nen Re » ! PROPERTY OWNERS ANXIOUS FOR THEIR | ——A. Miles Barr, accountant of the | To Raise BLooDED STOCK ON LARGE NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. —James B. Cook, the only son of Mr. and Mrs. Beefonte, Pa., April 26, 1912. To CORRESPONDENTS. espo: .~No communications ications published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. ——— or - THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——The initiation banquet of the Delta Upsilon fraternity was held at State Col- lege last night, ~The Bellefonte High schoo! com- mencement this year will be held May 26th to 30th inclusive. ——Mr. Rothschild, one of the victims of the Titanic disaster.fwas an uncle of Mrs. Thomas Murphy, of east Lamb street. Bellefonte. —Farmersshould not fai! to read the advertisement of Mr. L. H. Musser, in this issue of the WATCHMAN. There is money in it for them. ——Prof. J. Angel. eye specialist, will be at the Brockerhoff house Wednesday and Thursday, May 8th and 9th. Special prices. Eyes examined free, | MoneY.—All the property owners who sold their land to the State as a site for the new penitentiary are becoming quite | the Leathers Bros. to take charge of their anxious to get their money, and natural- books at their real estate business at ly wonder why the same has not been | Northumberland. As this will require paid over. They have lived up to their | only part of his time the work can be part of the agreement to the letter but | done in connection with his present posi- the money seems slow in coming. The | tion. last imperfection in the titles to a few of La Tan TT : the tracts was cleared up last wesc ana |___~The street Gepartment is dolug a there is now a good, clear deed for every off the not ouly renders them tract of land the State has purchased. It Ere eae is wet weather is alleged by those who ought to bein a but will leave A passable § vow around position to know that the Attorney | in dry and windy weather. Asa matter General lias passed on all details of the | of fact the much traveled streets ought transaction, that warrants have been | {drawn by the State Treasurer for the | to be cleaned once a week to keep them payment of each tract, and the cause of in good condition. ie the deiay in making the conveyances; -——The supervisors throughout the {cannot be accounted for by the people | county are now busy putting the roads | hereabouts. lin proper shape for the summer. Two Mr. John E. Potter, head of the! of the things they should be particular Potter Abstract company, which had the { about and which are both required by job of making the abstract of titles and | recent Acts of the Legislature, are the will soon make the conveyances and pay | removal of all loose stones and the re- over the money, was notified carly last | moval of all breakers or “thankee-mams.” week that everything had been cleared | The latter is provided for in the new up. His reply was in effect that they | highway bill passed by the last Legis- would be here soon to close up the lature. Nittany Iron company and Bellefonte Furnace company, has been engaged by SCALE.—On Thursday, May 16th, appli- cation will be made to the Governor for charters for the incorporation of two large stock farms in Bald Eagle valley. One of the applications will be made by George H., Fred and A. C. Leathers, who have taken the Leathers homestead of 135 acres at Mt. Fagle and will make a —James Fox. of Philadelphia, spent Sunday at his mother’s home in this place. —Miss Lucretia Williams, who has been visiting with friends in Harrisburg, returned to Bellefonte Saturday. —Mrs. W. A. White, of this place, spent the latter part of last week with her many friends at A. J. Cook, was in Bellefonte for the Sunday with his parents, —Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Spangler have returned to Bellefonte. after spending the fore part of the week in Philadelphia. —Mrs. Andrew Thal and little son Andrew spent Wednesday at State College with Mr. Thal, who is employed there. —Miss Louise Garman, who has been the guest specialty of breeding and raising pure | —Mrs. Susan Nolan, of Curtin, was an over ©f Mrs. Hugh N. Crider while in Bellefonte, left Berkshire hogs for the market. The : company will be capitalized at $20,000, with the shares at $50 par value. The officers of this company are Fred Leath- | ers, president; George B. Leiter, Wil-' liamsport, secretary; Dr. J. E. Ward, | Bellefonte, treasurer, and A. C. Leathers | general manager. The other application fora charter will be made by Fred, George H., A. C. and | J. T. Leathers, who have secured a tract | of land in Liberty township where they will raise high grade dairy cattle and con- duct adairy business. This company has been capitalized at $75,000, with stock at $100 par value. Its officers are president and general manager, George Leathers; ; secretary, J. T. Leathers, and treasurer, | Fred Leathers. All the above gentlemen | Sunday guest of Mrs. Nora McClain, at her home on Allegheny street. —Mrs. Andrew Harris, of Lock Haven. is spend- ing this week with her sisters, the Misses Mc- Dermott, on east Bishop street. —Mrs. Alice Showers is entertaining her daugh- ter, Mrs. James Meyers, who with her son Fred, eric came to Bellefonte Saturday of last week. —Dr. H. M. Hiller, of Chester, has been in Belle- fonte the past week recovering from a slight ill- ness and devoting part of his time to fishing for trout. —Samuel Eldridge arrived in Bellefonte last Saturday and remaining over Sunday accompa- | nied his wife and little daughter home to Cope May on Monday. —Mrs. Lawrence O'Leary has gone to Harris- burg to spend an indefinite time with her hus- band, whose position necessitates his making his home in that city. —V. J. Bauer, of Somerset, and Miss Helen Cunningham, of Washington, D. C., were in Belle. fonte to attend the funeral of Miss Mary Cun- Jars. The exchange will be continued . today. ——Neighboring towns are already | various deals but up to this writing | heralding the coming of the first circus nothing further has been heard from for the year but so far Bellefonte has no either he or warden John Francies. It is word of any coming here soon. not because the property owners have ——The Junior class of the Bellefonte | any fear of the State backing out of the High school will give a reception to the | bargain that they are getting anxious, ‘members of the Senior class, at the High | but because they consider themselves a schoo! building, this (Friday) evening. |loser every day that the payment of the ——Dupoat Powder company will give | Money is prolonged. For instance, the another demonstration of farming with | Property owner who will receive ten dynamite on the C.Y. Wagner farm |thousand dollars or thereabouts for his today to which all farmers are invited, [land is losing the interest on that Mrs. J. I. Way, who has been ug amount, or practically fifty dollars a dergoing treatment in the Blair county month, anda few of the owners have hospital at Altoona the past few weeks, been disappointed in making profitable returned (o her home in Patton township investments for the reason that they so on Monday very much improved in far have not received their money. health. LOOKING FOR A NEW GAME PRESERVE. ——0On Monday William Bilger, Lewis ~—Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, state game com- Wallace and R. B. Taylor, as viewers, in- 7 4 missioner, was in Bellefonte last Friday spected the new High sireet bridge and night, and talked with some of our while they did not condemn any part of local hunters regarding the probability of the work they reported the brick laying finding a good location in Centre county not what it should have been. for a new game preserve. A tract of not ——The Woman's Club of Bellefonte | less than three thousand acres is desired will hold their regular meeting in Petrikin | and naturally it must all be state land hall Saturday afternoon, May 4th, at half | and in addition entirely surrounded by after three o'clock. At this meeting Miss | state land so that no individual will be Lovejoy, of State College, will talk to the | able to put up trespass notices or pro- women on “Domestic Science.” hibit hunting thereon. There must also ~The Bellefonte Academy baseball | be running water on the land and forest team played their first game last Friday | enough to afford proper protection to all afternoon, defeating the State College | kinds of game. The preserve will be High school team by the score of 11 to 1. | stocked by the state game commission Tomorrow the Academy boys will go to | and wardens will be in charge all the ‘Huntingdon and play the Juniata College | time. About the only place in Centre wine. county available for such a preserve is in ——At their exchange in G. R. Spigel- | the Seven mountains, where the State myer’s store last Saturday the Ladies’ Aid | already owns large tracts of land. Ifa Society of the Presbyterian church cleared | '0cation were selected in the neighborhood Awenty-three dollars. The previous Sat- | Of the Bear Meadows there would be both urday the net receipts were twenty dol- | "Water and second-growth timber sufficient ; for game protection. Any person inter- ested in securing the preserve for Centre county should communicate with Dr. Kalbfus at Harrisburg. - VOTED AGAINST INCREASING INDEBT- EDNESS. —A special election was held in State College borough last Saturday to vote on the question of increasing the borough indebtedness thirty thousand! dollars for the purpose of erecting a new High school building and the proposition was defeated by a vote of 124 to 154. The borough is now left in a peculiar situation. The present school building, it is alleged by those favoring the debt, take his place. is overcrowded and entirely inadequate ——The four million dollar mortgage of | to meet the demands of the present day the Penn Public Service company, operat- | school methods and the only way out of ing in Centre, Clearfield, Cambria and | the difficulty is to erecta new building, Indiana counties, has been filed for record | But the borough does not have any funds in the recorder’s office, this county. The | for that purpose and the school board is instrument covers seventy pages of type- | in a dilemma as to what to do. County written matter. superintendent David O. Etters has ex- ——Last week's issue of Forest Leaves, | Pressed the opinion that they can go a paper published in the interest of the | ahead and erect the building, inasmuch forestry advancement of Pennsylvania, | it is an absolute necessity, and the contained a very good picture and com- | Poard may conclude to do this. There is plimentary reference to J. Linn Harris, | 2150 some talk of holding another elec- the Bellefonte member of the State For- | tion in the hope of fighting the question estry Commission. through in a legal way. ——A fair sized audience greeted “’L he EXPENSIVE TROUT.— On Thursday of Morning After” company at the opera last week Harvey Waite, son of merchant house on Tuesday night. Miss Goldie John W. Waite, of Beech Creek, returned Joab is a most graceful dancer and her from a fishing trip in the Scootac region winsonie and captivating manner on the with a basket full of trout. After the stage pleased the audience but that was | trout had been cleaned Mr. Waite took all there was to the show. them out and proudly exhibited them to ~The Ladies Aid Society of the |a crowd of envious friends. A stranger Presbyterian church, will hold the third | happened along and he, too, took a look. one of their series of exchanges, on Sat- | Observing that some of the trout were urday afternoon at Spigelmyer’s store. | quite small the man produced his cre Home-made bread, buns, pies, cakes, puddings, salads, candy, etc, will be on sale, also, a variety of aprons. ——From the cold wave that passed over Centre county Monday night and Tuesday we must have been in close proximity to an iceberg, while the wind on Monday night was terrific. It was| quite blustery all day Tuesday but calmed | Poi Vat the The oF itv collars and down that evening and by Wednesday name as Mr. Conklin, of Crawford county. normal temperature again prevailed. —There will be a big time at the Y. M. C. A. this (Friday) evening, when | this paper appears the advertisement of the formal opening of the new swimming | the Scotia Sand Co., which has reopened pool will be held fi r those entitled to its | their bank near Scotia for the season. privileges. Ralph Shinton, the champion | Mr. Burnside, the proprietor, informs us swimmer of the world, will be present | that he is prepared to ship sand to any and give an exhibition of swimming such | point in any quantity and prompt deliv- as has never been seen in Bellefonte. | eries guaranteed. Members only will be admitted and they | The sand from this bank is specially are all urged to attend. It will probably | adapted to building and concrete work be the only opportunity the members will | and no cleaner, sharper sand canbe pro. ever have of seeing Mr. Shinton, who is | cured anywhere. We would advise those almost as much at home in the water as | needing sand to communicate with Mr. he is on land. Burnside. ——The name of the Tyrone Country club has been changed to that of the Fairbrook Country club. This is the club that purchased and occupies the old Lyon homestead at Pennsylvania Furnace, one of the finest old country places in Centre county. ——Tomorrow night Jacob Jury will give up his job as bartender at the Brockerhoff house and in the future will devote his time to conducting his res- taurant under the Garman house office. “Grisley” Rhoads has been secured to Waite that it was up to hi inasmuch as he had the trout in his possession. The latter drove to Lock Haven, accompanied by the warden, and —————— For BUILDERS.—In another column of ——The warm weather of the past two weeks had the effect of bringing out the automobiles in goodly numbers. Not only have local car owners entered upon a series of pleasure trips but people in other sections of the State are traveling as strange cars pass through Bellefonte every day. From every indication automobiling will be more popular this year than ever before and all dealers are anticipating a successful season. ——The Bellefonte High school dra- matic club gave a very good rendition of Oliver Goldsmith's “She Stoops to Con- quer,” in Petrikin hall last Friday even- | ing; every one of the students taking their part splendidly. The attendance was large and the net proceeds amounted to seventy-five dollars, which included six- teen dollars taken in at the candy booth. The money will be applied to the benefit of the Athletic department. ——Miss Emily Bassett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Bassett and a grand-daughter of Rev. James P. Hughes, was married on Wednesday afternoon of this week to Hugh J. Winters, a naval officer, the wedding taking place at the home of the bride's parents at “Ten Hills,” Baltimore, Md. The guests in attendance from Bellefonte were Mr. James R. Hughes and the bride's brother, Eugene Bassett, a student at the Academy. ——0n account of the prolonged rains and wet weather followed by early freez- ing last fall farmers are somewhat anx- ious as to the quality of their seed corn. The Pennsylvania State College experi- ment station Has just coacluded a test of 102 samples received from fifty-three out of the sixty-two counties in the State, six kernels from each ear. An average of all tests shows 80.6 per cent. of the ker- nels germinated. Taking this as a basis it will be necessary to slightly increase the amount of seed used to the acre. te ——No better testimonial is needed as to the quality of the pictures shown at the Scenic than the fact that hundreds attend it every evening. They go there because they know they will see good pictures and they aiso know that there will be the best of order at all times. Manager Brown is just as particular re- garding the latter as he is about the qual- ity of his pictures. Then the room is always clean and well ventilated and it is as comfortabie as anybody need want. If you're not a regular attendant you ought to be. ——The Woman's Auxiliary of the Bellefonte hospital is making arrange- ments for a large card party, to be held in the armory carly in June. These women, not having asked anything from the public for the past eighteen months, hope for the hearty co-operation of every- body in Bellefonte. Planning to have flinch, five hundred, whist, cuchre, auc- tion bridge and bridge in play, they are expecting to have everyone interested in either the hospital or cards to join them for this benefit. Light refreshments will be served and an admission of fifty cents will be asked. —Ever since December the Bellefonte Academy minstrels have been practising two nights a week and when the time comes for their annual performance they will be in fine shape. The songs are all new and there will not be any old and musty jokes. The dialogue sparkles with wit and humor and the black face artists | are exceptionally good. There will also be some very clever dancing and amusing specialties. The dates are Friday and Saturday evenings, May 17th and 18th. The proceeds will be devoted to paying for the cinder track on Hughes field which is now about completed. ——Last Friday evening merchant John Haugh, of Scotia, was at Pine Grove Mills attending a lodge meeting and after the meeting was over he untied his horse and left a boy hold the animal while he stepped into a store. The horse broke loose from the boy and ran away the road homeward bound. At Meek’s church the buggy collided with a post throwing the horse to the ground aid badly wrecking the vehicle. Charles Meyers, William Sunday and Milo Camp- bell were close by when the collision hap- pened and caught the horse, which was uninjured. Mr. Haugh, however, had to walk the six miles home. taking give rise to the hope that the well known except Mr. Leiter and Dr. Ward are ningham last Saturday. practical and experienced stock raisers | —Mrs. C. 31. Bower, who has been spending the and agriculturists and will no doubt make . winter with her sister, Miu Shook, in Williams- i taki | port, returned to Bellefonte Tuesday, and opened s of thelr unde taking, | her house on Linn street for the summer. BELLEEONTE BASE BALL TEAM TO BE —John Gephart Munson with Mrs. Munson — Hi came to Bellefonte Tuesday, expecting to visit for ORGANIZED. —The prospects for a winning | two weeks with Mr. Munson’s parents, Mr. and base ball club for Bellefonte look very ! Mrs. L. T. Munson, before returning to their | promising. Register J. Frank Smith, a | well versed man in base ball, has been working hard for the last two weeks se- lecting 2 combination from the lucal tal- | wit vie Mice Sedie Daley. of Fine Grove ent, numbering about twenty-nine candi- | minute was utilized in the shops. dates. Local base ball fans will readily —Charles Whitehill, of Lemont, was a Belle- see that funds will be necessary in order | fonte visitor last Saturday and was a pleasant to maintain and defray expenses. Al- | caller at the WATCHMAN office. He is one of the ious ting Belle- well know. and progressive young farmers of Sag Tee i a NN Ye pREGEI order to College township, and is a hustler in every way. ~Thomas Kelley, coal operator, was keep the team in perfect Irunning order, | i, Bellare re. Co oo tosee Miss Gold" the team this year will require no money ie Joab in “The Morning After.” Mr. Kelley, by at all relative to salaries until it can be | the way, is making a success of his Cato opera. put on a paying basis. tions and so far has not been a victim of the strike Up until this writing Mr. Smith has se- | Wiliam Carson was one of Sie farmers of near lected eleven men who cannot be excelled and his inabiinty to plow and spent Tuesday in by any other amateurs froma town of this Bellefonte visiting with relatives and friends and size in the State. This was proven last | at the same time looking after some business in. Thursday afternoon on Hughes’ athletic | tersts- o: field when he Belton eam playedthe Hr od ME. 1 Ritad wih ti ec, strong Academy nine to a 0 to 0 score. terdam,” May 28th, for the summer in Europe. A meeting was held in the register's of- Going directly to Paris they will from there go to fice last night to further the movement, | Belgium, Holland, England, Scotland and Ireland but the WATCHMAN went £0 press. toy STNG to Auriga Septsuibes i early to give details. But the nT. Grove, Reynolds Ave- are very good for a team and the fans nue, havebeen entertaining Mr. Grove's brother . yi and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Orin Grove, of Red should give the organization proper en- Hill, who have been guests of relatives in Centre couragement. county. Visiting with them while in Bellefonte, eens i em—— was Mr. Grove's sister, Miss Minnie Grove. of AUTOMOBILE MISHAP. — Last week | Lemont. George Hazel bought Mrs. Mollie Val- | —J. L. Rote and Mrs. Philip Garbrick, of Cole. entine’s Ford automobile and on Sunday | Ville, visited last Friday in Williamsport, with he decided to have his first day of pleasure | M Fs Sauter, Mes, Avtiyie Black, io with it. He took a run in the forenoon | Mey. Garbrick returned to Bellefonte the same and got along all right. Shortly after | dav, while Mr. Rote spent the week-end with his dinner he invited some friends to take a | daughter. spin and they came in Water street at an ! —Robert B. Larimer. of Clearfield, once a resi- i ident of Bellefonte, spent Sunday here and at ordinary speed. In making the turn at the crossing at the corner of the Bush | freoant Gap. Mr. Larimer, who is convalescing from a recent illness, returned home after a short Arcade something went wrong with the visit with his brothers, expecting to return to his steering aparatus and the car turned | work. if his health will permit. otherwise he will sharply to the right and headed for the | ‘ave Clearfield. pavement, but fortunately the left front wheel collapsed and the driver was able to stop the car before it collided with the hitching posts and doing further damage. The occupants of the car, however, were all badly scared, though uninjured. ‘athe oberation. aie Another wheel was secured and COIL | Bello oc OY Drodks Who case Wagner attempted to run the car home was joined Saturday by her grand-daughter, Miss but the steering gear was so badly twisted | Marguerite P. Wood, and Logan McCoy. Miss that the car could not be controlled and i sed nd gE McCoy Teturied tv Overbrook it was necessary to push it out to Keich- = Me: tovisitiong lines garage for repairs. sn AG <5 sw Opp FELLOWS AT RENOVO.—A. good sized delegation of the Bellefonte Lodge of Odd Fellows wentto Renovo to attend the twenty-eighth annual session of the Central Pennsylvania district Odd Fel- lows anniversary association to be held | _. there today. The Bellefonte delegation dr i een i“ Drs Fas. will have a place in the second division | insburg, arrived in Bellefonte yesterday for a of the big parade and they have been honored by having one of their members, Samuel D. Gettig, appointed an aid to the division marshall. At the business meeting this morning new officers will be elected for the ensuing year while the parade will be held this afternoon. : bi Various pleasures and diversions have | be benefitted in health by that climate, Mrs. W, . been arranged to entertain the visiting during her husband's absence, will, with her two Odd Fellows. children, Creighton and Margery, spend the time at Waddle with her mother, Mrs. Dempster L. NEW BUGGIES AND CARRIAGES. —Forrest | Meek. : ad Cote L. Bullock, the Water street dealer, has; —Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes, who with just received a carload of fine new rubber | Way and Miss Overton spent last week in Wash. and steel tire buggies and carriages. They : are all the product of the Ligonier Car- riage Co., and in workmanship, quality | untiliThursday of this week. Mrs. Callaway is and finish can’t be surpassed at the price. vehicle this spring you would do well to look this shipment over because Mr. Bullock guarantees them and will sell them at a figure that marks them all as bargains. ~The removal of the family of Mr. James Parks from Bellefonte to the home in Tennessee. —Among the many persons who have been do- tng their summer shopping in Bellefonte this =Mr. and Mrs, Edward Struble left Bellefonte vesterday for Philadelphia, where Mrs. Struble who has been ill for the greater part of the pasg year, entered, as a patient, the University hospit. al. Mr. Struble will not return for a week, or until Mrs. Struble begins to recover from the ef, —Miss Helen Fox, who is now in Bellefonte with her mother, Mrs. Josenh Fox, returned from the west six weeks ago, where she has been for fifteen months. The greater part of the time Miss Fox spent with relatives in the State of Kan- sas, though she visited as far west as Denver city and upon her return trip spent some time in Chicago and Pittsburgh. —John Beezer, the butcher, and Harry Hamil, ton, both of Tyrone, spent Friday of last week in this section on a trout fishing expedition and as evidence of the fact that John has not forgotten the best trout holes on both Spring creek and Lo- gan's branch they took home with them forty- eight good sized trout. It was one of the best catches taken to Tyrone and more than one fisher- country place of the late Thomas Shearer, | man of that town cast envious eyes at them while two miles south of town, marks the be- they were on exhibition in the window of Beezer' ginning of the annual pilgrimage of the | butcher shop. { restless to the country, the shore and | —W. Harrison Walker Esq., Charles F. Mensch other resorts. While far enough removed | 34 George T. Bush went to Altoona last Friday to attend of the Temple of Shriners in from the grime and noise of metropolitan that ad ieting of th of forty-four novitiates life they are still near enough at hand to trod the hot sands and are now permitted to par- take of camel's milk. The two former mentioned daughters of the family, Misses Ide and | Went to Pittsburgh on Saturday to attend a meet- of the Syris Temple of Shriners. Mr. Bush, Sade, will not find it necessary to cancel Tog 9F the Syrig Temple of Suvians adopt a de- their social engagements here. sign for the official badge of the Altoona Tempe, ET & $Y use presented a neat original design which was adopt- ——Mrs. Simon Harper, of Centre Hall, | ed. The design had on the bar the front of a lo* comotive, representative of the railroad city, to- gether with the scimitar and crescent emblems of the order, the pendant being a keystone repre- was brought to the Bellefonte hospital on Monday and underwent an operation on Tueseay. Mrs. H. S. Taylor was dis- senting the State and containing the horse shoe charged on Tuesday. curve and the date of incorporation. vesterday for her home in Williamsport. —Andy McNitt, who has been for several years so closely associated with ali Halfmoon valley's social life. was in Atlantic City Sunday, for a short but much needed rest. —Mr. and Mrs. J. Willard Barnhart had as | week-end guests, Mrs. Barnhart's brother, Orlan- i da Johnsonbaugh, of Avis, with Mrs. Johnson- | baugh and their two children. | =Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Gill, of Pleasant Gap, left | Saturday for Burlington, Kansas, to spend the | summer visiting with relatives, and with a | thought of making their home in the west. ~Fred Reese has returned to Bellefonte after | spending several weeks at Patton. assisting his | brother, William Reese, who has been, on account | of illness, unable to take entire charge of his bus- i; i i Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Decker and daughter Hel | en, who spent the winter in Lancaster, returned | to Bellefonte last Friday and have opened up | their apartments in the Bush Arcade, intending | to spend the summer here. ; —R.D. Foreman, one of the influential citizens of Centre Hall, while in Beliefonte Thursday look- | ing after some business. spent part of his time with his brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. David R. Foreman, at their home on Spring street —Mrs. A. J. Cook returned Saturday from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. John Hinman Gib- son, at Rutherford, N. J. Mrs. Cook left Ruther. ford anticipating having her daughter and grand- daughter with her in Bellefonte, for the greater part of the summer. —Miss Hannah Newman's several visits to Bellefonte this spring are hailed by her friends as a good omen, they hoping that she may be con- templating coming again to make her home in Bellefonte. While here Miss Newman has been the guest of her aunt, Mrs. M. Fauble. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Pearce came from Lock Haven Wednesday for a short visit with their rel. atives in Bellefonte before returning Friday to their home in Conneaut, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Pearce with Mrs. Grace Ritchie, of Saint Joe, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Howard. of Chester, Pa., were in Lock Haven to attend the funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Dunn Pearce, wife of Rev. }3} Pearce, whose body was taken there from her home at Conneaut, Monday, for burial. S————— A emer CENTRE COUNTIANS AT STATE NoRrMAL ScHoOL.—The Centre county young men and women who have entered the State Normal school at Lock Haven for the spring term are as follows: Ella Daugh- erty, Pine Glenn; Lavin Ferree, Oak Hall; Candace Leathers, Snow Shoe; F. H. Barnhart and R. P. Barnhart, Curtin, and Rhoda Weaver, Snow Shoe. SALVATION ARMY HALLELUJAH. — A meeting will be conducted by the Salva- tion Army in the Y. M. C. A. on Saturday night at eight o'clock. Capt. Powell, of Steubenville, Ohio, who is better known as the “Hallelujah Jumping Jack.” will be in charge of the services. Everybody is invited to attend this meeting. Seats are free. CAPT. A. J. REESE, Officer in Charge. on HIGH SCHOOL ALUMNI —A meeting of the alumni association of the Bellefonte High school will be held in the new High school building on Monday night, April 29th, at 7:30 o'clock sharp. A full at- tendance is earnestly desired for the transaction of important business. EDWARD L. GATES, President. Louise M. BRACHBILL, Sec'y. Eellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce. Potatoes per bushel, new.. Advertisers and sspecinly Acrertisng nnn one
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