THE CENTRE REPORTER. FRED. KunTZ, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER CENTRE HALL, PA. THURS, July 19, THE RACKET No. 9 Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Leader in Dry Groods. Leader in Notions, Leader in Novelties. Leader in Shoes. Leader in Everything. | Our Spec Dress Goods Department. | ialties..... Botany Vantine Department. Oak Cemieal Department. Jutterick Pattern and Publication | Department. “New Idea” Pattern Department. | Housekeeper's Department. Whiting Stationary Department. | Hall's Legal Blank Department. | Rogers’ Silverware Department. They say, “The Racket” is | What do U up to date. sav! G. R. BSPIGELMYER, SHEM SPIGELMYER, Jr. Bellefonte, Pa. PERSONAL. — Miss Sallie MeClenahan went to] Milton last Saturday. —Mr. M. Shires, of Spring was in town Tuesday. — Dir. 0. W. Pellman, Mifflin- | burg, spent Sunday in Centre Hall. Mills, | of ——Miss Mattie Goodhart has : on a week's visit to friends at Hublers- | burg. gone | of Monday | Charley Long, town ee Merchant Spring Mills, was evening. in —Sherifl’ Condo in Centre Hall on Monday morningf on a ness trip. was busi- | — Miss Alice Hazelet, of Williams | port, is visting her friend Miss Grace Smith. — Mr. John Mersinger and daugh- ter Miss Ella, were in Centre Hall last Friday. on | Mrs. 8. W. Barr, of in visiting her mother, Mrs, Stiver, Potters Mills. Tyrone, near eM iss Carrie Emery, of Lock Ha- | ven, is the guest of her friend, Miss Jennie Kreamer, END OF HARVEST, A Fair Estimate of the FProduets.—-Up the Average. Harvest is over, aud we can give fair estimate of the crops in our coun- full average, and with 5 turned out a hay taken from the flelds, There was not a sprinkle of rain to taint it; sun- | 1 he h A AR PROBABLY MURDERDED, in Potter County Woods With His Throat Cut, On Tuesday, 10th inst., the body of in Potter county, with his throat cut The body was that of The wheat is cut and hauled in The crop is a good average the that crop hence we sum up the Rye has also given a fair yield, and No far the farmer has been favored, with anything like favorable be all that the farmer could wish. - -> - —— Farm Laborers Scarce the out of heard Strange as it may seem, in and many complaints men employment, are from some of the farming districts that from laborers are scarce, and this is Potter, of Milesburg, The report states that the throat was cut from ear to ear, but does not state whether it was a ease of murder or su- the have tually advanced at some places, of Lut, on the other hand, Ae. 3 Some Wag enty- five cents a day, while the best hands received £1.50 a day and board and extra high Bellefonte Daily News, We think the “* News" Farmers had no trouble 0 - 1 as § has been mis- to and wages are i side, think all over the county a A Freak. Oue day last week a call was that was a freak. The cattle were pas- found, but It he rmed il ul two well fi the avenge the doul it was dead. J sinned kK and the was of Mr. ¢( ho the sive arson cout mounted and can be seen Spring Mills it is quite a curiosity in Potter county woods and when last heard from was at the place where the body was found, EE a -~ HE WANTED TO TREAT,” But His Creditor laterrupted the Proceed: ings. The other day a man from across the country stepped up to a bar in this town and said, “Here boys, I'm going to spend my last dollar.” Just then a merchant to whom he was indebted and who could seldom get any money from him, stepped up and said: “What, do you mean to say that you That money does not belong to you. Come Potter county, to investigate the case, Young Potter had his life insured for $1500, ters Tnfested with Worms, The Centre Democraf says since the the farms in great lake on Gentzel of enjoy a drink on some other person's dollar. But some did. Since then saying that he was greatly mortified There is a pointer in this for During this season of excur- ed with millions of which have destroyed entire fields and other The worms made their appearance in fields where the water stood longest, are of a dark wor, They traveling west and eat up everything They are so thick on the ground that can scarcely along the road without tramping on Some of the old. similar WOrmnix, Crops, color and resemble the cut ex- cept that they are smaller. are as they go. One them at every step. they Wis er residents say are Known who the are w hint years ago as “army worm,’ and those a little superstitious think they are an omen of war fp Dots Worth Reading are sighing for about five ler weather and several were of min—one good shower <1. Wiring do Trout are no longer in danger now, have proven a fortune to its owner. { vntpe Devi el, i A Substitute for fee David 1. Mill i, & near Mt. Joy, was unable to fill his ice When the