THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —Mrs. William Lyon is quite ill at ; her home on east Howard street. ——A4 little baby boy arrived recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Krebs, | Visited was the home of Mrs. J. F. Alex | ander but they got no more there of Willowbank street. ~The Hunter-Thomas families will | hold a reunion at Agar’s park, Mill Hall, on Thursday, August 18th. ——John Keichline Esq., is getting things in shape to have a new slate roof put on his residence on Bishop street. ——Tomorrow is the day of the public sale of the old office furniture and all the | odds and ends accumulated by the re- modeling of the court house. ~——Miss Marie White was taken to the Williamsport hospital on Thursday | of last week and that night underwent an operation for appendicitis. She has since been recovering very nicely. ——Hugh N. Crider has traded his old Matheson roadster into the factory for a new seven passenger touring car of the Silent Six type and expects to have the ! same here within a few days. ——On the seventh page of to-day’s paper are printed four resolutions for proposed amendments to the constitution, Read them carefully and then when you come to vote upon same you can do it intelligently. ~The services in the Methodist church during the absence of Dr. Wilcox will be in charge of Rev. David Y. Brouse, of Warriorsmark, on August 14th, and Rev. Joseph B. Brenneman, of Mill Hall, on August 21st. —During Wednesday's hard rain storm hail fell in some parts of the coun- ty but not in quantities sufficient to do much damage except in the neighborhood of State College where the corn was bad- ly beaten down. ——The summer vacation for the school children of Bellefonte is almost over as the schools will openthree weeks from next Monday. And when they do the pupils will enjoy better educational facilities than they ever did before. —The Bellefonte Chapter D. A. R. will hold a reception at the Fraternity house Saturday evening at eight o'clock, with Miss Overton as hostess, as a welcome to Mrs. Elizabeth Callaway on her safe return from her trip abroad. —Mrs. Harry Keller entertained for the younger people of the town Tuesday night in honor of her niece and nephew, Daniel and Elizabeth Keller, of Lancaster, who returned to Bellefonte with her son Henry after his visit in Wyncote and Ocean City. ——While leaving the house of the Misses Benner one day last week, Mrs. Frank P. Green made a misstep and in an attempt to save herself from falling sprained her wrist so badly that she was obliged to have the arm bandaged and put in a support. ——Rev. E. Harvey Swank will preach in the United Brethren church at Julian on Sunday at 10.30 a. m., and at Paradise in the evening at 8 o'clock. A festival will be held on the church lawn at Paradise tomorrow evening, proceeds for the bene- fit of the church. ——Former Centre countians now lo- cated in Blair county have decided to forego having a reunion this summer for the reason that they could not secure a suitable date at Stevens’ park, Tyrone. Instead of a reunion they will hold a big banquet some time during the winter. —1It is announced from Washington that the complete census returns of the population of the United States will not be ready for announcement until early in October, so that we will have to wait two more months to learn how big we have grown during the past ten years. —Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Wetzel and family, who have been in Birmingham England, the past six months, will sail for home on Saturday, August 27th, Mr. Wetzel having completed the business which took him abroad. It will be vio- lating no confidence to state they they are all anxious to getback to this country. ———Newton W. Fredericks, J. KE. Smith and C. C. Edmunds, of Lock Haven, have made application to the Governor for a charter for a proposed corporation to be known as the Snow Shoe Fire Brick com- pany, a concern which has in view the erection of a plant in the vicinity of Snow Shoe for the manufacture of fire brick. —A large delegation of members of the Centre county bar as well as other prominent Bellefonters attended the fun- ‘2ral of the late Senator S. R. Peale in Lock Haven last Friday afternoon. Hon. ‘4, G. Morris took a load down in his Reinier car and the trip from Bellefonte 0 Lock Haven was made in just fifty-six ‘ninutes. ~ ——Company number one of the Unit “+d Brethren church will hold a festival 0 the green opposite Gamble, Gheen & Fors mill tomorrow (Saturday) evening, iding the weather is favorable; if it ! it will be held in the Aid society m. There will be lots of good things fin Everybody is invited to to get into the D. J. Meyer home and the | BurGLARS Do POOR BusiNess.—Last ——John Blanchard has bought the Thursday night burglars paid Centre Hall Johnston home on west Linn street for a visit but failed to get much plunder. ' $4,500. He intends to remodel the house - | They first visited the home of Shannon and fix it up into a handsome as well as a | Boal where they got seventy-five cents comfortable residence for his own occu- trousers and hat, discarding the latter in sioned to do the architectural work, and | the yard of Mrs. J. F. Alexander's home. this in itself assures a very handsome = The second place they tried was the home when it is completed. ———The degree of Doctor of Divinity was recently conferred by Dickinson col- i lege upon Rev. B. C. Conner, superinten- | dent of the Altoona district M. E. Confer- ence, and Rev. Morris E. Swartz, pastor Alex: | of he Methodist church in Clearfield, and | both gentlemen will hereafter be entitled to write Dr. before their name or attach D. D. to the end of it. ' Centre Hall hotel but in this they were | ——The entertainment and refresh- not successful. | ment committee of the ladies’ auxiliary On Friday night the same men, or others | of the Y. M. C. A. will hold an exchange | equally slick, went through two houses in the Y. M. C. A. rooms on Saturday, in Bellefonte. The first was that of Jo- | August 20th, at which both delicacies and | seph L. Montgomery. To gain entrance | substantials will be on sale. A liberal Thomas Moore home where they were in | | the bed room occupied by Mr. and Mrs. | ; Moore and got away without disturbing | | the latter's slumbers, though they failed | to get any plunder. The third place they | they did at the two former places visited. | From indications an attempt was made | the burglars carried a ladder from the: | patronage is asked for as the proceeds of | new High school building and got into | the exchange is a starting of a fund for | the house through the secviid story win- | the after-summer cleaning of the Y. M. !dow. Mr. Montgomery was not at home | C. A. i 'and Mrs. Montgomery was not awakened |__|. Friday mori Mrs. Sarah by the depredators, who failed to find | Saner, aged promi ag was on her ited was that of William Chambers, on Curtin street, where they gained an en- trance by removing the screen and get- ! ting in through the kitchen window. At | this place they got fifteen cents in mon- | ey, ate almost a package of breakfast food and drank a quart bottle of milk. Various articles were strewn over the floor as evidence that they had ransack- ed the place pretty thoroughly, but aside from what they ate nothing was destroy- ed. Itis alleged that an attempt was also made to get into the Col. Reynolds home, but the men were evidently fright- ened away before they succeeded in do- ing so. The Centre Hall authorities and the police of Bellefonte have no direct clue to the burglars though the general sup- position is that they were two strange colored men who came to Bellefonte last Wednesday night. Early Thursday morn- ing they left town and walked out the pike toward Axe Mann. Late Friday afternoon they were seen by Col. Rey- nolds coming in the pike just a short distance beyond the furnace. Since the robberies last Friday night they have not been seen and the supposition is that they left town the same night. That they were no amateurs is evident from the way they did their work and the fact that in no instance did they make enough noise to arouse the household. eo To DepicaTE NEW HicH SciooL BUiLD- ING.—The Bellefonte school board has de- cided on Friday, August 26th, as the day on which to dedicate the new High school building and a suitable program will be arranged for that occasion. On account of the fact that replies have not been re- ceived from all those invited to deliver ad" dresses a full program cannot be given this week, but it is known that one of the speakers will be Hon. David Sedden, com- missioner of education of Massachusetts, who will speak on "Vocational Education.” Dr. Edwin Earle Sparks, president of The Pennsylvania State College, is also ex- pected to be present and deliver an ad- dress, while somebody representing the State Department of Public Instruction will also be here. By next week the com- mittee in charge expects to be abletogive the program in full. The Haupt brothers have completed the concrete walk from the main entrance out to the pavement and are now at work on the front pavement. With favorable weather they will have all the work done by the day of the dedication. L. C.Wallace this week put the concrete floors in the sub-basement. The steps leading to the second and third floors were put on this week, so that the carpenter work is about completed. The slate blackboards are be- ing put up in the various recitation rooms and the desks arranged in regular order. Col. Taylor has several days work yet in coupling up the heating and ventilating system and installing the thermostats, while the electric light fixtures have to be put in place and the call bells connected with the master clock and regulator in the principal's room. But all this can be done in ample time for the dedication on the 26th. NURSES’ GRADUATING EXERCISES. —Mrs- Margaret Leggett and Miss Artie Keller have successfully completed the three years course in nursing in the training school at the Bellefonte hospital and appropriate graduating exercises will be held in the auditorium at the new High school building on Thursday evening, August 18th. Rev. John Hewitt, pastor of St. John’s Episcopal church, will de- liver the commencement address. Christy Smith's orchestra will furnish the music and there will be a number of vocal selec- tions by well known singers. Miss Keller has applied for a position as nurse in the United States army service and expects to leave for Washington, D. C., soon after her graduation. Mrs. Leggett will re- main in Bellefonte for the present. The new elevator for the hospital was shipped from Philadelphia a few days ago and will be installed in the near future. There are now twenty-eight patients in ed this week. ——Don't get discouraged because the Bellefonte ball team don’t win every game, but go out and help them win to-day. Be- fore the season is over they will give them all a good run for their money. anything of value. The next house vis- way from Petersburg to the home of her | daughter at Centre Furnace, this county, and ingetting off the train at Tyrone her foot caught on the car step and she was thrown to the platform. She was carried into the station and an examination dis- closed the fact that no bones were broken and her worst injury was a sprained leg, and she was able to continue her journey home. ——The Johnny Jones carnival com- pany passed through Bellefonte on Sun- day evening from Lock Haven to Tyrone. Last week they were in DuBois and at their last performance Saturday night some of the tough element of the town undertook to put the show on the bum but the manager got an inkling of what they intended doing in advance and had a number of state constabulary and police- men on hand and the toughs got the worst of it. ——Eban Bower, of Coburn, bookkeep- er for the Bellefonte Lumber company, is seriously ill with pneumonia at the Wit- mer home on east Lamb street. His regular boarding place is the Brant house but when he was taken sick a week or so ago he was removed to the Witmer home» as they are relatives. Early this week his condition was considered very critical but yesterday he was slightly improved and his friends indulge the hope that he will recover. —This (Friday) evening will be a benefit night at the Scenic for the Belle- fonte baseball team. The price of ad- mission will be ten cents but it will be | worth five times that to hear Mt. Pleasant, the Carlisle Indian student, play the piano and the famous baseball team quintette sing, not counting the incomparable pro- gram of music pictures. It will be an evening of rare entertainment no one can afford to miss. And ten cents is all it will cost to see and hear it. *-oe ——John P. Harris, treasurer of the Bellefonte Trust company, was seventy- eight years old last Friday and celebrated the event by a day's outing at Hecla park. In addition to the Harris family a dozen or more friends were present. Mr. Harris was born in Bellefonte and spent all his life here. He has been actively engaged in the banking business for half a century or over and is today just as keen in intellect and business acumen as he was twenty-five years ago. ——Beef on the hoof has taken a drop in price and is now selling for $7.25 a hundred against $8.40, the high water mark; but so far the consumer has de- rived no benefit therefrom. Young cat- tle are still bringing a good, stiff price and there is no indication of any great re- duction in the near future. Hogs hold very close to the high water mark, even sucking pigs bringing five dollars a piece, and when the time comes there will be a whole lot of us who will have to eat our buckwheat cakes and sausages minus the sausage. te ——The weather man has certainly been taking care of his job this summer, at least so far as this section of the coun- try is concerned. Just when the ground was getting fairly dry and the corn and potatoes began to show the need of rain, it came. It began raining about five o'clock on Monday morning and rained until the middle of the afternoon, and just hard enough that it all soaked in the ground. The result is that both the corn and potatoes will be greatly benefitted and the former promises to be a bigger crop in Centre county than we have had in two years. ——When you feel depressed and blue, kind of out of sorts with yourself and everybody else, don't resort to the medi- cine bottle or call in a doctor but go to the Scenic. An hour there each evening will make you forget all your troubles and imaginary ailments and put you in a good humor with the whole world. That is the character of some of the moving pictures shown there; others are especial- ly interesting because of their education- al value, being views of natural scenery, villages and cities in this and foreign countries, bringing the customs and tra- ditions of the old world right to your very door for the small sum of five cents. And the Scenic is the one place in Bellefonte where you can enjoy the pictures in com- fort. BAILEYVILLE PICNIC AND SOLDIER'S RE- UNION.— The annual Baileyville picnic, which is always the big event of the year in the western end of the county, will be held on Saturday, August 20th, or just one week from tomorrow, and it is safe to predict that all Ferguson township will be there as well as scores of people from adjoining townships. At the same time and place the sur- vivors of company E, Forty-fifth regi- ment Penna. Vols., will hold their forty- ninth annual reunion in celebration of the anniversary of their leaving for the seat of war. This gathering will be of un- usual interest, as the committee has book- ed as speakers Gen. James A. Beaver, Hon. J. C. Meyer, Hon. W. C. Heinle, Hon. J. D. Hicks, of Tyrone, and Rev. Ralph Illingsworth. On that occasion the committee appointed at last year's re- union to arrange for the building of a monument to the company will make its report and as it will be a favorable one definite action will be taken by the asso- ciation. The monument it is proposed to erect will be within easy possibility, if every family in that section of the coun- ty whose ancestors were represented on the honor rolls of the company responds with financial assistance according to their means. The monument will be of | granite and will have bronze tablets bear- ing the names of the two hundred men who at one time or another fought in this command. It is the desire of the association to have the monument erected | so that it can be unveiled and dedicated on the occasion of their fiftieth anniver- sary in August of next year. It might here be said that there is not another company in the United States more deserving of a monument than com- pany E. During its term of enlistment the members traveled over thirteen thous- and miles and fought in a dozen or more different States. They were in thirty- four engagements and their percentage of killed and wounded was fifth on the list of all the companies in the war, while their dead lies buried in ten different States. The company was recruited en- tirely in Ferguson, Halfmoon and Patton townships, this county, and from Franklin township, Huntingdon county, and on the roster were the names of all the well known families of that section. i SAD FATALITY AT MUNSON.—On Wed- nesday morning of last week several miners on their way to work discovered the dead body of an elderly woman lying on the street in front of the Moshannon house, at Munson. An investigation dis- closed the fact that it was the body of Mrs. Mary Haley, mother of John Haley, the proprietor of the hotel. How she came to her death is not definitely known but it is supposed that sometime during the night she got up in her sleep, went out through the window onto the porch roof and fell from there to the ground, a distance of thirty-five feet, sustaining in- juries which probably caused instant death. Deceased was sixty-nine years old and was born in Ireland, coming to this coun- try with her parents when she was but a child. She was married to Martin Haley and for years the family lived at Snow Shoe, Mrs. Haley being quite well known in Bellefonte. Of her twelve children ten survive as follows: Thomas, residing in Ohio; James, of Patton; Joseph, of Strat- tonville, Pa.; Mrs. Margaret McCabe, of Wilkesbarre; Mrs. Catherine Langton, and Mrs. Mame Sickle, of Snow Shoe; Miss Annie, a stenographer in Pittsburg; Mrs. Lena Reese, of Karthaus; John, of Munson, and Miss Agnes, who makes her home with the latter. One brother and one sister, residing at Joliet, Ill, also survive. The remains were taken from Munson to Snow Shoe on Friday and the funeral was held from the Catholic church in that place on Saturday morning. Gad ——Dr. Karl Reinhardt, Geheimer Regierungsrat for the interchange of professors between German and Ameri- can colleges, has notified The Pennsyl- vania State College that he has assigned Herr Heinrich Starcke, of Kottbus, as a member of the faculty of this college for the ensuing year. Herr Starcke will arrive in September and while in this country will lecture before prominent German societies of the State. The interchange is effected under the regulations of the Carnegie foundation. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. ~Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shehee, of Clearfield, are spending the week at the Willows. ~Mrs. Edward R. Chambers left on Wednesdav for a brief visit at her old home in West Chester. ~=Mrs. Harry C. Yeager and son Malcolm have been in Altoona this week visiting Miss Anne Wilson. —Mrs. Charles Whitely, of Philadelphia, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Moerschbacher, of Thom- as street. ~The Misses Anne and Caroline Valentine anticipate spending the greater part of the month of August in the White Mountains. ~Mrs. W. K. Foster, of Jenkintown, was in Bellefonte between trains yesterday afternoon while on her way to Stormstown to visit her father, Mr. George S. Gray. ~Mr. and Mrs. John Ishler, of Bellefonte, and cursion to Niagara Falls on Wednesday. ~Miss Millicent Prince arrived in Bellefonte Friday of last week for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Donald Potter. Miss Prince had with her Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Potter's only child, who has been for some time with his grandmother in Crafton. —Mrs. Sarah Gray is anticipating a visit from her daughter, Mrs. Frank Hartsock, who will ar- rive in Buffalo Run Saturday, from Ocean Grove, where she and Mr. Hartsock have been spending the past two weeks. Mr. Hartsack will join her Monday, the three children having been guests of relatives in the valley for some time. fonte visitor on Tuesday. ~M. A. Landsy left on Tuesday on a two week's business trip to Philadelphia. —Andrew Engle, of Johnstown, was the guest of Miss Pearl Mewshaw, over Sunday. —Miss Harriet Foster left on Sunday to spend a month with friends in Altoona and Juniata. —Mrs. Anna C. Woodcock has been for the past week with her sisters in Chambersburg. ~—Mrs. Maurice Yeager was an over Sunday visi- tor with Mr, and Mrs. Ed. Harper, at Curtin. —"apt. W. A. Simpson, of Lock Haven, spent from Friday unti! Sunday evening in Bellefonte. —Miss Lizzie Harris is in Nittany where she will be for several week, visiting with friends. —Mrs. Alice M. Parker spent several days with her daughter, Mrs. Jerre Glenn and family, at Curtin, —Willis Strubie left on Tuesday to spend ten days with friends at Philadelphia and Gloucester city, N. J. —John George, of Pittsburg, is in Bellefonte visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Decker and the Cas- sidy family. ~—Miss Ruth Ruble returned to her home in Centre Hall, after spending several days at the H. E. Zimmerman home. —Mr. and Mrs. Jack Decker with their children, Helen and Jack, are in Bellefonte after spending three weeks in Clearfield. —Miss Katharine Nixon, of Mill Hall, was a guest of Mrs. Frank Warfield at the picnic of the Harris family at Hecla, Friday. —Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lose with their son Joe, | of Pittsburg, came to Bellefonte last Thursday | evening for a brief visit with friends here. —Dr. and Mrs. Wilcox and Miss Wilcox left ellefonte Tuesday expecting to spend Dr. Wil | cox's vacation of two weeks at Ocean Grove. —Norman Kirk has returned from Clearfield county where he spent the past month on his (Fr har rR tn arr —Mrs. Howard Gearhart, of Newark, N. J., is in Bellefonte for the remainder of the summer with her mother, Mrs. Mary T. Fox, of Bishop street. ~—Mrs. John D. Sourbeck returned last Friday from a three week's sojourn at various seaside re- sorts and with her daughter, Mrs. Beliringer, in New York. ~Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Strawn and daughter Ellen left in their automobile on Sunday to spend a week among friends through the western part of the State. —Miss Julia Gray, of State College, was in Bellefonte Saturday on her way to Pittsburg, where she will spend her vacation of two weeks with friends. —Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wetzel and family left on Tuesday for Anawalt, W. Va., where they will spend several weeks with the former's brother, H. M. Wetzel and family. —Miss Anna McLaughlin, Mrs. Joseph Lose, Miss Anna Curry and Mrs. William Daley at- tended the funeral of the late Mrs. Mary Haley, at Snow Shoe, last Saturday. —Mrs. Edward Young and two daughters, Margaret and Ella, went to Tyrone and DuBois, on Wednesday in the hope that the change will be beneficial to the formers health. ~Miss Mary Potter, of Linden Hall; her sister, Mrs. Kent, from western Pennsylvania, and their niece, Miss Mary Delinda Potter, of Centre Hall, were in Bellefonte for the day Tuesday. —Fred Chambers was in Bellefonte between trains on Sunday evening to see how his father is getting along. He isstill on the road selling cig- arettes and was on his way from Philadelphia to Chicago. —Mrs. H. M. Bidwell returned on Tuesday to her home in this place after a ten days visit with her daughter, Mrs. V. D. Culveyhouse, of Utica, N. Y.,and her mother, Mrs. A. T. Parker and family, at Jersey Shore. —After visiting in Bellefonte for two weeks with her mother, Mrs. Wm. Steele, Mrs. A. C. Lon- gee returned to her home in Lewistown, Wednes- day. Mrs. Steele is at present entertaining her sister, Mrs. J. M. Dinges, cf Boalsburg. —Mrs. William Echols, ‘with her baby girl, was summoned to her home in Moundsville, W. Va., on Mondayon account of the death of her hus- band's mother, Mrs. Samuel Echols, who died on Sunday as the result of astroke of paralysis. —Mrs. W. Galer Morrison, Mrs. John McSuley Mrs. Harry Taylor and daughter and Miss Kath ryn Parker composed a party, who tock advan, tage of the excursion to Atlantic City on Thurs- day, expecting to spend some of their time with Mrs. James Blythe, of that place. —Dr. Hafer went to Reading Wednesday night to attend a reunion of the Hafer family held there Thursday. This being the original settlement of that one of the oldest families in Pennsylvania, it is not surprising to know that these reunions have numbered in the thousands. =]. Harry Orr, of Clarion county, was a Belle- fonte visitor on Tuesday. He was formerly Dem- ocratic county chairman of Clarion and is still in close touch with political conditions throughout the State. He says the Keystone party has a very slight following in that section. ~=John H. Bryan, who spent the past year with his daughter, Mrs. Thompson, in Mercer, has re- turned to Bellefonte and will stay here providing he can get something todo. His sojourn in Mer- cer did him a lot of good as he looks better now than he has for years, and he says his health is fine. —Rev. and Mrs. C. W. Winey and their child, left Monday to spend their vacation of two weeks in Snyder and Juniata counties, a portion of it in visiting Mr. Winey's parents. Sunday, the 14th, there will be no service in the United Brethren church and on the 2ist Samuel McClure will take charge of the services both morning and evening. —Richard Brouse and Charles Moran went along as mascots with the Bellefonte baseball team on their trip over the mountain this week, but you cannot charge the errors and bonehead plays made on Monday at Clearfield against them, because they were doubtless as much disgusted as everybody in Bellefonte when the final report of the game was received here. —Edward Brown, of Baltimore, arrived in Belle’ fonte the latter part of last week on a visit with friends here and to camp at Hecla Park. Since go ing to the Monumental city he has changed so much in appearance that some of his most inti. mate friends failed to recognize him; but then the change is amost agreeable one as it is in his favor. He returned home Tuesday night. —On Sunday Dr. and Mrs. W.C. Wilson, Dr. Ralph Wilson, Miss Clara Wilson and Mr. and Mr. Koch and daughter Ruth, all of Huntingdon, came to Bellefonte in two automobiles and tak. ing Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Ward and daughter Isa- - | belle with them made a trip to Penn cave. They returned to Bellefonte in time for supper after which they went up to the Tyrone Country club at Pennsylvania Furnace. —Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lutz, of East Howard street, have had as their guest within the past week Ezra Halderman, of Gorgona, Panama. Mr. Halderman's home is in Altoona but for the past three years he has been working in the mechanic. al department of the Corgona shops and has been spending the six weeks vacation which the gov- ernment gives to all its employees on the canal in Pennsylvania, having left Panama July 19th. He arrived in New York city July 25th, expecting tosail again for the Isthmus on September 3rd. —Ira G. Burkett, of Stormstown, was a Belle. | —Willie Winton. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Winton, is visiting friends in Punxsutawney, —Mr. and Mrs. John Bullock and their small son are in Chester and Chester county, guests of relatives. ~Miss Helen Landis will leave to-morrow to spend her vacation with Mrs. Frederic Topelt, of Brooklyn. —Col. Austin Curtin has recovered from his re- cent illness sufficiently to come to Bellefonte yesterday. —Mrs. Beliringer and two children are here from New York for their summer visit at the ~Mrs. Harry Burket, of Stormstown, is making a brief visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Tressler, of Reynolds avenue. —Miss Celia Noll Is home from a ten day's visit to Atlantic City, having gone down with the excursion which left Bellefonte July 28th. —Miss Bertha McKenzie, of Altoona, arrived in Bellefonteon Wednesday to spend some time at the Rosenhcover and Bertram homes up Spring creek. —Miss Confer, of Penn street, was a pleasant caller at the WATCHMAN office yesterday and it wasn’t the circus that brought her down town, either. ~Mrs. Musser, her daughter, Miss Katharine and Miss Shields, are visiting in New York State during the two weeks which Miss Musser has as a vacation. =Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lutz with their daughter and son, of Findley, Illinois, will visit their broth. ers, sisters and friends in Bellefonte and vicinity for a month or so. —Mrs. Robb has been visiting with her daugh- ter, Mrs. Frank Miller, in Franklinville, N. Y., where she was called two weeks ago by the seri- ous illness of Mrs. Miller. —Mrs. Joseph Ceader, Miss Calderwood and the Misses Hattie and Bess Hart were of the party who spent Monday with Mrs. Edward Harper at her home at Curtin. =On Saturday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. John Curtin gave an auto-corn party to Lock Haven. Mrs. J. M. Curtin, Miss Bertha Laurie and Squier H. L. Curtin were their guests. ~Miss Jennie Morgan and Miss Onmacht wil leave Bellefonte Tuesday of next week, expecting to sail from New York Wednesday fora stay of ten days in the Bermuda Islands. =Mrs. George Hazel and Miss Rose Dusling went to Altoona Tuesday, Mrs. Hazel to visit with her sister, Mrs. Morris Runkle, and Miss Dusling to be the guest of friends. =A. G. Morris, Mrs. Morris and Miss Lida Morris will leave Bellefonte Tuesday, in their big Rainer touring car, for a motor trip of three weeks through the State of Pennsylvania. ~—Edward Hughes with his wife and child, of Milwaukee, are spending the month of August with Mr. Hughes’ father, Rev. James P. Hughes, of the Bellefonte Academy. =Mrs. James R. Hughes has been for the past week traveling through West Virginia with Mr, Hughes, who has been spending some time in that section in the interest of the Bellefonte Academy. —Wm. Fisher and his family, of New York City, who spent the greater part of the summer on the Fisher farm near Unionville, came over to Belletonte Tueaday ia tie motor our for a short iia McLear, of Philadelphia, with her two children, have been spending several days of the week with Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk. Mrs. McLear is spending the summer with her moth- er, Mrs. Bean, at Unionville. —Miss Mary Barber, of Washington, who is spending the month of August with her parents in Mifflintown, came to Bellefonte Wednesday afternoon and while here for a week's visit will be the guest of Miss Emma Green. —Miss Lulu McMullen and her brother Law- rence, Miss Mabe! Allison,of Spring Mills, and her guest from Atlanta, Ga., Miss Grace Blackford, of Bellefonte, and Andy McNitt are members of a camping party at Lumber City camp, Clearfield county. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward Powers with their four boys, Edward, George, Arthur and Clarence, with a servant, are spending the month at Atlantic City. Ed. is one of the Bellefonte boys who has made good in other fields and we are delighted always to learn of his successes. =Albert Hoy is now in Bellefonte enjoying his summer vacation. He recently left Providence R. L, and located in New York city, but that fact can hardly account for the avoirdupois he has put on in the past year or two, as he has grown so lusty that it was difficult for his old friends here to recognize him. —Rev. George M. Glenn and Mrs. Glenn with their two boys returned to Sunbury Thursday. Mrs. Glenn and the children have been for five weeks with Mrs. Sarah Gray on her farm up Buffalo Run, while Mr. Glenn has been for the last two weeks overseeing some improvements that he has been having made on his farm at Brierly. —The Misses Anne and Christine Blanchard, ot Chicago, are in Bellefonte for u short visit with their aunt, Mrs. E. M. Blanchard, having come up from Lock Haven Saturday, where they have been with their sister, Mrs. George Green, who while her sisters are in Bellefonte, has taken her children to Brierly, for a week's visit with Dr- Green's mother, Mrs. Dorsey Green. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. less paid for in advance. he A Aversising SPACE OCCUPIED Sm | 6m | ly
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers