OL. LXXVIII. CENTRE COUNTY IN THE CIVIL WAR, 'RSDAY » Glant Bed, CTE ATS OF 1869 Mra. J. XY. Dale is U giant bed that the local present is Weber, dition buiit unique 3 west TOWN AN : in possession of a | great interest to | inhabitants. The bed at] in the of Fred Ww. | avd William Dillens paid Boalsburg, for repairs, in ad- | the penalty of deatl { to having a canopy and stairs | the bed proper. This piece of furniture is over one] is of tems Taken from the Centre Hes 8 Of p————— porter « nterent to 1005 Henders {HAPPENINGS OF in Fi had : 143:h Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. shops Ira Green five Miles Mwariz«l, Robert i CTOBER 15~The Centre Mills, id to dl , Wolf {or G : Tri . v 11g) f wi Rider, Samuel Morris A Tin for £1150 H 10 the killing of | Philip Lt Willis ry Aus Moutge Turnkey Condo, Tuesday morning a iT ~ if Co P, ile Meyer, S went, P. V. I'o be Cot sth Great cooloess of mind by to reach 10:55 o'clock. , George Everhart, 3 : { wasted was shown both men, but more mery, H, BehrefHer was! horse ! hom October | a | Miss Brenneman: cently ras r advertised a Millhelm, that Millheim : hundred years old and has been hand- | especially by Green, who considered CHAPTER X ed down from generation to generation | the affair with no dread. Mrs, Dale. $80. It was nicl (leory sheriffs on the Means has jail waa led Taylor, followed by Dillen July 12 in moved ( south mained t to former works. July 13 about + went skirmished points, July Geld by the family ly i order for i Original-| The procession from the made to} by Bherifl 1 weighing 250 pounds, | 8nd Rev. j i tall. The | Dillen sO tall, but of | lowed 3 Davidson, rus Bru was ight y & tumbl : shat The { and last of all came the deputies, ounty if Bricker a ePULY | boots. was 4 Gn g: | I ly iy tri t 15864, late four and formed line of battle ; evening, left Tite returned Among the many spactators ariff« ware a 13 rrie were al b for many years, about miles he bed co pnutn her and de puties f near Centre Hall, threshing Cox, who had his arms about from ¢ I wheat, 1 ; he an #8 a support. Green nex x-Hi ' g ill midnight, then and 8 A supp rreen : mbling shaft, and wife of ti supported by Rev, bis | “a moved to the right and rear second Ascending the seaflold Rev that Diller ruil Belore far hit rese By ified at miles, in ve, he fami-| Cox an- : " i {ot ts . township, James | inte regular camp. detail, | iy, all slept d at one time, | DOUnNCed wished to say J The i rif Elie Behoch at 5.5 if MoFarlane 4 (i 8 3 eighty years, ‘I 'Reown. of Udlon coil I'he large bari the of Wil and above | and fort any was discarded, | #omething IRDRIDG. day and night, to the 261 latter stepped for and sald farm marche am prepared (dod {reek al Jesu iv i i dinnet giant bed | i IF Know th crossed the s | | to miles ; at Point of Rocks, an “=Vven fqet ex pect ¢ 3 ¥ } ¥ i711 Even feet : tage mother n heaven, at Jones Neck on top of mat- | whom there, I'he ma-| There is ¢ maple and OR the there is not Aller Hey bivouascked thie ris al ©} i : Iy-igh 000s Bottom, very July 27, & i &, I. Lhe regiment ) HANA « : re is no fo Heal toward white hot. headboard are | tboard. | this ¢ ed great line and fire ; Late % [sl ve i ff LS 3 Capeusive | of Wood- general advanes i will iit | sod and calmly fede HRGe iz, in ii IW IL, Gephart glore | ledicated . 