= HERIFF'S SALE. ~ By virtue of a writ of Fieri Faclas, the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county irected, there will be exposed top sale, at the Court House, in the borongh of Be ionte, Pennsyivaaia, on MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1908, 1 1, the following described real estate All that certain messuage tenement and traet of land situate in the Township of Miles, County of Centre and Swate of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows to wit —Bogluning at a Pine, thence by land of George Brungart and Daniel Walker (now John Walker's heirs) south 58 degroes west 7 perches to a white Oak, thence by same south 2 degrees cast 14 5-10 perches to a white Oak, thence south 88% degrees wost 79 perches to a spanish Oak, thonee 2 degrees west 70 perches to 1 ne, thence north 88 degrees cast 178 p h and thence south 2 degrees 5) i perches to the place of I ginning, outaining 66 acres and 118 perches and allowance, Thereon ected two frame dwelling and other buildings. eized, taken in execution, s to be sold as the property of Henry W, Re Perms No deed will be acknowledge purchase money be paid in full H. 5 TAYLOR, Sheriff Hefonte, Pa., August 1, 1003 iss Ali to me M to stones fa story house, out «until Sheriff's Oflice, Be OF PENN'S CAVE—-Will be + sale at the Court House in 1 , tenement owp.,, Centre pring Mills, on UST 12, 0AM 1903, July 1.) . PENN'S CAVE Beginning at iblic road leading to Farmer's 1 road and land of George east 48 to grees east 20 perches a TRACT NO fa stone in the Mills, the perches ning privi © same sengers, { abn ends -fetiers of estate of Wm ieceased, having «, she would Administratrix, AL PERSONS OF CHAR ! in each sist yi in ent and sdvert i Horse and a Enclose self COLOXIAL CO 1 & nicago ® £ $junets The New Store Room We are now in our new store room and every day is an opening day. Our stock of goods is complete One more, and embraces all lines found in a well supplied general store, The goods are of the best quality and the price asked for them only include a reasonable profit. We kindly invite you to come to see us and price and inspect our goods, H. F. ROSSITAN, Spring Ilills. when she felt an attack coming on. di what off the app he same way, For sale LOCALS. Leslie Shililng, of Bhinglehouse, is | at present in Centre Hall, stopping ! with Lou Sunday, Mrs. Derstine, wife of Jacob Derstine, | of Freeport, Illinois, has been ill at her home for some time. Miss Estie Krumbine, who for some time had been in Philadelphia with her aunt, is heme again. Mrs. Elmer Noll and daughter, of Lewisburg, are guests of Mr, and Mrs, M. L. Emerick, in this place. The county officials have decided to observe the Saturday half holiday, aud hereafter the court house will be minus officials on Baturday afternoons. Mrs. Musser, of Ohio, mother of I. V. Musser, is visiting her daugh ter-in- law, Mrs, Musser, who at present is at the home of her parents, in this place. Calvin Bottorf and Levi Stump, of Colyer, were callers Batur- ‘day. They came to town that day to attend a meeting of Progress Grange. Rev, M. 8. Derstine, of the Dills- burg Methodist church, will fill the appointment in the United Evangel- ical church, in Centre Hall, Snnday evening. Rev. and Mrs. A. A. Black, of Boals Messrs, Huntingdon and Blair counties. While in Altoona, Rev. Black filled the appointment of Rev. Robb. W. M. Houser, of near Pleasant Gap, called Friday of last week. He is a young man of good qualities, and one who deems it next to a crime to read a newspaper the subscription to which is not paid in advance. by the Reporter that was not paid for. Miss Annie Eckley, aged thirteen, of Yarnell, while swinging in the barn al her home met with a serious mis- hap. A grain cradle which was hanging above her head fell, cutting the end of her nose almost off and inflicting other the face. Bhe was taken to the Bellefonte hospital for treatment, severe cuts about Rev, and Mrs. M. 8B, Derstine and daughter Marguerite, of Dillsburg, Tuesday were arrivals at the home of Mrs. Sarah Derstine, this place. Rev. Derstine is serving a Methodist t that They will time at in pastorate a point spend some Lewistown, Mrs. ing to York county J. stopped with Mr. and Mrs Q. A. Kennedy last week. Mr, Glenn were married in May, and the former being employed in the railroad poned until recently, when they went their return stopped here as mentioned, Fhe members of the Of of the exercises, Part of Hterary day night devoted to and then follows a period for including after intercourse, Kalvs cents is the price, you get au in- j& vitation from M sOlLe thodist chureh po -— - Popes Leo's Saceegany Cardinal Guisepps Sarto, Patriarch ire, henceforth to ized s Tuesd 3 DRlrea world as Pope Pius X, hy the Vers 1 thie I wind F ¢ 1] 1 srdingls B ‘utholi the long Re Pontifl of the He is thie 204Lh fis pe of Home, Church of thei: Bowen ( in line who, tracing Fisherman, have faithful Christian reigned over Era. ———————— John Beckwith Deowned. The dead body of John Beckwith, of Hannah Furnace, Tuesday morning was found in a creek near his house, Mr. Beckwith was ill with typhoid fever, and while his wife was prepar- ing breakfast the man escaped from the house unobserved and committed the deed. ' Mr. Beckwith was aged about fifty years, and was a merchant and poste master at Hannah Furnace, sa Linden Hall. James Kimport and nieces, Misses Betty and Ida, returned Monday from a short visit to friends at Millheim. Mrs. Elmer Houtz spent a few days last week among friends about Linden Hall. Mrs. Barah Moore, an aged lady, died Tuesday morning at her home in Boalsburg. The United Evangelical Sunday school will hold a festival at Linden Hall in the evening of Aug, 15th, Mrs. J. W. Keller and son Harry spent Bunday with friends at Rock Bprings, Mr, Leitzell, who is in the employ of the Linden Hall Lumber Co, at Bunbury, visited his brother last week at Linden Hall, Mr. and Mrs, Foster Jodon, of Pleas- ant Gap; Professor 8. C. Miller and wife, of Philadelphia, were guests gt the home of Frank Wieland Sunday snd Mouday of this week, ' Mrs. William Meyer and Mrs. I. V. Musser drove up from Centre Hall Tuesday to spend the day with Mrs, J. H. Ross. 4 ! HOME. Poculinr Habits of the torian’s Daily Life, The daily life of ‘Thiers was very pe- culinr. He rose always at a very carly hour, about 5 o'clock in the morning, seldom later. After a cup of coffee and n Hght repast be would work steadily for many hours. Then he usually took a walk or would perhaps play a game of tennis before breakfast. which meal wis served at the usual Freneh hour, Then he would speak to bis friends and go out for a drive, sometimes pay visits and return a little after 4, when he went regularly to bed and slept till it wus time to get ready for dinner. Fog some extraordinary reason his dinner hour was 7:50, and he was very punc- tual. After dinner he always slept for twenty minutes or half hour and then would remain up chatting and talking to a late hour. His brightest moment was always subsequent to his after dinner sicep. No could be more agreeable In conversation, more easy or natural or more ready to im- part Information without being prolix. He true Provencal in all his tastes nnd habits. He loved the bright sun of bis native Provence. He thor- oughly appreciated the peculiar charm The Hine an one was a of the gray olive groves and ihe of the Mediterranean. He pre- ferred the dishes of Provence to almost any others. He used to mix oll liberal Iy with his food, and I remember at a dinner at the Duc Galliera’s a fair sized bottle of oil was specially placed next his plate, and he consumed it all.—-Cornhill Magazine, } & liesse Puzzled the Professors, An amusing joke was practiced upon the London paper the been examiners at It in Cambridge, says n had be mathematios liffieult examination far too and very real complaints had ari tutors To the astonishment of university, all the S50 lutions appeared on the day before the examination the Granta out, we belleve, by our office How the miracle was perform mained a secret until it had be hiciently wondered at The the Granta had secured the serv) &f number of recent who in privacy hn becoming if wen from the efgtheen or She 3 in “Worked 3 fxiitor work to master the pr university for Accomplish and the printers we prin the ting Ll ranta sold How A pood story is member Before his “broke ferson « Crise Fis i a matter of your raliroad fave, didn’t 17 “I believe you did.” “Well, you i forty were down days I'l te you how | Wiis ig done at Journal DOL Hemarkuble Luoek. 1857. th losed his i od to be susted ruff threw hls disappointing weapon on the floor. With an cath, and, joined by his aids, left the place. Tole wiped the cold sweat from his brow, mechanically picked up the discarded wi fron, went to the door and fired off every charge, remarking that it was just his luck. European and American Oysters, The oysters of America and Europe differ greatiy. Furopean oysters are siuadier and have a coppery taste, Our southern are larger than the northern. They are dredged along the coast and transferred to oyster beds in erecks close to shore, where they fat- ten. In London oyster salesmen some times keep oysters for a few days in water to which oatmeal has been add ed, for the purpose of rendering them more delicate and of better flavor. When out of season—during spawning time-—the oyster is soft and milky and not fit to be eaten, The Cook Stays. Mrs. Newbride— How does Mrs. Hen- ry Peck manage to keep that cook of hers? Mrs. Oldband — 8he threatened to leave, but Mrs. Peck would not give a recommendation, and she wouldn't go without one, and they are both stub born. Judge, oysters Tact, “It Is difficult to say what tact is,” Archbishop Langley replied when ask- ed to define it. “Here, however, is an Instance of what it is not: Only this morning a clergyman in wy docese wrote to me, ‘In consideration of your graces ma Wlivtties and falling Powers’ t was not tactful” The Vivacious One. “The word ‘vivacious,’ ” said the cyn- leal codger, “is the polite social term for ‘gabby.’ "~ Baltimore Herald. ——— A a ——————— to be rot- ete Brn Vena HOW A COLT GROWS, From : He and Beauty, The development of a spindly legged colt into a full grown horse 1s an inter- esting process to watch, In “Iorses Nine” the author describes an Instance In this way: And an unhbandsome colt he was. His broomstick legs seemed twice the proper length, and so thin you would hardly have believed they could ever carry him. [is bead, which somehow suggested the lines of a bootjack, was set awkwardly on a ewed neck, In time the slender legs thickened, the chest deepened, the barrel filled out, the head became less ungainly. As If to make up for these lmprove. ments, the colt’s markings began to set. They took the shapes of a saddle stripe, three white stockings and an irregular white blaze covering one side of his face and patching an eye. On chest and belly the mother sorrel came out rather sharply, but on the rest of him was that peculiar blending which gives the blue roan shade, a color unpleasing to the critical eye and one that lowers the market value. Unganinlinesy Grace Develops The Death of Kenith. The death of Kenith, the half myth- ical king of Scotland, was one of the ost remarkable in all history-—that is, if it can consistently be called a his torical fact According to the story, Kenith had killed a son and brother of the warlike Fennella. She for revenge caused Wiltus, the most ingenious art- ist of the time, to fashion an automatic death a wonderful with hidden springs, lev- ers, ete. When finished and set up, this “brazen Image” was an admirable work of art, In its right hand it held a basin and In the left an apple of pure gold, dealing machine, statue filled both set with diamonds and other pre. To touch this apple was to dare death, it being so arranged that guilty of such vandalism would be riddled by ar- rows shot from loopholes in the body the Kenith was invited to come and inspect the wonder, and king- like and just as Fennella had hoped he tried to pluck the Imitation fruit. The moment his hand touched the incrusted jewel he was filled with volsoned arrows, dying where he fell. clous stones ane Immediately poisoned of statue precious How He Escaped. Not long ago an Eoglish curate sur- prised his parishioners bj marrying a widow consi lerably older than himself. The 1 | when rate girl him t $41 Seti ment was still greater oh The cu young the « Ww ¥ had as known ngaged fo frivolous conduct ied gret the step. He offered for his but it endeavored in every way become a Ww hose BOG oO re i nent release, Was refused. Ile to break the LJ engagement, but without CERS. “Is there nothing 1 can do to es ape this?’ he exclaimed one day “Yon who in despair girl's mother, who had been the nnd n the marriage nego- remarked was present the prime mover tiations, “by marrying me.” The curate decided, if be had to mar of the tw he preferred the mother and accepted her. The young girl soon married wealthy broker, I¥y Oh« 0, a stock- Nighteaps. For external application the night cap Is rarely seen. It is first mention- ed during the time of the Tudors. In the inventory of Henry VII's ward robe across the following item: “A nighteape of black velvet em broidered.” No wonder, with gearing, that, as Shakespeare suggests, “Uneasy rests thy bead that a Poor old Bishop Latimer was Fox in desgribes him | held his hat in his having handkerchief on his | and upon it a nightcap or two | A great cap, townsmen | with broad flaps to button under They evidently believed in beads warm in those i we come such wWenrs “He a follows such aR Keeping tl days. Health ir The Danger In Coenine, The great danger of cocaine lies in the fact that it is the most agreeable and alluring of all narcotics. It causes no mental confusion; only a little more talkativeness than usual. There is no headache or nausea, and the pleas. ant effects are produced with a com- paratively small dose, but symptoms of polsoning are rapidly developed, and within three months of the commence ment of the habit there may be mark- ed indications of degeneration, loss of memory, hallucinations and suspicions. ~London Lancet. Soll and Forage Crops. Those states which are noted for the production of forage crops not only have maintained the original fertility of the soll, but they spend for commer- cial fertilizers less than 1 per cent of the annual value of their crops, while those states which pay least attention to forage crops have Impoverished the soll and spend annually for fertilizers from 5 to 0 per cent of the total value of thelr crops. Home Appreciation. “It must be a great satisfaction to have such a palatial apartment,” said the old time friend. “It 18,” answered Mr, Cumrox. “It's a heap of comfort to have a house big enough to wander away and get lost in when mother and the gals are giving a musicale or a reception.”—Washing- ton Star, Began Soon. Mrs. Crusty--Do you remember our first quarrel? Mr. Crusty—Let me see. Was that going into the churchsor coming out? There are more millionaires and more, paupers In Moscow ‘than in the whole of England, Ae... 1845 1903. THE MuTuAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CONnPANY OF NEWARK, N. J. The Leading Annual Dividend Co. Insurance furnish- JO BTOCKHOLDERS ed at cost. No Tontine or Deferred Dividend Accumulations to be Forfeited in Case of Death or Default in Premium Payments CCIONEPICUOUR FOR BCONOMY and LARGE Returns to Polieybolders in Proportion to Payments by them, DALUTUAL BENEFIT POLICIES CONTAIN SPECIAL AND PECULIAR ADVANT AGES NOT COMBINED IN THE POLICIES OF ARY OTHER COMPANY Write or call on the sgent. requested wiil be given W. H. Bartholomew AUENT, CENTRE HALL, PA. Any information No man or woman in the state will hesitate tospeak well of Chamberlain's Btomach and Liver Tablets after once trying them. They always produce a pleasant movement of the bowels, im- prove the appetite and strengthen the digestion. For sale by C. W, Swartz, Tusseyville; F. A. Carson, Potters Mills. IN THE LAND B and up the land Lands sold on long A lsrge majority of By Buy Low The area ofgood lan Willsoon bea thi Write the undemnsigned fo carson rates (one fare plus 82.0 of every month quarter section (160 acres ) from there will be had The Lamp ou got it and stays good ; The N may be, in somes : 's only ona, lang chen youn on it; every Dysentery Cared Without the Ald of a Doctor, the flux,, (dysentery) says Mr. T. A. Pinner, a well known merchant of Drummond, Tenn, *‘I used one small bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and was cured without having a doctor. 1 consider world.” form either for children or adults. A. Carson, Potters Mills. A si Write Grant Hoover for prices on nsurance. 000 A — A —_ Bay! Cop Dat Chicken Neck Guy In De Pittsburg Bunday Dispatch. Yores Trulie, Pickle Neary. When you want a physic that is mild and gentle, easy to take and cer- tain to pa always use Chamberlain's Btomach and Tiver Tablets, For sale by C, W. Bwartz, Tusseyville; F. A. C n, Potters Mills, CRANT HOOVER Controls sixteen of the Fire and Life Insurance Com in the The Best Is the Cheapest..... No mutuals ; no assessments, «.Money to Loan on First Mortgage Bs A A] — Centre Reporter, $1.00 per year, in advance. ne, — win in . 00000006 000000000000000 I am now in my New Btore Room and ready to greet you all with The Latest Styles in Shoes OXFORDS SANDALS BLUCHERS And simost anythiz 1 may want in ne XK 1 will get it for Come in anfl jet us show you our goods, as it costs nothing 0 show goods Many thanks for past favors P.V.S. STORE. Goods exchanged for Produce. C. A. KRAPE. Spring Mills, Pa. OF THE DAKOTAS. a. One crop ofien pays Lhe cost of gntire Priced Farm Lands pany him on a trip. Ex- ist and 3rd Tocsday price of and to those buying ss much ssa ¢ Bt. Paul and other points where these lands may Freeport, Illinois. y Habits that you never will 1 ou 88 * just as good "— vat for all around good. To make nuine, look for the name Varieties) make of lamp transform. CENTRE HALL, . . . . . PENN. Manufacturer of and Dealer in HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble aw’ . Not Over Wise. There is an old allegorical pictare of a girl scared at a grass-hopper, but in the act of heedlessly treading on a snake. This is paralleled by the man who spends a large sum of money building « cyclone cellar, but neglects to provide his family with a bottle of Chamberlain's nst bowel
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers