~ - - ete —— Col. Roosevelt Shot yor to his associates and the next | lyn he get games. wih charmios ir With the Churches of the New Advertisements. Legal Notice. moment the throng was making way | of life at the girls’ colleges. But the Companion | . : . | does not surrender these readers when they have | Coun for his machine and the automobile | A xn ty Nes: o tn the was whirling toward the Auditorium. } will welcome the = i h A page for little children and the Notes of Interest to election of directors for the ensuing year ter of the Assigned cstate of Russel C. Danger Mark Will Not he Pass- The crowd that struggled about the | iy doctor's article. Fathers will find the im- | go : Shans People yl and for the transaction of such other busineas as Pearce. of State College. Pa, for the benefit_of | assailant in front of Colonel Ro08e- ' portant news of the day as it is, and not as it is Denominations in Parts o Pi rusted ome if in the ed by the Court of Common ¥ a company borough Pleas of Centre coun- ed Until Friday. velt’s hotel after he had left for the | rumored tobe. The entire household will appre- the County. | of State College, Friday, October 25th, at 10a. m. | ty. Pa to distribute the funds in the hands of 4 hall took his departure to mean that ' ciate the sketches which touch gently on common | — a MILTON S. MCDOWELL, J nN Krumrine, assignee of Russell C. Pearce, a iat | 57.39-3t Secretary. ate College, Pa., an insolvent, to and he had been uninjured and the crowd Jotiles S¢ varicutuns Seotikisies. In Shon. Joe | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY. 4 the creditors it entitled Ao fecejvo ¢ the same ace cheered. But when he had reached the | less than four cents a week the Companion brings | Service 10:45 a. m. Wednes- ing 10 law, wi a 10 the Juties ns Auditorium and made his way amid | into the home clean entertainment, pure inspira- | day 8 p. m., 93 E. High street. Millinery. Pofatment h 8 offices kaat 18 W ih SHzst, EXPECT SPEEDY RECOVERY great cheering to the front of the plat. | 0% fine ideals, increase of knowledge. =~. | — | | === | Thursday. November 7th. 1912. s “lem clock n . form those close to him could see a y coments | _ Rally Day services will be held in St. » at which place oth- g found in the Companion’s Announcement for 1913, | John's Reformed church Sunday school 11° : A ea Se hereafter de- Millinery Opening !|&= streak of red on his white waistcoat. | wpich will be sent upon request—with samples of | next Sunday morning at 9:45. You are t from coming in on said fund. “An attempt has just been made 10 the paper, to those not familiar with it. | cordially invi W. HARRISON WALKER, Colonel's Wife Spends Nearly All of L..\" oii the colonel to an au-| Every new subscriber for 1913 will receive free | y Suvited 30 be Present. Auditor. Her Time at Husband's Bedside and dience that had stifled its first cheers all the issues for the remaining weeks of 1912; a | —For high class Job Work come to | Ba isi ‘ and now listened in absolute silence. | so, free, The Companion Window Transparency the Wa 15008 | on | TCHMAN Office. is Visite “I am carrving the bullet in my body | and calendar for 1913, in rich, translucent colors | _ 5741-3 BLIC SALE OF VALUABLE BRICK Mrs. John T. Noll, of Pleasant STOC issued out . | —the most beautiful of all Companion souvenirs. — sap, has just returned from a | Colonel Roosevelt, his family with now, and so I will have to cut m¥ | yup vouTH'S COMPANION, 144 Berkeley St., _ N€W Advertisements. | trip to philadelphia with a com. | Hoe ere of ohn of J.C. Mover. him, and satisfied as to his condition, speech short. | Boston, Mass. | Sm TI mr === | plete line of Ladies’, Misses’ and iate of Beilefonte borough, deceased, will sell at rests at greater ease in the Mercy The manuscript of his speech hud | ———— OTICE: | Children’s Public sale, 2 he ulice of N.S. Runkle, at No, hospital in Chicago than at any time doubtless done much to save his life. Sale Register. i | on ” . ry since the hand of John Schrank was' When he had come upon the platform | , To the Tax Collectors and all Tax Payers of Cen- | MILLINERY | SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9th, 1912, lifted against his life in Milwaukee. at the Auditorium and drew the man- TYESDAY, Novis lah N Koch will sell | Pn Sout NO ie and -—am | ’ | at i o'clock pm, al the e Hght title and interest 3 z i C y and a full me of farm im- ou are { i sa .C. . , in a The first X-ray plate which deluitoly Joust from Hie Jockos Surine Je first | plements. harness. eic, at bis residence one. | that unless all State taxes for the year 1912 are | 3 wisic.to cxtentuan.igvim following shares of Bickford Fire Brick company Colonel Roosevelt's few words, the torn sheets of paper, mile northwest o rook station. ! | or of your district im | and wishes to extend an invita- st : iy ie ie: Fa The bullet | showing many stains of biood, Showed | ses a as EE of ie | tion to the public to come and in- oe Sicate No. 136, dated September Sth, 138, is shown partly imbedded in the frac- also that the bullet had gone through , New Advertisemens. | Commissioners oa tothe State Treasurer on or be | pect her fide liste of goods before : Septificate No. 190, dated September th, 1908, . rs enna 8 s s i ving clsewhere. tire in the fourth rib about four inches the manuscript. | Fm — ==== | Section 17 of the Act of General Ae of | ying | "Certificate No. 207. dated October 13th, 1908, from the sternum “You see,” cried the colonel, holding | Jute). 188. P.1. 326, the Auditor, General will | | forlo, shares. 200: datea: Osiober 13h: $008, * i r | amoun : : ate No. 3 . The bullet is much flattened and’ up the manuscript so that his audience EN ARANTED Dy oS TAND- due from Sich person, Contum of t 2 | Prices to Suit All Purses. | for 10 shares. spread out of shape. It is crushed into could see the bullet's hole through the PANY. BURNHAM, PENNA.— | COMMISSIONERS OF CENTRE COUNTY. of the ax valie of One Hundred Dollavs (3100.00) ib. Several sheets of paper, “it takes more than | Men and boys over eighteen years of | 57-41-2t 57-40-4t. Per share. rs > common stot: 19 the upper edge of the rib. pi ! age for Boring Mill a not subject to further calls and assessments. Cer- small splinters of bone project near that to kill a bull moose. | em. Chippers and helpers in Iron Found. | mm I —— | tificates Nos. 188 and 190 are held by D. M. Clem, let. He attempted to go on with his ry and laborers. Apply personally or by Sun, of Pittshy reh.} 1.30 Soflatera} Sfch ne the bulle letter. 57-41-2t The First National Bank. ERuxcales 08. ae y NeW The radiograph shows an extraordi- Speech then, but first he digressed to | as collateral security. BPR oonmon ees nary spread and arch to the uninjured ribs, indicating the unusual size of the colonel’s lungs and development of his chest. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., after a talk with his father and a consultation with the physician, expressed the feel- ings of those about the ex-president. “It will be four or five days,” said he, “before we can breathe easily.” The fact that a rib was fractured, which was not disclosed before, has added to the general feeling of uncer- tainty about the colonel's condition. Not before Friday, if all goes well, ! will the physicians be prepared to say that their patient is out of danger. The intervening peried will be required to determine whether blood poisoning or other complications are to be feared. The following bulletin, in which Colonel Roosevelt's condition was found satisfactory, was issued by his physicians: “His temperature, 99; highest pulse, 90; highest respiration, 22; blood | count, 90000. Seventy-seven per cent neutrophiles, 10 per cent more than before. less distress in moving, less distress in breathing. General condi tion very satisfactory. “DR. J. B. MURPHY, “DR. A. D. BEVAN, “DR. SCULLY L. TERRELL.” After a day of ceaseless vigil the colonel's physicians could say no more than that his conditicn was virtually! unchanged. Indications, they said, fa- vored the speedy recovery of the ex-| president. Colonel Roosevelt was cheered by the appearance of Mrs. Roosevelt, who arrived from New York and remained with him constantly. He felt no pain, he said, and moved abotu at will on his bed, reading or dictating telegrams or talking with members of his family. The impression grew that Colonel Roosevelt would be able to do little or nothing more in the campaign. Al- though he expressed the hope of leav- ing for Oyster Bay on Sunday, it is probable that he will be compelled to! remain in the hospital for at least a week longer, and that after his ar- rival at home he will not be permitted . to plunge into the campaign again. | It is Colonel Roosevelt's desire to. make at least one more speech before election day, and that in his own state | of New York. if he can do nothing else, he hopes to speak in Madison Square Garden. i As soon as Mrs. Roosevelt reached | the hospital she took charge of affairs. | She was accompanied by Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. Mrs. Nicholas Long-| worth and Miss Ethel Roosevelt. Later | Congressman i.ongworth arrived. Mrs. Roosevelt installed herself in a room | adjoining that of her husband and dur- | ing the day seldom left his bedside. Mrs. Roosevelt's first move was to decree that the colonel must see no visitors except the members of his family. Once or twice during the day she made exceptions, but otherwise she adhered firmly to her resolution. The colonel was “feeling fine” and ready to receive visitors, but Mrs. Roosevelt gave him no opportunity to pass upon her ruling, for she made it on her own authority and saw to it that it was enforced. She received the cards and messages for her husband and sent back her replies, with the result that the colonel himself did not know who wished to see him. Theodore Roosevelt was shot in Mil- waukee, Wis., as he was leaving his hotel for the Auditorium, where he was to deliver his speech of the even. ing. His assailant gave his name as John Schrank, and his address as 370 East Tenth street, New York. Before Schrank could fire a second time, Albert Martin, stenographer with the Roosevelt party, and Henry F. Cochems, former football player at Wisconsin university, grabbed Schrank, Colonel Roosevelt stood beside the au- tomobile which he had been about to enter when shot and directed the po- licemen who were relieving Martin and Cochems from their struggles with Schrank. Mr. Roosevelt insisted ‘on proceeding to the hall and going through with at least a part of his i The colonel was at first supposed to anve escaped uninjured, for a moment nfter Schrank had wedged through the erowd and fired at him Mr. Roosevelt smiled as if to reassure the people in turmoil that surged about him. He suddenly, however, put his hand under his coat and was seen to wince for an instant. Then he moved toward the assure hie audience that his wound | was not serious. “Give all assurances to Mrs. Roosevelt,” he called out, and he told friends that after he had de- livered at least a part of his talk he would submit to a thorough examina- tion and have the bullet extracted. His , surgeons in the meantime had consent- ed to permit Mr. Roosevelt to proceed with his talk. Schrank after shooting Colonei Roosevelt had a narrow escape from being lynched by the mob, who tried to drag him away from the police. As | soon as the police, however, had got' him clear of the mob that swirled | about him they rushed Schrank to po- | lice headquarlers. The police who were searching him first came across the memorandum of the Roosevelt tour and other notes which showed that Schrank had been following the colonel’s every move for some time. Next they drew from his pocket a proclamation which declared that Roosevelt or any other man “seeking a third term as president” should be shot. SPRING MILLS. Merchant J. H. Rishel was on the sick list for a few days last week. Miss Lydia Ebert, of Bellefonte, was a guest of Mise Blanche Dunlap on Sunday last. After an absence of a week on a business trip, T. M. Gramley returned home cn Friday last. Miss Mabel Brown left on Saturday last on a ten days visit to Harrisburg and Elizabethville, The stork made a visit to the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Snyder, on Tuesday last, and leftasa boarder a nine pound Wilson boy. H. F. Rossman, after an absence of a week in Philadelphia, filling up his fall and winter stock, returned home on Saturday last, Potatoes were selling here last week for 35 cents per bushel, they are so plentiful. This week the shippers will pay only 30 cents, and even at that price they say they can buy more than they want. Stolen or strayed away from U, A. Moyer last week, a valuable black and white hunting dos, (female) answers to name of “Dawn.” The pro- | « fessor prizes the animal so highly that he will pay a reward of ten dollars for her return and no questions asked. The loading of milk cans—f{rom 800 to 1000 gal- lons daily—which heretofore detained the passen- ger train from fifteen to twenty minutes, is now done in a separate car and attached to the regu- lar train when it arrives here, so that there is no | delay on that account. Mrs. Eddy’s Will Valid. BosTON, Mass, OcT., 13TH, 1912.—The full bench of the Massachusetts Supreme court decides that the will of Rev. Mary Baker Eddy has created a valid public trust wh can be administered a trustee appoi by the court. Gecision 3 declares that the heirs can- not inherit Mrs. Eddy’s property. This finding effects only the portion of Mrs. Eddy’s estate in Massachusetts, con- sisting of two properties estimated at $155,000 in value. The most of Mrs. Eddy’s estate is in New Hampshire and the Supreme court of that State last spring decided that the trust created by Mrs. Eddy, by which her fortune was to be used “for the purpose of more effect- ually promoting and extending the reli- gion of Christian Science as taught by me,” was valid. BOOKS, MAGAZINES, ETC. HAPPY MARRIAGES—Are the result of knowing the laws of health and nature. Ail the knowledge a young man or woman, wife or daughter should have, is contained in the People’s Medical Advis er, by R. V, Pierce M.D. This big Home Doctor Book containing 1008 pages with engravings and colored plates, and bound in cloth, (nearly 700,000 copies formerly sold for $1.50 each,) is sent Free to any one sending 31 one-cent stamps to prepay cost of wrapping and postage. Address, 662 Washington St., Buffalo N.Y. number of votes will also be allowed on each sub- scription. Names of those who wish to enter should be sent immediately to the Dispatch Contest Depart- ment, Piitsburgh, Pa. THE YoutH's COMPANION FOR 1913.~The Youth's Companion appeals to every interest of family life, from housekeeping to athletics. It begins with steries of youthful vim and vigor, automobile and stepped into it, said a | with articles which disclose the secrets of success- EGAL NOTICE.—Notice is hereby given to | all persons interested, that the folowing | .__ real and personal property has been ap- praised and set apart to Sallie Armbruster, widow of Christian Armbruster, late of Walker town- | ship, Centre county, Pennsylvania, deceased, out | of the estate of the said decedent pursuant to and | under the Act of the General Assembly of the | Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of 1909, Pamph- i let Laws page 87. Approved April 1st, 1909, i REAL ESTATE, TAKEN, AS FOLLOWS: | All those two certain messuages, tenements, | and tracts or parcels of land situate in the town: | ship of Walker, county of Centre and State of | Pennsylvania: bounded and described as follows, | o Wit: «One thereof beginning at a post, corner of lands sold by William McKinney to Jacob Rockey and | Henry and Lewis Yocum, thence by lands of or | formerly of said Yocum and other lands of or for- merly of William McKinney north 30 degrees | | west 90 perches to a post: thence by lands of or | | formerly of said William McKinney south 60 de- | | grees west 2) perches lo b post thence by lands | of or formerly of said William McKinney south of oc french ad irate Borin 07 | ands of or formerly of Martin Harnish and Ja- | | cob Rockey north 60 ] | mare or ! running south 60 degrees west 71% hes to | stones; thence north 29% degrees west 891% perch: | es to stones along the lands sold to Irvin; thence | | north 61% degrees east 69 6-10 perches to stones | i Along the line of lands sold to Dunkle: thence | | south 31% degrees east 40 8-10 perches to stones; : | thence south 30 degrees east 46 7-10 perches to the | | place of beginning. Containing 39 acres and 20 vin tothe uid Frau Mi | Xi ng and reserving to the said Fran! c- | i Coy his htivs and assigns all the jron ore or mine | | a n or ul prem reby con- | | veyed, together with the right, at all timesto en- | ter upon the said premises to search for, mine, | clean and take away all the iron ore therein or | thereon in such manner and by the use of such appliances and methods as to the said Frank Mec- Coy, his heirs and assigns, may seem most desira- Hien: hich ng the same premises which were granted and conveyed to Christian Armbruster, (now de- | ceased) by Frank McCoy and wife by their deed i dated the IV Of treiss300 0s s500enrinens A. D. | 1906 and recorded in the office for the recording | of deeds, etc. jor Centre & Sounty. Pennsylvania, in 0 Yi, pa Items a P al w ORME, PR...............;coesereienss Lot of hay in To ro ses | | are fled Sittin thirty ay Confirmed Ni Si and filed October 19th, 1912 J. FRANK SMITH, 57-41.3t Register and C. 0. C. Wanted. Laborers Wanted! Martin and Bingham, con- tractors for the new sewerage plant at State [College, want SEVERAL HUNDRED MEN Long job, good wages, boarding can be secured on the grounds. Electric Light. Mr. Landlord, Did you ever consider what a good investment itiwould be to put... ELECTRIC LIGHT in that house you rent to John Jones? He is usually very willing to pay a good interest on the cost of the installa- tion. Our “LIVE WIRE” WIRING PROPOSITION will make the cost to either of you very low. Mr. Tenant, Put this proposition up to the owner and tell us who he is so we can help you. Bellefonte Electric Co. | — | | | == : SUCCESS degrees east 89 perches to | | the place of beginning. Containing 50 acres, | And the other thereof beginning at stones and All persons are born under this sign but thousands ignore the laws that make its continu- ance possible and sooner or later live under the sign fail- The first step towards success in business is to have credit through proper banking connections. facilities of a modern bank. The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. We offer all the i | | Jiakions Cau tre Foret Natemertylahen ele. t | § are the banking qualities demanded by careful depositors. With forty vears of banking ex- perience we invite you to become a depositor, assuring you of every courtesy and attention. We pay 3 per cent interest on savings and cheerfully give you any information at our command concerning investments you may desire to make. The Centre County Banking Co. Bellefonte, Pa. 56 Lyons Tailored Gowns for Mademoiselle and Demoiselle a et Sop ee 57-38tf : PERRO N HE season's Paris styles and imported fabrics are fascinat- ing, bewitching, beautiful—more so than since the advent of the tailored suit for women. Our showing is now complete. YONS Costumes are carefully cut to graceful lines that em- phasize the beauty of the figure fem- inine, modifying and adapting even extreme styles to one’s per- sonality—all of which is procured through interested personal atten- tion from the moment a patr~n en- ters the shop. HE fetching costumes for young girls made here impart the spirit of youth—modest and chic to the last degree. meer (een LYONS QUALITY SHOP, 130 South Fifteenth Street. 57.39.41 Philadelphia. The Centre County Banking Company. E-._ = =A Strength and Conservatism TekMs oF SALE: —Cash on confirmation of sale. ELIZABETH S. MEYER, W. H. MACINTIRE, Knoxville, Tenn. aSministraiors of J pS Meyer, deceased, . RUNKLE, Bellefonte, Pa., Att'y for Adm’rs. 57-41.5t Notice of Approval of Bond IN CONDEMNATION PROCEEDINGS. In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, Pa. No. 19 December Term, 1912. Notice is hereby given to all parties concerned that on the 2nd day of October, 1912, in the mat- ter entitled to the above stated number and term, BE IE A rad » . ul or ve fitle aa between J. Howard Tipton and William and partly in the Borou J County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County ap- roved and directed the filing of a bond of The Pennsylvania Railroad Company to the Common- Jealth of Penns lyania wit the American rety Company of New York as surety, in | sum of fifteen hundred dollars, which said is filed in said Court in said proceeding for the use and benefit of the person or persons who may be found to be entitled to the damages for the taking and appropriation of the said land and premises, fully JescHbed in the said bond and in therewith, or for the damages or injury to such land, in accordance with the Diovisions of She Act st Asiembly of the , Comme monw of Pennsylva roved day of June, A. D. 1893, Pamphlet Laws, page 350. D. R. FOREMAN, 57-40-2t Prothonotary, OTICE OF APPOINTMENT AND TIME and place of meeting of viewers in Con- demnation Proceedings. In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre Coun- ty, Pa. No. 19 December Term, 1912. Notice is hereby given to all parties concerned that on the 2nd day of October, 1912, in the mat- ter entitled to the above stated number and term, pet The Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany. alleging a disputed, doubtful and defective title as between J. Howard Tipton and William T r and others, concerning land and prem- ied sHuste partly, in the Foun ship - Howaid ad t ’ County. on A ok Pennsylvania, the g Board he damages . said ion, Srowin out of the con- oh i petition ation the said The Pennsylvania Rail Company of the above mentioned land and premises, fully described in said petition, and fixed Friday, the 25th day of diy 1912, as the time for a meeting of the En oe, ene he Same, tbe To or viewing e, lowed Jv a hearing before the said viewers at the by said Court for the government gs before the County Board of Vi And the said Court further ordered and decreed that the said viewers after having viewed the said premises as aforesaid, and after having held said hearing as aforesaid. shall estimate and determine the axising outef the con- fell aet forth in the Decree of Court filed in said proceedings in this behalf. D. R. FOREMAN, 57-40-2t Prothonotary. Sherifi’s Sales. E HERIFF SALE:—By virt f a writ of EL et oF tho Cot of ECE Cm House. in the borough of Bellefonte, Pa., on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 1912, at 1:30 p. m., the following described real of FE gl } i | i : | 2 ; EH iH J i : ; i : i i i Sil I iH id ix i I I ged EH : i 2 <5 i i : & | i i i | : i i 4 i “f FH] ; i i : ; i a 3 i I i i 3 : i jis 3° ! Be 5 i i i Hi died unt] the purchase money J pak In full. ARTHUR B. Sherifl’s Office, Bellefonte, Pa. SE. Oct. 10th, 1912, 57-404
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers