EEE ville’s most popular young ladies, Annie E. Tibbens. Rev. A. A. Black performed the ‘ceremony at the Boalsburg parsonage after which the newly married couple journeyed to the groom’s comfortable home near State College, where their many friends wish them all the happiness possible. The groom has laid aside his old clay pipe and issmoking the tobies he had provided for the calithumpians. On last Saturday evening the officers of the Penns valley lodge No. 2761. 0. O. F. were installed. D, D. G. master of Centre county W. M. Cronister appointed H. M. Krebs speeial deputy and he accordingly performed the duties with promptness and dispateb. The officers installed were N. G., Musser BE. Heberling ; V. G., G. E. Harper; Sec, A. G. Archey ; Rec. Sec., S. E. Goss; Treas., J. G. Heberling ; warden; W. H. Fry; R. S. to N. G., AsJ. Tate; L. S. to N. G., A.D. Tanyer; R. S. to V. G., Jas. Tanyer; L. S. to V.G..J. Gummo; R. S.S., J. W. Fry; L. S.8., HH. M. Krebs; 0. G., David Otto; J. G. A. 8S Walker ; conductor, J. B. Heberling ; chap- lain, W. H. Roush. DEATH oF Miss MyErs.—After a long and painful illness, Mary Ann Myers died at the home of her brother, W. J. Myers, on Main street,on last Saturday evening at ten-o’ clock. Since the death of her aged mother she had made her home with her brothers and had long been a sufferer from rheumatism. Al- though suffering most intensely with cancer of the breast, she never murmured nor comn- plained and was so patient that her family did not realize that her end was so near. Hers was a life of sacrifice and gentle kind- ness and she looked forward with longing to the peace of perfect rest. She was 53 years, 3 months and 13 days old and had been a member of the Reformed church of Boals- burg since childhood. Mrs. Kline, of State College, W. F. Myers, of Alexandria ; W. J., of our town, Wesley and D. W,, of Boals- burg, are her brothers and sister. She was buried on Monday in the Boalsburg ceme- tery. Rev. A. A. Black conducted the ser- vices which was attended by a large concourse of people. After the services dinner was served at the home of D. W. Myers for the friends and strangers from a distance. Spring Mills. Professor D. M. Wolfe commenced a ses- sion often weeks at the Academy, on Mon- day last, fifty-nine students reported. On Monday morning last, people were de- cidedly astonished at beholding the sur- roundings covered with two inches of snow, _but by evening it had all disappeared. David Burrell, of Centre Hall, was observ- ed on our streets last week looking remarka- bly well. Mr. B. formerly resided in our village and has many warm friends here. For the last two weeks our farmers have been very busy plowing, the rainy weather not having stopped the work. Garden making too, has been engaged in to a consid- erable extent. Charles Miller, the well known wool mer-, chant of our village, is making preparations to collect wool. Mr. Miller has been in the business for many wears. He reports the market feverish and unsettled. All the applicants forthe postmastership of our town, have stated that the post office will not be located overone hundred and fifty feet from its present location, their locality is unquestionably the most convenient in the village. They further add that under no circumstances, will it be placed in a store. This latter question is very satisfactory to many, and yet decidedly displeasing to oth- ers. They say if it is placed in a separate building, the offiee will be closed dur- ing certain hours of the day, dinner and supper. and also at % o'clock in the evening. With this rule in forme, it will be very incon- venient and annoying, especially to farmers. Whereas if the post office is continued in a general store, as heretofore, access to the of- fice can be had at any time from day-light to 9 o'clock p. m. A majority of our people, however, are opposed to having the office in a store. : All Through Brush Valley. Thomas Harter, of Tylewsville, was in Rebersburg last Thursday. Hon. W. R. Bierly, of Rebersburg, was on the sick list last week. Howard Xrape, who isin the organ and piano business at Harrisburg, was at houe last week. On Monday morning Steward Weber open- ed a term of primary summer school at Re- bersburg. Pierce Erhard, of Miffinburg, spent Satur- day and Sunday among his relatives at Re- bersburg. On Tuesday the new merchandise store was opened by John Harter and Calvin Morris. Last Saturday H. E. Bierly, who has been | teaching the grammar school at Hublers- burg, returned from a visit to Lock Haven and Williamsport. Mrs. Gertrude Frank, of Spring Mills, was | a pleasant visitor among her many friends at | Rebersburg last week. DiEDp.