Bellefonte, Pa., July 21, 1911. EDITOR P. GRAY MEEK, TerMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ~Until further notice this paper will be furnished to subscribers at the following rates : Paid strictly in advance $1.00 Paid before expiration of year - 1.50 Paid after expiration of year 2.00 -_——— No Compromise Obtainable. The annual meeting of the Democratic State committee was held in Harrisburg on Wednesday last. Every county in the State was represented. Unfortunately for the party the divisions that have arisen in it, caused by the selfish ambi- tion of a few men who desire to take con- trol of the organization, could not be set- tled, and two committee meetings, elect- ing two State chairmen was the result. Howe— John B. Howe, a native of | Centre county, died at hishome at Wind- on Allegheny street looks like another ber of farmers in College and Ferguson | HATCHERY—The high water of two months efforts of the Lock Haven board of | ber on July 13th, as the result of a cancer- | place since he has changed the front by | townships would like to know the where- | ago, which ' ous affection from which he suffered for | putting the door at oneside and throwing ~——Frank E. Naginey’s furniture store | | BUTCHER SWINDLES FARMERS.—A num, REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENTS AT FisH and washed out the abouts of Lawrence Gangeni, until recent- | Bellefonte fish hatchery, did over two | WHAT 1S THE REASON? the trade that town has secured the plant of the American Hoist and Manufacturing com. " were being developed and the town some months. He was ason of John and | the rest of the space into one big show i i ly a butcher at Ganister, Blair county. thousand dollars damage to that plant, pany, which will be moved there from Esther Howe, and was born at Philips- | window. A new steel ceiling, hard wood | Gangeni located at Ganister some three and it has caused some wonderment Hamburg just as soon as the building for burg a little over fifty-six years ago. floor, etc., will be placed in the room. He | or four years ago and apparently did a | hereabouts as to whether it would be re- also anticipates in the near future erect- | thriving business. He bought his cattle | paired. All doubts were set at rest last ing a large addition in the rear of his | from the farmers throughout Blair and | week, however, when fish commissioner in size Centre counties, and had succeeded in | W. E. Meehan visited the hatchery and | When a young man he learned the tin- ning trade with Robert Musser, of Phil. | ipsburg, and worked at it a number of present building. years, finally going into the ice business. , : | =——The water in Spring creek is quite | When the Somerset county coal fields | |. and now would be a good time to | clean out the logs and other unsightly re- : | fuse from the falls down to the Central | settlers. There he engaged in the ice|p.; 4 of Pennsylvania bridge. The business and also conducted a dairy. | : 3 : . bed of the stream is unsightly enough Deceased is survived by his widow, | x d : id + i with comparatively little running water, name was Alice F 'butitisa great deal more so when filled Keller, and ‘these children: Virginia, x ! ’ Ha gi i | with old logs and other stuff that rightly Zelda, Par v Clarissa, Harry J. t | belong on a dump. Harvey E., at home; Edward M., married | = ew ‘and living in Windber, and Mrs. John L.! ——On Monday evening mail carrier _ Baker, of Latrobe. Two brothers—E. C. Edward Woods tramped on a rusty nail ' Windber laid out he was one of its first | its occupancy can be erected. The build. | ing to be erected now will be 40x200 feet Howe, of Philipsburg and George B. at his home on Thomas street and as a : Howe, of Rossiter—and one sister, Mrs. | consequence was on duty only part of GEORGE M. GUTHRIE, of Pittsburg, was W.C. Lingle, of Philipsburg, also survive. | the time on Tuesday, the balance of the elected chairman of what is known as the | The remains were taken to Philipsburg | day being spent in doctoring the wound. bolters, or rump, committee, and WALTER | Where burial was made last Saturday. | The same evening Edward Leepard, son E. RITTER as chairman of the regular Democratic State committee. On the i I | SUNDAY.—The death of Mrs. Harry i of Mr. and Mrs. John Leepard, of east : Lamb street, ran a piece of wire into his part of the “regulars” every effort was ' Sunday, at her home near Pine Grove foot but so far the wound has given him put forth to heal up the troubles and se- | Mills, Sunday night, cast a shadow of no trouble. cure harmony, but the bolters—the men ‘gloom over that community. A week | —Summer will ‘soon be over and the who refused to vote the Democratic tick- previous to her death she gave birth to a | theatrical season here, but in the mean- et last fall and divided the party in the State, spurned every proposition and re- solved to go ahead and drive out of the party, if possible for them to do so, every man who refused to follow their lead into the Keystone camp last fall. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. —]f at any time the Street committee of borough council gets out of something to look after they ought to go up to east Lamb street and take a glance at the hor- rible condition of that thoroughfare We'll wager that there is not an alley in the town that will compare with it. ——After conducting his shoe shining parlor and cigar store, next the Gazetle office, just two weeks Herbie Auman sold out last Friday to Eddie Thompson, who has transferred his headquarters there from the room in the rear of Nighthart's barber shop in the Crider building. Herb, by the way, was not long in making the discovery that to conduct a business prof- itably the owner wants to be on the ground and not in the next room. —— The Bellefonte Lodge of Moose had a reception at their home on Spring street, Tuesday evening, and an open air concert by the new City band. This is the second appearance of the band this summer, and very favorable comments were heard upon the music. The band is badly in need of new uniforms and the management hopes by giving a series of evening concerts to interest the people of the town enough so that they will con- tribute toward the expense of the equip- ment. ——The railroad shopmen of Tyrone will picnic at Hecla park tomorrow (Sat- urday) and it is estimated that upwards of a thousand people will come down on the special train which will convey the picnickers to the park. On the return trip in the evening the train will be run into the depot and sidetracked and the famous Tyrone band will give a concert in the Diamond from 6:30 to 7 o'clock. This will be in accordance with instruc tions from trainmaster R. B. Freeman, | who will do this as a compliment to B llefonte and its citizens. The Ty- Jne band is one of the best musical or- ganizations in Central Pennsylvania and their concert tomorrow night will doubt- less prove a real treat. W. E. Royer, formerly of this place, is now a member of this band. Last Friday Searle Moerschbacher was fishing in Spring creek, opposite Beezer’s garage, and pulled out a ten inch trout. As he did so a stranger who was standing by confiscated the fish and showed papers identifying him as a fish warden. He claimed the fish was caught illegally and told the boy to go along with him to his father and explain him- self. To. Mr. Moerschbacher and others he stated that the trout had been caught out of season, claiming that the sea- son closed on june 14. When a copy of the law was shown him, giving July 31st as the lastday of the season, he wassome- what crestfallen and couldn't do anything else than return the fish and let the boy go. If the man reallyis a fish warden he was not well posted on the law and is not really as smart as he evidently thinks he is. ——F. E. Snyder, who lives a mile this side of Vail, in Bald Eagle valley, was seri- ously inju-ed in the neighborhood of Dix station early Sunday morning. He left his home about midnight to drive to Port Matilda and in the vicinity of Dix his horse frightened at an automobile and plunged down an embankment onto the Bald Eagle Valley railroad, right in froatof a moving freight engine. The engine struck the buggy, literally demolishing the same. Mr. Snyder was hurled to one side of the track where the debris of the demolished vehicle feli upon him. The accident hap- pened at 1.30 o'clock in the morning and the man lay there until 6 o'clock when he was discovered by the work train crew and taken to Tyrone. A physician found two broken ribs, a cut in the right leg and numerous bruises and contusions. , baby boy and complications set in which | | proved fatal. She was a daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. William H. Goss and was born at Rock Springs twenty-seven years ago. {She was a member of the Lutheran | church and for a number of years organist ‘in the choir. On June 30th, 1908, she was united in | marriage to Harry Sunday who survives | with two sons, one a baby less than two | weeks old. She also leaves her parents, {two brothers and one sister, namely: Samuel E., of Reading; W. K., of Tyrone, |and Miss Elsie, at home. The funeral ‘was held from her late home at 10:30 ' o'clock Wednesday morning. Rev. J. S. | Shultz officiated and was assisted by Rev. | C. T. Aikens, of Selinsgrove. Burial was | made in the new cemetery at Pine Grove | Mills. | . BECKk.—After years of suffering with cancer Mrs. M. L. Beck died at her home in Howard last Thursday morning. Her maiden name was Agnes A. F. Beck and she was born at Nittany Hall August 17th, 1845, her parents being Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Beck. In 1881 she was united |in marriage to M. L. Beck, of Walker | township, and they lived on the latter's ! farm until April, 1907, when they moved | to Howard where they since resided. Her : | only survivor is her husband, they having . ‘no children. Deceased was a member of | the Lutheran church and a christian | | woman in every way. The funeral serv- "ices were held at noon on Monday and were in charge of her former pastor, Rev. L. N. Fleck. Burial was made in | the Nittany cemetery. | | | McFEeATERS.—Ralph Cameron McFeat- | ers, son of Mahlon V. and Mrs. Nellie J. | McFeaters, died at their home in Johns- | town on Friday, July 14th, after being | sick since April a; the result of an at- | tack of pneumonia. The child was aged | two years. Mrs. McFeaters will be re- : membered by Bellefonte people as Miss | Nellie Lebkicher, daughter of Mrs. E. L. Lebkicher, for a number of years a resi- “dent of this place. I I MusseEr.—On Thursday of last week Mrs. Elizabeth Musser, wife of Emanuel M. Musser, of Aaronsburg, died of par- | alysis aged 69 years, 1 month and 12 days. | She is survived by her husband and five | children, as follows: Clayton S., Ida M., Carrie D., Mary E, and Beulah. Rev. IM. D. Geesey officiated at the funeral , which was held on Monday forenoon, bur- ial being made at Wolf's chapel. | | GLENN.—A two year old child of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Glenn, of Altoona, died on Wednesday of last week and on Fri. day the remains were taken to Centre Hall for burial. Mrs. Glenn was formerly Miss Elsie Foreman, of Centre Hall, and at one time was an operator in the Belle- fonte telephone exchange. | | ScHAD .— Julia Frederica, the three weeks old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schad, died at 7:30 o'clock on Sun- day morning. The remains were buried in the Union cemetery Wednesday morn- ing. i S emes ——Miss Mildred Ogden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ogden, formerly of this place but now of Clintondale, won the gold medal for the best essay at the Mansfield Normal school commencement, from which institution she graduated in June. She will probably go to New Jersey to teach the coming school year, but will likely spend a week or so with Bellefonte friends before that time. eee ——The borough council has now se- cured a dumping ground for all kinds of | time Bellefonters and strangers visiting in the town can be delightfully entertain- ed every evening by attending the Scenic. One full hour's show for only five cents, something you cannot find anywhere else in the country. The pictures are all new and up-to-date and there are no repeti- tions. The Scenic is really the only popu- lar place of amusement in Bellefonte. ——Rev. E. C. Houck, a former pastor ' of the Milesburg Lutheran church, will preach in the Presbyterian church at Milesburg Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Rev. Eldredge, who the past year had served as pastor of the Baptist church at that place, recently resigned to go to Lewistown, and the congregation are now having their church repaired, which accounts for the services being held in the Presbyterian church on Sunday. —A clogged sewer pipe at the Hast- ings residence on north Allegheny street is causing considerable trouble and incon- venience. During the past two weeks workmen have been engaged in an effort to locate the trouble, and the pipe being buried to a depth of ten feet it requires ' considerable digging. As a result the | pavement on Lamb street has been block- ed ever since work was begun and it may be several days yet before it is cleared. ——William Miller, who resides on a farm about a mile east of Julian, is hav- ing more than his share of hard luck. Mr. Miller is merely a tenant farmer and the house in which he lived was totally - destroyed by fire. Mr. Miller had a five hundred dollar insurance on the house and one hundred on the furniture and when the insurance adjuster visited him he refused payment of the five hundred dollar policy because Mr. Miller did not own the property. He also refused to pay the money to the real owner of the prop- erty, because the policy had not been taken out by him. The affair has caused considerable indignation in that com- munity and it is likely the matter will be carried into the courts. And, as if this was not enough trouble for Mr. Miller, one of his best horses sickened and died | winning the utmost confidence of every- | authorized an expenditure of three thous- | body. and dollars, not only to restore the: About July 1st, as was his custom, he hatchery to its former condition but make visited Centre county, purchasing a num- | such improvements as is hoped will pre- ber of cattle in the vicinity of State Col- vent a recurrence of such a disaster. A lege. He is said to have given checks concrete dyke, three hundred feet long, which were later protested to the amount | ten feet thick at the bottom and five feet of about $600 in payment for his pur high will be constructed along the south chases. Evidently in preparation for his and west sides of the grounds as a pro- get-away, he sold most of the cattle on tection against the flood. The wall under his way home, principaliy at Union Fur- No, 2 building will be repaired, the Shu- nace. He also busied himself collecting = gert spring fixed up anda new trout pond accounts due him and it is supposed that 150x40 feet constructed. An ice house, he had at least $5,500 in cash when he ' stable and other necessary buildings will left. His assets amount to perhaps $400 be built, and when all is finished the and his liabilities to $5,000 or $6,000. Bellefonte hatchery will be the largest It was on July 4th that Gangeni's plant of its kind in the State. place of business was closed and he and | ; For UNPAID T 0 He SL rig, Ronen 3 thers ' Saturday of last week H. S. Riddle, of clue was in a letter received by fellow Howard, was aitested on the charge of countrymen at Ganister. The letter was unpaid taxes and brought to Bellefonte from friends at New York, who thought by constable LeRoy Leathers but instead they had seen Gangeni and his family on | Sigg 10 jail he paid the axes and costs July 8th boarding a vessel bound for wr h Sho au stale 10% coil ¢ Italy. As $5500 would be sufficient to | -oseP} MAIC B the fix collector o keep him and his family in comfort for ward and Riddle TPG Years tates many years, it is thought that the New v ther refused or neglected to York people were not mistaken. | pay. Holter secured 3 commissioner's Joseph Donora, of Clover Creek, a cred- warrant for Riddles arrest and the same itor to the amount of $1,200, placed his was served by constable Leathers, who claim Jor collection and a sheriff's execu- red Siete to brio Homan to efi tion was issued. At the petition of other . creditors the execution was stayed and Riddle protested against the arrest on the bankruptcy p fings started. grounds that the warrant was not suffi- Last Thursday Judge Orr, of the United | Siént: The constable claims that at the States Circuit court, appointed C. R. Fluke, | Howard depot Riddle became very abu- of Williamsburg, receiver with orders to > 'C, and used %0 much vile language that close up the business. It is thought that | 10 silence him he hit him in the face, Af. creditors will receive scarcely 10 per cent. | ter Riddle paid his taxes and costs in this of their claims. place he had the constable arrested for assault and battery, false imprisonment | and arresting without a warrant. The are just eight more days of the trout ' case will be threshed out before justice fishing season and the man who wants of the peace Henry Brown. another mess of the speckled beauties | Th. will have to hustle to get them. All in| COL. REYNoLDS WILL HAVE SHORT all the season was not a success by any | PEACH CroP.—Stories have come from means. Aside from the fish hatchery Delaware and other peach growing States trout taken out of Logan's branch and about the shortness in the peach crop Spring creek at the opening of the sea- this year and lovers of this luscious fruit son and after the flood that washed out | Will regret to learn that the same condi- the hatchery no big catches were made. | tion prevails in Centre county. On the A few were fortunate in landing some C°l- Reynolds farm in Benner township, large trout from both the above streams, Which the past two years yielded a crop but they were comparatively few in num- of twelve thousand bushels, there will not ber. ' be this year one-fourth of that amount. Fishing creek, which in past years was | The short crop, however, is not because the Mecca for fishermen from all over | the fruit was frozen, but owing to the nu- the central part of the State. was a dis- | merous hard rain storms when the trees appointment to all anglers this year. Were in blossom. The dashing rains, and While it was fished as hard as in past iN Some instances hail, knocked off the years very few good catches were made. blossoms by the hundreds so that only a Other streams throughout the county | Small percentage were left to produce were equally disappointing,and the unusual | fruit. What peaches there are, however, scarcity of trout emphasizes the fact that | 81ve promise of a fine quality. the method now practiced by the State | Fa oo. | in restocking the streams with trout fry | For A BusiNess MEN'S Picnic. —A meeting of the executive committee of i and will require 125,000 brick for its construction. The Commercial Travelers’ and Busi. ness Men's association of Philipsburg are now negotiating for the location there of a cut glass factory which will employ from fifty to sixty men and boys and an enameled brick plant, with a reasonable possibility of securing one or hoth. If neighboring towns can secure new industries what is the reason that Belle- fonte cannot? Times are no better in neighboring towns than they are here, and they are no worse here than any- where else. The reason, therefore, must be in the amount of energy put forth by the capitalists and business men of other towns. Down at Lock Haven a piece of ground was purchased through the efforts of the board of trade and from this free sites are offered for new industries. This is the entire actual outlay, though there is the additional inducement in the way of free water and exemption from taxes for a certain period. Bellefonte ought to be able to offer the same inducements, and by doing so might secure industries that would mean a whole lot to the busi- ness of the town. But individual action will count for nothing, and that is the reason the WATCHMAN has always been an advocate of a good, live board of trade. WORK STARTED ON Y. M. C. A. Swim- MING PooL.—Lewis Wallace, who secured the contract for the swimming pool Mrs. William P. Wilson is building for the Belle- fonte Y. M. C. A,, began work on the ex- cavation for the pool on Tuesday morn. ing. The work is to be pushed with the utmost vigor as the contract calls for the completion of the pool and building early in September. Architect Boyd, of Pitts- burg, who prepared the plans, will be in Bellefonte next Wednesday or Thursday and the excavation is to be completed by that time so that work can be started on the concreting for the pool. Once this work is begun it will be rushed through as fast as possible. In fact this will be absolutely necessary in order to insure against leakage. From the moment work begins men will be kept on the job con- tinuously day and night so that no part of the concrete will have a chance to set before more is added to it. The brick and lumber for the building will all be on the ground by the time the concrete work is completed and it will not take long to put up the structure, which will be princip:lly the walls and a roof. A full description of the swimming pool was published in this paper at the time the bequest for same was made by Mrs. Wilson, so that it is generally known what it will be like. It will be amply large for the needs of Bellefonte and is something that has long been needed for the town. -—te is not a success. If one-tenth the fry put into the streams lived there would be an abundance of trout every year, but it is evident that not one in a hundred sur- vives. If the trout were kept in the hatchery ponds until they are fingerlings and then put into the streams, one-tenth of the number now put out would bring better results. Ee. Ydgtweek, | OFF POR CAMP. — Company L, Belle- ——One of the latest purchasers of an | fonte's contingent of the National Guard automobile in Bellefonte is Mr. Claude | soldiery, will leave Bellefonte this morn- Cook, who last week bought a Hupmobile | ing over the Lewisburg and Tyrone rail- runabout for his daughter Grace. George i road for Sunbury where the train for the A. Beezer on Saturday received another | Twelfth regiment will be made up and new Flanders runabout for which he has : proceed to Selinsgrove where the annual . a prospective purchaser. W. W. Keich- | encampment will be held. All the bag- line & Co. on Saturday received another | gage of the company was loaded on a box car load of Fords that had been ordered | car yesterday and sent to Lock Haven in for May delivery but just now arrived. | the afternoon where it was loaded with Bellefonte is without question one of the | the baggage of Company H, of that city. best automobile towns in the State. While | Only hand baggage will be carried by the the exact number of cars owned here is | soldiers this morning. The grounds se- not known it is generally conceded to be lected for the camp at Selinsgrove are in the neighborhood of one hundred, | said to be in excellent condition and well which is not bad for a town of 4,200 in- | adapted for the purpose. Governor Tener habitants. Bellefonte, of course, is the ' is expected to visit the camp next Thurs- leader in Centre county in the automobile | day, when a large crowd of visitors is business, but almost every town .in the ' anticipated. | the Business Men's Picnic association of ' | Centre and Clinton counties will be held | at the Commercial hotel, Lock Haven, on | Tuesday afternoon and evening of next | week, July 25th, for the purpose of de- | ciding on the question o' a picnic this | year and to make arrangements for same, large and artistic in design, to be located lif it is deemed advisable to hold one, in the triangle between the Brockerhoff | which is quite probable. Centre county | house and the First National bank. To members of the committee will go to’ make it truly emblematic of Bellefonte, Lock Haven on the train leaving Belle-' which is a derivation of “beautiful fonte at 2:20 p. m., and return on the fount” he suggested that it would be train arriving here at 9:40 in the even: ' very appropriate to have it of marble and ing. Several vacancies on the committee the work done by George Gray Barnard, will aiso be filled at this meeting, one of | the world-famed sculptor. y which will be the election of a secretary | Of course to have a fountain of such J. C. Meyer. ' | magnitude would cost considerable mon- T Ur B EACLE ~On Tuesd + ey and that is the reason why Gen. Beav- night of last week thieves broke into the | er suggested that a fund ought to be 1 store of A. W. Reese, at Port Matilda, | St3ried NOW, to be added to from time to and carried away merchandise to the! time and the same profitably invested so amount of about ten dollars. Shoes, | that the accruing income would help in overalls and candy were taken, but no | swelling the fund. Naturally it would money was secured. The same night A. | | take years to bring such a fountain up to Williams’ granary was broken into and a | the ideal suggested by Cen. Beaver, but lot of oats stolen. Mr. Williams lives | that the present generation could benefit i , the ject could be started by about a mile and a half from Port Ma." Part the pro ) tilda and the parties who stole his oats | the erection of an ordinary fountain in A SUGGESTION FOR A BIG FOUNTAIN. — Several days ago in conversation with a friend Gen. Beaver stated that the people of Bellefonte ought to start a fund for the erection of a suitable fountain in the Dia- mond. His conception is for something warranted murder. Ventro was never county has one or more machines and many farmers in the rural districts are | also owners. And dealers predict a bet- "ter business in the future than in the past. — ——0On Sunday evening, May 7th, Dominico Giangioppi, an Italian, was in- stantly killed by Carman Ventro, a fellow countryman, by having his throat cut with a razor. At the coroner's inquest the following day the only evidence that could be gotten out of the foreigners who witnessed the killing, which occurred at the Stevens quarries up Buffalo Run, tended to show it to be a case of un- caught and it is now admitted by the Italian colony that he is safely out of the i country and beyond the reach of extia- | i hauled it away in a rubber tired vehicle, ' the Diamond which could be added to as the tracks leading up to and away ZIEGLER FAMILY REUNION.—The Zieg- lers of Centre and Clinton counties held their annual reunion at Hecla park on | Monday, with a large attendance. Hon. W. C. Heinle, of Bellefonte, made the | principal address of the day and told a ' number of interesting facts in connection ' with the Ziegler family, which, naturally, is of German extraction. Peter Ziegler was the first one of the family to locate i in Centre county, he emigrating here from York county in 1818. He settled on what is now known as the Benjamin Limbert from time to time until the whole is com. 1 i pleted. fom pe " ! Ie Plainly 4 the ae Bellefonte has always been not. d as a of the day following the robbing of the beautiful town and with the abundance P yivania railroad station in this place | of pure water we have here there should {and it is just possible they all were com- | be no laxity in supplying it to thirsty hu- : ' manity as well as the beasts that contrib- | mitted by the sem ope ries. | ute to his welfare and comfort. —e- PENNSYLVANIA MATCH COMPANY RE- For THE WILLIAMS FAMILY REUNION. ORGANIZED. — The Pennsylvania Match | _The executive committee of the Wil- company of this place recently received a liams family reunion association held a new charter and was reorganized under | meeting at the E. J. Williams home at farm in Brush valley, and raised not only good crops but a family of thirteen chil- dren. Daniel W. Ziegler, of Spring Mills, is the only survivor of the family. NITTANY COUNTRY Cru ELECTS OF- the old name. The charter the company | Unionville last Friday and fixed Saturday, originally operated under was deemed y : inadequate for their use and in order to put themselves on a good, substantia’ basis it was necessary to dissolve the old | | company, secure a new charter and re- | August 19th, as the date for holding their annual reunion and the place the John Q. Miles grove at Martha. The following committees were appointed: Entertainment—Walter H. Williams, D, Eberts. refuse out on the farm of Jerry Lutz, the | dition. And the killing of Giangioppi is only conditions being that bottles, old 'also admitted to have occurred in a free- cans and such like be dumped into the deep | for-all fight in which Ventro was so badly noles and that paper be dumped intoa hole beaten up before he struck the fatal blow and burned immediately. The lack of a that it was ten days after the fight before suitable dumping ground prevented many he was able to leave the country. Dur- people from thoroughly cleaning up their | ing that time he was concealed in a spot premises at the time of the clean up! less than a mile from where the killing week, but now that a place has been se- | occurred and was attended and supplied cured they ought to take advantage of it | with food and drink by some of his , at once and rid their grounds of all kinds | friends. When able to travel he was sup- of refuse. To use the dump a permit | plied with money and quietly left the The horse was uninjured and was found must be secured from the chairman of ! standing on the bank opposite where Mr. | the Sanitary committee of borough coun. | Snyder was found. + cil, Mr. George Grimm. i country. Of course he will never return to Centre county which is a good thing for both he and the taxpayers. FICERS.—The annual meeting of the Nit. tany Country club was held at the club house at Hecla last Saturday evening. Dr. J. M. Brockerhoff was re-elected pres- ident, R. B. Freeman vice president and George R. Meek secretary and treasurer. Five of the old members of the board of governors were re-elected, namely: Jo. seph L. Montgomery, R. S. Brouse, Harry E. Fenlon, Harry Keller and L. T. Mun- son, and John S. Walker and W. Fred Reynolds were the two new members elected. The house committee, which is selected by the board of governors, has : not yet been chosen. organize. F. W. Crider, Col. W. Fred | J. Gingerich, and O. D. Reynolds and Joseph L. Montgomery were | _Transportation—G. G. Fink, Harry S. the original stockholders and in the re- Williams and Geo. W. Bullock. organization Hugh N. Crider was also Obituary—W. H. Williams, Ida R. Wil- taken in as a stockholder. There was no | liams and John M. Williams, change in the officers of the company’ ___Mr and Mrs. Theodore Cherry have and the management will continue in the announced the engagement of their daugh- future as in the past. | ter, Miss Minnie Cherry, to Joseph Lyon ——Dr. Edward Harris, of Snow Shoe, | Nichols, of Girard, Pa., who is now visit- on Wednesday purchased a Flanders run- | ein =e Nelomse, ne date for the wed- about from George A. Beezer and here- : . after he will be able to make the rounds | | —— i] ——Chicken thieves are plying their ne- of his patients in good time. Mr. Beezer could have sold two more machines the same day, if he had had them in stock. | farious profession in various parts of Pennsvalley and the farmers are keeping an eye open for the vandals.