ve £ ge ° Two men wi killed and four in- jured, one fatally, in a freight wreck on the Northern Pacific railroad at Valley City, N. D. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Sartivel, near Cariton, Minn, was struck by lightning, and three children were burned to death and Mrs. Sartivel was fatally injured. Friday, July 27. Henry Wise, of Philadelphia, is un- der arrest at Reading, Pa, charged with 20 robberies. Mary F. Idler, aged 65 years, of Philadelphia, was found starved to death in her home, her body being covered with filth. The plant of the Monroe Lumber company at Monroe, La., the largest in north Louisiana, was destroyed by fire, causing a loss of $150,000. Mrs. H. A. Leaptrot was shot and killed and her husband fatally injured while sitting on their porch at Wynne, Ark., by three mounted men, who then escaped. Saturday, July 28. Thirty persons were injured, two fa tally, in a wreck of passenger trains at Springfield, Mo. Fire at Maryville, Tenn, destroyed the county court house and several buildings, entailing a loss of $150,000. Alexander Cruickshank, one of the founders of the Bath Silk company, died at his home at Bethlehem, Pa., of cancer, aged 67 years. In a collision between an engine and a car on the Reading railway near Reading, Pa., William Smith was killed and A. F. Bender severely injured. Francis B. Reynolds, a New York bookmaker, either fell or threw him- self from the fifth-story window of the Martin House and was instantly killed. Monday, July 30. Charles P. Neill, of Washington, D. C., has been re-elected president of the bureau of statistics and labor. Leopold Lewith, a well - known Wilkes-Barre, Pa., merchant, 56 years old, dropped dead in his store. He was a former resident of Cleveland. Michael Locuskey was killed and David Ha fatally injured by the accidental harge of a blast at the Richards colliery, near Shamokin, Pa. william Harway, of Danville, Va., was Milled near Sunbury, Pa, while stealing a ride on a Pennsylvania rail- road freight train by falling between the ears. v Tuesday, July 31. Secretary Bonaparte, of the navy. who has been ill at Lenox, Mass., has returned to Washington and resumed his duties. The Commercial LLaw League of America met in convention at Ashe- ville. N. C. Nearly 300 delegates are in attendance. Harry Mitchell, aged 70, an old sol- dier and one of “Buffalo Bill's” scouts when fighting for the government, was found dead in bed at his home near Berrien Centre, Mich. The cruiser Marblehead, which re- cently furnished neutral territory upon which peace was negotiated between Salvador and Guatemala, has arrived at Corinto, Nicaragua, on her way to San Francisco. PRODUCE QUOTATIONS The Latest Closing Prices In the Principal Markets. PHILADELPHIA — FLOUR steady; winter extras, $3.10@3.25; Pennsylva- nia roiter, clear, $3.2 3.50; city mills, fancy. $4.60@ 4.85. Rv FLOUR Arm: r barrel, $3.55. WHEAT , No. LX Pennsylvania red, WE ¢ORN steady, No. 2 vellow local, . OATS steady. No. # white, clipped, 42%¢c.; lower grades, 4le. HAY st ;- No. 1 timothy 17. PORK firm; family. $13.50, F steady; beef hams to ULTRY: Live firm; hens, 14lgc.: old voosters, 9%ec. Dressed firm; choice fowls, 14c.; old roosters 9c. BUTTER steady; cledmery. 23c. firm; select 19% @21c.; nearby. 18c.: western, i9c.; southern. 16@17c. per ATOES steady; new. per ba BAL rrel, $1.50 175 pel Sa Gar steady No. 7a BDO 8 oh er @ Tose. p ws u a 20. Cohs dull and steadier; ih spot, steamer, mixed. 52 % 2 tn, 37% @59%c. OA unsettle "white, No. 2, 42¢c.; No. 3, 3 . 40c.; mixed, No 2 30@ 39%c¢.; Ne: 3, 38@38%¢c.; No. 4. 37 ¢. BUTTER easy, Creamery se arator, extras, Zod He. prints. 71 e.; Ma ne sylvania nts, 15@ ic EGGS steady. faery land and Pennsyivania, 3 M4.1 Virginia. 17%c.; West Virginia, 17¢.; sou . 18350. Live Stock Markets. PITTSBURG (Union Stock Ya: Ne A 306; pi steady; choice. $5.7 prime. 35.40 @ 3.10. HOGE acuiva; rime heavies, $7@7.05; medinms, 2 Tas heavy and HE oer 6.10: Ags. $41 8. 'SHECP dow, pric ers, 0%: 50: culls ant com- mon, 1. 