oll i ho THE CENTRE REPORTER. | | Wednesday moved to Centre Hall. He : { has had employment for some time Tar ’ " Nav 20 | . 2 CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS. Nov. 22. | with Wm, Colyer, and finding it too PERSONAL MENTION, he wisely concluded to move here. Thomas Maitland, of Williamsport, aged seventy-five years, put a light- ning rod on the Methodist church at i Milton, doing the most perilous part { of the work himself. The steeple is | 165 feet high. The sight of such an | old man working at its top was con- | sidered marvelous. Coming and UGolng.— Visitors In and out of Town, : J. W. Wolf Saturday evening return- | ed from Philadelphia, Mre. W. W. Boob and daughter Grace spent Sunday at Millheim, John MeCoy Bhugert succeeds his father, J. Dunlop Shugert, as cashier of the Centre county bank. | y | James Shires, of Johnstown, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Lutz attended the f lof W | business trip for a few days to Ce otre | A rH 5 NB se o ’ . . ie : per ya. 5 Rover, Who was | County and Centre Hall. Mr. Shires | huried at Bellefonte Sunday. {is in the oil business in Johnstown | Prof. Johu W, Felds, Director of the | and is prospering, all of which the] Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment | Reporter is glad io note. Although | Station, wus at State College Monday. | kept business he looks hale Mrs, J. N. Meyer and Mrs. L. B. Frank drove up from Rebersburg on | Tuesday and called on their many | friends in town. W. Gross Mingle, connected the Howard Creamery Company, Bunday at Harrisburg (?), thence go to Philadelphia for a brief stay. close to a young man content in life. Quite a number of the Reporter | i able Samuel Philson, of Berlin, Pa., with} . : ; y BN will | father of the wife of Rev, W. KE. Fisch-| Ler, D. D., formerly of this place. He | birthday, and is extremely well served both physically and mentally, | . pre- Bruce Goodbart, located Wisconsin, will eat his Thanksgiving : : : : a. %.3 : x © | His active business life covered a peri- | turkey with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, | 4 : ; i od of almost seventy years. In making | George L. Goodhart, Centre Hill. : : a distribution of his property Rev, Harvey Lundy, of Mill Hall, his children, it was discovered that his filled the Methodist pulpit for : Rev. | weath exceeded $100,000, Chilcote Bunday morning, at which time communion was administered. at Clarno, rem ae ft PENN HALL, Miss Minnie and Clyde Lee, daugh- ——— ter and son of J. W. Lee, of Hublers- burg, spent a few days recently with | their uncle, J. T. Lee, in this place. | near future. Mrs. Mary Doe Foster and Mrs. | ‘Rev. John Tomlinson, of Du Bois, Charles H. Foster, of State College, re- | preached a masterly sermon in the turned home Wednesday from a pleas- | Lutheran church Sunday morning to ant visit to relatives in Union county. !a large audience. Rev. Tomlinson H. M. Hoy and Peter Shires, of | served the people of this congregation Millheim, have formed a partnership, | in the capacity of pastor sixteen years as shippers of produce. Several | ago, and has many warm friends here. car loads of eabbage and potatoes were | He Is an active and well-preserved handled by them last week, man for his age. Rumor says ‘here is auvother wed- «ame off in How is .., uiuce? ding cone LINDEN HALL, Thomas Coble, of Altoona, is home on a two weeks’ vacation, ri moreland county, arrived home few words to his dying mother. to the county seat Saturday lust, Clayton Detwiler, who spent a few days at Bpring Mills, is back again at his old post. Mr. and Mrs, Felding eutertained some of their Bellefonte friends Satur- day. H C. i home on a few {fog to il health. The Evangelical Association { their protracted meeting | ing. | Mr. and Mrs, Luther | Sunday last with { Hall. ? Proll KE. W. Ciettig, of Piteairn, weeks’ Pa., is vacation, ow- z Sunday evens Royer spent friends in Centre Crawford, of Centre is conducting a singing class al i Hall, | this place; people are taking adv Will Zelglor ved from this plac Hall quite an number of the young itage of it. i to the Seller's property at Oak | Wednesday last. | Mrs, Bearson, who has been a great iurday morning. Iaterment w iin the Boalsburg cemetery | Black | morning, Rev. | fp POTTERS MILLS, officiati Mrs, Wm. H Mr. and are spending | Centre Hall, K weeks with their daughter, Mr Reish. William and Clayton McKinney, Altoona, to spend their cation in the mountains, Miss Mabel Smith, one Mill's handsome young la Johnstown Friday, make an extended visit with M. 1... Smith. Miss Lizzi home t several are home where e Foust has come ; 3 . Nor 3 ££. C t oprietc f the Penn Ira W. Walker, of Freeport, Illinois, hé ondo, Pr 3BFet 4 4 i x : a ia a sda v “rnin all carriage works, was last b 108 left for his home Thursday morning. least in tuttioe ub 2 fine He was called east by the death seas In puting vps are of bh % Ty father, William Walker of Rebersburg, | place of bastnees . which occurred a few weeks ago. Heuary Dorublaser and wife, mar, were in attendance at the Mrs. Charles Deihl, of Ohio, is visiting her parents, Mrs, James Corman, at Re Mrs. Deibl went west two and likes the country very much. of his | sign at of lLa- Luth- Jellevuae, Mr, and sbersburg. eran conference last week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gellinger, | Lewisburg, visited 'SquireJ. 8. Mey- er's and J. K. Bitner's several days last John A. Montelius, of Piper City, Ill, | week. who many years ago was employed by Willis Cole, of Rebersburg, Wm. Wolf, working for his former elected a member of the Illinois the Penhall carriage lature. He is expeéted east in a Fisher Bros., the days, i recently of | years ago, is again | deceased, as clerk, was | employer in| works, merchants, purchased a fine English Coach wateh dog, who makes himself | who may lights legis. i few | have son, of | ! known to any one the store after the turned Wilson Haines, of Aaronsburg, spent | Monday with his father-in-law, Reu- 2 . : { ben Kline Ervin Gettig will move from Pleas-| ~~ . . ' { The Salem ant Gap to Bellefonte shortly, where : x Ct | east of town, he is employed by the firm of Kreamer | .. pid . ..:. | and durable and Gettig, butchers. Mrs. Gettig, | 4 0% Mrs. Jasper Gramley and Illinois, arrived in Coburn Saturday afternoon and will remain in that see | tion for a period of six or eight weeks, | when they will again return to the prairie state. come to) : have been | 3 OW, Reformed has erected wire ation, a handsome | congreg spend the winter with her mother. Miss Rhoda Alexander, with Dr. Alexander — ——— REBERSBURG, On Tuesday the real est late Wm. Walker Henry Wolf: nia, moved into Je Tuesday. Prof. E. M. valescing from his recent phoid Daniel Calby we . deceased wt and family, of hin Breon's t i Bl Brungart attack of ty- fever, , the only © had in Brush valley for a nu of years, died suddenly at the hb Winters, at Monday evenin George B. Kreamerv , having gone there He spe sid the eveniog ¥ We and died by heart trouble ly. VARS overcome very sudden es SPRING MILLS, The waters are still too low fence, This with ' - ! the sheds that were built a few months (nee MeClenahan) is well known inl : ! Centre Hall. | ago, add greatly to the general appear. | i ance and conv the church | Miss Romie Van Pelt Monday morn- | ,.. 4 cemetery. i ing returned to Wilson College to fin- | ish her studies begun at that | tor tion some two years ago. Vocal and | evening the ceremony instrumental music will be given spe- | the i i at Aaronsburg, at cial attention. + Auronaburg, aé € Charles Kerstetter, who has been to | parties were Mr. MecAlhattan, Pa. for some time in the | FP. R. R. station as a student, was trans- | Fairbrook, Pa. Bruee, oldest son of ferred from that place to the station st | Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rossman, of Coburn, where he expects to complete | the course of telegraphy and general railroad business, Dr. and Mrs, G. W. Hosterman went to Philadelphia Tuesday to attend the enience of liad been afloat last Bunday was performed parsonage, by i . Romors of a wedding instita- | some time, sud Bruce Rossman, of Pennhall, and Miss Lizzie Koch, of this | place, is a promising young man with | | & bright future before him. He is quite | { a favorite among the young folks of town, and a more energetic and trust { worthy young man cannot be found Christian Endeavor convention, They | anywhere in the neighborhood. His will also stop at Lancaster ytiure they | handsome bride is a refined and accom- have two sons staying-—SBumuner V., | plished young lady of remarkable abil. practicing law, and John 8. , at tending | ities and aptitude. Their many friends franklin and Marshall college. i wish them abundant success and hap- Misses Emily and Grace Alexander | piness through life, will spend Thanksgiving at home. | Miss Emily is in Philadeiphia at pres. ent, having gone there from Tyrone where she is teaching a class in instru- mental and vocal music. Mrs, J. F, Alexander will go to Philadelphia dur- \ Thanksgiving week. N Wm. G. Hoffer, son of George Hof- for, deceased, and wife, of Lincoln, Kansas, are east on a short visit to the former's mother who is in delicate bealth at the bome of her daughter, Mrs. A. CU. Mingle, Bellefonte. Mr. Hofler gold his newspaper, The Senti- pel, but purchased another weekly just before starting east. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Darst, of Boals- burg, were callers on Tuesday. Mr. Durst tells thie Reporter that he has several fine hogs that will be turned into hams, sides and sausage in a short time. Boalsburg leads balf the world for heavy weight hogs, and the reporis will be found in these columuos as time goes on. C. H. Murray, son of druggist J. D. urray, during the campaign just Passed was connected with “Facts,” co fs Ala A special election held in Belins- grove to decide whether the muunici- pality should erect an elestric light plant carried in the affirmacdive more than two to ona. The stipulated cost is not to exceed $10,000, A When you feel that life is hardly worth the candle take a dose of Cham- berlain’s Btomach and Liver Tablets, They will cleanse your stomach, tone up your liver and regulate your bow- els making you feel like a new man. For sale by Mrs, J. H. Keller, Linden Hall, and J. F. Smith, Centre Hall A So ———— The queMion of the spontaneous combustion of hay has recently been investigated by one of the officials of the United States Weather Ba reat, who states that fermentation wi- thin moist hay may raise the tempera- ture to 374 degrees Fahrenheit, at which temperature clover hay will ignite, ; a “I have used Chamberlain's Colie, published at Colorado Springs, Colora- do. “Faeta' is published in magazine form, thirty pages, and exhibits excel lent mechanical skill, as well as high elas editorial work. Mr. Murray, who has had experience in the news. business with the New York , is a gifted writer and has an ex- ceptionally large vocabulary at his command. There is possibility that Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and find it to ben great medicine,” says Mr. E. 8. Phipps, of Poteau, Ark. "It cured me of bloody flux. I cannot speak too highly of it.” This remedy always wins the good opinion, If not praise, of those who use it, The quick cures which it eftects even in the most severe cases make it a favorite every. where, For sale by Mra. J. H. Keller, David Sowers is nursing Abner Riber, schiool teacher at burn, Mouday he took the first degree of K. (3. E. Wm. Musser, the was in town evening obliging the eastern cities, Smith Bros, the valley, the furniture have a car load of ehamber seid to spend the winter with his sister, Miss Pearl Riter, of Centre Hal been visiting for the past Miss May Smith. John Bubb, of Feidler, business in our town week, Emanuel Zeigler, of near Madison- | burg, was seen in town, shaking] bands with bis many friends. a practical farmer and had the fortune to have payivg crops, week with one day cess in every respect; the crowded to its utmost, mons were preached by different min- church to town. C. K. Bober stopped several days at the house of D. H. Rubl. Liveryman the mountain, where he pheasant hunting; have not learned wnat success, Twelve of Bhook Bros, tame turkeys have been shot for wild ones. Any one can shoot that kind and call ita wild one, John Zerbe and wife have been vis iting friends and relatives at Lock Ha. ven the past week, John Breon will be a candidate for re-election for supervisor, Mrs. Wm. Gramley is able to be about again. G. H. Loong, one of our popular merchants, was presented with a new boarder, Michael Bmith, of Potters Mills, had charge of Bmith Bros. furniture store several days last week while the two members of the flem went to Pine Grove Mills to wait on their sick broth er Lowell, who ls In a very oritical condition. Friday and Saturday were good days for hunting rabbits, and the sportsmen took advantage of it; bang, bang, from Linden Hall, and 4 F. “Smith, Centre Hall, morning until night. Many of the lit- tle fellows aazed S———— Ua po or =r tCashi is King. | I. Beidle, of Mechanicsburg, Pa. And we want some of his king- | BANKS. Penn's spokes of second growth oak and i ickory butts, For further informa- § ship, for which we will give you ex-| Va lle . W. Boob, Centre Hall, 4 cellent values in merchandise, Banking Company, A pice lot of Au PAL oves and Mittens af Rocaives Depos its 5, | Discounts Notes. 85 cents wili buy $1.00 Goods, W. B. MINGLE, Cashier. auly 43 ii 4 i“ 50 is | aos ATTORNEYS. split - a Life, IH. H. Black, the well-known 4 will be sold like this : blacksmith at Grahamsville, BAYS: “Our # years old, has always é ulject to croup, and so bad have 2 4 i" iy attacks been that we have feared ¢ Underwear would die. We ¢@ 5 cents buys $1.00 woolen d the doctor and used many but Chamberlain's Cough : i® now sole reliance, It / #5 gents buys 30 cect woolen shirly seems Lo dissolve the tough mucus and drawers. frequent doses when the mptoms appear we have int the dreaded croup Is cured pets settled.” There is no kiving this heiedy for it 10 opium or other injurious ¢ drug and may be given as confidently 4 Mr. little son, five been) » shirts apd | © ‘i 3 drawers, medicines, { our and by givi Croupsy _Y found t / 22 cents buys 25 cent woolen shirts and the drawers, until glock is ex- hausted. danger ii containe Epes any. Centre Hall, F. Smith, Men's Underwear. and examine our fine Men's | KREAMER & SON. nderwear, £1.00, § i $ irom 4o cts. to Shoes.q We are agent o Misses’ § Lumberman’s Misses’ and Ladies’ Also a fine line of Hes SHOES, Snag-Proof Rubber Shoes. from x1. () to £3.00, Excellent li Men's Gloves. (ive us a call. HOTELS. KREAMER & SON. D. Irvin's Sons, HARDWARE Foundry Building. tre Hall, . . : . Penn A complete line of Hardware will be found in our store al prices that will go far toward makiog them sell. 3 PA t.elesmn vemeuis, {en ANA _ ood sagpie wilhessos Paints, Oils, Brushes, ela, in variety of quality and Kinds, All kinds of Wire Fence rial, ete, on hand, Builders will find that we earry all bard | ware needed in the construction of | 2 modern dwellings, Come and get | &, estimates i Farmers | will ind that we carry a line of | hardware that will suit their | wants. D. nails, mate always PRODUCE RFRA XKEGNGYS) The Gure that Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption, is Ved H. F. RossMAN, 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 oo9Cceeo%0eve Irvin's Sons v wo 2 be ie A The GERMAN REM a & ures Yaresk and \unn diseases. OM by all drungels, 258&50ds PA : Bold by). ¥ Linden Hall “New Rival,” “Leader,” “Repeater.” WINCHESTER Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells. “New Rival” loaded with Black pawders. ~ “Leader” and “Repeater” loaded with Smokeless powders. Insist upon having them, take no others, and you will get the best shells that money can buy. : Emith, Centre Hall : F. ES iceland (WH. Long, Spring Mills Najr 2 §lement Remeoiler MAJORS RUBBER CEMENT, ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM, MAJOR 8 AIEEE We pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with Liverita, The Up-to-Date Little Liver P... They are purely Vegetable and never fail to give satisfaction. 25¢ boxes contain 100 Pills, 10c boxes contain 40 Pills, Sc boxe cofan 15 Pil. | Beware of sb ms and imitations.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers