Beware. Bellefonte, Pa., May 26, 1911. A ———————————S P. GRAY MEEK, EDITOR I Terms oF SuBscrIPTION,—Until further notice this paper will be furnished to subscribers at the ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. To “WATCHMAN” CORRESPONDENTS.— ‘We desire to call the attention of all cor- The WATCHMAN wants the news from all parts of the county and will duly ap- preciate the efforts of its correspondents and friends to supply the same; but we must have it when it is fresh. Another point we wish to call attention to is in sending in death notices don’t confine your account merely to the date of the person's birth and death and when he was buried, but give information about his family, and his prominence in the community is next in line to his promi- nence in the church. We don't ask an account written in full, but we would tices or any other news item, and in this way you, personally, will help to make the WATCHMAN more interesting. A Bic FamiLy.—If Teddy Roosevelt was in the limelight now as he was four years ago he could be given a good exam- ple of his doctrine in favor of large fami- lies in that of the family of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Straw, of Huston township. Itisa big family in every way. Mr. and Mrs. | Violent Rain Storm Last Friday Evening Wrecked Bellefonte Fish Hatchery and Did Thousands of Dollars Worth of Damage to Farms and Gardens Between Pleasant Gap and Bellefonte. The man who argues that the destruc- tive power of fire is greater than water ought to own a farm or a garden along Logan’s Branch and he would have had a demonstration of the destructiveness of water last Friday evening that would have shaken his faith in man's ability to conquer that element. And it was all the result of a rain storm that did not last over three quarters of an hour in Bellefonte. The storm began about 4.30 o'clock Friday afternoon and the rain descended in torrents until abcut 5.15 o'clock, but at that nobody in Bellefonte anticipated anything like a flood until shortly before six o'clock when the water came rolling down Logan's Branch in billows and waves a foot high and soon overspread all the lower lands. It was a question of only a few minutes until the Phoenix mill dam was flooded and the water was pouring over the breast from one side to the other. An effort had been made to open the flood gates but they were so rusted that one man could do nothing with them and he was finally compelled to flee to keep from being washed over- board. The water 10se rapidly and soon was pouring over the breast of the dam a foot deep. Naturally the basement of the Yeager Swing factory was complete- ly submerged, the water was two feet deep in the engine room and the street was submerged to a depth of two feet. So great was the volume of water which poured over the dam that it ran in Water street and at one place ran over into the big spring. At the WATCHMAN office the water rose high enough to give us about eight inches in the press room, but aside from the dirt and bother of cleaning it out and rubbing up the machinery did little damage. The Yeager Swing company is the big- Straw have had nineteen children during gest joser in this place. They had a large their married life, ten of whom are liv- ing, and they are not out of the running yet. So much for quantity. As to size, they easily equal their record of progeni- tiveness. Mr. Straw weighs 260 pounds and Mrs. Straw 225. Their three oldest living children are sons and they weigh respectively 196, 220 and 225 pounds. They have seven daughters, the eldest of whom, eighteen years old, weighs 200 pounds; one sixteen years old weighs 235 pounds; one fifteen 155 pounds; one thir- teen 150 pounds; one twelve 146 pounds; one ten 72 pounds, and one six years old 60 pounds. 2 This makes the total weight of the entire family 2,144 pounds, or an average of 178 2-3 pounds. These are about the biggest straws to be found in Centre county or the entire State, for that matter, and we venture the assertion that not another family in the whole country can equal the Straw record in every way. LEA STATE COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT.—The annual commencement of State College will begin on Friday, June 9th, with the Sophomore—Freshman class scrap. The same evening,The Pharsonians will give their minstrel show in the auditorium. On Saturday there will be a track meet with Colgate University, a baseball game with Bucknell and a review of the cadet batallion. Herbert L. Willett, Ph. D., of the Uni- versity of Chicago, will preach the bacca- laureate sermon on Sunday morning and on Monday morning class day exercises will be held. State and the University of Virginia will play ball in the afternoon and in the evening the Junior oratorical contest will take place. Tuesday will be devoted to alumni and fraternity events and the annual meeting of the board of trustees. The graduating exercises will be held on Wednesday when the address will be de- livered by His Excellency Chang Yin Tang, Chinese minister to the United States, His subject will be “America’s Part in the Rejuvenation of China.” The graduating class this year will be quite large, in fact the largest in the history of the institu. tion. K. G. E. MEMORIAL SERVICES.—The | members of Bellefonte Castle, No. 357, Knights of the Golden Eagle and Queen Temple No. 148 will hold memorial serv- ices in their hall in Eagle block at 7.30 o'clock on Tuesday evening, May 30th. Samuel D. Gettig will preside over the meeting and a full chorus will furnish the music. The program provides for an invocation by Rev. C. W. Winey and the memorial address by Rev. John Hewitt, while Rev. J. F. Hower will also deliver an eulogy of the deceased mem- bers. Other exercises will be recitations by Miriam Hazel and Mary Showers, a solo by Thelma Tate and a duet by the Rider children. It has been over nine- teen months since there has been a death in the ranks of the K. G. E., though since the organization of the Castle in 1896 nine- teen members have passed into the great beyond while the Ladies of the K. G. E. have lost but one member by death, Mrs. Maggie Thompson, who died September 23rd, 1907. a————— A] om — ~—John Hoover, eldest son of Norman M. Hoover, years ago a resident of Belle- fonte, died at Pasco, Washington, May 6th, 1911. Remains interred at Little Rock, Ark, which place became Mr, Hoover's home after leaving Bellefonte, i | | quantity of drylumber stored in the base- ment of their plant and all of it was under water. Just how much of it can be redried so as to be of use cannot be told but Mr. Yeager estimates his damage at from $1,000 to $1,500. A large smoke stack at the plant tumbled to the ground owing to one of the guy wire posts being washed away. The dam itself was very lit- tle damaged, the superstructure on the breast at the west side being the only portion washed away. This was the only damage done in this immediate vicinity, except for a large hole washed in the west bank of the stream just below the breast. Raymond Miller, messenger boy at the Western Union, had about as thrilling an experience in the flood as anybody. His mother lives in one of the row of houses near the Nittany furnace and when the water began to rise so rapidly they moved as much of their household goods as possible to the second floor. While engaged at this work their pig pen with two good sized pigs in it floated off. Raymond could not bear to see the pigs drown and he waded the water waist deep and finally reached the pen where it had lodged against the Lewisburg rail- road bridge above the Yeager Swing fac- tory and saved the pigs. A washing ma- chine and ice cream freezer were among the articles washed down stream and the owner of the former chased it down toward Milesburg but we are unable to say whether he recovered it or not. The source of the high water was at the head of Greens valley in the Nittany mountain. There it rained hard and steadily for possibly two hours before the big storm late Friday afternoon and that had much the nature of a cloud burst in that section. The result was a torrent of water swept down the ravine into the stream that comes down along the pike on Nittany mountain. At the watering trough the trough itself was carried across the road and lodged against the opposite side of the mountain. Tons of rock were washed down the ravine and piled on the road so that they blocked traffic. At one place the road was washed out so that a temporary bridge had to be built. From that point down through the mountain and into the farming sec- tion the path of the flood is plainly dis- cernible by the destruction it caused. William H. Noll had just put down some water pipe along the side of the stream to a spring in the mountain and two hun- dred feet of this was washed away. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keller and Mr. and Mrs. William Keller, of Lancaster, took an automobile trip through Pennsvalley on Friday and had supper at the Old Fort. Not being able to get over the mountain they were compelled to spend the night in Centre Hall. The story of the devastation between - Half of the east wall of hatchery building was pushed building is partially inside of it a mass of mud that made it look like a i feet under water. In the fourteen according to superintendent 55,000 adult trout, and most of them were washed away and carried out into the stream. A number were caught in a seine and returned to the ponds after the | water subsided, but the number was | small compared to those washed | away. The story is not true that hun. | dreds of them were carried out into the | fields where they died when the water re- ceded. The bridge leading from the fish hatch- ery to the Shugert lower farm was car- ried away, as was that leading from the ponds, Pleasant Gap railroad station to the old fig given in this section of the county for the past year, was that in the Pres. Hamilton farm. At the Ross farm the spring house was ! ing {In | Centre county were visited by another | terrible storm and people hereabouts are | beginning to have faith in the prediction ' in Dr. Jayne's almanac that we are pass- i through an unusual cyclonic period. Bald Eagle and Nittany valleys it rained quite hard, with some hail, while ‘over in Pennsvalley, from Centre Hall , down the storm was of great violence, the | worst in that locality for years. Consid- | erable damage was done in the vicinity ‘of Spring Mills. The barn of W. O. i Griffith, were Gramley was struck by lightning and one | end of the roof blown off. The telephone | fixtures in his house were also burned WALKER. —Mrs. Ida Orris Walker, wife of E. L. Walker, died at her home in East Orange, N. J., about four o'clock on Sun- day afternoon, after only a few hour's iliness, and her death was naturally a great shock to her many friends in Belle- fonte and Centre connty. | She was a daughterof the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Orris and was born in Milesburg, where she grew towomanhood and spent the early part of her life. Later she made her home with her sister, Mrs. Elmer E. Davis, in this place, while she very ably filled the position of stenog- rapher for the late ex-Judge A. O. Furst. out. The dam at Farmers Mills went . On October 16th, 1907, she was united in out and a big volume of water rushed | marriage to Mr. E. L. Walker and since down the valley inundating a portion of | that time has made her home in East Spring Mills and the public highway for Orange, N. J. She was a member of the quite a distance. Numerous trees, fences Methodist church since early girlhood and and small buildings were blown down | always took an active interestin the work and some corn and oats fields badly connected with the church and Sunday | washed. Reports state that the storm !school. Of a bright and sunshiny tem- was also very severe up in Warriorsmark | ——One of the most successful bene- byterian church at Lemont, last Friday | perament she was a woman who made | many friends and one and all deplore | the untimely death of herself and son, whose birth cost her her life. The remains of Mrs. Walker and her , baby boy were brought to Bellefonte in , ! washed away and S. W. Zettle's new evening. Notwithstanding the fact that | the same casket on Tuesday evening and home, the old Dale farm, came in for its ' one of the greatest storms known to this | share of the filth. Several small buildings ' gection of the country raged during the were sw.pt away when the bridge there jute afternoon, it interfered but slightly went out, the cellar of the house was fill- ed clear full of corn field and other litter and much of the fencing destroyed. At Dr. Hayes’ "black barn” farm, where eign talent contributed their best, both Daniel Shuey is the tenant, the water i; music and elocution, but to Mrs. Da- was so high in the stables thatthe horses iq McMutrie, of Altoona, great credit and cattle were saved from drowning only must be given. Mrs. McMutrie, who after most trying work. The farm im-. hag been known to the public throughout plements had to be tied in the implement Central Pennsylvauia since she was a | shed to keep them from floating off and | child as an elocutionist, excels as an | a man who was in the creamery house jmoersonator, and it was to her reputa- separating cream found himself in water | ion no doubt, the great success of their waist deep before he realized what had happened. The little bridge leading from the flat below this barn over to the hill side was one of the only two left standing between Pleasant Gap and Bellefonte. Foster Shearer's corn field was entirely washed out so that he will have to plough the ground again and replant it. The pretty meadow on the D. M. Kline farm scarcely shows any trace of the fine barley set it had before the flood. About a third of the fence along there is gone and all of the stone top dressing of the pike is spread over a field that formerly looked like a garden. Joe Rightnour’s blacksmith shop at “Humes’ Mill” was submerged and the filth of the flood deposited there in great quantities. The bridge at the foot of Rishel’s hill rode away and the pretty yards and gar- dens of that little settlement there are sorry reminders of how beautiful they looked before the storm. At Ax Mann the cellar was swept right | out from under Geo. Miller's store, but as he had very few goods stored there his’ loss is not great other than to the build. ing. The steel and concrete bridge at that place held but the abutment at one: end of it was washed clear out. At the home of Wallace White, just be- low the cider mill the attractive yard and garden he has been working several years to beautify is a sight, though not seriously damaged. Possibly more damage was done at the property of James E. Williams than any- where else. The barn that stands on the bank of the creek just where the sub-way goes under the railroad tracks was almost ruined. Half of it was swept clear away and the main portion twisted off its foun- dations so that the mows above fell through and their contents crushed the two cows in the stable to death. The bridge leading from the pike over to the Williams home was carried away also. The meadow at Harvey Griffith's place is terribly washed, many of those pretty willows bordering the stream torn clear out and piles of drift spread all over it. The Lewisburg railroad fill at the big turn just below the Griffith place was so badly washed out that many cars of stone had to be dumped there before it was safe for the traffic of trains. The worst looking place in all the trail of filth and wreckage that marks the path of a spring fliod was at the toll gate. There the water reached a height of three feet six inches on the first floor of the home of Isaac Miller, the toll house keeper. So suddenly did the wa- ters rise that not a thing could be gotten out of the way, and tables, carpet, furni- ture and all were submerged and left cov- ered with about three inches of slimy, illsmelling mud. The spring house and small out buildings were carried away, the bridge over the stream went out and Saturday afternoon there was every ap- pearance of a mess that might well have discouraged strong hearted folk; though the venerable toll taker was sitting out in the road in an arm chair, with a pair of rubber boots on, as placid as a May morning, taking toll as if nothing had happened. A large building lodged under it was all that kept the Nittany Valley railroad trestle from falling into the stream, for the supporting trusses were all ‘knocked out and it will be some days before Supt. Gardner gets trains going again on his mine bank trunk line. All the low ground at the Nittany iron works was submerged and the stone houses of the company along the pike got cellars and first floors full of the flood. Shovels had to be used to get the mud out of the living apartments and we know now that there are many people who will appreciate what this office has to undergo an average of once a year. On Tuesday of this week portions of 'with the committee's well planned ar- : rangements for filling the church. Local ! talent, talent from State College and for- | entertainment can be attributed. | ——e Marriage License. | James F. Shilling, Bellefonte, and Liz- zie Gilliland, State Coilege. James E. Stover and Mary C. Martin, rm. | C. Mowery and Rebecca Guise- white, Aaronsburg. ! Adam Jeginak and Mary Kreaska, arenee. | Frank Albright, State College, and | Grace B. Grove, Spring Mills. | McClellan Williams, of Port Matilda, and Pearl Copeland, Osceola Mills. | Archie B. Brewer, Philipsburg, and Mary A. Tuttle, Asoph, Tioga county. — ee GY | For FRUIT GROWERS.—A long list of | dates for additional meetings in the sec- ond spring series of orchard demonstra- tions in the public meeting model orchards | of the State have been announced. Among the others are the following that will in- terest, and it is hoped will benefit the : fruit growers of Centre county: May 26th. At the orchard of Newton C. Neidigh, State College. | May 27th. At the orchard of Mrs. ' Elizabeth D. Green, at Briarly. — aes HeaTON—RUNYON.—Hensyl L. Heaton, | a former resident of Unionville but now "a corporal in the regular army, and Miss ' Lucy M. Runyon, of Altoona, were mar- ried in that city on May 15th, by Rev. Vaughn T. Rue. Corporal Heaton has been in the army the past twelve years ‘and has been stationed at various forts throughout the country He was one of the guards at the St. Louis exposition. ALBRIGHT—GROVE. — Frank Albright and Miss Grace B. Grove, both of Spring Mills, were married at the Methodist parsonage in that place, last Saturday by the pastor, Rev. J. Max Lantz. HouUsER.—Mrs. Mary Houser, wife of Daniel Houser, died at her home near Centre Hall on Sunday morning, aged seventy years. She had been in poor health a number of years and her death was not unexpected. Her maiden name was Corl, and her parents were Benjamin and Elizabeth Corl, early settlers of Pennsvalley. She was the last but one of a numerous family, her brother Peter being the surviving member. She also leaves her husband and two daughters, Mrs. Luther Krebs, of Denver, Col, and Mrs. Robert Bloom at home. She was a life-long member of the Reformed church and a conscientious christian lady. Rev. J. C. Stover officiated at the funeral which was held at ten o'clock on Tuesday morn- ing, burial being made in the Centre Hall cemetery. : | MARKLE.—On Sunday evening Miss Mary Ann Markle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Markle, died at the home of her parents in Tyrone after five months illness with a complication of diseases. She was born in Centre Hall, this coun- ty, September 2nd, 1883, hence was 27 years, 8 months and 19 days old. When she was fourteen years of age her par- ents moved to Tyrone where they have since lived. She is survived by her par- ents, one brother, James C., of Lewis- town, and a sister, Mrs. Roland Krebs, of Altoona. Funeral services were held at her late home at two o'clock on Wednes- day afternoon by her pastor, Rev. WwW. W. Hartman, of the Methodist church, after which burial was made in the Grand- View compton y ZIMMERMAN.—Samuel Zimmerman, of Milesburg, died at the Bellefonte hospital last Saturday night, of rheumatism, with which he had suffered for several years, He was seventy-five years of age and a veteran of the Civil war. Three children survive. The funeral was held on Tues- day, burial being made in the Advent cemetery. taken to the home of her sister, Mrs. E. | E. Davis, on east Linn street, from where | the funeral was held on Wednesday morn- {ing. The services were in charge of Rev. | R. S. Oyler, of Milesburg, assisted by Rev. { E. H. Yocum, of this place. Mr. L. T. Eddy, of Milesburg, led in the singing of the beautiful hymn, “Jesus, Savior, Pilot Me.” Burial was made in the family lot at Curtin, the pall-bearers being Harry Keller, Henry C. Quigley, Earle C. Tuten, Arthur B. Kimport, J. Kennedy Johnston and James Furst. In addition to her husband those of her parents family who survive to mourn her | untimely death are as follows: Mrs. E. ! E. Davis, of Bellefonte; Mrs. James | Campbell, of Tyrone; Misses Madge and Elizabeth Orris, of Milesburg; and G. P. .Orris, of Bellwood. i The out-of-town people who attended | the funeral were Mr. and Mrs. James Campbell and family, of Tyrone; Misses Madge and Elizabeth Orris, of Milesburg; | Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Orris and family, of | Bellwood; A. F. Walker, of Atlanta, Ga, ! a brother of the bereaved husband; Mr. | and Mrs. Joseph L. Barnhart, of Renovo; | Mrs. J. C. Weaver, of Philadelphia; Mrs Howard Herd and son, of Mill Hall; Mrs. 1 Rachael Thomas, of Philipsburg; Miss | Marie White, of Williamsport, and Mrs. | W. Frank Smith, of Lock Haven. ! | | HAAGEN.—Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Hafer Haagen, wife of Henry L. Haagen, died at their apartments in the Arlington hotel, Tyrone, at two o'clock Sunday | morning of heart trouble and paralysis. | She had been ill the past six months or | more and previous to last Saturday had | suffered two slight strokes. A third on | Saturday night caused her death. She was a daughter of Dr. A. W. Hafer, of this place, and was born at Osceola Mills November 23rd, 1876, so that she was in her thirty-fifth year. On December 8th, 1897, she was united in marriage at Pleasant Gap to Henry L. Haagen, of Ty- rone, and ever since had made her home in that place, her husband up to a year ago assisting his father in the manage- ment of the Arlington hotel. She was a kind and loving wife and mother, a true and devoted friend, and her death is sin- cerely mourned by all who knew her. Surviving her are her husband and two young sons, Richard H.and Philip D. She PraTT.—Riley Pratt, one of the promi- nent and well known citizens of Union- ville, died at his home in that place last Friday afternoon. He had been in poor health the past year and had been con- fined to bed six weeks or more prior to his death. Deceased was born in the Berkshire Hills, Mass., on August 30th, 1847, so that at his death he was 73 years, 9 months and 19 days old. He was educated in the public schools of his native State and at the Litchfield academy in Connecticut. Prior to locating in Unionville some thirty or more years ago he lived in Lewistown and Tyrone. For the past forty-six years he was employed as a traveling salesman for a Philadelphia wholesale notion house, in which he was very successful. He was a man who was greatly respected through- out Centre county and as evidence of this fact he was elected justice of the peace of Unionville borough thirteen years ago and has been re-elected at various times since so that he has held the office continuously and his death leaves that borough with- out such an official. He was a member of the Lewistown Lodge of Masons, and the oldest Past Grand of that lodge. He wasjalso a member of the Elks and of the Unionville Lodge, I. O. O. F. When a young man he became a member of the Presbyterian church and was steadfast in his devotion thereto all his life. His wife, who was a Miss Boyer, of Ty- rone, died less than two years ago, but surviving him are the following sons: Howard R., of Baltimore; Frank W., of Ambridge; David R., of Tyrone; Seth R., Rev. James A., and one daughter, Bessie L., at home. His funeral on Monday afternoon was largely attended. A large delegation of Knights Templar from Philipsburg and Clearfield on their way to Williamsport, stopped off to pay their last respects to their beloved brother. The funeral serv- ices were conducted by Rev. Bergen, of Petersburg, and burial was made in the ! Unionville cemetery. I u HALL. —After an illness of a year or over with kidney trouble Andrew Hall died at his home on Dix Run, in Union township, on Monday. He was born in that township and was sixty-seven years of age. He was a farmer by occupation and an industrious and progressive citi- zen. During the Civil war he served asa private in Company G, Fifty-first regi® ment, and participated in many battles’ in one of which he was hit on the head by a spent bullet, knocked down and stunned for a few minutes, but recovered quickly and continued in the fight. He is survived by his wife and the fol- lowing children: Perry, Robert, Homer, and Mrs. Howard Scholl, all of Union township. He also leaves three brothers and one sister, namely: Daniel, of Unionville; David, of Dix Run; William, in the west, and Mrs. Eliza Peters, of Sparks, Nevada. The funeral was held yesterday morning at ten o'clock, burial being made in the upper cemetery at Unionville. t | | Lucas.—Morris Lucas, a former resi- dent of Unionville, died in the Clearfield hospital on Sunday. Upwards of a year ago he became afflicted with gangrene in one of his legs and three months ago was compelled to have the limb amputated: The operation, however, failed to rid him of the disease and his death on Sunday was the result. He was about fifty years of age and until his health failed had been employed also leaves her father, Dr. Hafer, of this G., of New Haven, Conn.; Miss Jane F- noon, burial being made in Grandview | cemetery, Tyrone. | | I OWENS.—Miss Minnie Owens, daughter of William H. and Cora E. Owens, died at her parents home at Axe Mann last Fri- day morning after a brief illness with cerebro meningitis. She was born in Spring township and was aged 16 years, 4 months and 17 days. She was a bright | and interesting girl and her death was a | sad blow to her surviving parents, five brothers and three sisters. Funeral serv- ices were held in the Methodist church at Axe Mann at two o'clock on Sunday afternoon. Rev. Engler officiated and was assisted by Rev. C. C. Shuey. Burial was made in the Union cemetery, this place. | | ELLENBERGER.—Mrs. Mary Ellenberger, wife of Samuel Ellenberger, died quite suddenly on Sunday at her home at Gatesburg, after being sick only a few hours. She was a daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Gates and was born at Gatesburg seventy-six years ago, being the last one of her parents family. Sur- viving her are her husband, one son, Prof. I. C. M. Ellenberger, and one daugh- ter, Mrs. Ira Gates, of Gatesburg. The funeral was held at two o'clock on Tues- day afternoon, burial being made in the Ross church cemetery. ! I I BREON.—George D. Breon, a native of Centre county, died in Brawley, Cal, on Tuesday, of tuberculosis. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Breon and was born at Potters Mills in 1872. When a youth his parents moved to Altoona where he learned the carpenter trade. Later he worked in the passenger car shop of the Pennsylvania railrosd company until fail- ing health overtook him when he moved to California. He is survived by his wife, two sisters and one brother. Burial was and Talmage, of Bellefonte. The funeral | was held at two o'clock on Tuesday after- | made at Colton, Cal., yesterday. as a railroad engineer. He is survived by place, three sisters and one brother,name- | his wife and one daughter, living in Clear- ly: Mrs. F. S. Hamilton and Miss Alpha field; also his aged parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lucas, of Dix Run; one brother, Walter, of Viaduct, and two sisters, Mrs. Howard Miles, of Dix Run, and Mrs. Mabel Malone, of Pitcairn. The remains were brought to the home of his parents on Tuesday from where the funeral was held yesterday morning. —At Mrs. Mollie L. Valentine's card party given at the Bush house Tuesday night, three tablesof bridge were in play. — rs: Memorial Day Orders. Gregg Post No. 95, Dept. of Pa., G. A. R. BELLEFONTE, Pa., May 22nd, 1911. Comrades: The passage of time brings to us once more Memorial day, the festi- val of the deac. ‘To the end that we may on Hublers- Meyers 4:30 p. his t Snydertown at 10 al al a. m.; burg 2 p. m.; Zion 4:30 p. m.; cemetery 2:30 p. m.,, and Shiloh m. : : i 8 £2