S. W. SMITH, Editor and Proprietor. CENTRE HaLL, . . . Penna, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1903, TERMS. The terms of subscription to the Re- porter are one dollar per year in advance. ADVERTISEMENTS. —~20 cents per line for three insertions, and 5 cents per line for each sab- sequent insertion. Other rates made known on application, The figures opposite your name on label of pa- per indicate the date to which your subscription is paid. \When no date is given the date implied is July, 1800; when no month is given the month implied is July—thus : * 00" means July, 1500; ‘017, means July, 1901; © "means that yonr subserip- tion is paid in advance to July, 1904. Other months than July are indicated by abbreviations, When sou pay your subseription always ex- amine your label and when a notice appears | that corrections have been made, compare and report immediately if vou have not been given | proper credit, No receipts tor sabscription will be sent by mail unless by special request. The change of date on ls on to be suflicient evidence. Money by mail is reasonably safe. There have been no losses to this date. hel Linden Hall. One of the most enjoyable social | events of the season took place Batur- day afternoon, the nineteenth, “Hide-away Farm,” the country home of Willis given to Mrs. Brooks by a number of her many friends and relatives. karly in the morning Mr. Brooks decoyed the day with friends, thus giving their daughters, Miss Daisy and Mrs. Fos- ter Jodan a chance to prepare the de. licious refreshments which were dain- and more than enjoyed by all present. At four o'clock Mrs, Brooks, never having re- ceived an inkling of what was giug on, was driven home by her husband, the‘evening to find over fifty friends assembled ip her home. She was the recipient of Spring Mills. Van Valzah last Friday. a fair price, of the Goheen, of Boalsburg. The Goodhart farm, a west of town, bouglit the late Mrs, well attended thing brought ehurse to the skill Was very due criéer, Wm, few by Frank Mrs. Good- was Foreman, of Centre Hall, hart expects to have public sale of her this fall, possession stock, implements, ete, though she will not before spring. give I'he Misses Stamm, of Chicago, are visiting their cousin, Emanuel Bhook. M her cousin, ntzell is Miss Mame York, this week. Miss Alice spent a few w Carrie G entertaining Gentzell of Bellefonte, week Robison, of days last visiting friends in tow. Miss Carrie Osman left this week for Milroy ployment, , where she has secured em- wm————— oo Penn Hall. The farmers are working at their otnrn., Mrs. Nelson Wert and Aaronsburg, spent Sanday Mr. and Mrs. Le Blanche Hari Millbeim, vi ited Ella (© There will be services in the Reforin- Carl, of her vis Rossmur, SO with rents pared ' man, of undo Sunday afternoon, ed church Sunday morning. Charles Fisher made a business trip to Bellefonte Monday. Charles Bartges and family, aceom- panied Mrs. Wallace Musser, spent Saturday and Sunday with friends in Union county. Archie Zettle spent Clintondale. J. W. Cole, of Rebersburg, is work- ing in the carriage shop of J. C. Condo. by his sister, several days at cnc ff so a ecm ——— Aaronsburg, Paul Swabb, of Holsopple, is visit- ing his mother and other friends town. Miss Marion has from a pleasant six weeks’ friends in West Fairview, Miss Hettie of spent Bunday Main street. Mrs, Fred Crouse Heolsopple, are visiting Crouse, on North street. Henry Haffly, who is employed at Renovo, spent a week with his parents leaving again on Monday. J. W. accompanied by his mother and sister, attended the Van- Valzah sale last Friday. in returned visit to Stover Smull, State College, with her parents on children, of Mrs. Henry and Foster of Brisbin, spent a week with Mrs. D H. Lenker, the mother of Mrs. Houser. | Misses Hettie and Kathryn Smull | and Maggie Weaver spent Sunday aft- | ernoon with friends at Rebersburg. Miss Ella Stover has goue to spend | the winter with friends in ven. Colyer. tended Grange encampment. returned to their nome in Tuesday, after spending ten days with their parents, was the guest of her brother Charles, in this place, over Bunday. ' Mr. and Mrs, George Lee and son John, spent Bunday with W, F. Rock- ey, at Tusseyville, Sidney Rossman, of Siglerville, spent a week with filends and relatives in Centre county. Among the guests at the home of J, H. Moyer on Bunday were Messrs, Gurney and Lloyd Smith, Potters Mills; John Bubb, Mr, and Mrs, Jerry Albright and sons Clarence and Rob- ert, Penn Hall; Mr. and Mr. W, A, Reiber and son William, of Johns- town. Lloyd Kerlin and sons Frank and Gust, of Mohantango, attended the pienic and visited their parents, Mrs. George Bpangler and Mre. W. F. Rockey left on Monday morning for Baltimore, Maryland, where they will visit Mre. cpangler’s daughter, Mrs, Lydia Hipple. : Harry Weaver, son of A, J. Weaver, of this place, leit Monday for Reading, to attend school at that place, One hundred and fifty over- coats for men, youths and chil- dren at half MONTGOMERY & CO., Bellefonte, Pa. evening, At a late hour the werry crowd separated, after wishing Mrs, Brooks many happy returns of the day sud thanking their lightful time. hostess for a de- Among the guests were wood; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jodan, Mr. aud Mrs, Foster Jodan, Reeder Jo- ' of Bellefonte; Abuer Noll and wife, Mrs, Will Noll, Mrs. Henry Twitmey- er, Joseph Brooks and wife, Miss Hel- en Brooke, Dr. Bilger and wife, James wife, Pleasant Gap; Mr, and Mrs, Irvin Burris, Mr, Mrs, Samuel Gingerich, Henry Potter, Miss Mary Potter, Fergus Potter, Miss Phoebe Potter, Miss Libbie Davis und ther John, Mrs. John Felding, George Miller and wife, Jarues and wif, Frank Wieland Mrs John Tressler, den Hall; Brooks and and bre Ross and Mrs. Zong, Brooks and Cloyd Brooks and wife, John and wife, Centre Hall. James Beerist and son, wife, Lin- Richard wife, Breon of Lebanon, spent several days visiting ! his sisler, Mrs. James Ross, last week f Harry Frantz, wife and of Pine Grove Mills, visited at the 1 of Fran eC iintie bert wWiek, mother, Hes Me- ¥ the guests at the home of D C. Hess during the past week were, Misses Lucy and May Waring, Torone, and A. R and Cummings MeNitt, of Niglerville. Lloyd Smith expects to to move his Altoous vext week, where the P. R. R. Co. Bliss Meyer aud sister Blanche, of Bowling Green, amily i fs he is employed with Virginia, are visiting friends and Hall. Frank Wieland’s new relatives abt Linden house is uu- der roof aud ready for the plasterers. mss ss Tusseyvilie W. F. Rockey, the obliging ster, drove a free buss to the encampment, huck- Grange Mrs. Samuel Floray and Mrs. Aston Detwiler and children have gone to visit Rev. N, Dubbs and wife, of Cen- terville. John J. Spangler is a student at State College having entered that in- John stitution to pursue his studies Success to him. fine assortment of fall millinery goods ing for the encampment, The infant child of Mr. and Mrs Rev. Gress officiated. William Mulbargear has gone Greenwood Furnace to take a vacation to Bt. Louis, teem Georges Valley. Mrs. Newton Weaver, of Williams- port, visited J. Miles Barger last week. Grandpa Auman is visiting friends Those on the sick list are James ger and son Maynard, Green Decker started for North Da- kota on Monday morning; all wish him asafe journey. Lottie Hoover is visiting her aunt at this place, : Many of the farmers are raising po- tatoes and all say they are rotting, Henry Lingle was at Spring Mills Monday. John Ripka and family visited at his father's home Sunday. Rev. Bierly delivered a very able sermon Sunday morning, jar. ————— i —— A AIAN A Remarkable Record, Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has a remarkable record. It has been in use for over thirty years, during which time many million bottles have been sold and used. It has long been the standard and main reliance in the treatment of group in thousands of homes, yet during sil this time no case has ever been reported fo the manu. facturers in which it failed to effect a cure. When given as soon as the shild becomes hoarse or even as soon as the croupy cough a re, It will prevent the attack. 1H pietant to take; many children like it. Itcon- tains no opium or other harmful sub. stance and may be given as confident. Iy toa baby as to an adult. For sale by C. W. Bwartz, Tusseyville ; F, A. Carson, Potters Mills. ‘ Ap AAS a ——— Rev. and Mrs. Deitzell, of Maytown, Lancaster county, will return home today (Thursday) : in A SLEEP FANTASY. The Confusion nnd Absurdities That Come to Us In Dreams, If you would know what stuff dreams made of, read the following de scription of a sleep fantasy Marion Crawford's novel, “Cecelia” eandering through a in which we feel beleving ourselves Sometimes in 1 ahsnurdities ag madmen to be others than ourselves, Conceiving the laws of nature to be reversed for our advantage or our ruin, right wrong and wrong as right in the pathetic innocence of the idiot the senseless rage of the ma- niac, convinced beyond all argument that the vutely impossible is hap- pening before our yet never in the astonished by any wonders, though subject to terrors we never feel when we are awake, Has no one even confused dreaming mental state things turn chair we sit armchair Is and we ust, Soe ing us or abs eves, least understood that must be exactly of into living ereatures, lke the inanimate the the beast, the Insane? Norse, into a wild through on becomes a turned i-hunting endless rooms, which are full of trees and un who dance and we turned into people, it u have come in attire so exceedingly nder how the us in. because we Wi have let Monkfish, John Ash of Zoology - Stow's Celebrated One of the Htmares of nig ton's Creatures \ldrovandus and Stow If the old writers monsters were British up North sea, the the Irish coast thes rav which through the +» similar to that nut the were Or priests been curse] for {io God kent In the as Kept in the er thereof 1 eladiv did gladly Soldiers, ful is Aerobatie performed pas $10 20, the soldiers * +} t ng themselves this That Bends, rock.” “unbending wi: but, sort of as as stone fiber. It the few now in museuins, + Hartley in- England, India. inn inch It i= a partic and can with «1 several inches rom the horizontal: in ward like, having the grain of ordinary gray sandstone, as wooden ire, and abot nen hie ids be curs { 3 i otherwise it tt 1 3 fev 1 na maoeras Powerful Effect of Pure Saccharin, Saccharin should never be taken in a pure state. Some idea of its power will be conveyed when it is understood that part of it will give a very, sweet taste to 10,000 parts of water, Tasted in too large a quantity it acts upon the nerves in such a way as to paralyze the of taste, just as powerful music stuns or deadens the auditory nerves or a bright light acts upon the optic nerves. one sense Heart Fallure, “Turrible thing happened to Bill in the poker game las’ night.” “What was it?’ “Heart failure.” “You don’t mean it.” “Yes; he held four hearts and drew one card; got a spade.”—Brooklyn Ea- gle, ® Successful Experiment, “Mabel married that awfully dissi- pated young Flutterby to reform him.” “And is she satisfied with her thoice.” “I should say she is! His uncle died last week and left him half a milion.” ~Cleveland Plain Dealer. Diamonds. " When Lord Randolph Churchill visit: ed the diamond fields of South Africa, while looking at a huge parcel of dia-| thonds he remarked, “All for the vani.! ty of woman.” A lady who heard gue} remark added, “And the depravity, of man.” 1 The first American newspaper was Public Occurrences. It appeared Boston in 1600 and was promptly sup. pressed by the government of the cols ony. # a I A BUEN. DSUTADGe, THE SPIDER TREE. A Curious Product of the Cape Negro Country of African, Travelers ited or passed Cape Negro of Africa heard from the natives of a plant wis part that, threw its legs about in continual strug gles to escape. It was the good fortune of Dr. Welwitsch to discover the origin of the legend. an wind tableland eine upon a plant that upon the ground, but had two enormous leaves that blew and twisted about the wind like serpents—in fact, it look- id, i who vi often that growing, country spider and country, he rested low HW ept ed, ns the natives had sa like a gi- gantic spider Its stem four but a foot high. It in reality, that was feet across and had but two leas feet that prob most xtraordinary tree OR were eight long and split nd so they resembled ably the known It quite, a century, | yond foot, until it reaches the diam adult grows for ris if not ut vard be nbout a 10K INE MOTI " Rescued the Flag. © Eagles In the Tennessee Mountains, CHgIes this is ng Li i Od one, This is scarce iy bot in quest Yama MANE times, i trifle not long since Mr has wi £100 any Was fn at a sal the Isle of Wight by r Oxford street it suffered in th ars, ken nd od in a zetie, Spencer having been bro it is now enshrin Westminster Ga TOSS glass case Men Wear Combs, The traveler in India is surprised to gee that men wear conbs in their hair much more than women do. A Cinga lese gentleman wears what we kno as the circular namental back © to gather his eurly wears a full beard also, but his servant must trim beard is only allowed to wear the circular comb comb and a 3 Of locks together el [IRE LE] hils own The Nautilus, Airtight compartment ships were suggested by an examination of the nautilus. The shell of this prudent an- imal has several compartments into which air or water may be admitted to allow the occupant to sink or float, as it pleases. Each chamber is occupied in succession by the animal. As it in- creased in size It moves to a larger chamber. What He Was Doctor Of. Tommy Figgjam--What makes peo- ple call the Rev. Longwynde “doctor?” What did he ever cure anybody of Paw Figgjam-—-