4. Beha femonives " i v p a former Among Mev r, f f ¢ ia, regiment on (Gen, t. One Rill ay B/nuda nigu nuuand Hegi- Jil ES | » 1nded midoight at Fort i6, regim » right ; n fight sf Ce in igh before the night wai in skirmish Morton late . wounded wounded, £3 For Hil Works 17th. sw slightly residaentind election : 199 several in the nmioved own fil B ml egliment Mo EavVe B&B Co. A gave | of 17 of Be from 9 to 4 of the recent | ti the lines at Fort | Morton { Nov. 17 the rt ¥ (ira rin morn ‘ : {xen lelian majority few miles Fruce 8 Im during ihe * 4 Wwe 4 p.m. to bury the dead night fights Lliese Works ' i vol wee A, THArCnea 9 veniog 3 , moved camp one mile tol var i rt Morton e down tents and packed kept wight, in heavy cold vening, and m sick reach 'elersburg on Bunday the lst ; Petersburg ox Hay Oe ois fires ; orders to move did | pitnient moved with BRiut ii iles ott hs a 1 aH BULL 30 put up tents in forenoon. and began to tear Fun 6 i { moved camp ; pul up new near Heama Station i Peteraburg and Weldon this work evening of the Zird es vedd fifteen the railroad i burned the station bimidings the rail. : quarters, all night Nov, 27 road ; coutinoaed and t dress parade, abandoned for many months, reinstitated today. Nov, 29, routed out st midpight ; meandered twelve miles and camped near Fort MeMahon. Dee. 1, 1864, regiment moved from | Fort MeMabon to Forts SBampeon and Gregg, on the left, to garrison duty, tegiment has now only one hundred aud Gfty men. Dec, 9, at ten o'clock In the night, in heavy rain, we (ore down our tents and started 5 new camp a little to the | ' 0 the miles of fist 24, regiment reconnoitered : A kk tid ard Htopey Creek, three miles and returned Inte in the night, Vugust 26, battle at Heams Station. I iris battle in whieh | the regiment ever took part ; the first | and only battle in which the Zod Corps ever lost a gun, Union forces overpowered aod driven bsok. Ree tested in the night to the Williams rear, ¢ H Regiment lost five killed, Dec. 24, thie regiment left Forts teeuly wounded, forty-two missing, | Sampson aod Gregg sod moved to { killed or taken prisoners) total, six. | Fort Cummings, of which. it became 1y-seven, over 30 per cont, | the garrison, August regiment left camp at the| Dee 25, Inid out « new winter camp, Willlams House, marched five miles | in rear of Fort Cummings, snd began to the right (north) to the works be. jo build our eighth winter quarters, fore Petersburg and camped pear the Dee. 27, finished winter quarters. Avery House, on reserve; served by| Dec. 25, packed up snd moved our detail on skirmish line day and night | camp » short distance to the rear of to Bept. Sth. Fort Camnmings; put up the nioth was the liveliest Line, ry akg membered with people ai ¥ gaineq Thers fog and jostling hundred nil 5 ard i of Lhe GOOG fig 5 & HRI scrambling not or ones, w » » > " - ¥ MURDER, CAPTURE, ETC. MURDER 3 of : ¢ thie dead than siive, 11 Inve Bry y Mr his being struck severai | times by Dillen. The keys were pre | nected with the erime for which Dillen eured and Henderson, Constance and | and Green paid the penalty Tuesdsy, of the TING OF THE RECOUNTING OF TH placed in a stocking, turnkey int insensibility. the Murder, Trin! in that the reader mav re alled to his mind the Convietion, Appeals movements made by Condo were order have the cause for incidents con. Livingston were released from their | recounting murder, iail ny cells i T ietion, cenrred Friday wan July 20, 1904, his | h Prisoner | teontded alarm and WH given by Met forenoon ! Hherifl thirty-six | members of Company B and a search | was begun, uiley Haturday PRISONERR WHO BROKE JALIL, HEY ¥ favior deputized I'he prisoners who escaped from the seccunt of the killing of the turnkey were : WILLIAM DILLEN s IRA GREEN Henderson GEORGE HENDERSON DOMINIC CONSTANCE returved to the county jail the Toes ORGE LIVINGSTON day following the killing of the turn- { key, after being surrounded and cape tured ina swamp by Horsee BStiver, Eimer Fanigan, Atwood Harvey watch from a lady at Unionville, Charley Snyder and an unkuown The whereabouts of George Liviog- Wan, all of Clinton county. A ston have pot been ¢ eovered, At no deal of credit wes also given to EK, 1 time or place did he leave a clue after Taylor, James Morrison, Thos, CUatd- separativg from Dillen snd Green well sand RC. Daley, members of Monday after the murder. Company B, for their bot pursuit of THE DELIVERY, the convicts, Constance not ; (taken until Monday evening, August Green and Dillen were confined to Sth, in Dalian quarters near Belle- one cell, They managed to procure a table knife, which wae turned into a Wa mw, By means ef this the pin of the ME. CONDO'S DEATH binge of the steel cell door was sawed | Turnkey Condo died Sunday morn. oft and the prisoners escaped. They | IDE, July 31, about twenty-eight hours descended the stairs and awaited Turn. | after the sseanlt, not haviog regained key Condo, who entered the jail at] consciousness. Hin death was due to 8:80 p.m. accompanied by Edward | # compound fracture of the skull and McCulley, » prisoner who was allowed | other injuries. Funeral took place the the freedom of the jail. At this me-| following Wednesday, interment at ment Green stepped forward from his | Bpring Mills. APTURED «AUVGURT i, Green, Dillen and were Gh Dillen was imopriscned to await (ris on a charge of repe. The erie hang. over Green woe the theft of a great Wan dai Sept. 5, 1804, moved south a few [aod last winter quarter encampment \ hiding place and with a weapon com- { Continued on tnside page £ upon, to amputate W hiiie thrashiog, Breon { ¥ «init of wan the onde tuimbiing carried Lim riy stunned and ible Rev, Loong, N Mingle and Miss Wem ber Liz- zie, daughter of Thomas Yearick, both William B of Asronsburg i, about two miles this 12 the A John Conley ’'s bar b hour, Hall, is burning at 12 iow Cenlre Chursday November Phi Leth farm, now controlled {i Lieb, Bethiohe NovEMBER 26, Potter o was the barn on by Dr. im, Pa Married township, (ieorge Emerick, of and Miss Mary Elizabeth Weaver, of Gregg J. OC. Motz, of Wood. ward, and Miss Miranda, daughter of Dr. Reichard, of Freeport, 1llinols, Drcevnen S8—James P. Herring, Monday morning, broke ground for a new dwelling house. [This is the house now owand and occupied by 3. M. Boal] DeathsNovember 24, Hill, Catharine, consort Lee, aged 50 years, November 20, Misa aged aboul 63 years, [{ This issue contained the will of James Potter, occupying five columns on the first page. ] Dre, 10—Death— Frances Mary, ine fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Durst, of Potter township, township i at Centre of Robert % months, . Matilda Lingle, . Mr. Harter ia, 88 18 CO» pany Las i& five tions extend and six wm The mo ufaciured Gil eC. 4 Mane r, Caar biovks, ele,., 1h § Lt f it bee ing oak Anna daughter of years, HH. Laub, of Liewisl ti. ia 8 pps Le TOL Dee y her ral figure her part of talking than nites one of friends, life - ownseil, 'T ahd wa the grandmas w al quiliiog « Wr given to ho pe raed thi that ook mor rk todo. Anns L writer's charm the wWOrk Ww the little who Is beginniug an ind T usirions al a lender age The editor of the He ed to W. A. Batton, head of the ship- ping department of the Autocar Come pany, at Ardmore, for his first ride in an sulomobile. The drive was over the famous Lancaster pike from Arde more to City Hall, Philadelphia, » distanoe of eight miles. This road passes through Lowe: Merion tows ship, one of Lhe most aristocratic sec tions in Montgomery county, and the longest continuous siretoch of mao adamized road” in the United States. The greator satisfactioh, however, lay in the fact that the man ia charge was #0 thoroughly acquainted with the intricate parts of the auto and capable of controlling his machine in such a manner as to cereale admiration. The Autocar Company employs fully five hundred men, and the popularity of the machines they wake may best be judged from the fact thatthe orders