CUSATION.—At nine o'clock last Thursday | evening the police authorities in this place received a telephone dispatch from Hunt- ingdon to arrest and hold Harry J. Cohen until officials from that place could come | after him. The offense with which he ' was alleged to be guilty was hiring a horse and buggy from liveryman W. E. Milliken, of Huntingdon, about a year ago, driving the animal thirty or thirty-five miles into the country and leaving him there for the {owner to hunt up and take home. As | Harry J. Cohen, who works in Claster’s | Underselling store, was the only man by Logari : | that name in Bellefonte policeman Harry Axe "aha to the Gritith home "4" | Dukeman placed hin es Qt The : . | young man stoutly maintain t it was Som 3 Mes Loua Bis ts Fecoverd | all a mistake so far as he was concerned I ks grip and iS | 4 offered to give bail for his appear- aga. ‘ance when wanted, but the anthorities ——Mrs. William Johnstonbaugh, of | would not accept bail and hustled him off Milesburg, slipped on the ice on Tuesday, | to jail, where he was compelled to spend fell and broke her leg near the ankle. | the night. ——Dr. George F. Harris is nioving this Friday morning liveryman Milliken and week from his old offices in the Curtin | constable Port came over from Hunt- home to his new offices in the Gardner |ingdon to get their prisoner but when block on High street. | they went to the jail they were very much ——E. J. Teamanis the lay delegate of | chagrined to discover that he was not the the local United Evangelical church and | man atall. In apology Mr. Milliken stated expects to attend the annual conference that the name was the same but the at Newberry next week. Cohen who hired his horse was from New L bit : York. In the meantime Harry Cohen, of — Shoe ple iter Seminary this place, not only suffered the humilia- Bellefonte Academy five last Friday even- Ton of being compejled to spend a night i : in jail but he paid a lawyer five dollars as ing by the score of 45 to 23. ws : : a retaining fee to defend him and then ——James Pratt, of Unionville, a stu- 7 : ! ** | had no need of his services. He is now dent in En opm considering bringing an action against nary, preac rng li man Milliken for d for false Jacksonville and in the evening at Howard. ys Bap lop Camage Tor ——0On Monday Mr. and Mrs. John! And just as if throwing a man into jail Blanchard moved from the Crider house | for nothing was not the limit of endur- on west Linn street to the house vacated ance for any one Harry, on Sunday, had by Mrs. Florence F. Dale, on the eastern | another mishap. He was helping pull end of the same thoroughfare. the hose carriage of the Logan fire com- ——Mrs. Anna C. Woodcock has decid- | pany to the fire at the A. M. E. church ed to give up her house on Spring street | and coming down High street he slipped and for the present store her furniture, | and fell, the heavily loaded carriage run- intending to spend the time with her sons, | ning squarely over his legs. Fortunately Dr. Lee and Rev. Jay Woodcock. he was not hurt in the least and not only ——Next Sunday will close the work of did good work at the fire but is on his the present conference year in the local | JOP as usual this week. United Evangelical church. At the even- ing service the pastor will give a short review of the work done since the last conference. ——Dr. John Robinson, who recently sold his extensive practice at State Col- lege to Dr. P. Hoffer Dale, of Centre Hall, expects to go to Germany in the spring to take a post graduate course in the Heidel- berg University. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. With rain and hail and sleet and snow The days they come and the weeks they go, And we sit and shiver and wonder when Spring onions and garlic will come again. —John Confer recently moved from Two Fires.—Bellefonte has had two fires this week and superstitious people are now predicting a third. Thefirst one was on Sunday forenoon when the A. M. E. church on St. Paul street was com- pletely gutted and the roof burned off. The fire was discovered about 9.40 o'clock and it is the general opinion that it orig- inated from the furnace in the basement. When discovered the entire interior was ——Philip Rose, of Hartford, Conn., in flames and it was impossible to save entered the Bellefonte Academy as a stu- | the edifice. The church was a frame dent this week. He is a nephew of Tarl- | structure and was built in 1859. The loss ton Goldthwaite, who was in Bellefonte | is about $2,500 on which there is $1,000 twenty years or more ago as a tutor for | insurance. The congregation in this place Harvard University. is pron large one and the loss of their —The Price—Butler Comedy com- ch is quite a severe blow. : pany will be in Beliefonte in the near The second fire of the week was in Har- future for a return engagement at the | 77 Macker’s grocery store about 9.30 opera house and shortly thereafter Clif- o'clock Tuesday morning. Mr. Macker | ford Mallory will appear fo two nights | ¥2 filling a cigar lighter with gasolene | in high class tragedy. Wieh the Suid anplgted isi Bre 10 L . ET nana e ra room in general. rr ie Jo Cote repo st he the evening of March 17th, St. Patricks Ramee Were extingyished before they had day, for the benefit of the church. A Satgn rv F000 ee m0 on ae RE a extended to all | yp, pes stock was almost wholly ruined. Mr. Macker’s loss is about one thous- ——Capt. Fry, commandant at The and dollars, on which he had no insur- Pennsyivania State College, will spend his 8 : A . ance. Mr. Crider's loss on the room is leisure time the coming summer training | fully covered by insurance. The paper himseif how to run an automobile as he stock of S. H. Williams, which was in the was in Scottdale on Friday and bought | oom under Macker's store, was badly a second hand Pierce Arrow car. damaged by water but at this writing it ——Dr. James H. Dobbins had another is hard to determine just the amount of attack of vertigo on Wednesday after-| his loss. Whatever it is, however, is cov- noon but yesterday he was considerably | ered by insurance. improved. Mrs. Elizabeth Glenn, of Snow Shoe, is critically ill at the home of her niece, Mrs. Clayton Rider, at Coleville. —Witmer Smith went over to Centre Hall over a week ago to visit his parents, was seized with the grip and has been confined to the house most of the time since. Miss Mame Ceader has also been housed up with the grip the past week. ——Mis. James Harris recently pre- sented to Gregg Post a very good portrait of her husband, who {or years was chap- fain of the Post. It is very much appre- ciated by the members of the Post and has been hung over the chaplain’s desk. ——A mother’s meeting will be held this (Friday) afternoon at 3.30 o'clock in Petriken hall. Subject, "The Child in School.” The discussion of this subject is continued owing to the unusual inter- est manifested therein. All women in- . wited to this meeting. ——Rev. Father O'Hanlon, who will lecture in the auditorium at State Col- lege tomorrow evening, gave a dramatic lecture last year on “Hamlet.” The sub- ject tomerrow night will be “Art Study of Shakespeare.” This is his most recent Jecture and one of his best. ——{Jpwards of five hundred people including the members, their wives and sweethearts and the members of the Lodge of Rebekahs attended the annual banquet of the Bellefonte Lodge I. O. O. F. on Wednesday evening. A Lukenbach presided as toastmaster and quite a num- Deep Snow AND HARD WINTER HARD ON WILD GAME.—The deep snow in the woods and prolonged spell of cold weath- er is proving hard on the wild game in the mountains, especially wild turkeys, pheasants and rabbits. Out in the neigh- borhood of Pleasant Gap there are two flocks of wild turkeys which are being regularly fed by the farmers. One flock of nineteen turkeys is being fed by a young son of Michael Kerstetter while a flock of twelve turkeys makes its appear- ance at regular intervals at the home of county commissioner Harry E. Zimmer- man. The fact that wild turkeys will thus come out of the cover of the woods to feed at farm buildings shows to what straits they are being driven for susten- ance. So far, however, no reports have been received from men who work in the woods of the finding of any unusual num- ber of dead game of any kind and there is just a possibility that both birds and animals are still able to obtain food of some kind. ——— A ot To CHANGE CHURCH CHARGES—A meet- ber of speeches ware made. Duitrichs a ig orchestra furnished the music. / that another charge be made of the pect in the near future to move from Donora to Allentown where Mr. Stinson has accepted a good clerical position with one of the steel companies there. Mrs. Stinson was formerly Miss Lillian Crit- tenden and she and her little baby will come to Bellefonte for a few days stay while her husband is superintending the ARRESTED AND JAILED ON FALSE Ac- ' moving of their household effects. . en Ll i, ——Hon. Frederick Kurtz had quite a sick spell the latter part of last week but this week he has been somewhat improv- ed. Mrs. Kurtz, who had a very bad at- tack of the grip, is also improving siewly. Mrs. W. I. Fleming was so ill with the grip this week that her husband was sum- moned to her bedside from Harrisburg. ——Six new members were initiated into the Bellefonte Lodge of Elks on Monday evening and a number of others voted into membership. ' The handsome new home of the lodge on High street i an attraction for a great many and it would not be surprising if the member- ship reaches the two hundred mark in the near future. ——Nelson Marshall, of Union town- ship, recently purchased the two Gregg farms in Pennsvalley, about midway be- tween Centre Hall and Linden Hall for twelve thousand dollars. The farms are at present tenanted by John A. Heckman and Daniel Callahan and Mr. Marshall will not take personal possession of the same until April first, 1911. ——— AP So Wo ——Col. James A. McClain is likely giving away souvenirs at the First Na- tional bank at Spangler this week because on Sunday night Mrs. McClain became the mother of a nice little daughter at the Col. J. L. Spangler home in this piace. The colonel was here over Sunday but Mrs. McClain and the baby were doing | so nicely on Monday that he returned home. —{regg Post cleared about twenty dollars at their supper on Tuesday even- ing and everybody there bore ample evi- dence of the sumptuousness of the meal. In fact it was said that commissioner's clerk Williams could hardly get away from the table while A. A. Dale Esq, used up five cents worth of digestive tablets in order to get away with all that was get in front of him. ee er essen —The Central Pennsylvania confer- ence of the United Evangelical church will meet in annual session at Newberry, (West Williamsport) March 3rd. Among the important business which will be transacted will be the election of a new presiding elder and electing ten each of ministerial and lay delegates to the gen- eral conference which will meet at Can- ton, Ohio, next October. - ——There is no place in Bellefonte like the Scenic in which to spend a half hour or so each evening. You are always cer- tain of seeing a program of pictures va- ried enough to suit the taste of all. The very best film makers in the world are represented in the pictures shown at the Scenic and they are all new and up-to-date. Three thousand feet for five cents! No one can afford to miss such a treat. If you are not a regular patron it is vou get in the swim. ~—Last week the WATCHMAN publish- ed an item relative to the mysterious death of a young woman by the name of Jane Adams, of Atlantic City, and that the authorities were hunting William and Orvis Seyler, who were known to have been with the girl the last night she was seen alive. It at the time was thought the young men might be in this county but last Thursday they were both cap- tured at Petersburg, Va, and taken back to Atlantic City. The Seylers were born in Penn township, this county, but moved to Atlantic City a number of years ago. The family is well remembered by quite a number of people in the county. Wil- liam Seyler is the only one who it is be- lieved was implicated in the girl's death and so far the authorities are in doubt as to whether they can hold him for more than manslaughter. His brother Orvis is being held as a witness. ——The month of March promises to be an unusually busy month for the Ever- hart family of Ferguson township. On the 11th of the month J. H. Everhart will have public sale on the old Oliver farm and will sell over one hundred head of live stock. On the 17th Ben Everhart and Miss Jessie Reed will he united in mar- riage and on the 22nd Miss Martha Ever- hart and Edward Johnson will also take the nuptial vows. On the29th J. H. will move to Blair county and Mrs. Everhart senior will take rooms in Pine Grove. On the 30th Martha and her newly made husband will go to housekeeping in Bell- wood and on the 31st Ben and his bride will take possession of the old homestead farm which has been in the Everhart family for over a quarter of a century. ‘This will be a big change around for one family and the WATCHMAN wishes for one and all abundant success. CO m——— Next week will be court week and for the first time since last May a regular term of court will be held and, inasmuch as there is a large list of petty criminal cases as well as a big list of civil cases to be tried, it is quite likely there will be two full weeks of court. The new court house is, of course, not completed; neith- er is the remodeling of the old building finished but the court room and two jury rooms are so nearly done that they can be utilized for holding court. The court room is so changed from the old one that it is hard to recognize as the same room. ‘The woodwork throughout is finished in white and mahogany. There is a high backed enclosed jury box, a new judges’ desk, anda railing inside the barseparates the court officers from the attorneys and others interested in cases being tried. ‘Three sets of plate glass swinging doors separate the court room from the rear lobby and as far as completed it is all in harmonious good taste. GENIE. | br —— ORCHARD TRAIN COMING.—~The special orchard train run jointly by the Division of Zoology of the Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Agriculture, and the Pennsyl- vania railroad company, for the purpose of explaining methods of pruning and spraying and otherwise caring for fruit trees and other plants, will visit this sec- tion next week. There will be exhibitions of apparatus, | chemicals, insects, fruits and illustrated | charts; and valuable literature pertaining . | to fruit culture will be distributed. Lec- 5 tures will be given by different speakers * during the entire time of each stop. The lectures of the evening stops will com- mence at 7 o'clock and will be illustrated ' by means of lantern slides. Prof. H. A. Surface, state zoologist, will | be present at each stopping point, and ' have general charge of the arrangements, ' The train will consist of one exhibition : car and two lecture cars, and will be read- ‘ily found at or near the railroad station. All persons interested are invited to bring twigs of trees and other specimens of infested or diseased limbs for exami- nation. They are also requested to ask questions and obtain the latest informa- tion on all orcharding subjects. Each visitor will receivea copy of the “Orchard Primer,” just published by the Pennsyl- vania railroad company, which will be found both useful and valuable. The train will pass through Centre county on Friday and Saturday of next week. It will leave Tyrone Friday noon and be at Fowler from 1:05 to 2:20 p. m.; at Julian from 2:40 to 4 p. m., and will be in Bellefonte over night, illustrated lectures being given here Friday evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. Saturday the train will go over the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad and the stops will be at Centre Hall from 8:19 to 9:45 a. m., and at Coburn from 10:10 to 11:40 a. m. IN A SociaL WAY.—The variable weath- er of the past week has had no dampen- ing effect upon the people of Bellefonte sO far as keeping things lively in a social way is concerned, and among those who contributed to the gayeties and pleasure of others were the following: Beginning last Saturday evening Mrs. Longwell and her daughter, Miss Lizzie, entertained the merry little friends of the latter's niece Sarah, at a chicken and waffle sup- per at their home on Spring street. On Monday evening Dr. Edith Schad gave a dinner at which seven covers were laid. Tuesday was the birthday of little Mary Parker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Parker, and she was duly remembered with a shower of fifty-three postcards. On Tuesday evening Gen. and Mrs. James A. Beaver entertained at a small dinner in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Erle Sparks, of State College. The same even- ing the Phi Psi Chi fraternity of the Bellefonte High school held their first social event in the shape of a Martha Washington ball, in the hall of the public building on Howard street, which was at- tended by a number of invited guests. The same fraternity expects to have another dance about commencemant time. Yesterday evening Mrs. Paul Shef- fer entertained a number of friends at dinner and this evening Catharine Allison will entertain her young friends at a masquerade party. ANNUAL REUNION OF THE FIGHTING FORTY-FIFTH.—The members of that famous old fighting regiment, the Forty- fifth, will hold their annual reunion at Williamsport on Wednesday and Thurs- day of next week, March 2nd and 3rd. The gathering promises to be one of the best in years. Gen. James a Beaver, Gen. John I. Curtin, Col. Austin Curtin and Maj. R. T. Cheesman, of Washington, will all be there, while the representation of minor officers and members of the various companies promises to be unusually large. There will be adelegation from Washing- ton, D. C., a squad from Kansas and a great many from Centre and adjoining counties. General Collins, of Williams- port, will deliver the address of wel- come and on the evening of the 2nd there will be a rousing campfire. The Forty- fifth gained its reputation as a fighting regiment from having participated in thirty-four battles during the Civil war, most of them in the fierce fighting of the Virginia campaign. During the past few months eighteen of the regiment's oid comrades have answered the last roll call, Dr. Theodore S. Christ, last week, being the last to be laid away. ——A fair crowd attended the lecture given by Rev. W. A. Ward in Petriken hall on Tuesday evening. His subject of “The real issue, or why we find so few rich and many in poverty,” was an in- teresting theme and was well discussed from Rev. Ward's socialistic standpoint, but the one important point, how to sure- ly overcome present conditions, was not told. Itis an easy matter to point out conditions but it is another question to give a solution which will help the coun- try out of the difficulty. Of course Rev. Ward points to socialism as the solution, but in that he is simply laboring for the national socialistic organization by which he is employed and which is the official head of the Socialist political party. But at that, he is a fluent talker and was at at least entertaining if not convincing to those who heard him. | —Mrs. Daniel Hal, of Unionville, visited friends | in Bellefonte on Wednesday. : —H. S. Linn was a business visitor in Philadel: —~Mry. George Benner, of Centre Hall. was a phia the past week. shopper in town on Wednesday. ~—Mr. and Mrs. George B. Thompson, of Alto. —Mrs. J.C. Lykens, of Scotia. spent yesterday were in Bellefonte on Saturday. in Bellefonte as the guest of Robert Roan. —Mrs. W. A. White spent Wednesday of last Mr and Mrs. William F. Shope. of Lock week at her old home at Lamar. Haven. spent Sunday with friends in Bellefonte. ~Mrs. Edward Irwin is spending this week —Mr and Mrs. Bert Le Van, of Altoong, were among her many friends in Tyrone. | guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Irwin on Tuesday. Mrs. Elmer E. Davis and children spent Sun- | —Rev, Max Lantz, of Spring Mills, was a guest day at the Orris home in Milesburg. | on Tuesday night of Rev. and Mrs. Thomas S. —Mr. and Mrs. George Sherry were out in Pitts. = Wilcox. burg over Sunday visiting their son Leo. | —Mrs. George Grimm, of Thomas street, leaves ~—Jacob Marks returned on Monday from a two | today for a three week's visit with friends in weeks visit with friends in New York city. | Pittsburg. —Dr. Edith Schad was at Howard on Sunday | attending a memorial temperance meeting. | at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Potts Green, on Mra. Clara Deaius attended the funeral. of the | Linn street. late W. W. Shank in Williamsport on Monday, | —Judge and Mrs. John G. Love, after a three —~Miss Emma Aiken has been away the past | Week's visit at Atlantic City, returned to their week or ten days on a trip to New York and Bos. | home yesterday. ton. | —Joseph Huffert, of Jersey Shore, has come to —Mus. George Elliott and Miss Alice Wilson | Bellefonte as a new employee of the Pennsylvania attended the faneral of Mrs. Hiltner in Tyrone on | company. Tuesday. —Andrew Fink, a prominent contractorof Ma- ~Charles P. Barnes came home from Baltimore | haffey, is visiting at the home of his daughter, last Saturday for a week's visit with his mother | Mrs. Joseph Runkle. and family. | —Mrs. R. Russell Blair left on Monday for a —~Edmund Blanchard returned on Wednesday | Visit with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. George P. from a week's business trip to New York and | Bible. of Philadelphia. Philadelphia. : | =Mrs A. L. English and daughter, Elizabeth. —~Mr. and Mrs. James Lambert and daughter, | Of Jersey Shore, are visiting at the Altenderfer of Braddock, have been visiting friends in Belle. | home on Howard street. fonte this week. —John and James Franks, of the Coast artillery —Mrs. Marcia Breese, of Downingtown, is in | With headquarters at Baltimore. are home on a Bellefonte for an indefinite stay with Mrs. Curtin, | three month's furlough. of Curtin street. | —Mrs. Kinney, whose home is in Kansas, is in Bellefonte on account of the serious illness of her —Miss Mame Hamilton returned the latter part of last week from a week's visit with the Mc. ; father, Mr. Isaac Longacre. Clains at Spangler. \ . =Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fay, of Altoona, spent Washington's birthday with Mrs. Fay's parents, —Miss Holmes, of Wilkinsburg, who has been visiting Mrs. James Harris, expects to leave for | MT- and Mrs. John Lane. on Linn street. Philadelphia today. ~Miss Clara Mapes, of Clearfield, will arrive in Bellefonte Saturday for a visit with her grand- ~Messrs. Wallace H. Gepbart and Frank War- field were business visitors in Philadelphia the lat- mother, Mrs. Schreffler, of Thomas street. ter part of last week. Sowa Molawerth and R. 3. omer ere ~Mrs. A. G. Morris left in the beginning of the | tw of Unionville's representative citizens week on atrip to Columbia, S. C.. to visit her transacted business in Bellefonte on Tuesday. son, Robert and wife. : yy. Rage] oh duy spent Tuesday sight with —Miss Bessie Dorworth' was in Milton in the | her parents in Tyrone, owing to the fact that early part of the k attending the funeral of Wa 10 having picture susersaimmen 3: the Sef. her uncle, Mr. John Jenkins. . . ~John Curtin with his little son and J. c.| —Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Snyder, of Snow Shoe, were in Bellefonte on Monday; he on a little mat- fom pent. Susy Witl the Yormer’s Mother, ter of business while Mrs. Snyder did some shop- ping. — Harrison Waller Boa msided the for: | ~—Mrs. Jennie Wasson, who is taking life easy i opening and dedication new Elk’shome | .\ o/ormstown, was a Bellefonte shopper and a n Lock Haven on Tuesday night. | welcome visitor at the WATCHMAN office on Sat- ~Mrs. A. M. Hibler, of this place, is enjoying a | yrday, rest at Galen Hall, Atlantic City, where she ex-| _g.. © 5 wallace, of Philadelphia, a former pects to remain for several weeks. | United States consul to Jerusalem, has been the —Mr. W. C. Lingle, formerjy one of Bellefonte’s | guest the past week of Dr. and Mrs. J. Allison busiest business men, but now of Philipsburg. | Platts. was a visitor in town on Saturday last. | —On Sunday J. E. Ward and family and Mrs. —Ruth and Walton Kerstetter and Fannie Rose’ | john I. Olewine drove to State College and spent of Hamburg, Dauphin county, are visiting at the | the day with Mr. and Mrs. David O. Etters and home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Yeager. family. ~J. Harris Hoy went to Clarence on Wednes' | —The Misses Katharine and Elizabeth Harvey, day where he has accepted the position of head | of Jersey Shore, are in Bellefonte visiting Mr. and bookkeeper and cashier for the Clarence Supply | Mrs. Harry Keller and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Mont- —Rev. John Hewitt was in Lock Haven last | —Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Decker took their little Thursday evening and preached to the congrega: | daughter Helen, to Kane on Wednesday, where tion of St. Paul's Episcopal church, pleasing his | they will remain for 2 month or so for the benefit hearers very much. § ‘of her health, —Chatles T. Noll, of the Bellefonte steam laun- | —George Williams, of Lemont, was in town yes- dry, went to Rochester on Monday to accept a | terday and proved a regular fairy god-fathér in position as traveling salesman for the American | this office by fixing up the subscriptions to the Laundry Machine company. © | WaTcHMAN of two of his friends. ort ~—One of our very pleasant callers on Monday | was Miss Benner, of Oak Hall, who came in as messenger from her brother, H. R. Benner, to fix his paper up for another year. ~After a lengthy visit at the home of Gen. and Mrs. James A. Beaver, in this place, Miss Anne Beaver, a cousin of the general, left on Monday morning for her home in Southern California. —John Van Pelt came over from Barnesboro on Saturday and on Sunday he accompanied Col. J. L.. Spangler and Miss Katharine Brisbin to Cen- NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Ethel Irvin, of Westfield, N. J., is a guest John Toner Harris, of Harrisburg, spent Wed- nesday in town in the interest of the Pennsylva- nia telephone company, and also visited his moth- er, Mrs. Henry Harris, on Howard street. —William J. Dorworth, of Greensboro, N. C.. who was at Milton attending the funeral of his uncle, the late John Jenkins, spent Tuesday night and Wednesday forenoon at his home in this place. ~Robert D. Foreman, the hustling coal and grain dealer of Centre Hall, was a business visitor in Bellefonte on Wednesday and took time to drop tre Hall, to see his grandmother, Mrs John Spang. | a dollar into the subscription basket of the ler. WATCHMAN. —Miss Lillian Walker left last Friday for Phila. | —Three of Centre Hall's most progressive citi- delphia to spend several weeks studying the latest | zens who had business in town on Tuesday were styles in ladies headwear before resuming her Mr. J. H. Weber, Mr. R. D. Foremen and Mr. E. work as head milliner for Mrs. I. L. Heckwithe, at | M. Huyett, all of these are readers of the WATCH- West Chester. MAN, and men who know a good thing when they ~Paul Wetzel. who holds a good position in the | *¢ I engineering department of the New York Central | —E. M. Huyett, the well known lumberman of railroad with headquarters at Corning, N. Y., was | Centre Hall, came into the WATCHMAN office on home over Sunday visiting his parents, Hon. and | Wednesday and enrolled his name as a subscriber Mrs. J. H. Wetzel. Yoshie paper, Sic isune of the leading artists jn —Mrs. Harvey C. Lingle and Mrs. Hinterleitner, uyett-McNist company of Patton, were in Bellefonte last week visiting everything abu foady ai thelz big plans “Wat their grandmother, Mrs. Nora McClain, inasmuch B Deghy exten ve. ht ing operations he as Mrs. Lingle will shortly leave for her new alittle weathe er Soaditions . home in the south come more favorable. Infact they would Sanvcs Harris, of the Sivek Newiauy & digr.| ve beet at vik: sve 2his iad it wot bee or Hie deep snow and cold weather. ris, architects of New York, was in Bellefonte on Tuesday visiting his mother, Mrs. Louise Harris, and also seeing how the remodeling of the court house was progressing. i —Mrs. Norman Thompson was taken to the Bellefonte hospital for treatment —Mr. W. B. Thomas, of Milesburg, one of the | On Wednesday. oldest and most trusted employees of the Penn: S————— sylvania railroad company in this section, found Bellefonte Produce Markets. time on Monday to make a friendly call on the WATCHMAN, to help boost its circulation, and have the tab on his own copy advanced. —Misses Genevieve Watkine and Helen Coun- cil, schoolmates of Miss Rachael Shuey at Dickin son Seminary, were her guests over Saturday and Sunday; a reception being given at the Shuey home on Friday evening in honor of the Seminary basketball team which played the Academy five that evening. . —Amos Cole, Robert Kreps and Misses Eliza beth and Catharine McCauley made up a party from Lewistown who drove over the Seven moun- tains on Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. E.C. Tuten. They left at four o'clock on their return trip and were caught in the rain be- fore they reached home. —Mr. Michael Kerstetter, of Pleasant Gap, one of the best Democrats in the county, as well as one of the fairest and most successful hunters in this section of the State, made a pleasant call on friends in town on Saturday. It was Mr. Kerstet- ter who started the feeding of the starved wild turkeys out at the Gap and which promises to preserve a flock of nineteen for the hunting sea. son of 1910. ~The many friends of "Squire H. Laird Curtin were very glad to see him in town on Wednesday afternoon and evening. It is a little over ten weeks since he was stricken with pneumonia and being as near death's door as he was his recovery was almost as one returned from the grave. Not- withstanding the fact that heis still a little weak | in the knees he is looking very good and it will | not be long until he will be as chipper and spry as Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. Potatoes per bushel...............cccovviiiviiinnns - 58 Onions. 1 00 14 10 old friend Abe Baum, as it is a fact not generally known that they were boys and grew up togeth- er in the same town in Germany and it is mutual to be present and not infrequently took an active part in the proceedings.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers