«3 FF Pemorvalic Watcan Bellefonte, Pa., June 17, 1910. EE ———————————— To CormEsPONDENTS.—No communications largest class sent out into the world in | not be over their catch oilbiisied udless ageompusicd iy the veal vam the history of that institution. home. But ifthe ouly becomes ———————————————— AS early as the middle of last week | warm and the water in the streams fall THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——James McNichol was taken to the hospital yesterday with a bad case of ap. pendicitis. —Miss Berenice Noll es been in) bed the past few days with a very : sore | oF the graduates was greater than bereto- ——Children's Day services will be pp. Got feature of the commencement held in the Presbyterian church on Sun-. o. 410 Seate-Bucknell baseball game last day morning. | Sa afternoon which was won by ~The interior of the Lutheran church ' State by the close score of 2 to 1. Satur- is being redecorated, the walls frescoed day evening The Pharsonians gave their and the wood work painted. {usual commencement entertainment in ——L. H. Orwig is now driving a new : the auditorium. model G Franklin roadster and is as hap- py as any other owner of a car. —At the commencement exercises of Syracuse University last week the degree of D. D. was conferred upon Rev. Silas Everard Quimby, of Bellefonte. ——A new quarter horse-power elec : ot ah stalled ot (8 Un: | #¥oning 4 very enthiusiastic'meeting was dine fire company’s house on Bishop street | to be used in sounding their fire alarm. | meet “1 the ; : wis ——R. B. Taylor, of this place, has put | joi on Beaver field and in the evening in a bid for the enlarging of the big reser- | 1}, 4143] Junior oratorical contest took voir at Tyrone. As a contractor heis 1,00 Later in the evening a number of becoming quite prominent throughout the fraternities held receptions and dances. State. | Tuesday was a busy day with meetings ——Manager T. Clayton Brown has ar- | of the board of trustees, the alumni and ranged for a return of the picture of various fraternities; an exhibition drill by King Edward's funeral and the same will | the cadet batallion and a baseball game be shown for the second time at the | between the Varsity and Alumni, the for- Scenic tonight. mer winning by the score of 6 to 3. At ——R. B. Taylor is now receiving ship- | the annual election of trustees for the ments of brick to be used in the paving of | ensuing year the alumni elected Judge Allegheny street, so that the work wily | Ellis L. Orvis, of this place; J. E. Quigley, not be delayed on account of not having | of Pittsburg, and W. H. Walker, of Bos- the brick in time. | ton, Mass. . ——Preaching services will be held in | _ The agricultural societies re-elected W. F. Hill, of Huntingdon; H. V. White and the United Brethren church at Julian on ] . Carnegie, of New York, and Sunday at 10.30 o'clock a. m., and at s : | elected Prof. Menges, of York, to suc- Paradise at 7.30 o'clock in the evening | ! ceed Gen. Frank Miller, of Franklin. On by Rev. E. Harvey Swank, pastor. i 1 , Tuesday evening a large crowd filled the ——Claster’s Underselling store hasan | oo. um to witness “The Thespians” announcement on the sixth page of to- | "oy i Condition of “A Gay Soubrette,” day's paper that it will pay you to read. | Lye alumni reception in McAllister They are offering a big mid-summer cut |. yor in the evening was well attend- in prices on most anything you want or od. need. : The graduating exercises proper were ——Next Tuesday will be the longest | 14 in the auditorium on Wednesday day of the year and the beginning of the | morning. The commencement address summer season. This latter is one thing | was delivered by John H. Jones, of Pitts- we all ought to be thankful for, as so far | rg who took for his subject “Know we have had little weather at all like your Position.” The class valedictory was summer. | delivered by Charles Richard Steele, after ——Bishop Eugene A. Garvey, of the which the degrees were conferred and Altoona diocese, has transferred Father | prizes awarded. Corcoran from St. Mary's church at Snow | On Wednesday afternoon Congressman Shoe to the Catholic church at Spangler | S. E. Ancona, of Reading, was the princi- and Rev. Father Joseph Farran has been | pal speaker at a meeting held in the audi’ transferred from Altoona to Snow Shoe. | torium commemorating the one hun- in the Elks home but out of respect to the memory of the late Judge Love it was not given. Instead the orchestra played at the Brockerhoff house during the supper hour and gave a two hour concert in the parlor in the evening. : ————— A ~e—— ——Through fear your property should be that one that might mar the perfect condition of your street, see to it that day, that they find nothing to criticise. Even though you be a renter, the satis- faction and pleasure from orderly sur- roundings is compensation enough for the few hours spent in recognition of Belle- fonte’s first clean up day. BWP cm— ——Children’s day was very appropri- ately observed in the Methodist church at Curtinon Sunday when a large con- gregation was in attendance. The church was beautifully decorated with evergreen and laurel. The children all rendered their different parts in excellent style, and thus showed the excellent drill work of their teachers, The services were in charge of superintendent Howard Neff assisted by Calvin Bathurst. cc AAG A— —Mrs. Henrietta Nolan and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Boyd Nolan, spent Sunday and Monday in Tyrone. When the late Boyd A. Nolan entered the serv- ice of the Pennsylvania railroad com- pany as a brakeman he had his relief benefit made out in his mother’s name and when he died the money was paid to her. While in Tyrone on Monday Mrs. Nolan made transfer of the money and personal property he left to his widow. ————— Pm — —Thomas A. Shoemaker, for the Eyer—Shoemaker Construction company, has purchased the big slag pile at the Nittany furnace and on Saturday he and superintendent M. I. Gardner agreed upon a rate for the delivery of the slagover the Nittany Valley railroad to the Lewisburg and Tyrone road. The slag will be used at Northumberland as filling in the big classification yards being built there and it is expected that shipment will begin in about three weeks. I —— A lp smn —=0On Tuesday the University of Edin- burgh, Scotland, conferred the degree of Doctor of Laws upon Gen. James A. Bea- ver and the degree of Doctor of Divinity upon Rev. Robert E. Speer, both of whom ——1Jack, the young son of Mr. and | dredth anniversary of the birth of Hon. Mrs. J. M. Decker, is again going around with his arm in a sling. Six weeks or two months ago he fell and broke an arm and the bone had just gotten nicely knit together when he fell again on Monday and broke the same arm. ——John Curtin and James Furst | opened their camp on Fishing creek yes- John S. Morrill, of Lemont, father of the so-called “land grant act” of 1862, upon which the State College was established The big social event of the week, nat- urally, was the Junior assembly on Wed- nesday evening and it was attended by the usual large and brilliant crowd. In the list of graduates were the follow. terday and expect to have everything ing from Centre county: Clarence Ed- filled up over Sunday, at least, as W.S. | ward McCormick, Charles Darwin Faunce, Furst, of Philadelphia, and a number of | Joshua Plummer Pilisbury, Howard Hibbs Pittsburg friends will be their guests Agee, Sidney Prentiss Armsby, Charles are now in Edinburgh as delegates to the Worlds missionary convention. That such dn old and world-recognized Univer- sity as Edinburgh should confer a degree upon anyone not a graduate of the same is a signal honor and the people of Belle- fonte can feel proud of the fact that it was bestowed upon a citizen of the town. S——————— I ————— ~The Bellefonte baseball association realized thirty-eight dollars as the net proceeds of last Friday's game between the Fats and Leans on Hughes field. The from Friday until Monday. —Miss Emily Bassett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Bassett, of Spar- rows Point, Md., and a grand-daughter of Rev. James P. Hughes, of this place, was one of the graduates at the Hamilton school, Philadelphia, last week and was awarded the gold medal for proficiency in literature. ~——On next Sunday the Sabbath school of the Bellefonte Methodist Episcopal church will begin its sessions at 9.30 a. m., and continue meeting at that hour during the summer. The preaching serv- | ice will be at 10.45 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Prayer meeting each Wednesday evening at 7.30 o'clock. Emory Glover and Roy Benner Fehr, of State College; Thomas Gladstone Haugh. of Benore; George Albert Hoy, of Wad- dle; Guy Watson Jacobs, of Centre Hall; Roy Hall Mobley, of Beech Creek, and Walter Weber Muffley, of Howard. In the scholarship awards Charles Robi- son Stover, of Altoona, won the John W. White fellowship, $400, and Joseph Eyre Platt the John W. White medal, value $50. The Thomas W. Barlow prize of $100 was awarded to Paul Work, and the McAllister prize of $25 to Harvey Peter Kocher. The special military awards went to John Frederick Mattern, | Harry Barker Norris and John Augustus Summers. Among the advanced degrees conferred ——Yesterday Charles M. McCurdy, H. C. Quigley and Dr. Kilpatrick opened their annual camp on Fishing creek. J. . Edward Quigley, of Pittsburg, who was | here for college commencement, and ' Richard Quigley, of Lock Haven, were the first guests at camp, having spent Sunday there. ; in Bellefonte, which has been appointed : for Wednesday and Thursday, the 29th , and 30th days of June, means that every- | one in the town within the borough limits, ——Being unable to secure prompt de- | or outside, owning property or occupying livery on that Mitchell car he ordered a ' that which belongs to others, is asked to month or more ago Hon. A. G. Morris | improve the appearance of that same has cancelled the order and purchased a | property by cleaning your yards, your Leans won by the score of 12 to 8, prob- ably because they were lighter of foot and naturally ought to run better than the heavy Fats. Of course it was not a faultless or a very scientific game, but it furnished considerable amusement for the spectators, even though one nice looking young girl did make the awful remark that “it looked so silly to see those old fellows play ball.” —[n their undertaking to secure an elevator for the Bellefonte hospital the Misses Mary and Elizabeth Blanchard have so far secured pledged subscriptions to the amount of $750. To purchase the elevator, do the piping and install it in the hospital will require about $1,400, but as the firm from whom it will be pur- chased requires as a first payment only $700, it means that the elevator will be secured and installed in the near future; and when it is the physicians, patients and everyone connected with that insti- tution will be under deep obligations to the Misses Blanchard for what they have done. The borough authorities have of- fered to furnish the water necessary to operate the elevator free of charge. —Quite a large audience was present in the Presbyterian church last Thursday new Renier automobile which was ship- ped from New York on Monday. It isa high priced, up-to-date machine and the | the equal of any car in Bellefonte. —Miss Megargee, who the past two years has been head milliner at Katz & Co's store in this place, surprised her friends here the past week by announc- ing that she had been married in March to R. W. Jackson, of Germantown. She expects to leave Bellefonte in the near future to join her husband and go to oF —=Mrs. Harriet Thomas Kurtz recent- the church of the Messiah, Broad street for the benefit of the mission circle. The “| lending a helping hand to that ‘on | who is un to do for his Through Switzerland” in | children in this vaca front pavements and gutters, your alleys, trimming the trees and having hauled to ing the natural beauty of the town and same beauty can be enhanced by a few hours work about your own home or in I great! pride and the results will be gratifying. pido ghd [the results will be gratifying. id b. pes ap ok .. The heir th y | especi time so profitably | Loliege orches > FI tuitou yy sul sas stig. Doge evening to hear Gaul's “Holy City,” as sung by a chorus of fifty Vives, with pipe organ and orchestral accompainment, and as a result the Ladies Auxiliary of the Bellefonte hospital, under whose auspices the musicale was given, netted just $78.49 for the benefit of that institution. And that they were able to do this is due to the fact that practically everything was its surrounding country, and how that | not only feel very kindly toward all who in anyway assistedin the evening’s enter- tainment but through the columns of the i ATCHI Wichout § Sune of Temineration;. $9 se sang and ‘the members of the State i . I ! SANE FoURTH.—Quite a representative gathering of men and women assembled in the new High school building last Fri- day evening in pursuance to a call of the Civic committee of the Woman's Club in order to formulate a movement for a safe and sane Fourth of July. And right here we want to say that by a safe and sane Fourth it is not meant that the people of Bellefonte are to spend the day housed up in their homes or at church. It sim- ply means the doing away withthe pro- have been the cause of such a large cas- ualty list throughout the land, and mak- ing the day a holiday replete with harm- less sports and amusements. Various suggestions were made at the meeting as to how this could be done but no plan has as yet been definitely out- lined. Among the suggestions are a base- ball game, a marathon race, various field sports, an automobile parade, a good band to give concerts at various places throughout the town during the day and evening to close with a mammoth exhi- bition of fireworks to be put off on some hill where they can be seen by everybody and under the direction of an experienc- ed man. Of course it will require money to do all this but if one-fourth theamount usually spent individually is contributed into one general fund it will be ample to give the people of the townsuch a Fourth of July as can be equally enjoyed by all. As the one big thing in doing this is the money a Finance committee was ap- pointed atlast Friday evening's meeting to see how much of a fund can be rais- ed and report at another meeting to be held this (Friday) evening at the same place. The members of this committee are G. R. Spiglemyer, H. C. Quigley, W. Harrison Walker, Mrs. E. E. Davis, Mrs. W. G. Morrison, Mrs. L. A. Schaeffer and James C. Furst. If you have not yet put your name down for a contribution such as you feel able to make and are ap- proached by any one of the above com- mittee don't be at all backward, as they will take whatever you have to give. The following gentlemen were appoint- ed a committee on amusements: J. D. Sourbeck, chairman; Dr. R. A. Weston, R. Russell Blair, J. Will Conley, George R. Meek, John M. Shugert and Robert F. Hunter. It is their duty to arrange the schedule of amusements and sports for the day and the nature and scope of these will depend entirely upon the amount of the fund subscribed. SECOND ELECTION FOR COLONEL UN- SUCCESSFUL.—A second election for col- onel of the Twelfth regiment, N. G. P,, was held at Sunbury on Saturday night and again it was without definite result, so far as electing a colonel was concern- ed, though it showed the remarkable strength of Capt. H. S. Taylor, of this place. At the first election there were three candidates, Major William F. Foll- mer, of Lewisburg, Major W. C. King, of Williamsport, and Capt. H. S. Taylor, of this place. There are thirty-six line of- ficers in the regiment and of this number Follmer received sixteen votes, King four- teen and Taylor six. At Saturday evening's meeting Major King withdrew from the contest, leaving only Follmer and Taylor in the field. Only thirty-four line officers were present, as since the last meeting two vacancies have occurred, one by retirement and one by resignation. Seven ballots were taken and each resulted in a tie, both Follmer and Taylor receiving seventeen votes, and the meeting again was adjourned without electing a colonel. It will now be neces. sary to await the issue of another elec- tion order before a third attempt can be made to elect a commander for the Twelfth. In the meantime lieutenant colonel William F. Barber, of Sunbury, will have charge of the regiment and all its affairs. AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT - TION, ~The faculty of the school of agri- culture and experiment station of The Pennsylvania State College, has set aside Wednesday afternoon, June 22nd, 1910, for the purpose of showing the farmersof Centre county its field, garden and or- aside a day each year on which farmers within driving distance of the college plained to them by members of the staf On the date selected, Wednesday, Jun 22nd, it is believed that the plate will be in prime condition to indicate the lessons which they teach. Everybody is cordia invited to be present. Py pe’ The marriage of Lewis Bucking: of Rev. J. Ellis Bell, a prominent : will take place in the odist chu York, Pa, at six o'clock on Tue evening, June 28th. Mr, Buckingham is a relative of Mr. and Mrs. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. ~Mrs. Charles Heverley is in Altoona visiting friends. ~Miss Louise Maitland has been with a house party at the College this week, «j. Kennedy Johnston Esq., made a business trip to Williamsport on Monday. —Mrs. Amanda Houser was a Sunday visitor with her friends at State College. ~Mrs. Julia Shuey, of Lemont, is visiting her many friends in Bellefonte this week. ~Grant Hoover, of Williamsport. was a busi- ness visitor in Bellefonte on Wednesday. =F. W. Crider is at Mt. Clemens, Mich,, taking treatment and the baths for rheumatism. ~—Mrs. Jumes Lambert and daughter Hattie, of Pitcairn, ure visiting friends in Bellefonte. —Miss Ethel Dale is home from Wilson Col- lege, Chambersburg, for the summer vacation, —Miss Anna Keichline, a student at Cornell, came home on Tuesday for the summer vacation. —P. Gray Meek, Mrs. Meek, Mrs. T. K. Morris and Thomas King Morris Jr., are in Atlantic City. —Rev. aad Mrs. J. Max Lantz, of Spring Mills, visited friends in Tyrone the forepart of the week. urday in Bellefonte with her sister, Mrs. W. E, Gray. —Mrs. Ollie Miller, of Wilkinsburg, is here for a month's visit among her many friends and acquaintances. —Mrs. LeRoy Fox, of Lock Haven, with her two little children is in Bellefonte visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haupt. —Mrs. Harry E. Jenkins went to Tyrone on Wednesday to spend some time with her brother, F. K. Lukenbach and family. —Mrs. Sarah Gray came down from her home in Halfmoon valley on Wednesday morning and spent a few hours in Bellefonte. ~Miss Florence Peters, of Lancaster, a guest of Miss Mary Ray, is spending the week at the commencement at State College. ~The Misses Ella and Louise Parker, of Jersey Shore, spent Tuesday and Wednesday of this week with relatives in Bellefonte. —Mrs. Ed. Garman left for Philadelphia Thurs- day of last week for a visit with her cousin, Miss Kelly. She expects to be gone six weeks. —Shem Spigelmyer, of Jersey Shore, probably the oldest traveling salesman in the State, was looking after his Bellefonte trade on Monday. —Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cox