Bewci Mitin Bellefonte, Pa., May 13. 1898. CorrEsPoNDENTS.—No communications pub ished unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. : THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——Francis Labadie in ‘‘Faust,’’ at Gar- mans, next Monday night. William A. Stone and his corps of speakers are to be in Philipsburg to-night. —Jonathan Krape has bought Emma Jordan’s brick house in Aaronsburg.. He paid $1200 for it. ——Mr. Jacob Gross and Miss Margaret Curry, who will be married soon, will oe- cupy the Storm house on Reynolds Ave. It is not likely that the candidates will allow you to forget it, but the Demo- cratic primaries will be held on Saturday, June 11th. ~—— Sheriff Cronister took James Bechtel, of Howard, to ‘the Danville asylum this morning. They left on the 6:30 train, via Lewisburg. ——Miss Phoebe Hoover, of Philipshurg, a young woman who was once a public school teacher in that place, will leave for the Klondyke on the 25th. ——-J. W. Hafer, a brother of Dr. A. W. Hafer of this place and for a long time in the hotel business at Osceola, has moved to Lewistown, where he has taken charge of the Farmer’s hotel. ——Dr. R. Leighton Gerhart has rented the Reynolds’ house, on Spring street, form- erly occupied by Wm. T. Meyer, and his family will reside here while he preaches at his different stations. —Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Shoemaker are receiving the congratulations of their friends on account of the arrival of a little daughter in their family. She was born on Wednesday night. ——On Thursday, May 5th, Ira Gross- man and Miss Kate Sweeney, of Potter township, came to this place and presented themselves at the home of Rev. C. H. Goodling, on Willowbank street, and were married. ; ——On Tuesday evening Harry J. Swahb and Miss Georgiana Krebs were married at the home of the groom’s mother, on Val- entine street. Rev. Goodling performed the ceremony, after which a bountiful wed- ding supper was served. Roswell McClain, who is a member of battery A, 2nd Artillery, U. S. A., isa grand-son of David Garland, of Olivia, “Blair county. The young man writes that “he is in camp at Tampa, Fla., expecting to be ordered to Cuba at any moment. ° ~——The Bellefonte friends of Miss Flor- ence Houck, daughter of W. A. Houck formerly pastor of the Methodist congrega- tion in this place, will he interested in knowing that she is to marry Mr. W. T. -Hildrupp Jr., of Harrisburg. Their en- gagement has been announced. An8x 15 ft. flag was flung to the breeze from the top of a 71 ft. pole in Phil- ipsburg, on Saturday night. Hon. J. N. Cassanova presided at the ceremony and Hon. P. E. Womelsdorf, Eli Townsend and Matt Savage made the speeches. Law- rence Morgan raised the money to purchase the flag. ——Great preparations are being made for “The Deestrick Skule,”’ which is to be given in the Armory on Friday evening, the 20th. Mrs. W. W. Achenbach, of Williamsport, has taken charge of the class- es and some of the cleverest people in the town are enrolled as scholars. The enter- tainment is a burlesque on the country schools of fifty years ago and every place the play, if such it might be called, has ever been given it attracts great crowds. ——The season at Garman’s is drawing to a close but before the end comes Francis Labadie will be here with his superb pro- duction of ‘Faust,’ Labadie is recog- nized as being one of the strongest charac- ters on the American stage and has made such a favorable impression at former ap- pearances here that it should warrant good business for him when he comes to Gar- man’s next Monday night. On Sunday evening, May 15th, the new officers of the Bellefonte young peo- ple’s society of Epworth League will be publicly installed. Interesting services will be held in the Methodist church at 7:30 to which everyone is cordially invited. The young people will have entire charge of the services. They have been at work on their program for some time, so that something out of the ordinary may be ex- pected. : ——The charter for the Central Commer- cial telephone company was granted at the state department on Monday. It was the intention of the company to install the first plant at State College, but as the permit for a franchise at that place must pass three readings of council before it is granted it is likely that the erection of poles between this place and State College will be the first work done. The kind of phones to be used has not been selected yet. Coal train No 58 on the Bald Eagle valley railroad wrecked between Mill Hall and Flemington, early Tuesday morning, and twenty-two cars were piled up. It took all day to clear up the wreckage, pas- sengers having to be transferred. A brake- man named Zane Bell wasslightly injured. Had the wreck occurred an hour or so earlier the Ringling circus train would not have been able to reach this place without going clear back to Williamsport and trans- ferring to the Beech Creek road. Carr. TAYLOR RETURNS FOR MORE SoLpIERS. — The resignation of several members, the physical disqualifications of a few more and the orders to muster all companies of the Guard from sixty to the regular army standing of eighty men to a company made it necessary to call for re- cruits for B company from this place. In order to keep up the record for quick re- sponse which has always characterized the local organization Capt. Hugh S. Taylor re- turned to Bellefonte, last Friday evening, to select a squad of recruits from the many who were anxiously awaiting an opportuni- ty to be enrolled in the service. Corporal Sam Graham, of Philipsburg, was sent to that place where a number of men were reported to be waiting a call and he secured seventeen who were brought over here Friday night. Before leaving Philipsburg they were given a rousing farewell. Bands were playing, crowds cheering and cannon booming. In fact the demonstration was much like the inspirit- ing scene witnessed here when B company started to the front. The citizens of Phil- ipsburg raised funds to pay the fare of their contingent to this place and it was made up of the following men. John P, Johnson, Frank Goshorn, John E. Erb, Francis Reed, Jacob Spotts, Jacob McCall, Chas. F. Waring, R. P. Lloyd, George Cadwalader, E. C. Sheriff, Ed T. Eboch, Thos. Weston, L. Rittenhouse, Harry Paul, William Callahan, Harry Hysong. In addition to this contingent there were more than one hundred men at this place who were ambitious to soldier for awhile. With such an abundance of material to se- lect from the recruiting officers were neces- sarily very critical in the physical examina- tion that was made at the armory on Satur- day. Dr. M. J. Locke was there “nearly the entire day examining men. When he got through with them and pronounced them all right it was pretty near certain that they would stand the official exami- nation at Mt. Gretna. There were men from all parts of the county waiting to be taken. Some had walked miles to get here and seemed very much cast down when a slight physic- al infirmity would throw them out. Of the forty who were finally selected only three were Bellefonte men : Charles Saylor, Andrew Meese and Harry F. Miller. All of the Philipsburgers but Francis Reed, ‘William Callahan and Harry Hysong pass- ed and wereaccepted. The others are from various parts of the county. After the necessary number of men had been procured a short time was given to in- structing them in the rudiments of drilling and marching, so that by the time for de- parture on the 8:31 train that night they marched off for the station in a very credit- able column of fours. There was a great crowd on the streets to cheer and it was im- possible to get near the train after it had arrived and the squad had boarded it. The following are the men who were tak- en away in charge of Capt. Taylor and cor- poral Graham. Frederick Frank, Harry F. McManway, - Clyde Smith, Thomas C. Bartges, George H. Leathers, Harry E. Fisher, Samuel P. Bathurst, Milford Stover, Benjamin Lucas, John L. Johnstonbaugh, John E. Gaynor, James Noll, Andrew Meese, H. E. Redding, William H. Allen, James L. Sandoe, Dale Houser, Edward Davis, William G. Ertle. William 8. Bradley, Harry F. Miller, Clyde Cox, Elmer C. Sheriff, Edward Rittenhouse, Robert P. Lloyd, John P. Johnson, Charles 'I'. Waring, Geo, W, Cadwallader, Thomas Weston, Edward Davis, Jacob Spotts, Grant Goshorn, John E. Erb, John A. McCall, Edward T. Eboch, Henry Parsons, Harry M. Paul, Arthur Riddle, George B. Snyder, Charles C. Saylor, H. M. Hoy. Of the original company that left here on the afternoon of April 27th, the following have returned : [Failed to pass the physical examination.] M. J. Shuey, J. Clyde Jodon, Samuel Solt, Joseph Thal, Earnest Stine, William Ammerman, Samuel Taylor, [Declined because of could not be sacrificed more emergent. ] William C. Smeltzer, Andrew D.’Smeltzer, Harry E. Rhoades, John Hartsock, Howard Wells. [Rejected because they were beyond the age limit of 45 years.] Jacob Cole, Henry Vitalini, Of the last contingent that went to Mt. Gretna, Harry Miller and Chas. Saylor, of Bellefonte : Harry Fisher and Milford Stover, of Millheim ; Harry Paul, of Phil- ipsburg, and several others have returned. Last night the Bellefonte high school scholars shipped a surprise box for Co. B in which were over 300 lbs. of provisions such as are not issued by the army commissary. -o9e home engagements that under circumstances no John D. Toot, Anthony G. Noll. THEY Missep It.— Last week the WATCHMAN did something it seldom does and that only when it feels certain of its truthfulness. It advised the people of this community to see Ringling Bros. circus, which exhibited here on Tuesday. The circus is a western enterprise, not well known in the East, but having watched its advertisements and routing in western pa- pers for several years we knew that it was a big one and a good one and told you so. Those of you who took the advise found for yourselves that it was the finest circus that ever spread its canvas on a Bellefonte lot, neither Barnum nor Forepaugh ex- cepted. The afternoon crowd numbered about six thousand people and at night there was probably one-fourth that many there. The great features of the show were George Ganweiler’s band, the Lockard elephants, The Foys, Mlle Farnour, Rose Dockerill, Prof. John Philip Soosee’s band and the Fishers. i The entire outfit was orderly and came to town and left it again as quietly as if it had been a traveling Sunday school. —— nin ——W. V. Hughes, of Hollidaysburg, formerly of this place, has secured the con- tract for building the new county home for the poor in Elk county. Mr. Hughes built the home in Clearfield county. -—The homes of Harry Crispen and William Emert, at Mill Hall, were entered by burglars, on Friday night. A silver watch was taken from the former, hut nothing was secured at the latter. —. ——The annual commencement exercises of the Chester Springs soldiers’ orphans school are in progress and will be conclud- ed to-morrow. Austin Curtin, of Roland, is superintendent of this school. rh —PFrancis Labadie’s spectacular pro- duction of Goethe’s ‘‘Faust’’ has been one of the successes of the theatrical world. Labadie, himself, is an ideal Mephistoph- eles and his supporting company is very strong. The scenic effects in ““Faust’’ are magnificent. At Garman’s on Monday night, May 16th. Se ni ——DMiss Sarah A. Bollinger died at the home of her brother-in-law, H. M. Sausser, in Tyrone, on Wednesday night of last week. Deceased was born at Baileyville, this county, and was 38 years old. At one time she was a resident of Philipsburg, but previous to her death had been making her home in Tyrone. I I ll ——John Weaver, aged 75 years, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Adam Jor- dan, west of Millheim on Monday. De- ceased was one of Penn township’s best known old residents and is survived by a widow and several grown-up children. Funeral services were held in the Aarons- burg Reformed church on Wednesday morning. ll I I -—R. W. Porter died at the home of his sister, Mrs. Margaret Eldred, in Mack- eyville, on Sunday afternoon. Deceased had spent all of his life in that place and was actively identified with the growth of the community. He had been ill about a month with various ailments and was 70 years old. Interment was made at Salona on Tuesday afternoon. I ll ll ——Last Thursday morning the death of Mrs. Joseph Bierly occurred at her home in Madisonburg, after a long illness with consumption and heart disease. She was 62 years, 8 months, and 9 days old and leaves a husband and ten children to mourn the loss of adevoted wife and moth- er. Deceased had been a member of the Evangelical church since girlhood and Revs. Romig and Stover officiated at her funeral which was held on ‘Sunday morn- ing. The Madisonburg and Millheim cas- tles, K. G. E., were both present in a body at the funeral. I li li ——The death of Miss Lilly Kephart, in Roanoke, Va., a brief mention of which appeared in last week’s paper, was caused by spinal meningitis, now almost ankepi- demic in southern Virginia. The mortfing she died five other deaths occurred in the city from the same cause and it is not edn - fined to any age, for old and young are dy- ing of it. She was ill just one week, but unconscious almost from the first and her death was prostrating to her two sisters who havegburied their father, their oldest sister, and one of them two children within six years. The funeral services were held at her uncle Caleb Kephart’s, at Fillmore, on Saturday morning at 11 o’clock and she af- terwards was buried by the side of her mother and father in Gray’s burying ground. je gust ay i KILLED NEAR HONTER’S PARK YEs- TERDAY MORNING.—A fatal accident oc- curred at Bodle’s crossing, on the Bellefonte Central railroad, near Hunter’s park, yes- terday morning, in which Crawford Sweitz- er, of State College, lost his life. Sweitzer was a man of about 65 years of age and had come down to this place to see the circus on Tuesday. It is probable that he had started to walk home on Wednes- day night and had slept in a barn near the place he met his tragic death. Getting awake early in the morning he started off up the track toward the College and had just reached the sharp curve at the old saw mill site about one-half mile on this side of Hunter’s park. As the old man was very hard of hearing he evidently did not hear the approach of train 1, bound for State College, with conductor G. Ross Parker in charge and engineer Jerre Nolan and fire- man Sidney Walker in the engine. Sweitzer was on the middle of the track when the train sped around the curve and was only 150 ft. away when the fireman saw him and grabbed the bell rope ; at the same time shouting to the engineer who reversed his engine and put on the air. It was too late. The train could not be stop- ped and the man was struck and knocked about 15 ft. off to the right, where he land- ed on his head against the end of a pile of ties. He was dead when picked up, so that it is probable that he was instantly killed and never knew what struck him. The body was lifted aboard the baggage car and taken to Pine Grove Miils, where under- taker Heberling prepared it for burial. The skull was crushed to a jelly, the breast bones caved in, the right leg broken above and below the knee and the ankle ground to a pulp, while the left leg was broken above the knee. The body will be brought here at 9 o’clock this morning and buried by Gregg post in the G. A. R. lot in the Union cemetery. Crawford Sweitzer was unmarried. So far as is known he has no relatives and had made his home at Grieb’s hotel for about a year. Having been a survivor of the 1st Pa. Cav. he drew a pension of $12 per month and with this and his earnings as a laborer about the College he was able to keep himself. LuTHER KLINE AND His BROKEN ARM. —There was no little excitement about the court house shortly after dinner on Mon- day when extra officer Foulk arrested Luther Kline, who lives in Spring town ship just on the outskirts of what is known as ‘““Bush’s Addition’ to Bellefonte. Luther has been an object of considera- ble interest in police circles for some time and is quite a familiar figure to the quarter sessions. His latest dilemma occurred some time ago when he got into trouble with John Farley and his family by kid- napping their baby-in-arms. Just what Luther wanted with such a white elephant is hard to tell, but when officer Mont- gomery arrested him in the Bush house bar room, on April 15th, he said the Farleys had been getting milk from him for which they had failed to pay so he just thought he would hold the baby as a ransom. He went along with officer Montgomery as peaceably as a lamb to the shambles un- til they reached the Jackson, Hastings and Co. bank building. There he was sud- denly seized with the notion that his legs were given him for some other purpose than to walk to jail, so away he flew. Capt. Montgomery was nowhere in the chase and Luther breathed the happy air of liberty until Wednesday. Meanwhile overtures had been made to settle his trouble with the Farleys and they had progressed so satisfactorily that he ven- tured into the court house. There he fell into the clutches of the sleuth of the force, Joshua Foulk, who started to escort him in triumph to justice Keichline, but Luther wasn’t lending his presence to any such pa- rade, with Josh as chief-marshall, and he showed him a clean pair of heels. The of- ficer shouted in vain for him to stop and most people thought a fire alarm had been rung in, so great did the commotion be- come, but Luther sped right on and took to the hilly streets where he easily dis- tanced them all but officer Dunlop who had taken up the chase. Out Penn street to Beaver they flew, thence down an alley to the pike and across the round house bridge. Headed straight for Coleville they struck a 2 flat gate, neither one gaining an inch on the other and the swift patter of Luther’s feet on the hard road sounding like the tick of a Waterbury watch in compari- son to the measured thumps of the long jumps made by his pursuer. The Collin’s row was reached and then pursued and pursuer parted. The former ran into the yard of the middle house while the latter, designing his purpose, ran to the back gate to intercept him. Sure enough, he did just as Dunlop expected he would and popped right out the back gate into the very arms of the constable. The two started for Bellefonte, both more or less out of wind, and had reached the home of Harry Crissman where Kline decided to give the law another run for its money and away he went for the third time. Officer Dunlop gained on him, how- ever, and Luther undertook to jump a fence but he landed on top of it just as the tall officer’s hand landed on his collar. Dunlop gave a jerk to haul him back, but Kline’s collar button pulled off and the offi- cer flew one way and Luther tumbled on over the fence. He landed on his forearm and sprained it slightly, but he thought it was broken, so set up a lusty howl. Them the officer tumbled over on top of his prisoner. They returned to town this time, a very uneventful trip, except that the officer helped carry the broken arm and finally landed him in the district attorney’s office to which place a physician was called who failed to find anything the matter at all. Finally, to relieve the prisoner’s suffering an officer was sent with him to another physician who likewise failed to find any- thing wrong, so Luther was taken back and reieased on general principles. He then hunted up a physician, himself, and was consoled with the information that the ligaments of his elbow are ruptured. His arm is in splints and he is not doing any more foot races with the police. mas. 4 ode HISTORY OF THE 49TH PA. VOLS.--One of the latest additions to the historical and statistical works on the rebellion is the ‘History of the 49th Pa. Vols.” just off the press and edited by Robert S. West- brook, late sergeant of Co. B, 49th. It is a large volume, containing 272 pages and illustrated with fine half-tones of the offi- cers and trophies of the regiment. In ad- dition to being printed on good paper, the type is large, easily read and the work is so nicely executed that it is really a credit to the press of the Altoona Times. It contains a correet roll of the members of the regiment and all of its marches from 1861 to 1865 and is a very valuable book for any library, especially to the survivors of the 49th. As the edition is limited those who wish to procure a copy had better address Mr. Westbrook, at Altoona, early. oe *‘YZEIL”’—An interesting lecture will be delivered in the parlors of the Brockerhoff house, Thursday evening, May 19th, at 8 o’clock, by Madam de Kermen. The subject will be a play from the repertoire of Mm. Sarah Bernhart, the great French tragedienne. This play, which deserves to be considered a poem, is enti- tled : *‘Yzeil, or the conquest of a soul.” It has been the admiration of Paris, New York and all the great cities where it has been played. for the pathos of the subject, the grandeur of the ideas, the poetry of the words. It will be, accompanied by some recita- tions in French—extracts from the play— and the exhibiticn of some pictures from the play, all of which have been given to the lecturer by the great tragedienne herself. Tickets 25 cents. They can be obtained at the WATCHMAN office or at F. P. Blair & Co’s. Thursday morning. —Paul Koitsch, the young fellow whose sensational trial for the murder of little Edna Crider, attracted so much at- tention to the Lock Haven courts some time ago, has enlisted in the navy and has been assigned to the St. Paul. ——It is not often that we do such things but on Tuesday we fell a victim to a man who bossed us as if we were in the 99th degree of bondage to him. Attired in a black frock coat and eating peanuts so fast that his words were scarcely intelligi- ble he appeared in this office and said : “I have a notice I want published. To this we replied, asking the nature of the notice, whereupon the visitor informed us that he did not have it written out and said : “Get a paper and pencil.”” Well, we got a pa- per and pencil and he began to dictate. The notice turned out to be a regular ad- vertisement and after it was all written out, signed and marked up this man said : ‘Put it in once’”” and turned on his heel and started for the door. The fact that he had not even as much as thanked us rank- led a little and we decided, under the pre- tense of making a charge for the advertise- ment, to find out more about him. The conversation that followed discovered the man to us and we marked him down as another of the unfortunates who are occa- sionally met with who have gotten into a position where they imagine everyone to be their servants and find fools enough who are to make them forget, if they ever had them, or fail to learn the manners of a gen- tleman. For the sake of the people in the community in which this man is located we publish the notice which he ordered us to write and expected to be published with- out even a thank you in payment. News Purely Personal. —Mrs, Margaret Wilson, her neice, Miss Mary H. Linn, and Miss Blanche Hayes will leave soon for Boston for a pleasure trip of two weels. —DMiss Mame Ceader is at Spangler spending a week with Miss Mary McClain, a daughter of James A. McClain, formerly of this place. She left here Monday morning. —D. A. Deitrich, of Hublersburg, was in town yesterday and after reading himself full of war news from the Warcuman bulletins struck for the 3.45,train on the Central, —Mrs, George W. Jackson departed Tuesday for Oakland, Md., for a short visit with her daugh- ter, Mrs. George T. Brew. Having sold her car- riage horses some time ago her coachman started, on Monday, to drive them to their new owner in western Maryland. —DMus. C. U. Hoffer, of Philipsburg, with her two interesting children, Richard and Fred, are at the Gerberich home, on Thomas street, for a visit. Mr. Hoffer’s being in politics gave him a sufficient excuse to drop in on Tuesday—you know there was a circus in town that day. —Mrs. W. W. Achenbach, who came up from Williamsport to take charge of the ‘“‘Deestrick Skule,” a burlesque that is to be given in the armory next week, is visiting Mrs. J. E. Ward, In her role of the Yankee school marm Mrs. Ach- enbach is as funny as the end man of a minstrel troop but off the stage she is very much like her brother Hammon Sechler, intelligent and con- servative. —Frank Lingle, of Patton, had an infusion of juvenile blood on Monday and Tuesday morning, bright and early, saw him at the rail-road siding in Bellefonte watching Ringling’s circus unload. Frank was apparently enjoying it about as much as he did years ago when, with a barefooted horde of Bellefonte youngsters, he would tramp several miles out on some country road to meet and ex- tend the usual greeting to the old time wagon show. —Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Beck, of Jacksonville, were in Bellefonte on Tuesday, intending to go on West for a visit with friends near Nelson, Neb. While here Mr. Beck was taken seriously ill and the journey had to be postponed. He was taken to the home of Mr. Shilling, where he remained until Wednesday afternoon, when James F. Heverly came up and he was taken home on the 1:42 train. We trust that his illness will prove of short duration. —Richard Lutz, who gave up a good building contracting business in this place several years ago to go back to the more independent life of a farmer which he had never forgotten from his boyhood’s days, was in tewn, on Friday, talking war and feeling just a little bit sad, like some of the other farmers we know of, because he had sold his grain too early to reap the benefit of the phenomenal rise. Mr. Lutz lives on the old homestead place near Zion. It is a small farm but one of the best among the many fine ones in Nittany valley. —George H. Smull, general agent of the New York Life insurance company, dropped in for a moment on Monday to add his name to the Warcuyax list. Though he did not say so we in- ferred he had been leaving the dessert till the last, when he told us that with the Warcmman going regularly to his snug Rebersburg home he “would have every paper in the county.” Mr. Smull is one of the young men in the insurance business, but he has been making a mark that has not only attracted the notice of insurance people, but the publie, as well. —The Hon. P. W. McDowell, of Mackeyville, and his son Harry, from Jacksonville, were in town yesterday preparing for a trip which the elder McDowell will start on next week. He in- tends going to visit his daughter, Mrs, Blair, at Belle Centre, Ohio, and while he didn’t say ex- actly how long he will be gone his visit might ex- tend over a period of six months. Now that he has retired from farming he feels that he can spend the rest of his days without much concern where he is located, so long as it is agreeable and it is certain that the visit to his daughter will be such. Mr, McDowell is one of the stalwart Demo- crats of Clinton county. —Samuel Harpster Esq., one of the substantial old gentlemen of the upper end of the county, was in town on Saturday with his little grand son, Sammy Homan, a son of George Homan, who re- sides on the old Homan homestead on the “White Hall road.” Mr. Harpster has been identified with the politics and local business interests about Gatesburg for a great many years. He is contem: plating a trip to the West and will probably wind up about Clinton, Iowa, where he has relatives living. His grandson took quite an interest in finding out how a newspaper is made and proved himself every inch a little gentleman. —A number of Bellefonte military men were home the later part of last week. Capt. Hugh S. Taylor returned Friday evening to muster his company up to the regular army standing of 80 men. Co. clerk N. B. Spangler came up on a short furlough to arrange his business for a long absence from home. Robt. IF. Hunter, an aid on Gen. Snowden'’s staff, and A. Boyd Musser, Serg. Major of the 5th, both returned because when the Guard was mustered into the federal service the offices they filled were dispensed with, It is probable, however, that with the reorganization that is now going on places will be made for both men. THE PoLE FELL AND PARALYZED Hi. — While the patriotic people of Rebershurg were hoisting a 70 foot flag pole, last Fri- day evening, the tackles broke when the pole was at an angle of 45° with ground and it fell. Scott Kerstetter, one of the well known men of the town, was at the ropes and directly beneath the pole. He did not have time to jump to a place of safety and the pole struck him on the back of the neck felling him to the ground. He was unconscious when picked upand for awhile it was thought that he was dead, but several hours later consciousness was regained, though he was apparently paralyzed. On Sunday Drs. Musser, Bright and Houtz held a consultation and decided that he should be removed to the Williamsport hospital as soon as he is re- covered sufficiently. It is feared that he has suffered a permanent injury to his spine. Eggs for Hatching. The prices below are for a setting of thir- teen eggs. I guarantee all to be fresh and true to name and from first class stock. Light Brahma - - - 53cts Buff Cochin - - - 60° Barred Plymouth Rock = 40° Silver Spangled Hamburg - 690 ** 43-11 M. B. GARMAN, Bellefonte, Pa. The Philadelphia Markets. The following are the closing prices of the Philadelphia markets on Wednesday evening. WaeaTr—Receipts, 7,491 bushels ; 127,238 bushels. The market bearish pressure in speculative circles, and prices here declined 5c. per bushel. No. 2 red for May delivery was nominally quoted at the close at $1.45a1.48, but there were few if any offerings and little disposition to trade. Export demand was light. CorN—Receipts, 198,710 bushels; shipments, 169,619 bushels. There was a good export inquiry and the option market ruled firm, notwithstand- ing the decline in wheat, closing Lic. higher, un- der stronger reports from the West. Local car lots were scarce and firm. Sales of 1 car No. 2 ellow, on track, at44c. No.2 mixed closed : ay and June, 4034ad1c. Car lots in export ele- vator closed : No. 2 mixed, 40lgatlc.; steamer, 3915a40c,; No. 3, 3815a39¢c. Oars—Receipts, 32,390 bushels; shi ments, 9,421 bushels. Offerings of car lots were light and the market ruled steady, but very quiet. Ex- porters had few orders. Bales of 6 cars No. 2 white, clipped, part on track, at 38%5¢. Frouvr—Receipts, 2,166 barrels and 3,459 sacks. The market was wholly nominal. Buyers held off for radical concessions, in view of the decline in wheat, while the mills were generally indiffer- ent about selling and were unwilling to come down to buyers’ ideas of value. We quote : Win- ter super, $1.75a5; do., extras, $525.25 ; Pennsyl- vania roller, clear, $6a6.25; do. do., straight, $6.25 26.75; Western winter, clear, $6.2526.50 ; do. do,, straight, $6.50a7 ; do. do., patent, $7a7.50 ; spring, clear, $5.75a6.25; do. straight, $6.75a 7.25; do., patent $7.25a7.75; do. favorite brands, higher; city mills, extra, $5a5.25; do. clear, $6.50a7 ; do., straight, $7a7.50; do. patent, $7.50a7.75. Rye Frovr—Was quiet but firm on a basis of $4 per barrel for choice Pennsylvania. Feep—Was in oor request and firm, under small supplies. We quote: Winter bran, in bulk, spot, $17.50a18; spring bran, in sacks, spot, $17. 50a 18. BarLep Hay ano Straw—Receipts, 270 tons of of hay and 1 car of straw. Offerings of hay were light and the market ruled firm with a fair de- mand for desirable grades. Rye straw was in moderate soph and steady but quiet. We quote : Hay—Timothy, choice, large bales, 312.50 ald; do., No. 1, large bales, $12a12.50; do., choice small bales. $12a12.50 ; do., No. 1, $12; do., No. 2, $9.50a10; do., No. 3, $8a8.50; clover, $727.50 ; mixed, No, 1,899.50 ; do., No. 2, $8.50a9. Straw— No. 1 straight rye, $8.50; No. 2 do. do., $7.50a8 ; tangled rye, $6.50a7 ; wheat, $5.50a6; oat, $5.50a6. Provisions—Jobbers operated to a fair extent and values were well maintained on a basis of these quotations: Smoked beef, city, 17alSc.; beef hams, $23.50a24; pork, family, $13a13.50 ; hams, S. P. cured, in tierces, 7%5a84¢c.; hams, smoked, as to brand and average,” 8al0c. ; sides, ribbed, in salt, 614a614c.; do. do., smoked, Tarkge, shipments, was weak, under shoulders, pickle "cured, 5%a6le.; do. 0., smoked, 634aTl%c.; picnic hams, S. P. cured, 5)4a6c.; do. do., smoked, 64aTc; bellies, in ickle, according to average, loose, 634a73e.; ly Mh bacon, as to brand and average, ng lard, pure, city refined, in tierces, 634a7c.; do. do. do., in tubs, 7a7l4c.; do., butchers’, loose, 6a6lic. Dn aoeaipls and offerings were moderate and desirable table grades of both solid packed and prints were in fair request at generally steady prices. We quote : solid-packed creamery, extra 17c.; do. firsts, 16¢.; Jrinss, fancy, jobbing sales, 19a22¢.; do., fancy, wholesale, 18¢.; 'do., firsts, 17c. Cueese—Fine old full ereams continued in good shape and firm under small available supplies and a fairly active inquiry. We quote: i York, tall creams, fancy, 9%4c.; do., fair to choice 8l4adl4c. Eces—Were in light request and barély steady, with offerings large. We quote: Pennsylvania, fresh, choice, 10%4c.; western, fresh, in free cases, 10%c. Porarors—Were in ample supply and little wan- ted, but showed no change. We quote: White potatoes, choice, per bushel, 85c. a§l; new pota- toes, as to quality, per bushel, $1a4.25. Live Pouvrtry—Fowls were in good request and firm under small supplies. Spring chickens were in moderate supply and demand at former rates- We quote : Fowls, hens, 10a10 4¢.; old roosters, 615a7c.; spring chickens, weighing 1 to 2 pounds to the pair, 16al9c.; do. weighing 2 to 4 pounds to the pair, 20a23c. Dressep Povrrry—There was a continued good demand for choice stock, and prices ruled firm, with supplies well cleaned up. We quote : Fowls, western, choice, 10c. ; do., old roosters, 6al4e. Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by the Pu@~ix Minning Co. The following are the quotations up to six o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper goes press: Red Wheat, old Red wheat, new. Rye, per bushel.............. Corn, shelled, per bushel Corn, ears, per bushel... Oats, per bushel, new. Barley, per bushel....... Ground Plaster, per ton. Buckwheat, per bushel .. Cloverseed, per bushel.... 130 Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co. Potatoes per bushel 85 Onions i svent fi in on iggs, per dozen.. ) Ton per pound.. 6 Country Shoulders. 5 ides......... 5 Hams..... 10 Tallow, per pound.. 3 Butter, per pound 15 The Democratic Watchman. Published every Friday morning, in Bellefonte, Pa., at $1.50 per annum (ipaid strictly in advance) $2.00, when not paid in advance, and $2.50 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- less paid for in advance. A liberal discount is made to persons advertis- ing by the quarter, half year, or year, as follows : SPACE OCCUPIED | Sm | 6m ly One inch (12 lines this type.............. $588 |810 Two inches W T1110] 15 Three inch Vi 10 1 15 | 20 uarter Colu 5 inches). 412120] 30 alf Column (10 inches)..... «| 20135 | 55 One Column (20 inches).....cc.cvevnnnnne 35 | 55 | 100 Advertisements in special column 25 per cent. additional. : Transient advs. per line, 3 insertions............ 20 cts. Each additional insertion, per line.. . bets. Local notices, per line.. ae .20 cts. Business notices, per line.., ee hy 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 mostartistic manner and at the lowest rates. Terms—Cash. All letters should be addressed to P. GRAY MEEK, Proprietor