EE —————————— re... ENGINEERS AT WORK ON PENITENTIARY | a — ——While engaged in putting up a, Cousci Sits 1¥ CoLb STORAGE. —The | HOCKMAN—SHARER—On Thursday of | FLooDED Our oF Business.—William Burs. fast Thursday evening William M. | pair of steps at the match factory on regular meeting of borough council on | last week at the Reformed parsonage in | Doll, the baker, was temporarily put out . C. Donley, of Pittsburgh, chief engineer Tuesday . afternoon Harry Eberhart fell | Monday evening was not exactly a freeze Boalsburg, John H. Hockman, of Mingo- | of business on Wednesday evening by “for the prison commission, arrived in | backward to the floor, from a height of [out but the law against cold storage | ville, and Miss Grace C. Sharer, of Zion, | being flooded with water. During the Bellefonte to make preliminary arrange- ' about twelve feet. He fell on his back | | were united in marriage by the pastor, | severe cold weather the three inch stand- ments for beginning the official survey of and shoulders and injured himself so | bers been edibles instead of law-makers. Rev. S. C. Stover. A few relatives and | pipe put ‘up in the Bush Arcade as a member but one was pres- friends were present to witness the cere- means of protection against fire froze While ent, but there were no outsiders there to mony. Mr. and Mrs. Hockman will re- {and bursted, and when the weather force of eight men, namely: Peter Mel- ' he is badly bruised and a very sore man make demands or complaints and the au- | side at Mingoville. | moderated on Wednesday it thawed, lon, R. A. Schneider, T. J. McGovern, | it is not believed any serious results will dience was confined strictly to the news. vor - ; naturally. The result was a break on William McGovern, William McMinn, J. | follow. | paper men. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | the third floor andan avalanche of water C. Weir, Peter Wolff and J. R. Fording, — | The minutes of the last meeting were | : : : | poured down the steps, flooding the West- arrived in Bellefonte from Pittsburgh.| ——On Monday Jacob Jury purchased |read and approved and so far as the | . Miss Marie Walsh is spending some time in | To CorrpsrONDENTS.~No communications published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer, —— ————— THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——"Little Miss Kut-up” is coming and will be af Garmans in the near future. >on —Tie family of James H. Corl ex- pect to move to Chicago in the spring. ——There will be service in St. John's Episcopz’ church on Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock ~The jury list for the February term of court will be found in another column of this issue. -fHammon Sechler is again confined to the house with illness, which we trust will be of short duration. ——Beilefonte automobile dealers are already taking orders for new machines for delivery early in the spring. ——Miss Anna Keichline has opened an office in Temple Court where she will hang out her shingle as an architect. —M:. and Mrs. Morton Smith are | now ectertaining a brand new little | daughter, who arrived last Saturday. —Mi. George Ingram, who was con- fined to (he house a week or ten days! with the arip, is now able to be around , again. —The stockholders of the Bellefonte i Trust company held their annual meet- | ing on Tuesday, and also enjoyed their | annua! banquet at the Brockerhoff house. i —Quite a number of Bellefonters | have been housed up with the grip or | bad cold: the past two weeks, and the | doctors sre kept busy doling out quinine. | ——The chestnut tree blight specialists | who the past two weeks have been work- ing on the mountains in the vicinity of | Port Matilda have found the forests quite : free of thc disease. i —The Western Union Telegraph | company is now doing business in the room in the rear of Dr. Tate's office until the reguiar room dries out from the drenching it got on Wednesday. ——Ex-deputy sheriff Fred Reese, Levi Symonds and three or four other Belle- fonters have secured jobs with the peni- tentiary ergineering corps, and are now on the iva 1p in Benner township. —The Dickinson Seminary basket ball team will play the Academy five in the Y. M.C. A. gymnasium this (Friday) evening at 830 o'clock. Last Saturday the Academy team: was defeated by the Pittshurgh Collegians by the score of 37 to 27. ~——Fo.r cases of scarlet fever are re- ported i: the family of Thomas King, at Valley View, and three in the family of William King. Both homes have been | quarantined and the public school closed to prevent the disease becoming epi- demic. —01 the, one hundred and ten appli- cations received at the State Highway | Departiient for help in building state | road since the Sproul bill became a law | only one was from Centre county, and that fro: Snow: Shoe township for a 5,500 foot stretch of road. —taery Keller was on Wednesday morning appointed temporary postmaster of Belleionte to hold until a permanent successor of the late Samuel H. Williams is appointed. Mr. Keller represents the Surety Campany on Mr. Williams’ bond which accounts for his appointment, —Ai the morning service of the Presbyterian church last Sunday twelve new members were taken in by letter and nin€ by confession of faith. The sacred rite of baptism was administered to the latier. This was a very good re- sult of the previous week of prayer and praise service, and likewise encouraging to the new pastor, Rev, George E. Hawes. —Joseph Albright, of Howard town- ship, is confined to his home with a well- defined case of smallpox. Albright is a traveling tea salesman and returned home on Monday feeling quite iil, think- mg he had the grip. On Tuesday a phy- sician was summoned who found the man suffering with smallpox. The Al- bright home was at once quarantined and every effort will be made to prevent the disease from spreading, —Harry Burns, of Alto, and Emanuel Korman, of Bellefonte, underwent oper- ations at the Bellefonte hospital the past week. Miss Kate McQuillen, Miss Eliza- neth Jones and Mrs. Mose D. Burnet were admitted for treatment. A young son was born to Mrs. Edward Zimmerman on Sunday and four patients were discharged aamely: Irwin Martin, of Tyrone; Mrs. Herman and Mildred Irwin, of Bellefonte; and Samuel Waite, of Pleasant Gap. There are now twenty-three patients in the institution. ——There was a big fire in Philadel phia on Saturday which destroyed the headquarters of the General Film com- pany (Lubins,) but that will not stop the moving pictures at the Scenic. Man- ager T. Clayton Brown secures his films from the Pittsburgh agency and he will have a full program every evening. And where in Bellefonte is there a better place of amusement to spend an hour each evening than at the Scenic? It is always comfortable, even during the coldest weather, and you are always cer- ain of seeing something that will inter- st, entertain and amuse you. Never ny change in price, as five cents will ad- mit you any evening during the week. They compose Mr. Donley's surveying staff. They spent Sunday night at the Brock- erhoff house and Monday forenoon was devoted to laying in supplies for immedi- ate use and immediately after dinner on Monday they moved, bag and baggage, , to the Reynolds bungalow at Rock and ‘the adjoining farm house, where they will make their headquarters, the same ; afternoon beginning the survey. The “men were divided into two corps and will work in conjunction with each other. The ordinary citizen naturally considers this very rough weather for making a | | survey but most of the men have been ! working out of doors all winter and are inured to the cold. In addition they dress for the weather and claim to get along very well. As a matter of fact ! they can make better progress on their survey through the mountains during this kind of weather than they could next summer, for the reason that the trees ‘ and brush being leafless there is nothing to obstruct their view and they can train instruments a great distance. Were they to wait until summer time it would be necessary to have axemen and cut a well defined trail along every line. In addi- tion to this fact they want to have the of- ficial survey completed by the first of April, so that active building operations can be begun, and it will take every day of the time for the men now on the job to do the work. In conversation with the writer Chief Engineer Donley stated that there would be men on the job continuously from now on. While he will spend only two or three days a week here overseeing the work the present force of engineers will be here until they have made a complete survey of every line and every fence on the entire site. The lines will be plainly marked with stakes driven in the ground and when the weather opens up in the spring other engineering corps, some six or eight in number, will go to work and go over the entire ground for the pur- pose of placing a substantial concrete marker at every line corner. These markers will be sunk from four to six feet under ground and will project about two feet above . ground. Roads will also be laid out and grades given to all parts of the penitentiary farms, and he esti- mates that this will be an all: summer job. A number of the “trusty” prisoners are now being specially trained as help- ers for this work and they are very en- thusiastic in learning all they can about it. But the surveying will not be the only thing done next summer. As soon as the weather opens active operations will be started for the erection of the first build- ing, which will be a substantial stone structure and will be temporarily used to house the workmen on the job. When the prison building is completed the oth. er building will be converted into a ma- chine shop or work shop of some kind. While it is true that prison labor will he used as far as possible Mr. Donley stated that before the summer was two-thirds over Bellefonte would not be able to sup- ply one-half the outside laborers and me- chanics that there will be a demand for on the job; which demand will continue to a greater or less extent until the en- tire institution is completed. And this will mean an expenditure of millions of dollars, a good part of the labor percent- age of which, it is claimed, will flow through Bellefonte business channels. rte lA ee ee SHOVING QUEER CHECKS.—A Fauble, the Potter-Hoy Hardware company, A. C. Mingle and Sim Baum are looking for ayoung man who gave them checks last Saturday afternoon that have turned out to have the ear marks of forgeries. The checks were signed in the name of B. F. Homan and made payable to John Parker, the latter having endorsed them. Ali of the checks are drawn on the First National bank of Bellefonte, where payment was refused on them for the reason that B. F. Homan does not carry an account there. The only B. F. Homan known of in Centre county is a very prosperous tarm- er living near Oak Hall. When called on the telephone Tuesday morning he said he had not given checks of any sort to a person named John Parker, hence the search that is being made to appre- hend John long enough to have him ex- plain how be came into possession of the checks. While it is not a certainty that they are forgeries, yet the fact that they were drawn on a bank in which the drawer has no account and also the fact that the similarity of the writing of "John Park- er” on the face of the check and of “John Parker” as endorser makes it look suspicious. : The one thing considerate about the man who passed the checks is the fact that he showed very little partiality. All the checks were for eighteen dollars ex- cept the one passed at the Potter-Hoy Hardware company which was only for eight dollars. The man was only about twenty vears of age and a stranger. ——— Ami ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. | the restaurant under the Garman house | office and will conduct the same in the | future. He still retains his job as bar- | tender at the Brockerhofi house while | the restaurant is in charge of his son! Russel and John Kane. Mr. Jury is an | old hand at the restaurant business and | we trust he may be as successful in his | : ai a} new venture as Delmonico was in his in! New York the size of the town taken into | consideration. i ——Mrs. H. E. Fenlon's luncheon Mon- i Tuesday Mrs. Dix was honor guest at | { Mrs. L. T. Munson's bridge party, at| which four tables were in play; Tuesday | evening, Mrs. George Beezer entertained | at her home on Howard street: Wed. | nesday, Mrs. Dix was again honor guest at a luncheon given by Mrs. E. H. Richard for ten of her friends; Thursday the | Misses Valentine entertained at dinner | at their home, “Burnham Place” in honor | of Miss De la Garde, of Boalsburg, and | gave a parchesi party in honor of Henry S. Linn-—-parchesi having become very popular with the younger set in Belle- fonte. ——The writer has been asked repeat- edly as to the meaning of the applica- tions to be made to the Governor for charters for various light, heat and pow- er companies, in accordance with adver- tisements as published in this paper. The only answer that can be given is the as- surance of the men directly interested that they mean business. A. J. Musser, one of the applicants for the charters is secretary and treasurer of the Clearfield Electric Light company and secretary of the electric light company at Cammal, Indiana county. A. W. Lee and James Wrigley are both prominent citizens of Clearfield and the three of them have ample financial backing to carry out any project they may contemplate. —————. ir ——The announcement of a wedding which is of interest to a number of peo- ple in Bellefonte, was that of Mrs. Jennie Tomb Brown, of Jersey Shore, and Pro- fessor J. M. Murray, a musician of repu- tation, of Maxton, N. C., which took place at Laurinton, N. C., on December 4th, at the residence of Rev. James W, Williams, pastor of the Laurinburg Baptist chureh. The wedding which was a very quiet af- fair, was attended by a few intimate friends of both Mrs. Brown and Professor Murray, and followed by a musicale and dinner given at the Hotel Chetwynd, at Laurinburg. Professor and Mrs. Murray are living in apartments at Maxton, ex- pecting to make their home in North | Carolina. cos —It having been found necessary, on account of the drilling in the army pre- | paring for the inspection on the 12th, of February, to change the date of the Charity Ball. The committee in charge has now completed all arrangements for a fancy dress dance to be given on the night of February fifteenth, and cordially invites every one to join them for a pleasant evening. In order that the plans may be successfully carried out, the dancers especially are all asked to go masked and if possible in costume, the costume to be as simple or as elaborate as the wearer may choose. The tickets to be sold by the members of the club will be seventy-five cents, and the pro- ceeds will go to the treasury of the club. ~——The recently organized Ladies Aid society of the Lutheran church of Pleas. ant Gap, will hold a social at Noll's hall on Saturday evening, January 20th, the proceeds to be applied to the church building fund. The committee have de- termined that all who will kindly fayor them with their patronage will get value received. The high cost of living advo- cates will on this occasion get a chilly frost. The admission into the hall will be 3 cents or two for 5; Java and Mo- cha coffee, 3 cents per cup, or two for 5; sandwiches the same. Ice cream, cake, candy, pop-corn at the same liberal rate, in fact everything’ goes for 2 for 5 or 3 cents straight. Many pleasing attrac- tions will be pulled off, all of which must be seen to be appreciated. A most cor- dial invitation is extended to all. DT WALKER—ELDER.—~Quite a large wed- ding took place at noon on Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel El- der, at Rock Springs, when their daugh- ter, Miss Mary Elder, was united in mar riage to Ralph Walker, of the Branch. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. S. Shultz, of the Lutheran church. The attendants were Miss Sarah Elder, a sis- ter of the bride, and Irvin Walker, a cousin of the bridegroom. Over one huu- dred guests were present. The decora- tions were quite elaborate, consisting of potted plants and flowers. Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was serv. ed and in the afternoon the young couple left for a wedding trip to Johnstown. The bridegroom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Stine Walker, on the Branch, and is en- | the property. The secretary presented | | the lease, which holds until the first of | railroad cut near the Phoenix mill, and | restriction that in doing so they did not standing committees were concerned there were no reports worth recording. | The Special committee, which is the com- | mittee on the Green mill property, held a | meeting a few nights ago, but did noth- | ing. There were no verbal communica- | tions and under the head of written com- | munications a letter was received from | Col. W. Fred Reynolds enclosing a letter | from the Underwriter's Association rela. | tive to a number of safety alterations and | equipments, as well as repairs, to be | day, was given for Mrs. Dix, of Dayton; Made at the Phoenix mill property in or- | Customary auual visi at this office. der to carry the insurance at the prevail- | ing rate. This communication provoked | quite a discussion, resulting in an inqui- | ry by some of the new members as to the length of the lease the borough had on February, 1914, and after a reading of the same the discussion dropped about as suddenly as the mercury. The Pennsylvania railroad company the same ev ening Mrs. George R. Meek, | presented the agreement granting coun- | —Miss Roxanna Brisbin will return to her home cil the right to build a sewer under the the same was accepted and ordered filed. The same company also asked permis- sion to replace the watch box at the Gamble, Gheen & Co. mill crossing to the location it formerly occupied, and the same was granted. Under the head of old business the Fire and Police committee recommended the election of Harry H. Dukeman as chief of police and William Beezer as po- liceman. Mr. Judge made a motion that the report be accepted and the two men elected and Mr. Sheffer seconded the same. Mr. Grimm said that he couldn't understand why a change was desired, as so far as he knew the present policeman was doing his full duty. Mr. Beezer gave an explanation of the reason why the committee made the recommendation and upon a vote Dukeman and Beezer were elected, Mr. Grimm voting against them. The salary is to remain the same, $52.50 a mouth for the chief and $50.00 a month for the policeman. The question of paying the bill for the printing of the auditor's statement was then brought up. When the auditors completed their work last spring they gave the contract for the printing of the statements to the Keystone Gazette. Coun- cit held up the bill on the grounds that the awarding of the contract had not been left to them. The attorney for the audi- tors contended that they had the power to award the contract while the borough solicitor maintained that it was not with- in their province. But as the statement had been printed and properly circulated council voted to pay the bill, with the admit that the auditors were right and admonishing them not to do it again. Bills tc the amount of eleven hundred dollars were approved and council ad- journed. ARRESTED ON A SERIOUS CHARGE—John H. Beck, a clerk in the State College postoffice, was on Tuesday arrested on a charge of tampering with the mails and was held under three hundred dollars bond for trial at the March term of the United States court at Scranton. It is charged that Mr. Beck would. take can- celled stamps off incoming packages, of which there are many at State College, and then when a patron at the window would mail a package giving him the necessary stamps to carry it he would stick the good stamps on only by the corner. After the patron had left the office he would remove the good stamps and substitute ones already cancelled that he had gathered up. - * A Pittsburg inspector is given credit with having discovered the irregularity. He noticed parcels coming into the Pitts- burg office mailed at State College that had stamps on them that had previously been cancelied in Pittsburg. Immediate- ly the inspector and a detective went to State College put two decoy parcels through the office and found them latter in the mail bags at the railroad station with old cancelled stamps on them. The new stamps they had bought \erthie par cels, which had been marked, we in the stamp drawer at the office. The entire community was shocked by the disclosure as Mr. Beck had held an unsullied reputation. Several years ago he was a farmer in Marion township. He sold out there and moved to State Col- lege where he built several houses. Then he took the civil service examination,pass ed very high, and was made a carrier at the College. Proficiency won hima position in the office. He was an auditor of Cen- tre county three years ago and a man so highly regarded that it seems that there must be some mistake about this serious charge. ——QOwing to the extreme cold weath- er the Phil Otts comedians closed their show for the season and did not appear at Garman'’s last night as advertised. The next attraction will be “Little Miss Kut- up.” Press notices of the latter are very favorable and Bellefonte theatre-goers gaged in farming. The WATCHMAN ex- tends congratulations. will doubtless appreciate it. her home at Dayton, Ohio, after visiting in Belle- J.E. day to aid Mr. and Mrs, Wade Cruse in adjusting their trouble, following the fire of that day. Mr. | Krape is Mrs. Cruse's father. Steubenville, Ohio, for two months with her daughter and son, Mrs. Harry Bamhart and Daniel Martin, returned to Bellefonte last week. ter Helen went to Lancaster Friday, where on account of business interests of Mr. Decker they will spend a great part of the remainder of the winter. abeth returned to their home at Indiana, Satur- day, after having spent the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Larimer and Mr. and Mrs. Schofield was among a number who were brave enough to leave Bellefonte in the storm of last Saturday. Mr. Brumgart was leaving for Pittsburgh on a business trip. fonte Thursday, to attend the funeral of John Houser at State College, Friday. Miss Houser expects to remain in Bellefonte for a short visit with her cousin. Miss Blanche Houser. Armstrong Kirby Jr., came from their home at Trappe, Maryland, Friday of last week, and will visit for an indefinite time with Mrs. Kirby's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hammon Sechler. last week after a short visit in Bellefonte with her mother, Mrs, M. Fauble. is busily engaged at present in overseeing the building of her new home, which is expected will be ready for occu- pancy early in the spring. dren, Ruth and Jean, of Juniata, came to Belle- fonte on Saturday; Mrs. Johnson and the two chil- dren to visit her mother, Mrs. Edward Foster, while Mr. Johnson is spending the time with his mother in Milesburg, who is seriously ill. guest the past week of Mr. and Mrs. Burns Cride r at their home on east Linn street. She and Mrs. Crider were school mates at the school for the deaf and dumb at Mt. Airy, Pa., and they both very tions. pany, Williamsport, as automobile demonstrator, was in Bellefonte over Saturday night with a 1912 model Franklin runabout. The hood on the new model is similar to that on the 1911, while the rear holds the gas tank. From here he drove to Philipsburg on Sunday. stores of Altoona, was in Bellefonte yesterday on her way to State College to spend her vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Neidigh. Miss Neidigh will return to Altoona at | the the opening of the season. the oldest subscribers to the WATCHMAN, as he informed us last Saturday when renewing his subscription for another year, that he had been a thinks maybe George had the thermometer hang- ing under the bridge. left yesterday ing from New York tomorrow for Panama. Mrs. Pearce, whose home is at Empire, in the Canal Zone, has been spending the past month with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cook. Miss Sny- der is returning to Panama with Mrs, Pearce for a visit of six weeks, not intending to return north Philadelphia and New York. —Samuel Bolich, of Mt. Carmel, was the week Doll's bakery below. end guest of his sister, Mrs. J. L. Seibert. | —Miss Julia Curtin returned home last week | after a delightful visit with Miss Ruth Kerstotter, i in Harrisburg. | —Mrs. Andrew Hall, of Dix Run. was the | guest of Mrs. S. A. Bell. while spending Wednes- day in Bellefonte. | —Mrs. Harvey Griffith and Mrs. S. A. Satter. | field are in Bellefonte, "after a short visit with | relatives in Philadelphia. i —Charles Lucas Jr., of Runville, transacted business in Bellefonte yesterday and made his —Mr. and Mrs. Hugh N. Crider were guests over Sunday of Mrs. Crider's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Freeman, at Tyrone. —Miss Rebecca Valentine, whois the guest of Miss Margaret Brockerhoff, left Bellefonte three weeks ago to visit for a month in Philadelphia, —Mrs. Mary S. Thomas will close her house and go to Philadelphia, Saturday, expecting to visit for some time with her sister, Mrs. Shafner. ~=Mrs. Jacob Bottorf, of Lemont, has been the guest of her daughter and son, Mrs. John Ole- wine and W. M. Bottorf, while visiting in Belle fonte. at Centre Hall this week, after a visit of ten days with Mrs. J. E. Ward, at her home on Curtin street. —Mr. and Mrs, C.C. Shuey went to Curwens- ville the latter part of last week, and during the few days spent there were guests of Mrs. Shuey's sister. —Mrs. E. F. Tausig, of Harrisburg, and her two children arrived in Bellefonte Tuesday for a visit with Mrs. Tausig’s mother. Mrs. Martin Fauble. —Mrs. William B. Dix returned yesterday, to fonte for a month, with her sister, Mrs. L. T. Munson. —H. E. VanNorman, of State College, went to Pittsburgh Saturday to attend the Keystone Fair Association, which has been in session there for the entire week. ~Miss Eva Crissman, who left Bellefonte Sat- urday at noon, went to Rochester, where she will visit during the remainder of January with Mrs, Maguines. —Mrs.Garret and her daughter Elizabeth of Belair, N. J., who came to Bellefonte Monday, will beduring a two week's visit here, guests of Mrs. H. W. Tate, —Miss Mame Peck, 2 nrofessional nurse of Lock Haven, is in Bellefonte to take care of Mr. Frank McCoy, who has Leen ill at his home on Linn street the past week. ~Benjamin Krape came from Salona Wednes- ern Union telegraph office and deiuging In the latter room the ceiling was soaked and fell down and Doll's stock was all ruined while his room furnishings—tables, chairs, counters, cases, soda fountain, etc, were badly damaged. Mr. Doll's loss and the damagé to the building is considerable. When the break occurred an effort was made to find a place to turn the water off but no valve could be found and the pipe was cut in the cellar and the water turned out there to save the building. It appears that when the building was erected and the standpipe put up no pro- vision was made for turning the water off. Until the room occupied by Doll's bakery is repaired he will occupy the one adjoining. A aia A WEDNESDAY FIRE.—On Wednesday afternoon the house on Curtin street owned by Mrs. John M. Dale and occu- pied by Wade Cruse and family caught fire on the second floor from a defective | flue. None of the family were at home at the time but neighbors saw the smoke and gave the alarm. Policeman Duke- man was one of the first on the scene and he was compelled to force the door te gain an entrance to the house The fire had not gained much headway at the time and securing a garden hose the po- liceman and others attempted to put out the fire, but there was no water pressure and nothing could be done until the steamers got on the ground. The up- stairs were pretty badly damaged but otherwise the building is intact. Cruse’s furniture was badly damaged by both fire and water but as he carried five hun- | dred dollars insurance his loss will be j covered. The house was also insured. —Mrs. Catharine Martin, who has been at | —Mr. and Mrs. Jack Decker and their daugh- —Mrs. Charles Larimer and her daughter Eliz’ —Ex-Sheriff Cyrus Brumgart, of Centre Hall, —Miss Tess Houser, of DuBois, arrived in Belle- —Mrs. William Armstrong Kirby and William ~Mrs, W. E. Seel, who returned to Harrisburg ~—Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson, and two chil- —Mrs. Gertrude Futcher, of Pitcairn, was a much enjoyed renewing old-time associa- —Harry E. Goss, who is with the Keeler com- —Miss Minnie Neidigh, who has charge of one milliner departments in one of the large —Mr. Henry Tibbens, of Bellefonte, is one of tury. —Miss Mary Snyder and her niece,Mrs. Pearce, Bellefonte , in anticipation of sail- .50 18.50 The Best Advertising Medium in Central Pennsylvania. A Be fe A a in to read arerssennsanes year. Papers will nu: be seit out of Canive less for in advance, nor will discontinued until all are cept at the option e pu , ADVERTISING CHARGES: A limited of advertising space will be scld at the LEGAL AND TRANSIENT. and transient g running A ASE Comin adveiding rein fo un- be ex. Continued for ‘The following weeks, a per ct. Thre hd wes Sho burst before the first of March. Mt v2
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