The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 27, 1898, Image 8

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    THE CENTRE "REPORTER.
UENTRE HALL, PA THURS. Oct, 2
* THE RACKET.
No. 9-11 Crider’'s Exchange, Bellefonte.
Have U Selected Ur New Fall Cos-
tume Yet!
We are ready and yon wont be
offered the hap- -hazard choice of a
buyer who was not posted. We
stand very close to the importer
aad manufacturer, and offer U pat-
terns and styles not to be
elsewhere in Centre co. Every
store can’t get first choice. We do
get it. Itsa point worth remem-
bering when U start out for that
new dress.
mn
The “Gold Medal” line of Black
perfect and true to price. Dotany
Mills specialties in all desirable
shades and weaves, stamp our Dress
Goods Department as first-class.
The Dress Lining Department is
one of the best in the store, and
save money for U too.
Delineator,
T Ww
C. |
Jutterick Patterns,
ete., for November now ready.
much to talk about. Kom and
G. R. Spigelmyer.
|
{
i
|
New Goods
Coming...
Our buyer is now in
Eastern cities
the stock
purchasing
. .
oO0ds for
and
Fall and Winter
The wide
onr large
trade. reputa.
tion of our store will be
sustained in the purchas
ing of the latest patterns
and shades in the Dress
Goods line, and we prom
ise the ladies a rare treat
when they
the
in the fashions,
3
best
come to inspect
to be had on the market.
Come and see them.
' “¥} . ‘
gOOds Wil arrive in a
davs.
Wolf &
Crawford.
Affecting the Health,
i
SP 4 Se A eRe TL
CRACKSMEN AROUND,
Two Safes Blown Open by Robbers Last
Week,
A gang of experienced safe breakers
have been touching different parts of
the county the last week, and have
met with varied success in their opera-
tions, and so far escaped detection,
At Zion on Tuesday of last week the
safe of B. A. Noll & Co., general mer-
chandise, was blown open and a couple
dollars in change was all the booty se-
cured, The same night the safe in the
general store of H. G. Miller, at Re-
bersburg, was drilled into on the top
and an attempt made to blow it open,
but the robbers were not successful,
They rifled the money drawer and se-
nine dollars,
The safe was badly battered up
almost ruined, but with a few repairs
Mr. Miller can put it in good shape.
The same night an entrance was fore-
ed into the Rebersburg postoflice, and
the robbers tried to blow open the safe,
but did not succeed. They secured no
booty in the postoflice,
At Potters Mills on Thursday
the robbers were successful in making
a good haul. They forced an entrance
into the general store of T hompson &
Smith. A hole was drilled in the safe
door and filled with The
There
the
Goods in
night
powder,
wrecked.
sixty dollars
which the robbers secured.
the store scattered all around.
The robbers took an overcoat belong-
ing to Wm. H. Noll, of Pleasant
who was assisting the firm in
in safle
were
Gap,
taking
Friday night an attempt was made
{ to blow open the safe in Allison Bros,
| flour mill at Spring Mills, but the
frightened away
before they had completed their work,
inches
powder
two
The
about
the combination.
i
i
|
|
out, The robbers
dently made a hasty departure,
{ left behind them a brace
fuse burning evi-
They
, two bits, file,
other articles,
committed by
and several
All the robberies were
the same parties.
The
robbers have evidently moved
alone for a while. They
wm no clues and detec
iy
The Boro Water Plant Ready.
I'he heavy rains last week came to
of the new water plant and
mains all along the
Mr. Malone has the reservoir
a day or two of completion.
new
with an
with mountain
It no doubt,
job after the plans and
Riter, it
ials are likely
wilh-
four sided,
is,
councilman
boro offic
as
seems, and the
any special test, as with the
which speaks great confi.
dence in contractor Malone, and we
same
line,
naceous food unless you have a
good digestion.
very
i
nervous people and a headache is often
soothed thereby.
Oranges, lemons and limes aflect
most directly the complexion and are
especially good if taken before break-
fast,
Early morning exercise is denoune-
ed nowadays by the majority of hy-
gienic teachers. At that time, they
say, vitality is at its lowest ebb and |
needs the stimulation of food.
A French physician declares that
dyspepsia is often caused by soup. He
says it distends the stomach and pre-
vents the digestion of the solids that
are eaten after the soup.
An excessively nervous woman,
she has a liking for onions, should
gratify it. Two or three eaten with
bread and butter before going to bed
are a fine sedative.
Ripe peaches are easily digested and
are also fattening, Strawberries, con-
taining a larger percentage of iron than
any other fruit, enrich the blood,
Wp
Typhoid Causes School to Close,
We are informed at Spring Mills
#nd vicinity there are quite a number
of typhoid fever cases. The Polkhill
school, south of Spring Mills, was
closed on this account,
if
Parlor Stove for Sale,
A parlor stove, late style, and as
good as new, can be purchased at a
bargain. Call at property of Mrs. Ma-
ry A. Dinges, Centre Hall.
A Mis
“Many have said their children
would have died of croup, if Chamber-
lain’s Cough Remedy had not been
given,” write Kellam & Ourren, drug-
gists, Beaview, Va. “People come
from far and near to get it and speak
of it in the highest terms.” This is
equally true of this remedy in every
community where it is known. Buy
a bottle. For sale by J. H. Ross, Lin-
F. A, Carson, Potters Mills; H. F.
Rosman, Spring Mills,
barely lie at the conlracter’s door.
The great flow of water
erable leak in the lower reservoir, but
pipes
since the rise of the stream fully 1
ip for the leakage.
af
Foster's Weather
My last bulletin gave forecasts of the
reach
cross the
next will
the Pacific coast about 29th,
great central valleys 31st to November
3, eastern states 3d.
Warm wave will cross the west of
Rockies country about 29th, great cen-
tral valleys 31st, eastern states Novem-
ber 2. Cool wave will cross the west
of Rockies country about November 1,
| great central valleys 3. eastern states 5,
Temperature of the week ending No-
vember 7 will average below normal
in the northern states east of the Rock-
jes, about normal in the southern states
and on the Pacific coast,
The first week in November will
bring a cold wave to the northern
states, and, starting in cool, the same
week will bring a wave of high tem-
perature to the southern states,
Swallow Calls Prof. Hamilton Down,
Dr. Bwallow, in a speech at Somer-
set, the other day, said Prof. Hamilton
of State College, was a part of the Quay
machine and that he drew two sala-
ries from the State, one as deputy sec-
retary of the department of agricul.
ture and the other as secretary of the
State college. He also said that the
professor ought to explain in detail
what has been done with the $124,000
appropriation to the department of ag-
riculture and the $12,000 received by
that department for contingent expen
ses,
A ons,
Struck a Good Stream,
Krape has drilled his last well
for this season ; he stopped with a well
on Colyer's lumber tract on the mount.
ain two miles north west from here,
At a depth of 80 feet he struck a copl-
ous stream of soft water, Our energet-
fc lumberman, Mr, Colyer, will put a
steam lumber operation on the timber
tract.
RS I A AAT,
When you call for De Witt's Witch
Hazel Salve the great pile cure, ont
t anything else. Don’t be tal
a substitute, for pil
th
into tin,
Be oa for ura; for sala by
for so
& Cra
A PROMINENT CITIZEN.
day,
Balser Weber, the most prominent
and esteemed citizen of Howard, this
county, died on Sunday afternoon, at
his home from an ailment of the stom-
ach.
Balser Weber was a German
birth and was born in Bavaria. He
came to this country when he was
about twenty years old. For several
years he traveled over parts of the
by
dise.
chased a store in Howard and by
steady thrift and industry became one
of the wealthiest men in his locality.
He was a prominent Democrat, and
but local offices.
He was aged about seventy years,
and was a man of integrity, which
brought him a host of steadfast friends,
Mr. Weber the father of
children, five of whom are living. In-
terment made in the Catholic
cemetery at Howard on Tuesday after-
N
brick layers have finished
the large hall
Grange, and
The beauty
large building can now
the exterior.
on the inside
was
was
noon.
A
A Fine Baillding.
The
work
their
on erected by
removed
of the
viewed
at
Progress
scaffolding. fine
be
Carpenters are
fitting it up.
is pushing his work.
being built for a public hall.
of more than ordinary size is
the west end. The will
about three hundred comfortably
with a little crowding a couple
dred more can be accommodated.
A
room
A stage the of the
hall has been erected for grange
oft from
both
building
the grange. size
There are several rooms
main audience room
easy of access, The
on floors,
will be
tilating apparatus. The work
pushed right along until the
is completed which
six weeks yet.
w
may
Ms fp»
In the Hands of His Friends,
The people of the 25th
al District will offer sincere sympathy |
to James K. P. Hall,
Congression-
Democratic can- |
great concern for the life of Mrs, Hall,
who is now with friends in Tarrytown,
N. Y., in a very critical condition. It
bas been determined by her physicians
that an operation must be performed
and it understood that
chance out of a hundred is
Vor.
is only
in her fa
A FAITH CURE FATALITY,
Sulclde,
The coroner's jury investigating the |
death of Mrs, Mitchell Garbrick
whose mangled body was found on the |
railroad track October 10th, at Belle- |
fonte, has returned a verdict that the
woman ‘did deliberately lie down
with her head across the railroad track |
for the purpose of self-destruction, be-
tion of mind due to the influence
faith cure doctor, Rebecca Parry.”
of a
up to about
when she became ac-
tal aberration and the past six months
previous to her final attempt she tried
to kill herself, claiming that
required so to do by God.
she
Was
punishment, the authorities are
ing into the matter with of
bringing criminal prosecution against
Parry woman.
She Jellefonte
a view
came to two
liberally patronized though
not a single cure was traceable to
doctrine.
$
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
threatens
sincere
led by the calamity which
The
Eympa
{she may be permanently restored
her family.
— wo
i Drank Carbolic Acid,
| Wednesday morning Mrs. W. F. Ea-
jAon, of South Philipsburg, this county
acid into a mug and drank
then informed her husband
she had
it. She
of what
done and assistance was sum-
moned. When medical aid reached
the woman she was in an unconscious
state, and so continued until death en-
sued, twenty-four hours later. A de-
pressed state of mind resulting from ill
health is responsible for the deed.
ns A so
Boller Exploded.
Word reached Lewisburg last Fri.
day that a steam threshing engine ex-
ploded on the farm of Emanuel Pont-
ious, near MiMinburg, in Buffalo
township, Union county. Both ends
of the boiler were blown out with ter-
rific force and the engine is badly
wrecked, Mr. Pontius and Byron
Klechner, owner of the engine and
threshing outfit, were standing near
the engine and narrowly escaped being
killed.
Ss A A Ao
A Good Fertilizer,
All farmers know that wood ashes
are valuable for fertilizer. Bat this
value, as many know, is due much to
the material from which the ashes
come. Thus ashes made from hard
wood are more valuable than ashes
made froln soft wood, In fact, some
ashes from soft wood have not enough
virtue to make it worth while to both-
er with them. It has also been found
that the value is largely governed by
the part of the tree from which the
ashes is made. It is declared by chem-
ists that the ash of the trunk of the
tree, and the ash of leaves still more
valuable,
Georges Valley Beats on Pamplin,
The Milesburg man of whose 70 Ib,
pumpkin the Reporter made mention
Inst week, must take a back seat, as
Georges valley wins the pumpkin pie
with a much lacger one. C. J. Finkel
reports us he has two sweet pumpkins,
one weighing 60 and the other 85
pounds.
A stubborn cou
throat
in license,
tice of the peace she
icine or charged a fee for her services,
Rince that time she has migrated be-
tween Bellefonte and Howard.
Wl —
A BIG OFFICIAL BALLOT
Names lead
Four Columns
The form of the official ballot it
a=
various counti
vania has been printed by direction of
es in Pennsyl-
can
of
COoll-
the
judiciary,
names
the candidates for the
the
and
Yro-
Hon-
'. Bwallow heads
Liberty
tickets
Dr, Bilas (
for governor.
latter party
Trickett is
Prohibition, Peo-
and Liberty partly tickels r
judge of the superior court. The
N. Weiler appears in the Demo-
Will
» Democratic,
Swallow, iam
on ti
pi e's fo
ame
Wat-
ool
, and that of Justus
governor,
nine columns on the
the
recoguition
There are
but as Citizens’
denied
county commissioners will be
party
been on it
instruct.
state department
the
not to
uma on ballolis to
The precaution of putting nine col-
umns on the ticket was taken to expe-
dite the printing of the official ballot
provide for the
had the court decided the nomination
The official ballot will be mailed to
all the counties in the
day evening
state on Tues.
.
A Tram Road Accident
rail-
of Con-
afternoon on the Buffalo Vailey
road, Gilbert Kulp, a brother
gressman M. H. Kulp, and
tendent of their lumber business; John
E. Kreisher, of Lewisburg, and James
Jurd, a
the mountain on a lumber truck.
brakes gave way, and the car was soon
beyond their control.
mentarily increased,
and they
HE
THE
Star Store.
satablished 1889,
‘6. 0. BENNER, Proprietor,
We want to thank our many patrons
| for the generous patronage they have
| favored us with from time to time.
| We know what you are doing, (and so
| do you), when you deal at The Btar,
| As we've said before you get many a
| good deal, from the fact that our ex-
| penses are very light, and we can do it.
‘Do you want any of these at the price
| Men's Black Cheviot Buit., 84 00
{ Men's Dress Bhoe......
Men's U nde shirt and Drawers.
{ Horse Blankets. .......... aress
{ Wire te
Ladies’ Rubbe 5 axansn ~
Fancy Rio Coflee , Dry Ronsted........
You huy these any time at The Star,
ellefonte Bread, Oranges, Danan
Rock Cheese, Moca
Java Coffee, Maricabo Coffee,
‘umbia Flour, Ajax Syrup, the
| mous Logan Hydraulic Cement
Wanted.
Potatoes,
Butter, Eges.
the most complete line
lanke
he to 2 0h
as, Castle and
Col
fa-
y C10,
Apples, 1estnnuts
Pop-Corn,
We have
{of Horse B
| and see,
THE STAR.
phone
i
tg in town. Come
| Tel
connection,
A Line
of
(Granite Ware
at
Sixteen Cente,
Any Piece
worth
Double
for
Example a
Two nart
Bucket,
Regular price,
Phiri fia
Thirty-five
Sixteen cents.
GARMAN'S STORE,
BELLEFONTE,
nit
Antique
1 De iid
. large
’ +
i OBLS AN
i
Large
A Fine,
Armes. oniy
"Phone 1302.
ure.
lid
i 1
80}
1¢
’
-
Bed Room Bait
ot
1 Sl
Oniy '
Le
Oak
{IY wide d
£1.50
Rocker,
You.
Bellefonte, Pa.
Dry Goods
Closing Out
Depar
same room, and have determin
of Clothing without regard to
Our Clothing
tment.
we
Carpets and Clothing in the
ed to close out our entire stock
3
vaiue,
frightful velocity. To their dismay
they saw some other trucks on the
track ahead of them. Burd jumped off
and yelled to the others (o do the
same. Before they could do so the car
had dashed into the other trucks, and
they were thrown with awful foree.
The car was smashed into splinters,
and Kulp and Kreisher were found
senseless and bleeding smong the
rocks. Physicians were hastily sum-
moned from Mifflinburg and Lewis-
burg. Kulp is badly bruised, butit is
thought not fatally injured. Kreish-
er's condition is very serious, and it is
feared his skull is fractured. He has
a hole an inch or more deep in his
head, and is still unconscious,
A SA Ss
Arrived from Porto Rico,
Thomas Sankey arrived here yester-
day, from Porto Rico, and is staying
with friends.
Young Sankey left with a Peoria,
11l,, company for the Spanish war,
and was in the Porto Rico campaign
aa fur as Ponce, when the war ended.
Their march was through a mountain.
ous country on to Ponce. He tells us
he was in pretty good health while in
the service, Mr. Sankey left this place
for Illinois some six years ago.
Special Thanksgivieg,
Goveanor Hastings has issued a
proclamation designating October 27th
as a day of special thanksgiving and
prayer for the recent victory of Amer.
ican arms.
————_——————
Men’s All Wool
Suits
at £4.08, cost to manufacture £6.00
and generally sold at £8.00.
All Wool Suits at £7.50, cost to
manufacture £0.00 and generally
gold at $12.50,
Finer goods proportionotely low
in price.
Our stock of
Overcoats
is yon a goo On
sell you a goo
strong.
Overcoat for $3.08,
priced dsewhe re as high as 87 00.
Our All Wool Genuine Beaver
Overcoats at $5.50 cannot possibly
be duplicated at less than $0.00,
And our Overcoats at £7.50 and
£10.00 we are selling at but a frac.
tion of their real value.
Boys’ and
Children’s Suits.
Good line of Boys’ and Chil
{dren's Suits still on hand,
C oo ae 8 Suits as low as $1.18,
good goods and no shoddy. *
ing Carpet business. :
Bellefonte,
wmenfiybuestin for She RapoRSER.
.