CENTRE REPORTER mT THE THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1906. CHURCH APPOINTMENTS. Lutheran—Centre Hall, morning ; Union, aft ernoon ; Georges Valley, evening, Reformed —Centre Hall, morning ; Tusseyville, afternoon, Presbyterian—Spring Mills, morning , Hall, evening. [Appointments not given here have not boen reported to this office. | Centre Ohlo’s Democratic Governor Dead, Governor John M. Pattison, of Ohio, died Monday afternoon. By succession the state will have a Repub- lican Governor. A lene Hall Cuts Corn, A severe hail storm passed over a portion of country about Oak Hall doing considerable damage to corn fields and gardens. James Gilliland and John Tressler suffered the most damage, the hail beating to the ground the tender corn stalks. if —— Horse Sale at Milthelm, Gentzel & Beezer will sell a car load of fine Illinois horses at Public Bale, at the Musser House, Millheim ; SBatur- day, June 23, 12:30 p. m., sharp. This logd of draft, family and driving horses. An extra fine mated team. The weight of these horses runs consists from 1100 to 1500 pounds. pet cmesmem— Township Teachers rege township school board at a recent mae fend hers : LL. Gramley. Spring Mills Alice Robinson. Spring Mills Primary, Duck. Pike, Miss Terressa Rachau Intermediate, Miss Miss Bertha Murray, Miss Clara Condo. Hoy, George Weaver, Logan, Joh! Cross Roads, William Haney Penn Hall, A. LL. Duck. Farmers Mills, R. U. Bitner. Beaver Dam, Tibben Zubler Polk Hill, C. E Mountain, C. T. Musser, Decker, (i. W. Walker. Spring Mills High School is vacant Foreman Royer. aerial ma—— Winegardper-Goodhart A very pretty wedding took place at the home of Mrs. Mary Goodhart to- day (Thursday) at 12 o'clock, when her daughter, Miss Myra, was united in marriage to William R., Wine- gardner, of Milroy. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Harold M. Robinson, pastor of the Milroy Pres- byterian church, assisted by Rev. Dr” W. H. Schuyler, of Centre Hall. The wedding march from Lohengrin was played by the bride's sister, Miss Lautitia Goodhart. The bride was uncle, Li. ceremony being Miss Ella Decker, Spring Mills, acted as bride's maid, while Charles A, of Tyrone, was groom's man, Mr. Winegardner is employed as a foreman by the Cambria Iron & Bteel Company. The bride and groom left on the east- bound train for Philadelphia and Washington and other points after which they will return to Milroy, where the groom has a new home pre- pared for his bride, They will be at home to their many friends after August Ist, A fp Potters Mills. Everybody was thankful rain that came Friday. Quite a number of farmers are busily engaged in re-planting corn which the cut worms destroyed. Mr. and Mra. Bubb and son Chas. of Reedsville, were the guests of Mra. Bubb's parents, Lloyd Bmith, of Yeagertown, and Harry Wilkinson, of Reedsville, came home to attend Children’s service at Bprucetown. W. C. Mingle and sister, Misa Nellie, of Aaronsburg, were the guests of Miss Bertha Armstrong and mother, The stone crusher is in full blast, The path master is John Close, Miss Maggie Bible, of Milroy, visit ed friends here, Bamuel Johuson past few weeks, Mrs. Perry McKinney is seriously ill. Miss Bessie Breon, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Perry Breon, attended com- mencement exercises at State College, Dr. H. 8B. Alexander, wife snd son Hugh spent Tuesday at Millheim. Mrs. Michael Bmith spent Wednes- day at Bpring Milla, Mm. John Harper and Mrs, M. Hummers made a business trip to Cen- + tre Hall, Thursday. Elmer Alexander, of Yeagertown, was the guest of his brother Wednes- day of last week, Mrs. Henry Faust and family, of Jeannette, spent a fow days with Mrs, Hadie Faust, Quite a party of married folks had a pleasant time at Pat Garrity’s Bunday. George McCormick and mother spent Sanday, with Mrs, William weeney, at Coburn, John Strong was home over Bunday. Samuel Koch and mother spent a few days with the latter's sister, Mrs. Perry McKinney, Joseph Carson spent Sunday at 0 given away by her (ieo. Goodhart, the ring used. of Close, for the has been ill the wife and family ak Hall ® Ewpty things rattle most, especial Jj heads, : Thé Defeat nots Discredit, The ball game Saturday afternoon was a defeat for the Centre Hall team, but not a discredit. The opponents, the State College team, is a strong or- ganization, the mesjority of players had years of experience on the diamond. The score below shows that but two of the College team made hits off Bailey, while four of the downy-faced home team hit the whiskered pitcher of Btate. The local team is woefully weak back of the bat, and until some one of its number is developed to hold that place with credit, scores will con- tinue to be against them. The score : STATE COLLEGI Glenn, 3b J. Snyder, Fulton, ss C. Snyder, H . 0 0 { 1b 20 9-6 cael) 0 0 : 2b 1 i) 3 Markle, ¢ i 3 12 Garver, I .] 0 1 1 1 : R Cramer, rf 0 0 Meck, of 0 0 Hartswick, p . 0» - 3 1 Totals. . .17 H CENTRI I Mitterling, cf Shutt, rf HALL. 00130102290 001000000 w————— lp LOCALS Hehool Normal begin on Niate The Central | Commencement exercises | Bunday. H. G. Stohmeier, last week, pul up versal tombstones and monuments, al Glen fron, Miss Emma MeCoy is at Lemasters, 1 | sister, Mrs. SBartio, is ill The Central District Firemen's con- vention will be held in lellefonte on the 220d and 25rd of August, Mrs, Elizabeth Bartholomew, who makes her home with her daughters fell week, breaking her in Cuarwensville, down slairs, one day last wl face and body. Miss Alice the Spring Mills. 11 Or and receiv other bruises on obinson was elected to intermediate school Miss Rob teach inson n the school room. Mrs, Mary Ann Evans has been the guest of her daughter, Mm. GG. L. | Goodhart, during the past week. Mrs. Evans makes her home with another daughter, Mrs. RB. M. Smith, at tre Hill, and while seventy-five years Cen- of age, is quite active, Mr. and Mrs, Marcellus SBankey are entertaining Theodore I.. Kryder, of Lock Haven, who is just recovering from a severe illness of typhoid fever. After he has sufliciently recuperated, Mr. Kryder will enter the Getts - im- plement store, Lock Haven, as chief clerk. The in the Children’s Day service, in the Lutheran church, SBun- day evening, was very much aided by Messrs, William Floray and Ammon Kerstetter, both of Pleasant Gap, and J. Frank Bmith, of this place. They are skilled musicians as the tones from their cornets and trombone amply proved, music T. M. Gramley, of Spring Mills, and son, 8. Ward Gramley, of Mt, Union, were in Centre Hall Monday. The latter was formerly principal of the Centre Hall schools, and last winter held a similar position in the thriving town of Mt, Union. Mr. and Mrs, Gramley are spending the summer months in the valley. The midsummer fashions with a wealth of illustrations in color and in black-and-white are attractively por- trayed in The Delineator for July. Helen Berkeley Lloyd tells how the Summer girl will be frocked and far- belowed, and the Dress of Paris is dis cussed by M, Edouard La Fontaine, one of the best known critics in Paris, The caséd of the borough of DuBois agsinst the DuBois Opera House com- pany was tried in the Clearfield court and it was decided against the borough. The case grew out of a per. son getting hart on Park avenue, and in suing the city they secured a judg ment of over $1,000, The city then turned around and sued the opera house company to recover the amount, and Judge Smith charged the jury to bring io a verdict for the defendant, The case has been in the court for some time, and will cost the borough more than the amount sued for, Where is the man so happy ss the one who applies himself to manual labor * Where is the home so happy as the one where all members of the household feel, at the close of the day, that they have perforined some at least of the many duties devolving upon them? There may be a clash some day between capital and labor, Should this period ever come, the hope is that labor, with the conquering tread of a hero, will trample beneath ite heel pwer Lhat has, to a con- ar vanty ad Jobo: ameiot: THE DESERT MIRAGE. Eapluuation of This Frenk of Nature, One of uature's true wonders—one upon which has been written, but which is yet not understood when Its varied phenomena are considered Is the desert Travelers in the arld reglons of the western and south- United States tell wondrous concerning the spectral pletures which the desert mirage has presented for thelr inspection, Cool sheets of wa ter and grassy gwards appear where all is known to be parched earth and burning sands. Occaslonally a mountain range will ap- pear on what is known to be a bound- less streteh of level plain, or a herd of deer, other anlmals will be Been contentedly grazing of the atmos- occasionally seen from c¢lvillzation, An Peculiar much mirage, western » { ' dies and waving trees cattle or apparently the phere hundreds glassy surface Cities of oh ure miles vessels read wo Tin to persons who lived y from the waters that they to visit the never seen a awa and who had i § ship of the , is as follows: ng intensely hot, causes * which rest upon it to | qarefied, and under cer- | this layer is quite » denser stratum a few it—just as if it of water upon which oll this 1 stratum of ctor and ple- curious luverted explanation mirage, as above \ irefled in ret ORE A WILDERNESS OF TREES. Forests That Abound In Guntemala, wrthern and east- ia is covered with i wt, consisting of | kinds of cedar, | Along | + float if en Lhe other Fis 1s es- ents of Pe imber of trees are rice per tree, or a slip on a | . #3 qn iid for the timber an easy matter of land In discouraged by the » concessions are not I sr period metimes It Is stipo + tracts talon number of trees ring that time they must be forests are limited, belong In principally Most of the lumber United States, California The for- generally so rallroad compa- ly all their ties and I, because it is difficult for to get enough firewood. — New York Herald falnous country ible from the from Marringe and Health. Marriage is an institution highly con- » to the health of both husband says American Medicine. that among married nn over twenty years of age and wo the mortality rate is in among those who remaln Among the widowed and di : mortality is exceptionally i among the unmarried are much more numerous than among the married. The matrimonial state promotes temperance in every form. Furthermore, the probable duration of life of a married man of thirty exceeds that of his unmarried brother by five yeurs, wife may expect to live one year jonger than a single woman of the prove forty and the Same age She Snubbed Napoleon, Mme, de Chevreuse, a representative of of the noblest families In France, declined the honor which Na- poleon wished to confer on her, that of mald of honor to his sister-in law, the queen of Spain. She after. ward became Josephine's dame du pa- lais, but always affected to look down on the imperial court. One day she went to a reception at the Tulleries blazing with diamonds, “What splen- did jewels,” remarked Napoleon, “Are they all real 7’. “Mon Dien, sire, I real iy don't know, but at any rate they are quite good enough to wear here!” one being Nude, “Well,” said Mrs. Bruggins after a solo by a fashionable church cholr ten- or, “if that ain't the rudest thing I ever saw!" “What?” inquired her niece, “Why, didn’t you notice it? Just as soon as that young man began to sing every other member of the cholr stop- ped. But he went right through with it, and I must say I admire his spunk.” Athletio Amusement. Everything In nature indulges In amusement. The lightning plays. The wind whistles. The thunder rolls. The snow files, The waves leap. The flelds smile; even the buds shoot and the rivers run. In Anticipation, Howell--Rowell is always borrowing trouble. Powell-Yes; he's the kind of fellow who, If he thought he was going to get fat, would go out and walk off the welght before he got It. The exact distance to either the north SF wath pols trum the equator is 6,000 ILM A —— Bd ep ———1 THE PECTORAL FINS. Without Ther Siund the Fish Head, The pectoral fins «i a neh are fins, one on each wiu Licad extent Would “wi ils thie Just back of two the fish to some iid the tn swiniining hey are which the U tifully serve dis RLS hh feathers very beau und are of value chiefly to pre It is with these fins that the fish maintains its horizon tal position in the water not swimming Without would stand on its head fish both fins by disease or by equilibrium when the Sometimes a of its pectoral anceident, A fish without pectoral fins is In a bad way. While most fishes keep a position in the water not swim ming, fishes that do not. One of the the which when motionless suspends itself in the them loses one or when there are fishes is filefish, witter, head downward, at or filefish forty-five degrees perpendicular. A even nearer 1 Kept in the perpendicular when motionless to that it about the same angle pectoral fins had been intact, ing at an ang! nits | In the striped bass welghing and a half, pectoral one of whose Wii 4 ¥ WT il upon ased portions of ith : taal ¢ } po ia pair of sharp s thls : " y io Ww tl Ct Hie witli Lie ut bel part of the lke a ma Oar and on a Course to its after It got ¢ self SWISS EDUCATION. A Serious Matter, Guarded by the State, One reason why patriotism; aboy n is the lifeblood and soul of the re Switzer] . Switzerland | for Swiss chi en al and such as exist na supervision of the state a serious matter in Switze is no escape from send his childre: self to jall Adventist in be refusad to Jet his « on Saturdays The Man Who Sings, Give us, oh, gis writes Carlyle, the man who sings at his work! Be his occupation what it may, he is superior to those the same pursuit in He will do more in the same time, he will do it better, One is scarce ly sensible of fatigue while one march- The very stars are sald to make harmony as they revolve in thelr spheres. Wondrous is the strength of cheerfulness; altogether past calcula- tion are its powers of endurance. Ef- forts, to be permanently useful, must be uniformly joyous, a spirit all sun- shine, peaceful from very gladness, beautiful because bright © us wh How who follow silent sullenness he will persevere longer es to music Eezema, Cosmetic jelly has been found an ex- cellent remedy for eczema. You can use it on the face without the slightest fear of unpleasant results, Take thirty grains of gum tragacanth and soak for three days in seven ounces of rose wa- ter. Force through muslin to make the preparation smooth and add an ounce of alcohol, an ounce of glycerin and a suggestion of boric acid, say haif a tea- spoonful, The jelly is a preparation which has been found wonderfully fine for chapped face and hands, Has Three Climates, Abyssinia has three climates, accord: ing to the altitude above the sea. In the low country or valleys bananas, dates, indigo, cotton and other tropical plants flourish. Elephants, lions, gl raffes, zebras and gazelles abound. The intermediate zone recalls the climate of Biclly or of Andalusia, In Spain. There 18 good pasture for flocks aud berds in the highest region, Origin of “Whig.” What Is the origin of the word “whig?’ A twenty year-old number of Spurgeon’s magazine, Sword and Trow- el, says, “In Cromwell's day the royal fats first called the liberals whigs, tak. ing the first letter of each word In their motto, ‘We hope In God, and forming them into this word” An Explanation, Joe—But, my dear fellow, is your In- come enough to justify your marrying? Fred--I'm afraid not. Joe—-Then what reason have you for taking so serious a step? Fred—I have no reason. I'm in love. The wasp has one strong point, but it 1s not in his favor. Visiting cards printed at this office At Keith's Chestn “Johonies’' are J. Kiernan & tion, i star ut Btreet Theatre | gallon, Company sppear | and half paint. ing feature, tron, the aricatures, Kyans, the boy black-face Transfer Zwingle Yearick, « $525. D. W. Clark, et, al Kunes, April 17, 1 Fagleville, $450. Jane E 1906 ; 4 a $750, present Kas- and his English of notice. Heloise and the Argyro Lead and makes L. like iron. actors. Harry sized house, Mills & Actual cost 1. & comedians ; the gallon. and Miles & Bold in west, M. today. ’ .s lo Catherine C, 906 ; premises in 1 Thousand ( § Lond Bains 1 Austin, in Eagleville A req THE WHE F. Btover, Haines twp. $10 1905 ; he $50 M. ——y 19001: 1 scre in EE Ia and lot in siroheck- Re- IB acres, 136 - jut that was before alr air. h Verse 2. Verse 3. Ayer’ cu A 5 is the real secr derful success The bost kind i the days of the Avyer’s § wr 1 ¥ dA $ EF, 1.1 Machine. catalogue SPRING MILLS, CPO PLOIGPBVBVVSEROP OO HIPLGVORVNLVRDEOBBBEG © “ icgofoRofofofogofofofofofofofoRoRol Health, Prosperity health assured. - PA. The Month of June The Month of Weddings. Whether it is your own wedding or that of your best friend, you'll need a new suit, and for such an occasion you will find nothing better than a Kuppen- heimer garment. It's poor economy to buy cheap goods of any kind--that is, cheap in quality but to buy an inferior make of black goods is throwing money away. You will also want to be sure that the style and cut of your suit will be right just the proper thing for such a moment ous occasion, Kuppenheimer clothes are guaranteed as to quality, and are the standard of what is correct in style, material and workmanship. The best way to satisfy yourself is to see the clothes —try them on. We have a wide assortment and will be glad to show you. MONTGOMERY & CO. . The Home of Fashion. Bellefonte, Pa. VY buy stripe Aan For and your = ~ Fa E Vv i i : i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers