LOUVALS, Centre Hall and Millheim will play ball at the latter place Saturday aft- ernoon, Miss Alice Robinson is back from a trip to New York, Atlantic City and other points east. Hecola reunion Business Men's Park, August 16th. at Oak Hall, Saturday. Dr. W. A. Alexander, dentist, will be prepared to do all kinds of dental work at Bmith Brolher’s oflice, Bpring Mills, Wednesday, August Sth. pienie at Dale There will be an eclipse of the moon at 8 o'clock Friday morning, and an eclipse of the sun 19th inst., but neither will be visible in this section. Miss Hardy, daughter of Prof. Joseph: J. Hardy, of Lafayette College, Easton, is spending a few days in on DEATHS, SAMUEL NOLL Samuel Noll, na well known citizen of Pleasant Gap, died in the Bellefonte Hospital Sunday evening after a brief illness, He was taken to the hospital on the previous Monday and death was due to stricture of the bladder. He was a farmer by occupation and fifty- seven years of age. Surviving him are his wife, one brother, Hon. John Noll, of Bellefonte : two sisters, Mrs Lucy Stine, of Oklahoma ; and Miss Husie, of Pleasant Gap The funeral took place Interment “ednesday morning. Pleasant Gap, fl CYRUS JACOB KLIN ER The remains of Cyrus Klinger were laid to rest by the side of his mother, town at the home of Dr. James W. Boal. Mrs, W. A. Krise, after visiting a few weeks at the home of her George and family, in Chicago, is now at the home of her daughter, Elsie, in Pipestone county, Minnesota, son After a brief but rath «or stek- ness, Rufus Rearick He is a son of W. O. severe about Rearick, is nEnin of Mil. and illness at The boy was aged five the of Charles Klinger, of Wheeling, West Virginia, Years and was HO The mother was buried early in the spring, which makes the death of the lad of more than ordinary sorrow to the father, Marriage Liceuses Bellefonte Clean Huger, roy, and during his present is al the home father, M. J. Decker, Hall, toss Bushman succeeds Guy Jucobs | of east grand | Centre | his of as local news agent. The latter lias ! faithfully number of years, but since he has con- | served his customers for = | cluded to become a student in sylvania State College, he sold out his Miss Alice Wistar, a trimmer in Lt: millinery Mtever's | store, of Chicarso, who is Pen nN« § business of department an 8 vis to | her former nome in Howard, is spend- | ing a week the of W, Ww 1 Spangler, as the guest of his daughter, i ut home Miss Gertrude, Messrs. D, A Grove and dren advertise a hors Hall, Monday, August 6, one o'clock They will sell a car load Wm. Col | wile at Centre | of western | horses, consisting of mated teams of S000 pounds weight, and individuals of 1100 pounds and ap. Hon. James A, Kerr and party eross- ed the Beven Mountains between (en- | tre Hall and Milroy, and had the mis- | fortune to badly wreck their The ex-Congressmian aud party ceeded their by and the chauffeur and machine ed repairs st the Old Fort hotel, auto pro- | rail, to destination awaits Rev. J. Hamill Boal is spending his vacation in Centre Hall, at the home of his father, Rev. Jas. W, Boal, D. D He was installed pastor of the Presby- terian chureh of Hinkley, Minn, May, and is mueh pleased with h fleld of work where do good work, A regular board will be held this ( Thursday evening, at the Reporter office, Among other business to be transac! od of a millage, inl in he doubt less will | of the school meeting } will be the formal election prin- | cipal, fixing of the tax designating the time for the opening of the schools, Wm. Parker is back burg, where he was in camp with Com | pany B, N.G. P. Heand A GG. Noi | belong to the * cooking department i and i from Cietiys- | of the company’s outfit, and while the latter has had a number of years ex- petience, Mr. Parker was out for the | | first time with the State's guards i : James Bearson, of near Linden Hall, | is said to have one of the best wheat | crops in that digging. He on | the Potter farm, and it is vouched for | by his neighbor George SBwabb that | lives field for the first load of grain esme se | near the trath in this ease he HAW, eg ever ! Grasshoppers are doing considerable damage to onts by cutting the grains froin the main In fields the loss will be considerable on account mle, #Ome of this pest, which are not than half-grown. Itis feared the orthop- terous insect will cut the after the oats is cut, making the hand- ling of the erop more tedious Niavre also banda Generally speaking the corn erop in Penus Valley is in fine condition. The early corn is already well eared, and it would require the most unneusl ent. | ditions hinder its The flelds that were replanted on ae | count of cut worms or timothy worms | will require more favorable wentior | conditions throughout this month Tired of Cloyd Brooks, pumping water for ull! purposes, Dr. H. F. Bitner set to work | to dig a well ou an elevation suffi vient i ly high to permit walter to te to development “eeing his tenant farmer, carried | to the buildings by gravity, He fu] not aver sanguine that he will le ene. | cessful in securing water at the print | of operation, but there are mney furng | buildings that might ss well Iw ope plied in the wry contempinied by Dr, pump lever, Fine weather during the past few days. . . The roads are badly washed in all sections . . Farmers are doing a variety of work on the farm thresh ing, cutting barley, hauling in barley, plowing, snd casing the grasshop- pers, . . Odd Fellows picuie, Grange Park, August 10, . . Lots of summer boarders, . . Green apples: pain in Btomnch, . . Boavenir postal garde, 5 floe nesortment of local views, wi Reporter office, , . Horse sale at ene Blanche VV, W hippo, Bellefont, Jumes SN, Shope, Altaoons | Symptoms, A physician was talking about his | patient's symptoms. | “Young, strong people don't give me enough symptoms when they are i.” he sald, “but the middle aged and the aged glve me many. Thinking about their health all the time, study- lng thelr condition all the time, the aged and the middle aged discover a symptom In every muscle, in every or- gan, in every limb. Thus they confuse | me. “The average sufferer of fifty or so will pour upon my head a deluge of | symptoms lke this: * ‘Well, too doctor, I'm miserable all | feverish minute, freezing | the next. I've a gnawing pain in my hip and side and back and an all gone | sensation In the stomach, with a shoot- | Ing, neuralglec headache over the left | eye. 1 have a queer taste in my mouth, | a dizziness when 1 stoop over and a | dull ache up and down the right side, along kind of numbness. [| cough a lot, my throat's sore, and I've | the earache. Appetite's fair, but not | what It should be. I have a feeling of | lassitude, and I'm very weak. These | are only a few of my main symptoms. | To proceed, ete’ Exchange, over, one with a An Unruffied A contented ended that found It trying Spirit, ] Mrs, Snow's, at times her neigh- | an un- | righteous satisfaction In presenting any small thorns which might prick through | spirit was 80 cont bors and took filavite Owens, Clearfield Runkel Y'NYy Witlisisp ' i ust irl {hese Fe bb, Howard. Hu 1 Showed Noi, — ugh Tex Hate Lis perate tl Lhe hari h rough, ten wt i= mitils ; poor, twa mille py Souvenier Postal Unrds ine of A Vie fire cards, Hall, posing in snd about Centre sie nt the Repos yet produced 3 Pomona tirange be Centre ( ‘ounty | third quarterly in Vietor Grange Hall, Osk ‘inona | irange | will hold i meeting | Hall Sta. tion, Tuesday, August 21st A tl LAMU ALS Monday fi Horse aul afternoon Treasurer's adjurned anle of nse wands, Tuesday, August 7 Phe Pike sethiool ? in J Spring Mille, is the proper Peun town. Foe person to vaoant, =~ Meyer, address Miss Myrtle Williams, Indies vf One the salon in Katz & Company's Edons Murray The time fixed for monthly meeting of the town council | the reguins is the first Friday in each month. and the place of meeting Bank building No polished Ron ~ Dismond Beaver cook stove, i top condition. | M. shelf : with reservoir: in al a bargain Millbeim, Pa. J. M. Rearick fined to bed sines Cam p- tf Rev has been con-! Wednesday of He is suffering inst from ioflam- | confined to one of his ankles. Mrs. W. H. Schuyler is minus her | umbrella, having natural wood handle with the name plate and orna- She will appreciate any knowledge of its whereabouts. Pr. H Alexander, of Mills, and Dr. W. A. Alexander, | un N Potters fice Monday. The latter ia a dentist, Mr. aod Mrs, Reid Thompson and drove to Centre Hall Tuesaday and Hall ho- tel as guests of the Rives and 1 hom p- spent the tay at the (Centre SOs WANTED month, Woman cook, $40.00 per Two dining room girls, $20 00 month, Steady work. These wages include room and board. One- half railroad fare paid, Apply to Clayton T. Williams, Hotel Birming- ham, Pittsburg, Pa. Mr jrer Mrs. William Milton lege, are visiting and and of Hiate Centre Hall, of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Wion and Samtiel Ciross, nid the latter divided their time tween the Floray families, Mre, Walter M. Kerlin back to Centre Hall after spending some time in Millheln, with her mother, Mrs, Susan Kern, She will remain st the home of Mrs, Surah J. Kerlin until (ross nid Mrs Chrome, {' The former in Were plies s sre in husband will join her preparatory to ati, Ohin The Porgwy ivanda Rail ond Compas ny bins decided Lo vse 1000-mile Lick. vin for $20, after Septemitwr 1st, The company has slso announced that in {rhe nest fatire it would reduce its | rouniing fare from 1hres "eit to two [ nit one-half cents ‘per mile. This netion ja calculated to head off the de. | and for n flat two cent rate per mile, Almost every enndidate for the legin. | l-ture has been committed to favor two cent mileage rate, aid it is not likely that tie people will be willing to mcoept the half-cent reduction and keep peace. her comfort “NO, my sald Mr it se e epldemi hasn't "i Snow one day the measles, “Well, per- | » she should escape i iy children are un- | fortunate always In those re- | I take the best of | and, then, they inherit al throw off any germs. I] fliness with Angle” | this the redoubtable An- with measles a week | friend again | A tires YH haps “ION B th but usually spects Of course 4 Ui tt them, to pate no care tendency an In spite Kie later, and the Inquiring Snow of came down approact “Yes, dear Angle has the weasles at | ' sald the contented mother. “Now, | most of the r children are well, and | as the doctor has ple |y of time to at- | tend to her ft re tunity for Angle. 1 don't suppose there | ever was a child on whom they came | more beautifully Angie, | [ tell the doctor I think he may well be | i f his ¢ patient.” Youth's i othe ally seemed an oppor | out than on i Companion The Were mn ere 1 Atmosphere. for air he « man to { ould not | it were without an | Plants derive carbon, the i nt food food, | and with Even if oH ott ani hla live w hirewi thine v oreathing t on the earth if clement of thelr plants there | als and there Water osphere, ean cur. | RUppose one London, i near ast trip “When | Hdng pup | it American Buyer In in | i hotel A meri easy mark fn cabby at the around and me at 860, a very falr price, ns the dog will never be a show winner. 1 a $10 tip to the cab man, #0 1 made $430 by employing sn agent called his an ‘an 80M his horse ‘orse.” Now bought gave who sud York Sun hansom an Jackdaw and Magpie. In England the daw is hardly ever mentisned but as Jack, yet daw apd not jackdaw is the proper name of the It Is suggested that the ple “mag” to some corruption of Margaret or Meg. To mag Is to chat ter, but whether the verb was derived from the name or the name from the It more than probable that the Jim Crow of Ameri ca (the old name for a negro boy) was brought from England In the days when a was Jim, ns a swal- low was Dick, London Standard gpecies owes the verb is a question a ACTOuY Crow Egr and Nottie. Take a bolled egg, remove the shell, have a bottle with a large neck, add A plece of paper to the rock and light it. When in blaze put the eggs on it, point down, and the heat will pull the egg with great force Inside Now put again a blazed paper in the bottle and manage to have the egg in the neck point up, and the heat will push out the egg with an explosion Perpetual, “You always appear to be worried about your housekeeping,” remarked the sympathetic friend. “But really,” replied the housekeeper, “there are only two occasions when 1 am really worrled. One Is when 1 haven't a servant and the other 1s when I have” At the Art Museum, Her Inusband-"That statue Isn't true to nature. His Wife-What's wrong with it? Her Husband Why, it repre. sents a woman sitting still, saying nothing. Columbus Dispateh, In Xt Ethel-Mamma, what makes the Indy dress all In black? Mamma Because she is a sister of charity, dear, Ethel Is charity dead, then? The first Lombary poplar in America was planted by Michaux in 1785. Tablets, all sizes, at Reporter office, Farmers Mills ve, Penns Cave One of the features of the Bun ay- school picnic at Penns Cave was a | ball between Farmers | | : | in favor of | in of four Penns Cave thus: Farmers Zubler, 2b., Long, cf. If., Dunkle, p, Homan, 3b, Detwiler, sx, Penns Cave—Long, rf. C. Rossman, tossman, p, Ream, 3b, A, Rossman, 2b,, Dueck, If., E Rossman, ¢., Hagan, 1b, Wert, a» { A BCOre tery to The teams were made up | Mills—Eun gard, of | arner, 1b, Lony, iarner, eo, i Be tees Odd Fellows' Reunion Plans are well completed for the Odd Fellows’ reunion and picnic at Centre Hall, Grange Park, Batarday, 10th inst. The speakers for the occa. sion are Rev. D. H Hart, Deputy Grand Master, of Harrisburg: J. Meyer, Esq , of Bellefoute : Rey, (*. will be the after- cream, ole, In noon a game of ball has beer Lunch, served by the local lodge 10 arranged A FAMILY EDUCATOR should be an authority in all the principal departments of knowl- edge, and should give in concise form all that the consulter needs to know abo ing, pronunciat of words, + de “aiion, spell- nd de finition Il as facts about cities, towr i the natural fea tures of every part of the globe, facts in hist ture, ete Such International Dict NO HOME IS without th COTY fe nan “as We 4 aru £3 > ry, biography, litera- withority is Webster's onary COMPLETE pact storehouse of reliable information. Bev, Lyman Abbott, ILD. ¥ditor of the Outlook, #: Wels ¥ always tweens th 9 Pas y ¥ ¥ tw i. Come . New quarto ration: . Ab / wn TB WERITER'S G. & C. MERRIAM CO., i» PUBLISHERS, SPRINGFIELD, MASS, he Index... | Bellefonte, Pa. | { | OUR SPECIAL OR THIS WEER t Book ! 49 cents each. Hon. Pet “fy ! { x Vireis a Crucis Bis} hl PENNSYLVANIA... RAILROAD Schedule in Effect May 27, 1006 Trains Leave Centre Hall FOR MONTANDON and intermediate « stations, Sunbury, Harrisburg, Balti- more, Washington, Philadelphia, Wilkesbarre, Scranton and Williams- port: 7.04 a, m., 2.35 p. m. week-days, FOR ELMIRA and intermediate sta- tions, 2.35 p. m. week days. FOR BELLEFONTE, Tyrone, and in- termediate stations, 8.16 a. m., 3.36 p. m. week days, FOR ALTOONA and Pittsburg, 3.36 p. m. week-days. FOR LOCK HAVEN and intermediate stations, 8.16 a. m. week days. W. W. ATTERBURY, General Manager R. WOOD, Passenger Trafic Manager GEO. W. BOYD, % General Passenger Agent J Just received a fine line of Shirts, price 20 cents A fine line of Four-in-hand Ties, at 25 cents KREAMER & SON, Centre Hall, Pa. SLA 0 4 L.A 2 XA 2A X22 3 y 5 $3 333 33 utube od gd gn nde puddin Sdn dindn din nd lpn pd ppt fd elin did Badin Blind Be SS I'he convenience of the city added to the delights of the country, The farmer and market in touch, Information from near- est railway station available. Doctor al- ways witl FARMERS’ 11 iii speedy call with TELEPHONE SERVICE | PENNSYLVANIA TELEPHONE CO 3 Contract Dept.. Bellefonte, Pa. FETT Tyre rrr ey [0 THE NEW BEGINNERS . . . We will save you money if you buy any- thing of us from A COOK STOVE to A PIANO, Line, prada f patty ayy i y nih ts a sting adh $13 FEET 3% %Y yi a or that in the Furniture Give us a trial, Smith Bros., Spring Mills, Pa. fae 99 9900 0DB™aD T0000 D NV DUD ¢ ¢ 4 ¢ 4 ‘ ¢ / ¢ / § / 4 ¢ ¢ i ¢ : ¢ / / / ¢ ¢ ¢ # / ¢ # # 4 # ¢ ¢ 4 / ¢ A New Line of Shoes FOR SPRING Freed Bros. Plow Shoes Kangaroo Calf Congress The W. L. Douglass Dress Shoe for Men and Boys ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF LADIES’ AND CHILDREN'S FINE SHOES $ F. E. WIELAND, Linden Hall PVT VV VU DVD head om a Ta To the Farmers We are prepared to ing and Hay Baling. Our out fh ft fomn ODDO ODd DTV DVDRW D / B ELLEFONTE EASTWARD 28: BTATIOXS CENT RAL RAILROAD, ‘eek Days, — WESTWIRD + * Nh» a 3 OTe m and ’ 1] PA1l ‘ it achines ms: YOUR W. D. Strunk & Son, Centre Hall, Pa. Also agents for Huber Manufact- uring Co., Harrisburg, Pa modern n SOLICI Loleville Morris, Stevens... Hunters Fillmore RBrinrly Waddles Krumrine... LBtate College. «.Struble, : | ..Bloomsdor!.. | {Pine Grove Cro | Wi RONAGE B the RN ANTED By Chicago wholesale and mail order house, assistant manager {| MAN or woman ) for this county and sdicining lerritory. Salary 820 and expenses paid weekly eXpense money advapced. Work plessant : po sition permanent. NB investment! or ex perience required. Spare time valoable. Write at onoe for full perticulars and enclose #0] Ladd rossed { 4 nvelope SUPERINTENDENT, 132 Lake St Chicago, 11 oO. May 17, | Why not advertise in the Reporter: ou must look well after the condition of your liver and bowels. Unless there is daily action of the bowels, poisonous products are absorbed, causing head- aches, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsia. Ayer's Pills are Je nuine liver pills. We have no secrets | 0. It has proved its Ask you ures ou and real value during 75 years. r druggist for it. rant
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers