S| Pa., January 6, 1911. A ——— published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. — THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——The engagement of john McCoy and Miss Mary Harris was announced on Christmas eve. —Mrs. H. W. Tate entertained with cards Saturday night at her apartments at Petriken Hall. ——The annual inspection of Company L. of this place, will take place on Satur- day evening, January 28th. ——Good morning, kind reader. We trust you are as glad to see us this morn- ing as we are to greet you. ~——Mrs. A. C. Sullivan, who has been ill with pneumonia since going to York two weeks ago, is slowly recovering. ——At the euchre given by Mrs. E. H.» Richard, Wednesday, in honor of her sis- ter Mrs. Aull, eight covers were laid. ——The New Year was ushered .in Sat- urday night by the ringing of bells, blow-’ ing of whistles and considerable shoot- ing. . 1 ——Miss Annie McLaughlin anticipates | making ber home with Miss Mary Thomas after she moves into the Graham | home in the spring. | ——At the semi-monthly meeting of the Bellefonte Bridge Whist club on Tues- day evening, Egbert Merriman won first | prize and Harry Keller second. i ——A miscellaneous shower was given | draulic engineering. Dr. Kirk objected | dance in the town hall Tuesday evening: by the Misses Elizabeth and Mary Coon- ey, Tuesday night, for Miss Edna Meyer, | who will be an early February bride. ——Miss Margaret Whiteman, who fell at her home ten days ago dislocating her shoulder, has been taken to the Bellefonte hospital, where she is slowly recovering. —S8. S. Miles, of Port Matilda, was sworn in as mercantile appraiser on Wed- nesday, he having been appointed by the county commissioners about three weeks ago . ur old-time friend D. W. Schnarrs, of Osceola Mills, has forsaken that town and gone to Howard where he has been made watchman at the railroad crossing at the depot. ——Mrs. Ellen Lovett Meehan, a one time resident of Milesburg, died in the Blair county home on Monday. She was born in London, England, and. was seven- | ty-seven years old. : ——The United Evangelical congrega- | tion at Woodward held an old-fashioned | “‘watch” meeting last Saturday evening | which was largely attended by the peo- | ple of that community. Monday, with rainfall enough to raise the | streams throughout the county, but it has been cold erough since to make one | realize that winter is still with us. i ~The first baby born in Bellefonte | in 1911, so far as the writer knows, ar- | rived in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George | Johnson, on Penn street, on Monday. It is a little girl and is getting along splen- didly. -—=Mrs. S. A. Bell and Miss Alice Tate moved last Thursday from the Sebring house on Spring street to the rooms in the Curtin house on the corner of Alleghe- ny and Howard streets, which has been occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Don- achy. ~The Millheim Camp, No. 9833, | Modern Woodmen of America, will hold their annual banquet at the Sherman house this (Friday) evening, after which an entertainment for the banqueters will be given in the hallby H. S. Manlove, impersonator. ~The Epworth League will give an oyster supper in the lecture room of the Methodist church, Friday evening, Janu- ary 13th. A charge of twenty-five cents will be made for the supper, ice cream and cake being extra. The public is most cordially invited. ——A dispatch from Washington on De- cember 28th announced the resignation of Joseph D. Harris as general superin- tendent of motive power of the Balti. more and Ohio railroad company. The reason of his resignation or what he has in view in the future was not stated. ——John L. Knisely last week bought the John Walker property on Thomas street now occupied by Charles Moersch- bacher and family and Mr. Moerschbacher is trying to purchase the William Bell property on the same street to take possession on April first but Mrs. Bell is not disposed to sell. ——Harry L Griffith was on Thursday of last week appointed superintendent of the Bellefonte fish hatchery to succeed the late H. M. Buller. Mr. Griffith, as assistant superintendent the past severai years, has had entire control of the work owing to Mr. Buller’s long illness and is ——Mr. and Mrs. D. Wagner Geiss celebrated the New Year holiday on Mon- day with a dinner party at which the fol- J were present: Mr. and Mss. ge L. Goodhart and Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Huyett, of Centre Hall; Mr. and Mrs. William Daugherty, of,Lemont; Miss Lou Camp, of Tyrone; Miss Adaline | complete Williams, of Howard, and Miss Mary * Council. PROCEEDINGS. - - ee tt 0 ras w—— Tr r— ber of borough council was present on the Woman's Club of Bellefonte, will be Withers, of Jersey City, New Jersey, the Monday evening as if in anticipation of held in Petriken hall, Friday afternoon at well known landscape architect and | some very important legislation but when the session ended comparatively little had been done. There were no verba! or written com- munications and none of the committees had anything special to report, except the Water committee, which reported that the department was without a superintendent on account of the death of the late Samuel Rine. The treasurer's report showed a balance on hand of $188.47. Under the head of old business a report was made that notice had been served on the Yeager Swing company to vacate the Phoenix Mill property by April 1st, 1911. A communication was received from the Underwriters Association relative to changes to be made at the mill property in order to render it safe. They suggest the installation of a sprinkler in tower; that the building be sufficiently heated to keep the sprinkler from freezing up, and that the boiler house of the Yeager Swing company be detached from the main building. 1! Regarding a walk around Rhoads’ cor- ner and along McCoys the Street com- mittee was instructed to take some action in the matter before the next meeting of council. : The burgess’ report for the past two costs, $8.50; balance due burgess, $5.50. Mr. Keller offered a resolution in effect that the water superintendent, street | commissioner and borough engineer be! combined and the three to be looked after by one official to be known as a borough engineer, who must be thoroughly con- versant with civil, mechanical and hy- to creating such an office on the ground that it would not be a matter of economy but rather an increase in expense. Mr. Beezer and Mr. Grimm spoke likewise. The ayes and nays were called when a vote on the resolution was taken and Keller, Musser, Sheffer and Judge voted | for it and Beezer, Grimm, Kirk and Yer- | ger against it and president Harper cast the deciding vote in favor of the resolu- tion. Having thus created a new office the question of salary to be paid was dis- | cussed. Finally a motion was ade to pay a salary of $100 per month but the motion was defeated by a vote of 5 to 3. Dr. Kirk then made a motion to make the salary limit $1,000 per year, but this was defeated by a vote of 6 to 2. A number of applications had been sent into council for the position of water super- intendent and these and the salary ques- tion were referred to the Water commit. tee for investigation and report at next meeting; they in the meantime to engage some competent man temporarily to look after the water works. The treasurer was authorized to have | a note discounted in the sum of $1,500 for | — The first January thaw occurred on | four months to pay current bills. Bills to the amount of $1,311.30 were approved and councii adjourned. PHILIPSBURG FIRE SWEPT.—One of the most disastrous fires that has occurred in Philipsburg in years took place last Fri- day when the opera house, the Schoon- over block, the Hagerty block and sev- eral other buildings were destroyed, en- tailing a loss estimated at from seventy- five to one hundred thousand dollars. The fire broke out shortly before six o'clock in the morning and is supposed to have originated in the rear of Der- vishe's confectionery store. The flames gained on the Philipsburg firemen and an appeal for help was sent to both Ty- rone and Clearfield, firemen from both places responding as quickly as possible. Itwas not until the buildings named above were practically destroyed that the flames were gotten under control. Those who were burned out were Orin Vail’s wholesale liquor warercom, though most of the contents were saved; the Salvation Army; William Reed's tailoring establishment; Frank Chase, barber; Joe Mulson, shoemaker; L. B. Gernon, shoe store; A. Deryishe, confectioner; The Bell telephone exchange; ‘Mr. Schoon- over's private apartments; Shirt factory storage rooms; Prudential Fire Insurance company; E. E. Hagerty, bakery; Gus Johnson's job printing office; George Stott’s billiard room and cigar store, and the opera house. THE BLUE Mouse.—It is a relief to witness a play that does not compel one to swallow isms and dogmas, but leads one quite willingly to nibble upon the sweets in milady’s bonbonniere. This is what “The Blue Mouse” tempts you to do, and the tempting has been so cleverly arranged by Clyde Fitch that two con- tinents are nibbling. The play of that name, written by the author of “Girls,” has been adapted from the German by Clyde Fitch who, in translating and re- arranging a solid success, has given America one of the most wholesome and wholly convulsing farces of the present time. "The Blue Mouse” holds the record for the season's run in New York, having remained for over one year at the Lyric theatre. A carefully selected company title role will present the forthcoming engagement of this farce, which comes here on Wednesday evening, January 11th, at Garman's. : snm——— A Mp —. members of the Unfed Evangeica X pr gave their pas, Re Hower, a thirty o'clock. ——Mrs. John Gray moved from her house on College avenue, State College, to one of the flats in Crider's Exchange | Monday of this week. ——Mrs. James B. Lane and Miss Mary Thomas have closed their house on Linn | street and gone to the Bush house, where | they will make their home until Miss | Thomas takes possession of the Graham . house in the spring. —On Sunday Grant Halderman was engaged in loading ore at the Nittany fur- , nace and following a dynamite blast a lot - of ice and snow tumbled down upon him badly lacerating his left forearm, render- there seems general ; } ing it necessary'to take tim to the hos: lobed lackof now} ja edge in that line a lecture of that kind pital for treatment. , would be very instructive to the Belle- i ——A chicken and waffle supper will fonte public and it is hoped that it will ‘be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. be carried through to success. Tle Civic ' Andy Gummo, near Hunter's park, next ' Improvement Society are thinking of tak- Thursday evening, January 12th. The ing the thing in hand and have the lec- proceeds will be for the benefit of the ture at a very nominal charge to pay the | Buffalo Ran Presbyterian church. Every. few minor expenses and if anything is left | body is invited and a good time guaran- | to apply the same to the purchase of the teed to all. -~ | refuse receptacles for the street corners | ——County auditors H. B. Pontius, of of the ow: It op that a large this place, Robert Musser, of Gregg town- enough Mig Sa and that | ship, and C. U. Hoffer, of Philipsburg, | CerYbody will go who is interested in forester, and who was the landscape near future and deliver an illustrated lec- ture on the art of making the town beau- tiful and the care and handling the shade trees as well as show some of the beauti- tour. As the pretty streets in this town are samewhat marred by the indiscriminate ' months showed fines collected, $3.00; : convened on Monday and began auditing | N¢IPing to make the town beautiful and : i learn how to handle the tres question. {the accounts of the Commissioners of | . | Centre county. They anticipate a lengthy | Toone ing hw Sate oat To which | session on account of the large number ''®? ‘CUnvenieice EL . who of bills for the remodeling of the court | 138 30 kindly volunteered his services but Hose lit is thought that it will be the latter part i — ws |of this month or the beginning of the | ——The Christmas festivities of the | next. | younger set of Bellefonte consisted of a ———— ee oe ! —Ever since Tuesday Robert F, Mrs. W. F. Reynold's party which she | Hunter has been parading around town | gave Thursday night, for her son Frederic, | as if he had a chip on his shoulder and | who was home for his vacation from St. | ready to go up against all comers, but it | Georges school, Newport, and a dance in | was not because he was mad at anyone the town hall given by Dr. and Mrs. R.|or anything. In fact it is the direct G. H. Hayes for their daughter Ellen and | reverse, as he has simply been bub- her school friend, Miss Mary Tyler, both | bling over with jubilation over the arrival students at Sweet Briar, Virginia. {of a little girl in his home, the first in - es ve ars. ——Samuel Bryant has finally signed gavel years up with the Tyrone band and accepted a | position with the Pennsylvania railroad | company in that place, having gone there | —Miss Rose Prince, of Crafton, is the guest of on Wednesday of last week. As a leader | her sister, Mrs. Donald Potter. of the Coleville band and later of the | Tim Frick Glwtie of Bistibuix, spent the new City band, as well as COMIPOSEY of | —Mrs. Edward Haupt, of Thomas street, enter- band music, Mr. Bryant has acquired a | ¢ ' : ained her mother as her Christmas guest. reputation beyond the confines of Cen-| _g,..e Hart, of Steelton, and a friend, have tre county, and while we are sorry to 10se | been the guests of Mr. Hart's mother, on Bishop him here we congratulate him on his | street. gnod fortune. | —Miss Louise Brachbill went to Lock Haven - — . Wednesday, to visit with friends there and in ——The barn on the farm owned by | Williamsport. Wesley Rider, near Valley View in Buffalo | _ngeq Sidney Barlett and her three children, Run valley, and occupied by Harvey | of Altoona, have visited with Mr. and Mrs. David | Bradley was entirely destroyed by fire on | Barlett the past two weeks. the night of Wednesday, December 28th. | —Mr. and Mrs. Boyd A. Musser and child, of | The stock was saved but the entire stock | Altoona, were here for Christmas at the William NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. architect for the Jamestown Exposition, | ful scenery of that nature seen on that | cutting and trimming of trees and as of grain, hay, etc., and a lot of farm im- plements were destroyed. Some insur- | ' ance was carried but not enough to cover | | the loss. The origin of the fire is not! | known but it is belived to have been of incendiary origin. ———0On Monday morning, December | 26th, Rev. John Hewitt had a rather re- markable baptismal service in St. John's Episcopal church, in which three genera- tions were baptised. They were Richard | Stewart Brouse, Richard Stewart Brouse Jr., and Richard Stewart Brouse—Topelt, This was the first time in Rev. Hewitt's long ministerial work that he was called upon to administer the baptismal rites to father, son and grand-son, which is cer- tainly an unusual occurrence. —Qur friend R. A. Beck played Santa Claus for the little ones of the Episcopal Sunday school on Wednesday of the holiday week and if bright, happy little faces and peals of merry laughter count for anything he proved a decided success. With characteristic kindness, Beck, himself, purchased a doll for each little girl and a horn for each little boy so that with the usual church candy gift it was little wonder that the children think the big hearted barber about as near the real thing as they grow outside of the north pole country. VITAL STATISTICS.—During the year 1910 there have been many deaths in and around Bellefonte and it would seem as if the death rate had largely in- creased, but this is not the case. Accord: ing to the record of the registrar of vital statistics for this district, which includes Bellefonte borough, Spring, Benner, Mar- ion and Walker townships, there were 172 deaths during the year 1909 and only 141 during the year 1910, or just thirty- one less last year than the year previous This is a very decided decrease as it shows a death rate fully eighteen per cent. lower last year than during the year previous. ——REUBEN IN NEW YORK.—There will be plenty to entertain and excite the most blase patron of the opera house on Tuesday evening, January 10th, when “Reuben in New York,” the big laugh and comedy scream will hold forth. Three acts of rapid fire dialogue, humor- ous and complicated situations and an album of bright. sparkling musical num- bers and polite vaudeville is the offering. The company presenting this comedy creation is composed of singers, dancers and comedians specially selected for their various parts. A dozen or more musical numbers will be introduced including “Those Pretty Reuben Ponies,” a singing and dancing act, "The Taxi Girls,” “Cav- alleria Rusticana,” and a grand medley at the finale of the second act i ant on Hammerstein's Roof Gar J. Musser home on Lamb street. —~Mrs. Andrew Harris, of Lock Haven, and her nephew, Robert Burns, of Snow Shoe, were visit- ors at the McDermott home last week. ~Mr. and Mrs. Blair Yarnell and little daugh- ter, of Snow Shoe, were at the home of Wm, Mc- Clellan, on Lamb street over New Years. ~Mrs. James McClain and little daughter, of Spangler, are guests of Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spang- ler this week, having come in for New Years, —Mr. and Mrs, John Bullock and their son Charles spent a part of the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lukenbach, at Tyrone. —Miss Sallie Ulrich, in training for a nurse at Wernersville, came to Bellefonte Thursday to at- tend the funeral of her grandfather, Michael Ul rich. —Mrs. Frank Wallace, her grand-daughter, and her daughter, Mrs. Shaner, have returned to Bellefonte from a short visit with Mrs. Blair, at Tyrone. --Miss Helen White has been spending the week in Williamsport with her sister, Marie, but will be in Bellefonte today, to return to her work at Gambier, Ohio. —Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Hayes, who have been spending the fall and early winter at Atlan- tic City, have gone to De Land, Florida, to stay until spring. —Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Beaver, of Yorktown Heights, N. Y., and their daughter Katherine, came to Bellefonte last week and have been guests of Gen. and Mrs, James A. Beaver. . —Lieut. Roland I. Curtin, U. S. N., who was here for his father’s funeral, returned to his du- ties at Annapolis yesterday. Gregg will remain a few days before going back to Newark. —Mrs. Jennie Parsons, who has been visiting with Miss Humes, left Bellefonte Tuesday expect- ing to spend the remainder of the winter at Mc- Keesport, with Mr. and Mrs.James Parsons. —Miss Morgan and Miss Ohnmacht are home from Williamsport, where Miss Ohnmacht has been since before Christmas, Miss Morgan hav- ing gone down to be with her for the New Year. —Mrs. J. A. Woodcock will leave Bellefonte next week to spend a short time in Philadelphia, going from there to Scranton she wiil not return to Bellefonte before the early part of February. —Miss Annie Glenn, a daughter of Dr. W. S. Glenn, of State College, was in Bellefonte Tues- day night, on her way home from spending a week with Dr. and Mrs. Tom Glenn, at Bradford. —Mr. and Mrs. Claude Cook, with their daugh- ter Grace, spent the Christmas with Mrs. Cook's sister, Mrs. Brown, at Wernersville. Miss Grace, who did not return to Bellefonte with her parents, is visiting with friends at Uniontown. —Dr. John I. Robinson was a Bellefonte visitor over Wednesday night, looking as natural as if he were still located at State College. He left the College last summer and went to Philadelphia but is now located in Scranton where he is build- ing up a good practice, —Lieutenant James Taylor left on Tuesday. After a brief visit with his sister, Mrs. Bums Lieut. Taylor will go to San Francisco and sail for duty inthe Philippines. —After being for the Christmas week with friends at Centre Hall, William Magee, of Phila, delphia, spent Saturday in Bellefonte, packing and shipping a part of his father’s law library, which has never been moved since R. M. Magee was a member of the Centre county bar. —Jerry Herkimer, sonof Adam Herkimer late of this place, was in town on Wednesday the first time in twenty years or more. Jerry has been self. He was on his way back from a visit with his sisters at William: nd he r i | ——The regular monthly meeting of FOR A Town BEAUTIFUL—Mr. John T. Fern Robb, of Pittsburg. spent Christmas | with his mother in Bellefonte. ~Mrs. Eva Snyder, of Jersey Shore. spent last week with relatives in Bellefonte. —~Mrs. W. V. Hughes, of Hollidaysburg, is a guest this week of Mrs. John P. Harris. and who also delivers lectures on thecity _ beautiful all over the United States, was | expecting to spond two weeks in Philadelphis. with Mr. George Bush on his tour around ' py and Mrs. Lewis Lonsbury spent Christ- the world. He has written Mr. Bush. masand the Holidays with friends in Corning. with whom he is a personal friend and | N.Y. has offered to come to Bellefonte in the, —Miss Anna Keichline returned to Ithaca, N. Y. on Tuesday io resume her studies in Cornell University. —William Clark Jr. and wife, of Syracuse, N. | Y., spent several days in Bellefonte during the Christmas holidays. Lieutenant Richard Taylor, instructor at the Huntingdon reformatory, spent Christmas with his family in Bellefonte. —Miss Elizabeth Willow, of Lock Haven, spent Sunday in Bellefonte as the guest of Miss Helen Martin, in Bush Addition. ~Miss Beulah Dale came home from Atlantic City to spend the holiday week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dale. —A. Randolph Hoy came in from Pittsburg last week to spend part of the Holidays and New Years with friends in town. —Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Auchmuty, of Albany, N. Y., spent two days last week with her sister, Mrs. George Ingram, in Bellefonte. —Mrs. John S. Tome and Mrs. M. P. Hepburn, of Jersey Shore, have been house guests of Mrs. Louise Bush for the past two weeks. —Leland Struble, of Salamanca, N. Y., was here for Christmas and part of the Holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Struble. —Leo Sherry was home from Pittsburg to spend Christmas Sunday with his parents. but could not remain longer than the day following. —Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Spangler, of Barnesboro, spént Christmas and part of the Holidays with friends at Centre Hall and in this place. ~Frank Barrett, of State College, arrived in Bellefonte Wednesday after spending a delight- ful Christmas vacation in Jersey Shore. —Mrs. Thomas King Morris with her son King. who have been in Bellefonte for the past year, will leave for their home at Pittsburgh today. —Mrs. C. M. Bower and her sister, Mrs. Shook, of Williamsport, spent the holiday season with Mr. and Mrs. David J. Meyer, at Centre Hall. —Thomas E. Mayes has moved his belongings from the Aiken home to the Brockerhoff house and will make that his residence in the future. —J. H. Roush, of Madisonburg, was in Belle- fonte Monday and Tuesday attending the annual meeting of the Grange fire insurance company. —Mrs. George VanDyke, of Altoona, with her | daughter Mary, spent both the Christmas and the New Year in Bellefonte with Mr. and Mrs. John Noll. —Dr, and Mrs. John Keichline, of Alexandria, were members of the family party entertained by Mr. and Mrs. John M. Keichline at Christmas time. ~Mrs. Hugh North Crider and Mrs. J. H. Robb went down to Philadelphia last Thursday and spent the week with friends there and at Ardmore. ~Mr. and Mrs, C. D. Casebeer left last Satur- day for Pittsburg and from there wenton a sev- eral days’ trip to Chicago, returning to Bellefonte yesterday. —Edward K. Rhoads and sister, Miss Rebecca, spent Christmas and until Tuesday of last week with their brother, Joseph J. Rhoads and family in Altoona. ~Miss Julia Bidwell came in from Pittsburg to spend Christmas and the Holidays with her par. ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Bidwell, of south Alle gheny street. —Charles Underwood, who holds a good posi- tion at Watkins Glen, N. Y., spent his Christmas vacation with his brother Jesse and family on | Bishop street. —Miss Lillian Walker, of Philadelphia. and Lee Walker, of Schenectady, N. Y.. were home for the Holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs, We. Miles Walker. —George W. Young and his nephew, George Thompson, of Jersey Shore, spent several days in Bellefonte during the Holidays, with Andrew Young and family. —Mr. and Mrs. Tom Smith, Mrs. Charles Pen- nington, of State College, and John Smith, of Philadelphia, were with their mother, Mrs. Peter Smith for the Christmas. ~The Misses Anne and Caroline Valentine are at the College Club at Philadelphia, where they went shortly after Christmas, expecting to be in the city for an indefinite time. —Samuel H. Taylor, of Philadelphia, came to Bellefonte on Sunday to spend several days and accompany Mrs. Taylor home, she having spent the holiday season with friends here. —Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Singhiser and their child, of Renovo, came to Bellefonte Friday of last week for a visit with Mrs. Singhiser’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Woodring, of Howard street, —Mr. and Mrs. William Furey and family, of Pittsburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Web Karstetter and family, of Punxsutawney, spent New Years with the Morris Furey family south of Bellefonte. —Mr. and Mrs. William Beck and their small son came up Saturday from Nittany, and spent a busy day in Bellefonte, in the shops and attend- ing to business in anticipation of the New Year. —Mrs, Wesley O'Day and daughter Mary, of Northumberland, spent several days in this place during the Holidays and while here the latter un derwent a slight operation in the Bellefonte hos- pital. —John Powers, of Philadelphia, has been in Bellefonte the past two weeks, the first visit to the home of his birth in a number of years, and he certainly looks as if the world was treating him very kindly. —Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keller left Bellefonte this morning, to be guestr of Mr. and Mrs. William Keller on a trip to New York, On their return Mrs. Keller and her son, William Keller 2nd, will remain in Lancaster for a short visit. —Jacob Harpster, of Ferguson townskip, was in town Saturday making his report as assessor to the county commissioners, Mr. Harpster isa member of that ‘good, old staunch Democratic family up in Ferguson and they are all men of the type that the WATCHMAN is particularly fond of. He is doing the work of assessor in place of the reguiarly elected official who could not find it convenient to make the assessment, —One of the very agreeable callers at the WATCHMAN office on Monday was Mr. Ira Gates, of Winebago, Minn., who came in to renew his subscription to the WATCHMAN. When we say “came in" we do not mean that he came all the way in from Minnesota for the express purpose of paying for his paper, although he would be likely to do so in preference to doing without the WATCHMAN. Mr. Gates is an old Centre coun- tian, having been born at Gatesburg though most of his early life was spent in the vicinity of Pine Grove Mills. He went west twenty-seven years ago and lived in different States prior to locating in Minnesota where he now owns a fine farm, a small part of whichis within the incorporated limits of Winebago. It is ten years since he has been back east and the trip at this time was most- 1y to visit his mother, Mrs. Joseph Gates, in Lock Haven, who is now past eighty-three years of age, as well as friends at Pine Grove Mills, to which place he was going on Monday. . ay - v or : Struble spent their ing in the sights, t ixe ~Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harper left Bellefonte Wednesday, expecting to spend the remainder of the week at Clearfield. 1 —Mrs. Blanche Fauble Schloss left a short time | 480, with two friends from Ptttshurgh, to spend three months in California. —Mrs. John N. Lane has returned (0 Bellefonte | after spending the month of December with Mr. . and Mrs. Robert Fay, at Altoona. —Mr. and Mrs. James Parsons left for their | home in Homestead on Tuesday after spending | the Holidavs with friends in Bellefonte, | ==Mr. and Mrs. Boyd A. Musser and children, of Scranton, spent part of the Holidays with ! friends in Bellefonte and Centre county. | —Miss Emily Valentine left Bellefonte Thurs | day to visit for a week with the family of Mr. , and Mrs. James Sommerville, at Winburne. | —Mr. and Mrs. John S. Walker went to Phi) © | delphia Thursday, where they will visit for a | week with relatives inthe vicinity of that city. | —Miss Lulu McMullen, of Hecla, will go to | Philadelphia next week, where she will visit for a | month with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. —Miss Emily Parker returned to her home at | Somerset, Monday, after visiting for a week with | Mr. and Mrs. G. Ross Parker, of Thomas street. | —Miss Helen Hartranft, a student at the Bloomsburg Normal. spent her vacation in Belle- fonte with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hart- ranft. ~Capt. W. H. Fry, of Pine Grove Mills, was in Bellefonte on Wednesday attending the funeral of his old comrade and commander. Gen. John I. i . 1 i ~William J. Dorworth returned to Greensboro, | N:C., the latter part of last week, after spending’ the Christmas with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. E. S. Dorworth. | —Stanley B. Valentine has returned to Pitts- burgh, after visiting for a short time during the | Holidays, in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. Harry Valentine. ~William H. Brouse came up from Sunbury at the Christmas time and completed the family party which was being entertained by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Brouse. —Hon. John Noll went down to Harrisburg on Monday to witness the convening of the Legisla- ture, but was not able to change the schedule al- ready arranged by Boss Penrose. —William A. Lyon left last Saturday for Roches- ter, N. Y., to spend New Years’ day with his son Robert and wife and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McGuin- ness and son Jack, returning in the early part of the week. =Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Kurtz went down to Lewisburg on Tuesday of last week to spend a day or two with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kurtz, Jr. Mr. Kurtz came home with an attack of quinsy and was housed up for four days. ~Mr. and Mrs. Charles Donachy having ship- ped their goods last Wednesday, visited the re- mainder of the week with Mrs. Donachy's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs, C. C. Shuey, leaving for their new home at Williamsport Monday morning. —Miss Emeline Cooper, who is at school at Peekskill, spent her winter vacation at her home at Galveston, Texas, having gone down to be maid of honor at the wedding of her brother Rex, who was married to Miss Cornelia McNeill dur- ing the latter part of December. ~Alfred Klepfer, who is associated with his uncle. Fred Musser, in charge of the wholesale branch of the Lauderbech, Barber & Co., in Belle- | fonte, has been spending the Christmas holidays | with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel! Klepfer, at Wissimoning, near Philadelphia. —Dr. J. Allison Platts came to Bellefonte from Pittsburg on Christmas evening and remained with his family until Wednesday of last week when Mrs. Platts accompanied him back to the Smokey city. He has not yet decided how soon he will move his family from Bellefonte. i Sale Register. MARCH 23rD.—At the residence hy Waddie Station. “ Patton “town 5, retg er Shotts id othet farm an farm machinery and wagons, etc., all in the best of order and of the g Jatest and Mast improved terns. This wi one of rgest the coun- ty and will begin promptly at 9.30 a.m. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, The following are the quotations up to six o'clock Four weeks, and under three mos..10 per ct. SATE oh. Jud nde} 31% mos... 3 ber of. se Al Adios a insert Sitiden at Enna