Bellefonte, Pa., August 2, 1907. Cossssrox pests. —No communications pub. sned unless accompanied by the real name of he writer, THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——— ——Did you sce the eclipse of the moon last week? ——The Baum family are this week oc- cupying The Willows, up Spring creek. ——Mrs. Life Tate, of Logan street, was taken to the Bellefonte hospital on Wed- nesday. ——The aunual picnic of the Clinton county Gravgers will be held at Mill Hall next Tharsday, Angust Sth. ——Notwithstanding the rain yesterday morning quite a large crowd attended the Lutheran picnic at Hecla park. ——The brickiayers are now hard at work laying the walls of L. T. Muounson's new house on Allegheny strect. ——The Odd Fellows of Centre county will hold their annual pionic at Grange Park, Centre Hall, on Thuisday, August 20h. ——A. B. Williams & Bro, the name of the fim who bought C W. Crain's mer- cantile store at Port Matilda, taking charge of same yesterday. we —— Jacob From, of Centre Hall, ic again in trouble, though this time it is fivancial | trouble, as all his property, real and per- sonal, is tobe sold at sheriff's sale on Mon- day. ——Mrs. Charles Cruseand family moved on Wednesday from the Garmau honse on corner of Spring and High streets to the house owned by Mis. Satterfield, ou Bish- op street. ——Let everybody get in line now and work for the success of the big Centre and Clinton counties business men's picnic on August 20th, as it will be the next big gathering, —— A meeting will be held in the law | office of J. Thomas Mitchell Eon | east on a visit to his fatber, Rev. J. W. ad | ——If “A Citizen'’ will send his or ber wool. Of course everyoue wa: not speaker. 3 : : .: i limited pAstinge bad been made to Figs. | isters of Bellelonte. ing creck doring the trout fishing BEASOD | «ry Moers elected for the ensuing year quite a baneh of fishermen from Bellefonte | 0000 00. made the trip on Wednesday afternoon, | President, C. L. Grawley, Rebersharg ; loth to bave the season close without ove | . president, Rev Ww H Spangler more try at luring the speckled beauties. | Bellefonte ; accretaty. Rov Ww. H Sehut And try was about all it was as the whole |, Hall : Harare A. Zpkenbaeh { ler, C it y A ' punch iia nos bring Hugo usongs o ont | etlefoute : home department superintend- to make a hungry mau ball a breakfast. | ent, Lev. Ambrose M. Schmidt, Bellefonte; SUNDAY ScHOOL CONVENTION.—Atout He will enter opon bis duties at the latter | this and more or less discussion followed.” | inclined to take the same stond as the | News Parely Personal | m— | —~Joseph Lose, of Altoona, spent Sucday in | Bellefonte, | —James R. Hughe: made a business trip to | Hollidaysburg this week. —Miss Sophia Rockey, of Hublersburg, was a Bellefonte visitor on Wednesday. —~George Parker, of Philipsburg, was a Eelle- | fonte visitor over Tuesday night. —Mr. and Mrs, Warren Wood, of Spring Mills, are spending this week at Ocean City, N. J. ~Charles Harris, of Pittsburg, spent Sunday with his mother and sisters on Curtin street. —Andrew Dusling and daughter, Miss Rose, visite 1 Altoona friends several days this week. —~Mrs. C. D. Casebeer has been in Somerset four weeks spending her vacation with her par ents. —Misees Mine Getz and Cora Bathgate, of Le® mont, were in Bellefonte Tuesday on a shopping expedition. —~Walter Musser, of Scrasion, has been in Bellefonte this week visiting his sister, Mrs, Paul Sheffer. ~John Sommerville, of Pitisburg, was an over Sunday visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Potter, —H. E. Everhart and son returned home on Tuesday evening, after a weeks visit with friends in Panxsutawney, ~Mrs. Louis Grauer with her son and daughter and maid are atthe family cottage at Cape Msy for an indefinite time, —John Toaner Hargis, of Harrisburg, spent Sunday on a visit to his mother, Mrs. Henry Harris, on Howard street. > —Ed, Fleming came down from Allcona on Sunday and spent the day with bis parents, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Fleming. —Misses Roxy and Helen Mingle returned on Saturday from a months visit with friends in Pittsburg, East Brady and Greensburg. —Miss Marie White came up from Williams. port on Tuesday and will spend her vacation with her aunt and sisters at the Brockerhoff house, —Mrs. Dillon, a sister of Martin Cooney and Mrs, Mary Fox, is in from her Pittsburg home for an extended visit with her Bellefonte friends. —Rev. C. F. Gephart, of Newry, Blair county, was in Bellefonte Wednesday on his way for a visit with his mother,at