and several of the serious character. That live merchant, O. T. Corman, left town on Friday last for Millheim with a load of fresh fish. | Before his return he disposed of over three hun- dred pounds,and seven gallons of oysters—a good days business that. Miss Loda Rishel was quite unfortunate last i : g : ; t i tire new and full line of spring styles. Her dis- play of hats and hat trimmings on Easter, will be superior to anything ever brought to Spring Mills. Mrs. Wolf's taste in selections is well known to be exquisite, and being the only mil- | liner in town she does a large business, Marriage Li Licenses. Lewis Fetzer and Rosanna B. McClin-' cy, of Yarnell. D. Quiggle, of Castanea, Pa. and | ie C. Lingle, of Penn township. | Lee Roy Rodger and Esther R. Hamil- | ton, of Runville. Emanuel E. Tressler and Clara W. Mc- Cline, of Nittany. Wm. S. Bigelow, Jr., of Philipsburg,and Minnie Weley, of Altoona. Real Estate Transfers. Jennie B. Cross to Jemina B. Cross, Feb. 11, 1910, tract of land in Philips- burg; $1800. Samuel Cross et ux to Jennie B. Cross, Jan. 25, 1910, tract of land in Philipsburg; $1800. John C. Eaton et ux to Geo. W. Ea- ton, Feb, 15, 1910, tract of land in Lib- erty Twp.; $1. John I. Thompson et ux to Martin L. Wilson, Feb. 10, 1910, tract of land in Bellefonte; $100. W. I. Harter admr. to P. T. Me- clintic et al, Oct. 4, 1909, tract of land in Liberty Twp.; $710. H. C. Rothroch et al to Geo. Beezer, Nov. 15, 1909, tract of land in Ben- ner twp.; $3500. W. LIL Harter admr. to Alexander Masden, Oct. 4, 1909, tract of land in Liberty Twp.; $720. W. L Harter admr. to Wilber Gun- sallus, Oct. 4, 1909, tract of land in Liberty Twp.; $400. Union Trust Co. of Pittsburg, to Geo. Beezer, Jan, 20, 1910, tract of land in Benner Twp.; $1. W. LIL Harter admr. to P. T. Mec- Clintic et al, Oct. 4, 1909, tract of land in Liberty Twp.; $710. Sarah Ingram et bar to Jesse U. Ir- win, Feb. 18, 1910, tract of land in Union Twp.; $200. John lL.ong et ux to Geo. B. McC. Stover, Dec. 15, 1898, tract of land in Howard Twp.; $600. E. B. Henderson to Bernard Schnei- der, Feb, 19, 1910, tract of land in Burnside Twp.; $1. Ernest C. Culver to Catherine Cul- ver, Feb. 15, 1910, tract of land in Burnside Twp.; $98.90. Jane E. Coburn to F. P. Bower, June » 1809, tract of land in Haines Twp.; Mary C. Kunes to Frank C. Kunes, Feb. 19, 1910, tract of land in Liberty Twp.; $500. M. Alexander, Aug. 14, 1909, tract of “acts,” too, were of quite a land in State College; $850. Smith, Jan. 29, 1910, tract of land in Nathan M. Bitner to Charles P. Liberty Twp.; $1100. Mervin 8. Betz et ux to Robert P. Confer et al, Feb. 11, 1910, tract of land in Marion Twp.; $300. Walter C. Stephens admr to John Bergin, 10, 1910, tract of land in Rush Twp.; $300. ; et al to Conrad Kray- er, Jan. 29, 1910, tract of land in Cur- tin Twp.; $200. Peter B. Jordon et ux to May Wen- rich, Dec. 30, 1902, tract of land in tunes et al to Elizabeth E. Wykoff, March 13, 1909, tract of land in Twp.; $180, Ellis L. Orvis et al, exrs. to Moshan- non Coal Co. March 12, 1907, tract of land in Rush Twp.; $1. Jennie K. Reifsnyder et al to F. P. Bower, Feb, 4, 1909, tract of land in Haines .: $20. J. M. Gilliland to John Wilkenson, Sepe. 2, a tract of land in Potter W. F. Smith et ux to Anna M. San- ky, Dec. 18, 1909, tract of land in Penn Twp.; $1. i CENERAL STRIKE CERTAIN. Philadelphia, March 3.—The direc- tors of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit | company will throw their company in to the hands of receivers to smash does not believe that the results of arbitration could possibly be perma- nent. He believes that the company would have to make the same fight all over again with a set of men who have no respect for agreements, Hope of Intervention Remote. The hope of intervention seems 80 remote that employers of labor are preparing to make the best of thines when troubie comes to town on Sat- urday. Many plants expect to shut up absolutely. Others expect they wiil be able to run on half time. It looks as if the theaters will be dark. Managers were notified by representa: tives of the Theater Mechanics’ asso- ciation that a walkout was coming. Of course there are countless factories that are not at the mercy of unions, but even these expect desertions. The walking delegates of the unions have been busy proselyiing all week. The union officials insist that their mis- sionary work has been successful and that they have put thousands of for- mer non-union men on their lists. Just how many men will quit work on Saturday is all guess work. John J. Murphy, president of the Central Labor union, boasts that he can crack the whin over 150.000 workme:, Few thelr efforts were of no avail.” “We have urged upon the company the disastrous effects which have sc sompanied the strike of the carmen thus far,” sald one of the merchants. “We have tried to impress the direc- tors of the company with the loss of life and damage to property that has resulted We have aiso tried to point out to them the possible consequences of a general strike upon the entire city in the event that this strike be comes an actuality. But all our talk, all our arguments, have not shaken the directors. We have found it im- possible to move them, and conse- quently have had to give up. I fear the outcome of their action.” ~The union labor people made thelr last plan for the strike. After a meet- ing of the delegates of the Central Labor union it was announced that the strike would begin the instant the clock quit striking twelve next Friday night, so that the men wouldn't have to show up for work at all on Satur- day. There was not the slightest sign of disorder Wednesday, and the company managed to put about 1000 cars in ser- | vice during the busy hours. i Royal Flush Killed Him. With eighteen inches of unkeapt hair and # beard almost hiding his leathern features. Carl Klane, 2 Rus - sian, fifty years old. was found in a cave near Glenwood Bridge and lodg ed in the police station at Pittsburg, Pa. Klane declares that he made his escape from a Siberian exile colony twenty-two years ago. and hoasts that fn five years he has not washed his face. Shoots Mother as Burglar. News has been received at Whar ton. Tex., from Lane City that F, F. Kemper and his brother had shot and killed Mrs. F. F. Kemper and seri. ously wounded their mother, Mrs. J. I. Kemper. The women were mistaken for bur glars as they were entering the rear door and were fired upon with shot guns. Gets Six Years For Selling Oleo. Willlam Broadwell, charged with violating the law regulating the sale of oleomargarine, was sentenced to six years In the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan., and fined $15.000 by Judge Kenesaw M. Landis in the United States district court at Chi- the carmen’s union. Arbitration has : _ | save Mr. Murphy believe that su many R thiown asiic and the comjany | men will strike. A conservative esti stands ready to fight the whole city. i mate puts the number at 75.000, Mer On the other hand, the 124 unions | * ! chants whose business has suffered have pledged themselves to strike In| oo poping themselves: “If 5000 idle sympathy with the carmen next Sat-| =~ oo bin > ! g about a series of urday and are massing their forces for | Lo. spat cost half a dczan lives, in. a battle which will make or break jured 200 i people and made Philadel labor unionism in this city. Union | phia shameful before the country, men that have been on the most’ what condition of things is to be ex- friendly terms with their employers | pected if 76,000 men od a idly notified the employers that, although |... the streets. all animated by re- they were sorry, they would have to J quit work when the strike gong i the Rapid Transit sounds. The very success of the company in! This is the situation after days of | seinstatin i g service—whicis it has act effort on the part of influential mer | ,.;y gone to a large degree—is ex- | chants’ and citizens’ associations to Ti bring about peace. Their failure is pacted 15 be 1 J tant when ‘the gen: due to the remarkable implacability of | The business men have come to the | one man, George H. Earle, president conclusion that it is useless to appeal | of the Real Estate Trust company and | oo no Rapid Transit directors. Their one of the city’s three representatives | ....,, y,00 jg that councils may In on the board of directors of the Rapld | g,.,.0 the company or that McNichol, | Transit company. Several times, When | gy... ang Penrose will be able to! the majority of the directors SWWng | «epiny yp something.” ! toward arbitration. Mr. Earle stiffened | their backbones. At present the direc. Efforts of Merchants Fail. { ward the end of the game and when ! built and the country district scoured’ A royal flush which Frank Con-| cago. stentino, a resident of Carbondale, ! Pa., drew in a poker game, made the | Old “Forty-Niner” Dies. nian so excited that soon after go-| Colonel John Dietrich. one of t' ing to bed he died suddenly from what pest known citizens of Plainfield. N. the physicians describe as over-exer-| J and one of the “Forty-niners,” died tion of the heart. The flush came to-| gt his home from the infirmities due to old age. He was a personal friend | Hasn't Washed Face In Five Years. — a Notices. Interest not to exceed 6 per cent. and to pay five vears. BOX 168 PoRT. Ager ping DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE: — This farm is one of the most desirable properties in the valley. J. M. EWING, 5447-1. Newport, Perry Co., Pa. Whole Town Raising Hogs. | With hogs selling at $10 a hundred | weight, Meyersdale, Pa., has gone intc | the pork raising business. A meeting | 55-44 of the town council repealed an ordi’ nance prohibiting the raising or keep | ing of hogs within the borough limits, More than a thousand sites were 1 A Ht i, Tomei RICHARD BEASTON, Py Legal Notices. DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. ~Let tors are unanimous Mr. Earle's influence has been no where more manifest than upon the Hon. John E. Reyburn, mayor of the city. The mayor vacillated in the winds of public opinion like a shuttle cock until Earle took him firmly in hand. Since that day when Earle stood out single-handed against peace and overawed a whole board of directors Reyburn has been of all the lot the most virulently opposed to arbitration. There has been a good deal of curi osity as to why Mr. Earle set himself so stubbornly against all propositions It seemed to be the theory of the! peace delegations that Earle, as a representative of the public, would | feel bound to recognize the widespread demand for arbitration from the pub. fie, but from the announcements made by Earle himself. as well as the com- pany, arguments for peace had no ef fect. After Samuel D. Lit and Ga- briel Blum, as representatives of the merchants’ association. had a lone conference with Earle and Vice Presi dent Clarence Wol!. the following an- nouncement was made: “The merchants used their best eo” Williams IL. Foster et al to to bring the company and the men to- gether. Mr. Earle’s own explanation of his atitude is set forth briefly. He forts with both sides to have the strike settled, but inasmuch as net wy side would relent Jrom its position for half-grown pigs. Meanwhile the] representative of the state health de partment has taken the matter up and threatens to enforce the anti-hog ord! ! nance despite the action of councils. | Meyersdale, a mountain town of 6000 inhabitants, is in Somerset county, ! famous for its buckwheat cakes and: sausage. i a—————— Lightning Roasts Chickens. The barn and tool house on the | farm of Smith Applegate, in South | Burlington, N. J., were struck by lightning. They were both burned, but two buildings nearby were saved. One hundred chickens were roasted in the flames. AGGREGATE STATEMENT OF THE TRIENNIAL ASSESSMENT OF CENTRE COUNTY PENN- SYLVANIA, AS MADE BY THE ASSESSORS FOR THE YEAR 1910. DISTRICTS. my 321322? | Yhussday Apt) I- Sisuiver am Spring towmships. at Com- * Office. Tuesday, April 12—Milesburg Attest: E. J. WILLIAMS, In compliance with an Act of Assembly regulating Triennial . 12—Mi and Boggs town- a A Le Boner Coy and Shoe Bunsugh, Civ Shoe sallus’ Ee 4—Philipsburg and South Philipsburg Todi and Rush township. in Public building NOTICE.—No exonorations will be allowed on State Tax after theappeal day of the respective districts. A CS Per es Wo Clerk. * Office, Feb. 26th, 1910. i Friday. Aprii 15.—~Worth and Taylor townships, at Hotel %t HC. Woodring, in Port Matilda. Tuesday, April 19.—Unionville Union hy; Aull )o.Unignuile boroughs, Notion 2d Ii Wednesday. April 20.—Miles township, at hotel Rebers burg. Priday 4 H Thursday, April 21. —Millheim Haines day. Auth 21_-Millhoisn borough anes and Petin Friday, April 22, ~Contee Hall Potter and Gregg TO ee a Lae ad For Unseated Lands Appeais will be held at the Commissioners’ Office for the several districts as follows: The rate of millage will be 5 mills. JACOB WOODRING, H. E, ZIMMERMAN 55.9-3t. JOHN L. DUNLAP, | Assessments and constituting a Board of Revision, the County Commissioners of Centre county publish the above statement and hereby give notice that the following days have been fixed when they will sit as a Board of Revision at the following places. Jdnesday, 6—Bellefonte Borough, at Commission Wednesday 27.—Pation and Halfmoon townships, Cednerl Gore 0. BF Jan, Stormstown. nahi and Howard bo Curtin and Liberty township. 20—~Walker and Marion townships, at Pub- ublersburg. Tuesday May 3-Ferguson township, at hotel, Pine ars de A Set Apt TR Pen od + a CER LE We a S00, Br Bal, Jo. Tr Wh To revise and equalize the Assessments of the severs] Districts upon said days as above noted, as required by Act of Assembly. will be held in the Com- Wishing to be heard at ters of adi on the estate of J. rob i decoued. late of Oe e themselves Ed hy to ott 40 Des to make pay- ment and t the same to present them duly aut for settlement. ANNIE IL M . LETITIA L J . HARRY KELLER, Atty. Administratrixes’ Automobiles. 4 THE NEW } { BUICK ii { | IS HERE. Ce i f : ARRANGE FOR DEMONSTRATION. : 4 35 to 40 cents for butter when you can buy .... in there was a good sized pot, and Con of Abraham Lincoln, Stephen A. Doug- is a corner property and is RL stantino. became so excited that he| Jag and General Grant. from entrance of he. coll campus could hardly pile up his chips. He] ong oi tae most went to bed soon afterward and was — . J. M. EWING, . found dead. He died before he had. New Advertisements. 54-4741. Newport, Perry Co., Pa. | been able to take off his clothes. His — es . me, friends say that when the game broke eomargari np they noticed that he was excessive H°%w FOR RENT jmBeavet and Hoy Row. | ol ne i ly nervous and greatly excited. i A HOY. fi ge High Grade Oleomagarine Bush Arcade, from me at 25 cents per n— R. S. BROUSE, 54-45 Bellefonte, Pa. eR Lumber. Te VAY AV AIT BUILDING MATERIAL When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On LUMBER. MILL WORK, ROOFING, SHINGLES AND GLASS. * is he ol This is the place w Xe close : Brices open one with this old, conservatively managed bank. 5449-1y Seated Lands | Unseaed Lands ins at cows ccup For State Tax l boss Second Cia Ci Sie matefiafs get the orders of ail who : | AN ESTIMATE? z z z | 2 5 ZZ > 2.2 2 > >. = f { z z W. W. Keichli & Co | | 8 | 3 | 2 z § 5 [. . Aeichniine . ¥ | : é | . : g : | i i % i Z : i | : F BER South Water St. Bellefonte. Pa. | BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO: 7 | B.S 2 ia i . le : gx : z 2 ¥ x 2 LIVERY ATTACHED. dl ! FRLRRER HF rope Bi fef PE 06] SE ATI J bela ii | i 1} i EB Fast | th { BiL # ————————————————————————————————————— 113 | 12 ¥ | Gient |] > Fl The First National Bank. bf 4 : Fi 4d bape bicaingiiionis } gy bein Em -ar mm Lif id fod = fog] | 5 ] 149 FS 3 elle) 5 Bre rE EET IE CIE The First | 2 * 2 2 3 3 Ly iff 2i 21; | National Bank ! ui i 1 5705) WIS, 6 : PifiiiiEi=m2f; @ Naluon Er 5 ol BH we 0 se elu 4 1 4 Bellefonte, Pa. 1 iol - obit a a 2 BA po “i 15 i { : : & an MoE SE BREamg WR mI Capital and Surplus $240,000. | Pe » Ja all ss 21 amo 51 ag 0 1 4 = 19673 mis) 86 oll jor ey 1s | 50 3500, 70 12 \ : ir ! 847 ml Be HE 0 (3 fe S00 in : { CHARLES M. McCURDY, President. 4 514 55] 34 | seb Io a 22000 179 10 ’ 4 6 me 176 2 lo ue $ ow me fw 1 : GEO. F. HARRIS, Vice President. 1] Bol =n id 5 Bs a | U0 2 JAMES K. BARNHART, Cashier. { a2 04 B17 12! 60R| 46 18 2491 21 8 oss 1 : a me 1215 187 24 8 16. 8 | o| 9| 13 4 DIRECTORS: 4 oy ny sie 367) Nam Tes 16 Lo Ham, 132 { CHAs. M. McCurbY, W. FRED REYNOLDS, ; Cm nL a a8 LE , 1k - n Geo. F. HARRIS, Geo. M. GAMBLE, 4 = 198445 Ae = |) ° ws Yu 3 4 Ww. P. HUMES, MARTIN FAUBLE, y \ i { YR | S. LINN, | 8 el = 1 17015 poo 12 HENRY 4 = 2 | FEE Erm: BD E2 = a 12197 153 359 Pa 15 10390, 51 10 j 1 $ b mm wer se 16 "si ie 3386. # ms 8 2925 7 If you do not Have a Bank Account, use | 305481] $508248 3274 $3500929/ 1083 $3867, OTT $1362 188500082 60 $4510] 8290485 82901300 3411 28 ir 1 a ar — Tr —— —m—— ) Lime and Crushed Limestone. eee You Farmers and Agriculturists: Your land must have Lime if you want to raise paying crops. PROMPT SHIPMENTS. Write for information to Office: TYRONE, PA. f county Commissioners. Use Hydrated Lime (H-0), 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. ALL RAILROAD CONNECTIONS. American Lime & Stone Company, 554-1. The largest lime manufacturers in Pa. Sar
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers