g i sc pe SICK MAN STABS WIFE AND SELF. Mrs. O. F.Shaw is ill with the grip. i Mes. 1. Kimport ave hones wo with | 1,418 of her husband, who lay ill, : | Mrs. Mary Cras, of 1720 Jackson (100-1. Kesler trancictud Uusinens ot Mion | yprqut, this city, was attacked with a otneatey. sek ow at tise Mia | knife. After she had falien unconscious ernon McGill is a very sick boy at the Harry | go,04¢ the bed, gashed about the Shugerts home. breast and throat, the husband crawl . i Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Corl had a house party | oq jnto the next room and cut his | baby. Monday evening. | own throat. pnd Mrs. John Dale were visitors on the | pu peng and wife are in St. Agnes’ | hospital, both in a dangerous condi- Mrs. Joel Ferree. who had been itl all winter. is | gon There is little or no hope for the some better now, ; man's recovery, the doctors say. But Next Tuesday will be election day. Get out the | gor the couple's four-year-old son, who vote and vote straight. : {saw the sttack on his mother, hus- Fred Gearhart and family are visiting friends | pap and wife would probably have over in Huntingdon county. . died in the house. He ran to a neigh- Maurice Runkle has rented the Wm. Martz farm | 3,00 house with the alarm that se- east of town, to take possession April lst, 191. ‘ cured ald. Rev. Culler, of Bradford, will fill the pulpitin According to a statement made by the new Lutheran church at State College on Sun- - gp. wife 10 the police, her husband -. | fancied that she had been neglectful Wm. R. Dale and Miss Etta McGirk visited | op yp, The detectives believe. how- friends in Altoona over Sunday, returning home | ooo. put he made the attack and the Monday. | attempt on his own life in a fit of in- T. C. Crownover, of Saulsburg, was here last | week looking his worldly possessions on the | sanity that has been developing for Branch, ' days. Philadelphia, Feb. 8.—Called to the exterminated when a kerosene lamp The stork braved the blizzard Saturday and | delivered nice little girls at Charley Louck’s and | Charley Lytle's homes. i We are very glad to say that Ross Grove, who | Aa tumble from the washer at Benore some | ! John Cras. the husband, is thirty years old. and the wife, twenty-four. Mrs. Cras sald her husband com- plained of feeling ill a few days ago and quit work. He did not stay in bed all the time, but got up late mornings | shade roller and. pointing it at his | 51195, meee HAR or 2 RAIA A ES ' i Lamp Wipes Out Family. | An entire family was practically me a Soe ee A AHO Real Estate Transfers. John G. Dauberman, et. ux. to John H. | Knarr, Jan. 25, 1910, tract of land in Pot- ter Twp.; $1. wrecking the home of An- drew Pacie, in Walls, a suburb of Pitts- burg, Pa. Pacie., who is twenty-eight years old, was lying in bed ill with Tup.: typhoid fever, while his wife was in y another room with a four-daye’ uid : ! The iamp in the mother’s voom Keller, | room burned too low and exploded, S08. 0 | aeatvestng oil end ignitiag the furnish. | ings of the room. In frantic efforts to i | rescue her child and the helpless hus- | band, Mrs. Pacie was fatally burned. in Benner | The child received the full force of | Keystone State-Savings | the explosion and will die. Pacle, un | : able to raise from his sick bed, saw | the flames approach and was not res- cued until the bed clothes had caught | fire. He cannot live. Kills Brother Playing With Gun. 1909. Norman Harper, aged five years, had | , the top of his head blown off at his | Halfmoon Twp.; $4500. home in Spring Mount, near Norris town, Pa. He and his older brother, Raymond were in the attic, playing, | when the younger hoy took down a | £ g brother. said: “I'll shoot you.” | The older boy picked up an old musket and pointed it at his brother. | noon Twp.; $4700. Jas. C. Griffin, et. ux. to Peter S. Dun- can, Oct. 9, 1906, tract of land in Half New Advertisements. RICHARD BEASTON. oe BUICK IS HERE. Second Hand Cars For Sale and Accessories. a Dl BA BB. BB. DB AA W. W. Keichline & Co. South Water St. Bellefonte. Pa. LIVERY ATTACHED. 55-1-ly 3 WY WW WW WY Ww ww } ' a b ARRANGE FOR DEMONSTRATION. ’ | } b time ago, is improving. \ Y ou don't want to miss the festival inthe. O. | and lay around the house, complaining .F. , February 19th, it is for the (of his health. She thought nothing of 1. Po Hl) Sato a) church. elt wiorTi€ | that at the time, she told the police, Mes. Barbara Hartman, of Unioh county. ts | Dut 100king back over the last few visiting her uncle, Peter Corl, at Pine Hall, and enjoying the good sleighing. Last Friday John Fortney, of Boalsburg, sled- ded a party of lady friends to our town who took dinner at the Dannley home on Main street. . J. C. Sunday has purchased the Samuel Musser farm on Tadpole at about the $5200 mark. His brother Elmer will be the farmer next season. Ross Gregory and J. C. Bumgardner, two popu- lar drovers from Shavers Creek, are circulating among friends down Pennsvalley in quest of stock. Landlord Reed Randolph, of the St. Elmo, with Master Fay and Miss Ella Livingstone, braved the keen winds on Sunday for a drive to Stone- i valley. i Mr. and Mrs. James Laird, of Saulsburg, en- joyed the good sleighing over old Tussey Satur- day and spent Sunday with their Centre county i friends. i Rev. Warder is filling the pulpit in the Lutheran | church here each evening this week. The meet- i ings are quite well attended and a deep interest is being manifested. | Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Garbrick spent last week at i the bed side of their son George, at Lancaster, | who has been ill for several weeks with pneumo- ! nia, but is now convalescing. | Tuesday evening a party of sledders landed at Frank Fishburns and indulged in a hop. Mr. and | Mrs. Samuel Elder entertained a sledding party | from the Branch the same evening. February 22nd the Ladies Aid society at State days she felt sure that he had gotten the idea that she was not attending to him as she should have done. Decoyed to Bedside. 1 He staved up in his room and Mrs. Cras was at work in the kitchen, with the little boy, John, playing near her. She heard her husband call her by | name twice. She went upstairs at | once. with the child toddling close be- hind. Cras was lying in bed, and she | went to his side. i As she bent over the man grasped | her suddenly and pulled her toward | him. Before the startled wife had time to realize her danger he struck | at her with a potato knife that he had | kept concealed under the bed clothes. The woman threw up her right hand and the blade slashed across three of | her fingers, almost severing them. The i knife had been sharpened to a razor- like keenness. Then the wife began a | desperate struggle for her life, scream- | ing as she fought. For a few seconds she warded off the attack. but the man proved the | stronger. [reeing his right hand, he drove the knife into her breast four times and gashed her throat. Then she i i 1 | rushed upstairs to see the tot breathe March 26, 1908, tract of land in Ferguson | his last. | fruits and vegetables. He pressed the trigger. There was a rank Lizzie repori and the little fellow received Ee HF gt in Yarger, both loads. which were not known {0 | Twp,; $491. be in the musket, full in the face. His | A. Foster to A. F. Markle, Feb. | 1, 1910, lot in State College; $1. The parents heard the report and | Hannah J. Royer to O. A. death was instantaneous. Twp.; $2000. pe ————— | Julia Mudrick, et. baron to Harry F. De'~ware Farmers Organize. | Crispen, Jan. 25, 1910, tract of land in Delaware farmers and producers Snow Shoe Twp.; $20. from all parts of the state held a| Wm. Showers, admr. to Sarah Show- | meeting at Dover and organized the | ers, Dec. 14, 1909, tract of land in Walk- | Delaware Produce Exchange for the er Twp.; $1000. i packing. selling and shipping of all _ Elizabeth Kline, et. baron to George W. Long, Jan. 25, 1910, tract of land in Gregg James T. Shallcross, of New Castle, ir . A presided, and Professor Wesley Webb, Darius P. Greth, et. al trustees to of Dover, was elected temporary sec- | Panga, Ry Con = 1910, tract of tary. Mr. Shallcfoss in his address seid: F.E.B “Heretofore we have had to beg the pity transportation companies with our litt We heard a man say the other morning tle offerings of less than a carload of | that the abbreviation for February—Feb. this or that product: now, with our jjomeans Free elery bud, ate fhe man aggregate of many carloads, summing | rozen in . 1t was appar- up the hundreds, we will compel them jam that he needed the kind of warmth tc beg us." t reaches from head to foot, all over | the body. We could have told him from ™ = | personal knowledge that Hood's Sarsapa- Finds “Dead” Husband. i rilla gives permanent warmth, it invigor- In a woodchopper who was at work | ates the blood and speeds it along through near her home at Wabash, Ind., Mrs, artery and vein, and really fits men and Albert Holl; recognized her husband, | Women, boys and girls, to enjoy cold | whom she had not seen sence he had | Weather and resist attacks of disease. marched away a soldier in the Civil It gives the right kind of warmth, stimu. {lates and strengthens at the same time, BUILDING MATERIAL When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On AT OLY ATL OHTA ALT LY } BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO. : 52.5-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. BTL TL TL TATA TATA Real Estate For Sale. a — a FOR SALE Twa. hice homes in a Nuch petter induce: i ments for cash. LC. BULLOCK. | 54.334f FF FOR SALE OR RENT. For further particulars apply to H. E. FREDERICKS, 54-46-2m Lock Haven, Pa. 54-47-41. ti corner of Beaver and Streets. from Lika d yy one of the most State College. 54-47-41, Ty Gon Pa. Oleomargarine. Why Pay 35 to 40 cents for butter High Grade Oleomagarine from me at 25 cents per —— R. S. BROUSE, Bush Arcade, 5445 Bellefonte, Pa. Florida ‘Tours. Florida Winter Tours VIA War forty-seven years ago. She believed he was killed in battle and sold her home and moved away. He could not find her when he return- ed from the south and became & wan- dering carpenter, Mrs. Holly married James Stull a few years after the war. For forty vears they 'ived happily together. Ten months ago he was thrown from his car and killed. Holy and his wife will now remarry. College will serve chicken and waffles in the | Tainted. Satisfied that he had done afternoon and evening for the benefit of the | his work. Cras crawled into the ad- Lutheran church. Everybody is invited. | joining room, ignoring the wide-eyed Mr. and Mrs. Edward Goss are mourning the | child that stood. frightened and GOUsient of he vesen vious 0d bubs, Edward | Drestilens, near the bed, and cut his , who died of scarlet fever Sunday after- | throat. noon and was buried on Tuesday at Braddock. | Ten minutes later Mrs. Cras recov- John Stiver has bought the john Shuey farm ered consciousness and staggered just west of Warriorsmark and will take posses- | downstairs, the child following her. At sion April Ist. On account of ill health Mr. | the foot of the stairs she fell uncon- Shuey is quitting and expects to spend nextsum- | gojous again. The boy ran to the house mer in some hospital. ‘of Mrs. Adeline Mesherher next door, | | and told her that his mother was lying “all bloody” in the hall. . — . | Mrs. Mersherher rushed into the | Kal i Hazel and Maude M. Corman, | Cras house and saw the wife bleeding | Niagara Falls, N. Y., Feb. 8.—Miss o glomte, iat the foot of the stairs. In the sit- | Beatrice R. Snyder, of Buffalo, com- Wm. M. Heaton, Bellefonte, and Lena | yr oro0m, off the hall, she caught a | mitted suicide by going over the Horst, Altoona. : | glimpse of the husbandfi sliding from | American Falls. She entered the river John H. Sheasley, Spring Mills, and | 3 Morris chair, with blood flowing | about fifty feet back from Prospect Mary A. Flory, Centre Hill. ; from a deep gash in his throat. She | Point, at the end of the railing. Wit- George W. Rhoads, and Madeline M. | yan whrieking from the house, nesses say she hesitated a moment Downing, Bellefonte. "Policemen answered the screams for | and then threw herself on the cur- James Stokes, and Erma Robert, Hawk | help. They called the patrol wagon, rent, which the next instant swept her Run. ; ‘snd husband and wife, both uncon | over the brink. On the bank she left Louis H. Crossman, North Yakama, gecious, were hurried to the hospital. |8 handbag, handkerchief and a note, and Elizabeth B. Thompson, Lemont. The woman recovered consciousness in | Wkich reads: James Moorhead, Pitcairn, and Lucy B. | fifteen minutes after she reached the | “Dear Mamma and Papa—May you Iddings, Unionville. institution and told of the attack to | both forgive men for bringing this | the special policeman. awful disgrace upon yiu in these years i ere ete of your life. Also may our heavenly | Captain Kidd's Treasure Found? | father forgive all my sins. But I have The basket ball game between Allegheny Col- | Somers Point, near Atlantic City, | always been very good, thank God. lege and State resulted in a victory for State, the N. J.. is wildly excited, because it | You will find 2 slip for the money un- score being 34 to 20, iis believed that the fabled treasure der your dresser scarf. With my heart An examination was held here on Saturday for Of Captain Kidd, of buccaneer fame, | fy of all the kindness and tender love, census enumerators. There were twelve appli- | has been iound. The excitement is no with love to all. Goodby. Lovingly, cants for the several districts to be supplied. i less because of the fact that the sup- peatrice.” The lecture on Saturday night by Col. George posed discoverers of the loot wads i Knox McCain was the last of the five lectures | away with it. Old inhabitants who . booked by him here this season. His lecture was | really credit the bellef that something MiuSage hg BOYS Fol on the “Country of Turks and the City of Con- | of value has been discovered and made ney Qrieans. Feb. 8.—Mre. Russell stantinople.” The house was packed. | away with think it is possible that goro” who is here for the carnival, the treasure trove may have been | at all precedents by scattering plate and coin buried by residents of ,;,nev to the winds. The money was the ancient seaport when the British | Buffalo Girl Commits Suicide in Dra. matic Manner. Marriage Licenses. STATE COLLEGE. — 1 Colored Girl Wins Gold Medal. i Stella E. Gibbs, a fourteen-year-old | o 1 grabbed up by waifs, who followed he a i % oo Soe war vessels showed up during the | cil "on" the way throng fo ; pr ¥ id | Revolutionary war, but the more ro- | prench quarte jam A. Kerr, of the Hoboken, N. I., ch ‘quarter. mantic choose to believe that the | board of education, for the highest per- | ; oo was really the Kidd deposit. | Mrs. Sage left her hotel for a drive. centage at the midwinter examinati i News of her identity quickly spread for oe asion to the Hoboken hirh : Witieh bud been Searched for Suing land scores of gamins pressed about school. She attained a general aver- | pas alf century along this por | tne carriage crying for gifts. age of 99 1-3 per cent in six subjects. | e coast, been Brick: | In order to rid herself of the escort She had 152 competitors. ! e uncovered cave had been brick- | yy; gage used all the change she : led up with -walls over two feet In | sould find. even mulcting the coach. * Blind Ten Years; Sees Again. | thickness, which show the greatest p,, and the money was thrown to After being biind for ten years, Mrs. | €3T® In construction. The top 18 €OV. | ype youngsters. Anna T. Paschall, an aged Quakeress, ered with ciabs of red and stone of a ' of Concord. near Chester, Pa., can now | quality unknown in this locality and . ! believed to have been brought here | oy Struracts, Suan were a. along with the supposed treasure bur- are better off in our present state of specialist, caused her blindness | led by Captain Kidd or others who | civilization in good corsets than with- Now that she has emerged from a | sought its concealment. The bricks \, em» is the opinion of Dr. R. W decade's stay in the land of darkness, 27€ Of a style similar to those known | yo ot ‘of the Harvard medical school, Mrs. Paschall declares that she feels 30 have been ent Bere from Fe given in his lecture before the school. as it she had been born again, and | \°Pd during Colonial days, and Both {up's ynat certain physicians could S | stone and brick are so old that they that she feels thirty years younger. crumble to blows of picks now being jones - Cb MY Cig tof Doctor Dies In Sickroom. used to discover the real extent of the | ty to wear than in condemning Suddenly transformed from patient ' C8Ve. all corsets.” to attending physician, Albert Carroll | } | Wade Ellis has been known as one lea from his sick bed | Joapen from Penn iy ii | of the most active and energetic of John L. Sullivan Marries. ington physician, clubman and so- | “trust busters.” He made a pretty a, Ye an clety man. who was stricken with | Wide reputation along this line WHR | yy of the world, was married here heart failure while attend ' he was attorney general of Ohio. and Naught Mr. Carroll could do 28 aw was taken into the government ser- | io Hiss Katherine Hartnett, of Sharon. * » t Sullivan's age and is re- proved effective, and Dr. Compton | Vice less than two years ago because | o.oo, A3'S Age oat quickly expired. of his proficiency as an enemy of big Lin Bhaton. considerab estate ————— | corporations. i Aeronaut’'s Odd Suleide. i With his head thrust into .! velope of a balloon into which rnin i Steel Company Building Burns. After having tramped In poverty of illuminating gas was pouring, C. A. | Chester, Pa, Feb. 8. — The main throughout the country for nearly a ‘Farrar, an aeronaut, thirty years old, | building of the Delaware River Steel dozen years, James J. Corbett was was found dead on the roof of the | company, formerly the Tidewater Steel declared heir to $250,000 in Boston. house where he lodged in San Fran. | company, was burned. The loss is es. Judge George decided that Corbett elsco. It is thought 11 health caused : timated xt $100,000. The fire started Was the miseing brother and heir of him to commit suicide. , 1m the dynamo room. William J. Corbett, a junk dealer, Physician Favors Corsets. Cambridge, Mass, Feb. 8.—“Women Tramp inherits $250.000. {and all its benefits are lasting. | may be a suggestion in this for you. i Legal \ Notices. | OUSEFORREN T.—Beaver and Hoy Row. | $9.00 per month. Inqure J. HARRIS HOY. 56-6-3t. Bush house. | ! OT IC E.~The annual meeting of the stock- : holders of the Bellefonte Lumber Compa- Lavi eal ll bo hid af the office of the Comba- ny in onte, » On y, Februa | 1910, at ten o'clock a. m., for the election of direc- ! tors for the ensuing year and to transact such oth- ! er business as may properly come before such i . D. BUCK. | 55-6-3t Secretary. ‘The first and final account ceiver of Yeager Manufacturing Co. insolvent estate of Clyde W. . The final account of R. T. Conley, guardian of Hannah J. Fleck. January 26, 1910. A. B, KIMPORT, Prothonotary. EGAL NOTICE.,—Notice is hereby given hat the joi ichard Sheehe tl nt of R ohn Davis, for transfer of tavern license, the South Jpard of Borough « Bellefonte, was this day filed in the office of the Clerk of Quarter Court of county, one_for the transfer of tavern to Richard Sheehe NOT TO SATISFY MORTGAGE. In the petition for the of a certain | In the Court of Com- Pleas of mortgage, mon Centre Ran tok hr | FE Form, T Sh Bovey sal ment in the above Od OREN: to any and all NOTICE is here that has En i i ogc tre county, under the Act of Assembly such case, to show cause why satisfy aay ou, should 1812, EERIE iki LECTION NO'TICE~Notice 8 the School District of be submitted to the election PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD February 22, and March 8, 1910. ROUND $49.60 TRIP FROM BELLEFONTE Tickets for February Tours good for two weeks; for March Tour good until May 31. Special Pullman Trains from New York. For particulars cousult Ticket Agents, or J. R. WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD Pass. Traffic Manager. Gen. Pass. Agent, 55-1-7t. Philadelphia. - —————— The account of James W. Swabb, Receiver of | | Jas, K. BARNHART, Secretary. | | The First National Bank. Open a Bank Account. Every man and every woman who han- dles money, should have a bank account subject to check. Write us or call to see us and let us open one for you. We have the organization, the capital and the surplus to take care of your busi- ness intelligently, carefully and correctly. Why not use this strong bank in your business? The First National Bank, : 54-49-1y. BELLEFONTE, PA. Lime and Crushed Limestone. You Farmers and Agriculturists: Your land must have Lime if you want to raise paying crops. Use Hydrated Lime (H-O), through your drill or broadcast when you seed, for quick results, or use ordinary lime, fresh forkings, or lime for general use. But be Sure to Use Lime Lime for Chemical and Building Purposes. Limestone crushed to any size. Fine Limestone for Walks, etc. All sizes of Limestone. Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forge and Union Furnace. PROMPT SHIPMENTS. ALL RAILROAD CONNECTIONS. Write for information to American Lime & Stone Company, Office: TYRONE, PA. 55-4-1y. The largest lime manufacturers in Pa.