EE er ‘THE CENTRE REPORTER THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1906. CHURCH APPOINTMENTS. Reformed No services Presbyterian—Centre Hall, morning ; Spring Mills, afternoon, [Appointments not given here have not heen reported to this office. | LOCALS, Social Saturday night in Grange Arcadia. Go and have a good time, James Edward Dunning, of Osceola Mills, will succeed John 8. Hosterman as assistant principal of the Bellefonte High School Arney is picking choice for the market, in of Frank KE blackberries home They are choice respect the word, J. Calvin Vonada, farm of Rev. W. C. Rishel, at Mill, and one of the progressive young farmers of that section, called on the weporter Monday. Miss Lyde KE. Centre Hill, Lodge, Glen Haven, N. Y., instead of Philadelphia. every on the Ntone tenant Smith, formerly of at Runnymede i= How (ieorge A. Brown, Esq, of the law firm Brown & Lock Haven, is a Democratic candidate for of Stevenson, president judge of the twenty-fifth dis trict, to succeed the late Judge Mayer, “ 1 eould not think of doirg without the Reporter, my home paper. Send it along for another year for the dollar enclosed.”” That was the message from Mrs. Sallie Horner, at Colyer. Mrs, Perry Krise and daughter Bes. sie, of near Potters Mills, were in town Saturday and called at the Reporter office to advance their subscription on the Reporter. The family on Aa farm somewhat isolated, but it is very homelike. lives As an earnest that there is to be no cessation of its campaign against child slavery, the Woman's Home Compan- ion prints prominently in the August number the “Anti Child Labor Creed” nine curt paragraphs defining the faith and purpose of those who are fighting against the abuses of child labor. Ten short all of the first quality, are included in that remark- able * fiction number,” the August Everybody's. readers love story ; others prefer one with ad- venture, excitement, danger. Lloyd Osbourne has combined both elements in his ‘ automobile story, “ Three Speeds Forward,” a master- piece of humor, vivacity, and adreit stories, Some want a love incident. No one is so independent as the farmer : he doesn't have to truekle ; if he is insulted he can resent the insult without fear of losing trade, and there no earthly reason, with the im- proved farm machinery he now has in use why he should not have an eight- hour day and such leisure for reading and study as would soon make him one of the best informed men in any calling. Why shouldn’t the farmer be all this and more? Burely he has the possibilities. The local paper should be found in every home, No children should grow up ignorant who can be taught to appreciate the home paper. It is said to be the stepping stone of intelli- gence in all those matters not to be found in books. Give your children a foreign paper which contains not a word about any person, place or thing, which they ever saw or per- haps ever heard of, and how could you expect them to be interested. But let them have the home paper and read of people whom they meet and of places of which they are familiar and goon an interest is awakened which increases with every arrival of the local paper. Thus a habit of reading is formed and those children will read the papers all their lives and become intelligent men and women, a credit to their ancestors, strong in knowledge of the world as it is today. ——— ———— ww To a Smart Property.Owner, Painting is practical work. skill wins, It’s the same with paint making. You know 4 gallons L. & M. mixed with 3 gallons Linseed Oil makes enough paint for a moderate sized house—the best paint money can buy because the L, & M. Zinc hardens the L. & M. White Lead and makes the L. & M. Paint wear like iron. Buy L. & M. and don’t pay $1.50 a gallon for Linseed Oil, as you do in read y-for-use paint, but buy oil fresh from the barrel at 60 cents, and mix with the L. & M. Actual cost L. & M, aboul $1.20 per gallon, Sold by Rearick Bros., Centre Hall, Transfer of Real Estate, Maggie M. Jones, et. bar, to Wm, Robison, May 14, 1906 ; lot in Port Matilda, $55. Laura M. Parker, et. bar, to Chas, (. Overy, June 1, 1906 ; premises in Philipsburg. $2,300, J. CO. Hoffman, et, ux., to Joseph Hamer, July 28, 1005 ; lot in Philips. burg. $425. Catharine Gephart, et. al, to W. 1. Auman, Sept. 1, 1804 ; premises in Millheim. $150. John H. Auman, et. ux., et. al, to R. 8. Btover, June 25, 1906; lot in Millb: in. $160, Jus, '1 mer to Annie Gette, July 10, 3900 ; iv, .2 Philipsburg, $440. % T i sto 4, That was the score Baturday after. noon made by the Pine Grove Mills and Centre Hall base ball teams on Grange Park, Centre Halil, There were a number of errors on both sides, the home team did not have ils foot forward. The visiting team was without doubt the stronger, and was made up from various points in the western section of the county, The geore : best PINE GROVE H A. Tomko, rf . . 1 KF. (1088, 2b. . ala . 0 E. Martz, p . P. (loss, © W. Weaver, Dunlap, of P. Tomko, P. Martz, I. Weaver, i ’ » » 1b 0 3b I'otal CENTRE HALL Mitterling, of sShutt, ri Buck, If Bradford, 2b Stahl, « Knarr, Fotal Grove 04 Pind roy Hall Centre 00002 0060 3 06003 Hall 1 Slruck 2 Lente i iam— The Juniors Lose The local junior baseball team met its fate at Linden Hall Friday after- noon, the score being sixteen to two. The Linden Hall team has splendid young, growing timber in it, which, when developed more fully will be heard from in the loeal fields at least, For Centre Hall nothing commendable ean be this time The score : sOMme anid Linden Hall Runs 1b, . < Keller, eo, Palmer, Ashton, | - Rosas, P Fisher, ss, (loxey, 3b, J. Weber, 2b, Rtover, cf, . F. Weber. rf, Total Hall Homan, p,. Ww. Bradford, Bailey, 2b, Centre Runs (aris, of Allison eo, Mitterling, Smith, Buyder, 1b, . P. Bradford, as, . rf, th, Total Harris Township. Miss Gertrude Wieland is visiting Miss Eva Moyer, at Spring Bank. J. Dale, of Centre Hall, was supply- ing the merchants with dry goods. David Rhinesmith and daughter, Miss Bettie, of Bpriong township, spent last Thursday in Boalsburg. Misa Sarah Haflley, of Bellefonte, spent a short time here. Frank Torrence, of called on friends in week. C. P. Wieland is attending to busi- ness in Washington city, Mrs, Ella Calvert and sister, Mrs. Lizzie McGarvey, with her children, are visitors from Altoona. Dr. and Mrs, Samuel Woods, of Bharon, are visiting Mrs. M. A. Woods. J. A. Rupp spent last week at George Bhuey’s, at Rock View, helping at the ingathering of the harvest, Miss Bara McClenahan, of Centre Hall, is staying with the Misses Kel- ler for a few weeks, John Rishel, of Oak Hall, is spend- ing some time with Ris grandmother, Mrs. Katherine Wieland. John Shuey, of Lemont, attended to business here last week. Mr, and Mrs, H, M. Hosterman and Mrs. Henry Dale entertained visitors from Huntingdon, Henry Frederick : old his team and bought a spry three year old horse from Frank Homan, Early Monday morning he was out in the buggy try- ing him, A company of young people from this place with Miss Ella Rhone, of New York, as chaperon, are camping this week in the picturesque country near Bunbury. Miss Martha Boal, of Centre Hall, and Reuben BStuart, of Pittsburg, are also numbered with the party. The lecture, Friday evening, by General B, ¥, Fisher, of Philadelphia, was well attended and highly appre- ciated, He related some reminiscenses of the time when he, as a union sol dier, with other prisoners, was con- fined in Libby prison ; their trials and escape, aud his return tw the union lines. Quite a number of people from a distance were present, among who were Andrew Lytle and family, of Hiate College, and Mr, aud Mm, G. B, Heberling, of Pine Grove Mills, James aud Robert Galbraith will sell their personal property at public sale, Baturday, July 25th, and will make their homes with the families of James Hearson and Henry Reits. A ——————— A dog's bark is generally worse than ite bite, but IVs different with a mos. Philadelphia, Boalsburg last quito, MEDICAL DELUSIONS MANY STILL LINGER FROM THE DARK AGES OF CREDULITY, Superstitions Regarding Remedies For Disease on the Lower East Side In Old Time Apothecnries, New York—FPrescriptions of the An east sider in lower New York suf- fering from acute rheumatiggu was taken to the Postgraduate Medical Bchool and Hospital wearing a palr of eels, long defunct and dried, by way of garters. Ie showed much distress when they were removed by the nurse, being firmly convinced they would cure his rheumatism in time, The laugh of science to the contrary notwithstanding, medical delusions in surprising number still survive from the ages of faith. Any physician who practices among the poor and ignorant can testify to this, and it is in particu lar the stafl students of an justi tution Hke Medical School and Hospital, which receives its i 1 the lower with y te Oost and the Postgradunte from east Variety, fully doing extent remoedies for 1talian nmi teresting regarding are peculiarly in They fre trouble 1 upprosed to have been swal EB eggs] also eal respect stomach Ris eating wells hoy consumption, though vl to cure It snalls as a here are supported by a highly respect that of '“The Accom published fn 1656, that sunll water, "ow and glutinous particularly i These whenever thelr at all excited, either i urn rolls of waxed xly for authority wd Physiclan,” eclares ol, clammy f the gnail"” i msumptive hs or oll ears to cure the « arache ha © y through t nt of lighting fires ig they ven more on have v ¥y wo bieet Acie woe tocked lerns as sin 3 medicine foxes" lungs, pt | horses’ stones in , alligators, corplons and even sles These latter were r as a remedy for epllepsy, bring sup vounds and mortifica- wt Ou. 4d. a pound, or id was a recog baa 4 PNY Dod jes g 80 Was rollius ng for MI DAD, SOLE BAY but » that this ghast le for of Mummon disease, of any res ll HRULS r ore hillings in tabs’ eyed, pearls, white and the black as made bezoar iaws were thought to as amu WeRrer . 100, y when we nirotected Lg its MOY the amd sober, stopped blending, the onyx } ame ondatones $ t y " . te prevented epil , the topaz cured In flamn strengthened opal + emerald prevented i ‘ tide] the memory. Con cerning the emerald an old writer fur ther testifies: “It takes away vain and foolish fears, as of devils and hobgob ling, folly 1 anger, and causeth good condition it do so worn about one, reason ell him that being beaten into powder and taken inwardly it will do much more.” The nse of herbs and plants as medi cines, of agrees with modern practice; but the old physicians made the mistake of considering them as pos sessing seml-magical properties. It was believes that they were the dwelling places of good and evil spirits which worked thelr good and evil wills upon those who touched them, The old rhyme says: Trefoll, vervain, John's wort, dill Hinders witches of their will W & « IR $ COUrRe, And these four plants had extraordi- nary reputations in the middle ages for both natural and supernatural powers, The trefoil is common in the United States today, especially in the south, and has certain legitimate medical properties. The vervain 18 alligd to our native verbena and was anciently be leved to be effective against all pol gons and the venom of serpents, as well ns against bewitched drinks and the like. It was also efficacious for witch craft. Anne Bodenham, the celebrated witch of Salisbury, used to send her pupils into the fields to gather vervain and dill, The sun worshipers of Persia always earrled vervain when they ap proached thelr altars. They gathered {ft when there was neither sun nor moon and poured a lbatlon of honey upon the earth in reparatiion for their robbery, 8t. John's wort was called “fuga demonium” In the old days boeause it routed evil spirits, It was a common ingredient of magical con coctions and is still gathered with much I——— A AP SPAIN Gold comes in quartz ; so does the ceremony by the peasantry of Franc nud Nt. (June 24) cons Germany when wround Solomon's seal of working plants, sald to be the wis nnother wolide herb lepiy the no Clrouns itive } thie SL Hi ¢ in a ring applied te 14 the patient tlie of popularity eid that figures in ern tines the maglenl ring ot BO He Cnrious stories are told of the man wion of the potato family, the to called the i name later applied tc no doubt bed ause to ent of produced temporary in was much used in love phil ken the passion, and dpeciim were of gibbets the neck to gather the ©, i of which used be npple” LH Hinto), sly it \ tender elcaeious “us from the vicinity vil doers by aWHUng but one way ¢, under pain of death for mis ice the belief was that it groan 1 pitied from the ground heard the sound fel he custom tall te is 8 wins 1c the y the pland truggles hy the hie roots opera pitch which taken ding the 1 with , Tot GROWING PAINS. Aches In evlive Litldren That Should Attention Ne. Servious fp in the greet , eapoecially made at the } g the night should excell ipicion and if often re previ tend 1 folie of vamination of “nine frites ay be due § Ail 3 when the conpidint is close of t! vay or durin fe the necessity the 3 to rheuma if not detected and cor od, ony a carcial Grow tiem rectly of the hen A les manding medic Cause n ina wi} lead to disease trouble tl treatment the Ih in aria, This is a dangerous diagnosis, for if Incorrect It may be as serious in its 4 that of growing paling and even if the child has had an unmis takable attack of malaria the parent should not be content with that expla nation its aches and pals, buat should refer the matter to the doctor It should always be remembered that growth is a normal process and should no more be accompanied by pain than digestion or breathing. Youth's Com panion, which may y 1 t ning in nhs, is 1 CONSE UIeNCes | ler Little Mistnke, The joke 8 on a Westhrook (Me) woman who on getting ready to leave church recently was unable to find one of her rubbers, so she walked home with one shoe exposed to the wet When she arrived home she remarked to one of her family how heavy the foot with one rubber felt. This was explained in part when she attempted to remove the one overshoe aud found she had both on one foot. ———— A MS. all nizes, at the Reporter a ap Som Inherited Memories, i A writer in the Nineteenth Century | tells an strange story of memories,” The ruins of an anclent | Roman fortress rise from the grounds | of a Mr. Phillips. A clergyman called | gee the ruins, “He told me he had a distinet recollection of living there and | that he held + office of a priestly | nature in the days of the Roman occu- | pation,” said Mr. Phillips. “One fact | struck me as significant, Ile insisted | on examining a ruined tower which | had bodily overturned, be a socket In the top of it, he went | on, ‘in which we used to plant a mast, | and archers used to be hauled to the | top in a basket protected with leather, | from which they picked off the lead- | ers nmong the ancient Gorlestonians.’ We found the socket he had4indicated.” | When Paris Was Dirty, It takes the labors of 4,000 to keep | the city of Paris clean today, but In times past that capital did not care so much about the matter and was not always pleasing to look upon. In 1848 King John of France made the request that Parisians should not allow thelr pigs to roam the streets, Charles VI. (1308-1422) complained that the prac tice of throwing rubbish into the Beine made It a “great ir and an abom- Until the sev could back In order filth of the 5 were made veep the road but it was not just cart became an who A Lullaby. You are 186d y up at 2 What have yon at your hon- pean an alibl {1 it what you like, that I was 1 the baby at the Chica- Bs a POF en narge. and a to afford Just Like Mim, thin , » Whe { Yes, io it For that Dandruff There is one thing that will cure it—Avyer’s Hair Vigor. It is a regular scalp-medicine. It quickly destroys the germs which cause this disease. The unhealthy scalp becomes healthy. The dandruff disap- pears, had to disappear. A healthy scalp means a great deal to you—healthy hair, no dan- druff,no pimples, no eruptions. The best kind of a testimonial “Sold for over sixty years.” smn M —— ado by J.C. Ayer Co., Lowsll, Mass. SARSAPARILLA PILLS CHERRY PECTORAL. SPECIAL SALE OF OXFORDS For Ladies, Children and Gents : andof . , . Men's STRAW HATS Broken sizes in cach. Must be sold before Inven- tory, August Ist, H. SPRING F. ROSSMAN MILLS, PA. P0009 600000000E2000500000000000000000000006D SOVOOBIQISTOOVSOTROSL GOS EEE SS Shoes! Shoes! Good Resolution : Health, Wealth Prosperity buy Shoes from Krape. For and your My price is saving, good Sefzed His Chance, Miss Prim-—-In Siberia do reindeer? Mr. Nerve) or they have spow, darling Leader fle who doos not improve today will grow worse tomorrow. —German Prov erh em —————————— There are no two weighs about il a pair of scales, I'he average automobile is almost ns stubborn as a mule, ere 00000000000 0000000 P09 IANOS and ORGANS... The LESTER Piano is a ly high grade instrument en by the New England Conservator doston, Mass, Broad Street servatory, Philadelphia, as being unsurpassed for tone, touch and finsiah inasn. The “Stevens” Reed-Pipe Piano Organ is the new- est thing on the market, We arc also headquarters for the “White” Sewing Machine. Terms to suit the buyer. catalogue and prices. Ask for C. E. ZEIGLER SPRING MILLS, - - - PA health and prosperity assured, ’ Douglass, Dayton A. A. Cutler Radcliffe Seeing is convincing Price and Quality. Come one and all. in C. A. KRAPE Spring Mills, Pa. ——— Ie Ss Ae eo en] An Mas vest Unie per cent Experien Gur mis ANICE CO AOR V-AT-LAW LEFONTE, PA 8 ons atilended B= ECUTOR'S NOTICE-LETTERS TESTA mentary on the esial of israel Woll inte Miles township deceased, havin been duly granted to the an iersigned be woul respectiaily request any persons knowing them scives indebted to the esate Wo make immodini payment and those having claims againsl th sane 10 present them duly authenticated for sel tiement GHORGE NN. WOLY, Executor, Clement Dale, spring Mis, "a Athorney ¢ of XECUTOR'S NOTICE ~LETTERS TRSTA mentary on tbe estate of Jas, A. MoCintic, ate of Gregg township, deoccased having been duly granted to the nndersigned he wonid respect fully request any persons Knowing themscives in detted ww Lhe cstate Ww make mmedisie pay ment, and those having claims against the same to present them duly suthenticaied for wet tiement. ANDREW ¥ Clement Dale, AWYy., Beliefonte, ba Centre Reporter $1.00 a year. MeCLINTIC, Executor, No, 2 West Markel 5i. Lewistown, 'a PENNSYLVANIA . RAILROAD $5.35 Round Trip Via Delaware River Bridge $5 25 Round Trip Via Market Btroet Whar! TICKETS GOOD RETURN! NG WITHIN TEN DAYS WwW. W. ATTERBURY, GRO, W. BOYD,