VOL. LXX VIII. CENTRE COUNTY IN THE CIVIL WAR. 148th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, I. P. Meyer, Ne rgeant Co. Regiment, P. V. Io be Continuad | CHAPTER X A., 148th Clothing allowance, soldier received a 80 shirts, less of many ele. each year, If he pants, price managed to get ance in money, at the end of the year, If, however, he drew more the | allowance the excess was taken off his | pay at the ruling price at which was the cost ernment. than the time, price to the gov. | Following is the allowance state. | ment and table, “exhibiting the al- | lowance of clothing to each soldier | during his enlistment, and his propor- | tion for each year, respectively, as os. tablished by the secretary of war LLILAOWANCE THRE} FOR YEAR CLOTHING ILDIER FOR ¥ MN Y Total i i i { ihis table { with Lhe exception of Lhe price column is the exact form | furnished by the secretary of war and | Was printed on the back of every * re- biank to the he price columu in quisition "went YH pas fies the above is compiled from the best data at hand atid Id Ves AL approximately correct price of each single article or garment of esh kind in 1864 65 All wear, was strictly all woolen goods of thie and was ail Wear soldier's clothing, except under. wal and most darable quality the same for summer and Witiler iothing allowance to each sol He dier at first cost to the gover: ment Was abundant and cheap in view of thie price of wool, which ranged from one dollar per i to one dollar aud a quarter wind, fANCE AND CAMP EQUIPAGH I'he following articles of ordnance aud equipage charged to the varied price of ‘amp were issued snd the Limes, as men at subjoined the the fal articles to prices, which contract thie government varied $ single When these articles were hard worn or badly scuffed they were, upon in- spection, condemuoed and in place. If a soldier lost any of them through carelessness the of the articles lost was deducted from his next pay. open to this new issued smount We therefore kept our eyes matter, and very seldom that a soldier paid for an arti cle lost. Whenever we indiv duals or as a Company it was got behind as had I over and we the same articles condemne over, until even with Ugecle Ban. In 1864 the company fell short toa large amount, aggregating over two thousand dollars, for arms snd camp equipsage in battle, standing ageinst 4s by reason of care. lesanesas to report the losses at the proper time to get reduction. The of. ficers of the company smiled and walked away, which implied conour- rence in my plan of getting even with the government. We saved the outfit of every man killed or wounded and reported the same off as lost in battle, and were so much ahead. 1 had some old tents condemned and deducted over aud over, On inspection Lhe in- spector would mark them with stencil and black paint “I OC," which sigui- fied inspected and condemned, and put them to ithe credit side of our go- eonnt. After having secured this eredit I would prepare them for next inspection by erasing the “[(O " . where the paint had gone through the canvas | burned a hole into the tent and the “1C"” was gone. The tent cloth was changed and was again ready for inspection, to be pl to our credit, By spring of 1865 Co, A wax even with the government and had guns and other artigles to spare, At the close of Lhe war many compas officers owed the government we were again fost at HAI FHE LEGISLATURE, Introduced or Passed by House or Senate Following is a brief account setting { forth the work of the legislature, with | reference to the introduction and pass- age, by one or the other of i | that body, of various bills oranch ENATE the PROCEEDINGS, In Neate the following bills Amending the act providing for the tendance of children in public schools age and ability to the Knglish language superintendents ih cities und boroughs and by the Ly the secretary of the school board in HOUSE PROCEEDING The bill introduced by Mr. Ober, of in, fixing the minimum salary ie school teachers at $40 a month House, the In House passed finally the following bills Providing that county Commission. shall erect markers on soldiers’ xed charge on lands ae the Providing a by serves and t wl for Senate bill to reorganize the board of Sia e for forestry re- distribution of revenue gob 1001 and road purposes, uslees nusyivanias State College, teachers’ Regulating the granting of sic the of employment teachers in the publ schools with re- pect Providing tes thie Are 0 i t leachiers tor the relief of poor per- Ons, regi their settlement in means of wreement val of a poor of his settlement, the furnished t him and the Pay Inent 0 f or ta thereto, aarler Nes “THE MAID AND MUMMY, Long Wainut Strait Phlladelphin, Engagement at Thestre One of the most popular writers of lyrics and librettos whose * The Tenderfoot” and other musical comedies have already been passed upon by theatregoers and scored hits, Mr. Carle's latest, Maid and the Mummy," is the best and brightest of them all. big ly and complications, The by tabert Hood Bowers, a young musici the light, order, extremely whistleable, bright mirth music Hines, laughable situations provoking was composed an, and is of tinkling and #0) in demand at pres lovers of en- this kind. The elaborate one, tertainments of duction is a most both scenically and from the st “ The Maid and the Mum- comes to Philadelphia with costumes, my " identical cast and company, | ing in all one hundred and which early in made the seg I'he present engagement and ed as to time ran until the hot we opens Mond nut Street ather April rel 'heatre, and iay, there the ustial Weeilly died matinees, - a sid the Harrooin introduess hibiting tering =» penalty onment to ninety second offen { i i § Mi ing Lhiat By isjuehanon, pr inciudiog ¢ ion thereof required PR Where now alle rae, noting in Lhe | HOW ig his measure Lie iii Wa Own Rie IDiNors ab matter whether i vid authorizing I meetings ‘ouneil f ion of officers and to cast we when Cot ne Ls are equaliy divided, - - —— ALS ’ f.oe who isn deserving “i by Repre- | 3 alive ress y iniieage books sold railroads | Ha must be irom FWLHO presents it, Hum ese $ } 5 Rf pital last week le k distric was one of the party stay. They are carpenters by trade, and plentiful The West terian churches at Kishacoquillas Presby- Belleville aud Al- George Mcleod, of New York City. The salary is $850 M. I. Gardoer has opened an office in Masonic Bellefonte, as headquarters for the Nittany Valley railroad, of which he is He also Temple, general super. intendent. line of insurance, CAITies a Pennsylvania, by a passage in the House of the mea-ure appropriating $400,000 for the care of consumptives in State sanstoria on the State forest reservations, provides the largest ap- propriation yet sei apart by any State for this purpose Burveyor Wm. M. Grove was in town Friday and did some work for A. P. Luse & Bon. In the afternoon he surveyed a timber tract for J, Q. A. Kennedy, Mr Grove is using a high class surveying instrument that he fHods aids him greatly in making dif ficult surveys John B. White, beginniog of {his week, went to Altoona where he will be engaged at his trade, that of car pen. tering, during the coming summer, The prospects for the bullding boom at Altoons and suburbs Is juducement for the mechanics to go to that busy railroad centre, The commissisners of Union county and the owners of the Lewisburg and MifMinburg turnpike came to an agree. ment whereby the turnpike company Ia to receive $4000 for the rosd. Ata recent term of court a jury had award- ed damages in the sum of $2000, whieh verdict was sot aside by (he court as insufficient, The company wanted $5000, but rather than have a retrial n thousands of dollars through neglect. the case was adjusted as stated above, Souls Oa Fire ? grealest serial story of iis Tracy, famous Wings of he Pillar of Ligh a) sive to the the Mornis § will resders of ine Philadelphia reas March willbe the o given free with esac he Sa iy publi 110 Ameri may is A where this great stor sussia and Aweriea England, } uish the principal chars ters in this re- Love and i ure is Lhe Lthetne, as in all of Mr Worse thrown racy # most successful I'he action begius with a b stb in London, Auarchist meeting in Tottenham Court Road, some sensational disclosures in the Russian colony in England, and then shifts to the castle of an a Russian provin- cial governor, or ** Little Czar, subjects are in revolt at his intrigues a The Edwards Case The Pennsylvania Supreme Court having decided to send the case of Samuel Greason, the negro under sen- tence of death in Reading for the mur- der of John Edwards in 1801, back to the Berks County Court, the Board of Pardons granted a continuance in his ease and also in that of Mrs, Kate Ed- wards, who is condemned for the same crime An effort will be made, and more than likely accomplished, to have Greason released without a new trial. Mrs. Edwards will scarcely be hang- ed, if at all, before next winter. The Board of Pardons does not meet the summer, that Mrs, Edwards will escape with life imprisonment - .- Sproal Road Bill Approved The Beuate Pablic Roads Committee has accepted the House amendments to the $6,000,000 Sproul road lmprove- ment bill, ineressing the proportion of cost to be paid by the State. As amended, the State is to pay five-sixths of the amount and the county and township one-twelfth each, The above was one of the amend. ments contended for by Hon, I. Rhone and sssociate members of the Centre County Grange, at a recent hearing before the legislative commit. tee. While the Sproul road law, even With its smendments, 1s not an ideal road messure, the changes made are entirely to the advantage of the rural tax. payer, and were the best exten slous that could be obtained, LAW AGAINST CIGARETTEY Ware flons fils, Hestrie in Iucreasing smoking PFonusylvanin, Becomes us Law Hereafter, it will not only be unlaw- to sell cigarettes to minors in Penn- ania, but even to give them ciga- i i The Ware bill, providing for this new irohibitive, was signed by the Govern- or, after passing the Legislature, The present law prohibits s imply the selling of cigarettes, but the new sot provides that “ if any person: or per sons shail furnish cigaretts or cigarette ft, sale or otherwise, loany person or persons under twenty-one Veurs of : OF she 80 offending, be gulily of a misdemeanor and. upon conviction, shall be sentenced to a fine not more than $300 or not less than $100 — Wp ————— tepublican candidates ity of- Republican candidates for cour i § ces are on the increase. The follow willings'’ have announced since remarikalils Pen Weel, Da ie] er added two horses re Hall. The purchased at Jersey Shore, to ent Ble Keller, of his place, Mmwyer, came home Saturds Huntingdon inty, where ¢ Beeblehimer feman, deputy proihono- ire county, wes in Penps Sunday, and Saturday, Writer's orter office. sbsence, called at of the d sales held in this part to the atten. sale was ope Easy access 3 the ¢ snow has disappeared there Rain, sunshine and a bit of effort on the part will hideous. mankind bring the Mr. and Mrs, James P. Herring, of Altoona, attended the fiftieth marriage auniversary of "Squire and Mra. M. B Herring, of Bpring Mills, and before returning to their home visited broth. ers and sisters in Centre Hall William H. Noll and Jasper Brooks, the former a merchant and the latter a U. B. store-keeper and gauger, both of Pleasant Gap, ealled on the Reporter last week, Mr. Noll advertises the American fence elsewhere in this issue. Misa Gertrude Bartholomew, who M. Ostrander, the real estate man with Brothers, coal also of Philadelphia, merchants, Photographer Bmith took a view of the George Durst farm buildings Fri day morning. The farm was in the hands of the Durats for msny years, the buildings and all the improve. ments having been made by them, and itis natural that Howard Durst would want a picture of the same bes fore leaving the homestead, John 0, Seholl, of Altoona, returned to that place Satarday afternoon hav. ing been here to attend the sale of the personal property of his} deceased fa- ther. Mrs, Scholl and aon were detained on account off slight illness that overtook the fgfmer. Mr. and Mrs. Scholl now Ile in their own home which they bu\t Inst summer, and are very well contéuted, 23. 1905, NO 12. INCREASE IN IMMIGRATION The enormous increase in immigra- tion is credited in part to the effect of The men ay be forced into such conflicts want thir war in the East who to establish themselves in a country where there is small probability of war. Arrivals in New York alone were 41,406 in January and 48,600 in February ; a total of $0,065, as com- pared with 62,541 for the entire coun- try in the « rresponding months last January February have the year should tis increase keep record of 1903, which was U30 ~ Year and been the lightest months in in the up, “3, will be exceeded past, the { nfortunately, the increased immi- gration comes from parts of Europe where the least desirable emigrants re. draw- more niche Iiliteracy is a common Congress should make it it for undesirable immigrants to the United States. i jails and asylums and crowd dis of i to tricts cities, and * for the more de- beneflled by the e numbers of illit- disqualified from tussin 4,000 came 162 000 from The Hn any other iIRrgest CO ti- art Lo 0 go Bot Epi pres. easily that much in which praia Nn sugars in 1903, i der Was ail nog in rates, as the cl unti But J th {i ige ne 12 CA Was Praisers trust is en- It charged h it paid the de not sion is i make $5,000 one iransaction. - Nearly every Senator and Congress. "il 0 I'he Naval C he Northern © eX pense mit navy yards: Southern navy yards never require in- tion in hot : The Military Committees have Western posts to lonk Yell th Was the | feig ene WOR Park on PW alone Affaire Committees must needs inspect boundary monu. ments | Alaska has to be visited every summer ; aud now Senator Taft is go- ing to take about forty Sauators aud study t ati are for the man who sacrifices himself for the public good in Congress. AM rt ss snot nevolent assimilation in oper yi here some consolstions General Liveviteh has a happy uck al epigram and a touch of hu- He was wounded in the leg in the Pekin campaign, and when ap- pointed to the command of one of the armies in the field Inst fall he said in a #pecch to his troops that his lameness made it impossible for him to get around as actively as some persons, and in fact he could only move in one direction, and that was forward, And yet an evil fate placed him where he had to move backward, and now that he succeeds Kuropatkin, he seems doomed to continae his movement in that direction, - Bo seis Startling is the revelation of the methods of the ever-rapacious * Hyws- tem '’ made by Mr. Lawson in the in- stalment of his Frenzied Finance published in Everybody's for April. Mr. Lawson describes the getting to- gether of the properties that Com poke Amalgamated ; and in doing so, tells how the owners of Utah Consolidated found themselves obliged to ask assis. tance from the * Hystem '’ : how they ROL it, and the price they had to pay for it, Rt The result of the primary election and organization of the Union county Republican committes indicate clearly that ex-Senator Focht is boss of the situation in the county, The effort to unhorse him has proven fatile. The opposition to the ex-senator, in the Republiean ranks, is largely due to Jealousy. A A A AN A From the financial statement of Cen tre county one must come to the con- clusion that the County commission ers enjoyed the best of health during the past year and took no vacations. TOWN AND COUNTY NEWS, HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL IN TEREST FROM ALL PARTS. WwW. A. Odenkirk, of Centre Hall over Station (ilen Agent Iron, was in Bunday Grass and grain, where protected by snow during the look green and healthy, Miss Margaret burg, is visiting her glster, wife of Rev. Daniel Gress winter, now ack, of Adams Mre (ress, srisbin & Company, the lunmber- men, have a large number of first-class railroad ties lying at the on ready for shipment. lal) Before buying new or old get prices from D. A. Boozer formation will be worth the t eessary to inform yourself MAarness, The nec ih~ fie Oliver B. Brumgard, of Mies Alice Gertrude Bhiv lo Run, this nit marriage at the Lutheran parsonage at B. county, Balona by Rev. B Noll Brothers. o £ received field and poultry the the large amount Frank J. Met | Hockdale, West Virginia he Pittsburg hie point | the Wabash West Virginia 7 Lie Cieins give you Dotiom al LA ry B~ PFerminal Company, Ww bash tis RionDg Lhe Ls iipe the y # in norther: part nandied Misses Hall elsewhere ROGOs Centre ard is found te, and réfs. # Japanese silk walking skirts, Prices j onable considering style and | Wf Phila eipni Hall, Saturday § me fro | waist its, Whi are very sae 15% 2 JURIILY. wv nailer fu Frank B { ed through Centre Pass. aft. jernoon on his way hb through thd ig % i his regular tours Lhe stale in Lhe interest ling establishment the Shaffers | conducting in Philadelphia Mre their and Ward for f of Rev, | started | Friday | appointment in xy OK ew inst week. sat is Plainfield, y RKuown as VOCE, ut the postof address { Cumberland county. lie traveled {| overland to their new home WwW. WwW will make Photographer | State College, graphs of each I'he exposu Lhools, { Fri Fale oo day morning befor ol. Wher | will be sold at A farm of two hundred and { thirty | mores, r Springs, by forty- located near Ceda | Clinton county, irchased Frank B. Long, dollars per as the Was p al lhe rate Ii Lae Bro | and is one of the largest farms acre farm is two farm, Nit | known Wallace Wi {tany Valley. Nicodemus Luse last week moved { from near Woodward to Merchant W. H. Meyer, located near Centre Hill. Mr. Luse takes great in- in horse and himself owns several teams call not be | more than matched in juality in | Penns Valley. | Rev. Albert O. Mullen, { | tor of the Watsontown | church, and later of a church of the same denomination at Ardmore. has been appointed chaplain of the Mary- land state prison in Baltimore. The salary is §1200. Rev. and Mrs. Mullen now live in Baltimore. if ithe farm of | tarest flesh, {hat wmerly pas Lutheran The Bugar Valley Journal of recent date contained the following Isanc Smith, who kepl a general store in this borough during the seventies, now living retired at Centre Hall, is regis. tered at the Logan House and will re- main a week renew his asoquain- tance with old-time friends. Messrs. W. W. Rachau and H. 8. Limbert, of Spring Mills, were passen- gers on the west-bound local train Monday morning, their objective point being Bellevue, Ohio. The former for the past few summers has been employed in the section of Ohjo named, and finds the locality a most desirable one, to Mies Lizzie Boozer will attend the commencement exercises at the Wil lismson Free School of Mechanical Arts, near Philadelphia, the Iatter part of this month, to witness the graduation of her brother Ralph Boozer who took a full course in the electrial engineoring department of the institution, Variety and value mark the contents of the April number of The Bookloy- ers Magazine. There are a dozen or more contributions, and each one is strong in descriptive and eritical fea- tures. Mr. Burris Gahan devotes his third article on “ The Real Australia to the labor leaders and their politioal policies, and graphically describes the rise and fall of the Watson labor cabi- net--‘‘seven horny-handed men set in authority aver a tig a big'as Burope.