his old home in Miilheim, —Rev, and Mrs. Will A. Wagner, of New Bloom- field, Perry county, have been visitors this week of Mrs. Wagner's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Hezekiah Hoy. -— Notwithstanding the fact that uv-| goo, of Centre Hall, and the various min- | lem ——1It is quite likely that in the near fo- | ture av application will be made by the give assurance that they would be able to | people of Spring and Walker townships for secure the services of Smith’s orchestra, of | @ state road from Bellefonte to Hecla park, Bellefonte, and the Knights Templar band, | 88 8 number of Bellefonters are behind a | of Williamsport. The various other com- movement to have euch a road built, Clinton county people have built a state | mittees reported progress in all matters | pertaining to their live of work. | road from Flemington to Miil Hall and | Secretary J. C. Merer reported that he | the proper thing to do would be to build bad received letters from Joel A. Herr, | the road all the way between Bellefonte | Jobn R. Thompson and W. H. Stevenson | avd Lock Haven. It would make one of | acknowledging the receipt of notices of the best driveways in the State. "their election as members of the association | ye | . i ——Some time ago we mentioned the aud all pledged their hearty support ib poo giat Col. Emanuel Noll’s bees bad belping to make the picuic a enccess. | swarmed considerably earlier this year i Fang Warfield stated that as the pic- | than he ever knew them to do before ; and { nic was to be held ou Taesday instead of | 4 0 reason to believe it was because [Slog be had svi) Heaney of secur. | they wanted to get to work storing honey vg from other roads all the cars that would | 0 op 11y a possible and also have as mach be veeded to move the crowd promptly aud comfortably, aud that he could prom- | ise that every effort would be put forth by | the railroad company to transport the peo- | ple back and forth on schedule time. | This practically completed the business And that they vot only got to work but kept at it the editor of the WATCHMAN is able to testily, as we were the recipient last Friday of two blocks of Mr. Noll's honey, an anoual donation he never fails room available for that purpose as possible, | caught by Darlin Hess, a member of the | Of the meeting and all that now remains Bloomsburg State Normal base ball team. | to do is to get together everybody acd do The fish was twenty-six inches in length ' your best to make this year's gathiug the and weighed six pounds and fifteen onnces. — Last Friday evening James K. Barn- hart, treasurer of the Bellefonte Chapter, Royal Arcanum, paid over to Mrs. Sarah A. Kline a check for $2,884.99 the amount of insurance carried by her husband, the late Harrison Kline, deceased, in that order. ——Compauny B, the bospital corps and the Fifth regiment bugle corps came home from their weeks camp at Tipton last Friday evening; and from the looks of their equipment the stories about camping in a sea of mud could uot bave been exaggerated. —— Bellefonters were withont the Phila- delphia newspapers on Sanday. The morn- ing train on which they are regularly brought to Bellefonte was almoss oue hour late and when it did arrive came without | the papers, having missed connection with the train on the main line. Now that the trout fishing season is over sportsmen will bave to turn their at. tention to fishing for bass as the only le- galized sport. But then it will be a ques- tion of only three months nati! hanting season begins and the supply of fish stories is surely big enough to last until then. ———Not to be outdone by the other fam- iliea convected with the Centre County Banking Company president and Mais, Thomas A. Shoemaker on Monday an- nounced the arrival of a daughter at their home that makes Mollie McCoy Shugert and Joho Cartin Jr. look like lilliputian | babies sure enough. The new Miss Shoe: maker weighed eleven pounds the day she arrived. ——f8even weeks ago today Edward T. Gregory was operated on for appendi- citis, in the hospital at Lock Haven. We are glad to say that he has completely re- covered and on Monday was discharged from the hospital and left for his home in Keysville, Va., where he will spend a month or six weeks recuperating ere re- tarniog to take up his work as agent for ¢he National Biscuit company. | biggest ever held. Remember the time, | Taesday, August 20th, and the place, | Heela Park. | Those present at Tuesday evening's | meeting were as follows: From Centre { county, A. C. Mingle, J. C. Meyer, Capt. |S. H. Bennison, Hard P. Harris, Jobn M. | Bullock, Hammon Sechler, J. Will Con- ley, Harry Otto, Francis Speer, Johu D. | Bourbeck, Sidney Krumrine, W. Gross | Mingle, Robert Cole, John I. Olewine, | DeLaun Stewart, Charles Mensch, Thomas | H. Harter, H. 8. Ray, George Beezer, E. | C. Tuten, F. E. Nagin‘y and Frank War- | field. From Clinton county, George W. | Mason, T. J. Smull, G. W. Fredericks, C. (F. Brown, A. L. Merrill, P. P. Rittman, | P. 8. Kift, J. A. Herr, D. H. Stoner, John | R. Thompson, U. A. Xander, C. H. Bress- | ler, R. H. Stewart, F. E. Harder, D. IL | MeNanl. eG DousBLY AFFLICTED.— The Hoghes family are just now undergoing a series of sad afilictions. Last week the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hughes died quite suddenly and hardly had the news of that sorrowfnl fact been received until word came from Milwaukee, Wis., that Donald, the seven year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Hughes, had been strickenwith par- alysis and was in a critical coudition, The case is n most remarkable one, as it is an extremely rare cocurrence for a child to become paralyzid and the attending phy- sicians assign but two causes for it. That the stroke was canted either by a hemor- rhage of the brain or a tamor. If the for- mer there is a chance of not only saving the boy's life but effecting a permanent cute. If the latter, there is practically no hope of a permanent cure and very little of saving his life. It isa strange afiliction aod the parents are to he deeply sympa- thized with. i —— Bellefonte gossips will be interested in learning that the Hon. Henry Gasoway Davis, of West Virginia, is about to erect in the town that bears bis name a church to the memory of his late wife. { to bestow. And it was just about the most delicious honey we have ever eateu, which also shows that the bees are uot ouly good workers but have been educated to exercise gnod judgment in the matter of selecting and distilling their sweets. ed ee —0Oun Wednesday of last week Willis Heewan, a Bohemian who worked on Thomas Beaver’s farm, hired a horse and buggy from Fraok Baitley's livery sta. ble to go to Milesburg. He took with him fourteen-year-old Ida Parks, a daughter of Mr. and Mra. James Parks, who live on Lamb street near the electric light works, and instead of going to Miles- burg they went to Philipsburg where they passed themselves off as man and wile. Not returning bome that evening Mr. Bartley instituted a search by telephone He had them arrested and on Friday Bart- ley aud policeman Jodon went over to that town, the former bringing his horse and buggy back while Jodon brought Heeman back as a prisoner and he is now in jail to answer to the charge of stealing the horse and buggy. ——Squire H. Laird Curtin bas this week been entertaining his [raternity brother, Charles Goecenhofler, of New York city, and ae they were all at Trinity col- lege at the same time Hugh Crider is heip- ing the Squire make is pleasant for bim. Just to show the young New Yorker what kind of a meal they serve in Peonsvalley Squire Cortin entertained an automobile stag party atthe Old Fort on Monday evening at which Mr. Goscenhoffer, Charles Clement, of Sunbury, Wilson Gephars, J. H. Robb, Maurice Jackson, Hugh Crider aud himself were present and every one nvanimously agreed that laudlod Ed ward Roger did not miss putting on the table one thing that was eatable. From the Old Fort the party went to Spring Mills to see landlord Warren Wood only to learn that he was attending campmeetiug orsome- thing else at Ocean Grove. They next visited Penn cave and took a night trip through that subterranean cavern, finally landing in Bellefonte about 10.30 o'clock the same evening. a and finally iocated the pair in Philipsburg. | | normal department superintendent, Rev. G. W. Mecllnay, Spring Mills ; primary de- partment superintendent, Mis. William | Shawley, Yarnell. 1 pl mma RELINING THE BELLEFONTE FURNACE. —Qu Wednesday of last week the Belle. fonte furnace was blown ont for the par- pose of relining the stack. As soou as it | was cool enough a big force ol men were | put to work tearing out the old lining and | by Tuesday of this week they bad com- | pleted the job aud the bricklayers began | laying the brick for the new lining. It will take about one month to complete all | the repairs needed and get everything in | shape to put the furnace agaio in blast. In | the meantime all the workmen will be giv- | en steady employment so that the briel | close down will not affect any of them. This is the first time the furnace bas | been relined since it was blown in on Oc- | tober 20th, 1904, a ron of two years aud | nine months, aud in that time in the neigh- | borbood of ope hundred and fifty thousand | tons of pig iron have been cast. >. | | CELEBRATES SEVENTY-EIGHTH BIRTH- pAY.—On Wednesday of last week the children and grand-children of Mr. George S. Gray gathered at his comfortable home | near Stormstown and helped him celebrate | the seventy-eighth anniversary of his birth. | His brother, Mr. Samuel Gray with his | wile, of Martinsburg, with a pumber of | friends and neighbors were also present aud the day was passed moss pleasantly by all. Mr. Gray was the recipient of many useful presents. ——y == | CORNER STONE Latp.—The coruer stone of the new Grace Lutheran church at State College was laid with impressive services at 10.30 o'clock on Sunday morn. ing. Rev. J. I. Stonecypher, of Boalshurg, the pastor in charge, preached the ser- mon, which proved to be a very able dis- | course. He was assisted in the services by Rev. C. T. Aiken, of Selinsgrove. The building of the church will be pushed as fast as possible to an early completion. a —~Miss Haldeman, of Harrisburg, will be in | Bellefonte Saturday on hor way from Bedford Springs. While in Bellefonte Miss Haldeman will be with Miss Lion. —Mrs. E. 8. Dorworth and her daughter, Mis- Bessie will next week go to Ardmore to spend a month or five weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dorworth. —Mrs. M. I. Gardner and son Harold left yesterday for Warren where they will spend a few days then go to Lake Chautauqua, N. Y,, for a two weeks stay. —Mrs. Smith with her children of Hagerstown, Maryland, is with her mother, Mrs. Patsy Stewart. | Miss Margaret Stewart, of Wilkesbarre, will join her sister this week. —Mrs. D. L. Auchmuty, nee Miss Clara Shrom, of Albany, N. Y., with her niece, Miss Catharine Haines, of Rossiter, Pa., are guests of Mrs. George Ingram, on east Lamb street. —Mzrs. John Bentley with her daughter and son, of Pittsburg, are expected in Bellefonte shortly, and while here will be the guests of Mrs. Bentley's mother, Mrs. Yeager. —John and Calvin Huss, of Jeanette, Pa., spent several days at Tipton last week and while there attended the National Guard encampment. They are fine gentlemen and are formerly of Centre county. Calvin is agreat singer and generally travels with a minstrel show. He will start out with Dumont's minstrels this fall. _- —Mr. and Mrs, Joseph D. Mitchell, of Burn. | ham, have been visitors this week at the home of | Mr. and Mrs. J, Thomas Mitchell, on east Linn | street: | —=Will C. Rowe returned on Monday from a ten days trip during which he took in the soldier's i encampment at Tipton and visited friends in Pittsburg. —~Misses Lizzie and Sadie Lambert, after a very pleasant two week's visit with friends in Altoona and Belletonte, will leave for their home in Waterbury, Conn., to-day. —Rev, C. T. Aiken, president of the Susque- haona University at Selinsgrove, has been visiting | Centre county friends for a week or more and | was in Bellefonte on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Gross Mingle with their little son, of Centre Hall, and Mv. Mingle's sister, Mrs. Emory Hoy, of Philadelphia, were in Belle. founte a few hours on Tuesday afternoon. - Durbin Gray, who is attached to a corps of civil engineers surveying io New York State, isin Bellefonte spending his vacation with his mother at the Dr. Laurie home on Spring street. —Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Foster,of Philadelphia, and Mr. and Mrs. Will Foster, of Lewisburg, were at State College the past week the guests of their brother and wife, Hon. and Mrs. Robert M. Fos- ter, —Mr. and Mrs. David Boozar, of Centre Hall, passed through Bellefonte on Wednesday on their way for a trip to Niagara Falls, Buffalo and New York city; expecting to be away three weeks or longer. —Mrs. James Pierpont, who spent the past two weeks in Bellefonte left Wednesday for Philadelphia, expecting to go the latter part of the week to Delaware Water Gap for the remainder of the summer, ~Misses Anna McLaughlin, Marie and Agnes Gerrity and Catharine Cooney returned on Fri- day from a visit with friends in Tyrone : having gone up the Wednesday previous so as to attend the soldier's encampment at Tipion, —Congressman Charles F. Barclay with his wife and daughter and two {ries ds were in Belle- fonte on Thursday of last week ; being on an automobile trip in a White steamer from Atlantic City to their home in Sinnemalianing. ~The venerable John T. Fowler, who is a man closely associated with the development of Taylor township, in the upper Bald Eagle valley, came down from his home at Fowler station to transact business in Bellefonte on Tuesday. —D. Al Irvin, who left Bei'efonte several months ago and went to West Virginia to look after some lumbering interests he had there, has been at his home near Jacksonville asd among his friends in Howard for a week or more ; look: ing as hale and hearty as ever. —Miss Lula Ulrich and Miss Katherine Meyer have been in Bellefonte a portion of the week interested in the Sunday school convention as delegates from Penn Hall. Miss Ulrich and Mies Meyer will go from here wo State College, where they expectto visit before returning home. —Mr. and Mrs, George M. Mallory were calied to Altoona on Monday on account of the death of the former's Lrother, J. Cal Mallory, and then decided to spend the week visitiog their relatives in the Mountain city. Jacob Knisely, ot State College, has been in charge of the Mallory biack- smith shep during the week. —Miss Carrie Bayard, a teacher ia the Jum- monville soldier's orphan's school, is at her home here for a brief vacation. She was accompanied to Bellefonte by Major Waiters, a military in- structor in the school. Miss Sarah Bayard, a clerk in Bash & Bull's store at Williamsport, is also home for a brief vacation. —Hon. Benjamin Franklin Keller, United States circuit court judge located at Bramwell, West Virginia, was anarrival in Bellefonte last Saturday morning and was a guest of his nephew, Harry Keller, at the Country club over Sunday. Oa Monday afternoon he left for Boalsburg on a visitto his sisters. Judge Keller at one time was a teacher in the Bellefonte public schools. —L. C. Godfrey, who has been physical diree- tor at the Young Men's Chrisilan Association sigee the new building was opened almost twenty months ago, left on Tuesday for his home in Buffalo, N. Y., where he will spend a few weeks ere going to Batavia, N. Y., to accept a similar position in the Y. M. C. A. there. He was accom panied by his mother, who had been here for a week visiting him, —F. D. Ray,proprietor of the hotel New Albert, in New York was in Bellefoute from Saturday until Tuesday visiting his wife at the Brockerhoff house. On Wednesday landlord and Mrs, H. 8. Ray with their two children, Sara and Horton 8. Jr., Mr. Ray's mother and Maurice A. Jackson left for the Thousand Islands, N. Y., where with Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Ray and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Ray Jr., they have taken a cottage for the month of August. During landlord Ray's absence artist Marcus A. Landsy will assist io the management | of the Brockerhoff house. ' ~—Mrs. Harry Kelley, of Snow Shoe, was a Bellefonte visitor Wednesday. Mrs, Jones, of Chestnut Hill, is the guest of Mrs. Jonathan Harper, on Linn street. —Miss Virginia Rapp is entertaining her sis- ter, Mrs. H. C. Yerger, of Blairsville, ~Mr. and Mrs. John Gallagher and child, of Pittsburg, are visiting friends io this place. —-Mrs. Gilmore, of Pittsburg, is visiting her sister, Mrs, Margaret Shilling, of Howard street —Miss Helen Smith left Saturday of last week for a two weeks stay with friends in Philipsburg. —Miss Mary Valeutine, of Baltimore, is the guest of Mrs, Murray Andrews, on Allegheny sireet, —Mre. J. Will Conley and daughter, Miss Nellie,have returned from their visit with friends in Olio. ~Miss Mary Mosebarger left for her home in Clearfield on Saturday after a year's residence in this place. —Mrs. William McClellan, accompanied by her daughters Grace and Sarah, spent Sunday with her son Tom in Altoona. ~Misses Mary and Stella Cooney left the laller part of last week for a month's visit with friends in Bellwood and Altoona. —Mrs, Jack Norris, of Altoona, with her little son Bamuel, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Rine, in this place. —Walter Scheib with his sistor Miss Annie, of Pittsburg, are visiting with Miss Mary Grimm, at her home on Thomas street, —J. Will Conley is entertaining his brother’ James K. Conley, of Freeport, Ill, who is cast for the first time in six years, —Mrs, Aaron Bolich and her niece, Miss Ida Klinger, were guests of postmaster George Young, at Nittany, over Sunday. ~—Mrs. MacNeal and her son, of Haddonfield, N. J, will be in Bellefonte the latter part of the week as guests of Mrs. Wilkinson, —Mr, and Mrs. Frank Shaughensey, of Pitis- burg, are in Bellefonte visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Shaughensey Jr. — Mrs. Annie Caswelland her daughter Mildred, of Coatesville, came to Bellefonte Thursday and are the guests of Mrs, Miles A. Kirk. ~Mrs. J. C. Harper and daughter Helen lefy last Friday morning for a three week's visit with Mr. rnd Mrs, Clarence Harper at Lynn, Mass, —D. W. Schnarrs, of Osceola Mills, was in town the latter part of last week and he says Bellefonte is just about as hot as any other place these days. ~Mrs. Elmer E. Davis and two children, Isabel and Gerald, are in Philipsburg to spend several weeks at the home of Mrs, D. H. Thomas, —-W. H. Kramer is away on a ten days trip, visiting his daughters, Mrs. Arthur Pennington, at Braddock, and Mrs, W. W. Rishel, at Swiss- dale. —Rev, Norman Stockett preached his last ser- mons in the Episcopal church on Sunday and on Monday left for his regular pastorate in Couder- sport, —Will Kalz is away on a trip to New York and Boston and during his absence Mrs. Katz and son Joe are spending the time with the Baums up at The Willows. —After spendiag ten days at their old home in Howard and visiting friends in this place Mr. and Mrs, W, H. Gardoer left for their home in Pittsburg the latter part of last week. —Lieutenant Nora Weaver, who was in charge of the local branch of the Salvation Army only about ten days, left on Wednesday for Pottstown to assume charge of the organization in that place. —Mrs. Harvey Yarrington and (wo children, of Richmond, Va., were arrivals in Bellefonte last Saturday and will spend the summer st the home of her uncle, Mr. A. V. Miller, en east Linn street, —Rev, and Mrs, James B, Stein and family wily leave on Monday to spend their vacation at Ocean City. They will be joined in Harrisburg by Mr. and Mrs. Shearer and their sojourn will be at the cottage of Mrs, Stein's brother. —Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Judge have been spending this week in Philipsburg visiting Mrs. Judge's mother, Mrs. Smith. During their ab- sence Frank Crosthwaite, the heavy manon the college end of the Bellefonte Central railroad, has Judge's place as freight agent out at the Scales. —Rev. and Mrs, J. Allison Platts left on Wed- nesday ou a month's vacation trip. They went direct to Philadelphia where Rev. Platts will preach in the Tabernacle church on Sunday. From there they will go to Atlantic City for a week then make a trip through New York State, visiting the place where the reverend first began topreach and ending up witha trip along the great lakes, —When sheep hurdle together and keep their noses close to the ground, especially if the ground is loose, it indicates attacks from the gad fly, which deposits its eggs in the uostrils, caosing what is known as grub in the head. Keep the nostrils of the sheep well smeared with wood tar. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by Sechler & Co. Potatoes per bushel... vives rere. Seaton «Ww Duious assess forms . gg, per dozen..... 15 Lard, per pound..... 11 Country Shoulders. 10 Sides... 10 Hams. 15 Taliow, per . 8 Butter, per pound. 18 Rellefonte Grain Market. Corrected weekly by C. Y. Waaxea, The following are the quotations up tc siz o'clock, Thursday evening, when our paper goes Fess : heat Rye, per bushel..uuiiciiniiinn. Corn, shelled, per bushel............ Corn, ears, per bushel.....iicimmsnicisinns Oats old and new, per bushel. Barley, per bushel............. Groun T, per ton.. Buckwheat, per hel... Clove: Seens nse aeanaiey rseed, per bushel... Timothy seed per bushel Phiiadelpnia Markets, are the closing prices of The followin, fa markets on Wedneaday - the Philadelph evening. Wheat—Red........uue.. a — ———— “ No.2. Corn —Yellow Mixed new. Flour— Winter, Per Br'l. —Penua. Roller... “ Favorite Brands Rye Flour PerBr'l Baled ha —~Cholce .- 1 Mixed “1 The Democratic Watchman. Published every Fi in Bellefonte Pa., at $1.00 per annum ( in advance) $1.50, when not paid in and $2.50 If not paid before the expiration of the year; and nc paper will be discontinued until al PRs except at the option of the publisher. Papers will not be sent out of Centre county un less paid for in advance. A fberal discount is made to persons advertls ing by the quarter, half year, or year, as follows mornin # SPACE OCCUPIED ‘Sm [om | iy One inch (12 lines this type............./8 5 3 8 |§ 10 TWo INCHeR......ccerisscrrrivanes . 7 5 16 Three inches, ... cummins of 18 | $8 Quarter Column (5 inches)... .} 20 88 alf Column (10 inches)..... " s- 20 | 8 | 80 One Coltmn (20 INChes)unicniierssene.| 38 | 88 | 10