The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 02, 1897, Image 1

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    VOL. LXX.
COURT PROCEEDINGS.
CRIMINAL AND CIVIL CASES DIS-
PCSED OF
Docket
Important Sait for Dam
The Large Clvil List on the Being
Cleared Up
ages ton Wife Now on Trial.
Court convened on Friday morning,
when Edward Woodring, who plead
guilty to two indictments last Monday
for larceny, was sentenced to the Re-
Huntingdon of
the indictments, and sentence was sus-
formatory at on one
pended on the other.
Court adjourned at ten o'clock, un-
til Monday morning, at nine,
returned to No-
already
The following cases
not ree
vember sessions, and
ported, were disposed of as follows:
Com. vs. Arthur Evans, charge, lu-
nacy and dangerous, prosecutors Jas
T. Corman and H. H. Miller.
Com. vs. John A. Taylor, charge in
two counts;
tery; second, assault
first count assault and bat-
with intent to
commit rape; prosecutrix Agnes Ross
man.
pay the costs,
Com. vs. Wilkinson
betrayal,
Bill iguored, and prosecutrix to
Horner, «
Sallie
haage
R
t
Recognizance renewed to January ses-
prosecutrix yan.
sions,
Com. vs. Milford Stover, charge
trayal,
Recognizance renewed Lo January ses
be
prosecutrix Sadie Kleckner.
sions,
Gramley, charge
Ell
Com. vs. Ammon
betrayal,
Settled
Com.
prosecutrix a Johnston,
oS villing,
Ma
Bill ignored and the prosecutrix
harge
131
i
» '
LON
vs, James
adultery, prosecutrix 1
rr
SK
to
to pay
the costa,
Com. vs. Clara Frank, alias Clara
MeKinley,
trix Maggie Bloom; bill ignored and
the prosecutrix to 1
prosecution.
charge adultery, prosecu-
{
pay the costs of
Com. vs. Thomas Witmyer, charge
betrayal, prosecutrix Mazie A. Bower;
Recognizance renewed to January ses
sions.
Com. vs. Busan Long
Long,
prosecutrix Emma Falhringer,
J. O. Mohn,
vated assault and
Wm. Huey; c
sions.
£3 "
sault and
charge breach of
Vv age
Com. ra-
battery, prosecutor
watinued to January ses-
un. vs. Daniel Marphy, chai
intent to commit a
prosecutrix Fannie Barre; bill ig
and the county to pay the costs
a
trayal, prosecutrix Anna Mingle; true
bill.
Com. vs,
trayal,
true bill.
Com. vs. Charles Munice, charge be-
Com. va. Clem. Hanna, charge
obert Keath, charge be-
proseculrix Bessie Bradley;
trayal, prosecutrix Susan Martin; rec
ognizance renewed to January session,
Com. vs. ('lyde Roper, Luther
illegal
of
per snd J rry Condo, charge,
fishing, returned by
Gregg township; continued.
the constable
Court convened on Monday morning
with Hon, John G
Judge, on the bench, and after hearing
Love, President
motion and petitions court adjourned
until 1.30 p. m. on acenunt of the ju-
rors from Philipsburg and Snow Shoe
not being able to get here before that
time,
The following cases this
court were digposed of as follows:
Mingle,
feigned issue; settled and discontinued,
Gertrude B. Reber va,
tors of Aaron Williams, dec’d, feigned
for week's
ve
Mary Ellen Bhutt vs.
administra-
issue: continued on account of the se-
rious illness of Capt. W. F. Reber,
Catharine M, Resides vs, John W,
Cook, 8. M. Buck, The Saylor Madill
Coal Mining Co. and the Beech Valley
Coal and Iron Co.; continued,
Mary C. Treaster va. J. W. Mitter-
ling, administrator of ete.
Mitterling: continued.
Calvin Davidson vs. Harriet
Priscilla Stere and Eli Stere, three cas.
es, one against each of the defendants
above named; continued §
Lehigh Valley Coal Co. va,
Mtere,
D. C. Bhope, Isasc Lanning, Alfred
Ammerman, and Wilson Walford;
continued.
Lehigh Valley Co. va. Geo, Lucas,
Frank Lanning, Nelson Walford, Isaac
Lanning, David Hoover, Daniel C.
Shope, Alfred Ammerman, John Ar-
dell, Jr., and Mary I. Ardell; contin.
ued.
Philipsburg Coal and Land vs The
Guarantee Trust and Safe Deposit Co,
and John O'Niel; continued.
The Lehigh Valley Coal Co., vs. A.
J. Griest; continued.
Joseph 8. Ford, executor of ete, of
Geo. M. Ford, dec’d, va. Wm. J. Jack-
son, Eleanor H. Jackson, David I.
Woods and John Shook; continued.
Court convened on Monday after
noon at 130 and the sheriff acknowl
edged eight sherifi’s deeds and three
were continued, two special returns
| were read and quite a numbrr of peti-
| tions and motions were heard.
H. A. MeKee, use of Kezin Dunning
H. M.
| now Kezia SBlevens vs.
Annie C. Essington vs, W. R. Camp-
bell, summons in trespass, plea not
guilty; non suit entered,
Frank P. Blair Austin
gart, Sarah Gibbs and Charles Treziy-
Va, Brum-
ulny, summons in ejectiment, plea not
guilty. This suit is brought to recov.
¥
i
of land containing about one
the
about
er a trac
hundred and ten acres, located on
Nittany
one mile east of Zion, in Walker tewn-
ridge dividing valley
ship. The plaintifl’ claiming under
the Wister survey and the defendants
under the J.
the
Verdict in favor of the plain
J. Lingle survey, a junior
survey, LWO surveys interfering.
iY for the
to
the question of the law reserved by the
i :
land described in the writ, subject
court, whether judgment should be en-
tered on the verdict with or without
COSLS,
Jo A, and Wm. A. Hart-
sock, administrators of ete., of Joseph-
Williams d Wm. J.
Gee
Kline, J. UC George
Kline, No. 91
ho Logus
ine asedl vs
Henderson, and
April
as to J
term 1596, and
judgment opened (. Hender-
he let defences The
indgment was never opened as Lo Wm
son ani into a
Kline, and the jury
J. €. Henderson
his suit gro ut «
Feb. 21,
Ait
vy Lill
J. Kline and Geo
was sworn only to
note dated
i
"
18st and given
and
r the
wil
to Josephine
to
defend-
sts |
bases
Or ir
pu
three
The note
porting
nave 1 sig
ants above named, Was
tered and filed in
the
mon Pleas on the
4
1st, and some
Mr.
never signed
if his name is on U
Verdict
of the
D. F. Fortney,
Marg iret WwW yc
and H
diet in favor of
An interesting
Spangler
Wil-
Marriage Licenses,
The
were issued during the past
Wm. E
? ¥
Bellefonte,
following marriage Hoenses
week:
Miller
Green and Kate of
3. Wasson and Mary R.
Lemont,
Williams and Mary P. Mil-
Samuel |
Crieenin, «
Wm
~
Chas. H. Watson 1
Meek, of Bnow Bhi
and Finis Vivian
Ho
Frauklvn Kliveand Minnie
ge I'w ie
Franklvn Walker and Mollie
of Howard Twp.
‘ulle
E. Ad-
AN,
»- Ad -
Died Near Centre Hall,
Miss Katie Toner, daughter of Will |
fonte, died the |
y, Mrs
han, on Nittany mountain, near Cen-
tre Hall, Monday
an illness of several years, aged
47 year taken
Jellefonte where they were interred in
the Wednesday
morning.
liam Toner, of Belle at
home of her sister Dauiel Calla
on morning, after)
about
The remains were to
u
Catholic cemetery
WY
Cantata, i
of
The
Centre Hall is preparing a Cantata for |
eformed Sunday school
. : » + i
Christmas Eve. [hose who have]
| heard the music of it, pronounce it |
5
of the for amateur work. |
As there is considerable expense i
one finest
ini
conpection with its rendition, an ad- |
mission fee of 20 cents for all over 12]
years of age, 10 cents for all under 12,
will be charged.
pine
Corn fram Seed 3000 Years Old
i The Rev. Lafayette Johnson, of Ow-
Len county, has some corn raised this
| season from seed taken from a sealed
jar that was found in a mound in Mis
| souri, fifteen feet beneath the surface |
of the earth, two or three years ago.
| It has possibly been in its hiding-place
| for 3,000 years, according to the Rev.
| Johnson's estimate, he being an anti-
| quarian of no mean repute. The grains
| of the corn grown by him are the col
{ or of an Indian.— Louisville Post,
i A — A
For Sale,
Over 100 loads fine mason stone,
cheap; quarried, culled and banked on
my lot. Can be bought and hauled
any time, FrRASK E. ARNEY.
moi
When you want a suit to fit, of
good quality and at a low figure, there
is but one store in Bellefonte that can
touch all these points, Lewius, at the
Plllad. Brauch le the place.
A CHANCE FORTHE GIRLS
| A Matrimonial Agent Wants
1 His Colony In Alaska,
of
Seattle,
Charles Carrington,
be the selection of 200 or
|
{equalizing the disparity between |
male and female population
}
that is
next spring.
The
miner and proposes
agent exX~-
the
the party, getting his remunerations
matrimonial is an
FETE
exp
bo for
paid
i
in
will
it
ly legitimate business,”
out of the sums that
i
wives on his arrival. is a perfect
said he, "and
[ consider myself a benefactor, There
women in the
iI ha
and w
are thousands of young
east who are unable to fin shands
in their own communities, ould
ladly avail themselves of
Id be
fo
who
ne
g
tunity if they cou
iy good partners
act
ual miners,
and whi
f pay dirt
get any of tl
work
1
i
ol
FORA
‘I am making ¢
Believe the End of the World is Near
One ise
er who
and ie won
i
and worl
1
EN
IR,
belief
day drew
get hie rin
prea hed to en
passed and the wo
i
vi ld
and many times preached his doet
110 Ose
tine wi eventually
that the
Others have t i=iOn an
skeen up the deli
now the date has been set for Decem-
ber 12
ie
PITH
i
exception ith
prophe
church members, § d sto
And
and well
wit without § bree
this are none
the id
$
evers in y !
15 en Of
¢
many «
i
iy
predestinationisin
ye
them are intelligent rea DH
miss any topie and quote
of
ing able to dis
theologian
fact
they base the claims of their belief on
prov
AL
jerings
with the best
Reripture
And still more strange is the that
and Joe
the theory. this
tirue there are evening
ti
texts to prove
atl
or
K
different be
at
the homes of ne levers,
where the one topic of
i
of the world
the coming destruction
praying and praise
All worldly subjects are treat
od with indifference even to the stran-
ger who may happen to come among
them at snch a time,
A
Lien Collections Cense.
No further attempt will be made by
the Department of Internal Affairs to
eollect the unpaid purchase money for
in Chester, Lancaster, Berks and other
counties, and so great has veen the
pressure on Secretary Latta that he re-
cently addressed the following letter
to Major I. B. Brown, his deputy :
Dear Sir--The collection of the un-
wid purchase money Spon the land
jen docket has developed so many in-
stances of real hardship, particularly
in the excessive charges of interest im-
posed by the act of 1864, that I am in-
clined to think the next Legislature
would be disposed to afford relief. The
State can Jose nothing by the delay,
and ean be liberal if she chooses,
You will be gond enough, therefore,
to suspend further collection, except
from those who prefer to pay to perfect
title.
—————— Wi FO
The new Fall styles of dress suits
have been received at the Philad.
Branch, Bellefonte, and a more com-
plete stock you will not find. If you
need a new dress suit, hat or any ur
nishing goods, see their stock, Many
sales and small profits is the way the
firm has built ap their large patronage.
I SA OTE
WASHINGTON LETTER
| A SCHEME TO ROPE IN THE DEMO
| CRATIC MEMBERS
1
i
To Bring About Currency Legisintion
the
§y
Administration Is Working for
port of Benators and Members,
“Walk
he spider Lo ti
WASHINGTON, Nov
{to my parlor,” says t
fly:
scheme,”
“walk into my National
say
the Bouthe
the
outer!
Washingt
war al
Hips out of
fo say running «
ui
Ry
iy
1%
taken |
i large £
w the war
“Ory
and territory shall havea p
f
i
at iota o
1
ernment,
© the employes of the
ft?
19% 11a
a list prepared showing the resi fend
j of the en
secretary (Gage has §
iploves of his Department
and has announced his intention
weed out the “barnacles
been interpreted by the em stove to
mean that dismissals are to be made
of
{among the residents those states
{having
{to give
less than their share
{ which have
{ Rhould this be true, many persons
a residence, in
gn, ti
states all have more than their
taiding, or claiming
states will have to as 10
i nearby
| nearby
Distriot {
| lumbia, which is legally entitled
Treasury
{ upon residents of the 0! ¥
i
to
i»
i partment, but whieh has more than
| three hundred.
| nl acares of this sort before, but it is'nt
i only nine elerks in the
who have been in government employ
sn long that they have forgotten how,
if they ever knew make a living
outside, can get used to, The odd
thing about it, if earried out, would be
that it would eatch many more Rep ub”
licans than Democrats, but not a few
of them are political hermaphrodites,
making it their business to always ap-
pear to belong to the party on top,
without actually belonging to either
Representative Hartman, of Mont,
takes issue with the Republicans who
are trying so hard to create the im-
pression that the silver question is
dead. Hesaysit is the livest issue
now before the people, owing to the
absolute failure of the Wolcott Come
mission; that last year thousands of
Republicans voted for MeKinley, be-
Hieving that he would do something
for silver, and now they know that he
will not. Mr. Hartman makes this
prediction for 1000; *There will be 3,+
to
2, 1897,
{ 500,000 free silver Republican votes, 1.
{ 500,000 Populist votes and
Mr. Bryan stood for last year.”
lepresentative Livingston, of (in.
good for legislation favorable to Cuba,
He thin lot of
but
ka there will be a
no action,
WEATHER FORECAST,
he Kind of
the Coming Mouth
My last bulletin gave forecasts of the
storm wave Lo the ecoutinent
from November 25 to December and
the hh the
“ui
next will reach Pacific
wil December
Rockies country by
grea
1d wave will af
of
| States and Canada east of
1d will be attended DY Ie
Interesting Discovery
One of the interesting dd is
cently announced is the site of an
battlefield
th
ane
cient in Indian Territory
¢ Arkansas Professor
Walters, a western
near river.
archa
j« said to have made the find, declares
the
! Years ago
that battle occurred about 20,000
between the
Ameri
| ca, and that fully 75,000 persons
ers and the Mayas of Central
were
slain,
the ground is literally covered
the skeletons bearing unmistakable ev-
idence that they came there
{ the fatalities of battle. Not the
interesting feature of the find is the
statement that the skeletons,
well.
it
| this circumstance on which Professor
| two distinet strata belonging to
| known geological periods, and
proximate number of years which
have elapsed the battle
fought.
since
During the past two years, Mrs. J.
W. Alexander, wife of the editor of the
Waynesboro, Miss. Times, has, ina
| great many instances, relieved her ba-
by when in the first stages of croup,
by giving it Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy, She looks upon this remedy
as a household necessity and believes
that no better medicine has ever heen
put in bottles. There are many thous
ands of mothers in this broad land,
who are of the same opinion. It isthe
only remedy that can always be de
pended upon as a preventive and cure
for croup. The 25 and 50 cent bottles
are for sale by J. H. Ross, Linden
Hall, 8. M. Swartz, Tussey ville, F. A,
Carson, Potters Mills, and H. F. Ross
man, Spring Mills,
Af in need of a stylish and dressy
«uit, it is wise to consult Lewins, Belle
| Cullings of More than Ordinary Interest
tom Eyer) where,
Wheat 85 in this market,
Dressed pork $4.50 per
Apples and potatoes ar
Beautiful
morning
§
t old in the
day this
Germany will not
| Ha)
warship to
ti to enforee a
\ Kein
now on Monday ret 1, one inch
epth and third of Ul ween,
=abbath
fuvited,
this
stimosphere
titer
ted Lo Wi.
if an or-
them to
1 they will
requi-
Scho 7, fell un-
freighti Lain at West Milton Fri-
ht yd hh his lk
He died i
{al at Williamsport next day.
at bot IR Were
oe n
ove wil
fie and son, to-
men,
their
s-judge Riley, bro r
gether with a few other ung
from
¢, with six
than any
Boalsbn
1 Jargest
» svorid is the *Raf-
attractive
ae
inmeter of which
. but is odor is worse than
that of asafoetida.
in this neighbor-
the valley,
that a young man from this town had
killed near Johns.
not The
unfortunate one was a different person.
The report going
hood and other parts of
fam
been run over and
town, by a train, is correct.
Manager Garman, of the Dellefonte
| opera house, had a fine company there
last Friday night the Boston Ladies’
| 8s mphoay Orchestra, composed of 32
ladies, which drew an unusually full
house, Al is always on the walch for
the best,
There are now 1.050 convicts in the
Western Penitentiary, and 700 of these
will bethrown out of employment af
ter January 1, 1888, when the new law
regulating the manufacture of goods
in prisons goes in effect. Centre coun-
ty has upwards of a baker's dozen in
this brigade.
isi———————
The Trouble Over,
A prominent man in town said the
Sher day: “My wife has been wearing
out ber life from the effects of Dyspep-
sia, Liver Complaint and Indigestion.
Her case baffled the skill of our best
physiciaus, After using three pack-
ages of Bacon's Celery King for the
Nerves she is almost entirely well”
Keep your blood in a healthy condi
tion by the use of this great vegetable
compound. Call at G. H. Longs,
Spring Mills, sole_agent, and get a tri-
foute, and Lave him ft you out.
*