SEVERE ATTACK OF GRIP Oues Bottle Cough Remedy. “When I had an attack of the grip last winter (the second one) I actually | cured myself with one bottle of Cham- beriain's Cough Remedy,” says Frank W. Perry, Editor of the Enterprise, Shortaville, N, Y. “This is the honest | truth. I at times Rept from eoughing mys=eif to pieces by taking a teaspoon- fui of this remedy, and when coughing spell would come on at night I would take a dose and it seemed thai in tbe briefest interval the cough would pass off and I would go to sleep perfectly free from cough and its ace companying pains. To say that the remedy acted as a most agreeable sur- prise is pitting it very mildly. I had no idea that it would or could knock out the grip, simply because I never tried it for such a purpose, bat it did, and it seemed with the second at- tack of coughing the remedy caused it to not only be of less duration, but the pains were far less severe, and I had Cured by Grip had bid me adieu. sale by Ww. Swartz, A. Cdrson, Potters Mills: C. Spring Mills, fore Mr. JF inkle, Semi Clothiers. Danger of Colds and Grip. The grip is their If and Ci taken, Among greatest « resulting in pneumonia, care used, iamberliain’s Cough all danger will be the tens of thousands have used this remedy for these eases we have vet to learn of a single oase having resulted in pneumonia, which shows conclusively that itis a certain preventive of that dangerous disease, Jt will cure a cold or an at- tack of the grip in less time than any other treatment. It is pleasant and safe to take. For saleby C. W. Tassey vil lle; ¥F. A. Carson, Potters, Bitlet . J. Finkle, Spring Mills. reasonable is Remedy DIOL CE.—NOTIC has made plu Affaies 107 a Potter E IS HEREBY (rove rove ADAM N ASTRATING- service to any trated Hoover for prices on ann Write Grant nsurance, Why Pay Rent or the Current Rate « Interest |, When the HomeCo-Operative Com pa ny a Co-partnership will furnish you the money to buy a home, or pay the mortgage off, and give you Ten Years and Five Months To pay it back at the Rate of $8.50, per Month, With Interest at 3 Per Cent. Per Annum on the graduating scale, Amounts to 144 per cent, ple inferest on smount. Buric t investigation courted. which sim. I am also agent for the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York The largest in the World, You cannot afford to insure your life until you see me. Write or call on the General Agent for full particulars. Any information required will be given. Edwin K. Smith | General Agent Oak Hall Sta., Pa. — ens Italian Bees for Sale. The undersigned offers for sale . . , 20 Colonies Italian Bees On Langstroth Frames. Thisls the most favorable season to buy bees as they are now ready to begin Ai will sell from now on until July, Prices very reasonable, oma WM. REIBER, Colyer, Pa. POST OFFICES CLOSED, Rural Mail Service The postmasters at Centre Hill and Colyer Saturday received official no- { should be closed to-day (Thursday) and all government property be for- | Farded to Spring Mills. The rural [ free delivery service will be inaugu- rated Friday, May 1, and will cover the greater part of the territory of the Southern and Western Precincts of Potter township. The Centre Hill post office was es- tablished in 1847, when that point was an important one along the star route from Bellefonte to Lewistown. James Boozer, the first postmaster | at Centre Hill, was a member of the mercantile firm of Boozer & Gilliland, { doing business in the Btrohm store i room, The persons who acted as postmas- { ters at Centre Hill, and in the order in { which they served, are appended : | James Boozer. John Gilliland. Robert Gilliland. Mary Boozer. Reuben Keller, James Batten. James Lasl Robert Lee. Michael Stroh J. B. A. R J. B | Thes | ent hell Btrohm, ¥ Lite, Bible. rvices of Mr. Bible, the are dispensed pres- with 8ys- master, egret. He 1 04 p yal with was i tematic and The posi i tablished in 15 to obliging, ¢ at Colyer was es. ommodate a |KO A DIRE CALAMITY AVERTED, Fish Dam a Stream aod Cause Mack Water to do Damage, A verified fish story comes from the banks of Laurel Run, a stream of water flowing from the Beven Mountains in- Huntingdon in which | Frank Kaup and his associates on the | tram road leading from the Linden Hall saw mill interested, For county Ys are alel with Laurel Rup, and on its bank are several homes that have} occupied by H mountaineers who living gather berries and roots, and vote considerable time to the rearing | of broilers for the early market It was since the opening of the trout | season that these men on their way the saw mill with several trucks of | fine timber, were obliged to leave their train of logs and go to the assistance of a young girl who had been left in | charge of one of these mountain im- | provements, In fact, they were flagged | by the maiden who was standing on the tram road, furiously poking in the | stream with a long pole, endeavoring | | to dislodge thousands upon thousands | | of trout that had “backed up,” in the | parlance of Laurel Run inhabitants, | and were causing the stream to over | flow. | w The train engaged in a vigorous manner to | | break the “back up,” and finally suc- | but not until of | Laurel Run had obliterated the minor buildings of the mountain ment, drowned one chickens, of a mile of railroad track. There curren whole force of men on the log | ceeded, the overflow improve- | hundred and fifty washed a quarter and AWAY danger of a re- up’ is constant wee of a “back ng the | that veniently | Mills | during its | three large number idents in lo- | } Ww i 1st ¢ the offices at Pe I'he office, existence Who 3 4] gervel by itlers | or } Tussey ville, 8 period of postmasiers, as { lows Jacob Smith. Edward W, Crawford. Peter B. Jorda During the Id rdan, the j by Geor ort had ol Mr. | ducted | fils PArIOng no cause wi on pliant t Potters Mills and | main to serve the € districts app {ated succeed | Tussey vill poy ~ pe lation iy their respeetis M. SWEETS ’ f wimasier al usseyviiie to IR d. Early in the Field. ders in Peopsylva- | r Quay, map out politics ear before the 194. They t and in- eguiniure, unfinished questions Hx Menats Are 0 the Te danti stritoat of great pre : IRI Conte of have gl registration ive wrtion- and judicial nomina be candidates for | neral at super- | sy from awfard | reap ALCUS wid itor ge WO nusnce Chester Aes are be Lo out fa for the , and the in a way to The well the | suliing is marked and th Thus plain | the bo ‘ « machine | government of Pennsyly i arrangement of the offices i siren ntral opie py d a8 th 3 syivania machine, and, gihen the os have nothing to say i Wii soos edicts of thelr masters, dill m————— Marriage Law Amende! An amendment to the marriage li: | | pense law 1855 has been passed by | | the present legislature. The amend- | ment makes no change in the condi- | tion under Which a marriage license | | shal | be granted, but it requires the clerk or official issuing the license to ask certain questions and to incorpo- rate the information received ia the li- | cense issued, | Under theor iginal law the clerk was | required to ask the necessary questions i in order to ascertain if there was any | legal objection .to the contemplated | marriage. In the amended act these | questions are specified. The clerk | must ask the age of the parties and if | under age if the consent of the parent | or guardian hag been obtained; if there was any prior marriage and if so, how [it was dissolved. It is next provided { that this information, that the parties | are of full age, or if minors that cone | sent has been given, and if married | before and how a prior marriage was | dissolved, and if a divorce was granted i | and for what cause, must all be set { forth in the license issued. Under the original act none of this was shown in the license issued although it was on rocord in the marriage license office, ———— Wanted An honest, active, Intelligent gent man to solicit life insurance at Cent | Hall aud other parts of Centre county, for Mutual Benefit Life Insurapce | | Company, Newark, N, J.-M. Suis, District Agent for Central Peta. spring Mills, Pa. \ WanTED—~By the Howard Cream- ery Company, at the Centre Hall plant, a ton of poultry, Highest price of 1885 | | i | i i { ! it | i i i i i in this stream, and the! of the caused the capers of the speckled beauties, along the i hatred for! inh ab tants ¢ pel has have a fect id under no con- would they use them for of thege stam pedes. a ————— The Worthless Dog. homas MceMurtie, of Miiffin ship, Columbia county, has been e | pelle 2 to kill two cows that h fown- Sn - AVE gone | ten by a dog, the to ago. | an d he has two wore chained | barn, which he kill. These were bitten of the bitten and + B Las been compe M any in will have a week fears he sane has already kills | four kill farmers township had three ed one, and Georgs i them, i fv Wao Steely Nad bitten an iled to Of other have suffered likewise and all are won- dering when it will end, w— ss fe sot —— Are You Golog West # ROY iden of If you 4 you corresponding with Liaye Re will profit In a finavcial way the sport ing west, by Reporter be- be Hunger Cer. fore leaving. Tran ation can secured in tain ¢ ed. Do n« this paper early such a way that nditions the fare will be refund. fail to correspond with | $ is tp LOCALS, Hee Reformed church for next Sunday #1 ' ipointments ve the the | taught refinement } You may trovernor Pennypacker toed claiming should be her ways than by fines thant Yapitter” in ot Hon, Michael E. Straup, bethvilie, a member of the nia Legislature f of Eliza- | Pennsylva- | rom Dauphin county, spent several days last week fishing at Pat Garrity’s famoys resort io the Sey- i : Tool offices The American Axe and pany have moved their Com- | from | , Where the Misses Nora and Sarah Kaler and of Coburn, daughters and son of Section Hoss Kaler, Satur- The Misses | es, will H. C. Roverts and Miss [da M. Long l re conduc ting one of the five stores remunin at Herndon some time. cently was at Stubenville, Ohio. The particular store Mr. Roberts and Miss Long have charge of naw is at Cone nelsville, Fayetie county, Pa. Wm. G Hoffer, editor of the Will. shire Herald, Willshire, Ohio, has the audacity to say to his readers that the pocket book lost by him contained one, two, five and ten dollar bills ! If a Pennsylvania editor were to make such a break, a commission would a} once be appointed to enquirg into the sanity of the newspaper Han, Mrs. Russell King Miller is one of the contralto singers in Philadelphia who is popularly known among church goers. Mrs. Miller belongs to the quartet choir of the Bethlehem Presbyterian ohureh, Broad and Dis- which is attended by the Is noothgr than Miss Emma Meyer, daughter of Bolomon Meyer, deceased, who in bis day was the ackpowledged leader in wmusionl circles in Centre county, and for years lived with his fémily in and near Centre Hall, Mrs, Miller was but a little girl when she left this place, but not too young to delightfully entertain her school com» panions every Friday afternoon with df pod ro HowAnp OrEAMERY Co. SRG OF tHO sORgA, C. M. BOWER, Continued from first Page, | Marshall College, class of 1808, “Bocially, Mr, Bower is of a retiring Lidisposition, absorbed in his books and | his profession; yet he has acquired a | large circle of acquaintances, und | formed strong friendships, He is a | representative of one of the oldest fam- ilies in Centre ¢ ounty, and his ances- tors on both sides were some of the earliest settlers in the eastern end of Penn's Valley. Many of the Bowers a member of the | of the county, and some of them own cegtors settled about the time of the the title thereto not having passed out of the family “Jacob Bower, the great-grandfather of Calvin M., and the son of John and Catharine Bower, came into what is township, York county, in 1776. He married Christena Nease, daughter of Philip Nease. John Motz, grandfather Mr. Bower on his | mother's side, came to the site of | Woodward from Peon township, in ‘hat is now Boyder county, in 1786, date .of April 5, and Is credited with being the the town site named, fter locating, he built a mill, small scale manufactured highly educated, a profession, had to consequence of liberty. u valuable the great- of | He bought land under 20, 17 | first settler on | Shortly a W and in a He was and leave the Fatherland in 0 the Cause he left ai devotion t At his death of guile ete, wife's maiden pame His Was Mary : » a a Fore Gasoline Lights Three seven hundred enudie power gasoline lights for the were ordered last week | better lighting of the streets. | placed opposite the Pres- | church, one at the station | other on east Church street, | These lights ugh Jeweler Bush- | subscription, but it is | expected that the borough will bear! the expense of lighting and furnish | the gasoline ithe same after the have been thoroughly tested. | N 2 the | the Lhe and uorongn site, were purchased thro man by private far a v 1 wight Presbyterian be ¢h placed at Chur Was KREAMER & SON. TER A fine full line of LADIES’ & MISSES’ SHOES. A Complete line , ,.. MEN'S AND BOYS’ SHOES. Please do not forget our . . FINE LINE OF CARPETS. Kreamer & Son, Centre Hall, Pa. — a 0900000000000 0000O00E0000 I am in my New Store Building And will be Pleased to have you call. have no prices to give, but lots of Shoes at prices that will command your inspection, The best The most stylish The prettiest Considering quality THE CHEAPEST Furniture In this neck o’ woods You will find at Our store. Store. Nothing is omit- ted. We can supply not only a part but all your wants, and at the lowest P.V.S. STORE. possible prices, . (Goods exchar for Produce .C. A. KRAPE. Spring Mills, Pa. ged The rest will beall right, SMITH BROS. SPRING MILLS, PA. 0000000000000 00GOSOGBOOBS “th &, purchased by the following : i Shoop, ( Cron Ww Namuel H Puff, Martz, (i. W. Black, J. wge Nearhood, John | Hosterman, L. L. Smith, | Kerlin, J. H. Krumbine, one dollar; John Knarr, Rev. J. buitz, Al. Krape, Capt. George M, Boal, each fifty cents ; W. H. Runkle, W. A. Krise, twenty-five cents : | Olie Mader, one dollar. The contributors to light No, at the are W, Jartholomew, W. W. Spaugler, Wm. | E. W. Crawford, Clyde Brad- W. Frank Bradford, John J. Frank Smith, W. A. Oden- Colyer, Sr., Wm. Colyer, James Smetzler The purchase of light No. to be located near the borough line on East Church street, largely due the liberality of H. Army, who | ten a each erected station, Sliver, oo z 4 is to epjamin to a request for the names of the other goutributors., Almos. sufficient money has been | subscribed for a similar light for West Chureh street, : EE —— — Chureh Conference, The official members of the gelical Christian chureh met Reiber, Colyer, 28, 1903, to organize a Conference. Evan- i at the! March The prayer. Rev. A. J. Horner was elect- ed chairman and 8. Brown secretary. This being the first session there were no minutes to be read nor unfinished business to be disposed of, A eonstitution having been previ- ously drafted, was read for approval. The constitution included rules of faith and discipline; after discussion by the brethren present the constitution was adopted as a whole by unanimous vote. The conference then adjourned to meet March 1904, There has been quite a good deal of speculation regarding this new socie- ty, but we want to say that according to the constitution we have a right to worship as seemeth to us best. We want to say further that we have not gone into this work as the unthink- ing horse, but we have consulted the proper authorities. We do not wish to be selfish or unkind but we do want to correct some mistakes, We wish the publie to know that brother A, J. Horner is a legally ordained minster and as such has a right to baptize, ad. minister communion, solemanize mar- rianges, and perform sueh other du- ties pertaining to his office as may be required. In the near future we ex pect to build a church, when we will ask your help financially as well as your prayers and good wishes, Later we hope to give you a more detailed account of this body of believ- ers and its origin, B. Brown, New Jewelry Store, Jewelry and silverware for sale. Ree pairing of watches a specialty. Work guaranteed. Eyes tested free. Best 8 W.B. ¢ Lamp of Steady Habits np that doesn’t figre up or smoke, or cangs you “ se bad language ; the lamp that looks good when 5 i and stays good ; the lamp © il you never will with, onos you have it ; that a ie New Rochester. Other lamps may be offered you as“ ju they may be, in sone respects, wut for all an Doss, there's only one, The New Rochester, "i sure the lamp offered you is penuine, look for tl On it; every lamp bag it. (30 Varistion) Old Lamps Made New. We cas fill every lamp want. Ne matter whet a pou Fo ap sew lamp or stove, an old one repaired or ren. hed, a vase mousted or other make of lamp tr ans! AT ed into a New Rochester. we can do i. Let us send you Hierature on the sukject, We are SPECIALISTS in the treatment of diseases of Lamps. Consultation FREE. hoi THE ROCHESTER LAMP CQ., 35 Park Place & £3 Baretay se. The Girls Like This, It’s easy to turn, just good exercise, and then there are not a whole lot of pieces in the bowl to be washed, Only one piece inside the bowl of a SHARPLESS TUBULAR CREAM It's very different from other separators; more 0 than you think. the difference, SHOOK BROTHERS, SPRING MILLS, PA. MARGLE avo GRY An ONGHEATS. 2 1 as pond New York. EPARATOR probably Come and let us show you Although our store room is small and inconvenient, we have this week added A VERY FINE AND FULL LINE OF Summer Goods Dress Goods and Notions . H. G. STROHTEIER, CENTRE HALL, . PENN. Manufacturer of and Dealer in HIGH GRADE... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble ano Granite, Don’t fall to get my prices. I ns IN DRESS GOODS WE HAVE LAWNS PERCALES MADRASES CHAMBRAYS and OTHER NEW PATTERNS, . . - . NOTIONS ' Fancy Buttons L IN cr FORE GRANT HOOVER Controls sixteen of the largest Fire and Life Insurance nies in the The Bast is the Ch No mutuals ; no H. F. ROSST1AN, Spring Mills. So Be... —————— Livery a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers