Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 13, 1908, Image 5

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    Pine Grove Mention. |
Mrs. B. F. Browa is visiting relatives in |
Clearfield. :
Miss Sarah Ress is a very sick lady at the
home of James Lytle.
George Rossman has three wild turkeys to
his credit this season.
Mrs. Muggie Gates spent Tuesday at the !
Glenn home just west of town.
Charley Homan and wife visited relatives
down Pesinsvalley over Sunday.
Mrs. J. C. Struble is making her annual |
visit among her friends in Tyrone.
Wm. Meyers, who has been on the sick list |
the past two weeks, is much better, !
Ira Benner and wife came up from Rock to
spend Sunday with friends at Lemont.
J. 8. Herman is transacting business in
Philipsburg—hi« old stamping ground. i
Albert Allen is walking on air since a littie |
daughter arrived at his home last week. |
Harry Bloom and family spent Sunday at
the George Behrer home at Pine Hall,
J. N. Dinges, un old Civil war veteran, is
quite ill as the result of a paralytic stroke.
George Fortney recently bought the old
Fortney home farm just east of Boalsburg.
Frank Fishburn, of the Glades, is break-
ing ground for a new home at State College.
Mrs. Ray Williams has been qaite a sick
lady the past week, suffering with a heavy
cold, i
Miss Minnie Neidigh has gone to the
Mountain city to engage in the millinery
business.
Now its grandpa Port, a nice little girl
baving arrived at the Earl Smith home last
Thursday.
Will and Robert Leech bagged a wild cat
at Shingletown Gap—but Pussy climbed itself
to fredom.
That frisky little pust, the skunk almost
took possession of this town in the early part
of the week.
Yesterday George Kline, of State College, |
went to White Haven to enter the sanitorium |
for tuberculosis :
Miss Nellie Herman, a trained nurse, is
spending her vacation with friends in and
about Philipsburg.
Friday morning while Amos Koch was
operating a coin sheller be got his index
finger badly mashed.
Mrs. Frank Bailey, of Milton, is sojourn
ing among her friends here while Mr. Bailey
is out after big game.
W. H. Glenn, who has been housed up the
past month with a bad kvee, is making loco
motion go on crutches,
Miss Laura Gregory, of Nef's Mills, is
dividing her time between friends here and
at State College this week.
Lumberman Frank Davis, of Baileyville,
was in town Tuesday and was frank to admit
that the election returns did not suit him.
Owing to the death of his wife recently |
Charles Cronemiiler will offer bis stock and
farming implements at public sale on the
21st.
Roosevelt hunting club went to their old
hunting zrounds on the Six Mile run on the
Alleghenies where they will pitch their tent
today.
Mrs. W. E. McWilliame, of Rock Springs,
was in town Tuesday doing some shopping.
She was accompanied by her little daughter
Isabelle.
Mr. and Mrs. George Gleun and Mrs,
Agnes Krebs drove over from State College
to spend Sunday at the old Ross farm just
west of town.
Mrs. J. B. Krebs is dividing her time be-
tween friends here and at Centre Line, while
the doctor will be among the nimrods the
next two weeks.
Wm. Fortney, of Pittsburg, came in last
week to spend some time at the home of his
youth, Bealsburg. He isa brother of high
eonstable John Fortney.
E. T. Kellerman, who has been Squire
Miller's right bower on the farm, banded in
his resignation Tuesday and flitted to Scotia
Wednesday to take his old job.
Mrs. Margaret Kauffman, of Boiling |
Springs, is spending some time among friends
down Pennsvalley. Mrs. Kauffman was
Margaret Shaffer before her marriage.
John Randolph and wife and Robert Green
and wife, citizens of McAlevey's Fort, en.
joyed a drive over old Tuesey’s heights Sat.
aurday to spend the first day of the week at
the St. Elmo hotel.
The State College bunch of nimrods have
pitched their tent on Sand Knob this year.
They are D. B. Thomas, Ira Hess, Phil Fos-
ter, Ed. Moore, Clyde Thomas, John Gillis
land, cook; J. M. Homan, I. C. Holmes
and Harry Miller.
The clover hullers have pulled in after
hulling the largest crop of clover seed for
many years. W. K. Corl heads the list with
1503 bushels to his credit. Charley Corl has
1000 bushels on his list and H. A. Garner
hulled 750 bushels.
The Modock gang will leave today for
their old camp over at the Ross place on
Stone Creek. L. D. Musser) N. T.and H.
M. Krebs, of this place; Dr. J. B. Krebs, of
Northumberland; Dr. Frank Bailey, of Mil.
ton; Abe Lanor and Wm. Wagner, of Al-
toona; Harry Bailey, Wesley and D. W.
Meyers, of Boalsburg, with Lee Markle as
cook constituted the crowd.
i
i
Howard.
m—
The rain on Wednesday was welcomed by
all.
There is still some corn to be husked
among the farmers.
Thomas Manu butchered on Tuesday.
From now on butchering will be the go.
The sale at Mrs. Sarah J. Bechdels on
Wednesday was well attended and things
sold well.
Mis. Rena Dieb] came home Monday from
Renovo where she was called to see her sick
sister, Mrs. Frank Zeigler. .
Lionel Walker, the machinist at the Em«
pire Iron works, was called to Nittany on
Tuesday night to repair the boilerof J. 8.
Condo's threshing ontfit.
Dr. O. W, McEntire and William Quay
are rushing their new houses to completion
as rapidly as possible. They want them
| county, were here for a day or two this week.
| sent to him from one of the neighboring |
seady for occupancy by April 1st,
Our town was visited by three deaths this |
week. Mr. A. J. Walizer died on Sunday
morning and was buried Tuesday in the
Methodist cemetery. Mr. snd Mra. John |
Wagner's second daughter Eleanor died on
Tuesday morning from a relapse of scarleting |
and was buried in the Reformed cemetery at
Jacksonville on Tuesday. Mrs. Shay an |
aged lady of ninety-three years died om |
Monday.
Spring Milie,
W. 8. Baum, of Union
J. L. Brown and
H. H. Rachau is having his residence |
very artistically painted, a great improve-
ment,
Our town has been enveloped ina dense
smoke for two or three days—more mountain
fires,
Magistrate M. B. Hering, who has been
qnite ili for the past ten days or two weeks,
is still confined to the house. His convales-
cence seems very slow,
L. Phillips met with quite a serious ae-
cident last week. At the coal yard of C. P,
Long by some mishap his wagon upset, and
partly (alling on him one of his legs was
badly broken.
Turkies are plentilul in Penns valley, so
there will be no sexrcity for Thanksgiving
dinner. Last year they were difficult to ob-
tain at sny price. Sausages, or a big rooster
were generally substituted.
Autos have been quite numerous on our
roads of late, some with lively family parties
and others with commercial agents. Its
hardly the vehicle for the beaux, it requires
too much attention, but no doubt that will
be arranged one of these days.
Since the recent political earthquake the
Republican newspapers are howling pros-
perity, flush times, roast beef and three dol-
lars a day. Possibly the laboring man will
not require his dinner pail hereafter, pros-
perity will be so great that his meals will be
hotels.
Adwiring some beautiful fur hats a few |
days since, Mrs. Margarct Rubl, milliner of
our town, remarked that they were very
popular this season, but were chiefly in the
form of turban and toques, and like all close
fitting bats require little trimming. Of course
sone of them ure gloriously hig, but ull are |
very stylish and handsome. She has just |
received a complete line of these elegant |
goods. Mrs. Ruhl is now taking a full conrse |
of instructions from a millinery academy in {
New York city and by spring, with her na-
tural skill and exquisite taste, will evidently
graduate an artistic trimmer and designer
in ali that pertains to feminine headwear.
Being at the lower end of town on the
“Hill” side a day or two since 1 stepped inte
the Spring Mills carriage works tosee 8S. L.
Condo, the nroprietor, and found him very
busy arranging his salesroom for the display
of a car load of sleighs he had just received ;
also an iuvoice of high grade harness. Quite
a number of sleighs were in place. They are
beautiful, made of thoroughly seasoned stock, |
elegantly finished and upholstered with a |
high gunality of imported English cloth and
regular railroad plush. All the work is
evidently that of craftsmen of the highest
order of excellence. The spring sleigh is
quite an institution, a decided improvement.
Mr. Condo says they soon will supersede all
other styles for comfort, durability and
beauty.
Lemont. :
Tuesday brought as a little rin.
Alf. O'Neil and wife returned to Altoona
Saturday.
William O. Daugherty made a flying trip
to Lock Haven Saturday.
Quite a number of people from this town
attended William Steele's funeral.
Mrs. Lydia Hite came home from White
Haven Monday, and is feeling much
better.
F. Woods Bathgate came down from Al-
toona, Saturday, for a few days visit at the
home of his mother.
Elmer C. Ross is at present having the
finishing touches put on his coal shed in the
form of a fine coat of paint.
The special train brought between 300 and
400 people from Lewisburg for the football
game at State College Saturday.
Jacob Klinger is not improving very fast
hut it is hoped that be will soou be able to
be around and at his work again.
John Fishel and Jacob Shuey cach of
whom bad the misfortune to have a fat hog
die for them, hope it will stop there.
Representatives of the fish commission
made a trip along Spring creek last week ex-
amiving the fish baskets and they pronounced
several not lawful and fined the owners.
Miss Bess Thompson returned home from
Altoona, Saturday, where she had been with
her sister, Mrs. Mary Shaffer, who under.
went an operation for appeodicitis-last week.
A Power fer Good ‘'I'neugh Beaten
From the Louisville Courier Journal,
““The result shows that we oversized the
Spisituni and undersized the material in
the hearts and minds of the people. They
were dear alike to precedents, to reason
and to eloquence ; for nothing could sar-
pass, as nothing bas ever equalled, the per-
sonal canvass of Mr. Bryan ; its wondrous
lucidity and power of statement ; its splen-
did intellectual and physical endurance ;
its unanswerable argnwent,
“Nor did Igovatins of Loyola sweep
through a world of incarnate evil bearing
the cross of Jesus to trinmph with greater
force of inspiration and trath than did the
heroio son of Nebraska traverse a land gap-
ing with curiosity, but too busy over its
work and play to consider any danger to
the immortal sonl of its constitutional fab-
rio.
*‘Old-time Democrats will wait and keep
their powder dry. If they should despair,
if they should break spar, the country
would be exposed to political anarohy lead-
ing throogh radicalism and excesses of
every sort to practical irresponsibility on
the one band, unregenerate debauchery
backed by resistiees force on the other
band. We may be a power for good,
beaten and in opposition. Seven
million of votes are never to be despised
in case they hold together. Many States
remain to us. The constitution of the
United States has not been abolished yet,
nor institutional freedom, nor wise and
n administration, and these are still
w fighting for.”
a e———_ So SA —— So —————_— ro —_——
New York Postmaster’s Life Saved By
i fourteen-year-old daughter,
SHOT BY CRAZED MAN
His Daughter.
New York, Nov. 10. — Edward M.
Morgan, postmaster of New York city,
who was wounded in’ the abdomen by
a bullet fired by E. H. B. Mackay, an
cccentric English stenographer, who
committed suicide, is resting
aud uniess complications develop
~ili recover,
..I. Morgan probably owes his life
to the quick wit and bravery of his
Dorothy,
who saw Mackay draw his revolver
and struck it with her hand. This de-
flected the buliet, otherwise the post-
master would have been fatally wound-
ed, for his assailant was at close
range and fired four shots in all. The
shooting occurred at One Hundred and
Forty-sixth street and only a short
distance from Mr. Morgan's home. He
was on his way down town at the
time.
An investigation of the life and rec-
ord of Mackay reveals that he was of
a morbid nature and a former inmate
of an asylum at Worcester, Mass.
Evidently he had never seen the
postmaster, for as he met Mr. Morgan
he asked, “Are you Postmaster Mor:
gan?” At Mr. Morgan's affirmative
reply Mackay drew his revolver and
fired a shot into the postmaster's ab-
domen.
The wounded man fell to the side
walk, and as two witnesses of the
shooting came running up Mackay lay
down on the sidewalk, opened his vest
and sent one bullet into his head and
another into his heart. He was dead |
when the first man reached him. |
ELIHU ROOT FOR
U. S. SENATOR
| fense during the trial and exception=
| to the indictment itself. This step had
A —————
i
to be taken before application for bail
Secretary of State May Suc-
ceed T. C. Platt,
Washington, Nov. 10.—It is the gen |
eral opinion in Washington that as a,
result of a long conference at the,
White House between President!
Roosevelt, James Wadsworth, Jr. the,
speaker of the New York state assem
bly, and William L. Ward, Republican!
national committeeman, and one of!
the foremast leaders in New York
state politics, the man who will be
supported by them next January as |
the candidate before the New York)
legislature to succeed Thomas C. Platt!
on March 4, 1909, as United States
| senator from New York, will be Elihu |
Root, of Clinton, N. Y., the present]
secretary of state of the United States, !
Secretary Root declared he had!
made no announcement that he would!
be a candidate and that he could not!
discuss the matter. He had just come |
from the president's office, where Mr |
Ward and Speaker Wadsworth pre. |
viously had been in conference with
the president. !
LEAPS INTO COKE OVEN
Conductor, Injured In Wreck, Sought
a Terrible Death,
Grafton, W. Va.. Nov. 10.—Seeking |
a terrible death, J. H. Deevers, for
merly a Baltimore & Ohio conductor,
threw himself into a seething coke
oven, and efforts are now being male
to find some of his ashes.
Deevers was injured in a wreck
some time ago, and had been visiting
his father at Hiora, Preston county.
Near thecoke ovens at that place his
clothing was found, with a note ex
plaining his suicide. The letter fol
lows:
“I have been wondering, and I can't
get nothing else into my head. Geo
tlemen, I am in debt, and can't wo. k
and I don't know what else to do bit
put myself out of the way. I have
been studying ever since I got hu: .
and I have heen wondering and stud -
ing and studying. and I can’t get notin
ing else in my head. So I will bring it
to a close, and here you will find my
remains.”
CITY OFFICIALS ON TRIAL
Wilkes-Barre Mayor and Councilmen
Charged With Neglecting Streets.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Nov. 16.—A novel
case was called for trial in court when
Mayor Kniffen and thirty-two Wilkes.
Barre councilmen were arraigned,
charged with maintaining a nuisance
by failing to keep the streets of the
city in proper repair. Counsel for ihe
defendants moved to quash the indict.
ments on the ground that while the
city could be proceeded against the
councilmen as individuals could not.
Before proceeding further Judge Hal
sey said he would hear argument on
this point.
Going Home In Plaster Cast.
Encased in a plaster cast, which
covers all of her body except the neck
and head, Minnie Fisher, a circus
rider, who was injured some time ago
by being thrown from her horse at
Ogdensburg, N. Y., left there for her
home in Alabama. She is unable to
move any part of her body beiow the
shoulders and will lie on a cot during
the raiiroad journey south.
The accident in which the young
woman was injured occurred during a
performance at Malone last Septem:
ber. Her horse became frightened and
bolted toward the spectators. The
equestrienne turned the animal into a
fence, and the rider was thrown heav-
ily to the ground, nearly every bone in
her body being broken. It will be
three months before the plaster cast
can be removed.
WIFE COLLAPSES IN COURT
: applied for and secured a stay of ex-
| structed them to fight “to the last,
| the words which condemned him to
Victorien Sardou, Dramatist, Is Dead.
Kern Is Out For U. 8. Senate—C. W.
Eliot Resigns As President of Har
vard—Going Home In Plaster Cast
With Nearly All Her Bones Broken.
Fatally Shot His Father — Ordeds
Nineteen Locomotives—Pulls Nine
Teeth For One.
From a cell in the Tombs prison
in New York city Charles W. Morse
now directs the efforts of his counsel
to secure his freedom, he having been
sentenced to serve fifteen years in the
federal prison au Atlanta, Ga., for mis-
application of the funds of the Na-
tional Bank of North America and
making false entries in the books of
the bank. Alfred H. Curtis, forme:
president of the defunct bank, who
was jointly tried and convicted with
Morse, was given his liberty on a sus-
pended sentence.
While Morse's lawyers immediately
ecution for ten days after sentence
had been imposed, still it is probable
that Morse will remain a prisoner in
the Tombs, as Judge Hough has re-
fused to admit the financler to bail
The Morse lawyers applied to the
United States circuit court of appeal:
for a writ to show cause why thei:
client should not be admitted to bail,
and the writ was granted, but it is not
returnable until Monday; hence it ap
pears that Morse must remain a pris
oner until the question of bail is set
tled on that day.
Whether a new trial will be granted
Morse is problematical. Judge Ila
combe granted a writ of error to the
Morse lawyers. This writ is returnable
Dec. 3 and is based on the usual
grounds—exceptions taken by the de
could be made, and it also leads to
the argument for a new trial. The
Morse lawyers say their client has in- |
ditch.”
A crowd of more than 600 men and |
women followed Morse and two deputy |
marshals, who had him in charge, from
the federal building to the doors of |
the Tombs. As they trailed along th~ |
crowd jeered and hooted. “How would |
you like to be the ice man?" shoute: |
some one as the little man walked!
along hetween the two big deputie:.!
“You'll get no ice there,” yelled an
other. These and similar cries fel |
lowed the prisoner until the heavy
barred doors of the prison had closed |
behind him.
The scene in the courtroom when
sentence was pronounced by Julig
Hough was a most dramatic one. Th
wives of the two prisoners, who ha |
been constant attendants at court dur
ing the entire trial, were present, as if
anxious to cheer their husbands by
their presence in the trying ordeal
which confronted them.
When the real test came, however,
it wos the husbands, and not the
wives, who proved the comforters. |
Maurse sat like a stoic when he heard
prison. There was scarcely the tremor
of an eyelid, and to those who watched
there was no longer even the shadow
of a doubt that the “Little Man” was
indeed a man of iron nerve.
Kern Out For U. 8S. Senate.
John W. Kern, the defeated Demo-
cratic candidate for the vice presi
dency. announced that he is a candi-
date for United States senator, to suc-
ceed James A. Hemenway. The incom-
ing Indiana legislature will be Dem-
ocratic on joint ballot by a majority
of twelve. Others mentioned as prob
able candidates are John E. Lamb. of
Terre Haute, who was in charge of
the Democratic national headquarters
at Chicago during the last campaign;
Thomas Taggart, formerly national
chairman; State Senator Slack, Ben-
jamin E. Shively and Edward Hoff-
wan, of Fort Wayne.
Fatally Shot His Father.
Fearful lest his father strike his
mother, whom he was pursuing with an
axe, Ernest T. Hayes, twenty, shot and
fatally wounded H. T. Hayes at Bel
mont, a suburb of Charlotte, N. C. The
trouble it is alleged grew out of the
demand for money which he had given
his wife. When the demand was re
fused the man seized an axe and pur
sued his wife.
Pulls Nine Teeth For One.
Unable to reach a dental office and
suffering untold torture from an ach-
ing tooth, James Ridley, residing in a
remote part of the farming district
of Lackawanna county, Pa. himself
extracted nine teeth with a pair of
pincers before he secured the right
one. Ridley, for a greenhorn, made a
fairly good job of it, but his gums
were badly swollen and bleeding.
Place For Bryan.
Two evangelists now in Chattanoo-
ga, Tenn., Revs. George W. Coons and
J. G. Lawson, who have organized sev-
eral religious campaigns in this coun-
try and Europe, have written to W. J.
Bryan, suggesting that he hereafter
engage in evangelistic work, as they
“believe he can do a greater amount
of good in that than any other way.”
Cut Down Burning Tree; Fatally Hurt.
Lund Myers, twenty-two years old,
was fatally injured, and Charles My-
ers, his brother, and Edward Schade
were seriously hurt at Jeanette, Pa.
near Pittsburg, when the men were
caught by the burning branches of a
falling tree which they had acciden-
tally fired and then cut down to pre-
vent a forest fire.
Explosion Costs An Arm.
Isaiah Roe, son of Deputy Sheriff
Ashby Roe, of Gore, Winchester
county, Va., lost his left arm and his
face was horribly cut and burned by
an explosion of dynamite with which
he was trying to thaw out o traction
engine. He was also injured internally
by the force of the explosion, and it is
believed he cannot recover. He is
twenty-four years old and unmarried.
First President of Cuba Dead.
Thomas Fstrada Palma, the firse
president of the Cuban republic, died
Wednesday night at Santiago, Cuba.
Orders Nineteen Locomotives.
It is announced that the Richmond,
Va., branch of the American Locomo-
tive Co. has been awarded the con-
tract by the Virginian railway for
nineteen locomotives. When the pat-
terns and material have been received
all of the shops will be put in full
blast again, giving employment to
2000 skilled workmen.
B. Frank Hall Kills Himselr
PHILADELPHIA, Nov, 10.—B. Frank
Hall, a wealthy resident of Ss. 8, Pa.,
and a brother of State Senator J. K. P.
Hall and Judge Harry Alvin Hall, shot and
killed himself to-night in a car on
the Buffalo express on the nsylvania
railroad.
According to a statement of Judge Hall,
his brother bad been slightly deranged
mentally for the lass few s and at the
time of the tragedy was on his way to
Philadelphia to consult a specialist.
With his brother and several friends
Judge Hall walked into the dining car of
the express, when the train left Lancaster.
It was not noticed that Mr. Hall acted
straugely and after dinner the party re-
turned to the parlor car. A few moments
later St vu e asked to be. sxsued a mo-
mens. He stepped into the toilet compars-
ment and closed the door. Almost im-
mediately there was a revolver shot. The
door of the compartment was forced Spe
and Mr. Hall was found lying en the floor
with two bullet wonnds in his head. Death
was probably instantaneons. The body was
| carried into the smoking car and when the
train reached Broad street station was
turned over to an undertaker. Judge Hall
is much grieved over the affair.
*‘My brother bad no business or other
troubles. He was wealthy, bad retired
from business years ago and had every-
thing in the world to live for. About ten
days ago he returned from a hunting trip
in Scotland. He talked of an enjoyable
trip, but it was noticed that be had hal-
lucinations and we saw that he imagined
tronbles that had no existence. Believing
that it would he well to consult a special-
| iet I suggested a trip to Philadelphia and
he readily agreed to accompany me.”
Announcements.
We are authorized to announce William H.
Daley, of Lamb street, as a candidate for over-
|
|
An —
New Advertisements.
R SALE.—Single Barrel Shut Gu
FO an,
R SALE.—A first class fox hound,
only thirteer months old. Will not run
anything bot foxes but is the best in the country
for fox hunting. Inquire at this office. 53-43-(f
HOLSTERING.—Have yoo
Chairs, Mattresses oran ng in that line
te repair. If have, call H. M. Bidwell on
Commercial lly He will come to see you
about it. 62-4-6m
R SALE— Horse, and harness,
Horse 12 years old, wood roadster. Ba
homemade, in good condition. Harness,
and hames good a= new. Reason
moving away. Apply to
Rzv. R. H. BER3STRSSER,
Pine Grove Wills, Pa.
for "selling,
53-45-t1
EW BELLEFONTE RESTAURANT.
Will open SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. Tth,
the room next door to Schofield’'s Harness
in
House, at which Meals, (hot or eold,) Oysters,
Game in season, and hot usaally Distant:
ed by a first class restaurant will be served.
53-44-3t, EDWARD MURRAY.
EGAL NOTICE.—Notice is
William 8. Brooks, guardian of uel T.
will be presented to the Court for confirmation on
Wed December 0th, 1908, and unless ex-
ceptions be filed thereto, on or before the second
day of the term, the same will be confirmed.
A. B. KIMPORT,
Proth
53-44-5 onotary.
MALL FARM FOR SALE. — The
subscriber, on account of the loss of his
eyesight, offers for sale his
HOME AND FARM
situated near Runville station on the Snow Shoe
railroad, consisting of three acres of land with
good house, barn and out-buildin
cellent repair, Plenty of fruit of kinds, and
an excellent supply of never failing water. It
and will be sol
is a com: e house in a
close to church and sch
cheap. Apply to
MICHAEL SENNET,
53-20-41 Runville, Pa.
PB UGGIES, CARRIAGES, ETC.
Whether you are a farmer, in the livery
business, or living a life of ease, we can
sell you the best
NEW BUGGIES,
NEW CARRIAGES,
NEW RUNABOUTS, ETC.
with or without Rubber Tires.
—) OR (ee
SECOND-HAND BUGGIES, CARRIAGES AND
RUNABOUTS
Almost as Goop As New, at as reasonable
prices as you can get them anywhere,
RUBBER TIRES A SPECIALTY.
AUTOMOBILES painted aud repaired,
| seer of the poor subject to the rules and regula. | 53:18-€m. 4 8. A. MeQuistiox & Co.
| tions of the Democratic party. 53-45 Rev
Bellefonte Lumber Company.
e
i
DO YOU NEED ANY
"\
52-2-1y
“
Sand, Lime, Wall Plaster, Bricks,
Cement, Glass, Doors, Sash with
or without any number of lights,
Rough Bill Stuff—any wood, Stair
work, Mantles, Interior Finishing,
Planing Mill Work of Every Kind.
We are a builder's supply house
selling everything anyone needs
for any building, and put up espe-
cally forhismse. . . . . . .
BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO.
Bellefonte, Pa.
J
Wall Paper, Paints, Ete.
= III —
Co DB BM Bl Be Me BM Me dM BM il BB. BM. BM BM Be ols
pensive.
Bush Arcade,
~~
PAINT YOUR HOUSE
In attractive colors and it will stand out from its
neighbors.
OUR EXPERIENCE
In combining colors harmoniously is at your serv-
ice, with Pure White Lead and Oil to back us up.
THE NEW WALL PAPERS
We have cn be made to give many novel forms
of decoration. We'd be glad to suggest original
treatment for your house—They need not be ex-
Wall papers, Window Shades, Curtain
Poles, Paints, Oil, Glass, &c., at
ECKENROTH BROTHERS
529-14
Bellefonte, Pa.
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