Tu em Lemont. Mrs. Jawes 1. Thompson returned to York, Monday. John Moser was bere attending Jacob Bot- to:f’s funeral. Mrs. Henry Evey came home from Belle fonte Saturday. THE MURDERERS SURROUNDED Punxsutawney, Pa. Sept. 3.—Two members of the state constabulary dead, one dying and two others wound- ed is the result of a riot with Italians Duty to be Discontented. From the New York American. No American who wants the republic to be what it should be can free himself from discontent. It is your duty as a citizen to be discon- at Florence, seven miles from here. tented and to keep on discontented Dre of the Italians is dead, another is until she criminal tiusts are smashed and slightly wounded and two are under William Keller moved from here to Axe. Mann, Tuesday. Saturday morning brought us a frost—the first of the season. Clarence A. Houtz spent Friday night at the home of his father. Many people from town attended William Brouse's funeral Monday. Miss Bessie Rowen is visiting with Miss Margaret Coble this week. One of the heaviest rains of the season visited this section Monday morning. Mis. Thomas C. Houtz, of Selinsgrove, was in town attending Jacob Bottor{’s funeral. Charles G. Getz, came home from Sunbury Saturday to visit at the home of his parents. Mrs. S. C. Bathgate returned from Pitcairn, where she spent a few weeks with her sister. R. F. Eves went to Altoona Saturday, to look up a job, and succeeded in securing same. The schools of College township were all opened Monday morning with a fair attend. ance. Mrs. Alice Williams and daughter-in-law, Mrs. Boyd Williams, went to Philadelphia Friday. Nelson W. Williams and family returned, Monday, from Howard, where they made a sojourn of a few days. Rev. Walter K. Harnish and family re- tarned from Alexandria, where they took their summer vacation. Harrison K. Whitehill went to Hammon- sport, New York, where be will assist in gathering in the fall fruit crop. George R. Roan had the great misfortune to step on the point of a large nail, which ran deep into his foot and bas since been giv- ing him quite a good deal of pain. Class No. 3, of the United Evangelical Sun. day school, of Lemont, will bold «a Mystery tea at the home of W. E. Grove on Wednes- day evening, Sept. 11th. All are cordially invited to come and help solve the mystery. A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED" Wednesday, August 29. The 16th annual convention of the | International Leageu of Press Clubs | was held at Denver, Col. The annual Industrial Exposition at Cincinnati, Ohio, was opened by Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, who pressed a gold btuton in Music Hall Mrs. Margaret Schaeffer, of Phila- delphia, was given carbolic acid in mistake for medicine by her nurse and there is little hope for her recovery. William and Theodore Holliday, col- pred, were sentenced to nine years in the penitentiary for assault and bat. tery on a policeman at West Chester, Pa. Thursday, August 30. One man was killed and several oth- ers seriously injured in a freight wreck in the New York Central yards in New York. Mrs. Mary Harris, of Millville, N. J., ate potato salad and complained of distress before retiring, and was found dead in bed. Fred Beasley and Norman South- worth were drowned in the Hudson river at New York when their motor baot was run down by a ferryboat. While at work along the railroad four laborers were killed and another fatally injured by a Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern train near Loveland, O. Friday, August 31. Lady Campbell-Bannerman, wife of the British premier, died after a long illness at Marienbad, Bohemia. Dora Morowitz, 4 years old, fell into a tub of water at her home in Phila delphia and was drowned. George J. Gould and Judge D. Cady Herrick resigned as members of the board of directors of the Equitable Life Assurance society. The Pennsylvania railroad flyer struck a switch engine at Ebenezer, near Buffalo, N. Y., and both engineers were seriously injured. Homer 8S. Castle, Prohibition candi date for governor of Pennsylvania, was notified of his nomination at his home in Pittsburg. Saturday, September 1. Fifteen buildings were burned at Fryeburg, Me, including 12 residences, causing a loss of $80,000 Edward Rosewater, proprietor and editor of the Omaha Neb., Bee, was found dead in the newspaper building. Helen Keer, aged 6 years, fell from a second-story window at South Bend, Ind., was impaled on a picket fence and fatally injured. A B. & 0. passenger train collided with a freight at Wheeling, W. Va,, and Engineer Lee McMann and Fire- man William Moran were killed. Masked robbers, who travel in an automobile, blew open the safe in the postoffice at Highland, N. Y., and se- cured $500 in money and $800 in stamps, Monday, September 3. The Marquette Club, of Chicago, will give a banquet on October 9 in honor of Speaker Cannon. Jacob Suydam, of Flemington, N. J., was instantly killed by stepping in front of a fast-moving train. Three hundred butchers in Balti- more have gone on strike for a nine- hour day. without pay reduction. Miss Dottie Glover, of New York, saved Walter Stinson from drowning after his canoe upset on a lake at New Egypt, N. J. James C. Abernathy, managing edi- tor of the Charlotte, N. C., Observer, died at Asheville, where he had gone for his health. . Struck by lightning while at work at Troy, Ala, Newton Graves, a car- penter, and his two sons, John and » were killed. arrest, while the house in which the rioters barricaded themselves is a wreck from dynamite used by the government —national, state and local—is rescued from the laicenons bands of the pi- ratical rich and their ignoble tools, the When you hear a man or see a nDewspa- troopers to dislodge the rioters. The dead are: Private John Henry, of Philadelphia; Private Francis Zeh- ringer, of Conshohocken; unidentified Italian. Fatally injured: Private Homer C. Chambers, of Rochester, Pa. The others wounded are: Private William A. Mullen, of Harrisburg, shot through the foot; First Seargeant Jo- seph Logan, of Dubois, shot through the leg; George Felitzsky, aged 12 years, son of Steve Felitzsky, a miner, shot in the leg. The trouble began when Sergeant Logan went to Florence to search for Leopold Scarlat, who is charged with shooting his brother-in-law, Bruno Trazzone, on Friday night. Logan was in Dr. Bodenhorn's office, when Salva- tore Waltzoch, who is said to be one of the most desperate members of the Black Hand, started to fight with a countryman in front of the house where Waltzoch boards. When Logan placed Waltzoch under arrest the lat- ter invited him into the boarding house to prove his good character. |5 Logan had scarcely passed the door when one of the Italians in the house made a lunge at him with a stiletto, the weapon passing between his arm and body. Logan retreated, but be fore he got 15 feet from the building an Italian opened fire on him with a magazine shotgun. Logan returned the fire, and the two men emptied their weapons at each other. Logan got one buckshot wound in the foot, and the desperado was seen to fall back into the house, perhaps fatally | wounded. Logan, by inquiring of the | | residents, learned that he had a; | Black Hand man to deal with. He VV | then telephoned to the barracks ati ~ this place, and a detachment of five! | privates was detailed by Lieutenant | J{'OR SALE.—H. Y. Stitzer, of Belle- | Egle to go to his assistance. When ! offers oh vy "farm in | the detachment arrived Private John | Spring Twp., Centre county and a three-story | Henry immediately started for the | rick business block in Philipsburg, Pa. 51.351t- | house, but when about 20 feet from it | was shot down. Chambers and Mul | PVELLING HOUSE FOR SALE.—A len, in attempting the rescue of thelr, Bert ie A mo Bk Hamil’ companion, were both shot down be- | ton's estate and the other to S. E. Satterfield will fore they reached him. A telephone | be *old Bugler dole o call was then sent for in tor the entire 3 FE. SATTE SLD. Executor. force and 15 additional troopers were SE EATEN IED Ryu hurried to the scene. When the sec- ond detachment arrived, and while 12 | of the constabulary kept firing into the windows and front doors, six po licemen made a rush for the side door, | 51.33.11. which they battered in. Three of the officers, Zehringer, Gross and Cum- mings, dashed up the stairs, but were | confronted by three of the despera- | does, who opened fire. Zehringer fell at the first volley, but the two other men escaped. | The house was then dynamited and | get afire by the troopers, who arrested two Italians in the house before the flames gained headway. In the house was also found a dead Italian, with a bullet through his head. The house was destroyed, and with it a smaller one standing close by. While but two arrests have been made, a search is | | ARHUITIRE YOURS, UF Eon iy. demand. being made for others known to have | | ed in this great Financins aad Manufacturing escaped when dynamiting of the house | | Sit ior Circulars. 51-04-40 Pittaburg, Pa. per deploring popular discontent with ex- isting conditions, material and litical, if you will take the trouble to follow the trail of that man or newspaper you will find that it leads straight to an office of the Plunderbund. There can be no progress without discon- tent, for progress means the abolition of abuses, the advance from bad to good. Letter to A. Baum, Hellefonte, Pa. Dear Sir : There's twice as much borse in one horse—it may be a mare—as there ia in two or three others together. So with paints too. If a painter can do your job with 10 gallons Devoe for $50 ; it'll take 12, 15 or 20 of other paints ; and the cost of a job is about $5a gallon, what- ever the paint may be. There are paints adulterated thiee-quar- ters—only one quart of paint in a gallon— he's got to paint four gallons of rubbish to get one gallon of paint. The worst horse yov've got is as good as that paint, and he'll go as far. The less-gallous paint is the paint, as the most-horse horse is the horse. Yours truly F. W. DEVOE & CO., New York. —It's the ander part of » hen’s body that bas no protection. All wet soaks in and chills the hen, thus causing most ailments. New Advertisements. — R SALE— One good Schomer square piano. Call at 123 N. Allegheny St. 51-35-1t R RENT.—Ten room house, nicely located on Allegheny street. Apply to 128 N. Allegheny street. 50-351 ANTED.—A boy to take care of horses at my stable in Bellefonte. J. HARRIS HOY. i 51-35-2m TOR SALE.—A practically new brick barn and a large frame barn, It is desired to be sold and removed at once, A to JAMES R. HUGHES or F. W. CRIDER Bellefonte, Pa. XECUTOR'S NOTICE—Letters testa mentary in the estate of Sarah Frank, late of Millheim borough, deceased, having been ® I uestail persons knowing themselves {ndebted to the —_ to make Immediate pay- ment, and those having claims net the same to present them in due and legal form for settle. ment. GEO, 8. FRANK, Millheim, Pa. Gurria, Bower & Zeuny, Attys. Executor. 5135-6 A HIGH GRADE COMMERCIAL AND SHORTHAND TRAINING SCHOOL, duly ted to the undersigned, he would re- | wan begun. ——————————————— ee BELLEFONTE, FRIDAY, SEP. 21 WALTER L. MAIN’S BIG SOCIETY CIRCUS and Horse Fair Combined with the COL. CUMMIN’'S WILD WEST SHOWS Educated Wild Beasts Exhibit, Hippodrome, Menag- erie, Fire and Flame Spectacle rie — Two Only troupe of Lady Zouaves direct from the Empire Theatre, London. Great features from the famous New York City Hippodrome. Herds of Performing Elephants. Lady Bucking Horse Rider Representative Indians from 51 Different Tribes. Strange People From Every Clime The Famous Spectacle “FIGHTING THE FLAMES” General admission and Reserved seat sale (all seats have foot rests) at Parrish’'s Drug Store, 18 North Allegheny Street, at same price as sold on the show ground, commencing at 9;30 a. m., on day of exhibition; also at Ticket Wagon on show ground. Children four years of age half price. All 12 years of age and over require adult tickets. NEW NOVEL & GORGEOUS STREET PARADE at 10:30 a. m., rain or shine. } | { { { ; { | | : rr— ;....CUSTER'S MASSACRE..... ; { 51-17 GRANGE PARK, CENTRE HALL, PA, George Dale, McCalmont & Company. 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, - $11.50 cash Phosphate and Potash, per ton, - $14.00 cash Standard Bone Phosphate, composed exclusively of Animal Bone Matter and Potash, per ton, - oe $20.00 cash THiNk 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. Grange Encampment at Centre Hall, 33rd ENCAMPMENT AND EXHIBITION OF THE PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA ENCAMPMENT OPENS SEPT. 15 The largest and best fair in Central Pennsylvania by farmers and for farmers. Twenty aight acres devoted to camping an exhibition purposes, Ample tent ac- commodations for all desiring to camp. A large display of farm stock and poultry, farm implements, fruits, cereals, and every production of farm and garden. The Penn'a. State College will make a large display of the work of the College and State Experiment Station. ADMISSION FREE. LEONARD RHONE, Chairman J. 8. Dauberman, Geo. Gingerich, G. L. Goodbart. Lyon & Co. a as al od Bl i Be Be lB dM i Be Me Me NM Al SEPT. 15 TO 21 INCLUSIVE EXHIBITION OPENS MONDAY, SEPT. 17 51-31-68 ee I LYON & CO LYON & CO. A Be i dd ad dd ie le Al Al Be dB AM Me Be AL Be A A Be SM BM AM BN Ww Weare showing a big line of EARLY FALL GOODS w everasies Everything that is new and stylish in Dress Goods, Silks, Trimmings and Linings. We . are receiving new goods every day. If you want to get the newest at the right prices, look at our stock before you buy. . Special line of Children’s Dark Wash School Dresses, ages. 6 to 14. The material costs as much as you will pay for the dress. ScHooL SHOES AT THE OLD PRICES. ‘ YY YT YT UYU YY $Y YYW PUY YT YT ETT TTY TTY ITY TTY YY LYON & CO. LYON & CO. 47-12 Allegheny St., Beliefonte, Pa. rv YY TY TY TY TY TTY TET TOY YY Ye YY YY vv VY New Advertisements. ANTED—Young ladies to learn phone Bellefonte, Pa. Li salary to start, tele operating at the Bell Eachange INE SMALL FARM FOR SALE.—Located 22 Ferguaon Township. 2 miles north of ne Grove Mills and containing 45 acres, 5 acres is offered for sale at a buildin, al DAVID L. MILLER, 51-28-3m* Pine Grove Mills, Pa. RR I PY Borou * . , Inte of t! n u estate ha been Ta re), All Torory in del 30 1ai4 salute are roqiesed so make pay- ment and those having cl s to present hem without delay to Wu. C. Parreasos, Hamzizr A. McEwwaix, Jonuws H. Leer 51-30-6t State College, Pa. Executors. ARM FOR SALE:~A good farm of 217 acres, located on the public road leading to the te Coll and about five miles west of Belle- fonte, is otfered at private sale. Upon it is erected GOOD BUILDINGS and an excellent orchard; hasa well at the door and cistern at barn, with several ponds of never iting water upon the property. School and church nearby. 170 acres, all level, well cleared and the balance well timbered. Will besold at a reasonable price. Apply to the owner, upon the premises, or address him at State College, Pa. 51-14t JAMES CLARK DMINISTRATORS NOTICE—In the matter of the estate of Samuel Noll, late of In the Orphans’ ty. Letters of administration having been granted to the undersigned by the ter of Centre county upon the above estate, all persons having claims against the same will present the same duly authenticated for payment, and all persons indebted thereto, will make immediate payment to the undersigned. A. B. Miussn, Aap Pv N, imines es A. B. Mires, y ministratix, sata efonte, Pa. y Pleasant Gap, Pa. Jan OTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS’ MEET- ay aN ice of Su flehanna eat) Ratt y ugust 21st, 1 Notice EP oeby wad that a ret ht the stockholders of the Susquehanna Central way Company will be held at the principal office of said company in Ridgway, Pennsylvania, on MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th, 1906, at 9 o'clock a. m., for the pur of voting for ————— {0 adoption or rejection of the agreement of consolidation and merger between the Susque- hanna Central Railway Company and the Pitts burg, Binghamton and Eastern Railroad Com pany and the Tioga and Clinton Railroad Com- Attest: JAMES K. GARDNER Frep H., Croven, President. 51-332. Secretary. UBLIC SALE OF RESIDENCE PROPERTY. — By virtue of an order issued ont of the Orphans’ Court of Centre county, Pa., the undersigned will expose to pub- lic sale on the premises at Lement, Pa., on SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15rn, 1906, at 2:30 p. m., the well known property lately the resi dence of Mrs. Mary M. Dale, deceased, sold as the property of Virginia Dale and John M. Dale, Jr,, minor children of John M. Dale, de- ceased, The premises thus to be sold are fully described as follows : All that certain messuage or {ene ment and tract of land situate in the township of College, in the county of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to wit : Beginning ata past in the road or turn- ike leading from the village of Lemont ‘o State liege, at or near the junction of said road with the public road commonly known as the Branch , leading from the said village of Lemont to Pine Grove Mills, the sald place of beginni having been former! Jesigrated by piece of ig metal, thence along said road or turnpike ing to State College north forty-nine degrees west seventeen perches and five-tenths of a perch to a post, thence along said road or turapike north forty-five d west, crossing Spri creek, nineteen wo to a post, thence by lan of or formerly of Samne! Wasson south seventy- five degrees west, ten perches and eight-tenths of a perch to a post, thence by land of William F. Lytle and generally wang the western side of Spring creck, the next two following courses and distances, viz: south thirty-three degrees east seventeen perches and three-tenths of a perch to an elm tree, and thence south forty-seven de- grees east, twenty-five perches and five-tenths of a perch to the middle of the iron bridge crossing Spring creek on said Branch road, on the western end of said bridge, and thence efosing said bridge and Spring creek and in the said Branch road and by lands of Whitehill north forty de- east fifteerz perches to the place nivg, containing three acres and fifty-three rches, more or less; subject to the right to dam hack water on a certain fon at the porthera end of said premises, as originally excepted and reserved in deed from James Irvin and Juliann, his wife, to Robert A. Whitehill, dated September 18th, 1835, and recorded in Centre county, in Deed Book “N,"” page 64 etc., and subject also to the right to dam back the waters of Spring creek to the southern line ot said premises, as originally excepted and reserved in from John Irvin, surviving executor of the last will and testament of John Irvin, deceased, to J. Y dated d recorded in . Dale, 3rd, 1865, Centre county, Pa in Deed Book “A, No. 2" 7 ete. Pr or Sare.~Ten per cent cash on day of sale, 2334 per cent on confirmation of sale and delivery of deed, and one-third of purchase mon- ey in one year, and remaining one-third thereof in two years from such confirmation, with mter- est ble semi-annually, said deferred pay- men tobe secured by bond secured mortgage on the premises containing usual installment and in! default, insurance and sci. fa. clauses. No bid for less than $3750 accepted. THOMAS A. SHOEMAKER, Guardian of Virginia Dale and John M. Dale, Jr., minor children of John M. Dale, deceased. Braxcuarp & Braxcuarnp, Attorneys. 51-32-4¢ W. A. Ishler, Auctioneer. — rer - — VWHAT BULLOCK HAS THIS WEEK It is a rare chance. You buy as follows: 1 fall Jaather top, platform gear, cost $450.00; $00, ol $225.00 1 full leather top, regular gear, two-seated car n elegant condition, cost .00; my price - - - $125.00 1 fall leather top, regular gear, two-seated carriage, never used but once; bas two sets of wheels, one with rubber tires aod one with steel, cost $360.00; my price - $235.00 1 two-seated, second hand surrey, in first-class condition, cost $125.00; my price - $55.00 ———C) s—— . A full line of the Columbus Buggy Co's CELEBRATED VEHICLES. nema () sens The only light plants, the SUNLIGHT OMEGA, They never clog and stop. They are safe. w——— We do and work and don’é forges the. Tooation, The MoCoy & Liane Chain works, five minutes ous of Belle- fonte. Telephone connection. Butwock Swine axp Cammisce Mra. Co, L. C. BULLOCK, Jr., Mgr. of fine timber. This excellent producing farm t necessary out buildings, never- gs, all failing a igh » Saar, fruit of aay kind cultivation. For particu- lars and p call on or address i i AS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers