The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 12, 1908, Image 8

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    A
HE CENTRE REPORTER
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1808
DECEMBER COURT
Firat Monday ia December and
Continues for two Weeks,
The jurymen drawn for December
court, opening the first Monday in
December and continuing for two
weeks, are appended :
GRAND JURORS.
Frank Bowersox, Ferguson
Isaac Bowers, Philipsburg
Charles Batchlor, South Philipsburg
James Dunlap, Rush
James Eckenroth, Spring
Matthew Goheen, Harris
John Gunsallus, Snow Shoe
Samuel! Garner, State College
George Haagen, Howard twp.
William T., Hall, Milesburg
Shuman Holter, Howard boro.
Sereneas Harry, Miles
W. B. Haines, Miles
P, A. Hoover, Taylor
Peter Ishler, Harris
John Meese, Bellefonte
John T, McCormick, State College
Walter O'Bryan, Ferguson
Edward Sharrer, Taylor
Alfred Thompson, Snow Shoe
Daniel B. Weaver, Miles
C. E. Wetzel, Spring
Potter Walker, Snow Shoe
TRAVERSE JURORS-FIRST WEEK,
H. L. Barger, Snow Shoe
Isaac Beck, Half Moon
P. L. Beezer, Bellefonte
R. B. Bartges, Gregg
Samuel Charles, Boggs
David Chambers, Snow Shoe
Robert Cooper, Snow Shoe
John A. Confer, Snow Shoe
Milo Campbell, Ferguson
William Crissman, Snow Shoe
Harry Crain, Philipsburg
Harry Callaban, Rush
Samuel Decker, Bellefonte
F. D. Fye, State College
George Frankenberger, Penn
J. W. Fry, Ferguson
Opens
Potter
T. M. Gramley, Gregg
G. Ed. Haupt, Bellefonte
Joscph Heberling, Ferguson
James Haines, Curtin
H. H. Hewett, Philipsburg
Charles Johuston, Liberty
G. H. Knisely, Bellefonte
William Kreamer, Beliefonte
John Kennedy, Rush
Harvey Lutz, Walker
W. J. Manck, Walker
Daniel Moore, Rush
H. D, Meck, State College
L.T. Munson, Bellefonte
George R. Meek, Bellefonte
William J. Musser, Bellefonte
8. 8B. Miles, Worth
W. D. O'Brian, Snow Shoe
W. C. Patterson, State College
W. W. Rupert, Walker
Peter Robb, Jr., Curtin
Lewis Russ, Philipsburg
Sol Schmidt, Pt allie |
J.B. Shope , Snow Shoe
h heflor. Bell efonte
{lliam St ummers, Unionville
W. G. Talhelm, Huston
H, B. Waite, Half Moon
D. L. Welsh, Howard boro
TRAYERSE JURORS-SECOND WEEK,
Jerome Auman, Potter
J. T, Alkens, Boggs
James Black, Philipsburg
Herman Bowes, Liberty
Samuel Budinger, Snow Shoe
John Bergin, Rush
W. J. Burns, Rush
Elmer Bryan, Boggs
L. C. Bullock, Jr., Milesburg
Robert Bennlson, Marion
W. M. Biddle, Philipsburg
Jonathan Condo, Marion
Harry Cole, Philipsburg
T. F. Corl, Ferguson
F. W, Corman, Walker
G. Frank Dunkle, Philipsburg
Clayton Etters, College
Newton Garver, Potter
J. A. Budson, Phillpsburg
George BR. Hughes, Spring
Michael F. Hasel, Benner
George Hastings, Benner
Charles Keichline, Bellefonte
E. K. Keller, Spriog
H. A. Leftzell, Philipsburg
Marcus Miner, Howard boro.
John ‘IT, Merryman, Taylor
Edward Marshall, Benner
William Orr, Marion
J.T. Runkle, Potter
Herman Robb, Bellefonte
Harry Resides, State College
CO. M. Seller, Patton
W. H. Steffen, Yaines
Frank E. Vonada, Marion
W. H. Witmer, College
H. C. Woodring, Worth
A.M, Watson, Snow Shoe
T———— A AS A———
Two More Properties Sold
YZ. Two more properties in Centre Hall
were sold a short time ago. The one
was that of Mrs. Lizzie Jacobs, con-
sisting of house and lot and vacant lot,
to John G. Dauberman. This place is
located near Mr. Dauberman’s slsugh-
ter house, and is also more convenient.
to his meal market. Consideration
about $1600.
Mrs. Jacobs, after disposing of her
home, purchssed the house and lot
occupied for some years by J. A. Rees-
man, from E. G. Van Pelt, of Ithaca.
N. Y., and will move into it next
spring. -
Haines Township Property Sold,
The administrators of the estate of
- Jacob Neldigh, late of Huines town-
ship, deceased, sold the following real
estate: Tract No. 1, being the old
homestend farm, to George B. Blover,
of Mille: n for $72 25 per acre. Tract
No. 2, tim'wriand, passing with the
farm. Trw No 8, being 70 acres of
timbe risod, +5 oid to Motz & Btover
for $1285. Tree! N+ 4, consisting of
20 acres of timb ra J, was bought by
I. W. Vonuada, for $100. Tract No. 5,
also timberland, was sold to Bamuel
Kresmer for $455,
SR
After completing the erection of a
wall for a pew dwelling house, in
Centre Ha sgain.
Le, g1 el share, boson od
a
How Long Do Dreams Last?
How long do Inst? A Ger
man savaut is iu igiting the mat
ter. But there Is zcnireely a doit who
could not give him poluts and has not
dreamed centuries in seconds, The
dream, it may be stated, comes tn the
few seconds before the awakening
and has no relation to time or space.
This Is clear enough to the map who
has ever been placed under an anaes.
thetic for a short while and found
time and space eliminated.
As an experiment this writer was
placed under a whiff of chloroform by
a doctor. Absolute unconsciousness
supervened, then a return of con-
sciousness, the questions of the unl.
verse, up through layers of conscious.
ness, with always the feeling. “Now 1
have solved it,” and the “No” and the
*Yes" ~lHernating through centuries of
thought, and then the quizziea! face
of the doctor, remembered after a mil-
Hon years. “How long have you been
under?’ The experimenter struggled
up and saw the doctor with his watch
in hand. “Ten seconds,” the doctor
sald, and the dreamer had been out
side time for a time that has no meas-
ure.—London Chronicle.
A Great Artist Enraged.
Alma-Tadema bas told a story of the
fate of two unsuccessful pictures of
his student days. One of them was re-
turned unsold by the committee of the
Brussels exibition in 18589. The sub-
Jeet wus a house on tire, with people
rescuing th The artist's fel
low studeuls ere nailed Into Almas
Tuadema's studio -— ere invited to
Jump throvgh the ov the owner
of it leading by
first through the oily flames,
The other nusuccessful effort was a
large sized square picture that came
back again and again to its creator's
easel until at last it was cut out of
its frame and given to an old woman
to use as a table cover,
The picture was praised by at least
one person who appreciated its excel-
lence, so Alma-Tadema used to
for the old woman was wi
that it much better
common ollicioth thing
water through,
i-Tadema's making was ao
of paint
vi Bin
is,
the way eaplog head
de
{Oo
than
% that al
as the pl
int
clare,
re gf was
thiuse
ways let toe
ture of Alma
gouwd
on it.
thick one, with plenty
Mivueapolis Journal
The Supposed Life on Mars.
Not only do the « is we have
scanned sad us to the lusion that
Mars af this moment is inbabited, but
Ian the further one
se denizens of an order wh
the making
come 10 coun
more instaot
which science
More
they
hiservatic
Coli
they us al that
the
scqguaintance
Whether
with in any
is a question upon
at present has no data to decide.
important to us is the fact
exist, made ull the more
by their precedence of us in the
of evolatieu. Their presence «
us {row apy unique or self cen
tered position in the solar system, but
world did the Copernican
'tolemale, snd the world
this deposing change So
To all who have a cosmo-
breadth of view it cannot
but be pregnant to coutemplate extra
mn and to realize that we
warrant for believing that such
I.Je fi:h the planet Mars
Professor Lowell in Century,
are
was worth
ever
them
we shall
Verse
way
that
interesting
paith
ertainiy
vel {
so with the
system the
survived
may man
planetary
udane life
have
now hits
A Big Snowfall.
of spow that ever
place iy wmighan l oectirred In 16015
falling oa the
a |
fhe heaviest fall
took
asd conth
i he 12th of March fol-
voversd the earth to such
that passengers, both horse
aid foot, passed over gates, hedges and
which had been obliterated by
i eet On the 12th of March
nnd so by little
immed and wasted sway
28th of May
fall vecurred In Scotldnd In
falling thirteen days
ith little or no intermis.
depth
wills,
to lecrense
ie rune
f iv ¥N00WY
nighis
+ of the heaviest falls on a single
ma fires] on the 21st of February,
in some places being
i ten to twelve feet deep.
the siow
He Kept Count.
A famous animal trainer was talking
ty u reporter in New York, He sald:
“The secret of animal training Is gen-
tleness Nothing sudden or brusque
niust be doue An unexpected caress
may anger an animal more than a kick
In the ribx Sudden, brusque, unex-
pected things never go, no matter how
well they are meant. Once | was
showing io Scotland. We trainers sup-
ped one night with a Scoteh admirer.
The old wan was the soul of hospital.
iy. but | admit | was rather startied
when he leaned toward me and sald:
“Stick in. man Conklin, stick in.
Yer frien’ Coot's twee mufling aheld o
yo!"
Transiated,
“Habiliments For Infants” is s sign
in a clothing store in Boston. A west.
ern visitor, seeing it, stopped In amaze
ment.
“What does that mean?" he asked his
better ncquainted fellow westerner.
“That? sald the other, “Oh, that is
Boston dialect for kids’ duds.” House:
wife.
* Silenced,
Dad (severely)—And look here, Ethel,
you ir cattt’t encourage that young man
to stay so late every night. It's dis
graceful, What does your mother say
about it? Ethel-8he says men haven't
An Eccentric Genlus.
Among the genluses none perhaps
was stranger than the poet Baudelaire
who dyed his halr green, tried to stran
gle his father-in-law, used opium, to
bacco and wine to excess and enjoyed
perverted olfactory sensations. “My
soul soars upon perfumes as the souls
of other men soar upou music,” he
wrote. But what pleased him, strange-
ly, were odors of putrefaction, vile
smells which other men abhorred and
the stenches of disease which made
others sick. And yet his poetry Is
among the most passionately musical
of the literature of France. He was
exceedingly superstitious, belleving he
would not succeed In an undertaking
unless he left a house first with the
left foot, and would count the number
of gas lets along the streets, the num-
bers of cabs and numbers of doors
Adding these figures In his mind, he
would consider the result an omen—
multiples of three good, multiples ot
geven reassuring, while his bad num-
ber was seventeen. Curiously, once he
was thrown out of a cab, the figures of
whih he added and found amounted
to seventeen.
’
A Sharp | Swindler,
A fashionable young lady once drove
up in a handsome carriage to a private
lunatic asylum situated a
from Paris and requested to see the
proprietor. Her wish being acceded to
she informed the doctor that she de
sired to place her husband under his
care to see If a cruel manila under
which he labored—viz, “that he had
lost a large quantity of jewels” -—could
not be removed. After some hesita-
tion the doctor consented, and the lady
drove away directly to a jeweler's in
Paris and selected Jewels to the value
of several thousand francs and re
quested one of the shopmen to go with
her in her carriage to procure the
money for the goods she had taken
She drove with him to the asylum, and,
arriving there, he was shown Into n
room. The lady then sought the doc
tor, told him of the arrival of her hus
band and, getting into her carriage,
again drove away. The rest be
imagined, but the poor fellow was con
fined several days before it was found
they both had been The lady
was never heard of after.
few miles
may
“sold”
Wagner's Portrait.
When Wagner was in England super
vising the first production of his operas,
the music enthusiasts commissioned
the artist Herkomer to paint the mu
siclan’s portrait, but Wagner was dash
Ing about in such a state of frenzy that
he repelled impatiently every attempt
to get him to give a “sitting.” Still,
Herkomer stuck to him like a limpet,
fed with him, walked and talked with
him, watched him conduct hi lies
tra, wre music and read At
last, when attempt to sectre a
% Of
books
every
Herkowmer ross
eariy one morning, painted
gitting™ I failed
with
ried i wi all day, spent
in restle deep, rose early -agal
painted furlously. till on the secon
evening he sat down exhansted but
with his picture fin Wi
called In and hits
amazement eried
derful! That how |
like to look If 1 could”
fhe ARHOr Ww
bands in
“Won
would
threw up
“Ah!” he
is exactly
Why Kelly Didn"t Sleep.
“One night 1 went inte to Father
Demipsey’s hotel. Every bed was full
and there were 200 men
the floor of the recreation room. Each
one of them had a
him to keep off the dust of the
I pointed to one little Irishman and re
marked that did not seem to I
resting well
“ "What's your name, my
ther Dempsey asked him,
“ “Thomas Kelly, your reverence.’
“You don't seein to be resting well,
Mr. Kelly'
“TH get
sieeping on
newspaper under
f wr
he
many
to sleep after awhile,
reverence,” he answered
“1 don’t believe you will unless
you change your bed. You're sleeping
on a Westliche Post.’ answered Father
Demprey 81. Louls Post-Dispatch
your
Caught the Ceneral.
One of the regular army officers tells
a story of how the old stringent army
regulations once went against General
Seott. One wet afternoon that soldier
was caught in the rain in Washing
ton. He was in full uniform and was
well known, so, no cab being near, he
borrowed an umbrella. Arriving at
his hotel, an underofficer approached
him and calmly remarked:
“General, you will consider yourdelt
under arrest for eight days for earry.
Ing an umbrella while In full unl
form.”
His Solicitude,
“Is it a fact that your mother-in-law
threw herself out of the third story
window and you did nothing to re
strain her?”
“Excuse me, | went to the first story
to catch her, but she had already
passed.” —Diavolo Rosa.
Riches,
It Is not what we have, but what we
can do without, that makes us rich
Socrates, seeing a large loaf of valu
ables pass one day, exclaimed, “1 an
most happy, for there are so many
things that-1 do not want!”
The Maroon Monster,
Friend-1 suppose you run down 2
great many people? Motorist Well
sometimes | run them up Pricod-
Run them up? Motorist Yes: lam
night I ran two men up a tree Chi
*sag0 News.
A Change.
Mrs. Larkin-—I want a little money
today, Fred. Mr. L-~I'm very glad of
that. Mrs. [. (surprised) Why are
. you glad? Mr. L.—Because gencrally
you want a good deal.
DR. SOL. ML NISSLEY,
VETERINARY
A graduate of the Univ ersity of Penn’a,
Office at Palace Livery Stable, Belle-
fonte, Pa. Both ‘phones,
SURGEON,
oct.1.08.1yr
FLAT IRON CLEANER.
Household women,
want - our Acne Flat Iron Cleaner and
Waxer, It saves time, labor and linen
and produces an excellent finish, Price
15 cts, each, 2 for 25 cts, postpaid.
Reliable agents wanted in each locality
THE STOVER CO., Altoona, Pa.
0. dec. 4 P.0.Box 383.
here is what vou
ETERINARY SURGEON AND DENTIST
The undersigned having received a
diploma from the Detroit (Michigan) Veterinary
Dental College and also a license wo practice gen
eal Veterinary Burgery, is prepared to serve the
ople in this community in either or both capac
Ligy Charges are reasonable, and responses wil
be made promptly to calls made in person or by
mail ¥. €C. FRANK,
Veterinary
Cent
0. jan. ii
oH ag
P. 0. Address re Hill, Pa,
spring Mills, r. {. 4,
cS
choloe
dozen
ABBAGE FOR BALE~The undersigned of
fers for sale several hundred hesds of
cabbage. Price from 6c w $1 00 per
E. P. BROOK,
Spring Mills
The Thrice-a- Week Woria
The Torice.-n Week World will be
to Reporter subseribers at the rate
of sixty-five
Be gst
cents per year, paid in
sdvar ce i he re
price is $l i¥
gular subscription
Ladies’ rolled soled rubbers, {8c at
Yengers
W. A. Henney
Centre Hall
General
Blacksmithing
Special attention giv-
en to tire setting and
satisfaction always
guaranteed, . . .
All Kinds of Repair
Work Given Prompt
Attention.
Prices Reasonable
i i I le UB
00000009 PCR LQUOPO00000000200000000000000000000000000*0000
Beers roPoeeed00e00 pee 00000
ogee =e
SHOES
FEET
DRY.
Ladies’ Kid and
Gun Metal Shoes.
ALSO HAVE A
TO KEEP
WARM
THE
AND
Complete Line
For Children.
PLEASED
YOU CALL.
TO HAVE
SRS
C. A. Krape
Spring Mills - - - Pa.
go
A full line of Selz
Shoes and Rubbers
for Fall & Winter
A NEW STOCK
OF DRY GOODS,
NOTIONS, EIiC,
Our stock of goods
was never more
complete. Come.
®
»
H. F., ROSSMAN
$0
$4
$8, 7, 6.60 Values,
$6, 6.50, 5 Values,
100 pr. Knee Pants, were
bc, at a. 2c
$12
$10
5 8
b
$d
$2
Were
$100, at - - - - 0c
NNN DNDN DDD DRM VNR
re
Carry a
Centre Hall
THE
Ten New Capacities
Ten New Prices
Htatlonery for Ladies,
A fine grade of box paper, having
embossed at the top “Centre Hall, Pa."
has jost been added to the assortment
of stationery for ladies. The Sualuty
and style are good enough for the
od qunen.
R. SMITH’S SALVE
NNN ND BV BB BDV WWW BN