Bellefonte, Pa. October 23, 1908. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Epiror EE ——————————————— Teams or Susscrirriox.—Until further notice his paper will be furnished to subscribers at the ollowing rates : Paid strictly in advanes........wne $1.00 Paid before expiration of year......... 1.50 Paid after expiration of year.......... 2.00 Democratic Presidentinl Electors. For President : WiLLiaM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. For Viee President : Joux W. EN, of Indiana. Presipesrial Evcrons. Josern P. McCuLrex, Ar Lanar { Avsenr J. Base. DISTRICT ELECTORS, 1. Daniel F. Carlin 17. Cyrus C, Gelwicks, 2. Ed. B. Seiberlich, 18. George D. Krause, 8. Aaron G. Kravse, 19. Samuel M. Hoyer, 4. Clarence Loeb, 20. Henry Wasbe 8. James T. Nulty, ini Hawley Saf 6. Michael J. Howard, 22. John K. Hoi . 7. John C. Ferron, #3. John F. Pauley, 8. Jno. H. Danenhower, 24. Howard 8.M all, 9. Louis N. Spencer, . Robert X. Brown, 10. Alex. W. kson, 26. Howard Mutehler, 27. Wm. Lewis Neal, 28. Fred. A. Shaw, 20, Henry Meyer, 30. Wesley 8. Guffey, 31. Dennis J. Boyle, 32, Casper P. Mayer, 11. John T, Flannery, 12. Oliver P. Bechtel, 18. Harry D. Schaeffer, 14. Charles A. McCarty, 15. John Franklin Stone, 16. John I. Welsh, - Democratic State Ticket. For Judge of the Superior Court, WEBSTER GRIM, of Bucks County. Democratic County Ticket. For Congress: W. HARRISON WALKER, of Bellefonte. For Assembly: J. CALVIN MEYER, of Bellefonte. For Sheriff: FRED F. SMITH, of Rush township. For Register: G. F. WEAVER, of Gregg township. For Recorder: F. P1ERCF MUSSER, of Millbeim. For Treasurer . J. D. MILLER, of Walker township. For County Commissioners: C. A. WEAVER, of Penn township. J. L. DUNLAP, of Spring township. For Auditors: J. W. BECK, of Marion township. Joux L. CoLg, of Walker township. For Coroner: Dr. P. 8. Fisuggr, of Walker town- ship. He Is a Farmer. Under the caption ‘‘An Extensive Farm- er” the Gazette last week tried to make capital ous of the size of FRED SMITH'S farm in Rosh township. It was a mali: cious, contemptible attempt to belittle a good man by saying that be bas only 19 acres of laud in bis farm. What matters it if he has only one acre or really is a tenant farmer ; that is his occupation sll the same. The size of a man is not taken by his worldly possessions and is is next to a cer- tainty that if FRED SMITH owned a farm of two bundred acres this same Gazelle would be holding him up to the voters as already too well off to be asking anything at their hands. But with its characteristic anéiruthfolvess it tries to make the public believe that Mr. SMITH'S farm is only a blind. A letter from the candidate for Sheriff puts the lie back to its originator as follows : Philipshurg, Pa. Oct. 19, 1908. Editor Democratic WATCHMAN, Dear Sir: The labored and persistent attempts to find something to attack me on, since I have been a candidate for the high office of Sheriff. culmivated in a most malicious lie in the Keystone Gazette last Friday. That paper sarcastically intimates that a man tilling only nineteen acres of land can not be regarded as a farmer and says that I own no more than that in Rush township. The editor of the Gazefte knows that I have thirty-six acres and that, by bard work and care, I have ancoeeded in clearing off a listle farm from which I have been making a livelihood, The Gazetle is guilty of deliberate lying when it says that I received $700 as road master of Rosh township. The books show that for the year 1906 I received $130 and for 1907 I received $125, making a total of $255, stead of $700, for my services. Will you kindly refute this untruthful attack upon me. Yours respectfully, F. F. SMITH. Thus you will see what a pitiable cause the Gazette must have when it has to resort to this kind of argumentation. It knows that Mr. HURLEY bas not been a resident of Centre county long enough to be enti- tled to the high office of Sheriff. It knows that he is not the kind of a man who should be Sheriff, even if he had lived here longer. It knows that FRED SMITH was born and raised in Centre county and bas worked his small farm in season and at hauling at other times, as 80 many small farmers do. It knows that be is an honorable, upright man. And, knowing all these things, it resorts to the most despicable means at its command to try to stem the tide that is running xo strong for Mr. SMITH. Yes, Mr. SMITH is a farmer, one of the kind the people of Centre county are proud of and his election would secure us a splen- did Sheriff. ——— Youn wouldn't trust your business in incompetent hands. The business of the Recorder’s office ie your business, It is not the county’s business. It is yours, be. cause it deals directly with yon and every legal document you have to have recorded you or your dawyer go to that office to have it done. You can : offord to take a chance on & mistake being made that might cost you the title to the very house you live in GEORGE F. WEAVER, The one-armed school teacher of Gregg township who seeks your support for F. PIERCE MUSSER, Edisor of the Millheim Journal and can- didaste for Recorder of Centre County. Vote for him because he is better the office ADDITIONAL LOCALS. STROHECKER.—Samuel Strobecker, who died in she Bellefonte hospital on Thaurs- day afternoon of lass week, was oue of the best known men of Miles township. As stated in last week's WATCHMAN, he came to Bellefonte on Thursday, October 8th, to attend the Centre county fair. While on the fair grounds be was taken sick and, though be wished to be taken home, the doctors advised him to go to the hospital which he did. Is soon developed that he was a very sick man with double bronebial pneamonia and though everything possible was dope he lived just one week. Deceased was a uvasive of Miles town- ship and was sixty three years and six days old. He followed farming during his earlier life but a number of years ago re- tired, sold his farm and purchased a home in Rebersharg where he has lived since; devoting his time to varions light ocoupa- tions. He was a member of the Lotheran church and a consistent christian geotle- man. Io poiities he was a Demoorat and equipped to fill | the office of Register. | shan his oppouen. An Appeal to Docent Citizenship. There is nothing in the history of Centre county to warrant the helief that her citizens are not of ordiuary intelligence. In sruth they are above the ordinary. The county is among the older ones in the State and for more than au bundred years she has held an enviable reputation for the culture and refinement of her sons and daughters. Centre county has contributed men to the public life of the State and Nation whose names will he perpetuated as long as public institutions and government lasts, Tbe time has come when all the counties of the State and all the States of the Union are awakening to the call and the crying need of better public men. For ours, the old men who brought prominence to us, have gone and unless we are careful we will soon lose even the prestige their illustrious works have given us. The question that confronts us now is the one of doing the best we can to keep Centre county above the muck and mire of log-rolling, gralt-seeking politicians. It is one of having our county represented in legislative halls by clean, able men whose lives will command respeot and whose voices will compel attention. It is not a personal question, nor is it one much of party. It isa question of sending men to Harrishurg whose character and ability are in keeping with what you would imagine the Representative from a district within which is located the State’s only great institution of learning should be. A dietriot whose citizenship has always been regarded as of the highest type. A district where schools and ohiurches have beeu uplifting for more than a century. In less than two weeks the voters of Centre county will be called upon to choose a Representative in Harrisburg. The choice muss be one of the two men named by the two great parties. We can scarcely eay thas, either, for we firmly believe, and the faots justify the belief, that the better element of the Repablican party is not responsible for the nomination of their candidate. Oo the one side stands J. C. MEYER, a lawyer of ability, an orator of pleasing address and a man whose life will bear the closest scrutiny. On the other side stands R. B. TAYLOR, a man without a scintilla of qualification. If he possessed a single characteristio to rec- ommend him, in all honor, we would mention it here, because he is so atterly unfitted for the office that we wonid be glad if there were some one thing to ex- plain why any reasonable man should advocate his candidacy. Understand that this is said without the slightest malice, because, personally, our relations with Mr. TAYLOR have always been friendly aod we hope they always will be. Bat we feel it our duty to try to persuade the voters of Centre county to save them- selves the humiliation of sending a man to Harrisburg who has no conception of the honor of the office and no equipment to fill it if he had. We might till columns of this paper with truthfal stories of Mr. TAYLOR'S do- ings and words thas woald sound to you so impossible and preposterous that yon could scarcely give them crvdence ; yet if you were to come to Bellefonte, even for a day, you could learn enough [rom any disinterested source to convince yon that most anything we woald say would not be saying enough. Bat the object of this article is not to parade Mr. TAYLOR'S lile before the public but to appeal to the decent citizenship of the county to conserve that decency. We lear that thers are many who won't comprehend the danger, many who think his chances of election so remote that they won't aronse themselves to pre- vent it. So let us warn you that there is danger. The WATCHMAN was the only paper in Centre county that predicted his nomination and maintained throughout the spring primary contest that he would not he beaten. Mark you! We said “would not.” He could have heen hut the very reason he was not is the reason that sounds the warning now. The class that attaches iteell 0 Mr. TAYLOR is the class that stops at nothing in politics. Is works while the innocent souls who talk of purity and honor in public life are forgetting even to go to the polls. His class is the class that when the roll is called by she watcher on election day every name is marked present or voted. This is the class that won the nomina- tion for him and this is the class that will win the election for bim unless the oth- er class is up an: doing. Do you want to vote for PENROSE for the United States Senate when you know what you do about his gang and the State capitol ? If you do vote for Mr. Tay- LOR, because be will not deny that be intends voting for PENROSE and his friends are boasting that PENROSE money is to come in to carry the county for him, Do you want to vote for a man who is peither Republican nor Demoorat and always anything that bas the most in it for bimeelf? If you do, vote for Mr. TAYLOR. You don’t want to do this, however, so why ask the question more? Yon want to vote for Mr. MEYER. Your conscience tells you it is your duty to do so and if you are an honorable man you will follow the diotates of your conscience. Of course yon have heard stories about Mr. MEYER, and hecanse we are hon- est and sincere in this matter and want you to understand that we are vot trying to deceive any one we do toe nesitate to ask yon: Were they not about invest- ments in which some people lost money ? We know all of them, but what have they to do with his fitness for the Legislatare. Mr. MEYER ‘merely had laith in some business enterprises and thought he was doing his friends a kindness when he advised them to invest. He profited nothing through any of them and probably lost more than any of his friends. It was not his fault that the mines at Joplin, Mo., that had run wohderfully rich ores for months should turn so lean ae to be unprofitable. He merely did what honest men are doing every day. Upon the advice of friends others put thousands of dollars into the old Bellefonte Gas and Steam works, into the glass factories, into the furnaces, into the look works, into other industries right here at our very doors, all of which failed, yes there was no one in particular to censure. Then why censure Mr. MEYER for something that he had ahsolutely no personal way of preventing. Even if you do censure him, again we insist that that has nothing to do with your duty in November. He stars ont preeminently the superior man to Mr. TAvLOR, wonderfully well fitted for the duties of a Legislator and so constitut- ed that his ambition would be above being the creature of such a boss as PEN. ROSE. ‘Won't you do semething? Won't you talk to your honorable neighbor about this question ? Won't you work from now to election day to send the better man to represent you in Harrisburg ? I S———— yet you take that chance if you vote for Brows, Already his friends realizing be the responsibility of a clerk and eepe- that he ie not competent to run the office are explaining that he can hire a man to do it. This is the most pitiable acknowledg- ment that we have ever heard in a contest for county officers. Of course he would oially when bis chief knew nothing about the work himself. No, no, Centre county can stand for none of this when it nomes to keeping her court records and she will put F. Pi1gRcE MUSSER in that office, a man who has the education and training to make one of the best Recorders she has have to hire a man to do it but what would | ever bad. always a staunch supporter of his party aod its principles. Ou Thursday morning be realized that death was near and had the physicians | send for "Squire W. J. Karlin to come to ! Bellefonte and write his will but be died | betore that gentleman reached here. He | came to Bellefonte, however, and took | charge of the remains, accompanying them | to bis late bome in Rebeishurg Friday | morning. Deceased bad no children and | is survived only by his wile. The foneral was beld on Sanday after- noon and was very largely attended. Rev, H. C. Bixler, she deceased’s pastor, had charge of she services and be was assisted by Revs. Wetzel, Snyder and Dabbe. In- terment was made in the Rebersburg ceme- tery. | GARNER. —Miss Ella Garner died at her bome at State College on Tuesday morn- ing. She had been sick for three years or more and during that time underwent an operation in the Bellefonte hospital and one in the Allegheny hospital, which, how- ever, did not result in her recovery. Illas she was she hore her suffering with remark- able patience and fortitude and was always cheerful and even hopeful of recovery up until the day preceding her death. Her sunshiny nature and lovable disposition were not only emblematic of ber true christian character but an inspiration toall with whom she was thrown in contact to a nobler and better life. And even though her death isa source of deepest sorrow to her family and friends they can find con- golation in the fact that she has simply been called up higher—her spirit gone to the God who gave it. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Joho Garner and was born and raised in College township. Her mother died some years ago and surviving her are her father, two brothers, John and Edward, and swo sisters, Miss Margaret, head nurse at the Bellefonte hospital, and Miss Sosan, of State Coiiege. The foneral was held at ten o'clock yesterday morning. Rev. C. W. Snavely, of the Methodist church, and Rev. A. A. Black, of the Reformed chuich, Boalsbury, officiated at the services, In- terment was made in the Pine Hall cem- etery. | | BucHER.—Jadge Joseph C. Bucher, of Lewisburg, who for twenty years was judge of the Snyder—Union counties judi- cial distriot, died lass Saturday night alter two week’s illness, He wae aged seventy- two years and was quite well known in Centre county ae he frequently presided over the courts in this place. He was ad- mitted to the har in 1858 and was elected to the beneh in 1870. He served two terms and was defeated for his third term in 1890 by Judge McClure. In 1894 he was nom- inated by the Democrats for Congressman- at-Large but declined on the plea of profes- sional business. Since his retirement from the bench he has been attorney for the Pennsylvania railroad company in Ubion county. He is sarvived by three sous and one daughter. A number of the members of the Centre county bar attended she fun- eral which was held on Wednesday after- noon. | i MATTERN.— Mis. Sarah Martin Mattern, well known to many residents of Buffalo Run valley, died at her home in Philadel- phia last Thursday afternoon. She was a daughter of Daniel and Eliza Martin and a descendant of the well known Gray fami- ly, of this county. The remains were taken to Martinsburg, Blair county, where the faneral was held on Sanday. Mrs. Mattern for years before her last illness had been very closely associated with the charity work of Philadelphia, her time being mostly spent in the interest of the soldier's and sailors’ home in that city. She also was recognized as ove of the work. ers among the Chinamen of her distriot. | | BeacH,—Miss Fanoie Beach, a niece of Rev. R. Crittenden and who has frequent- ly visited in Bellefonte, died at the home of her uncle, R. J. Stone, of Bradford, last Saturday. She will be remembered by many people of Bellefonte as a very charm- ing and lovable woman. The funeral was held on Tuesday the remains being taken to Mootrose, Pa., the home of her birth, for burial. | KyLe.—Mrs. Hugh Kyle died at the home of her son Andrew, at Charter Oak, Huntingdon county, on Sanday, of paraly- sis. She was about seventy-eight years old and is survived by two daughters and four sons, one of the latter being Henry Kyle, of Gateshurg. The faneral was held on Tuesday afternoon, interment being made at Mooresville. | died shorely afterwards. death of Benjamin Bradley on Monday evening was quije a shock to the many friends who had scen him around as usual that morning. Mr. Biadley had the con- tract for repairing Ss. John's Episcopal chuch and went to work Monday morning at the usual sime, thongh during the fore- noon he complained of a pain in the chest. As noontime he ate a hearty dinner, then iaid down on the couch to take a ress. Aboat four o'clock he became violensly ill and before the family could summon a physician he was dead. Acate indigestion was undoubtedly she cause. Deceased was born in Gloucestershire, England, February Sth, 1840, heuce was 68 years, 8 month« and 11 days old. He with his wife came to America thirty-five years ago and came direct to Bellefonte, making this their home ever since. He was a carpenter by trade and from working as his profession by the day he became a con- tractor and for years has been regarded as one of Bellefonte's leading contractors and master carpenters. He wasa member of 8t. John’s Episcopal church and a man of the highest integrity and character. He kuoew most every man, woman and child in Bellefonte and numbered cach and all as his friend. He issarvived by his wile and the following children : Mrs. George P. Bible, of Philadelphia ; Mrs. J. A. Riley, of | Bradford ; John W. and Benjamin, of Phil- adelphia ; Robert T., of Bradford, and Miss Mary, at home. Rev. John Hewitt officiated at the foneral which was held at two o'clock yesterday afternoon, interment being made in the Union cemetery. | | HENDRICKS. —By a fall of clay in the mines of the Eagle brick works, near Flem- ington, on October 10th, David Hendricks, of Mill Hall, was so badly injured that he He was born in Beech Creek township, Clinton coanty,and was 68 years, 4 months and 3 days old. Sarvivivg him are his widow and eight children,{four sons and four daughters, as follows: William, near the Eagle brick works; Joseph, of Castanea: Antice, near the Eagle brick yard; Mrs. Eva Lakner, near Eagle brick works; Misses Emma, May, Eleanor and Robert, at home; also four grandchildren, the oldest thirty-eight years and the yonugest ten vears. He also leaves the following brothers aud sisters: Mary Tabordale, of Clearfield; Sarab Bones, of Beech Creek; James, of Sebula; Harry, of DuBois; Fravk, of Pittsburg; Auston, of Hicks Ran; William, of Hicks Run; George, of Eagleville; Mrs. Laura Eckert, of State College; Mrs. David Kanes, of Eagleville. He served a term in the Civil war and was a member of the G. A. R. of Blanchard. Rev, M. C. Frick of Mill Hall, conducted the services at the funeral which was held on October 13th, interment being made in the Cedar Hill cemetery. | | TAYLOR—Thomas Taylor, one of the best known colored residents of Bellefonte, died on Thursday morning of last week at his home on Penn Street. He had been sick for some time and several months ago underwent an operation in the Bellefonte hospital without affording him any relief. county, and was almost seventy years of age. Daring the first two years of the Civil war he served as hody servant to General Gallagher. In the fall of 1863 he enlisted as a private in company D, Second United States colored infantry, and served until the close of the war. He came to Bellefonte shortly after the war and lived here the balance of bis life. His wife is bis only survivor, The funeral was held on Saturday afternoon, interment being made in the Union cemetery. | | | MILLER.—After an illness of ten days Cyrus Miller died at the home of his broth- er, J. H. Miller, at Rock Springs, on San- day morning. He was 62 years, 2 months ami 7 days old and is survived by his aged mother and the following brothers and sis- ters: Mrs. R. M. Wolfe, of Woodward ; Mrs. J. W. Keller, Linden Hall ; Mrs. J. H. Williams, Pine Grove Mills ; Mrs. J. B. Crawford, Freeport, Iil. ; John H., Rock Springs ; Howard, of Rebersburg ; Charles, of Williams, Iowa ; James, of Lena, Iii, aud Robert, of Freeport, Ill. The funeral was held on Tuesday, burial being made at Graysville, | | | STOVER.—Miss Tammie A. Stover, a daughter of John Y. Stover, of Wolf's Store, died on Thursday of last week at the home of her sister, Mrs. William Wantz, of Woodward, where she bad been staying the past six weeks. Heart disease was the cause of her death. She was thirty six years old and is survived by her parents, four brothers and five sisters. The faneral was held on Monday afternoon, in- terment being made in she cemetery at Woll’s chapel. 1 MussgR.—Margaret Emma, daughter of Mr. aod Mrs. Harry C. Musser, of Mill- heim, died on Saturday night of indiges- tion. She was aged 10 years, 5 months and 11 days. The funeral was held on Tuesday afternoon, interment being made in the Union cemetery, at Millbeim. | | HoLLoRAUGH.—Mr. and Mre. George Hollobangh, of Coleville, are mourning the death of their eight weeks old baby boy, Louis, who died on Friday morning. The funeral was held on Sunday afternoon, io- terment being made in the Union ceme- tery. —————— ——Qnly a little over three weeks yet until the opening of the deer season, and hunters of that fleet-footed animal are be- coming quite nervous. Deceased was born in Salteburg, Indiana | BRADLEY.—The anvouncement of the| Y.M. C. A. CONFERENCE. —The fall conference of the Fourth district, Penn- sylvania Y. M. C. A, which includes asso- ciations in Centre, Clinton, Lycoming, Pos- ter, Tioga and portions of Clearfield, Union, Snyder, Northamberland, Montour and Co- lumbia counties, convened in this place last Friday evening with abous fifty delegates present. They were entertained at a ban- quet in the Y. M. C. A. rooms at six o'clock that evening. Following she banquet James R. Hughes took charge of the meeting. In a brief talk he told of the importance of the gath- ering and closed by reading a letter of regret fromiGen. James A. Beaver, who was attending Presbyterian Synod at Baus- ler, and could not be present. The sub- jeot discussed at Friday evening's meeting was ‘‘Responsibility,” a balf dozen or wore delegates waking brief talks. The final speech of the evening was hy John A. Eby, state secretary of religions work. A short session of the conference was beld in the United Brethren oburch on Saturday morning and at 10.15 o'clock the delegates and a number of members of the Bellefonte association went on the train to State College. There they were met by a large delegation of the college Y. M. C. A. snd escorted to the main building where they spent a short time inspecting the col- lege. At twelve o'clock the visitors were enteriaived at luncheon by Dr. and Mrs, Sparks at the president's residence. At 1.30 o'clock a meeting was held in the audi- torinm which was addressed by Prof. F. H, Green, of the West Chester Normal school, The remainder of the afternoon was spent in sight-seeing and watching the State— Geneva foothall game. The delegation was schednled to leave the College at 5.30 o'clock but owing to the wreok on the Bellefonte Central and the necessity of taking another train to the College it was almost seven o'clock! before they got away from there and 7.45 when they arrived in Bellefonte. Notwith- standing the lateness of the hour the meet- ing arranged for the Methodist church thas evening was held though the stereopticon exhibition was cut out and the entire time was given over to the address of Dr. Edwin Erle Sparks. That gentleman took for his theme the “Call of Duty,” and bie address was a most interesting one throughout. At nine o'clock Sunday morning there was a quiet hoar service at the Y. M. C. A, rooms and later a number of the delegates spoke in the various ohurches of Bellefonte, In the afternoon a men's mass meet ing was held in the cours house which was attended by just two hundred ad thirty. five persons. One of the features of the meeting was the singing by a male quariette from State College. The farewell meeting was held in the Presbyterian charoh in the evening. All in all it was a most snccess- fal conterence. ed ommmrmminte BowLEs—BIBLE. — An early morning wedding yesterday was that of Dr. Craw- ford M. Bowles, of Altoona, and Miss Elsie M. Bible, of this place, who were married at six o'clock in the morning in the Metho- | dist Episcopal church by Rev. James B. | Stein, pastor. The bride 18 a daughter of | W. W. Bible, of east Bishop street, and for some time bas been a stenogiapher in the office of Clement Dale E-q The bride- groom is a son of Prof. J. B. Bowles, prin- cipal of the Eighth ward public schools in Altoona. He is one of the prominent young dentists of that city, where the young couple will make their home after their return from a wedding trip to New York, Boston, Washington and Baltimore. meee GALLAGHER—LYONS. — Clarence Gal- lagher and Miss Helen Lyons were quietly warried at the Catholic parsonage, at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday svening, Rev. Father McArdle officiating. The young coaple thought to steal a march on their friends by having the ceremony performed and getting out of town on the evening train for a brief wedding trip but in this they were mistaken, and they were escorted to the train by a very jubilant bunoh of friends. The bride for some time past has been head waitress at the Brookerhoff house while the bridegroom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Barney Gallagher, and both have many friends. - ——n- JUVENILE COURT IN SESSION.—For the second time since the juvenile cvart was created in Centre county a session was held on Menday to dispose of the case against Rapbael Rairdon and Thompson Spangler, two young boys of Blanchard, arrested on the charge of larceny. For some time past the boys have been somewhat of a pest in Blanchard by riding freight trains and throwing Jumps of coal at people they would pass and through windows of houses. They always managed to elude the railroad officers but on Friday last Rairdon was arrested and brought to Belle- foute by deputy sheriff Fred Reese. Spang- ler was arrested and bronght to Bellefonte on Monday morning and both boys were given a hearing the same afternoon. The evidence againet them was so conclusive that the court decreed that the best place for them was in a reform school. On Wed- nesday sheriff Kline took Spangler to the induaesrial reform school for buys at Gleun Mille, Delawsre county, while Rairdon will be taken toa school in New York State. The latter boy, by the way, was the youngster who acted as mascot for the Howard base ball dlab daring the season just closed. — Lew Wallace *be building an addition to his home on Curtin street which will include on the first floor a kitohen and pantry with a large porch and on the seo- ond floor a bed room and bath room. It is being built of brick with the intention ultimately of casing the entire house.
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