Mr. Tiller farmer, residing house last winter, heavy and They packed the ice house full of snow in dee sires to fill his ice chest he goes to the cake of ice. When the gentleman Mr. James Carson, of near Belle. fonte, circulated among friends in Cen- | tre Hall on Tuesday. ——John Goodhart, of Spring Mills, spent Sunday with the family of Mr. | John Dauberman. —Mr. C. F. Romig, a recent citizen | but now living at Lamar, came over last Friday to see his old friends the town. in| wee Mire, Jolin Mullen and children returned to Renova last Friday, after | a visit of several weeks to her sister, Mrs. J.T. Lee. —— Mrs. Boozer returned home last | week after a several months’ visit to her grand-daughters, at Hammerly's Fork, Clinton co. el), C. Keller, of Turbotville, ar- rived here on Monday on a flying vis it. He reports the drouth here greater than in Northumberland county. Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Atlee and Mrs. Margaret Harper, all of Tyrone, arrived on Thursday last at Centre Hall, and are the guests of the family of J. C. Boal. John Miller, one of our former boys, but now residing at Johnstown, spent a day or so in town last week. He is on the road traveling for a drug house, ~—It is reported that Mr. James Fiedler, formerly of the Bellefonte (Ja- zetle, intends starting n daily paper in Williamsport. Success to you, James, at all times, wherever you be, ~Ogear D. Emerick and wife ar- rived on Monday evening from Free port, Illinois, on a visit of several weeks to his mother and relatives here. Oscar is prospering and likes the west very much. ~Mrs. Harry Boone, nee Miss Beulah Brisbin, of Calumet, Michigan, arrived on Tuesday afternoon and is now domiciled at the howe of her par- ents. She will remain several weeks before returning. ee On Monday afternoon the Re PORTER office was graced with the presence of Mrs. Alexander, of Free port, Ill, Mrs. Henry Boozer, Mre, Mollie Ross and Mrs. John Conley, who Inspected the ari preservative. rs. Alexander is n native of our vale ng from Aaronsburg, and is on to her friends here in the val- | It makes elegant ice Nu x - . oe. Frightfal Accident, cake of snow ice, water. —Columbia On Monday afternoon of last week, while T. L. Kessing- er, of Hublersburg, was mowing grass, away, in the near the ankle and the flesh was torn into shreds, He was other wise injured but the hurt to the foot is ma- A ny Hard Digging. On last Wednesday Sherifl Weaver heard a noise in cell occupied by Miles Walker thief who awaiting trial. When the Deputy stepped in the cell noon Deputy horse is the masonry about the window, aint it?” iron in surprise and never spoke. was hobbled at once, By Annual Convention, The Knights of the Golden Eagle of this district of Pennsylvania will hold their annual convention in berland on labor day in September, The local lodge of that town is making extensive preparations for the conven- tion. a bc Births, Deaths and Marriages, The births in Centre county from December 1st, 1508, to May 1st, 1504, making five months, were 451. The deaths during the same period, were 197, and the marriages 146, the births exceeding the marriages by 305. e—————— so —— New Postoflice, Our former townsman, Isane Strunk has been complimented by the ap- pointment as postmaster at Strunkton, near Hecla Furnace, where he is rin ning the old Hecla grist mill, Special Term of School, Prof. D. M. Wolf, of Spring Mills, will open a six weeks’ term of school, at that place, commencing Monday, next, July 25. This after-harvest term will give those students a the of summer Not much sickness in valley just now, Save some cases complaint; the doctors are enjoying a rest. May it be a long one. to get cisterns and wells, Streams are beginning low rain however, are still bolding out. for want of Exmmine your label and make a re mittance on subscription due—please, A Death of Mra. W. H. Kramer. The wife of W. H. Kramer, station ngent at Coburn, died former at mrtown, Crawford « ounty, Pa., on the } Nae. th inst, after a week's confinement, i She was Catherman, former Hall. Her remains given birth to a son. Arb Centre ¢ 3] were taken to piace, for interment. Her age was 35 Veurs ff Pieniced in the Park. Westfall with ladies from Lewisburg, Milton and Williamsport, in They arrived on the pay train sod stopped off while the train went on to On Monday about tw enty-five young Supt. had a little pienie his part to perfection, and they all seemed to have the kind of a time they were after, — Received a Call, . person’s money. Many a dollar be- longing to printers and merchants is think they are enjoying their own money.—Tyrone Times, ep Died at Tyrone Jonathan Kreamer, died at 8.2 o'clock -~ Baking Powder A Remarkable Case, Burns Hovey, a woodsman was in- dinary case at the Williamsport hospi- tal. He was struck on the breast by broken, one of which punctured a lung. The Williamsport Sun says: “Every part of his skin, from the top of his head to the tips of his is puffed up like a balloon and tight as a On Saturday he could not talk and Dr. Nutt punctured his chest to give relief, The air rushed out with toes, felt better. He is still greatly puffed This puffing of the skin is the result her granddaughtor, Mrs. J. A. in Tyrone, being general decline from Born in Centre county June 10, 1812, she was aged 82 years and 1 month when the final summons came. Sure two daughters, Mrs. Isabella Haney, of Tyrone, and Mrs. Eliza Melntyre, of Clarion. Jonathan Kreamer, the died some years ago; he lived many years near Oak Hall, and was a black- smith by trade and was generally known in this valley. ly . A Delieate Mechanical Feat E. A. Williams, a watchmaker of Broadway, New York city, recently accomplished a remarkable mechanic- al fent—that of drilling a hole through the entire length of a common pin, ing being just large enough to admit of the passage of a fine hair. Mr. Wil- liams is the mechanic who two years ago cut a sewing needle in two length- wise and then drilled holes and fasten could not be seen with the naked eye. oe One of the Latest Fraods, A sleek chap, who abhors work, game. He offers to sell a recipe to the ladies for canning fruit without heat or sugar, and all for fifty cents. sell a recipe for putting up fruit with- a A Heartless Cuss, A thief stole twenty-five postal cards from the desk of the editor of the Mill Unless our brother of the quill is better fixed than the charge. Eureka is a town po isi Importrnt to Observe, pipes in safe condition. A spark lodg- Look to your hydrants now, wait until water gets low and run the Isis ——— Denth at Haffalo Ran. At an early hour on Thursday morn- ing, Mrs. Rebecca Meese, wife of Da- Buffalo Run, after an illness of only a couple days, she being out and around st A Trains Delayed. Monday morning the passenger trains were delayed about three<quar- ters of an hour owing to the breaking of the eccentric on the engine of Con- ductor Reamer’s train below Centre Hall, ss smi A No Place There, Bicycles and hand carts have no rights on sidewalks. Their proper place is the street, where they have the same right-of-way as other road vehicles. Injurious to Mogs, Cotton seed meal, while it is good for cattle, will kill pigs if given them to eat. This is a recent discovery, Oh, the villainy WA ps Was Already Employed, The Dubois Express gave vent to the following in a late issue: It is re ported that during the street service on the shoulder of a Swede andjaskedifl ! i with Yon E. DuBois. in Price. Wy. Not Likely to go up generally. Oats and corn are likely to bring fair, and over average prices, What the agriculturist looses in the low price of wheat, is more than made up in the low price of goods, imple- ments and all he needs to buy. EE A Rig Foree, E. M. Huyet employs forty men on his new lumber job, and his camp, on both sides of the pike, at the Seven mountain school house, is just the best looking one we have yet seen lumber job. Saw Mill Burned. The steam saw mill of Nathan Haugh, in SBugar Valley was destroyed by fire on Tuesday night. The loss is placed at $3,000, Sunday Morning Services, Rev. Robert Wolf will fill the pulpit at the morning services next Sunday, at ten o'clock, in the Presbyterian church. AA on ~~Whether you want a suit made of order or one ready-made, you will find Lewins $8 to $6 cheaper than elsewhere. hale it again through the mouth or Consequently the air, which had to go somewhere, finds its way in- Nose, to the cells immediately under the cu- | ticle, and the result can be readily im- This condition is the result | of a punctured lung, but this case is { unusually severe and if the man well it will be remarkable. gets Wy Nimple and Helpfal We vouch for the following being as { helpful as simple: When feeling a cold-in-the-hiead set back of the head, hot water bath—hot either by applying a ting in, give the neck and face a {a8 you can bear | cloth dipped in hot water, or other- | wise—until thoroughly heated up, and | you will find it the cold checked. refreshing and When a cinder or other small object gets into the eye, never put your fin- ger on the eye, it will only serve to fas ten the object on the eyeball. it alone, and in two or three nature, by the operation of winking will earry the particle into the one cor- Leave minutes ner of the eye where it can then easily be removed. Never rab the eve w hen | something gets in it. To slop the ble ding of hie | a string tightly around the little fin- ger of the left hand, and the bleeding will cease. An artery into little finger, turns and goes back The tieing stops the circu- lation and the bleeding. nose, Lie goes the io the nose, WA Good News for Johnstown The officials of the Cambria Company at Johnstown ex pect to start every department in full blast time next wsek. Some the and furnaces, all of which had been {shut down socount of the coke strike, resumed on Monday. While there is no absolute certainty as to the length of the time operations will con- run Iron sOMe of mills on tinue the chances for a long exceedingly good. The orders now in hand will keep the mills and furnaces busy for five or six weeks, and by the time these are filled it is reasonably certain that enough more will have been received to keep the wheels mov ing for a considerably longer time. are ay Might Have Been Worse On Tuesday forenoon as mr. B. F. Yearick, tenant on Kurtz's farm, west of here, was driving across the track in the farm lane, one of his horses got his foot fast in a projecting railroad spike, and fell with mr. Yearick, whose leg got under the horse, and was bad- ly bruised, he was taken to the house suffering much pain, but is about his work again. The other horse, in the muss, also fell, making quite a tangle. Fortunately no train was due about the time. Both horses sustained some bruises, imine aim— The Strike Over. Tur great railrosd strike is over, and the strikers, of course, are the loosers. Debs’ gain may be a fine and a term in prison, In the Philipsburg and Houtzdale region the soft coal strike also ended last week, the miners having accepted the compromise rate of forty-five cents per ton. They got forty cents and wanted fifty. A ————— Mast be a Small Town, What a small town Loganton, in Bu- gar Valley must be. Newton Brun- gard the other could not turn around in it with a load of hay with- out upsetting his wagon, Taken to the Asylum, Sheriff Condo last week took John Whitehill, of Milesburg, and Francis The Citizen in the Country Now the boarder from the eity roam the fields a careless rover, trying hard to tell the difference Indian corn and clover. between For the turnip tree he searches, and he secks with zeal divine for the baga orchard and t snip vine. Climbs the grape vines for ruts he spreading par- bananas, and through the fragrant fields he cuts scanning elderberry bushes in search for cocoanuts, And through swamps and tangled forests with unwearied feet he pushes, searching day and day in patience for the watermelon bushes, startled farmer if he's through his nutmeg hoeing: how And he asks the his chocolate trees are doing: how his lemon vines are growing. If he's dug his early hay crop; if he's if his slip pery elm is planted; if he's grafted his tomatoes, sowed Lis sweet potatoes: If he's trimmed hiswearly grass trees. money in honeysuckle Post De- if he thinks there is more potato bugs than raising for its ot honey. Louis spate Kk. ovens Union County Deaths, h of Ju- Mrs. Wesley Snyder, aged about 47 In Lewis township, on the 5t ly, years. In Lewisburg, on the 6th of July David Myers, aged about 64 years. In Lewisburg, on the 3rd of July, Bes enbaugh, aged 82 years Near Bellévae, O., on the 4th of Ju- ly, Mrs. David Moore, aged 67 years, She was formerly of near Mifflinburg. In Lewisburg, on the th of July, Howard Murphy, fp Mach The oftenest divorced woman in Indianapolis, weob He aged 48 years Divoreed, lives she was divorced eight times, twice from the same man, and is now living with her ninth hus band. She is thirty-seven years old and comes from a family noted for its Her mother ls vorees and is living with her seventh husband. An have each been married five times, divorces is had six di- uncie and two aunts Centre county might match that in a damsel who can boast of having had twenty beaux, fourteen engagements, no marriage and no divorcee. pays Now you Your money and takes your choice, Bly A postal card to the Registrar, will bring the 120 page year book, showing the five departments—College, Acade- my, Ladies’ Institute, Music School and Art Department, and cuts of the ten buildings of Bucknell University, at Lewisburg, Pa. Next year begins September 13, 1854, GRAIN MARKET. Wheat. ——— Corti. coven os wa— LEA BROW ..oonnnes coisa sonvnimmns BACRW BBL cosas sssns ssisammisnmrsmnissssssns PRODUCE AT STORES, Batter A FRR ...connnns us suse Lard... Shoulders Fotaloes Bides............ Your Husband's Dollar.” An increase in the purchasin wer of your husband's dollar is hy of consideration, susiSit’t it 7 It's worth while reading what we have ang “a sband’s dollar. you ve cenyisn’t it? Commencement Furnishings, DRESSES, FANS, GLOVES, LACES, HOSIERY, RIB- BONS. HAND- KERCHIEFS, &c. LINE Hats Grays -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers