i ! Peworratic, Gata, | Bellefonte, Pa., December 6, 1912. { — — To CORRESPONDENTS.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real name | of the writer. ! — THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——C. G. MacAvoy has been ill at his home on Spring street for a week, with a severe attack of tonsilitis. —~—Dr. and Mrs. R. G. H. Hayes with their two sons and Mrs. Hayes’ mother, Mrs. Hoffer, will spend the winter at the Bush house. ———Mr. Daniel Eberhart, of east High street, was seventy-nine years old last Friday, but did not have any big celebra- tion of the event. ——The management of “The Girl From Broadway,” which was booked for Bellefonte next Monday night, cancelled their date on Tuesday. ——Mrs. John Klinger, who has been housed up for the past two weeks with a | is about all it is possible to have present ' cult. fonte either needs a new borough coun- cil or the old one wakened up to its duties as borough officials. Time used to be when a member thought it a dire neglect of duty to miss one meeting; now it ap- pears to be a burden to attend. Five members, or just the necessary quorum, any night, and frequently this is diffi- For instance: There wasno meet- ing on November 18th because only three members reported. On Monday evening of this week it tock until eight o'clock to | get five members together and then one man had to be sent for. Such a condition of affairs naturally leads to the query if ‘a councilman, why not attend to the ! duties of the office or resign? When a quorum was finally rounded | up on Monday evening the minutes of | the last meeting were read and approved. | There were no verbal or written com- | munications. The Street and Water | committees reported various repairs | around town and the latter committee re- | ported that the fire hydrants in front of the postoffice and near the Centre coun- ty bank were in such a condition that BELLEFONTE BOROUGH CounciL—Belle- | ——The Ithaca Conservatory of Music CANON—MARTIN.—Quite an elaborate i Concert company will give an entertain- | wedding took place on Thanksgiving | ment in the Lutheran church on Tuesday | evening, in St. Mark's Lutheran church evening, December 10th, proceeds to be at Nittany, when Miss Alverna Mastin, | for the benefit of the church fund. The | the only daughter of Mss. Mary Martin, | doors will open at eight o'clock and the ' of that place, became the bride of Frank | entertainment begin at 830. Price of Ashton Canen, of Philadelphia. The! admission, 25 cents. The public in gen- church was beautifully decorated for the eral is invited to attend. occasion with rhododendrons, the calor | — sd - white. i ——Automobile licenses for 1913 are | Shee a Ye — he now being issued and, as usual, most of yinmed with duchess point lace and | —Frank BE. Naginey made 2+ business tripto Philadelphia this week. —Trood Parker, of Jersey Shere, spent Friday at hishome in this place. —John Tomer Harris, of lkurisburg, spent Thanksgiving with his mother in this place. —William Miller, the Philipsburg tailor, was in Bellefonte tliis week attending court as a juror. — James Wian spent Thanksgiving and Friday of last week sn a trip to Lock Haven and Wil the owners about here are saving them- selves a lot of time and annoyance by leaving their applications with W. Harri- son Walker Esq. He has all the required blanks and being a notary completes the applications without any more cost tham if you did the work yourself. ——Bellefonters will be afforded a special treat on Sunday afternoon when that noted eiocutionist and impersonator, Miss Gay Zenola MacLaren will appear in Petrikin hall under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. in “The Sign of the Cross.” This is a sacred impersonation and is said by those who have heard it to be equal to a good sermon. Sunday after- : : | —Miss Anna McCaffrey spend. the latter part of | pearls, with a veil and erange blossoms. | |. eek withher brother, Mr: Bat McCaffrey, in | She carried a bouquet of bride's roses Lock Haven. : and lillies of the valley. The attendants —Miss Erama Green returned home on Mon- | were Miss Ruth Beck, of Nittany, as maid | day after a ten days visit with.friends in Lewis- | of honor; Miss Mildred Martin, of Pitts. A bur® and Miflinburg. burgh, and Miss Miriam Beck, of Nit-' —Jerome Harper, of Bitumen, was home to beid id Thei his wife at the Smith nip y | spend Thaanlagiving with at ‘of yellow satin triramed with shadow | _nyiy Atert E. Canfield, who is visiting at lace, rhimestones and pearls, and’ their | Wyncote, near Philadelphia, ia.a. guest of her sis’ | bouquets were yellow chrysanthemums. | ter, Mrs. W.C. Stoddart. i | Sophia Gutgsell, of Philadelphia, a small| —M. A. Landsy left on Tuesday on a two | niece of the bridegroom, acted as flower Weeks business trip to Franklin and through the i . : | western part of the State. | girl, while the bridegroom's buother,| H. Florey, of Spring. township, was | Benjamin Canon, of the Schoolship |, ..qa0s visitor at this office on Saturday while | Adams, officiated as best man. The | in Bellefonte on a shopping. tour. | ushers were Messrs. William Duck, of —MissStella Cooney, of Galen Hall, Atlantic | Millheim, and John Beck, of Nittany. | City, and Miss Boyle, of Hazelton, have been severe attack of grip, we are pleased to | they would freeze up in cold weather. state, ismuch improved this week. | The borough engineer was instructed to ——The jury commissioner s went to | purchase two new ones to replace these work on Monday filling the jury wheel | then have the old ones repaired. The with the names of those who will be | Water committee also reported that the drawn for jury service during 1913. | meter bills for the third quarter amount- —— Miss Sallie Fitzgerald entertained | €d to $675.87. The Finance committee | eighteen young lady friends at her home | reported a balance in the hands of the | on Spring street, last evening, in honor | treasurer of $530. : of her guest, Miss Emma Barner, of | Under the head of old business the noon, December 8th, at three o'clock. | "rigs Beulah Miller, of State College, | ——The State College football team | played the wedding march as the bridal | closed the season on Thanksgiving day Party marched to the altar where the by defeating the University of Pittsburgh ceremony was performed by Rev. L. M.! by the score of 38 to 0. The team went : Fleck, of Newry, the ring service being through the season without a defeat and | used and the bride being given away by! had their goal line crossed only once, by | her brother, J. Edgar Martin, of Columbus, Cornell. They scored 285 points to six | Ohio. Fellowing the ceremony a recep- | against them. Only three teams in the | tion was held at the home of the bride's. Williampsort. ——Miss Kate McGowan, an operator | in the Commercial telephone exchange, | who was suddenly taken ill at her work | Street committee reported the pavements on Curtin street reported at a previous meeting either repaired or the contract let for the same. Mr. Judge reported that a new splash board had been put on the dam in Spring 2 : | creek by order of Gamble, Gheen & Co., ——Hon. W. C. Heinle entertained all | and wanted to know what council was the grade teachers in the public schools | going to do in the matter. After some at his home on east Bishop street on | discussion Mr. Judge made a motion that Thanksgiving evening and after rerssel | the borough engineer be instructed to re- ments were served took all who cared to ve the same. President Keller sug- attend to the Scenic. ~——Dr. Joseph Brockerhoff is contem- plating a trip to the Bermudas after Thanksgiving day, is better, but has been unable to return to her work. gested that in order to make the instruc- tions more effective the motion should be amended in effect that the borough engi- country scored more points than State and each one had a bigger score against it. roe ——The Scenic is doing business at the same stand and under the old man- | agement and will continue to do so not- withstanding various reports to the con- trary. Only the latest and best pictures obtainable will be shown, but nothing ob- jectionable will ever appear upon the program. The Scenic stands for every- thing good in a motion picture show and | you will make no mistake by patronizing it. Three reels and three shows every evening. oe | mother and later the young couple left’ on a brief wedding trip, expecting to be | at home to their friends after January first at No. 3914 north Percy street, Phil- adelphia. Among the guests present at the wed. ding were Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Smith and | daughter; Miss Laura Harrison and Miss Blanche McGarvey, of Bellefonte; Miss Esther Martin, of Pittsburgh; Miss’ Kathryn Martin, of State College; Mr. | and Mrs. G. L. Emerick, of Benore, and | J. A. Enserick, of Lock Haven. CROMER—CRISSMAN.—A quiet wedding was celebrated in St. John's Episcopal Christmas and will in all probability have with him as traveling companions both James Pierpoint, of Philadelphia, and H. E. Fenlon, of Bellefonte. ——Miss Adaline Olewine entertained Tuesday night with three tables of five hundred, in honor of Miss Osborne, of DuBois. Miss Olewine entertained last’ week also, for her brother, J. Harris Ole- wine, a student at State. ——Miss Kate Shugert was operated on at the University hospital Saturday after- noon of last week for appendicitis. Miss Shugert had been at Bryn Mawr for a week, where she had gone to spend a month, when suddenly taken ill with the above results. ——Up to Saturday of last week Geo. B. Thompson had husked and hauled in 4,100 bushels of corn and still had four and a-half acres to husk. He also raised over three hundred bushels of potatoes, notwithstanding the fact that this is not his potato year. ——William Mackert and his family, occupying the house owned by Mrs. Harry Curtin, on Curtin street, will move | to Sunbury, where they had been living before coming to Bellefonte. Mr. Mack. ert has been connected with the Com- mercial telephone. — Invitations have been issued by Mr. and Mrs. James I. Thompson for the marriage of their daughter, Mary Irvin Thompson and Charles Thomas Stahle, Lieutenant Coast Artillery Corps, United States Army, which will take place on Wednesday, December eighteenth, at twelve o'clock, at “Oak Terrace,” Le" mont, Pa. ——The wedding of Miss Ellen Donnel- ley, daughter of Mrs, Elizabeth Donnelly, of Ridley Park, to Edmund Blanchard, Esq., of Bellefonte, will take place in the Presbyterian church at Ridley Park on Saturday, December 28th. On account of the recent death of Mr. Blanchard's mother only the immediate members of the two families will be present. ——The Ladies Aid Society of the Pres- byterian church of Boalsburg will give an entertainment in Boal hall, on Satur- day evening, December 14th, at 7.30 o'clock. The program will consist of liv- ing pictures, reading and music. Every- body is invited to attend and see Bridget, Mr. Peter Popinjay and all the notable people of the day. Admission, 10 and 15 cents. ——Mr. and Mrs. W. William Prince, of Crafton, Pa., on Saturday of last week announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Millicent Prince, to Thomas Beaver, voungest son of Gen. and Mrs. James A. Beaver, of Bellefonte, Though the date for the wedding has not yet been made public it is generally un- derstood that it will occur some time dur- ing the winter. ——George Holter, Thomas Butler and Dewey Shay, of Howard, were given a hearing before justice of the peace W. H. Musser, on Wednesday, on the charge of snaring rabbits; the prosecutor being Atlee Davidson, a state game warden. The boys admitted the snaring but pro- duced a card containing the game laws on which was printed the fact that rab- bits could be taken any way except by the use of ferrets. The card was distrib- uted by a Lock Haven sportinggoods deal- er. In as much as the boys were in- nocent of wrong-doing they were dis- charged, after being cautioned not to do it again. i neer be instructed to remove the board {and to see that it is kept off. Mr. Dag- i gett seconded the motion and it passed without a dissenting vote. Mr. Beezer, of the Street committee, reported that the Bell Telephone compa- ny of Pennsylvania wanted permission to change the location of a pole on Wilson street. The matter was referred to the Street committee and borough engineer | for investigation and with permission to grant the change in location if they judg- ed it proper to do so. A note for $1,000 was renewed for one year; one for $800 for six months and a | new note for $4,000 was authorized for | four months to renew a note of $2,000, | pay to the county $1,500 and $500 to go for current expenses, after which bills to | the amount of $1,240.64 were approved | and council adjourned. “oe Proposep NEW GLASS PLANT FOR | BELLEFONTE. During the past few weeks | representatives of the Mercantile Realty | company, of Pittsburgh, builders and pro- | moters, have been working on a project to build a new glass factory in Bellefonte and the matter has already progressed to that extent where J. H. Fisher and B. G. | Ott, representing the above company, submitted their proposition to the execu- tive committee of the Bellefonte Board of Trade on Wednesday afternoon. They claim that they have the sum of thirty thousand dollars pledged in Belle fonte for the new enterprise. All they asked of the Board of Trade was to guar- antee them exemption from taxes and free water for a period of five years; im- provement in railroad facilities in con- nection with their plant, and that the Board of Trade aid in securing an option on the land desired as well as rates on slag at the nearby furnaces, the slag to be used in the concrete work for founda- tions, etc. It was stated on Wednesday that a charter for the new company, which will be called the “Centre County Window Glass company,” has been received and the company already organized. It will be composed entirely of Belle- fonte people and the location in view for the plant is a piece of ground owned by the Thomas estate on north Thomas street. Those who have the pro- ject in charge assured the writer yes- terday that the new plant is a certainty. As president of the board of trade Col. Reynolds appointed as a committee to co-operate with Messrs. Fisher and Ott J. Linn Harris, Ad. Fauble and Frank E, Naginey. VoGEL'S MINSTRELS.—John W. Vogel's big city minstrels will appear at Gar- man’s opera house, Thursday evening, December 12th, and will present one of the most novel and pleasing entertain. ments ever offered the amusement loving public. The program is overflowing with rapid-fire fun and genuine surprises; pretty music and dazzling scenic and electrical effects form an important part of the entertainment. The entire mam- moth program is everywhere presented in absolute perfection, never curtailed in any detail, a fact that makes this or- ganization still more successful each suc- cessive season. The management’s motto ons Gt —— —— Next week's session of court does not promise to be a very big one as only a few cases will be called for trial and they will not be very lengthy. SE = church at 8:30 o'clock last Saturday morn- ——W. H. Fielding, who was born and | ino when Miss Eva H. Crissman, daugh. | raised at Linden Hall, this county, but ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Homer Crissman, | who for some years has been connected | pecame the bride of Alexander B. Cromer, | with the New York police department, | of Baldwinsville, N. Y. The ceremony | resigned his position on November 2nd | was performed by the pastor, Rev. John and one week later purchased the Cald-| Hewitt. There were no attendants and | well pharmacy on Atlantic avenue, Lyn-| only the immediate members of the brook, N.Y. where he is now located. bride's family were present. At the con- | visiting with Mr. and Mzs. Martin Cooney. —Mrs. James P. Cobusn left Bellefonte Thurs day morning for Norristown, where she will visit for two weeks with her sister, Mrs. F. B. Sowes; ~-Alfred Underwood, a Senior at State College spent partof his Thanksgiving vacation at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Underwood in this place. —Lawshe Baird, coal operator and prominent business man of Osceola Mills, was a business visitor in Bellefonte over Monday and Monday night. —Miss Marie White, of Williamsport, spent Thanksgiving as the Brockerhoff house with her aunt, Miss Powell, and sister, Miss Josephine White. —Miss Catharine Weber, of State College, will come to Bellefonte today to remain until tomor- row visiting friends and shopping preparatory to Christmas. —Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Thal and children, of State College, spent Thanksgiving in Bellefonte with Mrs. Thal's mother Mrs. Alice Hocken’ berry and family. —Miss Osborne, of DuBois, who had been with friends at State College for Thanksgiving, spent the forepart of the week in Bellefonte as the guest of Miss Adaline Olewine. —Mrs. James McClain, who has been in Belle. fonte for the past two weeks, during the absence of her mother, Mrs. J, L. Spangler, in Philadel adelphia, returned to her home at Spangler Tues’ day. —Mrs. F. W. Campbell, who had been in Belle- fonte for two weeks owing to the illness of her sister, Mrs. Elmer E. Davis, of Linn street, re turned to her home at Westport Tuesday of last week. —Mrs. Georgianna Dale, of Lemont, was in Bellefonte for several days the fore part of the He writes us that Lynbrook is considered | clusion of theceremony the young couple | week, during which time she was the guest of the second Brooklyn of New York, and | went by taxi to Milesburg where they Miss Rachel Marshall and Mrs. Longwell, on his change to there from Newdorp, L. I., is considered a very good one. ——The Bellefonte Academy football team closed the season at Harrisburg on Thanksgiving day with a game with the Steelton High school, winning by the score of 21 to 14. The Academy lost but one game during the entire season, and that was to the Indiana Normal by the score of 14 to 0. Very few prep teams in the State had as good a record and the members of the team as well as every- body connected with the Academy have reason to feel proud of the good work done. —W., H. Macker, the green grocery- man in the Crider building, last Friday filed papers in voluntary bankruptcy and his store was closed the same evening pending the appointment of a receiver. His liabilities are placed at about $5,800 while the assets will probably be less than five hundred dollars. Failure to realize on produce shipped to different cities 1s assigned as the cause of Mr. Macker’s reverses. On Tuesday G. Fred Musser was appointed temporary receiver for Mr. Macker. —Sixteen year old William Ralph Waite, a native of Tyrone but of late a resident of Altoona, was accidentally shot in the back on Saturday afternoon by S. C. Fox, of Altoona, while the two were preparing to return home from a three day's camping out near Warriorsmark, dying shortly afterward. Waite was standing at the stove eating and Fox was packing up. He supposed the gun was empty but it proved otherwise. A num- ber of relatives of the unfortunate young man live in Centre county. ——As the Christmas season draws near many a perplexing question can be solved by a visit to Miss Morgan's Shop, where every inch of available room is filled with something you or your friends would accept with great pleasare as a Christmas remembrance. All the cos- metics, creams and furnishings for the dressing table, so much needed at this season, attractive inexpensive jewelry, shell pins, crochet and embroidery cot- tons, embroideries finished and ready for finishing and countless other things to delight the heart of a woman. Miss Morgan will consider it a great privilege to have you visit her shop. GA mm. ———While hunting on Tussey moun- tain last week with the State College hunting club W. L. Foster trapped a lynx that weighed sixty-four pounds. It had a beautifully soft and silky pelt, but Mr. Foster will probably have it mounted. The lynx is a very rare animal in this part of the State and it is believed that this one-—or a pair of them, rather—had migrated here from the mountains in New York State or Canada. That there was a pair of them is evidenced by the fact that since Mr. Foster made his kill last week the cries of the other lynx are heard nightly by residents living at the foot of the mountain, and an effort will be made to capture it. i left on the train for a wedding trip to | Niagara Falls, Buffalo and other places, | at the conclusion of which they will go direct to their own home in Baldwins- | ville. The bride is one of the best known young ladies of Bellefonte, having the past few years conducted a dancing school in the Bush Arcade. Her husband is also quite well known here and at State College. He is a former student of the Bellefonte Academy and also spent two or three years in study at the College. | He now holds a very responsible position with Stewart & Co., large contractors of | Spring street. —Mrs. Wilbur F. Reeder left Bellefonte on | Tuesday noon for Philadelphia where she will be until the last of the week when she will go to Knoxville, Tenn., to be for an indefinite time with her sister, Mrs. J. Edwin Borches. | —Mrs. Stewart and Miss Betty W. Stewart, of | State College, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. | G. Morris during their stay in Bellefonte las: | week, while Miss Stewart was holding her ex hibition of mission and Italian jewelry. — After spending ten days with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Miller, at the toll-gate, Mrs. E. P. Moore and her daughter Katharine will return to their home at Tyrone tomorrow. Mrs. Moore and Miss Moore came to Bellefonte for the Thanks | giving. | —~Mrs. Thomas A. Shoemaker returned yester: New York city, and has a promising fu- | day from a short visit to New York and Balti ture ahead of him. May they have a | more, where she had been with her davelter : | Martha, who is at school a little way out ew happy and Drosierous We. ! York city, and with Miss Rod.r, whose home is | in Baltimore. A ng To Haller "| —Miss Priscilla Boal was in Bellefonte Tuesday man, 0 Arrisourg, an 155 nginia ! on her way to her home in Horton, W. Va,, after Kaup, of State College, were married at | having spent the greater part of the summer | the latter place on Thanksgiving day by | with relatives about Lemont and the College | Rev. Mr. Horn. Following the ceremony | they came to Bellefonte where a delicious | wedding dinner was served at the home | of the bride's sister, Mrs. Edward R. parted on a wedding trip to eastern cities. | They will go to housekeeping at Enola, | near Harrisburg. -—— BEIGHTOL—FRAZIER.—On the evening of November 30th a quiet wedding was celebrated at the United Evangelical parsonage in Howard, when Lewis A. Beightol, of Jacksonville, and Miss Cora R. Frazier, of near Howard, were united in marriage by the pastor, Rev. M. J. Snyder. The young couple have the best wishes of their many friends for their future happiness. ———— nn CANDIDATES FILE EXPENSE ACCOUNTS. —Wednesday was the last day for can- didates voted for at the recent election to file their expense accounts, but up until yesterday noon there were two or three lacking. James A. Gleason, Demo- cratic candidate for Congress, was the first man to file in Centre county. His expenses were, $976.97, and of this amount $175 were contributed by outside parties. Congressman Charles E. Patton has not Sled any account. John P. Har- ris, a presidential elector, filed an affi- davit that his expenses were less than fifty dollars. J. L. Montgomery, as treasurer of the Republican county committee, filed i an ac- count of $1,255.84 receipts and $1,255.06 expenditures, leaving a balance of 78 cents, C. L. Gramley, Republican candidate for the Legislature, expended $271.25, and Robert M. Foster, Democratic can- didate, $520. Charles F. Cook, acting treasurer of the Washington party, received $270,00, and expended $217.20, leaving a balance on hand of $52.80. Two hundred dollars of the above amount was contributed by Charles E. Patton and $50 by C. L. Gram- ley, the balance being in small contribu- tisns. . —Don't read an out-of-date paper. Get | all the news in the WATCHMAN. | Miss Boal is the younger daughter of Mr. and | Mrs, Hammil Boal. | ~—Miss Mabel Allison, daughter of Hon. William | M. Allison, of Spring Mills, returned home on | Wednesday after spending six weeks on a trip to | Owens, and in the afternoon they de- | philadelphia and Atlantic City, and visiting her | Butter brothers Charles and William in New York and Frank in Mercersburg. i ~Mr. and Mrs. John Decker, of Detroit, Michi- | gan, were guests of Mr. Decker's parents, Mr. | and Mrs. Christ Decker, for the week-end. On | their way east Mr. and Mrs. Decker stopped in | Pittsburgh for the Thanksgiving game, after which they came on to Bellefonte. | —Mrs. W. D. Engle, who has been in Belle. fonte for some time with her daughter, Mrs. J Thomas Mitchell, has returned to her home at Indianapolis. Mrs. Mitchell accompanied her mother on a part of the journey and stopped in Pittsburgh for a time with friends, =Mr. and Mrs. James K. Barnhart and their four children were at Punxsutawney during the past week attending the funeral of Mrs. Barn —Mrs, Annie R. Long of Bellefonte hus: been ~ ior several weeks witlt friends at Bracford, Pa. —Mrs. Clayton, of Philadelphia, is visiting with Her daughter, Mrs. Hilpatrick, on Curtin street. —Mrs. W. Miles Waiker and Mrs. Robert Irwin made a trip to Williamsport the latter part of last week. —Miss Sarah Miller left on Thanksgiving to spend some time with her father, Charles Miller. who is located near Williamsport. —Mrs. Lvkens and her daughter, Laura, of Bellwood, are visitingrwith Mrs. Lykens!’ sister, Mrs. Robert Rhone, of east Beaver street. —Mr. and Mrs. William C. Coxey. of east Bishop street, are entertaining Miss Lillian Elder, of Williamsport, whexcame to Bellefonte Thurs- day. —Miss Helen Ceadér with Mr. and Ms: H. N. €rider were ameng the State Slowing at. the Thanksgiving game in Pittsburgh last —Mr. A. C. Brown. of Freeburg, Pa. was an ever Sunday guest of Rev. and Mm. C. W. Winey: Mrs. Winey being a daughter of Mr. Broan. —Mrs. W. J. Kurtz and Mrs. William Weber, of Howard, have been entertaining their brother this week, Dr. William Hensyl, a prominent physician of Berwick, Pa. —Mrs. Ambrose Sloteman, of Leck Haven, spent a short time in Bellefonte last Friday on her way home from visiting her sister, Mrs. Daniel Boone, at Linden Hall, ~Mrs. Shuey, of Prospect, Ohio, wito came to Bellefonte last week for a visit with her pareats. Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Hoy, andother relatives, will spend an indefinite time in Pennsylvania. —Mr. and Mrs. Hyndman, of Butler, will come to Bellefonte, this week to visit for several days with Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Ward. Mr. Hyndman was at one time secretary of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A., consequently has many friends in this locality. ——Newt Krebs, of Pine Grove Mills was in town Tuesday acting very modest for a man who had just shot a fine big buck. He had been in the mountains for two weeks with the Pine Grove crowd whose camp burned up the first day they were out. As a party they got one buck, but the next day after Newt returned home a lady called at his store and told him she had seen three deer grazing in a nearby corn field. That was enough, for Newt grabbed his “old trusty” and made tracks for the corn field. Sure enough, there were two bucks and a doe, so he just picked out the biggest and that was all there was to it, except getting the critter home. ——The annual memorial exercises of the Bellefonte Lodge of Elks were held in Petrikin hall on Sunday afternoon. Grand Exalted Ruler W. C. Cassidy was in charge and a specially selected choir furnished the music. The address was delivered by Hon. L. S. Walters, of Mt. Carmel, and it was one of the most elo" quent, scholarly and pathetic memorial | addresses ever heard in Bellefonte. The Bellefonte Lodge has been extremely fortunate that out of a membership con- siderably exceeding two hundred not a death occurred during the past year. ——Adam Dale, of Lemont, has been devoting considerable time since the cold weather set in to trapping fur-bearing animals and so far he has sold fifty-one dollars worth of pelts. This is pretty good in a country in which fur-bearing animals are supposed to be almost ex- tinct. —The Parent-Teachers association will hold a pie social after an interesting program, on Tuesday evening, December 10th, at the High school building, to which all parents and their friends are cordially invited. Mrs. George H. Hazel, Secre- tary. 57-2t Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The prices quoted are those paid for produce, Potatoes per bushel, new........................... “ E per dozen...... Lard, per sos Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, The following are the quotations up to ‘clock Thursday evening, when our paper 1 Aiki press, day ever Wie Wha «» RERRIER hart’s mother, Mrs. Martha J. Campbell. Mrs, | Oats Barnhart, who has been in Punxsutawney for two weeks, will return to Bellefonte tomorrow. ~—Miss Mary Snyder went to Latrobe Saturday of last week to spend several days with Mr, and Mrs. H. A. Pearce, who were visiting with Mr. Pearce's parents, before returning to Panama. Miss Louise Pearce, a sister of Mr. Pearce, will go with them to the Isthmus to visit for an in- definite time, ~—Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Griest and daughter, Miss Mary R. Griest, and Joseph Griest, all of Union- will spend the winter. They will be joined upon their arrival in Florida by Miss Ella Brooks, of | —Henry C. Quigley Esq., returned on Sunday evening from a week's hunt with his brother and party in the mountains of Clinton county. All told the party got four bucks and 164 pheas, ants. Most of the party were out during all of November which accounts for the large number of birds bagged. —Mrs. Dixon, wife of George Dallas Dixon, vice president of traffic of the P. R. R., arrived in He will not be sent out of Centre county un- Ey year...... 1 YeRT...... 2.00 cept at the option of the Four weeks, and per ct. Tiree mon fad unde aon. ere Se SEE Day"