Demorratic Waldman Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 4, 1899. CorRrESPON DENTS.—NO communications pub ished unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——Sunday was about as perfect a day as could be supplied. ——1It is likely that the Mattern bank of the Bellefonte furnace will be started on Monday. ——A thief stole forty-one half grown ducks from the farm of J. Ricker, in Nit- tany valley, a few nights ago. ——The St. John’s Catholic church picnic will be held at Hunter’s park on Wednesday, August 16th. ——A good band and orchestra has been secured for the Logan picnic at Hunter’s park on the 22nd of August. ——1It is reported that over four hundred people were in attendance at the Milesburg Methodist picnic at Hecla on Friday. ——The institute of the public school teachers of Centre county will be held in the court house here beginning, Monday, Dec. 18th. The new Silshy steamer, two hose carriages and 1000 feet of hose for the bor- ough of Mill Hall arrived in that place on Monday. * Everybody is invited to attend the festival to be held in the yard about the Methodist church at Lemont on Saturday evening, August 5th. ——The Sunday trains slip in and out so quietly that few would know of their coming and going were it not for the cur- ious crowds that gather about the station. ——Twenty-eight members of the Gar- man family sat down to the large table which was spread at the home of Daniel Garman, corner of Ifigh and Spring streets, on Sunday. ——A large casting which he was help- ing to lift fell on John Brown’s foot, out at the Jenkins & Lingle foundry Friday morning. The foot was badly crushed, several bones having been broken. ——There will be but one week of court during the August session in Centre coun- ty. There are very few cases on the calen- dar so that it is expected that all of the work can be finished up in that time. James I. McClure announces the prosperous condition of his harness busi- ness in no more forcible manner than the ownership of a new sorrel horse, which he purchased, on Monday, from Daniel Gar- man. ——Dr. John F. Harter, of State College, the newly appointed deputy revenue col- lector for this district, took charge of the office on Tuesday. His predecessor, J. F. Brosius, of Lock Haven, had served for five years and four months. ——Philipsburg is going to make an ef- fort to secure the eighth annual convention of the Central Pennsylvania district Volun- teer Firemen’s Association. That town en- tertained the association upon the occasion of its first meeting in 1893. -——The ‘‘Bellefonte'’ furnace company is just filling a two hundred ton order of pig iron to be shipped to San Francisco. The iron has gone to Philadelphia via the C. R. R. of Pa. and the Reading and will be leaded on ships to goaround the Horn. ——Hon. H. R. Curtin has tendered his resignation to Governor Stone to take ef- fect September 1st. Mr. Curtin leaves the the $900 position he held as an inspector for the dairy and food department to become the resident manager of the Eagle iron works at Curtin’s. ——Miss May V. Rhone, daughter of Leonard Rhone of Centre Hall, was reliev- ed of her place as a stenographer in the de- partment of agriculture at Harrisburg on August 1st, to make room for P. S. Chapin, of Milton, whom Congressman Monroe H. Kulp, recommended. —John C. Scherck, well known in this place, is running a hotel at Sayre and the Evening News, published there, speaks in complimentary terms of a banquet he recently served the Masons. Schenck is the man who recently tried to get license for a hotel at Eagleville. ——One of the great features at the Logan’s picnic at Hunter’s park on the 23rd will be the ball game between the fats and the leans in the company. The fats combined weight is 18601bs, while the leans only aggregate 10651bs. Every “one of the eighteen men is over six feet in height. ——A young son of Professor Brown, of Spring Mills, fell off the iron bridge lead- ing from that place to the railroad station and struck on a rock in the stream-bed be- low, with the result that his hip was brok- en. Willie Grenoble, who was with him at the time, picked up the young sufferer and carried him to his home, where Dr. Braucht rendered the necessary surgical at- tention. The first of the third annual series of summer dances were given in the armory on Friday night under the direction of Henry C. Quigley, Hard P. Harris, Edmund Blanchard, Fred Blanchard, Wal- lace Reeder, Richard Lane, Edward Hoy and Harry Keller. Chappell’s orchestra furnished the music for dancing and Harrison served the refreshments. It was an excessively hot evening for dancing, but that did not deter from the success of the affair. It proved a very delightful dance, though there was not as large an attend- ance as usual. A MARKER FOR OLD ForT REID. — The Hugh White chapter D. A. R. of Clinton county on Monday evening unveiled a shaft that will mark the supposed site of old fort Reid in Lock Haven. While the exact lo- cation of the fort is a trifle obscure and the opinions of the old ones vary as to where it actually stood they have the marker planted now and in doing it enough patri- otic songs were sung and patriotic things said to leave no doubt in the minds of any- one that everything from the signing of the Declaration of Independence down to the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown was effected within a stone’s throw of Lock Haven. Reid was one of the frontier forts of Pennsylvania and like most of the others was nothing more than a stockade into which the early settlers could fly for safety from Indian attacks. It marked the high tide of western settlement along the West Branch. Immediately after the purchase by the Penns in 1768, settlers began to flock into that fertile valley. The Normal school site on the one side of the river. and Isaac Packer’s on the other side marked the limit of cleared land. It was a disputed fact whether the lands on the north side of the river were embraced in the purchase; but the temptation to occupy the fertile soil was too great to be resisted and settlements were rapidly made. A proclamation was issued by the governor of the province warning settlers not to locate on the north side of the river. The proclamation brand- ed all such violators as outlaws, and im- posed a-fine of 500 pounds and a year’s im- prisonment as penalties for disobeying it. No attention was paid to the proclamation, but instead the God fearing people, who cared for their homes and their families, formed a mutual compact and adoped a code of laws for their guidance. They an- nually elected three of their number who settled questions of disputed boundaries and decided all controversies between the settlers. They were called Playfair men. From their decision there was no appeal; and there could be no successful resistance, as the whole body of settlersat the mandate of this court turned out to enforce its de- cree. Every immigrant to this settlement was required to solemnly acknowledge this form of government and agreed to abide by the decisions of the court before he was permitted to take possession of any vacant land. The evidence tends to show that the regular place of meeting of this tribunal was at about the mouth of Chatham’s Run, although it appears that they met at almost any place or time which best suited the convenience of litigants. The marker is four feet eight inches high, two feet and four inches square and weighs about two and a half tons. The three sides are rock work, while on the one side is the following inscription: Erected July 29th 1899, by the Hugh White chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution of Lock Haven, Pa., near the site of Reid’s Fort, built in 1775 for defense against the Indians. > CRUSHED BY FIGHTING Cows. —On Wednesday evening Isaac Tressler, a well known farmer in the vicinity of Linden Hall, had an experience that was highly exciting and came near resulting fatally for him. Two of his cows were in furious combat, when he started to separate them. His efforts had the effect of making them more frantic and in their struggles one of the animals fell over on Mr. Tressler, crushing him to the ground. He was rescued from the perilous position and car- ried to his house where it was some time before the real nature of his injuries could be ascertained. As he is 75 years old it was quite a serious accident for him, but yes- terday afternoon it was reported that no bones had been broken and that he was resting easy. ooo ——George Hart, whose home is in this place, was seriously injured during the fire that recently so nearly destroyed the Pass- more house in Philipsburg. He has been in a drug store over there for some time and was living at the Passmore. When the fire broke out he ran to the hotel to save his effects and gained his room on the third floor, but then his escape was cut off by the flames. In attempting to leave his heavy trunk down by a rope made of the bed clothing it is thought he strained one of the valves of his heart. At all events he was overcome and was rescued only af- ter considerable difficulty. While the phys- icians think he will recover he has been in a critical condition ever since. Yester- day he was reported as slightly worse. > ——Mr. Joseph Trees, formerly of the town of Indiana, and who was educated at the State College, near Bellefonte, and the Western University, Pittsburg, has struck oil near Martinsburg, West Va. His well produces ninety barrels a day, giving him a daily income of $100. Mr. Trees worked as a tool dresser in the oil fields and was poor financially, but the territory he leased proved a winner. eG ——The school board has leased the building on west Howard street formerly occupied by the Logan engine company from M. I. Gardner, its present owner. The building will be fixed np by Mr. Gard- ner and used as a school for primary schol- ars. The congested condition of the pri- mary rooms has made it necessary to get more space. The teacher has not been elected for the new room. eee ——The ladies of the U. B. church at Runville will hold a festival in the church yard on Friday and Saturday evenings, August 11th and 12th, for the benefit of their church parsonage. All sorts of deli- cacies will be served and the public is cor- dially invited to attend. ——Clinton county tobacco growers be- gan cutting their leaf on Monday. Ge ek ——The Mill Hall firemen realized $180 at their festival last Friday and Saturday nights. SE eatin ——There will be dancing all day and evening at the Logan picnic at Hunter's park on the 23nd. > ——G. H. M. Good, for several years superintendent of the A. & P. C. railroad, has resigned his position and U. S. Houck has been appointed to succeed him. a ——A party of Tyrone wheelmen will ride from that place to Penn’s Cave to- morrow; going hy way of Old Fort, where they will spend the night. — be ——DMake your arrangements to take the trip to the Seashore, Thursday August 10th, via Pennsylvania railroad. Rates are low and accommodations unsurpassed. i ee The artist who lettered the old Fory Reid marker for the Lock Haven D. A. R. probably spelled site ‘‘sight’’ just to con- vey the impression that the real site is out of sight. anh ge ran ——About 175 people attended the pic- nic of St. John’s Episcopal Sunday school on Wednesday at Hecla park. It was the most successful outing held by that de- nomination in years. ———— Pleasure seekers will again be ac- commodated on Thursday August 10th, with an excursion to the Seashore. Coaches will be run through to Atlantic City via Delaware river bridge route making the trip most delightful. sey ——~Capt. James E. McNarny who was appointed one of the committee which the city of Pittsburg has sent to San Fran- cisco to welcome the 10th Reg. on its arriv- al from Manila, is one of the salesmen for the Standard Scale and Supply Company I.’td of this place. . ake ——Lock Haven is moving to secure the fall meeting of the State Grange. At its last meeting that body decided to meet at Sunbury next fall, but that city has ap- peared indifferent to the honor and the grangeis are said to be looking about for a more desirable rendezvous. ER KR ——DRobert Thomas Tonner, of Canton, Ohio, who was well known as a visitor at the home of his cousin, Mrs. Henry P. Harris in this place, died at his home in Canton on the afternoon of the 24th ult with tuberculosis. Deceased was 36 years old and is survived by a widow with a daughter four years old. QA ——The Philipsburg colored Sunday school is reported to be on the point of hir- ing itself out as a rain making machine to farmers. Every time that body has tried to have a picnic in recent years it has rain- ed and now the dusky scholars are certain that they are the regl thing in bringing about precipitation. ode ——Lock Haven councilmen are going to save money in their street paving down there by laying brick without cement foundation. Itis largely experimental, but they think it will prove a success. It might for towns located on rocky soil but it seems to us that Lock Haven is not the right place to undertake it. tS Next January the time expires in which the law gives railroad companies operating within the State to take the old fashioned couplers off their cars and re- place them with new and safer ones, pref- erably the Janney. The Pennsylvania Co. has issued orders to the Renovo shops to carry the work on at the rate of from 150 to 250 cars per month. An idea of how much it will cost can be had when it is stated that the repairs to a single car run from $50 to $60. an gen hun ——William Garbrick and W. W. Schenck, two Mill Hall men, have been held under $500 bail each to arswer the charges of assault and battery, rioting, stoning and damaging trolley cars. The men caused a disturbance on the Lock Ha- ven trolley cars, hence their arrest. Wil- liam Mayes was to have been arrested also, but William Gingerich is reported to have warned him of the officer’s approach and now Gingerich, himself, is under arrest for aiding Mayes to escape. They will all be tried this afternoon. oo ——The Chester DeVonde stock company will arrive in this place next Monday to begin rehearsing a repertoire for their sea- son’s tour. The company will be entirely new, new scenery, new costumes, and all. The members will rehearse at Garman’s until they have familiarized themselves with thc various plays to be presented and then open the season here. They will give performances at Garman’s Thursday night, August 10th, matinee and evening on Sat- urday, August 12th, evening performance on the 17th and matinee and evening on the 19th. Their first stop after Bellefonte will be Altoona. Qf pn ——The fourth annual convention of the Christian and Missionary Alliance for the State of Pennsylvania will be held at Brad- ford, Pa., August 11th to 20th. This con- vention will afford a special opportunity to Bible students and christian workers desir- ing knowledge of the word and qualifica- tion for service; to believers seeking deep- er life in Christ, and God’s children who may be tried, afflicted, sick and suffering, weak in faith and burdened in soul. Some of the speakers who will be there will be Rev. A. B. Simpson, Rev. D. W. LeLach- eur, China and Rev. Stephen Merritt. AX OLD RESIDENT GONE.—The an- nouncement of the death of the venerable Jacob Schrom, which occurred at his room in the McClain block late last Thursday night, was a decided surprise to the many who knew him in and about Bellefonte. It had been stated that he was in ill health, but his condition was not generally known to have been so serious as to warrant any alarm. He was born near Mechanicsburg, Sept. 25th, 1825, and for fifty years had followed the trade of a saddler in this place. He was quite prominent asa citizen in the early days of Bellefonte, but the latter years of his life he made almost a recluse of him- self and lived a solitary life, content to work alone at his trade and find his one diversion in music of which he was passion- ately fond. When Bellefonte’s famous old band was in its prime and filled engage- ments in many parts of the State Jacob Schrom was an alto player who knew few superiors. His wife preceded him to the grave sev- eral years ago, the following children sur- viving: David, Butler; Mrs. Sarah Watson, Osceola; Mrs. Elizabeth Ingram, near State College; Mrs. Samuel Skean, of Pottstown; Edward, of Pittsburg; Mrs. Diadem Gilbert, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Clara, of Bellefonte; Mrs. Martin Haines, of Philipsburg; Mrs. William Cowdrick, Niagara Falls,and John, on the steamship St. Paul. On Saturday evening the body was taken to the home of C. C. Shuey,on High street, and burial services were held there Sunday afternoon at 3:30. Rev. W. H. Blackburn, of Wilmore. Pa. and Rev. Allen Rhen, o this place, ous i i | DANIEL FLEISHER.—Daniel Fleisher, a highly respected citizen of Centre Hall, died early Saturday morning from a com- plication of diseases due to old age. From the Commemorative Record of Cen- tral Pennsylvania, the following is gleaned: ‘Mr. Fleisher was born June 12th, 1811, in Hanover township, Dauphin county. About 1823 his mother and her children came to live near Tusseyville. Before attaining his majority Mr. Fleisher was married to Miss Pollie Boone, of Berks county, who died in 1876. He was again married to Miss Mary A. Shirk in 1879. The following children survive the deceased: Jared, of Jamestown, New York; Mrs. William Jordan, of Adams county, Ohio; Isaiah, of Philadelphia; Dan- iel H., of Oklohoma; Catharine, at home, and Uriah, of Los Angeles, Cal.; William died in early manhood, and Mis. Julian Fleming, died several years ago in Centre Hall. One of Mr. Fleisher’s chief aims of life was the accumulation of wealth in which he was very successful, having begun life in poverty. He was a pleasant gentleman, honest and true, and bore the esteem of that entire community because of his unpretentious, christian life. pon the occasion of his last visit to Bellefonte, when he was in his 83th year, he seemed remark- ably active and at that time it seemed as though he had a number of years of useful life still ahead of him. Interment took place on Tuesday a. m., at the Tusseyville cemetery. Rev. S. H. Eisenberg officiated at the funeral services, the deceased being a member of the Re- formed church. ll li i Mrs. W. C. SNYDER.—The death of Mrs. W. C. Snyder, which occurred at her home in Altoona last Thursday afternoon, has been sincerely lamented. by the many friends and relatives she leaves in this county, the home of her birth and girl- hood. She was the youngest daughter of Fletch- er E. and Eliza G. Meek and was born at Pine Grove Mills, November 4th, 1867, and was consequently aged 31 years, 8 months and 23 days. Her sufferings were borne with the fortitude of a christian and the death summons found her ready. She was a pleasant, genial, true woman. Her husband survives her as also does one son, Clark M., aged 15 months. Her parents are also living as are these brothers and sisters: J. Emory, and S. Glenn, of New York; G. McClelland, of Altoona; Mrs. J. F. Harter, of State College; Mrs. Frank Musser, and Mrs. F. Houseman, of Altoona. The deceased was a member of the Eighth avenue Methodist Episcopal church, as well as an earnest teacher in the Sunday school. Her absence will be misseed by all who came in connection with her, not only in church work but as a neighbor and friend. The funeral took place on Saturday afternoon. The interment was made in Fairview cemetery. l ll I MARY E. SHAFFER.—On the 2nd inst at her home in Somerset Centre, Michigan, Mrs. Mary E. Shaffer passed quitely from this to the life to come. Mrs. Shaffer was the eldest daughter of the late Captain Griffith Davis, and was born in this place, fifty-one years ago. She grew to woman- hood ere and was well known to many of our people as a most industrious, worthy woman. About fifteen years ago her health failed and she went west thinking a change of climate would be beneficial. Shortly after reaching Michigan she met and mar- ried Mr. Wm. Shaffer, with whom she has lived a contented, happy life. Her moth- er, three sisters and a brother, all residents of this place, survive her. The remains which will be brought home for burial are expected to reach this place this Friday morning. Interment to be in Union ceme- tery this afternoon at 4 o’clock. ——Jacob Gehring, a brother-in-law of Alois Kohlbecker, of Mileshurg, was drown- ed at Cleveland, N. Y., on Sunday. He was formerly an employe of the Bellefonte glass works in this place and is survived by a widow and an adopted daughter. The particulars of the drowning are not known. DI1ED.—Mrs. Joel Tressler, of Nittany, died at her home on Wednesday, August 2nd, at 10 a. m., of cancer. Mrs. Tressler had been annoyed by a small ulcer on her foot which physicians pronounced to be cancer. During the spring months she he- gan medical treatment causing it to spread rapidly and one month ago her limb was amputated. The disease scattered through her entire system, however, and death end- ed her suffering. She was 51 years old and leaves a hus- band and a number of children, residing in different parts of the State, to mourn her loss. Remains were buried in Snyder- town cemetery. — eee ——DMis. Sara E. Garis, widow of Serg. Chas. Garis, who died at Chicamauga while serving with Co. B, 5th U. 8. Vols., is the first person in this section to receive a pen- sion on account of that war. News Purely Personal. —Mrs. James Reed, of Washington, D. C., is in town visiting relatives. —Dr. Andrew Lieb, of Bethlehem, is in town on a short visit to his old home. —Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, of south Spring street, has returned from Atlantic City. —Philip Beezer left for Pittsburg Sunday even- ing, there to buy a car load of cattle. —Rev. Thos. Levan Bickel, of the Reformed church, was a visitor in Lock Haven on Monday. —The Misses Agnes and Teressa Shields, of Logan street, are visiting Altoona and Tyrone friends. —DMiss Gertrude Hiltner, of Tyrone, was the guest of the Misses Armor, on east Linn street, over Sunday. —DMichael Karstetter, of Pleasant Gap, was in town on Saturday and dropped in for a pleasant chat with the writer. —Misses Daise M. Keichline and Mary E. Runkle left yesterday for a visit among friends at Selinsgrove and Sunbury. —Roy B. Mattern, of Milesburg, who holds a chair of Mathematics in Adelphi academy, Brook- lyn, N.Y;, is home on a visit to his parents. —Al and Robert Garman were arrivals from Tyrone on Sunday morning. They spent the day at their former home here. —Mrs. Mary Peters, with her two daughters, Anna and Tessie, are up from Philadelphia for a short visit to Cheney Hicklen and family. —Miss May Judge, the only daughter of D. Judge, general factotum of the Bellefonte Central railroad at Coleville, is in Philipsburg visiting friends, —Miss Grace Young, of Youngstown, Ohio, who spent several weeks with Miss Charlotte Yeager at the Brant house, left for her home yesterday afternoon. —Edward Praag and daughters, of Philadelphia, are at the Brockerhoff house for several weeks’ outing. Mr. Praag is connected with Dyers Trade Journal. —Chas. H. Wright, formerly connected with F. P. Blair & Co’s. jewelry store in this place but now located in Washington, I. C., is home on a short visit to his parents in Milesburg. —Geo. T. Brew, of Oakland, Md., was an arrival in town on Saturday evening and has been look- ing after some business mterests here and in Williamsport during the week. —DMiss Mary Hamilton, of east Howard street, is entertaining Miss Gertrude Snowden, of Phila- delphia. Thomas Hamilton Esq., of New York, is also sojourning at the Hamilton home. —Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kimport were in Mill- heim spending Sunday with former prothonotary and Mrs. W. F. Smith. Mr. Kimport was Mr, Smith's deputy during his official life here. —Owing to severely burned feet Winfield Lose, a zon of Scott Lose, has returned from Bellwood to his home in this place until he recovers from his injury, which was purely accidental. —Capt. Hugh S. Taylor and Lieuts. Geo. L, Jackson and Chas. Taylor, of Co. B, N. G. P,, went to Altoona Wednesday to participate in the election of a lieutenant colonel and two majors for the 5th. They returned last evening. —James Barry, so well known around Bellefonte as an amateur devote of the fistic art, is home visiting his mother in this place. At present he is shipping clerk for the Harrisburg rolling mill company and the gratifying report comes with him that he is getting along nicely. —Ferd Baum, who had been connected with Joseph Bros. & Co. and Aikens’ stores im this place for several years, left for Princeton, Indiana, on Monday, to take charge of a clothing store in which his brother Jacob is interested. —Mrs. Evelyn Rodgers, of North Allegheny street, is entertaining her cousin, Mrs. Harvey Musser and three children, from Akron, Ohio. Mrs. Morgan F. Medlar, of Allentown, a sister of Col. Coburn, is also visiting at the Rodgers home. —Mortimer O'Donoghue, who for years was superintendent of the Valentine iron works in this place, was an arrival in town from Philadel- phia on Saturday evening. He isin business now with his brothers in the manufacture of pearl goods and if looks are a criterion the business must be flourishing. He left for Niagara Falls on Tuesday evening. —George Harpster, of Hublersburg, who is scarcely at home long enough any more for all of his friends to get to see him, is off again. This time he is gone to Fritchton, Ind., for an indefi- nite stay. George is such a fine blacksmith that his services are in demand continually and he knows a thing or two about politics—good Demo- cratic polities. —George B. Johnson, of Beaver Falls, was an arrival in town last Friday, having come on to visit his family and parents in this place. Mrs, Johnson with their two little daughters and that fine boy John T. Jr., who happens to be named after both grandfathers and an uncle, have heen here for some time visiting at the Aikensand Johnson homes. They will return to Beaver Falls together. —James A, Feidler, of Williamsport, is in town writing up the industries about Bellefonte for the Philadelphia Journal of Commerce. Mr. Feidler is so well remembered in Bellefonte where he was postmaster and owner of the Keystone Gazette that his friends here are always glad to welcome him. To be sure he was an unrelenting, aggressive political enemy, but such an one as it was a pleas- ure and a credit to take issue with, —Col. James Milliken, of New York, is back irom his sojourn at Bedford Springs, fully con- vineced that that famous old resort has lost most of the charms it had when the State's most fa- mous men made it a rendezvous, The Colonel forgets that many of the old time celebrities who once gathered with him there are gone and that such types of men are rare in later generations. —Among the strangers who were here for the first of the third annual series of summer dances, which was given in the armory on Tuesday even- ing were: Miss Blanche Good, Lock Haven; Miss Grace Hiltner, Tyrone; Miss Anna Stewart, Pitts- burg, Misses Anna and Bertha Shafner, Philadel- phia; Miss Ruby Hale, Lancaster; Miss May Hale, Newark; Miss Stone, Pittsburg; Miss Orbison, Philadelphia; Thomas XK. Morris, Malcolm Stevenson, Tyrone; A. N. Diehl, State Col- lege; Ralph Good, Lock Haven; Gregg Curtin, Pittsburg; George Lippincott, Philadelphia; J. Norris Bogle, Howard; Loury Montgomery, Phila- delphia. ——A quartet of Logans who started down Bald Eagle fishing on Wednesday af- ternoon were Wm. T. Hillibish, J. M. Cunningham, John McGinley, Joseph Rightnour and George Nisely. They went for bass and were scheduled to be home last night, but as no one expected them to bring back anything larger than a helgra- mite or a stony-cat, it wasn’t thought nec- essary to have an extra wagon to meet them, and just there is where the boys were fooled. You have all read the account of the great Seaserpent that was seen along the Atlantic coast early this spring and how it frightened people away from resorts down there. Well, the terrible monster must have gotten into the Chesapeake bay and then run up the Susquehanna to Bald Eagle creek for the Logans have caught it. It was only after a frightful struggle with guns, axes and saw logs that they were able to still the mighty thing and they say that half of Bald Eagle valley had gathered on the banks of the stream hefore the battle was over. The serpent is now being em- balmed at the Logan engine house and will be one of the many startling exhibits at their great picnic at Hunter’s park on the 23rd. In talking of his thrilling expe- rience after getting home last night John McGinley said that when the monster lash- ed the waters with its great tail the spray flew over the valley so fast that the farmers for miles around thought they were having a wonderful phenomena of a thunder show- er from a clear sky. The serpent has a head like a W box, wings like a canary bird and a tail like a bear. —— ——On last Sunday nearly every church in Bellefonte had a stranger in its pulpit. Rev. Charles Wood, of Philadelphia, preached in the Presbyterian church, both morning and evening; Rev. D. S. Monroe, of Altoona, talked to the Methodists in an eloquent sermon in the morning; Edgar E. Brooks, of Tyrone, was in Rev. Geo. Brown’s pulpit at St. John’s Episcopal church; Rev. W. H. Blackburn, of Wil- more, preached to his old hearers in the United Brethren church; Dr. A. E. Gobble, president of New Berlin college and Rev. S. P. Remer, the presiding elder, were both officiating at the Evangelical church; and Rev. George Lescher, of Boalshurg, con- ducted the evening service in the Lutheran church. Qf pees ——Rev. L. K. Evans D. D., of Potts- town, will preach in the Reformed church of this place on Sunday next, both morning and evening at the usual hour for serv- ice. Doctor Evans is well known to many of our people as an eloquent and able di- vine and we have no doubt that a large and appreciative audience will greet his coming. > ——DBudd Gray, of Tyrone, who was graduated from The Pennsylvania State College several years ago, was married to Miss Eunice Bright, of Cleveland, Ohio, at 2:30 on Wednesday afternoon. The cere- mony was performed in London, England. Mr. Gray is residing in Paris as the foreign representative of a Cleveland electrical firm. —d- ——Atlantic City is the most popular Seaside resort in America and it is this point that is reached via Pennsylvania rail- road Seashore excursion on Thursday Aug. 10th without transfer through Philadelphia by purchasing tickets via the Delaware river bridge route. ——eee ——Ask your grocer for our flour. “Finest’’ and ‘Fancy Patent’ brands lead all others.—Phcenix Milling Co. Philadelphia Markets. The following are the closing prices of the Philadelphia markets on Wednesday evening. Wheat—Red.... 1@71Yy “ —No, 2 6T@674 Corn —Yellow 3915 ¢ —DMixed. 35 s@35%4 Oats, irene i 24@29Y5 Flour— Winter, Per Br'l. 2.251 ¢ —Penna. Roller... 3.00@s ¢¢ —Favorite Brands 4,30@4.50 Rye Flour Per Br'l ar Baled hay—Choice Timothy fe ee 4 Mixed Straw......... Bellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by the Puesix Mining Co. The following are the quotations up to six o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper goes press: Red Wheat, old......c..ccoerreeeeirmnnssnnnninnisieens 70 Red wheat, nev 65 Rye, per bushe 40 Corn, shelled, per 35 Corn, ears, per bushel.. 30 Oats, per bushel, new .. 25 Barley, per bushel........ 40 Ground Plaster, per ton.. 8 50 Buckwhent, per bushel ccic.iviissecosesnesisnsnnss 25 Cloverseed, per bushel... $3 00 to §5 00 Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co. Potatoes per bushel new.......... 40 Onions dures oe as 0 gs, per dozen.. To i] ound.. 7 Country Shoulder: 6 Sides... 6 Hams.. 10 Tallow, per pound 3 Butter, per potnQ.....c.iccrsirmssnnnssrernicissane . 15 The Democratic Watchman. Published every Friday morning, in Bellefonte, Pa., at $1.50 per annum (if paid 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. g 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.............. $5 (68810 Two inches... ol 1410115 Three inches.... 4101151 20 Suarer Column (5 inches alf Column (10 inches).. One Column (20 inches)..... Advertisements in special column 25 per cent. additional. 3 Transient advs. per line, 3 insertions Each additional insertion, per line Local notices, per line.. Business notices per li Job Printing of every k 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, Proprieto