073.50: lambs, $4.50@7; veal calves, $7@ 7.25. | | : gEE 3s fi fi (hE a sis g Ei¥af § Ein and the revolver Pearce and her two children were mur- dered. According to the story told in his confession, young Dempster attempted an assault on the 4-year-old daughter after the departure of Mr. Pearce, but was frustrated by the mother, whe went to a bureau to get a revolver to shoot him. The negro says he se. cured the gun first, and, after killing | the mother and shooting the children set fire to the house to hide the crime Feeling against Dempster is running high. Robert Pearce, 3 years old, the only survivor of the tragedy, who was shot through the body, will be brought ts the Canonsburg general hosiptal in ar effort to save his life. Many neighbors flocked to the deso- lated home. Pearce, the bereaved hus band and father, is still there. While imprecations were uttered against the young negro no violenct was offered to him up to the time hs was taken from here on a street car Dempster was safely lodged in the Washington county jail. The officers had an exciting trip from Canonsburg Two attempts were made to take the | negro from them. l ghortly after leaving Canonsburg &' srowd of about 20 men boarded the car, and, with shouts of “Lynch him!’ “Kill him!" dragged the prisoner ané | officers from the car. i A flerce struggle followed, but the | officers succeeded in keeping possessior | of the negro, and finally drove the! mob off at the points of their revol i vers. When Washington was reached near ly 800 people had gathered at the | courthouse, but the crowd was eluded by taking the prisoner through th: basement to the jail. . Up to midnight no attempt had been | made ® take Elmer Dempster from | jall. The excitement which prevailed upon the arrival of the officers with | the prispner subsided during the night | and all danger of a demonstration i: apparently over. Dempster Clears Up Another Murder In a supplementary confessien Demp ster cleared up another murder mys tery, which has led to the arrest of two other negroes. These men were arrested by the Washington county officers, who upon Dempster's infor mation went to the mines of the M. A Hanna Coal company in Cherry Valley near Burgettstown, and took the men as they came from their work in the mines. The n@mes of the men are Pat: terson and Bucher, and they are charged with the murder of John Ko boda, a wealty foreigner, who was found dead in a clump of bushes along the Wabash railroad tracks in Inde pendence township on May 1. The men were placed in the McDonald lockup, near Burgettstown, and were brought to the county jail here today. Demp ster further confessed that he had served timeX in Allegheny. Fayette Westmoreland and twice before in Washington counties. i Whole Town to Move on Rollers. Gregory, S. D., July 30.—Tuesday, July® 31, is moving day for the town of Dallas, in the Rosebud country. Tomorrow morning the 150 inhabi- tants of the town will rise and eat breakfast in their homes in Dallas. The next morning they will have breakfast in the same homes, but they will be in the tows of Gregory. IN THE J. BR. Woop, Passenger Traffic Manager. bl-20-2t . into the creek in an endeavor to save | body of Joseph D. Bardenheir, a jew- | found in the woods three miles east of Pennsylvania Railroad Excursions. ee — IIR THE MIDSUMMER VACATION YELLOWSTONE PARK RY TAKING THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD'S PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED TOUR Leaving the East AUGUST 6th, going via the MAGNIFICENT CANADIAN ROCKIES and including a side trip to Denver will prove A MOST DELIGHTFUL OUTING Rate from Bellefonte, $2323. Proportionate Rates from other points. Covering all necessery expenses for twenty days. SPECIAL PULLMAN TRAIN LATE SUMMER TOUR SEPTEMBER 3rd For further information consult nearest Ticket Agent, or address RECEIVER NAMED FOR ZION CITY U. 8. Court Decides Neither Dowie Nor Voliva Are the Owners. Chicago, July 28.—Neither John Alexander Dowie, founder, nor Wilbur Glenn Voliva, present general over- seer, is owner of the properties of the Christian Catholic Church in Zion, in- cluding Zion City, 111, and sald to be worth $12,000,000 to $21,000,000, ac- cording to a decision handed down by Judge Landis, of the United States district court. Judge Landis declared the property of Zion City to be a trust estate, and named John G. Hately, a member of the Chicago board of trade, receiver of the church's property, and ordered an election on September 18 of an overseer (trustee of the church's property) by members of the church at Zion City. Judge Landis will de- cide later what compensation Dowie will be allowed for his past services to the church. NEW YORK POLICEMAN A HERO Loses His Own Life Trying to Save a Drowning Boy. New York, July 30.—In an unsuc- cessful attempt to save a drowning boy, policeman William Hedderman Jost his life in Cromwell creek at 161st street and Jerome avenue, when help was near at hand. Weighed down by his clothes, the policeman strug- gled desperately to keep his head above the surface, but he was soon exhausted and sank. A brother policeman, who jumped his comrade, was nearly drowned. He, too, found his uniform dragging him under the water, but managed to reach the shore. The boy who was drowned was one of several who were in swimming. Jeweler Robbed and Murdered. Madison, Wis., July 81.—The dead eler, missing since last Monday, vas here. He had been robbed and mur dered. . ar cnsnaanss AA sn —— Books, Magazines Kite THE AUGUST ST. NICHOLAS The August St. Nicholas will he a nam- ber of special outdoor interest, coutaiuing | besides several stories a detailed account of "forest evolution by Frederic E. Clements. "and a sketch of *‘Crabs and Their Habits” (hy M t Leighton. The issue will bave | algo brief talks on *‘A Giant Flower from | the Tropise, “Feathers versus Far.” “A | wren Nesting in an Orioles Nest,” **Ahont i Waswings; and “A Portugese Man-of- ar. | | ——Both buckleberries and black! erries | are quite plentiful. V ANTED~— Young ladies to learn tele- phone operating at the Bell Exchan Rellefonte, Pa. Liberal salary to start. 51-30 Businessmen's Plenie Privilege, Ihe Passenger Department of the Central R. R. of Pa. has announced that bids for the various stand privileges at Hecla Park, Thursday, Aug- ust 16th, account of the Centre-Clinton County Business Men's Picnic will be received up to noon o° August 4th. Those desiring any of the following privileges and such others as may be proper, should get their bids in before that time, Sale will be @ to the highest bidders, reserv- ing the right to reject any or «ll bids:—Ice Cream, Restaurant, Fruit, Soft Drinks, Peanuts, Candy, Cigurs and Tobecoo, Photography, Canes, Shoot- | ing Gallery, ete. 51-202 ELP WANTED,—A number of women are needed in the kitchen department of the State Hospital for the Insane at Danville, Pa; also several young men and women desirous of taking up training for nurses upon the insane. Immediate engagement can be had, if the appli- cants ure suitable. Further particulars can be had hy personal application, or letter, to the Superintendent, H. . MEREDITH, M.' D. 51-29 Gxo. W. Porn, General Passenger Agent Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. McCALMONT & COMPANY, FERTILIZERS FOR FALL SEEDING Farmers purchase superior fertilizers from us at a great sav- ing. The conservative farmer buys good goods, from re- sponsible dealers, and gets good results. Acid Phosphate, per ton, . Phosphate and Potash, per ton, - Standard Bone Phosphate, composed exclusively of Animal Bone Matter and Potash, per ton, - - Si1.50 cash $14.00 cash $20.00 cash TaiNk oF IT! If you want to raise a good crop and build up the farm at the same time, use animal bone goods. We have a dozen brands. Timothy Seed, Grain Drills, Harrows, Plows, American Wire Fence, Barbed and Smooth Wire, etc., all at attractive prices. McCALMONT & COMPANY, BELLEFONTE, PA. BUSINESS HOURS FROM 7 A. M. TO 6 P. M. 51-17 ———————————————— Penna. Rail-road Excursions. JPESNSYLVARIA RAILROAD TEN-DAY EXCURSIONS TO ATLANTIC CITY, CAPE MAY, ANGLESEA, WILDWO OD, HOLLY BEACH, OCEAN CITY, SEA ISLE CITY, AVALON, NEW JERSEY. THURSDAYS, AucGusT 2, 16, and 30, 1906. Round Tri Round Tri $5.85 Via Delaware Bridge $5.75 Via Market Street Wharf Tickets good goivg ov trains leaving Bellefonte at 6:25 a. m., or 1:50 p. m. to Philadelphia; thence on regular trains to all resorts named. TickETs Goop RETURNING WiTHIN TEN DAYS. For fall information consult nearest Tioket Agent. W. W. ATTERBURY, General Manager. J. R. WOOD, Passenger Traffic Mgr. GEO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent, 51-277 Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. a i ii i A dB Me ele Be lM an Bb Si Sb od { LYON & CO LYON & CO. SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE CR, AT Lvon & Co's. We begin this month our Clearance Sale of ALL SUMMER STUFFS. This means a big reduction in every de- partment, and low prices on everything. We have too large a stock to quote any prices, but we guarantee a big saving on all Summer goods. - iva > . One lot of short ends in Dress Goods—only one dress pattern of a kind-—are marked down at less than cost. - - - Summer Shoes in white, russet and black, at wholesale prices. 1 El - - Everything in Summer Goods must go now. First choice is always best. - - p { LYON & CO. LYON & CO. } 4 ! p 1 712 Allegheny St., Rellefonse. Pa. YY WY TEE RTTRR YY YW WY WT ee Es on OT AY DL MILLER, Grove Mills, Pa. EXECuiors NOTICE -Bataie pad, Scurge . Atherton, of the Borough 51-30-6t OTICE—TRANSFER OF WHOLE- SALE LIQUOR LICENSE.—Notice is that the jon of hereby y es M. oo hii in the office of the clerk of the Court of le Jone oth S34 Ward of Puli rg borough, to Jonathan M. Da: Bellefonte, Pa., July 26. E=CUIORS NOTICE.—Estate of d ceased: Lotiers & , late of College township, ters testamen ving been i Mg Ro ted to the u al “aid ovate are reqtosed to make payment, and those ha ms or demands to make the same known wi t delay to, FLORENCE F. DALE, Executrix Braxcuarp & Brax . on ass Bellefonte, Pa. located on the public road lead State College and Ranh cading to fie Bie. FOR SALE:—A good farm of 217 saecres, ered at private sale. Upon it GOOD BUILDINGS and an excellent orchard; hasa well at the doot and cistern at barn, with several ponds of never falling water upon the rty. School aad church nearby. 170 acres, all level, well cleared and the balance well timbered. Will be sold at a reasonable price. Apply to the owner, upon the premises, or address him at State College, Pa. 51-14t JAMES CLARK RE ADIs am Jennie Mor er new room on Spring St., lately as offices by Dr. ke B pv w tmeet any and all patients wishing treatments U9" electricity, treatments of the scalp, facial mas - sage or neck and shoulder has also for sale a large collection of tion shell pins, combs and orname able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles including creams, powders, toilet waters, ex- reacts and all of Hudnut's preparations, the Honorable Ellis L.Orvis, Pres! of the Court of Common Pleas of the oth adiens District, consisting of the ccunty of Contre having issued his precept, bea date the 3th 3 ay of Sul ois to me directed, for hold. mon Orphan: Court of Quarter Sessions Pius Curly and Terminer and General Jail Delivery ia commence on the 4th Mondav of Au the 27th day of August, 1006, and to i week, notice is hereby given to the Coroner, Jus- tices of the Peace, Aldermen and Constables of said county of Centre, that they be then and there in their proper Jetaots, at 10 o'clock in the fove- noon of the 27th with their records, inquisitions, examinations, and their own rememoran todo done, and those who are bound in recogn izamees to ute the prisoners shail BE A Oe A Ae aa] to prosecute against them as shall be jus of July, in the year of our Lord, 1606, one hundred and thirty-first 1 pen dence of the United iy Fear of the inge HENRY RUISE, She 51-30-4t A LINE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC After being prevailed upon by my many old customers and friends to open a car riage works, I have done so, and I wish to impress on everybody's mind that I am not located in my brick building in Miles- burg borough, but have opened my new place in what is known as the McCOY & LINN CHAIN WORKS located along the pike halfway between Bellefonte and Milesburg. ! am equip ping the new place with ENTIRE NEW MACHINERY and tools of the latest design, and every- thing will be the very latest, best and up to-date. It will be some time before [ can get my new works fitted up the way I want them, but I have already turned out some work and am io shape to take care of my trade in anyway. [am very desirous of having a chance to figure on your work. Give mea call, [tis only five minutes walk from Bellefonte. 1 want to assure my old patrons, and others, that any CARRIAGE OR WAGON WORK you get done at the Bullock Carriage, Swing and Novelty Mfg. Co's. place will be rignt, and no question about it; as 1 feel, after twenty-two years experience, | ought to know my business in that ine. My prices will be regular and in keeping with the kind of work 1 give you. Res member the location. Yours Truly, L. C. PBULLOCK, Jn. 51-29 Prox J. ANGEL EYESIGHT SPECIALIST AT THE Brockernosy Housr From Thursday morning to Friday voon, Auuusr 0th and 10th, Prof. Angel as an eysight specialist gives remarkable results for weak oyes, head: ache, blurred vision, cross eyes or defec- tive eye sight. Should any person doubt the staiement Prof. Ange! is wellable to give plenty of individual testimonials of some of the best people of Bellefonte and vicinity. Prof. Angel is trustworthy and reliable. If you wish tosave your money and your eyesight too don't fail to call on Prof. Angel. All parents are advised to have theirchildren's eyes examined, es- pecially those who go toschool. You will thereby make a good scholar and avoid suffering. Atthe Brockerhoff house trom Thursday morning until Friday noon, August oth and 10th. 51-29-24 OURT PROCLAMATION. — Whereas Bellefonte, for the county of Centre and te . those things which to their office may fobs - iven under my hend, at Bellefonte he isth day and the i 3 3 4 |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers