Bellefonte, Pa., July 14, 1911. To CoORRESPONDENTS.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——The Presbyterian Sunday school on Sunday decided to hold a picnic at Hecla park on Wednesday, Aug. 22nd. ——The annual meeting of the Nittany Country club will be held at the club house tomorrow (Saturday) evening. ~The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs- Lewis Daggett, who was born on the 1st day of July, has been named Jane Orvis Daggett. ——The repairs on the Methodist church are so rapidly nearing completion that all services will be held in the church on Sunday, July 16th. ——There are two more weeks of the trout fishing season, but for all the trout now being caught the season might as well be closed at once. ——The ladies of Boalsburg Reformed church will hold a social on Saturday evening, July 15th, for the benefit of the church. The public is cordially invited. ——0On account of the extreme weather the consistory of the Reformed church of Bellefonte have decided to omit all even- ing services from their worship from now until the 1st of September. ~—A little son who weighed seven and one-half pounds, and whose name is Jo- seph Graham Hughes, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hughes, at the Belle- fonte hospital two weeks ago. ~The Jared Harper house on West High street recently vacated by Mr. John Wetzel is now being repapered and paint- ed, and as soon as the work is completed will be occupied by Howard Stover and family. ——John McCoy claims to be the first farmer in Centre county to finish harvest- ing, as he hauled in the last of his crop of thirty-two acres of wheat on Monday on the farm at the McCoy & Linn iron works. ——Mary Orvis Harvey is the name of a ten pound baby girl born to Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Harvey, of Philadelphia, on Wednes- day afternoon. Mrs. Harvey is a daugh- ter of Judge and Mrs. Ellis L. Orvis, of this place. ——Next Sunday the second quarterly communion service will be held in the! local United Evangelical church at 10:30 a.m. and 7.30 p. m. Rev. H. A. Benfer, presiding elder of Center district, will preach and officiate at the evening serv- ice. ~The four hundred Pennsylvania railroad shop foremen, with their fami- lies and friends, of Altoona, will picnic at Hecla park next Tuesday, coming down from the Mountain city in a special train which will be taken directly through to the park. ——The dinner at the Country club last Saturday evening, given by Miss Mary Blanchard, followed by a dance in the pavilion at Hecla park, was in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Reynolds, of PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD TICKET OF- FICE RoBBED.—The ticket office in the this place was robbed in broad daylight on Monday evening, and, although the local officials refuse to state the exact 6:40 o'clock in the evening, when the men were away from the depot and the watchman had not yet come on duty, and | it was evidently the work of professional yeggmen. From the way the robbery | was committed there must have been at least three, and perhaps four men in the gang. Entrance to the ticket office was ef- fected through the window in the ladies | waiting room. The screws were removed from the lower right hand corner of the | screen and the latter was then bent out- ward a sufficient distance to permit of a the “bank,” which is the change drawer | used in the sale of tickets. It took at’ through the window and securing the | money and there must have been one or | two confederates on watch. Experienced | i | from the depot to be beyond detection. —f pretty home Haven, on Wednesday of of Rev. and Mrs. Wilford P. Shriner, Edward Day Curtis, a member of Lock Haven Normal school faculty. The church in this place. —fA person can't help but swelter this hot weather, and you'll swelter just as much outside of the Scenic as in it. The big argument in favor of the latter watching motion pictures of such interest electric fan always keeps the air pure and in good circulation so that it is not un- comfortable. Try it once. ~The eleventh annual reunion of the Reformed people of the Lock Haven, turning leave the park at 7.30 p.m. The Rev. Wilson F. Moore, superintendent of least two men to do the job of going | Bethany Orphan's home, Womelsdorf, will deliver the address at 10.30 a. m. ~——Maurice Yeager on Monday re- burg, who shot the animal while cn a visiting with her sister, Mrs. F. W- J. day, will be for two weeks visiting with relatives Selinsgrove. —Mrs. Blanche Y. Schloss, of Bellefonte, has amount of money taken, it was in the bride will be remembered by many peo- been registered at “The Stenton,” Philadelphia, neighborhood of sixty-six dollars. The job ple in Bellefonte from the time when her during the past year. was done some time between 6:10 and . father was pastor of the Methodist —Mrs. William Hughes, of Hollidaysburg, is the guest of Miss Mary A. McGill, at Mrs. Charles | Gilmore's home, on Linn street. ~Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Reynolds have been ¢: ~Miss Helen Crissman and her brother Luther . are in Sunbury; having gone down to spend an 1 is that while you are sweltering you are indefinite time with their aunt, Mrs. M. L. Hend- ricks. | that you forget the heat. Then the large —Mrs. Moerschbacher is entertaining her sister: Miss Schloss, of Philadelphia, who will be her guest for the two weeks she is visiting in Belle fonte. ~Mrs. Henry P. Harris, Mrs. Stewart and Mrs. C. M. Parrish with her two children, were guests for the greater part of last week, at the Nittany country club. man crawling through, after the wooden | Bellefonte, Nittany Valley and Hublers- » —nfr and Mrs. J. H. McClure. of New York: slide in the window was forced. No at. burg charges, will be held at Hecla park spent the first few days of July in Bellefonte, tempt was made to force the safe, the | Thursday, July 27th. A special train Ruests of Mr. McClure's parents, Mr. and Mrs. robbers being content to get away with A will leave Bellefonte at 8.15 a. m. and re- James McClure. ! ==Mrs. George VanDyke, of Altoona, with her daughter Mary spent the Fourth of July in Belle fonte, guests of Mrs. VanDyke's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Noll. | guests of Mrs. McGuinnis’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Schofield, for several days, which included yeggmen could do the whole job in less ceived a monster moose head from his ; the Fourth of July. than ten minutes and get far enough away i brother-in-law, J M. Bentley, of Pitts- : —Richard Brown, who has been living in Balti- more for the several years since leaving Belle- fonte, spent the vacation week with relatives and When the robbery was discovered at i hunting trip last fall on the shores of ; friends in Bellefonte. 6:40 o'clock in the evening there was not | Tamaugame Bay, in the north of Maine. ! ~~Mrs. Ben Curry with her little baby, of Pitts. a person within sight of the depot who An idea of the size of the head. as well burg, and Miss Abbie Cook, of Kansas City, Mo., could even be suspicioned, although later 2s the animal, may be had from the are both in Bellefonte on a visit to their father, Mr. Charles F. Cook. ~Mrs. George Jacobs, of Philadelphia, is in ' A. Aiken, who left Bellefonte Satur. —Mr. and Mrs. McGuinnis, of Indiana, were —William Harper Brouse, who is with the Eyre- up and locked up as suspicious charac. Spread of six feet and were massive in | ters. At the same time the men who | proportion. committed the robbery had either gotten | safely away, were in hiding or walking | i | the streets of the town entirely Ynshe; of larceny, made an attempt to escape | Work for the year at the Scotland Soldiers Orphan Shoemaker Construction company at Northum® berland, has been spending a vacation in Belle. ; fonte, visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. ——One morning last week Joe Powell, S. Brouse. of Mounment, who is in jail on a charge! —Miss Daisy Brisbin having completed her — a —— ow — nic at Hecla Park on the Fourth of July | probably be roaming the wilds. He tore { —After spending the greater part of the past ater _— (and had it not been for the vigilant in. | Indra) Rook a in Bellfoni to soend the Tue Moose PicNic.—The Moose pic- | spection of sherifi Hurley would now | spangler. iid was the only near attraction for Belle- | tonters and was fairly well attended from this end of the line, eighteen hundred tickets having been sold at the Bellefonte station of the Central Railroad of Penn- sylvania. The entire attendance, how- ever, was .iot nearly as large as antici- pated. Only six hundred tickets were sold at the Mill Hall station and very few at intermediate stations, so that the entire crowd did not aggregate over three thousand people. A good many of those who did attend went there to see the air ship flights of Walter Bauman, of Lock Haven, but in this they were disappointed, as that gen- | tleman claimed that he failed to receive | pression seemed to be, however, that he | did not want to go up. The base ball | games advertised were played and there | was dancing all day with band concerts at various intervals. i The watch offered by the lodge to the | young lady receiving the highest number of votes for "gypsy queen” of the picnic {was won by Miss Florence Hamilton, | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hamil- ton, of Penn street. While the picnic | was a pleasant day's outing it was not a | big financial success for the Moose. i i oa ADDITIONAL TEACHERS ELECTED.—At up some of the flooring in his cell and | year in Atlantic City and Philadelphia, Miss Katie - . Ww. - i Linc guests of Mr. gndMrs Be a meeting of the Bellefonte school board N vent idle, —George, the 12-year-old son of Mr. | ya lo¥ aint Fawerd Sekde of and Mrs. Sterling Simcox, living on the | sciences in the Bellefonte High school, Halfmoon road four miles south of Phil. |and Miss Ellen Levy was elected as an ipsburg, disappe ared from his home on | extra member of the High school faculty. Monday. Any information as to his where- Mr. Steidle is a graduate of The Pennsyl- abouts will be gratefully received by the vania State College in the class of 1911, distracted parents. and stood highin his class. He will suc- ——The annual Sunday-School picnic of | ceed Joseph E. Shultz, who declined a the United Evangelical church will be | re.clection in order to accept a profes. held at Hecla park, Saturday, July 15th. | sorship in Perkiomen Seminary. In ad- The special train will leave Bellefonte 2t | dition to teaching the sciences Mr. Steidle 8:15 a. m. Trains will stop at Pleasant wil} also have charge of the athletics of View for the accommodation of those | the school. who attend from there. Miss Levy and her work as a teacher ~——On Tuesday afternoon Ellis Way, | are too well known to need extended who lives near Unionville, fell from aload i comment. She was a teacher in the of hay to the barn floor, alighting on his | Bellefonte schools for a number of years head and sustaining a concussion of the | up until last year, when she went west to brain. Up until yesterday there was very | kelp nurse a sick brother. little improvement in his condition. which | TI is considered quite serious. | BLANCHARD MAN Has Crose CALL.— —It must have been the hot weather, | Lettel Clark, of Blancliar], came near for in no other way can we account for | losing his life on Monday by being over. % 3 come by foul air while cleaning out a well barber Beck shedding that luxuriant hir- for Samuel Gardner, at Beech Greek. suit appendage of his which he has so | > Ee a proudly worn for many years, but he shaved it off on Sunday and now looks | Dardly reached the bottom until he was | overcome and dropped over. John Fritz as fresh as a tender youth. | and Frank Kunes saw his plight and vol- untecsid to go to his rescue. They were lowered into the well and succeeded in tying a rope around Clark’s body, but were so affected by the noxious gas that they both were limp when hauled out of the well. Clark was totally unconscious when hauled to the surface and it took a phy- sician more than an hour to revive him. Though a sick man for a day or so, he is now all right again. ~The farm house of William Miller, about a mile east of Julian, was totally destroyed by fire a few days ago. Only Mrs. Miller and her daughter were at home when the fire occurred and they were unable to save any of the contents. Mr. Miller had five hundred dollars in- surance on the house and one hundred on the furniture, but this is not half the amount of the loss. ~The little son of Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Woodcock was born at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson, at Centre Furnace, where Mrs. Woodcock and the children will spend the greater part of the summer. ——Rev. C. B. Winey, pastor of the United Brethren church, is attending the national Christian Endeavor convention at Atimtic City this week, but will be home for his regular church services on Sunday. On Sunday evening he will speak about the work of the convention. Songs of Fannie Crosby, the famous com- poser, will also be sung that evening. ———Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Buddinger have announced the engagement of their daugh- ter Edith to J. Ellis Harvey, of Orviston, the wedding to take piace the latter part of this month. Mr. Harvey is the general manager of the Hayes Run Fire Brick company, while Miss Buddinger is agrad- uate of Birmingham seminary and a young woman of exceeding popularity. ——J. Adam Bebe, the able young Con- gressman from Minnesota, will deliver his lecture “Our Nation; Its Problems and Progress,” in the auditorium at State College next Friday evening, July 21st, at 8 o'clock. Congressman Bebe is not only a forceful writer but a fluent speakerand it will be well worth the admission price of 25 cents to hear him. dropped through to the lower corridor. Then with a piece of iron torn from his bed dug a hole in the wall but failed to get the job completed when the sheriff made his rounds of inspection in the morning. Although Powell made an at- tempt to cover up his work until the following night it was discovered by the | sheriff and now the gentleman occupies | a steel cell. a] NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Madeline Rowe, of Curtin street, is vis. iting with friends in Dayton, Ohio. last week with his parents in this place. Mrs. E, J. Wilkinson. —Mrs. E. H. Richard, of Linn street. is enter. | taining Mrs. Hibbs and her daughter, Miss Mary | Hibbs, of Norristown. : —Jacob Jury ison atrip to Millersburg, York one of whom is quite ill. —Joseph D. Mitchell, of Burnham, spent the greater part of the week visiting with his father and sisters in Bellefonte. —Miss Fryberger, who has been visiting at the Wm. Brachbill home, left Bellefonte Wednesday for her home at Philipsburg. —Mrs. Charles Kirby Rath, of Elizabeth, N. J., | smith. who had been visiting Mrs. Kirk will be | ¢rson went to Snow Shoe, is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. | Mrs. Rhinesmith’s guest, while Norman is doing | Te™mained at Hecla. Crider, having come to Bellefonte Monday. —Albert Canfield left yesterday for Pittsburg, where having secured a position through J. E. Quigley, he will begin his work immediately. —Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ball, of Philadelphia, are visiting friends here and at Axe Mann. Prior to her marriage Mrs. Ball was Miss Mina Daw" | —Mrs. Herdick and her daughter, Miss Her- dick, of Albany, are the guests of Miss Powell, whom she is entertaining at the Brockerhoff house. —-J. M. Bentley of Pittsburg, and Edward Har. per, of Curtin, are now away on a two week's hunting and fishing trip in the wilds of Nova Scotia. Mrs. Wilbur F. Reeder, who a short time ago left Bellefonte to make her home in California, is preparing to spend some time in travel in the Orient. —Walter Rankin, of Harrisburg, was one of Bellefonte’s many young men, who returned to spend their Fourth with their relatives and friends at home. —Miss Carrie Rankin was with her niece, Mrs. Ben Curry, when she came from Woodlawn F ri- day of last week. Miss Rankin expects to spend some time with her relatives in Bellefont=. —Mr. and Mrs. George Grimm had as their house guests for the first few days of July, Fred Smith, of Rochester, Pa.. who was in Bellefonte to spend the Fourth of July with her sister, Mrs- Grimm. —Mrs. Andrew Brockerhoff and her two chi’. dren, whose home is in Philadelphia. are expected | in Bellefonte this week, and while here will be the guests of Dr. and Miss Brockerhoff at their home on Bishop street. —Mrs. W. A. Pierce, of Latrobe, has been spend” ing a few days in Bellefonte, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cook. Mrs. Pierce, whose son was | married to Miss Cook during the winter, is on he” way to her summer home at Milford, Del. —Miss Frances Elmore, who is an instructor in the schools at Pittsburgh, spent a week in Belle. fonte with her aunt, Mrs. Wm. B. Rankin, on her entire summer with her mother in New York State. —Mr. and Mrs. Clarence G. Harper and chil dren, of Lynn, Mass., are now in Bellefonte visit- ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harper; and grandpa is just as happy among his grandchil® dren as he is when writing a ten thousand dol lar life insurence policy. —Dr. and Mrs. Louis E. Reber, of Madison, Wis., came to Pennsylvania the fore part of last week and will visit for some time with relatives at State College and in Nittany valley. While Dr. Reber has been to State College several times since going to Madison, it is Mrs. Reber's first visit to Centre county since leaving four years ago. : —Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Brew with their two children arrived in Bellefonte Wednesday, for a short stay with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Fenlan, ex. pecting upon leaving to have their daughter Lu. cy remain for a prolonged visit with her aunt and uncle. The Brews have been visiting at Ridg- way and are on their return trip to their home in New York city. and Perry county on a visit to his three brothers, | ! Murray returned to Bellefonte the early part of last week, expecting to stay with her father, Ter- | rence Murray, until fall. | =Dr. and Mrs. George F. Harris left Bellefonte | Thursday of last week, expecting to make a short visit in Philadelphia before going to Cape May: ! where they will be on account of the indisposi’ | | tion of both, for several weeks. 1 —Col. H. S. Taylor, wife and six children, Miss Gertrude Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gehret ; and niece, Miss Helen Love, were among the Bellefonters who went on the first excursion to | Atlantic City last Thursday morning. —Mrs. Albert Engles Blackburn, of Philadel. phia, has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler since the beginning of last week. Mrs. Blackburn is alone in Bellefonte, the children be- Harris Heylmun, of Pitcairn, spent part of | ing for the summer with Dr. Blackburn's rela. | | tives at Fishertown. several parts of his motor and conse-| Miss McNeill, of Haddonfield, N. J., came to | —Miss C. Ella Rhone was in Bellefonte a day quently couldn't go up. The general im- | Fellefonte last night fora visit with her aunt, | during the past week on her way to Boalsburg, i | where she anticipates visiting for an indefinite , time. Miss Rhone, whose home is in California, has come east to spend the entire summer with relatives in Centre county. =Dr. and Mrs, Hall. of Wilmington, Delaware, who are spending the week with Mrs. Hall's rela’ tives at Boalsburg, will be the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Har:y Keller. Dr. and Mrs. Hall are making a short visit in Centre county before | leaving for Nebraska, where they will be until | fall. | —Norman Kirk and his sister Lois are in Clear- field county for an indefinite stay; Lois having | returned home with her aunt, Mrs. David Rhine" —Carl Royer. of Tyrone, spent Sunday in Belle- fonte visiting old friends. —M. A. Landsy returned to Bellefonte on Tues- day after spending two weeks in Philadelphia. —Miss Ruth Musser, of Altoona, is visiting Mr. ~~ —Mrs. William Kelley and two daughters, of and Mrs. L. H. Musser, on Howard street. Scottdale, are visiting relatives in this place. —Mrs. John A. Rogers, of Philadelphia, is a —Mr. and Mrs. Guy Linn, of Beaver Falls, spent guest of Mrs. D. H. Hastings, at her home on Al- several days last week with friends in this place. legheny street. | —Edward L. Gates spent last week with rela- —Charles Barnes, who is now working in Pitts- tives in Johnstown, returning home Friday mom- burg, spent his vacation of a week with his moth- ing. er in Bellefonte. ~—Miss Maude Piskey left on Seturday for —Miss Annie Powers went to Philadelphia last * Pittsburgh, where she will visit relatives for some Thursday to spend ten days with her sister, Mrs. time. Charles Massey. —W. Harrison Walker has been in Rochester, N. Y.. this week attending the grand conclave of Shriners. —Mrs. William R. Jenkins and daughter Doro- thy went to Harrisburg on July first to remain for two months. | =—John D. Meyer, treasurer of the Blair County | Title and Trust company, Altoona, was a Sunday —Claire Seibert, of Tyrone, spent his mid-sum- . mer vacation in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Seibert. : —Postmaster Philip D. Foster, wife and son Philip Jr., were guests of Mr. and Mrs, G. Fred ' Musser over Tuesday night. | =Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bathurst, of Fleming: ton, were guests for several days the fore part of | visitor in Bellefonte. last week of Mrs. Elsworth Miller, at the Forge. | —James H. Corl came in from Chicago on Mon" —After visiting for a week with relatives in and | day of last week and remained until Sunday with about Bellefonte and at Pleasant Gap, Ephriam his family in this place. Keller returned to his home in Philadelphia on ' —William Long went to Geneva, N. Y., last Saturday. | Thursday to install a smokeless burner on the —Miss Grace Mann, who came from her home boilers of a large laundry plant. at Beech Creek two weeks ago, to attend the fun, | —Mrs. Harry Houser and daughter Ruth, of eral of George B. Flack, remained in Bellefonte | Colona. Beaver county, are visiting friends here for a visit with relatives. . and in different parts of the county. —Mrs. Thomas Moore, of Philadelphia, arrived | —Joe Fauble came in from Monongahela City in Bellefonte Wednesday for her customary mid- on Sunday morning to see the family, going from ' summer visit with her mother. Mrs, William | here the same evening on a ten days trip to New Dawson, on Spring street. i York city and the Shore. =Mrs. Perry Stiver will come from her home in ~Mrs. William Kerr and son William, of Oma. , Freeport, Ill. the latter part of this week for an ha, Neb., passed through Bellefonte on Monday extended visit with friends in this county and at | on their way to Centre Hall to see the former's : her old home in Lock Haven. | brother, James B. Strohm, whose condition is —Edgar Burnside. of Chicago, Ill, came to Sradually growing worse. Bellefonte on July 3rd and spent the week of the | —Isador Baum came home on Sunday, July 2nd, Fourth with his many friends in this place; leav: for his first visit since leaving here eighteen ing on Sunday for the Windy city. | months ago, since which time he has been located —Miss Madge Gilmore, of Philadelphia, and , in Coffeyville, Kan. He is not at all changed and the Misses Louise and Anne Garman, of Williams. | While he likes the rush of business in the west he port, came to Bellefonte the latter part of June to Was genuinely pleased to get back to Bellefonte, attend the funeral of Mary Ceader. | if only for a few weeks vacation. —Miss Mary Bertram returned home the latter part of last week from a visit with friends in Al. toona and was accompanied by Miss Anna Hes. ' ser, who was her guest for several days. =Dr. W. H. Schuyler and daughter, Miss Elo. ise, of Centre Hall, left on Monday for New York State cn a month's vacation. Dr. Schuyler wil; i 40 the Thevlosical Seminary at Auburn to {| =Mrs. Marian Irvin and daughter, Mrs. Hob- | take a two week's special course, after which he bes, with her two children, who were here to at. “1 Join his daughter at Clinton, where the re. tend the funeral of the late George B. Flack, lefy man time will be spent. ou Sotwday morning for their home at Niles, | Labi aan, 25 of Me. ud Mes, Wilbur 4 | L. N riday morning for Baltimore, b a5 | where he will spend his two months tion fill- | =Mrs. Raymond Acheson, of Niagara Falls, is | aca + with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaugh- ing a clerical position in the train master’s office ensey, for an indefinite visit while her husband is : however, to return home in time for the ing undergoing treatment in a private sanitorium for open of State College in September. | a nervous breakdown. | | —Miss Meltzer, of New York. has been the —Mr- and Mrs. Charles Larimer with their lit" of Mts, for ks, ut the tle daughter, who have been in Bellefonte since guesl Bogle " sevénal last " by spring, left last Saturday to again take up their | Miss eRionse, of join gl v iby residence in Indiana, Pa. Though they will make ' day in Bellefonte visiting with her mother. that place their home for the present, at least, | Mr. Larimer has been placed in charge of the | —Mrs. Galway and her daughter, Mary Louise, | Johnstown dist ohnst: ndiana | are guests of Mrs. Galway's mother, Mrs. Pao 1X Jit ot the) on amd | telephone company. P. Harris; having arrived in Bellefonte Monday | EEE a of the Northern Central railroad; expecting, i ngs, for a visit with Mr.and Mrs. W. F. Har. Wagner Geiss and family, in this place, while his daughters, Misses Verna and Elsie Geiss, have been with friends in Philadelphia. Last Thurs- | day Mr. Geiss, accompanied by his daughter-in, { law, went over to Centre Hall and opened up his | home and his t 3 Mra. PY or horn wo daughters returned on Mon weeks. : | =W. A. Stuart, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, is A —Mrs. Herbert F. Bartley and daughter, « Lock Haven, are now with Mrs. Bartley's fathe ed in Centre county some tim: during the month ex-county treasurer James J. Gramley, i Reb ersburg. where they will remain during the sum ' and to join his wife, who has been at State Col. : haa. lege on account of ill health, since the early part met. Mr, Bartley left this week; for -Illiiok | =Mrs. Archibald Allison returned last week | | from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. T. I. Humes, at Latrobe, where she had gone two weeks previous, with her niece, Miss Lucy Humes, who had been i i where he will spend the ensuifig two months o , of June. ©. von his brother-in-law's three thousand f m | =Mrs. Elizabeth Callaway returned home Wed: acre farm near Springfield. in order to have th nesday of last week from a six week's stay at At. benefit of the outdoor alr and exercise. Talos LR. Saybeank, Com ati Piladeiphia. —Nelson E. Robb and family arrived in Cent, | With was aunt, manda Tome, county on Saturday, July 1st, from Jackso: will be Mrs. Bush's guest the remainder of the Miss., and are now at the Dr. Fisher home : summer, Zion. Mr. Robb has resigned his position as ge: ! =—Miss Lulu McMullen's house guests at her eral superintendent of the Jackson Home te! ! home at Hecla, last week, were Miss Margaret phone company, because northern capitals : McGrath and Miss Anderson, of Altoona. After have stopped sending money down there to ke: several days visit with Miss McMullen Miss An- it up. He has several offers of good rositions while Miss McGrath this State, but has declded to take a vacation o! ' month or two and in the meantime may decide | practical work in the agricultural course he istak- | ~—Mrs. Edward P. Irvin came to Centre county ' 80 into business for himself, ! ing at State College. | the second of July for a visit with Mr. Irvin's rel | ne | —Mrs. Louis Crossman, who has since her mar- = atives at Julian. Being joined later by Mr. Irvin Bellefonte Produce Markets. riage two years ago, been living in the State of , they together spent a few days with their many | —— Washington, has returned to Pennsylvania and is = friends about Bellefonte before returning to their | Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. now visiting with her father, John I. Thompson, at home at Cherry Tree. ; The prices quoted are those paid for produce. | Lemont. Mr. and Mrs. Crossman anticipate ~Charles G. McAvoy left the latter part of last : Potatoes per bushel. i Att hs | making their home in the east, where Mr. Cross week to join his wife and baby at Sea Isle City, N. . Eggs, per dozen man will continue his work of extensive orchard 'J., for a brief vacation. During his absence Mil, Lard, per growing. ton Willard, son of Mr. D. I Willard. who is iders.. ] —On Thursday of last week Mrs. D. I. Willard | home on his vacation, is in charge of the plant of ’ Hams... i went on a visit to old friends at Union City. She ' the Bellefonte Electric company. ! Tallow, per was joined on Sunday by her husband and both | —Mrs. John A. Woodcock, who will be the ' © iter Per pound. will spend two weeks at Union City and on an ex- | guest of her son, Dr. Lee B. Woodcock, of Scran- | Bellefonte Grain Markets cursion to Niagara Falls. On Tuesday they were | ton, while on a trip to Europe, will sail from New | Ty — " | guests at a picnic given by the South street Cen: | Yorkon the 5th of August, to join him for a | Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, tury club of Union City, of which Mrs. Willard two month's stay in Vienna. after which time | The following are the quotations up tosix o'cloch was formerly a member. | they willtravel until their return to America the ; Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press ~The motor party which came from Pittsburgh = latter part of October. | Red Wheat $8 Saturday, July 1st, to spend the Fourth in Belle —Mrs. D.G. Bush's house party for the week. | Rye, per bushel... fonte as guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Morris, in" = end included her sister, Miss Tome, of Philadel, 1 Corn, shelled, per bushel cluded Mr. and Mrs. William Morris and their | phia; Miss Shissler, of Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and | Sori SArs, per bushel | von, David McKee Morris, of Pittsburgh. With | Mrs. Gibbs, of Cincinnati, Ohio, who came here | Barley, per bushel ! them was Thomas King Morris, who came to visit | from Jersey Shore, where they have been visiting | vith Mrs. Morris and their son King now spenc- relatives, and Mr. and Mrs. George B. Thompson, | , ing the summer in Bellefonte. ; of Alto, and their two children. | —Mr. and Mrs. Sharpless Walker with their two | —Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Delaney, of Slate Run, | children, of Miles City, Montana, came to Belle- with their son Eugene, were guests of Mr. and | fonte on the third of July, for a short visit with | Mrs. James Noonan last week. While here Dr, | Wheat—Red , Mr. Walker's brother, John S. Walker. Having | and Mrs. Delaney, with their host and hostess, ‘Con Nolow. been in Delaware for three weeks, with Mr. Walk- | spent much of their time motoring, their trips in- | _* —Mixed new.. er's parents, they were on their return trip west, | cluding State College, Centre Hall, the “Cave” | r “Winter, per barrel and left here July fifth for Buffalo, N. Y., from | and most places of interest in Centre county. | _* —Favorite where they would make the journey to Detroit bY | _Miss Anna Blanchard with Mrs. George | HAH A water. | Green's two little daughters, will come from = oo oy ag i i —Ensign Trood Bidwell arrived in Bellefonte | Lock Haven to Bellefonte Monday, to be with | Straw Taesday morning and will spend the ensuing | the Misses Hoy at their home below town, while month with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. t Dr. Green with Mrs. Green and Miss Youngman. Bidwell, of south Allegheny street. Two months '©f Lock Haven, and Miss Christine Blanchard, of | The Best Advertising Medium in Centra way to Owego, N. Y. Miss Elmore will be for the | stay in Bellefonte. —Mr. J. F. Stover, of Pleasant Gap, one of the best Democrats in the county, and an old soldier who has reason to be proud of his record, is bound not to let the postoffice department prevent him getting his WATCHMAN, and advanced the figures on his tab away up to the middle of 1913 on Tuesday. Mr. Stover is positive in his opin. lar Democrats at the Harrisburg meeting next week, and has no favor to show to the factionists who are striving to divide and disorganize the Democracy. —Mr. George W. Young, of Nittany, one of the always reliable Democrats of Walker township, and there are many of that kiad down there, found time on Monday to come upto town to give his views to Chairman Kimport on the ques- tion of how he can best represent the real Demo- crats of the county at the state committee meet- ing next week. Mr. Young is decidedly against the recognition of the faction breeders and asked Mr. Kimport to stand by those who are known as Democrats and who have always worked and voted for ;Democratic, candidates—a matter that the factionists who are clamoring about “re-or- ganization” hnve never done. ion that Mz. Kimport should act with the regu- | or more ago he was stricken with typhoid faver | Chisan Whur a tah dy s oto: (575 to Middle- | a sylv “rs and ever since had been confined to a hospital at town, N. J. ! strictly Democratic publication indepen. Norfolk, Va. Though he has convalesced rapidly | —Mrs. Margaret Irvin Bean. who lives the : denice enough to have. and with ability and cour- | the past fortnight he is still far from robust and | greater part of her time at Er:sire, on the Isth- | page form—six columns to page—and is read the duration of his furlough will depend entirely mus of Panama, is the stuest of Mr. and Miu. Ed: 1 eVery week by e on how rapidly he regains his health during his | ward Cook, of Academy Hill. Mrs. Bean ha Be t | ago, the guest of Mrs. John H. Orvis and Mrs. ' David Butts. —Mr. and Mrs. A. Roy Gribben and their three children, Dorothy. Richard and Allen Jr., depart. ed on the evening train. Thursday of last week, for thelr home in Pittsburg after a two week's va- cation spent with Mrs. Gribben's sister, Mrs. A. M. Barr, on north Spring street. Mrs. J. B. Duff, Mrs. Barr's mother, who accompanied them to Bellefonte, will remain for an indefinite period. —Mr. Robert F. Sample, proprietor of the big, popular Gallatin hotel, at Uniontown, and his nephew, Edward Sample, both former Pine Grove Mills boys, made a short stop in Bellefonte on Wednesday, on their way up to their old home for a short visit among old time friends. Since leaving the county years ago “Bob” has been back a number of times but this is “Eds” first vis- it since back in the eighties. They'll find great improvements at their former home and we'll bet that although both have prospered greatly since | leaving it, they will both regret that they are not at less ; sill citizens of quiet. healthy and preity Pi | Crders of parties unknown to the wets | Grove Mills. the cash,
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