CE ET A TI TE Bewoeralic;l Bellefonte, Pa., September 12, 1919. a — P. GRAY MEEK, : - Em— Editor To Correspondents.—NoO communications published unless accompanied by the real name of the writer. Terms of Subscription.—Until further notice this paper will be furnished to sub- seribers at the foliowing rates: Paid strictly in advance - - $1.50 Paid before expiration of year - 1.75 Paid after expiration of year - 200 Keep Out of the Trout Streams. During the past week several young men have engaged in grappling suck- |. ers in Spring creek, opposite the Bush house, one young man in one day se- curing a string of twenty-six. While so far as known no trout were taken by the young men who had been en- gaged in the grappling, and it is al- leged they carried with them a per- mit granting them the right to take food fish from streams as they were doing during the four months from July to October jinclusive, yet such permit expressly states that the “holder of such a permit is not al- lowed to spear or gig in streams in- habited by trout;” and further ex- plains that “trout streams are those where trout are commonly fished for and caught.” Now the word grap- ple” is net even used in the permit, but if spearing and gigging are for- bidder in trout streams, the Depart- ment of Fisheries advises that it al- so includes grappling or taking fish by any means whatever. Another nractice that has been in- dulged in pretty freely and unchecked by anyone recently is the stoning of the big trout that lie in the stream below the falls by boys and young men. This also is an open violation of the law and the offender is just as liable to arrest and punishment as if he caught the trout. Inasmuch as an officer from the Department of Fish- eries is liable to visit Bellefonte most any day it would be a wise thing on the part of boys and young men to refrain from doing anything that might land them in his clutches. Interesting Convention of Sunday School Workers. The seventh district Sunday school convention was held in the Methodist church at Pleasant Gap last Thurs- day and the two sessions proved very interesting. The convention opened at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon with devotions by Dr. A. M. Schmidt. J. Kennedy Johnston then gave a talk on the stewardship of time and money, "and he was followed by Rev, Fox, of Duncannon, Pa., who discussed the teachers and their responsibility. The balance of the afternoon session was devoted to business. : The evening session opened at 8 o'clock with prayer by Rev. George E. Smith. Dr. A. M. Schmidt gave a talk on the latest in Sunday school work and he was followed by Rev. M. C. Piper in a brief but interesting ad- dress. The following officers were elected: President, C. C. Shuey; vice president, Edward R. Owen; secre- tary, Adaline Kline; treasurer, Darius Waite; temperance superintendent, V. BE. VonGunden; missionary super- intendent, Mrs. D. L. Shuey; cradle roll superintendent, Mrs. J. A. Wood- cock; home department superintend- ent, Mrs. N. E. Wolford; elementary department superintendent, Mrs. D. R. Foreman. ~~. rm meme Annual Sunday School Convention. The Pennsylvania State Sunday school association will hold its 57th annual session at Wilkes-Barre Octo- ber 8th, 9th and 10th, 1919. Centre county Sunday schools should elect their delegates and send their names to Darius Waite, county secretary, in good time to get their proper creden- tials for reduced car fare, and their entertainment provided for. It is hoped there will be a large delegation from Centre county. There will be a young people’s con- ference at the same place, in ils fourth annual session, on October 10th, 11th and 12th. All young peo- ple who will be delegates to this con- ference should be elected and their names sent to the county secretary for credentials. Let the schools at- tend to this promptly so the commit- tee of arrangements will not be held back in their work. Bridge Contract Awarded George Rhoads & Son. At a meeting of the Centre County Commissioners on Tuesday morning the contract for the building of a bridge over Spring creek at Lemont was awarded to George Rhoads & Son, of Bellefonte, for $5,495.00, that being the lowest bid submitted. The bridge will be of reinforced concrete, 48 feet long and a 24 foot roadway. The bridge is to be built this fall. ee and Mulford Haines, of Union town- ship, were both quite badly hurt in an automobile accident about a mile be- low Unionville on Tuesday. So far as the facts could be ascertained young Haines purchased a Ford car and he and Keatley went out on Tuesday to try it out. In some way Haines lost control of the car and it ran into a ditch at the side of the road and turn- ed completely over. Keatley sustain- ed a bad cut on the back of the head which required a number of stitches to close, but that is his most serious injury. Haines sustained an injury of his back and was unconscious for several hours. In fact it may be sev- eral days before the full extent of his injuries are definitely known. The car was considerably damaged. Geergia--to-make his. home. but the home town? = There were strawberry festivals in June, ] mother always used to bake a cake for the strawberry festival and Jim Bond's mother was in charge of the ice-cream, and strung them from tree square, and you went and met everyone you knew and had the best the Japanese lanterns, kind of a time. =! 2 Frederick Heydecker read the Declaration. 1 E one agreed. You could hear every 2 the crowd, where the d There was the Harvest Home, too, fol pumpkins, and OE ny pl i a simple, friendly, semi-rural life. [TO TU OI facturing nation as well as a great caused the great S| stagnate—and yet—we paid a price the loss of that old neighborly life. care less. in the old town, with riots There are observers, life of America is one of the nation’s saddest. and going their way, They believe, and have good grounds for believing, ing it idly and sentimentally, to find a remedy. = they have found it. In 600 cities near soldiers, camps, in fifty or so big war industry centers, In the camp towns, 5 thas been brought to life again. 2 desire to provide hospitality for men in uniform in their brief periods Men and women united to entertain the boys in service, and = of leave. thus folk met who never had become acquainted before, had lived, so to speak, next door Community Houses, tainments of all sorts, service. In the war industry towns, the building up of a community spirit groups that had been interested theretofore only in the jobs the town had to offer, was one of the marvels of war-times among diverse racial in America. kindly mission on in peace times. (Incorporated), and is incorporate 0 70 FF FR TT Ala fale edie nd] [L | AEE EE EERE ERE ERR REE ARERR : The Home Town O you remember the old-fashioned good times in the little Then there was the Fourth of July celebration, when the Hon. because he had a Prince Albert coat, and a fine speaking voice, every= balloon peddler pushed his way along. out again, but supplemented this time with jack o’lanterns made out of shocks of corn and heaps of squashes. the same old folks, all friendly and neighbor-like. Well, it’s all changed now, isn’t it? There's a baby carriage factory, and a typewriter factory, and the canning factory that uses up the pumpkins that and the town is full of “foreigners. nowadays and not see a soul you know, That is an epitome of the history of America. Once we were all neighbors and friends, all pretty much the same kind of folks living and our wonderful industrial expansion. We became a great manu- drift of population from country to town and from : small town to great city. Great industries called for labor from across 5 the sea, and got it, thouands and millions in strange incoming hordes. It was worth while, of course. We had to go in; we could not El nd whole blocks of the population of which we know nothing, and Yet we sigh, now and then, for the old spirit. The change has affected us more than we realize. and lawlessness. who believe this loss of the old community sailors and marine corps training parents and boys and girls rubbed elbows at enter- drawn by their common kinship to men in And now a national organization has been formed to d to co-operate nationally. If it can, beginning in such tangible ways as by developing neighborhood playgrounds, neighborhood clubs,—all sorts of leisure time activities— build up again the old American spirit of equality and common social life, it will have performed no trivial service to the nation. remember? Your and they got out to tree on the town They always chose Fred ‘whereas” even out at the edge of with the Japanese lanterns Again you met The old town has boomed. once made lanterns, You can go down Main street hardly. » Then came the age of invention, agricultural nation. The factories for it all. Part of the price was There are whole sections of town There was an ugly strike, right But instead of deplor- they have cast about the neighborhood spirit it was born of the though they to each other for years. In the carry the It is called Community Service oJ] oll nnd [ndfnd TAYLOR.—Samuel Bryson Taylor, of Milesburg, died at the Bellefonte hospital on Friday of last week, of general debility, aged almost eighty- five years. Born in Milesburg his boy- hood life was spent there but at the age of sixteen years he left home and went to Clearfield where he learned the trade of a blacksmith. He married Miss Mary Irwin, in that town and all their married life was spent there. About hine years ago, following the death of his wife Mr. Taylor went to southern climate did not seem fo agree with him and three years ago he returned and had since been mak- ing his home with his sisters in Miles- burg. His surviving children are Ralph B. Taylor, living in the State of Wash- ington; Arthur, in Ohio; Lloyd, of DuBois; Edith Flegle, of Great Falls, Mon., and Lillie Flegle, of Indiana, Pa. He also leaves two sisters: Mrs. M. S. Peters, in Kansas, and Mrs. S. W. Hahn, of Williamsport; and one half-brother and three half-sisters, namely: W. F. Taylor, of Tyrone; Mrs. Agnes Fowler, Misses Florence and Lida Taylor, of Milesburg. Fun- eral services were held at the Taylor home in Milesburg on Monday even- ing and Tuesday morning the remains were taken to Clearfield for burial in Hill Crest cemetery. i ll BRETT.—Mrs. Laura R. Graf Brett, widow of the late Robert G. Brett, died on Monday, September 1st, at the home of her son-in-law, E. F Haley, in Pittsburgh, following an ill- ness of some months, aged sixty-sev- en years. She was born at Manor- ville, Pa., and when a girl went west and located at Perry, Kansas. She was married in that place to Robert G. Brett and in April, 1871, they re- turned to Pennsylvania and located at Pine Grove Mills where they lived un- til after Mr. Brett’s death. Shortly thereafter Mrs. Brett returned to Kansas where she lived until two years ago when she returned to Pitts- burgh and had since made her home with her daughters in that place. She is survived by three sons and three daughters, namely: J. E. Breit, of Seattle, Wash.; O. A. Brett, of Perry, Kansas; F. P. Brett, Mrs. G. W. Ward and Mrs. E. F. Haley, of Pittsburgh, and Mrs. C. A. Bradford, of Perry, Kansas. Burial was made in Pitts- burgh. i! Il BROWNE. — Thomas Beaver Browne, a well known bond broker and member of the Philadelphia stock exchange, died on Monday night in the Bryn Mawr hospital following two operations for appendicitis, one on Saturday night and one on Sunday. His death is of interest to Bellefonte readers of the “Watchman” from the fact that he was married to Miss Mar- cia Curtin, a daughter of the late An- drew Curtin Jr. Mr. Browne was for- ty-three years old and lived at Wynnewood. He was quite active in Philadelphia social circles, being a member of the Racquet, University and other clubs in Philadelphia as well as a member of New York clubs. He was also a director in the Ardmore National bank. His father was Wil- liam Hardcastle Browne, a prominent lawyer and author of Philadelphia. Mr. Browne is survived by his widow and three children, two of whom were the result of his first marriage. MURRAY.—Miss Katie Murray died in the Altoona hospital on Mon- day of blood poisoning. Almost a year ago, while living with her sister in Philadelphia she ran a needle into her finger. At the time she went to a hospital and every effort possible was made to locate the needle, but in vain. Almost two weeks ago she went to Tyrone to visit friends, was taken ill last week and removed: to the Altoona hospital on Saturday. Her ailment was diagnosed as blggd poisoning, and the cause the needle she ran into her hand about a year ago. Deceased was a daughter of Ter- rence and Jane Cone Murray and was born in Bellefonte over fifty years ago. Her entire life was spent here until the death of her father early in January, 1918, after which she went to Tyrone to make her home with an aunt. The aunt died some months later when she went to Philadelphia to be with her sister, Mrs. Mary Dow- ling, her only survivor. The remains were brought to Bellefonte on the Pennsylvania-Lehigh train on Tues- day afternoon and taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Daley, on east Lamb street. The funeral serv- ices were held in the Catholic church at 10:45 o'clock on Wednesday morn- ing by Rev. Father Downes. Burial was made in the Catholic cemetery. Among the out-of-town people here for the funeral were her sister, Mrs. Dowling, of Atlantic City; Mrs. P. McDonnell and Francis Laughrey, of Tyrone, and William Healey, of Cuba. i i KLECHNER.—Mrs. Lydia Orndorf Klechner, wife of C. W. Klechner, died at her home at Mill Hall last Saturday evening following a pro- longed illness with cancer. Her maid- en name was Orndorf and she was born in Haines township, this county, and was aged 62 years, 8 months and 23 days. She is survived by her hus- band and two daughters, Mrs. F. P. Royer, of Woodward, and Mrs. Sadie Ludlow, of Mill Hall. She also leaves five sisters and one brother, namely: Mrs. Lincoln Confer, of Loganton; Mrs. Harvey Garrett, of Greenburr; Mrs. James Beck, of Spring Mills; Mrs. Harvey Hoover and Mrs. Aaron Stover, of Woodward, and Samuel Oradorf, of Mill Hall. The remains were taken to Millheim where funeral services were held on Tuesday after- noon by Rev. C. F. Catherman, burial being made in the Fairview cemetery, Millheim. 4 § il i MUSSER.—Henry Dale Musser, a son of C. Dale (deceased) and Eliza- | beth Musser, died at Girard College, | Philadelphia, at 10 o’clock on Monday morning following a siege of rheuma- tism which finally affected his heart. He was thirteen years old and was a grandson of the late W. H. Musser, of | Bellefonte. His father died about sev- en years ago but surviving him are his mother, living in Camden, N. J.; one brother, George Q. Musser, a stu- dent at the Scotland orphans’ school, and one sister, Elizabeth, who makes her home with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Woods, in Lincoln, Neb. The deceas- ed boy was a nephew of Mrs. John M. Bullock, of Bellefonte, and Mr. and Mrs. Bullock went to Philadelphia on Tuesday night to be present at the funeral which was held from Girard College on Thursday morning, burial being made in the beautiful cemetery at Willow Grove. SENSOR.—George W. Sensor, a Curry—Glasgow.—John J. Curry, a i native of Centre county, died at his ' well known Salvation Army worker,’ home in Tyrone on Tuesday evening | following an illness of two years. He | and Elizabeth | was a son of Frederick of Tyrone, of Centre Hall, were married in the Salvation Army barracks in Tyrone and Miss Anna Glasgow, ! i | | Sensor and was born in Unionville on | last Thursday evening and it being | January 26th, 1861, hence was in his | the first wedding of the kind to take | fifty-ninth year. eight years held a position in the | maintenance of way department, working up to the responsible position | of foreman of carpenters. He was a | member of the Presbyterian church of | Tyrone, the Allegheny Gateway , Lodge L 0. O. F., the Tyrone Lodge | I. 0. O. M. and the Tyrone club. | In May, 1873, he was married to Jennie F. Campbell, of Unionville, | who survives with two daughters and | one son, Mabel B. and Helen E,, at | home, and Scott Sensor, of Palmyra, | Pa. He also leaves one brother and | three sisters, William B. Sensor, of | Tyrone; Mrs. Alfred Ammerman, of ! Blue Ball; Mrs. David T. Hall and | Miss Minnie Sensor, of Unionville. Funeral services will be held at his | late home in Tyrone at 10 o'clock thi» | (Friday) morning, and the remains | will be brought to Unionville on the | Pennsylvania-Lehigh train for burial in the cemetery at that place. il I} MEESE.—Jacob O. Meese, a native of this county, passed away last Fri- day at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ralph Beck, in Reading, following an attack of ursemic poisoning. He had been ill but a short time and bedfast only three days. He was a son of George and Mary Fultz Meese and was born at Fillmore on February 13th, 1862, hence was in | his fifty-eighth year. His “boyhood life was spent in Buffalo Run and Halfmoon valleys. When he grew to manhood he learned the painting and paper hanging trade and worked at | that occupation in various sections of the State. His wife died seventeen | years ago but surviving him are one daughter and two sons, Mrs. Beck, of Reading; Harold and Robert Meese, in Altoona. He is also survived by one brother and four sisters, namely: William Meese,” of Philipsburg; Mrs. D. W. Eves, of Halfmoon valley; Mrs. W. C. Weston, of Tyrone; Mrs. | Wilson Ghaner, of Scotia, and Mrs. | Miles Wrye, of Loveville. The remains were brought to Cen- tre county on Saturday and the funer- al held on Sunday afternoon, burial | being made in the Friends burying ground in Halfmoon valley. —— Dr. R.L. Weston, formerly: general secretary of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A., has been selected to sup- ply for Bill Martin as athletic train- er at State College. Rev. R. Leighton Gerhart, who has been pastor of the Reformed church at Lewisburg since 1900, has notified his congregation that he will give up active ministerial work after next Easter. After that he will move to Shippensburg where he will devote his time to editorial work on the | three church papers with which he is | connected. Rev. Gerhart at one time | was pastor of the Reformed church in | Bellefonte. i ——The blackbirds have started | their migration southwards. Their | first appearance in Bellefonte in any unusual number was on Sunday even- ing when they came in in flocks of | hundreds and made the trees on Linn | street their roosting place for the: night. On Tuesday evening they! came by the thousands and after | roosting during the night started on | i | their flight about seven o’clock Wed- nesday morning. The birds flew in a | south, south-easterly direction and | when the writer watched them go he; was led to wonder where they would | stop for breakfast, as it would natur- ally require considerable food to fill up the thousands of little stomachs in | the flocks of birds in transit. — The rain that fell on Wednes- day came as a welcome boon in cool- ing the atmosphere and relieving parched vegetation, but there was not enough of it to relieve the scarcity of water situation throughout the coun- ty. Residents of Bellefonte never ap- preciate what a protracted drought means to other portions of the county, especially where farmers and others have to depend upon the small streams and cisterns as their entire water supply. In many places throughout the county the small | streams were about dried up and the | cistern water supply exhausted. As an illustration, over at Grange park the Centre Hall water supply was so low that it has been impossible to get | all the water needed out at the park, | but the tenters there made the best | use of what they could get and nobody | has actually suffered. ——Notwithstanding the fact that | there has been no great manufactur- | ing boom in Bellefonte recently the housing situation here was never more | acute than it is at the present time. ' Every week there are a number of in- | quiries at this office for houses to rent or rooms to let, and every time the seeker after a home has to be turned away without getting any in- | formation. For a town the size of | Bellefonte there are probably fewer desirable houses changing tenants year after year than in any other town in the State. This fact is prob- ably due to the reason that so little building is being done. Not a dozen new houses have been erected in the past decade, and with the price of all kinds of building materials high as they are now, there is little likelihood of any new building being done in the ! immediate future. In the meantime the scarcity of houses as much as any- : thing else is keeping people away from Bellefonte who would likely set- tle here if they could geta good home. . When a young man | he went to work for the Pennsylvania | railroad company and for twenty-. ' Blue Ball, Pa. | Mr. ' Bald Eagle, and Miss Verna Kelly, 2 | | daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Peter Kelly, | of Port Matilda, went to Cumberland, breathed his last. It was said by his place in that city it attracted consid- erable attention. The ceremony took | place at 8:30 o'clock in the evening and at the appointed hour the bridal party, consisting of Capt. and Mrs. Schneider, of the Salvation Army, two little flower girls and the bride and bridegroom marched onto the stage between two flag bearers, one with the Stars and Stripes and one with the Army flag. On the stage they were met by Rev. A. S. Fasick, pastor of the First Methodist church, who pronounced the solemn ceremonial that made them man and wife. Prior to the wedding the Army held a brief song and testimonial service. For the { | present Mr. and Mrs. Curry will be | located in Tyrone. we ie Allok McCullough—Gearhart.—The home Pine Grove Mills, was the scene of a quiet wedding at 2:30 o’clock on Sun- day afternoon when their daughter, marriage to John T. McCullough, of Only the immediate | the Centre county had a per capita of Te. for the week ending August 30th, or a total per capita of $2.04. Every school teacher in Centre county is expected to organize a wide- awake thrift and savings society. Text books are now being prepared by the Treasury Department, at Wash- ington, and will be mailed to every school teacher in the United States within a very short time. It is of the of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gearhart, in utmost importance that every pupil attending the public and parochial schools in the nation should belong to organization formed in the | schools. | Miss Helen Gearhart, was united in members of the family were present | to witness the ceremony which was performed by Rev. L. V. Barber, of the Presbyterian church. evening Mr. and Mrs. McCullough me- ‘tored to Tyrone where they took the train for the bridegroom’s home. Mr. MeCullough is serving Uncle Sam as a marine and his term of enlistment will not expire for two years, but he was given a furlough to return home \ for his wedding but was under orders to report at Camp Dix, N. J., yester- day. rein A. In the! McElwain—Sourbeck. — Announce- ' ment has been made of the marriage Lewistown an August 23rd of . Joseph McElwain, of Marengo, this . county, and Mrs. Sourbeck, of Lewis- in town, the ceremony being performed by the Baptist minister of that city. They will make their home in Lewis- | town, Mr. McElwain being employed ! | at Burnham. Way—Kelly.—John H. Way, son of | and Mrs. William M. Way, of Md., on Wednesday of last week and | were united in the holy bonds of mat- i rimony. Carson—=Stover. James Ww. Car- son, son of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Lulu M. Stover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Stover, of near Woodward, were married on Sunday evening by Rev. J. J. Weaver, of Aaronsburg. Westbrook—Bastress.—Joseph El- mer Westbrook, of Williamsport, and Miss Elizabeth W. Bastress, of State College, were united in—-marriage at Lewisburg last Saturday by Rev. R. L. Gerhart, pastor of the Reformed church. Wanted.—Two girls for general kitchen work, at $8.00 per week. Ap- ply to Miss Huntley, McAllister Hall, State College. 36-1t BIRTHS. Kelley—On August 1, to Mr. and The purpose of this great move- ment—thrift and savings—is to make people savers of money—to teach our people the value of money—how to use it, and how to invest it. “I should think ill of any man who did not leave his children a little better off materially than himself.”—Theo- dore Roosevelt. “Provision for oth- ers, is a fundamental responsibility of human life.”—President Wilson. Death of John Mitchell, Labor Leader. New York, September 9. — John Mitchell, former president of the United Mine Workers of America and one of the most widely known labor leaders in the United States, died at 5 o’clock this afternoon at the Post Graduate hospital. Mr. Mitchell was only 49 years old. Although he un- derwent an operation ten days ago for the removal of gall stones, his condition had been reported as entire- ly satisfactory and his death was wholly unexpected by his friends, as he had been ill only a few days be- ' fore he was taken to the hospital. With Mr. Mitchell when he died were his wife, one son and daughter. _ Governor Smith, who had called to inquire about his condition, arrived only a few minutes after he had physicians that while there has beeh every reason to expect his recovery, Mr. Mitchell had failed to rally from the effects of the operation. Since 1915 Mr. Mitchell had been ! chairman of the New York State In- | dustrial Commission. He also served Carson, of near Aaronsburg, and Miss : education by studying at night. as president of the State Food Com- mission, chairman of the Federal Food Board, president of the New York state council of farms and mar- kets, and as a member of the federal milk commission for the eastern States. While his office was in New York his home was at Mount Vernon. Mr. Mitchell was born in Braid- wood, Ill., February 4, 1870, the son of Robert and Martha Mitchell. At the age of 11 years he began work in the coal mines, obtaining his He | soon developed an interest in labo¥ problems and a deep sympathy for workers in the coal mines. Feeling that some time he would , become a champion of the laboring . man’s cause, he began the study of Mrs. George A. Kelley, of Bellefonte, | ! mines, he joined the Knights of La- a son, George A. Kelley Jr. Bloom—On August 10, to Mr. and Mrs. George M. Bloom, of Walker township, a daughter, Joyce Marie. Colpetzer—On August 23, to Mr. and Mrs. William H. Colpetzer, a daughter, Hazel May. Smith—On August 27, to Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Royer Smith, of Belle- fonte, a daughter. . bined | ments and labor. law, but soon gave it up to perfect his knowledge of economics and labor questions. In 1885, while still employed in the bor, subsequently traveling exten- sively through the west in the com- interest of mining develop- 3 In 1891 he married Katherine O'Rourke, of Spring Val- . ley, I1l., and shortly after this was ap- pointed secretary of the United Mine Workers of America, becoming nres- ident of this organization in 1899 and ' serving without Casper—On August 25, to Mr. and , Mrs. David E. Casper, of Bellefonte, a daughter. Immel—On August 10, to Mr. and Mrs. James T. Immel, of Bellefonte, a son, Arthur Dale. Richard—On August 24, to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Richard, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Elizabeth Marie. interruption until 1908. He relinquished this office to accept an appointment as chairman of the trade agreement department of the National Civic federation, serving in i this office until 1911, when he decided to expound the cause of labor from the lecture platform, which occupied his attention until 1913. Gummo—On August 15, to Mr. and Mrs. Benner Gummo, of Bellefonte, a son, Harold Richard. Shuey—On August 30, to Mr. and Mprs.*Paul C. Shuey, of Bellefonte, a daughter, Adaline Marie. Ichkowitch—On August 13, to Mr. and Mrs. Ichkowitch, of Bellefonte, a son, Joseph. Sharpe—On August 19, to Mr. and Mrs. Constance C. Sharpe, of Belle- fone, a daughter, Melissa Rose. Showers—On August 26, to Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Showers, of Zion, a son. Crider—On August 24, to Mr. and daughter, Cecelia. Andrew Thall, Bellefonte, a ! daughter. ove —Four prisoners were taken back - president of the national body. { i His affiliation with the American Federation of Labor began in 1898, with an appointment as fourth vies e became second vice president in 1900 and continued in this office until 1914. He was invited to become a mem- ber of the New York state industrial commission in 1915 and was chair- ‘ man of the commission at his death. i i | Mrs. Albert Crider, of Bellefonte, a During the war his activities were centered in work connected with the state food commission, of which he { was appointed president. During his strenuous life as a la- bor leader and organizer Mr. Mitchell found time to write numerous books on the subject nearest his heart. Among his works were “Organized Thall—On September 11, to Mr. and | Labor, Its Purpose and Ideals,” and | Mrs. “The Wage Earner and His Prob- lems.” to the Pittsburgh penitentiary from | Rockview on Saturday, two colored men for fighting and two white men | caught in a cornfield where they had hidden in an effort to make their es- ' cape from the Rockview institution. i Under such circumstances it was deemed that the best place for them was behind bars and stone walls portunity to.escape. ——The highest bid made for the Meyer farm near Centre Hall, when offered for sale recently, was one for $14,500 submitted by Clifford S. Thomas, of Potters Mills. Inasmuch "as the farm contains 282 acres, and is equipped with good buildings, the bid was deemed too low and the sale was continued until a later date. —A general strike of steel work- ers has been called for September 22nd. — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” where they will not have the same op- | 219¢ prominent. | forts of the British Goat Society, con- Mr. Mitchell is survived by his wid- ow, a daughter, Katherine, and three sons. The burial will be made in Scranton, Pa. The Goat as a Milk Supplyer. The goat is a useful milk-producing animal for the cottager and small- holder, and the war, with a consequent scarcity and high price of cow’s milk, has made the merits of the animal Thanks to the ef- | siderable progress has been made in goat-keeping during the last 40 years. Thirty years ago a little more than three quarts was the record daily yield of a good specimen of goat, while at the present time it is not un- common to find goats giving 4 gallon and, in exceptional cases, nearly five quarts a day. Children thrive on the milk, which is eminently suited for culinary purposes. The housing and feeding of the goat is, in addition, very economical. it was so long ago as 1875 that the late Baroness Burdett-Coutts set the . example of rearing goats on large es- tates, an example well worthy of im- itation.—The Lancet. <>