestation of | the mountains and other lands from FROM PRIVATE FISH PONDS. Eighteen months ago Willis Shuey ~~Miss Edith Robb who came up from Morgantown, W. Va., for Easter, will remain here for an indefinite time, a guest of her cousin, Miss Hazel Kelley and other relatives and friends at her former home at Coleville, —Dr. Grant, assistant to Dr. Charles H. Frazier, of the University of Pennsyl- vania, was in Bellefonte this week in con- sultation with physicians here concern- !ing Dr. Melvin Locke's illness, which has developed a serious condition. —Mrs. Myron M. Cobb, whose condl- | tion has been causing her family and friends some concern, is thought to be slightly better this week. Mrs. Cobb has ‘been ill since the beginning of the year, with what was thought to be “the flu.” —George Sims Jr., only surviving mem- ber of the George Sims family, at one time one of tne most prominent colored |the members interviewed officials of ‘the Lime and Stone company who promised to do everything possible ‘to abate the nuisance, Some five jor six months ago report was made to council that a sum of money had | been set aside for the purpose of in- | stalling a dust collector, which would | probably be in place by the middle of March. | That time has come and gone and the dust continues on it's long, long trail over the northern section of | Bellefonte. Other lime companies ‘operating in this section have hy- |drating plants which are equipped | with dust collectors that are said to 'be efficient and cause little or no | trouble to operate. A similar him is not only satisfactory but a pleasure as well. | ~The Second National Bank, of Altoona, closed it's doors last. Friday morning, the third institution in that city to close with- in two months. Officers of the Second National claim it will be able to. pay every obligation in full, it's clasing having been forced by ‘the withdrawal of almost a million attempted to make a left hand turn. To patrolman Morris he claimed that he was blinded by the lights of jan oncoming car. His car was ‘damaged to the extent of $75, but | he | their work of cars. Wed- nesday of last week Corp. Gross and patrolman Turner checked 74 cars on route 64, near Milesburg, Five dollars by depositors. ‘had bad emergency brakes, three ~——Mrs. Blanche Houser Ferguson, bad foot brakes, one no mirror and who several years ago supplied the 4 obscured tags. injury. Highway patrolmen are continuing | removed and which is not suitable ‘and Joseph Bertram built two pri- | vate fish ponds, on Spring creek, | for cultivation as farm land. Fora for the p of pro lin {number of years prior to his death uzpose pagating | In the lower pond they placed 2500 the late Grant Hoover planted more trees, annually, on his mountain | Tout ranging in size up to nine | inches, while in the upper d' other individual in Centre county, |,.e’ ine trout Sabiey. Season. lat ‘and while the present generation | (8 Cor a Taree sized trout | will not derive benefit from his work | Oo. caught by fishermen and the there jor aow a stand of young trees | omainder of the 2500 have practical- on the land which in years COME |v disappeared in some mysterious will no doubt prove exceedingly | manner. [valuable in mote ways thal one. : |“ yyuey the dams. ‘were. built cone | This spring requisition has been | crete breasts were put in and wire | sister, Mrs. John Love, at the Love home . : ‘on Reynolds avenue, where he will be Yarnell, of Mingoville, and Miss ap- families of Bellefonte, was here from Al. Paratus installed on the plant of the toona the early part of the week, for American Lime and Stone company the funeral of his sister, Mrs. Alice Sims | Would probably abate to a great de- Emery Burrs, Wednesday afternoon. | gree the nuisance which is causing —Logan Long, who for several years S50 much worry and trouble to scores has made his home at Port Matilda Of residents in Bellefonte. indefinitely. | Blanche M. Orr, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Albert Orr, of Hublersburg —Mrs. John Porter Lyon drove to! : ’ Harrisburg, Wednesday of last week, Were quietly married at the Presby- with her son George, and was met there parsonage, in Bellefonte, on (by her daughter, Mrs. Doblebower, who Wednesday evening, by the pastor, stores of Bellefonte and many of its | On route 58, near Pleasant Gap, made for 130,000 forest trees to be familics with potato chips, has re- out of 120 cars checked 24 were planted on Centre county lands. The sumed this work, intending to again | found with glaring headlights, three western penitentiary at Rockview put on the market her former high | with no tail light, two carrying il- will put out 30,000; the State De- grade chips. Small or large orders legal devices and six with only one partment of Forests and Waters will ‘delivered promptly. Be sure when light. | plant 22,000 on State-owned lands; ‘buying potato chips that the bag is On Saturday night 215 cars were E. L. Nixon, the “potato wizard” of marked “Blanche’s Potato Chips.” checked on rouce 220, near Miles- |Bipee Celiege. will plant 20,000 8 : ~———Senator Scott's bill amending burg, with the result that 48 were his land in Ferguson township; Dr. ‘the tax collection law which caused found with glaring headlights, four G. S. Frank, of Millheim, will put ‘Such. an uprising all over the State, With no tail light and two with il- out 12,000; the Black Bear hunting last. summer, has passed both the legal devices. club, of Philipsburg, 5000; S. W. Senate and’ the House and is now On Monday afternoon 128 cars Smith, of Centre Hall, 3,000; the up to the Governor. The bill gives were checked on route 537 near Philipsburg State hospital, 3,000; the one year more leeway for the pay- Milesburg, 21 of which had bad State Game Commission, 1,000; the ment of taxes and makes the Inter- emergency brakes, eight bad’ Grange Encampment and Fair com- est rate for non-payment just half foot brakes, one no horn, one no mittee, 1,000 on the camp grounds what it was under the original act. mirror and two obscured tags. At at Centre Hall, and the Bellefonte We had t the same place, at night 209 cars fish hatchery 360 on the hatchery IAL a Pleasant surprise|,, .." nesied, 60 of which had giar- grounds at Pleasant Gap. yesterday morning when rural mail ing ts, no tail lights, carrier John Hartswick walked into jug headlights, ee I i AROS GRE the office carrying a carton full of egal ses Y GAS STATIO. delicicus apples. They had just one headlight. i ms SHOT AND ROBBED. Tuesday nigh rs were —_— opened their “apple hole” up at their y ta Rinehart home: on east Bishop street and Mrs. James Drop Het. 3 checked on the Nittany mountain, 14 Aa Har: of which had bad emergency brakes, gasoline sta between Bigler wh wie was the thoughtful lady three bad foot brakes, one no mirror Kylertown, Clearfield county, was that some of them be breught Geenq |and one a swinging tag. ‘shot in both arms, Saturday night, dere, They have been in the ground And then we wonder why there by three men who robbed his till of all winter and have the flavor and are so many auto accidents, while $160 and made a successful escape. the odor that only buried apples get. we should marvel that there are not The high-handed piece of banditry ——At the monthly meeting of the. hoard of trustees of the Centre County hospital, held on Tuésday | evening, manager W. H. Brown's re- port showed 72 patients admitted during the month of March. There were eight births and the 125 pa- tients in the institution were there for a total of 1235 days. The re- ceipts for the month were $6320.85, which included $2739.87 from pa- tients, $200 from Mrs. Blanche Hayes Hiller for upkeep of room, $562.40 from the nurses’ fund and’ three month's State appropriation for 82143750. Expenses for the month were not given . ——Fifteen friends of Charles M. McCurdy motored to Gettysburg, on Sunday and mingled with the large | congregation present at the First presented on the stage. In choos- (formerly the ing “The College Widow" the glee ground for the connection between Presbyterian church Upper Marsh Creek church) to hear club has made a radical departure the 12-inch water more of them. HIGH SCHOOL GLEE CLUB TO occurred at 9 o'clock. Mr. Rinehart was putting things in shape to close for the night when a high powered |screens at the spillway kept trout (from going up stream, but notwith- | standing this fact brown trout got into the dam by boring through the ground under the concrete. The brown trout gobbled up the brook trout wholesale, and though quite a number of the cannibal species have been caught and removed from the dam a number are still there. | In the upper dam the owners | placed some 5,000 trout fry a year |ago. Most of these are still there, {and are now from five to nine inches i |in length. REVOLUTIONARY MARKER TO BE UNVEILED | Bellefonte Chapter Daughters of {the American Revolution will unveil | la marker, Saturday afternoon, April twenty fifth at 3.30 o'clock in mem- | jory of three Revolutionary soldiers— |John Goheen, John Borland, John IGlenn and George Meek. This | marker is placed on the Sumner Miller farm near the highway between Pine Grove Mills and Pennsylvania Furnace and is about a quarter of a mile north of the little old cemetery in which these three soldiers of the Revolution are buried. ' Owing to the inacessibility of the took her mother on to Philadelphia for a visit at the Doblebower home. George Porter Lyon returned to Bellefonte the same day with Mrs. Lyon's car. —Mrs. Harry Dawson and her brother, Samuel Cherry, drove up from Philadel- phia, Sunday, the trip being made that + Mr. Cherry might be here for the open- ing of the fishing season. Mrs. Daw- son, accompanied by her father, Theodore Cherry, returned home Tuesday, Mr. Cherry intending to visit with his daugh- ter only for a few days. —Mrs. Frank Warfield, with her sister and daughter, Dr. Edith Schad and Mrs. Craig, drove to Altoona yesterday, from there Dr. Schad went by train to Pitts- | burgh, to join her son-in-law, Gail Chaney, for the drive home to Toledo, Ohio. Mr. Chaney, who is now employ- (ed in Pittsburgh, will move his family there as soon as school closes. —Miss Hannah Newman and her niece, Mrs. Sitnek, drove over from Altoona last week, for a day in Bellefonte. When !a resident of Bellefonte, some years ago. Miss Newman was one of its foremost business women and when retiring left here to make her home in Altoona. Mrs. Sitnek is a daughter of Mrs. William ' Grauer, also a former resident of Belle- | | fonte. —Mr. and Mrs, John McCoy, with Miss Katherine Allison as a driving guest, left here Wednesday of ast week, drove to Mifflinburg for Miss Anna Mc- ‘car containing four men drew up PRESENT “COLLEGE WIDOW.” ‘and stopped. One man remained The Bellefonte High school glee In the car with the motor purr- club has selected “The College Wid- ing. The other three, with drawn ow,” the laughable farce comedy by Weapons, entered the station and George Ade, as it's annual produc- ordered Rinehart to “stick ‘em tion this year, and rehearsals for up.” Rinehart dropped behind the the same are now under way. The counter and came up with an auto- date selected for the performance is matic but before he could use it one cemetery and the fact that some of Coy and Miss Kate Shugert, who had the graves have disappeared in a sink been there attending a missionary meet- hole it seemed best to locate the | ing, hea 0 oo ditimare 308 marker nearer the State highway. their five p they As all descendants of these men are Paltimore, Washington and Philadelphia. not known to the committee jn [°'WMINg home Sunday night, leaving charge, individual notices are impos- | geimiar and Miss Shugert in Phila- ey jovitetion je | —Miss May Taylor, an instructor in the tended to them; friends and those in| 0’ high school of Bellefonte, expected Thursday, April 30th, and the place Of the robbers shot him in both arms. ‘They then robbed the till and run- ning out of the station jumped into | their car and sped away. Wounded as he was Rinehart was unable to get the number of the license tags on the car. He was taken to the | Clearfield hospital for treatment. the Richelieu theatre, “The College Widow" made a big hit when it was presented by first- line theatrical companies in all the big cities in the United States, as well as at one night stands. It is a play in feur acts. In the third act a very realistic football game is ~The 12-inch pipe is on the main, on Alle- his historic address on the one hun- from its usual line of entertainments, gheny street, and the new pump at dred and ninety-first anniversary of the founding of the church. While the | but one that will no doubt appeal to all who see and hear it. Tickets | the Gamble mill. ‘When it has been put down and all connections rade trip was made as a surprise com- for the play will be put on sale to- the working capacity of the new pliment to Mr. McCurdy every one of the fifteen felt well repaid for | having made the trip because of the made by the Bellefonte banker who spent many years of his life in Gettysburg and was a member of the church before coming to Belle- fonte. masterly and interesting = day. ———Forest fires have been raging, this week on Bald Eagle mountain, toward Tyrone, and in the Barrens, east of Warriorsmark. In the lat- ter section over 3000 acres have been burned over and the home of Wil- liam Barto destroyed. to | erating | cause la six the ter the terested in patriotic and historic | work to join the D. A, R. in this com- memorative event. ———Gilbert F. Noll, the well known painter and paper hanger, has in- vested in a portable steam boiler for use in removing old paper from plastered walls and, after viewing the operation, we wondered why such a simplified thing had not been in- vented long ago. With it's use one man can remove as much old paper intwo hours as two men could do in a day by the old method of digging, and it obviates all danger of tearing off the plaster. j—— Elizabeth Cooney is at present on rebl and reconditioning old hats and at very moderate prices. Take your hat of last year or two years ago to the Hat Shop and have it blocked to the 1981 style. 16-1t to go to the Clearfield hospital this week, to be under the observation of Dr. Wa- terworth until her condition improves. Miss Taylor had been out of school for several months, on account of ill health, but resumed her work three weeks ago, then finding she was not making a com- plete recovery, decided to enter the Clear- fleld hospital for special treatment. Miss Taylor's condition became worse during the week and she has not been able to make the trip. —Mrs. D. H. Hastings and her grand- daughter, Mrs. McVey, drove up from Harrisburg Monday afternoon, to look after some changes in the flower garden of the Hastings’ home on Allegheny street, remaining in Bellefonte for an overnight visit. Mrs, Ross Hickok, Mrs. Hastings’ daughter, will sail on May 6th for Cape Town, for a visit of two weeks or more with her son Hastings, now doing engineering work in Upper Rhod- esia. From South Africa Mrs. Hickok will go to London to join Mr. Hickok, expecting to travel in Europe for a part of the summer. | Rev. William C, Thompson. The young couple were guests at a | wedding dinner given at the home ‘of the bridegroom's parents last evening. They will reside in Hub- lersburg. Boldin—Plozner.—John Boldin and | Miss Lucy Plozner, both of Belle- 'fonte, were married in St. John's | Catholic church, at 7,30 o'clock last | Saturday morning, by Rev. W. E. (Downes. The young couple were | attended by Joseph Sundav and Miss | Annie Boldin. For the present they will make their home with the ‘bride's father, John Plozner. The bridegroom is employed by the American Lime and Stone company and is an industrious young man. Harpster—C on fe r—Elmer Carl Harpster, son of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Harpster, of Pine Grove Mills, and Miss Hattie Ellen Confer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Confer, of Salona, were married, on Monday evening of last week, at the Luther- |an parsonage at Salona, by the pas- tor, Rev. W. O. Ibach. They will reside at Pine Grove Mills. ——Tuesday of next week will be the day for the opening, at the Postoffice Department in Washing- ton, of the various proposals for a site for Bellefonte’'s new govern- ment postoffice building. It is un- derstood that a number of proposals have been submitted but just where they are or what properties they include cannot be stated with any degree of certainty. How many of them might be considered available is also unknown. It is possible that the Department might not consider any of them as measuring up 30 tae requirements, in which even might be necessary to resort to con- demnation proceedings to secure an available site. ——The spring-like weather of last week inspired the garden mak- ing brigade in Bellefonte and tools which have stood idle for almost a year were brought forth and put in- to active use. —— A ——————— Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected Weekly by C. Y. Wagner & Co. 80 Corn J5 Oats A Rye 00 BAY cesssssccmmmm— + t— + $0 BULEWHABE oss + cesar J