—Old Mr. John Burd, of Kreamer- ville, died, on Tuesday morning, of a para- lytic stroke. He will be buried this morning. | The up to date milliners workers, Mrs. Duck and Miss Sallie Bierly, of Rebersburg, were in the city last week. No doubt satis- faction will be given, if friends call on them for work. on I. A. Zeigler, who has successfully taught two winters school at Wallace Run and whose aid as a teacher is desired the third winter, is helping to enlighten Mr. Hosterman’s Acad- emy, at Rebersburg, with his pleasant and intelligent presence. Mr. Zeigler believes in going upwards. A GRAND CoNCERT.—A grand concert will be given this evening by the Rebersburg Nor- mal in the Evangelical church. This will be the first of the series and a fine musical treat is certain under the direction of Professors Newcomer and Zeigler. It will consist of both vocal and instrumental selections, the chorus will consist of about forty voices sup- | plemented by the Rebersburg mandolin, vio- lin and banjo club, whose music has been | so appreciated and applauded on previous | publicoccasions. Let the community Iiber- ally patronize this musical institute which is the best ever held in this valley. DEATH OF DANIEL BRUNGARD.—Mr. Daniel Brungard of this place, who had been ill a little over a year, died last Thursday evening and was buried on Monday morning in the Lutheran and Reformed cemetery of Rebersburg. The funeral was very large, the exercises were conducted in the Reform- ed church of Rebersburg by Rev. Moses George, assisted by Rev. Harris Stover, of Rebersburg. The church was crowded to its utmost. Deceased was 74 years old. The following were among those from a distance attending” the funeral : Cyrus Brungard, of Millheim; Fred Gutelius, of Millheim ; Emmon Corman, of Aaronsburg ; Wm. Kreamer, of Millheim. That Howard Board of Health Trouble. Howard, Pa., Apr. 3, 1897. Editor DEMOCRATIC WATCHMAN : Please allow me space in your valuable pa- per to say a few words in response to a communication, dated Howard, March 30th, published in a recent issue of the Gu- zette, and purporting to be a reply to “How- ard Items’ correspondent, published in the same paper, under date of March 26th. In this article, to which its author affixes the letter **X,”’ it says: “We regret that we are not able ;to’go in to detail and explain, Ete.” cessitate them doing so and so. Without making any attempt to denounce or contra- dict the truth, well knowing that it would be besmirch the character of the individual who wrote it, with the sole intent of maintaining for some ONE a vindication by force, and af- ter the elimination of this ‘‘snake-like ven- om’’ thereby hopes to mislead and change public sentiment, by covering up and evad- ing the truth. This exponent then speaks of “writers, level, addle-headed and unprinci- pled individuals, Ete., Ete.,”” while the per- ance to bear, simply being employed in the promulgation of an unscrupulous scheme, and while much better is to be expected from one of God's most noble creatures, we will leave the public to judge as to what level its author attains in the construction of this con- temptible little slander story. We confess that we are not an avowed pro- fessor of Christianity and we would like to ask if this is the kind of a christianispirit, by way of example, they would seek to have any one emulate ? We think not. There are people so narrow minded and prejudiced who never can see convincing evi- dence when they are wrong, and when con- fronted face to face with the truth, so insanc- ly jealous are they, that even then they will not admit defeat. While we are willing to make the admission that the criticisms of the Board of Health may have been severe they were mot unjustly so, and were not intended to, mor did they, spitefully or maliciously, wrong or abuse the personal character ofa single individual. It is only when the trnth is told, and an effort put forth to divert the attention from the reality and evade the truth by attempt- ing ito degrade and belittle, that we think it time to. make it known, and ‘we have only to reiterate that the former statements were ab- solutely true and evincible and most willing- ly agree with “X"’ to ‘‘submit the case to the verdict of a discriminating public,” for the -tivie of whom it hits or hurts. “PRO-TEMPORE." Marriage. You No—Kreps,—At the residence of the groom's father in Bellefonte on April by Rew C. H., (oodling, Mr. Edward F. Young wml Miss Arena M. Krebs. i Books, Magazines, Ete. Herper's Magazine for April opens with 2 popu- lar historical paper on “Washington and the French Craze of '93, by Prof. John Bach MeMas- ter, who describes the enthusiasm for ostenta- tious republicanism aroused by the first successes of the French Republic, and especially By “Citi- zen” Wwenet, the French, ambassador. The illus trations, including the frontispiece in ealor, ave in Howard Pyle's most forcible and virile manner. | In “Paleontological Progress: of the Century,” | the third of a series of protusely illustrated papers ; describing -the history of modern science, Dr. | Henry Smith Williams traces the development of | our knowledge of fossils from the time when they were supposed to be the relics of Noal's flood until the final establishment by Darwin of the theory of evolution. George du Maurier's romance of reincarnation, “The Martian,” continues to present, under a thin disguise, much of the author's own life and personality. The super- natural interest of the story reaches a climax in the intervention in Barty Josselin's love affair of Martin, the invisible heroine of the story. The illustrations present Du Maurier at the height of his powers. “From Home to Throne in Belgiam,” by Clare de Graffenried, describes the domestic and political institutions of one of the most primi- tive, individual, and at the same time c8smo- politan of European nations. The article is illu- strated with rare skill and delicacy by George Wharton Edwards. The third paper of the series on the Mexico of to-day, by Charles F. Lummis, entitled “The Awakening of a Nation,” deals with haz, the soldier and the statesman, outlining a career which is the most adventuresome and | i { | i i { i i i | i romantic, and one of the most patriotic and heroic, ! of the nineteenth century. The illustrations are drawn from photographs taken by the author ex- pressly for the series. The sixth paper in the series on ‘White Man's Africa,” in preparation of which Poultney Bigelow spent many montks of travel, describes the opening of the Cape Colony Parliament, one of the most characteristic and impressive incidents of British colonial empire, and discusses the political and social questions { which the Jameson raid has raised between the | Dutch and English. The article is realistically illustrated by R. Caton Woodville. . “Wild things in Winter” is a sympathetic study of bird life hy | J. H. Kennedy. “Our Trade with Brazil and the River Platte Republics,” by Richard Mitchell, ! U. 8. N,, describes commercial conditions in | South America favorable to the investment of | capital from the United States. In the leading short story of the Number, ‘The Wisdom of | of Fools,” Margaret Deland raises the question of | personal responsibility in the existing social or- | der. Other stories are : “A Realized Romance,” | by Mary M. Mears, and “A Solo Orchestra,” a sketch of a New York street musician, by Brander | Matthews. In The Editor's Study topics of gen- | eral and current interest are discussed by Charles | Dudley Warner. The Editor's Drawer opens with “Beauty Hath Charms,” a story by Henry | Gallup Paine, illustrated by A. B. Frost, and con- tains the usual variety of anecdote and verse. ——New spring clothing just opened at i Faubles’. Prices much lower than ever. It will pay you to investigate. as the “Howard Items’ correspondent had | “made statements so colored and distorted” | that to refute them, or attempt to, would ne- | fool hardy to attempt it, the only thing left | for its author to do, was to make an insidious | and despicable attack by trying to assail and: | - son from whom this emanates has no aggriev- | | though | montks, we felt, would bring the ines- “truth is mighty and will prevail,” irvespec- | ’ Spee were covered with odorous cedars, their MR N NN A % RE 3 ORY LS pA remas st ttossse sn of ste mos ted smal 1 RU rs , NY i it, 7 x oo EE, FD Ie ig O rn «AY » ," & 7 Allg ll TTY CUE 1 . ai i} Jr 3 SEN + 2 I> “V NL 2 : i, tl 7 Y £7 et ain hao Jikn & br EASTER LILIES. How a Woman Raised Flowers. and Regained Her Health. mgs fi 1 Wwe were about stranded, and there was no use in trying to blink the fact. The doctor had sent us to Bermuda, and the last thing he had said to me was that if my mother couldn’t get well there she could not anywhere. This is what made it seem so hard, after a stay of tLice months, when I found our mon- ey wearly gone and mother yet weak, convalescent. Another six timabie blessing of renewed health. But how were we to stay when there seemed to be nothing to stay on? While cogitating this problem one sunny day in January I strolled into a secluded vale lying between the high- road from St. Georges to Hamilton and the southern shore of a little islet. Like so many of those charming dells in this cluster of isles and islets, it was filled with a semitropical vegetation, with or- ange and lemon trees, pomegranates, bananas and figs. The hill crests around skirts fringed with 71antanas in showy bloom, and the pocket of earth between the ridges was as rich and fertile as the’ hill slopes were sterile. Wending my way through this bit of ‘tropical paradise, I came upon a straw thatched shanty, or rather a group of primitive dwellings of this character, at the head of a little slope running down to a creasentic beach of snowy sand lying between outcropping coral ledges. An old man sat in the doorway of the principal shanty smoking a long stemmed pipe, such a pipe as Tennyson loved to smoke, known in the old coun- try as a ‘“‘churchwarden.’”’ None but a philosopher or a poet—at any rate, a man of leisure and calm temperament— smokes this sort of pipe, and I knew that he must consequemtly be one c:®, the other, and hence safe to assume well worth the knowing. And my conjecture proved true, for on accepting his hospitable invitation toentgr his humble dwelling I found it filled with all sorts of natural history objects, such as shells, stuffed birds and dried plants. In short, my aged ac- quaintance was a naturalist, and, as I afterward learned, a skilled one, well known all over the islands. He was nearly 80 years of age, his long, snow white hair fell to his shoul- ders, and in every feature was an air of cheerful benevolence that won my heart and engaged my attention, so that in less than half an hour we were convers- TAKING THE FIRST SEASON’S YIELD. ing like old friends. He had lived here 60 years, he told me—ever since he had run away from an English ship—and | had never left his home for a single night. His little farm had cost him al- most nothing, his wants were few, and from the soil he had obtained an casy though frugal living. It did nos take me long to detect be- nedth his rude exterior one of nature’s noblemen, and, warmed by the kindly gleam of his eyes, I soon had told him of my present trouble. He locked me over very thoughtfully and finally said between the whiffs of his pipe: ‘‘Lady, the Lord must have sent you to me, be- cause, of all the people living in the Ber- mudas, I alone perhaps can help you. I haven’t much, only my little farm here and these rude huts, but if you will accept, one of the latter as a tem- porary dwelling it is. yours for as long as you may wish. to stay. As for food, if you can put up with my fare of milk and sweet potatoes, with now and then a bit of meat and all the fish you want, to be caught in the bay, you are wel- come. No, don’t thank me,’’ he said as I tried to express my gratitude. ‘“‘I have been thinking of making some one this same offer for the privilege of pleasant company, for I am getting old and have lived too long alone. Indeed you will do me a favor by accepting my offer.”’ The yery next day we had removed our belongings to one of the huts, which promised to serve us as well as if it were a palatial mansion in that favored land where one may pass the entire day ‘out of doors. ‘As the physician had or- dered my mother to spend all the time possible in the open air, it mattered lit- tle what kind of a rooftree sheltered us at night. And, so far as I was concerned, it was a joy to wander in the shade of those fragrant trees and along the beach, where shells of every hue were abundant and where the crystal waters covered the gardens of sea plants. Seeing that I liked to work about the flower garden and knowing that he might speak to me frankly, my aged friend suggested that I make an attempt to wrest a livelihood from the soil. “I am too old,’’ he said, *‘to embark | in any new adventures; but, if you want to try it, why there’s the garden, with as rich a soil as anywhere, and here are all the tools and seeds you need. You seem like a strong and sensible young lady. Nobody need know what you are doing, as my place is so secluded, and all the time your mother will be getting her health while you are gain- ing strength and perhaps making money. There are three or four things that pay herc in Burmuda. These are potatoes, onions, arrowroot and Easter lilies. The first three are too difficult for you to manage, but the last, it seems to me, would be easy to cultivate and pleasant to raise. Now, one corner of that plot is already planted with Easter bulbs, and if you will take the care of them off my hands I shall feel greatly obliged and will divide the profits with you into the bargain. ’’ Womanlike, I jumped at this generous offer, and, to make a long story short, tended those lilies so assiduously that even the first season’s profits were very satisfactory. The second season’s were much more so, and the third and fourth found us with a surplus of cash to our credit and. half the little vale planted with bulbs. Our good old friend died the fourth year of our stay, but left us a life inter- est in his estate for a small considera- tion, and we continued in the occupa- tion which we had found so pleasant, and which promised to be so profitable. My mother regained her health and from choice worked with me in the gar- den, while I myself had become so at- tached to the place and so contented at my-labors that I doubt if anything in the world could draw me away. There are objectionable features, of rourse, mainly depending upon a wom- an’s performance of what is usually done by men. The middlemen doubtless rob- bed me at times, the lilies did not al- ways arrive in New York in good con- dition, and sometimes the bulbs would be injured by a protracted sea voyage. Again, land cannot be purchased here Ly alien Americans, af® the Bermudas constitute a military colony, and only those loyal and subject to the British "queen can own real estate, but long leases are casy to obtain, and. thus all danger of forfeiture is obviated. Aud there is also a peculiar satisfac- tion in the reflection that all this love- liness was, in a sense, the creation of my own hands, a sensation only under- stood by those who have gardens of their own. SARA ENDICOTT STANDLEY. acai THE EASTER BELLS. When They First Began to Ring Their Inspiring Mes- sage.—The First Church Bell Ever Made—How It Revolutionized Church Architecture and Implanted a New Ceremonial In the Rites of the Church. There is nothing more expressive of Easter joy than Easter bells. ven more than the chaste and modest beauty of the lily, or of vernal flowers massed around altar and chancel, do their thrilling, exult- ant tones typify the gladsome spirit of Christianity’s chief festival, proclaiming the glorious tidings of Christ triumphant over death, the inspiring message of eternal life forevermore. A benison, a psalm of thanksgiving, an anthem of victory, peals forth from Easter bells in every clime, cir- cling the earth from pole to pole and softly fluttering heavenward to the great white throne. When and where did the first bells ring out at Eastertide? What manner of folk were the first worshipers who listened with rapt attention to their commanding and clamorous call? Was it in Palestine or Egypt or Greece or the farther western countries? Many times have thoughtful Christians asked themselves this same question, and great is the nwunber who would bé glad to know the answer. To learn it we must take a ‘look backward over nearly 16 centuries, before the great schism of 729, when the Christian church was one and undivided. About the year 431, when Naples was a settlement of Roman villas in the luxu- riant plains of Campania, there lived in "Nola, a considerable city of that province, one Paulinus, now a duly canonized saint of the Roman church. He was not only bishop of Nola, but also the abbot of a flourishing community of monks, monastic life even at that early date naving ob- tained a firm foothold in the primitive ehureh. And he was a bishop of consider- able note, whese name and fame have been handed down to us both by history and tradition. Besides that, he was a church builder. In Nola, the seat of his bishopric, he erect- ed a basilica, or church modeled after the style of the Roman courts of justice, many of these structures having been handed over by Constantine to the early Christians as places of public worship. Paulinus dedicated his basilica to St. Felix, in celebration of whose virtues he annually composed an ode, calligg him his patron, his father, his lord. Now, it happened that in the monastery ruled by Paulinus small hand bells were rung to ‘notify the flock to betake them- selves from the refectory or the dormitory, as the case might be, to their lectures and prayers, this usage of the bell being de- rived from the ancient Romans, who were summoned to their public baths by these little tintirrabulators, and they were used in their public processions as well. Ob- serving their great convenience and noting further the great carrying power of their tones, Bishop Paulinus conceived the idea of utilizing this effective instrument of sound to notify the monks and the neigh- boring worshipers at the shrine of St. Felix of the times for holding the church serv- ices. It seemed to him a more appropriate as well as a more orderly call to prayer than many of the rude methods then in vogue THE BAPTISM OF THE BELL, among the various branches of the church. These included, for instance, private noti- fleation, the strident vociferation of the town crier, the striking of a *.mmer on a piece of metal, the beating uf gongs or cymbals, or the blasts of the trumpet after the ancient farchion of the Greeks, the Israclites and the Egyptians. Necessarily Paulinus had to have manu- factured for the business in hand a bell of much greater dimensions than the little tinkler which did duty in the monastery. But this was casily accomplished. The next problem that vexed the worthy prel- ate’s mind. was where to place his new contrivance, so that its voice could be heard from afar. There was, however, on the roof of the basilica of St. Felix a sort of cupola known as a lantern. It was open on all sides, its principal purpose being, as its name im- plies, to give light to the interior of the structure on which it rested. It was in this lantern that the bishop of Nola yoked the first church bell. . Most probably it was of the miter class and looked for all the world like a good sized metal bowl with a clapper inside. Nor was it a large affair. The fifteenth century was well advanced before bells of any considerable dimensions were fash- ioned. At any rate the worthy bishop’s bell was set up in its place, and right royally did it serve its purpose. One can easily imagine the flutter of excitement it caused among the good people of Nola in those placid times and fancy the congregation of St. Felix, in picturesque garb and san- daled feet, wending their way tc their church, guided by the clanging reverba- tions of that wondrous bell, which rang out its aster roundclay on the plains of Campania nearly 1,600 years ago.. In those days it must have seemed as marvelous to them as the telephone did to us. Truly that was a momentous Easter, and the excellent prelate’s new departure was destined to have farreaching conse- quences, of which his sincere and single minded soul could never have had the re- motest conception. Without specially in- tending it he had developed the best meth- od yet discovered for signaling by sound for long distances, a discovery that could be applied to all manner of uses in the practical affairs of life. From Nola the use of church bells soon spread over Chris- tendom, and at the beginning of the sev- enth century Pope Sabinius, by some er- roneously supposed to have been the in- ventor thereof, did all he could to encour- age their adoption. ; It was probably not a great while there- after that the custom of baptizing church bells originated. This process, according to a high authority, includes ‘‘naming, anointing, sprinkling, robing, sponsorial cenorrements and every initiative accom- panimens waich marks the admission ot rational beings into the gospel. Not that bells, say the advocates of this system, are ° baptized for the remisson of sins, but that they receive power to ‘act as preservatives against thunder and lightning, and hail and wind, and storms of every kind, and that they may drive away evil spirits.’ *’ Other important innovations in church affairs were also cffected by Paulinus’ first church bell. It changed the entire char- acter “of church architecture. That the bells might be heard for a long distance, +it was necessary that they be hung at a high elevation. Hence bell towers were constructed, and every high tower in the Christian world owes its erection to thc bishop of Nola and his bell. At first the towers were merely an en- largement of the lantern already described. This was subsequently heightened and fre- quently finished with a conical roof. To extend this roof to a tapering spire was an easy transition, and thus the church stec- ples originated, its belfry being known among architects: as the lantern to this day. So runs the story of Paulinus and his godly work and the first Kaster “bell. Though it rests largely on oral tradition, there is much strong presumptive evidence to support it. The name of his city. Nola, for example, is the name given to a small bell attached to the neck of a dog, the foot of a bird or the housings of a horse. The word campana is the Italian and Spanish name for a bell, the Italian, as we have seen, designating a bell tower as a cam- panile, both words being clearly derived from the same locality. Many episodes, commonly accepted as historical facts, rést upon no better author- ity than that which proclaims Bishop Paulinus the discoverer of the church bell. In these days of research and close investi- gation it is more than likely that evi- dence such as will place his fame upon an unassailable foundation will be unearthed in the near future. E. W. FOTTER. At the Boarding House. “Yes, Mr. Jones, at this Easter season 1 always provide for the inmates of my humble home a dic: largely of c¢gsv—not from motives of ccoromy, asyc insinuate, but because of their appropriatencss to the season.”’ “You can’t convince me, madaii. that last Kaster’s eggs are appropriate this Easter’s dinner. That’s all I'm kicking zbout.”’ Obvious. ‘Do you believe, Mr. Jones, that the glad Easter festival weare celebrating was really suggested by the heathen customs?” ‘Believe it? I know it. The heathen -are alive yet, too, most of ’em, making out bills for Kaster bonnets.’ An Embezzling Blair County Post- master Broke for Liberty. Joseph A. Vaughn, the Blair county post- master who is under arrest on the charge of embezzling $291, made a desperate dash for liberty while being taken to Altoona for trial on Saturday. Vaughn’s hearing was scheduled to take place before United States Commissioner Graffius at 2 o,clock that afternoon. Dep- uty Miller went to jail for the prisoner shortly after noon and the two boarded a car at the court house in Hollidaysburg about 1 o’clock. = Officer and prisoner had hardly become seated when the Tattey dashed out the car door and up a nearwy street toward the country. The offices jol-. lowed as quickly as he could, but was rap- idly being distanced by Vaughn when two, horsemen hove in view. The officer explained the sitiiation to the horsemen and deputized them to pursue and take the fugitive. A hot chase across the country ensued, but Vaughn, who is a strong runner, kept in the lead for over a mile. Just at the almshouse one of the horsemen overtook the fugitive and de- manded his surrender. Vaughn, however, artfully arranged his handcuffs so that they resembled pistols and by this scherie held the officers at bay for some time. Deputy Miller and the other horseman, at this. point, appeared on the scene and together they overpowered the prisoner and conduct- ed him to the almshouse. The almshouse ambulance was utilized to convey the offi- cer and prisoner back to Holldaysburg. Vaughn took his recapture good humor- edly and said if he had not eaten such a good dinner at the jail before he left he never would have heen recaptured. The meal, he said, ‘‘spiled his wind”’ and made his recapture easy. When finally taken before the commission- er he waived a hearing and his bail was fixed at $1,000. Being unable to secure this, Vaughn was remanded to jail, where he will remain until the first Monday in May, when he will appear before the dis- trict court at Pittsburg for trial. Governess-—What it Easter. Willie? Willie—It’s the only time of the year when chickens lay dyed eggs. Navel oranges are selling in Califor- nia at $500 a car load. other oranges at $300. With those prices prevailing it is expected that the next season’s orange e¢rop will yield the State $4,000,000. New Advertisements. ALESMEN WANTED.—To sell our high grade inspected. Nursery Stock. Many new specialties offered this year for the first time, as well as the standard varieties of fruits and or- namentals. No previous experience necessary. Write for terms, stating age, ete. Hoopes, Bro. & Tuomas, Maple Avenue Nurseries. 42-15-4t West Chester, Pa. RPHANS’' COURT SALE !— There will be sold at public sale at the Court House, in Bellefonte, Pa., at 2 o'clock p. 1m. on SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1897, the following real estate of Barbara Walkey, de- ceased, in Walker township : A GOOD FARM. - Tract No. 1—A small farm located near Mecla station, adjoins lands of John Irvin, dedeased, David bunkle and Samuel Walkey and contains about 27 ACRES in high state of cultivation. Large frame house, bank barn and all necessary outbuildings. Good orchard and never-failing water. Tract of land No. 2—Estate of Samuel Walkey, deceased, Walker township—a tract of excellent farm land adjoining No. 1 on the northwest, 2on- taining about 30 ACRES, TIMBER LAND. No. 3—Estate of Samuel Walkey, deceased—a tract of land in Walker township timbered with white oak and chestnut: will make good farm land, adjoining lands of Divens, McCatmont, Clevenstein and John Carner, containing about TWENTY-FIVE ACRES. Terms oF sALE.—One-third of the purchase money to be paid in cash on confirmation of sale ; one-third, in one year with interest ; and the bal- ance, one third, in two years with interest, de- ferred payments to bear interest from the con- firmation of sale, and to be secured by hond and mortgage on the premises, HENRY WALKEY, Trustee of the estate of Barbara Walkey, HENRY WALKEY, Adm’r. of the estate of Sam’l Walkey, Dec'd. 42-12-1t JOHN M. KEICHLINE, Attorney, Dead,