VOL. LXXIII. SUPT. REPORTS. An Account of Extibits Given to the ny Distinguished Guests at Grange Encamp. ment, Hon. W. F. Hill, of ty, Master of the State Hon. J. T. Ailman, Crawford coun- (range, of Juniata, Sec- retary of the Slate Mrs. Helen Jolhinston, « of State Grauge. G. W. Oster, of Be of the Executive ¢ DD. man of the IKxecutive ¢ M. 8. Bond, of Mo the Btate { iran re, Col. R. H. ex-Secrelury of che Miate Grange Williams Grove Grange Erie, Ceres liord, Secretary | rattles Kennedy, of Erie, ex-f ‘hair { ynmittee, ntour, Deputy of] haniesbuarg, and manager of the pition. Hon. James K. I’. this district. Hon. P. Gray Meek, Demoeratic eral. Senator Heinle tor of this district. Mr. Luther Kaufla attorney the Roru: Pure Butter Pre Mr. Dasiingt porter for the North Mr. BR. 8. Conkliy, clerk of the division of { Mr. Ruhl, Lewisburg the ciation. Mr. Ed. Walter, leading gation from Cl Hall, nominee f Uniou county far cantly ester count Hox. Li. RHoxNG Encampment and (Girange I here- nd- ent of the division of general exhibits : Chairman with submit my repor as superinte The exhibit of Experiment Station finest ever made by occu pied an entire sisted of a collec grasses, fod etabl 2 Ta: Calvin ream separator, Buckeye drills, and Wood mowers J. R. McFarlar for Harrison & cutler, st Potter & Hoy, I stulkey plow, and other machinery. John D. Ncese, . -N, cream separator and Thornton Barnes, Massilon Toronado ' gel Toler vaiers new pattern steel plo Improved powers, Philadel Zro- phi A, ceries, spices, ele, W. OO. Rearick, ( machinery, Garrity & Son, ing. D. Irvin's Son's, tre Hall, hardware Vermont separators and dairy John A. Deitzler, Lebanon, gant display of harness, J. C. White, est Manufact Hall, orn planters, Philadelphia, cloth- ‘entre farm Wagons, « Bellef and stoves, onte and Cen- Creamery Co. creamers, Pa., e¢le- blankets Williamsport, De uris Co., sewing chines and bicycles, G. H. Long, Spring Mills, notions, novelties, ete. Lamb & Jaflin, spec (+. ©). Benner, Centre ies, confectionery, ete, W. A. Huber, novelties, M. J. Derrick, York organs and pianos, Acetylene gas plant, 85. K. Lewisburg, Every subordinate grange had head- quarters, with a banner and flag at its entrance, giving name and location. The County Grange had on exhibi- tion two new flags. The Subordinate | CGirange flag has a field centre repre! senting a homestead presided over by Ceres, surrounded by a wheat field, all | having a border of blue, which repre. | mpl ¢ ele, BiOr- ML nis- grote ries, ‘facies, Hall, gro - Mechanicsburg, Pa., | s Pa., Weaver Sober, } sents the subordinate grange color. ] The county Grange flag has a w hi ite | centre, green border with pomona’ on the field centre, surrounded by orchard and vinyard. A handsome state flag floated over Btate Grange headquarters, which was presented by Drs. Rothrock and Pear. son and Mrs, Conkling, of Harrisburg. Trusting my labors have proved sat- isfactory, I remain, Gro, DALE, Bupt. Gen. Exhibit, Report of superintendent of stock department. Whilst the exhibition of stock was not as large in number as on some former occasions, it was merito- * rious, I. 8. Frain, Abdera, bay French Coach mare, fonled June 21, 1897, No. 1764, bred by J. W. Aiken & Hon, Bei pio, N. Y. “Orie,” black stallion, four years old, thoroughbred Coach, foaled May 2, 1806, No, 1680, bred by J, W. Alken, N. Y, an N. B. Schaeffer, Percheron colt. James (. Goodhart, Centre Hall, grade colt, David K. Keller, French Coach mare and colt, Henry J. grade allion, “Kerman French Junior,” Cierbrick, Coach st 5 years old. Horse Coach stallion, James A. Company, imported “Kerman,” ler, four head strand. aefler, Centre Kel milking N. BB. Seh horn bull. cattle, Hall, James C. Goodhart, shorthorn bull, four years old. T. Pe four James Goodhart, iter, Jersey heifers. Poland Shropshire shire and Southdown she ep, George Giogerich, Eoglish Berk- hogs. sire 2 Samuel Gingerich, English Berk- i oe HOES, J. E. Rishel, F Mills, Berk- aroiers Shook Bros., Chesterwhite and Eng- sh Berkshire hogs, . Keller, Centre Hall ly and eigut Puppies, dgian Hare 1 Rozk and Hall, ghorns, two Hamburgs, barred Bull Ply- Hamburgs, Silver rgs, two coops White tock, J.B, Penn Meyer, drown L CONS Ly mouth Roek, two White 1 Ham! Barred rand. le Poultry F OOPS Plymout arm: Black White-crested Bls led Re ack iat . 1 naotls, single wtra Games, ac IVer-spaug combed wd Brown we Od Mi r ottir + RUIGEARN, Sebright ban- of stock farm, , two Coops he original oberta’ sid wk , Harry Green, man- », trio Red Caps, i. two Coops Barred Ply- RICH, Bupt, of the than of the X hibition charge " is more $ assed w grand SUIOOCPAR oith En ment and | ih ny i and wish to hereby thank the public for their very liberal patronage, and invite all to come again to our annual gathering. LE (:E0 INARD RITONE, DALE J. B. DAUBERMAN, GRO, GINGERICH, J.J. ARNEY, Committee, ent —— LINDEN HALL, A Giettig spent day last with friends in Boalsburg. A quiet but pretty wedding took the home of Mr. and Mrs, Per- their daughter Lizzle place at of Bellefonte. We wish them a happy walk through their wed- Irvin Zeigler, who is teaching at Penn Hall, spent Saturday and San- Sanson Barris, his sister and child Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Luther Royer spent George Markle who is working on a farm in Nittany valley was home over Sunday, Miss Minnie Gummo, of Waddle, was the guest of her friends, Misses Lizzie and Valerie Getlig. Miss Ketura Stump, of Lemont, who was visiting her parents the past week and attending the plonio, left on Mon. day morning acoompanied by her sis ter Miss Mary, who expects to enter school at that place, . AA a — STATE 8. 8. CONVENTION, Great Preparations for the Gathering in AL toons, Oct, 43, 24, and 25. The Sunday School State Convention will meet in Altoona, Oct. 28, 24 and 25, tary of the international entire session and direct the conference work. Dr. Charles H. Meade, of New dress, Mhd HALL, PA., COURT HOUSE NEWS. , tate in Centre. Marriage Licenses, The following marriage Kdwin Brown, Potters Mills, and Rallie Feese, Tussey ville. A. M. Bloteman, Bellefonte, Linden Hall. John LL. Harshberger Bohn, Linden Hall. Joseph Flook Harok Run, Pa. George Mitchell and Liz and Lizzie and Hannah Jones, , Lemont, and (Cath- Gilliland, Oak Hall. TRANSFERS DURING THE PAST WEEK John P, ( rift, to 184, four ‘ondo, sh Sabina tracts | Wi Oh), | Vm. Douty et dated four trac.s of land in A. Meck Hall Lumber Co. August 1900, 4555.65 acres in Harris, James 1. ler, guson, ux to laurelton Mareh 20. 1900, | Miles for $1501 00 . 1 etux et nl to Lumber Co dated for $1500, Mil- Fer Thompson to Geo, F. dated Aug. 2, 1 for 817 Sabina Doaty’s heirs to Wm. dated Jan. 27, in Miles for $750 Henry J. Tibbens to dated Sept. 1 WY), 5 acres in 3.060, outy i 1900, land ! four tracts of ix Austin O. Fu and rst i, 1800), 25 acres 62 | perches in Marion for $350.00 J. K. Moy per, Har- | ACTres Thomas April 1st, 1882 57 Penn township; Cons eret ux to dated ideration $32 Maurer & Wagner to John D. er dated Dee, f #rches in Potter township; tion $250 00, Elizabeth A Chas. A. Deck- 14 Oth, 18583, 50 acres and 140 Thomas el (Giuelich dated Se pl. lot in Phillipsburg borough; tion $50.00, J. P, Gephart et ux to Joseph Moy er dated March 25th, 1802, 57 Penn township; consideration §7 John Wolf et ux to John D. Decker, | acres in| i (6), | 1867. 25 acres & tion $275 00 The Ci placed A SSOERGTs supplies ¢ minty Comm issoners for the hands of th the personal pr nt in the 3 nial Assessne BNRORROTR This being ent 11 well ANSERsI of real as pert y, the B sted strict instructic 8% ard of Commissioners have ind wis to the assess | ors concerning the fixing of prog The Act of Inting the assessmnent requires tl a Assembly au int all | shall be as | sccording to the a property, real or personal, tun] value thereof, and at such as the same | in good price wou .d separately and faith sell,” for an assessor to neglect or re- misdemeanor, pun- As ith these best his oe THE DOINGS OF YOUNG MEN Who are Start ing in Life, Earl Fleming returned to Lock Ha- in that institution. He stood first in many of his last year, and no doubt will classes keep at year, Wm. Keller, son of PP. F, Keller, of this place, went back to Munson Bta- tion where he divides his time bet ween railroad work and hisuncles, Dr. Wm. Keller's drug store, Messrs, Howard M. and George Em- erick, Jr., who went to the western part of the state to secure employment have been successful. George has se- oured a position as attendant at the Dixmont Hospital, located at Boyce, Pa., fifteen miles out from the city, and Howard as teamster on the farm attached to the same institution. The latter writes that they have very de- sirable places, and that the crops on the hospital farm are anything but flattering. One lot of nine acres of potatoes yielded 1050 bushels of pota- toes, and another lot of two acres but seventy-five bushels. "The majority of the workmen here,” he writes, “are Republicans. The Centre Hall boys will stick to Bryan and hope for his election.” Sonroity of Water, aN 7 D. Foreman, who teaches the Mannor Hill public school, reports that it Ie a difficult task to secure suf. ficent water for drinking perposes for the school children. The entire neigh borhood is either out of water entirely or only has sufficient for home use. Mr, Foreman thinks of taking a supply of the fluid with him from his home In this place. RSDAY, EDDY'S SEPTE CURIOUS NOTION. We llave nn Right te whiter the Filipinos, the Pittsburg Post, to justify the Filipinos in his the ground they and merit no consideration He also justifies our way of treating them on Ar constitution was not reaming savages. Then onquer them? Not to witnesses, Admiral Otis give testimony the fact that the Fil- aming savages, but fixed habiti- oosevelt seeks of CHES On living in industries ‘superior” » subjugation of Con- Otis in partment Sen- tabilishes beyond the Filipinos ' when they pain , libraries, They (zen, works bet. r American com- were | some Bitious ing their 5 and the , #choo esting on the Country. Mr. McKinl greasion where with g feat r has been vals Present vo PETS weak to exercise to break loose knows is gr ruin to the gr 6 the same excuse on. He will say nto is deplorable liar and unto. He has hand of “destiny” and mpossible for him to resist. people of this country will rally to being classed alcoholism and the 2 might be excusable in the man of intemperate habits ean- not be offered with hope of acceptance on a question of national honesty. It fsn’'t suff for Mr. McKinley to tell us that his course in the Philippines is along the lines of our “manifest des- tiny.” The country at large, irrespec- tive of party, has not such blind con- fidence In the opinions of the president on political questions to accept them without a grain of salt. The voters of the republic have in years past be- lieved in the policy of the people ham- mering out their own destiny and not allowing it to become a matter of chance or of one man’s opinion, circumstances, been #1 by the it bas been | But the very natu object with the victims of ey that tent The President's False Pretense, tiis professions of morality have not been able to restrain President McKin- ley from indulging in at least two pals pably dishonest assertions in his letter of acceptance, For example, in the first quarter of that elongated and apologetic paper, he declares that “five yours ange we were selling government bonds bearing as high as 8 per cent interest,” Manifestly he intended to convey to the public that within five years the government borrowed money at the rate of 5 per cent, whereas if he knows anything he knows that is not true, Five years ago the government had na suthority to issue any bonds other than 5 per cent bonds, and could bor row money in no other way, though Becrciary Carlisle and President Clove. land had insistently asked congress to authorize the issue of a lower rate gacurity, The reasonable and wise re- quest was denied, however, and when the necessity to borrow money arose the §& per cent bonds were issued, buy #014 at such premium as 10 reduce the interest rate to & fraction below 3 cent. President McKinley was certain ly aware of that fact, and yet in his jotter he uttered an imolied Governor Stone Tuesday appointed his law partner, Wm. Pp, Porter, of Pittsburg, as a Judge of the Bupreme Court So mctned Ae inte Ohilet Justice Henry Green, of OVER THE STATE. Semi-Local News Taken from Excha ges, the Reporter Readers. aged instantly Gettysburg Willlam Hammers, years was shot and fale nt Saturday night The farm der in which D. H. house of Jacob Kostenber Hiv TOWN AND COUNTY NEWS! | HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST FROM ALL PARTS. i We've All Met Them, its 0° fel vel never made & The loss 4 the tenant is about &1 owner 91 by fire, $800 and to the 200.00 partly insured. The fire occured at midnight There was a heavy * x plosion inst the Lebanon furnaces the Friday at tore off a section of jacket encire- the stack, ty of molten iron to pour } ling antl CRUSINEZ A lar oe: hie carts ing house, Some of the furnsce men made narrow escapes, After using chloroform { gregse in i remove HE as OOF on Kuhn put on the coat s He the heated room. Was BO chilorofor ws from its effect by the fumes of was found unconscit It took over two hours to revive took prosperous Firebugs on tubl, a farmer, revenge A well-known Mifflinbus , by burn The wered by and residing west of last yn Sunday night of week, ing his barn with all its contents, loss is about $1500, which is © insurance in the Baflalo Valley Com- pany. Lloyd McUart sme for li «nt which befell hin ill of J. R 1am] | sk. He riage and the saw caught ting off both heels Edwin F. Garman a ih of Mi. married Sunday by Res They in Centre county view by, of Muncy, will 3, #8 Lhe result Glass, up Was riding Pleasant Mill . H. ( are spending there honeymoon ing Pet ' Cave Hall. The man, be ' iin and visiting at Centre are were tendered a receptio Post, young couple Very A blow has been struck by minster general against the of the endless chain system of selling goods, an order being fect that and all mail matter in der the he order is based on al | the attorney jssued to the ef all such schemes are lotteries relation thereto is unmallable un lott general Slates, at Canton A sensation was caused one day last week, when Mrs, Landon was arrested for compl the attempled lynching and spon William McMann. Bheisc ed with having made all the assauit IRTrg- masks wort by the white-cappers on the night She has been heavy bail for court. of the outrage. As a result of the bursting of an em- ery whee | Miller's silver plating at Lapcaster. Frederick decker, a polisher, had his skull frac turad, and will probably One large piece struck Rodecker fairly the forehead. Several other work men were also hurt, in works, aie. on Edward Bashinger, of Columbia, innumerable robberies in and eral rooms full of stolen booty was found, committed suicide in the county inil at Lancaster, Wednesday of last] week, by banging himself with a ven- tilator cord, nila i ——— Ladies’ Hat Wants Owner. A ladies’ hat was brought to this of- fice by W. W. McCormick, of Potters Mills, and the owner ean have it by calling for it. The hat was placed in his buggy on night of Sept. 1, when his horse was tied in front of Kreamier & Son's store. The article was no doubt put into the wrong buggy by mistake, A AWONDERFULCURE OF DIARRHOEA A Prominent Virginia Editor Had Given Up, but was Brought Back to Perfect Health by Chamberiain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, Read His Bai. torial, Prom the Times, Hillstille, Va. 1 suffered with diarrhoea for a long time and thought I was past being cured. 1 had spent much time and money and suffered so much misery that [ had almost decided to give up all hopes of recovery and await the re. sult, but noticing the advertisement of Chamberlain's Collie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and also some tes. timonials stating how some wonderful cures had been wrought by this reme- dy, I decided to try it, After taking a few doses I was entirely well of that trouble, and 1 wish to say further to my readers and fellow-sufferers that I am a hale and hearty man to day and O. R, Movre. Sold by J. H. Ross, Linden Hall; 8. M. Swarts, Tussey- hand over whirk Lime, i well shacks persist from tellin’ iis praises lay was Hebrew New Year, th, the phothgrapher, will be at llery Friday. Al dmission t will y the Centre cou niy fair be twenty-five cents, John Kleinfeiter, painter and paper hanger, formerly of Madisonburg, has the sudito- be had rhild’s cape was 8 lat) in rium at Grange Pa and can by calling at this o taken bode at t of John 1%, and intends to up a ome Miiler, at Logan work at his trade Her broken in Sugar Valley. SBoook had one of his legs Lumber unisins. held on present in- its history. Gertrude Meyer, guests of J. W, Hil daring last working for the Kulp upany in the Sever The Milton Fair {and 5 and ions will be the best in In mo 11 3 will De from Misses Bessie and of Cobar: . were the Dashem, of Centre : of Bralsburg, now 8s student in the Jefl Medical Col- lege, Pailadelphia, was entertained by E. Park last Friday. the advt. of F. W. Weber, sburg, for partner to work a pa- tent spiral sectional stairway. This isa golden opportunity for some one. If the Bi soa Nie f Boal ible to Progress the door of night a dol- be found on the door sill. belonging returned to Grange Arcadia, the next is J. B. Fleisher, executor of the estate i=in town rea: estate elsewhere in this issue, . deceased, advertised G.B business . Clements isbusy at work in present. He has a number of wells to drill and besides is handling air motors, casing and pipes. The fires in the Bellefont furnace will be relighted next Thursday morn- ing at 6 o'clock. This is joyful pews to the several hundred employees of this company. at George Fishburn, fireman on the Illinois Central Railroad, is with his friends near Bellefonte. had been located in Freeport for about five years. Mre. Henry Cooney, who lived a mile west of Tylersville, disposed of her household goods at public sale, says the Loganton Journal, and has gone to Centre codnty to live with one of her daughters. D. C. Armstrong started his stave mill last Monday, Besides shipping the output of his own mill, Mr. Arm. during the last four weeks, and wil continue buying and shipping in the future, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Adams and won Paul, of Irondale, Mo., stopped with the family of Wm. H. at the station, last week. Mrs, Ade ams is a sister of Mrs. Keller. They stopped here on their way home, hav- ing spent some time fo Washington ton and other eastern cities, . Mr. and Mrs, Frank Lee and daugliter, former but now living on a farm near #