i , - — eC ml THE CENTRE REPORTER THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1907. TRAIN SCHEDULE Trains leave Centre Hall on the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, P. R. R. System, as follows : EAST... «178, mm, and 2.85 p.m, a) WEST .......cconnn8 15 8. m. and 3.86 p. m, Pays the ited Rose, The site of Zion church, a (German Reformed institution, at Manhein, Lancaster county, was presented by a German nobleman named Henry William Steigel, the condition being that the rental should be ared rose paid annually. Twice the rental was demanded during the life of the baron, and then all was forgotten until 1891, when the custom was revived, and since the First of Roses is annually observed. Last Sabbath the occasion was observed, and after commenting on the aflair the Philadelphia Record stated that Bumner V, Hosterman, £8q., ( formerly of Centre Hall ) made payment of the rose. Afterward the congregation filed before the altar and deposited a red rose. The flowers were later sent to the Lancaster hospitals. .-—— Kelth's Theatre, The bill at Keith's Chestnut Theatre, Philadelphie, this week one sure to be long remembered, as it contains many remarkable num- bers. Heading the list is George H. Primrose, graceful r, and his minstrel boys. An- other is variety’s offering in the charming Miss May Tully, assisted de A. Demarest & Co, in a play, Look! Listen !”’ The most swagger musical act of the times Nireet a 80 America’s most dan? newest oy Viau one-act hi Stop 1 is Lasky, Rolfe and Company's Edw, F. Rey- nard, America’s premier ventriloquist, his famous I iil nds, while entertainer and wit, and mechanical figures create much merri- Glinseretti troupe of European acrobats are playing a wel- 1 many other return, i popular ment. The great are at COLE here favorites a JPERTIDR this : B pay house this week, a——— fi escmmm——— LOCALS, WwW. H. Foust sale, Saturday, 22nd inst. Runkle will asuc- at Red Mill, Constable tioneer the In this issue is reprinted the school teachers new minimum salary act. "A stone from King Solomon's temple, 15x15 inches, will be the corner stone of the Masonic temple to be erected in Sunbury. Mrs. D. Hesse, of Linden Hall, and daughter, Mrs. T. C. Heims, of Osceola Mills, were in Cenfre Hall Monday calling on friends and acquaintances. entre Hall, former- ash BSlore, at Bpring accepted an agency with the thers Shoe Company, started his first £1 | on morning. most beautiful day, ut the I'he Ltheart by his side, seated looks dust-covered pleasure Young man, Li DS BWes in a rubber-tired run-about, just a8 happy the richest tourist in his Bs automobile, fhe White Rock Lime Btone Com- pany, whose plant is located at Pleas ant Gap, is doing an extensive busi- ness, Their shipments each day are from eight to twelve car loads of lime and stone. Merchaut W. H. Noll, of Pleasant Gap, is one of the parties in- the compspy, and gives considerable of his time and attention to the concern, terested in Samuel W. Penoypacker, the gov- ernor who attempted to paste shut the eyes of taxpayers by giving them a glimpse of the capitol, might arrapge for another series of penny-a- mile excursious. The Palace of Graft would highly these June days to even those who viewed it last year. The tax payer knows more about the contracts, the con- tractors and the complement of officers who permitted the state to be skinned, slate be interesting Perry O. Btiver, editor of the Free- port ( Illinois ) Bulletin, was a most pleasant caller Baturday Having come from the west. Mr. SBtiver is a native of Potter township, and although here but a short time, be made a trip to the south side of Potter township to see the old homstead and the people of that seetion., Mr. Stiver, like almost all the young men who left Penns Valley and located in the west, has succeeded in more ways than in dol- lars and cents to reflect credit on his birth place. As was scheduled in last week's issue of this paper, Rev. B, F. Beiber, of Milton, last Bunday filled the ap- pointments in the Lutheran churches at Centre Hall, Tusseyville and Spring Mills, and at each place the congregn- tions were quite large. Rev. Bsiber just entered the ministry, having graduated from Bucknell University and Gettysburg Theological Beminary, The reader who had the pleasure of attending the services conducted by the young man, will agree with the writer that he was instructed and is better for having observing the hour of devotion. And this is the purpose in view of the consecrated minister, Even the bandsomest umpire wears a mask, Hens lay eggs for their masters, but belligerent roosters lay for esch other, BRANCH 00. NO. 18, Thirteen Telephones on Rural Line Be. tween Centre Hall and Farmers Mills, The rural telephone line between Centre Hall and Farmers Mills, enact- ed by Branch Co, No, 18, The Patrons Rural Telephone Company, is com- pleted, and the thirteen telephones along the line installed. The pole line, including the side line, is about nine miles in length, the extreme termicus being the home of 'Bquire M. L. Rishel. The pole line leads along the Keller, or middle road, to Farmers Mills, and connects almost every farm house on the route. The telephone subscribers, all of whom are stockholders except the last named, are, M. L. Rishel, Samuel Frederick, Joseph K. Bitner, W. D. Bartges, Arthur Grove, Philip Durst, H. E. Homan, John E. Rishel, Frank W. Decker, D. K. Keller, Wm. Homan, James A. Keller, John W, Conley. mein Children's pay, Both the auditorium and Sabbath school room were filled at 10:80 Bab- bath morning by the Presbyterians and their friends who joined them in celebrating Childreg’s Day, An ex- cellent program, prepared by the Pres- byterian Board of Publication and Sabbath Behool Work, was used with some additional music and recitations by the little ones. The program renderel was as follows: He Anthem, ** Hosanna,” choir. Prayer by the pastor. Responsive reading, Psalm 96, ‘* Nine little pilgrims "— Exercise by nine children, assisted by choir, Recitation, "For the sake of others." Herbert Goodhart. Song, “The earth song.’ Recitation, “A Dorothy Ruble, Recitation, “Bunshine day,” Catherine Ruble, Recitation, “If I ouly knew,” Nweetwood, is flllea with little bird tells,” for a rainy Ida Boog, * The children's mission," the children, Recitation, * Down by the brook," James Lingle, Solo, Miss Roxanna Brisbin. Recitation, ** Little Christel.” Ruble, Anthem, ** We praise Thee O Lord.” choir, Recitation, ** A little boy's dream,” James BSweetwood, tecitation, “ Granny's grace,” rie Sweetwood. Song, ‘* The children’s hosanna, Duet, Carrie Bweetwood and Ruth Ruble. Male Quartet, Messrs, Rearick, Ishler and Arney, Responsivejreading, Matt. Hong, ' Come with gladness.’ Ruth Car- Crawford, ay y 2146-18 Pastor's address, Recitation, ** The beth Bweetwood, Duet, shine,” Mrs, Leroy ). Benner, offering,” Eliza the sun- Mrs. “ Roses kissed by Rearick, (i. Benediction. Much praise is due the various com- mittees and their assistants, as well as the children, for the skill and patience which brought their labor of love to a successful issue, taste, The decors- tions were beautiful, ropes of spruce, banks of fern, great jars of wild szalea and snowballs being the chief fes- tures. There were also some garden favorites which seldom wait fora June festival, such as columbine, lillies-of the-valley and for-get-me-nots, The music was prepared under the direction of the church organist, Miss Mabel Arpey, and Mr, Crawford and was highly anpreciated. The recita- tioos of the children were well chosen and carefully prepared. Considering their extreme youth and inexperience they did remarkably well. oh AA ——— Snowball Fight in Jane, During a snow flurry at Homewood aud vicinity, in Beaver county, Wed. nesday of last week, when three inch. es of suow fell, almost the entire pop ulation of the town turned out and engaged in a June snowball scrim mage. At Centre Hall snow, it was too cold to i ————————— Every Man His Own Doctor, The average man cannot aflord to employ a physician for every ailment or slight injury that may oceur in his family, nor can he afford to neglect them, as so slight an Injury as the scratch of a pin has been known to cause the loss of a limb. Hence every man must from necessity be his own doctor for this class of ailments. Bue- cess often depends upon prompt treat ment, which can only be kept at hand. Chamberlain’s Remedies have been in the matket for many years and enjoy a good reputation. ‘hamberlain’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for bowel com- plaints. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough. CBamboriain’s Pain Balm ( an anti. septic liniment) for cuts, bruises, burns, sprains, swellings, lame back and rheumatic pains, Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets for eonstipation, billcusness and stomach troubles, Chamberlain's Balve for diseases of the skin, One bottle of each of these prepara tions costs but $1.25. For sale The Btar Btore, Centre Hall ;” F, A, Carson, Potters Mills ; C. W. Swartz, Tussey ville, Many a man doesn’t know which side his bread Is buttered on unless it is buttered on both sides, GLASS FOR WINDOWS Art of the Man Who Manipulates the Blowpipe. SHAPING THE MOLTEN MASS. The Juggler Before the Fiery Furnace Must Have Skill and Strength and Dexterity—The Flattening and Clean- ing Process, In different towns in the gas belt of Kansas there are great factories where window glass is made, It is esting process, Entering the factory, bins of sand, carbon mixed together in a fine powder ready to be dumped by a swinging crane, 250 pounds at a time, into the crucible tank of melting glass near by At hand also are heaps of broken glass the trimmings and debris of the fae tory. These are melted up and used again, The furnace fire, fed by gas, gl a brilliant white The crucibles of baked clay are bath ed in this heat of these crucibles a from time to time an inter great Or 1 f1is0 =800 degrees placid Belgian the mixture carbon and lime until, makes 000 tons of molten gla this moiten gl the furnace that their the other 5 Lie on blowpipes to use The Bel his eyes from the flery light, re. traveling tall ders, You red ed 0 uow the end of the h it enter fu mber aven ft wil ROL very warm, thre ud greater it finnil 8 OL a Ki In a section of the oven so hot that the gla re i slightly soft #0 that a teh itor heat iooth and enough man by reaching into ith n long handled scraper can easily smooth it out flat. When this has | revolving the oven w the great stone which it has been flatten Ing wheels it of the oy It is given lying while around to a cooler £1 a little push and slides off which travels slowly through the sections of the oven, on to an iron frame V rraduaally and cool the cool enong with tory where the blowers are, if appro for some highly spectacular scene. bobbing and crouchin ong the dark rafters. Breath is preclous where it to m tily dressed men hurry here and carrying great of soft gla white as to throw out a slight vio strange OWS up am is no ta is used wads glow Each m ette against a dark see the furnace side of him black sill ground if h the furnace, Possibly the most picturesque part it is place where the blows takes the lump of glass with its cavit possibly eighteen {1 »8 long and s all rr “hil ¥ fully increases that inflating it with breath until it fully as large as himself. He stands before the open door of a furnace A swinging be tween him and the fire. The screen is notched, on which he may rest his blowplpe with its long glass weight at the end. testing the cylinder so, be may push it Into the flery furnace if it has grown slightly hard or by a movement draw it out again The melted glass is taken by a man called a “gatherer” on the end of a blowpipe—that is, a hollow crowbar like instrument The glass to be fifty sixty pounds is sta his screen is worked ts or The blower in- into the mi » of It a ba is m : lke a on, uch longer than wide and dangling by its neck from the end of the blowpipe, and moving almost constantly, and for this a long opening into the basement is made In the floor before him. Here he back and forth his great swings glass at the end Now and then be twirls it gayly upward and, resting it on the screen, swings it lightly into the fire, blows a little perhaps and before You know it has it down in the opening swinging it skill fully back and forth, twirling it light ly, as though it did not welgh., blow pipe and all, something lke seventy pounds, Just giass becomes bard to manage the blower, by one of those simple twists which he Is paid good wages for knowing how to do, manages to cause a hole to appear iu the bottom of the bottle, and It widens and widens for a minute until there is no bottom to the bottle. A helper then takes the blowplpe with the now hard bottomless bottle and carefully breaks off the one from the other. Along comes the “snapper,” who winds a little string of soft redhot glass around our big bottle at Just the point where the sides begin to narrow toward the neck. A little rap on the glass, and the neck drops off, cleaving a way in a perfect line just where the redhot glass touched. We now have left a great perfect cylinder of glads five feet long and fourteen or eighteen inches in diameter and weighing about sixty pounds, blowpipe and all, As it lies on the table another man reaches Into it with a redhot fron look- ing like a poker. He traces with this redbot point a straight line on the side of the cylinder from end to end, and at once the glass splits on that line. Now you have a cylinder with a crack down one side, and you can readily see that If the cylinder can be per suaded to flatten out it will be a near ly square sheet, Here comes a reckless boy with a spring pusheart. He loads ten of thase cylinders on, placing each In a festoon of two leather straps, which are strung on springs, and away he goes full gal lop down a silght incline to the great flattening room. There our cylinder will be coaxed out flat by a gentle heating, great enough to soften but not enough to melt the glass, A great, low oven Is the flattening place. A boy lifts Into the oven on wa a silver elding back 5 1 > in the floor before the too is celebrated furn and take up the j it or perhaps for it. Some of these from the availa in ntire population a Then there are « schoo! brass bands, such bands being composed of players from among the or the workers in the several institutions or shops in which the bands are form- ed." New York Sun. The Word “Toast.” The word “toast,” used for describ. Ing the proposal of a health In an after dinner speech, dates back to mediaeval times, when the loving cup was still regarded asx an Indispensable feature of every banquet. The cup would be filled to the brim with wine or mead. in the center of which would be float. Ing a plece of toasted bread. After putting his lips thereto the host would pass the cup to the guest of honor, seated on his right hand, and the lat ter would In turn pass It to his right hand neighbor. In this manner the cup would cirenlate around the table, each one present taking a sip, until finally the cup would come back to the host, who would drain what remained and swallow the plece of toast In hon. or of all the friends assembled at his ade up ba found town. nds and braas the ¢ le brass i ands and shop students sansa (OPTPOOPPOP IRN PRCER OPC OO00BE0E Eat Tet r Cured, A lady customer of ours had suffered i § to her household duties her, Chamberlain's medicines give splendid satisfaction in this communi -M. H. Rodney & Co., Almond, Alan Chamberlain's medicines are for The Star Mare, Carson, Potiviw Tussey ville Centre Hall : F, A filla: OC. W, Swnrrtz 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 an Muslin, Lace and Inser tions for Waists and Skirts A 1{ ‘ | 1 1 AT iN HF SPRING ROSS » fA Yi A MILL I’A. 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, CPORSROEVI LT HLPO0GES t0000 P 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 Terms to suit the buyer. Ask for catalogue and prices, C. E. ZEIGLER SPRING MILLS, - . . PA. SPDT POVVEIPOVIPRCIOODINCET REPT OOP 0R2008030000000000 urniture! 0 BN NN Ww wn D 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. ; - =~ - ZA NN ™~ Fy SHERWIN & WILLIAMS PAINT Is the best paint We sell it. OV wW VW CNG . 9 Rearick’s FurnitureStore Centre Hall. Pa. made. SHORT TALKS BY L. T. COOPER. DEBILITY. A mesay: LY I dont just hat's the Many people who talk to feel half sick alithe rr - i i nera 'svery People in 3 this BYmy arn’t sick en« for bed so drag ls mie Lacs uggs they around and families exasperated witht n re are two for $ this a weak an eating st and not chews. 13 The stomse ss of appetite, ation, and general get , and the worn out, despond- sick feeling will be a thing of t t Two t covery will put thd stomach in shape. Common sense willdo the rest. There re f thousand people in this y who know this to be true be. cause they've tried it. « Here's a letter from one of them: “I was all run down from overwork, lost ambition and energy and could not sleep. It was difficult for me to attend to my work owing to that tireds out feeling. I secured two bottles of the New Discovery naedicine and de- termined to try it. The result de- lighted me for renewed strength and vigor and energy camfie with the first few doses. » It’s effect was different from anything I had ever taken. I finished the two bottles now and feel well and strong again.” EK. McDade, 839 Dix Ave., Detroit, Mich. ¥ We hear favorable reports of these famous medicines every day. y Ask us about them. gr - J. D. MURRAY, Druggist Centre Hall, Pa. Eo0AD MABTER'S NOTICK. — Notioe is hereby given that all WMXpAyers may haul stones, sultable for crashing, on the public roads al roints where a crusher may convenient Iy be located, Farther notice is given that all taxpayers may ADpEAr in wark on the road st any tite the un- dersigned Ix engaged in such work. SAMUEL BRUSS, a Pathmastor, Contre Hall, Pa. H. 8. TAY LOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office : Opera House Block | BELLEFONT PA Opposite Court House | » All branches of legal business sitended to promptly, ETOLE 108 SALE The undemigoed or ETay bore, rising Thx Jone old. & gente, will or ——— double, A lullaby Is somethitig that keeps a whole neighborhood awake while it puts one kid to sleep,