THE CENTRE REPORTER. | EDITOR AND PUBLISHER FRED. e KURTZ, CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, March 21 THE RACKET No. 9 Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte. Pays to Buy in Bellefonte, + \ We Open This Waek New Spring import: itionsof Kaika, Taffeta, and Gaufre Silks, in exc Ju- sive patterns, suitable for Waists It Pag to Buy at The Racket, We Open This Week A line of Black Dress Goods, that for beauty, quality and price stand | unequaled. If U need a good black res, it will both please and to Kom and C. Jresses., fine Dress the opinion ! A large assortment of Linings, and we have of three of Dressmakers that no such “dress fixings’ were ey er offered tothe trade in Bellefonte. alt Pays To Buy At The Racket. G. R. SPIGELMYER, SHEM SPIGELMYER, Jr. Bellefonte, our $15: st § fi [= Pa. 50 Years Ago Your Grand- mothers Made the 1al we mater- the Toweling. same kind of now selling, viz: Linen alled are i kind of It is now « ol homes. t wears better, wash- €8 nicer, other kine Towelin We also h AVE ( ther from up. Sea Island Percals. New Dress Materia 12 1-Ze. it in di wash Wait for Our Lace Curtain Opening. W.T. MEYER, Aa, pestofice Bellefonte, Bush Two « Special. the trade that seeks has the It is seldom that Bel of tage & column lefonte markets advar such a mark down sale as Lyon Co. are advertising in another on this page. It w it up. ill pay you to look Bp PERSONAL. —Mr. J. W. Ishler, was a REPORTER caller week. —Mr. Mills’ a call this morning. Mr. George P. Mills, the with his presence last town. —Mr. H. K rger, den Hall, a pleasant calle office on Wednesday 106. of one Tussey vi day Hiram Lee, of Potters most successful farmers one gave us Rearick, REPORTER week, of Spring office while favored of L + r, ai Harshbe in- Was this la and put has bel out to —Bob Bartges, four years the obli- ging assistant in the Centre Hall hotel, has gone back to his Penn Hall home ; Bob was generally — Michael elected justice, liked. Grove, Potter's newly caller, and will ready to try cases that may be Was a soon be brought before him. John Grove, of Gregg, gave our and arranged to have bills for a public sale of personal pro- perty late of Chas. Yonker. Wm. H. Bohn, of Linden Hall, was a caller and puts himself ahead to '96 on the Reporter. He will move to Fillmore in a few days. sanctum a eall, —(irant Meyer's, State College's stately and flourishing tonsorial artist, gave our sanctum a call, and planked down some jinglers on the Reporter. —William Coldren, of Pleasant Gap, gave us a call and fixed his label. He reports health good in that vieini- ty after a siege of measles and ailments, — Rev. J. W. Boal, of Port Carbon, and a greatly esteemed minister of the Presbyterian church, honored our sanctum with an hour's call and pleas- ant chat, weeOur affable friend, Clevan Din- ges, of Williamsport, favored us with a call sorrowing over the death of an interesting little daughter. We know | Dinges. John Dauberman went down to | 5, Keller, who is making preparations to remove to Bellefonte from that place | to take charge of the Cum House, GEORGE GLASGOW, Died Near Colyer Last week, After an Ill- ness of Several Months, George Glasgow, son of John Glas- gow, who lives near Colyer, died on last Friday, of grinder’s consumption, aged twenty-six years and thirteen days. He contracted the disease while engaged at Axeman in the axe facto ry. During the last three years he had employment in Philadelphia, | from which place he came home about | the latter part of January. He was buried from the residence of his father at the Tusseyville cemetery on Tuesday, Rev. Eisenburg officiat- ing. The funeral was a large one, '| showing the esteem in which the | young man was held in the communi- | ty. i a New Business House in Bellefonte, A large mercantile opening will be | an event in Bellefonte about April 1st, in the rooms formerly & A. Loeb. Katz & Son, the new firm ; they are experienced Phila- delphia merchants and will open a to | next, is by =. dry goods and millinery store sur- in Bellefonte. The best of everything, | latest styles, and obliging treatment of all customers, with prices to defy com- petition. Messrs, one of the Son have engaged in Philadel- 10 country, Katz & best milliners phia, which will be a feature | the | plying a | pect to satisfy the tastes of the fair sex ladies in town and su p- longfelt want, and they ex- of Centre county in every particular. a —— That County Fair. The for seems to have gone to sleep, or may be movement a county heart trouble, the pul- to keep up the If it has died of sations being too weak know the circulation, we not be at the funeral [.et the Hall picnic fair boom, and AS mourners, ver to the it or go assed an county can't a larna- this one The 8 . ' ) two fairs, let's make ‘ tion Hl the « onee g one anvhow. ople ounty seem to want a vear and they want a great people r and near is the thing, and ¢ tart assured. Ay — Met With an McCormick Aecident., Mrs. ormick Med her h dent $ nize is ENUe 13S met atl ome week. lamp and was abot l when ad foll 1 iT ii MoeCormi widow of James Mec- of Centre Hall — Whirled Around the Shaft Hepbur —- Robert erseer of poor Bellefonte rir O% sustained serious ine's rolling mill Mond iY ftir tieht in Ming caugnt in fa CO whirled around a re arm, ankie and before the He broken mach was st opps 3 | and ine is ry about seventy vears er. - . Will Hemnain lin wd lin ur Here, of the U h, has Hall term, and Rey Methodist another term. y Ky Rev. gelical cl Ev assigned for Gro nited Deer another the his Centre charge f [Hingsworth, of church, is also to remain This will be acceptable fo par- news to the the ticular. peoy ple in general and members of those charges in - ad — state Teachers’ Association. The nia State Teachers’ Mount Gretna July An unusually of the association next session Pennsyliva- held at and 4th 2nd, large 3rd, attend- est ever held by ths association, iy Brief Locals, and will be ploy in thestore. leish is getting ready old Potters Mills hotel to open stand, Ap. 1 NO NEW TOWNSHIP, The Voters of Boggs Township Vote Down the Scheme, The proposition to form a new town- ship out of part of Boggs and Snow Shoe, was voted down by the interest- ed voters last Saturday, at election held for the purpose, to find the sentiment of the district. The an- ti’s won by a big majority and the pro- moters were never in it at all, eighty and not one a special votes being cast against for it, The new township embraced all of the northern precinct of Boggs town- ship and that portion of Bnow Bhoe that lies south of Beech Creek from Curtin township line as far near the Snow Shoe pike, west as to not embrac- This is a strip of mountainous settled, with one school district and few and ing it. country, sparsely and roads few voters for the area covered. a oo Death of Rev, George Elliott The people of Bellefonte were shock- of Rev, George Elliott, which of Mr. Mills, were sick residence near Pine Elliott, and Mr. Elliott Mitchell, Mr. visiting. {irove his wife had where been since developed into acute Rev He Presbyterian fatal termination. red about 69 the but about five labor a retired life in was ag Years, Was a church tired from has been livin minister in VEars re Ago or active and since KE Bellefonte, - - Will Build a New Bridge. Last week the (1. - Centre L. yvhm and Frank Ross and Woolridge, field count p it county com- Goodhart, James Admas met Messrs the ( Mtr SUT ie ar- y commissioners, met slican headquarters at Philips unt meeting decide . ye +} ROTORS TH build bridg: from the fi a new non borough. § forty Broke His Leg the Andrew urday, tre Ha upset, resulting in Dr. is the fourth dth Time Jordan while 1 iin on 3 oliver from Bor forms the Mr Emerick in time Drogen and mu his leg He hard ro May wil a — toth are Whitewashers n pre act that uth Lik, Arrested by His Wife, T enner constable from Ww H. station, uesday evening the = tow nship arrested Thomas, who resides near the at this place, « his wife that he had left him, el ited curred during a wn a charge by to kill iming he her She her tly « threatened abused and « an instance that recen Wie tie het er lit d dragge «d her ov family quarrel the top in which he seize hair of yes by the hearing § a stove He was given i - . 17th and 18th Snows, the winter fell 14th, and was two in- The 17th snow of ht, on Thursday nig ches in depth. The 18th snow fell on Friday night inches in depth. The 19th snow fell Sunday one inch in depth. night, snows 65 inches, pc Used on Delinguents, An exchange tells of a western edi- tor who has invented an infernal ma- i pp tl ie Came to an Understanding. The misunderstanding between A. Krape and Mr. Moyer in the pur- chase of Krape's store at Rising Spring has been amicably | perty and store. — Death of a Child Helen Irving, the first and only child of Mr, and Mrs. Clevan Dinges, Fu- | The infant daughter was 5 months old. EH — Owing to the fact that Y.yon & Co., of Bellefonte, must make room for a large stock of spring goods, they now offer their entire winter stock at { this county. See their advertisement in another column on page five, the The ma- who ‘refuse’ yard kill the dog. fy A Thrilling Scene, The novel sight of three thorough. bred race horses running a race of three-fourths of a mile on a stage will the the in in Bellefonte, on Friday evening appearance of Neil Burgess “County Fair.” Ag We Have Them, The finest line of earpet samples ev- er brought to town, Elegant patterns, and prices within reach 5 everybody. Call and see them, Worry & CRAWFORD, ie ~Hubseribe for the REPORTER, $1.5 0 ——" “THE LAND OF FLOWERS ” Last Personally Conducted Tour of the Sea- son to Florian via, ¥, BR, KB, If the general sentiment copeerning the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's | 8 personally-conducted tours to Florida is to be taken as an index of their pop- ed the ideal tours. The next and last of this season’s of to Jacksonville will leave New York and Philadelphia on March 26, the rate, including round-trip transportation and meals and Pullman berth on special train going, is $50.00 from New York $48.00 from Philadelphia; proportion- ate rates from other Tickets for this tour will for return passage on regular until May 31st, The number of persons for which ac- series tours and and points, good trains be commodations can be provided is nec- essarily limited, and it would there- early applica- tion for space. For further Agents, Agent, 11¢ Room 411, information apply Tourist York, or Phil- for | to} address New Nat or i Broadway, Broad Street ion, o whom application space should also be made, > + A Sudden Death, Plu - eldest | of at ~tan- MeGarrah, H. McGarrah, dispensary clerk lodgings at Ot Ti ursda He hi ol | yin | James mmer James and died at 1 t RB about seven o'clock. te health, hemorrhoids, for jellefonts Ramey, 18 ley's hotel a amey morning been in delica resulting fro but Wed- | well | about a better. year, lately seemed much On unusually | t Mr. Rhodes’ | until lock. to bed at the hotel nesday he was feeling and in the evening was a residence after ten o'« Soon | 5 § He was | Rh wil } was sent odes | GUNZ nan po roke Her Thigh AAV evening he de f Madisonburg iis plac - Young Man Be Sober. g men of Centre heed tl 1 young county and elsewhere, and drifting iis allroad other large WOT Bi cory tions are towards the senti- # iat t i none but sober Young FOO Ho ment ti nen shall be employed. nen should bear in mind that d positions are open enti Indies, to those w and only ho are att ve to bus- ®HODET in husbands, likewise ber man fp, Before the Committee Ox Tuesday President Atherton, of on education, of the bill scholarships from to 500 and providing that ges be paid out of the common school fund. arguing increasing the HS in support number of state the expen- The additional expenses to the Wp News for the Fish, The mail pouch for Ryde, not yet been found. suckers, catfish and bass are now busy | protection of fish. ” The flag floating over a Snyder Co. tp A Disgraceful Act with holes by the scholars who used it as a rifle target, with the teacher ap- Such treatment of “Old Glory’ is not likely riotism. to inspire pat Hot mo - Choloe Eggs for Sale, Buff Leghorns, cholce stock, eggs 50 cents per setting of 13; Buff Ply- mouth Rock, excellent layers, eggs $1.25 per setting of 18, Mus. M. B. RICHARDS, Centre Hall, Pa. feb21-83m WEATHER PREDICTIONS, S— March. My last bulletin gives forecasts of the storm wave to cross the continent from | the 18th to the 22d, and the next will reach the Pacific coast about the 23d, close of 24th, the great central valleys | 28th. This will often termed the There is no regular date for equinoctial storms and they may occur | at any time, from 16th to 27 of March or September. Planetary influences must be taken into the estimate in or- der to ascertain the date of the equinoctial storm. be a severe and what true This storm will occur during a cold | period of March, although mild weather will accompany the storm es- pecially on its south side, the temper- ature will drop back to cold following | it and a cold wave, approci to the blizzard kind in the states may be expected to follow the and ing northern dates given above. This storm will cause heavy rains ing these rains frosts will go unusually | far southward. The warm wave will cross the west- the eastern ern mountain country about 23d, and will country 25th great central valleys 25th, The cold mount wave { the i 26th, western great eastern states Th bring unusually he ain central valleys 50th. al 1d ¢ last half of March is expected to SAVY rains in mal iy | parts of the country, and probably heaviest of these rains will ace the storm described shove. wi —- -> — The Sick John most in List. H. respected Cit L. 3 r 11 » venerable Keller, ong f if our oldest and zens has been quite for the Conley. Mrs. Fred Bottorf, mending sOme Mrs, Je home of his daughter, somew nat # illness, wer y Lohr, t week, "m ie bs I'he grip has taken barbx in earnest dy Reesman |i ity-fiv I CW fs i lure Years He habits ive vears, ellent ng wihart in itleman of rinciples. He ith James M. « business § Houts Centre © ext 1 was ui ne gi n Lewistown. Oe antile Mr. | Mills, the spring of to bx firm of the Capt town tre Houtz enlisted. war he was born near Sprin ounty, in 1839, and in with & Bons the arrived gin his business career f George Blymyer On he company routs r same day entertd Stover’ Ww on wn Penn's valley, Cen Mr. the and eturning from offered county, to the seat of war, was again A CHANCE TOMAKE MONEY. The times are hard, but there al- | ways seems to be opportunities for | those who are willing to work. In | the past month I have made $175 | above all expenses, selling Climax | Dish Washers, and have attended to | my regular business besides. I never saw anything that gave as general sat- isfaction. One should not complain where they can make over $6 a day, [ have not canvassed any, so anxious are people for Climax Dish Washers, that they send after | them: any lady or gentleman can do Lo well as I am doing, for anyone can | sell what everyone wants to buy. I | think we should inform other through the newspapers of opportuni- | ties like this, as there many will- |ing to work if they only knew of opening. For full particulars, address » Nim wax Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio. After you have tried the 1 | week, publish the results for the fit of others. right at home, each are an USI Ness § i bene- po Notice to Clergymen, The has decided to continue Pennsylvania railroad compan the of and clergy- | men who hold orders of t valid for u issue all his compa- which are se until furnished with | ny’s issue March good for the remainder of the year date, and it for them to make You will the lingly. r= i 31, will be oO ders will not be nec- further appli- fore be govern- at an early | essary t | : cation. 1 ed accor 1 llefonte, are yon & Co, mak T hey CAITY & department, and at ¢ WAY their com- pay big the llars cheaper at ex- big fal 15s iliii 2183 drive in this shoes, ein | prices that ar below 3 It shoes whe i858 Useless 10 a or 1 you can get x ¥ 3 tole veral Ade LICE seVETARL GU dealer an Don’t pay any rice, until you inspect their LATDONS, yrds, ets eer iret, about wie “Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away book steed tol icant uw footin Nerves makes wesk DON ERD Posit ure por ive or free & rel BEECH BEO Address Randolph GRAIN TR MARKET. D WEEKLY BY B. D. BRIS BIN, PRODUCE AT STORES, — firm. His business steps led him upward {| from the first. In March, 1870, Ritz Burns, J.M. Goodhart, Houtzformed a copartneship and open- ed an extensive retail dry goods house known the “Iron Front | Store.” since as yl Marriage Licenses, | granted during the past week : Samuel 8, Cole, of Zion, and Cora E. Robb, of Nittany. Martin L. Holderman and Mary A. Shuey, of Benner twp. Charles H. Bierly, of Rebersburg, and Vernie Scholl, of Wolfs Store. ——— Dots Quick Today, opening of spring, opened spring. six in have all near Bellefonte, all, Foreman’s sale consumed half & beef, several hams, two bushels of dough- nuts, pecks of rusks, scores of loaves of bread, tubs of coffee and, in fact, about all eatables around, John T. Johnston, of Bellefonte, a clerk in the department of internal affairs, who was taken seriously ill from heart failure on Tuesday, is im- proving. «Every welldressed young man gets his clothing and gents’ furnishing at Lewins, Bellefonte. wefBubseribe for the REPORTER. % weeeBubscribe for the REPORTER. . i tu wr" 1 ine ieading nov- ~Crepon g from 50¢ up AAT Season mans. ergoes, Checks. Cheviots, Cravenetts, Henriettas, Novelties, Cre pons, and all the head} ng styles of for Capes and { Dresses —Garmans. roods Les rtham, Bc, Ap- P leton A Muslin, be, Tark- ley Red P ints, Shirting Prints, | Outing, ete. —(armans. ace Curtains, Serims, Dotted Muslin, Madras, Heavy ortieres, ete.—(iarmans. | Thirty patterns of Percals and Madras Cloth, Duck, Dim- L Rv5 Pique, Plaid and Striped White Goods.—Garmans. i uckles for Trimming Dress- es, Initial Stick Pins, Be, riting Tablets, and Lead Pencils at about one-half price. —{Farmans. nice oval glass Dish, full size, be. Imitation Cut G3 lass, choicest Patterns at ruin. ously low prices.—Garmans, rownie Lunch Boxes, Tin and Agate Ware. Our gate Ware is of the finest quality at cut prices. —Gar mans.