ee ————————" | SEEKING SITE FOR NEW PENITENTIARY. —John Francis, head warden of the wes- tern penitentiary, was in Centre county ‘on Tuesday and Wednesday looking over various sites for the new penitentiary to be built by theState. J. Linn Harris acted as host and accompanied by several other ' Bellefonte gentlemen took him to inspect a number of localities. Among them were * the Crider farm between Howard and Blanchard, the ground in the neighbor- hood of Snow Shoe Intersection and up at Unionville; the Zimmerman farm in Benner township and the Reynolds farms adjoining; the section in and about Hous- erville, as well as places in Harris and Potter townships. The most favorable ' Jocations are the Benner township site and the one near Potters Mills, owing to the fact that the water facilities are bet- ter at those places than any of the others. While warden Francis is favorably im- pressed with what Centre county has to offer he is not in a position to give any positive statement as to the location he will choose. Quite a number of Bellefonte people are doing all they can to secure the insti- tution for Centre county while others ——Now for the Granger's picnic. ———Miss Overton's primary school will open on Monday, September 11th. ——Rev. William C. Isett, of Pittsburg, will fill the pulpit in the Presbyterian church on Sunday, both morning and evening. ——Don't stand over the hot stove and bake. Buy what you want from the Epworth League in the Bush Arcade on Saturday. ——Quite a number of students have already returned to State College and in another week or two the place will be crowded with them. — Oliver Witmer is out for the nomi- nation for councilmanon the Republican ticket in the North ward and Harry Eb- erhart on the Democratic ticket. ——Bellefonte is noted throughout the country for its pretty girls but you'll miss | it if you don’t see “The Missouri Girl” at’ the opera house on the evening of the 14th. James Fox, who has been clerking in Parrish's drugstore the past two years, will leave on Sunday for Philadelphia to enter the Philadelphia College of Phar- ! macy. > ——Borough engineer J. Henry Wetzel has had a force of men at work this week fixing up Lamb street and it must be con- fessed that the work is not being done : before it is needed. ——Mrs. Robert Sechler, who has been | seriously ill for the past year, and operated at the Bellefonte hospital last week, is ty. One thing is evident. It would mean the expenditure of a large amount of money in the building of the penitentiary and a continual expenditure even after- wards for supplies and the living of the hundreds of officers and employees con- nected therewith. If the location in Ben- ner township were chosen it would un- doubtedly mean the building of the much State College, and in more ways than one would be a financial help to Bellefonte and the entire community. These things are worthy of careful consideration by all who feel any interest in the matter. LABOR DAY IN BeLLEFONTE—Labor day on Monday was more generally observed in Bellefonte than ever before. Of course, v being a legal holiday, all the banks were growing better ® rapidly that her friends closed and the postoffice observed holiday ope for a complete recovery. | hours. All the stores except the cigar ——The Blue Goose at State College ' stores and having been sold by Miss Betty Stuart, t0 | and most everybody took a day off. S. S. Grieb, Miss Stuart will spend the The Bellefonte Lodge Knights of the Winter 3 Dover, Def, ete She will be Golden Eagle and a big delegation of e guest of Mr. and Mrs. es ——1t is five years since “The Missouri Lock Haven to attend the annual con- Girl” has been seen in Bellefonte but it | vention of the Susquehanna district asso- is just as good now as ever, and you can | ciation of that order, returning home the gee it at the opera house next Thursday | same evening, but most pleasure seekers evening, September 14th. It will mark | went to Hunter's park, on the Bellefonte the opening of the theatrical season in Central railroad, where the Odd Fellows Bellefonte. | of Bellefonte and State College held their antl : ; ._ | annual reunion. This gathering was more Mrs. Peter Collins, of Philadelphia, —— this vear aver be. has announced the marriage of her daugh- ttended : than . ter Anna, to Anthony B. Gallagher, fore, the crowd in the afternoon being which oecorred in that city on Sept. 2nd. estimated at from twenty-five hundred to Mrs. Gallagher is well known here, hav- three thougam) people. Various Suse ing visited frequently at the Collins and Sports