Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 02, 1915, Image 8

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| Bic GLAss FACTORY AND NEW TOWN i
——See Candyland’s flowers and price.
|
| PIANS.—TFhe Pennsylvania State College
: enarratic { FOR RusH TowNsHIP.—Residents of Rush Carnations 50, 75 cts. and $1.00 a dozen.
Be | township are highly elated over what! Roses, $1.00 and $1.50. Fine double | Thespians will appear in their.eighteenth
Bellefonte, Pa., April 2, 1915.
"To Corres :SPONDENTS.—No communications
published unless accompanied by the real name
of the writer.
THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY.
——Were you April fooled yesterday?
——Good waitress wanted at the Bush
house, telephone or apply at once. 60-9-tf
——Palm Sunday was appropriately
observed in all the Bellefonte churches.
will take care of
flowers. Both
——Gregory Bros.
your need of Easter
phones.
——Miss M. H. Snyder will have on
display Thursday, April 8, exclusive
models of Spring Millinery.
——Pessimists are already predicting
a short crop of fruit this year, even be-
fore the buds have had a chance to start
growth.
——R. Finley Stewart on Friday went
to work as timekeeper for the State on
outside work being done at the new peni- |
tentiary.
——George A. Beezer last week sold a
new Studebaker seven passenger car to
George S. Keller, of State College, for
livery purposes.
——A squad of ten State College stu-
dents spent Tuesday and Wednesday in
Bellefonte gathering data on the geolog
ical formations hereabouts.
——Center county hotel men who were
granted license by Judge Orvis were quite
prompt in lifting the same, only three
holding over until this week.
Miss Kemmerer, teacher of Eng-
lish and domestic science in the Belle- |
,fonte High school, is at her home at |
State College seriously ill with an attack
of pneumonia.
——John Dubbs, the well known imi-
plement and seed dealer, of Bellefonte,
has an advertisement in this issue of the
WATCHMAN which is of especial interest
to the farmers of Centre county.
——At W. Grok Runkle’s stock sale on
Monday horses sold up to $300, and one
team $550. Cows sold at from $40 to
$60. Mr. Runkle sold nothing but stock
and the sale amounted to $3,500.
——Monday night, March 29th, it
snowed. Tuesday morning, March 30th,
pavements coated with ice and snow and
the thermometer eighteen degrees above
zero. How's that for spring weather?
——The Penn State quartette left last
Thursday on its three weeks trip to the
Pacific coast as guests of the Santa Fe
rail-road company. They will give a
number of ‘concerts enroute and will
spend four days at the Pan-American
exposition. : : '
Mrs. William Tibbens, who has
been quite seriously ill during the past
three weeks, at her home a short distance
west of town, has been slowly growiug
better for several days, so that it is now
thought that she will recover entirely
from this illness.
——The junior auxiliary of St. John’s
Episcopal church, will hold an exchange
in the parish house Saturday afternoon.
Cakes, candy, bread and rolls will be. on
sale, in addition to aprons, tea towels,
iron holders etc, everything in plain sew-
ing usable in the kitchen.
——The Palace Livery sale of stock,
rigs, sleighs, harness, etc., will take place
on Thursday, April 15th, and will be one
of the biggest livery sales ever held in
Bellefonte. The livery is being closed
out owing to the sale of the building by
the Stewart heirs to F. S. Knecht.
——George Vandegrift Luessen. of
Reading, a mining engineering student,
has been chosen as valedictorian of the
graduating class at The Pennsylvania
State College for the commencement ex-
ercises in June. Luessen has the highest
standing of any student graduated from
the College in the history of the institu-
tion.
——The electric sirene fire alarm which
was received in Bellefonte last week
and given a daylight test, was pronounc-
ed unsatisfactory by members of borough
council and was re-shipped to the manu-
“facturers in Denver, Col. It was not only
not loud enough and penetrating but was
of rather crude construction and work-
manship.
——The Penn-State Electric company
is having a hard tussle with the borough
council of Centre Hall over the matter
of a franchise in that municipality. Many
of the residents would like to have the
company enter the town so they could
have the benefit of electric light, but
others are opposed on the ground that
the company’s rates are too high.
——A fine young son was born to Rev.
and Mrs. William Potter VanTries, of
Altoona, at the home of Mrs. VanTries’
parents, at Berwind,on Sunday, and both
mother and babe are reported as getting
along fine. This is the first grand-child
that Dr. Thomas C. VanTries, of this
place, ever had, and he will doubtless re-
joice to know that his posterity is thus
being perpetuated.
——Misses Sara and Betty Stevenson,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Steven-
son, of Waddle, have both entered hos-
pitals as nurses in training. Miss Sara
entered the City hospital in Altoona on
February 14th and Miss Betty the Belle-
fonte hospital on March 22nd. As both
are splendid young ladies there is no
doubt but that they will develop into first
class professional nurses.
: 120 men.
| glass factory and a new town between
! Cold Stream and the Tyrone pike oppo-
{have organized the Mercantile and
! Reality company, of Pittsburgh, and early
lin February purchased a tract of land
| from Christian and Eve Sharer, the con-
| sideration given being $5,000. In ad-
| dition they have taken options on other
i land totalling seventy-five thousand acres,
underlaid with coal, block fire clay and
| white silica sand for manufacturing
glass.
The company has apportioned a plot
of the ground as the site for a new town
and claim that one hundred lots have al-
ready been sold while the remaining 704
14-1t* | lots will be offered at public sale some time
in May. The new town is to be named
Glass City in honor of the big twenty-
four blower tank window glass factory
which the projectors claim they will erect
there this summer at a cost of $61,000;
and which, when completed, will employ
A boarding house has already
been erected and is in charge of Frank
Cogan, of Gardner Station. The glass
plant will be in charge oi Capt. Philip F.
Garbrick, of Bellefonte, and the brick
and clay plants which the company also
claim they will establish will be in charge
of an experienced man from Mt. Union.
Fire-proof and damp-proof concrete
houses will be built according to the
Schubs system of metal moulds.
The officers of the Mercantile and
Reality company are John H. Fisher,
Washington, D. C., president; John B.
Beam, Tyrone, vice president; W. C.
De Lancey, Pittsburgh, Pa., secretary and
treasurer; directors, H. T. Hamilton, Ty-
rone, Pa., and H. W. Davis, Wilmington,
Del. The three above named are also on
the board of directors. This company is
chartered under a Delaware charter and
has offices in Pittsburgh, Pa, also Wash-
ington, D. C. Pittsburgh office, 1611 First
National bank building; Washington of-
fice, Harris hotel.
THE IRONY OF FATE.—On Wednesday
sheriff M. A. Keiffer and county detective
John Smith, of Fayette county, brought
Nicolo Mandollo, an Italian, from the
Uniontown jail to the death house at the
new penitentiary at Rockview, where
next Monday morning he will be electro-
cuted as punishment for the murder of
Lillian Leonard, an eighteen year old girl
of Uniontown. ‘Lhe irony of fate in
Mandollo’s case is that he was one of the
first squad of prisoners put to work last
spring on digging the foundation of the
death house where he is to meet his fate.
Mandollo was serving a sentence for
manslaughter and was brought to Rock-
view during the winter of 1913-14. He
helped dig part of the foundation for the
death house before his time was up and
he was turned out on parole. He return-
ed to Uniontown and in less than a month
shot Miss Leanard while in a restaurant.
He was arrested, convicted and sentenced
te the death chair. Before leaving
Uniontown Sheriff Keiffer took Mandollo
on an automobile ride around the city.
During his incarceration Mandollo made
two attempts at suicide and still main-
tains he will never be electrocuted.
ed
FIRE AT STATE COLLEGE.—On Saturday
afternoon a supposed explosion of chem-
icals in the chemical laboratorv of Unit
No. 4, of the Engineering building at
State College, caused a fire which was
not extinguished until damage had been
done to the extent of $2,000 to $2,500.
Unit No. 4 is used as a testing depart-
ment for the students in mechanical
and electrical engineering courses, and
various chemicals are used in this work,
, a number of which were imported from
Germany, and it will probably be impos-
sible to replace these at this time. The
fire broke out late on Saturday afternoon
when few students were around and it
had gained considerable headway when
discovered. The student body attempted
to fight the flames from the inside of the
building but gained little headway. The
Alpha fire company got on the scene as
quickly as possible and throwing a four
inch stream against the outside windows
broke the glass and soon had the flames
under control. The loss is mostly cov-
ered by insurance.
THE GIRL AND THE TRAMP.—‘“Variety
is the spice of life,” said Shakespeare,
and he must have had in view “The Girl
and the Tramp,” which plays at Gar-
man’s Tuesday evening, April 6th, when
he wrote the line. For novelty and en-
tertaining diversity, this show forms one
of the best attractions of the season
Interspersed throughout with catchy
melodies, humorist monologue and unique
dances, the bill opens up brightly and
wins from the start, leaving the audience
gratified. No one could witness this pro-
duction without feeling that the old
world is worth living in, despite the wor-
ries of rents, taxes, coal bills, and a few
other necessities summarized in the high
cost of living. The grouch owes it to
his neighbors to go and see this show.
Prices, 25, 35, 50 and 75 cents.
BELLEFONTE ACADEMY NoOTES.—The
annual declammatory contest for the W.
S. Furst prizes will take place at the
Bellefonte Academy on Thursday after-
noon of next week, April 8th.
The Academy will not close for its
Easter vacation until Friday of next
week, April 9th, when the students will
be given ten days instead of six. During
the vacation the Academy baseball team
will make its first trip of the season.
| site Osceola Mills. A number of capitalists :
—GREGORY BROS. Bellefonte.
——Should you have any curiosity con-
cerning the Varney’s, read the paper care-
fully next week and it will tell you all
about their stay in Bellefonte, which
will be from April 19 to April 26.
bres pi
——Councilman George H. Richards,
one of the substantial citizens of Philips-
burg, was in Bellefonte this week and
after consultation with some of his
friends decided to be a candidate this
year for the nomination for sheriff on
the Democratic ticket. Mr. Richards’
announcement will be found elsewhere
in this paper.
LSE ri FR
——Tragedy in moving pictures was
never more strikingly portrayed than it
was by Mrs. Lesiie Carter in Du Barry,
at the Scenic last Friday evening. Stu-
dents of French history had no trouble
recalling the troublous times of the Com-
mune in Paris from the pictures portray-
ed upon the screen. This is the class of
pictures manager T. Clayton Brown fur-
nishes his patrons and that is one rea-
son for the Scenic’s widespread popu-
larity.
——"Squire H. Laird Curtin’s big stock
sale at Curtin, on Tuesday, amounted to
a little over $4,600. One horse brought
$300, a team of mules $430, and cows
$60 and $70. His brood sows, shoats and
pigs brought him about $1,000, it being
the biggest public sale of swine ever held
in Centre county. Mr. Curtin’s sale does
not mean that he intends giving up his
farming interests, as the stock he sold
was the surplus he has acquired during
the past few years, and he still has plenty
of horses, cattle and hogs to amply stock
his farm.
—— OW mee
——The Pennsylvania State College
closed for the Easter vacation on Wednes-
day and the students took advantage of
all possible ways to get away from the
College as soon as possible. Quite a
number of them went by automobiles in
the morning to Pennsylvania Furnace to
catch the train over the Lewisburg and
Tyrone railroad to Tyrone, to make con-
nection at the latter place for points
west. A large number of students who
did not get out of class until eleven
o'clock went to Lewistown by automobile
to catch the 1:16 p. m. train east. There
were fifteen automobile loads in the lat-
ter bunch, each machine hauling from
six to eight students with their suit
cases.
——Beliefonte friends of Augustus
Beezer, a native and former resident of
Bellefonte, but who now operates a big
dairy farm near Punxsutawney, Jeffer-
son county, will be interested in know-
ing’ that his entire herd of sixty-eight
blooded milk cows was killed on Sunday
owing to an outbreak of the foot and
mouth disease among the herd. Inas-
much as the State allows only fifty dol-
lars a head for cattle killed, Mr. Beezer’s
reimbursemen:
$3,400, which would make his loss con-
siderable, as he had cows in the herd
that he paid $90 for, while very few of
them stood as low as the price he was
paid. In addition he will suffer consid-
erable in a business way as it will proba-
bly be months before he will be able to
get another herd together and in the
meantime his dairy business is at a stand-
still.
re A ein
——Bellefonte florists guarantee every-
thing they sell. Low price and good
stuff. —GREGORY BRos., Bellefonte, Pa. -
——Thirty-five years ago Miss Mar-
garet Campbell taught a class of eleven
boys in the Sunday school at Meek’s
church, near Fairbrook. The boys
ranged in age from ten to sixteen years
and they preserved the unity of the class
until 1887 when Miss Campbell married
J. B. Williams and moved to Tyrone.
On several occasions since the class has
held a reunion and last Friday Mrs. Wil-
liams arranged a reunion for them at
her home. Those present included Da-
vid G. Meek and wife, of Juniata; Dr.
Joseph Carter and wife and Toner Pen-.
| nington, of Altoona; Morrison Ewing, of
Lewistown; Milo Campbell and wife, of
Fairbrook, and John Campbell and wife,
of Tyrone. The four members of the
class not present were Frank Bailey, of
Milton; John and Oscar Bowersox, of
State College, and John Pennington, of
Greensburg.
——1In renewing his subscription to the
WATCHMAN for the ensuing year Rev.
Isaac Krider, pastor of the Lutheran
church at Duncansville, writes as fol-
lows: “I seein last week's paper that
there is to be a big demonstration on the
4th of July in Bellefonte. Fifty years
ago I was at a demonstration in Belle-
fonte on the 4th of Julyand marched in|
the parade with the students of Pine
Grove Mills Academy. In June I will
celebrate my twenty-fifth year as pastor
of the Lutheran church here. How time
does fly!” Rev. Krider is a native of
Centre county, having been born and
raised at Gatesburg. It was at the Pine
Grove Mills Academy that he received
his preliminary education before going
to college to study for the ministry and
it was while he was there that the entire
student body came to Bellefonte for the
big demonstration he refers to. We con-
gratulate Rev. Krider on his long and
successful pastorate at Duncansville and
trust his future years will be filled to
overflowing with successin the Master's
cause. ;
would amount to but!
: i they consider A No. 1 prospects for a big | violets, 75c. We welcome you to a call. | annual production, a musical comedy,
“Miss Adam of Eden,” at the Garman
{ opera house on Saturday evening, April
(10th. The plot of the play which is laid
in Reno, Nev, concerns a young
| playwright who, in love with Miss Adam,
|is much annoyed by the attention of a
much divorced and adventuresome ac-
tress. The actress is found to be the
divorced wife of the Count, who in reali-
ty is Henry Burns, an actor and also a
fortune hunter, and the playwright again
comes into the good graces of Miss Ad-
am.
The characters are well taken by J. E.
Graham, as the playwright; L. H. Schultz,
as the actress; G. L. Hemminger, as Miss
Adam, and L. S. Raynor, as the bogus
Count, together with a telephone opera-
tor; Azekah Adam, a millionaire from
Eden, Pa.; his wife Petunia and the
waiter.
Levi Lamb, in his part as the waiter,
causes much mirth by his actions with
the invisible accessories of the cafe, and
Raynor, with his specialty songs, will be
subject to many encores.
There are three specialties in the
show: A burlesque, the Mission picture
melodramar, “Tina Cann, the Prune
Eater's daughter” and two of the latest
castle dances, the syncopated walk and
the black and white dance. The burlesque
is a great laugh producer, while the
dances are very gracefully performed.
The chorus, with their catch songs and
new dances, are exceedingly well fitted
for their parts.
The show this year has a complete new
set of scenery and with four changes of
costumes it. can truthfully be said that
this is the best show ever put on by the
Thespians.
The patronesses’ sale of tickets will
{be held at Garman’s store bn Tuesday,
April 6th, at ten a. m. The general sale
will be held on Saturday, April 10th, at
Parrish’s drug store.
WHENCE THE ILLUSION.—The Johns-
town Democrat on Monday contained the
following item:
Illusions which quite a few Center
county farmers entertained regard-
ing fancy prices their livestock would
bring at public sales this spring have
been punctured, according to Wil-
liam Jameson, a farmer and stock-
‘ man, residing near State College,
who visited friends in Johnstown
yesterday. Center county farmers
are especially grieved by the pro-
nounced drop in the price of horses.
Good animals, guaranteed to be
sound, can be purchased at public
auction as low as $135 a head. The
price of cows, steers and sheep like-
wise dropped.
Mr. Jameson evidently didn’t attend
the George Boal Thompson sale at Alto
where horses sold for $180 and cows $70;
or the George Irwin sale at Pennsylva-
nia Furnace where horses went as high
as $250 and cows $95; or the John
Behrer sale on Buffalo Run where one
horse brought $350 and a team $660; or
the Clayton Struble sale at Struble where
horses sold from $240 to $275 and cows
(from $75 to $80; or the Hon. J. W. Kep-
ler sale at Pine grove Mills where horses
brought $250 and cows $70. Mr. Jame-
son is probably correct in his statement
that horses sold as low as $135, but it
was probably because they were not
worth any more. So far as the writer
has been able to learn good horses, good
cows and good hogs brought good prices,
and this is an object lesson to the farm-
ers that even at a public sale it pays to
have good breeds of stock.
nie
BIG CELEBRATION ON JULY 5TH.—A
meeting of the officers and executive
committee of the Independence Day asso-
ciation was held in the grand jury room
on Wednesday evening. It was decided
to hold the proposed big celebration on
Monday, July 5th, inasmuch as the 4th
falls on Sunday. A newspaper clipping
from a Lock Haven paper was read sug-
gesting that Lock Haven boom Belle-
fonte’s big celebration and in return
Bellefonte to boom Lock Haven’s aviation
meet in the fall. President Blanchard
named the following committees with
their chairman, leaving it to the latter to
select their co-workers:
Finance Committee—John Curtin.
Amusement——Lewis Daggett.
Parade—Col. H. S. Taylor.
Publicity and Printing—Donald Wal-
lace.
Decoration—]. Will Conley.
Speakers—]J. Linn Harris.
Music—George R. Meek.
Transportation—]J. M. Cunningham. .
——Hatching eggs, S. C. W. Leghorns,
Tom Barron strain. Fertility guaran-
teed.—H. J. WALKEY. 13-2t*
~ NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.
—MTrs. John Henderson, of Philadelphia, is in
Bellefonte visiting with her mother, Mrs. How-
ard Barnes. :
—Mrs. Robert Mills and little grandson, of Ty
rone, are visiting the former’s brother, Milton
Reed, on Lamb street.
—Charles Scott, at Princeton; Basil Mott, a
student of pharmacy in Philadelphia, and Philip
Reynolds, at school at St. Lukes, are all in Belle-
fonte for the Easter vacation.
—Mrs. Newton Rerick and her son have re-
turned to Niagara Falls, after visiting at Cole-
ville with Mrs. Rerick’s mother, Mrs, Smith,
and with Mrs. J. Dorsey Hunter, in Bellefonte.
—Past Eminent Commander J. S, McCargar,
Generalissimo David Miller and Captain General
Hugo Deemer, of Constans Commandery No. 33
Knights Templar, attended the installation and
ball of Hospitaller Commandery at Lock Haven
last Thursday evening.
—Miss Katherine Heinle, who has been in
Bellefonte with her aunt, Mrs. Theodore Kelly
since the holidays, went to Morristown, N. J., on
Tuesday, where she will spend Easter with her
friends at St. Elizabeth's College. From there
Miss Heinle will go to New York.
op
{ Mrs. A. Wilson Norris.
—Andrew Curtin Thompson, of Philipsburg,
was in Bellefonte on a business trip on Tuesday.
—Daniel F. Poorman, of Runville, was in Belle-
fonte Friday, on his way to State College to at"
tend the Krumrine sale.
—John L. Nighthart went down to Philadelphia
on Monday to consult specialists at the Wills
Eye hospital regarding the condition of his eyes.
friends in Harrisburg and on Monday night was
guest of honor at quite an elaborate party given
by Miss Fannie Cohen.
