————————————————— Belletonte, Pa., November 28, 1913. Ee ——— SE ——— published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer, C———— THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND HE COUNTY. —— Thanksgiving is over and next in line comes Christmas. ——All eyes are now turned toward New York, where the Army and Navy will battle for gridiron honors tomorrow. ——Aikens’ Ladies’ Furnishings, Belle- fonte, Pa. All coats and suits reduced to cost at AIKENS. 58-2w. ——The new Lutheran parsonage on | east Linn street is fast nearing comple- tion and will be ready for occupancy early in the new year. ——The Women's Auxiliary of the Y. M. C. A. will meet in the Y. M. C. A. building Monday evening, December 1st, at half-past seven o'clock. ——The ladies of the Methodist Epis- copal church will hold a roast chicken dinner on Thursday. December 11th, at the Y. M. C. A. The public is invited. ——At Hollidaysburg on Tuesday a marriage license was granted to Clarence E. Eisenhauer, of Aaronsburg, and Miss Bessie E. Sleeman, of South Lakemont, Altoona. ——Class No. 10, of the U. B. Sunday school, will hold a sale of bread, rolls, pies, cakes, candy and ice cream, Satur- day afternoon and evening, in the room adjoining the church. ——Baled hay is being hauled to Belle- fonte and shipped away by the car load, almost daily; evidence that the hay crop in Centre county last summer was not such a poor one, after all. —Mr. A. A. Witter, of Tyrone, suf- fered a slight stroke of paralysis on Thursday of last week, but he was so slightly affected that he was able to be around a day or two later ——The Ladies Aid society of the Milesburg Presbyterian church will hold a fair in the manse, December 5th and 6th, 1913, to which a cordial invitation is extended to all to attend and enjoy them- selves. ——The Pennsylvania railroad has es- tablished a rule which provides that the return portion of an excursion ticket may be redeemed at the ticket office at which it was bought, if presented by the original purchaser. ——David McCullough, the five year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mc- Cullough, of Coleville, fell on a stone last Saturday and injured his right arm so badly that it has been virtually par- alyzed ever since. ——The ladies of the United Brethren church, will hold a sauerkraut supper on Thursday evening, December 4th, begin. ning at 4.30 o'clock. Tickets 25 cents. Ice cream, cake and home-made candy will be sold during the evening. —The school board has had erected a concrete wall along the entire north side of the school grounds at the High school building. This will be surmount- ed, with a double iron pipe guard rail which will be a decided improvement. ——William Shultz, of Port Matilda, is receiving congratulations as the author of a song entitled, “We'll Meet Again Some Summer Day,” which was set to music by Harry Verona and published by the Globe Music company, of New York ity. ——Saturday evening the deal was closed whereby E. O. Struble became the purchaser of the W. T. Speer property on Thomas street, now occupied by Charles McCoy and family. Mr. Struble and fam- ily will occupy the same after April 1st, 1914. —-State College closed yesterday for the Thanksgiving recess and a large del- egation of students went out to Pitts. burgh to see the State—Pitt game yes- terday. A number of Bellefonters also went out to see the game. College will reopen on Monday. —The Ladies’ Aid society of the Presbyterian church will hold their an- maal X-mas sale Thursday, December 4th, in the Presbyterian chapel begin. ning at 10 o'clock a. m. All kinds of fancy work, also baked goods, will be on hand. This is the place to buy your X-mas presents. ——The squirrel and pheasant season will close tomorrow and then the only kind of game in this section of the State that it will be legal to kill will be rabbits, raccoon and bear, all of which run to January first. Quail runs to December 14th and snipe, shore birds and web- footed fowl to December 16th. ——At the annual meeting of the Hayes Run Fire Brick company, at Orvis- ton last Friday, all the old officers and board of directors were re-elected for the ensuing year. The general manager's report showed the company to be in a very prosperous condition, the business of the past year being the largest since the plant was built. ~——Thanksgiving day was generally ob- served in Bellefonte yesterday. All the stores and banks were closed, the post. office observed regular holiday hours and the hote! bars were closed. The Belle: fonte High school—Bucknell Freshmen football game attracted quite a crowd to Hughes field in the afternoon and the balance of the da, was very quiet and peaceable, ’ i DEER Season CLosep.