THE CENTRE REPORTER. FRED, Kurtz, EDITOR ANDPUBLISHER. CENTRE HALL, PA. THURS, OCT.19 THE RACKET ndcn— No. 9 Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte. 0-0 Wisdom is an open book to those who will profit by past experience, An entire line of Ladies’ Just In Coats and Wraps Lastest ideas from the best New York manufacturer. Exclusive Styles Lowest Prices. Yor} SIDE BAND SUITINGS The latest novelty for Ladies’ Suits. CI _ - = . — . THEIR BUSY BEASON, The Foundry Begins Manufacturing a Big Lot of Planters. Along with the general brightening tie Hall has also felt the warmth of the rays of industry and on October 2, the Centre Hall Implement works be- gan the manufacture of one thousand corn-planters, The shops had been comparatively idle during the summer months, with work at about half time, but they are now running full time, with a busy! summer at least. The firm last year disposed of more planters than were | manufactured any two years previous, { and the success they met with in new territory encouraged the firm to build | as many planters, if not more again | this year. The planter is their prin- cipal article of manufacture but not the only one, as all kinds of farm plements are turned out here and sold all through the state. The firm, Huyett, Rearick & Boozer, es them all the success they deserve. That it is an important industry Stylish. No where else in town. mmm () — Hop Sacking at Racket Prices, — O==0 Silks! ~ Silks! KOM AND C. Silks! { noted from the fact that the firm | received offers from Boards of Trades state, in which inducements were tre Hall A A A CHURCH DIVIDED, 00 G. R. SPIGELMEYER, SHEM SPIGELMEYER, Jr. Bellefonte, Pa PERSONAL. ——Mrs. Sallie Kline departed Tues- | day on a visit to friends near fonte. of on Houseman, Tussey- the town ~— Squire ville, was in morning. — Messrs. M. F. Rossmnan and H. yesterday. ~—Mr. J. C. made us a call on Saturday, town. Bible, of Centre Hill, while left to Boozer {hi LOC ¢ hicago Tuesday attend the — Henry morning for World's Fair. Fi. M. Huyett was last week buying a lot of ing home Saturday. off to cattle, return- | —Puvid Meyer, James Samuel Kreamer got back World's Fair on Tuesday. —John Spangler and Monday for Hastings, Pa., to their sons at that place. from wife on a visit —Among those who returned recently from the World's and Miss Mame Meyer. ‘ Mrs. Jones, of Clarion, Pa., and | Mrs. Moore, of Altoona, are visiting at | the residence of Mrs. Jane Love, on Church street. —e Mr. W. W. Boob and wife from Centre Hall Tuesday morning to take in the wonderful sights of the | white city at Chicago. Mills, and Mr. Mills, now and wife, of Spring W. Ream, of Farmers among those from this valley the Fair. —Mrs, Lavina Frantz, of Tussey- ville, accompanied by Mrs. Daniel Fleisher, were pleasant callers at the | ReporTER office last Thursday, « and inspected the art preservative. are at dition of our townsmon, J. H. Reifsay- der, Kaq., shows very little, if any, improvement. to his office work himself and is part of the time confined to bed. his health seems very poor there is still hope for recovery and his friends trust that such will ultimately be the case, ~Millheim Journal, a Trial Sermons, that trial sermons will be preached by Rev. G. M. Boyer, of Huntingdon co., in the congregations of the Centre Hall Lutheran charge, as follows: Oct. 28, 1d Georges Valley, Sunday morning October 20, At Union Church after. noon, same day, and at Centre Hall in the evening, same day, At Tusseyville, on Monday evening, Oct. 80. s——————] Railroad Ofcers Elected, J. W. Gephart, of Bellefonte, has been elected general superintendent of the central railroad from Bellefonte to Mill Hall, and Frank Warfield, for many years employed in the Beech Creek freight office at Jersey Shore Junetion, has been chosen general freight agent, mm ——— A IY IDI Jurors Chosen, The following jurors have been chos- en from Centre Hall and Potter town- ship for the next term of court: J. C, Brown, H. W. Frantz, D. F. Luse, D, Wagner Geiss, Charles W. Slack and David Fye. | Bellefonte Presbyterians at Variance Over the Use of Fermented Wine, | byterian church at Bellefonte on Sun- { day over the question of the use of fer- | mented wine for sacramental purposes. | About twenty members, including two { rendered its use improper. Rev. Laurie, advocates the use of j mented wine, | The opposition to use of fermented i wine comes largely from the members Christian This question was up before the and although seventy-five unfermented The pastor of the society of pres- | bytery two weeks ago, | forty-five out of the | churches are now using for i when it came to a vote, the { of the fermented juice won. wine sacramental purposes, yet A A CU { Wholesale Hospitality, i Our good sister town Bellefont i tality with a and without grumbling. | large assembly the ollowed the big spoon The M. E. , held its sessions there ; Lutheran Lutheran body, and with its i next came { then sy nod, i another large | ry knocked at the door and was wel- comed in. And still there is enough | the workers in the good cause, sama — Charles 8. Wolfe's Estate. the funds The distribution of i Aris. ing itate of the late Charles 8. Wolfe, | Lewisburg, to the unsecured creditors, | shows the estate to have been in a de- | plorable condition. { ble for distribution amounted to 805 and the liabilities are $108, | The genereal or unsecured creditors re ceived 9.8 per cent. of their claims. Wo Ay He Will Carry Coal, The Shenandoah Herald says that a {man by the name of Smith, who is i said to hail from Mt Carmel, is seek- { nel that Guetling, the World's { trotter became a traveling The Mt. Carmel man proposes carry- i gO { the coal as souvenirs, pont i Prospecting for Coal Expert geologists and prospectors { from the anthracite regions are pecting for coal in this county. Pros There to determine whether or not it really exists in the section. i a ——————————y A Good Chance. The Daniel Horner property, adver. next Saturday, is a desirable property to invest in an live on. Go and see the farm and attend the sale, ahd Esq. tesy, as is his disposition, it — Move to Mill Hall, Mill Hall, the terminus of the new Bellefonte Central railroad, along with other booms, is to have a paper. The moved from Loganton and located at Mill Hall, which will be a better loca- tion. mommies IS BANA Being Frescoed, The Reformed church in Bellefonte is closed for three weeks, as the interi- or is undergoing repairs. The ceiling and sides are being frescoed by W. F. Wise & €o., artists, of Tyrone, we Piles of fall and winter goods at Lewins, Bellefonte. All latest styles and lowest prices to be had anywhere, Go and see before all gone. wenfSttbscribe for the REPORTER, BORO GOVERNMENT, { The Walks and the Talks—The Rights and the Wrongs. I The work on our street, besides be- | ing a disgrace was so clearly unlawful { on the part of the council that our cit- | | izens will justly protest against paying | | for what properly belonged to the pike | [company. Besides, the premises of | | Mrs. Odenkirk have been rendered not | | only inconvenient but dangerous to | | approach, and several premises oppo- | site are left in about as bad a fix, The | law, fortunately, gives the citizens full remedy and protects the taxpayers | against a flagrant outrage of two or | | three persons who overflow with wis- | | dom but are noted for always doing everything wrong, and if they are ob- liged in the end to pay for this outrage themselves it will be but simple jus tice, and take off some conceit. A just complaint lies also in the mat- | ter of walks. Councilmen have un- { lawfully favored persons in the coun- | il, built their walks, repaired them, i shoveled the snow from the same and paid for it all out of the oro funds to | the amount of upwards $500! and | then, to the impudent notices are sent out to tae build and repair their walks itism and spite is what of cap climax, citizens to Favor- seems to be the i study of some in the council. A num- ber of citizens counted 13 ugly holes {in the board walk of the greatest chs \p | in the council and it remained thus for | six weeks, and his little man Friday in | the council told the writer the repairs on that walk would be yet at the notices were sent out charged to the | boro, same time impudent to owners of lots | similarly located to repair their walks ialtho their walks were in better { condition than the councilman’s. The { one signing these notices we will spare far { from printing a little secret, just now. In the matter of and walks, add, sil | proceeded without svstem or law, | has practiced favoritism, | tion and low spitework, Notice is given to build walks on the sireels | we beg leave to the coun has and diserimina- of pike atl it ast side rhere there and as { vacant lots on the e al lower end of town, w i led, ii eed the opposite aide : 5 not at a sinoe isa walk the oot in expense of tax-payers who wa + fair i the future kept up his walk, o man has allowed it to be own walks, it would if he bie build walks hundred the r else i fore others are notified to refund the taken off payers to build and Keep in re That wor ‘et him evernl { dollars unls wiully tax- walk slong his lotsa { just and honest, The i ters over to find talking theses taxpayers are “where they are s - » How to Keep Apples The keeping of apples during the | winter largely depends on the mode of po { handling them when they are harvest- Apples that have fallen to the { ground bave become bruised to som { extent, and will sooner or later to decay. into cider, for vinegar, Apples that picked from fully, {edd ¥ Dein such apples should be made without are to be stored should | ti Laie tree and handled care to permit of th est injury to a single one, 80 as not slight- it being well known that where one rotten in the barrel the rot sooner than i 6 apple HE others are liable f all are sound. Wp Minlag Company Fails Manufact- whic * The Juniata Mining and uring company of Tyrone, owns extensive interests in Huntingdon counties, failed nesday. The Blair county pointed A. M. Laporte, of Tyrone, A.W, Eims, of Rockhill Farnace, receivers. The liabilities are | $35,000 and assets at $12,000, i Hair Wed court on R. A. McCoy was president of the com- | pany.~ Times, i - oa We Pennsylvania Sabbath Schools, The twenty-ninth annoal meeting of ! the Pennsylvania State Sabbath school | association, now in Pitts ‘burg, reports Pennsylvania the strongest Sunday school state in the onion in numbers of scholars and teachers. There are WZ schools, 136,- 256 tenchers and officers, and 1.247.- | 820 scholars, making a grand total of 1 1,386,276 interested in Sunday school | work. session at fis i AA LA Grand | Millinery Opening. i Mrs C. B. Boob will return next week from the city and will have a grand opening of fine millinery goods {on October 27th and 28th, Friday and i Baturday. The display will be larger tand finer than ever before. Every. body is invited to come on the open- ing days. Ladies.do not miss it. C—O SAA Oe Oyster Sapper, The ladies of the Union church at Tusseyville, on next Saturday after noon and evening will hold an oyster sitpper in the basement of the church at Tusseyville. All are invited. Pro- ceeds for repairing the church. AAP Resolutions Adopted, The Christian Endeavor State Cone vention which met at Reading last week, adopted resolutions against the theatre, card playing, cigarette smok- ing and the tobacco habit, Announcement, Services for Sunday, October 22nd, Tusseyviile at 10 a. m., Centre Hall at OF INTEREST TO FARMERS, Court on Line Fences, Among the decisions handed week was one relating to partition or line fences, eminent lawyers that when law of 1700 with re the fence gard to outside fene- cified in the act, continued to high standing claimed that the the act of 1700 was removed from the MeO valid books. jut Judge held that the law of 1842 Judge Dean has sustained | view, the point difference where the supreme court held that in the Mensch, that the defendant should have seen that there was sufficient fencing to keep in his own cattle; notwithstanding the that there had existed igants an agreement for up o of the fe il. a 80 wording to Ju ire is Him of case of Barber vs. fact between each to keep Hereafter Dean's deel a man who wishes to pasture cat that the sufficient lin] { 10, sion, tle or ling i nee must se whole partition is {to keep lis cattle on his own with the ef in t holds partie for by each premises, right to reco the words, ver one-half of wis of from his the su fence adjoiner. Wwenie I agrecinents wt cour all ween maintenance of one half and that the Lo pasture hi not stand unn who wv vn & catil msl se hat {1 ve i; TPN hat they do not damage his adioir In cases where vou have already your half under ly an nur Ht yout Huer ne ir on: Fern iy against vous wd ie who refuses thie Lil to build his half is to construct fence and then der the ¥ of HL Viewers on uns 8 of ss act of thie your adioiner py Loose Headway, f $34 Mi and 't cone rianps sii-mosh’ his Delightinl Weather On Friday sOCIELY Wi | Hall AS Organi Grammar School y of Prof. J. « following office: dent, Bumper Hosterman: ident, Harvey Van Pelt Zilla MeGechon; treasurer, The meetings in the { rection | Were vice-presi- secretary, Anns will school room Bare tholomoew. society hold its i be rendered. a, wk Haven of Penn Hall, | Runkle, of Tussey-| Martied In 1 Mr. Frauk 8S. Musser, and Miss Maggie ville, united in marriage Thursday last at Lock Haven, at residence of Mr. James High. were the! The | ceremony was performed by Rev, B. Gruver, pastor of the church, in the presence of a number of friends and relatives. The bride is a daughter of Mr. James Rune kle, of Tusseyville, and is a young la- dy held high in the esteem of her friends, nf —— A Motley Crowd, Monday morning four dirty looking specimens of humanity accompanied by three bears, entertained the popu- lation of Centre Hall with their an- tics and tricks. They did not reap a harvest in the town and their depart- ure wis as hurried as their entrance, A A Guard Rail is Cheaper, The township of Shrewsberry, Ly- coming county, will pay $850 because it did not have its public roade provid. ed with ¢ guard rail to prevent acei- dents, This will be a warning to Shrewsberry and it should prove just as beneficial to all of the other towns ships and boros in the State, A ——— Pamphlet Laws Completed. The pamphlet laws for 1888 have at last been indexed and printed, and are now being lssued by the state depart. ment. One copy is sont to ench coun 2.30 p. pu. W. J. WaaxexR, ty officer and to each justice of the peace throughout the state, GETTING READY FOR ELECTION, Voters to be Hidden From View by the Ad- dition of Curtains in the Booth, The county commissioners are in the midst of the to the the month, made necessary ballot Ia Whil law w fied in some respects at the last now work preparatory election next the an holding of by new Ww. the session of the legislation, it does not material- ly make changes which sald lesson the preparatory labors. Becre ify the rs of the nevi Ww Ww ii Cort ®iOT ral eounties of the commonwealth and the cor 14 Work wo i for the Ros rs gape 2311 + ONES Wilh 4 ies have the official ballot rints voters of this county Under the requirements of the new ballot lnw a curtain will be hung at every stall or compartinent in the voter prepares his ticket, thus ting him from view enti It tion officers to reiy. will be news to most of learn that the additional tiie lot law imposes an ¥ them, that « im, 1 sioners’ office election to receive spective f th lots for their re clion of Aw Should Have Kept Posted, A A Butler county mean to take miser, who is too swindled A i - {as a paper, was day of strangers called out of £5,000 one last week, at his he presi nted t couple with a bag of stuff’ reg £3 § 11 MM Bik. of the s iL to Hiiser at Lich kled gold dust which thes wanted 1it of robberies hey said it was the the railroad west and they were a bank about half price, rest one recent in afraid t it to He nance on 0 take the Wis and offered ’ ty lke a speculation Here gerly at ti} $5,000 in greenback 1 Be and The tutto fhe w BeXL Gay wih 4 > . kK he was told that 1. od lien thie sw ban it was not gold, assortment of brass filings, — > - A Leader first Fitters has gained Mince its introduction, rapidly in now it Is clearly alteratives—eontaining nothing whic pPermils its use as a bever ge or nt , IL 15 recognized as the medic Liver cant best ine for all ailments or Kidneys. mick Headacehis . Indi ry AL. § Malaria from Are tion Tesiion, ¢ 4 5 g f ” g » + ¢ : BYSWILL. Dauisiaciion guaranteed will per 3 inded. { fardst preigitl car aays ang nights, 1 slorin period promises winter toward id fol of ho navigal {cid eda iLL. A 11318 smart dash of lowing the close ils OTILR, en and lake is waich oe Married Near Belief: Mr. EEL nie, John respected cit. to Miss hie ceremony was per- of Mr. Jolin Mus the bride, near of the Reform- On last = of | izens, Thursday Od Fim 3 ville's ii was united in marriage | Anna Miller. 1 home | ser, brother-in-law of | Bellefonte. Rev. Noll, {ed church performed the ceremony. the most intimate friends and relatives of the bride and groom present. Immediately alter the cere | mony they returned to the home of | the groom at Tusseyville, where they | will make their future home. { formed at the Only were E —— Election Days Not Holidays, One opinion has been given by the superintendent of public instruction on the acts of May 23 and 31, 1808, des- ignating the days to be as holidays, He holds that the school boards throughout the state are not required to close the schools on the days desig. nated as election days. On the con trary, he urges them to keep their schools in session on these days SAAN SM Pn Outcome of Spite. As o result of a bitter feud that has existed for some time between two school teachers in the village of Cool Spring, Jefferson county, Charles Shaf. fer threw a bottle of nitric acid into Carrier Thompson's face, burning it so badly that it is thought he will lose his eyesight. A Its Worth Trying. It is said that if tea ground like oof. fee or crushed immediately before hot water is poured upon it, that it will yield nearly double the amount of its exhilirating qualities. AS wlio to lLewins, Bellefonte, for your clothing. Their styles are per foot in every respect. Bults neat in pattern, stylishly cut and elegantly made, Nothing quite #0 good any. ' ne A; Where. of tramps who encies i - .- Apple Shipments. pn rate that leave Being id having shows patience with tied mill account foe] it ect it SIVEOs Wi “ such as re Hain uns Grand Opeping Fali Joys an ping of Men, MO NTG( v & Co, ¢ Bellefon ts GRAIN MARKET. Lew {orn " Dew Harley Burkwheny im PRODUCE AT STORES, Butler Few far Hyon! Ham Tall Pru Loos Rides ..... ders Carmans. Backing, Garmans, NMacking, Garmans, Sacking, Garmans, sacking, Garmans, Hop Hop Hop Hoo Serge, Garmans, Serge, Garmans, Serge, Garmans. Serge, Garmans. Blue Cheviot, Garmans, Blue Cheviot, Garmans. Blue Cheviot, Garmans. Blue Cheviot, Garmans. Habit. Cloth, Habit Cloth, Habit ( loth, Habit Cloth, Garmans, Garmans, Giarmans, Garmans, Dress Trimmings, Garmans, Dress Trimmings, Garmans, Dress Trimmings, Garmans, Dress Trimmings, Garmans, Ratines, Garmans, Satines, Garmans, Satines, Garmans, Natines, Gannans.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers