ARRISB Pi —Mr, have as : | BELLEFONTE'S FIRST | WILL Reed—Keefer,—St. Paul's Meth- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hurley | H! URG MAN # house guests their daughter, Paul | | TALK ON SAFETY TO Episcopal church, State Col i 2 TO BE HELD TUESDAY Bellefonte's first annual flower Lg Tuesda next week, "NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. 28 chabel a . ar " el —Barbara Winifred is the name of | afternoon, under the auspices of the oa vase; container arrange- wveek, which makes upward of fifty ’ T Inofe, 3 Plants. flowering; ferns. «cases since the disease broke out | Vegetables and herbs. ri - two months ago, Fortunately there | i od 3 riot BIb8.—one- varie. bave been no deaths and very few | yarety. Children’s exhibit. «cases ef a serious nature. Prizes in th fo 2 tr rors . e poster contest for the | flower show have been awarded as : Sealed Jxnds was follows: First, Margaret Beaver: Salooi tracts were bid second, Jean McGarvey; third, Con- ; stans Curtin; honorable mention, of un- held in the Com- on Monday. Only | in by the owners, | © the other 91 tracts going to the ATna ‘ County Commissioners for taxes and Mae Saylor, - costs of advertising and sale, i eA — _ —~'Squire I J. Dreese suffered a | CAMPING DAYS ARE ON % glight stroke, Saturday night, Which | FOR BELLEFONTE BOYS. affected his speech to some extent. | Score , The family physician has kept him | a at re godt vic ar oe . and as quiet as possible at | espec " his home in Mind ever since, in Who have an opportunity to do so, order to avert further Sliplication.{ ate Sjeniing as much time as pos- ~——The George Hazel and Thomas Sible in summer camps. : Shaughduey families a occupying | wh Robert alae, fan. Jn - the Hazel camp, on Spring Creek, | , , this week; White at the Kustenbor- | Walker is hostess to a party of boys der cabin on the same stream six- Which iucluty her sons, ROWE Ira teen girls, members of the Sunshine chard, Robert Blair, ug class of the Lutheran church, are Rogers, Jimmie Hoffer and Kennie in camp for the week. | Taylor, as well as her daughter ——At a meeting of the tri-coun- Jane. - ty council of the American Legion | ah George Reuven Maek Ix hi Xilary ge counties] ah on Fishing wo. A have ot . nire, ton an ycoming, | ' -beld in the Methodist church at Jer. | for four days, this week, Franklin 4 Hg on Wednesday of last week, Pening ov, Albert Osman and John . J. M. Decker, of Bellefonte, ‘was elected second vice president ol pany of wl og for the ensuing year, i cam : Lake Erie, owned by the mother of SR a Pa hol fF Be op br Fe gh Rg h street, 1s THEY Were transporte! there, last Tomodeling and rnover St (week, In two of W. J. Emerick’ . = g Whe PrOp- Cars, one of which was driven by “erty with a view to occupying tor. Emerick, who was accompanied pleted Just Bn tis som- | by his wife, and who, after seeing rapidly and when it is done he is| \Nat the boys were properly located, | went down to Pittsburgh for a day - Boing to have a very pretty house. lor two, returning home on Saturday. ~The 24th annual reunion Of | The other car wis left with the boys “the Grove family will be held at for the return trip home, The party * Grange park, Centre Hall, Saturday, | Includes Robert Morris Jr, Hugh -Jume 25th. An attractive program Curtin, Eiwood Furst, Paul Emerick, arranged and every member ' Ben Gryctko, Buddie Caldwell, Rob- lan who can possibly do 80 ert Witter, Roy Wilkinson, Calvin should attend. Herbert F. Grove, of | Purnell and Max Alters. Centre Hall, is president of the as- | — - sociation and Roy H. Grove, of War. ren, the secretary, | MORRISDALE MINER - . | COMMITTED SUICIDE, ~——Mrs. William Derstine, who is | preparing to leave Bellefonte the Peter Sudak, 65 year old Austrian, first of July, is offering at private | or Pardee, near Morrisdale, commit- sale, at her apartment in the Decker ted suicide by shooting himself with building, her furniture which includ- a shotgun Sunday morning. For es 1 oak dresser and bed, 1 oak side- many years he had been employed board, 1 couch, 3 tables, rocking as a miner by the Morrisdale Coal chair and straight chairs, and a | company but had been out of work number of small pieces. Mrs, Der- | for five years, and this fact, with * stine will be in her rooms any time falling health, was assigned as the Jt may be convenient for you to see cause of his act. ‘ this furniture. Sudak arose early Sunday morn- ——Kenneth McCauley, a member | 08 and shortly afer went out into of the Hubiersburg baseball team DiS back yard. A short tite late while playing a game with Lamar, his wife heard the report of a Sus, on Saturday, made a long slide to Dut that was nothing unusual d base. He felt a sharp pain in his | that locality. When her husban finished the game and failed to return she went out into ‘went around as usual, until Mon. the yard to look for him and found ‘ day, “when the pain became him lying in a lilac bush, dead from ‘ 0 acute that he consulted a physi. @ Sunshot wound in the neck. (cian. An examination revealed two Sudak, with his wife and chia, Wwroken bones in the ankle and he ¢ame to this country in 1893 and lo- was taken to the Lock Haven hos- | Cated rear Morrisdale where they pital to have the fracture reduced. have lived ever since. Surviving the | deceased are his wife and ten chil- ~The marriage of Miss Isabelle | dren, nine of whom are at (G. Ward, only daughter of Mrs. J. I'E, Ward and the late Dr. Ward, of | “Bellefonte, and Charles L. Warren, | ¢°day morning of Mamaroneck, N. Y., will be cele i casi brated’ in’ the Bellefonte Methodist OUR MAILING LIST church' on Wednesday, June 29th, | HAS BEEN CORRECTED ot Sie noo "hour, No formal Invite The Watchman mailing list has years past Miss Ward has had been corrected. All subscriptions and charge of the Cut Rate drug store, at | changes of address received at this State College. Mr. Warren, a gradu- | office up to and including Saturday, ate of Dickinson college, has taken | June 11, should be reflected on the "bis degree at Columbia University | labels on pavers of this date. Will ‘and has been engeged fo teach at! you please look at your label and ' Mamaroneck next school year. Ths |See if you have been given proper young couple will spend the summer | credit for any remittance you might at the Ward home in Rellefonte, have made. show will be held in the Presbyteri- one | .| Luzerne county in 192 | — burg, will come to Bellefonte Tues- ‘day, June 21st, when he will address the employees of the American and Stone company at 11:30 a. ‘on the subject of “Safety.” Follow- ing plan i the reduction of accidents ‘u the | mines and quarries of Pennsylvania. Recently, he has addressed the Na- tional Safety Council, the National Lime Association and the National Crushed Stone Association on this He is a ve | convincing speaker, ed in starting safety | this work has been gratifying. | that time accidents were more | less a common occurrence hut matter of great concern, time accident for nearly two and the Bellefonte operation has not had one for about nine months, A very active campaign is now being waged to entirely eli dents. Years ago peopl upon accidents as being unavoidable, but today caused by ignorance, willful neglect. The employees of the American Lime and Stone company are to be congratulated on their ex- cellent record in safety work. EE ———— STATE SABBATH SCHOOL OFFICERS TO CONFER July 12th and 13th have been designated as the dates for the an- nual gathering of presidents and Secretaries of county associations and councils of christian education in Pennsylvania. The place of the meeting will be Sunbury, Pa. This two day gathering for evaluation of work now being done and of outreach on the who are responsible Seven counties of its promotion will be of practical nature this year. The first meeting of the com- in | annual convention of ‘nia State Sabbath School Associa- | tion was recently held in Lancaster, | where the convention will be d | October 12-13-14, 1932. This conven. | tion will bring together representa- tives from every county and from an denominations, | It will be a church-housed conven- tion. Dr. Joseph R. Sizoo, of Wash- ington, D, C., will preach the con- | vention sermon found in the keynote | from the text——John 10:10—“I am | Some that they might have life and have it abundantly.” The convention theme Is—"“Expanding Christian Ex- periences.” | Dr. J. Alvin 0 | United Presbyterian church of Pitts- | burgh, will lead the devotional per- | iods each of the days of the conven- | tion. The participants in the | are being gathered from |-of the country. SE ——————— TWO PRISONERS ESCAPE ONE RECAPTURED Two prisoners made an easy es- cape from Rockview program all parts Blair county for three to six years for larceny, and John Hilty, of Armstrong county, serving a three to six years sen- tence for breaking, entering and lar- ceny. The men were both team- sters, Supposedly entirely trustwor- thy, and carried passes to go out of the main gate to attend their horses at the barn. Saturday morning they went out as usual to go to the barn to look | after the stock and that was the last seen of them. Instead of attend- ing to their work they kept on go- ing and their departure was not known until & checkup at the sup- per hour. As they had five hours start by that time they could have gone some distance. The escaped prisoner recaptured is Charles Ohls, alias John J. Rob- erts, who got away on July 1st, 1925, nineteen days after he was transferred to Rockview from Phil- adelphia. He was caught in Alaska and last Thursday Governor Pinchot signed requisition papers to have him brought back to for sentence, Ohls was sent up from 1 for a term of 5 to 10 years for robbing a hard- ware store. ————————————— ——Seven new members were initiated into the mysteries of the Crystal Springs Lodge of Rebekahs, No. 25, of Bellefonte, at a regular | meeting in the I. 0. O. F. hall last Harold Mayes, Mr. and Mrs, Girard Altenderfer and Mrs. Hester Steltz. Visitors from half a dozen lodges in the county were present at the meeting to see the degree work of the local team. an intensely | mittee of arrangements for the 70th | the Pennsylva- rT, of the First Centre county the safety rally at the lime i ry forceful and | | Nearly seven years ago he assist- | Furnace plant has not had a lost | lege, years and green crepe, similar | to that of the maid of honor, large horse hair garden | minate acci- 80Wns, and carried e used to look |SPring flowers. it is known that, with In very few exceptions, accidents are | ™ in | | { | i i i i | i Friday evening. The list included Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Hoy, Mr. and Mrs, | x The Rev. Harry G. Ketterer, church, officiated. bride, who was accompanied the altar by her cousin, Byron Haverly Blackford, of Alliance, Ohio, and given in marriage by her moth- lace, arranged in cap effect, with a | bandeau of orange blossoms. | carried a shower bouquet of white | and baby breath. wore a princess gown of blue American Lime and Stone com- roses. | pany organization and the result of | wore frocks of all wore hats in shades contrasting with their The bride's mother was triple sheer orchid chiffon, trim- ed with cream lace, roses. Betts Anne Barbee made a charm- g little flower girl, Russell Smith, of State College, was best man, an ward Reed, Ronald Fye, Gardner Cook, William Fisher and Paul Mc- Cormick, of State College, ward Steel, of Carlisle. Jay Kennedy played the wedding | march and added charm was given by Rennselaer Frizzell, the ceremony who sang “I Love You Truly.” The church decorations were pot- ted palms, spring flowers and can- dles. Seventy-five out of town guests witnessed the happy event. A reception at the Nittany Lion Sterling Ruhl is vacationist man for the Inn followed the ceremony and later the young couple left on an auto- mobile wedding trip. They will be at home, after July 1st, Allen street, State College. The bride was born and received | family, the her early education in Bellefonte, The six bridesmaids, Miss Lucille At | Wingate, of Wellsboro; Miss Eliza or beth Allison, of New today Miss Mary Frances Wri | an accident that causes the loss of daysburg; Miss Dorothy Seigel, | working time to any employee is a | Sargent; She | Kensington; | ght, of Hoili- | a custom of Miss Hill Miss Gladys Bodle and The Union | Miss Louise Wetteran, of State Coi- pink, yellow, | in design | They | bouquets of wned and decorated | d the ushers Ed- and Ed- | | back for the week in his old place —Mrs. Frank Daly and her two small | daughters, are expected here from Wash. | | ington, this week, for an indefinite stay | ' with Mrs. Daly's parents, Mr. | Edward Cook. Mrs. Daly was | Jeanette of State College. daughter. pastor | had been in Bellefonte with her mother, ~The Newell Long family, of Curtin street have with them, Mr. moth- —Mrs. Violet Barnhart Morris, who ve r. Long's er, Mrs. Sarah Long, of Bradford, ‘who is in Bellefonte for the sum , | Mrs. J. Willard Barnhart, since gradust. | ae ing from the Mount Sinai hospital in the | early spring, has returned to New York, where she will locate permanently as a et registered nurse. —Thomas Downing, Downingtown National bank, i ident of the pros with his | Yesterday, on their —Janet Brouse, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brouse, of Thomas street, has urned home from a week's visit with | her uncle, R. J. Landis, in Tyrone. —Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Quigley left, drive to St. John's, in, Mrs. Clara Fox, as a motor guest, | Canada, where they will spend two weeks drove up from Downingtown, Friday, t, 2% Suests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Frederick spend a part of the week with relatives Re¥nolds IIL in Bellefonte, being guests at the Mark- | land during their stay. Dixon families, intending to stop in Ai- visit with friends there. toona on their trip home for a tw) day's —Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Foreman and | their daughter, Lois, were among those | who visited the nearby towns this week, —Mrs. C. L. Gates and daughter, Miss Winifred M. Gates, went ou: to Johns. | having Sriven vig to Altoona Wednes- | town, last Saturday, for a visit with the | 98%, lor the day. roses | | Miss Helen Poticher, of Carlisle, Edward L. Gates and Mrs. Hayes C. who attended the bride as maid of —Dorothy Runkle | Zenooimate at Temple | Duddy, of Cambridge, | here for a week's visit at is entertaining a University, James N. Y. who is the Runkle i —Miss Isabella S. Hill, of the Belle- NOMe on Spring street. | fonte Academy faculty, expects to leave | today for her home in Norwich, Conn, | with no definite plans as to how she spend her summer vacation. It has i | her three months vacation. vacation on account of ill healta, east Curtin street. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dorworth, | and their daughter Rebecca, drove i graduatd this week with the class of 1932. Charles accom- panied his parents and sister to Belle- fonte, expecting to be at home for the present. —It is expected that John Blanchard Esq., who has been a surgical patient in *he Geisinger hospital since the middle of April, will be able to be brought home this week. Mr. Blanchard’'s two children, Jean, at school in Massachu- setts, and Evan, now ga sophomore at Yale. are both in Bellefonte for their summer vacation. —Sterling Ruhl, of Lock Haven, manager of the downtown A. & P. store, | substituting for Grover Corman, who is at 236 south Philadelphia for i off on his week's vacation, which he is spending at his home on Thomas street. A. & P. stores of this district and came here from Snow Shoe. —Mrs. William Mann was up from a week-end stay with Mrs. John Sebring and the visit being made primarily who is here her sister, to see Thomas Derr Jr., later graduating from the State | with his mother, spending the month ot College High school her education at Dickinson Junior college, The bridegroom, who grad- uated in the same class as the bride, is associated with Mrs. Keefer in the hardware business at State College. SO —— i v——————— Smith—Bechtel.—Merriil C. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Smith, and completing { | | | | | | i June with the child's grand parents, Dr. and Mrs. John Sebring. Mrs. Derr was formerly Miss Mary Sebring. —Mrs. Sara Brown is expected here from Cleveland, late next week. for Fer annual summer visit to Rallefonte. Since leaving to make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Robert Wray, Mrs. Brown has come back for a visit each year, but for the past several years she has come for the entire season, occupying an apartment in the Baum house, on of Blanchard, but who has been lo- Allegheny street. cated in Cleveland, Ghio, for and Miss Linnie Bechtel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edgar T, Bechtel, of Blanchard, were married at the home of the bride's parents, at noon on Tuesday, Hall, Methodist minister of War- riors Mark. Both the bride and the several groom are graduates of the Blanch- ard High school. The. bride is also a professional nurse, graduating at the Lock Haven hospital training school with the class of 1925. The North Dakota to the Yellowstone park. | young couple will make their home They took in Cleveland, Ohio. ——— vn v———— Jodon—Johnson.—Russell Robert Jodon, son of Mr. and Mrs, J. C. Jodon, and Miss Helen Cordelia | Johnson, were married at nine o'clock on Wednesday evening, in their already furnished home on Wil- lowbank street, by Rev. A. Ward Campbell, of the Evangelical church. The young couple were attended by Nevin Jodon and Miss Roxey John- son. Only members of the immediate families were present to witness the ceremony. The young couple left immediately after the ceremony on a motor wedding trip. —————— —Mrs. Hiram M. Hiller, of the Rittenhouse plaza, Philadelphia, but formerly of Bellefonte, has announc- ed the marriage of her daughter, Mrs. Virginia Bell Hiller-Norris, to William Barney Harris Jr., of Balti- more. The marriage ceremony was performed on Wednesday of last week, by a magistrate, and Mrs. Hiller stresses the fact that it was not an elopement, This is the bride- groom’s third matrimonial adven- ture, as he had been married twice before. It is the bride's second mar- riage, as she obtained a divorce from her first husband, Septimus Edwara Norris, in common pleas court, Phil- adelphia, on April 7th, ———— ——While at work fixing up the surroundings at the camp of the Sycamore club, at Snow Shoe Inter- section, last Thursday, M. W. Wil- liams and H. C. Yeager were aston. ished to see a monster blacksnake crawling up the steps to the front porch. The reptile was killed and measured seven feet, according to the men. From various sections of the county come reports that the dry weather is driving the snakes out of their retreats in mountain fastnesses but why that particular snake should choose the Sycamore camp we fail to comprehend. —Mrs. E. G. Cantwell, of Ohio, with her three children, Ashland, Sally, to | Bethlehem, Monday, for the commence- | daughter, ment exercises at Lehigh, where Charles | is | —Rachael | Van Pelt, | University ; Lois Kurtz, from Temple from Bucknell will | and Mary Baum, from Ohio State, have been | joined the college set in Bellefont, home to travel during for the summer vacation, —Kelsey Harvey, son of Mr. and Mrs. —Miss Helen Schaeffer, of the person- | Ives Harvey, of Altoona, former residents nel of the W. Harrison Walker law of-- of Bellefonte, was here for fices, who is taking an enforced month's | Monday, stopping enroute to Jackson, has ] Mich. entirely recovered from her recsnt indig- | position but will spend the remainder of lumbus, Ohio, for a week's visit, nas been June resting at the Schaeffer nome, on la a short visit, where he is employed, —Robert Reed, who is here from Co- guest of his aunt, Miss Ella Bottort, | of Lemont, and the Willis M. Bottort i | family in Bellefonte, during his stay, ~—Mr. and Mrs. Sim Baum with their Mary, and niece, Dorothy Baum, of State College, and Mr. and | Mrs. John Scholl, of Altoona, occupied | the Masonic camp, at Wingate, for the week-end, ~Miss Marian Cole, daughter of Frank and Mary Ewing Cole, of Highland Park, N. J. Is visiting her aunt, Mrs. M. A. | Dreibelbis, on west College Ave., State | College. Miss Cole's father is a graduate | of the College. —Thomas R. Hayes II arrived here, a week ago, from Syracuse, N. Y., with plans for being in Bellefonte with his mother, Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, until re- | turning to New York in August to ra- sume his work. —Mr. and Mrs. John Mignot, of east High street, motored to Frenchville, last Thursday for the funeral of Mrs. Samue: Briel who died in Karthaus and way buried at Frenchville, Mrs. Rriel was 3 cousin of Mrs. Mignot, —Dr. and Mrs, Horace Lincoln Jacobs left for Williamsport, on Tuesday, where they are attending the annual conference of the Methodist churches of Central Pennsylvania. While in that city they ire the Ziuests of Zane B. Gray. —Miss Ellen Shoemaker is expected here from Devon, Sunday, for a week's visit home with her mother, Mrs. T. A Shoemaker. Some of the family are ar- ranging to drive to Harrisburg and wis meet her there, so that she will make a part of the trip by motor. ~—Mrs. E. M. Broderick, of State College, was host to a party of women who motored here on Tuesday for a visit of Severa hours with friends in Bellefonte. Her guests were Mrs. Manning and friends from Washington, D. C,, and Iowa who are visiting her at the Col. lege. —Nannette, the elder daughter of the Pat and Tommie, will arrive in Belle- | i by Rev T. Max Mr® Caatwell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. i i i i | { i | | | { i i fonte, tomorrow, with plans for spending an indefinite time here with John Mignot, of east High street. Mr. Mignot will drive to New Castle to meet the Cantwell family, who will be brought that far by Mr. Cantwell. -—Mr. Saturday afternoon, on an automobile trip through Canada and down through everything necessary for a camping trip and will return oy way of Chicago, expecting to reach “ome by July 4th. During their absence Russell the F Rider will substitute for Mr. Everett as| .¢, Fourth of July mail carrier on Route 3, Bellefonte. —Yielding to the urgent appeals of her | i { | i i i 'h with and Mrec. A. R. Everc't ieft, on 4s bush her | i | i late Albert H. Hoy and Mrs. Albert D. Beers, of Plainfield, N. J., was operated on, Friday of last week, in the Fit Avenue hospital, New York, for appendi- citis, and is now rapidly recovering. Nannette is a niece of Miss Anna H. Hoy, and frequently visits in Bellefonte. —Mrs. Harry Irvin, of Akron, Ohio, mother, Mrs, Florey, for the past two weeks, 0 be with her until she her illness of 3 month. Tentative plans have been made by Mr. Irvin and their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Doran Dill, of Massilon, to drive to Centre county for and take Mrs. Irvin back home with them, —Mr. and Mrs. Willis Weaver and their at Pleasant Gap, having come in t kK and Jesse Derstine. M. | son Ralph, drove over from Johnstown, William Derstine is now making ar- rangements to dispose of her house fur- nishings and leave Ballefonte to make her home with the Frank Derstine fam- at Juniata, and the Jesse Derstine family, at Ambridge. Mrs. Derstine is occupying an apartment Decker building, which she plans vacate by the first of July. —Mrs. Peace Hazzard, of Narragansett, Rhode Island, will arrive here tomorrow for a short visit. She will bring her - Breese, and her cousin, Mrs. J. Gilbert McIlvain, both of Down- ingtown, with her. Mrs, Breese expects to spend part of the summer with Miss Anna H. Hoy, of north Spring street, while Mrs. MeIlvain will visit with Muss Caroline Valentine, at “Burnham Place.” Mrs. Hazzard, before her marriage, was Miss Katherine Burnett, daughter of the late Mose D. and Katharine Curtin Burn- ett, —Frank Ebe, younger son of Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Ebe, of Edgewood, Pa., who has been here for a week with his grandmother, Mrs. T. A. Shoemaker, drove in from Pittsburgh Friday of last week, with his uncle, T. Collins Shoe- maker. Frank, with his mother and elder brother, Wallace, 1s anticipating spend- ing July and August with his paternal grandmother at the Ebe cottage on the eastern shore of Maryland. Dr. and Mrs, Ebe and Wallace are expected to drive to Bellefonte for Frank at the end cf his visit with the Shoemaker family. —Mr. and Mrs. Carman A. Torsell and two children, Patrick Torsell, James Torsell, Miss Angeline Torsell, Frank Rackowski, Miss Mary Rackowski, Gil- bert Anderson, Misses Annabelle Snyder and Vera Markle composed a motor party who drove ten miles above Lock Haven, on the new State highway, where they picnicked for a day, on Sunday, at a comfortable cabin. During the day the young men killed a three foot rattle- snake which evidently came down off | the mountain to see what was going on, and as proof of the kill one of the young ladies brought home the snake's appen- dage, ten rattles and a button. | i i i Sunday, for a visit with Mr. Weaver's aunt, Mrs. Mary A. Hall and her daugh- ter Wilburetta Hall, of Renovo, who are spending the month of June with Mrs, , at Union- Mr. Weaver's being a native of Milesburg and Mrs. Weaver, of Howard, the is sufficient reason for their frequent vis- its back home to Centre county. —Miss Virginia Burns, of St. Mo., has been a guest in the WwW. H. Brouse home, on Thomas street, this week. On Sunday she and Miss Carolyn Brouse will leave by train for timore, where they will join Miss Burns’ for a motor trip to St. Louis. stay of a week at the Burns home the party will go on to their place at St. Joseph on Lake Michigan. Miss Brouse expects to be gone about a —Jean Robb has been spending the | week here with his mother, Mrs. C. Ed- ward Robb, but wili leave today to be- gin work with the International Mags- zine for the summer months, His terri- tory will be along the eastern coast with no definite location. Mrs. Robb's young- er son, Richard, who has been a student at the Bellefonte Academy during the past year, was the honor student In history, which carried with it a ten dol- lar prize. —Mrs. Martin Howard is arranging to 80 down to Philadelphia on the excur- sion, tomorrow night, with plans for spending several weeks with her sister, Mrs. E. E. Sager, In the city and at the shore. Mrs. Howard, during her stay, will be under the care of specialists both for her eyes and health. When re- turning home she will be accompanied by her sister, Mrs, Sager, who makes frequent visits to look after her property interests in Bellefonte. rm———— A ———————— Bellefonte Grain Markets, WHERE .ssssccsmmrmsmmrerssscsscssmmimsasons JS Corn 40 Oats 25 Rye 85 BABY mercer. 435 Butkwheas .......inn sro 33