a Sr © THE POTTER TOWNSHIP OAUOUSKS, Conducted According to Strict Letter of the Law Will ba» the Strange to say, yet true, fur than twenty years Potter has been conducting ils caucuses cons trary to law, by obliging voters to go outside of their voting precinct to nominate candidates for township offices. This coming Saturday, how- ever, the Democratic caucus will be held similar to those held in other townships having wore than one voting precinet, or in other words ne- cording to law. Tue voters in each precinct will meet at their respective polling places, nom- inate election officers for their pre- cinet, and select delegates who will place in nomination candidates for mare townehip township offices. ——— A A i Statue for War Governor, Representative Martin, of Mercer | county, introduced a bill in the legis- | | lature creating a commission of three | persons to erect a statue of Governor | Curtin on Capitol Park, and appropri- | ating $25,000 for the same, Officers lustal led, l The officers for the flrst half of 1907 | of the Centre Hall Lodge, K. G. KE, | No. 365, were recently iustalied by D. | D., G. C. Hazel. The officers sare ss | follows: P.C., J. A. Martz; N. C.,] JA.Auman; V.C., C.E Lutz. H.| P, W.E. Jee; V. H.,, W. Blaud ;] MofR.,J.H Puff; C. of E., Zettle ; K. of E., A. C. Ripka ; 8. H Robert Smith ; W.B, P. C Frank ; W. C., J. Kuhn ; Eps., G. L. Horner ; | Esq, F. LL. Walker; F. G., Jobu | Martz, Br.; 8. G, 8. Gross ; Represen- | tative to Grand Castle, John Kuhn. | The Castle was organized March, 1906, and has a membership of fifty-eight. CoN Habeas Corpus Hearing. The habeas corpus hearing in the | case of Kachic and Watson, charged | with the murder of John Kachie, Sat- urday afternoon, was largely attended by spectators from about Bellefonte, Bnow Bhoe and Clarence. The evi- | dence produced was of little conse- quence, it being the intention of the prosecution to divulge barely suf- ficient to hold the prisoners. he does the prosecutors—the Common- wealth—will be permitted to retain | The Dale Case Agnin. ‘Nothing new. No new promises Authorities occupied on the in-hold- ing the accus«| nurderers of Kachic No reason to think the Dale case ix | being neglected. Wait, patiently w The World and Reporter- 81 65 } Ougé dollar and sixty-five cents will | year, LOUALS Hnow but no sleighing. * Penn Literary ”’ will week. Rppenar Four below zero Wednesday morn. ing. Right smart Prothonotary Kimport accounts presented for confirmation by the court. About four inches of snow cold. not distarbed it Mis« Jennie Bartholomew, of Lock guest of her brother, W mew, in Centre Hall, Charles Auman, of the his. parents at Bpring Mills. Friday as the janitor, Grammar school fell over, spilling some of ita ealorifie contents. Aside from lwurning the floor the damage was nothing. Miss Mable Brown, assistant in the from & visit to Union absence Mise Brown was not able ta return tended. Mise Carrie M. Genizel perved | as assistant for Miss Brown During her took sick and when cause some ous ridicules or opposes you. A man who hus opinions of his own and the courage to advocate them will be sure to have opposition in this world because he runs across or cone trary to other people’s opinions : but Just keep right ahead if your cause is right and your conscience clear. Don’t worry about what other people say ; life is ton short for that. Some will abuse you through envy, others for the want of principle and some becuse they honestly differ from you; but if you keep right on openly, manfully and intelligently, and with your proper dignity of character, honesty of purpose and self-respect, those who differ from you will respect your opinions, LIST CORRECTIONS. THE COUNTRY HOUSE. A Room Apart That Should De Known ns the ce.” moat privately Fd home must comnuunicate with increasing fre- quency with the world outside, The coal man, the ice man, the automobile repair shop must be upbralded or ca- jolted. Reports must be reviewed, ac- counts kept, bills examined and the senders occasionally treated with a check From a room removed from the rest of the house one must speak with the railway station, settle with the expressman or deliberate with the chauffeur or coachman, for none of these things should disturb the tran- quillity of the home or the equanamity of guests, 1f the house is to minister to all the activities of a home It 18 high time that space be devoted to this mechanism of living. For want of a better term a room devoted to such a purpose may be called the “office” of the house. Ilere the telephone stands on a table that bears also the mis- cellaneous utensils and printed matter that are always wanted in a house when they cannot be found, Here are cookbooks, gardening books, diction- aries, time tables, while a few old a east or two, bits of Dresden, water colors and a few cherished pho- tographs relieve an otherwise hum- collection of necessities. Here pare and the Mysterious cup- ind drawers with and Out, \ CONTRAST. The arum ay 1 1 are placed ' 1 ¢ 1007 nnd English Women as They Cross nn Muddy Street. muddy the poises lke a wht, deftly raises han enough to show #1 skirt, the dainty hose ues, and without more and heel i the mud refusing feet that hardly at ion on it Landed on » other sid he gives her fine feath and passes as if just put He Cross a noes tiptoe to across, toe : % $ 3 feed 1. . ers a little shake » place that look on with shoes on at that momen Watch an Engl ly afterwar stone, stolidly contem immediate the curb standstill and muddy road Finally she JdJects a route. Then autiously, sh lifts her dress making sure that the tops of her slowly » puts her right foot out ater o00z ishwoman d She reaches comes to a dead 1 wy pintes the shoes are under cover; then, Plump ng over til the other with when shoes and muddy sofled skirts and soaked way. Nothing of their wpective nationalit nothing could be more amusing thar their m ways Trans French For St. Loui aracteristic oth From the ublie utual contempt for each s er Men's Hats and Women's Vells, “]l see here that voman writer wonders why a man always looks In his hat before he puts it on,” said the looked up from reflective man i his paper. *“ wre | what she sa x hat he most but That's t to see If the nd together ils head when expects to see remain a mystery, he looks for it, all the ime.’ will be at the he puts it why a woma f she'll tell me pulls down her veil and pu y up her mouth before call Ht square.” Side Whiskers, In her last novel, “The the Business" Mrs, Craig Dream and x, 1 regret to note, used the expression “side whisk ers.” The redundant “side” Is to be found also In Meredith, Dickens, the Richardson, Bronte, (Caine, Sims and Shorter, As a matter stated, the Corelli, of fact, otherwise least intelligent reader would take it for granted that the whiskers were worn on the side of the face, ag indeed is the usual practice. The terms “lip whisker” (mustache) and “chin whisk er” (beardette) are Americanisms.- Pall Mall Gazette Just Like Him, The Rev. Walter Colton, author of “Ship and Shore” and other books, gave a most forcible illustration of the character of an officer on board the ship to which he was attached as chap Toe officer was always meddling | with other people's business and was seldom In Lis own place. Consequently he was most unpopular with the sail ors. One of them, goaded to unusual irritation, sald one day, “I do believe that at the general resurrection the lieutenant will be found getting out of somebody else's grave.” unless The Soft Answer, “Johnny,” said the stern parent, “my father used to whip me when I be haved at the table as badly as you are doing.” “Well,” rejoined the precocious youngster, “I hope I'll never have to make a confession like that to my little boys.”—Chicago News. Effect of High Living. Goodman Gonrong-—Wake up, pard Wot ye gronnin’ about? Tuffold Knutd {rubbing hls eyes)—Gosh, but I've had a horrible dream! 1 thought I'd got a Job o' work an’ wuz doin’ the mani curin’ fur a octopus.—Chleago Tribune. A Restorative, fupplicant-1'ia faint from lack of food. Rich Lady (generously)-How dreadful! Here, smell my vinaigrette, Iti impossible to matoh a sample In g experience, pi A BRIDGE CURIOSITY. Odd Structure In Mexico Bullitt of Solid Mahogany. As mahogany Is among the most cosa ly woods in the world, it may well bs inferred that this tropical material is not very extensively employed in the construction of buildings, ete. A bridge constructed of solid mahogany is cer- tainly a rarity, a curlosity. There is one, claimed to be the only one in the world, built of that material, This structure is located in the department of Palenque, state of Chiapas, republic of Mexico. This district lies in the ex- treme southwestern part of Mexico, near the boundary line of Guatemala. This mahogany bridge is constructed entirely of that valuable wood except some {ron supports, braces and nalls that are necessary. The bridge spans the Rio Michol, and {ts total length, in- cluding approaches, exceeds 150 feet, while the width is fifteen feet. It is used by both teams and pedestrians, and, although somewhat rude and primitive in construction, it is very substantial. None of the timbers of the flooring were sawed, for in that region there are vo sawmills, but were hewn and split. In that section of old Mexico there are several very large rubber planta- tions, and mahogany trees are quite common. In clearing away the tropical forests for setting out the young rub- ber trees the mabogany growths are also cut down and removed. As this wood is quite abundant, some of it was used in building the bridge.—American Inventor. MEANINGS OF CALIBER. Either the Dismeter of a Gun or Its Length Divided by Diameter. There Is surely no word in menclature of guns, big and which caused and is much confusion in the lay 1 word caliber. The I use of the ter: tival sens to Indicate length, as wher » BAY § BO caliber six | : The word cal applied to arti} lery signifies essentially and at all times the the bore of a gun. A gun, then, i neh caliber is a gun whose bore is just six Inches. For convenlence an because the power of n gun when once its bore has been de 1s so greatly in the bh of the gun the no- little, causing so ind as the has confusion ari yv from the upon its | rt artiller 5 are n, as mount. is a trifle gth and liber gun. ms the caliber hs of an Inch, ber or 32 « rall- the bore is in diameter.—8cl- Tangled. Your nate, wom? At present my in this state. In Miss Smith, my in three states it is husband's name.” I have a trunk in a nelzghboring ate, where 1 am getting a divorce from my present husband “Then you' “T'm m ind Mass at present?’ New York swreed In South ka, Oklahoma nist in three nan in The Last Word. “Having the last word.” sald 2 naval officer, “ren {f a story I heard not long ago in man died, and a clergyman gaged to offer a eulogy. This worthy minister prepared & sermon of exceeding length and strength, but just before he entered the parlor to deliver it he thought that It might be advisable to learn what the dead man’s last words had been. So he turned to one of the weeping young- er sons and asked: “My boy, can you tell me your fa- ther's Inst words? “‘He didn’t have none,’ the boy re plied. ‘Ma was with him to the end.” A ceria was ei Absentminded. La Fontaine, the famous fable poet, was a most Meet. Ing one day in a saloon a young man, he was so favorably impressed by his conversation that he expressed his ad- miration for him in the most flattering terms. “But he Is your own son!” ex- claimed a guest in astonishment. “Is it 807" replied the poet. “Then I am the more delighted to make his ac qualintance.” absentminded man, A Remedy. “For some time past I've been buy- ing a dozen eggs every week at this store, and I invariably find two bad ones In every dozen. Bomething's got to be done about It,” sald an Irate housekeeper, . “Well,” sald the new clerk nalvely and with a quiet smile, “mebbe If you only bought half a dozen you'd only get one bad one’ -Grocer's Literary Gazette, It Lasts, When a man writes a proposal of marriage 5 a woman he has written something that will last forever. A woman never destroys a letter that contains an offer of marriage.—~Atchi- son Globe, To live long It Is necessary to live slowly. ~Clcero. / ———— I AIA The enables the dootor to all hi coders. emp £8 rid : osha a — CA ke Chamberinin's CUbugh ,Hemedy a» Medicine for Uhlidren, In buying medicine for Remedy, Is lie f iw Biv nym Cough feom it, follow, [It i= colds, wird =11r 10 intended especinlty for coughs, Group sud whagoping cough, sud there is no belier medicive in the world for these not only given as thisenses It in # sure cure for croup, but, rtoupy the 1 ol whieh BOO us the ¢ ¢ ugh nppears, will Whooping ¢ prevent All. ugh is when this directed, It CC algerond tetuedy ™ KiIVen wns entilaitus ho opium or other harmful droge, many be given as confidentially to a baby as to au adult, For sale by The Star Btore, Centre Hall; F. A, Carson, Potters Mills ; C. W. Bwarlz, Tusseyville. wr. GRAIN MAKKET. BY sivas sssens ivan BAIIEY cou sesrss rexssrssnns PRODUCE AT STOKES, 08 Butter Potatoes 40 Egws........ RA” RITE US FOR our illustrated cata- logue of 1 sieitd Household specialties Special prices 0 agents THE HOME BPE CIALTY CO. 815617 Equitable Building, Baitl- more, Md (Jat The Price of Peace, The terrible itching and smarting, incident to certain skin diseases, is al- instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain's Balve., Price 25 cents For sale by The Star Store, Centre Hall; F. A. Carson, Potters Mills: C., W. Bwartz, Tusseyville, most I ——— A MS A man can’t be in two places at once unless he is an office holder. } CLD YOUR CROWN oy ; ; Lire . The Index... Bellefonte, Pa. For Business Men : THE COUFFIELD UNIT SECTIONAL FILES The “Best Card Index { System in the World. Let us explain its methods and’ quote you prices. EEE ES — — me SR J. T. LEE & SON Hoes fixed up a shop back of the house on rear of lot, we are now pre- pared to do all kinds of... Wood Work, Painting and Trimming, We make a specialty of RIMMING AND SPOKEING 4 4 WHEELS, 4 4 Both on Buggies & Wagons, Spokes and rims alwsys on hand and dry. WE REPAIR AND PAINT CHAIRS, ETC, House an Barn Painting CENTRE HALL, PA, | - Ne Just received a fine line of Shirts, price 50 cents A fine line of Four-in-hand Ties, at 25 cents KREAMER & SON, Centre Hall, Pa. 9999999 VDD VYVT 20ND VDDD YRBD > | | a Lindi dipped Bip dl 3 Bedindidindidindindidindindindidndidndn dodo dnl A Sd d A FF 3% 3 YY Apadrmie FY Ae ¥ Lend Us Your Ear, Mr. Farmer! You will never regret it, EAA AE AA EAR EE RAE REAR RRR ERD TELEPHONE SERVICE IN YOUR HOME A Protection A Convenience A Necessity. Rates very reasonable. Let us explain our Co-oper- ative plan to you. Telephone, write or call upon the manager, PENNSYLVANIA TELEPHONE CO Contract Dept., Bellefonte, Pa. TT TT Tr rT rr rT Ir rr rrr rr rr rr rr rr rrr rrr rrr rrr TY er — VNB Ne GLOVES and MITTENS 4 Io YY OF ALL KINDS ¢ ‘ Men's Leather Work Gloves...Men’s Woolen ¢ Mittens and Gloves...Boys’ Mittens with fur 4 backs for school...Ladies’ and Childrens’ all ¢ Wool Mittens and Golf Gloves. ¢ 4 é 4 ® NNN VN ¢ F. E. WIELAND, Linden Hall 299% % 99% HNN NNN NNN NN NNN GOOD MAN in each county 0 represent and sdvertise coopers { tive department. pul out samples, etc. Old es EASTW ARD { tablished business house Cash salary $21.00 = | weekly, expense money advanced | permanent 4 | 2 ETATIONS. | position. Our reference, Bankers National Bank men. 1 — o————— | of Chicago, capital $2000 000, Address Manager, M | AM Ar. I TRE OOLUMBIA HOUSE, Chicago, lilinnis, 3 12 50 | 8 50... Bell { Desk No. 1 10 12 40 | » 07 112 87 § O08 § 12 85 TF DELLEFONTE CENTRAL RA Week Dars, ILROAD WESTWARD ER efonte., ~Oolevilie Morris : Stevens. " Wiji2sism ~Hunters... Hay Press forSale|:: :z|:5 "ans » “ | 3 : 24 Briarly.. 5 45 201820 Waddies.... 8 07 ...Krumrine.. 00 ...Btate College. 7 45 Struble, 40)... .Bloomsdor!.. BS Pine Grove Crm ag be ENE ———————————— BS tt eR oh 0 08 60 50 60 00 80 60 o., 48 83 83 Ge RERER » 10 © 12 i 10 87 5 il 10 | 814 251 The undersigned offer for sale an ELI STEEL HAY PRESS a steam wininie Bibbs in first class condition. It is OME FOR RENT—The 1 aulemiandd offers ber home, located in Potter township. one mile east of Centre Hill, known as the Fred- erick Arnold homestead, for rent. The place contains about thirty-three acres, thirty acres of which are clear and in good tiith. The build. ings and fenoes are in good condition, and there is abundant fruit and water. Will five entire possession, as it i& my tion of leaving home. Will rent for cash BARAH TRESSLER, Bpfing Mills, BR. £. 4. 4. power press and will be sold at a sacri- fice. Inquire at Boalsburg or Centre Hall. inten- J. H. & S. E. Weber piat— « 1 { Centre HIlL) a Tablets, all sizes, at the Reporter offen i ALTOCNA MORNING TRIBUNE 3*<°°°77o=s"c beets =ee* Unquestionably The Best Daily Paper in Central] Pennsylvania... The Best . . . MORNING NEWSPAPER In Pittsburg is The Post x Newsdealers Sell it, 000000000000006000000000 Why not advertise in the Reporter $3.00 per year in advance Full associated Press Telegraph Service which means all the news of the world. state interest. depart- 200809900002 90000000000000 ALTOONA TRIBUNE COMPANY _ | ALTOONA, PA, | i | on The Weekly Tribune Contains all the important events of the week, Published Fridays at $1.00 per year in advance, ~mr «The undersigned all kinds of i Oe nian gosranteed , sad Price Te aber From now on, terms All having indebtedcoss to the under wre to make tement, FOMEIOUN. L. MCCLENANAN, "5 Centre Hall, Pa. Cut off that cough with e's Expectorant and prevent pneumoni > bronchitis and consumption. " The world’s Standard Throat and hg Get it of your droggnt 1nd Keep it always rudy in the hows, _
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers