ASE To Conarsronpexts.—~No communications pubs ished uniess accompanied by the real name of the writer. A ——————————————— THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——A nice little son, the very first, was bora to Mr. aud Mrs. HarryjYeariock last Tharsday moroieg. ——A big haby hoy made ite arrival in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Dake- msn, at Axe Mann, about two weeks ago. ——Joho Sebring Jr. recently brought 0 Bellefonte an E-M-F touring car, which of coume is for demonstrating purposes and sale. Word was received here Wednesday day that J. Mao. Cartin is ill at his home in Pitsburg with ao attack of pneumonia threatened. Mrs. John Derstine Jr., was taken to the Bellefonte hospital on Monday for a0 operation. Her condition is considered quite serious. ——The State College High school bas- kes ball team will play she Bellefovte High school team in the Y. M.C. A. gymnasium in this place this evening, ~The Hon. Chatles F. Barclay is al- ready in the field with the pablished an- nouncements of his candidacy for a re-nom- ination for Congressman from thie district. ——Mr¢s. Mollie L. Valentine has order ed a Ford touring car for delivery in the early spring. She has already learned mach about driving and expects to ran the oar hersell. We hasten to offer our sympa- thy. —Though the bids were opened last Friday tke contract for the re-building of the Country club house at Heola has not yet been awarded, as all the bids are in exoess of the means at the command of the club. —There will be skating at the skating rink on Saturday and Wednesday uvights. Manager Rine has engaged the City band, which will render fine music on both oc oasions. Admission for ladies 150. gen- tlemen 250. ~The ladies of the Reformed oharch at their Country Store in Petriken ball, Toesday and Wednesday oleared one bun- dred dollars, the last money neceseary So olear the debt of two thousand dollars on their new ohapel. ——0n Taesday T. 8. Strawn, broker, bought out Maurice T. Kelly and’ the lat- ter will wind ap his affairs in bis broker's office in Temple Court tomorrow at noon. At present he has not decided oo what he will do in the futore. «Dt. Ambrose M. Schmids will leo. ture on ‘‘Aocross she Atlantic and to Italy” in the Reformed oharob at Howard on Fri- day evening of next week, December 3rd. Mrs. Schmids and Miss Roxie Miogle will accompany him and sing. Andrew Allison Thal Jr., is the name of the young man who arrived as the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Thal on Wednes- day night, and as he has been a fairly well behaved guest so far they have decided to keep him as a regalar boarder. ~The Bellefonte Central railroad train on its way to State College at 10.15 Sator- day morning, ran off the track up Buffalo Ran and did not reach the College until two o'clock in the afternoon. Fortunately nobody was hurt and no great damage was done. ——[). Waguoer Geiss was housed up all of last week and she fore part of this with an attack of tonsilitis, and during his en- forced absence his sister, Miss Elsie Geiss, was over from Centre Hall looking after the clerical work in the coal and graio office of Edward K. Rhoads. ~The Bush house yesterday kept good its reputation by serving one of the most elaborate Thauksgiving dinners on the cuisine of any hotel in Central Pennsyl- vania. And the result was that most of the regular guests at the hotel entertained friends there for dinner. «The bids for the building of the State highway through Bellefonte were opened at the office of the state highway sommissioner in Harrisburg on Taesday but up until the hour of going to press ghey bad not been received by the county commissions in this place. — We regret to announce that the Rev. James Potter Haghes is quite ill at the Academy. He was threatened with poen. monia, but it is thought that the develop- ment of shat malady bas Leen stopped. As he is nearing his 82ad milestone any ill pess he may saffer is serious. ——There will be a total eclipse of the moon tonight, or rather tomorrow (Sas- urday) morning. The moon will enter the earth's shadow at 2:11 a. m.; will be- come total at 3:14; middle eclipse at 3:55; end of total at 4:36, and the moon will leave the earth’s shadow as 5:38, ——The tickets for the Coanty Fair, the entertainment to be given in the opera house by she Elks Charity olab, will be on sale at Parrish’s drugstore and the cobart will be open for the first night on Wedoes- day morning, December first. Get your reserved seats early and save all coofasion, ~The Bellefonte friends of Mrs. J. Irvin Borohes, of Knoxville, Tenn., will sympathize with ber in the total desirue- tion of ber home by fire about a week ago. Piactioally notting at all was saved from the flames. Mrs. Borohes is a half sister of Mrs. Lillie G. Reeder and before her marriage was Miss Mary Jackson. | everybody is invited. | tarkey yesterday? In o statement issned from the aod- : department in Harrisburg oF LECTURES. —Aloog in the latter pars of | Inst April a very obarming and good look- | the past week it is shown Shas the total ing woman arrived in Bellefonte and in- | amount of mercantile tax assessed in Cen- troduced herself to the general public as | tre county for the year 1900 was $5.962.79, Mrs. Charlotte W. Elliot, of New York. | of which amount $205,65 was uncollecta- She claimed to be a traveling representative | ble. The coss for advertising the meroan- of a New York University Extension Leo- | tile appraisement and collecting the tax tare Course burean aod her business was to | was $748 18, leaving as the net amount secare enough subscribers in Bellefoate to | paid $5,008.90. justify giving a course of lectures here. | th, The plan was that each subscriber was to| ——WadeCrase, who the past year bas be sent a certain number of books for which | been in the employ of the Pennsylvania they were to pay a stipulated price, which telephone company in this place, bas been in the aggregate amounted to about twen- appointed epeoial rural route line agent for ty-uine dollars each. In addition lectures the Williamsport district of the same com- were to be prepared by leading college. pany, with headquarters in that city. He professors and sent here, and these were $0 will enter upon the duties of bis new posi- be delivered to the subsoribers by some | $100 next week, probably Monday, and as well known loos! speaker, Kev. Hewitt, ab soon as he cau secure a house or suitable the time, being the gentleman designated. apartments will move his family to wil- As stated above Mrs. Elliot was a very | lamepors. obarming woman, as is evidenced by the fact shat she succeeded in securing a list of abouts thirty-five subsoribers at twen- ty-nine per. Then she lels Belle. tonte wishout completing arrangemeate with Mr, Hewitt to deliver the leo- >oe — A force of men are at work putting up concrete abutments for a new irop bridge on the Lewisbarg and Tyrone rail- road, a short distance south of she Yeager Swing company’s plant. When the abot- ments are completed the superstructure tures or give any details about she| .,), , ooy jogether on temporary abut course. The only definite thing the Belle-| alongside the presens wooden bridge Joute petals was the knowledge al and when all is completed she wooden they signed a contract to paya g SE prio Sor member of buoks aed 8 bridge will be shoved aside and the iron woman's promise that they would bave an bridge @ovelt nyo plage. opportuuity to hear some highly elevating Writing in Monday's North Ameri- lectures prepared by some eminsnt college | can “Linesman” in a review of she fool professors. ball season up to that date gives Yale un- Their signed contracts passed as good disputed standing at the head of the liss of carrenoy for the publishers sens the books | clabs, with Harvard second, Lafayette in one, two, three order, each one calling | third and State College fourth. This is for the payments of another installment, | probably the first time that any writer has and they wouldn’s book any delay in re. | given the State team the proper recogni. mittance, either. Bat the lectures failed | tion it merited in the standing of eastern %0 arrive and Rev. Hewitt failed to receive | teams, a fact whioh shows shat the hereto. any definite request or instructions about | fore considered smaller colleges bave be- delivering the course and naturally the | come dangerous rivals lor any team of the subscribers became a little querulons. Let. | big six. ters were written hut Mrs. Elliott counid not be found ; the college professors who —=The growth of State College during were 40 prepare the lectures replied shyt no | *h Pass wo or three years has resalted in atrangements had been made with them #0 muah of the available site being built up for anything of the kind and so the master | SUAS the borough authorities are now agi- stood when a meeting of the local sab. tating the question of extending the bor- toribers was called and held at the Bush | 9vSh limitssoas to take in She Mase: boase last Thursday evening. fn, Tie would ive vols Salli Some of the subscribers, by the way, OFS Bum Jean ? bave paid she fall price for the books white | The installation of a twenty-five thousand those who have been paying in installments dollar sewer system is another improve have paid only sbout half the amount, | ™e0! being discussed by she authorities And to find out if they were compelled to while private parties are endeavoring to keep on payiug an attorney was called into secure a suitable site, ceutrally located, on the meeting to give advice. Though not which to build a theatre. consoling his advice was practically to keep on paying. It was finally decided by those present to invite Rev. Hewitt to give a course of lectares, aod this he finally con- sented to do, and the only thing the sab. soribers would now liks to do is to again meets She charming Mrs. Elliot. nn ——You are wondering what you will send to thas relative or friend who is away from home, as a Christmas present. Have you thought what an appropriate and acoeptable gift a copy of the WATCHMAN for one year wold, be. Nothing thas you can get for the money would be received with hall the pleasure. And you can have it sent every week in the year, to any post office you wish for §1 00. BELLEFONTE SHIRT FACTORY BRANCH- ING Out.~—~The Bellefoute shirt factory is now a shirt factory in reality as well as pame, a¢ on Toesday the manufacture of shirts was began at that plsnt. When the factory was first started in Bellefonte it was started as a shirt factory bat for a nom- ber of years past men’s drawers only have been made. Six weeks or two months ago S. D. Ray, se the proprietor of the factory, was in New With the long winter evenings com- York city and at that time Salant & Salant, ing on apace, with the weather vatorally large wholesale dealers in shirts, made bim growing colder and colder, there is more of a very good proposition to take up the | 0 inclination for indoor amusement and manulactare of shirts in connection wish | entertainment aod there is no place in his present line. Having carefully investi. | Bellefonte where you are better assured of gated the proposition Mr. Ray fioally de- both than at she Scenic. People go oided to take up the line and on Taesday there now who never went belore, while started in on the manufactare of shirts. | OD0® & patron always a patron, is nob only Miss L. V. Miles, of New York oity, is in |® maxim but a reality. The reason is that sharge as instructress and forelady in the | YOU are always certain of seeing something shirt department. As present fifseen ma. | YOU Dever saw before—becaase no old and chines will be kept busy on this line but stale pictures are shown at the Soeunio. additional machinery bas been ordered and | A0d they are all the best of Sheir olass, be as scon as it arrives and can be put in place | Shey scenic, historical, feature or comic. this number will be doubled, at leass. And | Then the fine musio is another pleasing vext spring Mr. Ray will equip his baild- feature. Mrs. Rassell Jury continues as jog on south Water street and from shen on pianist while as a singer, either of the our- manufactare shirts on a large scale. rent illustrated songs, the more popular The present factory is now a basy place, songs of the day, or the old fashioned a8 in addition to making shirts aud drawers | 900ke Miss Norton grows more charming Calder Ray has resamed the manufacture to her audiences every night. And all the of osaton flannel gloves for the wholesale | Above for five cents. wade Tue cauion ee oa ~——Between eleven aud twelve o'clock for cheapness of price there is nothing to Sy'Tursda) tuenosn Dury Gulitat, drives compare with it lor warmth and durability. Aown at'the Central ith avs: ne As the presect time between fifty and sixty vania with a load of goods and when yl: girls are employed in the shirt factory aod he bridge thera the doubl Share this number will be gradually increased as ax $ ant Subletses on the wagon broke,allowing the broken parts addisiova! very is {ostalled. as well as the single trees to fall down on Tag Basksr SHor Exmrsrrion 1 | the beels of the horses. The avimals be- BELLEFONTE. —The Basket Shop will hold | ame [rightened and ran away throwing its aonusl exhibition in Bellefonte in | Gebres trom she wagon against the truss of the W.C. T. U. room in Petriken hall the | the bridge. He was knocked unconscions week beginning December 13th. This and being found in thas condition the wild exhibition is sonually becoming more and report was ciroulated thas his neok had heen more a feature for Christmas and Holiday | Droken by the fall and he was dead. Most shoppers wherever exhibited. The line | fortunately, however, his was not the case, of baskets this year is far larger and as he recovered consciousness shortly after- prettier than ever. Thereare baskets of | Wards and his greatest injury wasa com- all kinds for household purposes: Waste pound fracture of she bones of his right leg. baskets, sewing baskets, work baskets, He was taken to his home on Bishop street baogiog baskets, in varions styles and | 8% his own request but later upon the ad- fancy shapes, at prices to suit any kind of | vice of his physician be was taken to the a purse. Nothing so good or appropriate Bellefonte hospital where the fracture was for a Christmas remembrance reduced, though it proved a tedious and The basket Shop now affords employ- delicate operation. The fracture is jast mens to from twelve $0 fifteen people and | 3%0ve the ankle and the large bone was their ontpat goes all over the country. | Mob oly broken bul was badly splintered They aouually bave exhibits in Chicago, | *° that the ends of the bone protruded Pistsburg, Philadelphia, Washington and through the flesh and it was necessary to New York, but notwithstanding this fact | Wire it to keep the ragged fragments in the exhibit tobe given in Bellefonte will | Place. It took one hour to perform the be just as good as those shown in the above operation, inasmuch as unusual cave was cities. The week beginning December 13th exercised to reduce the fracture so as to is the time, Petriken ball the place, and obviate as far as possibie the dauger of a : 47.44 | #4ifl ankle upon recovery. He is now get- ——— etn | ting along all right bus it will be six weeks ——Did you enjoy your Thanksgiving | or longer before he will be able to do any | work. Deer HusTING Ausost OVER. —QOanly four days yet remain of the open season for huntiog deer and, unless have been many deer killed by away out in the mountains and not yet re- ported, the slaughter will have to be anus- ually large the last four days if the record for the ceason will come anyways near that i close to one hundred, bus so far this year it is a question if the number so far exceeds thirsy or forty, more likely not that many. Of course the season has nob been as good for the opening day. The mixture of warm and cold weather we bave bad since the season came in hes doubtless caused the deer to lie olose to cover and only go on the trail when danger approsched too close, So far as the Bellefonte bunters are con- cerned, the Panthers bad no deer up until Monday when Edmund Blanchard came home. The statement received last week that Jobn Kaisely shot a large buck was true, only they did not ges the buck. The only thing they got was a trail of blood, the deer making bis escape. It is not yet until the last day of the bunting season— next Taesday—or come home tomorrow evening. No word bas been received from the Gentzel party. . Naturally there are quite a number of bunting stories going the rounds and among those most interesting to Centre oountiaus are the following: Dr. A. P. Hull, of Montgomery, who spent & week with one of the Snow Shoe hunting parties, took home with him a two pronged buck which carried a bullet wound in one of its legs which had all the appearance of having been made some time before thie season opened. Sherman Mader, of Lock Haven, while hanting in the vicinity of Hayes Ran, killed a wo huodred pound bear and se- cared a number of pheasants and rabbits. On Saturday evening the carcasses of four large bear and one deer were brought in on the Soow Shoe train as far as the Intersection and from there shipped to Al- toons. They were the spoils of a party of eight Altooca nimrods who bave been out in she vicinity of Kartbaus since the opening of the deer season. In addition to the above is is reported that they bave three oub bears captured alive. Chailes White, of Altoona, was a mem- ber of a Philipsburg party haunting on the mountains south of that place last week who claims to have himself kiiled the max- imam number of pheasants allowed one mau during the season, which is fifty. His party also gos a good sized bear. Jobu Naooarzow, a former conductor on the Beeob Creek railroad, inst Wednesday killed 8 three pronged buck sear Monu- meus. A number of Winbarne hunters are en: camped near the Black Moshannon and one day last week while they were making a drive for deer Frank Howe, one of the party, climbed on a bollow log and bark- ed io imitation of a dog. He almost fell off the log when he saw a big she bear orawling out of one end of it, bus retaived presence of mind enough to shoot. His shot only wounded the bear but Amber Davis, who was nearby, succeededin bring- ing brain to earth. The bear dressed 248 pounds. THAT Bic CoUNTY FAIR.—Matters are progressing very nicely in preparing for thas big County Fair, to be held in the opera house Friday and Saturday of next week uoder the auspices of the Eik’s Char- ity club. While Miss Book, the direotress, bas been away from Bellefonte the past two weeks she will be here for the next full rehearsal next Monday evening, No- vember 20th. This one act musical comedy was writ- ten by Miss Book, who bas made the drill- ing sod producing of home talent plays a specialty—this play has been her biggest and most successful. The plan and plot is very simple—nothing bat a county fair scene with all manner of people coming to enjoy the festivities of she event. It will be a real picture of the real old-time coun- ty fair, with displays innumerable of riob, yellow pumpkins, big potatoes, immense squashes, record-breaking ears of yellow corn, red apples, and maybe Si Jones, of Squedunk, will have some of those mar- velous patob-guilts there. Yet the real interest is centered in the dialogue of the visitors at the fair and in the musical pum- bers to be presented. As the soene opens the loud-mouthed fakirs, lemonade man, sideshow barker and the balloon man will almost dealea you with their mighty yells. Then follows a quick succession of farmers, old maids, school boys, jockeys, bride and groom, gold brick men, city visitors—a conglomeration of She charasters one can possibly imagine at a conauty fair, esoh with an appropriate dialogue and conver- sation, All of this colloguy is of the moss humorous nature and has life and spirit to it thas keeps the audience in constant con- vulsions. One of the big features in the County Fair is the Teddy Bear oborus by a large number of girls between the ages of three aod nine years. It ie said to be one of the prettiest and outest ever. There will be another children’s chorus and six young men and young ladies’ choruses. All of these are the latess, ocalobiess song pro- duotione and are presented in a beautilal, attractive manner. —— A ————— —Mrs. Samuel H. Diebl, who has not been in good health for some time pass, was taken to the Bellefonte hospital on Monday for an operation, 8s last, when there was a tracking snow known definitely whether they will remain he wi ~Miss Mabe! Woomer left on Monday (or a few | Mrs. David Kelley, in the former's automobile, days visit with friends in Jersey Shore. : and DedaaBasiw/ Sus aid Wo, and Mrs, —Dr. R. G. H, Hayes has been for the Harry E. Jenkins, in the doctor's car, comprised week on a business trip to Philadelphia. P#*! | two partes who drove to Tyrone on Sunday and tian * on spout the day with friends. yams Wednesday 10 see the State boys play football, | Misses Mary aad Elisabeth Blanchard left Zien Josephine eDormol it esarday 100 t vorspre ue out a soe oy To » visit of several weeks with relatives in Pitts Basket Shop. From Philadelphia they will go to burg ‘| Washington for a week and then New p week ~Mrs. Murilla Dawson and Mrs. Isasc Dawson | York before returning home. : Tol aj giving. Mabel Fauble will go down to Philadelphia today ~ Mr. and Mrs. W. I Fleming spent Thaoks- | io do some shopping. Miss Helen Crissman and giving with Mr. and Mrs. Ward Fleming, in Har | piss Fauble will return tomorrow or Sunday risburg, : ' while Miss Eva Crissman will remaic in the city —Mrs. Emma Yeager and her daughter, Mrs, | and assist Mise Blanchard in the Basket Shop ex- Edward Harper, speat Thanksgi ving with friends hibition. in Altoona. «Mrs. Herry Cartin has closed her home at Curtin for a week or so because of the absence of ‘her daughter Katharine,'who is visiting in Pitts. burg. She has roomsat the Mrs, John I Curtin home on Curtin street, while Laird is stopping at the Brockerhoff house; as a more convenient place from which to superintend their iron works and mines. HewirT—ST0VER. —A wedding of in- terest so Centre countians ocourred at Al- toona, Wedoesday evening of last week when Mr. Cloyd Hewitt and Miss Rath Stover were united in marriage by the Rev. Ralph H. Bergstresser. The bride is well known at State College and Pine Grove Mills, being a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Stover who were formerly from Pine Grove Milla. The wedding was a very elaborate affair, and the bride looked beau- tifal in a white princess gown. The brides- maid was Miss Edith Stover, a sister of the bride. A reception and dinner was ten- dered the bridal party immediately after the ceremony. —~Miss Ids Wolf was home from Altoona to spend Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wolf. = ~8, A. McQuistion and his daughter, Miss Mary, were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. A, Boozer, of Centre Hall. velop —Miss Mildred Grimm, who has been in Brook- lyn, N. Y., for the past four months, returned to Bellefonte Wednesday night. —Paul Fishburn, who is now in the employ of the Pennsylvania ralirosd at Tyrone, spent Sun’ dry with friends in Bellefonte. i —Mr. and Mrs, Haugh N. Crider spent Sunday at the tome of Mrs. Crider's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Freeman, in Tyrone, «Mr, and Mrs. Boyd A. Musser, and little son, of Altoona, were down for Thanksgiving at the Musser home on east Lamb street. —Mr. and Mrs, Matthew MeGinness and Charles Larimer were in from Indiana to spend Thanks. giving with heir friends in Bellefonte, —Mr, and Mrs. Charles F. Shaw, of State Col- lege, are spending their Thanksgiving vacation with Mr. Shaw's parents, in Rochester, N.Y. —Mrs. J. E. Ward and daughter Isabel spent Saturday night and Sanday at the home of J, B. Williams, in Tyrone, as the guests of Mrs, Mollie Proffitt. —Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spigelmyer and litile granddaughter went to Williamsport to spend Thanksgiving with the Hoffmans; they wiil re- turn today. : —Mrs. Frederic Topelt, of Brooklyn, is expect’ ed in Bellefonte next week, and will stay until after Christmas with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. 8. Brouse, —Mr. and Mrs. William Walker came to Belle fonte last week and will spend the winter in the home lately vecupied by Mr. Walker's mother, in’ the Browa row, —Mrs. Cyrus Labe, with her little buby, left on Wednesday for Harrisburg, where her husband now has a good position and where they will make their future home. —Mr. and Mrs. Will Rees and littie daughtex Jeft for their home in Patton on Tuesday after a week's visit at the home of the former's parents Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rees, —Miss Anne Shafner, who came up from Phil adelphia last Friday in the motor car with Mr. and Mrs, John Porter Lyon, returned Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving at home, —W. Harrison Walker Esq., left yesterday for Bloomsburg, Columbia county, where he is inter- ested as one of the leading attorneys in the set tlement of two large estates in the orphan's court. —Edward A. Wood, manager of the Pitisburg’ branch of the Equitable Life Assurance society, was a guest of Mr. J. 8. McCargar several days the fore part of the week, leaving for his home on Wednesday. v —W. A. Moore, president of the Bellefonte Furnace company and Nittany Iron company, se companied by Mrs, Moore, went to Philadelphia on Sunday on a business trip. They returoed on Wednesday. —8. A. Dunlap, of Pioe Grove Mills, was a Belle- fonte visitor on Saturday and a caller at the Warcunas office. He is one of the old time resi dents of Ferguson township and a Democrat of the o. 1 type. —Edmund Blanchard Esq, left; on Wednesday for Philadelphia on a trip that combined busi ness and pleasure, and naturally was one of the interested spectators at the Pennsylvania—Cor- nell football game. —Miss Helen Robb has gone to Canton, Ohio, for a fow week's visit witn her sister, Mrs, Sam- uel Cole and family, and during her absence Miss Helen Bair ix #lling her position as stenographer for W. Harzison Walker Esq. «Meg J, L. Spangler and Mrs. James A. Me. Clain will go to Philadelphia tomorrow to take home Albert Engles, the infant son of Dr. and Mrs. Blackbarn, who with his nurse, has been at the Spangler home since last April. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fay and adopled child, of Altoona; Frank K. Lukenbach, of Tyrone, and John D, Meyer, of Altoona, were arrivals in Bellefonte Wednesday evening, and of course re- mained to eat their Thanksgiving turkey here. —Mr. and Mrs. Kirtley, of Union Star, Missouri, are the guests of Dr. and Mrs, M. A. Kirk. Mr, and Mrs. Kirtley were married on October 20th and their visit in Bellefonte is part of their hon. eymoon which they have been spending in the east. —Mrs. Catharine Rhone, of Rochester, Pa. passed through Bellefonte Tuesday on her way to State College, where she will visit for a few days with her mother, Mrs. Fye, spending the remainder of her ten days with her brothers and sisters there and in Tyrone. —Among the Bellefonters who went to Pitls- burg on Wednesday for the big State—University of Pittsburg football game yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Quigley. They were also the Thanksgiving