The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 19, 1906, Image 8

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    AE
‘THE CENTRE
REPORTER
THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1906,
CHURCH APPOINTMENTS.
Reformed —No services
Presbyterian
Hall, evening
Spring Mills, morning | Centre
morning, “ What
Methodist—Sprucetown,
“The Great
Who "' Centre Hall, afternoon, 1!
Fool '' ; Spring Mills, evening, * Life's Mission.
[Appointments not given hore have not been
reported to this office. |
New Bells.
The Bell telephone was installed in
the residences of L. LL. Smith, George
L. Goodhart and Hon. Leonard
Rhone, in Centre Hall.
cl A —————
Rankle-Kline,
Maurice Runkle, of Tusseyville, and
Miss Catharine Kline, of near Belle-
fonte, were married at the Lutheran
parsonage, Centre Hall, Wednesday
evening of last week, by Rev. J. M.
KRearick. The groom is a son of John
L. Runkle, and the bride a daughter
of John Kline, formerly a resident of
Potter township.
a——————— A — ———————————
Box Social,
A class of young ladies in the Lu-
theran Sunday school has decided to
hold a * box social’ in Grange Ar-
cadia, Saturday evening, 25th inst.
There will be entertainment during
the entire evening-—music, instru-
mental and voeal, ete., ete. Refresh-
ments will be served during rendering
of the program. No admission will
be charged.
eee ——
Telephones Compaules Combine,
The United Telephone and Tele-
graph Company, The Keystone Tele-
phone Company and several other
local concerns are to be united under
one corporation to be known as the
Philadelphia, Pittsburg & Erie Tele-
phone Company. The competition
among these companies has been very
gharp, and this move is intended to
put all on an equal fooling.
—— lp —
Mitterling--Middleton
The marriage of Charles A. Mitter-
ling and Miss Mary A. Middleton,
both of Chicago, Illinois, took place a
short time ago. Last week the young
couple set up housekeeping in a suite
of rooms in a prominent flat,
The groom is the eldest son of J.
William Mitterling, of Centre Hall,
and is engaged in a drug store, He
has been located in Chicago for several
The bride is a Chicago lady.
ef fle
years.
The Aggregate That Counts,
The wave of righteousgmess
passing over Lhe Stales should not be
shut out of the small cities and
boroughs. If there is an opportunity
to lessen the expense of conducting
the business of the smaller municipal.
ities, the opportunity should be seized.
Because the leak is at the spigot and
not at the bung-hole is no reason why
a remedy should not be applied. It is
the aggregate dollars saved that
counts,
civie
of
Ap Ap
Keith Souvenir Palm Mirror,
Any lady who sends her name and
address, together with a two-cent
stamp and this notice, to the Publicity
Department, Keith's Theatre, Phila-
delphia, will receive, free of charge,
one of their beautiful new and service-
able palm-mirrors, which will be found
just the thing for the Bummer, and
indispensable to any lady traveler,
Summer resorter in the country or at
the seaside, or for the city maiden.
Thousands have been delighted. It is
your turn next. Send in your name
at once,
ee oss
Helth's Theatre,
An interesting bill is that at Keith's
Chestnut Street Theatre, Puiladelphia,
this week. Toby Claude, the diminu-
tive comedienne, is a leading feature.
Nellie Beaumont & Company appear
in a sketch entitled '* A Busy Day.”
Max Witt’s * Bix Bophomores and a
Fresh Man, ”’ with Harry Pilcer as
the Fresh Man, is a brigbt and tuneful
number. Brown and Nevarro, color-
ad character artists, are of interest.
The Zazelle-Vernon Company, giving
comedy acrobatic pantomimes, are an
oxtra attraction. Others appearing
there are : Markey and Moran, char-
acter comedians ; Myers and Hosa,
disc manipulators ; Grace Childers
and her dog ; Edsall nud Forbes, in
“ The Two Rubies ;”’ Arthur Deagon
& Company, in ** The Perfect Man ;"
The Bt. Onge Brothers, comedy
cyclists,
————— —————
Resolutions of Respect,
Whereas, it has pleased Almighty God in his
all wise providence to take from our midst our
sister and co-laborer, Mrs Elizabeth Coxey,
therefore
Resolved, That by her death the Woman's
Home and Foreign Missionary Society of the
Lutheran church, keenly feels the loss of =
faith ful member, +
Resolved, That though gone out from us, ihe
missionary spirit manifest by her constant de-
yotion to the work through all the years of her
relation to this society, of which she was a
charter member, is still with us, Though dead
she yot speaketh ; and in our remembrance of
her attitude to the cause of mimions as well as to
every other operation of the church, we find
a noble inspiration,
Resolved, That asa society we bow in hum:
ble resignation to the will of our heavenly
Father, ahd commend the bereaved home, fot
eomfori, to Him who is a very present help in
trouble.
Resolved, That this memorial be placed upon
the minutes of our society, that it be inserted in
the county papers, that a copy be sent to the be-
Bynod.. .! Society. WERE
ANNA §
HE 3 roNEcYPiteR,
Committee.
as
LOUALS
And now that the walk is down, the
ini rp ———
According to reports to the Agricul
tural Department there will be a most
| abundant crop of barley this year
The of J. W
in-
salary postmaster
|
creased from $2000 to $2100 a year,
R. K. Merrill, the ‘ buckwheat
king, of Clinton county, will grow
fourteen acres of buckwheat this sea
son on his island farm,
Dr. J. Finley Bell and wife, of
Englewood, N. J., visited the doctor's
old Pleasant Gap,
time Dr. Bell is mecting with
HSUCCOSS,
home, un short
AO
The rural mail carrier has discover-
ed that farmers are busy —exceptional-
ly busy. Few letters are sent out by
them during the haying and harvest-
ing season,
A hundred acre farm in Granville
township has been purchased by specu-
lators and will be laid out in town lots,
The new site is one-fourth mile from
aw istown.
br. J. R
fonte Hayes-Dale
hereafter travel in
professional business
(i. Hayes, of the Belle.
Sanitarium, will
an auto when on
He purchased
a machine of his own,
=e daileyville Pienie will be held
August 4th in the style of a basket
pienic. Company I, 45th P. V. Regi-
ment, will celebrate their forty-fifth
anniversary that General
Beaver and other distinguished speak-
ers will be present to make a day of
enjoyment for the old veterans. All
old soldiers are invited whether mem-
bers of Company KE or not,
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Foreman
and family, of Bellefonte, are spend-
ing their vacation in Penns
on date,
Valley
among relatives, staying the greater
part of the time with Mr, Foremau’s
mother, Mrs. Sarah Foreman, in this
pisce. Mr the very ef-
ficient clerk to Prothonotary Kimport,
and finds the South of Centre
county, his old home, just the
for a real rest,
The friends of Dr. H. F. Bituer and
family will no be to
learn that his son, Laurence 8B, Bitner,
Foreman is
side
place
doubt pleased
has received an appointment as Junior
of the Jaynes Medi-
Shanghai, China
Since his graduation from college Mr.
Resident Manager
cal Company, at
Bitner has been employed in the ad-
vertising department of the Philadel-
He is to be congratulated
this new sppointment,
which gives him a large salary
excellent opportunities for travel
phisa Press,
on receiving
and
in
foreign lands, One unpleasant feature
is that he covenanted to
abroad for not than three years.
It is to be hoped that he will be equal
in
remain
He
in efficiency and integrity to the usual
Centre Hall boys, who always *' make
of responsibility.
He will sail about August first, in the
mean time he will be in the Compa-
ny's office in Philadelphia to learn the
details of the work.
good" in positions
aiismnlfmtinn
Smullton
Kugene Smull, while at play in the
barn, fell and broke his arm,
H. H. Stover working at Zion
during haymaking and harvesting.
Mrs. Lydia Luse and Mrs. George
Waite spent Sunday in Bugar Valley,
Sidney Douty and family were visit
ors at the home of Amos Fehl Sunday.
Herbert Bmull, who was seriously
ill from tonsilitis, is slowly improving.
David Diehl, of Wolfs Btore, was a
guest at the home of Warren
Bunday.
Rev. G. W. Mclinay preached most.
ly to the children Bunday. Text, St
John 12:32,
Mr. Harry, while jumping scross
a fence, sprained his fool, and is now
unable to work.
