ARs ae Belletonte, Pa., September 1, 1916. To CORRESPONDENTS.—No communications published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. ——See our early fall and winter line of coats and suits.—LYON & Co. 34-1t ——Beginning next Sunday the price of the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh Sun- day papers will be six cents. ——MTrs. Sol Poorman has been ill for the past two weeks with a broken arm, the result of a fall downstairs. The county commissioners have decided to repair the Centre county half of the inter-county bridge at Beech Creek. The Friends quarterly meeting at the old meeting house in Halfmoon township will be held tomorrow, Sun- day and Monday. ——All the stores in Bellefonte will be closed on Monday in observance of Labor day, therefore be wise and do all your shopping tomorrow. ——Valuable real estate for sale on the corner of Bishop and Allegheny streets, known as the Edward Brown corner.—J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. 61-33-4t old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Owens, of Valentine street, fell last Thursday evening and broke her right collar bene. ——DMiss Ottilie Hughes gave a dance at the Academy last Wednesday even- ing which was attended by fifteen cou- ples. Refreshments were served and all present had a delightful time. —The family and friends of the late Charles Koontz desire through the “Watchman” to express their ap- preciation and thanks to the owners of automobiles in Bellefonte who so kindly gave their service at the fun- eral of Mr. Koontz yesterday morn- ing. ——Miss Gertrude Shultz, of Philadel- phia, who was to have been in Bellefonte and make an address before the Young Woman's Missionary society of the Pres- byterian church, in the chapel this even- ing, has sent word that she will not be here, owing to the threatened railroad strike. Patrons of the Scenic on Wed- nesday evening were dalightfully sur- prised when they saw thrown upon the screen the pictures of two Belle- fénters. The picture that was being shown was the Burton Holmes travel pictures, depicting * scenes at the San Diego, Cal., exposition, and brought out in strong relief were the figures of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Thompson, who were there when the picture was taken. ——The last picnic of the season will be held next Monday (Labor day), , when the P. O. S. of A. of Clinton county will hold their annual reunion at Hecla park. There are thirteen Camps in Clinton county and every one will be represented at the gather- ing. Members of the order in Centre county and elsewhere are invited to attend this picnic. There will be dane- ing during the entire day and sports of various kinds. —September is here and only three weeks more until summer will be over and the cool, frosty winds of approach- ing winter will be sweeping o’er the land. But summer or winter the Scenic will Alice Owens, the fourteen year | Pennsylvania Troopers In Grand Review. !A Magnificent i Horses and Vehicles. Turnout of Men, Other In- : teresting News from the | Front. By Corp. Harry J. Cohen. Camp Thomas J. Stewart, El Paso, Texas, August 26. We have just returned to our troop i street and I hasten to jot down the : happenings of a ringle morning, long to be remembered and cherished by | all who were fortunate enough to have | been a witness of the most glorious : display of pomp and power of the en- | tire Pennsylvania fighting force. The sight as each regiment of the seventh _ division, comprising the entire mili- ; tary system of the Keystone State | filed past the reviewing officer's stand, | with Major General Clement as chief, in company formation, was as awe- | inspiring as any one could wish for | All the different divisions of the i service congregated at their respec- | tive positions at 9 o’clock on the pa- !rade grounds about one-half mile | south of Tobin, Texas, which is a i shert distance north of our camp, and | exactly fifteen minutes later the grand review started. First every regiment and hospital corps attached to each of the three brigades of in- fantry, with their various bands and { their blue colorea regimental stand- ards along side of Old Glory, and with their headquarter’s staff mounted, passed and it was fully three-quarters of an hour before they were followed by the signal corps. Next the artil- lery swung in line and they were fol- lowed by our own gallant First regi- ment cavalry in platoon forma- tion. Following us was the wagon train and auto truck train, and by the time the last one passed the reviewing stand it was almost 11.30 a. m. This maneuvre came as a great sur- prise to all concerned, as there hadn’t been a word said about it until late ‘the night before, all of which shows with what speed the different units are rounding into form. Fully 18,000 men, thousands of horses and mules, besides countless vehicles were in line, and with the beautiful day and cool- ing breezes was, as Lieut. Smith said, a sight we may never see agair. Of course, each and every man is deserving of credit for the part taken by him, but all due praise must be given our excellent Captain, H. Laird Curtin, for bringing down kere, truly a bunch of rookies, and giving each one his undivided attention and of his unbounded source of military ability. . His knowledge of horsemanship is far above any officer of the regiment, and if he don’t turn us out a real, crack cavalry centingent it won’t be his fault. I can safely say that there isn’t a troop anywhere around here who respect and honor their captain | and lieutenants as do the men of troep L. If we do or do not stay here this winter we will be at least well pre- pared in so far as camp comforts are possible. Every troop is having built of real lumber dining halls and kitch- ens, to take the place of the tent affairs we now have. These buildings will have adobe floors, made of the mud of the desert mixed with straw and dried in the sun, a process used in the building of houses zll through this section of the country by the poorer class of the mixed people, but which continue to show the same high-class i programs of motion pictures. In fact manager T. Clayton Brown is always figuring on improving his service and | giving his patrons more for the money | than they can see anywhere else. If you | are not a regular attendant of the Scen- ! ic now is a good time to make the start. | ——Charles W. Tripple has been ap- | pointed agent for the Adams Express | company at Tyrone and took charge of | the office on Monday. Mr. Tripple is thoroughly conversant with the express ' business, having when a young man started in as driver of the delivery wag- on in Bellefonte. He later succeeded | ‘Orr Hoover as agent of the Bellefonte | office, a position he filled most accepta- bly for a number of years. He resigned the agency here about ten years ago to £0 into other business and most of the time since has been spent on the road as a traveling salesman. But he is now back to the work of his early manhood and there isno doubt but that he will make a competent and courteous agent. —Six residents of Kane, all Elks, is admirably adapted as a protection against the elements. On Wednesday every man was ex- amined by the hospital corps accord- ing to the Bertillion system. Every scar, mole and disfiguration, real or fanciful was marked on a chart in the exact spot that it appeared on the man, and then the fingers separately and then together were taken, and that of the index finger was taken again, just for luck, so I guess our Uncle Sammy has us now, until he is willing to play quits. But as far as L Troop goes, he needn’t have wor- ried, nobody wants to go home. (Liar.) The Y. M. C. A. has opened up what is called an army hut, but in re- ality it is a real, large auditorium, where stationery and a writing room are furnished gratis, and lectures on different subjects will be given. There is alsc a victrola and some of the latest rag-time music as well as clas- sical records to help entertain the sol- diers. The dedication is booked for who were on their way to Reading for the big convention, stopped at the Elks Lodge in this place on Sunday afternoon and spent a half hour or so, continuing their journey the same day. In one of the cars were Frank G. Copeland, a jew- eler of Kane, and R. E. Shaner, of the. same place. Two miles below Jersey Shore Copeland attempted to pass a car going in the opposite direction, ran up on the bank and upset his car. He was pinned underneath but Shaner was thrown out of the danger line. It took some time to release Copeland and when he was finally gotten from under the car it was found that he had two ribs brok- en, one of which penetrated hislung. He was given first aid treatment then taken to the Williamsport hospital. tonight and all await the big doings. James Calvin (Pudoe) Young re- | ceived a letter from some fair maiden "in Bellefonte this week on the reverse side of which were the letters S W A K. We dont know what they were in- tended to mean but instead of*Pud- joe” the boys are now calling him “Swak,” all on account of a girl. I guess that’s about all, except all are feeling great and are enjoying the equitation exercises, and a few have ordered cane seats for their chairs instead of the wcoden ones now sup- plied. The weather is much cooler than it has been for some time, mak- ing it pleasanter for all. All the beys send their regards to the friends at home. A Call to the Colors. Lieut. R. A. Zentmyer, of Tyrone, ! recruiting officer for this district, was in Bellefonte all day on Monday and Tuesday morning on his preliminary trip to recruit men to fill Troop L to ! a war limit and also men for the mounted machine gun troop now at Mt. Gretna, the latter troop being twelve short of its minimum strength, by reason of eighteen men failing to pass the physical examina- tion at Mt. Gretna. The Lieutenant did not have one applicant on Monday and naturally he is at a loss to account for the ap- parent lack of interest in the matter on the part of available young men. Of course, no true American is lack- ing in patriotism when his country needs his services and, notwithstand- ing the fact that we are not at war now, more men are needed to help along the preparedness ‘program of President Wilson. Lieut. Zentmyer will be in Bellefonte on September 7th and 14th, and on those days he hopes to have many applications for enlistment. In the Throes of an Ice Famine. For the first time in many years Bellefonte is now in the throes of an ice famine, but at that, we are no worse here than the residents of all the surrounding towns. R. B. Taylor, the largest . ice dealer in Bellefonte, ran out of ice last Thursday, notwith- standing the fact that last winter he stored over three thousand tons, the largest supply he ever put up. The wet, murky weather during the early summer was harder on his ice than the actual consumption, as his actual sales cut of the total amount put up aggregated a little iess than one thousand tons. Of course he is still supplying ice but it is a hard job to get it. In fact he is getting it from DuBois, Hecla, New York and wherever he can. Al- tocna, Tyrone, Lock Haven and even Buffalo, N. Y., are out of natural ice and have to depend on artificial ice plants, and they are taxed to the limit to keep up a supply for home con- sumption. Mr. Taylor, however, will do everything possible to keep his customers in ice and hopes to be able to meet the demand. ——Yesterday morning Dick Bart- let, who was working for Harry Win- ton at his coal yard, undertook to drive the motor truck from the coal bins to the scales at the office. He got it going all right and ran around to the office but by that time he had for- gotton how to stop the critter. So he ‘decided that the best thing to do was play a sort of ring around rosy inthe street until the regular driver came to his assistance. Unfortunately, however, the street there is not quite wide enough for that sort of a game with a motor truck and the result was Dick managed to drive it into colli- sion with the express wagon, which was waiting on the Central Railroad of Pennsylvania train and after brushing it aside ran into one of the posts surrounding the Central sta- tion, breaking it off at the ground and stalling the machine. By that time Dick was yelling as loud as if he had sat down in a yellowjacket’s nest and when young Steele, the regular driv- er, arrived upen the scene he found a truck minus one head lamp, one front fender, radiator shoved in and a few minor damages. About that time the train pulled into the depot and con- ductor Harry Winton took a survey of his wrecked property. Harry did not say much, but we’ll bet a barrel of apples he wasn’t thinking of the threatened railroad strike for a few minutes, anyway. Farming at the Penitentiary. The Philadelphia “North Ameri- can” in its magazine section on Sun- day contained a double page write-up of the new western penitentiary at Rockview, illustrated with a big pan- orama view of the prison farms with fifteen three column pictures showing the various phases of life at the new penitentiary. Included in his article the writer gives the following figures of this year’s farming area: Wheat, 320 acres; oats, 230; hay, 250; pota- toes, 130; corn, 145; rye, 19; garden, 65; pasture, 170; nursery, 10. They housed this summer 800 tons of hay and expect a total yield of 6,500 bush- els of wheat, 7,000 bushels of oats and 8,000 bushels of corn. They have 80,000 cabbage plants in good grow- ing condition, practically all of which will be used at the prison, a good percentage of which will be turned in- to sauerkraut for winter use. There isa mill atthe prison capable of turning out 65,000 pounds of rolled oats and 65,000 pounds of wheat crisp a year, and which is now sup- plying all the cereal used at the peni- tentiary. How many farmers living right in this section have any direct knowledge of the magnitude of the work done on the penitentiary farms, and to do that work requires the services of sixty head of horses, and they are now raising twenty-one colts. There are eighteen milk cows on the farms and fifty-eight brood ! SOWS. NEWS PURELY PERSONAL. | i i —George Poorman, of Windber, is visiting | friends in Bellefonte. | —Clement Dale Esq., made a business trip ; to Tyrone on Wednesday. —Mr. Jchn Mitchell, of Lemont, transacted ! business in Bellefonte on Wednesday. —Mrs. Melissa Bing, of Unionville, Wednesday with friends in Bellefonte. —MTrs. Sylvester A. Bixler, of Lock Haven, has been in Bellefonte for a part of the week with her mother, Mrs. George L. Potter. —Mrs. Harriet T. Kurtz is at the Brocker- hoff house, having come here Wednesday from Sayre, Pa., where she has been visiting for a month or more. —Mrs. M. W. Furey and daughter, Miss Margaret, returned home oniTuesday after- noon from an over Sunday visit with friends at State College. —J. Harris Cook, of Pittsburgh, and Miss Carrie Rankin, of Graysville, were in Belle- fonte on Wednesday for the funeral of the late John A. Rankin. —Cook Leathers and L. H. Musser returned last week from a ten days’ trip to Gulfport, Miss., stopping enroute at Mobile, Ala., Sa- vannah, Ga., and other places. . —Mr. and Mrs. Frank McDonald, E. W. Au- rand, of Lewistown, and Miss Laura Renner, of Altoona, spent Seturday in Bellefonte as guests of Mrs. Frank P. Battley. —George Parsons, zn engineer on the Bell's Gap railroad with headquarters at Punxsu- tawney, is in Bellefonte visiting his mother and other old time friends of former years. spent —DMr. and Mrs. Oscar Faust and the Misses Katherine and Miriam Jenkins, of Milton, were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. J. Will Conley, having driven here in Mr. Faust’s car. —Mrs. J. Thomas Mitchell is in Indianapo- lis visiting her mother, having gone out from Pittsburgh last week where she was on busi- ness connected with the children’s Aid soci- ety. —After attending the big Williams’ reun- ion at Martha on Saturday Harry Gates, of Port Matilda, came to Bellefonte and spent Saturday night and Sunday with relatives here. —Mrs. Horace Musser and Miss Mary Say- lor departed on Monday atfernoon for St. Louis, Mo., where Mrs. Musser will visit rela- tives and Miss Saylor may conclude to locate permanently. —DMiss Bertha Moerschbacher, accompanied by Miss Mildred Ludis, of Salina, Kan,, de- parted last Saturday for Freeland, Pa., where they will spend ten days or two weeks among relatives and friends. —DMrs. G. O. Benner passed through Belle- fonte on Monday on her way home to Centre Hall, after attending the Williams’ reunion at Martha on Saturday and spending Sunday with her father, John Q. Miles. —The Misses Helen and Roxanna Mingle, who have been at St. Davids this week with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Olin Hof- fer, are on their way home from Atlantic City, where they bad been for two weeks. -—Mrs. Percy Miller, of Punxsutawney, was a Bellefonte visitor on Wednesday, having come up from Snydertown where she has been ministering to the wants of her father, Mr. John H. Beck, who has been ill for several weeks. —Mrs. G. Ross Parker went out to Somer- set yesterday to spend a week with Mr. Par- ker’s, mother and sisters, and upon her return will bring home her daughter Emily, who has been with her grandmother and aunts the past two weeks. —Mr. Aaron Katz left on Wednesday on a business trip to New York and Philadelphia, after concluding which he will spend some time in pleasant recreation at the sea shame and among relatives elsewhere, expecting to be gone about a month. —J. Norman Sherer, of Reading, has been spending the greater part of the week with his friends in Bellefonte, and during his ab- sence Mrs. Sherer is entertaining her sister, Mrs. George G. Green, of Lock Hiven, who went to Reading Saturday. ‘ —Col. and Mrs. J. L. Spangler returned from Mount Clemens, with Mrs. Spangler much improved in health. On Sunday the Colonel motored to Spangler where he spent several days looking after his extensive property interests. : —Mr. J. S. McCargar left on Sunday even- ing to attend the annual meeting of the Cen- tury club of the Equitable Life Insurance so- ciety, of which he has been a member for years. The meeting is being held at the Waldorf-Astoria, and will last through the week. —Miss Katherine Heinle came to Bellefonte the latter part of last week from New York city, where she has teen during the summer at the University of Columbia, taking a course in elocution. After a visit of several weeks with her aunts, Mrs. Rothrock and Mrs. Kelly, Miss Heinle will return to New York to resume her work. —Mr. and Mrs. William Greenawalt, with their niece, Miss Claire Shields, of Columbus, Ohio, motored to Bellefonte last Thursday. On Friday they were joined by Mrs. William McCurdy and son Earl, of New York city, and after spending several days visiting friends in Bellefonte and Milesburg left on Tuesday for the return trip to Columbus. —Robert V. Lyon, with Mrs. Lyon, his son Godfrey and Mrs. C. B. Williams motored from Ruffalo, N. Y., last Thursday in Mr. Lyon’s Twin Six Packard and spent the week- end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Lyon. On Monday, accompanied by Mrs. W. A. Lyon, they drove to Milton and Dan- ville and from there returned to their home in Buffalo. —Mr. and Mrs. George S. Grimm were in Bellefonte Friday and Saturday on their way from Saxton to their new home at Macunzie, Pa., where Mr. Grimm has accepted a posi- tion with the Empire Iron Co. Mr. and Mrs Grimm joined their daughter, Mrs. John Kistner, here, going with her to Sunbury for the week-end and from there left for the east- ern part of the State early in the week. —Mr. and Mrs. P, E. Nitchman, of No. 1124 west Sixth street, Wilmington, Del., ar- rived in Bellefonte last Saturday ard are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clevenstine, at the Pruner orphanage, Mrs. Nitchman being a sister of Mrs. Clevenstine. The duration of their stay is somewhat indefinite, as they are here for the benefit of Mr. Nitchman’s health, who was overcome by the heat during the re- cent hot spell. —Reading is the mecca for Elks this week and Milton Kern is represerting the Belle- fonte Lodge at the annual state convention , being held .there. Hugh N. Crider went to New York on Sunday and came back to Read- { ing for the big gathering while M. A. Land- sy went there from Philadelphia yesterday to see the big parade. On Tuesday afternoon Henry Kline motored down, taking with him A. L. McGinlgy, Edward H. Gehret, Jacob ! Marks, Orie Kline and R. S. Brouse II. Mich., last Saturday, ' —George Gregory, of the Gregory Bros., Candyland, is at Atlantic City. fonte with Mrs. Curtin and their family. —DMiss Kate McGowan will leave tomorrow for Canadr, where she will spend three weeks. —Mr. and Mrs. Martin Cooney have as a guest their daughter, Mrs. Ray Stauffer, of Hazelton. —Mr. and Mrs. William Ott, of Bishop street are entertaining Miss Mabel Breon, of Elmira, N. Y. —Mrs. Edmund Blanchard has as guests her cousin, Miss Barr, and & friend, both of Patterson, N. J. —Mr. and Mrs. John Tonner Harris were guests of Mr. Harris’ mother, Mrs. Henry Harris, for the week-end. —Mrs. Jerome DuMont and her sister, Miss Brown, of New York, have been guests dur- ing the week of Mrs. John Powers. —Joseph Lose, of Philadelphia, stopped in Bellefonte Friday for a short visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Lose. —D. R. Foreman and his family returned to Bellefonte this week. Mr. Foreman joined Mrs. Foreman in Philipsburg Saturday. —Rev. J. R. Woodcock, of Syracuse, N. Y., was in Bellefonte Thursday, returning home from a visit with his family at Alexandria. —Miss Margaret McFarlane, who has been on a case in Bellefonte for several weeks, re- turned Wednesday to her liome in Lock Ha- ven. | { i 1 are in Bellefonte visiting mother, Mrs. Thomas her two children, with. Mr. Barnhart’s Barnhart. —Miss Anna M. Miller is spending her two weeks’ vacation with her parents at Salona. Miss Marie Doll is substituting for her at Dr. Hayes’ office. —Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Meek, of State Col- lege, are among those from Centre county who are at Ocean Grove attending the Billy Sunday meetings. —Miss Mary Bradley snd Mrs. Russell Blair have been guests this week of Miss Bradley’s sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Riley, of Bradford. —While in Belleforte last week for a short visit, Mrs. Charles Dennis, of Baltimore, was a guest of Mrs. Denius. Her daughter, Miss Hazel Dennis, spending the time with Mrs. Mallalieu. —Mrs. George Hockenberry passed through Bellefonte on Wednesday on her way home to State College, after a visit of three weeks with her son, William Hockenberry and wife, at West Brownsville, Ohio. —Mrs. Jared Harper, her son John, Mrs. Oscar Wetzel, Miles and Helen Wetzel, are on a motor trip through Northumberland and Snyder counties, where they have been visit- ing relatives. The drive is being made in Mr. Harper’s car. —E. S. Moore, one of the progressive far- mers of Ferguson township, transacted busi- ness in Bellefonte yesterday. Mr. Moore has all his plowing done for the fall seeding and expects to sow grain next week if the weath- er is favorable, —Miss Gretchen Mingle, who has been in Bellefonte for the greater part of the sum- mer, visiting with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Mingle, left the early part of the week to return to her home at Fort Wayne, Indiana. —Mrs. Harvey S. Yarrington left Saturday for Baltimore, where she spent the week-end with her son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Al- exander Yarrington, going from there to her home in Richmond, Va. Miss Yarrington re- mained in Bellefonte. ; —Dr. and Mrs. Hurtt, of Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Barber, and Dr. and Mrs. Himm, of Mifflinburg, who have been motoring through central Pennsylvania this week, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. Potts Green, while in Bellefonte Wednesday. —Miss Jeanette Johnston, of Beaver Falls, i is visiting with her grandmother, Mrs. J. A. Aikens. Coming here Sunday, Miss Johnston ! will be in Bellefonte for several weeks. Mrs. | Aikens, her daughter, Miss Jane Aikens, and | Miss Jeanette Johnston went to Centre Hall | yesterday to spend the week-end with Mrs. ! Frank Bradford. | —Mr. and Mrs. Ward Fleming, of Philips- | burg, with their .two childien; Mrs. Flem- ing’s mother, Mrs. Donaldson, of Butler, and Mr. and Mrs. William Burchfield and their son Billy, drove to Bellefonte Sunday, being guests for dinner of Mr. and Mrs. W. IL Fleming. The trip was made in celebration of Mr. Fleming’s and Mrs. Burchfield’s birth- day. —Mrs. Howard Lingle and her daughter, Miss Marion Lingle, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lingle and Mr. Albright, all of DuBois and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee and their family, of Philipsburg, motored to Bellefonte Sunday and while here were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Garman. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Lingle of Graceton, with their family, will be here for the week-end, for a visit with Mr. Lingle’s mother, Mrs. Lycurgus C. Lingle, who is vis- iting with Mr, and Mrs. Garman. 4 A Destructive Fire. At an early hour on Sunday morn- ing fire destroyed the barn and out-. buildings on the Benjamin Stover property at Aronsburg, and the barn on the Dr. Sumner Musser property adjoining. With the Stover barn were burned one horse, a lot of chick- ens, two hogs, 250 bushels of corn, 26 bushels of wheat, harness and some farming utensils. Mr. .Stover’s loss is about $1,000 with $300 insurance. Mr. Musser’s loss was confined to his barn alone, as there was nothing in it. ——“The Curse of the Forest, is the name of a motion picture repre- senting a real forest fire and showing methods of fighting it, with the de- vastation that follows in its wake, which has just been completed by the Vitagraph company in co-operation with the State Department of For- estry. The picture was taken in the South Mountains in Franklin county, and will have its first public showing next week at the convention of the Wild Life League, at Conneaut Lake, which will be in session September 5th te 9th inclusive. Later it will be shown before the faculty at State Col- lege and will then be released for ex- hibition to the general public. i rere ——Harry Alters has given up his po- sition as a traveling salesman and is now employed as a clerk in Montgomery & Co's store. —J. M. Curtin; of Pittsburgh, is in Belle- | —Mrs. Lloyd Barnhart, of Pittsburgh, and’ Ee ———— —— i —————_.. { i | | day say Didn’t He Do Right? The “Watchman” has never been a party to crime nor lent its columns in defense of criminals or wanton vi- olators of the law, yet we cannot re- frain from commending the action of the Centre county court in discharging a Bellefonte youth on Monday after- noon who was brcught before him on the charge of attempted burglary. The boy, for he is only about six- teen years old, was caught by the police about one o’clock last Saturday morning trying to force a window of Parrish’s drug store with a screw driver. When searched he had on his person a, pillow slip and an unloaded revolver, but no cartridges. The boy is not strong physically, in fact not able to do hard work. His father and mother are separated and the latter maintains the home by taking in washings five days in the week, with the assistance she gets from a daugh- ter who works every day. Naturally it is a continual struggle for the fam- : ily to get along. The writer personally knows the boy in question and knows that he is not a vicious character and has never been mixed up in any questionable scrapes. He is also ready and willing to work at anything he can do, and can stand to do physically. He was down town with his mother on F riday evening and went home with her about eleven o’clock, and who can guess what was in his mind when he slipped out of the house and came down town to commit a burglary. But he was caught by the police in the act and pui in the lockup for the night. Saturday he was sent to jail where he was kept until Monday afternoon. When brought before Judge Quigley that gentleman gave him an earrest talking to and sus- pended sentence, directing the county to pay the costs. . While we do not condone the boy’s act, the question now ‘s, did the court Wo right? Shou!! he have sent the boy to the Huntingdoa reforma- tory, to associate with all classes of criminals: and become hardened to vice and crime, or turn him out and give him a chance to make good and show that he is not at heart or in de- sire a criminal? Only the boy’s ac- tions in the future will be a satisfacto- ry answer to this question, and the “Watchman” hopes that the brief ob- ject lesson he has been taught will have its effect in inducing him to strive for a nobler manhood than that of the criminal class. —Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Gehret moved this week from the house of Gehret and Lambert, on south Allegheny street, into their own house on east Bishop street, which has been occupied by Charles Brachbill and family; the latter moving into the house vacated by the Gehrets. LosT.—A bunch of keys on the street on Monday evening. Finder is requested to return same to Clarence E. Rhoads. -——See our early fall and winter line of coats and suits.—LyoN & Co. 34-1t ee ppp re A ——§3000.00 to loan on first Mortgage. —J. M. KEICHLINE. 61-33-4t Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer. The p ices quoted are those paid for produce. ser SL Potatoes per bushel... 00 65 23 ,» per pound 14 Butter per poun 22 Bellefonte Grain Markets. Corrected weekly by C. Y. WAGNER, The following are the quotations up to six o'clock Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press. Red Wheat..... ye, per . Corn, shelled, per bus In, ears, per bushel. Oats, old and new, per bush ley, per bush esessenstnanes Philadelphia Markets. The following are the closing prices of th Philadelphia markets on Wednesday evening. . Wheat—Red ......... edbersesiasassusidenrishssins $ 1.38@1.41 —No. 2 1.35@1.38 Corn —Yellow......... 23@94 —Mixed new. 90@91 Qals... CST 49@50 Flour —Winter, per barrel. 6.00@6.25 * __—Favorite Brands. .. 8.50@8.75 oice Timo 0. 1... 10. p * Mixed No. 1........ 13.50@16.50 Straw 8.50@13.50 The Best Advertising Medium in Centra Pennsylvania. A strictly Democratic publication with indepen dence enough to have, and with ability and cour- age to express, its own views, printed in eight- page form—six columns to page—and is read every week by more than ten thousand responsi. ble people. Itis issued every Friday morning, at the following rate: : Paid strictly in advance............... $1.50 aid before expiration of vear...... 1.75 Paid after expiration of vear........ 2.00 Papers will not be sent out of Centre county un- less paid for in advance, nor will subscriptions be discontinued until all a 3 are settled, ex- cept at the option of the publisher. ADVERTISING CHARGES: A limited amount of advertising space will be scld at the following rates: LEGAL AND TRANSIENT, All legal and transient advertising running four weeks or iess, or otices, per line.. Business Notices, per lin BUSINESS OR DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS Per inch, first insertion............ +eeeneB CES. Each additional insertion per inch..25 cts. 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