Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 08, 1893, Image 8

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Bellefonte, Pa., Sep. 8, 1893.
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To CorrESPONDENTS. — No communications
published unless accompanied by the real
aame of the writer.
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THINGS ABOUT TOWN & COUNTY
——Tuesday night’s rain was a good
one for this section,
——The summer term of the Spring
Mills academy closed last Friday.
——Tce holds its own this cool weath-
er, but the iceman is losing weight.
_ ——Bellefonte has within her con-
fines many speedy horses, and some
beauties among them.
——Two weeks from to-day we will
have a day during which the night and
day will be of equal length.
— The Fall session of the Pennsyl-
vania State Ccllege will open on Wed-
nesday morning, September 18th.
— Tyrone ve. Bellefente at the park
to-day. The last championship game of
the season between these two clubs.
——1t is rumored that Miss Mary
Bradley will return to Bellefonte to be-
come organist in St John’s Episcopal
church.
——Billy Crawford is mad. It is a
girl, and Billy thought he should have
had another son.
——Work was resumed in all depart-
ments of the Tyrone paper mill on
Monday morning.
——On next Sunday the annual har-
vest thanksgiving service will be held
in the Reformed church in this place.
——Next Monday, September 11th,
will be the Jewish New Year’s day and
all their stores in this place will be clos-
ed until 6 o'clock p. m.
——Rails are now laid on the new
rail-road as far as Hecla Furnace, where
the building of an iron bridge has stop-
ped the work for a time.
——Prof, W. A. Krise, of Johnstown,
well known about Spring Mills, mar-
ried Miss Ella G. Haunner, of Roxbury,
Cambria county, yesterday.
——The Phenix flouring mill deliv-
ery wagon broke down at the High
street bridge, on Monday morning. The
spindle broke off one of the back
wheels.
——The Central Synod of the Luth-
eran church will meet in the new
church, in this place, on Wednesday,
September 27th. It will be in session
several days.
——The Veteran’s picnic at the park,
on Saturday, was the largest ever
known in the history of that organiza-
tion. Nearly five thousand people
were there. :
——Hunters report a scarcity of
squirrels. Very few of the many sports-
men, who went out from here on the
morning of the 1st, brought more than
one or two squirrels home.
—— The voters of Union township
will hereafter vote at the private house
of Samuel Brugger, and the polling
place for Unionville borough will be in
the new hall of the P. O. S. of A.
——The water continues low in
Spring creek and every day the boys
loop dozens of suckers, within view of
our windows. The fish are excellent
eating and vary in size from 12 to 18
inches.
——At the meeting of the board ot
trade on Tuesday evening it was decided
to boom Bellefonte by issuing an illus-
trated pamphlet setting forth our ex-
ceptional qualifications as 8 manufac-
turing centre.
——Residents of some portions of
town are greatly worried over the
nocturnal appearance of an apparition
which no one seems able to exactly de-
scribe. Some have an idea that there is
*. ‘a romance under the “spook.”
——The Bellefonte ball 2lub is away
playing a series of exhibition games.
On Monday it defeated Clearfield 22 to
2. and on Tuesday and Wednesday was
beaten by Punxsutawney by the scores
of 2 to 0 and 4 to 1 respectively.
——The primary grades of the Belle-
fonte public schools began the work of
4 new year, on Monday, and as early as
seven o’clock in the morning groups of
little children were noticed about the
school house doors. It won’t be thus
afterwhile.
~——Cards are out announcing the
coming marriage of Miss Catharine
Miles Groen, daughter of F. Potts
Green of this place, to Mr. Clevan Din-
ges, of Williamsport, Pa. The cere-
mony will be performed in the Presbyte-
rian church, at high noon, on Wednes-
day, September 20th.
——Two Bellefonte . polling paces
have been changed by decree of the
court, The North ward will hereafter
vote in the stone school building, on
Allegheny street, and the West ward
has been ordered to vote inthe base-
ment of the new United Brethren
church, at the corner of Thomas and
High streets, but that will be impossi-
ble, because the place is too small for
such a purpose. Another place will
have to be looked up for the West
ward voters.
Trg NEw LuTHERAN CHURCH DED-
1cATED.—Sunday was a perfect day and |
the members of the Lutheran church of |
this place were correspondingly happy. |
For four years they had been struggling
to build a place of worship to whica
they could point with pride. Trouble
in every form confronted the first efforts
at building, but Sunday saw the cul-
mination of their long work and the
fact that their day of dedication was
blessed with perfect weather was a
source of much gratification.
The first service was held in the morn-
ing at 10:30, and all the other church-
es in town, except two, having been
closed there was a general outpouring of
the other congregations, all eager to
hear the treats in store for them, After
the choir had sung the chorus: “The
Lord is in His Holy Temple’ and the
invocation had been made, the scripture
lesson for the morning was read by Dr.
Laurie, pastor of the Presbyterian
church. The congregation sangand Dr.
McKnight offered a prayer for help and
guidance in the conduct of the service.
Another hymn was sung, then Mr.
Hoshour, the pastor, introduced Rev:
Dr. E. J. Wolf, professor of church his-
tory and new testament exegesis in the
Gettysburg Theological Seminary. His
sermon was founded on ‘““upon this rock
I will build my church, and the gates
of hell shall not prevail against it,” and
from it he drew an effective comparison
between the immortal and mortal build-
ing of & church. He said ‘the builder
takes the conglomerate mase of stone,
mortar, wood, iron and other materials
and, apparently without knowing what
he is doing, perfects a structure rich in
beauty and symmetry, but only as the
architect may have designed it.”
Thus he explained that the building of
the material church structure corre-
sponds precisely with Christ’s building
of the church of God. All the elements
entering into its construction being in
the crude state before brought into use
and when the church is complete these
will be a homogeneous, beautiful whole
which has existed in the eye of God,
since the time when the work was be-
gun, This led to a discussion of the
progression of the christian church and
he concluded by referring to the World's
Columbian Exposition as the most con-
| elusive evidence that christianity has
been progressive. The sermon was just
a half hour in length.
Rev. Hoshour made a statement of
the church finances showing that the
building had cost something over
$15,000 of which $11,775 had already
been paid and asked that $4,000 be
raised that morning in order to clear the
debt. The congregation responded
liberally and by the time of dismissal
$2,045 had been subscribed.
The evening service was quite as well
attended as had been that of the morn-
ing and Dr. McKnight’s masterly pro-
duction with ‘the love of God”
as the text of his theme, was greatly en-
joyed. He is the president of Gettys-
burg College and is a man of superior
accomplishments. $850 more of the in-
debtedness was raised and as the Board
of Church Extension had guaranteed
$1000 on the day of dedication, the
trustees assumed the balance and the
pretty structure was dedicated to the
worship of God.
Rev. Fischer, of Centre Hall, and Rev.
Aikens, of Pine Grove, were visiting
ministers of the Lutheran denomination
who assisted in the dedication, The
Bellefonte churches were nearly all rep-
resented by their pastors.
THE NEW CHURCH IN DETAIL.
The new Lutheran church, which now
ornaments the south-east corner of Linn
and Allegheny streets, is a red brick
structure, 50x100 ft. The general ten-
dency in its design is towards the Goth-
ic style of architecture. It fronts on
Allegheny street, but the Linn street
view is quite as ornamental as the other.
Its division is into a church auditorium,
chapel or Sunday school room, library,
study and infant rooms ; all so arranged
with sliding doors that the whole inter-
ior can be thrown together in times of
necessity. The auditorium is 43x43 ft in
the clear, and is finished in dark antique
oak. A neat terra cotta brussels carpet
covers the inclined floor and when the
pretty vaulted ceilings are frescoed it
will make one of the handsomest places
in town. The seating of the auditorium
is semi-circular, thus throwing the pul-
pit in the one corner or exactly in the
middle of the side of the building
whence it commands all the rooms
when thrown into use. The building
throughout is finished in antique oak, and
shades of terra cotta prevail in the car-
pets. The Sunday school room and oth-
ers adjoining it are perfect in appoint-
ment. Just over the infant room and
study isa gallery which will accommo-
date a number of people when entertain-
ments are given in the Sunday school
room.
The building will be heated from a fur-
nace in the cellar and is lighted with gas.
The combination gas and electric fix-
tures forming no small part of its orna-
mentation. The windows are all of rich-
Col. John H. Stover ever bright in the
minds of those who see it from time to
time. Ih the Sunday school room a
handsome memorial window emblemat-
ical of Christ’s saying “Suffer little child-
ren to come unto Me” was placed there
as a monument to May Edith Dale, Ma.
rietta Musser, Annie Margaret Ishler
and Frank F. Harbaugh, four children
who died during the erection of the
church.
The Lutheran congregation is to be
congratulated that they have done so
well in building themselves such a
structure. Their number is small and
for that reason the work was correspond-
ingly large. It is an ornament to the
town and another to our long list of well
appointed and comfortable places of wor-
ship.
——Lock Haven is moving for the
better care of her poor.
——The corner stone fora new Meth-
odist church has been laid in Curwens-
ville.
—— Wall paper at Schreyers.
——The Sugar Valley rail-road boom
is on again. News is getting scarce
with the Journal man.
——Curwensville hus lately passed a
cow ordinance and the council of that
town is getting abused accordingly.
——F. H. Cota, of Long Branch, N.
J., has been called to the secretaryship
of the Y. M.C. A. He is expected here
about the 15th.
Lock Haven for over forty years, died in
that place Monday evening. He was a
well known contractor and builder.
——The fall meetings of the Milton
Fair Association will be held on October
8rd, 4th 5th and 6th. The races will be
one of the features of this year’s fair.
- ——The Williamsport Sun is respon-
sible for a rumor that the passenger de-
partment of the Beech Creek rail-road
will be moved from Jersey Shore to
Philipsburg, on the 15th,
—— Clinton county tobacco growers
report an average crop. Cutting is in
progress now and if the weather contin-
ues good until it is housed they will all
be happy. It has not rusted and there
has been no damage from hail.
——Wall paper at Schreyers.
——A bicycle tournament was held
in Houtzdale, on Labor day, in which
wheelmen from Centre, Clinton, Clear-
field, Blair and Cambria counties took
part. Lester Shaffer, of Curtin street,
represented our flyers and won two of
the events. He took the 1 mile free for
all, against a field of five starters, in 2:47
winning it easy, without even having
been forced to run his time down to the
record he has made on the road here.
Two gold medals were his reward.
~——The Horatio mine, near Punxsu-
tawney, caught fire last Thursday and is
still burning, When the mine first took
fire Tyrone and Altoora fire companies
were called and sent to fight it with
their engines, hut the slope is a long
one and the only way the fire can be
put out is by flooding. An attempt at
this is now being made. A miner
named Moses Hughes and his two sons
were in the mine and suffocated. Their
bodies were recovered Friday evening.
~-— Madaline Merli’s production of
“a story of a kiss’ at the opera house,
on Monday night, was not to be com-
pared with her work as “Frou Frou” in
the engagement here last season. The
play seems to be all right but there are
80 many situations in it that were be-
yond the grasp of the company. Miss
Merli would perhaps have saved herself
the annoyance of the laughter during
all parts of the play had she have had
‘“‘Maurice’’ working on a picture, during
the first act, that bore some slight re-
semblance to the original. As it was
the work of the artist was extremely
farcicial and spoiled the effect of the en-
tiro company’s work.
——The second annual convention of
the Epworth League of Central Penn-
sylvania Conference of the Methodist
Episcopal church will be held in Wil-
liamsport, Pa., Oct. 17th, 18th and 19th,
1898. This convention will be the
largest gathering of Methodist young
people that ever assembled in Pennsyl-
vania. It will bring together the best
heart and the best brain of the young
people of the great Methodist church.
Enthusiasm is already high in anticipa-
tion of the coming of this army of chris-
tian young people. The new opera
house, with a seating capacity of twenty-
five hundred, has been rented for the
great mass meeting, Wednesday Oct. 18,
Dr. Berry editor of Epworth Herald
and two bishops will be present, ‘“‘Ep-
worth Songs will be the singing
book used. Entertainment will be
provided for all delegates. Low rates
at good hotels can be had by all who are
ly colored glass and especial care for har- |
mony was observed in their design. A
large memorial window in the audito-
rium will keep the memory of the late
not delegates. Make your plans that
you may enjoy this great gathering in
one of the most beautiful cities of
Pennsylvania.
——Thos, C. McNerney, a resident of"
WaBN Gor FIveE YeEArs.-—“The
verdict, your honor, is, that we find
John N. Wahn guilty in the manner
and form indicted” wes the way fore-
man McCann announced the decision of
the jury that concluded its inbors on the |
Wahn case last Friday evening.
The story of the arrest of John M.
Wahn, of Lock Haven, at one time sec-
retary of the Y. M. C. A. of that city
and later a “quack” doctor with mas-
sage treatment as his hobby, is a famil-
iar one to the readers of the WATCH-
MAN, His trial for practicing abortion
on the person of Mrs. Maize Winkle-
man, of Nittany Hall, thereby indirect-
ly causing her death, began last Thurs-
day morning and every effort that his
attorneys, Messrs E. R. Chambers and
Wilbur F. Reeder, could put forth to
save him was of no avail as against the
strong chain the commonwealth, repre-
sented by District Attorney Singer and
ex-Judge Orvis, had fastened about him.
There is little use in going into detail
of the crime for which he is now in the
penitentiary as the facts will be all that
are necessary. It was proven that
Wahn went to the home of Mrs. Horace
Winkleman, by appointment in May
last, and there, according to his own
statement, undertook abortion to relieve
her of a fetus. The evidence brought
out all went to show that the accused
had been making a specialty of aborticn
and when he came to be sentenced, in
his statement to the-court, he acknow-
ledged it and said that had he have had
entiresway in Mrs. Winkleman’s case
she would not have died. It was proven
that the abortion upon Mrs Winkleman
had been pre-arranged as all of her child-
ren had been sent away from home and
her two sisters had met there, one of
whom Judge Furst directly implicated
as an accomplice when he sentenced
Wahn.
It took the jury a little over two hours
todecide. It stood 11 to 1 for convie-
tion, on the first ballot, and that one only
hesitated because he had not clearly un-
derstood some statements made during
the trial. The verdict was announced
on Friday evening, but the sentence
was not given until Monday morning
when Judge Furst gave the prisoner
the following : $300 fine, costs of
prosecution and five years at solitary
confinement and hard labor in the
western penitentiary. By good behavior
he will get about thirteen months off,
The sentence was given early in the
morning of court and on the 10:20 train
west. Sheriff Ishler, with Deputies W.
G. Runkle and Williams Collins took
John M. Whan for five years. S. C,
Bennet 1 year for larceny, and W. H.
Young 1 year and 9 months, also for
larceny.
Wahn is an intelligent fellow and
realizes the disgrace into which he has
fallen very keenly.
Waar CoxGrrss MEANS.—At the
present time when all eyes are turned
toward Washington and the people, in
general, seem to be mainfesting a keen
interest in the doings of our Senators and
Congressmen there is danger of a confu-
sion in the minds of some owing to the
several and apparently contradictory
meaning of the word Congress.
The original meaning and use of the
word Congress was as a collective term
by which the upper and lower. branches
of our national government were des-
ignated. The one being spoken of as
the upper house of Congress, the other,
as thelower house. But as the upper is
made up of Senators it ‘came to be
known as the Senate, while the lower
house became popular as Congress.
The danger of confusion in the use of
the word is in reading an article which |
says ‘Congress has repealed the Sher-
man bill,” or something similar, when
it has, and has not. The lower branch
of, Congress has repealed it, but the Se-
nate has not voted on the measure yet,
hence Congress cannot besaid to have
repenled it until both branches have so
acted. Just a little care will soon lead
to a clear understanding of the dual use
of the word.
Ar CounciL MonpAaY NIGHT.—
Monday night was an uneventful one
with the councilmen, excepting in the
little “dab” they gave the chairman
of the Street committee by voting that
hereafter he can employ no one but res-
idents of the borough to work on the
streets.
A scarcity of water was reported from
east Bishop street and another complaint
was lodged against the bad condition of
south High street, on Reservoir hill.
Both were referred to the proper com-
mittees. The Fuel and Supply Co.,
was granted permission to erect an oil
station in the hollow near the car works.
The privilege was granted for a period
of ten years. All committees reported
favorably with their work. The treas-
urer showed that the finances of the
borough are in a deplorable condition,
without much prospect of improving,
aud council adjourned. :
——The tenth annual convention of
the Woman’s Christian Temperance
Union, of Centre county, was held in the
Presbyterian church, in Milesburg, on
Wednesday. Mrs. A. M. Holbey, of
Pittston, Pa., was the chief drawing!
card.
——Judge Mayer, of Clinton county,
has rendered a decision to the effect that
water rent is not a tax.
——Mr. and Mrs. William Ostrander,
are mourning the death of their ten
months old daughter. It died Sunday
of cholera infantum.
——The fitty-third annual conven-
tion of the Allegheny synod of the gen-
eral synod of the Evangelical Lutheran
church is in session in Huntingdon.
——Carpets at Schreyers.
~The Clearfield county fair will be
held on September 18th, 19th, 20th and
21st. Arrangements are being com-
pleted to make it the largest ever
known in the history of that county.
——The Tyrone ball club will play
its last championship game here to-day.
Remembér it will be the last game in
which: our vanquished friends from
Blair county will play in Bellefonte
this season.
——If there was a race track at the
park, some carousals, a roller coaster
and a string band for dancing it would
become, in a very short time, one of the
most popular resorts in the central part
of the State.
——The first copy of the Spangler
Sentinel, the new Republican paper that
will champion the interests of that grow-
ing mining town on top of the Allegh-
enies is before us on our desk. It is a
neat, well gotten up, four page paper
and 1f Mr. Pannebaker puts the same
ginger in it that has made his Coalport
Standard so readable it will be sure to
go.
——We invite the attention of our
readers to the advertisement on an other
column offering Paragon Plaster for
sale. This plaster has been thoroughly
tested and is a first class article for plas-
tering rooms in houses churches and es-
pecially school houses, becaue it is hard
and strong. It dries quickly and is
well adapted for jobs to be quickly done.
For sale by McCalmont &j Co.
——Carpets at Schreyers.
Among the speakers at the Centre
county Veteran Club’s picnic at the
park, on Saturday were :
Beaver, president of the Club, Judge
Grier, of Butler county, Henry Hall, of
the Pittsburg Times ; T. P. Rynder, of
Erie county ; R. A. Cassidy, Mayor of
Cantun, Ohio ; ex-Governor A. G. Cur-
tin ; Prof. John Hamilton, of State
College, and S. B. Miller, of Bellefonte:
The Milesburg, State College, and Half
Moon bands were there to discourse
sweet music and Joshua Folk’s drum
corps reminded the boys in blue fof the
days of 65. :
News Purely Personal.
—J. C. Meyer Esq., isin Coburn on business,
—8. D. Ball Esq., of Lock Haven, had legal
business in town on Wednesday.
—The Misses Bryner, of Sewickly, are visi-
ting at the home of F. W. Crider.
—James Pierpoint, of Pittsburg, was an ar-
rival in tcwn on Tuesday evening.
—Ex-county Prothonotary L. A. Schaffer
and wife left, on Friday, for the Fair.
—Miss Jennie Furst, daughter of Hon. A. O,
Furst, in entertaining her friend Marie Cham -
berlain. of Harrisburg.
—Roland Curtin, Bellefonte’s aspirant for
honors in the U. 8. Navy is home for;a fort-
night’s farlough from Annapolis.
—Able Markle, that jolly, good fellow who
serves State College people with toothsome
meats, was a caller on Monday.
—Dr. I. 8. Lytle, of Philipsburg, was an at-
tendant at court on Tuesday. The case in
which he was interested will not be reached
this week. .
—J. P. Gophart Esq., and wife have return-
ed from an extended visit to Mrs. Gephart's
home in Logansville. The ’Squire is greatly
improved in health.
—Harry Green came over from Philipsburg
to spend Labor day and Sunday at his home
here. He is a book keeper in the Moshannon
bank in that place.
—Miss Julia C. Gray, stenographer of the
Pennsylvania State College Experiment Sta-
tion was one of a party of Fair travellers, from
the College, on Monday.
—J. 8. McCargar, our tobacconist and bii-
liardist who is now introducing the Keystone
Suspension fence to Bradford county farmers,
spent Sunday at his home here.
—Walter and Mrs. Bayard, of Washington,
D. C. have been spending a few days at the
home of their parents here, They stopped off
on their way home from the Fair.
—Mrs. Nevin W. Fisher, of Boalsburg, was
In town, on Saturday, on her way to the Veter-
an picnic. She spent Sunday here and enjoyed
the Lutheran dedicatory services.
—J. C. Weaver and wife started? on ;what
will be a delightful trip on Wednesday jmorn,
ing. They go to Burlington, Vt., via New
York City, the Hudson, and Lake Champlain.
—Mr. and Mrs. A. R. {Qsmer are visiting at
the home of their brother E. D. Osmer, on
Willowbank street. They were recently mar-
ried in Franklin, Pa., and are here on their
wedding tour.
—Jas. F. Keller Esq., of Centre Hall, was in
town on Monday along with a party of well
known farmers throughout the county. They
were here on business relating to the Grange
organization.
—Miss Rebecca Blanchard, of Linn street,
and Miss Eleanor Mitchell, of North Thomas
street, have entered as students at Wellesley
college. They departed for the famous Mas-
sachusetts institution on Wednesday morn-
ing.
—On Monday morning Misses Jane McCal-
mont, Elizabeth Shortlidge, and Marie Meek,
of this place, Theresa Meek and Nora Gray, of
Buffalo Run, and Mrs. Harvey Yarrington, of
Richmond, Va., made up a party of World’s
Fair visitors. The same evening Hard P-
Harris, Harry E. Fenlon and Mortimer O'Doro-
ghue started for Chicago.
General’
ATTEMPTED TO FIRE THE PRESBY-
TERIAN CHURCH'—At an early hour
last Saturday morning the sexton’s wife
went into the Presbyterian church, at
the end of ‘Howard street, to get it ready
for the Sunday service and the moment
she opened the door she noticed that the
immense edifice was filled with smoke.
She immediately ran to the home of
trustee John C. Miller, who lives a few
doors down on Spring street, and awoke
him. Upon investigating he found
that the fire was located near the pulpit
and running to the rear of the church
he discovered a rear basement door
burned through and flames burning
fiercely at the joists. A dozen or more
buckets of water saved the beautiful
church from destruction.
The fire was undoubtedly the work of
an incendiary as a charred peach basket
in which bad been inflammable mater-
ial was found outside the door where it
began. Had it not been for the timely
discovery the church would have been
in ruins now. If such fiends are caught,
a rope with a noose would not be too
good for them.
GosPEL TEMPERANCE MEETINGS.—
On Tuesday, evening, September 19th,
Maj George A, Hilton, the renowned
lseturer, will be here to begin a series of
gospel temperance meetings, During
the day he will hold meetings for all
those who find it convenient to attend,
at which Bible reading will be the es-
pecial feature. Every effort is being
put forth by the W. C. T. U. to make
these meetings as attractive and enter-
taining as possible. In order to insure
a large attendance they will be heid in
the Court House and will be free.
Maj. Hilton is well known in this
community as a temperance orator and
as an evangelist he has no small reputa-
tion. Remember that the work is for
the good of all, and be surs to attend,
Good music will be a feature, Turn
out and make the series a ringing on.
slaught on king alchohol and you
might be the instrument through
which some fallen one will be saved.
A MonsTER CABBAGE HEAD.—Pro-
duce gardener, Theo. B. Haupt, whose
truck farm on the old dam flat has fur-
nishing the markets here with early
vegetables for several years, shipped a
head of cabbage to Philadelphia, on
Wednesday morning, which for size
beats anything we have ever heard of in
this community. It weighed 27% pounds
Mr. Haupt grew it from the seed of the
«All head early cabbage’’ variety, pur-
chased from W. Atlee Burpee & Co.,
the Philadelphia seedmen, and reports
excellent results from all of their seeds.
He expects to take a prize with his mon-
ster cabbage head.
Marriage.
STEELY—MILLER.—At the M. E. parsonage,
July 26th, 1893, by Rev. Wm. A. Houck, W.
T Steely, of Lewistown, Pa., and Sue D. Mil-
ler, of Spring Mills, Pa.
RISHELL—PETERS.—At the same place and
by the same Aug. 17th, 1893, Newton J. Rish-
ell and Annie R. Peters, both of Lemont.
WALTERS—BUSH.—At the same place and
by the same Aug. 31st, 1893, W. R. Walters,
Eee W. Va., and Eva May Bush, of
Unionville, Pa.,
To the Tax Payers of Spring Town-
ship.
The undersigned will be in Bellefonte, on
Wednesday, September 27th, at the office of
J. R. Alexander, in the Garman building,
from 9. a. m.,to 5 o'clock p. m., for the pur-
poses of receiving taxes.
W. H. TAYLOR,
35-3t Collector.
——Great cash sale of stiff hats brown,
light brown, tan and black.
150 hats now $1.00
200 ¢¢ + 1.50
250-300 2.00
For Men and Boys
MoxrcoMERY & Co.
Bellefonte Grain Maret.
Corrected weekly by Gro. W. Jackson & Co:
The following are the quotations up tosix
o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper
{oes to press:
White Wheatb..........ceenessarnessssssassressnsnesesns 65
Old wheat, per bushel. roy 55
Rye, per bushel........... 60
Corn, ears, per bushel.. 25
Corn, shelled, per bush 50
Oats—new, per bushel. 32
Barley, per bushel....... 48
Ground laster, per ton 9 50
Buckwheat per bushel...cuieisiiecssensins 75
Cloverseed, per bushel. $9 30 to §9 6¢
Bellefonte Produce Markets.
Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co
Potatoes per bushel
Eggs, per dozen.
Lard, per pound.
CountryShoulder
Sides...
Hams...
lailow, perpound..
Butter, per pound.....
The Democratic Watchman,
Published every Friday morning, in Belle-
fonte, Pa., at §2 pe: annum (if paid strictly in
advance); $2.50, when not paid in advance, and
$3.00 if not paid before the expiration of the
year ; and no paper will be discontinued until
all arrearage is paid, except at the option of the
publisher.
Papers will not be sent out of Centre county
unless paid for in advance.
A liberal discount is made to persons adver-
tising by the quarter, half year, or year, as fol-
lows:
SPACE OCCUPIED. |3m | om ly
One inch (12 lines this type.
TWO inches ..curereeersssssnanes 1 13
Three inches......c..... senses 1015 | 20
narter Column (424 inches).......| 12 | 20 | 80
alf Column ( 9 inches).....euu 20 | 36 | 58
One Column (19 inches)............... 36 | 56 | 100
“Advertisements in special column,25 pe
cent. additional.
Transient advs. per line, 8 insertions......20 cts
Each additional insertion, per line.......... 5 cts
wocal notices, per line........ A, e256 ChB
Business notices, per Hane... didn 10 cts.
Job Printing of every kind done with near
ness and dispatch. The Warcumaw office has
been refitted with Power Presses and New
Type, and everything in the printing line can
be executed in the most artistic mannerand ¢
the lowest rates. Terms—CASH.
All letters should be addressed to
P. GRAY MEEK, Proprietor