Buran. ARRESTED POR VIOLATION OF GAME ——The season for motor tourists has Laws.—Five well known business men of begun as was evidenced by the fact that Bellefonte and 2 prominent resident of on Sunday just twenty-six automobiles Spring township were arrested last Fri- | passed through Bellefonte, not counting day afternoon on the charge of violation local machines that went out from here. of the game laws by shooting two doe Of the twenty-six, however, only a few deer during the 1910 hunting season. : stopped for gasoline and oil, and none The men are L. H. Gettig, E. J. Ecken- | for ameal. roth, J. Benjamin Gentzel, Isaac Miller | —————— ——The concrete basin for the new ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —Exit the trout. —A little daughter arrived in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grubb one day last week. —A little son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Luther Smith, at the Bellefonte hos- pital, on Sunday. ~—Mrs. D. G. Bush is slowly conva- lescing from the illness which has con- | fined her to her room for the past two | we eks. | ——Captain Henry Montgomery and his grand-daughter, Miss Marie Mont- gomery, are ill at their home on Bishop | street. The condition of both is such as to cause their friends some alarm. ——The Epworth League of Filmore will hold a festival on the lawn at the church in that place Saturday, August 12th. Ice cream, cake and all the del- icacies of the season will be served. —A burning chimney on the house occupied by Fred Bryan, on Thomas street, was the cause of a fire alarm on Wednesday evening but before the fire- men reached the scene the fire had burn- ed out. —Toner Hugg, of Milesburg, has taken the agency for Centre county for: the Metz automobile and will soon be driv- | ing the first one to be seen in this section_| It is manufactured only as a runabout and is one of the cheapest cars on the | i market. ——Work is progressing very nicely on and Charles Stover, of this place, and David Moyer, of Pleasant Gap. The ar- rest was made by constable R. B. Mont- gomery on a warrant sworn out by game warden H. E. Hummelbaugh, of Clear- field county. The entire bunch volun- tarily went before justice of the peace W. H. Musser the same evening and gave bail if the sum of two hundred dollars each to appear for a hearing on Thurs- | day of next week, August 10th. Naturally all the men maintain their innocence of the crime charged. They admit killing deer and bringing the same home but aver that they were all bucks, and that nobody can produce proot to the contrary. Just what evidence war- den Hummelbaugh has in his possession upon which to swear out a warrant for the arrest of the above men is not known, but it seems rather peculiar that he should wait until this time, practically eight months after the close of the deer hunting season, to prefer his charge. A charge of such a nature, even if true, will be ten times harder to substantiate now than it would have been during the hunting season when a man could be taken with the goods on him. The hunting party composed of the gentlemen named above spent the deer hunting season of 1910 in the Green woods along the border of Centre and Clearfield counties. The warrant was sworn out before a Clearfield county jus- tice but the hearing will be held before ‘Squire Musser next Thursday. The penalty prescribed by law for killing a the repairs and improvements at the doe is one hundred dollars and every Bellefonte fish hatchery and by the time | man in a party is equally guilty. In this spawning season comesaround in the fal] | case the charge is that two doe were the work will be complete and the hatch- | killed and if the charge is substantiated 'Y. M. C. A. swimming pool was com- pleted on Monday and the foundation for | the building is about ready for the super- | structure. At the rate of speed with { which the work is being pushed the pool can easily be completed and ready for | use by the early part of September. i | =——The Merchants’ and Business Men's association of Tyrone, evidently will not accept the invitation extended by the Centre—Clinton Counties Business Men's Picnic association to join in the picnic at Hecla park on August 22nd, as last Thursday evening they decided definitely to hold their picnic this year at Stevens’ park. —— ——At a recent meeting of the school board Irvin O. Noll was premoted from assistant principal to principal of the High school to take the place of Charles A. Auman, resigned. There is still one vacancy to be filled before the faculty done at the next meeting, if a suitable man can be found, ee ——A marriage “license was granted in Philadelphia on Saturday to John W. Ostertag, of Bloomfield, N. J.,, and Rose R. Gamble, of Bellefonte Mr. Ostertag is a graduate in the electrical engineer- ing course at The Pennsylvania State Col- lege, class of 1911, while Miss Gamble is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Gamble, of east Linn street. —The seventh 2nnual reunion of Schnecksville, on Saturday, August 12th, to which all are invited and those com- will be complete and that will likely be the Wotring family will be held at Sand- | rr A -— o_o. REGARDING TURNPIKES.—On Monday a: —Miss Janet Scott is in Gettysburg, her former motoring party from Danville arrived in | home, visiting with relatives and friends. Bellefonte and spent the night at the —Mrs. Harry Bowersox and little daughter, of issue. When the driver of the machine | —r Joseoh L_ Montgomery anther two sors came to the toll gate out beyond the fur- nace and was taxed eight cents for com- ing into town he protested most vigorous- ly to the veteran toll gate keeper, Isaac Miller; nc: to him personally for attend- ing to his duties but to the turnpike and toll gate system in general, stating that he had to pay just eighty cents toll in coming from Danville to Bellefonte. There is no question but that the turn- pike is a system of less advanced times ‘and they ought to be condemned and abolished all over the State; something which will undoubtedly result with the advancement of the building of the chain of state highways as authorized by the Sproul good roads bill passed by the last | Legislature. Just at present, however, | the out-of-town people who came to Bellefonte Centre county is particularly fortunate in W cqtnutad su li ig Me Sea. the small number of toll gates within its | ~°™ . spent Monday and Tuesday i of the week in Philadelphia, havin; down boundary. Years ago toll gates in this | Siu might. He returned to Bellefonte Tues. county were quite numerous and a man | day. could not travel many miles in any | —Mrs. Denius and her daughter, Miss Helen direction without being held up by a toll | Denius, left Bellefonte Thursday to join a party day. ~Mrs. Ella Smith and Miss Roxie Crosthwaite, of Altoona, are visiting friends in Bellefonte and Centre county. ~—Mrs. William Kerstetter, of Pleasant Gap, after some business interests. ~Mr. and Mrs. T. James, whose home isat Lake Helen, Florida. are visiting in Centre county with Mrs. James’ relatives and friends. —Miss Emily Polk, of Baltimore, arrived in Bellefonte Sunday and will visit for an indefinite time with Mrs. David Kelly on Spring street. among her many young friends in this place. gate. Now only three remain, one beyond | #0in to Eaglesmere, where they will be for ten | days. . Nittany furnace, one at Pleasant Gap and .one in the Narrows on the pike from —Mrs. Rachael Glenn, daughter Katharine, and Milt ; Philip, of Cleveland, Ohio, are in Cent to B valley. grandson Philip, of Clev arein re county for a month's visit among their many Every man who has ever driven the | friends. pike from Bellefonte to the top of Nittany | —Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Riling. of Altoona, are mountain knows that ordinarily itis a souding gone tithe in Centre cosy, and while ' good stretch road n Bellefonte have been guests of Mr. a rs. C, finer piece of roud can he od ary. gi Hoover. of Philadelphia, is the guest - where than the pike through the Millheim | of pis aunt. Miss Bell Hoover, during the short narrows. It is perhaps worth a little ex- | time he is spending with his many friends in "tra to have such good road to travel over, | Bellefonte. but with the money assessed for road —Mrs. Frank W. Bartley and sister, Miss Zelda taxes throughout the county and the, Clements, departed in the early part of the week amount appropriated by the State it for a fortnight's visit with friends at Watsontown | ought not be necessary to impose the ex- | | tra expense of toll service to keep even a and Shamokin. tion with his sister, Mrs. Frank Luckenbach, of ' stretch of road in good condition. Tyrone, at the Tyrone Country club, at Penn —John M. Bullock is spending his summer vaca- | Spring Grove, in Lehigh county, near! | through some of the eastern counties of | Allegheny street. In this particular the Danville autoist , was hardly to blame for his criticism of | the toll system, but he ought to travel sylvania Furnace. —~Mrs. James A. McClain and little daughter Emma, of Spangler, arrived in Bellefonte on Tues- | day evening for a visit at the Spangler home on — ———— —Miss Martha Parker, of Jersey Shore, hasbeen in Bellefonte the past week visiting relatives. —Miss Helen Martin left yesterday for Cleve- weeks, —Mrs. W. A. White, houseiééeper for Mrs. —Misses Eva and Isabelle Grove, of Shiloh, were | Nora McClain, was an over Sunday guest with in Bellefonte on a shopping expedition Wednes. her friends at Lamar. * —John S. Henderson came up from Philadelphia | on Sunday for a week's vacation with friends in Bellefonte and up Buffalo Run. —Mrs. Mose Levi and young son Leopold, spent part of last week in Lock Haven, the guest spent Sunday in Bellefonte, shopping and looking | Of her sister, Mrs. Edward Sweiler. 4 —Mrs. James Lambert and daughter Hattie, of | Pitcairn, is rounding out a two weeks’ visit with : friends in Williamsport and Bellefonte. | =J. Harris Hoy, of Snow Shoe, came to Belle | fone Monday evening for the last of the series of | three special dances held at Hecla park. —Miss Edna Mallory is spending her summer —Miss Bessie Sharp, of Trenton, N. J., will leave | Vacation in Philadelphia, having left Bellefonte for her home tomorrow after a pleasant visit | Friday expecting to be gone two weeks. | —After spending three weeks in Bellefonte with —Sheriff B. F. Schaeffer, of Nittany, was among | her mother, Mrs. Benjamin Bradley, Mrs. Joseph | Reilly left Wednesday for her home at Bradford. | =Mr. and Mrs. Philip Beezer went to Williams- | port on Sunday, returning on Monday morning, | accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Eugene A. | Whitcraft and her little son. —Jacob Baum, with his two sons, Herbert and Maurice, of Lockport, Ind., arrived in Bellefonte | on Tuesday for a three weeks’ visit at the home | of his father, Mr. A. Baum. ~After his week's camp with Company L, Nevin | Corman spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. L. O. Corman, before returning to that good | job he is holding down in Renovo. =Mrs. Durbin S. Gray, who came to Bellefonte Friday, will visit for several weeks with Mrs. | Laurie and Miss Bertha Laurie, before returning | to her home at Jamaica, Long Island. —Miss Ida Green is visiting with her aunt at Huntingdon and will later in the summer go to | Erie, where she will be the guest of her brother | and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Green. | —Edvard Keichline, who is learning to build cars and locomotives in the Pennsylvania railroad shops at Renovo, spent Sunday with his parents, { Mr. and Mrs. John M. Keichline, on east Bishop | street. | —John H. Wilson, manager of the Western Union Telegraph company in Altoona, with his little daughter, was a Bellefonte visitor last Saturday. He reports business as rather slow in the Moun- t ty. —Mrs. William Kerstetter. of Pleasant Gap, saved her husband a trip on Tuesday by coming to town to attend to a little business matter and | while here was a pleasant caller at the WATCH- ing from a distance will be looked after | the State where they not only have turn-' _Mr. Lane, traveling salesman for the Belle | MAN office. ery will be in a better condition than it | the six men will be liable to fines aggre- ever was before. ——0On Tuesday John Beezer took charge of the Laugenbacher meat market | in Tyrone and will conduct the same in the future. He is an old butcher and | knows the business from A to Z so that | there is no doubt but that the residents | of that city will be served some nice juicy roasts and steaks. ——Robert Schroyer, of New York | city, was brought two weeks ago to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles | Schroyer, of Altoona, in a helpless con’ dition, suffering from inflammatory rheu- matism and malaria. Although there has been no change in his condition it is’ thought he will recover. ——The Presbyterian church, chapel and parsonage are to be given a general | overhauling in anticipation of the elec- tion and reception of a new pastor. This will include painting and frescoing in the church and chapel, painting and paper- | ing as well as a number of alterations in the parsonage; new concrete pavements, etc. ! ——The prolonged drought and gener. al dry spell was broken on Wednesday afternoon when a hard rain storm swept over Centre county from one end to the cther. While it was a dashing storm for a half hour or longer rain fell at inter- vals during the fore part of the night and it will do a lot of good to the corn and late potatoes. i i —]t is only a few days over two weeks until the business men’s picnic and the time will pass all too soon, so that you had better begin your planning now in order to have everything out of your way so that nothing will interfere with your attendance. It is the big gathering of the year and everybody ought to be there. —George W. Updyke, of Tyrone, a | member of the Bald Eagle valley work’ train crew, was instantly killed on Tues- "day afternoon by being struck by a train between Tyrone and Bellwood. He was born at Spruce Creek, Huntingdon coun- ty, and had a number of relatives in Bellefonte and Centre county. Burial was made at Franklinville yesterday afternoon. i ——In our notice last week of J. C. McCargar’s trip to Tioga county we in- advertently got him mixed up with the Prudential life insurance company when it should have been the Equitable. Of course it really didn't make any difference to his policy holders but the comparison between the two companies is great enough that we are only too willing to make the correction. ——The Misses Harper have vacated | the rooms they have been occupying in gating twelve hundred dollars, and costs. IT Won't DowN.—Like Banquo's ghost the old Coleville band wont down. It seems that that Prof. Spangenberg, Phil Garbrick, Johnny Fagan and all the others who figure in the early history of this well known musical organization must have instilled the same elixir in it that cats are supposed to have, for local in- dustries closing, causing men to leave town, internal dissensions and even the | allurements of a great railroad corporation have killed it nigh unto death time and again, but just when it looked as though Billy Cox would have to put the torch out | forever out she comes, with Sammy at | the head, playing just a bit more bril- liantly than the most optimistic hoped for. That was the case Tuesday night when twenty-six pieces were mustered without Harry Garbrick, Louie Hill and Henry Brown, though they did have Frank Wetzler, the old-time virtuoso of the Milesburg band, and that regular army star, Johnson, who is home on a vacation and just filled in with his trombone for the enjoyment of it. It was a fine concert and it is time that our people waken up to do something in the way of supporting it. The boys are most generous with their music. They love the band themselves, but love can't pay for uniforms, music or instruments. The pleasure the band gives the masses in Bellefonte should inspire those who are ' able to organize for its permanent sup- port. We have bought uniforms and in- struments for many “Bellefonte Bands," only to see them go up after a year or so of indifferent existence. But here is the old Coleville, always ready and willing and good, even when most run down, that Bellefonte has never made any concen- trated effort to help. Let us turn in and buy those uniforms for them. The old ones that they bought themselves were worn out playing for us. BIG BARN BURNED.—During Wednesday evening's hard storm the barn on No. 2 farm of Col. W. Fred Reynolds, occupied by John S. Benner, was struck by light- ning and burned to the ground, with its entire contents of this vear's crops of hay, wheat, oats, etc. Three calves and a brood sow were also burned, but all the rest of the stock was saved. This was the fifth time this barn had been struck by lightning, and the second time this year. It might be mentioned that it was not equipped with lightning rods. Those who saw the fire say that it was almost like applying a match to a can of gasoline. The entire upper portion of the barn seemed to become a mass of flames at the same time. Col. Reynolds carried ample insurance Mrs. Hibler's house, on Allegheny street. ' on the barn and Mr. Benner had his crops Miss Harper having secured rooms with and farm implements insured, having, it Mrs. Charles Smith, on Bishop street, will | js reported, taken out five hundred dol- for the preserit make her home there, jars insurance on this year's crops as late while Miss Jennie will spend the time . a5 Tuesday, the day before the fire. until her wedding with Mr. and Mrs. There was one peculiar incident in Edward Harper, at Curtin, and with her connection with the destruction of the sister at Mrs. Smith's. ‘barn. Harry Murtoff, of the Potter—Hoy ——Contractor R. B. Taylor has been Hardware company, had been up the engaged this week in repairing that por- | country selling plows. He was on his tion of the state road on north Water Way home and seeing the storm approach street and west Linn street put down last | asked Mr. Benner if he could drive intothe fall and which is not proving satisfactory. | barn and wait until the storm was over. A new top of cinder with a dressing of Mr. Benner told him he could make town real asphalt and ground limestone is being before the storm and advised him to drive put on and it is believed this will make it on. Murtoff did so and he had not driven as good as the asphalt portion of the road a half mile until the barn was struck by on Allegheny and Bishop streets. The lightning and in a half hour it was in latter gives every indication of goodiwear ashes. Had he been in it at the time he and permanency. might have been killed. on arrival of trains at Allentown by R. D. Wotring, president, and Geo. F. Wot- ring, of that place, by order of commit- tee. —When asked if there was anything new in the sheriff's office deputy Fred Rees replied “yes, these;” exhibiting several bills of sheriff sale which he was about to post. not the kind that strikes any man very cheerfully and the poor fellow whose name was embodied in the clause “seized, taken in execution, etc.,” would undoubt- edly prefer reading anything else than such news. ~The Scenic has been showing some superior moving pictures the past week and the excellent attendance shows con- c'usively that the public appreciates man- ager Brown's efforts to give the peopie of Bellefonte and he gets it at any cost; same, only five cents. ——Rev. Campbell, of Pennsylvania Furnace, will preach in the Presbyterian | church in this place on Sunday morning | and following the sermon will act as mod- | erator over a congregational meeting to vote on the selection of a new pastor. There are six candidates now in the field, namely: Rev. Hort, of South Bethlehem; Rev. Hawes, of Braddock; Rev. Hugh! Alexander Smith, of West Virginia; Rev. Laird, of Harrisburg; Rev. Fulton, of Waynesboro, and Rev. Nevin, of Philadel- phia. ——Miss Ada Welshans, of Lock Haven, who several years ago spenta number of months in Bellefonte as man- ager of the Western Union telegraph office, was married in that city on Mon- day of last week to Robert Hager, a member of the Lock Haven High school faculty. The young couple kept their marriage a secret until Friday when the fact finally leaked out. Mrs. Hager is still remembered by 2 number of Belle- fonters as a very pleasant and charming young woman. ——The 4,44 passenger train on Sun- day evening was a half hour late owing to a peculiar accident at Lock Haven. While turning the train on the Y one of the rails broke in three places, right over the ash pit, allowing the engine to drop until the axles of the driving wheels rest- ed on the side of the pit. There being no other passenger engine in Lock Haven the engine of a freight train on the P. and E, was secured and with that the train was taken through to Tyrone. The Lock Haven wreck crew succeeded in raising the derailed engine from the ash pit and putting it on a solid track, none the worse for the mishap. ——— A —— ——When the plant of the Bellefonte Electric company was destroyed by fire some eight or ten vears ago a detective by the name of Perkins was brought here from Pittsburg, and George W. Vernes, from Renovo, to ferret out the firebrand. While they failed to discover the exact cause of the electric light plant fire a Bellefonte man was convicted for at- tempting toburn the armory a short time afterwards and he always maintained that the wholeplot had been worked out by men in the employ of the Perkins agency. A strange coincidence in this connection is that on Saturday Vernes died at Renovo and the same day Perkins was sent to the Such news, however, is | Bellefonte the very best there is in the | having gone down Tuesday. motion picture line. He goes on the ! motto that there is nothing too good for | while the price of admission is always the | | reunion of the McNitt tamily. ! fonte basket shop, will leave Saturday for a five ' pikes but toll bridges to cross which cost | from thirty cents to a half dollar. Paying | Weeks usincse » xin Hifeagh New England and ; toll is one of i eof the material expenses of |“, "cgay, of Phitadeiphia, with her i . - . 1 | traveling in that section, according to |... chters. arrived in Bellefonte Wednesday | Bellefonte autoists who have made the | to visit for an indefinite time with Mrs. Seixas’ | trip. mother, Mrs. Charles Smith. —MTrs. Samuel Decker, of Spring street, accom- panied by her brother, Mr. Jeremiah Twitmire, of Milroy. are now on a trip to Philadelphia and may visit Atlantic City before returning home. —Mrs. Charles Pennington, with her small daughter. returned to her home at State College Wednesday after visiting for two weeks in Belle- fonte with her mother, Mrs. Peter Smith. —Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrong Kirby and their small son left unexpectedly Thursday for their home at Trappe, Md., on account of business — sae a NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —Miss Mame Woods returned last Saturday | from visiting friends in Tyrone. —C. T. Gerberich left on Tuesday on a visit to his sister, Mrs. D. S. Rank, at Lebanon. {| =—Mrs. Charles Heverley left on Monday for a week's visit with friends in Duncansville. ~Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilmore returned home | Saturday from a six weeks’ trip across the conti. ! nent. | =—Mrs. Albert E. Blackburn, after spending some i | time in Bellefonte, left for her home in Philadel” | | phia Thursday. { =—Mrs. Frank Montgomery and her sister, Miss | Hassell, are in Philadelphia for their summer visit, —Mrs. Shaner left Monday for a visit in Pitts. burgh, having gone home with her two nieces, who have been visiting in Bellefonte with their grand- mother, Mrs. Frank Wallace, of west High street. —Mrs. Elizabeth Calaway was in Lock Haven last night for a reunion dinner given at the Country club, for some of the members of the party who were together on the trip around the world a year ago. —Dr. W. W. Feidt has gone to Philadelphia : where he will attend a course of special lectures during the ensuing three weeks. Mics Atle Melatahlin Mis ai —Andy McNitt and Lawrence McMullen will | ~Hs8 ie w MISSLurry TS. motor to Milroy tomarrow for a week-end family | Harry Jackson, left Thursday morning for Clear- | field, where they will spend the first part of the | two weeks they anticipate being away from Belle- fonte. —Mrs. C. D. Casebeer left for her home in Som. erset Sunday morning, where she will spend the —[saiah Zimmerman and daughter left for their home in Kansas yesterday after a six weeks visit among their many Centre county friends. —After spending a month at Cape May, Dr. and which required Mr. Kirby's immediate attention. | Mrs. George F. Harris returned to Bellefonte yes- terday, both being very much improved in health, ~The Misses Lucile and Ruth Wetzel, daugh* in Northumberland, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hili. bish. —Miss Mary A. McGill, with Margaret Gilmore, left Bellefonte at noon Thursday for Logan, W. Va., where they will visit with Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Humes. —Jack McCummins was called home from Orviston last Friday on account of the very seri- ous illness of his wife, though her condition is now somewhat improved. —Thomas K. Morris will arrive in Bellefonte to- night. With him will be Mrs. Barber and Mrs. Bell, of Pittsburgh, who will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Morris for two weeks. —Thomas Glenn and Harry Alters went to Pine Grove Mills on Monday where they remained until yesterday morning when they went to Ty- rone and joined the excursion to Atlantic City. —Miss Kathryn Hill, of Punxsutawney, and Miss Emma Parsons, of Bellwood, returned to their respective homes after spending a week with the latter's grandmother. Mrs. Emma Par- sons, or Water street. —Mrs. D. J. Vaughn and son Harold, of Joliet, Ill. are visiting Mrs. W. M . Dawson, on Spring street. Ten years ago the Vaughns lived in Bellefonte, Mr. Vaughn being superintendent of the match factory, and this is their first visit bere since that time. —A very pleasant caller at the WATCHMAN of- fice yesterday was Miss Mary Dreiblebis, a daughter of the la'e Daniel Dreiblebis, of State College. She and her sister, Miss Maude, were in Bellefonte doing some shopping and looking after some family business matters. —Mrs. John Keichline, of Bishop street, has en- tained during the past two weeks, Mrs. Robert Gardner, of Pottsville, who visited in Bellefonte for a week, and Mrs. Gates, with her son and mother, Mrs. Gardner, all of Altoona, who after a short time spent with Mrs. Keichline, will leave today. ~The week-end house party entertained by Mrs. J. A. Aiken included the Misses Irma and their summer vacation of two weeks with friends and relatives in central Pennsylvania; Dr. C. T. Aikens, his son Claude, and Frank Fullerman, of Selinsgrove. —Mrs. James Carrell, who has been with her brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hughes, for the past six weeks, will with her little daugh- ter Gladys, leave Bellefonte today to join Mr. Car- rell at Bradford. Mr. and Mrs, Carrell will later make a trip through the southern States expect- ing to spend the entire winter in the South. —Fred Titus, the one time champion bicycle rider, later a driver in various automobile races and now a demonstrator for the Alco car, spent last Friday night at the Brockerhoff house. On leaving for New York Friday morning he was ac- companied by H. S. Ray and Edmund Blanchard. They reached Pocono mountain Saturday even- ing, spent the night there and landed in New York Sunday evening. Messrs, Ray and Blanch- | penitentiary from Erie for blackmail. ard returned home Tuesday morning. tersof Mr. and Mrs. J. Henry Wetzel, are visiting month of August. Mr. Casebeer will join her there for his summer vacation, expecting to leave Bellefonte next week. ~Richard Brown, who has been employed in Baltimore the past two years, has resigned his po, sition there and gone to Parksville, Tenn., where his father and brother Edward are located. He has secured a good position there. —Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Singhiser and little son, after a week's visit with Mrs. Singhiser’s father, ex-sheriff D. W. Woodring, returned to their home in Renovo on Tuesday. Before going Mr. Sing- hiser made a brief call at the WATCHMAN office. —Mr. and Mrs. William Katz have been in New York since Monday, expecting to be with Mr.and Mrs. Monish for two weeks. In their absence their home and children are being cared for by Mrs. Katz's sister, who is spending some time in Bellefonte. —Among the Bellefonters who took advantage of the sea shore excursion yesterday morning to make a trip to Atlantic City was Richard Brouse the second. This is “Dick's” first trip away from Bellefonte for some time and he will no doubt enjoy the change. —Rev. J. C. C. Beale, of Philadelphia, accom- panied by his mother, Mrs. David J. Beale, and sister, Miss Jennie C. Beale, sailed from New York on the steamship Baltic, Saturday, for a month's trip abroad. The Beales were formerly from Centre county. —Mrs. J. H. Pickle, after being in Bellefonte for three weeks, with her father, W. T. Twitmire, left the latter part of last week for Sunbury, where she will visit for a short time with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Twitmire, before returning to her home at Millersville. —Miss Rebecca Lyon left Bellefonte Thursday after a visit of several days with her aunts, Mrs. Pugh and the Misses Valentine on Curtin street. Miss Anna Lyon, who came with her sister from Philadelphia the forepart of the week, wil! remain in Bellefonte for a part of the summer. —Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Krumrine have had as guests during the past week Mr. Krumrine's two sisters, Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Kemmerer, of State College, who left Thursday for New England, —George A. Beezer returned from Pittsburg last Friday, where he purchased twocars, a Buick and a Ford. New cars are as scarce 2s hen teeth | and he was unable to secure the kind or makes he went after. ~~Mrs. Catharine Gross, of Axe Mann, with her grand-daughter, Miss Kathryn Gross, of Mill Hall, returned home on Saturday after spending three weeks very pleasantly with her daughter, Mrs. Ira Proudfoot, of Berwick. —Alfred Osman passed through Bellefonte last Saturday on his way home to Altoona, after a week's outing in the Bear Meadows. Just toshow his friends how huckleberries grow in the Seven mountains he took with him a sprig of a bush twelve feet in height which yielded over a quart of berries. —E. Mutchman, one of the head men with the Standard Scale & Supply company, at Beaver Falls, was in Bellefonte over Monday night. He had been down in Williamsport inspecting the McGarvey electrical automatic weighing beam for scales and stopped here on his way home to greet old friends and acquaintances: from the time that he was a resident of Beilefonte, a num- ber of years ago. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lang, of Graysville, Minn., were over Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Kern, of Bishop street. Mr. Lang is a large ranch owner in Minnesota and Mrs. Lang prior to her marriage was Miss Ada Zink, of Lock Haven. They were married in Los Angeles, Cal., last spring and are now taking their honeymoon trip through the east, Mr. Lang's first visit through this section. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, The following are the quotations up to six o'clock Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press. Vera Snook, of Philadelphia, who are spending where they will be for the winter with Mrs. Kem- merer’s daughter, who is in school at Boston. —Miss Mary H. Linn and Miss Elizabeth Blanch- ard landed at New York Sunday afternoon from a four weeks’ visit to the larger cities and places of interest in Scotland. Miss Blanchard coming di- rectly to Bellefonte arrived here Monday morning, while Miss Linn stopped for a short time with friends in Harrisburg. —Mrs. Carrie Bayard has returned to her work at the Soldiers’ Orphan school at Scotland, Pa., after being for five weeks in Bellefonte with her sister. Miss Ursula Bayard, who was taken ill while visiting with Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Zeller and Miss McManus. Miss Bayard is slowly improv- ing, though not able to leave her room. —Jacob Lyon returned on Monday from a ten per ct. day's sojourn at the sea shore during which time mos. under six mos. per ct. he took several trips to New York to spend a few SO hasassararn perct. hours with C. B. Williams. Mrs. W. A. Lyon, who is with her daughters, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. E. J. McGuiness, at the Shore, is very much | taken of orders to insert at less improved in health and expects to be home before | F3%e3 than above, nor will any notice be given to long. accompanied by the cash.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers