ET — — Bellefonte, Pa., August 13, 1909. To Connssronpewts.—No communications pub- Iished uniess accompanied by the real name of the writer. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ~——Girls will be girls. ——Tie Bellefonte shirt factory closed on Wednesday for a month’s vacation. ——Rev. William Brooks, of Reedsville, will fill she pulpit in she Presbyterian chuich on Sunday, morning aod evening. ——A wedding which will take place in Bellefonte in the very near future is that of Edward Latham aud Mise Berenice Haups. —Mm. E. W. Crawford, Hall, was brought to the Bellefonte hos- pital on Wednesday and will nndergo an operation today. ~——Jease Derstine, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Derstine, and Miss Viole: Irwin will be married oo Wednesday of next week, Aaguost 18:h. ——J. H. Robb pat io his last time io the Ceatre county bank last Sasarday fore- noon and ou Mooday morning went to work in his new position with the Belle fonte Trast company. ——We bave a report to the effect that Robert Meek, formerly of Ferguson town- ship, who resides in Altoona now, saffered a stroke of paralysis last Tharsday aud has been unable to speak since. ——0Oa account of the remodeling of the Centee county court house no September term of court will be held. In fact shere are lew cases of importance for trial and canceling she term will work injury to no- body. —— According to reports from up Bald Eagle valley there are more hockieherries ou she Allegheny moantains hack of{Union- ville thao anywhere else in the conoty, It is said shat piokers can easily average a bushel a day. ——The members of the Lemont M. E. oharoh will hold a festival on the lawn of the oburch on Saturday evening, August 21st, to which all are cordially invited. Ice cream, oake and other delicacies of the season will be sold and a pleasant time is assared all. ——The annual couventiou of the Cen tral Pennsylvania Volunteer Firemen's as- sociation will be beld at Jersey Shore on Tharsday and Friday of nex: week and big preparations are beiog made by the fire. men of that oity for the eutertainmeut of the visitors. ~——Kuisely & Rhoads bave completed she abatments for the new concrete bridge over the race near the Central Railroad of Penusylvauia round hoose and employees of the York Bridge company are now at work putting on the superstructure and conerete road way. —— Last Satarday afternoon justice of the peace W. H. Musser was so badly over- come with the heat that he had to be taken ¢o bis home on east Lamb street in a car- riage aod carried into the house. A few days quiet and careful nursing ate briog- ing Lim around all righs. ——A special meeting of she borough council was called for last Mounay even- ing to settle defivitely (perhaps) affairs in regard to the vew hydro-electric plant bot the councilmen failed to respond, as there was no quoram present and they were com- pelled to adjourn autil this (Friday) ev- ening. ——The Pennsylvania Match company bas gotten its new storage yard, below the American Lime aud Stone company’s plant in condition for use and bas already begun the storage of lumber therein. They will now have space for the storage of an uo- usually large sapply of stock lumber for boxes and match wood. —— William Brouse, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. 8. Brouse, expects to quit clerking in his father’s grocery store in the nzar future and leave Bellefonte. He bas secured a good position with the Eyre—Shoemaker Construction company on their big job near Northumberland and will leave for there the latter part of this month. Tomorrow is the day for that big sale of lots by the Leathers brothers at State College. This may be the chance of your lifetime. A [free train will leave Bellefonte for the college at 10:30 a. m., retarniog immediately after the sale. Re- member one five hundred dollar lot will be given away to the lucky person. ~The second quarterly communion service will be held in the local United Evangelical church next Sunday evening at which time the presiding elder of the dis- trios, Rev. J. C. Reeser, will preach the word and officiate. The people of Belle fonse always enjoy hearing Rev. Reeser and bonor him with a good attendance. ~The survivors of company E, Forty- fitsh Penvasylvania Volunteers, will cele brate the forty-eighth anniversary of their departare for the front with a meeting to be beld in the Gregg Post rooms, Belle. toute, ou Thursday, September 20d. As the address of a number of the survivors are not kaown other papers will please copy this notioe. ———Next Taesday will be the day for the special election to authorize the school directors of Bellefonte to increase the in, debtedness of the borough district thirty- five thousand dollars in order to complete the new High sobool building. When you go $0 east your vote don’t do it in a hap- hazard way, but vote conscientiously for what you know to be right. of Centre | { BELLEFONTR'S Housg. —The stoue foundation walls of the pew High schoo! haildiog have been com- ——— | pleted and most of the steel griders and joists tor the first floor bave been putin position and in a tew days bricklayers will begin work ov laying the brick for the main building. The ontside walls will be of Pompeian or mottled brick with the in- side walls of ordinary brick. The big cost of the new building over the original estimate has heen the caase of much discussion and comment 1n Bellefonte aud is is just possible that not ten per cent. of the taxpiyers of the town know why it is 80. It might be said right bere that the school board, if they thought it wise to do 80, could greatly reduce the cost of com- pleting the hailding, bat it would not only be at a sacrifice of she stability of the stractare bat also shesalery of every stu. dent attending school there. The present plans require that brick, or practically fireproof partitions divide every room, and that steel ceilings be placed in all of them. They also provide that all the hallway floors be of tile or concrete ; that the wainscoting in the balls be of oream colored vitrified brick with the npper portion heavily plastered and caleimined. This will render the balls almost totally fireproof and if a fire should oconr io one or more of the school rooms, the pupils would be perfectly sale the mioute they reached the hallways. And as these will be large with three main entrances and exits, it can readily be seen how ahsclute- ly safe the building will be. To reduce the cost, wood floors and wains- coting, aod the ordinary plastered oceiliogs could be put in, bat who in Bellefonte would want tosave a few hundreds or even thonsande of dollars in the coustruction of a building which, when finished, would not only he nusafe hat practically a death: trap in case of fire? Certainly no ove who has she interests and the safety of their own children. or the yonug people of the town at hears. There is no denying the fact that sixty five thonsand dollars is a hig sam for a school building, bat if the town is given a schoo! baoildiog fally worth that amount | of money, for the benefis of the children and she coming geuerations it ought to sanotion its erection. FOUNDATION WALLS ALL RIGHT. For some time past there has been con- siderable talk around Bellefonte shat she foundation walls of the new building were jefective and should not be allowed to stand that way. [Iu order to set at ress all doubts in the master the school board yes- of hydraulic and sanitary engineering at The Penosylvania State College, to make a thorough inepection of the walls, which he did. After speodiog over two hour in going over them moss thoroughly he was seen by the editor of the WATCHMAN and himself anthorized the statement thas the walls are “all right,’ so quote his own words. n " : It is anderstood, however, that Mr. Walker suggested to the school board and architect Robert Cole a lew minor changes in several places, but which refer to the plans only and have nothing whatever to do with the character or stability of the wall. This should be enough to satisly the people of Bellefonte and put an end to all cofair criticism. Nirrany Country Crus House WiLL ProBABLY BE REBUILT —~There is a strong probability that the Nittany Country clab house at Heola, which was totally destroy- ed by fire on Wednesday night of last week, will be rebunils. A meeting of the mem- bers from Tyrone, Altoona, Osceola Mills, Houtzdale and Philipsharg was held in Ty- rone last Friday evening and they were unanimous in favoring the rebuilding of the club honse at Heocla. In fact, that is the only place they considered at all, and in liea of rebuilding there they woald either withdraw from the membership of the clab or favor disbanding entirely. Ob Saturday afternoon a general meeting of the members was held in this place which was attended by twenty-six, At that meeting the fact was reported that while the McMullen estate would not rebuild the boase they made the club a very attrastive offer whioh natarally had much to do in influencing the members in their decision so rebuild, it it is at all pos- sible to do so, and a committee composed of George R. Meek, chairman, L. T. Mun- son and W. Harrison Walker, was appoint: ed to bave plans prepared, inquire into the possibility of financing the project and re- port within a week. If said report is favorable, and as matters look now it will be, then the club house will be rebuilt on practically she old lines of the one destroyed, so far as the exterior is concerned, but modernized somewhat on the iuterior plans. If it is decided to re- build work will be begun in the immediate future so thas the building will be com- pleted and read; for occupancy by Novem- ber first. IT Was Hor.—Sanday was not only the hottest day shis season but the hottest here in years, in fact ever since there bas been a government recording station in Bellefonte. Heretolore she hottess is has been in Belle- fonte was a fraction over 98 degrees while on Sunday the thermometer climbed as high as 89 degrees above zero and remain- ed there a good pars of the day. According to the old folk lore weather prophets we will not bave any rain to amount to anything until Sanday, when the Virgin Mary re-orosses she mountain. This is eaid by old-timers to be a sure in- dication of rain sud, after the prolonged drought we bave had it is to be hoped that the above propheoy will come true and rain come in plenty. New Hicas ScHooL ! terday secured Elton D. Walker, professor | ——Take it ail through this will be a | poor honey season. While the forepart of | the sammer was favorable and tbe bees i laid in a good stock of a superior grade of honey the prolonged drought of the past seven weeks has so dried up every kind of vegetation, especially the second orop of clover, fall flowers and buckwheat that the fall gathering of honey will be very small. — ——Girls will be girls. ——The family of ex county commis- sioner H. C. Campbell, of Ferguson town- ship, held a reunion at Penns Cave on Tuesday of last week at which all of the eight sons and daoghters were present. The affair was arranged by the two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Campbell, who are now the owners of the cave and it proved a very bappy mathering. Among the outside | guests was Dr. Leotz, of Philadelphia. i ———— A ——— | ——Landlord Charles Waple, of the Pos- ter house, Philipsburg, also has a farm pear thas town on which be raises most of the vegetables and fruits nsed in his popu- lar hostelry. The farm is conducted hy Charles Philips, and so far this season be bas picked over sixty bushels of peas with a still larger crop to gather. His crop of string beans will exoeed his pea crop and in addition to what they have served in the hotel fonrteen bushels bave been can- ned for use later on. . eS ——The combined I. 0. O. F. lodges of Bellefonte, State College and Pine Grove Mills will hold an Odd Fellows picnic at Hunter's park on Monday, September 5th, (Labor day) which promises to be the largest there of she season. There will be | sports and smusements for everybody and a number of prizes will he offered which wi!l he announced Iater on. Watch for the big bills and fature anvouncements. All lodges and friends will be extended a hearty invitation to attend. eir— =e ——In the regular advertising columpa of the WATCHMAN will be found the ten constitational amendments which will be voted upon at the election in November In order that every voter in Centre county oan vote upon them intelligently they should be read and carefully studied. Read them now, when you will have plenty of time to consider them wisely and do not wait aotil the eve of the election when you will have to read them hurriedly and with- out the time for consideration may vote ill advisedly. >. Girls will be girls. —— Williamsport has been selected as the place for holding the meeting at which the nomivees named at the Democratic state convention, at Harrisburg, last week, will be formally and officially notified of their selection as the standard-bearers of she party, and vaturally the Democrats of thas oity and county are jubilant. The | meeting will be held on Wednesday, Au- gust 25th, and quite a large gathering is anticipated. Naturally, quite a number of the leading Democrats in the State are expected to be present and take part in the proceedings, and the day will practically mark the opening of the fall campaign. ——W. C. Foote, of this place,the school book agent charged by liverymav Ben Shellenberger, of Tyrone, with driving a horse of his to death, mention of whose ar- rest was made in last week's WATCHMAN, was given a hearing before justice of the peace W. F. Taylor, in Tyrone, last Thars- day morning. Mr. Foote was represented by H. C. Quigley Esq.,while W. L. Pascoe E«q , looked after liveryman Shellenberg- ec’s interasts, Several witnesses testified that Foote had driven turther than Hannah and that the horse was forced to a trot up hill and down. Mr. Foote throngh his at- torney, finally waived a further hearing aod was held under three hundred dollars bail for trial at the October term of court in Hollidaysburg. ‘oe ——Girls will be girls. . —————— A ~— ——The workmen who are patting the new steel ceiling in Petriken ball are mak- ing good progress this week and have prob- ably one-third of it on. The work, by the way, does not interfere with the Scenic moving picture shows, though it may in- convenience the audiences fora few days, and thas popular place of amusement con- tinues to draw large crowds every evening. Will G. Laye and Jobo Bartruff have been in sapreme charge this week during the absence of T. Clayton Brown and the fact that the place runs along as smooth as ever is evidence that they are old hands at the business. The Soenio is so well known by this time, and its reputation for giving only the best 50 well established that all one has to do any evening in the week is to follow the orowd and be is sure to land there. And everybody always goes away more than satisfied. —Four weeks from yesterday The Pennsylvania State College will open for the ensuing school year and from present indications the institution will be crowded as never before. From the number of appli- cations for entry already received it is esti- mated that the Freshman class this year will amber close to six hundred stadents aod the attendance all told be in the neigh- borhood of fourteen hundred. The one great problem yet to solve is where to house them all. Of course the large number of new houses being erected will be about completed by that time and as most of them are desigoed for the purpose of lodg- ing and boarding students,accommodations will thus be made for from two hundred students upwards. But with that the col- lege needs one or two large dormitories de- signed especially fer the accommodation of the students in attendance at college. | and bis shroat is now about healed up. BeLLEFONTE—STATE COLLEGE TROL- LEY.—Two or three times in the past de- cade charters bave been secared and sur- | veys made for a trolley road {rom State Col- | lege to Bellefonte and Milesburg bat each | | News Parely Personal —~Miss Mary Greist, of Unionville, was a guest of Miss Bessie Brown the past week. ~A. Randolph Hoy, of Pittsburg, is spending | his vacation with his sisters at Rock farms. | —Mrs. B. H. Williams, of Curtin, friends at Port Matilda. —Mr. and Mrs, Edward Rishel, of Pitisharg, ! are visiting friends in this section. —~Mrs. Seymour, of New York city, is in Belle- ! fonte visiting her sister, Mrs, James Noonan. time the movement never got beyond the | _Roger A. Bayard, local editor of the Tyrone | _ Mrs. Alfred Grove returned this week from a survey and expenditare of a goud bunch of | money, the promoters always failing to get the requisite financial backing. This time, | however, the movement promises to be a | success and the trolley assured, because the financial part of it has already been arrang- | ed and all that remains now is for the var- ions horoughs to grant she right of franchise | shroagh their streets and the secaring of a | charter when the surveys will be made and work on the line begun. It the trolley road is built, sud there is now every reason to helieve it will be, the one man iv Bellefonte to whom the credit will belong is Mr. L. T. Munson. He was one of the men connected with the move- ment to build a road four years ago and, though the project was abandoned because the engineers of J. Gilbert White & Co , of New York, aleer a survey and careful esti- mate, declared it wounldn's pay, Mr. Man- son did not give up. During bis location in Pistahurg the past year he brought the matter to the attention of a number of Pittsburg capitalists aod after a close snd careful examination into the matter by men of experience from that city a ayodi- cate has been formed and all the capital needed to build sud equip the road already pledged. Mr. Munson will make application at the next regular meeting of the Bellefonte, Mileshurg and State College borough councils for the granting of a franchise throngh their limits and expects to make application for a charter next week. Jost as 300n a3 these are secored a corps of en- gineers will be put to work laying oat the line and work will be siarted as soon as possible. Though they have nos yet fally decided on the route of the trolley through the boroughs from State College to Bellefonte it will be by way of Lemont and Pleasant Gap, practically on the same route surveyed four years ago aod for which the charter was sorrendered, after the project to build it was abandoned. i ——Girls will be girls. PENNSVALLEY DAIRYMAN CoMMITS SuICIDE. —Epbriam Shook, of Gregg town ship, committed suicide oo Wednesday morning by blowing bis face and the fore. part of bis bead off with a ebot gun. Mel. aucholia caused by several years ill health is assigned as the cause, as the man bad no family nor financial troubles, so far as known. Mr. Shook owned and conducted an up- to-date dairy farm about one mile soutb of Penn Hall in Georges valley and, while be had not been well for three years or more he was still akle so be around and oversee his business and on Tuesday was shout as ‘usual. He went to bed that eveuing aod | his little son occupied the same room. The boy was net well and consequently quite restless during the night and about four o'clock Wednesday morning he wens down stairs to get a drink of water, leaviog ois father alone. While the boy was gone Mr. Shook secured his shot gao, sat down on a chair and placing the muzzle under his chin pressed the trigger with his toe. One balf of his bead was blown away aod death, naturally, was instantaneous. The unfortunate man was about fifty- three years old and is survived by his wife and two sons, one of whom is grown up. The foneral will be held at 9 o'clock this morning and will be private, amen A em ——— BELLEFONTE ScHOOLS WILL OPEN SEP- TEMBER 6TH.- Jonas E. Wagner, super- vising principal announces that the public schools of Bellefonte will open for the com- ing school year on Monday, September 6th. Natarally there has been considerable won- derment as to how the different schools will be accommodated until the comple- tion of the new building acd at the sug- gestion of Mr. Wagner the sohool board has concluded to adopt the following sched- ule : The High school will be held at the usual place and so will the schools in the Midway. All the other graded schools will be held in tbe brick building on Bish- op street, but instead of baving a fall day’s school they will be divided into two peri- ods. Hall the schools (the grades and number to be announced later) will meet at 8 30 o'clock in the morning and contin- ue in session until 12 o'clock when they will be through for the day. The other half will be in session from 1 to 4.30 in the afternoon. In this way the school board will not need go to the extra ex- pense of leasing rooms and putting in seats, desks, blackboards, eto., to accommodate the schools until the new building shall be completed. ——Girls will be girls. EYE GRAINS IN THROAT PRONOUNCED DIPHTHERIA. —Last week Edward Con- fer, a farmer near Yarnell, suffered witha very sore throat and the attending physi cian at first diagnosed the ailment as diph- theria. After a day or two, however, it became evident that it was not that much dreaded disease and for a time even the physician was baffled. On Sanday the doctor made a close examination of Mr. Confer’s throat when he discovered as the cause of the trouble two decomposed grains of rye lodged in the membraneous lining of the throat just below the root of the tongue. How or when the grains got there Mr. Confer was unable to state, but there they were lodged and decomposing caused inflammation and a soreness almost like diphtheria. The grains were removed and sinos Mr. Confer has gotten along all right Herald, was a Bellefonte visitor on Sunday. — Miss Fannie Confer, of Yaraell, was in Belle | fonte on a shopping expedition on Monday. —Miss Mame Orbison, of Huntingdon, is in Beliofonte a guest of Gen. and Mrs. James A. Beaver. —Miss Elizabeth Lam'ett, of Waterbury, Cona., is in Rellefonte visiting her brother, John Lambert. —~Mrs. J. O. Reeser spent Sunday and several days in the early part of the week with friends in 8now Shoe. —~W. Harrison Walker Esq. spent Saturday and Sunday on a business trip and visitiog his par ents at Salona. ~Edward M. Griest and family, of Philipsburg, are now at Unionville fora two week's stay at the old Griest home. —~Mr. and Mrs. William R. Shope and Mrs. Alice Shook, of Lock Haven, spent Sunday with friends in Bellefonte. ~Mrs Daniel Keller and daughter Laey, of Philadelphia, sre visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keller. —Dr. Walter Stewart, of Wilkesbarre, was in Bellefonte the latter part of last week visiting his mother and brothers. —Harry Hasson, of Washington, D. C., has been & past week visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Howley, on Rishop street. —Mra. Thomazine Lane has returned to Belle- fonte for the balance of the summer and will stop with Mrs. Louisa Harris, on Allegheny St. —Misses Carrie and Sadie Bayard, daughters of the late Col. George A. Bayard, are spending their vacations with friends in Belleforte, —After a visit of wen days at the home of Jerry Donovan Miss Katharine Donovan, a charming young !ady of Renovo, left for har home on Tues day. —Ben Jones, the young son of Mr. and Mrs Claude Jones, of Tyrone, was a guest (he past week of hisaunt, Mrs, H. 8. Ray, at the Brock® erhoff house, ~Mrs, Mary Peters and daughter Annie, of Philadelphia, are members of a house party be. ing held this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chaney K. Hicklen, —~Mrs. Jane Miller accompanied her litle nephew, Thomas Miller, who has heen vieiting his grandfather, A. V. Miller, to his home in Piteairn last Friday. —Mrs, Thomas Moore, of Philadelphia, isin Beilefonte visiting her mother, Mra. William Dawson. Her daughter, Miss Helen Moore, is expected here next week. —Miss Anna Goldberg, who spent several week's in Bellefonteat the home of her sister, Mrs. Jacob Finkelstein and family, left on Mon” day for her home in Philadelphia. —~Misses Ellen D. Valentine ana Bertha Laurie left on Wednesday afternoon for a visit with Mrs. Ernest Taylor, in Middletown, N. J, and friends at Cape May and Downingtown. —After a week's visit at the home of her uncle, William Saxon, of Spring Creek, Miss Ada Behrer returned to her home on Wednesday, accompanied hy her cousin, Miss Lulu Saxon. — William Kurtz, who a number of years ago eondncted the stationery store in the Reynolds building but who is now in Clearfield, has heen in Bellefonte the past few days looking up old friends, —Ciaude Hull, of Philadelphia, i= spending ‘some time with friends in Rellefonte and on Wednesday night de'ightfally entertained and pleased the many patrons of the Scenic with a mandolin solo. —Judge and Mra, Harry Alvin Hall, of Ride- way, spent last Friday night at the Brockerhoff house. They were on an automobile pleasure trip and on Saturday went to Pann Cave, thence to Williamsport. —~W. S. Mallalien, manager of the Penneylvania telephone exchange in this place, left last Satnr- day on a ten days vacation which he will spend in Williamsport. Mra. Mallalien expects to go down tomorrow and return with her husband on Mon® day. —Rev. J. Allison Platte, who was spending part of his vacation in Pittshurg, was summoned to Seneca Lake, N. V., on Monday, where his family are summering, on account of the serious illness of one of his sons, The nature of the illness has not been learned at this writing. Miss Mary F. Hughes, of Merrill, Wis, Miss Alice M. Hughes, of Wistar, Ohio. and Mise Sadie B. Brewster, of Woodbridge, N. J, are guesis of Mrs, Minnie Hughes, at the Academy. Having spent some time campiog the party anticipates spending the month of Angust in Bellefonte. —Mr. and Mrs. T. 8. Strawn and dangh ter Ellen, and Mr. and Mrs. George A. Beezer, in the form- er’s automobile, composed one party and Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Casebeer, M. A. Landsyl®and Miss Josephine White, in a carriage made up another party who went to Old Fort hotel for supper on Sunday evening. —Mr. aad Mrs. W, H. Garbrick left on Wednes- day for a ten or twelve days trip which will in- clude brief visits with friends at Tyrone, Bell. wood, Wilkinsburg, Piteairn, Pittsburg and East Liverpool, Ohio. During their absence their daughter, Mrs. Annie Styers, will look after their home affairs. —Charles P. Miller, son of John C. Miller of Barnesboro, is visiting friends in Bellefonte this week. He now holds a good position in Wilmer- ding and is such a fine looking young man that it is almost impossible to reconcile him with the towheaded boy who used to travel the streets of Bellefonte only a few short years ago. —Miss Eva Ebbs, of Winfield, Kan, is visiting friends in Balfmoon township. She wax born and raised at Loveville and after studying music went to Winfield where she ik now a teacher of music in one of the leading colleges of that place, and this is the &rst time in a number of years that she has spent her vacation in visiting her rela” tives in this county. —John South, of Bridgeport, Ohio, and Lorne V. Hummel, of Harrisburg, graduates of the Academy in June, are visiting friends in Belle fonte. They have both been admitted into the Freshman class of the University of Penusylva- nia by certificate, Townsend Frasier, of Bridge- pore, formerly a student at the Academy, passed five of his recent examinations at the University of Pennsylvania, with a grade of “D,” which means distinguished. The German professor said he was the best prepared pupil in German he had had for many years. —After spending several weeks visiting old friends and haunts in Centre county Samuel W. Baker left last Saturday for Sunbury where he expected to spend a few days before departing for his home in DesMoines, Iowa, by way of the P. and E. railroad. Mr. Baker went west forty years ago and in all that time has visited Centre county but twice, twenty-four years ago and his recent trip. Naturally he saw many changes hereabouts in that time and just as naturally his friends remarked more or less change in him, but so far as the latter is concerned his friends in Iowa will notice even a greater change, as dur- ing his stay in Centre connty he got rid of that long, flowing beard of his and the resuit was that when he left Bellefonte he looked as young and frisky as a thirty-year-old. | ten days visit with her parents at Watsontown, —Mrs, C. D. Casebecr returned last Friday from a month's visit at her old home in Somer- set. —~Miss Mary Bradley left on Monday for a week's visit with her brother Robert and family, | in Bradford. —Mrs. Harry Kaup and little son, of Pittsburg, are visiting friends in Bellefonte aud at State ! College this week. —Mrs. Mary Bauer, of Jersey Shore, was in Bellefonte on Wednesday attending the funeral of Mrs. V. J. Bauer. | =—Mre. Thomas Buchanan aad family, of Al- | tovna, are in Bellefonte for a weeks visit among their many friends, ~Michael Darby, of Baltimore, Md., isin Belle. fonte visiting his cousin, Mrs. Maurice Yeager and family, on Bishop street. ~Orin Ishler and Miss Hess, of Pitisburg, are this week at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Ishler. —~Mrs. LeRoy Fox and little daughter return- ed to their home ip Lock Haven, after spending a week with friends in Bellefonte. { i ~Mrs. MaNeil and son Arthur, of Philadel phia, ars in Bellefonte for an extended visit at the home ot Mrs, W. H. Wilkinson. ~—Miss Etta Long, of New York city, is at home for a several week's visit with her pareats, Mr. and Mrs Edward Long, of Wingate, —A. W. Moore, manager of the Western Union telegraph office in this place, is spending this weak with his family in Lancaster. ~Mrs. William F, Logan and daughter, Miss Elizabetn, of Williamsport, are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Harris, —Dr. Lee B. Woodcock, of Scranton, was an arrival in town on Tuesday afternoon; having come over for a short visit with his mother, — Miss Gertrude Fulton, of Osceola Mills, is a visitor this week at the home of her cousin, Walter Fulton and wife, on east Lamb street, —~Mrs. Harry Garbrick and little daughter Alice, of Coleville, left on Tuesday morning on a two weeks visit to grandpa Crissman, in Pits. burg. A JOHNSON—FOSTER.—A quiet wedding was celebrated at the Evangelical parson- age at Curtin last Satarday evening when William Johoson Jr., a son of Mr. and Mrs. William Johanson, of Milesburg, and Miss Sarah Foster, a daughter of Mrs. Ed- ward Foster, of this place, were united in marriage by Rev. Dabbs. Following the ceremony the young conple left for a few daye weddiog trip to Harrisburg and are now at she home of she bridegroom's par- ents in Mileshurg. They will go to house- keeping just as soon as they can find a suit. able place. STRUBLE—~SNYDER—Harry V. Struble, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Watson Strable, and Miss Maade Snyder, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Snyder, both of Siate College, went to Boalsburg on Wednesday of last week and were quietly married at she Re- formed parsonage by Rev. A. A. Black. Daring the past week they bave been away ona weddiog trip to Philadelphia and Atlantic Cisy. RoaDp SUPERVISOR'S ORGANIZE.—A$ the convention of road supervisors held in Bellefonte last Thursday a good roads asso- ciation was organized by the election of the following officers: President, Col. Austin Cartin, of Boggs township ; seore- tary, Frank Wian, of Spring township ; treasurer, J. H. Beck, of Walker township, Amos Gaitbrick, Col. John A. Daley, Sim Batchelor, Victor L. Wagner and Dr. L. E. Kidder were appointed an execative com- mittee to prepare a constitution and by- laws and report at a meetiog to be held on a day during the Centre county fair. —— Mra. Margaret Medlar, a sister of the late Col. James P. Coburn, died as her home in Allentown on Wednesday night. She had been an invalid for many years and was eixty-five years old. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. 8, Brouse, grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. ecesesenene, resessesstraneiter Tallow, as ssscesssscssesnsssmmminsississrscsn Butter, ber yovad "a es ~emsts———————. 12