nS @rilliant Wedding of Philadelphia Girl and Young English Nobleman, Heir to Earidom, Season's Social Event in London. London, June 9.—The marriage of Viscount Maidstone, elder son of the Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham, and Miss Margaretta Armstrong Drexel, daughter of Anthony Drexel, of Philadelphia, the first of three Anglo-American weddings to take place in London this month, was cele brated at St. Margaret's, Westminster. But for the death of the king placing many people in mourning this was to have been one of the big social events of the season. As it was, there was a large attendance both at the church and at the reception held afterward at Mr. Drexel's residence in Grosvenor square. The service was fully choral, the bishop of London and Canon Henson, of Westminster Abbey, rector of St. Margaret's, officiating. rhe interior of the little church had been decorated with white flowers, chiefly margue rites. The bridal procession was unusually long. The bride, accompanied by her father, who geve her away, wore a handsome dress of soft cream satin, with a long train of white and gold brocade. Her face veil and the lace on her gown had been worn by her mother, grandmother and great-aunt at their weddings. There were ten bridesmaids in soft white satin, and instead of hats they wore bandeaux of marguerites with long tulle veils. They were Lady Gladys Finch- Hatten, sister of the bridegroom; Miss Hilda Chichester and Miss Essex Vere Gunning, cous ins of the bridegroom; Miss Rhoda Astley, daughter of Dowager Lady Hastings; Lady Violet Manners, Miss Sybil Fellowes, daughter of .Lord de Ramsey; Miss Constance Combe, the daughter of Lady Combe; Miss Edith Wayne, of Philadelphia, and two American Dbrides-elect, Miss Mildred Carter, who is to be married to Lord Acheson on June 21, and Miss Helen Post, to be married three days later to Montagu [liot. Charles Mille, son of Lord Hillingdon, was the best man. The two received many presents, The bride’s father gave her a diamond tiara and a medallion of diamonds at- tached to a jeweled chain, as well as an automobile, in which Lord and Lady Maidstone are to tour the conti. nent on their honeymoon. Mrs. Drex- el's gift to her daughter was a rope of pearls. The value of the presents has been estimated at more than a quarter of a million dollars. J. P. Morgan sent a diamond cable two yards long, and the George J. Goulds a twelve-carat gem get in a ring. Explosion Kills Eight. Eight gquaarrymen were instantly killed and four were injured by the premature explosion of a blast in the quarry of the Lehigh Portland Cement company at their mill B. West Cop- lay, near Allentown, Pa. Among the dead is Daniel Cannon, foreman, of Allentown, a widower, who leaves ten children. The four in- jured were foreigners and were able to go home. The men were preparing three holes sixty feet deep, and had put in 600 sticks of dynamite when the explo- sion occurred. No one knows the cause, but it is believed something fell into the hole, causing the cap to explode. The force of the dynamite was exerted upward and 2000 tons of rock were dislodged. Exhume Bodiees For Hair. Women in the United States who purchase switches of black hair wiil be interested to learn that a crusade has been begun by the Chinese gov- ernment against Chinese who supply human hair for shipment to America, according to reports brought to Vie toria, B. C., by the Empress of Inria. It seems that a charitable institu. tion of Canton, which buries large numbers of paupers, found the hair dealers exhuming bodies to recover hair, and when this action was report- ed action was taken against the hair dealers. Instances have been reported of the hair exporters cutting hair in crowds and the officials are prosecuting all! apprehended. Student and Co-Ed Drowned. Considerable mystery surrounds the finding of the balies of two students of Ursinus college in the Perkiomen creek, near the boat landing of the col lege, which is ut Collegeville, about tewnty-five miles from Philadelphia. The dead students, who were last scen alive when they entered a boat for a row on the creek, were Edna Thomas, seventeen years old, of Roy- eraford, this state, and Frederick L.' Fogelmann, of Munhall, which is near | Pittsburg. The girl was a sophomore and the young man a senior. How they came to their death is puzzling the authorities, though the fact that the water about the college landing is deep and that the young man could not swim lead to the belief that in the darkness the girl may have fallen overboard while trying to step from the boat to the landing. This being true, the authorities think Fo- gelmann may have been drowned in trying to rescue his companion. | Man's Body Found In Bushes. Mpysteriously murdered a week ago, when he was last seen alive, the body of John Liskinsky, of Plymouth, near | Wilkes-Barre, Pa., was found hidden | behind a clump of bushes at a deso-| late and little frequented place along the bank of the Susquehanna river. in Memory of Lincoln. These officers were ele ted: Presi dent, Truman Newberry, of Detroit, former secretary of the navy; vice president, Samuel Hill, of Seattle; sec- retary, James T. McCleary, of Man- kato, Minn.; treasurer, Robert A. C. Smith, of New York city. The association does not intend to ask for public subscriptions of any kind. Whatever expenses are connect: ed with the work of the association will be met by the officers personally. Those forming the association believe that the national memorial to Lincoln should be paid for entirely by the na- tional government. The road, as plan- ned, is to be about seventy-two miles long and about 200 feet wide. The es- timated cost is $2,500,000. To Democrats. Hes generally believed Sha the next ouse of Representatives at ington will be Democratic if there is united and harmonious effort on the part of Demo- crats everywhere. The National Democratic Congrassigsial Committee is charged with mi respon- sibility in furnishing a campaign book and other literature, di and doing the especially in a financial way. Please send to the National Democratic Congressional Com- mittee, Washington, D. C., a check at once as we are tly in need of funds to push our i pm must Democrats to furnish them. r Com- mittee is sustained voluntary con- tributions. We are reliably informed that the Republican Committee is already gen- erously supplied with money. Will you not aid us at once ? James T. Lroyp, Chairman. upon JosepH E. RANDSELL, Chairman Finance Committee. Real Estate Transfers. Geo. A. Brown et ux to A. W. Wit- mer, March 24, 1910, tract of land in Benner twp.; $9,500. W. L. Foster et al to Harry Beck, December 6, 1907, tract of land in State College; $200, W. L. Foster et al to W. H. Beck, December 6, 1910, tract of land in State College; $200. W. L. Foster et al to W. H. Beck August 14, 1909, tract of land in State College; $285. B. F. Frankenberger to H. E. Smith, March 23, 1910, tract of land in Penn | twp.; $2,650, 1 J. I. Thom ‘et ux to A. F. Mar- kle, April 23, 1910, tract of land in Patton twp.; $150. J. O. Eisenhuth et ux to J. F. Eis- enhuth, March 15, 1910, tract of land in Haines twp.; $50. D. M. Kennedy et bar to Elizabeth Edmunson, December 10, 1909, tract of land in Rush twp.; $40. Edith M. Moyer et bar to Henry Smull, August 24, 1895, tract of land in Kreamerville; $100. F. Shontz et ux to R. E. Shontz, May 24. 1910. tract of land in Philips- burg; $1,100. T. E. Griest et ux to L. H. Lansberry, May 21, 1910, tract of land in Union- ville; $775. Mrs. Kate Dale et al to H. F. Bit- ner, May 28, 1910, tract of land in Pot- ter twp.; $1,000. Nancy Musser to Calvin Sunday, Feb. 25, 1910, tract of land in Ferguscn twp.; $5,500. John I. Robinson et ux to Peter H. Dale, June 1, 1910, tract of land in State College; $9,000. LE i Hl 8¥ tH thi i i j i | iE i fi fe FRE i: bution next Sunday. Its writers and artists are the very men whose work has made famous such periodicals as Scribner's Collier's McClure’s the Saturday Evening Post and publications of that class. It is to be issued monthly and to be abso- high-class fiction. Itis freeto all readers of The Sunday Dispatch. If you are not regular reader now notify your news dealer to begin delivery next Sunday, June 12, and be sure to get the new monthly magazine free. NEW MAGAZINE TO BE DEVOTED TO STORIES. — One of the most notable advances in the history of American publications is to be taken on June 12. On that date the Philadelphia North Ameri can will begin the publication of a genuine, high- class monthly magazine to be issued without cost to its patrons. The contents will be mainly fiction—stories of love and adventure, pathos, humor, character, action and sentiment. They will be written by authors famous in the magazine field. So great is the demand for the North American of Sunday, June 12, that thousands are placing special orders with newsdealers to make certain of receiving the first number of the new maga- zine. THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD.—When a daily newspaper numbers among its readers tens of thousands who dwell in communities remote from the place of its publication there is prima facie evidence that narrow local interests play but a [comparatively small part in the scheme of its existence. The strong following of “The Philadelphia Record” outside of Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Mary- land, is a case in point. “The Record" makes a fetish of reliability. One consequenc of this is that its daily market quota- tions have become the standard, officially recog- nized in the Courts, by which transactions in pro- duce are governed. Another is that its sporting department is the recognized authority on all matters in its province, including horse news. As a family newspaper “The Record” pays as much attention to utility as to entertainment. It publishes a great fund of information helpful to the farmer. It carries an irresistible appeal to womankind in its departments devoted to fashions and household affairs. It prints more store news —a matter of live interest to women—than any other Philadelphia newspaper. Its daily patterns are thoroughly up-to-date and in great demand. It is, in brief, for a dozen reasons indispensable in the family circle, and clean enough to be Jentitled to the honored place it has won there. HuMmAN Lirefror JUNE, 1910—"Bar the'one who died on Calvary and Abraham Lincoln, there has been more ink and paper given to Mr. Roosevelt than to anyother man,” declared Alfred Henry Lewisin his editorial announeement of his forth- coming “Story of Roosevelt.” The opening chapters of this great serial appear in the June issue of Human Life, and this masterly story is be- On the Great Lakes. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD BULLETIN. JUNE ON THE GREAT LAKES. Restful, delightful, interesting and instructive, there is no trip hike that on the Great Lakes, those inland seas which form the border line between the United States and Canada. And June is one of the most charming months in the year in which to rake the trip. : For comfort the fine passenger steamships of the Anchor Line have no superiors. As well-appointed as the palatial ocean greyhounds which plow the Atlantic, their schedule allows sufficient time at all stopping places to enable the traveler to see something of the great lake cities and to view in daylight the most distinctive sights of the lakes, and the scenery which frames them. The trip through the Detroit River, and through Lake St. Clair, with its great ship canal in the middle of the lake, thence through Lake Huron, the locking of the steamer through the great locks at the Soo, and the passage of the Portage Entry, lake and canal, across the upper end of Michigan are novel and ineresting features. The voyage from Buffalo to Duluth covers over eleven hundred miles in theifive days’ journey. Leaving Buffalo, the steamships Jun- iata, Tionesta and Octorara, make stops at Erie, Cleveland, Detroit, Mackinac Island, the Soo, Marquette, Houghton and Hancock, and Duluth. The 1910 season opened on May 31, when the Steamer Tionesta made her first sailing from Buffalo. The Anchor Line is the Great Lake Annex of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and the service measures up tq the high standard set by the “Standard Railroad of America.” An illustrated folder, giving sailing dates of steamers, rates of fare, and other information is in course of preparation, and may be obtain- ed when ready from any Pennsylvania Railrcad Ticket Agent, who is also prepared to book passangers who may desire to take this np through the Great Lakes and back. 55-23-21 accurate, and columns. New yond all doubt the greatest and most intimate, fascinating consecutive history yet written of America’s “Man of Destiny.” Searching the political horizon for 1912 Presi- dential possibilities, not a few telescopes in the West are now being levelled at the rising star of Governor Harmon of Ohio, and James B. Mor- row’s story in this issue of his rise from obscurity to fame shows him to be one of the most interest- ing and impressive personalities in the country Advertisement. There are a number of articles of special inter- est to feminine readers, including “Saint Sophie of New Orleans,” “Actresses of Today,” “A ‘Womans Commercial Club,” and sketches of the clever women who figure in the “Celebrity” In*“My first Job” Hugh C. Weir humorously tells how David Belasco, Frank A. Thomas A. Edison and other noted men got their Bait: AND ROOMERS Phone, TOCKHOLDER'S PROF. A. State WHEE Emr 55-212 Pa, Wim ars county lighting system than electric at 1-3 the cost. required Commission on salary basis, Se 55-19-tf A. C. MANN, Mgr. Mill Hall, Pa, Legal Notices. A PNeS SF simimistration NOTICE.—Let- 9! sdministiation the estate of ship, decease Raving been granted 10 the under. yo dey requested A hose having Claims againe payment, and the Same to prasent them duly accord- ARTER NOTICE~] is CC /given that an nll ‘be made to of Cor ory) en, ten o'clock Summer Vacations. BULLETIN. al Park. layas. and Chicago, phia, Pa. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Tour to Yellowstone Park and Canadian Rockies. In the heart of the Rocky Mountains lies one of na- ture’s richest treasure-houses—the Yellowstone Nation- It is America’s greatest show ground. To visit this Park is to see nature in a variety of rare and majestic moods. he Canadian Rockies, glorious in scenery, display- ing new wonders in every mile as one penetrates the great canyons through which the railroad runs. combine the beauty of the Alps and the grandeur of the Hima- On August 15, a personally conducted tour through the Yellowstone Park; to Portland and Seattle, and re- turning through the Canadian Rockies, will leave the East by special train over the Pennsylvania Railroad. Five and one-half days will be spent in the Park, one day in Portland. one day in Seattle, one day on Puget Sound, going by steamer from Seattle to Vancouver, part of a day at Vancouver, one day at Laggan, one day at Banff, and sight-seeing trips will be made in St. Paul * The tour will cover a period of 21 days. The rate will cover all necessary expenses. Persons desiring to utlize this exceptional oppor- tunity to visit the Yellowstone Park and the Canadian Rockies, should apply for Pullman space early, as the party will be limited. Address Jas. P. Anderson D.P.A., Sixth Avenue and Smithfield Street. Pittsburg, Pa, or Geo. W. Boyd, General Passenger Agent, Philadel- 55-23-2t. The First National Bank. A BA De BA BM DM AM A BM AM MA ~~ a a —— a — The First National Bank The small depositor has discovered the advantages of a check account. He has learned that to draw his Checks lends 8 cergain dividual prestige since none may guess how much stands behind it. Again it keeps personal expenses down, for mercilessly show the aggrega amount spent. Then it brings a new joy in making a balance grow. incentive to thrift never felt before. TRYITWITHUS, . . . . .. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $225,000. The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. Lime and Crushed Limestone. YY TY YY YY YY YY YT YY TTY TTT YTT YT TTY TY YY YY YY You Farmers and Agriculturists: Your land must have Lime if you want to raise paying crops. Use Hydrated Lime (H-0), through vour drill or broadcast when vou seed, for quick results, or use ordinary lime, fresh forkings, or lime for general use. But be Sure to Use Lime Lime for Chemical and Building Purposes. Limestone crushed to any size. Fine Limestone for Walks, etc. All sizes of Limestone. Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forge and Union Furnace. PROMPT SHIPMENTS. ALL RAILROAD CONNECTIONS. ‘Write for information to American Lime & Stone Company, Office: TYRONE, PA. §54-1y. The largest lime manufacturers in Pa, 1 5 i bi | L 5 : in June. at a. Ee Lome mec ge oe EER for the purese of the cecton of directors and t i TheSchoolBoard of theBorcugh of Milton offer er fo one 0 thereafter to DE EN i= day of 1921 or thereafter, at the maturity EPI Wied so aa , chairman of committee. CONRAD HILE Pres, ed. In the Orphants “The a been appointed an auditor by the coun- PAL cribubion of the hie deceased. to and among 1 that he Ee ke of ™ FRIDAY, JULY st. 1010, Bh San Pangan tae of he “Towa o Snow Shoe, County of Centre, State of Pennsyl- erms of sale: Cash. JAMES A. FLANIGAN, Administrator of inist yw t the estate of i Ih a I e the he knowing law for sett t GEO. B. JOHNSTON, AS. C. FURST, P.O. Bo: Beaver F J for Est. = 486, Aha 35 to 40 cents for butter when you can buy.... High Grade Oleomagarine from me at 25 cents per pound. R. S. BROUSE, 55-1-1y Bush Arcade, 5445 Bellefonte, Pa. Automobiles. se p { THE NEW » { BUICK y ; IS HERE. 1 re p ARRANGE FOR DEMONSTRATION. Second Hand Cars For Sale 4 and Accessories. b p W. W. Keichline & Co. b South Water St. Bellefonte. Pa. i LIVERY ATTACHED. p b Lumber. BUILDING MATERIAL When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On LUMBER, MILL WORK, ROOFING, AND GLASS. This is the place where close and BE AN ESTIMATE? BLLLEFONTE LUMBER CO. 525-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. VAY AY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers