avo ey PAS SNe gE THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 19807, TRAIN SCHEDULE Trains leave Centre Hall on the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, P. R. R. System, as follows : EAST... W178. mm, and 235 p.m, WEST . 15a. mm. and 8.36 p. m. The silvery sardine you will find In water and on land ; He's very spry when in the sea, But when on shore—he’s canned. ens A Rain Fall, Heavy The rain fall on Baturday and Sun- day wasquite heavy, the total being almost an inch and three quarters. All crops were greatly benefited by it. mai — The Pink Label, The subscription list of the Reporter was corrected this week. If you paid subscription between the dates of April 9nd and June 2nd, the credit should appear on the pink label, If you find an error, please report at once, ces mn fel Oats and Barley at Discount The oats und barley crop is certain to be at a great discount. Few, if any, fields planted to this grain has an &p- pearance at present of making more than a fifty per cent. crop. Much of the grain, due no doubt to the contin ued cold weather, failed to germinate, evelop a plant, at least to O or pf — Over 50-Foot Embankment Mr. and Mrs, Arthur two little children, east of Centre Hall, had a experience Monday evening at Spring Mills. They were traveling buggy, and on ascen 1ill this side of Spring Mills, the horse they driving took at an ergine and stone- erusher standing in the stone quarry. The animal began edging toward the Grove and thrillin in a Lo] 13s » 3 ding the 1 were fright bank, and fin the fifty-foot embankment. The four 4 i remained mveyance they where the forty-five degree slope terminates a four or more foot perpendicular Here they were violently thrown from the buggy, the driver, Mr. Grove, landing occupants the wehicle seated in the © until reached a point in wall on the horse, Upon picking themselves up it was found that Mr. Grove received a scalp wound, which bled profusely, and a number of | the children vehicle was demolished. Grove and The \ ruises. Mrs, escaped ipjury. ME LOCALS Luse is done The new dwelling of John being painted, the work by Mr. Luse aud brot being hers, of Harrisburg, which * the Charles P, Tredwell, is corn Lor the train on Mr. Reamer | man with the Mrs, was at the home M. Rearick, in Centre the family io Salona. I IUARNY Years was pun sh." of Middleburg, Mrs. J. assisting fsainh Walters, of her sister, Hall, preparing fo move Lo Rev, James Hamil H James W, from bis i Minnesota, Presbyterian College. on of Dr Boal, is al ht : al presen asl field at Hinkley, Last Babbath he filled the Slate appointment at Miss Tillie Keller, clerk in the Cen- tre Hall post and ber mother, Mrs, William Keller, Wednesday went to Berks county Mrs. Keller, quaintances there. M41 0iii0e, Reading on a visit io relatives, the she ¢ home of many saoc- native is and has While standing on the trestle, near the Bellefonte Harry Helms was by the rear coach of whaler, shore, and aside drakeman ofl it bis train into deep t» the from the complete water soaking he gol he was none Lhe Worse. station, § + i ouited from Young Heims swam Mrs, Arthur Kerlin is the delegate from the Centre Hall Lutheran Missionary Society to the missionary conference now in session at Hart. leton. Bhe left for Mifflinburg Tues. day with her father, Jacob Wagner, where the two remained uvutil the gpening of the conference. On Memorial Day Mrs. W. H. Kreamer fell the full length of the stairway leading to the second story of her home, Bhe was wearing a new pair of shoes, and in taking the first step to descend hier foot slipped. The result was many bruises from head to foot, but fortunately no bones were broken, A subscriber writes and says he used to see the local time table published in the Reporier, but now Le is at a loss to know the schedule on which the trains run, The time tables are omit- ted simply because the Reporter can not aflord to do so without remunera- tion, and the railroad company thinks itself too poor to pay for the advertis- ing. The many friends of BR. Linn Eme- rick, formerly of Smullton, will be sorry to learn of the serious accident that befell him recently at the Btate Forestry Academy at Mount Alto, While driving a horse and wagon in the nurrery of the academy the hon ran away and Mr. Kmerick was thrown from the wagon and dragged over rough cinder. His arm was dislocated at the elbow, several ligaments being torn, his ankle severely sprained, be- sides several deep cuts on his face sud + hands, The injuries will confine him to his bed for 8 month or more, wT ———. GOVERNOR APPROVES BILLS, Governor Stusrt Signed a Large Number of Bills, which Are Now Laws. The following bills were recently signed by the Governor, and are Now laws : Extending the time for the collec: tion of tax for which collectors may become liable after the expiration of the warrant for one year, Prohibiting a borough officer or councilman from being interested di- rectly or indirectly in munieipal con- tracts, Declaring indigent and entitled to the benefit of the poor laws the head of a family or person quarantined and by reason thereof unable to maintain themselves or families. The Dunsmore bill, for the establiah- ment of a railroad commission to in- vestigate and correct railroad abuses in Pennsylvania, and the four Rey- nolds bills, to enforce the Constitution and prevent discrimination in car service or rates, the absorption of com- peting lines and the operation of mines and mills by railroads. Providing for a shade tree commis- sion of three freeholders in each city, borough and first-class township, who shall have control of all shade trees therein. Making it lawful for school boards to fix not less than two periods of not less than one week each during which beginners may enter school. ‘' Be- ginner,” under this act, means any child of school age who cannot read and write, Providing for the acquiring by mu- nicipalities of water plants and sys- tems from private owners. Providing for the advancement of cases on the trial list of Common Pleas Courts, where a new trial is granted, a judgment of non-suit taken off, and where, on appeal, a judgment is re versed and a venire facias de novo awarded. I'ne Tustine pure food bill. The measure provides punishment for the gale of any adulterated food or con- fectionery with the proviso that no action shall be sustained for violation of the act when the article alleged to be adulterated is not adulterated with- in the meaning of the Federal food and drug law of 15086. Giving electric railway companies the night of eminent domain, provided they obtain the consent of 51 per cent. of the property owners along the pro- posed route of extension. Increasing the pay of jurors from $2 to §2 50 a day and witnesses from $1 to $1.50 a day. Authorizing a widow to accept real estate in partition or compete in bid- ding therefor. i A A ————————— Three Bells Installed Bell telephones were installed in the residence of D. J. Meyer, in the gen- eral store of J. Frank Bmith and in of Robert D. Foreman, the senior member of the firm of Fore- man & Smith. the residence semen —— Letter to Weber Brothers, Hall, Pa. Why do people send us such tales as this? D. G. Bmith, Madison, Fla., had his mother’s house painted Devoe 11 years ago, and the house looks better today than other houses painted with other paint 3 or 4 years ago. They are full of goodwill for Devoe, Yours truly, F. W. Devoe & Co., 28 New York. Kreamer & Bon sell our paint, Cent re Dear Sirs ; - li Spring Mills. Wm. Meyer and wife were Millheim visitors on Friday. Boyd Auman, last week, made a business trip to Nittany Valley. Dr. P. W. Leitzell, of Portland Mills, visited in Hpring Mills last week, Jared Hazel and wife, of Bellefonte, were Hpring Mills visitors on Baturday, Miss Hadie Miller, of Centre Mills, is at present visiting at the home of C, E. Zeigler. T. M. Gramley Thursday returned from Bunbury, where he had been as a delegate to Lutheran Bynod, As nearly everybody had gone to Millheim or Asronsburg on Memorial Day, Bpring Mills seemed like a de- sorted town, If it had not been for the patriotism of the little boys, who formed a drum corps, the people would hardly have known that it was Deco- ration Day, as there were no other demonstrations. A large delegation from the Bpring Mills Lodge, I. O. O. F., went to Mill- heim and Aaronsburg Thursday, and participated in the Memorial services. The exercises at Aaronsburg being es. pecially attractive, are worthy of no- tice. The parade was made up of chil dren from the various Bunday schools, the G. A. R. Post, members of the I. 0. O. F. and K. G. E. Lodges and the band. After the services in the ceme- tery the large procession marched to the Reformed church, which was filled to its utmost capacity, where Prof, C. H. Albert, of Bloomsburg, delivered the oration. The citizens of Aarons burg certainly deserve the highest con- gratulations in securing the services of Prof, Albert, as it was a treat to hear him. Your correspondent must say that he never heard 8 more able and appropriate Memorial address deliver ed in Penus Valley. Prof. Albert cer- tainly capped the climax, : THE STRENUOUS LIFE. One Day's Work of a Sixteenth Cen- tury Law Student, If law students of the present day are laboring under the delusion that when the world was younger there was Jess law to study and more relaxation for young men of thelr class, let them read the following extract that an English contemporary has taken from the “Memoirs of Henrl de Mesmes,’ descriptive of a day's work of a law student at Toulouse in the sixteenth eentury: “We used to rise from bed at 4 o'clock, and, having prayed to God, we went at b o'clock to our studies, our big books under our arms, our Ink- horns and candles in our hands, We heard all the lectures without inter. mission till 10 o'clock rang. Then we dined after having hastily compared during a half hour our notes of the lectures. “After dinner we read as a recrea- tion Sophocles or Aristophanes or Eu- ripides and sometimes Demosthenes, Cicero, Virgll or Horace. At ] o'clock to our studies, at § back to our dwell ing places, there to go over and verify passages cited In the lectures until 6; then supper, and after supper we read Greek or Latin “On holy days we went to high mass and vespers; the rest of the days, a little music and walks." SKILL OF THE ANCIENTS, The Old Timers Apparently Did Many Things Better Than We. “We are losing all our secrets in this shabby age,” an architect sald. “If we keep on, the time will come when we'll be able to do nothing well. “Take, for Instange, steel. We claim to make good steel, yet the blades the Baracens turned out hundreds of years ago would cut one of our own blades in two like butter, “Take ink. Our modern ink fades In five or ten years to rust color, yet the ink of mediseval manuscripts is as black and bright today as It was 700 years ago. “Take dyes. The beautiful blues and reds and greens of antique oriental rugs have all been lost, while In Egyp- tian tombs we find fabrics dyed thou sands of years ago that remain today brighter and purer in hue than any of our modern fabrics. “Take my specialty, buildings. We can't bulld as the ancients did. The secret of thelr mortar and cement is lost to us. Thelr mortar and cement were actually harder and more durable than the stones they bound together, whereas ours—horrors!” — New York Press. Presence of Mind. The Duke of Wellington was writing in his brary when, chancing to look up, he saw a stranger near him who had entered unheard. “Who are you, and what do yom want?’ asked the duke. “I am Apollyon and have been sent to kill you.” The nobleman realized that he bad an insane person to deal with, but he was equal to the emergency. With the utmost carelessness he inquired, “Got to do it tonight?” “No.” “1 am very glad, as I am quite busy now. Just send me word before you come again, and I shall be ready for you,” politely bowing the crazy person out of the room. Shortly the fellow was safe In the bedlam whence he had managed to escape. The Home of a Genius. Beethoven was born in a small house in Bonn. His father had Inherited the vice of drinking, and often Beethoven and his younger brother were obliged to take thelr Intoxicated father home. He was never known to utter an un- kind word about the man who made his youth so unhappy, and he never failed to resent it when a third person spoke uncharitably of his father's frality. Young Beethoven was thus taught many a severe lesson In the hard school of adversity, but his trials were not without advantage to him. They gave to his character that iron texture which upheld him under his heaviest burdens. The Influence of Books. Books have always a secret influence on the understanding. We cannot at pleasure obliterate ideas. He that reads books of science, though without any desire fixed of Improvement, will grow more knowing. He that enter. tains himself with moral or religious treatises will imperceptibly advance in goodness, The ideas which are often offered to the mind will at last find a lucky moment when it Is disposed to receive them.—Samuel Johnson. Precious Spices. There are portions of the globe today where spices are worth more than gold or silver. “In the arctic region spices are essential to health and happiness,” wrote an explorer. “A dash of pepper, a pinch of ground cinnamon, a little nutmeg or a plece of ginger root re- vives the jaded appetite wonderfully in the north. I have seen shipwrecked sallors fight over an.ounce of spices with more flerceness than they ever did for money.” This One Especially. From a Paris paper we take the fol lowing conversation in a police court: The President-It appears from your record that you have been thirty-seven times previously convicted, The Pris oner (sententiously)-Man 1s not per. fect. —London Globe, Man is greater than a world, than systems of worlds, There Is more mys tery In the unlon of soul with body than In the creation of a universe. Henry Giles. —————— I HE ——— Advertise in the Reporter, HHO $19 HE WON Incident That Shrewdness of A number of YEuirs jamin 1°, uo! 18 1 guest of ln Brooklyn the rule of the panies compelling CASE. fiustrates Ben Butler. ro General Ben &4n visit Lie noted COLL tiring his treet rallwa)y conductors to regis PABBCHZErS entered the Tw 0 or {er fares a8 80o0n us the cars and before fares fHe- tually collected, three afterward he represented the in a damage suit for $15,000 in Brooklyn street r the defendant. The pr ipal for the company was the conductor of the car on which the accident red, and his testimony was s as to make things look bad for Butler's client nt Ih enlled thegunusi rule he hind rem { rs before, an on Cross exnmi “Your 31 up fares ns the car, do “RBuppos were years which a company was witness occur i Mr air line. Do you TO REPEL A HOW Carrier Had a Rem Vicious Curs. Letter to preserve t sex and Fas quake. and Hertfordshire have an eve county, ties, deal with them as t! and. far the rest of the coun ou pleaseth.’ The Magazine tells an Eng ion who bewall of Cornhill Hshwoman of high stat ed to a friend the loss by death of a somewhat {il bred but extremely wealthy neighbor who had been very liberal in his help to her country chari. ties. “Mr. X. Is dead,” sald she, "He was #0 good and kind and helpful to me in all sorts of ways, Ile was 80 vulgar, poor. dear fellow, we could not know him In London, but we shall meet in heaven" Odd Coincidence, Not many years since a pastor in New York state read in his pulpit this portion of a hymn: Well, the delightful day will come When my dear Lord shall take me home, And 1 shall see his face Just then he was stricken with paral yals and died in a few moments. Thir ty-three years before in the same pul pit another pastor was reading the very same stanza when he, too, was stricken and died. —8erap Book. Advertisement, “Why do sou allow yourself to be posted at your club?” “Well,” answered the easy going youth, “it's a large club and a swell one, and no one would know 1 was a member of it unless I got posted now and then! -Washington Star. os MI Read the Reporter, IPCPPREeO00 YR SSRI GO600RNIGP0CR0OIEBRION0LDO0C0O0TBORQ 0) A Totter Cured, ith tetter for two or three years, | Chamberlain's medicines giv M. In The Btar Btore, ‘re Hall ; Ladies’ Mousquetaire Lisle Gloves 2 clasps, 20 in,, in white and black ; also black elbow length silk gloves BLACK PATENT LEATHER and WHITE CANVAS OXFORD SHOES A full line of Ladies’ Underwear in muslin, cambric and gauze, Skirts trimmed in lace and em- broidery, Corset Covers and Night Gowns, Also a special line of Swiss, Nainsook and Muslin, ' Lace and Inser] tions for Waists and Skirts A full line of 1} woods in Plaids and Polka-d H. F. ROSSMAN SPRING MILLS, PA. COS eeUeRANPesrweetaed 808 Dress Ancy drill ind OUR SPRING LINE OF GOODS ARE ON OUR SHELVES FOR YOUR INSPECTION. CALL AND SEE. C. A. KRAPE Spring Mills, Pa. Wanted Lard, Side Meat, Onions, Chickens, Fresh Eggs. | Highest Cash prices paid for same deliver- ed to Creamery, Howard Creamery Corp. CENTRE HALL, PA. i i ed IANOS and ORGANS... The LESTER Piano is a strict- ly high grade instrument endorsed by the New England Conservatory Boston, Mass., Broad Street Con- servatory, Philadelphia, as being unsurpassed for tone, touch and finish, 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, Ask for catalogue and prices, BAAN C. E. ZEIGLER SPRING MILLS, - - - PA. BPRS DVHBOB OOP ODPORSOBOSS “urniture! If you are think- ing of buying Fur- niture, buy it now. It will never be any than cheaper at present. If don’t know where to buy you let us tell you of a good place ; that is at Rearick’s. # Sa SHERWIN & WILLIAMS PAINT Is the best paint made. We sell it. 99% VO BUD 2 > Rearick’s FurnitureStore Centre Hall, Pa. SHORT TALKS BY L. T. COOPER. NERVOUSNESS. Nervousness makes people miserable, blue, and unhappy. They think something terrible is going to happen. At night they toss and worry and are not rested. They tire easily and havn't much en- ergy. They think many things ere the matter with theme. Consumption, Kid. ney trouble, or twenty other dis. cases, It's just stomach trouble, nothing else in the world. Two bottles fae MES, W. J. 5CHAURER. stomach in shape in three weeks. times. pear. it happen a thousand times. Then all nervousness will disap- I know this too, because I've seen Here's a let- f “My system was badly run down and my stomach and nerves in an awful shape. I could not digest my food, was - had heard so much of your New Discovery medicine that I began taking it. Relief and strength and happiness were wonderful. 1am no longer nervous, my, good and I eat Mrs. W. J. Schaurer, 220 Guthrie St., Louisville, Ky. We sell Cooper's New Discovery. It makes tired, worn out, nervous people happy. - J. D. MURRAY, Druggist Centre Hall, Pa. Every Man His Own Doster. The average man cannot afford to employ a physician for every ailment or slight injury that may occur in his family, nor can he afford to neglect them, as #0 slight an injury as the scratch of a pin has been known to cause the loss of a limb. Hence every msn must from necessity be his own doctor for this class of silments. Boo cess often depends u prompt treat. ment, which can only be kept at hand, Chaukbetiaiis Remedies have | been in the mai ket for many years enjoy a god reputation. y Jhamberiain’s Colic, Cholera and Diatrhoen Remedy for bowel ocom- plain Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup and whooping h. Chamberlain's Pain Balm ( an anti.