The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 22, 1895, Image 1

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    VOL. LXVIII.
A., THU
2°
ey
RSDAY, AUGUST
MORE TROUBLE
QUAY THREATENS TO APPEAL TO
THE COURTS.
Gilkeson Refuses to Cali a Meeting of the
Republican State Committee at
Quay's Suggestion,
Making up the roll of delegates to
the Republican state convention, is a
Quay don’t trust
and thinks he will
honestly and de-
the state central committee
called to make up the list of
Giilkeson has refused to call
new trouble ahead.
chairman Gilkeson,
not make the roll
mands
shall be
delegates.
the committee, and now a majority of
the committee have signed a call for a
meeting on the 26th to make up the
roll. The Record says:
Meanwhile the Quay lieutenants
here are talking about the probable
consequences of the State Chairman's
positive stand against the movement
to have the roll of delegates prepared
by the committee and to provide for
such policing of the hall as would pre-
vent the place from being packed with
the shouters of one faction. There are
about 120 members of the State
mittee, the basis of representation
ing two from each of the 50 Senatorial
districts, except where a district in-
cludes more than counties, in
which case there is one member from
each county. At least 80 of the State
Committeemen are claimed to be sup-
porters of Quay in this contest. The
that a large
are Quay
num-
Com-
be-
two
Grilkeson people concede
majority of the
men. There is no rule
ber of members required
call by the chairman for
the committee.
The Republican party of the State
has no written or printed rules except
on the basis of representation in con-
the election of State
Committeemen and the State chair-
Outside of these matters every-
according
members
as to the
Lo
meeting
secure a
a
ventions and
man.
thing has been done to cus-
tom and precedent, except on such ex-
as Senator Quay
finds to have The
Quay men argue that Chairman Gilke-
or
commitliee
traordinary occasions
arisen just now.
son is mistaken in saying intimat-
ing that the State has no
right to control him. They add that,
although he was elected chairman by
and pe
ate Convention,
the party nominees rimanent
chairman of the St and
not by the State
not usurp the powers of the commit-
tee. He is not ted t
will of that body oy if it ® had elected
him.
The convention that resulted in Col.
Committee, he must
less 0
chairman ad-
journed sine die and has no existence.
Ever since that time the Quay
contend there been nobody
nothing for Col. Gilkeson to be respon-
sible to but the State that
body being the only organization rep-
resenting the and
certainly he has not been responsible
to any individual official
The sole agent for all
the party has been,
Gilkeson's election as
men
has or
Committee,
lepublican people,
or citizen.
the business of
will be until
the moment the permanent chairman
of the coming State Convention takes
the chair, the State Committee, by
whose rulings or implied assent all of-
ficial actions of the State chairman
must be governed.
Hence it is declared that Col. Gil-
heson, in denying the right of the com-
~mittee to change the way
of preparing the roll delegates,
matter upon which there is no rule, ar-
rogates to himself the powers of the
body whose servant he is, and virtual-
ly declaies that he is the committee,
Consequently if he shall persist in ig-
noring the call signed by 37 members
for a meeting of the committee, it
declared that that body will ignore
him on Monday before the convention
by meeting in the Lochiel Hotel and
taking the necesgary precautions
against a doctored roll and a hall pack-
ed in the interest of Gilkéson.
This controversy suggests
thought that if Col. Gilkeson and his
backers shall resist the committee's
taking matters into his own hands,
unprecedentedly disagreeable, and per-
haps exciting, ocenrrences may follow,
among the possibilities being rival
Btate Conventions and rival State
committees and chairmen. It is also
intimated that circumstances might
prompt an appeal to the Dauphin
county court to compel compliance, in
the roli and hall arrangements, with
the decision of the State Committee,
EN
and
customary
of a
is
the
Died at Altoona.
Mrs, Busan Westfall, wife of Engi-
neer J. D., Westfall, died at her home
in Altoona Wednesday evening. Her
death resulted primarily from cholera
morbus which superinduced paralysis
of the bowels.
Clay Wosterd Suits, worth
12,00 and 15.00, our price, 7.00
and 8.00. Lyon & Co.
HOW THEY GOT AHEAD,
Lancaster County the “Garden Spot of the
County.”
The people of Lancaster county, Pa.,
are justly proud of at least one of the
facts established by the belated but
welcome publications of the Census
Bureau. Lancaster county is, by
census of 1800, installed in the envia-
ble position of ‘garden spot of the con-
tinent.,’”! The six leading counties in
the United States in the value of their
57,067,790
, 6,004,160
5 B63 80
5,489 450
5,411 870
50
1. Lancaster County, Pa...
2, St Lawrence county, N.
Chester county, Pa. ‘ -
i. Worcester county, Mass. o.com
5. Bucks county, Pa....cicormsies ssssmes
6. Cotusa county, ( oe .
The theory that a protective tarifl,
while beneficial to the manufacturers,
is injurious to farmers is not supported |
by facts. Pennsylvania's pros-
perity largely due to protection,
The policy has built up her great and
varied manufacturing interests. And
while those interests have been grow-
ing it appears that her farmers have
fared so well that three of her coun-
occupy, respectively, the first,
third and fifth positions in aggregate
value of farm products.
The Lancaster New Era supple-
ments the census figures with explana-
tory remarks that enhance the agricul-
tural supremacy of the three Pennsyl-
al . 5,857,
these
is
ties
Foster Tells of Storms, Cool Waves Frosts
and Earthquakes,
My last bulletin gave forecasts of the
storm wave to cross the continent from
the 17th to the 20th, and the next will
reach the Pacific const about the 21st,
cross the west of Roekies country
the close of the 22nd, great central val-
leys 23rd to 25th and eastern states the
26th. This disturbance unusu-
ally severe in the west the Rocky
mountains and the cool wave
ing will eause killing frosts in the up-
per Missouri, upper
by
will be
of
Mississippi and
Warm wave will cross the
Rockies country about the 2ist,
central valleys 23d and eastern
the 25th, will
west of Rockies country about the
great central valleys the 27th and east-
ern states the 25th,
Particular attention is called
of
great
west
Cool wave
Cross
to the
The latter will probably occur only in
earthquake countries, Within
days of Aug. 20, Sept. 17, Oct.
a few
16,
be expected. Near Aug. 22, Bept. 18,
Oct. 15 and Nov. 12 bril lig int auroras
will probably be observed on the North
American continent,
In my next bulletin will be
detailed forecasts of temperature,
given
rain-
vania counties. The second county in
the list is St. Lawrence, N, Y., but it]
is three times as large as Lancaster.
Its farm lands are worth little more |
than half as much per acre as those of |
Lancaster, and the are less diy
versified, the chief item being dairy
Colusa county, is also
but |
as |
crops
products, Cal.,
Lancaster,
only one-fourth
It is stated that the agricultur- |
three Pennsylva-
nia counties is due to the Quakers and |
Quakers in Chester county, |
both Qua- |
three times as large as
her land is worth
much.
al superiority of the
Germans
Germans in Lancaster, and
kers and Germans in Bucks.
These farmers have grown rich by |
industry and economy, the only possi- |
ble way to succeed in any calling, and |
ini
leave |
more important in farming than
other They do
the Pp
and put
not
all
howling
wey do not leave their |
field
while they at- |
hear
rant about the wrongs inflicted on far-
“money sharks in Wall |
They do not mortgage their
money where-
avocations,
zh in the
in their
cheap money. TI
harvesting machines in the
winter |
for |
loug furrow
time
€ex- |
posed to rain and snow
tend meetings to demagogues |
mers by the
street.”
lands nor crops to get
with to buy luxuries,
But they their
good things of life and
of the!
content- |
share
“live
have
edly between the little and the great.”
Beginning
tune,
early to work out their for- |
laying aside a little money every
year, they find
bly fixed before the children
They are able to buy
themselves comforta- |
grow up. |
pianos for their |
daughters without recourse to money |
lenders. Both sons and daughters are |
to school, and some of the bright-
If the farmers |
of the country at large would make a
sent
est go through college.
study of these Germans and Quakers,
with a view to learning how to make!
farming profitable, the next census
improvement in
Washington Post.
would show a great
agriculture,
. Bl ottoecmssimmsan
It May Do as Mach for You,
Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, IIL,
writes that he had a Bevere Kidney
trouble for many years, with severe
pains in his back and also that his
bladder was affected. He tried many
so called Kidney cures but without
any good result. About a year ago he
began the use of Electric Bitters and
found relief at once. Electric Bittets
is especially adapted to the cure of all
Kidney and Liver troubles and often
gives almost instant relief. One trial
will prove our statement. Price only
50¢. for large bottle at J. D. Murray's
Drug Store.
a A Mf Si bo
Awaiting a Decision,
he telephone question has not yet
been decided, and the petitioners who
ordered their phones removed or giv-
en a $1 per month reduction are await-
ing the action of the company. All of
the petitioners paid the company for
the last two weeks of August at the $3
rate, and so far none of the checks
have been returned to them. The pa-
trons think they will win this time.
They either win or the phones go out.
They are fully determined on this
point.
Assis
Is a Professor,
Woolrich, Clinton county, has a
man who claims that he has beaten
the world's record in diving. He
¢lalms that he has remained under the
water five minutes and a fraction, He
proposes giving exhibitions in the fu-
ture and has already received offers
from several amusement managers,
Clay Wosterd Suits worth
12.00 and 15.00, our price, 7.00
and 8.00. Lyon & Co.
fall, storm waves, severe
frosts for September,
storms
The calculations
have been carefully revised, and
to prove correct.
I ex-|
pect 85 per cent.
SUICIDE AT TYRONE,
Newton Bouse, once
Shoots
Hall
" © entre
Himself,
Boy.
Newton!
ing in
Jouse, a young man resid-
Tyrone, committed suicide
1 Tyrone, {
15, He
Bouse, who about
at
af-
nm Thursday
was a son of the late
15
pastor
the
lev. Years ago
ag
thie
entire
fr
03
E. church, and where
Young Bouse took a revolver and | shot
he
'
‘
for a long time was unable to obtair
employment, and this so weighed
became melancholy
He was a practical druggist and up
1864, he conducted adrug
store at Saxton, Af-
to
the
Jedford county.
he
and has since resided at
homes of his brothers in that place
1 aged
aged
John
came
Tyrone
it
mother
A.
A.
M.
and Harry I.
He was unmarried and
30 years. He
abot
leaves an
Dr.
Wi
yardmaster, Tyrone ;
Tyrone,
Bu Hse
Bouse,
fouse,
illiam
(ie,
Bouse,
— iene
To Keep Bread Fresh.
In Swiss and German farm
{| where the baking takes place onoe
{ fortnight or certainly at fairly long in-
unknown. It is
| tends to preserve its freshness. Sprin-
kle flour freely into an empty flour
sack, and into this pack the loaves; be
careful to have the top crusts of two
loaves touching. Where they have to
lie bottom to bottom sprinkle flour be
tween them. Tie up the sack and
hang it up in an airy place, not against
a wall, but so that it can swing, The
day before the loaf is wanted take it
out, brush off the flour and stand it in
the cellar over night. In this way
bread remains edible for three or four
weeks,
————
Wheels not to be Cheaper,
Some one recently informed the pub-
lic through the press that bicycles
would be reduced in price over one
half next season, claiming that one
firm would put four or five hundred
thousand on the market at $30 each.
The best information we have on this
subject comes to us through the pa-
pers published in the interest of bicy-
cle dealers, and they all deny the re-
port of wheels being cheaper. It is
quite well known that the material
that goes into the make-up of a wheel
is practically controlled by a few firms,
and they are not endangering their
business by reducing the price when
the wheels are in such great demand.
Wheels in "96, therefore, are not like
ly to be much cheaper than at present.
—
Bought a Store.
It is reported that the general mer-
chandise store of Roush & Limbert, at
Madisonburg, has been purchased by
Isanc Bmith & Bons, of this place.
The new firm is to take possession on
September 1. The grocery at this
place will be continued under the pres-
ent management,
BL MAS —
~You will want a new suit. You
want it cheap and good, as well as of
the latest cut. Lewins, Bellefonte,
can accommodate you in every partic-
ular, and is bound to please.
NG TOWNSHI
CHAPTER OF
HISTORY.
ANOTHER EARLY |
Early Residents who Settled There Nearly
a Century Ago. Descendants of Plon-
cers in the Township,
A chapter on Spring township,
the History of Centre
of general interest:
to Centre
Philip Benner in 1792
Waddle (his business manager,
Williams, Mordecia;
rad Drimmey,
County, will be
CAI county with Gen.
Thomas
|
and Con-
were
Benner,
latter a Revolution-
Williams
forge-builder,
the
soldier. mill-
wright and
not only forge
ary was a
He
and mill for Gen,
for
Centre
trade
built
Ben-
{ ner, but did similar service others
in various portions of
He had learned his
Jones, who
{ about the time of Gen.
Williams made
with Isaac
came to Centre county
Benner's com-
his home at Rock
Forge until 1801, when he to
Lemont. There he lived
the home of Cornelius Dale
death, in 1857, at the age
iseven. Of Ev Williams’
six are
aunty
pring tow nsl
Willis
5
{ INE.
moved
ly
until h
chief at
of « ighty-
twel
those in
Williams,
an
still
being
ip,
Ms,
living,
Mark
Levi,
Lemont,
| children,
fof 8 and
Evi
aged
James
of
died
Thomas Waddle,
the
married one of Ge
He had
seven are
Wilson,
{f Patton; T
Ha il
arah Al
: G4
in 150%,
wile
cighty-seven, mens
tioned as having come to
Be
daughters,
county
nner, ii.
Benner's
Idren, of whom
are Ruth B.
P. B. Waddle
as Waddle, of
Hamil
Mary Griflith,
fonte;
shore;
Sarah Wi
Mordecai Wi addle,
ip. Mordecai Wad-
Centre A
He
up
On
Jersey
f
Of r
Ma, enner;
and
of Spring townsl
die was sherif
1854 to
township in
I
uilt a wool
ys few te
1 William
I'l
2
Benner
,
NOW an's
mii
nement
Williax
ie saw mills
Ephriam an
ed the
ns
ven mill
by
woolen mill was destroyed by
WO i
himself.
fire, &
at « ed with
OE a stone structy
The W
iness in 1532, when
rented the t
into a distill
illiams brothers gave
Henry
iilding and
ry. Harvey -
sequently occu
shop in Onn
{ pon ae place now he |
Harvey Mann the firs
h been a Mr.
of as * ‘the old
delighted i ng k
d silver-buckled shoes.” An
Methodist
and whenever he «¢
| ry. LOIN
Mrs
supposed to
setlier
ave Kinne
leman
nee breech-
He is SPOREn «
gent
who n weari
€% an
i
i
he,
nt and devout was h
wld
that
worship
would
grt
F IOreover, Fo,
{ a circuit preacher to come
i would have public in
to which he
| neighbors by personal
| hand.
The kitchen portion of Mr. Kinnear’'s
{ old house is still standing, and in use
lon Mrs. Mann's place. John
bought the property of Kinnear,
sold to Judge Thomas Burnside,
call |
before
house, iis
notioe
Long
who
in which he served
campaigns, moved from
to
1808
Revolution,
through three
eastern Pennsylvania
county in 1782, and in
his habitation to Boggs township,
{ Centre county.
| Judge Huston, and while his
| worked the farm he followed his trade
of weaving in a shop that he had set
up on his property. Helived in Boggs
township until 1840, and died in How-
ard township in 1844, at the age of
eighty-four. His childran were eleven
in number. Of them, one died at the
age of eleven. When the next death
occurred among them the youngest of
the ten was sixty-five years old. There
were four sons whose names were Ja-
cob, Henry, Philip and John. These
sons are dead, but of the eleven chil-
dren two daughters are still living
Mrs. Judge Dopp, of Howard, and
Mrs. J. W. Clark, of Iowa. The four
sons married, and all but one died in
Centre county. Mrs. John Curtin, of
Bellefonte, Mrs. T. R. Sellers, of Pat-
ton, Philip Barnhart and Henly L.
Barnhart, of Boggs township, were
children of Henry. John moved to
Towa with his family in 1856 and died
there. Jacob and Henry married in
1814 daughters of John Holt, one of the
pioneers in Boggs township. In 1818
Jacob moved to Spring township, and
occupied as a renter land owned by
John G. Lowrey, and first improved
by Philip Shreek. This land was sur-
veyed cn Samuel Bimpson's applica-
tion of April 3, 1760 and in 1810 Mr.
Lowrey built upon it the house now
occupied by John H. Barnhart. Ja-
cob Barnhart was a sturdy pioneer,
and pushed his way bravely on in the
work of clearing up an almost new
country. He found upon his arrival
in 1818 that his nearest neighbors were
Daniel and John Weaver, on the pres
ent Weaver place, and John Lamb, on
Lycoming
changed
in
|0OnNs
NO
. 33
{ the Brockerhofl’ farm. Mr. Barnhart
| rented the farm from 1818 to 1850, in
which year his Philip N. and
{John H, it. They still own
| and occupy it, having all told about
| four hundred acres in one tract. Up-
{ on that farm Jacob Barnhart died in
| 1876, aged ninety-one, Of his six chil-
| dren, living. Philip and John
| with two sisters, live on the old place,
| Jacob 8,
BONS
bought
five are
lives in Towa.
Alexander Biggs died
{ township Nov. 1, 1821,
He was a remarkable
strange
in Bpring
dged ninety
instance
vicissitudes of life. He
an Englishman, and in early life
held a commission of lieutenant in the
British army, the East
{ Indies, where prisoner,
y
Years,
| of the
Wis
and served in
he taken
intimately
Was
and became acquainted |
with Oriental manners and customs.
years he was employed in a
on the continent of
the Mediterranean.
Republican in he
muntry, being in affluent
umstances, but
| For many
ilitary capacity
and in
Europe
| Being a principle
eame to this eo
| cire
and &
ri
Was
the
miseries of
unfortunate,
of
he
Al-
After traversing
ifter experiencing blessing
hes and the poverty,
died in a lonely cottage among the
legheny mounta
{| the f the
in
banks of his
of
mighty
in the
hill ne
His
vived him, but children
left Bigs;
ed on the tract where
stands,
n married his daughter |
coffee-
Ganges
silence
the
widow,
Femains now repose
{
1
death on
of Lo
a bleak Ar
banks
gan Branch. very
his
him.
since re
lone
ng »
HOw and
3
Was ‘a If-gallon
d with gold
witli gol
In Isl two bhrotl
el Weaver,
John and Dan-
COUNTY NEWS,
Interesting Items Clipped and Condensed
From All Around,
Krumrine, the Bellef druggist,
has invented a new compound for em-
balming the dead.
onte
Abe Luckenbach saved a little boy
from drowning, a few
saw him tumble into Jackson's
race and hurrying to the
him out,
he
mill-
spot he drew
days ago;
A gon of Dr.
Mills, while
week, was
broken.
Vanvalzah,
wrestling
thrown
Spring
last
arm
one
had
day
and an
George
of th
tion,
Dale's new house,
¢ burned one
on the site
2, I8 nearing comple-
Brush valley, like other localities, is
Mrs. Samuel Lyon,
in Bpring left
grand children and
children,
who died
10
E
Aug. 3
twp., children, 66
great grand
Jessie,
of C. H.
10 inst,
an interesting litt
Evy, 0
le daughter
state College, died on
Rev. W. W. Hess has left
Mich.
accepted a call to preach.
Zion,
a new house,
Wm.
on tl
2
Boalsburg
for Berrien Springs, where he
Daniel Grove, of has broken
ground for
J. Bnook
of Millhei
A few ni
IKE ag
mises Penn
four bushels of wheat,
houlders, a «
The
1€ mountain,
If ye
Mrs, M. Hart-
re sick list
and
man, s Ale
ht
0 Henry Keen's pre-
robbed f
in twp., were of
two
ned
two hams,
an of lard and can
goods, thieves tracked to
th
were
says the Journal.
a want any job work, plain or
» hundred
Spring
form-|
Ro-
land |
by |
lo-1
BCATCe-
f
of |
to the
Ww occupied
MeClell
IAD
Han moved
ship nit
Whe
4
Wes aver.
upon the pl
iy cleared land in that
From B
1@ path a
He had to build fires to keep
ives from his cabin, i
1d
i
% there was
portion
IZ. uiing spring to
through
his |
Was dense
and
n the beasts wo al times
howl
door.
th
is Lh
Weave
$s 8
I night at
orge Weave
niv a:
Oniy sur
cabin’s
f
r, Oi 3el
wilt
very
lefonte, e
son of Daniel
viving
{in Centre county
4
George Swartz | at
cated Milli
His children were
f whom John
William
one of the
ds ater hit
KA
heim
twel ive
li
Bel
iAar-
of Andrew
1820 moved
0
1 py
about i438
now ves
11
in Mil
fonte.
and
Henry.
ried one of the
Harter, of Haines, and in
to a farm in Nittany
i tow nship, that
heim in
sons,
ers
valley in Spring
his father, George had
There were three hundred
tract, known as the Mal-
colm Ross warrantee, sold to Andrew
| (ilenn in
| purchased.
acres in the
1805, from
Swartz purchased it.
dred acres of the three
Swartz, son of Henry,
| He moved with his fa:
lier's cabin on the
whom George
Upon one hun-
hundred A. J.
lives now.
nily into a col-
mountain side, and
| set himself to clearing away the forest,
I'he charcoal burners had been in and
burned off a good deal of the timber,
but there was nevertheless a good bit
left. The Nittany road was then open
and upon it Swartz found a few neigh-
bors, but they were indeed few and far
Old Mr. Pickle lived on
land now occupied by the Kauffman
and Sharer farms. A man by name of
Krise was near Pickle, and the Gor-
dons lived along the mountain’s base,
Later came the Kauffmans, Nolls,
Sharers, Millers, Jacob Gill, James
Brown, Frederick Nofsinger, and Jas,
Ralston,
James Brown kept tavern on the
pike, where David Bell now lives. Ja-
cob Gill bought of Henry Swartz a lot
at the foot of the mountain, and lived
there until his death, in the summer
of 1850, His age was ninety-three,
Mr. Swartz lived three years in the
collier’s hut, and then built a log cab-
in. In 1840 he erected the brick man-
sion now occupied by his son, the on-
ly one now living of Henry Swarts's
eight children. The Mt. Pickle spok-
en of as living neighbor to Henry
Swartz owned four hundred acres,
which he sold to Jacob Sharer in 18387.
In that year Sharer made his settle
ment upon the tract. Pickle had been
there several years, and had improved
a good share of the land. In 1886, Ja-
cob and David Kauffman came to Nit-
tany from Union county. Jacob died
in 1875 and David in 1878. George
Kauffsi, son of Jacob, lives now in
Spring township. The sons of David
now in Spring township are Israel and
Benjamin,
BR AM RA
between.
wedding it
and
sale
fancy, tations, bill
ietter heads, envelo pes,
programs,
&c., please call at the lepor-
where the finest and cheap-
est work is done,
office,
Sn s———— —————
Local Dots,
Old and new wheat 65 at burn ;
™
OAs
Cool on Tuesday, warmer on Wed-
nesday.
Big crops of oats, corn and jpotatoes
in Haines township,
"Cross-the-way
put de
but apples scarce.
r neighbor, has
wn a new board-walk.
300b,
A little daughter arrived at
Mever's,
Charley
on Tuesday.
Some farmers think of sowing next
rather early
One dealer in Hartly township this
shipped
228 bushels of huckle-
season
berries.
Dr. Jacobs showed us some very fine
potatoes raised by him, which would
render him eligible to the grange.
ground is to be
supplied with board walks for prome-
naders,
Advertise in the ‘Reporter’
send us your job work
work first-class.
Davy
a
The grange pic-nic
and
prices low and
Meyer is proud because now
gross-daudy. For particulars
see item higher up.
Mr. Ranck, of Lewisburg, during
the war a clerk in Wolf's store, was in
town Wednesday, as a shoe agent.
Our town's water supply was excel-
lent for quantity and quality all sum-
mer--the grandest institution here.
Hartley township has an abundance
of apples ; towards Lewisburg they are
SCATOR,
Hello ! Charly Long, what's become
of the telephone fight ? it's as interes-
ting as the Quay-Hastings dance.
A nse
he's
The Ideal Panacea,
James L. Francis, Alderman, Chica-
go, says: ‘“‘I regard Dr. King’s New
Discovery as an Ideal Panacea for
Coughs, Colds, and Lung Complaints,
having used it in the family for the
last five years, to the exclusion of phy-
sician’s prescriptions or other prepara-
tions.”
Rev. John Burgus, Keokuk, Iowa,
writes: “I have been a Minister of
the Methodist Episcopal church for 50
years or more, and have never found
anything so beneficial, or that gave
me such speedy relief as Dr. King's
New Discovery.” Try this Ideal
Cough Remedy now. Trial bottles
free at J. D. Murray’s Drug Store.
i A
Mrs, Chester Munson,
On Tuesday evening Mrs. Letitia
Munson, wife of Judge Cbester Mun-
son, died at her home at Philipsburg.
For some lime she had been quite ill
her illness resulted in death at the
time stated. Her maiden name was
Letitia McClellan, and she has lived
at Philipsburg ever since her birth,
over sixty-nine years. She was mar.
ried to Chester Munson fifty-one years
ago. The result of this union was five
children, who are R. Edward, James
H., Mrs. Gertrude Lingle, Mrs. Carrie
M. Lee and Ella A. Munson deceased.
She has only one sister, Mrs, Ellen
Denning.
Figured China Silks, 20¢. a
yard. Striped Wash Silks, soc.
~~Hubscribe for the REPORTER.
a yard. Lyon & Co.