Howard Struble and Miss Kathryn
Fehl, of Williamsport, spent a few
days with the latter's parents.
Mrs. Ida Bair, who had an opera.
tion performed at a Philadelphia hos-
pital, returned home last week,
Pearl and Bessie Mallory, of Pitts
burg, have been spending some time
with their brother, Charles Mallory.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Bmull, Misses
Mayme Wolf and Mabel Brungart at.
tended the centennial celebration at
Williamsport.
Mr, and Mrs. John William, of Oak-
land, Armstrong county, have been
holding a meeting, for several weeks,
in a vacant building belonging to Mrs.
Kve Mallory.
Mrs, Bamuel Waite, who was em-
ployed in Lewisburg for a few weeks,
returned to this place, preparatory to
going to Laurelsville, Somerset coun-
ty, this week,
Sunday, Mr, William, who preach-
ed in this town for some time, con-
ducted a service of immersion about
one and one-half miles west of Smull-
ton, at 2:30 p. m. The service con-
sisted of scripture reading, prayer and
singing, after which the following
persons were immersed : Mr. and Mrs,
Biduey Douty, Wm. Douty, John
Stover and Amos Fehl, About six
hundred people were estimated to
have been present,
mm
lerly
If you want to buy a
mortgage on improved
real estate, write George
H. Smull, Smuliton, Pa.
en eeam—
NATURE IN THE OCEAN.
Lrseatures Devouring Each Other to
Prevent Overprodwetion,
beget 442,000 young in the cours
the year, und if these were all permit-
ted to mature and reprodace
gelves the seas would In a short time
But the cetochilus, or “whale food,”
constitutes almost the exclusive food
of the vast shoals of herrings and the
sen llving salmon and salmon trout.
Thelr existence 1s one of the greatest
economic triumphs of nature, for these
minute creatures scour the sea of its
refuse and keep it sweet, while they
form the food of fishes, which In turn
furnish wholesome food for millions of
human beings.
Feeding on dead vegetable and anli-
mal matter, these entomostraca are
converted Into the food fishes of the
world by one remove, being first assim
lated by the herrings, then absorbed
by the tunny, cod, mackerel and other
herring shoals and
They mainly
¢ surface of the water, and
them in this position
the shoals of herrings to
Their countless numbers
mented by the microscople
fixed shells, such as the bar
begins life this form
+ eyed crusta-
growing a palr of eyes and
finally aftixing itself
In rivers these
food of all
follow
the latter
y
arch of
ich in
Bwimming
11s, then
larvae the sole
fish and often also of
the crea
4, larvae and
nr
young
riv
spring
niscroscopic entomos
on the mud
and were it
for keeping
would be thelr
that the whole
water would speedily
ied
in the wa
plants,
YS roy sion
ter,
k so rapid
plication
of the
Jy cha
AIR IN HIGH ALTITUDES.
as In Other Places, but It
Microbes,
think
The Same
Contains No
ror to that the chem
os
ple may be
rent to nitro
of the alr differs
its Is the game
of the Alps
The fa-
, of a change
+ explained by any
f its
¥ of
sortions
The lmportant
bacteriol cal
altitudes contalns
while
e proj
stituents
ane,
no
jx, In fact, sterile,
inl some
icrobes are un
and crowded places
nierobe lmpuarity in-
ns
ry ay rl 44 avis)
mirities, such
hustion of coal, ac
igatora have found
wm and eertain hydro-
in pine,
s to these
of traces
ef
trac
wality of a fir forest Is
Jief In of the
Rut these traces of
product
y speaking,
they are apparently
constituents of the alr.
especially
i '
nsisting
that the cura ive
Ith resorts are
diseases
as
Recet
Mulia
ah
Ala
lysis has shown that these
1 nd to disappear in the alr as
igher altitude is reached until they
on It
ierobes, hydrocarbons
and oxygen and
nitrogen, and perhaps also argon, are
incidental to the neighborhood of
human industry, animal life and damp
vegetation. - Chicago Chronicle
pear altogether would seem,
therefore, that 1
t 3 .
LAR Oe than
only
Ancient Remedies
TT hice
He
For Hiccongh.
mgh seems to be a modern
and dangerons but the an-
and prescribed reme
be tried advan
Galen recommended sneez-
ing Actius ay proved of a cupping in
with great heat, to the
Alexander believed In an oxy-
I«. Alsaharavius made use
of refrigerant drafts, Rhazes put his
trust in calefaclents, such as curfin,
pepper, rue and the like In vinegar.
Rogerius looked kindly on calefacient,
attenuant and carminative medicines
disease,
clients knew it
that might
tageously
dies now
atrument,
breast
mel of squil
Not Just What He Meant,
Lloyd George was addressing a meet-
ing in Wales, and his chairman sald:
“1 haff to ihtroduce you to the member
of the Carnarvon boroughs, He hass
come here to reply to what bishop
of St. Asaph sald the other night about
Welsh dizsestablishment. In my opin-
fon, gentlemen, the bishop of St. Asaph
is one of the biggest lars In creashon.
But he hass his match In Lloyd
George!”
Savored of the Truth,
“That's no le,” remarked the man
with the newspaper,
“What's no lle? queried the ether
party to the dialogue.
“This paragraph to the effect that
‘wise men are more often wrong than
fools are right,’ ” answered the other,
Chicago News,
Why Rodies Were Emhnimed,
The Egyptians believed that the soul
lived only a= long as the body endured;
hence their reason for embalming the
body to make it last as long as poss)
ble. It Is estimated that altogether
there are 400,000,000 mummies In
Egypt.
Bad men lve that they may eat and
drink, whereas good men eat and drink
that they may live. Socrates,
It 1s some compensation for great
evils that they enforce great lessops,~
Bovee.
ssi A ———
No girl can look swell with the
mumps,
HA,
WONDERFUL
Those
MIRAGES,
In the
MNovthern
Secu Winter
Twilights
LI
Vlas
The most wouderial ever be
fic: 1cl
fie
by mortal eyes oi.
the twilizht
Adak ih
hastly pleiures of Imag
rend, the
the waste plains instead of
tht are
{ cen In in
uirkable
both
winter days
i north rel
thilngs,
nary nna an are mirrored on
surface of
upon the clouds or in the atmosphere,
Mimie ldies and water courses fringed
with vesetntion are to be seen pictured
life the surface of the
while mounds, stumps,
trees, logs, which have an actual
existence
are
in all kinds of fantastic shapes
of are distorted
and ma fied futo the shapes of huge,
fi8 Trend ns on
KNOW, KUNSsY
ele,
ome place on the earth's sur
face, outlined against mountains of
HUHOW
oblects
Some these
inimals and reptiles of enor
tng
he fogs and mists
HOURS profs IOs
are driven across these wastes by the
,
t
winds
wid as the objects referred to
loom up in the flying vapors they ap-
pear like living creatures and seem to
be actually moving rapidly across the
+ they
air, al HEN IB |
i appear high in
the characteristic of
the
near the
norther: nirnges that are seen
When the vapors
out to the
appear to be
a terrific
Ligh
roll
the
and
to 1
appar
ore
driven sea
in them
i the
wiiters at
1
i
the ray
breakers
toward
pe
I Bone
THE RED SQUIRREL,
fle Stores Very Little Food For Use
In Winter,
+ re] squir
ake large
nter con
he stored
« have no
1 matters,
‘ in the
inter as much as they
in £ i , 0 precautions for
fol are uot sanded A red
squirrels t for a good part of the
Year upon Uw ones of and
the limbs, they
hard the snow
in all
among tree.
are
the
HINES
spruces, which hang to
ilo not ure £39 “wis Of
mn ", wing secure
the food
tops fangor
finding
the
Courage.
mrt of the courage that
orld is not of a he
rol kind GUrage may be displayed
in everyday life as well as In historic
fields of here needs, for ex-
ample, the comm ourage to be hon
the « resist temptation,
the truth, the
ally are and
are not,
tiy within our
not dizhonestly npon
Smiles
The greater
is needed in tl
Hy «
f to
to speak
what we
tered to be what
eat
the cours
courage to we
not to pr
the courage to Hv
and
others
woe
hones
own means
the means of
Indian Ocean Serpents,
Among venomous serpents
in the world are the marine snakes of
the Indian ocean. They are the dread
of fishermen, and It sometimes hap
pens that vessels are obliged to thread
their through barrels to pre
vent the reptiles from swarming on
board. Great numbers of them may
often be seen floating on {ie surface
of the water as If asleep, They are
exceedingly fleree and will commonly
attack human beings without provoca-
tion
the most
cables
When the Raven Was Milk White,
According to Mobammedan belief,
the ravens which Noah took with him
on the ark were hoth pure white, When
the ark had been riding the billows of
the flood for thirty-three days one of
the giraffes died, and the carenss was
thrown overboard, No sooner had It
struck the water than the ravens
pounced upon it. For this Noah cursed
them, and since that day they have
been coal biack,
The Disappointment.
May-~It was too bad that Miss Trills
disappointed the audience at the ama.
teur performance, Elsle~But she
didn't. She was able to appear after
all. May Yes, but it was generally
supposed that she would not be abie
to appear.
YA
Tablets, all sizes, at the Reporter
office,
Transfer of Hen! Estate,
Jas, 8, Martin, et, ux, to Harry M,
Frrunk, Jan, 16, 1006 ; Jo's No, 11 and
14, in Jacksonville,
tiordon Harper to
buty 26, 1906 5 126 acres
$l
Chas, Kekeuroth, et, ux , to Ameri-
cnn Lime June 27,
1906 ; 96 meres 75 in Mpring
twp. $7000,
J. B. Irish, et. al, to Mike Norokie,
June 20, 1906 ;
$500,
Clara Valentine
June 50, 1906; 7
Hpring twp. $150,
Jenne K, Cox, et, al., to Ida V. Gil-
len, June 25, 1906 ; house and lot in
Bellefonte on Bishop street, $2700,
Authony Dussling, guardian to W.
W. Dunkle, June 28, 1906 ; Miles.
$775.
James BB. Williams, et. ul, Lo W. H.
Williams, et. al.,, Nov, 9, 1906 : 227
and 78 Half
$3000,
Daniel D. el. nx.
Chestie Rumberger, May 15, 1000
540 gq. feet in Philipsburg. $500.
John M, Holt, et. ux., to Margaret
Meyer, July 24, 1583; in Philipsburg.
$958.02
F. H. Bartges, et.
Korman, July 7, 1906 ;
$257.60,
George J, Wilson, et. al,
Jackson, May 9, 1906 ; 433
perches and 400 acres in
jurnside, §1.
Thomas J. Lee, et. ux.
Creek R. R. Co, June 1,
Hush twp. $1.
Fugene Mark
uly 9, 19006
Cieo
Harper,
78 perches in
twp,
nid Mtone Co,
perches
1 acre in Rash twp.
to Juno. Woods,
neres 95 perches in
in
burg.
ROTes perches in Moon
twp.
Meyers, to T.
y 10,~
ux., io WwW.
59 4-10 perches
in Coburn.
to ¢ lyde
1635
Liberty and
ROTOR
to Beech
1906 ; in
to Elizabeth Mark,
in Philipsburg. $5.
Chestie A. Stover to Reuben Bmaull,
August 1906 ; 204 acres in Miles
twp. $5.50
C. D. Loose,
Nlover, Nov. 07,
Miles twp. $20.75,
i
’
et. ux., to Cornelius
1896 ; 20} acres in
EE
K. G, KE Offloers
Millheim castle, K. U4. E
Lo
’ installed
the following officers serve during
the ensuing term
P.C., H. KR Auman,
N. C., John F, Krape.
VY Co, M. lL. Breon.
H. P., H. G. Auman.
V.H., W. H. Miller.
M.of R, E. E. Knarr
C.of KE, Jos. W. Reifsnyder,
Nir H., C. UG
W. B., C. H. Breon
WwW.C..1L.W.
Eusign, F. H. Blover,
Iequire, H. J. Bower,
First Guardsman, T. K. Frank.
second Guardeman, J. H
T. K. Frank
. Weaver,
Blover.
LU rotise,
1 sles
i A
To the Vest Pald Man
It's sound sense thal we Lell you,
Your work costs less dollars and is
M
best every line you use the Li, &
Paint
You do more paiutiog with one gel-
lon of 1, & M. than with (wo gallons
of other paints and the L. & M. Zine
hardens the LL. & M. White
makes the L M.
HO,
Lead and
Palul wear like
i gallons 1, & M. mixed with 5 gal
lone Linseed Oil will paint a moderate
sized house,
Actual cost L. & M,
gallon.
A. IT. Terrell, MN. ¥Y.,
writes, '* 10 years ago painted with L.
& M. Only now requires repainting
sold by Rearick Bros., Centre Hall.
about $1.20 per
Riverhead,
IANOS and
ORGANS....
he LESTER Piano is
y high grade instrument endorsed
by t
by the New England Conservatory
3 §
yOu
mn, Mass, Broad Street
Coni-
* v il 3 |
servatory, Philadelphia, as being
unsurpassed for touch and
$
tot
one,
The “Stevens” Reed-Pipe
.. Piano Organ is the new-
est thing on the market.
We are also headquarters
for the “White” Sewing
Machine,
Terms to suit the buyer,
catalogue and prices,
Ask for
1000100000000 00000000F003000100000000
C, E. ZEIGLER
SPRING MILLS, - - - PA.
00600002 00000000000C0000000ED000B09200000009
S6000PERAPRGODERNLNNERe
(4 elp! Help!
I'm Falling
Thus cried the hair. And a
kind neighbor came to the res-
cue with a bottle of Ayer’s
Hair Vigor. The hair was
saved! This was because
Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a regular
hair medicine. Falling hair is
caused by a germ, and this
medicine completely destroys
these germs. Then the healthy
scalp gives rich, healthy hair.
The best kind of a testimonial
“Bold for over sixty yeurs.”
Made by J. U. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
Also manufecturers of
J SARSAPARILLA.
yer PILLS.
CHERRY PECTORAL.
SPECIAL SALE
_OF-
OXFORDS
For Ladies, Children and
Gents; andof . . .
Men's STRAW HATS
Broken sizes in each.
Must be sold before Inven-
tory, August Ist,
H F. ROSSMAN
SPRING MILLS, PA.
Alt ts
me
Shoes] Shoes! |
Good Resolution: For
Health, Wealth and
Prosperity buy your
Shoes from Krape.
BEE
My price is saving, good
health and prosperity
assured,
Douglass, Dayton
A. A. Cutler
Radcliffe
Secing is, convincing in
Price and Quality.
Come onecfand all.
C. A. KRAPE
Spring Mills, Pa.
ESET
_
—
=
NN ANTED—Travelling salesman. Mast
furnish references and Invest Une
$1000.00 ) Dollars in our 6 per oeni.
! ry and expenses paid. Experience
iired, We teach busiDess al our mills
WHEELING ROOFING & CORNICE QU
Thousand
bonds
not reg
THE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Block | BELLEFONTE, FA.
wile Court House §
Opera Hou
Ori
All branches of legal business allended
promptly
0
2
B= ECUTOR'S NOTICE~LETTERS TESTA
mentary on the estate of Issel Woul,
mle of Mies wwoship, decessed, having
been duly granted to the undersighed he would
respectiuily request any persons knowing thei -
selves indebled (0 the estate Wo make immeodinsie
payment and those having cisios agninst the
sane to present them duly authenticated for sel
tiement GRORGE N. WOLF, Executor,
Clement Dale, Spring Mim, Pa
AUorney
Ex UTOR'S NOTICE ~LETTERS TESTA-
mentary on tbe estate of Jas, A, MeCuntic,
Inte of Gregg Wwash ip, deceased having beeh duly
granted to the undersigned he would respect
Tully request any persons knowing themselves in:
debied w the estate 10 make immediate pay-
ment, and those having claims against the sane
to present them duly suthenticated for soi
tement.
ANDREW F, McCLINTIC, Executor,
Clement Dale, Ally, No. © West Market 56.
Belwefonte, ka Lewistown, Pu
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Centre Reporter $1.00 a year,
RAILROAD
NEW
$5.35 Round
Via Delaware River Bridge
$5 25 Round Trip
Via Market Btreet Whar!
W. W, ATTERBURY,
GRO. W. BOYD,
troneral Passenger