Bellefonte, Pa., May 4, 1917. m— To Correspondents.—No communications published unless accompanied by the rem mame of the writer. -. THINGS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY ——Exit the oyster. Wanted.—A girl for general house- work in Clearfield county. Bell tele- FOOD GROWING PATRIOTS. phone 9254. 62-18-2t* Bellefonte Men and Women Who Will Do Extra Gardening This Summer. It is a pleasure to record the fact that there are a number of people in Bellefonte who are taking the “Watch- man’s” advice seriously and are at least going to try to grow their own vegetables this year. This fact is ev- idenced by the number who have se- cured vacant lots for gardening pur- poses and they ought to be taken as George Young, the barber, is | an example for others to follow. able to be around again after being | housed up for the past five weeks with pneumonia. ’ ——Have you tried pulverized sheep manure on your lawn and gar- den? It does wonders.—Potter-Hoy Hardware Co. Mrs. Charles Daugherty, the youngest sister of Mrs. Henry Harris, of this place, died at her home in Can- ton, Ohio, yesterday. Drive out the dirt Let in the light Clean up next week With all your might. Requests for three stenogra- phers and office girls, at salaries from forty to seventy-five dollars a month, have come to Bellefonte within the past three days. - ——1If you are not too tired to take home your groceries, you can save some real money by patronizing our ready pay grocery department.—Co- hen & Co. 18-1t Dr. and Mrs. George P. Bible have announced the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy Marguerite, to Lewis S. Schad, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schad, the wedding to take place early in June. The W. C. T. U. “Thimble Bee” will be held at the home of Mrs. Wal- ter F. Carson, on Reynold’s avenue, Wednesday, May 9th. The ladies are now sewing for Troop L. All women interested are cordially invited. The annus! essay contest for the prize given by the W. C. T. U. will be held in the auditorium of the High school, Friday, May 4th, at 2 p. m. Every one is cordially invited. Spe- cial music by the High school orches- tra. —Dr. George H. Tibbens has es- tablished a Bellefonte office in the pri- vate parlors of the Garman house where ‘he can be seen every Tuesday and Saturday. Chronic diseases a "specialty. Chiropractic, high frequen- ¢y and X-Ray. ——Beginning Monday, May 7th, we are compelled to advance the price of the following soaps to 5c per cake. The price is still one cent less than any other store in Centre county: Star soap, Ivery, Fels Naptha, Rub- No-More, P. & G. White Naptha.— Cohen & Co. Egat Miss Harriet Fowler, a daugh- ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John T. Fowler, of Fowler, has received no- tice of her appointment as a stenog- rapher in the United States agricul- tural department at Washington. For some time past she has held a posi- tion as stenographer in J ohnstown, —J. Linn Harris, who with Mrs, Harris went to Carlisle two weeks ago has not decided on making his perma- nent residence there. His present plans include spending the summer at Carlisie, intending to return to Belle- fonte next fall. He has not as yet re- signed as chairman of the Republican committee of Centre county, as has been reported, and has no intention of doing so at the present time. Centre county has always proved her loyalty whenever the oc- casion demanded it, and the people of Bellefonte are nightly proving their loyalty to the Scenic, Bellefonte’s most popular motion picture show. And the reason they do this is be- cause they are. always sure of seeing pictures worthwhile watching. Noth- ing old or stale is shown there, as every picture must be new and up-to- date. ——L. H. Musser on Monday re- ceived a Case gasoline. tractor and dophle trailing plow for use on the farm. Of course the tractor can be used in most all kinds of farm work except heavy hauling. It is the first of its kind brought to Centre county and it yet remains to be seen whether the farmers are ready to bid good-by to their faithful horses and install gasoline tractors instead. D. H. Shivery bought this tractor after a successful demonstration was given on his farm on Tuesday. " ———Sechler & Co. put a new deliv- ery car into commission on Saturday, and they have the honor of being the last grocery firm in Bellefonte to adopt the motor car delivery. Not that Mr. Sechler isn’t up-to-the-min- ute in all his business affairs but he is a lover of animals and he could not bear to see his old horse cast aside for the speedy motor car until he felt it an absolute necessity in order to make all his deliveries promptly. But the time has come when the horse has practically been superceded by gaso- line propelled vehicles for most kinds of work outside of the farm. There are still many lots in Belle- fonte that ought to be utilized for the raising of foodstuffs and most of them can be had for the asking. The one drawback experienced so far is the difficulty in getting the ground ploughed, and any person who has a team and plow and is willing to do the work (for compensation, of course) should notify the Woman’s club or leave word at this office. Included in the list of those who have taken lots are the following: The Woman’s club, the Gray lot on Curtin street and the Reynolds lot of two acres south-east of the brick school house. This ground will be cul- cultivated by twelve women members of the club. The lot in the rear of the parochial school has been cleaned up as a dump- ing ground and will be cultivated by the school pupils. Herbert Auman and Howard Smead have taken the Spangler lot on Cur- tin street. Harry Yeager and Wilbur Baney the Ray lot on Curtin street. Arthur Thomas, the plot of ground between the old Thomas homestead and R. B. Taylor's coal yard. Joseph Thomas the lot adjoining his home on Thomas street. John Richards the Benner and De- nius lots. : : Lambert and Kerns the Gentzel lot on the corner of Spring and Curtin streets. Morton Smith, Curtin street. Thomas Lamb and Daniel Snyder; lots of ground secured from the American Lime & Stone company. Morris Miller, a lot on east High street. Frank Gardner, the Grauer lot on east Lamb street. John Sourbeck, the Robert Miller lot on east Lamb street. Charles Ray, the lot in the rear of the Garman property on High street. Charles Smoyer, the Mitchell lot on Linn street. David Washburn, the VanPelt lot on the corner of Curtin and Wilson streets. Milton Reed, the Jacobs lot on east Lamb street. the Baney lot on ——— eee One Hundred Billion Pounds of Hon- ey Wanted. The Bureau of Economic Zoology of the State Department of Agricul- ture is putting forth a strenuous ef- fort to encourage the beekeepers of the State to do their bit during the present scarcity of foodstuffs, by aim- ing to produce larger honey crops. Pennsylvania beekeepers must do their part to help produce one hun- dred billion extra pounds of honey in the United States this Season. This is the figure aimed at by the United States Department of Agriculture. Several apiary advisers are now visit- ing the beekeepers of the State, and a number of field meetings will be held in various sections. Two meetings will be held in Cen- tre county as follows: The first meet- ing will be held in the apiary of Aaron Thomas, Centre Hall, on Tuesday, May 15th, at 1:30 p, m. The second meeting will be held in the apiary of Prof. W. P. Hosterman, Spring Mills, on Friday, May 18th, at 1:30 p. m. Apiary located at Penn Hall. : : : Big Food Acreage at Western Peni- tentiary. Warden John Francies, of the west- ern penitentiary, does not mean that the inmates of that institution shall infringe on the food supply of the State, but will see to it that enough of food products are grown on the penitentiary farms to supply all the prisoners and everybody connected with the institution and perhaps have seme to sell. In the 2,445 acres of land under cultivation the allotment to various crops is as follows: Wheat, 447 acres; corn, 320; oats, 227; rye, 183; potatoes, 150; sweet corn, 19; dry beans, 58; devoted to garden purposes for the raising of beans, tomatoes, lettuce, parsley, etc, 65 acres; cabbage, 223 acres; hay, 524; pasture, 544; orchard and small fruits, 120. Between six and seven hundred acres of the above are cultivated by tenant farmers and all the balance by the prisoners. They Should Have a Great Potato Crop. The farm management at the new penitentiary is planning to put 150 acres in potatoes. They have 40 acres planted now. Such an acerage, with an average yield of only 100 bushels to the acre would mean a crop of ‘man, of Philadelphia, announce the 15,000 bushels. We presume this ex- traordinary acreage is partially due ' to the fact that the penitentiary has had to pay as high as $3 and more per bushel for the tubers that the inmates consume and they are determined to bend every effort to reduce their own high cost of living. A Tractor at Work. They are plowing with a tractor out at the penitentiary. It is working fine and is being used twenty-four hours a day in the strain to get all the land possible, of the immense acreage there, under cultivation. The only trouble they have had with it for night plowing has been due to the poor lights, but at that wonderful re- sults have been obtained. Three hun- dred and twenty acres that were plow- ed last fall have been disced four times and now it looks like an im- mense garden. ——The McCoy & Linn Iron com- pany have men engaged in cutting down the willow trees on the strip of ground this side of the Central Railroad of Pennsylvania car shops and lying between the railroad and Spring creek. The stumps and brush will all be removed and the ground planted to a spring crop of some kind. It is the company’s intention to farm all the land they can possibly get out this year. ——A concert which promises to be a musical event in Bellefonte is that which will be given by Miss Mary B. Mott, in Garman’s opera house, Fri- day, May 11th. Miss Mott, assisted by Miss Sallie G. Fitzgerald as solo- ist, and the Harmonic club, will pre- sent a program so pleasing to music lovers that no one can afford to miss hearing these talented young wom- en. Admission, 25 and 50 cents, the tickets to be on sale at the Mott drug store. ——Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Cress- marriage of their daughter Marion to William Marshall Hollenback, the wedding having taken place on Mon- day. Mr. Hollenback is very well known in Bellefonte from the years he spent at State College as coach of the State football team. Following a brief wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Hol- lenback will take up their residence in Syracuse, N. Y., where Mr. Hollen- back is in the coal business. ——Miss Mary Schad, of Belle- fonte, had charge of the costumes for “Les Romanesques,” by Edmond Ros- tand, which was presented in French at the Western College for Women at Oxford, Ohio, on April 28th, by students in the department of French, which has a prominent place in the curriculum of the school. Miss Schad will have one of the principal parts in “The Magic Piper,” which will be presented at the College on Tree day, Wednesday, May 16th, by students selected from the whole school. The Woman's Auxiliary of the Archdeaconry of Williamsport, a branch of the great missionary socie- ty for women in the Episcopal church, will hold its spring meeting as guests of St. John’s parish, Bellefonte, on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 15th and 16th. Representatives will be in attendance from all the parishes and missions in the central section of the State. The chief events of interest to the general public will be a splendid missionary service on Tuesday even- ing, May 15th, in the church, follow- ed by a reception to the visiting mem- bers of the Auxiliary in the parish house. The men of the community are as cordially invited to this serv- ice and reception as are the women. The coterie of Bellefonte Acad- emy students who will take part in the Academy minstrels attended the Coburn minstrels on Monday even- ing and they will doubtless collabo- rate some of the stage mannerisms they saw there with the original ideas of their own at their show to be giv- en in the opera house on May 25th. But whether they do or not the peo- ple of Bellefonte can feel sure of see- ing a worth-while entertainment. The boys have been practicing diligently and have many new stunts never be- fore pulled off on a minstrel stage. A big street parade will be given which will be led by the State College band. The prices of admission will be 25,35 and 50 cents. Tickets on sale at Mott’s drug store. ove — —On Saturday evening C. C. Shuey, with his wife and daughters were returning from a motor trip to Williamsport and when in the vicini- ty of the Fishing creek school house on the Nittany valley road they were the victims of a collision with the big Premier car of the Palace livery, driven by ‘Joseph Dan. The latter car also contained a load of people and fortunately none of the occupants of either were hurt. Mr. Shuey’s car, however, was badly damaged. The left front wheel was smashed, the axle bent almost like a halfmoon, the fender wrecked and the running board torn off. The steer- ing gear was also badly bent. The Premier car suffered less, as its most serious injury was a slightly bent axle. Arrested on the Charge of Larceny. H. A. Ellis and Charles Waelier, of Buffalo Run, were arrested on Friday on the charge of larceny and brought to the county jail in this place the same evening. The men were arrest- ed on the charge of stealing chickens, meat and other produce from the far- mers of Buffalo Run and Halfmoon valleys. They both secured bail on Saturday morning for a hearing be- fore justice of the peace S. Kline Woodring on Tuesday morning. At the hearing before ’Squire Woodring Wesley Biddle testified that he had been away from home ten days ' or two weeks and during that period a dozen or more of his chickens were stolen. J. E. Clark testified that he discov- ered that Mr. Biddie’s chickens were gone on the morning of April 26th, and in company with others was able to discover the tracks of two men leading from the chicken house to a lane. It had rained during the night and the ground was wet. In the lane they found the track of a buggy and they trailed it down the road to the H. A. Ellis farm where it turned in the lane. A brother of J. E. Clark, who lives on an adjoining farm, testified that he and his son were out at the barn look- ing after some stock that needed at- tention just about midnight when a buggy containing two men drove past. They heard the men speak to the horse and recognized the voice as that of Mr. Ellis. When the buggy got op- posite where they were standing the son lifted the lantern and they both recognized Ellis. They could not pos- sibly identify the other man but thought he was Charles Weller. Other evidence was given corrobo- rative of the above after which both men were held in four hundred dol- lars bail for their appearance at court. aoe Short Strike at the Titan Metal Plant. At noon on Monday Christ Jodon led about forty of the men in the roll- ing mill and melting room depart- ments of the Titan Metal company’s plant out on strike. Jodon was the leader and spokesman for the strik- ers and he presented their demands for a 20 per cent. increase. The men were given a hearing at the company offices and promptly told that their demands could not be met and that unless they returned to work at once their jobs would not be held for them. By Tuesday morning most of the men were back at work with the ex- ception of half a dozen or more of the leaders and fomenters of the dis- turbance. They were discharged. The plant was running as usual on Tuesday with practically all of the places filled. This Week Twenty Years Ago. The following appeared as an “Ink Sling” in the “Watchman:” : Gen. Miles sailed for Europe on Tuesday, at the government expense, to study the foreign war situation and get a few pointers on the way the armies of Eng- land, France, Germany and Rus- sia are organized. If he has a good time, that is his business, but we don’t want to have any need for the information he might pick up. And little did we think at that time where we would be at now. - William Horner was found dead in an outbuilding at his home on Nitta- ny mountain. i Dr. Lawrence Colfelt, of State Col- lege, declined a call to the Congrega- tional church at Cambridge, Mass. Another Prisoner Escaped. Another prisoner escaped from the western penitentiary in Benner town- ship on Wednesday afternoon, mak- ing his get-away between two and three o’clock. He was one of the last carload of prisoners brought here from Pittsburgh only two weeks ago. The man’s name is C. A. Wilson. He is 5 feet 11 inches in height, weighs 176 pounds and is 29 years old. He has light blue eyes, light chestnut hair, medium light complex- ion and of medium stout build. He was dressed in the regulation prison clothes. The man was sent up from Allegheny county. The Pittsburgh Collegians, a very fast team composed of some of the best players in the western part of the State, will be the Academy’s opponents on Hughes field this (Fri- day) afternoon, at 2 o’clock. The game must be played early in order to allow the visitors to catch the 4:50 train for Altoona. A shift and a change has been made in the. Acade- my lineup which has materially strengthened the team and it is now believed they will be able to surprise the fans by their work in future games. Be sure to see this game. ——Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Mitch- ell, who are moving into the Thomas house on the corner of Allegheny and Curtin streets, have temporarily aban- doned building their bungalow on Linn street. ——Oh, what pleasant hours you can spend when you have a Victrola. See us for Victor talking machines, records, and supplies.—Cohen & Co. 18-1t I ! : ’ ' ' { 1 NEWS PURELY PERSONAL.. —M. A. Landsy left on Monday on a business trip to Philadelphia. —Mrs. Henry Wetzel is a guest of her daughter, Mrs. Malcolm Pifer, at Jackson- ville. from a month's visit to Atlantic City and Philadelphia. —Judge Henry C. Quigley returned on Sunday from Montrose where he spent all of last week holding court. —Mrs. Peter Smith is spending time in Centre Hall, going over weeks ago to see her new grandson. —Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Bennet, of Lancas- ter, spent the fore-part of the week here with their son, W. O. Bennet, and his fam- ily. —Mrs. Sylvester A. Bixler, of Lock Ha- ven, was here two days of the week look- ing after her mother’s property on Linn street. —AMrs. Iemler, who has spent the great- er part of the winter with Mrs. T. A. shoe- maker, returned to her home in Harris- burg Tuesday. —Mrs. J. M. Curtin, of Pittsburgh, has been in Bellefonte for several days this week with her mother, Mrs. George F. Harris. —Mr. and Mrs. Hunsinger, of Altoona, were week-end guests of Mrs. Hunsing- er's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Witmer, of Bishop street. —Mrs. John VanPelt and her daughter Rachel left Wednesday afternoon for De- troit, for a visit with Mrs. Van Pelt’s brother, Joseph Harris and his family, —Thomas K. Morris, of Pittsburgh, spent Sunday in Bellefonte with his fath- er, A. G. Morris, who has been ill for the past ten days at his home on Linn street. some three —Mr. and Mrs. Jack Decker are spend- ing seme time in Chambersburg in the in- terest of the insurance company of which Mr. Decker is the representative in Belle- fonte. —Graham Hunter, with the Curtis Pub- lishing Co., of Philadelphia, came to Belle- fonte Friday of last week for a short vis- it with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hunter. —Willim Daley came to Bellefonte on Saturday from Burlington, N. J., and after spending Sunday with his parents, accom- panied his wife and baby daughter home on Monday. —Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Beaver Brown, of Wynnewood, Pa., spent the fore-part of the week at the Bush house, coming here to visit with friends of Mrs. Brown, who before her marriage was Miss Marcie Cur- “tin. —Miss Helen McClure came to Bellefonte Sunday, expecting to be with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William McClure, while con- valescing from an operation for appendi- citis. Miss McClure is a nurse in training in Pittsburgh. —Martin Viehdorfer and Mr. ‘Meeker, both leading citizens of Pine Glenn, drove to Bellefonte yesterday with Charles Hip- ple, spending a busy morning transacting business which had accumulated from their infrequent visits. —Mrs. John G. Love returned from Phil- adelphia yesterday morning, to spend a few days looking after the opening of her house, intending then to go to Tyrone for a visit with Mr. Love’ sisters before com- ing to Bellefonte for the summer. —Mrs. J. A. Aikens and her daughter, Miss Emma Aikens, are in Ohio, having left yesterday, expecting to spend the greater part of May with Mrs. Aiken’s three broth- ers. Going directly to Wooster, they are at present the guests of I. H. Odenkirk. —Mrs. Satterfield is contemplating a vis- it of a month or six weeks with friends in the western part of the State and in Columbus, Ohio. Although having ar- ranged to leave this week, her going has been postponed until late in the month. —Mrs. George Hile, of Lewistown, has been spending a week in Bellefonte, visit- ing with her mother, Mrs. Alice Parker, and with Mr. Hile’s mother, Mrs. Sadie C. Hile, who was taken suddenly ill at Pleis- ant Gap, since going there two weeks ago. —Mrs. Walter Meek, of Harrisburg, and her son, Charles Meek, state forester at Coburn, drove to Bellefonte for the Ma- sonic lecture Wednesday night. Mrs. Meek is contemplating taking a house at Coburn and remaining with her son dur- ing the summer. —Mrs. Joseph Strouse, her daughter-in- law, Mrs. Luther Strouse, and her two sons, and Mrs. Luther Strouse’s mother, Mrs. Cramer, all of State College, motor- ed to Bellefonte Saturday afternoon to spend a few hours looking after some bus- iness and in the shops of the town. —Mrs. A. B. Cromer arrived in Belle- fonte Sunday, coming here from Pitts- burgh, where she had been with Mr. Cro- mer visiting with his parents before leav- ing for their new home in Toronte. Mrs. Cromer will be here for a week, expecting then to leave to join Mr. Cromer in Cana- da. —James H. Potter, of Bellefonte, and Rev. Samuel Martin, of State College, will leave here Monday, May 14th, for Dallas, Texas, as representatives from the Hunt- ingdon presbytery to the General Assem- bly. Mr. Potter’s vote was the largest ever given a delegate, a compliment no doubt, which will add much pleasure to his an- ticipated trip south. —Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. P. Gray and Mr. Gray's mother, Mrs. Belle Blakely Gray, will spend the summer at their home in Stormstown, returning there ear- ly this month from Indiana, where they have been with Mrs. Robert Gray’s sisters during the winter. A part of the time was spent by Mrs. Belle Gray with her sister, Mrs. I. V. Gray, in Philipsburg. —Mrs. Isaac Gray was in Bellefonte Monday between trains on her return home to Half Moon, for the summer. Clos- ing their house and leaving there early in December, she and her daughter, Miss Esther Gray, have spent the winter in Tyrone and Scranton with the two other daughters, Mrs. Glenn and Mrs. Hartsock. Mrs. Gray came here from Mt. Carmel, rs. Glemn’s new home, Miss Gray having returned before Easter. —Miss Minnie Crosthwaite Murphy, the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lindley Murphy, spent Sunday in Belle- fonte with her mother’s aunt, Mrs. §. A. Bell. Mrs. Murphy and Miss Murphy have been up Buffalo Run for several weeks with relatives, stopping there on their way from East Liverpool, Ohio, to their new home in Herkeimer, N. Y. Up- on leaving Monday they were accompanied by Miss Nannie Murphy, who has been in the county with relatives. since before Christmas. —Mrs. D. G. Bush will return next week | i —DMiss Mary Cooney is visiting in South | Bethlehem, having left Bellefonte a week | ago. —Miss Jennie Reifsnyder, of Millheim, was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. McCargar | while visiting in Bellefonte last week. | —Elliot Morris left Monday for Wayne, { where he will continue his studies at 8t. ; Luke. expecting to enter West Point in June, - —Mrs. Reish, of Lewisburg, is with her brother, Dr. R. G. H. Hayes. Mrs. Reish came to Bellefonte Wednesday morning, expecting to spend a week with Dr. and Mrs. Hayes. ---Marshall Cook will leave tomorrow for Long Island, having accepted a summer position on a truck farm. Marshall, whe is a student at Penn State, has been in Bellefonte with his father, Charles F. Cook, for the week. —Mrs. Anna Taylor returned to Belle- fonte yesterday accompanied by her daughter, Miss Lillian Taylor. Mrs. Tay- lor has been in Pittsburgh during the win- ter under the care of specialists, and is now very much improved in health. Centre County Threshermen Meet. The Centre county Threshermen and Farmers’ Protective association held a meeting in the grand jury room of the court house at ten o’clock last Saturday morning. The meeting was presided over by the president, C. M. Tice. Twenty-one of the forty-one enrolled members were present, with a number of other farmers and threshermen who are not members. A liberal feature of this organization in its meetings, is that every man can have the right to speech but only members can vote. Among the discussions at the meet- ing were such questions as the dou- ble tax on threshing rigs, increased cost of machinery, labor and supplies, and the added cost of boiler inspec- tion imposed this year is making the threshermen “sit up and take notice” that the price of threshing must also be advanced this year. ; The most vital question and the one demanding an immediate solution is that of the boiler inspection, as all boilers of agricultural engines must be inspected by July 1st, 1917. The executive committec was appointed to act in conjunction with the officers of the association in the selection of a competent boiler inspector and to look after any other matters that might require attention. Secretary Isaac Underwood is de- sirous of hearing from every thresh- erman and owner of agricultural en- gines regarding the above important questions. When the meeting ad- journed it was with the understanding that it was subject to convening at the call of the president. eer Mrs. Myrtle Fike, of Axe Mann, was sent to jail last Friday by "Squire S. Kline Woodring in default of $700 bail, on the charge of setting fire to the house of Mrs. Stover, her mother, which was burned at Axe Mann on the night of April 11th. Mrs. Stover and James Sommers were the witnesses for the prosecution. Mrs. Stover said the house was insur- ed for $500, and that she paid the in- surance. The policy contained a mortgage clause to cover $300 in the name of the holder of the mortgage, while the remainder was in the name of Myrtle Stover, her daughter. She said the house was in her name as long as she lived, and that upon her death it became the property of her daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Fike. A report in detail of the coun- ty conference of Womens clubs, held at Boalsburg a week ago will be pub- lished in the next issue of the “Watch- man.” Wanted—A place on a farm for boy of 16, to work for summer wages. Write or call MRS. J. T. MITCHELL, Bellefonte, Pa. —Style-Plus clothing for men and young men at $17.00. No more, and no less. The price of these goods have not advanced.—Cohen & Co. a 18-1t ——Rose bushes and hydrangeas just arrived from Dreese and in fine shape.—Potter-Hay Hardware Co. ——GQGeiss’ livery is well equipped for prompt service with four horses and three autos. Special attention to traveling men. 18-2 Architect.—Anna W. Keichline, Bellefonte, Pa. 62-4-6m ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Bellefonte Produce Markets. Corrected weekly by R. S. Brouse, Grocer The prices quoted are those paid f , Pe qt P or produce Bellefonte Grain Markets. The following are the quotations up tosix o'clock Thursday evening, when our paper goes to press. Red Wheat... Lo . $2.75 White Wheat....... 4 Rye, per bushel.............. 1.00 Corn, shelled, per bushel . 1.25 Corn, ears, per bushel............ 1.25 Oats, old and new, per b: 70 ley, per bushel.................. 80 er E——— Philadelphia Markets. The following are the ing prices of the Philadelphia markets on W. ay evening. Jats gg our —Winter, * _ —Favorite (
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