Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 21, 1911, Image 8

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    PET
Pewoceatic adam
Bellefonte, Pa., April 21, 1911.
OPENING OF THE TROUT FISHING SEA-
came in more auspiciously than it did
——The Julia K. Hogg prize offered by
| soM.—The trout fishing season never the Pennsylvania D. A. R. to the young
woman of any woman's college or co-
Er —— gt Saturday morning. Though cool the educational institution in Pennsylvania
| day was clear and bright and hundreds of who shall submit the best essay on an
"To CommespospExTs.—~No communications | fishermen, and many who were not fisher assigned historical subject was this year
published unless accompanied by the real name Men, went out to try their luck. Of course awarded to Miss Kessler, a student at
of the writer.
THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNZY. |
——Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Fenlon, have
moved from their apartments at the Bush
house, into the Hamilton house on north
Allegheny street.
——At a meeting of the Vestry of St.
John's Episcopal church held on Monday
all the old vestrymen were re-elected for
the ensuing year. i
-——The White Rose club of the A. M. |
E. church will serve a luncheon at the!
home of Mrs. Rachel Taylor, on Penn
street this (Friday) evening.
—A little son was born to Mr. and
Mrs. George R. Meek, at the Bellefonte
hospital iast Saturday afternoon. The
young man will be christened Peter
Gray Meek the Second.
—Rev. Edward A. Snook, of Newton
Hamilton, will preach in the Presbyterian
church at Milesburg on Sabbath evening,
April 23rd, at 7:30 o'clock. Everybody
is cordially invited to attend.
——An infant child of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry L. Lambert, of Milesburg, died
April 14th, and was buried at Curtin on
the 16th. Rev. Winey, of this place, con-
ducting the funeral ceremonies.
——Lloyd Oswalt, of Snow Shoe, who
some wecks ago hired a horse from a
Clearfield liveryman and driving to Bald
Eagle sold the animal, was on Monday
sentenced by Judge Smith to the Hunt:
ingdon reformatory.
——At a district camp convention of
Maccabees held in Altoona last Friday
George T. Bush, of this place, was elect-
ed one of the delegates to represent this
district at the great camp convention to
be held in Pittsburg in June.
——James B. Strohm, who has been so
ill at his home in Centre Hall for months
past, is now so low that he is unable to
talk so as to make himself understood
and is practically helpless in every way,
so that his death may occur at any time.
——A very large reception was giyen
by Mr. and Mrs. Frank McCoy, at their
home on Linn street, Thursday evening,
from eight until eleven o'clock, in honor
of Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy, who were
married in Bellefonte during the month of
February.
—J. C. Cornwall, of Rochester, N. Y.,
has this week been filling the position of
express messenger between Bellefonte
and Mill Hall, on the Central Railroad of
Pennsylvania, in the absence of Perry
Alters, the regular messenger, who is off
on his vacation. .
——Baseball enthusiasts are figuring a
baseball team for Bellefonte this summer
as a sure thing. A great deal, however,
will depend upon the preliminary fund.
You can help swell this by attending the
performances of the Academy minstrels
May 5th and 6th.
——Miss Helen E. Overton, who is in
charge of the primary department at the
Bellefonte Academy, was elected Vice
Regent of the Pennsyivania Daughters of
the American Revolution at the annual
convention of the National D. A. R. held
in Washington this week.
——Philip H. Meyer, of Centre Hall,
was taken quite ill on Sunday and while
it was first thought he had a slight stroke
of paralysis it afterward developed to be
heart trouble. By yesterday, however,
he had recovered so as to be able to be
out of bed and down stairs.
——On Tuesday morning the dwelling
house on the Hale farm near Waddle, oc-
cupied by Dallas Marshal! and family,
was burned to the ground though the
family succeeded in saving most of their
furniture. The house was insured. The
origin of the fire is a mystery.
——Denman Thompson, the author of
“The Old Homestead,” is dead, having
expired at his country estate at West
Swanzey, N. H., last Friday. He was
seventy-seven years old and when a young
man speat a year or so in Bellefonte,
working at the old Cummings house.
——On Monday evening a large num-
ber of friends of the venerable Jacob
Emigh, of Ferguson township, gave him
a very liberal donation as a gentle re-
minder that it was his seventieth birth-
day. The affair was planned and so suc-
i ly carried through by Mrs. George
——Some time ago ‘Squire H. Laird
Curtin sent his Premier touring car to a
dealer in Philadelphia to dispose of at
the best price possible and having gotten
rid of it he has arranged for the purchase
of a Premier roadster, four passenger,
and will leave today for Philadelphia to
drive the car home.
~—Rev. Dr. Smiley,
Second Presbyterian church, Camden, N.
J., will fill the pulpit in the Presbyterian
church on Sunday morning and evening.
On Sunday, April 30th, Rev. Dr. Cook,
pastor of the First Presbyterian church,
Wheeling, W. Va, will officiate, both
morning and evening.
~The supper given for the benefit 6f
the Baptist church at Milesburg, adver.
tised last week to take place on the even-
ing of the 15th, will not be given until to-
morrow (Saturday) night, the 22nd inst.
Everybody who can attend will be made
welcome, and an excellent supper and a
good time is anticipated.
count was made of the number of men and
boys on these streams the crowd was esti- |
mated at over five hundred. At six o'clock
in the morning just one hundred and sev-
en-two fishermen lined the pavement be-
tween the two bridges in this town. '
Of course every person who was out
did not catch trout, but the majority of
{ them did. Some got but one, but a large
| number got anywhere from a half dozen
| to twenty, while a very few got the limit.
William Dukeman caught forty out of
Spring creek, between the High and
Lamb street bridges, before nine o'clock
| the Mecca for all was Logan's branch State College. The prize is fifty dollars
' and Spring creek and while no accurate in casa and a hand engraved certificate
by Caldwell.
oni mmmi——
——Shortly after twelve o'clock on
Tuesday night the residence of Clayton
Shope, at Milesburg, was discovered to
be on fire and being an old frame struc-
ture it was destroyed before the fire com-
pany of that place could get their appa-
small part of their furniture.
——The Thespians of State College
were.in Harrisburg and Milton this week |
Council's DoiNGs.—If the members ot
the Bellefonte borough council were paid
anything for their services to the town
they would not have earned their salaries
at Monday night's session, because it was
the most uninteresting held in months.
None of the committees had anything of
consequence to report.
C. T. Gerberich was present and stated
that he wanted to begin putting down a
new pavement along the Curtin property
on Allegheny St., of which he has charge,
but the curb there has so crumbled away
that it should be replaced with a new one,
and asked that something be done in the
matter. The Street committee and bor-
ough engineer were instructed to have it
attended to. The borough engineer was
also instructed to inspect the curb and
|
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, gutter along all of the state road as well |
| as the brick paving in the Diamond and
see if it is all right.
in the morning and had to quit fishing. and not only drew big houses but were reported that he had communicated with
‘But the number that caught the limit
could probably be counted on one hand.
At that the catch was a phenomena! one |
and it is estimated that it would exceed
over one thousand trout. Of course it
was all because of the trout put in these |
streams from the Bellefonte hatchery last |
fall. They were accustomed to be fed
and naturally jumped at any kind of bait: |
These trout easily composed ninety per
i
|
lauded by the press for their high class
performance in “The Climatologers.”
They will be at Garman’s tomorrow night
and you'll miss a good thing if you fail to
hear them. Remember the Penn State
orchestra will give a half hour concert
before the regular performance.
——There are quite a number of good
singers among the Academy students and
the State Highway Department relative
| to the early completion of the state road
' through the town and that he had re-
| ceived a letter stating that they would
! push the job through as soon as possible.
! A motion was passed in effect that the
| Street committee and borough solicitor be
| required to have a conference withthe
| officials of the Bellefonte Electric com-
| pany and James Noonan regarding the
cent. of the catch. The native trout | they willall be heard in the performance | latter's claim for damages sustained by
were better and larger. Several of these | of the Academy minstrels at the opera! his wife in falling into a hole on the corner
were caught which measured in the neigh-
borhood of twenty inches and weighed
about three pounds.
A number of Bellefonters went down
to Fishing creek to try their luck, but did
not have very good success. The water
was high and clear and the trout wary.
Very few catches ran into two figures
while no large ones were made. Fishing
creek, however, as well as some of the
other mountain streams, will furnish
good sport and some trout after Spring
creck and Logan's branch have been lit-
erally fished to death.
THREATENED TO BLow OuT BRAINS.—
For just one instant on Monday morning
Harry Miller, of Willowbank street,
thought his end had come. Following
his failure and assignment of his grocery
store to G. Fred Musser his books were
put into the hands of an attorney for the
collection of accounts. Naturally state-
ments were sent to all those indebted to
the firm of R. P. Miller & Son. Monday
morning Charles Heisler went over to
Harry Millers on an errand and he and
Mr. Miller were standing just inside the
door when there was a sharp knock on
the outside. Mr. Miller opened the door
and stepped out onto the concrete walk
and Mr. Heisler followed. The knock
came from a man generally known as
“Ben” Beckwith, who lives out in Bush
Addition, and as Miller stepped past him
he jerked a revolver out of his pock-
et and with a fearful oath declared he
was going to blow out Miller's brains.
Fortunately Heisler was close to the man
and he knocked his arm down and grab-
bed him around the waist, pinioning his
arms to his sides. At the same instant
Miller grabbed the revolver and turning
the muzzle downward managed to wrest
it from the man’s hand and empty out
the cartridges. The man, however, pro-
duced more cartridges and declared he
had plenty left.
After he cooled down Beckwith
stated that he did not mean to shoot
Miller but only to scare him. He claim-
ed that the statement of the account
sent him was larger than his book show-
ed and he merely wanted to have the
mistake rectified. He further claimed
that when he pulled the revolver he
thought he was pulling his store book
from his pocket and got the revolver by
mistake. It is only fair to Beckwith to
state that he did pull his store book from
his pocket at the time he pulled the re-
volver but let it drop to the pavement.
Mr. Miller did not have the man arrest-
ed but he kept the revolver as a matter
of precaution.
CENTRE HALL HOTEL LICENSE GRANT-
ED.—On Wednesday morning Judge Ellis
L. Orvis handed down a decree granting
the application of James W. Runkle for a
liquor license at the Centre Hall hotel.
In his decree Judge Orvis stated that a
license would have been granted for this
hotel a year ago had it not been for a
technicality of law in the filing of the ap-
plication. That the remonstrants this
year averred that there was nothing to
be said against Mr. Runkle personally or
against the kind of a hotel he conducted,
but that inasmuch as he had run the
place the past year without a license, and
there was no reason why he should not
continue doing so, they asked that the
same be refused. On this point the court
stated that while it is true that Mr.
Runkle kept his hotel open the past year
for the accommodation of the traveling
public, he likely did it in the belief that
he would receive a license this year. And
further, there was no assurance that he
would continue to keep the hotel open if
he were not granted a license. For these
reasons and the fact that the court deem-
an automobile don’t think he'll neglect
the Scenic, for he won't. You'll find just
as good pictures there in as
you have in the past, and
of them, if the films hold
no such a word as retrograde in
Soenic dictionary.
house May 5th and 6th. The songs wil)
all be new and up-to-date while there will
be no worn out or worked over jokes. And
the best of all is that the whole thing is
to be one big athletic benefit and this
will be the very place to start the fund
for a baseball team this year.
——0On Wednesday Judge Orvis hand-
ed down a decree in the matter of the
application of Mrs. John Bayletts for the
placing of two of her children in some
home on the ground that they were in-
corrigible and beyond her control. The
children in question are two boys, John
Samuel Bayletts, twelve years old, and
Roy Everett, nine years old, and the court
ordered them taken to the house of ref-
uge at Glen Mills, Delaware county.
——The Bellefonte Chapter D. A. R.
has quite a treat in store for the people
of this community. Dr. Hugh P. Baker,
head of the forestry department at The
Pennsylvania State College, has kindly
consented to deliver an address on “The
Conservation of the Forests,” illustrated
with photographs he took on his recent
trip abroad and also some secured in
Washington. Through the generosity of
T. Clayton Brown the pictures will be
chown at the Scenic Friday, April 28th,
at four o'clock p. m. A nominal admis-
sion of five cents will be charged. Every-
body invited.
~—G. McC. Fry, of Ferguson town-
ship, lost a horse on Tuesday and the
fact makes him feel very much like quit-
ting the farm. He was in the field plow-
ing when one of his horses suddenly
dropped out of sight, leaving the other
horse, the plow and Mr. Fry standing on
the ground. The animal had dropped
into a large fissure in the limestone rock
and had gone down to a depth of over
twenty feet. It was so badly injured that
it was killed and the carcass buried in
the rocky cavern after the harness had
been recovered. As this is the third horse
Mr. Fry has lost in the past two years
in the same way it is not to be wondered
at that he feels like giving up farming.
oe
—Before the next issue of the
WATCHMAN reaches its readers Bert De-
lige will have paid with his life the pen-
alty for the hideous crime he committed
in the assault and murder of Mrs. John
Baudis on October 16th. Sheriff W. E.
Hurley has everything in readiness to
carry into execution the mandate of the
law and he will perform his duty un-
flinchingly. There will be no fuss of any
kind and the crowd who will be admit-
ted to the execution will include only
those required by law to be present, in
all not over two or three dozen people.
While the law requires that the execu-
tion shall take place any time between
man, of Port Matilda, who will take it to
the Delige home at Scotia where the fam-
ly will give it a decent burial on their
own little farm and one of the members
of the family has requested us to state
that the burial will be private.
—— ent
Jim FINDLEY AGAIN IN TROUBLE—
James Findley, the man who a year or
80 ago carried off the pipe case in front
of Harry Otto'scigar storeand pool room,
who was arrested the same night and be-
cause the goods were all recovered sen-
home. He was brought to
‘of Bishop and Allegheny streets in time
| to make a report at next meeting.
| Water tax collector W. A. Ishler pre-
| sented his list of exonerations desired
| which amounted in all to about $175,00,
| and on motion of Mr. Grimm the same
| was allowed.
In order to get the matter on record the
| Street committee reported that viewers
| had been appointed on the High street
bridge proposition and that the same
| would be brought before the May term of
| court for action.
| Bills to the amount of $249.21 were ap-
proved and council adjourned.
BARNUM CIRCUS AT ALTOONA.—The
| people of Altoona and vicinity are to be
| given an opportunity of seeing the Bar-
num and Bailey Greatest Show on Earth
which will give two performances in that
place on Monday, May 8th.
Many wonderful features, new to Amer-
ican circus-goers are promised. A com-
pany of 400 of the world’s most promi-
nent circus talent, principally European,
will present an array of novelties, there
will be an elaborate forenoon parade and
a new menagerie. In the menagerie
among many other wonders is to be found
Baby Bumbeeno, the only giraffe ever
born in America. It is just one year old,
Among the more sensational numbers
on the long bill are John Ducander’s com-
pany of bell-ringing horses, from Eng-
land; the Fonelli company of Italian ac-
robats, the Siegrist-Sibon family of Ger-
man zrialists, Jupiter, the balloon horse,
Charles, the First, a chimpanzee bicycle
rider and roller skater, the great Geor-
getty family of French jugglers, the Les
Deko and Les Silvas family of equilibrists,
Noonan’s brass band of elephants, Capt.
Winston's troupe of riding and juggling
seals and sealions, Berzac's company of
mule and pony actors, Nederweld’s dog
and monkey circus, Victoria Codona, the
world’s greatest wire dancer and the fifty
funniest clowns in the world.
The Barnum and Bailey circus is now
at the zenith of success. It travels on a
train more than a mile in length. It em-
ploys 1,286 people and has 700 horses. In
the menagerie are forty elephants and
over 1,000 other strange animals. The
show carries its own dynamos illuminat-
ing the twenty tents and the show grounds
with 4,000 incandescent lamps, arc lights,
search lights and beacons.
THE THESPIANS TOMORROW NIGHT.—
The people of Bellefonte cannot fail to
appreciate “The Climatologers,” this sea-
son’s play The Thespians of State College
will give in the opera house tomorrow
(Saturday) evening. It is a musical ex-
travaganza written by several of the stu-
dents around a plot conceived at a certain
house party held in Bellefonte the past
year, and interspersed with the very
latest and most catchy songs of the sea-
son—everything new and never heard in
Bellefonte before. To enable the mer-
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Borough solicitor J. Thomas Mitchell :
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{| Mrs. Shuman Lyon, at Lyontown.
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—Frank Stover, of Altoona, spent Sunday with '
friends in this place.
—Ralph Struble and Miss Elizabeth Fisher
spent Sunday with friends at Snow Shoe Intersec-
tion. '
—Carl and Miss Pearl Royer spent Easter with |
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Royer, in Ty |
rone. ;
—Miss Lucy Cox, of Altoona, spent Easter with |
her grandmother, Mrs. Anne Cox, on Allegheny |
street. !
—Ex-Register A. G. Archey, of Pine Grove
Mills, was a business visitor in Bellefonte on |
~Mrs. John Guisewhite and two children,
Frederic and Katherine, left on Tuesday for their
new home at Cherrytree.
~Mrs. Sidney Bartlet, of Altoona, with her
children, spent Easter with Mr. and Mrs. David
Bartlet, of Thomas street.
~Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Musser and little son, of
Altoona, were Easter guests at the William J.
Musser home, on Lamb street.
—Frank Lyon and son Harwood, of Mt. Carmel.
spent Easter with Mr. Lyon's parents, Mr. and
~Lee Struble, of Salamanca, N. Y., was a visit
or at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. O.
Struble, in this place, the past week.
—F. W. Topelt, of Brooklyn, joined Mrs. To-
pelt at Bellefonte last Friday and was the week
end guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Brouse.
—T. I. Humes Jr., of Latrobe, a student at State
College, was the guest of his aunt, Mrs. Archi-
bald Allison, during his Easter vacation.
~Mr. and Mrs. John Huffman and daughter
Leonore, of Williamsport, were Easter guests of
Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Spigelmyer, on Howard
street.
«Mrs. Marcus Overly and her two children
came from Altoona the latter part of last week to
visit with Mrs. Overly’'s mother, Mrs. George
Taylor.
—Misses Mary and Catharine Shelly, of Holli-
daysburg, arrived in Bellefonte on Wednesday, to
spend a few days with Marie McGowan, up
Spring Creek.
—Miss Alice Lowry, who is attending the Wom-
an's college at Lutherville, Md., is spending the
Easter vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs:
Henry Lowry.
—After visiting for several days with relatives
at Bellefonte, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Doll, with
their three children, returned Monday to thei
home at Altoona. 4
~Mr. and Mrs. Blair Yarnell and two children,
of Snow Shoe, were Easter visitors with Mrs.
Yarnell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William McClel-
lan, on Lamb street.
—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Derstine and two chil-
dren, of Altoona, visited over Easter at the home
of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Derstine, on Penn street.
—Charles Tripple, of Philadelphia, was a Belle-
fonte visitor over Saturday and Sunday; having
come here for the opening of the trout fishing sea.
son as well as to see his numerous friends.
—T. B. Jamison, one of the leading citizens of
Spring Mills, transacted business in Bellefonte on
Tuesday and took a look at the Legislators as
they arrived in town to attend the Meyer funeral.
—As is his usual custom Joe Katz came over
from Lewistown to eat his Easter dinner with his
parents at the Bush house and just naturally spent
a day or two in town greeting friends of former
years, :
—Mr. and Mrs. Faust, of Altoona, were at
Bellefonte for Easter; having come to be for a
few days with Mrs. Faust's father, James Rine,
before he left Monday for the Wills Eye hospital
in Philadelphia.
—Dr. and Mrs. McCluney Radcliff were in
Bellefonte Wednesday on their way home to
Philadelphia from Centre Hall, where they had
been attending the funeral of Dr. Radcliff's uncle,
John Shannon Boal.
~Mrs. Kerstetter came froin Harrisburg the
latter part of the week to join Mrs. Yeager’'s East-
er family party. which consisted of Mrs. Geising-
er, Mrs. Kerstetter, Mrs. Yeager and their broth-
er, Charles Tripple.
—Both Dr. John Keichline, of Alexandria, and
Edward Keichline, of Renovo, are expected in
Bellefonte for the banquet of the Sigma Chi fra-
ternity of State College, celebrating their nine-
teenth anniversary, at the Bush house Friday
night.
Daley, who for the past eighteen
months has been driver for the Adams Express
company in this place, has been promoted to the
position of agent at Bordentown, N. J., and left
forthat place on Tuesday. His place here has
been taken by Curtin Taylor.
—A. D. Albert, an employee in the Pension De-
partment at Washington, was a Bellefonte visitor
on Tuesday. He is one of the survivors of the
Forty-fifth regiment, having been a member of
Company D, and being one of the historians of
the regiment was around hunting up data for the
history the survivors propose haying published.
—John S. Henderson, who gave up the idea of
becoming an M. D., to accept a good clerical po-
sition with the Provident Life and Trust company
in Philadelphia, has been visiting his old home up
Buffalo Run the past week, arriving in Bellefonte
last Friday morning. He is candid in stating that
his present position has got a doctor's job beaten
about fifty ways.
—Mrs. G. G. Pond, of State College, spent Wed-
nesday as the guest of Miss Linn. Mrs. Pond,
who is a member of the rural committee, appoint.
ed by the president of the State Federation of
Clubs, to make a report of art treasures in Penn-
sylvania, was devoting the time while in Belle-
fonte to her report of the art treasures in the pos-
sassion of the residents of this community.
—John Beezer, an old Spring creek boy, came
and, while he did not catch the limit, he
one which was the equal of more than a dozen
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—Dale Musser spent Easter with his
| Millheim.
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parents at
¥
—Dr. Edward Harris, of Snow Shoe, was among
the many visitors to Bellefonte Tuesday.
—Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Delaney, of Slate Run,
spent Easter with Mr. and Mrs. James Noonan.
at the Brant house.
—Edward Isaac Chambers, of Wilkinsburg,
spent Easter with his parents, Col. and Mrs. E. R.
Chambers, in this place.
—Miss Barbara Levi and brother Leopold are
spending the week at Lock Haven with their
aunt, Mrs. Edward Swiler.
—Mrs. John A. Woodcock will spend next week
with her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. R
Woodcock, at Birmingham.
—Mrs. John N. Lane arrived home Saturday
night from a visit of several weeks with her
daughter, Mrs. Robt. H. Fay, in Altoona.
~—Edward Fleming, of Altoona, was the guest
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleming,
while in Bellefonte visiting at Easter time. Gy
~Arthur Harper returned to his work at Co
lumbus. Ohio, Monday, after spending a short va
cation with his many friends in Bellefonte.
~Miss Anne Wallace, whose home is at Mont
gomery Inn, Bryn Mawr, has been the guest of
Miss Lida Morris, the greater part of the week.
~Harold Kirk, having secured a position with a
furnace company at Birdsboro, left Bellefonte
Thursday, expecting to begin work immediately,
~John D. Meyer, of Altoona, spent Easter with
friends in Bellefonte and was also here on Tues
day to attend the funeral of the late Hon. J. C.
Meyer.
=Dr. W. S. McCalmont, of Philadelphia, who
was here to attend the funeral of the late Hon. J,
C. Meyer, was a caller at this office on Monday
evening.
—Mrs. James K. Barnhart and her two younger
children are expecting to go to Punxsutawney
soon to visit with Mrs. Barnhart's mother, Mrs.
Campbell.
Mrs. William Naatz, of Syracuse, N. Y., with
her son and daughter, have been guests of Mrs
Naatz sisters, Mrs. Brewer and Mrz. Keichline
since last week.
—Dr. Wilbur Twitmire, who is now pulling and
plugging teeth down in Lancaster, was in Belle:
fonte to spend Easter with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. T. Twitmire.
~Mr. and Mrs. Charles Donachy, of Williams
port, had as their Easter guests Mrs. Donachy’s
sisters, the Misses Rachel, Anna and Sara Shuey
and Miss Dorothy Jenkins, all of Bellefonte.
—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boyer and daughter
Ruth, of Altoona, were guests over Saturday and
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walkey: Mr. Boy
er having come down for the opening of the trou!
fishing season.
—Stanley B. Valentine came to Bellefonte Fri
day of last week for a short visit with his parents
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Valentine, on his way tc
Pittsburg from a business trip through the east
ern part of the State.
WANTS BiG DAMAGES.—This week
Samuel S. Osmam, of Port Matilda
brought suit against the supervisors o:
Spring township for ten thousand dollar
damages for injuries he alleged he sus
tained when he drove into the lake nea
the Gentzel farm, southeast of Bellefonte
on the night of March 2nd, 1910. Osmar
claims the supervisors were negligent ir
not having something there to warn trav
elers of the danger from the deep water
Mr. Osman has employed W. Harrisor
Walker and N. B. Spangler to prosecut:
his case and the supervisors have engagec
Gettig, Bower & Zerby to conduct thei
defense.
ALUMNI MEETING.—There will be :
meeting of the Alumni Association of th
Bellefonte High school on Friday evening
April 21st, at 7.30 o'clock, in the office:
rrr En
or the pu of a
the annual tion to the gradual
class, and it is important that a larg
JouN J. BOWER,
Presiden
number of members be present.
ELSIE RANKIN, A
Bellefonte Produce Markets.
Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer.
The prices quoted are those paid for produce.
Potatoes per bushel.................c.cocecrcerenennns -
BA ht tht nt YY
Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER,
three perct.
anne
12 mos...........
Ee
a