. Sunday, at Youngstown, Ohio. The . ing only one sister, Mrs. Bimm, of . better known in Bellefonte ag Re- «last. Friday. While the lad’s injuries pi] ~raD J — "Bellefonte, Pa., June 24, 1932. = S———— NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——Food sale at the Variety shop, gonducted by section 4 of the Will- ing Workers class of the Lutheran | church, Saturday morning, July 2, | from 9 to 12. ——The six weeks summer school | BEAUTY AND FRAGRANCE MARKED BELLEFONTE’S FIRST FLOWER SHOW One Hundred and Sixty-five Separ- ate Exhibits Displayed to Public in Presbyterian Chapel on Tues- day. Bellefonte’s first annual flower show was held in the Presbyterian chapel on Tuesday afternoon. It was | a decided success both in quantity and quality. One hundred and sixty- | gession at the Pennsylvania State | College will open Tuesday, July 5, | and close with the summer com- | mencement on August 11. | ——A crew of ten men were put to work, Monday morning, laying | the new sanitary sewer pipe in Spring creek. Operations were start- | @d at Lamb street bridge, the men working up stream. ——The dropping of the Belle- fante postoffice from the first to the second class has resulted in a drop jo the prices of mail boxes in the office, a fact that all boxholders will appreciate at this time, -~——Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Schickling, of Clearfield, have an- pounced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mildred, to George A. Rothrock 2nd, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Rothrock, of Belle- . fonte. When C. A. Talbert completes -his contract of repairing the Belle- .fonte reservoir the town’s water basin qught to be strong and tight enough to hold water without leak- .dng, and high enough to furnish wat- ~er to any section of the town. ——Shortly after noon, last Fri- «day, a hard rainstorm passed over a | Jortion of Bellefonte, That is, it .xained hard for ten minutes over the! ‘southern and middle sections of the | town. Out on Linn street only a .gmall quantity of rain fell and not @ drop on Curtin street. . ——Mr. and Mrs. E. Burnett “Pimm, are receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter, born .Jittle girl is. their second child hav- . becca Cruse, daughter of Mrs, Charles Cruse. Walter Palmer, aged eight . years, of Potters Mills, is under treatment in the Centre County hos- . pital for face and head injuries the | ~ result of being hit by an automobile, «operated by Donald Cuttshall, a traveling salesman, of Johnstown, are serious they are not deemed of a critical nature. Tuesday was the longest day dn the year, according to the calen- ‘dar, and it was to us, too. Out in she garden: fighting Mexican beetles | ‘before five o'clock in the morning we wound up after ten at night try- iing to get the low-down on the i Sharkey-Schmelling fight over a :yadio that fairly sizzled with static :8nd electrical disturbances. ——Caroline, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Curtin, of Linn | 8... completed the last year at Miss | Mick’s school in Washington, D. C,, | with signal honors. She won the most coveted prize offered to stu- @ents in the school; a scholarship for scholastic and athletic excellence, hat carries tuition for an advanced @ourse in her chosen work; physical | gulture. i ——Peter and George Meek Jr.,! and Jacob Bottorf will drive to Downingtown today. The Meek boys "will remain there until. Monday and «Jacob will go on into Phitadelphia #o stay with his aunt Sue Garner aumtil the party returns. They went ‘down to bring Miss Louise Valentine, who has; been visiting her uncle ‘Thomas: Dewning; in Downingtown, for. ten. days; back home, ——TPraffic on the Bald Eagle Val- ley railroad was completely blocked for five or six hours, on Saturday | afternoon, by the derailment of three freight cars at Julian. The result | was the Pennsylvania-Lehigh trains, #oth east and west, were detoured By way of Sunbury and all passen- | gers to points on the Bald Eagle | goad were held in Tyrone until the | wight train, which was late reaching | Bellefonte. John B. Griffin, retired mer- @hant of Tyrone, and Mrs. Griffin afopped in Bellefonte yesterday at @he noon hour for a few minutes. John evidently retired when retire’n was good for he was driving a hand- some. new: Packard and didn’t seem to be worrying: about anything. And we. should say that a man sitting so pretty that he could motor leisurely to his old home in Stormstown, via Bellefonte, just to keep store so that his younger brother, who is in busi- ness there, could go to a ball game, hasn’t much to worry about. ~——The milk dealers in Bellefonte are now having troubles of their own. Recently they reduced the price from 10 to 8 cents a quart, then wanted the farmers who sup- plied them with milk to assume a big part of the cut, One of the farmers, Roy Zimmerman, living south of town, demurred. So he de- eided to establish his own milk route. He fixed up a dairy which is # model of sanitary neatness and started out by selling two quarts fire first day. Now he has in the weighborhood of one hundred patrons and has cut the price of milk to 7 eents a quart. While the war is on fe consumers will reap the benefit. five separate exhibits (we counted ' them) were on display. The sweet fragrance of the beautiful blooms saturated the atmosphere in the | spacious auditorium of the chapel. We openly admit ignorance of floriculture and inability to give the names and anything near like an accurate description of the number and wide variety of flowers exhibited. In the garden we know onions, pumpkins, sweet corn and tomatoes. We know roses, marigolds and sunflowers, but we are candid in saying that we did not know the names of one-fourth the flowers ex- hibited. But we do know quality and every vase and standard of flowers showed the “pink of perfection,” evidence that they had received the best of care and cultivation from the gardener who grew them. The show was sponsored by the Bellefonte Garden Club but was open to exhibits from any one. The very fact that such a large number of exquisite flowers were shown justi- fies assertion that the club, in the one year of it’s existence, has stimu- lated an interest and wholesome competition in the growing of flowers unheard of in Bellefonte prior to it’s organization. During the afternoon the young woman’s guild of the Presbyterian church served refreshments. The show was voted so much of a success by all who visited it that members of the club are favorably considering the proposition of having another one late in the summer for fall flowers. The judges at the show were A. E. Cloetingh and W. G. C. Thomp- son, of State College, and they had a job awarding the ribbons. There were SO many exhibits that the tables were crowded and too many flowers were in most of the vases So that the work of judging was very difficult. However, the two men decided the winners to the best of their ability and as impartially as it was possible to do. The list of ribbon and prize winners is as fol- lows: Class 1, Perennials—one variety to a vase, 3 stems or sprays: A. Delphiniums—1st Miss Blanche Un- derwood; 2nd, Mrs. Robert Morris; 3rd, large | PATIENTS TREATED AT COUNTY HOSPITAL Byrl V. Lose, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lose, of Bellefonte, was discharged on Monday of last week after under- going medical treatment. Franklin B. Harpster, of College township, became a surgical patient ‘on Monday of last week. Glade E. Horner, of Potter town- ship, was admitted last Monday as a surgical patient. BELLEFONTE MAN GRANTED A PAROLE, OTHER COURT CASES After serving nineteen months in the Allegheny county work house under a sentence for failure to obey an order of support of his wife and children, Ralph Cole, of Bellefonte, was granted a parole at a special session of court on Saturday with the stipulation that he go to work for L. A, Hill, stick to his job and pay $15 a month to his wife. Cole's NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. Mrs. Howard Gearhart spent the early part of the week in Altoona under the care of Dr. Glover, taking prelimin- ary treatment for the removal of a cat- aract from her left eye. — James O. Brewer, Jr., of north Thomas street, has made application to enter the Mechanics Institute at Roches- ter, N. Y. James is the only son of J. O. Brewer, the Bellefonte coal merchant. __Evan Blanchard went over to New York, the early part of the week, to learn | the insurance business, intending to fol- | low that work as a profession for the Edward Kachik, 12-year-old son of .,56 dates back to about four years present. Evan was a third year man at Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kachik. of Spring township, became a surgical patient last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. George R. Laird, of State College, are the proud parents of a daughter, born at the hospital | last Tuesday. | Adaline V. Walker, 6-year-old | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George | Walker, of Potter township, was | admitted last Tuesday for surgical treatment. Miss Edith V. Armagast, of Ben- ner township, became a surgical patient last Tuesday. After undergoing surgical treat- ment, John H. Johnsonbaugh, 3- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph | Johnsonbaugh, of State College, was | discharged on Thursday. Mrs. J. E. Fleisher, of Huston township, was discharged on Thurs- day after receiving surgical treat- ment. Mrs. Charles T, Sellers, of Patton township, a medical patient, was discharged last Thursday. Mrs. Henry G. Ellis, of State Col- lege, returned to her home on Thursday after receiving medical treatment. Mrs. George H. Fancher and infant son, of State College, were discharg- ed on Thursday. Charles Shreffler, of Pleasant Gap, became a surgical patient on Thursday. Ralph R. Williams, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Williams, of Pine Grove Mills, was discharged on Friday after receiving surgical treatment. Harry K. Ulrich, of Bellefonte, a surgical patient, was discharged on Friday. Mrs. Helen Barron, of Williams- port, became a surgical patient on Friday. Mrs. Ada Hillary, of Wheeling, W. Va., was admitted Friday for surgi- cal treatment, Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Miller, of Bellefonte, are rejoicing over the birth of a daughter at the hospital | on Friday. Mrs. Robert Roan, of Bellefonte, became a surgical patient on Satur- day. Mrs. H. G. Witter; honorable mention, | fonte, was admitted on Saturday for | Mrs. H. C. Yeager; consolation ribbon, | Mrs. Thomas Beaver. B, Peony—I1st, Samuel 2nd, Mrs. C. E. Gates: Walker. C, Iris—ist, Mrs. O. B. Malin: 2nd, Mrs. W. J. Emerick; 3rd, Mrs. Harry Yeager; consolation ribbon, Miss Holter, of Howard. E, Gaillardia—1st, Mrs. W. J. Emerick; 2nd, Mrs. Harry Williams; 3rd, Mrs. Harry Yeager. F, Poppy—1st, Mrs. W. J. Emerick; 2nd, Mrs. Harry Williams: 3rd, Mrs. Harry Yeager. G, Other perennials not listed: Canterbury Bells—1st, Mrs. D. H. Has- tings; 2nd, Mrs. W. J. Emerick; 3rd, Mrs. Harry Williams; honorable mention, Mrs. H. G. Witter. Foxglove—l1st, Mrs. W. J. 2nd, Mrs. M. H. Brouse. Miscellaneous—1st, Samuel Rumberger; 2nd, Mrs. Harry Yeager; 8rd, Mrs. Wil- liam Pletcher; honorable mention, Margaret Cook. Class 2, Container Arrangement; A, One Variety—l1st, Miss Pletcher; 2nd, Mrs. W. C. Rowe; 3rd, Mrs. W. Harrison Walker. B, Mixed Variety—1st, Mrs. W. J. Emerick; 2nd, Mrs. N. E. Robb; 3rd, Miss Helen Harper; honorable mention, Mrs. Charles Schaeffer. Class 3, Roses: A, Hybrid Teas—I1st, Mrs. J. J. Kil- patrick; 2nd, Mrs. Ivan Walker; 3rd, Titan Metal Co. B, Hybrid Perpetual—l1st, John Bower Jr., 2nd, Mrs. Robert Morris; 3rd, Mrs. C. E. Gates; honorable mention, Miss Rebecca Valentine. C, Climbing—1st, Mrs. Elwood John- son; 2nd, Mrs. William Witmyer; 3rd, Mrs. Eben Bower; honorable mention, Samuel Rumberger. D, Best Single Bloom—1st, Mrs. Kil- patrick; 2nd, Mrs. Emerick; 3rd, Mrs. N. E. Robb; honorable mention, Mrs. W. Harrison Walker. Class 4, Roses—Container Arrangement: 1st, Mrs. George Beezer; 2nd, Mrs. Melvin Locke; 3rd, Mrs. Kilpatrick; hon- orable mention, Miss May Crider. Class 5, Plants: 1st, Miss Baldridge; 2nd, Mrs. Alten- derfer. Class 6, Vegetables and Herbs: 1st, Mrs. A. O. Furst; 2nd, Mrs. H. Nagle; 3rd, Mr. Nagle; honorable men- tion, Mrs. Ivan Walker. The special prize of five dollar's worth of plants and shrubs offered by Manus Curran, Mill Hall nurseryman, for the best all-around exhibit, was awarded to Mrs .Emerick. Class 7, Children’s Exhibit: A, Bird Houses—I1st, Franklin Stevens; 2nd, Jack Port; 3rd, Constans Curtin; honorable mention, Harry Witter. B, Miniature Gardens—1st, James Thompson; 2nd, Constans Curtin; 3rd, Betty Long; honorable mention, Francis Jodon. C, Dish Gardens—1st, Bobby Curtin; 2nd, Catherine Cliffe; 3rd, Catherine Kil- patrick; honorable mention, Virginia Cliffe. D, Bouquets—I1st, Richard Knapp; 2nd, Mary Louise Johnson; 3rd, Betty Grove. Consolation prizes, Barbara McDowell; Mary Catherine Walker, Stanley Musser, Bill Musser, Harry Witter. Rose Trellis, Linn Krape. The hand painted posters and pen Rumberger; Emerick; Miss | 3rd, Mrs. Ivan | Mrs. Barbara Keeler, of Belle- medical treatment. Mrs. Harold G. Bohn, of State College, was discharged Saturday after receiving surgical treatment. Mrs. Annie Hoff, of Philadelphia, is a surgical patient, having been admitted on Sunday. There were 44 patients hospital at the week. in the beginning of the ——Mrs, W. C. Rowe entertained about two dozen friends at a buffet supper, at her delightfully pleasant home, on north Allegheny street, on Wednesday evening of last week. Those who assisted her in catering to her guests were Mrs. Wilbur H. Baney, Miss Adaline Olewine, Miss Nina Lamb and Mrs. George A.| Beezer. The decorations were choice | flowers from her own lovely garden. In addition to the above, other guests were Mrs. Benjamin Bradley, Miss Margaret Cook, Mrs, W. L. Daggett, Mrs. G. Oscar Gray, Mrs. J. D. Hunter, Miss Helen Harper, Mrs. A. C. Hewitt, Mrs, J. J. Kilpatrick, Mrs. Robert Morris, Mrs. H. H. Pat- tee, Mrs. N. E. Robb, Mrs, H. C.| Taylor, Miss Mary Underwood, Miss Blanche Underwood, Mrs. Harry G. Witter, Mrs. Ivan Walker, Mrs. W, Harrison Walker, Mrs. Fred Witmer and Mrs. H. C. Yeager. ——Farmers in Centre county have begun cutting their clover. fields for hay and one of the best fields we know of in the entire coun- ty is one of eighteen acres on the farm of A. C. Grove, just south of | Bellefonte. It is an even, heavy stand all over the field and has an average height of three feet, though there are some spots where it is forty inches tall. It is well headed and should yield an exceptional crop. | ——Roy Wilkinson motored to Danville, Wednesday afternoon, and brought home John Blanchard Esq, who has been a patient in the Geis- inger hospital for two months or longer. Mr. Blanchard has recovered to that extent that he walked out | of the hospital to the car without any support and showed keen enjoy- ment of the ride home, and ink sketches used to advertise the show were made by Marian Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith, of Howard, and Jean McGarvey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul McGarvey, of Bellefonte, and all drew favorable comment. The exhibit of hand tinted photo- graphs of Mrs. Yeager's flower gar- den and Mrs, J. D. Hunter's bouquet of peonies, work of the McGarvey Studio, were also much admired. All told 125 men, women and chil- dren had exhibits at the show and the Garden club is to be congratulat- ed upon it’s success. | McDowell, telegraph operator in the | at Luthersburg, by the pastor, Rev. [ ago when he was haled into court | and ordered to pay $25 a month, He | never kept up the payments and was | before the court several times. Fi- | | nally in December, 1930, he was sent | to the work house. Mr. Hill was in court when the application for a parole was presented and told the court he will give Cole steady work; will give him board, lodging and five dollars a week. Out of the money received he will have to pay $15 a month to his wife. | Back in May, 1931, Olaf Risen, and his wife, Ida M. Risen, entered into an amicable agreement that he pay her $25 a month for the support | of herself and child. At that time Risen had a good job with the Abramsen Engineering company but him his job. He then went to work for the American Lime and Stone company at 60 cents an hour but re- ductions in pay followed until now he is getting only 30 cents, The re- ments to his wife and being unable to pay the amount agreed upon ap- peared in court to have the sum re- | duced. The court fixed the amount to be paid at $5.00 per week and | told Risen he should make an ef- fort to pay something on the lapsed payments. Edward Gravish, of Rush town- ship, was brought into court on a bench warrant issued at the insist- ence of the overseers of the poor of that township because he failed to make good on a court order to pay $0.50 a month toward the support der was made May 1st, 1930, and at that time Gravish was able to make his payments but the depression hit him and it was impossible for him to meet them. In their demand that Gravish be brought into court the overseers of the poor charged that he has a bank account of $5,000, owns his property and bonds and stocks and is able to pay. Parole officer Wilkinson stated that so far as he could discover Gravish had no money in bank, did not own stocks and bonds, and was himself aid under the Talbot relief fund. Judge Fleming stated that he had known Gravish for a number of had $5000 in his life, He therefore discharged the bench warrant and put the costs upon the overseers of Rush township. Albert Baney, now living in Ly- coming county, who has not made good on a court order to pay $1.50 a week for the support of his child, was committed to the Allegheny county work house. | VonStorch—Matthews.—A belated | wedding announcement is that of | Robert VonStorch, of Scranton, and | Miss Agnes Miller Matthews, daugh- | ter of Mrs. Matthews-Minich, of | Philipsburg, the marriage having | taken place on March 25th at the | Neshaming Warick Presbyterian | church, at Bristol Road, near Phila- | | | delphia, the Rev. Ernest Vander- bosch officiating. Witnesses to the ceremony included Mr. and Mrs. | Charles Kindred, of Bristol Road, and Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Glenn, of State College. The bride is a graduate of the Philipsburg High school, class of 1926, and later took a two year’s course in dental hygiene in the Uni- | versity of Pennsylvania. During the past four years she has been dental hygienist in the schools of Belle- fonte and State College. The bride- groom is a graduate of State Col- | lege and is now employed by the | Hudson Coal company, in Scranton, | and it is in that city they will make their home. McDowell —Wilson.—F. Edmund Western Union office at State Col- lege, and Miss Madaline Wilson, an employee in the Campus Green room, were married last Thursday after- noon, in the First Methodist church L. L. Woodin. The bride is a daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Wil- son, of Bigler, and the bridegroom a son of Mrs. Dora McDowell, of Woodland. Both are graduates of the Clearfield High school. Before going to State College two years ago Miss Wilson was a stenographer in Clearfield. The young couple will reside at the College. Rossman—Beck.—Allen R. Ross- man, son of the late G. W. Rossman, of Pennsylvania Furnace, and Miss Hazel I. Beck, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Clyde Beck, of Centre Line, motored to Sinking valley, last Wed- nesday, where they were married in the Lutheran church by the pastor, Rev. Mr. Bourde. The bride is a most estimable young woman and has been prominently identified with the church and social life of her home community. The bridegroom is a partner in a gas and oil supply station, in Altoona, and it is in that city they will make their home on their return from a wedding trip. a reduction of the force there lost | sult is he is back some $130 in pay- | of his father, Rolle Gravish. The or-! receiving | years and also knows that he never! | Yale last winter. | _George McNichol, with the Bell Tele- phone Co., at Harrisburg, has been home for the past ten days convalescing from a tonsil operation. George has been with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James | McNichol, of Howard street. — Mrs. William Wallis is expected here, next week, for a visit with her mother, Feng J. Will Conley, of Logan street. | Mrs. Wallis will come to Bellefonte from | Atlantic City, where she has been with | Mr. Wallis attending a convention oz furnace men. —The T. S. Strawns, of New Kensing- ton, the Larry Monohans and Mr. and Mrs. Burkee, of Pittsburgh, were here for one of their frequent week-ends at The Markland. The Strawns, having been one time residents of Bellefonte, have many friends about here. —Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Young and their four children arrived here from DMead- ville, Sunday, for their annual summer visit with the children’s maternal grand- parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk. A part of Mr. Young's time will be spent in convention at State College. —William Brouse Jr., who is back | home at Boalsburg, entirely recovered | from his recent illness, was in Bellefonte, | Saturday for several hours, his time while here being devoted to some bus?- ness which accumulated during his ill- | ness and in doing some buying. | —Rebecca Dorworth and Dorothy Wil- | kinson drove to Pittsburgh, a week ago, | Rebecca to spend a week with Betty | Curtin, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin, of East End, and Dorothy to be the guest, during the time of a college mate, Nancy Hartman, in | Monongahela City. | | | | —Miss Tomazine Potter came up from | | Ashbourne last week, to be in Bellefonte | indefinitely with the James H. Potter | family and her sister, Miss Lucy. Miss | Lucy Potter went over to Winburne this week to spend ten days or two weeks | with her cousin, Miss Mary Sommerville, | and upon her return to Bellefonte, Miss | Tomazine will go over for a part of the month of July. | —The Misses Dorothy and Helen Mc- | Knight, daughters of Mrs. McKnight and the late Robert McKnight, of Philadel- | phia, and a cousin, Miss Gailey, were in | Bellefonte recently for a short visit with | the Misses Margaret and Martha Mec- | Knight, sisters of Robert McKnight. The | young women came up on the last ex- cursion from Philadelphia to spend Sun- day with their aunts. 1 —Barly Tuesday morning Miss Eliza- | beth Hart, of Spring street, with Mrs. W. Hays Mattern, her daughter Patsy and her mother, Mrs. John Patton, of Holli- daysburg, who has been visiting the Mat- terns, left for a motor trip east that will last until their return today. Mrs. Mat- tern and her party will stop in Haver- ford for a visit with relatives while Miss Hart will drive to Lansdowne where she will be a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin O. Noll. —Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Grove and { children, of Warren, have been spending | the week here with Mr. Grove’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Grove, on the farm | south of Bellefonte, and with other | friends. Roy is still connected with the ! Bell Telephone company of Pennsylvania | and has a good position in the Warren | district. He is taking his vacation at | this time because of the Grove family reunon which will be held at Centre Hall tomorrow. —Maj. and Mrs. H. L. Curtin, their daughter, Nancy, with Mrs. Harry Cur- | tin and her son, Harry Jr., drove to I | Baltimore last week, from where Mrs. | Harry Curtin, Harry Jr., and Nanay, | went by boat to Norfolk, for a visit with | Mrs. Curtin’s sister, Mrs. Wilcox and her | family. Mrs. Wilcox and Mrs. Curtin | were the former Eleanor and Elizabeth | Ardell. From Baltimore, Major and Mrs. Curtin drove to Philadelphia, to see their | daughter Mary graduate from Temple | University and to bring her home. —Mrs. Joseph Allen and Miss Nutler, al class mate in the Georgetown University | training school for nurses, drove to Bellefonte from Washington, D. C., Fri- day, in Mrs. Allen's car, and visited here until Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Ed- ward Cunningham, at the Cunningham home on Water street. Mrs. Allen is only now recovering from a nervous break- down and the Cunningham house having been closed while Mrs, Cunningham spent the winter with relatives in Cleveland, Toledo and Akron, it was Mrs. Allen’s first visit home since the death of her father, —Mrs. Joseph Abt, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Badger with their daughter and son, Miss Anne Badger and Wilbur Badger; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Eby and family, Mr, and Mrs. John Hartswick and Miss Irene McClellan motored to Lewisburg, Wed- | nesday of last week, to attend the twenty-seventh annual reunion of the Eberhart family, held at Brook park, James Eberhart, of Lewisburg, 85 years old, and dean of the clan since the death of the late D. W. Eberhart, of Bellefonte, has been president of the reunion asso- ciation ever since it was organized twen- ty-five years ago. At the reunion, last week, he was presented with a five dol- lar gold piece. —Charles G. Haines and a friend, Roy Caster, of McKeesport, motored here on Saturday and remained until Sunday eve- ning, visiting the former's mother and daughter, Mrs. David Haines and Miss Peggie, of north Water street, Mrs. Haines celebrated her ninetieth birthday anniversary on Sunday and, we are hap- Py to be able to say, she is still in the remarkably good health she has enjoyed for so many years. Mr. Caster is in the employ of the McKeesport tin mill and has been fortunate in having fairly steady employment, Having had Satur- day off and feeling the need of a little trip he brought Charles to Bellefonte in his car. —Phil Reynolds is home York for an indefinite sta, father, Col. W. F. Reynolds, Linn street. —Harold Hoag, with the State Higy, way Department, at Clearfield, was for a Sunday visit at the Hoag home . Thomas street. von —Mrs. John Thackery ig here for he summer visit with her daughter, Mr, Stuart Gast and Father Gast, at the rectory on Spring street, 7 —Patty Lane Fay Jr., of Alto been among the June visitors t¢ fonte, a guest during her sty grandmother, Mrs. John N, Lane, —Edward Houser was taken to Clearfield hospital, Tuesday, to 1, ted on for a sinus condition fro; he has been suffering for sever —Mr. and Mrs. 8. H. Hoy ang Mrs. Clayton E. Royer drove to Pitts. burgh, for Sunday, which they spent wity the Harry Hoy family, at Wilkinsburg, —Miss Mary Norris, who has several months with Miss Caroline Vale. tine, at ‘Burnham Place,” wil] return t, her home in Bel Air, Md., next Monday —Mr. and Mrs, Ebbert Hollobaugh and their son, Richard, are up from New Jersey for their summer vacation vig with relatives here and at State College, —Gorge W. Ward, who is in Pittsburgh again making one of hig quent trips back home to Pine Mills, spent several hours in Be Saturday. —James A. McCafferty and hig f former well known Bellefonte residents, have left Hartsville, S. C., and gone back to New York city, where they lived pe. fore moving south. ona, hag 0 Belle. ¥ of ne the € Opera. Mm which al years, Mr. ang Spent, from fre. Grove llefonta amily, —The Widdowsons drove to Phillip, W. Va, a week ago, and spent several days there as house guests of Mr. ang Mrs. Bruce Talbot. Mrs. Talbot wag the former Elizabeth Gamble. —Katherine Walker accompanied Ellen Shoemaker up from Philadelphia, Sunday, and will be a guest at the Shoemaker home, on west High street, until Ellen returns to Devon, Thursday of next week. —The Misses Anne McCormick, Sye and Marcie Seiler and a friend who i3 visiting at the Seiler home, motored here from Harrisburg, on Wadnesday, to pe | luncheon guests of Miss Caroline Valep- tine, at ‘Burnham Place.” —Nancy Jean Usselton, of Chestertown, Md., who has been visiting Ann Dale | and Betty Peach, of Mitchville, Md., who has been a guest of Caroline Curtin for the past two weeks departed for their homes yesterday. The girls were al schoolmates at Miss Hick’s school in Washington. —Mrs. Maynard Murch Jr., and her sister, Miss Georgie Daggett, drove in from Cleveland, yesterday, and are now guests of their aunt, Mrs. Wells L. Dag- get. Mrs. Murch will only make a short stay in Bellefonte while Miss Daggett will spend a part of her vacation with the Daggett family. —Mr. and Mrs. Warren ‘Cobb, who were married two weeks ago, have beef making their first visit home with the Cobb family. Arriving in Bellefonte Fri- day of last week they visited here until Sunday, leaving then for New York, where they both will resume their work with the Irving Trust Co. —Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Musser came over from Juniata, Friday morning of last week, for a two day’s visit back home, both being natives of Centre coun- ty. Their time, while here, was spent with Mrs. Musser's brothers here and at State College and also with Mr. Musser’ relatives at both places. —Mrs. Craig Scott and her small daughter, Cynthia Anne, came in from Erie a week ago to spend the remainder of June in Bellefonte with Mrs. Scott's grandfather and mother, former Judge Ellis L. Orvis and Mrs. Driscoll, at the Orvis home on north Allegheny street. Mrs. Scott is better known here as Mary Orvis Harvey. —Gilbert T. Noll left his home in Pleasant Gap at three o'clock last Sun- day morning, drove to Newark, N. J. spent several hours there and was back at five that evening. He took his moth- er, Mrs. James B. Noll, and his two daughters, Jane and Madaline, to New- ark for a visit of two weeks with his sister, Mrs. Henry T. Gruber, who wa3 the former Miss Pauline Noll. —Mrs. Etta Grether is back at her cozy home at Harrisonville, near Pleasant Gap, for the summer, having come in from Oklahoma City, last Thursday, to spend the summer months in Centre county. She was accompanied by Mrs. J. F. Oyer, president of the Parent Teachers Association of Oklahoma City, who will spend the summer with her. They expect to be at the Gap until September, at least. —Mrs. Austin O. Furst, Mr. and Mrs John Curtin and their daughter Caroline motored to Overbrook yesterday for the Furst-Burrell wedding, which will be celebrated in the Presbyterian church It that place today. The bride to be is Sara second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wil- liam S. Furst and the groom, David Be rel, a graduate of Yale and the Yale Law School, A reception at Green Hill3 Farms, will follow the ceremony. —Mr, and Mrs. Frank Clevenstine and their son Miles, of Zion, and Miss Claes Clevenstine, of Williamsport, ariel home, Sunday evening, from a week 1 drive to Illinois. While away they visite with Mr. and Mrs. Clevenstine’s ol daughters, Mrs. Melvin Miller and Miller family, in Chicago; with Mr% Clevenstine's brother, Otis Garbrick, y Dakota, and stopped with relatives A number of other places, both enroute OU and back. —Those from out-of-town here, nesday morning, for the funeral © John A. Woodcock included her som oh Lee B. Woodcock, Byron Woodcock, Yr: and Mrs, James K. Gearhart and Dr. ne Mrs. F. W. Fillwood, of Scranton; oe Rev. J. R. Woodcock and his son wy liam, of Syracuse; Mrs. Joseph Pom and her daughter, of Pittsburgh; Ws Mary Forbes, her niece, Mrs. en Forbes, and the latter's two childrh Miss Mary and Wilson, and Miss Heth leen Seibert, of Chambersburg; Mr. a Mrs. Richard Forbes and their daugh iy of Williamsport; Mr. and Mrs. Nts Woodcock, of Hollidaysburg, and Harriet Sloan, of McConnellsbursg. Wed- f Mrs. Dr. —We will do your job work right
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers