CENTRE VOL. LXXVIL. NO. 2. HALL, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1904. LETTER FROM MISS McMINN. Ri TOWN AND COUNTY NEWS, : | HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST lative and executive | FROM ALL PARTS. f +3 Oi Lilie TOOK HER OWN LIFE. CENTRE COUNTY die | IN THE CIVIL WAR, | mrs. Joseph Spangler Found Hanging in Corl Shed, at Her Mome lu Free AGAINST SF'HOUL ROAD LAW, DLAND, CALIFORNIA. € EDITOR CENTRE REPORTER, BIR :—Bome of my friends east have Mrs. Anna Spangler, wife of Joseph | written me for an eight or Spangler, a farmer living just east of description of my trip west, | Freeport, Illinois, committed suicide { oceurred to me that se By T. P. Meyer, Sergeant Co. A., 148th Saturday afternoon, the 2nd inst., by | V hanging herself with a clothesline in the coal shed. It appeared Vaurmers' Organization Will Benefit Wants Act All Counties all at a distance ingredible to us. thnt o But the hills begin to crowd upon us, port, Illinois, rg { Here we pass u post marked on one Phrough its legi # the | Grange has taken bill ten page side “Colorado,” on the other “New | committees It has Mexico me of my quon- dam friends in dear old Centre might dary svivani tate r 3 §1 'e Pennsylvania Btate| 1he fourth month publie a stand against the by the last ( se hiool Ay W . " | ter, ix light A joint meeting of these committees | : Mrs. held lerm bias heen closed, Ina twinkling we plunge intoa half | Bproul road passed mile tunnel dark ss Egypt and at an | Legislature, minci, Lhe tant post ras be expecting something of the same, ing the ‘BIGTS Now jnstead of writing elevation of seven thousand six hun-| Regiment, P. {To be Continued | like a de- to each ipdi- dred feet, Emerging from it, the train | was in Harrisburg which Myra ! tre Hall, CHAPTER V1. THE PRISONER'S STORY The second was, the fact of the con- dition of filth and misery in Belle Is- land prison camp, now threatened to which, with its packed might become a pest-camp, eight thousand inmates on about seven acres of ground, easily and quickly get beyond the con- trol of the health of the Confederacy. Chen woe to Richmond Mauchester, to In Jan. 1864, broke out in camp, and many authorities and as well as our camp. smallpox were carpied out aud sent to a pest The daily increased, and camp, of prospect AWRY from the city. numer Canes the un der this additional visitation of tion, made our situation doubly horri- ble, inasmuch as there was no escape, and we asked how long, and what more shall vet be added to the misery already endured. Our quarantine was already established, in the vigilant guards around us During the month became pumerous that si the cases d Mauchester alarmed and demanded action An gate, requesting all i, to report iy tichmon and becatn olice was p wied at the o desired to wi vi } ital vaccinated nospiiad every afternoon ; the boys went out by hundreds ev In our mess used, a isk. cap d : when it ha i $ at last come, It that ? ed’ the virus month we es- For a seemed that the greatest ur ti was stated befo inner, Adams SRIne night r took sick ; | ana s i to “sick call ood bim up looked at hi wired and returns hie same day mine away, 1 spring, Our mess was all for several weeks, fearing that was in our tent But scurvy, in camp | { Liem all r homes : never came For mo % there had been paroled from Island prisoners were aliost daily coming in, tiil, nn gon of tes the and more | g 1g th, thousand prisoners were in the eamp, | itwithstanading ol sais by rea sickness and dea over eigl it twice enlarged, i which was nD a ihe greater the amount CORRAL Y number here, of misery a greater the to be en- | Is- | durea by all. Every man on the land was determined to do his best to get away by the first oppor tunity, they eared not where, for any ir the possible change must be | { On Dee. 27th squads No. fTteV five } in.” lostantly, the that the had agreed, and the long talked of pa- | to begin, The | wyiul release greatly excited better » hundred men, were d to “fall forth Exchange ail idea went § 3 ors of i Commission i Toile was pects { Camp. The commotion indescribable ; yelling, shouiing and runoiong through | the streets, and packing agsivst the | gate, a dense, uncontroliable mass of more than three thousand men, every one of them determined of the five hundred. I was a member of squad No. 68 at that time, but [ work- ed hard to “flank in,” snd made good headway ; I began to be very hopeful ; they were still going out and not a dozen ahead of me. 1 got into the gate with several others when the Con- federate Sergeant shouted, “That is all I” Bill we were being crowded forward by the multitude back of us, still pressing to get out, ‘‘Get back !” the guards shouted ; we could not get back ; the guards were armed with guns and bayonets fixed, Many were more or leas severely bayoneted ; quite a number of Confederates had clubs only, aud the clubbing of prisohers also commenced, Mauy fell Gnder the clubs ; my time had come ; they were up to me. I turned and tried to get out of reach, but the pack wad too dense. Oneof the “clubbing rebels’ now took me over thie besd with his club, and I, too, “went down in a heap.” 1 wore my blanket like a shawl, and became entangled in it, Continuediat foot of next column, pros- the! MH was to be one termined effort of Mrs. meet death in this manner, for when the body was found that have close to the floor by stretching herself she could touched floor. The body was cut down by Mr. Spangler, who had just returned from atrip to town, Mrs. the eight children, one of whom of a mother died Spangler was Year ago, { for some time and submitted to an op- eration at Globe hospital in Freeport | December 8 last, returning to her home While condition seemed t December 31 ber physical ried over atlairs that no doubt aflected ber mind, The deceased was thirty- nine vears old and much sympathy is expressed the busband snd mot his Mr. acd Mrs, from the Wil Hall, “Hy spangler went west SOL farm, east about four Mrs of Years ago, the oldest daughter ex-Uounty Treasurer James J. v Rebersburg — An Old Bible Aun old d in 180 ceived by Mrs German family le, pur- re- David Keller, of Boals- the reer heirloom, " Mrs, , several dave ago, from west, eh Keller's i vidually, will You give space to the en- | closed letter 7 And later on to another Yours Truly, KATE B. MoMix 1604, 141 Eureka Street, January 0, in Beas the Leaving my good friends county, I boarded a E. R. R. on the Jetober, meeting my travels Mrs, Youngstown, train on evening of the 28 oft TR { panion, mn th found us in Chie the Middle West pot, we then cure our sleeper office of the = I. SER | proceed ed to the Ten Sears ago this yw iedped it was but a faint HOW MT: a1 1 thiree acres of the fluest fabric i family for from t! Keller, who George Shenel Ibe book was shipped by freight, | all ightng nivety ndit snd on book acl well well Ugh read great-grand-children, making six generations who have seen and heard res m 1 Nhene. fie (rermat LeETRer Centre Counlinns Will Hanqaet he male Associa members of the Centre nly on | hold a banquet nt’ ih, \ fect © a ie i fis ef it Mat. ration. 1 myself ia quickly as 0 ssible | just then one of the guards Pp me with a bayonet, | 1o- | thie the situation was critical, g out life, I dashed against | the I pushed several worst yell of my the pack of prisoners just inside gale, Lo =AYVe INN self head over heels, and fell headlong over relieved when | £ JY of them, aud felt greatly [ felt others falling on me. 1 were bayoneted, | learned, and we the pack had greatly thinned out, and matters! looked more orderly, never tines Thia mix-up soon our feet ived, Again . I must pot omit saying that my head was well protected by the thick tough, yellow rebel that | and under the excitement of the ocean i sion I never felt the blow that knoek- | ed me down, although for several days | I wore'a lump on my head the size of | a walnut, int wore There was no further need of vio- lence, if excuse for it could be given in the first place. But the Rebel Ser. geant, Haight by name, a deserter from the Union Regular Army, and the greatest tyrant of all, in charge of the guard, was not satisfied : he snateh- ed a musket from one of the guards, and most brutally bayoneted several of the prisoners. A poor emaciated, eadaverous looking prisoner, scarcely able to keep his feet, tottered by him ; on seeing him at his right, he brought the butt of the musket to the right, and with great force butted the half dead prisoner on the temple, and he fell in a heap ; he gave him a thrust wit: the bayonet, which latter, how- ever, could give him no pain, ss the blow on the temple had killed him. “Get up I" the Reb. yelled, as he once more drew the bayonet for another thrust ; “Don’t ! you have already kill hind’ we shouted ; “take him away,” he commanded, he was earried out, and we yelled, "Murderer | murderer!” The five hundred prisoners taken out were sent south, I A APP NAIA Centre Reporter $1.00 a year, 1 skilled hands in ries, its de partmen ported j ery MOTH Cons BRE Io tii Erie [44] il Pp tourist's sleeper, nt wnfortabile Kansas (ity we expected to No we decided not till where we next day I to train we react Mr. of Harry Taylor, Our stay Mrs, formerly was indeed a wider d kindness them their Their link belweet a meniory Monday und t 88} At Heasand noon on boarded and lly and good natured as We have ney. Any of the other the Pacific OC nanctors f traveled over through lines to mat. and train other road surpass if equal hose of the Sante Fe in intelligence, Our route now lay over what truly the “Great West,” was We had been through western Kansas and Colorado, from an altitude of four thousand feet the till as we reached the Hatoon of the Rockies, we were told tude was «ix thousand feet, gan the final ascent to the many “lofty mountain gateways’ The Ratoon I'he grade steep that two powerful mountain en- gines are required to haul the train at a rate hardly faster than a walk. The curves are so sharp the wheels shriek at the strain. Here we had time to view the ever changing scenery. Here a beautiful canon shaded with aspen and pine, | then, huge bare clifls, and mountain ranges with breaks through which we could see far out across to other rang. unbhove BEA, Range the alti Mere be first of Poss is so I SA The Winning Estimates J. E. Elwell, of Ottawa, Kansas, guessed within sixty-three of the cor rect number of clgars upon which tax at the rate of 83 a thousand was paid | in the month of November. The cor | rect number was 678,167 470. Mr. Ek well got $6,000, for bis good estimate, | Twenty thousand dollars will be dis tributed in prizes on secount of this contest, | } seetned to rush down the steep | Lill co “A Territory in the Bky It hal in the Eastern states must ght among the clouds.” ad then we cross, or pass in sight of, the Old Bante Fe trail, over journeyed every emigrant thi 134} 11 5 rer 4 x this Bout Western country ill ear:y days, Here our route lay past ond of ibid dead wvolea OER 8 Inva beds, YO informed us the bed ¢ Bunte Fe railroad, Here we pass 8 Lor making little adobe Indian tts—an, bu covered with d. Here ranchmat glirred tie $ tid] recrossed A great river came “This is al washes all this the rainy season i= hol =» Rluiral wonders “el Lo be appreciated day al noon we reached Ash bye to left Phoenix, tied here we bade good LOO Our passengers, who us taking a branch road to in that boone greatest of all * night shortly wssed “The Needles’ a town rom two lofty peaks just on luesday i after i! i e between Arizona and Califor | “Now all get ofl if you want to | think train i res | enough, see Iondiaos" 1 fow the Indians to the right of us, ti miser«ble, homely, tatooed creatures, their arms outstretched very mained on Mure Indians tol ¢ left of us, Indians all around us with ~hung | AnX- Two A good many Returning to the Gar, berths were made up, and we were n asleep, forgetful alike of beads, Indiane, or anything elee tan- gible. Soon after midnight the porter roused tis to say that we were nearing Barstow, Here we left the Ban Fran. cisco train and our jolly traveling companion, who pursued her way to Stockton, while we, after a half hours’ wait, took our seat In a chair car for San Bernardino, reaching it by 4:20 p.m, After a wait of several hours we got a car for Redlands and were soon at our destination, thankful that God had so kindly watched over us all the way. with beautiful strings of beads, iously begging, "Havey some ? bite, four bits, dolla.” invested our fast Wi Church Conference for York, The Central Pennsylvavia Confer ence of the United Evangelical church will hold ite annual conference in York opening March 1, next. The sessions will be held in Trinity chureh, Rev. H. A. Benfer, pastor, Bishop W, F. Heil, of Chicago, will preside, and Bishops Hartzler, Dubs and Stanford are to be present. [all classes of properly should bear that a tax of TORO least one mill should be placed pers nal and corporate property | raised should be applied to local taxation. Hepresentat {Columbia county, a member 1 3 of f benefit iegisialive committee, said present jaw Wik ul one-i min Outil jue i LAKE Al i ward H wre g subscribers eo H AR Wy it ler says have stated Uw to Howard, ewiabilish Factory in and now, glad to announce, that ene has been sold and the contr the plant closed, the smount, sixteen cle At meeting thousand liars, being raised a tiiltlee the last und to erect it have been The ploy 150 persons, and every person on, and they facts will em- foside of 30 davs the erecting the building will commence ——— A — ETS TP TO YOU, If youare nota subscriber to the Centre Reporter you should be Here is an offer made to indace youl to become a subscriber y For One Dollar in advance the Centre Reporter and the Tri- Weekly New York World will be sent You one year, Think of tnt. The Tri-Weekly New York World answers all the purposes of a daily paper. It gives you the news of the whole world, The price of the Tri-Weekly New York World is One Dollar a year, in advance, The price of the Reporter is One Dollar, in advance. The Two Papers will be sen! to any New Subscribers of the Centre Reporter for One Doliar, in advances. Bubscribers now on the Reporter's list ean have the Tri-Weekly New York World sent to them for sixty-five oduts, always in advance, A $00 goods shades visited the Centre Hall hit. « Bid i Mondays i He ited} thie midwin i , died al Lock Have under the Woven 3 ! ¥ Hi er, d ever, of s, AD AN us, the David X wit i LOT ae pe fats Meise, t be Wh y had an ex- to not He tasking a m the Centre Hall Mr iss’ st ; and on took the wnole perience Merchant to ond of groceries fre ion to ging Dat does repeat ¥ ng Tusses vi is horse ght and sp ed Dave and load on the grou I'he animal ran hoine Ex-Bheriff and Mrs, C. C, Brungart, of the latter's Alexander, this The Sheriff’ is quite ve Valley, This is due of Bellefonte, esis Mrs place, Tuesday. were g James in popular in Pes that Bherifl Brungart was in office, and remain. th was In fore ed just e same Cyrus Brungart he being elected to the ty's chief office, coun. Lavi Stump, of Tusseyville, was a caller last week. He will have sale March 15th, and will quit the farm tp move to Bpring Baok, between Mill heim and Hebersburg at which place he purchased the Foust property. James Moyer, of Tuosseyville, will be his nearest seighbor having purchased the property across the pike from the one which will be occupied by Mr. Stamp. “Miss Bob White” is to appear in Garman's Opera House, Bellefonte, Tuesday, January 10. Those who want to see a clean comedy opers can have an opportunity to do so when Mies Bob comes to Bellefonte. The Reporter predicts that Messrs. Nixon & Zimmerman who will present this opera, will be able to please every per. son in the audience, It is complete, delightful and pleturesgue, but not overdressed or overdone JM the lavish expenditures have been fir talent and not for tinsel, which together with the meritorious book and melodious music, are a triumvirate hard to beat.