EE — y i . ~ DEATHS OF THE WEEK on Mann and the last of his family. MILESBURG MAN GETS | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL G. Mac Gamble has bess in Washing- { HERE AND BER Lr interested in Newton Ham-| BOROUGH CONTRACT FOR —Mr. and Mrs. C. M. McCormick, of | Wainer Roca Moder observation. at the — | ton. be Was: \deatified With every. REPAIR OF RESERVOIR College township, spent Monday after-| = po oo "oie — —»| GRIER.—Dr, Alvin R. Grier, pres- thing relative to its progress, in all —is noon in the shops and transacting sme | Hore LE Sat aw A Lewis. Bellefonte, Pa., May 13, 1932 ident of the schoel for girls at|church, social and business move- Low Bidder in of Nine. Will business in Bellefonte. Lut A iit Birmingham, Blair county, died at ments. Take About a Month to Complete _The Jomes McNichols, of Howard tireios ii Sessial odical : ROUT TOWN AND counpy | the Roosevelt hospital, New York i I the Job. | street, had with them as guest of honor Store} po NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. | iv last Friday morning, as the re- SICKLE. —William A. Sickle, well 735050 C. A. Tal. |" Mother's Day. their son, Georss, with » Rlen Brown, fg A te —— The Sells Floto circus is be- | Sult of a heart affection aggravated known druggist and postmaster at AL bp big of ny C. aval- | the Bell Telephone Co.. at Harrisburg. ad Moon La oats éng billed for exhibition in Altoona by a fall received about a Wook {Snow Shos, Ja Sf 10a Ducting: best, MRE, a or ane the | po reerict Burts aR to Sua Sot ray re, hav. On Thursday, May 26th. previos: 3 , Monday afternoon. fonte reservoir, at an adjourned stay, having gone down for a visit with more in the ety. Saturda He was a son of Lemuel G. and 5.15 o'clock on y o> wi — Dr. and Mrs. R. L. St abd Y, May 28th, Bas heen |. neau Grier and was born at| He was in charge of his business, as | meeting of borough council on Mon. | Miss garet Hagerling, a y their two children, Frank and Dorothy, "designated as official poppy selling ‘day by the American Legion. -——The Bellefonte Kiwanis club's ‘fund for underprivileged children wvas enriched to the extent of $500 as the result of the recent revue Birmingham on February 22nd, 1860, was educated at Birmingham, Princeton University and the Uni- | versity of Pennsylvania, and held usual, last Thursday. Becoming ill | ' hence was past 72 years of age. He on Friday he was taken to the hos- a field of pital, Saturday, his condition being ' such that all efforts to combat the disease proved unsuccessful. He was born at Bristol, Pa., degrees from Juniata College and day evening. He was low bidder in’ and, as he promised Bellefonte labor as proved satisfactory, to employ long as it ‘held in the State theatre. | Franklin and Marshall. He succeed- ——The meat market of W. R. od his father as president of the Kissell, in the Lyon building on Birmingham school in 1887. Allegheny street, was closed by the He was active in the business life Sheriff, on Tuesday, which makes of Blair county, being one of the ‘One less butcher shop in town. organizers of the Tyrone Electric ——Among new appointments | Railway company and served as its | ‘made by Governor Pinchot, Monday, president from 1897 to 1899. He was that of Clayton A. McKinney, served as president of the Home ‘Of Spring Mills, as an assistant for- | Electric Light company, Tyrone, ‘ester at a salary of $1500 a year. |from 1899 to 1902. At the time of | ——Steve Hamas, Penn State's fis- | his death he was president of the ‘tic idol, met Tommy Loughran in a | Water street Trap Rock company ‘return bout in Philadelphia, Wed- and a director of the First National nesday night. In January Steve bank, Tyrone. knocked Tommy out in the second| He was a member of the Presby- | round of what was to have heen a | terian church, the Pennsylvania So- ‘ten round go. The Wednesday night | ciety of New York, the Blairmont battle went the limit, however, and | Country club, and the oldest mem- Hamas won the decision by a two ber of the Altoona Cricket club. ‘to-one vote. | A man of broad education and ——Mrs. Ruth Knorr, of New | Wide knowledge, his counsel and York City; Mrs. Pearl Chase, of | leadership were effective in all mat- Philadelphia; and the estate of Miss ters Of social progress touching the “Mabel Gray, all daughters of Irvin communities into which his influ- : tended. The impress of his G. Gray, of Stormstown, have bought | *n¢® eX twelve lots in Gray's cemetery in| teaching and high character has . | been indellibly stamped upon the | faut Moon valley oa ny go ey ox ‘lives of thousands of girls who were | ‘mausoleum during the summer. It Ke Dipils dusiee the forty-five years is designed for twelve vaults. | . ige at tne. seminary, Homer Thompson, an employ: Many Genre Suny girls being ‘@e of the Decker Chevrolet Co., in| NO he du a Dr. Grier mar- ‘Bellefonte, was filling a car with gas | o4 yoo Mary v ‘Campbell of Al- “when that lurid bolt of lightning toona, who survives with Wo. daugh- ‘Zell on Sunday afternoon. While it |g 00 oo sons, Misses Nancy ‘didn’t strike the gas stand it was |, Virginia Grier, Thomas C. and ‘close enough to make Homer feel that | p.ckman Grier. He also leaves t ‘if he hadn't been hit he might as t Ne ves two 3 ay Tor he ph , | #isters living in New York. wa ve been, for rr ood Funeral services were held in the : about half an r r Presbyterian church, at Birmingham, flash. The Doreugh Iotkih. Hit been at 3 o'clock on Saturday after- — p noon, by Rev. T. Stacey Ca of ‘doing a land office business this Hollidaysburg, burial on Ay , in ‘week, having eight guests at one | the Birmingham cemetery. time on Tuesday. Four of them were i I “Bellefonte young men who wrecked | ; i Low- ‘a car on north Water street while Ry Mrs, Jaa Yarodl died driving around the town in an alleg- | quite unexpectedly at her os at | ‘ed intoxicated condition. They were Nittany, last Saturday evening | ‘each fined five dollars and having 10 | the resu oar While | money were sent to jail for five | the hah WHioetion, . : she had been ailing for about two | . years her condition did not become ‘af Harrisburg has set. May 10 ae, vo ou ith about a wesc previous ; r the date and Bellefonte the place| She was a daughter of Isaac and | where representatives of all official | Emma Yarnell and was born at automobile inspection agencies in Hecla on August 16th, 1872, hence ‘Centre and Clinton counties must | was 59 years, 8 months and 21 days ter to Jwsive Special instructions old, All her life was spent in Nit- a requir | tany valley. She is survived by her automobiles properly for the next | husband and six children, Merl Low ‘semi-annual inspection, which will ry, of Fleming; George, of West- Wegin on July 1 and end September port; Delmont, of Duncansville; 30. ' Fred, of Dover, Minn.; Razelle, of ——Congressman J. Banks Kurtz Port Matilda R. D., and Sherlock, ‘has introduced a bill in Congress at home. One daughter, Bertha, died providing for the erection of a vet- | some years ago. She also leaves two ‘erans hospital in the mountains of step-children, Lawrence Lowry, at Pennsylvania, either in Blair, Cen-!' home, and Mrs. Bessie Miller, of tre, Cambria or Clearfield county, | Howard. Two step children, Earl and providing an appropriation of and Nancy, are dead. Five brothers ‘$1,500,000 or as much thereof as and four sisters also survive, name- necessary to obtain the site and ly: William Yarnell, of State Col- ‘erect and equip the buildings. The lege; ex-Sheriff George H. Yarnell, hospital is to be designed to accom- of Hecla Park: Mrs. Sarah Ogden, ‘modate 3500 patients. 'in California; John I. Yarnell, of ~—-~Briggs Kingsley, of Howard; | Bellefonte R, D.; Ambrose A. of ‘Rev. Stuart F. Gast and John J. | Durbin, W. Va.; Delmont, of Frank- -Bower Esq. motored to the Water lin; Mrs. George Nestlerode, Mrs. Street Inn, last Friday evening, for Bruner Williams and Mrs. George the annual meeting of the Central Whiting, all of Salona. Pennsylvania alumni of Franklin and | Funeral services were held in the Marshall college, John D. Meyer, of Cedar Creek church at 1:30 o'clock "Tyrone, president of the association,| 0h Wednesday afternoon, burial presided and Chester B. Wray Esq. being made in the Cedar Hill ceme- ‘Of Altoona, was toastmaster at the | tery. "banquet. Quite a number of the old | Il Ii grads were in attendance. MINEMYER.—(Charles Ray Min- ——We notice that the convicts emyer passed away at his home at ©f Joliet and Stateville penitentia- Coleville, on Saturday morning, foi- -ries in Illinois have taken up a col- Wing a lingering illness. He was a lection and donated $800 to purchase | SB of John and Lillian Minemyer ‘a gift for warden Henry C. Hill, and was born in Benner township “who will leave there on July 1st to 41 years ago. As a young man he take charge of the new federal peni- learned the trade of a barber and “entiary at Lewisburg and we won- Worked at that occupation until der if the gift is to be of a kind Overtaken by illness several years @hat will cause him to remember 289° “them or whether it is given because He married Miss Claire Davis who ‘they are glad to see Ze go. survives with two children, Marian and Charles, both at hom2. He also ‘—=-At ‘he annual convention of . leaves his father and the following ‘the Susquehanna Synod of the Luth- brothers and sisters: Mrs Otto ‘eran church, held at Lewistown on Thorn, Mrs. John Letterman and : Wednesday, Rev. C. E. Arnold, of | ng,rrig Minemyer, all of Plains, Mon. ; Bellefonte, was elected ministerial George, of Tablo, Mon.; Mrs. Morris delegate to the biennial convention Mason, Mrs. Marie Gunsallus, Rob- of the church to be held in Philadel- ert and Ralph Minemyer, all of phia, in October; Rev. J. F. Harkins Johnstown; Mrs. Ruth Boyer, of ‘and Rev. Edward Dingham, of Say- Youngstown, Ohio; Mrs, Abner Rid- (dertown, alternates, and J. Randall | o. ang Warren Minemyer, of Belle- "Miller, of Millheim, and B. F. Ho- fonte, and Mrs. Anna Krape, of Al- man, of State College, lay delegates. toona. ——— Commissioner's clerk Boyd C. Funeral services were held in the "Vonada was in Altoona, on Tuesday, | United Brethren church at 2:30 as Congressional return judge from | o'clock on Tuesday afternoon, by ‘Centre county, taking up the official Rev. G. E. Householder, burial being vote on Congress in this county. made in the Union cemetery, Belle- "When the official vote was comput- | fonte. ed from the three counties in the I! Il «district—Centre, Clearfield and Blair, KINSLOE.—The death of Henry ‘Congressman J. Banks Kurtz had a | Clay Kinsloe, a prominent resident ‘total of 16,563 votes. Congressman | of Newton Hamilton, has been noted “Chase 13,111; Eugene H, Lederer|in the Central Pennsylvania news- ‘3791; Floyd G. Hoenstine, 512. and | papers this week. Mr. Kinsloe, who Charles D. Rockel, 652. Kurtz's ma- died Saturday May 7th, of a heart Jority over Chase, therefore, was ailment at the age of seventy-nine, 3,452. was a brother of the late Mrs. Fear- » September 3rd, 1865, hence had The bids were opened at a spe-! reached the age of 66 years, 8 cial meeting of council, last Thurs- as | improving the service in every way months and 6 days. He located in| Snow Shoe thirty-nine years ago and | embarked in the drug business in Twelve years ago he appointe] | A. G. Andrews, Eng. Co., Tyrone 3206.10 Gaisinger, postmaster and held the office ever since. He was affiliated with the Metho- | dist church, belonged to the four branches of the Masonic fraternity | in Bellefonte; was a member of the | Odd Fellows, Red Men and Order of | | Macabees. He was a Republican in| politics, and active in the councils | of his party. In August, 1897, he married Miss Mary Ellen Haley who survives with | two children, William Jr., of Wood- bury, N. J, and Harry, a State, highway engineer. He also leaves two sisters, Mrs. E, Wagner Evans and Mrs. Robert Funk, both of Phoenixville. Funeral services were held at 2:30 o'clock on Wednesday afternoon, by the Masonic fraternity, and yester- day the remains were taken to Woodbury, N. J, for interment. ——————e———————— COLONIAL RESTAURANT PASSES INTO NEW HANDS At noon on Thursday last the Colonial, the oldest and one of the best eating places in Bellefonte, pass- ed into new ownership. Over half a century ago the late John Anderson established it and though it has passed through many hands since it has always supplied a needed want on west High street. Its latest owner was J. H. Bickett, who has gone to Snow Shoe to live, Mr. and Mrs. M. ‘P. Brooks, of Pleasant Gap, are now in complete possession. They have bought the bisiness and all the fixtures and have started in with the idea of possible. In other words, it is their aim to make the Colonial better than it kas ever been. It will be open from 5:30 A. M. until 12 midnight each day and if it is a meal or merely a lunch or light refreshment you want the new proprietors invite you to try it. D, A. R. MEETING AT TALLEYRAND INN { | | Mrs. S. N. Lisse, of State College; day evening, and were as follows: | B. A. Glunt, Altoona .......o.. $2661.10 Harrv Budd, Jersey Shore 2469.00 | C. A. Talbert, Milesburg........... 2260.50 | Miller Coa. Co., Bellefonte ..... 2681.18 | Dunlap Bros., Bellefonte ....... 3522.75 Monaghan & Barr Co, Pittsburgh 2643.92 { W. R. Dale, of Bellefonte, also submitted a bid which carried a! total of $3820.30, Lut when council | figured it up on the basis of his! price for the several kinds of work to be done it amounted to only $2,- 194.40, which would have been the lowest bid. When seen in regard to the discrepancy in his figures Mr. Dale stated that he had made a mis- | take in putting down the total, which should have been $2820.20. As this still left a wide discrepancy his bid | was eliminated. After opening the bids last Thurs- | day evening, council adjourned until Monday evening to give the Water | committee time to consider all bids in conjunction with the borough en- gineer and borough solicitor, and it was with the advice of the latter that the committee, on Monday | evening, recommended that the con- tract be awarded to Mr. Talbert, | Mr. Talbert expects to file his! bonds today or tomorrow and, if the | weather is favorable, will begin work | next week. stated that it would take about a month to do the job. MISSIONARY WOMEN MET AT NITTANY CHURCH | About one hundred delegates, rep- resenting the women's missionary societies of the northern conference of the Susquehanna Synod of the Lutheran church, held an all day confrence in the church in east Nit- Keller, of Nittany; vice president, secretary-treasurer, Mrs. J. N, Hub- The Bellefonte chapter Daughters jer, of Lock Haven. During the day of the American Rvolution, held | pg Lisse explained the plan of the | their regular monthly meeting at gocieties to raise a fund of $50,000 the Talleyrand Inn Thursday, May | to endow a chair at Grace college | | period the centar of all social iife | roof tree together. 5th, the hostesses for the evening being Mrs. John I. Olewine, Mrs. N. B. Spangler, Mrs. Ivan Walker, Miss Mary Woodring, Mrs C. A. Heverly, Mrs. M. P, Claney, Mrs. Harry Gar- ber, Miss Anna Muffly and Miss Mary Muffly. The evening was given over to the reports of various committees on the work accomplished during the year, also to reports of the dele- gates to the National Congress of the D. A. R. in Washington, held in April, which was attended by the Regent, Mrs, John G. Love, Mrs. Edwin Erle Sparks and Mrs, Olive B, Mitchell, after which refresh- ments were served and a social hour enjoyed. COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT : SPEAKKER ANNOUNCED Dr, John W. McCracken, of Wash- ington, D. C., director of the Amer- ican Council on Education, will be the commencement speaker at the Pennsylvania State College, presi- dnt Ralph D. Hetzel announced on Monday. Graduation ceremonies will be conducted Monday afternoon, June 6, with commencement activi- ties starting Friday, June 3, with the annual election of college trus- tees, Alumni day will be observed Sat- urday, June 4, president Hetzel said with ten classes planning to hold quinquennial reunions. Plays by the Thespians and by the Pena State Players, concerts by the glee club and by the symphonic band, sport- ing contests, class day exercises and a commencement reception and dance will comprise the wezk-end program. ———Thaddeus Cross, veteran Spring township farmer, celebrated his eighty-second birthday anniver- sary last Sunday and for the first time in thirty years all of his six children were under the parental The last time | | such a heppy event in the family occurred was thirty years sgo at! Woodland, Clearfield county, when they were packing their household goods preparatory to moving to Cen- tre county to take charge of what was then known as the Gordon farm at Hecla Park. to be known as the Katherine Scher- er Cronk chair. “LUCY” WAS HONOR GUEST AT AN ENJOYABLE PARTY April 22, stands out as an event- ful day in the life of Lucinda Hall, for that was the date on which she came into the world. Of all the an- nual anniversaries she has been spared to celebrate the last, her six- ty-third, was happiest, for her good | friend, Mrs. Maude Saxon, of Union | township, with whom she is now | living, gave a party for her. A goodly number of friends gath- ered at the Saxon home and a de- lightful time was had by all, Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin and two children, of Bellefonte; Mr. come, Mr. and Mrs. John Saxon and “Toots,” Gene, Jimmie, Jack and Don Saxon, all of Unionville. “BIG TROUT” INN ROBBED TUESDAY NIGHT The “Big Trout” Inn, located on south Water street, owned and con- ducted by Mrs. Marian McAlarney, was burglarized on Tuesday night, or rather on Wednesday morning, as the robbery took place some time between two o'clock and daybreak. Entrance was made by breaking the window in the south end of the building and there evidently were two or more in the party. Most of the eatables in the place were either eaten, carried away or destroyed. The robbers also stole two clocks, two cartons of cigarettes, two box- es of cigars and various other things. Mrs. McAlarney estimates her loss at $75.00. Whoever did the job left some very good fingerprints and state police are at work tracing the culprits. —Jt i8 rumored that the Lau- derbach-Griest company is one of sixteen wholesale grocery companies which will consolidate into a chain system in the near future. the college. —Jonas Wagner, a tives, at Pleasant Gap. —Mrs. Fred Rees has been here from Erie, a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William E. Hurley, whose other daughters, Mrs. Kerk, of Paoli, ang Miss Hazel, of White Plains, have also made | which he had been quite successful. Geo. E. Rhoads’ Sons, Bellefonte 2977.80 | several visits home this spring. —Mrs. Harry Yeager, her sister, Mrs. Mrs. George Miller, Mrs. Josephine Clark and Mrs, James Clark drove to Harrisburg, Sunday, in the latter's car, and spent the day there as guests of Mrs. George Kerstetter. —Mre Louise Kellerman MecClintic, with her daughter and granddaughter, drove over from Huntingdon, Sunday, and spent it here with Mrs, McClintic's mother, Mrs. Kellerman, at the Musser apartment, in the Lane building, on High street, —Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Curries bade goodbye to their many friends in Belle- fonte, on Monday, and left by motor car for Charleroi where Mr. Currier has been transferred as assistant manager of the West Penn Power company, a pori- tion he filled in Bellefonte during past {our or five years. —J. P. Craddock, a salesman for the Safe Guard Check Writer company, Pittsburgh, was in Bellefonte for a part of the past week, looking aftr some business for the company. Mr. Craddock is well known here, having only leit (in October, after being with the Sutton Abramsen Engineering company for four | years, ~The three Furst men, William 8., John and Walter, drove up from Phiia- delphia, Saturday, to join Mrs. Curtin and James C. Furst in a family celebra- | tion of Mother's Day with their mother, To newspapermen dE"™ Austin O. Furst. The party spent | | Saturday afternoon at the Furst camp, | on Fishing Creek, and Sunday at an ail day home party. ~Mr, and Mrs. Oliver Auckerman, Miss Melvina Auckerman and Edward Lingle, | of Spring Mills, spent most of last week at the Mrs. James Pergrim home, in DuBois. Returning home, on Friday, they took with them A. L. Hildebrand, of Johnstown, who spent the winter with his daughter, Mrs. Pergrim, and who will spend the summer season at Spring Mills, —Miss Virgania Healy went east, on Tuesday, for a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Staples, at Hillcrest Farms, Upper Darby. Mrs. Staples will be bet- ter remembered as Miss Anne Straub, prior to her marriage, while her hus- band will be recalled as division engi- neer of the State Highway Department when the district offices were located in Bellefonte. —EBdward P. Irvin, who for many | years made his home at tae Bush Fouse, left the Penn Belle the first of May to occupy a room in the home of Mr. and Mrs William Ott, on High s:rect. Mr, Irvin is the last of a popnar social group who from time to hime lived at the Bush house, making it during that Bellefonte. former supervising principal of the schools of Bellefonte, | and Mrs. Wagner, were up from Camp | Hill, during the week, guests of Mr. | and Mrs. T. E. Jodon and other rela- | of | | of | —Mrs. James Noll was in from Pleas- | ant Gap for the day, Saturday, on one | of her few visits to town since her return | from Newark, a month ago. Mrs. Noll had been with her daughter, Mrs. H. T. Gruber, since December, and visited from Newark with her son, Irvin O. Noll, at Lansdowne. Mrs. Gruber and her small son will be home to spend the month of July at Pleasant Gap. —Elizabeth Herr was home from Hood College for Mother's Day, having with her as guests two fellow-students, Helen Sinon and Katherine Smith, all of whom spent the day as honor guests of Eliza- beth's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Claude Herr. At the W. Harrison Walker home the day was celebrated with three more Hood students, their daughter, Mary Louise, Helen Meixel and Julia Hosback, all having driven up from Frederick, Md., for a week-end visit in Bellefonte. —Miss Betty Lockington's anticipated visit to Europe during the summer is chiefly for study of the: French lan- guage at the University of Paris, Miss Lockington, who is instructor in French, in the schools of Bellefonte, will leave "| here the middle of June, with plans for devoting the early part of the summer to her work, her remaining time abroad she expects to spend traveling. All of France, Belgium, Germany and England are included in her present plans for a sight-seeing travel trip on the Continent. —Mrs. John A. Woodcock's guests, during the week, have included her #is- ter, Mrs. Mary Worbes and Miss Ka‘*h- leen Seibert, of CTham | John, of Johnstown, and Gilbert, of WIL. liamsport, were among the many back home last week for Mother's day, both men having driven to Bellefonte, Satur- day afternoon, bringing with them their families, all of whom were overnight guests at the Waite home, on Phoenix avenue, —Beach Schreffler, of Jeannette, and Harry Twitmire, of Wilmerding, cousins of Miss Joanne and Miles Decker, drove to Bellefonte, Friday of last week, for a visit of several days. All of Mr, Schref- fler's time was spent at the Decker home while Mr. Twitmire went on to Pleasant Gap, to be with his mother, Mrs, El- mira Twitmire during his stay, ~Mr. and Mrs. George B. Thompson and the latter's sister, Mrs. Gar- ber, drove to Westfield, N, J., Friday for an over Sunday visit with Mr, and Mrs, Thompson's elder son, John Irvin Thomp- son and his family, While away Mrs. Garber spent a night with friends at her former home in Flushing, then the party stopped enroute home at Oaks, Pennsylvania, for an overnight stay with Mr. Thompson's sister, Mrs, Crosman, ar- riving back in Bellefonte Tuesday, EE —————— “LETTY LYNTON” LATEST CATHAUM SCREEN HIT Two of the screen’s most stars are teamed together i ty Lynton,” one of the year's out- standing romantic dramas which comes to the Cathaum theatre, State College, on Monday and Tues- day next. Joan Crawford and Rob- ert Montgomery are the co-stars, in their former pictures together will not want to miss this new hit. In the supporting cast are such fine performers as Lewis Stone, Robson and Nils Asther. SR ———— w—————— ——Ex-Sheriff E. Dunlap is building a man’s size porch onto the front of his house, on east How- ard street. The porch will extend along the entire front and from the look of it is about eight feet in width. The steps leading up from the street to the centre of the old porch have been done away with | and concrete steps constructed at the west end of the porch. The old stone retaining wall along the front of the property has been torn away and a new one of concrete put up, while concrete steps and a new pavement have been put down along the Penn street side of the proper- ty. ——Maj. Eugene H, Lederer, bur- gess of State College, delivered an illustrated lecture on temperance in the Lutheran church at Snydertown last Sunday. The Major spoke mostly of his personal observances and con- cluded his address with expression of his belief that teaching and train- ing temperance will be less costly and more permanently effectiv> than the attempt to make people temper- ate by law. He has been invited to speak in several other churches in Nittany valley. ——B, Fred Stamm, formerly of Mifflinburg but for some time past a resident of Lewisburg, was com- mitted to the Centre county jail, in default of $100 bail, last week, by ‘Squire J. R. Miller, of Millheim, on the charge of passing a number of worthless checks on Millheim busi- ness men. It is said he is also want- ed in Union county for similar of- fenses. ——Qut in Indiana county, on primary day, Earl E. Hewitt, an old-time State College athlete, ran for the Republican nomination for the Legislature against J. Clair Sloan and won out by exactly 9 votes, the official tally showing 5306 for Hewitt and 5297 for Sloan. ———— A ——— Beliefonte Grain Markets. Wheat sersssrensssesrmesssesissrmen +3 Corn 40 Oats 50 Rye A0 BABY smasrmmmsisnrcicsinisesssoiim insets VY Buckwheat 85