THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ~The second meeting of “The Wom- an's Club” of Bellefonte will be held this (Friday) afternoon, in Petriken hall, at 3.30 o'clock. All women of the town are cordially invited to be present. ~The Scenic is being given a thor- ough housecleaning this week, the floors and all the woodwork being scrubbed from front to rear. —Wednesday was the day for turn- ing off the steam heat but the weather was so inuch like winter that Col. Taylor kept the plant in operation. ~The Tyrone Country club house at Pennsylvania Furnace was formally open- ed yesterday, and was visited by from one to two hundred people during the day. -———Rev. H. G. Finney, one of the best known Presbyterian ministers in Central Pennsylvania, died at his home in Wil- liamsport last week and was buried on Monday. ~The Academy-Lock Haven Normal baseball game that was to have been played on Wednesday will be played on Hughes field tomorrow (Saturday) after- noon at 3.30 o'clock. . =——There will be a festival on. Half Moon hill Saturday evening, June 4th. Ice cream, cake and other refreshments will be served. All are invited to attend. The proceeds will be for the benefit of the U. B. church. —Tomorrow is the day for the pri. maries for the nomination of candidates to be voted for at the fall election. If you don’t turn out and do your duty tomor- row don’t growl at the nominations made by the other fellows. ~The editor of the Republican has been treading kind of high ever since yesterday morning and its not because of any political affair, either. In fact it is entirely domestic, as a nice little girl ar- rived at his home yesterday morning, ——Santanelli, the hypnotist, did not prove a drawing card at the opera house last week, notwithstanding the fact that manager Garman considered him a much cleverer man than Pauline, who created quite a sensation here two years ago. —Mr. and Mrs. James Parsons have moved from State College to McKeesport where Mr. Parsons has a good position. For the present they are boarding but they expect to go to housekeeping just as soon as they can secure a suitable house. ~The Grove family reunion will be held at Grange park, Centre Hail, on Wednesday of next week, June 8th. All members of the Grove family as well as their friends are invited to attend. The gathering will be inthe shape of a basket picnic. —A brand new baby boy arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Leepard on east Lamb street, Tuesday evening. He is the fifth child in the family and Mr. Leepard naturally thinks that he is entitled to have the young man named after him, which will probably be done. —Floyd Davis, a brakeman on the Beliefonte Central railroad, fell from the top of a hopper car to the roadbed last Saturday afternoon, badly injuring his hip. He was taken to the hospital and given treatment and by Sunday had so improved that he was able to be taken home. , ——Miss Emma E. Payne, of Ashland, Pa, for the past five years a worker in the mission field of Mexico, and at pres- ent home on a furlough, will talk of her work to the people of the Methodist church next Sunday at both the morning service and during the Sunday school hour, ——(n Saturday night about ten o'clock an alarm of fire caused considerable ex- citement for the time being but it did not last long. The fire proved to be a smail ' Liaze in a house in the Brown row, but before the fire companies got on the ground the incipient blaze had been ex- tinguished. ——Last week A. W. Moore, manager of the Western Union telegraph office in this place, moved his household furniture went to Lock Haven and met his wife and daughter, and brother and accompanied lives in Stone valley, was moving a stone crusher over Shaver’s creek when the {i 15g ini! 8 : A RR country—throughout i States, in fact—surviving soldiers of the Civil war payed homage to their departed | comrades by decorating their graves with garlands of flowers. On Sunday, the day | held in all the churches in the country, those in Bellefonte being held in the! Methodist church at 10.30 o'clock in the | morning when the pastor, Rev. Thomas | S. Wilcox, preached an interesting dis- course. His various references to the The address was de- C. Pettinger. From Pine Hall where services were held at 5.30 o'clock in the afternoon. Hon. Alva Agee was the orator of the day at that place and his address was a very aff selected choir furnished the music. se —— memberships in the Booklover’s library for creditable lists of answers sent to the Philadelphia Press in that paper's book- Norris.—Mrs. Gertrude Norris, wife of ex-burgess Daniel B. Norris, of Juniata, ! i + i the entire United Pine Grove Mills the old soldiers went to and a niece of Mrs. Henry Tibbens, of this place and George W. Rumberger, of | Unionville, died at her home in Juniata . on Sunday night. She had been in poor | health for some time with dropsical heart previous, special memorial services were , ing one. The State College band and a ' trouble but last week was so much im- , proved that her friends felt encouraged ‘over her condition. She retired to bed | on Sunday evening in a happy and cheer- | ful frame of mind and during the night ; calmly slept away, as when Mr. Norris | went to awaken her Monday morning he men who died on the field of battle and ; lovers’ contest. They are Miss Myra found only her body, cold in death. those who braved all the dangers and Humes, Miss Helen Overton, Mrs. B. W. Deceased was about fifty-five years of horrors of those years of strife and have Shaner, Harry Keller and Prof. A. H. age and was born at Buffalo Run, this since died, were touching and pathetic. Sloop. The first prize, a fifteen hundred county, being a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. In Bellefonte the Memorial services dollar Maxwell automobile, was won by Balser Rumberger. In 1874 she was mar- with the decoration of the graves of the soldier dead in the Union cemetery. At maiden lady of Philadelphia. —Edgar Poorman, who six weeks were concluded on Monday afternoon | Miss Ray Bradshaw, a sixty-year old ‘ried to Mr. Norris at Unionville and the | young couple spent the first six years of their married life in this county, moving the usual hour, two o'clock, Gregg Post 504 had his legs so badly crushed in a to Juniata in 1880, when that borough escorted by the new City bandand Com- rai1road accident on the Bellefonte Cen. Was yet in its infancy. Mrs. Norris was pany L, marched from the Diamond to tra] railroad that it was necessary to identified withalmost every movement of the cemetery and after the regular brief | 5; 0u¢ate both of them, has entirely re. Progression in the growth of that borough and formal services in general usage covered under the good care and atten- and her influence for good has manifest | placed a bouquet or wreath of flowers tion he got in the Beliefonte hospital and ©d itself in many ways. She wasa mem- on the grave of every known soldier. The ' wag ahje to be taken from that institu- - ber of the Trinity Lutheran church and a day was observed universally and the | tion to his home at Coleville in the be- sincere christian woman. She was prom- people of the town and community were | ginning of the week. He will be supplied ; inently identified with the Ladies Aid so- lavish in the decoration of the graves of | ith one cork leg and then with the aid ‘ciety and the ladies auxiliary of the their loved ones, so that the Union cem- etery was more liberally strewn with flowers than it has been in years. The grave of the late Andrew G. Curtin, Pennsylvania's “Old War Governor,” was marked with the customary garland of flowers sent by the Pennsylvania Reserve association from their headquarters in Philadelphia and special services were held at his tomb in honor of his life and his work. The address at these services was made by Hon. William C. Heinle. At the conclusion of the services in the cemetery the crowd returned to Pet- riken hall where the regular address of the day was delivered by Rev. Fred W. Barry, of the Lutheran church. It was not only a patriotic talk butone in which great praise was given the men who sac- rificed so much for their country in the war of the rebellion, as well as other wars, and a touching tribute was paid to { of crutches will be able to get out and around. aur ne ara ——There are many reasons why you should be a regular patron of the Scenic but one of themost forceful is that if you miss one night you are almost sure to miss some good pictures. That is be- cause every evening's program is new and different from every other evening. No picture shown twice. If there is an exceptionally geod one this evening you will have to be there to see it, as it will not be shown tomorrow evening. That is the reason you should attend every night. If you don’t you are sure to miss something good, and perhaps the very picture you have long wanted to see. And the price of admission is a mere baga- telle, only five cents each evening. If you don't attend regularly try it awhile and see how you like it. a the memory of those who have fought —On Sunday afternoon J. Mitch Cun- their last battle in life and whose remains ningham, with his wife and mother, were 0 iscinle day was now help to compose the city of the dead. AT MILESBURG AND VICINITY. Geo. L. Potter Post of Milesburg, had charge of the services in that place and vicinity. A detail of the Post went to the Fairview cemetery, three miles north of Curtin, where services were held at 8.30 o'clock in the morning, a good sized crowd being present. The committee in charge was composed of Austin Curtin, | Simeon Bathurst and Henry Heaton. i Comrade John A. Daley made the address { and a choir from Romola sang several | appropriate songs. From Fairview the i detail went to the Advent church where ! they met the other members of the Post i and joined in honoring the heroic dead buried there. The crowd at that place | was unustally large, people being present from Marsh Creek and Runville. Col. Austin Curtin had charge of the services, which began at 10.30 o'clock, and he was assisted by comrades Boyer, Haupt, Mc- Mullen and Wilson. Miss Ambie Confer, of Marsh Creek, read Lincoln's speech at Gettysburg in a very impressive manner, while the choir from the Marsh Creek Sunday school furnished the music. The address was delivered by Rev. Hamilton, of Runvilie. Atil.30 o'clock in the afternoon serv- ices were held in the cemetery at Cur- tin, at which the address wa: made by Rev. R. S. Taylor, of Howard. The final service of the day was held at Milesburg at 4.30 o'clock. The parade was made up of the Milesburg band, George L. Pot- ter Post and the children of the various Sunday schools. Colonel Austin Curtin also had charge of the services at that place. Lincoln's Gettysburg speech was read by Miss Ophelia Haupt and the regular address was made by Rev. Oyler, of Milesburg. DOWN AT BLANCHARD. The Memorial sermon for the soldier dead of Liberty township was preached in the Baptist church at Blanchard on Sunday morning by Rev. J. B. Eldridge, the church being appropriately draped with the national colors. The regular Memorial exercises were held on Mon- day morning at 9.30 o'clock and were very largely attended. Large delegations were present from Beech Creek, Howard and the surrounding country. Both the Blanchard and Howard bands turned out and in addition to the old soldiers there were in the parade the Odd Fellows, Pa- triotic Order Sons of America, Red Men and Sunday school children, as well as church where the address of the delivered by A. A. Dale Esq., of Bellefonte. He spoke quite eloquently and paid a fitting tribute to the men in whose honor the services were held. The Baptist church choir, in charge of Joseph L. Pletcher, furnished most of the music, Dean Goodwin presiding at the organ. Miss Mabel Bitner gave a patriotic reci- tation which was much appreciated by all. UP IN FERGURON TOWNSHIP. The Memorial sermon at Pine Grove Mills was preached in the Lutheran church on Sunday evening by Rev. J. S. Shultz. The regular services and decora- tion of graves was held at two o'clock in the afternoon and the old soldiers coming in the pike from a spin in his | Young Men's Christian Association, being i treasurer of the latter organization. A short time ago she instituted a move- ' ment for the organization of a ladies aux- iliary to the Rogers fire company No 1, {and her last evening away from home was that on which preliminary organiza- : tion of the auxiliary was made. In addition to her husband she is sur- . vived by the following children : Mrs. ‘ E. C. Hallett, Mrs. E. H. Young, Joseph 'M. and Walter M,, all of Juniata ; Mrs. { Roy T. Ake, of Syracuse, N. Y.; Marga- | ret, Agnes, Russell, George and Gertrude, | | at home. She also leaves one half | brother and two half sisters : Green | Matts and Mrs. Andrew Lohgerman, of Juniata, and Mrs. Eva Ross, of Tyrone. | The funeral was held from the Trinity | Lutheran church at Juniata on Wednes- | day afternoon at two o'clock. Rev. H. i E. Weiand officiated and burial was made in Greenwood cemetery. I i HasTINGs.—William Hastings, of Gates- | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. : —Mrs. Jane Marshall, of Centre Hall, is visiting | friends in Bellefonte. ~Edward Sebring. of Jersey Shore, was an | over Sunday visitor with Bellefonte friends. —Miss Leda McFarlane, of Cherrytree, is in | Bellefonte visiting her friend, Miss Hazel Dick- | inson. | ~—Mrs. George Fisher and two children, of | Boalsburg, are visitors at the Rine home in this | place. —Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Tibbens were in Al | toona Wednesday, attending the funeral of Mrs. | Gertrude Norris. —Guy Linn, of Beaver Falls, came to Bellefonte | friends in Bellefonte : —Mrs. T. S. Strawnand daughter Ellen spent | from Saturday until Monday with the former's | father in Johnstown. | —Miss Mary Love Campbell, of Linden Hall, | has been spending a short time in Bellefonte, the | guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cook. —Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Musser and little son, of | Altoona, spent a few days this week at the | W. J. Musser home on east Lamb street. —J. Linn Harris and J. M. Cunningham went | to Lock Haven yesterdav to see what can be | done about organizing the Centaal Pennsylvania baseball league. —James A. Blythe, an expert carpenter who | has been working at State College for some time | past, left on Tuesday for Pittsburg where he has | secured a good job. | —After spending the winter with har sister, | Mrs. James A. Depler, in Pittsburg, Miss Bessie G. McCafferty, retumed to her home on cast | Lamb street last week. —Rev. Father McArdle was in Snow Shoe on Monday assisting Bishop Garvey, of the Altoona | diocese, in holding confirmation services in St. | Mary's Catholic church. —Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Singiser and baby Ray, of Renovo, came to Bellefonte last Friday and were with relatives here until Wednesday of this week when they returned home. =C. T. Gerberich has as his guests at his home on Thomas street his cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Cobb, of Philadelphia, and his daughter, Mrs. C. U. Hoffer, of Philipsburg. —Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk have had as their guests during the commencement week, Mrs. Sue Wilson, state organizer of the W.C.T.U. and | Miss Bess Sensor, both of Reynoldsville, Pa. i —Miss Mary Dolan, of Bellefonte. Pleasant Gap, spent Wednesday in Bel —Mrs. Wm. Kruppt, of Huntingdon, is spending some time Jin Bellefonte with her mother, Mrs. Katharine Gault. —Mrs. Sarah Satterfield left on Wednesday for a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore, in Philadelphia, “The Blue Goose,” State College, were Suests of Mrs. James Harris on Wednesday, —Walter Rankin, of Harrisburg, was in Belle- fonte over Sunday visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Rankin, of Curtin street. —After a winter south with her daughter and sister, Mrs. Matilda Dale has returned to Belle- fonte to spend the summer with Dr. and Mrs. David Dale. —Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Griffith left in the beginning of the week for their home in Phil. adelphia, after spending some time with friends in this section. —Atthe end of a weeks visit in Bellefonte as guests of Mrs. Frank McCoy, Mrs. Finley Shu- gert and Miss Bradley, left Tuesday for their home in Washington. —Earl C. Musser, who for two years or more has been teaching school at Sheffield, Pa., has re. turned to his old home at State College and will remain there during the summer at least. —Mrs. Anna E. Stonerode who has been with her daughters in Jackson, Michigan, returned to entre county the middle of April expecting with two sisters and brother to occupy he house in Snow Shoe. Town —Misses Anna Waite and Margaret McFarlane: of Lack Haven, Miss Katharine Etters, of State College, Miss Kathryn Lukenbach, of Tyrone, and John Bertram, of Altoona, were here for the High school commencement exercises yesterday. —Mrs. Bogle has been having as guests at her home, The Forge House, her daughter, Miss Sara Bogle and Miss Wells, of the East Liberty Library, Pittsburgh, and Miss Ballou. of Philadelphia. Miss Ballou expectsto be in Bellefonte the greater part of the summer. —Mr. and Mrs. Claude Cook have been in Phil- adelphia this week the commencement exercises of the Walnut Lane preparatory school, their daughter Miss Grace, whose name has been entered at Wellesley College, being a member of the graduating class, —James H. Potter who went to Atlantic City, a month ago to recuperate from a slight illness, has been so much benefited by his stay there and —Edward Lyon, of Elkhorn, W. Va., is visiting | visit in Baltimore, that he came to Clearfield his mother, Mrs. Shuman Lyon, at Lyontown, | county during the week and is now a guest of having timed his visit so as to be present at the friends in Winburne. automobile, intending to turn the corner | burg, and one of the well known resi- at the Yeager swing factory and take 2 dents of Ferguson township, died in the run out towards Roopsburg. Dr. Locke | Jefferson hospital, Philadelphia, at five had been out to the hospital and on his way back had a visit to make out the | pike and attempted to turn the corner at the same time Cunningham did. The re- sult was that to avoid a head-on collision the doctor turned his car at a sharp right argle and ran it down the railroad track until he stuck in the switch rails. Mr. Cunningham also turned his car quickly | ‘ to the right and ran into a railroad sign post. Dr. Locke's car had to be pushed out of the switch and off the track but it was not damaged in the least. Mr. Cun- ! o'clock last Friday morning. He had | been in poor health for some tim: and | two weeks or more ago went to the hos- | pital and underwent an operation. In- stead of improving peritonitis set in and | his death followed. ! He was born in Blair county on July 1st, 1844, hence was aimost sixty-six years | old. When only eighteen years old he enlisted as a member of Company I, | Twenty-second Pennsylvania cavairy, and | served through the Civil war. Returning i he located in Centre county and ever ; ningham, however, was notso fortunate. | gince lived in Ferguson and Halfmoon His radiator was stoved up several inches | townships. Forty years or more ago he and one of the rods of the steering gear | was united in marriage to Miss Emeline badly bent. Fortunately, however, no-| Rider who survives with five children, as were assisted by the Sons of Veterans body was hurt, though the ladies were pretty badly frightened. ——The writer apologizes to Halley's comet for calling it a tailless thing in last week's WATCHMAN. Since that time it has been plainly visible in the western sky every night and it now presents a | tail of great length and magnitude. In fact its size depends very much upon the eyesight and imagination of the observer. But there is no contradicting the fact that it has a tail,though it must he admitted that there is considerable disappointment felt on the comet in its entirety. From the way its wonders had been heralded by scientists and astronomersit was naturally expected that it woutd be a heavenly body of great brilliancy with a tail so phosphorescently bright as to illumine the night, while it is much less conspic- uous so far as brilliancy and scintillation. is concerned than scores of planets and stars. But then it is Halley's comet ; it comes only every seventy-six years or thereabouts, and we all should be thank- ful that we have at least bean able to see it on this trip around its orbit, as it will likely be out of our line of vision on its next trip. a JAKE FROM AGAIN SENT TO THE PENI- TENTIARY.