a SE oe urine 8 3hoemaker homes in this place. afternoon for w prizes were a pi d. — The last of the Hecla park after- Tire a2 Hep Sanding iis 1a ep : : : ‘and other features n 0 Soon ad ag an See. will 1s ro the crowd occupied and in agood humor. he : : . The only attraction for those persons saleneitin ow Ya ine ot the who remained in Bellefonte was a game t f colored men of 1st, it seems, was in error and there will % bel) EE oi OE TLEaion: Pant dance this afternoon and even- the visitors winning by the score of 14 to 10. ——1f Col. H. S. Taylor walks a little — We: more dignified these days than usual it CELEBRATED GOLDEN WEDDING. Up is all because he is the father of another wards of one hundred people, including son, who was born in the Bellefonte hospital last Friday evening. It weighed twelve and a half pounds and both the attended the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Bridgens, at Mill : Hall, last Friday, the event being one of bible 389 Mave Taylor are getting along unusual social prominence in tat: town, ’ | many persons from Centre county being ——Hon. Leonard Rhone, of Centre present. Mrs. Bridgens was a daughter Hall, has been named by Governor: of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Kunes, of Tener as one of the delegates of Penn- | Eagleville, and she was married to Mr. sylvania to represent the State in the | Bridgens at the home of her parents on sixteenth International Dry Farming Con- September 1st, 1861. Less than a year gress and Congress of Farm Women to | after their marriage Mr. Bridgens en- be held at Colorado Springs, Colorado, listed in Company G, 203rd Pennsylvania October 16th to 20th inclusive. | volunteers and served until the close of he returned to Eagleville Tne Ladies Aid society of the|the war when Presbyterian church will hold an ex- ‘and the family lived there until about h store ul D. | twenty years ago when they moved to ii A i Sore of Peo | Mill Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Bridgens were (Saturday) afternoon from two until five | the recipients of many valuable and use- o'clock. Home made bread, pies, cake ful presents last Friday. and candy will be on sale. The patronage | KILLED BY TROLLEY CAR.—Raymond, of the public is cordially solicited. | the six year old son of Mr. and Mrs. ¢ | Harry Nestlerode, of Johnstown, but for- ——We are requested to announce that ' the subject of Dr. VanTries' address be- | merly of Blanchard, was instantly killed ‘by a trolley car in the Flood city last fore the Centre County Veteran Club, at their annual reunion at Centre Hall, Sep- | Thursday afternoon. His mother sent tember 12th, during the Granger's picnic, him onan errand and in crossing the street he ran out from behind a car on will be “Echoes from the Southland,” an account of what the doctor saw and one track in front of one on an adjoining fearned in the south. Everybody invited. track. The motorman was unable to Gowland Manuf Com stop the car and the child was struck and mani THE GU nufacturing Com- _ jnetantly killed. The remains were taken pany’s plant in Philipsburg was last week | 10 the home of the child's grand-mother by Robert A. and JohnD. Gill, Mrs. Martin, at Blanchard, on Friday, Jr., and will be operated under the firm | cn where the f 1 was held on Sun- name of John D. Gill's sons. The com- in the pany will manufacture mining tools and day afternoon, burial being made in machinery of all kinds and also do a general foundry and machine business. The Curtin furnace is now out of blast while a new hearth is being put in and some other alterations made which it is believed will increase the output and efficiency of the plant. The Curtin and furnace are the onl the MeCoy & Linn Y | not a cheap melodrama but a play of two charcoal furnaces yet remaining in Centre county, of the many that used to | more than ordinary interest. As evidence dot this section. | of its popularity Mr. Raymond this year | will have four companies on the road in o'clock three young boys broke into Wm. | company which will be seen in Bellefonte Doll's ice cream room in the rear of the | wil be one of his best. — + — Raymond's areat production, “The Mis- souri Girl.” This show has been in Belle- fonte once or twice before this and al- ways gave complete satisfaction. It 18 an——— A ———— ——William Hunsinger has resigned Wednesday were let go with the payment his position as mechanician at the Belle- of the costs, after the "Squire had given | fonte shirt factory and his place has been them a good lecture, a talk, by the way, taken by Jesse Showers. Mr. Hunsinger the boys had better take totheart and expects to move away from Bellefonte in profit by. | the near future. think it would be a stigma upon the coun- talked of trolley line from Bellefonte to green groceries were closed | Girvin. | members of the Lady's Temple went to | ——Mrs. W. W. Montgomery had quite | a bad fall at her home on Allegheny street the past week and, although no bones were broken, she sustained quite a severe nervous shock. She had just recovered from a several months illness and her in- jury is very unfortunate. ——On Saturday the Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal church will have a sale in the vacant room in the Bush Arcade on High street. Bread, pies, cake, cookies, candy and all the good things for which the League is fa- mous will be on sale. Ice cream and cake will be sold in the afternoon and evening. Come and buy your edibles for Sunday. ——Following the suggestion made in the WATCHMAN of last week the borough authorities have had Spring creek from the falls up to Waite’s implement store cleaned of the moss and refuse which has ' made it such an unsightly and unsanitary | place the past month or so. In this con- | | nection it might be added that there are other portions of Spring creek that would likewise be improved by a cleaning out. ——Nortwithstanding the fact that a ' strong effort was put forth to run down the party or parties who robbed the ticket office at the Pennsylvania railroad station in this place, several months ago, it has so far been without result and there is little likelihood now of the robbers ever ' being detected. Whoever did the job not only did it quickly and completely but so covered his tracks that no trail has been found. ——One of the last announcements ‘made by the late fish commissioner W. ' E. Meehan before he retired from office | last Friday was his estimate of the num- | ber of trout caught during the past sea- | son, which he placed at half a million. | Centre county is credited with four | thousand. Centre county is also credited | with one hundred and three stocked | trout streams, the largest number of any | county in the State. ——The Scenic is the only moving picture show in Bellefonte and the pic- | tures are the best that manager T | Clayton Brown or any other manager can get. In addition to the regular service the Scenic always shows special feature films of interest when there are any on the market. And the price always re- mains the same, five cents. The best of order prevails at all times and you are sure to be entertained. *ov | ——George T. Bush returned on Mon- | day from -a trip to Williamsport and { Philadelphia where he made arrangements ‘for the illustrating and binding of his | book on his trip around the world. It| | will be out about October first and is | titled "Forty Thousand Miles around the | | World,” or “a personal narrative of the | experiences and impressions of an ener getic traveler who crossed both the equa- ' tor and Arctic circle on a tour.” \ ——There is no bidding for the | county peach crop this year as there was last year and the year before; principally because there is no crop worth | for. The Reynclds orchard and i | peach growing sections indicate a good | ance in the first grade schools show a fruit can probably | slight falling off. The High school faculty | | were in Bellefonte Saturday to attend the Saxe poiatoes per bushel, new | Onions crop and the luscious be bought at about the same price as last year. » cow —-— ——The family of Mr. fonte, have more than their share of hard luck. Several months ago Mrs. Laurie suffered a nervous breakdcwn and for a time her life was dispaired of. She was taken to the Mercy hospital, Altoona, and home on Wednesday of last week, though she is not yet entirely well. On Saturday their youngest son, Andrew G., while playing on the grounds of the new school of his legs, which will lay him up for some time. ——— A — ——The Y. M. C. A. will start a whirl- wind campaign for two hundred new members in one week. The teams will meet for lunch on Monday night and begin the campaign. A clock will hang across the street, giving the progress of the teams. Mr. Will Zerby will be captain Every will wear either a red button or a blue, denoting the side he is on. The winners of the contest will be given a banquet and twenty free memberships to boys and pool. The pool is every citizen should show his apprecia- tion to the donor by becoming a member. a a — ——The Bellefonte Academy will open on Wednesday of next week and there is every assurance that it will be crowded jast week from a trip through the wes- tern part of the State and brought with him positive assurance of a larger number of students than has been at the Acad- emy in any past year. And since his re- turn he has received a number of letters from parents stating that they had de- cided to send their sons here. All this is evidence of the high standard of the Bellefonte Academy in every way and who have sons and daughters to prepare for college cannot send them to a better place | than the Bellefonte Academy. | side and in, ' a new pulpit, new has so far recovered that she was taken | _ Mills and has been of the Blues and Russell Blair of the Reds. | member and every one interested and being more or together regular session : two members ‘and Beezer. with students. Mr. James R. Hughes, | the sick list, Mr. Musser also had troubles headmaster, came home the latter part of | | was picnickers home and Messrs. | tween Rev. | burg GET READY FOR THE BiG CENTRE COUN- TY FAIR. —The twelfth annual exhibition and fair of the Centre County Agricul- tural Exhibiting company, which will be held the week of October 3rd to 6th in- clusive, is now being billed throughout county knows Mr. Decker and when you see him get a list and look it over and see the long list of very enticing prem- iums offered. Last year the fair manage- ment paid out on the last day of the fair between seven and eight hundred dollars in premiums, all of which went into the pockets of Centre county farmers, their | wives and their daughters. Is not that sufficient inducement for one and all to help make this year's fair the biggest yet? Remember there is no limit to the exhibitions. You can enter any number from one up and the more the better, not only for the fair but for yourself. head of stoek, sample of fruit or article of handiwork may take a first or second premium, and every premium taken helps | In this way you to swell the aggregate. ' visit for ten days with relatives in Centre county. Every | | MAN office. | NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. : —Jerre Glenn, of Curtin, has been visiting rela- tives in Cleveland, Ohio. ~Thomas E. Mayes made a business trip to i —Miss Joe White, will go to Philadelphia to-day Rochester, N. Y., the fore part of the week. } whereshe will het pi ib —~Mrs. John Kreamer and three children, of | Isaac Chambers is home from Pittsburg, are visiting friends in Bellefonte. | wor wks se bo ecuperate from a econ seh —Miss Elizabeth Lycett, of Johnstown, is the | illness. guest of her cousin, Miss Anna Taylor, on north | —Miss Mary Monahan, of Cleveland, is the Spring street. | guest of the Misses Curry, at their home on James. Dardis ava avs Pulp rusereed | Logs NE Saturday evening from a trip to New York, | —~Miss Louise Armor is in Hartford, . Philadelphia and Ocean Grove. | spending her summer vacation with oud, Qo —Misses Mame Gross and Agnes Scanlon, of | George M. Armor. Axe Mann, have returned from a delightful | —Wiiliam Tressler, of Bellefonte, and Joseph week's visit with friends in Altoona. | Tressler, of Filmore, have been for the past —Edward Keichline came down from Renovo | Week visiting at Corry. and remained over Sunday at the home of his | —~Miss Harriet Foster returned last Saturday parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Keichline. | froma five weeks visit with her sister, Mrs. —Miss Charlotte Meek, of Washington, D. c.. William Johnson, at Juniata. will be in Bellefonte next week, expecting to | —~Lawrence McClure, of Renovo, was the week end guest of his parents, Mr.and Mrs. James McClure, of Spring street. —Miss Mable Allison, of Spring Mills, is in Bellefonte the guests of her aunts, Mrs. Frank | McCoy and Mrs. Archibald Allison. the well known | —Mrs. Emil Joseph and her son Edmund ar- residents of Houserville, was a Bellefonte visitor | rived in Bellefonte Wednesday, and while here on Tuesday and a pleasant caller at the WATCH | will be the guests of Sigmund Joseph. —Mrs. Harvey and her little daughter of Phila- —Miss Carrie Harper has returned to Belle | delphia, are in Bellefonte for an indefinite time, foute fiorka gi weds stay in Michigan, having | visiting with Judge and Mrs. Ellis L. Orvis. gone to to escape the hay feverseason | —Miss Flora Parrish, of Ebensburg, is the in Pennsylvania. | guest of her brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. C. —Miss Mary Shaughensey, of Philadelphia, is a very pleasant visitor at the home of her uncle | and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shaughensey, | Sr. ~David J. Tressler, one of will not only get to see the fair for noth- | i . | —Miss Emma Waite, dne of the eTicient opera- M. Parrish, at their home on Spring street. ing but make some money in addition. | o in the Bell telephone exch or Sal. | The fair is only three weeks off and that is the have not already done so. Don’t wait bly have other things tooccupy your time and minds, but begin now. There will be the usual young department this year and they are to respond liberally. School children, especially, are urged to prepare exhibi- ; tions for this department. It is a feature the Centre county fair has provided ex- | of the! clusively for the boys and girls county and they should be encouraged in their interest by the older people. The free attractions this year will be reason it is time to begin to | get your exhibits in readiness, if you | | Emma Green, spent last week visiting with rela- s : | i until the last week when you will proba- | ‘ore Lstyisbark av Mifflinburg, returning to people's : asked | special attraction for him here. | Atlantic City last Friday, intending to visit his —Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sheffer and Mr. and urday for a two weeks visit with friends in Pitts: i Mrs. Ralph Taylor, of Milroy, were week-end burg and Altoona. | guests of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sheffer, of Curtin —Mrs. James R. Hughes and her sister, Miss | street. ~The Misses Christine and Isabelle Merriman, who left Bellefonte Monday, weie while here visiting, the guests of their sister, Mrs. John Blanchard. —~Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fay, of Altoona, with their little daughter, Patty Lane Fay, spent Sat- —After a very short visit to their old home | below Bellefonte and with relatives in this vicin- | ity, Col. and Mrs. Austin Curtin will leave for Vicksburg next week. urday of last week with Mrs. Fay's parents, Mr. —Mrs. George B. Johnston, after visiting for | and Mrs. John N. Lane. several weeks with her mother, Mrs. J. A. Aiken, —~Mrs. W. G.” Morrison and Miss Kathryn Monday with her three children for their | Parker left yesterday for Mill Hall, where they home at Beaver Falls. | took in the Curtin—Mann wedding which was — Andrew Engle, of Altoona, was a Bellefonte | solemnized at that place last night. visitor on Friday of last weck, and the frequency | —Clark M. Gramley, of Rebersburg, spent Mon- of his visits is assurance that there must be a | day afternoon and night in Bellefonte. He is one | of the leading residents of that thriving and beau- —John D. Sourbeck went on the excursion to | tiful little town in Brush valley and is in more different kinds of business than any man down better than ever before and each 43Y | yoghter, Mrs. Herbert Bellringer and family, in | there: will alone be worth the price of admis- | Brooklyn, before returning home. sion. > SEVEN EVENINGS WITH YOUNG PEOPLE. | —An interesting series of meetings have | people of | Methodist | Mr. and Mrs. Daggett at the Bush house, having | come with her aunt, Miss Boynton, upon her re. | and Mrs. W. B. Rankin Saturday and Sunday of turn to Bellefonte two weeks ago. been arranged for the young Bellefonte, to be held in the church September 1th to October 26th, | Thursdays of each week at eight o'clock | _ p. m. The meetings and addresses are primarily arranged and will be given for the profit and pleasure of young people. The persons who are to give the addresses will not be known until they appear upon the platform. Special music will be | a feature of each meeting. The schedule of the meetings is as follows: Sept. 14.—Learning to Read, by a Learner, Sept. 21.—A Girl's Dream. A Boy's Story. Sept. 28.—A Message, by a Merchant. Oct. 5.—A Young Woman's Musings. A Young | Louise Galway, left the fore part of the week for Man's Visions. Oct. 12. —A Brief, by a Lawyer. Oct. 19.—~Etchings, by an Editor. Oct. 26.—0ld Saddlebags, by an Itinerant. coe — BorouGH ScrooLs OPEN.—The public { schools of Bellefonte opened on Monday | and by this time are running along very | Centre | smoothly. The total enrollment so far is 750, which is the largest for the first week | jin a number of years. There are tWO | of his neck, which has been giving him some con’ bidding | hundred students in the High school and ! : or- ' about twenty-five from outside districts | | chards in Pennsvalley will yield but a scant | crop and these will be disposed of entirely | were refused admission on account of poor preparation. The number of appli the local market. Housewives, however, | cations from outside of Bellefonte was their children, grand-children and friends, | 4 ot despond as reports from other greater this year than ever. The attend- | prs Evans, of Lock Haven: Mrs. Henry D. ! Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Harper, of Curtin; | is complete and is considered one of the | strongest ever engaged. and Mrs. John | T. Laurie, of Tyrone, formerly of Bellz. | CHURCH REDEDICATED.—The Reformed church at Hublersburg was rededicated last Sunday after undergoing extensive repairs. It was re-roofed, repainted out- redecorated, furnished with and new lamps, at a cost of about $650. The sermon in the morning was preach. ed by Dr. Ambrose M. Schmidt, who also had charge of raising the funds needed, The balance of $150 was raised at the morning service and the church rededi- building, fell and cut a deep gash in one | cated by the pastor, Rev. H. I. Crow. An individual communion service was pre- sented to the congregation at this service. ——Conductor J. Henry Cook made his | last run over the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad last Thursday when he took hie train from Bellefonte to Montandon. He began his service on this road when it was first opened in 1883 as far as Spring in continuous service since. He is now less afflicted with rheumatism took advantage of the rule of | the railroad company which gives its em- _ ployees the privilege of retiring at the age of sixty-five years. girls—who are worthy—for the swimming | eee nearing completion and | ! was ——Whether it was because Monday Labor day, or someother reason, not borough dads could be gotten Monday evening to hold the of borough council. Only reported, Messrs. Grimm President Harper was on enough of of his own to contend with, Mr. Judge busy getting the Hunter's park Keller and Sheffer were out of town. | ——At a special meeting of the West | Susquehanna Classis held in the Reformed | church at Hublersburg on Tuesday fore- the pastoral relations existing be- H. I Crow and the Hublers- and Zion churches was dissolved and the reverend dismissed to the Eastern Pennsylvania Classis; he having accepted the pastorate of the Reformed church at | oxeent from the illness she suffered during most Bethlehem. wife and family have been over in Philipsburg the past week: the former looking up the political situation and the latter visiting friends. day of last week, after being for the greater part Mrs. of the summer at Asbury Park with her daugh- ters, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. McGinness. Barnes, and three of Mrs. Barnes’ of Altoona, are guests of the childrens grand- | mother, Mrs. Katherine Gault, of Curtin street. | | came to Bellefonte Wednesday of last week with | Mrs. Wells L. Daggett, and during be Mr. and Mrs. Daggett's guest | house. pews and choir chairs sixty-eight years old —Mrs. N. A. Boalich and her daughter, Miss —Miss Julia Gray, of State College, went to Esther Boalich, of Deming, New Mexico, who are Wernersvilie Thursday, for a few days rest and | on their way to Boston where they anticipate treatment. Miss Gray will return to her work | spending the winter, were in Bellefonte during Monday or Tuesday of next week: | the past week, guests of Dr. and Mrs. J. L. —Miss Jackson, of Waverly, Pa., isa guest of | Seibert. —~Miss Frances Elmore was the guest of Mr. | last week. Miss Elmore had been for the sum- | mer with her mother in New York state and was * | on her way to Pittsburg, to resume her work for the winter. | —A pleasant caller at the WATCHMAN office on | Tuesday moming was Edgar Martin, a son of Mary Martin, of Nittany. He graduated at State College in the class of 1909, and since that time has taken a two years general training course with the Westinghouse people in Pitts- burgh which he recently completed and is now home on a two weeks vacation. Upon his re turn next week he wili step into a much better position in the general offices of the company. WO —— ——We heard indirectly during the visiting in Belle week from Mrs. Calvin Lose, of Atlantic Deputy prothonotary David R. Foreman Mrs. W. A. Lyon returned to Bellefonte Thurs —Mrs. Harry Stover, her sister, Mrs. George children, all —Mrs. Galway and her daughter, Miss Mary their home in Virginia, after | with p ’ i! [ap 3 | fonte Mrs. Galway’s mother, Mrs. Henry P. City, who is one of the Wa 5 Harris. —Mrs. Maynard Murch Jr., of Cleveland, Ohio, Valued readers. She was formerly a | resident of Bellefonte and remembers her her stay will friends here in memories fraught with at the Bush many of the happiest times of her life, ' for while better business opportunities iia rehere the former wil ita Prompted them to move to the Shore ay da rding a swelling on the right side | SOME years ago they still look upon Belle- fonte as "Home" in every sense but that ' of actual residence. —Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harper went to Philadel cern of late. —Mrs. C.D. Casebeer returned to Bellefonte m—— last Thursday evening after a month's stay at | Mace is the outer shell of the nutmeg, her old home in Somerset, being accompanied by | resembling it greatly in flavor. It may her nephew, Walter Brownfield, who remained . he used whole or in powdered form. over Sunday. Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. $115 Mrs. S. G. Hall and G. E.Saxe, of Scranton, —~Harper wedding. ! ONIONS... oz00ereeseree oy — Mins Anna Hull, who has been for four weeks FEE Def Ang. 13 with friends at Altoona, Tyrone and Graysville. Country 10 will return to Bellefonte Sunday. Her sister, Miss | Fo Rss y Mary, will leave the same day for her vacation of Tallow, per ed 04 a week to be spent visiting in thesame places. FUtter, DET POM. ceneer errr rstissssnessssmssraniss ae Miss Helen White came to Bellefonte Saturday of last week from Pittsburg, to spend this week with her aunt, Miss Powell, before leaving for Clarion where she will be the physical director | The following are the quotations up tosix o'clock in the Normal school during the coming year. | Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press. —Mrs. William E.Gray and son Samuel will go Red Wheat............cccco.coneenne: to Princeton. N. J. next Tuesday where the latter te Nhe will matriculate as a student in Princeton Col- | . lege. Mrs. Gray will remain there some time | and may decide to stay throughout the school | Barley, per bushel year. i —Misses Susan and Sarah Tuten, of Ayer, | Mass.. are in Bellefonte for a two weeks | The following are the closing prices of the with their nephew, register Earle C. Tuten. They | are sisters of the late Edward T.Tuten and hey | pulladelphiamariiets on Wednesday venjuk. is their first visit in Bellefonte for about twenty years. —Ms. Harry Meyer and Mrs. Faxon. of Rebers- burg, were in Bellefonte Thursday on a driving ' Figs Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, asa33ny Senreessasensns rebates r trip, having visited with friends at Spring Mills | —F and being on their way to spend several days | Bye Blou pes oie Tr and being on their wey, to SPiR0 iesbury and! Dod . . —John M. Dale, Jr., who has been with his mother and sister, Mrs. J. M. Dale and Miss Vir- The Best Advertising ginia Dale, for the greater part of the summer, at | Willoughby Beach, Va., returned to his home at the Bush house last week. to take up his schoo! | work for the year. { —Mrs. Herbert N. Bartley and daughter Ruth, ' Page who spent six weeks at the home of her father. | Bl cole, Tt 13 ex-county treasurer James J. Gramley, near Madisonburg, returned last week to their home in Lock Haven. Mr. Bartley has also returned home | from a month's vacation on a farm in Illinois will not be sent out of Centre county ug: Papers very much benefited by his outing. tess paid for in advance, nor will subscrptoRs —Judge Hawkins with his wife and daughter denn the option of the pu are : Paid after were in Bellefonte a short time on Tuesday on their way home to Pittsburg from an automobile CHARGES: trip to the eastern part of the State. Ton vote | fy imjted simugnt of advertising space will be was an intimate friend of the late Edward C. | yo vil race . Humes and also William P. Humes and is quite | LEGAL TRANSIENT well known by a number of Bellefonters. Jacob Marks returned to Bellefonte on Tues: day evening looking and feeling better than he hay any time since he was taken sick seven | per | months ago. When he left Bellefonte about two BUSINESS OR DISPLAY months ago he went to a sanitorium near Phila- | Per inch, each mri 25 cts. he a WO he following discounts will be allowed on ad since which time he has been at Atlantic City. ing discounts latter part of last week from Atlantic City where 8, nd Six mos, re pers she had been for two months and, remaining here mes, 14 1ROBrriuernsn over Sunday took her sister, Miss Ursula Bayard, Advertising along home with her to Williamsport on Monday | are op in wi afternoon; the latter having recovered to a great ] taka of € oor will any i" _ orders of parties unknown to the \inless of her stay in Bellefonte. | accompanied the cash.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers