Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 31, 1913, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    BoB JoNES—EVANGELIST.—Bob Jones,
the southern evangelist, has been con-
ducting meetings in this place, under the
auspices of the Methodist church since
last Saturday night. They were started
in the church but it soon became ap-
parent that the auditorium there would
be too small to hold the crowds and, on
Monday night, the meetings were moved
to the armory.
There they have been gradually in-
creasing in size, until last evening the
place was practically filled.
Rev. Jones is assisted by chorister
McKenzie and Dr. Guille, a clergyman of
the Presbyterian church, who conducts
Bible class studies each afternoon at
3:30. Morning meetings of forty-five
minutes duration are being held each
day at 10:30, but the crowds are found
at the evening service.
Up to this time it is rather hard to
forcast the good the campaign may do
the community, but it is an absolute cer-
tainty that it won't do it any harm. Rev.
Jones is a forceful, dramatic speaker
with a personality at once commanding
and magnetic. Like all evangelists he
strikes right from the shoulder with
homely truths that cannot fail to carry
conviction of their reality because most
of his hearers who are honest enough to
admit it know that conditions really are
just as they are painted in his word
pictures.
While the WATCHMAN does not believe
that Bellefonte is the worst place in the
world it does believe that it could be far
better and it is just such “clean-up” sea-
| sons as this evangelistic service inaugu-
rates that are needed to clarify the
moral atmosphere of our community.
The fact that Rev. Jones has actually
told us nothing new don’t count. What
does count, however, is to have the spirit
of contentment and indifference dis-
tributed to the point where the public
conscience is aroused by being confront-
ed with its own supineness.
While many may not be converted at
these meetings there is no estimating the
seeds of righteousness that are sown to
develop and flower in their beauty in
ways and at times that cannot be known
now.
To our minds the unfortunate part of
the whole program is the fact that just
about the time Rev. Jones will get the
community aroused he will have to de-
part and this misfortune suggests the
propriety of at least trying the continu-
ance of them in the armory as union
revival services for a short period. The
time to strike is when the iron is hot and
the making of Christians—not Metho-
THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
——A. G. Morns Jr., bought a team of
mated grays from F. B. Way, of Storms-
town, on Tuesday, for $600.
——The Sophomores won the cider
scrap at State College last Saturday by
the narrow margin of four points.
——Jeremiah Zettle, of Georges valley,
Centre county's expert trapper, will
spend the winter at Middletown, N. Y.
——The Central Pennsylvania Alumni
association of The Pennsylvania State
College was organized in Harrisburg on
Saturday evening.
——James H. Rine, of Bellefonte, who
is working in a planing mill in Altoona,
had his left hand badly lacerated by get-
ting caught in a saw on Saturday. The
injury was dressed at the Mercy hospital
in that city.
——Col. H. S. Taylor and John S.
Walker were the speakers at a good
roads meeting held at Port Matilda onl
Tuesday evening. The sentiment in fa-
vor of good roads is increasing every day
in Centre county.
——On Monday of this week H. Laird
Curtin sold his farm in Spring township
to E. Frank Frain, of Tyrone, the pur-
chase price being $16,000. Mr. Frain
expects to go into the stock raising busi-
ness on a large scale.
——Calvin A. Weaver, of Coburn, was
last Friday appointed deputy to sheriff
Arthur B. Lee, vice W. C. Rowe resigned.
Mr. Weaver is nostranger in the sheriff's
office, as about fifteen years ago he was
deputy under sheriff John P. Condo.
——A very important short meeting of
the Y. M. C. A. Women's Auxiliary will
be held in the Y. M. C. A. building at
half-past seven o’clock, Monday evening,
November 6th. All members are urgent-
ly requested to be present.
——The Bellefonte Academy had an
easy proposition defeating the Dickinson
Seminary eleven on Saturday, the score
being 33 to 0. The Bellefonte High schoo!
team won its third successive game on
Saturday by defeating Bellwood 6 to 0.
——During Miss Helen E. C. Overton's
absence at Scranton, this week, attend.
ing the State Congress of the Daughters
of the American Revolution, Miss Sallie
Fitzgerald has had charge of her prima-
ry department of the Bellefonte Acade-
my.
—-On account of the provisions of the
new woman's employment act the store
of Mrs. J. A. Aiken will close at 530
o'clock every evening in the week except
Wednesday, when it will be open until 8
o'clock, and Saturday evening until 9
o'clock.
-—Among the delegates appointed by
Governor Tener on Saturday to represent
Pennsylvania at the annual convention
and exposition of the United States Good
Roads association to be held in St. Louis,
November 10th and 11th, is J. Linn Har-
ris, of Bellefonte.
other particular denominationalists,
{ should be the objective. Why not a day
or a right especially for each one of the
little army of employees that are found
in our various industrial enterprises, a
day or a night especially for our business
men,
While there would probably be little
disposition to close business places for
an hour of worship we all know that they
have been closed to attend base-ball
games, picnics and as tributes of respect
to certain of those who have preceded
through the dark vale that is not lighted
by good intentions but by good works.
If you haven't been there, go to the
Bob Jones meetings that yet remain to
——Mrs. Harry Harper, late of Belle- be held. Take our word for it, they
fonte but now of Centre Hall, was taken | €30'¢ hurt you, unless the wound comes
violently ill on Monday and was taken | in having driven home to you something
to the Bellefonte hospital the same even- that you know you ought to have done
ing where she was kept under close that you have not done.
——— A mns—
watch until Tuesday morning, when she TWO SPECIAL SERVICES BY EVANGELIST
was taken to the Lock Haven hospital for
"BoB" JONES —Bob Jones, the evangelist,
treatment. who is preaching morning and evening
in the armory, has announced two special
services which are attracting a great deal
of attention. He is to speak to women
only Saturday afternoon at three o'clock
when he is tospeak on the subject, “The
Modern Woman.” He will probably have
a large audience of women. There will
be a committee of women to usher and
to take up the offering at that service.
Sunday at three p. m. he is to speak to
men only on the “Question of Men.”
Mr. Jones has given this address in more
thaw one hundred cities in America. He
gave this address in Scranton last Jan-
uary to eight thousand men. Such an
audience never assembled in that city to
hear any man in a revival meeting. There
will be no boys under twelve years old
admitted to the men's meeting Sunday.
Itis judged by this that the message
must be very plain.
PASTOR INSTALLED—Rev. W. H. Thaub
was duly installed as pastor of Grace
Lutheran church, State College, last Sun-
day, the services being especially im.
pressive. The sermon in the morning
was by Rev. M. S. Cressman, D.D., of
Lewistown, who also delivered the charge
to the congregation. Rev. F. P. Manlast,
D. D., dean of the theological department
of Susquehanna University, at Selins-
grove, preached in the evening and de-
livered the charge to the pastor. Imme-
diately following the sermon the young
pastor was officially installed. Rev.
Thaub has been in charge of Grace
Lutheran church for three months and
has proven very acceptable to the con-
gregation. He is an able bible scholar
and an earnest and fluent pulpit orator.
——The number of former State Col-
lege students employed on the Panama
canal is quite large and they have form.
ed an organization known as the State
College club. It is their intention to give
a ball at the Hotel Tivoli, Panama, on
Thanksgiving evening, and are arranging
a very pleasant affair.
~——On account of the hard rain the
good roads meeting scheduled to be held
at Millheim last Friday night was post-
poned until Monday night. At that time
J. Linn Harris, Robert F. Hunter, Edmund
Blanchard and register J. Frank Smith
were the principal speakers. The meet-
ing was well attended and quite enthu-
siastic.
——Mrs. J. M. Bolton, who came to
Bellefonte from her home in Franklin,
last week, and stopped at the Brockerhoff
house, was seized with a chill on Monday
evening and became so bad that she was
removed to the Bellefonte hospital. By
Tuesday morning pneumonia had devel-
oped and her condition since has been
quite serious.
~——Next Tuesday will be election day
and before another issue of the WATCH-
MAN goes to press the various candidates
will know their fate. Good men should
be elected to all local offices, and as Su-
perior court judge is the only office on
the State ticket all Democrats as well as
Republicans should vote for Webster
Grim, as he is a clean man and an able
jurist.
—=Mr. and Mrs. J. Will Conley have
issued invitations for the marriage of |
their daughter, Miss Nelle Meese Conley,
to William B. Wallis, of Pittsburgh, on | ———.
the evening of Wednesday, the twelfth , =——The ladies bible class of the
of November, at six o'clock, at St. John's Lutheran Sunday school will hold an
Reformed church, Immediately after the . oyster supper in the supper room of the
ceremony a reception will be held atthe Y. M.C. A, on Tuesday ev/ming, No-
home of the bride's parents at No. 26 vember 4th, (election day), for the benefit
west Logan street. Mr. and Mrs. Wallis of the electric light fund. Price, 25
will be at home after the first of January cents; ice cream, cake and home-made
at 731 Clinton Place, Bellevue, Pittsburgh. ' candies extra.
dists, Presbyterians, Evangelicals or any |
| penitentiary site hunters will have to
| State in their game against
——The Epworth League of the Storms- | KiLL WILD GEESE WITH BROOMSTICKS.
town M. E. church will give an enter- | —The usual quietude of the village of
tainment in the town hall at that place Stormstown was very much disturbed
on the evening of November 7th, en- last Saturday evening when a flock of
fitled, “The Little Girl in Red,” by “The | wild geese swooped down upon the town
Sniggle Family.” Proceeds for the bene- and, it is alleged, so frightened some of
fit of the church. The public is invited. the more timid inhabitants that they ran
—— Rabbits are said to be exceedingly | "inci Omes MHlockes She doom, +
plentiful in the neighborhood of Peru from their hatching nests in the north to
but as that section is now included in the their winter homes in the southern States
and early Friday evening the people of
Stormstown heard the honk! honk! of
the birds as they flew high in the air.
Shortly after dark, or along about eight
o'clock in the evening, when the falling
rain made the darkness almost impen-
etrable, a flock of geese numbering one
hundred or more, were attracted by a
lighted lantern in the doorway of a barn
on the outskirts of Stormstown and after
circling a few times swooped down upon
the town. Some managed to alight in
Halfmoon run, a narrow stream that
flows through the edge of the town, but
the most of the flock settled on land, in
fields, gardens and the roadway.
Naturally a number of young men tried
to capture one or more of the birds, but
the only successful ones were D. W.
Way and William Harris, who, armed
with broomsticks, managed to get close
enough for each one to clout a bird over
the head and kill it. They finally got
together and soaring aloft continued their
flight toward the south. During Satur-
: day night and Sunday thousands of wild
only slightly effected. | i. | geese passed over Halfmoom valley from
——The State College football team the North to the South. And nowit is
was defeated by Harvard at Cambridge, UP to the weather prophets to predict an
Mass, last Saturday, by the score of 29 early winter.
to 0. But the score must not be taken | ™.
as a criterion of the strength of the State TiLLIE Do Ss HOME WRECKED.
team, as the game was played in rain and The home of Tillie Dorsey, Juss off Lamb
mud and State being by far the lighter Street at the rear of the Hastings prop-
+ erty, got such a blowing-up the other
team played at a great disadvantage. :
State's game with the University of Penn- day as to leave it practically a wreck on
3 . .y the inside. She had been presented with :
sylvania at Philadelpnia tomorrow will a cooking stove by a former employer |
Probably be A better test of her strength, | theday betore and when the plumber |
——The trout are now spawning and | disconnected the stove from the water
every day a number of the speckled | supply preparatory to moving it to Til-
beauties can pe seen on the gravel beds lie’s house he foolishly plugged the wa-
in Spring creek, opposite the WATCHMAN ter-back without draining it.
office. The trout range in size from | After it was set up and the good old
seven to eighteen inches and scores of colored lady had made a roaring fire in
persons stop on High street bridge dur- | her new treasure she went out into her
ing the day to watch them. Many | back yard to burn some rubbish. It was
strangers are among those to stop and | providential that she did for she had
look and some of them who have read been gone only a few moments when
about but never seen a live trout in the ' there was a terrific explosion that shat-
stream can hardly credit the fact that | tered the glass in her windows, tore the
they are trout plastering from the walls and almost
a : completely demolished the interior of her
A. H. Hartswick a former student little place. The steam that was gener-
at The Pennsylvania State College | ated in that plugged water back had
and who is now a traveling Salesman, |, 3it.. As the stove was blown to
was taken seriously ill Saturday morning | atoms there wouid probably have | a
= the Hotel Butex. Harrisburg, anda [2 7h (157% WOOK DRO Sains dave be the
few minutes was so violent that it took house at the time
four men to restrain him. He labored : —
under the impression that he was to have
gone to Cambridge, Mass., to
give it a wide berth. Of course if the
little animals become to plentiful they
might be killed by the prison guards and
worked into potpie for the prisoners.
~The state constabulary were sum-
moned to Oviston last Saturday on the
presumption that the foreigners there
would go on a rampage after receiving
their pay. There was also a suspicion
that liquor was being sold there illegally.
However, nothing out of the way occur-
red, the foreigners evidently recognizing
the state officers and conducting them-
selves in a very respectable manner.
—— AA a ————
~The precipitation during the month
of October has been the greatest of any
October for many years, the rainfall be-
ing over eight inches. It rained during all
of last Friday and a good part of Saturday
and Saturday night. The weather this week
has been quite varied, with some rain, and
more rain is promised for today and
tomorrow. Notwithstanding the big rain-
fall the streams and springs have been
COP ns
PENN CHEMICAL COMPANY WINS. —The
NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
on a shopping
day in Bellefonte shopping and visiting friends.
=J. C. Dunlap, of Colver, Pa., wasa Bellefonte
visitor on Wednesday and a
this office.
—William T. McCormick, of Tyrone, was in
Bellefonte on Tuesday to attend the funeral of
James Gregg.
=—Mr. W. H. Woomer, of Tyrone, was a Belle.
fonte visitor on Tuesday and a visitor at the
WATCHMAN office.
Monday, where he has the
=Mrs. F. H. Thomas
Gephart
shopping
and Mrs. Wallace H.
—Mrs. Montgomery.
Col. W. F. Reynolds, is
Reynolds at their home on Linn street,
turned from Atlantic City Saturday, after spend-
the Shore.
Ruests of Mrs. Latham's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Newton Haupt.
=—Mrs. Clement Dale went to Philadelphia the
early part of the week, for an indefinite stay with
relatives and friends. Philadelphia was Mrs.
Dale's girlhood home.
—James Rine, who has been living in Altoona
for a year, has been spending this week in Belle-
fonte with his tamily, and attending the evangel-
istic meetings in the armory.
=Mrs. Elizabeth B. Callaway went to Scranton,
Bellefonte Chapter of the D. A. R. to attend the
State Congress in session there this week.
~Lieutenant William Marsh, of Greensburg, in
charge of the state constabulary in the district of
which Bellefonte is a part, was in Bellefonte last
Thursday night inspecting Troop A, in this place.
Noll spent Tuesday in Williamsport as guests of
Mr. and Mrs. King, whom Mr. and Mrs. Brown
have entertained a number of times in Bellefonte. |
specting that institution and had luncheon with
Mr. Bookman, general secretary of the college
¥Y.M.C. A.
—Mrs. William H. Brouse, who has been in
Bellefonte the past month, left on Tuesday for |
Paw Paw, W. Va., where her husband is now |
employed and where they will be located the |
next two years.
—Dr. Lee B. Woodcock and his cousin, Byron |
Woodcock, were in Bellefonte Menday on a mo- |
tor trip across the State. Having left Mercer on :
Tuesday, the entire week will be consumed be-
fore reaching their destination at Scranton, |
—William Woodson has resigned his position |
at the Brockerhoff house and left yesterday for |
Altoona where he will spend a day then go to De- |
troit, Mich , for a week before proceeding to Bay |
City, where he will spend most of the winter.
—Miss Mabel Allison, of Spring Mills, with her |
aunt, Mrs. J. F. Alexander, Miss Grace Smith |
and Miss Sara McClenahan, of Centre Hall,
drove to Bellefonte Wednesday in Miss Allison's
motor car, spending the day in the shops and
with friends.
=T. C. Heims, of Overbrook, but who for years
was 2 well known resident of Osceola Mills, was |
in Bellefonte the fore part of the week on busi. |
ness pertaining to the settlement of the estate of |
the Hess family, at Linden Hall, his wife being |
play with jong drawn out case of the Penn Chem.
Harvard. jc) company vs Mary C. Ammerman
Hartswick was taken to the Harrisburg | was finally settled on Tuesday when the
hospital where his illness was diagnosed | defendant gave to the attorney for the
as kidney trouble. 2 | plaintiff a check for $700 in full payment
——Thomas A. Edison's Kinetaphone, | of the verdict, costs, etc. The case had
or talking pictures, ina new and im- | been appealed to the Superior SoRrt and
portant series of his latest productions, it Was before that tribunal, sitting in
the Shore recuperating after an operation for ap- !
pendicitis, Mrs. John G. Love returned home |
this week while John Jr. returned to his studies
at Haverford College.
—Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Fox and two children,
of Lock Haven, were over Sunday visitors at the |
home of Mrs. Fox's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hen.
ry Haupt. Mr. Fox is recovering from
| with his parents in this
—Mrs. N. B. Spangler is spending a week or so |
in expedition.
—Mrs. Luther Dale, of Oak Hall, spent Satur. |
VisHy caller # |
—Edward Shields went to Detroit, Mich. on |
promise of a good po, | Lycoming
factory. chiid
spent the latter half of last week ona |
expedition to Philadelphia. !
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. |
1
ing the greater part of the month of Ober 22 | cs dad war a
otherwise.
| .
=Mr. and Mrs. Edward Latham and two chil. | TBE
dren, of Harrisburg, spent Sunday in Bellefonte, |
Monday morning, as a representative from the |
{ —Mrs. Oscar Peters has
—Mr. and Mrs. T. Clayton Brown and Miss |
—Miss Mira Humes, Mrs. James Harris and Mrs. |
i
SaraC. Brown, spent Tuesday at State College, in | friends in the town,
| her return Mrs
EEE
—Frank
Crissman, of "
onbury, spent Sunday
| with Harrar,
| having gone down Wednesday.
=Dr. and Mrs. T.R. Hayes, who have been for
the ic Institute at
| Philadelphia, have gone to Atlantic City to spend
the winter months,
| —After visiting for the summer at State Col.
| lege with her niece and family, Mrs. John Harter
| has gone to Baltimore, where she will spend the
| fore part of the winter with her daughter.
=Mr. and Mrs. John C. Brooks, of Waterville,
county, having with them thei
, visited this week with t liste
| Mrs. C. D. Tanner,
~Miss Anna McCoy and Miss Kate Shugert re. , , — S9uire Michael Shaffer, of Smuliton,
spent a
day or two in Bellefonte the latter part of last
- He has just recovered from a recent ill.
shaky on his feet but all
—Mrs. Edward H. Richard went to Philadel-
phia Tuesday and will be joined there next week
by Mr. Richard, at which time they will go to
Atlantic City, expecting to spend the month of
November at the Shore.
=A. P. Zerby returned home last Friday from
an extended trip through Illinois, and visiting his
son, E.P. Zerby, at Union. For the present he
will remain in Bellefonte with his son, W. D.
Zerby Esq., and family, 1
—Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lucas, of Atlantic
City, spent Sunday in Bellefonte with Mr, and
Mrs. John D. Miller, of east Curtin street. Mr.
I Was at one time employed in Samuel Lew-
in's clothing store in this place.
been visi with .
tives and friends in Centre gh oh
ten days. Mrs. Peters, who with Mr. Peters and
their family lived in Bellefonte uni] several
years ago, moved from here to Lancaster, where
they have made their home since that time.
; =Mr.and Mrs. H. B, Mallory, of
and Mrs. Mallory
they spent much of the time
visiting among them. Mrs, Mallory augh-
| ter of Joel Johnson, had
=—Mrs. James B. Lane went to McKeesport yes.
terday, intending to spend a week with her son
and his wife, Mr. and Mrs, Richard Lane. Upon
two months with her sister,
Philadelphia.
——— ee
——The J. L. Tempest Dramatic com-
pany will be the attraction at Garman's
all of next week presenting Jennie Temp-
est, as leading lady, and a good support-
ing company with splendid scenic equip-
ment. A repertoire of all royalty plays
with special vaudeville features. Popu.
lar prices of 10, 20 and 30 cents will
prevail and seats will be on sale at the
usual place. The opening number on
Monday night will be “For Mother's
Sake.”
ewe
—Last evening was celebrated as
“gate night” but so few homes in Belle-
one of the heirs. fonte have either fences or gates that
—After spending several weeks in Atlantic | the depredatiously inclined found
| City with her son, John G. Love Jr., who was at | little to do, To-night will be Hallowe'en,
and while Young America will doubtless
celebrate to their heart's content they
should do so in a decent, manly way,
Don’t do anything to anyone that you
would not want someone to do to you.
This will be a pretty safe rule to fol-
will be the offering at Garman's today
and tomorrow, October 31st and Novem-
ber 1st. The new program to be given
here by Mr. Edison's own traveling or-
ganization comprises several pretentious
musical numbers and operettas, comedies,
dramas, farces, vaudeville bits and cab-
arets, a truly varied bill which will
doubtless please every one. Performance
each evening and matinee Saturday af-
ternoon. Special introductory prices, 10
cents to everybody in the gallery; 10
cents to children up and down stairs, and
20 and 30 cents to adults on the main
floor.
——The Hallowe'en season, a time
most conducive to entertaining, includes
among its hosts and hostesses Miss Emily
Natt, who entertained with cards Satur-
day of last week, and the Misses Rankin,
who also entertained with cards the
same evening, in honor of their house
guest, Miss Helen Coghnigan. Witmer
Smith's Hallowe'en stag party given
Monday evening at his country home a
short distance east of town. Mrs. R. G.
H. Hayes’ bridge dinner Tuesday at the
Country club, for which twelve covers
were laid. Tuesday evening the Sym.
phony Orchestra club were guests of
Miss Winifred Gates at her home on east
Lamb street and at the same time Mrs.
Edward Harper gave the first of a series
of entertainments she has planned for
the early winter. Wednesday Mrs. J. L.
Montgomery entertained in the evening
with bridge, the honor guests being Mrs.
Montgomery, of Lancaster, and Mrs.
Hickok, of Harrisburg. Thursday even-
ing the younger girls gave a costume
dance in the Town hall. Mr. and Mrs.
Earl C. Tuten entertained thirty of their
friends with a Hallowe'en party at their
home on east Linn street. A progres-
sive party, which carried with it much
merriment, started from the home of
the Misses Harriet and Mary Ray, from
there went to Miss Helen Smith on
Bishop street, then to Miss Nellie Smith
on Linn street and from there back to
Bishop street where they were guests of
the Misses Fox, Miss Lilly Williams and
ended at Miss Mary Hicklen’s. Tonight
Mrs. Howard Best will give a masquerade,
and a costume party will be given by
Eleanor Weston at her home on west
Linn street. Saturday night Mrs. Garber
will give a Hallowe'en dance in the
Arcade and Tuesday night of next week
Miss Fitzgerald will entertain for Miss
Harriet Ray, one of the November brides,
|
Philadelphia on Monday, that an agree-
ment of settlement was reached.
.~ Another case argued on Monday was
that of J. L. Seibert vs. John Sebring Jr.,
being a contention over the sign post
erected by Mr. Sebring on Allegheny
street in front of Dr. Seibert’s property.
No decision has yet been given by the
court in this case.
—A special train bearing the Sopho-
more class of The Pennsylvania State
College left Lemont yesterday morning
for Philadelphia, where they will hold
their annual banquet and remain for the
Penn State—U. of P. game tomorrow:
The team went down last night and this
morning another special train will be run
to accommodate the students and others
desiring to attend the game. All told
State College will have a delegation of
from one thousand to twelve hundred
students and others on Franklin field to-
morrow.
——Return postal cards were distribut-
ed among the farmers and employers of
labor along the rural routes in Centre
county from the Bureau of Immigration,
Department of Labor, which has under.
taken the work of an employment agency,
without charge. It is designed that per-
sons wanting work on farms shall send
their names and qualifications to the
department and those seeking help shall
make that fact known. The department
proposes to become the connecting link
between the employer and the employee.
————. A] ——
——-Mrs. L. H. Gettig, chairman of the
committee for shipping papers, has asked
that all those having magazines or pa-
pers will please send them to the room
in the Garman buiiding, at their very
earliest convenience, as she would like
to make final arrangements for shipment.
The key for the room can be gotten at
the Potter—Hoy Hardware store.
——Edward Rine, son of the late
Charles Rine, and who has been with the
Adams Express company for a number
of years, has purchased the Gessner
property at Coleville. He contemplates
giving up his position with the express
company and going into business in
Bellefonte.
——At a meeting of the executive
ccmmittze of the Centre county W. C. T.
U. held in Bellefonte recently, it was de-
cided to publish the names of all the
applicants for liquor license this year,
sustained in a fall from a locomotive at
house in Lock Haven.
—Mr. G. Ralph Spigelmyer was summoned to
Philadelphia on Monday evening on account of
the very serious illness of his daughter, Mrs. J.
E. D. Huffman, of Williamsport, who underwent
an operation last Friday for the removal of gall
stones, at the German hospital.
—Among those who witnessed the Harvard and
Penn State game at Cambridge, Mass., last Sat-
urday, was Miss Belle Fleming, of Bellefonte, ac-
companied by her nieces, Mrs. Jack McArdle
and the Misses Margaret and Tessie Bartley, of
Boston, but formerly of this place,
~—Among a number of persons from State Col
lege who came to Bellefonte Tuesday night to at-
tend the evangelistic services conducted by
“Bob” Jones, in the Bellefonte Armory, were
Mr. and Mrs. J. Irving Foster, Mr. and Mrs. H.
D. Meek and Mr. and Mrs. John B. Meek.
—Edward Rine, an employee of the Adams Ex-
press company, at Tvrone, has resigned his
position and will shortly come tec Bellefonte to
join his family. Having bought the Gessner
property at Coleville during the summer, Mrs.
Rine and the children have been living there for
—Rev. Zeb. W. Bathurst, who the past year has
been located at Shade Gap as pastor of the Unit-
ed Brethren church, was at the recent conference
transferred to Freestone, Franklin county. He
was in Bellefonte the fore part of the week visit-
ing old friends before settling down to work in
his new pastorate.
—After spending several weeks with Mrs. Wil.
liam T. Speer in her last illness, Mrs, Frank
Campbell left yesterday for Nevada, Ohio, ex-
pecting to spend the winter with her brother,
John Woomer. Mrs. Campbell came to Belle
fonte from Philadelphia, where she has been
much of the time since leaving Centre county.
—Harold Gardner, who since his graduation at
The Pennsylvania State College last June has
been with the Jones—Laughlin Iron and Steel
the round
home on Tuesday evening on account of illness.
He will remain in Bellefonte for an indefinite
time in order to recuperate his shattered health.
=Mrs. Sara Brown, who has been spending
the fall and a part of the summer in Bellefonte
with Mrs. James Harris, went to East Brady, on
Thursday, for a visit with her daughter, Mrs.
Robert Wray. Visiting Mrs. Wray just now, is
Mrs. Brown's sister-in-law, Mrs. French, who
has just returned from spending the summer in
Europe.
—"Billy” Tucker, of Akron, Ohio, is visiting
with his great aunt, Mrs. Thomas Donachy, and
will probably be in Bellefonte for an indefinite
time. “Billy's” mother, Mrs. Tucker, is at Dr
Howard Kelly's private sapitarium at Baltimore,
where she was operated three weeks ago and
although rapidly recovering, does not know
wanen she will return to Chio.
—Mrs. W. M. Glanding with her daughter,
Miss Mary, arrived in Bellefonte on Monday
afternoon from Syracuse, N. Y., 10 join her. hus-
band, Rev. Glanding, the new pastor of the Luth.
eran church. Untilthe new parsonage on Linn
street is completed they will be located at Mrs.
John Klines, on west Curtin street. A formal
with their bondsmen and petitioners.
injuries |
low.
BOO an conn.
——Mrs. Jane Tate, Mrs. John Noll,
| and Mus. Noll's daughter Mrs. VanDyke,
| all of whom have been ill for the past
recovering their
| several weeks are slowly
EE ——
| normal health.
Bellefonte Produce Markets.
Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer.
Quoted are those paid for prod
bushel he.
company at Woodlawn, was compelled to come | Page
The following discounts will be allowed .
F wecks, and under thme iy
our mos..10 per ct.
mos. under six mos......
Shires Thos. Mid Sudas x3 averse Aaa
of SE Aion es
taken of advertisements
reception will be tendered the pastor and family
at tha ¥otheran church next Monday evening.
at
ST So ee
sccompanied by the cash.