PE TY A——— RTT Ae eT Ny An be i Wt VT my Pi i A, Nn i EAs pug WEE TT mia JEW orer—— Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. II, 1896. To CorresPoNDENTS.—NO communications pub- ished unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. IRC. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——William Barnes has purchased the Bush house news stand from Jesse Under- wood. —— Interesting exercises attended the opening of the High school, in tlis place, on Monday. ——The Gerberich, Hale and Co., mill race was drained off Monday evening and boys caught bags nearly full of fine suckers. ——Mr. ahd Mrs. William Allen are mourning the sudden death of their infant daughter, which occurred Sunday morning. ——After helping with a grain thresh- ing all day Saturday Joseph Isett, of Sink- ing valley, went to hed that night and never arose again. ——Maggie Gill, formerly of this place, was struck by a street car, in Altoona, on Monday evening. She suffered a slight bruising of the right elbow. ——Dr. George W. Atherton, president of The Pennsylvania State College, will give a non-partisan talk in the court house, this evening, on what he believes to be sound money. ——Charles Green, a venerable colored man died at’his home, on St. Paul street, because of heart failure. He left a widow, two sons and one daughter. Burial was made on Tuesday. The Bellefonte school board is mak- ing arrangements to carry out the com- pulsory school law. All children between the ages of eight and thirteen are now forced to attend school. ——The disease that is killing hogs in Half Moon valley has assumed the propor- tions of an epidemic. Mr. Neidigh, who lives on the William Gray farm, has just reported the loss of sixteen. ——Handsome new show cases will coon contain the many new trinkets and jewels that F. C. Richard’s sons are displaying for the fall trade. Three six foot, cherry frame cases were put into their store on Wednes- day. ——On Tuesday, Sept. 15th, there will be a second evangelistic rally at Hecla park. Evangelists Weaver, Weeden and Vandeventer will conduct it. Special trains will be run from Lock Haven, Wil- liamsport and Bellefonte. ——Leo Stevens was preparing to make a balloon ascension from Huntingdon, on Wednesday afternoon, when someone called: “let go!” and all bands released the ropes. The halloon shot off without the aeronaut. He made a successful as- cension later in the evening. —LI. B. Luse and Miss May Hartman, of Millheim, drove to Spring Mills, on Tuesday evening, and were married. On returning home they were met by a calithumpian band, the horses unhitched from their carriage, and the couple were escorted home hy the most discordant mu- sic that ever was heard. ——John Schrom, Bellefonte’s young sailor, is now aboard the great American liner, St. Paul. While nautical supersti- tion has it that a bad fate hangs over that boat, because she stuck in her stays when the first attempt was made to launch her, we hope John will come out all right and not share in the misfortune should any be- fall the hoat. He had heen aboard the Illinois. ——A movement is on foot that will cre- ate a furore in Pennsylvania. J. Carson Mercer, county commissioner of Allegheny, is having prepared a bill to be introduced at the next session of the Legislagure pro- viding that al! church property shall be sub- ject to taxation the same as any other prop- erty. Commissioner Mercer will also bring the matter before the annual conven- tion of the county commissioners, in Read- ing, next month. —— Fatty degeneration of the heart was the cause of the sudden death of Mark G. Crawford, a Tyrone hardware merchant, while sitting in a rocking chair, on the back porch of his home, last Sunday morning. He had retired the night previous feeling a slight pain in his back, but thought not seriously of it. He awakened, as usual, in the morning and after going down stairs to make a firc he went to the porch to sit down. He was found dead there. —The wealth of Centre county, as furnished by the auditor general, has been compiled as follows : Number of taxables, 14,524. value of all real estate, $12,404 ; value of real estate taxable, $11,141,162: number of horses taxable, 7,200 ; value of same, $246,421; number of cattle 7,810 ; value of same, $113,886; salaries and emoluments of office, $463,865 ; aggregate of money at interest, including . mortgages, judgments, etc., $2,779,629 ; total tax on dogs, $814. This shows a fair increase over last year. : —The Academy opened yesterday with a splendid showing. All of the schools were well filled and the primary department fairly overflowed. Mr. James Hughes is home from his vacation in Massa- chusettes and Canada with many new ideas and enthusiastic as ever. Miss Julia Reed, whose continuation year after year is suf- ficrent recommendation of her efficiency and popularity, is back from Conneticut for the winter’s work, and Miss Overton, whose success last year m1 the primary de- partment was really remarkable, are all starting in to keep the school at or above its high standard. THE RECORD DAY AT HECLA.—No one was surprised at the crowd that thronged Hecla park, on Wednesday, the occasion of the joint picnic of the Lock Haven and Bellefonte business men. It had been con- fidently expected that all records for num- bers would be broken if the weather was propitious and the fact proved the expecta- tions not ill grounded. During the day there were fully seven thousand people visited the park. It was a nice crowd too. Orderly and good na- tured, everyone seemed to enter into the spirit of the thing ina way that madea dull day an impossibility. It was the first picnic of the two towns and was conducted under the auspices of the Bellefonte committee. Next year Lock Haven will make the arrangements and Bellefonte will go to the park as lookers on. The picnic was more of an experiment than anything else, but proved a thorough- ly delightful one. The day was well put in. Entertainments began in the morning, when a ball game was played on the athlet- ic field between picked nines from Lock Haven and Bellefonte. In this contest Bellefonte won by the score of 7 to 1. After the ball game mayor Wm. H. May- er, of Lock Haven, and burgess W. E. Gray, of Bellefonte, welcomed the people in neat words from the band stand in the east woods. This was followed by a business meeting in the same place at which a per- manent organization of the business men of Lock Haven and Bellefonte was affected. Hammon Sechler, of Bellefonte, was elected president. W. F. Elliott, of Lock Haven, secretary; G. W. Fredericks, Lock Haven, treasurer. These officers were empowered to appoint an executive committee, three from Bellefonte, three from Lock Haven, two from Nittany valley and one from Bald Eagle valley to co-operate with them in perfecting the plans for the permanent organization. Then band concerts began on the grounds. The Military and Good Templar bands, of Lock Haven, and the Bellefonte and Un- dine bands were all on the ground and played continuously. The tub race on the upper lake between Jim Mahew and ‘‘Rastus’’ was a convul- sive amusement and lasted about an hour, finally resulting in ‘‘Rastus’’ getting the candy from the wire. Immediately thereafter the bicycle races began. They were conducted by the Bellefonte wheelman’s club and our riders scooped most of the prizes. The races were won as follows : One Mile Novice: Won by Harry Miller, Bellefonte. 2nd, Forney Winner, Lock Haven. 3nd, Gus Brendle, Lock Haven. Prizes-Bicycle suit, pocket kodak, cyclom- eter. Time, 2:36. One mile Race for boys under 17 years : —1st, John Teats. 2nd, Jessie Under- wood. 3rd, Harry Bell. 4th, Toner Hugg. Time 2:54—All Bellefonte riders. Two-third; mile open amateur :—1st, Harry Miller, Bellefonte. 2nd, Harry Yeager, Bellefonte. - 3rd, Ben. Bradley, Bellefonte. 4th, Casper, Williamsport. 5th, Audet, Williamsport. Time 1:48. Prizes, dia- mond stud ; 3 stone gypsy ring ; silk um- brella. Two mile race for colored men :—This was the most interesting race on the program. There were six starters, but before the race was over three had fallen off and were unable to get in again. On the last lap Fred Robinson fell off and did not have strength enough to finish by himself so he was helped onto his machine and shoved over the tape to get the third prize. 1st, Billy Mills. 2nd, Thomas. 3rd, Fred Robinson. Prizes—gold watch, sweater, pair of stockings. ’ After some exhibition. riding by Casper and Audet, on the Demorest companion wheel, the races closed and speeches were in order again. No politics entered into the talks, so that they were thorough- ly practical. During the rest of the day various other entertainments had been pro- vided : “usic, dancing, fireworks, ete. the day being a round of pleasure from start to finish. Everyone left the park well satisfied with the first picnic. About the pleasantest feature of the oc- casion was the liberality of the Central R. R. of Pa. in providing everything for the comfort of the people. The joint commit- tees of the two towns : Torrence Shearer, Joseph Haberstroh, Daniel Crowley, E. K. Parsons, Joseph Ceader. W. F. Elliott, - R. G. Larimer, Lock Haven Committee. Bellefonte Committee. deserve the greatest credit for having made the event so much of a success. J. D. Sourbeck, Jared Harper, G. W. Reese, There was considerable disappointment manifested that Hon. S. R. Peale, of Lock Haven, was not on the grounds to speak, since - he had been advertised. He has authorized the WATCHMAN to say that he has never disappointed a meeting in his life and the reason he was not at Hecla was because he ‘had neither been notified nor invited.”’ ! Two of the most distinguished looking men on the ground were mayor William H. Mayer, Lock Haven, and Capt. John Jack, of Philadelphia. The former enter- ed into the spirit of the picnic and seemed ‘bent on doing his share toward making all have a good time. Bellefonte has rarely heard as fine a band as the combined Bellefonte and Un- dine made when they marched down High street, Wednesday morning, playing Sousa’s El Capitane. That music decided for plen- ty of people the question as to whether they would go to the park that day. As usual there were a number of people at the picnic who, out of the goodness of their heart, were determined to share the goodness of their baskets with others. The fireworks looked beautiful on the water. Crowds remained to enjoy them. ——Sheridan troop of cavalry, from Ty- rone, took part in Huntingdon’s centenary military day. ——Work is said to be more plentiful in the Snow Shoe coal regions than it has been in the last five years. tt Gl ty ——Thos. S. Emerson, manager of the Hoover, Hughes and . Co, planing mill, at Philipsburg, and a brother-in law of W. V. Hughes of that firm, has been elected pres- ident of the Curwensville lumber company. RE BE ——David Grazier, a descendant of the original Graziers of Wrriors-mark valley, died in Tyrone, early Saturday morning. The paralysis that had partially in- capacitated him for seven years was the cause. — ——1In a sick and depressed condition of mind Mrs. John E. Hess, the wife of a Clearfield groceryman, hanged herself in the attic of her husband’s store, on Mon- day evening. Sickness is ascribed as the cause of her deplorable end. : rr mn. : ——Our theatre-goers are eagerly wait- ing the appearance of Miss Philadelphia, Thos. D. Van Osten’s big spectacular ex- travaganza, which had the phenomenal run of one hundred nights in Philadelphia last Spring, and is to be revived again soon at the Park theatre where it is scheduled for fifty more nights, after which it will start on an extensive tour of the country. Mgr. Garman was fortunate enough to arrange a date for Bellefonte and looks forward to this attraction as being the event of the season, comprising, as it does, one hundred people headed by the prince of comedians, Willie Collier, and Inez Mecusker, prima donna, and embraces such novel features as aladies’ military band on the stage in a grand military march, and the ladies’ sym- phony orchestra of sixteen musicians from Boston, Mass., this being the the first the- atrical organization to carry a ladies’ or- chestra. Among the other novelties will be an exact reproduction of the famous Phila., New Year Shooters’ parade, which is a grand Mardi Gras scene, with bells ringing, whistles blowing, and the annual parade of the shooters in their gorgeous costumes ; and in this scene manager Van Osten pre- sents Robert Newton, the 1895 New Year Shooter prize winner, with his $3,000 star and crescent costume, which requires 50 pages to carry the cape, and the costume, when spread actually covers the entire stage. It required the constant work of five needle women for one year to complete this marvellous costume which is a won- derful piece of art needle work, some of the beautiful flower designs standing fully | four inches in thickness above the ground- work, and were made entirely by hand from the finest and most costly silk, satins, velvets, and plushes. It is to be hoped our citizens will support Mgr. Garman’s efforts in bringing such high class- attrac- tions to this place and give ‘‘Miss Philadel- phia’’ a royal reception. ee Qf rere FESTIVAL AT MILESBURG.—The Miles- burg band will hold a festival, on Tues- day evening, Sept. 29th, at which there will be another great attraction, besides the excellent ice cream, cake and things that will be served. The band is a deserving organization and every one, who can, ought to lend. his aid, however small, to the effort of the boys to get new suits. . ts SIXTY YEARS MARRIED.—Mis. John Wagner, of Spring street, has recovered from her serious illness of last week. Two weeks ago she and her venerable husband gave a dinner for their children and grand- children, at which Mr. Wagner greatly surprised them by announcing : Sixty years ago, to-day, Sarah and I were mar- ried.” We doubt if there is any other couple like them in the county. Both are over eighty and they are well, able to be about, in the possession of all their facul= ties and interested in all the questions of the day. They have not been drones in life's busy market. Their comfortable fortune was accumulated by hard work and careful, honest living is likely the se- cret of their physical well-being. May they live to celebrate many more anniver- saries of their wedding day is the WATCH- MAN'S wish. > A SEPTEMBER WEDDING. — Although we have so long cherished the idea from || Locksley Hall, “In the Spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love,”” September, with her glorious, gold- en days, seems to suggest the happy culmi- nation for another charming wedding oc- curred, Wednesday evening, when Miss Anna Woods, of Boalsburg, was married to Dr. Thomas Olin Glenn at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Mary Woods wife of the late Dr. Woods. The ceremony, at which the Rev. George M. Glenn officiated, attended with none of the regulation dis play of attendants, was very pretty in its simplicity as what wedding would not be with a bride, gowned in white argandy over a silk. ) > or “The light of love, the purity of grace, x The mind, the music, breathing from her face.” A reception and supper followed, the on- ly bappening to mar the perfect pleasure was a quarter of an hour monopolized by that ever present and have-to-he-endured calithumpian. The number of prominent people attending and the many pretty pres- ents are only suggestions of Dr. and Mrs. Glenn’s popularity in Boalsburg where she has always lived and he, a graduate of the Pennsylvania State College and of the Cin- cinnati Medical College, has lately opened what is proving a very successful and satis- factory practice. = The wedding tour is ostensibly to Washingtan, D. C., but just where no-one, hut they two, knows. THE VETERAN CLUB REUNION.—The weather turned out to be anything but pleasant, yet the thousand or more people who went to Hecla Park, on Saturday morning, to the Centre county veteran club’s reunion, did not know that they were to experience what has been about the most disagreeable picnic day that has ever hefallen that organization. The day was cold and threatening up 'till 1 o'clock, when it commenced rain- ing and rained until everyone had heen driven from thegrounds. Happily there is plenty of cover at Hecla, so that people were protected until trains came along to bring them home. The business transacted was as fol- lows : Meeting was called to order by Pres- ident James A, Beaver at 10.30 a. m. Com- rade Deniston, of State College, led in prayer , after which committees were ap- pointed on place of next meeting, and on nomination of officers for the ensuing year ; these committees to report at 1.30 p. m., to which time the club took a recess. The club assembled at the appointed time and the committe on ‘nomination of officers re- ported the following. For president, Jas. A. Beaver ; vice president, W.C. Patter- son, of State College, and Thos. E. Royer, of Miles township ; secretary, W. H. Mus- ser, of Bellefonte ; treasurer, Geo. M. Boal, of Centre Hall ; all of whom were elected. The committee on place of the annual meeting of the club reported in favor of Hecla park, after considerable discussion on different places of meeting. A motion was made and seconded that the business of naming a place for the next meeting of the club be left to the executive committee to decide at its next meeting. The president reported the progress on subscribtions toward a soldiers’ monument for Centre county. At this point all busi- ness being attended to comrade W. T. Fitzgerald, of Bellefonte, read an original poem on Gettysburg. Comrade John A. Daley, of Curtin township, read a short history of the 56th Reg. P. V., and especially of Co. H. of that Regt., known as Col. W. W. Brown’s ‘‘Sharp Shooters.”” Comrade John Hamilton, of State College, gave an account of the doings of the 1st Penna. Cavalry, and of his own company accepted by the government in April 1861, but not ordered to Harrisburg until later. Com- rade Robt. Cassidy, of Canton, Ohio, a mem- ber of the club, then addressed the club and friends. At 3p. m., the meeting ad- journed and at 4.15 most all the people left the park. eons MucH IMPORTANT BUSINESS TRANSACT- ED BY CoUNCIL.—All but one of the coun- cilmen were present, on Monday evening, at the meeting, because of the nature of the business to be transacted. Miss Ammerman requested the looking after the sewer in Perry alley, as itis de- stroying the walls . of her Bishop street bome. Referred to street-committee. The request of S. B. Miller for a grade on East Linn street by which permanent improve- ment can be made was referred to the same committee. It is possible that a grade will be established clear to the borough line, on that street. A request for an arc light on east Curtin street was referred to the Street committee. In the report of the Water committee it was advised that a new roof be put on the boiler house of the water works. Upon rec- ommendation the committee were em- powered to put a slate roof on the brick portion of the building. The Market committee reported the col- lection of $16.10 in fees. The Fire and Police committee asked for an appropriation for the Logans and for new uniforms for the police. Council de- cided to hold the Logan appropriation over. More for a scare than anything else, we suppose, for that body wouldn’t be foolish enough to suppose that the town would tolerate a withdrawal of support from the firemen. Bids to furnish coal for the water works were opened at this meeting. All the Bellefonte firms, except McCalmont & Co., were bidders. Their offers being so rea- sonable that the matter was left to the Water committee to decide. R. B. Tay- lor has been given the contract. His price was $1.38 per ton delivered. The borough solicitor was instructed to prepare an ordinancé against riding bicycles on the pavements and present it at the next meeting for approval. A require- ment for all wheelmen to use lamps and bells ought also to have been engrafted into the ordinance. They are becoming so numerous as to be extremely dangerous and council should enforce such precau- tions for the public safety. Upon advice of chairman Williams, the advisability of purchasing a stone crush er for use on the streets was considered. He announced thas it was impossible to do the needful work under the present system and that a crusher is badly needed. After much discussion Mr! Keller moved that a crusher with elevator and screen chute he purchased upon the best terms pos- sible, but only after it had heen set up and thoroughly tested. : Just what council means by" such an in- vestment no one seems to know. The town is over head in debt now but that seems not to have been considered. — pei His POCKET PICKED.—Some light finger- ed individual ‘‘touched’’ Daniel Garman, of this place, just as he was about to board a train for the picnic, at the foot of Lamb street, Wednesday morning. Mr. Garman had been counting his money in full view of the crowd and it is supposed that the fellow saw him and followed him until he was ahout to step on the cars, where he remembers having been touched. —A. A. Pletcher, of Nittany, will teach the graded school, at Clintondale, this fall. Semmens ff ceesee— —Experts report most encouraging signs of oil in Gallagher township, Clinton coun- ty, where they are prospecting for Lock Haven capitalists. : A re, —After a six week’s suspension the Mill Hall brick works are again in opera- tion working out orders for paving brick for many cities in the State. ——Mr. Henry Bollinger, a native of Millheim, died at Bridgewater, South Da- kota, on the 26th ult. Deceased was 60 years old and leaves a large family. —Flemington wants a bicycle factory now. $3,000 are needed to start the enter- prise. It is beginning to look as if there will soon be several machines made for every inhabitant of the land. rr pe ——State zoologist Dr. B. H. Warren has reported that the ravages of the army worm have ceased, with little prospect of them returning next season. Estimated damage to crops is $200,000. GA CATECHETICAL CLASS.—There will be no meeting of the catechetical class in the Re- formed church, at Zion, on Sep. 12th and 19th, the class will hold its next meeting, on Saturday, Sep. 26th, at 2 o’clock, in the afternoon. R. LEIGHTON GERHART, Pastor. er ee Qe eens. MARRIED WITH THEIR FINGERS.—It will be interesting to many of our readers to read the following from the Williams- port Sun : “A pretty quiet, yet withal unique, wedding occurred at 8 o’clock last evening at the residence of Mrs. M. E. Goodfellow, 645 Maple street. The parties were Gus M. Fahnestock and Miss Bessie Goodfellow, Rev. J. M. Kohler, of Philadelphia, offi- ciating. The groomsman was Peter Leon- ard and Miss Mary McDermott of this city acted as bridesmaid. All parties were deaf mutes except Rev. Kohler, who though deaf, can speak. In performing the ceremony he first spoke aloud the ritual and repeated it in the sign language. The wedding was wit- nessed by a number of guests, and the cer- emony was solemn and impressive. Mr. and Mrs. Fahnstock were the re- cipients of many gifts. They go to house keeping at once in their own house.’ The bride is a native of Bellefonte. She was born here twenty-three years ago. In full possession of all her faculties, while living up along Spring Creek, she was seiz- ed with scarlet fever, the after-math of which was the loss of both hearing and speech.’ : News Purely Personal. —Mrs. Tom Shoemaker is visiting Mrs. Philip Collins in Ebensburg, —Miss Annie Clever, of this office, attended the Huntingdon centennial and thought it was great. —Miss Gertrude Irvin and Her little sister Hel- en are in Philipsburg visiting her aunt Mrs. J. D. Albert. —Will Hillibish is home from his work at John- son's steel plant, at Loraine, Ohio, for a two week's vacation. —Mrs. Edwin Tyson and daughter, Miss Sara, of Philipsburg, with Mrs. Will Tyson, of Vail, are visiting friends at their old home here. William Diehl, the populer thresher of How- ard, and Frank Wallace, of Milesburg, on their way to Hecla, stayed in town, Wednesday, long enough to visit our “‘devil’s” den. —The Misses Annie and Julia O'Donoghue, Mortimer O’Donoghue’s two pretty sisters who have been out at Mrs. Tonner’s for several weeks, leave for their home in the Quaker City, to-day. —Dr. Miles Kirk, who is now a full fledged boltocrat with a Palmer badge under the lapel ‘of his coat where he wore the McKinley one, was called to Barnesboro Tuesday by’ the illness of his nephew, Dr. Tom Kirk. —Miss Mary H. Linn, one of our clever and popular girls, has gone to Dimock, Susquehanna county, to tutor for two months. Her pupil is a Bryn Mawr student, who does not atténd college during the autumn months. —Mrs. William Laurie, of Spring street, left for Holyoke, Mass., on Monday morning, to which place she accompanied her daughter Bertha. The latter will enter the woman's college at that place for a course of study. —Mrs. John I. Rankin wasintown over Sun- day on her way home from Philipsburg, where she has been visiting for several weeks. Her home is now in Philadelphia where Mr. Rankin has a good position under Mayor Warwick, and as that is her native place she has not bemoaned the seven years away from here. —Mr. and Mrs. John O'Conner, formerly of Bellefonte, but now of Philadelphia, have been spending some time with friends in Snow Shoe. Mrs. O'Connor's health had been very peor, but she is regaining it among the mountains. John returned to Philadelphia, on Wednesday evening. —Banker W. B. Mingle, of Centre Hall, spent Tuesday afternoon in Bellefonte, busy as he al- ways appears to be when here. In all the rush, however, he found time to say that he had never known a national campaign to enthuse the peo- ple in the vicinity of Centre Hall as this one is doing. He seems to think that the enthusiasm will amount to something, too. —J. Frank McCormick, son of Hon. John T. Me- Cormick, of Ferguson township, was in town on Wednesday. He had been ambitious to secure a position as instructor inthe High school here and would have made a good one, as he was an honor man in the elass of '96 at the Pennsylvania State College, but now he has accepted a position t6' help Hon. John A. Woodward carry on the Farmer's Institute work in the State, — —Mr. D. Fleisher, of Centre Hall, was in Belle- fonte, on Tuesday, and honored the Warcuman office with a-call. Had we not known him to be 4 man of exceptional veracity we would have been disinclined to believe his statement that he is eighty-five years old. He certainly looks and moves like a much younger man, but then it just shows what forty years a WATcHMAN reader does. Mr. Fleisher isa particularly affable gen- tleman. —On Monday noon Mrs. Luther Roberts, who has been here for two months visiting her mother Mrs. Catherine Humes and other relatives, left for her home in Passadena, Cal. With her went Mrs. Catharine Whitmer, of Los Angeles, who has been East since May visiting relatives. Mrs. Whitmer was a Miss Corman, of Penns valley, and although nearly eighty years of age is so bright and active that she enjoyed every minute of her stay and looked forward to her journey across the continent with pleasure. “less DEATH AT PORT MATILDA. — Mrs. Mar- garet Jones, wife of J. G. Jones, of Port Matilda, Pa.,departed this life, on Septem- ber 5th, 1896, aged 76 years, 8 months and 13 days. The deceased had heen an invalid for some time, but was confined to hed only a little while, during which time she appa- rently suffered little. She was for sixty years a member of the church. On March 7th, 1867, she united with the Methodist Episcopal church hy letter from the Baptist church, of which she had been a member for thirty years. Her profession of faith and confession of Christ was not so loud and ostentatious as | that of many others, but her precept and example was such as that an influence was wrought for good upon all with whom she was brought in contact. She died, as she lived, in full trust and confidence in the blessed Christ whose she was. Her funeral was attended bya large concourse of friends and relatives, who mourn the loss of this mother in Israel. Services were held in the Methodist Episcopal church, where her pastor deliver- ed a discourse from the words of Job, 14 : 10 :—*‘But man dieth, and where is he 2” Her husband and three children survive her, viz: Ebenezer and Albert Williams, and Bella Jones, of Port Matilda, Pa. * rr Serre THE CoMING FAIR AT BROOK PARK, LEWISBURG, PA.—The forty-third annual fair of Union county agricultural society will be held, at Brook Park, Lewisburg, on September 29th, 30th and October 1st and 2nd. Excursion rates on all railroads. It is one of the oldest organizations of the kind in the country. It has stood the test of time, because from the start it has been steadfast in the belief that honesty is the best policy. With increased age, its ex- hibitions become better. This fact will be demonstrated this year more than ever be- fore. New officers, new track, and large purses. The committee have formulated a list of premiums that will prove very at- tractive to owners of fast horses, live stock raisers, farmers and farmers’ organizations, manufacturers and others. Full particulars are given on pamphlets issued by the so- ciety which can be had on application, or by addressing C. Dale Wolfe, secretary Lewisburg, Pa. The public is assured that this year’s exhibition will prove pre- eminently attractive. pa To NIAGARA FALLS.—-Arrangements have been made for another low rate excursion to Niagara Falls via Beech Creek R. R. This will be the last one this year and the date fixed upon is Tuesday, September 15 ; tickets good to return from Niagara Falls or Buffalo on or before Friday, September 18th, and on the Beech Creek R. R. on or before Sept. 21st. The following are the rates : All points Jersey Shore to Peale, inclusive, £5.00 Wineburne and Philispburg Munson and all points west to Mahatt Children between the ages of 5 and 12 years one half of the above rates. ry INTER-COUNTY FAIR AT MILTON.—The twelfth annual fair of the Milton driving park and fair association will be held this fall on October 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th. The speed programme offers purses aggregating $2,125. The premiums for stock, agricul- tural exhibits, mechanical and art displays amount to over $5,000. A magnificent at- traction has been secured, that will insure patrons of the fair a fine equestrian enter- tainment each day, including hurdle, Ro- man standing, chariot and team races, etc. he po FINE BUGGIES FOR SALE.—S. A. Me- Quistion and Co., desire to announce that they have an exceptional lot of new and second hand buggies that are being offered at prices to suit the times. The work of this firm is too well known to need praise. Suffice is tosay that any vehicle purchased there will be entirely satisfactory. LL ——Ammon Moyer’s tannery, at Boone- ville, was burned to the ground last Wed- nesday night. Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by Geo. W. Jacksox & Co. The following are the quotations up to six o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper goes ress : ed wheat....... Rye, per bushel Corn, shelled, per bushe 65 35 Corn, ears, per bushel... 1214 Oats, per bushel, old...... 20 Oats, per bushel, new 13 Barley, per bushel......... 33 Ground Plaster, per ton. 8 00 Buckwheat, perbushel...........................~ Cloverseed, per bushel... ..86 00 to 87 40 ) . Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co. Potatoes per bushel Onions reves Hag ggs, per dozen... Lard, per pound... Country Shoulders Sides.... Hams... Tallow, per poun Butter, per pound... Ra — LRT NNNR The Democratic Watchman. Published every Friday morning, in Bellefonte, Pa.; at 82 per annum (if paid strictly in advance); $2.59, 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 un- aid for in advance. : A liberal discount is made to persons advertis- ing by the quarter, half year, or year, as follows : SPACE OCCUPIED | 3m | 6m ly One inch (12 lines this type.............. 18 5 (§ 848 10 ‘Two inches............ "ie 1/10 1 15 Three inches......... 1015] 20 uarter Column (5 $ 30 alf Column (10 inches).. 500 One Column (20 inches)...... 100 Advertisements in.special column 25 per cent. additional. : — Transient advs. Pe line, 3 insertions Each additional insertion, per line Logal notices, per line............... cts. Business notices, per line............. 10 ets. Job Printing of every kind done with. neatness and dispatch. The Warcumax office has been re- fitted with Fast Presses and New Type, and everything in the printing line can be ‘executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Terms—Cash. All letters should be addressed to P. GRAY MEEK, Proprietor 20 cts. 5 cts.