andson Robert, of Franklin, Pa., are guests this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sechler, on Spring street. —Mrs. Jacob L. Runkle, of Youngstown, Ohio, is in Bellefonte for a visit with her friends and is at present the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Joseph Ceader. —Mrs. Howard Barnes and her son Chester, left Friday for an extended trip through the West: expecting to spend some time inthe Yellowstone Park and in California. —Mrs. Louisa Bush returned on Monday after- noon from a three week's sojourn at Atlantic City, feeling very miuch invigorated by her sojourn by the seaside. —Mrs. Isaac Maitland, of Williamsport, who has just gone through a most serious operation, is here recuperating at her sisters, Mra. Charles Cruse, on Allegheny street. —Miss Jane Miller has returned from a visit latter part of last week and _ttended a dance at the Country club at Mill Ha on Friday evening —George H. Thompson, district missionary, representing the Children's Home Society of Pennsylvania, spent Monday and Tuesday with Dr. Wilcox in Bellefonte in the interest of his work —Mrs. John Swaney and two daughters, of -D. C. Stover, of Altoona, was a pleasant caller at the WATCHMAN office on Tuesday while on his way to State College to see his son, Charles d here. ~ of idl Coatindt —Mors. Phiilp Collins, of s is Er “Mrs. W. A. Lyon is in Bellefonte after a three weeks visit with her daughter and son in —Miss Margery Lyon, a student at State Col- lege, is at home in Bellefonte for her summer vacation. =Mrs. Sarah Brown left Bellefonte Thursday, for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Robert Wray, of Harrisburg. =Mr. and Mrs. Fauble have been having as their guests, their daughter, Mrs. Tausig, of Harrisburg, and her three children. —Mrs. Lemuel Osman, of State College, was in town last eveningon her way to Snydertown to geitag the funeral of her cousin, Mrs. Ira Mecht- —Miss Beulah Dale, of Galen Atlantic City, left Bellefonte Tuesday Be WelloAtasic a vacation of two weeks in the town with rela the week-end guest of Mr.and Mrs. W. B. Ren kin, leaving the beginning of the week for Pitts —Miss Bessie Green, of Filmore, spent Sat- | burg =Miss Emily Valentine has returned to Belle- fonte after being in Europe the greater part of the year and is the guest of Miss Natt, on Curtin street. =Mrs. John P. Kotchamp, of Brooklyn and her little daughter came to State College Wednesday Bade the summer with her father, Dr. W. S- —James Cook, of Punxsutawney, came to Belle- Fare. Mean Wen Sent wth ba parents, Mr. Andrew J. . pan J. Cook, for sev —Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Scholl are here from their New Jersey home for afirst visit since their mar- riage, and are guests at the Scholl home on east Bishop street. =J. Malcolm Mitchell left Bellefonte on ‘Wed- nesday for Detroit, Mich., where he has accepted a position with the Chalmers—Detroit automobile manufacturing company. =Mrs. ‘Isaac Gray and Miss Annie , of fut Ru. et Mi, Fk Koch of , were te Wi the funeral of Judge Love. —John S. Walker spent the forepart of the week in New York and being joined by Mrs. Walker in Philadelphia Wednesday, visited for a short time with Mr. Walker's parents in Delaware. =Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Casebeer will Jboth have their mother with them for a week. They are una J Suscantand Mes, J. R. Walter, both of Somerset, they arrived on Wednesday evening. —Miss Helen Ceader i3 in Baltimore, having gone down to attend the commencement exer cises of the Notre Dame of which she was a stu- dent, later expecting to visit her cousin, Mrs. Bragonier. —Walter B. Furst, private secretary to John Manson, of New Haven, Conn., has been in Belle- fonte visiting his mother, Mrs. A. O. Furst, and spent the week at the State College com- mencement. =Mrs. Joseph Hobart, of Harrisburg, has been the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Charles Gilmore, since Wednesday, expecting to go to Mrs. Allison's Saturday where she will be for the re- maining part of her visit. =A. C. Mann, of Mill Hall, was in Bellefonte yesterday looking the promotion of that gasolene lighting system of his. He is anxious to secure a few good agents and if you are interested you should scan the advertising columns of this issue. —Miss Emaline Cooper, of Galveston, Texas, who has been at school at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. is in Bellefonte with her aunts, the Misses Benner, for the summer, expecting to be joined here by Bet mothes, Mss. H. 5. Couper, the latter past of Miss Mary Bertran will leave next Monday for Seattle, Washington, where the former goes to visit her sons, Michael and Lewis and the latter Wednesday night to make their future home in Harrisburg, the closing The following. are th fling prices ot the Pr Geese