—The fifteen days deer season came to an end on : Tuesday and it might be summed up as | having been a fairly successful one for | the hunters. While it is difficult to get | the exact number of bucks killed in Cen- | tre county a careful estimate places the | number equal, if not in excess of that in | former years. Centre county hunters ‘had the best luck in the Seven moun- tains, probably because there were more | hunters there than in the Alleghenies. | A number of does were killed by eager or careless hunters who shot at anything | in the shape of a deer. Even two elk were killed by mistake. The present law protecting does is having the effect of making them much more plentiful but the killing of bucks only is decimating the ranks of the male deer very percep- tibly. Bellefonte hunters fared very poorly as not a deer was brought to town. The Panthers returned home on Saturday night empty handed, but it was not be- | cause they didn’t see any deer. In the last week of their hunt they saw three large bucks, with wide-spreading antlers, | but failed to bring ary of them to earth. ! They saw a number of does, one of which | almost ran over James Clark, but of course no one took a shot at them. The Pine Grove Mills Rod and Gun club returned last Thursday evening from ' a ten day’s hunt over in Huntingdon county. They were fortunate in secur- | ing an exceptionally fine five-pronged | buck, which was killed by L. D. Musser, | the first day of the season. They report- ' ed deer not as plentiful in that section as in former years, and especially so with | the bucks, having seen only two during their entire time out. In the party were Col. D. W. Miller, Dr. R. M. Krebs, N. T. Krebs, Richard Markle, Fred Randolph, | Hamill Glenn, L. D. Musser and J. Will ! Kepler, all of Pine Grove Mills, and C. i V. Smith and John Bressler, of Pennsyl- ' vania Furnace. The Bradford hunting party, of Centre Hall, with whom Register J. Frank Smith | was hunting, came out last Thursday | and brought with them six bucks, one of | which was shot by Mr. Smith. This par- | ty was probably the most successful of | any out. ! The Howard hunters secured three : deer and three bear and the Robert Mann party three deer. Others who got deer on the Seven mountains were the Bellwood crew two, | the Lightners two, the Modocks one, the : State College crowd one deer and a wild cat, the Fleet Foots two, the Indiana, crowd two, the Riley's twc, the Rutz | gang three and four killed by men out on individual hunts just for a day. HUNTING STORIES. R.C. Yocum, of Mapleton, went out | alone for a deer hunt on the last day of | the season. He stationed himself on a | crossing and watched for a buck to come | along. He had not been there long until | he espied a huge buck creeping through | the brush some distance away, He had | ample time and taking deliberate aim : fired. He was using a high powered gun { and the ball not only killed the buck but | —Late as the season is there are still some farmers who have not all their corn husked and housed. Where would they be at had snow fallen as early as it does some years and the weather continue cold throughout the winter? Of course the scarcity of farm labor is given as the reason for not having the crop and fod- der all housed. om ~——Several new kilns have been prac- tically completed at the Whiterock quar- ries plant at Pleasant Gap and their op- erations will ere long be trippled over what they were the past year. Their new quarries east of Pleasant Gap are being opened up and developments will be pushed at that point just as soon as the connecting railroad is completed. ——The Centre County Pomona Grange will meet in Grange Arcadia, Centre Hali, Tuesday, December 2nd, at 10a. m. It is urged that there be a full attendance. Fourth degree members are invited. The election of officers for the next two years be called upon to get him home. When SERRE a, Cot. EMANUEL NoLL SURPRISED. —Our —Mr. and Mrs. Wallace H. Gephart were over good friend Col. Emanuel Noll, baggage Sunday visitors in Philadelphia. agent at the Pennsylvania railroad depot, Sarat Castle Auden went to Tyrone on was sixty-six years old last Saturday, and’ John QA, Tigi. Hans a half dozen of his friends thought it a of Centre henmedy i devin i on Mom good opportunity to show what they day thought of him. His daughter, Miss Re- —Mrs. J. Y. Dale went to Philipsburg Saturday bie Noll, was a partner in the scheme for a visit and to spend Thanksgiving with Mrs. and she prepared an elaborate dinner as Bell Hirlinger. one of the features of the occasion. To J E.D. Huffman, of Williamsport, was an Joe Undercoffer was assigned the duty of gee Sauday gueq # the Mr. and Mn. G. R- keeping Mr. Noll down town ‘till a cer- —Mrs. William B. Mingle, of Centre Hall, tain hour but he had nothing to do, as spent Thanksgiving in Bellefonte with Capt. and the latter was so excited over the Acade- Mrs. A. C. Mingle and family. my defeating the Wyoming Seminary football team that he forgot to go home —L. H. Musser made a business trip to Wash- ington and Philadelphia the latter part of last at the usual time and a liveryman had to week, returning home oa Sunday. —Mrs. John Lambert went over to Oak Hall yesterday to assist her sister, Mrs. Luther Dale, he arrived and discovered the prepara- in a big butchering they are having there today. —Mr. and Mrs. Cheney K. Hicklen went down to PF on Wednesday to spend Thanks. giving. —After ~Mrs. Charles ville on Monday with relatives, —John G. Love Jr, a student at Haverford spent Thanksgiving in Bellefont roth. er, Mrs. John G. Love. Swit Haan, —Edward C. Cooke, of Baltimore, arrived in Bellefonte on Tuesday to look after some busi- ness demanding his personal attention. —Mrs. A.R. Miller, of Lewisburg, will ¢ y ome to Bellefonte Monday to visit for the greater part of the week with her cousin, Mrs. J. A. Wood- tions for a sumptuous dinner he was nat- urally curious but was told by his daugh- ter that she expected a few friends. A few minutes later the door bell rang and the colonel hastened to answer it. Upon opening the door he was surprised to see will take place at this meeting. At noon Rev. John Hewitt, W. Henry Taylor, lunch will be served and after that a | Amos Garbrick, Monroe Armor, Robert short time will be given to social inter- | Sechler and Henry Walkey, standing as course. {if on parade. In fact the above gentle =]. Thomas Mitchell Esq., went over to Burn. ham on Saturday and remained over Sunday as a guest of his brother, Joseph D. Mitchell and | family. —J. Harris Hoy, of Snow Shoe, spent Tuesday in Bellefonte on his way to Pittsburgh for the annual State—Pitt game; an event he never misses, —Miss Grace Irene Beck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Beck, of Snydertown, spent from Saturday until Tuesday visiting Bellefonte i had very little practice and were there- | this time of the year. Cooler weather, ——Gehret & Lambert are now at’ work fixing up the interior of the Belle- : fonte postoffice so as to afford more | working space. The partition and boxes | have been moved forward four feet by ! cutting out the raised window floor and | moving the door forward. This will give ! considerable more space in the rear. | The room is also being wired for elec tric light. A ——The re-opening of the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium last Friday evening proved | quite a successful event. Between four | and five hundred people attended the { reception, heard the concert bythe Ty- | rone band and saw the basket ball game | between the Tyrone Y. M. C. A. five and Bellefonte. The Bellefonte team had | | fore easily beaten, the score being 20 to 7. ——The weather last week was so warm that men went around coatless and women and girls without wraps. Sunday night there was achange and the disturbance that came from the north- west forced the temperature down to al- most freezing point with snow squalls on Monday. It has since become warmer and the temperature is above normal for however, is predicted. ——In the neighborhood of one thous. and State College students did not go home for Thanksgiving but remained at the institution, and many of them had a | Thanksgiving dinner from home. On Wednesday morning almost one-half of a baggage car on the Lewisburg and Ty- friends. —Mrs. Calvin Spicher, of Wilkinsburg, arrived in Bellefonte on Wednesday to spend Thanks. giving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Danie; Heckman. —Mrs. William Johnson and little daughter, of Juniata, spent from Friday of last week until Tuesday in Bellefonte with her brother, Samuel men aver that Mr. Noll was so surprised that he forgot to ask them in until Rev. Hewitt reminded him of the fact, but the colonel declares that isn't so. He admits, however, that he may have been a little slow in doing so, as it took him a few | seconds to recover from his surprise and | Foster and family. realize that it was a birthday greeting. | _nry Sarah Etters, of Lemont, went down to After that all went smooth as a marriage | Williamsport on Monday to consult Dr. Haskins, ceremony. The dinner was delicious and | Rev. Hewitt, as spokesman of the crowd, | I the Lumber city. are out in Johnstown this week visiting their son, Warren S. Krise, and attending the Billy Sunday meetings at The Point. —Miss Jane Crowley came to Bellefonte Sun- day afternoon, and after visiting for the re- | mainder of the day with friends, returned to Lock Haven on the night train. occasions that impresses upon a man the value of true friendship. AN ACT OF INTEREST TO EVERYONE IN | CENTRE COUNTY.— The Woman's Club with a view of maintaining the beauty | and neatness of the town in every possi- ble way, desires to call the attention of the citizens of Bellefonte to the Act of | the General Assembly No. 358, approved June 25th, 1913, said Act being an amend- | ment to section two of Act No. 24 ap- proved March 10th, 1903. Will not every citizen help to make his town as attrac. tive as possible? The Act reads as fol- lows: “That no person shall paste, paint, brand, stamp, or in any manner whatsoever place upon, or attach to, any building, fence, bridge, gate, out- last week after spending six weeks or two months in Williamsport on account of the sick- ness and death of her sister, Mrs. J. E. D. Hufi- man. =Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Beaver went out to Beaver’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Prince, | yesterday. —Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wallis returned to | Bellefonte Saturday and after spending Sunday : with Mrs. Wallis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Will home at Pittsburgh. | —Col. W. F. Reynolds with Mrs. Reynolds and | Miss Linn drove to Harrisburg Monday, in the | Reynolds touring car. Spending the night as building, or property of another, guests of Mrs. R. J. Haldeman, the party return. whether within or without the limits | ed to Bellefonte Tuesday. of a highway, any written, printed, | —Mrs. Susan Peters, of Pine Grove Mills, was painted, or other advertisement, bill, |in Bellefonte Friday and Saturday of last notice, sign, card, or poster, without week with his sister, Mrs. John Shadle, first having obtained the written con- | whose condition has become so serious that no sent of the owner, or tenant law- hope is being entertained for her recovery. fully in possession or occupancy rone railroad was piled to the roof with boxes for college students, which con- tained, no doubt, all the good things the rest of the family had at home. ——A prominent visitor in Bellefonte over Friday night was Oliver F. Cutts, the famous Harvard football player, now | alumni secretary for the international Y. M. C. A. committee. He was on his | 8 —Mrs. M. Ward Fleming, of Philipsburg, with hier Bh That sorting | her little son John, and a maid have been in Belle- erein s 80 construed as to | fonte for the week with Mr. Fleming's mother, prevent the posting of any notice re- i Mrs. W. I. Fleming. Both John's father and quired by law or order of court to be | grandfather joined the party here for Thanks. posted. | giving. The section stating the penalty for —Mrs. Margaret Hutchinson, of Howard street, i : : . | has been at Ka violation of this law reads: | there to spend thie THANKIHIVING scat ny ate “Every person violating the provi- Tom Hutchinson and her a expecting to sions of this act shall be liable to a | penalty of not less than five dollars nor more than twenty dollars, to be recovered before any magistrate or ! Bellefonte. | Stanley B. Valentine, who came from Pitts. | the occulist, and spend several days with friends —Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Krise. of Centre Hall, | —Mrs. G. Willard Hall returned to Bellefonte : Crafton on Tuesday fora brief visit with Mrs, | and to attend the State—Pitt game at Pittsburgh | Conley, left Monday afternoon for their new | ne since last week, having gone | | | Miss Dorathea Jones, of i make a visit of several weeks before returning to | Course in nursing, —Charles McClelian, the tallor, went out to Paint os W Sdncutay to visit his son Walter ughter, Mrs. Brady Fre, away until Sunday. TRpecing tobe clerk to the county com- rs. Meyer parents at Spring Miils, =-Mrs. Helen Arthur, a very cl i Mise Ohnmacht, spent Tuesday in = rien J T guest, returning to her home at Williams. port the same atternoon, =” Willieas ~Frank Crosthwaite station agent and Reneral factotum for the Bellefonte Central railroad at State College, was in Bellefonte i on Wednesday afternoon, betwen trite —Harry Keller Esq, went down t | on Wednesday to spend + Keller and their son William at t brother, William H. Keller Esq. —Mrs. Sue Donachy Bolion went to Pittsbu A h on Wednesday 10 see the State—Pirt Rame wo terday, after which she will enter the Beilevue hospital training school for nurses, . Norris Bogle, of New York, Bogle, of Pittsburgh, were in Bellefonte to spend Thanksgiving with their mother, Mrs. Bogle, at the Forge House, Lancasteg iving with Mrs, he home of his on east Bishop street. —Dr. Lee B. Woodcock with his cousin Byr Woodcock, of Scranton, drove to Bellefonte ! Thursday to spend Thanksgiving d i Woodcock's mother, ay wi Dy stay. =Mr. and Mrs. G. Charles F. Mensch | night atiending | bers of Jaffa | Feltwell, i —Edmund Blanchard Esq., went down to Har- | risburg on Wednesday afternoon where he met i Mrs. Blanchard and they both ate their Thanks. giving dinner with Mrs, A. Wilson Norris. They | expect to return home today. ; Wess, David Haines went ! grandson S. Gamble and Mr. and Mrs, were in Altoona Wednesday the reception given the mem. Temple by the Potentate, Dr. A, S. to Lock Haven » Where she was ‘the guest of her and his wife, Mr, and Mrs. Harry | Haines, for T) ing. Mrs. Haines will | continue her visit in Lock Haven for a week. { _~Miss Mildred Kirk, a Senior at Bucknell University, accompanied by her school friend, State College Thanksgiving f come to Bellefonte to re- main over Sunday with Dr. and Mrs. M. A. passed through it and killed a doe that | Way to State College to make a talk be- was a few feet away and right in line with | fore the college Y. M. C. A. on Sunday. the buck. When Mr. Yocum discovered | Another prominent visitor on Saturday | what had happened he almost fainted, | was Eddie Butler, the once famous quar- | but he did the right thing by going be- | terback on the Cornell team, who umpired fore a justice of the peace at Mapleton, ' the Academy—Wyoming Seminary foot- making information against himself and { ball game, i ch i paying a fifty dollar fine. The doe’s car- | —Since taking charge of the pike cass was sent to the J. C. Blair Memorial | plant of the American Lime and Stone hospital at Huntingdon. company Charles Morris has practically Dayton Aikens, of Siglerville, who kill- | rebuilt it. Three of the old kilns were ed the big elk that wandered over the | torn down and in their place two new Seven mountains from the Centre coun. steel kilns have been erected which have ty game preserve, is not worrying much i a greater capacity than the three old about the $100 fine he had to pay. He ones. Another of the old kilns was par- was given the elk’s head and hide and the former he is having mounted. He has already been offered $80 for the hide but will have it made intoa rug. He got a handful of teeth out of the head which he will have mounted into Elk charms, and which sell for $25 and $30 each. An elk head properly mounted is worth from $75 to $100, if it has a good spread of antlers. ———— No-LiCENSE PEOPLE ACTIVE.—The no- license agitators in Centre county have been quite busy this week filing remon- strances against the granting of liquor licenses to the various hotels in Centre county. Up to date twenty-nine differ- ent and separate remonstrances have been filed. These include specific remon- strances against some of the hotels in Bellefonte, Philipsburg and Milesburg, as well as general remonstrances against the granting of any licenses in Bellefonte and Philipsburg as well as general re- monstrances against the granting of any licenses in Centre county. The specific remonstrances against the Bellefonte hotels contain ten signatures, five min- isters and five citizens. On some of the general remonstrances at least two-thirds the signers are either women or non- voters. The papers contain a very small percentage of the business or profes. sional men of Bellefonte. The faculty and residents of State College, and 288 out of the total of over two thousand students at State College have filed gen- eral remonstrances against the granting of licenses in Bellefonte and also against the granting of any licenses in Centre county. License court will be held on time both sides will be given a just and unbiased hearing. S——— A ove— ——The Christian Endeavor conven: tion which was postponed in the Spring will be held at Lemont, December 3rd and 4th, in the Presbyterian church. Saturday, December 13th, and at that| tially torn down and a steel top construc- ted on it, so that the plant is practically all new, with a larger output of lime than ever before. ——The Bellefonte Academy foot ball team met the Wyoming Seminary eleven on Hughes field on Saturday and de- feated them by the score of 13 to 7. It was the hardest fought game seen in Bellefonte this season, and the victory places the Academy at the head of all Prep. schools in the State. The visitors felt their defeat very keenly, as it is the ; only game they have so far lost this sea- son. The Academy closed the season at Binghamton, N. Y., yesterday, in a game with the High school team of that place. ——— A e— ——On Thursday of next week, De- cember 4th, manager T. Clayton Brown will show the wonderful biblical picture, “From the Manger to the Cross” at the Scenic, afternoon and evening. Owing to the big expense in securing this five reel picture the price of admission will be ten cents for the evening and ten cents for adults and five cents for chil- dren at the afternoon matinee. The picture is a sermon in itself, and should justice of the peace, as fines and penalties are by law recoverable; and such written, printed, painted, or other advertisement, bill, notice, sign, card, or poster is hereby dezlar- to be a public nuisance, and may be removed and abated as such.” BELLEFONTE CONTRIBUTED ONE OF Miss WILSON'S WEDDING PRESENTS—Dur- ing the past week there has been on ex- hibition in M. I. Gardner's china store on High street a basket, the product of The Basket Shop of this place, which took first prize at the National Conservation Exposition at Knoxville, Tenn., held dur- ing October and November of this year. A description of the basket would not do it justice; it must be seen to be appre- ciated. And evidently it was seen at the Exposition by some one who had an eye for the beautiful for The Basket Shop some days ago received an order from a very prominent individual in Washington for a similar basket as a wedding present for Miss Jessie Woodrow Wilson, who on Tuesday was married to Francis Bowes Sayre, of New Bethlehem. Miss Wil- son's presents included many gifts that cost hundreds and thousands of dollars and that a basket made in The Basket Shop, Bellefonte, was selected as one of the gifts is a rather noteworthy fact. THIRD AMENDMENT PROBABLY CAR- RIED. —Official returns from every coun- ty in the State except Allegheny indicate that the third amendment to the consti- tution probably carried. The vote on it is 184,951 for to 178,184 against. The complete but unofficial vote of Allegheny county was given as in favor of the amendment, so there is almost a certain- ty that it alone of the five amendments carried. The third amendment is the one extending the terms of judges whose terms expire in odd numbered years one year, and will affect Centre county to the extent that Judge Orvis’ term would be extended from the first Monday of January, 1915, to the first Monday of Jan- uary, 1916. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | burgh more than two weeks ago, ill with jaun. Kirk. dice, is much improved in health and willrenain ~~ —Mrs. !in Bellefonte with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. | daughter, | Harry C. Valentine, until entirely recovered from | Wednesday to visit her Mrs. Warren this illness. | Else and Mrs. Robert Burns. Her son, Gladstone —At the family Thanksgiving dinner gwen by Ta¥lor, who has been working for the Eyre. | Mr. and Mrs. A. Lukenbach, their guests inclu- | er Construction company at Bippus, | ded Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lukenbach and their | 10d. will join herin the Smoky city for Thani. Hugh Taylor with her little grand. Betty Zerby, went to Pj on | children and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jenkins and | 1Ving and accompany her home to Bellefonte in | their son Raymond, ali of Tyrone, and Mr. and | the beginning of the week. Mrs. Mart Garman, of Bellefonte. = — Bellefonte . | —Mrs. Jacob Bottorf, of Leraont; Mrs. Robert Produce Napssts | Reed, of State College. with her small son, and | Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. | Mrs. Linn Bottorf's two children, Helen and Har. | _ The prices quoted are those paid for produce, l ushel, new old. and Will Jeffries, of Scranton, a student at | Potatoes per b State, were Thanksgiving guests of Mrs. John I. | nN. | Olewine and Miss Adaline Olewine. | Lard, per pound. ~G-E. Snyder, of Oak Hall, was a business | BUttf ber pound teessrernensinnirs i | Williamsport, after which she will go directly to Bellefonte Tuesday on her return trip from Chi- cago, having accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schroyer west two weeks ago. Mrs. Bell left here for a short visit with Mr. Bell's relatives at New York. —Norman Kirk, who spent the summer at Thief River Falls, Minn., doing soil survey work for the United States government, arrived home on Tuesday and will spend two weeks with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Kirk, then goto Georgia where he has been detailed on the same line of work. —Mrs. Weirback was in Bellefonte Friday after having spent a week at State College with her niece, Mrs. Nelson Robb. Her short stay in Centre county followed a visit with her brother, place she had gone after spending the summer with her daughter at Nantucket. Mrs. Weirback was on her way to St. Louis for the winter. left Bellefonte Thursday morning for Harris burg, where they had their Thanksgiving with Mrs. Norris. Inthe afternoon Miss beth Blanchard went on to Washington to attend a club convention in session there, and Miss Mary Blanchard to Philadelphia, where she will conduct the Christmas sale of baskets at the Aldine hotel. Mrs. A. B. Cromer, who has been seriously ill within the past month at her home at Bald- winsville, N. Y., will come to Bellefonte Wednes- day of next week to spend the Christmas season with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. Homer Criss man. Mrs. Cromer was Miss Eva Crissman and left here immediately after her marriage a year ago, this being her first visit to Bellefonte since that time. Luther Crissman has been visiting with his sister in New York State since last week. than Baughman, who lives on the old Armor farm northeast of town. About two years ago the house they occupied burned down with all its contents, the family losing most of their clothing, but Mrs. Baughman is a woman who cannct be daunted by misfortune and today they are get. ting along as good if not better than before, and have one field already plowed for their spring and Mrs. Frank Crosthwaite. —Frederick and Reynolds came to Belle- fonte Wednesday, to their vacation with their Mr. and Mrs. W. F. ~Mrs. Harry Otto her two children, of Johnstown, came to Be Wednesday even- ing and have been guests of Mr. Otto's mother, Mrs. Jared Nolan, at her home on Thomas street. crops, dinner Eliza- | the | visitor in Bellefonte on Tuesday and during the | Bellefonte Grain Marke: | few minutes we had the pleasure of his presence | Sean Markets in this office he commented upon the fact that Corrected weekly by C. Y. WacNER, there are still some farmers in Pennsvalley who The following are quotations up to six o'clock are not through with their fall work. rsday evening, our | —Mrs. Jerome Bell, of New York city, was in Wheat. ten rate: Fai ee year...... of year........ Papers full not be sent out of Centre county un- Joss for in B08 Will subscrigtivi be cept at the option of the publisher. - ADVERTISING CHARGES: EAE Es 25 per ct. are sesppctiaily tn TT a reennrn. — the cush,