TE | KRUMRINE.—Mrs. Rebecca C. daughter, Mrs. Thomas J. McDer- Bellefonte, Pa., April 1, 1932. Krumrine, wife of Adam Krumrine, mott, at River Edge, N. J. | passed away on Tuesday morning of | pyesday morning, following an ill- |last week, at her home in State Col- n.gq of several years. lege, following an illness of almost yp. was born at Cedar Springs, ——C. Y. Wagner & Co., have a jou Yu i the result of a stroke Cinton county, on May 3rd, 1863, fine grade of seed oats which they gp, wag a daughter of Felix and hence was not quite 69 years old. In -are selling at fifty cents a bushel. | October, 1899, he married Miss Annie Catherine Garbrick Shuey and was o gwarz a daughter of the late ——Orvis Hosterman and Miss born at Houserville on November y .ciion’ and Susan Swartz, of Grace Stover, both of Aaronsburg, 13th, 1857, hence was 74 years, 4 en were married at Mouat Holly Springs, months and 9 days old, On January pg hi fad Sweaty 5 a last Saturday, by the Rev. Ward. K. 21st, 1879, she married Mr. Krum- arin by tra de and foll 1 that Hosterman. rine and they at once located on a y occupation during his residence in ——The stock of the Harter music farm in College township. For thirty Bellefonte. He was a member of the store, sold at sheriff's sale last Fri- years they lived on the farm but in Met} list church and in politics a day, was bid in by John G. Love, 1909 they retired to a comfortable Republican. Survivi Mm are two Esq, for Mrs. R. G. Hayes, on her home in State College. Mrs. Krum- _ «claim for rent, at his bid of $750. | rine was a member of the Reformed |Jaughters, Mrs. McDermott, at whose NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. | | | | | | ——W. I. Fleming celebrated his "75th anniversary Sunday, March ‘27th, and was the guest of honor at a family dinner given at the home of ‘his son, Judge M. Ward Fleming, on east Linn street. ~—The boys of the Bellefonte Hi- Y club will hold a food sale at -Schaeffer’'s hardware store, on Alle- ;Bheny street, tomorrow, Saturday, from 9 in the morning until 1 p. m. "They will have pies, cakes, candy and other home-made articles of food and | they are hoping that they will -liberally patronized. A little son born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Gates, of Hecla Park, last Thursday evening, and attack while on his way home from Shivery, a native of Centre county ‘who had been named Charles Lewis, work, last Thursday =vening, collaps- | and for almost forty years a prac- ‘after it's paternal grandfather, died ed on the street and died almost | ticing physician at Woodland, Clear- at noon, on Monday, as the result of ! ‘a valvular heart lesion. He was buried | “Tuesday morning in the Gates lot in| ‘the Union Cemetery, Bellefonte. ——The directors of the Clearfield County Agricultural association have ‘about given up hope of having a ‘county fair next fall. Last year they ‘had a deficit of $3,107.08 and have ‘decided that it will be taking too ‘long a chance to plan for a fair in| “1882 unless a possible deficit of | $3000.00 is underwritten by public | (pledges. | , ———The Ira Philips sale of farm ‘stock and implements, on the H, L. Harpster farm near Alexandria, last Friday, amounted to a little over $4000, pure bred cows selling as high as $180. The interesting thing "in connection with the sale, however, ‘was that not enough cash was taken ‘in to pay the auctioneer, and Mr. Philips had to draw a check on his "bank account to pay it. ——The regular spring meeting of ‘the Huntingdon Presbytery will be! held in the Presbyterian church, at ‘State College, next Monday evening and Tuesday. Rev. Joseph A. Speer, 'D. D., of Tyrone, will preside, Rev. ‘Francis Shunk Downes had been elected moderator a year ago but ‘since then he has accepted a pastor- ate in California, and because of that ‘fact Rev. Speer will preside until the ‘election of a moderator. Containers for the Merchant Marine hook drive of April 10, will “be found in the Y. M.,C. A., and in the Wbby of the Richelieu theatre. "The request comes for books of any be | ‘home he died, and Mrs. Harry A. Rossman, of Milesburg, where he js | made his home the past four years. G. He also leaves one brother and three Mrs. | church all her life and a most desir- |able friend and neighbor. ! In addition to her husband she rived b h Mrs. |C. Reed he A to ius: i !sisters, Elmer Stevenson, of State College. She also leaves one Emma Zimmerman and Mrs. Eva 8 | brother and rng in John C. Shuey, Sproul, of Omak, Wash, and Mrs. blockade until nearly noon. | : y : He also ‘of Lemont, and Mrs. Mary Tressler, Ella Swartz, of Easton. | of Centre Hall. leaves eight grand-children. | Funeral services were held last The remains were brought to the | Thursday afternoon by Rev. A. S. Rossman home, at Milesburg, where | Asendorf, assisted by Rev. John F. funeral services were held yesterday | Harkins, burial being made in the afternoon, at two o'clock, by Rev. |M. H. Crawford, assisted by Rev. M. 1 !C. Piper, burial being made in the BECK. Charles W. Beck, an em- Union cemetery, Bellefonte. | ‘ployee of the Philipsburg Hardware i! | company, was stricken with a heart SHIVERY.—Dr. DEEPEST SNOW OF WINTER FELL ON SUNDAY NIGHT AND MONDAY MORNING Highway Traffic Blocked, Trains De- layed, Telegraph and Telephone Service Disrupted but No Great Damage Was Done, The bumper snow of the winter (or spring) season fell on Sunday night and Monday morning. It start- ed with a heavy precipitation of rain on Sunday evening which turned to snow between nine and ten o'clock. By six o'clock Monday morning it measured eleven inches on the level in at least one back yard in Belle- fonte. This we'll swear to because we're the fellow who measured it on | Pine Hall cemetery. 1" li George Burton instantly. field county, died on Saturday eve-' He was a son of Jeremiah and Ning as the result of a stroke of par- | Catherine Beck, and was born in 2lysis sustained that morning. Warriorsmark valley on October He was a son of Andrew J. and ‘21st 1874, making his age 57 years, Jane Wilson Shivery and was born 5 months snd 3 days. He had been ©B the farm in Buffalo Run valley, a resident of Philipsburg and an em- On June 28th, 1862, hence had reach- the walk. At least three inches fell ployee of the hardware company ©d the age of 69 years, 8 months and after that. Down on Lamb street since 1909. He was a member of the 29 days. As a young man he studied | West Penn Power workmen claimed United Brethren church, the Red medicine and upon receiving his di- {t measured 18 inches while 16 Men and the P. O. 8. of A. He mar- ploma to practice located at Bigler, inches were shown in several other ried Miss Ollie Mechiey, of Mahaf- Clearfield county. He spent three places. Out at the aviation field the fey, who died three years ago but Years there then moved to Woodland official measurement was 14 inches, surviving him is one son, Harold Where he had lived ever since He phyut the man in charge of the station Beck, also an employee of the Phil- Was in active practice up until the who could mot get through by auto- ipsburg Hardware company. He also day he was stricken, He was a mem- mobile and had to walk a mile or leaves the following brothers and ber of the Methodist church and more averred that he waded through sisters: Mrs. Ida Hartsock, of Phil- | prominent in Masonic circles. 22 inches of it. And it wasn’t feath- ipsburg; William, Walter, Robert, He married Miss Elizabeth Dale ery flakes, either, but all of it well John and Albert Beck, all of War-| Who survives with two sons, George water soaked. riorsmark valley. Burton, Jr., of Knoxville, Tenn., and ~ State highway crews with their Funeral services were held at 10 Kenneth, of Clearfield. He also snow plows were unable to cope with o'clock on Monday morning, at his leaves one brother and two sisters, the situation and it was Monday late home in Philipsburg, by Rev, A. David Harry Shivery, of Bellefonte; afternoon before main routes of travel E. Sharp, burial being made at War- Margaret E. and Sallie E., both mar- | were opened up. Telephone service, riorsmark. ried and living in Ohio. both local and Jong distance, I I Funeral services were heid in the ong i IRWIN.—Jesse Irwin, a native of | Woodland Methodist church at 2 Centre county, died on Monday after- o'clock on Wednesday afternoon, noon of last week, at the home of burial being made in the Bradford cemetery, at Woodland. LAM. Mrs, - | streets of Bellefonte as well as along stam, widow of Thomas GO. the highways. The snow stuck to the 1 i be leaves one daughter, Mrs. E. T. Hall, of Fleming. were held at Jersey Shore, last Fri- | died at her home in Tyrone, on Sun- | day, following an illness of ten weeks | with a complication of diseases. She was born on Dix Run, Union township, on January 1st, 1873, | hence was in her 60th year. Her | Brief funeral services married life was spent in the vicin- Pnn at several points but not as bad as by the storm several weeks pre- vious. 4 With a temperature 1 above the ity of her birth but following the | freezing point the snow settled con- | day morning, after which the re- death of her husband nine years ago giderably on Monday, and the mildly “kind, suitable for reading or to be paing were taken to Unionville she moved to Tyrone. She is Sur-|geqgonable weather since has taken sold, and as this is'such a worthy «charity, it is hoped a liberal response ‘will be made to the appeal. Mrs. Paul | McGarvey and Mrs. Blanchard are in ‘charge of the drive, with the Boy ‘Scouts aiding, in charge of collection. | —~Norman Kirk, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kirk, of this place, and a senior in the Bellefonte | High school, has won the Gorgas ;medal for the best essay on: “Mos- | rquitoes, their danger to health and ‘the importance of their control.” | Miss E¥zabeth Herr received honor- ‘site mention for her discussion of ‘the same subject. The medal is of- fered to a senior or junior of Belle- fonte High school by the Gorgas) "Memorial Institute of Washington, | MD. C. Norman's essay will now be entered in the contest for the State trophy. ———A record attendance at the ‘Woman's Club meeting taxed the capacity of the Linn home, Monday ‘night, where the club was entertain- ed by Miss Linn, as speaker of the ®vening, witha talk on “Early Homes ‘in Bellefonte,” in a setting to be gotten nowhere else in the town. The ‘entire Linn house, rich in treasures ©f early American and colonial per- ods, was opened to the club in il- Austration of the talk. Preceding this, “the regular business session was “held, at which ten dollars was voted “the welfare committee for its work and tentative arrangements were made for the coming of Miss Anne Bright, who is to give her second showing of Miss Bright's pictures, .of beautiful gardens in Europe and America. -w—Many regular attendants are ‘of the opinion that last Sunday morning's service in the Bellefonte Methodist church was the most heartening and impressive they have ever attended there. The beautiful music, the admission of an unusually large class of probationary members and the memorial for members who had died during the year made it a service that left a deep impress on the minds and hearts of those who participated. Those memorialized were Mrs. Stella Brown Thompson, | Mrs. Ethel Zettle Poorman, Wilbur *T. Twitmire, Mrs. Ollie Campbell ‘Barnhart, Mrs. Mary Bathurst Mc- “Clure, Margaret Ann Smith, Mrs. Mary Naatz Brewer, James Wil- Aiams, Mrs. Jane Bathurst, Mrs, Han- mah Wilson Smith and Perry Moran. | daughter, Mrs. Mary Hendricks, | o'clock on Sunday afternoon, by Rev. where services were held in the | Methodist church by Rev. J. Russell Dunlap, burial being made in Oak Ridge cemetery. il I WAGNER.—James Irvin Wagner, a lifelong resident of Liberty town- ship, died at his home on Marsh Creek, last Thursday night, following an illness of several months with a complication of diseases. He was born on Marsh Creek 77 years ago. For many years he was engaged in lumbering on the Alle- gheny mountains. He was a member | of the church of Christ at Blanchard | and the Odd Fellows lodge, Surviving | him are his wife and an adopted home. Funeral services were held in the Church of Christ at Blanchard, at 2 David Neilson, burial being made in the Disciple cemetery at that place. Il Il GARBRICK.—Alpheus E. Gar- brick, well known farmer of Walk- er township, died at his home, near Zion, on Sunday morning, following three week's illness with pneumonia. He was a son of Jacob and Eliza- beth Garbrick and was born near Zion 63 years ago. He is survived by one son and a daughter, Arthur Gar- brick, of Zion, and Mrs. I. R. Baum- r, of Bellefonte. He also leaves one sister, Mrs. Boyd A. Noll, of Zion, He was a member of the Luth- eran church. Funeral services were held in the Lutheran church, at Zion, at 10:30 o'clock on Wednesday morning, by Rev. Paul Keller, assisted by Rev. C. E. Arnold, burial being made in the Zion cemetery. i Il FAY. Robert Hamill Fay died at his home in Altoona, last Friday, as the result of a heart attack, though he had not been in good health for several years. He was a son of Dr, John and Catherine Royer Fay and was born at Williamsburg about 70 years ago. vived by seven children, Mrs. Ira Ike, Frank Ingram, Mrs. Simon Harpster, Clark and Cathryn In- ingram, of Tyrone; Blair Ingram, of Hublersburg, and Mrs. Harold Fern, of Altoona. Funeral services were held at her home in Tyrone, at 2 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon, by Rev. Samuel Stimer, assisted by Rev. J. 8. Col- ledge, burial being made in the Oak Ridge cemetery, in Union township. | it STRUNK. Mrs. Teressa Jane Strunk, wife of J. Plummer Strunk, Strunk all at home. She also leaves her parents and the following broth- ers and sisters: Mrs. Clyde Shutt, of Monument; Arthur Bennett, of Moose Run; Frank and Walter of Runville; Mrs. Richard Gunsallus, Col- petzer died at his home in Benner township at 6 o'clock last Wednes- day evening, just three hours after the burial of his wife, as the result of an attack of pneumonia. He was close to 85 years of age and during the Civil war served as a member of Company D. Pennsylvania volun- teers, having enlisted in January, 1863, and discharged in July, 1865. Three children survive, Miss Ke- turah Colpetzer, at home; John, of Pennsylvania Furnace, and William H., of Bellefonte. He also leaves one brother, Solomon Colpetzer, of Axe Mann. Rev. C. A. Metzger and Rev. For many years he was employed as Altoona. He married Miss Patty Lane, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John N. Lane, of Bellefonte, who survives | C. C. Shuey officiated at the funeral a clerk in the office of the general which was held at 3 o'clock on Sat- |, | superintendent of the P. R. R., in yrday afternoon, burial being made ng. |in Meyers cemetery, ——The Willing Workers class of with one daughter, Miss Patty. He St. John's Lutheran church will hold also leaves one brother and a sister. a bake sale at the Variety shop to- Funeral services were held on morrow (Saturday) at 9 o'clock. All Monday afternoon, burial being made | kinds of home made bread and cakes in the Fairview cemetery, Altoona. |on sale. ‘the bulk of it away. The rains and the snows of the past mont: have pretty thoroughly soaked the ground but has had no flood effect on the streams, Meteorologist Parker tells us that the big snow of Sunday night and Monday morning, reduced to its water content, was the equivalent of a rainfall of 1.24 inches of water. SOME SNOW FALLS, THESE: Miss Emma Pletcher, of Howard, who returned, last week, from a two month's visit with her sister, Mrs. Ivar Harvey, in Langhorne, measured the snow at one place in their yard, at Howard, last Monday, and found it to be eleven inches deep. By way of comparison she looked up her father's “Record of Events” and found the following interesting state- ments: . In 1807 three feet of snow fell in one night. In the great snow of 1854, it began to fall April 15th, in the evening, and stopped April 17th, about noon. It smowed 42 inches deep. About eight o'clock April 15th, 1879, snow began to fall and con- tinued through that day, the" eleventh and until the evening of the twelfth, in all about forty-eight hours, and to a depth of 33 inches, which is sup- posed to be the greatest snow rall in ninety years. The Women's Missionary Society of the Presbytery of Huntingdon, which includes the society of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church, will hold its tenth annual meeting in the Second Presbyterian church at Altoona on April 5th and 6th, Miss Anna McCoy, of Bellefonte, is first vice president of the society and Miss Kate Shugert is secretary of children’s work for the group under 12 years. Miss Shugert will represent Bellefonte on the program, reporting Tuesday afternoon for the department of which she is secretary, and being one of the leaders in the young people's discussion groug Wednesday morn- ———The guest speaker at the chapel services in the Schwab Audit- orium at the Pennsylvania State Col- lege this Sunday will be Rev. Har- old Tweedy from the Yale Univer- sity Divinity School, Chapel service begins at 11:00. | Frank McFarlane and with Col, and Mrs. | 1y defective | { H NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —-**Col.’ Harry Flack went out to Blairsville, on Tuesday, to attend the fu- neral of his son Lloyd's mother-in-law which was held in that city yesterday. —Mrs. Oscar Wetzel's Easter guests in- | cluded her daughter, Mrs. W. F. McCoy pills an d | and daughter, Amy Jane, and Bobby, all | P false { of whom drove in from Ambridge for the | visit. —Mrs. D. H. Hastings came up from arrisburg last week, expecting to be here indefinitely with her sister, Mrs. IJ. L. Spangler. | —Mrs. Harry Garber is here from New York with her sister, Mrs, George B. Thompson, having came te Bellefonte, | | their “son William, of Buffalo, N. Y., we: i | ner sister, Mrs. Irvin and to consult —Mr. and Mrs .Robert V. Lyon an in town over Wednesday night. They ha been in Washington for a few days an stopped here to take Mrs. Lawrence M: | Clure back with them for a visit wit | specialist in that city, ~—Mrs. Harry Keller returned to Bell: fonte, last week, from a winter's vis | with her son, Dr. Henry Keller, at Ne | Brunswick: with her sisters’ Mrs, Ca: | field and Mrs, Stoddard, at Wyncote, an with Judge William Keller's family, Lancaster. When leaving here Mrs. Ke ler went to Pittsburgh to spend Chris mas with her son, Ellis and his famil: and went East from there, —Fred Landis came over from Lewi town, Sunday, and from here accompanie by his mother, Mrs. Alfred Landis, drov ! to Philadelphia, where Mrs. Landis hs been called by the death of her younge | sister, Mrs. Frank Maul, the former Mu | Ivy Watson, of Pine Glenn. Mrs. Land Looking across High street from the Watchman office doorway | is spending the week in Philadelphia, he at 9 o'clock Monday morning March 28, 1932. Snow had just stop- | son and daughter, Fred and Mrs. Willia ped falling. The cars parked in front of the Penn Belle are those of | orow™¢: expecting to drive down for he guests, several of whom were unable to get them out of the snow | Sunday. ER —— i ——————— DR. ROAN OFFERS ADVICE | ON CARE OF THE EYE Don't be fooled by unscrupulo: So-called opticians who ie | bargains in spectacles, says Dr. Ey |B. Roan, the well known State Co lege and Bellefonte optometrist, “All glasses look alike. So do a teeth. It is in whe | you cannot see that you win or lose. | | | | “Eyes are too precious for anyon [to select an optometrist with let | care than they would a physician ¢ a dentist. They might be only sligh without any loss of vi: | lon, in the early stage. This is cal |ed ametropia and is often the caus (of headaches and nervous disorders. “Glasses to correct this conditio | last week on account of the death, of her &re worthless at an ri i ce uml | nephew, Daniel Bush Thompson. aa ot | their daughter, —Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harm and Polly, drove down from Elmira and spent Sunday in Bellefonte, as guests of Mr. Harm's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Oscar Harm, of East Linn, street. Both Mrs. John Van Pelt, teaching in a school in New Jersey, and her daughter, Rachael, a student at Temple | University were in Bellefonte for their | Easter vacation, guests of Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy. —Mr. and Mrs. David Howell, of Youngstown, Ohio, were among the vis- itors to Bellefonte, over the past week- end, here as guests of Mrs. Howell's fath- er, J. K. Barnhart, Mrs. Howell was the former Miss Louise Barnhart, —Mrs. Edmund P. Hayes' sister drove in from Pittsburgh last week and was accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. Hayes, who returned from there to Chi- cago by train. Mr. and Mrs. Hayes had been in Bellefonte since shortly after Christmas. ~—Mr, and Mrs. Hollobaugh and their small child were among those back home for Easter, driving here from New Jer- sey, for a visit here with Mrs. Hollo- baugh's parents, Mr. and Mrs, M. R. prescribed. after a painstaking scientific diagnosis.” - “Skilled professional services ar | within the reach of all, but neve found on the bargain counter” If your eyes trouble you at a you should consult a good optom trist, at once, before the conditio i i Johnson, and at Mr. Hollobaugh's for- mer home at State College. ~—Miss Mary Sommerville, who is here with her brother, John Sommerville and his wife, at their home on east Bishop street, will be in Bellefonte for some time. Miss Sommerville had been in Westfield, N. J., for the winter and stopped here on her way home to Winburne, —John M. Fleming, feature writer for | the Philipsburg Daily Journal, was in Bellefonte Sunday, the only out-of-town | Y= guest at the dinner given by Judge and _ Jodon.—Tharp.—Clifford Jodon, « Mrs. M. Ward Fleming, in celebration or Bellefonte, and Miss Bessie Thar the seventy-fifth birthday anniversary of of Williamsport, were married : Judge Fleming's father, W. I. Fleming. noon, on Monday, at St. Mark's Lut! —Mrs. Charles Livingston, a native of | Tan church, Williamsport, by tt Bellefonte and at present a resident of Pastor, Rev. J. Ray Houser, who use Jersey Shore, was an Easter guest at the the ring ceremony. They were a Reynolds Shope home, while in Bellefonte | tended by Miss Dorothy Snyder, « spending Sunday. Mrs. Robert Knox, of Williamsport, and Clarence Stine, Harrisburg, a member of the Shope fam- | Bellefonte. Following the ceremon lly, was also one of thelr Easter guests. 5 wedding dinner was served at ti —Miss Marilla Willams, in charge of Baldwin tea room and latcr ti the stenographic section of the Highway young couple came to Bellefonte i Department, , spent her East- make their home. er vacation visiting relatives, and with friends at State College. Miss Wil- | liams is a native of Bellefonte and went | from here to State College as a stenog- | rapher. There she inaugurated an orig- inal method of filing, whick indirectly led her to her present responsible posi- tion in Harrisburg. —County Treasurer R. F. Hunter, Sheriff John M, Boob, former Sheriff E. R. Taylor, Commissioner John S. Spear- ly, E. J. Thompson Esq., of Philipsburg, and Albert Mingle, chairman of the Penn township Democratic committee, make up a party that will motor to Washington next Wednesday to be present at the Jefferson day banquet there. All of the Democratic candidates for President and many other party big-wigs are to speak at the banquet. —Prof. W. B. Plank, of Lafayette Col- lege, his brother, H. R. Plank, of Wash- ington, D. C., and Prof. J. W. Brandt, of the faculty of George Washington, at Washington, were all Easter vacation guests of Mrs. John H. Beck, at Nittany. Prof. Brandt is a grandson of Mrs. Beck and was with her for only a day while the Plank men, both Penn State gradu- ates, spent the week-end in Centre coun- ty. H. K. Plank, who drove to Nittany with his brother, left from here for Cali- fornia, where he has accepted a position as supervising entomologist, at Sacra- mento. Prof. Plank returned to Easton with plans for leaving to join Mrs. Plank and their daughter, Adaline Jane, in the South of France, as soon as Lafayette's centennial and commencement are over. The Planks went to Europe, a year ago. Prof. Plank returned in June, leaving Mrs. Plank and their daughter with Dr. and Mrs. Louis E. Reber, at Nice, Adaline | Ge b work done here Jane having attended school at Cours | b. your jo Maintenon, at Cannes, during the time they have been abroad. The family will coupl motor wedding trip. Price—Evey.~Harry Price, wi has charge of the highway patr office, in Temple Court, and Mi Eleanor Evey, daughter of Mr. ar Mrs. Robert Evey, of Bellefont went up to Hollidaysburg, on Tue day of last week, where they wei united in marriage, They went out ! Ohio on a little trip where they spe: a day with Mr. Price's sister, return ing to Bellefonte on Sunday ar going direct to their already furnisl ed apartment in the house of W. Chambers on east Curtin street. Week” by the State of Pennsylvani All persons in Bellefonte are reques ed to remove all ashes and rubbi: from their lots and from the alle; in rear of their properties. Th should be done so that the inspectic the following week will be a cred to our community. SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF COUNC ——The choir of the Evangelic church will hold a chicken-waff supper in the basement of the churc on Willowbank street, Thursda April 7th, from 5 to 7 o'clock. Adult 50, Children 25. The public is co dially invited. Bellefonte Grain Markets. Wheat return to the States In time for Adaline Jane to enter Wellesley College in the fall, and Mrs. Plank to resume her ac- tive: work as a director onthe. school board of Easton, to which she was re- Corn Oats Rye Barley elected while in Europe. 4 Buckwheat A ————— ——