THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 16, 1907 ~Mr, and Mrs. Curt Johnson spent | ~Mrs, C. M. Bower, who had been | : M {wi , Jilliams ar Sunday with friends at Unionville. | visiting friends in Williamsport and the | other places during the winter, returned T 5 71 T —Melvin Derr, extra fireman on Fe Balla. ] BELLEFON E AND CINI Y shifter, is laid up with a very sore hand. | *Y Beli fonte Tuesday. ’ “1 ¢ 1arley Seott bellef Merchant Tallhelm, of Julian, was Ar y 4, Boll hustling about town on Monday on busi- vean play witu rie, Ch good 88 Lhey can ~ ' ' onte's crack st to i basemar sday morning arley is about THE LOCAL HAPPENINGS IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS ness, ‘ A 10n next week fy Court will be in and the From Tri abl onsider ¢ attention r. and Mrs, Al Georg Hana Ot pent Sunday in aller, and he thinks there is little damag one fonte, : ruil tor William Mr. a eld relied with Clearfi Mrs. Fall spent Sunday at aged mothe Dr, Vai on Spring couple coats of pain ~Harvey McClure, of been visiting his parent James McClure on Spring — Mrs, 4 home to Alto today able visit at the street. ROYAL Baking Powder is indispen- sable to the preparation of the finest 1T'ries is having h street. | r} Bra y withifri cake, hot-breads, rolls and muffins. t need t« Lr QOry Housekeepers are sometimes buy other powders because they are ‘che iD. Housekeepers should stop and think. | powders are lower priced, are they inferior? Is it economy to spoil your digestion 1DOrt ! 5 ~A stranger remar} surrounded by thanks for the so fewills. - Vance & got up “The in Snow Shoe this week. and ba we have ) From, Jaco h Dale 3 TCASON and Ho “Royal Baker ' containing over and valuable © ceipts—free to every postal card with you — Robert Kustal nark, was a gues home of Mr. and Mrs Lamb street, -There will John's Hall which the p Admission Calvin sary at thea men at the ROYAL BAKING POWDER CC RECENT DEATHS now a 71¢ Wednesday visit to Ii A iment. | : : spend a portion of s summer in that | il finist 10 before t section, " ‘ y ~Alfred H. Barr, of Gatesburg, came | 051d weather Harry D. Rumberger, of to Bellefonte and at the recruiting sta- | Philipsburg, son of Deputy Treasurer, tion enlisted in the artillery department | GW Rumberger, comes forth and says of Uncle Sam's army. He ups the |. on May 11th of last year there was scales at 180 pounds and is the making | pretty fair snow. Judging from that! of one first class solder. { this weather 15a" so bad, ~W. D. Weikel, of Philadelphia, RH.| _ pani EE. Naginey, George A Toole, of Baltimore, D. M. Hinkle, of | peeser and T. 8. Strawn like some more Williamsport, and L. B. Wampler, of of us, are talking automobiles. Gentle Philadelphia, gentleman do so much the. Pennsylvania Match other fel acted business m Bellefonte 3 ana wey leave king about the Wh He vicicity. On Jaouary 1s was married to Miss Alice Laws, daughter of (reorse baw Pl Survives il | KS nalileq HK. n of “Holi uten has been wearing a complacient nile for the last week which will fade Mrs. Thomas Hazel, representing the Temple, a dapartment of the Knights of the Golden Eagles: Samuel D. Getti I% i ‘ alle Esq . a member ot the Commitee If oe » Shell rose when he commences 10 walk Sp a ag y fae BY x Boar at * olen t night and tl Grand Castle, and Mr. L. R. Poorman, |" Hoer at 1 o'cl ck at nigh and 1 represented the order K ; : fe 10p OF is Voice tending week mE ¥ : § e ATES AY a convent men do not I'he U exercis f : 3: OWS Would one Going to Porto Rico ing under the talker. son of Mr. at Charles Heisler ton, Monday steps in posit to Dr }. E substantial ar Dr. has pull — Monday Walker, E spent sever ment of a 8g ousiness in raing, n fron stone he entrance Ward's : will t ha : RL Ne w } LEGAL taker , ven to INTELLIGENCE of the High school who riting a biographical essay. Miss ris the . daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester velop | : e of abpendicit 17 1 | Ray, and the taking of this an td into 4 se of appendicitis 0 Ho Te 4 «4 PF + ni. | indication that ve in was this time it h ht neces 1a8 : v : y | spent profitably, sary to resort to an operation as the ail. | ™* ; ’ ment possibly can be overcome by other treatment McGinley is after the store and pool room during illness Squire W. J. Carlin, of trip mmensely and Joseph Hettinger, of burg, were also guests ding Shutt MARRIAGH NSS t job and has len book work, with Hol burg, this Samuel Bol Maria Wanzer Harry A. 1 Bernice B. Yarnell Wm. H. Bathurst Maude May Miller quian Ramize Myrtle Francis Twigg Robt, 8. Kustenbauder Sarah C, Gates tian of 4 tion of « * George Knisely was taken ill on Sunday with what &nally de over Years. 8 viving are ber husband and eight dren: Mrs, Anna Poorman and 1-+hn T.. of Bellsland ng: Mrs. Lizzie Meiss Wm., Orvis and Harry. of Pitts! IR Mrs. Ellen Hollabaugh, of Moshannor Howard, of Altoona: Mrs. Minnie Spran kle, of Colorado, also 11 grandchildren She was buried Tuesday inst. at 1 days r lot prize is ressic her tir school WANTEIL not been "i \ rh i Cassidy, of Canton. Ohio on, W. ( Cassidy He is always a wel lefonte, Roland each I lellefonte : on EE ome but everytime he finds that some of his old friends have gone the way of all the The two nights production of “The Bel efonte Rector of St. Mark's” in Garmans opera house last week for the benefit of the Logans only netted the boys about $<o That was not enough considering the lookin sandy Ridge Rush twp Warriorsmark onan K his visitor in h WANTED mle both wars returns he 8th env stamped was in Bellefonte, last week to sixth commission as of Miles township Mr. Carlin already held this office for twenty-five years, This is highly cemplimentory to him, showing that the ¢ community are satisfied with th and the manner he does business larnes, brother of Homer jarnes, of Bellefonte, wl years has been Westinghouse trics Pittsburg, has been spector of the work, This means that he will lay down his hammer and chisel and exchange a blue flannel shirt starched one, The position carries with it more pay but considerable responsi. bility. So rsiding that there are 12,000 employes about the establishment the romotion shows that Harry has been aithful to his employers and thus came | the reward. That's about how Carnegie, | Frick and John D, got their start, ~When the citizens of Bellefonte picked up a local paper the other even. | ing and read that Mr, John Olewine and Mrs. James Clark were shopping in| Williamsport, there was good deal of | Sympathy expressed for both Mrs, Ole. | wine and poor "Jimmy" Clark. A wo. man is quoted as saying that she just ktew that the Stanley steamer would | be the ruination of Mr. Olewine, and that ber predictions came true. The truth of it is Mr. Olewine never was, not within fifty miles, of Williamsport, for the last six months, and thus he can prove an alibi. However, Mrs, Olewine and Mrs, Clark were iu the Lumber City and en the little outing immensely, and the joke as well. just 'ce of the peace has itizens of the " ling ruiing Harry and Joe y last Wo for ten 0 employe MC made general in the AT 3) : n i : H fora | gratifying. hard work and the effort made to make ita success, The fire laddies are ex pected to risk their lives in time of a conflagration, but when it came to fa- voring them a little, our citizens were not there. It's not a square deal The members of the Bellefonte United Evangelical church gathered at the home of their pastor Rev. W, B Cox on Willowbank street and tendered him a surprise party on Thursday night During the evening he was presented with a beautifyl silk umbrella with his initals handsomely engraved on the handle. The presentation speech was made by Colonel Thomas E.liott Maize train dispatcher on the C, R. R, of Pa Mrs. W. H. Wilkinson Chairman of the Young Women's Club, of Bellefonte, says that she believes that thus far they have been successful in their new under. taking. The club has been in operation seven weeks and the results are very Saturday evening a cordial invitation is extended to the public in general to go there and inspect the work, making any suggestion that will tend to increase or benefit the work, ~F. W. Crider, of Bellefonte, has recovered from his sprained back which | he received while trying to move a heavy box in the cellar of his residence, | on Linn street. Although able to be ardund in a creepy kind of a way, he left | Thursday for Philadelphia and on Fri. | day brought his wife home, It will be | recalled that Mrs, Crider has been quite sick for a month or more at the home of her daughter, Mrs, Charles E. Dorworth, at Ardmore, but she has now almost | recovered from paralysis and is rapidly improving. I He was very much pleased with his trip world, which brings with it a tinge of sadness. He, however is in the best of health and says he get's three meals a day and sleeps with a clear conscience, which is about all that a man can reasonably expect The house on east Howard which is the entrance tothe | tery i ndergoing The southern side of way street, nion Ceme extensive repairs the building was viieh made it incon The en an addi ucture be a pleasant Is d ground unhealthy tire building has been tional wall placed under When completed it will place to live, that is if ghosts don't get alter you. George Port, who has charge of the cemetery, and who is the right man for the place, has moved to his own house, just a short distance away until the repairs are made venient as well as raised the str the Last Friday Hon Gassoway Davis, | the remarkable eighty-four year old | West Virginia millionaire, and the late | Democratic nominee for Vice President | of the United States, arrived in Belle | foute where he became a guest of Mrs. D. H. Hastings, and Col. J, L. Spangler, bere and the probabilities are that he will return—perhaps—s0 they say, Mr. Davis is a widower and probably the most popular man in his state, and the reader need not draw very hard on the imagination to figure out why he was here, and wherefore he might come back, If Dame Rumor is anyways near correct, there also is an excell.ent (cy) widower in the executive mansion at Harrisburg, just as likely to make the same character of a visit to our town, so th say, Our “That” man has been spec to keep tab on these possibilities. Sell William Ezra Smith Mary E. Keller Hand Was Amputated Rosa Miller, of Bellefonte, the young woman whose right hand was caught between the hot iron | a mangle in the laundry at the Park Hotel in Williamsport some weeks ago, under went an operation Tuesday in which the hand, with the exception of the thumb, was amputated. As a result of the in juries the hand had become petrified and gangrene had setin. Dr. W. P Logue performed the amputation Every effort had been made to save her hand State Collgee Mrs of 1 : Judgment Affirmed The appeal to the Supreme court of “The Nittany Valley Railroad Company vi The Empire Steel Company” from this county was argued last month, On Monday the Supreme Court affirmed the judgement of the lower court. That means that the opinion of JudgeMcClure and the judgment in favor of the Nit tany Railroad Company, is sustained, The right of the railroad to enter the furnace yards was disputed. A large sun for criminal charges will be collected in consequence by the railroad, Bargains Again, Another collection of fine organs for sale, at almost your own price, $10, $15, $20, Say and upwards, such as the “Estey,” “Mason & Hamlin,” and other standard makes, 8q and 840. Bargains indeed ; an u piano for $90. Call early and your choice, M. C, Germany Po — Bellefonte, Pa. Blackoak cemetery, Rev. Bierly officiat ing. Her maiden name Masterson of Huntingdon Co was Sarah Mus, Jacor From after an illness with tumors of a ture, Mrs. Jacob From died at her hon in Centro Hall, on Friday May 1 The interment tox ] Sut that place Age husband, who extend CADCerous K piace on day hx 0 Years } ler b IS Await R a charge of murdering Josiah Dale A rmitted to attend the funer accompanied there by Reese (By an over item was omitied from hence this brief motice « was » -" al - Deputy She the ab last weeks issue Ed.) Newiuix Haun—one of Howard twp's oldest and most prosperous farm. ers died at his home on Thursday morning, after a short illness of pneu monia, aged about 76 years. Funeral was held Sunday afternoon. Interment in the Schenck cemetery. Mr. Hall years ago was on the board of county commissioners, and served to the best interests of the taxpayers, He was well known over the county and greatly es. teemed, Brackronn an infant child of Mr and Mrs, Percy Blackford, formerly of Bellefonte, but now of New Castle, died | last week from pneumomia. About| three weeks ago the bereaved parents | moved to their new home from Clear Alt and the loss of their child is quite Mig Mercur who married Min srace Houck, youngest daughter Rev, W. A. Houck, fotmorly of Belle- fonte, died recently of heart failure! at en : , ror IROL home near Wi Y IAN Girmt ior AY LAr fal k Kerpels re * wine ia Fa Centre Hn MARKET QUOTATIONS. Beiistonte. Produce The following prices prevalled Thursday morning The following prices are paid ty SpcHLER & Oo, for produce Eggs, per dozen ke per pound allow, per pound Butter, per pound Side, par per pound Shoulder, per pound Belintonte-Brain, The following prices are paid by ©. ¥. Wan "n: ~ for grat Wheat, a... Whea 1 0 or 04 , cone vo 8 et TE tek ee eet EL hea CL A G——— LOCK MAVEN MARKETS, Prices on the curb market Wednesday morning, at, Lock Haven were as follows: : pound 3se; \ red Khickenn,
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