HORTON S. RAY FOUND DEAD IN HOME FRIDAY. a NEWS ABOUT TOWN AND COUNTY. —Mrs. W. T. McCormick enter- tained with a bridge luncheon, at Talleyrand ‘clock house, committed suicide, Tee ste an BO BO I eet self in the head. His body ——The annual ball will 40.4 lying on the floor of his be held at State College this (Fri- oo gt his home on east day) evening. A road band, travel-' ..,...t at 12:15 o'clock by his daugh- ing north from Florida, will furnish 4, Miss klizabeth, when she ‘the music. ‘turned home for lunch from the’ ——Dorothy Cowder, ten year old Cadillac garage where she is em- ‘daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George ployed in the office. A physician, h having gone up Saturday to be with —The H. BE. Garbricks had Mrs. Gar- family of her son John, until brick's cousin, Mrs. H. W. Reeser, of per is able to be taken home Snow Shoe, for a guest at their home hospital. Upon leaving no ti week. | been set for her return to Bellefonte. that on January 20th he the at Coleville for a Showers and | son “Johnnie,” who has been spending Showers’ the winter in Bellefonte. —Miss Elizabeth D. Green returned to “Cowder, had a bad fall, on Sunday ‘evening, breaking her left arm just ‘below the elbow. .fire company and has purchased old chemical truck of the Neptune Fire company, of Tyrone, with sev- ‘eral hundred feet of hose. —The ladies of St. John's Catholic ‘church wish to express their thanks to the business people for their donation to their bazaar which helped to make it so wonderfully successful. ——The ladies aid society of the Lutheran church will hold a bake sale in the Harvey Schaeffer ware store Saturday morning begin- ning at 9 o'clock. Everything good “in the way of pastry will be on sale. ——Bast-bound passenger train on the Bald Eagle Valley railroad, at 9:20 o'clock last Thursday morning, | hit a mule, which had wandered onto the track at Snow Shoe In- tersection and killed it. The animal belonged to E. Blair Fisher. ——Forstalling Valentine day Mrs. ‘8. M. Nissley gave a bridge lunch- eon, last Friday afternoon, at her -home on north Spring street, at which four tables were in play. The prize winners were Mrs. Charles Mensch and Mrs. W. Harrison Walk- er. | from two to three hours. ‘bathrobe was | revolver was found on ‘neath his right side. It was an old | Smith & Wesson, 32 calibre, con- tained one exploded cartridge and three loaded ones. | Mr, Ray had not been in good health for some years and this, coupled with the fact that he re- cently lost his job with the State Highway Department, is believed to ‘have resulted in the despondency ‘which caused him to take his own life. That morning he was the | first one to get awake and called |his children. He then appeared | about as usual. But he did not go down for breakfast. When his | room was searched for a note or letter a copy of The New Yorker i was found on his dresser. It was open at an article about ‘furniture, which he had probably | been reading, Judging from the | position of the body he had stood | before the mirror in the dresser when he fireu the fatal shot. | He was a son of Frank D. and ‘Sarah A. Petty Ray and was born ‘at Syracuse, N. Y. on December who was hastily summoned, stated that Mr. Ray had been dead for location for the y. | Badger and OV A | that they had made an inves of the scene of the , after it happened and and | 80Y way in which the | oward but t negligent or accountable, At Fe large iT i tig “acquiring | point in question there are three the Hibler property next door. | concrete steps leading from the John Gross is willing to give his Pavement down to the alley. Gehret property, on Spring street, but | fell when he stepped from the last whether this will be large enough Step onto the ice covered alley, and gion, UE | ne ice was merely the natural ac- Outside of the present 1 | curhulation there and not the result > ocation | ereliction on the part of borough officials, Gehret's demand was re- ferred to the Street committtee. (of the postoffice the above are about (all the available sites in the uptown section that might be even specula- ted upon. Secretary Kelly presented the exe- And down town about the only cuted release of the McDermott ‘available site on the main streetis heirs for ground taken in the open- ‘the Meek estate property, if the ing of Burnside street. ‘heirs would be willing to dispose, In the matter of compensation of it. This property is larger than for policeman Thomas Howley for any of the suggested up-town loca- injuries sustained in the attempted tions and has the advantage of be- | arrest of John Steele, last summer, ing near the railroad, Another ad- Mr. Jodon reported that papers | vantage would be ample parking been forwarded and a favorable | space in the rear for the cars of reply was expected most any day. ‘rural carriers as well as a drive- Papers have also been executed in way for delivery of and loading of the claim of John Anderson, alleged mails. to have been injured at the same time. The Street committee reported opening a clogged sewer on Linn LANDLORD LANDSY TO LEAVE THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE. home at Briarly, the early part ot ~The out-of-town Scull home on east High ' day, included Mr. and Mrs. | and their son, Richard, who drove from Clearfield for a part of the a tion is very much improved though she is still under the care of her brother, ~—John M. Boob, of Millheim, was in Bellefonte, Monday, looking up some friends in the interest of his candidacy for | with her sister, Mrs. A. H. Tarbert and | the Democratic nomination for Sheriff. the family, returning to Bellefonte Tues- | Mr. Boob runs a meat market in Mill- my, | circ tent is goin make | i es a says going to an | ~—Mr. and Mrs. John Burkett and their | ive can for the honor hie , two children left here this week to re-|.o aspires turn to Altoona, after making Bellefonte | their home for the past seven years. The Burketts have been living on Wil- lowbank street, | —G. Murray Andrews will sali from England, the latter part of next week, | expecting to arrive in Bellefonte early | S3led to New York on account of her in March. Mr. Andrews has been in |p 3 TOC SRCLTTRISE 9 Sra England for three months looking after | sn tated his being in | busi in | hospital from that time until a month | 20me ness interests. (ago, and his return to Bellefonte now | | aq Mn. lye Sud their OR | is for an indefinite time, while con- ick, t! rs. erman = | valescing from this illness. , Clintic as a motor guest, drove over | 8 | from Lewistown, Sunday, for an all day | visit in Bellefonte with Mrs. McClintic's | | York, Saturday, | —Mrs. Odille Mott and her son, Basil, arrived here from New York Wednesday. | Mrs. Mott left Bellefonte in October for | Detroit, but was with her daughter, | Mrs. McMillan only two weeks i when REFEREE LYBARGER MADE had ' mother, Mrs. James Kellerman, in Petri- BIG CUT IN ATTORNEYS FEES. ken Hall — | —7.M. Huey, of Fillmore, was In Lee Francis Lybarger, Lewisburg, town on Wednesday and while here for- referee in bankruptcy in the Centre mally announced that he will be a can. County bank case, filed his decision, didate for County Commissioner, Mr. last week, in the contested claim of Huey has been active in the affairs of former Judge Arthur C. Dale, for- | Patton township for years and Is very mer Judge Ellis L. Orvis and Mor- (highly regarded by a large circle of timer C. Rhone for $9,500 attorneys | friends, | fees in which he made an award of —James E. Williams suggested as 23, 1874, hence was 56 years, 1 —_ an interesting mews item that we month and 21 days old. When a Op March 31st landlord M. A. “call attention to the fact that there boy his parents moved to Chicago pandsy will retire from the manage- has been enough of rain this week and after a few years there went 0 ment of the Brockerhoff house and to muddy the water in Spring creek, Seattle, Wash. Most of his school- thereafter devote all his time to ‘and we might add, the first time ing was received at the latter place, looking after his own hotel, The ‘since the middle of last trout fish- street, near the Lutheran church,| _p u. Peacock, of Cleveland, son-in- | atm Dat the present tx Inch um "oto Wa Br. Be 5 ee eae eis oth terra cotta sewer is too small and | Indianapolis, was in Centre county over ., ... receivers, John S. Ginter ought to be replaced with an eight night last week, looking after some busl-' yp) g “nale and Rev. Reed O. inch iron pipe. The committee ness pertaining to Dr. Smith's farms in| o, e v. . also stated that Mr. Long, of Nor- | Pennsvalley. Mr. Peacock arrived in| Steely, for compensation in the sum -ing season. ——Yesterday was the 82nd birth- ‘day anniversary of W. I. Gilliland, of State College, and Wednesday Mrs. Gilliland was 75 years old, and in celebrating the double event the couple were guests at a dinner given in their honor by their daughter, Mrs. Frank Shillings, of east How- -ard street, on Sunday. ——The many friends of Ed Beezer will be sorry to learn that he is in a Philipsburg .pital with his right hip in a plaster-cast and likely to stay there for weeks. While helping to pusk a motor car out of an ice coat- ed gutter he slipped and, in falling, broke or injured the hip bone, —~Toner A. Hugg, deputy reve- ‘nue ‘collector for this district, “will be at the Moshannon bank build- ‘ing in Philipsburg on the 24th, At ‘the court house in Bellefonte on the 25, 26 and 27th. At his office in ‘Mileshburg on the 28th. These spe- ‘cial sittings will be to render as- : sistance to any who might need it in making out their income taxre- . ports. -—In spite of the stormy weath- ‘er the baby clinic, held last week in “the W. C. T. U. room, in Petrikin hall, was well attended. The work- vers felt much encouraged by the number of women who appeared "with their small children on the opening day. Each week these free ‘clinics will be held on Friday, at 3 School ship Saratoga, and Edward, at |, oat " y He also leaves one brother, } Bellefonte ‘p. m., in the W. C. T. U. room. It -is hoped that all who are interested ‘will take their babies, up to three lyears of age, for examination. ——The annual football dance of ‘the Beliefonte Academy will be ‘meld at Hecla park on Friday eve- ning, February 27th. It will be a semi-formal affair, $3.00 per couple,