Bellefonte, Pa., September 2, 1910. of the writer. m— THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUN ———Another little boy arrived in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Auman on Sunday. AGED VETERAN MEETS DEATH IN AUTO- MOBILE ACCIDENT.—George Smith, an old soldier and well known resident of Belle- fonte, was the victim of an automobile accident shortly before five o'clock last | Saturday evening as the result of which LL ———— |. was down at the Pennsylvania - ' railroad passenger station and after the Ty. departure of the train west he started to he died less than five hours later. Mr. cross the street to Keichline's store. While he was in the act of crossing the street an automobile owned and driven by Ward W. Hagerty, of Coalport, and in My. | Which were he and his wife, another gen- ——f big baby boy was born to Mr. i and Mrs. Russell Jury in the forepart of | tleman and two ladies came 8 the the week. —(wing to the cool evenings only one and that this evening. come reports of low streams and wells and cisterns almost dry. ~—At Miss Mary Ceader’'s luncheon, given at her home Tuesday, at one o'clock, fourteen covers were laid. —~The regular meeting of the Wom- an’s Club will be held in the W. C. T. U. room in Petriken hall this (Friday) after- noon at 3.30 o'clock. ~——Holy communian services will be held in the United Brethren church on Sunday by the pastor, Rev. C. W. Winey. All members are urged to attend. ~The postponed dinner of J. Norman Sherer, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin, was given to a few of his friends at the Bush house Monday night. ——(eorge Ingram, one of the faithful employees in the Rhoads coal yard, who has been off duty on account of illness for the past week is able to be around again. ——F. E. Naginey arrived home from Philadelphia at eight o'clock last Thurs- day evening with I. J. Dreese’s new Ford touring car and delivered the same on Friday. ——The Mountain league will soon be a thing of the past and Bellefonters will have but one more opportunity to see the home team play, and that the exhibition game on Monday. -———Harry C. Valentine has grown so much better after his recent serious iil- ness, that he is again seen on the streets with every indication of a complete and permanent recovery. ——While out in the woodshed on Tuesday Miss Birdie Meek, of Fairbrook, had quite a bad fall and so badly bruised and sprained her arms that she has not been able to use either of them since. ——Leone, the bright little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Lyon, of east How- ard street, celebrated her fifth birthday last Saturday and her many friends sur- prised her with a large posta! card shower. ——The musical department of St John's convent will re-open on September Sth. Besides the piano the Sisters will will give lessons on the violin, mandolin, guitar, banjo, coronet, clarinet, cello and trombone. ——The “Paid in Full" company drew only a fair audience at the opera house on Wednesday night but those who were there enjoyed the play very much. The play was well staged and the parts were all well taken. ——Hon. John Noll during the past week purchased the Montgomery proper- ty on Bishop street opposite the Haag ho- tel and will make that his home after the first of April, 1911. The price paid was two thousand dollars. ——Gladstone Taylor left Bellefonte on Monday for Northumberland where he has accepted a position with the Eyre- Shoemaker Construction company on their job of building tk big classification yards for the Pennsylvania railroad. ——About thirty invitations were issued to the very delightful childrens party given by Mrs. Louis Grauer, at her home on Linn street Tuesday afternoon, from three until six, for her daughter Estella, ja honor of the childs two cousins, Hortense .and Herbert Gordon, ofJPhiladelphia. ——Word has been received that Lieut. James Taylor has returned from the Philippines and is now sick in a hospital in San Francisco. It is just about a year ago since he went to the Philippines and his return at this time is a little pre- mature. The nature of his present illness is unknown, ~The ladies auxiliary of the Belle- %omte hospital is arranging to hold a rum- image sale during the last week of Sep- tember, the town will be thoroughly can- vassed for clothes, furniture, bedding, pictures or anything that your attic or house may contain that you are willing to give to the cause. ——The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society for the Central Penn- sylvania district of the Lutheran church will hold its annual meeting at State Col- lege September 6th to 8th. The delegates from Rebersburg will be Mrs. W. J. Car- lin, Miss Ethel Harter and the superin- tendent of the mission band, Miss Byrd Stover. ——Mrs. J. L. Seibert’s card party Wednesday afternoon from half-after three until seven, for which twenty invi- tations had been issued, was in honor of her neice and house guests, Miss Helen Klase, of Cranford, N. J., and the Misses Millicent and Clara Pond, of State Col- lege. Five hundred was played and the prize, a water color, was won by Miss Millicent Pond. ! railroad from West High street. The | Snow Shoe train was shifting and Mr. | Hagerty was watching the train as well more dance will be given at Hecla park, as the road. Mr. Smith did not see the | automobile approaching but there were a ——From various parts of the county | number of bystanders who did, among them policeman Dukeman. The latter called to Mr. Hagerty and he at once shut off the power and threw on the brakes. Whether it was the cries of the bystanders or the fact that he just real- ized his danger Mr. Smith stopped right in the path of the machine. Had he con tinued he would not have been struck. As it was, however, he was struck on the left leg by the front wheel of the machine and thrown to the brick paved street with such force that his skull was frac- tured. The machine also passed over his leg fracturing the bone. Mr. Hagerty was out of his car in an instant and was one of the first to pick up the unfortunate man. Mr. Smith was bleeding and unconscious and a hurry call was sent for the ambulance. By the time it arrived he had regained conscious- ness and when the doctors proposed tak- ing him to the Bellefonte hospital he ob- jected and insisted on being taken home, stating that his daughter would take care of him. Under the circumstances he was taken home and given all attention possi- ble. He lapsed into unconsciousness on the way to his home but after he was taken into the house he was conscious long enough to tell his wife not to be frightened or worry. From that time on he was unconscious and gradually sank until the end came shortly after nine o'clock the same evening. Mr. Hagerty, in addition to doing all he could for the injured man, made no at- tempt to evade the authorities or any responsibility which might entail upon him as a result of the accident. He was not driving his car at a high rate of speed at the time and the only negligence or violation of the law that can be brought against him is that he did not watch the street close enough and it is alleged by seme did not blow his horn. As to the former he is to a certain extent ex- cusable as he was looking out for the safety of himself and party from the shift- ing train. As to whether he blew his horn or not is a fact that will likely be cleared up at the proper time. Mr. Hag- erty came to Bellefonte on Monday morn- ing but for various reasons the investiga- tion was postponed until today when he will return and an inquiry will be held before burgess John J. Bower. The gen- eral opinion, however, of those who saw the accident is that it was one of those unfortunate occurrences which was be- yond the power of man to avoid or con- trol. George W. Smith was born near Mflin- burg, Union county, on July 5th, 1843, hence was 67 years, 1 month and 22 days old. His early life was spent in the neighborhood of his birth and the vicinity of Nittany, this county, following the oc- cupation of a carpenter. He enlisted for service in the Civil war on August 13th, 1862, as a member of Company E, Seventh Pennsylvania cavalry. During his term of service he was taken prisoner and serv- ed some time in Libby prison. On being discharged he was transferred to the 137th U. S. cavalry and was promoted to sec- ond lieutenant in April, 1865. At the close of the war he returned and located in Nittany valley where he was united in marriage to a Miss Beck and several years later the couple went west. About eigh- teen or twenty years ago they returned and located in this place, Mr. Smith build- ing the home they have since occupied on east High street. Ever since his return to Bellefonte he has practically been an invalid and a constant sufferer, and it seems an irony of fate that he lived vir- tually on the brink of death for a score of years, then lost his life in an accident. He was a member of the Loyal Legion and of the Lutheran church. Surviving him are his wife and one daughter, Miss Erma; and--two brothers, Andrew, of Lock Haven, and Isaac, of Farmer's Mills. The funeral was held at 2.30 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon. Rev. Fred W. Barry had charge of the services at the house and he was buried in the Union cemetery, with the honors of war, the services being conducted by the mem- bers of Gregg Post. oe ——Next Monday (Labor Day) will be the time for the picnic of the Odd Fel- lows of Bellefonte, State College, and other parts of Centre county, at Hunter's park. A great program of sports and amusements has been arranged for the day and as numerous prizes are to be awarded the contests will doubtless prove most interesting. One or more bands will be on the grounds during the day and there will be a number of speeches by prominent Odd Fellows throughout the county. The park has been put in good condition and it is one of the most delightful spots in the county for a basket picnic, such as this will be. Not only Odd Fellows all ——Uriah Kitchen, the well known vet- | eran of both the Mexican and Civil wars, | celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday anni. versary at his home near Beech Creek on | August 20th. Notwithstanding his ad- | vanced age and the fact that he exper- | ienced the hardships of two wars Mr. | Kitchen is still in fairly good health. | ——Application has been made by Dr. | F. K. White and Martin Dugan, of Phil. | ipsburg, and George R. Meek, of this | place, for a charter for an intended cor- | poration to be known as the White-- Dugan Coal company, whose purpose it is | to develop coal lands recently acquired by | them in the neighborhood of Olt Mills. ———— ! ——The track house at State College | opened yesterday and candidates for the | college foot ball team are expected to re- port within the next few days. The out- look for the team this year is quite favor- | able, notwithstanding the fact that sev- eral of the stars of last year’s team will not be back. Active practice will be be- gun next week. ——The item in last week's WATCH- MAN about the leak in the water pipe out near Mallory’s blacksmith shop, which caused a sink hole in the street, had the desired effect, as the leak was repaired within twelve hours after the paper was issued, and the man whose duty it is to look after such things averred that it took only eight minutes to do the job. ——Rosie Crain, a pretty white girl, of Tyrone, and Fred A. Banks, a husky colored man of Coraopolis, went arm and arm into the register’s office at Pittsburg on Saturday and asked for a marriage license. The paper was refused because | a woman claiming to be the girl's mother had telephoned early in the day not to grant the license as the girl was only eighteen years of age. ——The Bellefonte Motor club held a meeting on Monday evening and one of range for an informal reception to the Altoona motor club on its sociability run here on Wednesday. Several questions of interest only to the members of the club were discussed and one or two com- mittees appointed who are to report at a regular meeting to be held on Monday evening, September 12th. ——About three hundred people at- tended the Schenck and Pletcher families annual reunion held in the Schenck grove below Howard last Thursday. B. F. Pletcher read a very interesting historical sketch of the two families while addresses were made by N. H. Schenck and Revs. Patterson, Faust and Rhoades. The Howard band gave a number of concerts during the day and there was plenty of other instrumental and vocal music. —After next Monday you will never have another opportunity to see the Bellefonte baseball team play ball, and that is the reason you should go out to Hughes field and see the farewell contest. The strong Tyrone team will be their op- ponents and the game will be called at ten o'clock in the morning so it can be over in time to allow the two teams to get dinner and make the 1.07 p. m. train for Tyrone where a game will be played in the afternoon. Remember this is the last chance you will have to root for the home team. ——Last Friday evening at half-past seven, a crowd of twenty young people gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Osmer, in Bush Addition, to throw a surprise upon their son Edward, who was just beginning to think that no one knew when his birthday came. At 8.30 he returned home and to his surprise found a room full of gay young people. The evening was well spent in playing games, followed by a delicious supper, after which the guests reassembled in the parlor and put in the time until in the wee hours of the morning when they all departed for their respective homes. ——The cold snap predicted for the latter part of last week came on time and while it did not create any rush for over- coats and winter flannels the nights and mornings had enough chilliness to warn everybody that the time of frosty morn- ings is not very far distant. In fact last Saturday morning there was a slight frost in the foothills of the Alleghenies and at Yarnell the thermometer stood only four degrees above freezing point. Sunday morning was equally cold but that ended the brief spell and by Monday there was no cause for complaint. About the only thing in the weather line that is needed now is a good soaking rain to ma- ture the corn and the late potato crop and then Centre county farmers would fare very liberally indeed. COO mn. ——John L. Noll, son of Col. Emanuel Noll,of this place,has been promoted from an instructor in the Altoona High school manual training department to super- visor of manual training at a salary of $1,500 a year. The choice was unani- mous, owing to the excellent work he did last year, his first year at teaching, by the way. Mr. Noll is a graduate of the Belle- fonte High school and the Bradley Polytechnic institute. A number of years ago he went to Altoona and accepted a position in the Pennsylvania railroad shops and one year ago he was elected to teach forging, machine shop and foundry work in the Altoona High school. His promotion to supervisor of that depart- ment at the expiration of one year is in itself evidence of the good work he has | and see the game. Then if you are not the principal things they did was to ar. | Osceola OvVER.—In losing two games to Osceola | or in Lock Haven. this week Bellefonte lost her only chance for winning the baseball pennant of the Mountain league and the only thing to struggle for now is the honor of finishing in second place. Monday's game was more like a “slaughter of the innocents" than anything else, Osceola hammering the Bellefonte pitchers without mercy and tallying a total of eleven runs. In the seventh inning Bellefonte got busy and made five runs, but there they stopped. Tuesday's game, however, was a good ex- hibition of baseball and the home team won out in the ninth by the score of 6 to 5. But the men from the coal region put it all over Bellefonte on Wednesday at Osceola when they made the score 11 to 1 and thus put us out of the running and cinched the pennant for themselves. The Osceola team fairly proved themselves the best players in the league and of course are entitled to the glory of being the champions. While Bellefonte did not win the pennant she was strong enough to make the race exceedingly interesting and furnish good sport during the two month's season. And for the men who composed the Bellefonte team it can be said that they are all gentlemen, who comported themselves as such at all times, and in this respect did credit to the town. Bellefonters will have one more oppor- tunity to see them play, and that will be next Monday forenoon, (Labor day),when Tyrone will be their opponents on Hughes field. The Tyrone team has been here before and its strength is very well known, so that a good game is assured, and Belle- fonte is going to make a strong effort to win the last game on the home grounds. For this reason a big crowd should go out satisfied take advantage of the liberal ex- cursion offer and go aleng to Tyrone and witness the game in the afternoon. The standing of the clubs to Wednes- day evening was as follows: Won Lost P.C. 2% I5 634 18 539 saan 19 500 ——Mrs. N. B. Spangler entertained with cards Thursday night at her home on High street. Three tables of six-hand euchre were in play. Oe NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Will Katz is away on a business trip to Cleve- land, Ohio. —Miss Margaret Redding, of Reynoldsville, is visiting the Misses Curry. —Douglass Orbison, of Princeton, is in Belle- fonte visiting his grandmother. ~Miss Adelaide Anderson, of Greensburg, was an over Sunday guest of her cousin, Mrs. Charles Lukenbach. ~Miss Catharine Cooney is in Bellefonte, after a three weeks visit with Miss Catharine Snyder, at Altoona. —Mrs. S. Onmacht and Miss Jennie Morgan have returned from a delightful ocean voyage to the Bermudas. =Dr. Lee B. Woodcock, of Scranton, arrived in Bellefonte yesterday for a visit with his mother, Mrs. Anna C. Woodcock. —James Schofield went to Indiana Wednesday, for a visit with his two daughters, Mrs. Charles Larimer and Mrs. McGinness. ~Mrs. Peters,who has been with her daughter, Mrs. Hicklen, for the past six months, will return to her home in Philadelphia today. —After seeking relief for hay fever in eastern Canada for the past month, Miss Carrie Harper is expected to return to Bellefonte this week. —Miss Rose Prince, of Crafton, was here over Sunday to visit her sister Millicent, who is in the Bellefonte hospital recovering from an attack of afpendicitis. —Frank Seymuur, of New York. arrived in Bellefonte on Wednesday for a visit with his uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. James Noonan, at the Brant house. —Albert Canfield has returned to Bellefonte after spending the summer with his father at Salt Lake City, to be here for the opening of State College, where he is a student. —Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harris, of Baltimore came to Bellefonte in the former's private car last Saturday and spent the day with his mother, Mrs, Rachel Harris, on Curtin street. —Mrs. Charles Morris and her daughter Eliz. beth, will leave Thursday of next week for Raleigh, N. C., where Elizabeth will enter St., Mary's, a school for young ladies. —Mrs. Sue Wooden with her little niece, Hortense Seixas, left for Atlantic City on the ex- cursion this morning, expecting after a stay there to go t oPhiladelphia for the winter. —William Carson, with his daughter Mary, who now occupies the Doctor Lieb farm below Centre Hall, was in Bellefonte yesterday and fa- vored this office with a pleasant call. —Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Schaeffer and daughter Miss Helen, were down at Nittany on Tuesday to be present ot the celebration of the eightieth an. niversary of the birth of ex-sheriff Benjamin Schaeffer. —Mrs. Coss A. Hickok, with her three children ge —Mrs. B. H. Osborne, Miss Epley, Miss Mitch- ell and A. W. Brown, of Franklin, who are out on a pleasure tour of the State in Mrs. Osborne's Studebaker car, spent Wednesday night at the Brockerhoff house. Though Mrs. Osborne has her chauffeur with her she drives her own car and the way she handled it while here shows her —Mrs. W. A. White spent Sunday with her many friends at Lamar. —Col. Emanuel Noll wasout in Pitcairn from Friday until Monday evening. ~Mrs. H. S. Taylor is enjoying the cool sea breezes down at Atlantic City. —John Tonner Harris, of Harrisburg, was an over Sunday visitor in Bellefonte. —George Poorman, of Houtzdale, is a guest at the Solomon Poorman home in this place. ~Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Katz returned on Sun- day from a two weeks sojourn at Atlantic City. —Mrs. Sarah C. Brown was in Unionville on Wednesday attending a picnic and family reun- ion. —Mies Mary E. Griest, of Unionville, spent last Thursday with Mrs. Sarah C. Brown, on Spring street. —Mrs. William Wolfe will leave today for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Frank Zeigler and family, of Altoona. —Miss Eleanore Haupt has returned from a am, at Harrisburg. —Miss Ruth Garman returned last Saturday from a fortnight's visit with the Isaac Maitland family in Williamsport. —Thomas Mayes, train dispatcher on the Cen- tral Railroad of Pennsylvania, is away on a trip to Niagara Falls and Canada. —Miss Esther and George Young are spending this week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Young, at Jersey Shore. —Mrs. George B. Brandon with her daughter Miss Winifred, of Honesdale, are in Bellefonte visiting her parents and relatives. —Mrs. James A. McClain and little daughter, of Spangler, have been visitors this week at the home of Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler. —Mrs. Edward Murphy with her son Mahlon and little grand-daughter, of Philadelphia, are guests at the Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mallory home. =Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lonsbury with their little baby, of Corning, N. Y., are here for aweek as guests of the former's brother, Lewis Lonsbury and wife. —Earl C. Musser, a native of College township, was in Bellefonte on Monday and stated that he intended moving this week from State College to Greenville. =Dr. W. U. Irwin, of Unionville, was a Belle- fonte visitor on Monday, though nobody had the temerity to blame him for coming down to see the ball game. —After spending her vacation at the home of Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler Miss Daisy Brisbin will leave today to take up her work asa teacher in the soldiers’ orphan’s school at Scotland. —After a pleasant two week's vacation at her home here Miss Luella Shook left for Pittsburg on Sunday, where she has a good position as stenogravher with a large firm of contractors. —Mrs. Agnes Moore.of Philadelphia, is visiting Mrs. Satterfield and friends in this place. Before coming to Bellefonte she had been visiting Mrs. John Harrison, in Jersey Shore, whose health is not very good at present. —~'Squire W. J. Carlin, of Rebersburg, was a Bellefonte visitor Monday and Tuesday, being in town to attend the audit of the accounts in the Strohmeyer estate and to transact other business of more or less importance. —W. F. Beck, one of the well-known residents of Lock Haven, was a Bellefonte visitor on Tues- day and a very pleasant caller at the WATCHMAN office. He used to come to Bellefonte quite fre- quently but this was his first visit here in! almost two years. =—Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. Ray Jr., with their two little boys, Fred and Frank, and nurse ar rived in Bellefonte last Thursday evening from New York for a two week's visit with the form- er's brother, landlord H. S. Ray at the Brocker- hoff house. =Mr. and Mrs. L.C, Bullock, of Milesburg. re- cently returned from Cincinnati, Ohio, where Mr. Bullock spent 2 week on booking himself more thoroughly on the gasolene gas-light propo- sition, he being the agent for the plants in this part of the State. =Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Goodheart and two children, Franklin and Margaret, of Johnstown, passed through Bellefonte on Tuesday for a visit of tendays at their old home at Centre Hall. Mr. Goodhart is one of the employees of the Rothert Company of the Flood city. ~The Rev. Thomas S. Wilcox, D. D., was called to Shamokin, on Wednesday, to bury Mr. Antho- ny Smith, one of the leading men of that com- munity and an official of the church. The pastor Rev. G. M. Hoke, was quite ill and unable to attend to duties. Dr. Wilcox expects to return on Friday. —Ellis V. Snyder, of Dunkirk, Ind., is spending the week with his sisters, Mrs. Edward Cook and Miss Mollie Snyder. Mr. Snyder is a son of Capt. A. B. Snyder and has brought his oldest son Austin, to enter at the opening of the coming term of the Bellefonte Academy, where he will prepare for college. —Among the Centre countians who are in at- tendance at the Grangers picnic at Williams Grove this week are John]. Arney, who was Master of the first Grange organized in the coun- ty; William Homan, Harry Fye, John Weber, Ly- man Smith and Alfred Krape, all of Centre Hall; Daniel Grove, of Lemont, and Hiram Thompson, of State College. ~Mr. and Mrs. Johnston Hall and Mr. and Mrs. Frank von Tackey, all of Titusville, were guests of W. Harrison Walker, at the Bush house sever- al days in the early part of the week. They came here in the former's Pierce-Arrow car and were accompanied by Mr. Walker who spent a day or two in Titusville on his way home from the Elks convention at Bradford. =On returning from a business trip to Phila- delphia, John S. Walker brought with him his mother, Mrs. William H. Walker and his sister, Mrs. Barnard of Bryn Mawr, to visit with him for an indefinite time. Mrs. Walker whe is the colder sister of the late William Shortlidge, visited her brother in Bellefonte fifty-five years ago, this be- ing hersecond visit to Centre county. =Mrs.E. M. Huyett and daughters, Misses Lela and Miriam, were in Bellefonte on Saturday on their way home from Waddle to Centre Hall. Mr. Huyett has charge of the saw mill and lum- bering operations of the Huyett—McNitt com- pany at Waddle and has a very comfortable cabin there where Mrs. Huyett and daughters spend the week, going home on Saturday to remain over Sunday. —Mrs. Harriet Thomas Kurtz, who has spent the past year in Philadelphia and Atlantic city, is now in Lewistown and will be in Bellefonte for the autumn. She recently sustained a severe injury to the left arm from which she has not entirely recovered. While hurrying tc getona street car she tripped over a shoe scraper, fell heavily and was picked up unconscious, but while badly bruised suffered no other injury than that to her arm. —About two months ago Herbert M. Bartley down in health from his very close application to his work in the Clark printing office, Lock Haven, and decided to take a season of outdoor life. He went over to Madisonburg and did light work on afarm, living outdoors as much as possible and last week he returned tanned as brown as a berry and looking in fine shape. He returned to done. his hom: in Lock Haven on Thursday and start. ed in work again on Monday. month's visit with her sister, Mrs. Edward Lath. BELLEFONTE'S BASEBALL SEASON ABOUT | ~—Hon. W. C. Heinle was an over Sunday visit —Miss Mabel Gentzel, of Beaver Falls, is visit- , ing Bellefonte friends. —Mrs. Frank McCoy spent yesterday with Mrs. + J. F. Alexander, at Centre Hall. —W. S. Zeller returned on Tuesday evening from a ten day's sojourn at Atlantic City. =Mrs. David Dale will go to Philipsburg today, to visit until Monday with Miss Hurlinger. —Merchant J. S. Gilliam returned on Wednes- , day morning from a business trip to New York. —Miss Snowden, of Philadelphia, is the guest of Miss Mary Hamilton at her home on Howard street. =—Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Curtin with their little son Andrew. will return to their home in Pittsburg, | =Mrs. George W. Atherton, of State College, | spent Wednesday in Bellefonte visiting with her : many friends. | =—Rev. Fred W. Berry spent severa! days this : week in Williamsport and vicinity, returning on | Wednesday evening. | —Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Boals, of Altoona. spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Boals’ parents, | Mr. and Mrs. William Bible. —Mrs. Willard Hall returned home yesterday | after a three week's visit with her sister, Mrs. John Huffman, in Williamsport. —William P. and Miss Myra Humes left on Wednesday evening for a week or ten days trip to Philadelphia and Atlantic City, —Miss Georgie Daggett, of New York city, is the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, Wells Daggett of the Bush House. —Miss Mary Woods returned to Bellefonte Tuesday night, after spending the greater part of the summer with friends at York, Pa. —Miss Mollie Snyder will go to Atlantic City Friday to rest for a few days, before going on to New York to purchase her goods for the win- ter. =Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wetze! have returned from athree week's visit at the home of the former's brother, H. M. Wetzel and family, at Anawalt, W, Va. —Howard F. Gearhart came to Bellefonte Tues day exoecting tospend two weeks with friends here before returning with his wife to their home at Newark, N. J. —Mrs. John Curtin and her brother, James Furst, left Bellefonte Wednesday for New Haven, Conn., expecting to be there for a week with their brother Walter. —After a pleasant visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donachy, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Tucker and son William have returned to their home in Akron, Ohio. Judge and Mrs. Ellis L. Orvis. —Miss Emily Valentine, who has been for the summer with her aunt, Miss Natt, on Curtin St., left Bellefonte Tuesday, expecting to spend the month of September at Nantucket. —Harry Keller with Mrs, Keller, Mrs. James B. Lane and Miss Mary Thomas, left Bellefonte Wednesday, for atrip to Toronto and along the St. Lawrence to the Thousand Isles. —Miss Helen Hartranft left Bellefonte this week for a visit with friends in Watsontown, before going to Bloomsburg where she will enter the Normal school as a student for the winter. —While the Misses Marguerite and Sara Potter, are spending a month at Digby, Nova Scotia, their mother, Mrs. G. L. Potter has closed her house and will visit for that time with relatives through Centre county. —Miss Helen Valentine and Miss Katherine Curtin, who have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Burlingame, at Cazenovia, N. Y., for the past three weeks, are expected in Bellefonte the latter part of this week. —~Frank Blythe. a member of the State College baseball team, whospent his vacation in Texas and New Mexico, was in Bellefonte on Wednes_ day on his way back to College to do a little pre- liminary work before the opening of school. —Frederic Reynolds and J. Fairfield Carpenter, who has been visiting with Frederic in Bellefonte, left Tuesday for Mr. Carpenter's home at Caze- novia, N. Y., where they will spend some time oseier before the opening of school in Septem- Tr. —The Misses Anne and Christine Blanchard with Miss Madaline Youngman, who was in Belle- fonte for the dance at Hecla Monday night, re- turned to Lock Haven, Tuesday, where the Misses Blanchard are visiting with their sister, Mrs. George Green. —Mrs. Alice M. Parker went to Jersey Shore on Wednesday and yesterday her sister, Mrs. Anna Johnson left for Bay City, Michigan, to visit their brothers, whom they have not seen in thirty-six years. They will be away two weeks or longer. —Mr. and Mrs. John K. Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. John K. Lloyd Jr. of Altoona, and Miss Single- ton, of Newburyport, Mass., composed an auto- mobile party who came to Bellefonte on Wednes- day afternoon and spent the night at the Brock- Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, The following are the quotations up to six o'clock Thursday evening, when our paper £oes to press. EEE ee One \ & 0 Pm
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