Bellefonte, Pa., january 26, 1912. rates : Paid strictly in advance $1.00 Paid before expiration of year - 1.50 Paid after expiration of year 2.00 + —————— — ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. SUDDENLY.—After being ill only since Sunday with quinsy John Taylor, a stu- dent at the Bellefonte Academy, died at nine o'clock on Wednesday morning. He became iil on Sunday morning and had to be excused from attending church. His room-mate remained with him and gave him medicine and after church a physician was summoned. He was un- certain at that time as to the nature of the disease and a consultation of physi- cians was held in the evening. The phy- sicians then diagnosed the ailment as quinsy and the young man was removed to the Hughes residence. There he was given every attention possible and on Tuesday afternoon he was enough im- | proved to sit up in bed and joke with the boys. that Mr. James R. Hughes went to Al- toona to be present at the installation of Rev. William Potter VanTries. That evening, however, he was suddenly taken worse, notwithstanding the swelling had been lanced, having a number of chok- ing spells during the night. His death | on Wednesday morning was the result of parietal abscess rupturing into the windpipe, causing strangulation. Taylor was a native of Warren, Pa, but several years ago his parents moved to Chelsea, Oklahoma. He was seven- teen years old and this was his second year at the Academy. He was an excep- tionally bright young man, very atten- tive to ali his studies and a general fa- vorite of the teachers and pupils. Last year he won the mathematical prize. His death has cast a deep gloom over the in- stitution, and as a tribute to his memo. ry no school was held Wednesday. A fitting memorial service was held at the Academy on Thursday morning at 8.30 o'clock conducted by Dr. George E. Hawes, pastor of the Presbyterian church, prior to taking the remains to Warren, Pa. on the 9.23 train where the burial will take place. There was a profusion of flowers con- tributed by students and friends. ! | GRENOBLE.—IL. J. Grenoble, a former resident of Spring Mills and at one time one of the leading business men of Penns- valley, died at his home in Gettysburg on Sunday. He was about sixty-six years A 1any Rod and Gun club which later wasi of age. When but sixteen years old he | reorganized into the Nittany Country | enlisted in Company I. 148th regiment and served until the battle of Poe River where he was so badly wounded in the leg that it had to be amputated. After the war he went into business at Spring Mills and it was he who erected the large store and residence on the hill. When the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad | during all the years of its existence. He | was was opened through to Bellefonte he Was a member of the Bellefonte lodge of | established coal yards and grain eleva- tors at all the stations through Penns. valley. In the latter eighties he became heavily involved financially and in the crash that followed many of the farmers throughout Brush and Pennsvalleys suffered heavy losses. Several years later Mr. Grenoble moved to Gettysburg where he stocked a small dairy farm and also engaged in the ‘insurance business. His wife, two sons and two daughters sur- vive. Burial was made at Gettysburg on Tuesday afternoon. | | GARBRICK.—After an illness of only one week's duration with pneumonia Mrs, Joseph J. Garbrick died at her home in Bush's Addition on Sunday morning. Her maiden name was Miss Annie Fryber- ger, and she was born in Berks county sixty-five years ago. For a number of years the family occupied one of the Reynolds farms at Rock View but for the past eight years they have lived a retired life in Bush's Addition. Since girlhood she was a member of the Lutheran church and a good christian woman, Surviving her are her husband and the following children: Charles, John and Mrs. Clyde Jodon, of Bellefonte, and Harry, of Zion. She also leaves one brother and two sis- ters, namely: C. T. Fryberger, of Phil- ipsburg; Mrs. P. S. Fisher, of Zion, and Mrs. Amanda Grim, of Joplin, Mo. Rev. Fred W. Barry, of Centre Hall, officiated at the funeral which was held from her late home on Wednesday morning, burial being made in the Zion cemetery. | | Buck.—David Miles Buck, a life-long resident of Half-moon township, this coun. ty, died at the home of his sister, Mrs. W. A. Stephens, in Sinking Valley, on Thurs- day of last week, He was a son of Benja- min and Mary A. Buck and was born near Centre Line on September 23rd, 1850. He was a farmer by occupation and worked at the same until about three years ago when he became afflicted with rheumatism and went to make his home with his sister, who is his only sur- vivor. Funeral services were held in eleven o'clock on Sunday morning after which burial was made in the cemetery adjoining the church. ——————— A ~~ ansmar— ~Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Beworvai Matdma, | In fact he was feeling so good | sudden deaths in Bellefonte, but the most sudden of all was that of Frank Warfield good health as usual that day and was Eprror | host of a party of seven who went down in = , to the station at Hecla without making a the | few minutes late and the gentlemen | stood along side of the track waiting for it. They were conversing in the usual manner when Mr. Warfield suddenly ex- claimed “catch me,” but before anyone could put out a detaining hand he fell forward on his face in the snow. Those were the last words he spoke and by the time a lantern was procured he was dead. His friends, however, could not believe it possible that death could come so sud- denly, and when the train arrived they tenderly carried the inanimate body into | the baggage car and placing it upon a couch made of cushions from the passen- ger coach did everything possible to re- vive any lingering spark of life. In the meantime they telephoned to Bellefonte ‘for physicians and the ambulance to meet the train and they were on hand { when the latter reached Bellefonte. hay- ling run through without any stop, ‘but it required only a glance to tell | them that the man was gone beyond all | recall. Acute dilation of the stomach ! was what the doctors assigned as the cause of death, but it came with all the suddenness of a stroke of apoplexy | Mr. Warfield was born in Bangor, Me., ‘and was fifty-two years old. When a | youth he went to New York State and | when but seventeen years of age he ac- | cepted a position with the New York ' Central railroad company. When the [latter company took over the Beech | Creek railroad he was placed in a posi- | tion in the offices at Jersey Shore where he remained until the completion of the | Central Railroad of Pennsylvania in 1893 ' when he accepted the position of general freight and passenger agent on the latter | road. | death and filled it to the utmost satisfac- | tion of the company and with fair deal. | ing and impartiality to all its patrons. In | this position he was naturally the best known in Bellefonte and throughout the | State, but during his residence in Belle- | fonte he became prominently associated | with other business interests. He was ‘one of the largest stockholders as well ' as treasurer and general manager of the | Bellefonte Lime company, whose plant ‘is located at Salona, and was a stock- | holder of the Cato Coal company. He | was one of the organizers of the old Nit- | club, and it was mainly through his ef- | forts that the park at Hecla was planned ; and constructed. To him also belongs the | credit for having organized the Business | Men's Picnic association of Centre and ! Clinton counties and he was a member of the executive committee of the same Masons and the Knights Templar. In | fact in the Masonic organization he had | taken everything but the thirty-third de- gree. He always took a keen interest in outdoor sports and was himself a good wing shot and trap shooter. For the past ten vears he had been a member of the Bellefonte Council Royal Arcanum, and carried $3,000 insurance in that order. Mr. Warfield was a man of a distinct personality. In business he was firm and decisive, but socially he was genial and affable. He was generous and charita- ble and his close personal friends regard- ed him with a loyalty of affection that could only be inspired by a loyal and warm hearted nature. Though not a member Mr. Warfield was a regular at- tendant and liberal supporter of the Pres- byterian church and had declared his in- tention of uniting with the same at the first opportunity. teen years ago he was united in marriage to Miss Emily E. Harris, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Har- ris, who survives with one daughter, Mary. His only other relatives are two sisters, Mrs. Walter Ross and Miss Min- nie Warfield, both living Tennessee. The funeral was held from his late : home on Curtin street at three o'clock on Monday afternoon. Rev. George E. Hawes and Rev. J. Allison Platts, of Pitts- burgh, formerly of Bellefonte, had charge of the services at the house, while burial in the Harris lot in the Union cemetery ' was made according to the beautiful rit- (ual of the Knights Templar. The pall | bearers were J. Will Conley, Joseph L. | Montgomery, Thomas A. Shoemaker, ' Harry C. Valentine, John M. Shugert and | Dr. M. J. Locke, of Bellefonte; Thomas ! Kelly, of Cato, and Joseph W. Baker, of Philadelphia. Among those from out of town who at- tended the funeral were, Mrs. Samuel Tweed and Mrs. Charles Beck, of Nitta. ny; Mrs. Evelyn Huston, of Clintondale; Mrs. Catharine Rhodes, of Williamsport; John P. Harris Jr., Mt. Union; Dr. E.H Harrisfand wife, Snow Shoe; Robert Fos- ter and Phil. Foster, State College, and the Misses Kephart, of Waddle. ———— soe ——There was just enough warm weather the past week to clean the pave- ments of their accumulation of ice and — WARFIELD.—There have been many | at her J in ange, morning of Tues- | last Thursday evening. He was in as! He held that position until his | in Nashville, | day morning, burial being made ! Gatesburg ORBISON. i t i late residence on Curtin street, | day, January 23rd, 1912. great grand-daughter of Col. James Dun- "lop, the father of her grandmother, Ann Dunlop Harris, and is thus connected in direct line with James Harris and Col. James Dunlop, the original proprietors and founders of the town of Bellefonte. : On her mother’s side she is related to | the Miller family, identified with Belle. fonte and Centre county and its indus. trial interests from the early part of the | nineteenth century. Mrs. Orbison was married to Rev. ' James H. Orbison, of the well known ‘Huntingdon family of that name, on ' November 20th, 1858; and for the next "ten years, from 1838 to 1868, they lived “in India as missionaries under the For- | eign Missionary Society of the Presby- terian chuich of America, during which ( ime their four children were born, viz: | Rev. J. Harris Orbison, now also a mis. sionary in India in religious, educational ; and medical work; Mrs. Eleanor T. 0. Beach, intermarried with Rev. Sylvester W. Beach, the pastor of the First Presby- terian , New Jersey; ' Miss Agnes L. Orbison, of Beliefonte, and | Dr. Thomas J. Orbison, a practicing phy- { sician of Los Angeles, California, recently ' appointed as Professor of Neurology in the University of California. i After ten years of missionary work in India, Mrs. Orbison and her husband left { there with their children in 1868 and re- | turned to America in 1869 and the Rev | James H. Orbison died in Bellefonte | shortly after his arrival in this country. | Thereafter Mrs. Orbison spent her life in Bellefonte with the exception of two years spent in Italy, during the years | 1894 and 1895. |* She was always deeply interested in foreign missionary work, and within a ' | year or two after the organization of the Women's Foreign Missionary Society of | the Presbytery of Huntingdon, compris- ing seven counties, she was on March 29th, 1877, elected the president of that | Society and remained its president until | the election of her successor, in March, | 1895, during all of which time she was | active and ardent in furtherance of the | work of this Society. Upon her retire. | | ment as president of the Society she was | elected its vice president and her special | interest in this work continued to the end | of her life. Throughout her life she has been close- ly identified with the Presbyterian church of Bellefonte, of which she became a member in her youth. The sweetness ‘and charm of her christian life was ever | present in the minds of her large rela- | tionship and acquaintances. Her's was | { always the cheerful and charitable view. | | No misfortune could be so great that she | could not from it point to something | hopeful and something cheerful. Here's one of those quiet christian lives that spoke more by deeds than by words. | Mrs. Orbison was a woman of strong | mental power and of the finest sensibili- ties. She has left an impress were | community that will long be felt. | The funeral services, which will be | private, were held at her late residence | on Curtin street, Bellefonte, on Thurs. | day, January 25th, 1912, at two o'clock p. m, | | | TWITMIRE.— Word was received in | | Bellefonte on Wednesday of the death of | i i i Mrs. Twitmire, wife of Prof. George W. Twitmire, of Wilmington, Del., but as no particulars were given the cause of her | death is not known. | | Her maiden name was Miss Joanna | | Reese, and she was a daughter of Chris- | | tian and Elizabeth Evans Reese, and was 'born on the old Reese homestead on | Muncy mountain where her mother died {only a little over a year ago at the age ' of winety-seven years. Before her mar- | riage to Prof. Twitmire she was one of | Centre county's efficient school teachers’ ! Most of her married life was spent in | Wilmington, Del, where her husband is rina of a college. Her surviving brothers and sisters are Dr. O. P. Reese, 1 of Kylertown; Aaron W. of Port Ma. | tilda; Joseph, of Williamsport; Mrs. | Kate Burkett, Mrs. Alice Hoover and | Miss Emma, at the old homestead on the | mountain. At this writing the arrange. | | ments for the funerai are not known. | | RIDER. — Sarah Rider, relict of the ! | late John W. Rider, died at the home of { her son-in-law, Homer Barr, at Gates- | burg, on Monday night, of diseases inci- | dent to her advanced age. Her maiden name was Sarah Hamlin and she was born near Saulsburg almost ninety years ago. Her parents were among the first settlers in that section and she was the last one of the family. When a young woman she married John W, Rider, of Gatesburg, where they spent the balance of their lives. Mr. Rider died about six- Joseph Meyers, Mrs. Isaiah Devore, Mrs. Howard Barr, all of Ferguson township, and Samuel, of Saulsburg. She was a member of the Lutheran church and was. a woman possessed of a kind and genial disposition, with a smile and good word for everybody. Rev. F. S. Shultz officiat- ed at the funeral which was held yester- | caught is not known but it is supposed | teen years ago. Their children are Mrs. | tery WEISER. —Samuel Weiser, a well known and energetic business man of Millheim, Musser. —Emanuel Musser, an old-time | resident of College township, died on Sun- | day morning from heart failure caused by member of the Mill left a fire burning in the fire place in the | heim Castle K. G. E. and of the United Evangelical church. Fair in all his deal- ings with his fellowmen he was well that in some way this fire communicated | liked by all who knew him. In 1875 he with the framework of the building and was married to Miss Clara j. Cantner, spread quite rapidly. Mrs. Musser was , who survives with three children, Ward awakened by the smoke and went down | K., at home; Emerson E.. of Altoona, and stairs to investigate. She found the lower | Mrs. Bertha . of Spring Mills. ve charge of the the stairway so rapidly that she was un- ' funeral which will be held this morning, able to go back up the stairs to warn her | burial to be made in the Union cemetery husband, but was compelled to go out of | at Millheim, the house onto the porch. In the mean. |. § time Mr. Musser had wakened and | whether it was in bewilderment or in- tentional he went up to the third story and climbed out of a window, hanging to the sill by his hands. Neighbors who were rushing to the fire heard his cry for help and procuring a ladder got him safe- ly to the ground. Both Mr. and Mrs Musser were clad only in their night clothes and securing wraps they were taken to the home of their daughter, Mrs. David O. Etters, at State College, AT SCOOTAC POWER COMPANY Prop. while their house and entire contents went in smoke. The shock My OSITION.~Lee M. Patterson, George Krea- No uw in ae th . . nD "mer and W. M. Knapper, of Lock Haven, 5 fr one oo or i . a d a ney representing the Scootac Power company, O is daughter. : - were in Bellefonte on Tuesday and that Deceased was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Be ev y i i MAXSON.—Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Max. spent a good part of the time in Belle- age. Funeral services were held taken to Elmira, N. Y., | ment will be made today. ee where inter- George Musser gud Sori in. G evening informally met the members of | B ger and was nin Lregl: he borough council in their chamber in | the public building. The object was to | discuss the proposed ordinance granting them the right to operate in Bellefonte. | An amicable adjustment of all the claus. es in the ordinance was made and the! township June 1st, 1834, hence was 77 years, 7 months and 2] days old. His boyhood days were passed on the rarm and when seventeen years of age he went to Boalsburg to learn th» tanner's trade: Four years later he went to Illinois but remained in the west only six months, Returning to Centre county he engaged in farming, an occupation he followed the balance of his life. In 1874 he purchased the farm near State College where he had lived ever since. He was regarded as one of the most substantial and progressive citizens of College township and was highly esteemed by all who knew him_ He was a member of the Lutheran church and of the Oak Hall Grange. He was united in marriage to Miss Katharine Bottorf, who survives with the following children: Luther and Mrs, David O. Etters, of State College; G Fred., of Bellefonte; Mrs. Roger Bowman same ‘will be presented at the next regu- February 5th. mean business is the fact that they will Our Correspondents’ Opinions. of Valley Forge; Boyd A., of Srcanton: © af General oy focal interest. The Wench elt Mrs. George Handlong, of Brooklyn, N. i ers Duksible for their ideas or sale. Y., and Mrs. Helen Duff, of Roselle Park, N. J. He also leaves three sisters, name- | ly: Mrs. John Krumrine, of Braddock; | Shall People’s Sovereignty be Sacrificed? Mrs. Henry Gramley, of Ravenna, Neb., . , and Mrs. Elizabeth Chittendon, of Strawn, | ditor Democratic Watchman: The commendable rarity of National ll. The funeral was held from the Etters : - Senate open session to- ratify or amend home at State College at 10:30 o'clock dad the arbitration treaty formulated by our Wednesday morning, and was largely at- sha I i tended. Burial was made in the Shiloh Secretary of State and British Em ot, cemetery. | | RippLE.—~Hugh J. Riddle, a wcll known resident of Centre county, died at the home of Samuel Breon, near Benore, on Srom publication when the request is made. tiaries appointed by each Nation to arbi- ‘the honor of England or the United : y | States, and any compact thereby, to be Monday morning, after a long siege of |. ; : s : rheumatism. He born at Pleasant | binding, without ratification of this Re Gap, was 76 years and 7 months old, and | public—the bulwarks of public safety— ._ by ninety National Senators, duly elect- | a half brother of former county commis- : | sioner, Matthew F. Riddle. He served °d bY State Rights, two from each State, during the Civil war and came out of the mediation toward equit struggle minus two fingers. He was well | habitants thereof. educated and a number of years ago con- : tributed both prose and verse to some of | the local newspapers. While Pleasant Gap was always regarded as his home he was of a somewhat roving disposition and traveled around the country a great deal. His only living relative is Frank Riddle, a half-brother living in Kansas City, Mo. TheG. A. R. and Gen. Beav- er Camp Sons of Veterans of State Col- y rule by the in- making, are conflicting with national hon- or, tradition and public safety. It abro- gates such a deliberate body from partic- ipating in international treaty making, that would be demanded by England, Germany and Russia, one family in com- b ine foe against silver coin debt paying power, and now reinforced by Japan in aggressiveness to become Emperor of Asiatic adjacent countries, to these do- made in the Pine Hall cemetery. ah Te ions 1m Povsriched by Yep. | | «| tuting by credit money to make obedi- Hoover.—Philip Hoover, a ranch own. | ence to them, and rule of the world by erand meat merchant of Prescott, Ar- | above nations. izona, died on January 4th, after a six { Our acquiescence to such surrender of weeks illness with dropsy of the heart, | treaty power to three mortals would having taken sick immediately after re. | Cause vast unrest of this and adjoining turning home from a visit with relatives | Republics, relative to our currency con- in this county. He was born at Tyrone | tinuation of stop coinage of silver dollars and was aged 68 years, During the Civil | of embossed motto “In God We Trust,” war he served as a member of Troop H, | Which has been already a loss to our Twenty-second Pennsylvania cavalry. At | Commonwealth of $500,000,000, and of the close of the war he went to Arizona immense moral power loss, by depriving where he had lived eversince, He issur- | jabor and capital from remunerating em- vived by his wife and two brothers, John, | Ployment in our vast precious metal of Bellwood, and Alexander, of Belle. | mines, and corresponding demands of fonte. The remains were buried at Pres. | trade to supply with commodities the cott. producers of labor money coin. The world’s ratio weight of silver and gold mined in the last century is an average of 15 to 1 gold and the last ten years 12 to 1 gold, hence the motto is well found- ed; by equity rule silver coin is safe cur- rency, and the salvation of Republics by realities are God of love in humanity and its greatest achievement would be to as. semble Representatives from every na. tion and colony to decide the money question, Yours faithfully, JAMES WOLFENDEN, Lamar, January 24, 1012. ————— SMULLTON ITEMS. Harry Brungart was a pleasant caller at the Rishel home on Saturday evening. The social of the graduating clus of the Rebers. burg High school was well attended. “Buffalo Bill,” one of Smuilton's well known residents, is training his horse for the race track. Jacob Winklebleck is building a new house be. tween his present home and the store, on the Harry Smull lot, | | Jounson.—Joel Milton Johnson, son of J. Curtis and Augusta Ward Johnson, died at his parent's home on Bishop Street on Sunday. He had been an epi- leptic since boyhood and his death re- sulted after a succession of convulsions lasting through Saturday night and Sun. day. He was born April 19th, 1892, hence was almost twenty years of age. Sur- viving him are his parents and several brothers and sisters. The funeral was held from his late home on Bishop street at ten o'clock on W morning, burial being made in the Union ceme- ! | BAUER. ~—Mr. and Mrs. John Bauer, of Bishop street, are mourning the death of their eleven months old baby bey Nicho- las, who died at the Bellefonte hospital last Thursday night following several op- erations for the removal of a his throat. cemetery. Homer Crouse, who came in from Illinois some time ago to visit his old friends in Brush valley has decided to remain here until March. | died on Monday night after a brief ill. | - | mess with a complication of diseases. He | motes of Interest to Church People of son, mother of Mrs. J. Allison Platts, who | fonte while Rev. Platts was pastor of the | Presbyterian church, died at the Platts home in Wilkinsburg on Wednesday morning. She was seventy-six years of | yesterday after which the remains were ‘lar meeting of council, which will be on As evidence that they ! , make application for a charter for the - Logan Light and Power company for the | purpose of furnishing light, heat and pow- | er, by means of elictricity to the people of Bellefonte and vicinity. These are the | people who have under consideration the ‘taking over from the borough of the Green mill property at Milesburg, where one of their powd plants will be located. | This column is at the service of those of our people pany all communications, but will be withheld ‘James Bryce, as recommended by our ' President, that there be three plenipoten- | trate any contention not conflictng with : to commune in whole Federal Union for! The “above starting basis of treaty With the Churelies of the County. all Denominations in all Parts of the County. i UNION BIBLE SCHOOL REPORT i In the suburban v | within a common | than ; Bible ville, View. | Ist.—All of these Bible schools are ! evergreen; no suspension, summer or | winter. | 2nd.—All of them are self-supporting ; , contributing also somewhat to other out- ; side objects in need. | 3rd—All of them report hopeful con- ! versions in the year of our Lord, 1911. ! 4th—In these not less than ‘eight different religious denominations | are represented. Sth.—All of them | working together un 1 illages of Bellefonte, radius of not more two miles, there are four Union schools, namely: Axemann, Cole- Nittany Furnace and Pleasant are worshiping and itedly in harmony in “the name that is above every name.” 6th.—In the four suburbs there are 170 han twenty-five of ts in the Bellefonte ‘ families, not more t them are attendan churches. 7th.—All of these chapels in wich these schools hold their sessions are paid for; no debt upon them: the Olive Branch Union chapel alone must seek some outside assistance for needful finishing and furnishing. 8th.—The churches in Bellefonte are considered, in great measure, responsible for preaching the Gospel and largely accountable for the christianization of these near neighborhoods, especially for the saving of the voung people and little children. MiSSIONER. Rev. C.-C Shuey preached a very ' practical sermon in the United Evangeli.- cal church on Willowbank street last Sunday morning, to an appreciative | audience. Next Sunday the fourth and last quarterly communion of the Lord's Supper for the present conference year will be observed both in the morning at 10.30 and in the evening at 7.30. Rev. I. C. Shearer will preach the word in the ‘evening. This will be the last commun- ion service under pastorate of Rev. Hower. All are cordially invited. —Rev. E. C. Houck will preach in | the Milesburg Baptist church on Sunday, morning and evening. A cordial invita- tion is extended the public in general to attend and hear the reverend gentle- | man. Rev. J. M. Ross, a Senior at the Sus. quechanna University, will preach in the Lutheran church on Sunday morning and evening. The full congregation and pub- lic in general is invited to turn out and hear him. ——————— PINE GROVE MENTION. Mrs. J. F, Kimport is suffering with an attack: of throat trouble. Mrs. Harry Gates visited friends at Altoona and Bellwood last week. Mrs. Warren S. Ward, who has been sick sev. eral weeks, is improving You don't want to miss the 1. O. O. F. festival tonight and tomorrow evenings. W. D. Pert, a Civil war veteran, is housed up with a bad cold and rheumatism, Miss Lizzie McCracken visited her aunt, Mrs. Samuel! Adams, at Indiana last week. Miss Bess Woomer, of Altoona, was a welcome visitor at her parental Fome last week. J. H. Ross, grain and coal merchant, transacted business in Altesns several diss last week. J. S. Herman has been housed up with an at tack of indigestion but is bet er at present. Mrs. John Gingerich and f riend, Mrs. Harry : Harrah, visited friends at Oak Hall Saturday. Joseph Meyers, who has been confined to bed he past week, is improving and able to sit up. | Fred Randolph is spending this week with his | friend, Wilson P. Ard, at the Susquehanna Uni. | versity. J. W. Sunday, D. W, Miller, J. A. Decker and W.S. Tate attended postmaster Williams’ fun. eral Saturday, Mrs. Wm. Brouse is Dinges, at Boalshurg, throat trouble, The venerable Adam Felty, after a months visit with relatives at Harrisburg, returned home last week to Boalsburg, Miss Maude Miller and Miss Bella McWilliams, of Rock Springs, handled the ribbons over a 2.40 nag, Friday, and did shopping in town. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Brown enjoyed the sleigh- ing and came down from Tyrone to spend seve eral days among friends down Pennsvalley. | Wade, son of Daniel Harpster, is nursing some ! ugly brusies sustained by falling into an old stone quarry, and his sister Estella is sick with the grip, On Wednesday Newton Yarnell, of Harris town- ship, killed two hogs that had a combined weight of half a tor, the largest one weighing 635 pounds, T. C. Cronover, of Saulsburg, spent several days on his big farm on the Branch, out next season's work and keeping the boys busy. A jolly sleighing party from White Hall in- vaded the Jacob Harpster home at Tadpole on Monday night, where they spent avery pleasant evening. i visiting her sister, Mrs. where she is sick with Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Krebs, of State College, spent Sunday at the Sallie Fortney home on Main street. Mr. Krebs is superintendent Good. ling’s right-bower at the experimental farm. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Gregory, of Neff's Milis, spent several days last week in the valley. Mrs. Gregory visited the home of her youth while Mr. Gregory was looking for bargains in the stock jine in which he is an expert.
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