—Miss Sara Clemson, a Senior at Dickinson
Seminary, is spending her Easter vacation with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clemson, at
their home near Stormstown.
from a business trip through the eastern part of
the State and New York city.
and visit for two weeks with their son and his
wife, Mr. and Mrs. William Dorworth.
—Miss Annetta Williams, of Shamokin, and
her niece, Edith Woland, are guests of Mrs. Wil-
liams’ sister, Mrs. Howard Smith, having come
to Bellefonte yesterday to spend Easter.
—E. S. Moore, one of the energetic farmers of
Ferguson township, was in Bellefonte Saturday
making some necessary purchases for his farm,
and looking after some business interests.
—Mrs. Joha Noll and her daughter, Mrs.
George Van Dyke, were at Williamsport and
Canton, Pa., Wednesday, Mrs. Noll consulting
her physician, and Mrs. Van Dyke inspecting an
order at Canton.
—Frank Lukenbach, of Tyrone, was in Belle-
fonte Saturday helping his mother with the sale,
at which she disposed of all her household goods,
preparatory to going to make her home with her
daughter, Mrs. Garman.
—M. A. Landsy returned on Wednesday even-
ing from a five week's business trip to Franklin,
Titusville and other cities in the western part of
the State. He reports business as being a little
slow throughout the oil regions.
—Miss Elsie Sellers, of Buffalo Run, has been
for a part of the week in Bellefonte, taking ad-
vantage of the early spring sales at the stores
and looking after some business, which necessi-
tated her being here for two days.
—Mrs. William Magee with her young son,
Huyett Magee, of Philadelphia, came to Centre
Hall last week on a visit to her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. M. Huyett. They will be joined tomor-
row by Mr. Magee, who comes to spend Easter
with his wife and son. )
—Rev. and Mrs. A. Lawrence Miller passed
through Bellefonte Saturday on their way to
State College for a short visit with Mrs. Miller's
mother, Mrs. W. C. Patterson. Mr. and Mrs.
Miller were going from Lock Haven to their flew
appointment at Bloomsburg.
—Mrs. Samuel Harris has returned to Mill Hall
to open her house for the summer, after having
spent the winter with her daughter at Camp Hill.
It has been Mrs. Harris’ custom for several years
to visit with Mrs. Hartsock during the winter,
and return to Clinton county in the spring.
—Miss M. Eloise Schuyler, who istaking a post
graduate course at the University of Pennsylva-
nia, arrived at Centre Hall yesterday to spend
her Easter .vacation with her father, Dr. W. H.
Schuyler, whose health has been somewhat im-
paired so that he has not been able to fill his pul-
pit appointments since Christmas.
—Mrs. John N. Lane and her son Elliott re-
turned to Bellefonte this week from their South-
ern trip, both benefitted in health. Having left
here very early in February, they went directly
to Suwanee Springs, and from there visited sev-
eral Southern health resorts. Mrs. Lane came
here Monday, Elliott joining her Tuesday, after
making a stop in Washington.
—Miss Lydia Eberts, the winsome daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Everts, of Martha, was in
Bellefonte on Saturday and called at this office to
advance the label on the WATCHMAN going to
her grandfather, Mr. J. N. Eberts. Miss Eberts
is also a grand-daughter of ex-county treasurer
John Q. Miles and with such antecedents as Mr.
Eberts and Mr. Miles it is not to’ be wondered at
that she gives promise of such charming woman-
hood.
—Frank E. Naginey was over at Milroy on
Monday attending the funeral of his brother, Mr.
M. M. Naginey, who died at the German hos-
pital, Philadelphia, last Thursday night follow-
ing an operation about two weeks ago for kidney
trouble. The day following his operation Mr
Naginey received word of his appointment
as postmaster at Milroy, but unfortunately he
did not live to profit by the appointment. He is
survived by his wife and three young daughters.
Burial on Monday was made in the East Kisha-
coquillas cemetery. f
—Mr. and Mrs. Al. S. Garman and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F. Garman came down from Tyrone
on Wednesday afternoon and with Edwin F.
Garman and Mrs. Charles Cruse made a trip to
Axe Mann to inspect their old stone house at
that place. They planned to remodel the build-
ing into a very comfortable summer residence or
club house by tearing down the frame structure
in the rear and building it up of stone, and also
building a spacious porch around the west and
north sides. At present the house is occupied
and the start on remodeling it will depend upon
how soon it can be vacated by the family now
living there. :
—Hon. Samuel B. Elliott, a member, of the State
Forestry Commission, of Reynoldsville, Jefferson
county, was a guest of J. Linn Harris Tuesday
afternoon and night on his way to Snow Shoe
where he delivered an illustrated lecture on
Wednesday evening. Mr. Elliott has been a
member of the Forestry Commission a number of
years and his diversified knowledge of the moun-
tains and woodlands of the State coupled with
his sound judgment have been of great benefit to
the Commission in its good work of recent years.
In fact Mr. Elliott and J. Linn Harris, of Belle-
fonte. are two members the Commission could
ill afford to lose. !
—Clarence Rine, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Rine, will leave next Monday for Ashland, New
Hampshire, where he will take charge of the sta-
tionary engine at the factory of Thomas Dona-
chy, who has been engaged since leaving Belle:
fonte in manufacturing lolly-pop sticks. Mr.
Rine has been employed for some time as an en-
gineer at the plant of the Pennsylvania Match
company and is an industrious and trustworthy
young man. He goes to Ashland at the solici-
tation of Mr. Donachy, who is in need of just
such a capable young man. Mr. Donachy’s busi-
ness as a lolly-pop stick manufacturer is increas-
ing steadily and he now has orders on his books
to keep them running all summer.
—Among the WATCHMAN's esteemed callers on
Saturday was Mr. Charles Lucas, of Run-
ville, who, with his son-in-law, L. J. Heaton,
drove to Bellefonte with James Witmer in the
latter’s car. Mr. Lucas is almost eighty-two
years of age and up until last summer did all
kinds of strenuous work on the farm, following
the plow from early morning to night as any
young man might do. Even now he looks after
the stock and helps with the light work about
the farm. During the past winter he attended
the nine weeks’ revival services at Runville and
was absent from his fayorite pew only four
nights. Mr. Lucas has been a reader. of the
WATCHMAN for one half a century, having taken
it before the present editor, P. Gray Meek, took
charge of the paper. He still enjoys good health
and we hope may: live for years to come.
ee a —————
WATCH FOR THE PENN STATE THES- | —Miss Lucy Potter is in Harrisburg, a guest of = —Mrs. Frank C. Montgomery and Miss Hassell
have returned to Bellefonte, after visiting for a
month in Philadelphia.
{© —Miss Rebie Noll, who will go to Atlantic City
today for Easter, will be a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
York during her stay at the Shore,
i —Miss Margaret Cooney, a student at the Lock
Haven Normal, is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Cooney, for her Easter vacation.
—Mrs. William Bell will go to State College
—Miss Sarah Kessler, of Millheim, is visiting Monday, expecting tospend the month of April
with her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Kessinger.
—J. Millard Hartswick Jr., is at Baden, Pa.,
| having left Bellefonte Tuesday, to attend the Mc-
Calmont-Brown wedding, Miss Eva McCalmont
being a cousin of Mr. Hartswick.
—Mrs. Frank Shilling is at Harrisburg, having
gone down Monday for a week or ten days, dur-
—W. P. Seig, of the Bellefonte Engineering ing which time she will help Mrs, Wilbur F. Har-
company, returned in the beginning of the week FiSmove and arrange her new home.
—Mr. and Mrs. James Poorman, of Boalsburg,
returned to Centre county Wednesday, after hay-
—Dr. and Mrs. E. S. Dorworth will leave to- | ing spent the winter with relatives in Nebraska.
day for Baltimore, where they will spend Easter, ' Mr. and Mrs. Poorman left here in November.
| —Mr. and Mrs. William Tressler are enter-
taining their daughter, Mrs. Harry Burket, of
+ Stormstown. Mrs. Burket came here Tuesday
with her child, fora two week’s visit with her
parents, :
—Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Lonsberry are arranging
to leave Bellefonte very soon, expecting to go to
Corning, N. Y., where they will spend an indefi-
nite time, hoping by this change and rest to ben-
efit Mr. Lonsberry’s health.
—Mrs. Joseph Lose, of Philadelphia, and her
son, Joseph Jr., are expected in Bellefonte today
for a visit with Mrs. Lose’s sisters, the Misses
Curry. Mr. Lose spent last Sunday with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Lose.
—Miss Adaline Olewine is again in Bellefonte,
after having visited for several weeks in and
about Boston, at Hartford and in the vicinity of
Philadelphia. Miss Olewine, who has been the
guest of school-mates during hei absence, made
her last visit at Wissinoming, where she visited
with Mrs. Howard M. German.
—Miss Hazel Lentz, a student at the Lock Ha-
ven Normal, will come to Bellefonte today and
tomorrow morning will accompany her mother,
Mrs. George E. Lentz, and sister, Miss Mildred
Lentz, to Harrisburg where they will spend Eas-
ter Sunday with capital city friends. Conductor
Lentz will go down tomorrow night to be with
them on Sunday.
—Eugene and Miss Lucille Delaney, of Wil-
liamsport, were guests of their uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. James Noonan, at the Brant house
from Friday until Monday. Miss Catharine
Waple, of Tyrone, was also a guest of the Noon-
ans over Sunday, having come down on Friday
for the girl's basket ball game between Belle-
fonte and Tyrone,
—Miss Rachel Shuey left Monday for Roaring
Springs, to visit with Miss Mary Essingler and
to play at her wedding, which took place there
yesterday. Before returning to Bellefonte, Miss
Shuey will go to Wilkinsburg, where she will
spend two weeks with friends. Miss Anna Shuey,
a Junior at Dickinson College, will go back to
Carlisle to resume her studies, Tuesday.
—Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Osmer, of Johnstown,
were in Bellefonte for the week-end, with Mr.
Osmer’s father, Edward G. Osmer, who has been
ill for the greater part of the winter. Mrs. Tel-
ford Fink and her child, of Philipsburg, have also
been visiting in the Osmer family, having come
here two weeks ago. Mrs. Fink will return to
her home early in the week, accompanied by Mr.
Fink, who will be here to spend Easter.
—Dr. George E. Hawes returned last Friday
evening from his three week’s vacation in Flori-
da and gave a very glowing account of the Cen-
tre county colony at Lakeside. A number of
purchasers have a good part of their land clear-
ed and under cultivation and the result is that
land values in that section are jumping in price.
Land adjoining that purchased by the Centre
county colonists is now selling at one hundred
dollars the acre, without being cleared or brok-
en up.
—Mrs. John S. Boyd, who has been in Belle-
fonte since last September with her cousin, Mrs.
James Harris, will leave here tomorrow for Phil-
adeiphia, where she will spend some time before
going toher summer home in the Pocono moun-
tains. Mrs. Boyd came here in the fall instead
of going to England with her son, owing to the
unsettled condition in Europe. Mrs, Sarah C.
Brown will come to Bellefonte from East Brady,
Monday, to spend the summer with Mrs. Harris.
Mrs. Brown has been since fall with her daugh-
ter, Mrs. Robert Wray.
Bellefonte Produce Markets.
Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer.
The prices quoted are those paid for produce.
Potatoes per bushel
Onions... .o...c cor inrs
Eggs, per dozen. 15
Lard, per pound.. 12
Butter per pound 22
Bellefonte Grain Markets.
Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER,
The following are the quotations up tosix o'clock
Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press.
Red Wheat....................... $1.50
White Wheat... .. 1.45
Rye, per bushel............. 80
Corn, shelled, per bushel. 80
Corn, ears, per bushel.............
Oats, old and nsw, per bushel
Barley, per bushel
Philadelphia Markets.
The following are the closing prices of the
Philadelphia markets on Wednesday evening.
. _ 6.75@7.00
we 11.00@18.00
wrens 14.50@17.
Straw......l..o 0 50h Hite iranssinnine vesnserss 9.00@13.50
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