day guests of Mr. Quigley’s broth- er, J. Edwin Quigley and family. —Dr. Fred Robinson, of State College, spent Saturday night in Bellefonte and on Sunday left for Pittsburg where he spent the week and re mained for the big State—University of Pittsburg Ta rar. Mrs, Ruliasct, by the | Saovessetds Lat DAShel. mumelf] 0060 95 00 way, has been visiting (riends in Pittsburg the S———— past two weeks or longer. —3Mr. and Mrs. Maynard March Jr, of Cleve. land, Ohio, who have been occupying the “House a riying, are dhe sl Ji ot of Lords” for the past two weeks broke camp on evening. markets on Saturday, Mr. March returning to Cleveland Ww while Mrs. Murch left Wednesday to spend | WROM—ROd.uiisisisissiscsrrnns SLISGLIS CASNER—WINKLEMAN, — On Tuesday of last week Charles W. Casner, of Juniata, aod Miss Esta M. Winkleman, of Nittany, were married as the parsonage of St. John's Lutheran church in Look Haven, by the pastor, Rev. Amos A. Parr. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace W. Winkleman, of Nittany,and 1s well known in that pars of Centre county. Mr. Casner is employed by the Penvsylvania railroad company at Juniata, sod it is there the young couple will make their home. PETTINGILL—BOSWORTH.—On Monday William W. Pettingill Jr., constable of Allison township, Clinton connty, and Miss Josephine C. Boaworth, of Look Haven, came to Bellefonte and were quietly mar- ried at the Methodist parsonage by the pastor, Rev. T. 8. Wilecox. They returned home on the next train and immediately went to housekeeping in the Pettingill home in Allison township. i fA i. James -SHEATS. ~On Wednesday, No- vember 17th, Milton James, of Blanchard, snd Miss Bessie M. Sheats, of Lock Haven, were married as the home of the bride's parents, Mr. aod Mrs. Charles M. Sheatz, in that place. Only a few intimate friends were present to witness the ceremony, which was performed by Rev. A. A. Parr. They will go to housekeeping at Blanchard. New Moric Pierre Snow.—Calvin Hose, the well known minstrel man bus who has been in the moving picture buei- ness the past year or eo, has leased the opera house and will re-open the Eleotrio Theatre motion pioture show next Monday evening, November 20th, with a good pro- gram of wnoviog piotures and illustrated songs. The very fact thas Mr. Hoes has been before the publio long enough to know what they demand and what they appre- ciate in the way of entertainment, as well as the knowledge shat he is no novice in the moving piotare business, ought to be assurance that his venture in Bellefonte will be one worthy the patronage of all. The popular price of five cents will prevail and il you are lucky enough yon may be able 80 get a season tivkes at nominal cost: You can find out how by attending the opening Monday night. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. 8, Brouse, grocer, The prices quoted are those paid for produce, ersessesrarassnsesane . EERE ALESSI SER HORE INET S EERE RS Eee Ha 00e ereens B.5E53583S Thenksgiving with her fathor in Hughesville, 0x- | Corn —XelOW rrr rere. VISTI pecting later to return here for Christmas with | * —MiXed BeW.w....cuuersssmmnerssnse Oatsa.nessssrsarensns Mr. and Mrs, Daggett. BERENS ARIES LEREAE HINEE SR IRIIIE Flour— Winter, Per Br'l.......cuumu 4 1] —~Thomas R. Harter, lumberman and president | op FEAVGHLS BEM cvcrres esses i of the First National bank, of Loganton, with ex- Rye I hay—Onotes™ Fiimot No ios 1 8.00 sherift Torrence Shearer, Mr. Browa aod another “le “ Mized * 1 age 0 gentleman of Lock Haven, composed a jolly quar- Bra. ccnisnrisine 8.00@17.00 t tte who cama to Bellefonte in the former's au. A tomobile last Saturday evening, “just for a little "as t it, as they made the run here | Published » in Bellefonte ay ey VS to do better than that 2481.00 por annum (1 aid sicily 3 advance ) going hume, Ge a and $2.60 if noi —Ex-Judge and Mrs. John G. Love left on QUE be discontinued until Wednesday for a sojourn of two weeks at Clifton iL Springs, N. Y., for the benefit of Judge Love's health, as he has not been quite well of late. a de er, of Tasers Eats Their children, Jack and Cstharine, were up in ing by the quarter, ha'f year, or year, as Tyrone for Thanksgiving with the Love family SPACE OCCUPIED [sm |om|1y and will remain thereover Sunday. When they e n Que inch (13Tines (his (ype... 8 6.8 1 return in the beginning of the week Mra. 8. A. 16 Bell and Miss Alice Tate will go out and take | Three inches. pps) 10 | 18 | 38 charge of their home until Judge and Mrs. Love's | aif Column oo tacnes —l 20 | 88 50 return. Ome Column (20inches 1861881 10