—Early in the spring Jake From nailed up his house at Centre Hall and left the town. Shortly thereafter he turned up at the farm of Daniel Keller, in Chester county. Mr. Keller was a former resident of Centre Hall and ex county treasurer, and knowing Mr. From gave him work upon his farm. Some time ago he was caught in the act of bur- glarizing a hardware store and on Mon- day of last week plead guilty to an indict- ment for attempted burglary, in the courts of Chester county, and was sen- tenced to pay a fine of two hundred dol- lars and not less than nine months nor more than three years in the eastern | follows: John and Charles, of Tyrone; ! Mrs. Myrtle Rumberger and Mrs. Lizzie | Snyder, of Hollidaysburg, and Miss Atha- | lia A. at home. He also leaves one broth- | er, John, in Colorado, and cne sister, Mrs, | William Cupp, of Centre Line. . | The remains were brought from Phila- delphiaand taken to his home in Gates- burg last Saturday and the funeral was held on Sunday. Rev. J. S. Shultz, of the Lutheran church, of which he was amem- ber, officiated and burial was made in the Gatesburg cemetery. i i Asezy.~Taylor Askey died at his home at Cold Stream, near Philipsburg, on Wednesday evening of last week after a lingering illness with a complication of diseases. He was born in Nittany val- ley and was sixty-three years old last January. He left Nittany valley many years ago and located in Philipsburg where he lived a long time. About a year ago he moved to Cold Stream, where he followed the occupation of a miner. He was a soldier of the Civil war and served his country faithfully. He was a member of the Presbyterian church and an upright, honorable citizen. Surviving him are his wife and the following chil: dren : Clayton, of Blairsville ; Harry,of Avemore ; Mrs. Harry Bowersox, of Win- burne, and Mrs. Thomas Evans, of Blandsburg. He also leaves two brothers and two sisters, namely : Thomas As- key, of Philipsburg ; John, of Buffalo, N. Y.; Mrs. D. H. Yeager, of Jersey Shore, AMMERMAN.—John T. Ammerman, a native Centre countian, died at his home in Altoona on Saturday morning of dis- eases incident to his advanced age, after an illness of a number of weeks. He was born at Eagleville, this county, and was 71 years of age. He served during the Civil war as a member of Company G, Fifty-first regiment. Thirty or more years ago he moved to Altoona and went to pany in the shops at that place. A year or soago he was retired on account of the age limit and placed upon the pen- sion list. His wife died a number of years ago but surviving him are ten chil- dren and one adopted daughter all but one of whom live in Altoona. The funeral was held at two o'clock on Monday af. ternoon, burial being made in the view cemetery, Altoona. is graduation of his niece, Miss G. Adaline Lyon. —William Rice, who is now employed in the office of the daily New Era, at Huntingdon, was home over Sunday on a little visit and to transact some business demanding his personal attention. =On Monday Al S. Garman drove to Belle- | fonte in his new Ford car to participate in the | Memorial exercises. He brought with him Roger T. Bayard and Misses Ruby Pifer and Rue Logan all of Tyrone. —Frederick Schad, fully equipped witha com, plete fishing outfit went up to Unionville on Tues- day to spend two weeks with his uncle, John P. | Harris Jr., expecting to devote a good part of the | time in fishing. | —Mr. and Mrs. John Huffman and three chil. ' dren, of Williamsport, came to Bellefonte on Sunday in their automobile and spent Memorial day with Mrs. Huffman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spigelmyer. —Randolph H. Hoy came in from Pittsburg on | Saturday and spent Sunday and Memorial day with friends in Bellefonte, leaving on Tuesday morning for the Smoky city where he has a good position, and which demands his close attention. —William McFarlane spent Sunday in Lock Haven with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kyle McFarlane. Mr. McFarlane, while unable to help himself in any way is in good health other. wise and weighs two hundred and seventy-five | pounds, ! —W. Harrison Walker Esq, was at Salona Saturday attending the funeral of his sister-in, law, the late Mrs. George Walker, who died on Wednesday afternoon of tubercular trouble. Her maiden name was Rute and she was born near Lamar forty-one years ago. —Mrs. W. E. Park, of New Milford, Susque- hanna county, is spending several weeks with her parents, Capt. and Mrs. George M. Boal, at Centre Hall, and last Friday she and her sister, Mrs. W. Gross Mingle, spent the day on a shop. ping expedition in Bellefonte. =Mrs. Charles Weber and daughter Hazel, of Williamsport, arrived in Bellefonte on Wednesday and will spend the next two weeks visiting friends here and in other parts of the county. They will also attend the Grove family reunion at Grange park next Wednesday. —Miss Katharine Burnet,who has been studving at the Academy of Fine Arts, ia Philadelphia, during the past winter, came to Bellefonte last Friday for a short visit before sailing on June 25th for Europe, where she will join her mother and | aunt, Mrs. Mose Burnet, and Mrs. Breese. { —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas, of Lewistown, » with friends at their old homes here and in Miles. burg. They returned Monday because Charley was afraid that hardware store over there needed his services more than he needed a longer vaca" tion. —'Squire M. L. Rishel, of Spring Mills, was a Bellefonte visitor on Tuesday. He came up to attend to a little business and when that was completed tried to get a line on the political situa® tion for tomorrow's primaries but found every’ thing about as much unsettled here as it is down in his home precinct. —Gilbert Beaver having spent Sunday with his parents, Gen. James A. Beaver and Mrs. Beaver, left with his father for New York Monday morn- ing, from where Gen. Beaver sailed for Europe Tuesday. Mrs. Beaver hasbeen for the week in Huntingdon the guest of Mrs. Blair, attending the dedicatory service of the new Blair hospital. —Charles K. McCafferty, of Bradford, but who was born and raised in Bellefonte and naturally is regarded as one of “our own,” was in Bellefonte Monday on a business trip: and one partof it was to give instructions for re- painting the entire McCafferty block of houses just west of the railroad, near the freight depot. —judge Harry Alvin Hall, of Ridgway, spent Saturday night at the Brockerhoff house on his way to State College where he was the guest of Dr. Edwin Erle Sparks over Sunday and on Mon- day made the Memorial address at the tomb of Dr. Atherton. He was brought from Lock Haven to Bellefonte by E. B. O'Reilly in his new Apper- son car, Frank O'Reilly and Paul Brosius coming along for company. --A motor party consisting of Mrs. Chandler Hale, of Washington, Mrs. W. H. Bradley, Miss Seiler,James M. Cameron and Donald McCormick, of Harrisburg, came to Bellefonte Saturday in ~Mrs. M. E. Maxon. mother of Mrs. J. Allison Platts, has returned from a visit with friends in Pittsburg. Her daughter, Mrs. WilliamG. Natho with her littie son, William Jr., of Pittsburg, and Miss Erma Beattie, of Moundsville, W, Va., are also guests at the Presbyterian manse. =Mrs, Joseph D. Mitchell, of Burnham, is the home of her brother Thomas Mitchell a on Linn street. She came over several weeks ago, with her two children, fora short visit : which was unpleasantly lengthened when the little one’s contracted measles. Both are recover- ing now. =Mr, and Mrs. William S. Furst, with their two children, are here for a visit of several weeks with Mr. Furst's mother on Linn street. He has just returned from quite an extended trip abroad | THE ACADEMY RECEPTION. —Tonight is the time for the annual reception and dance of the Bellefonte Academy. All past and present patrons, all past and present students, and all friends of the Academy are cordially invited to the reception, which will be held at the Academy main building from eight to ten o'clock. The |electric and lantern illuminations, the music by Smith's orchestra and the privi- lege of meeting friends for a chat on Academy hill make a delightful program. These receptions are always attended with great success and those who stay away miss a social treat. The school rooms are transformed into most attrac- tive reception rooms. The dance under the auspices of the alumni and under- graduates will take place at the armory from ten until three o'clock. The com- mittee in charge consists of Thomas Beaver, Gilbert Meyers, Percy Eisenbeis, Willard J. Boyd and George Lee. No cards issued, the invitation as above be- ing general. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. drove over the mountain Sunday to spend a day | Onions Mr. Cameron's car and were guests over Sunday of Miss Linn and the Misses Valentine. Leaving Monday morning for Harrisburg, they were accompanied as far as Lewisburg, by W. F. Reynolds, Mrs Reynolds and Miss Linn, in Mr. Reynolds touring car.