To Marry Monday, The marriage of Dr. Halvor Harley, of New Jersey, and Miss Alice May Robinson, of Milesburg, daughter of ‘Mr. and Mrs. H. C, Robinson, will take place in the Presbyterian church, at Milesburg, at twelve o'clock, noon, Monday. The ceremony will be per- formed by Rev. W. Henry Behuyler, Ph. D., pastor of the Centre Hall Presbyterian church. Mr. Robinson will lead ths bride to the altar. There will be no attendants. After the ceremony a reception will be given at the Robinson home. The young couple will take up their residence at Williamstown, New Jersey, where Dr. Harley will practice his profession. Fhe acquaintance of the young peo- ple was formed at the Presbyterian Hospital, Philadelphia, where Dr. Harley was a physician, and Miss Robinson was taking a regular course in nursing. Miss Robinson is well known in Centre Hall, where she lived for several years with her parents, A A A —— Methodist Conference Changes, The charges of location of ministers lu the Altoons district made at the conference held at York are noted below : ALTOONA DISTRICT District Altoona, superintendent, Benjamin C. Conner, Allegheny ~David J, Fram. Altoona—East, Otto C. Mille nue, William R. Picker Witman » supplied. e and Glen Campbell—Fr Ridge-—-Wil field Circuit—Willlam 1k M. Roher, Coalport and Irvona- William L. Armstron Curwensville- Joseph H. P Mahaffey tr Hn KE. Hartman, Munsou—-Charles H. Campbell, Patton—John H. Mortimer, Ra Jacob H. Di supernumerary Elbert V, Brown. Marriage licenses, Budd F. Tate, Bellefonte Cora M. Garbrick, Bellefonte Harry E Acker, Aaronsburg Annie M. Hains, Aaronsburg Jesse P. Btrunk, Huntingdon Jesse T. Bennett, Runville James R. Frazier, Centre Hall Mollie Krape, Bellefonte Ez:kiel Lucas, Curtin Myrtle I. Bathurst, Curtin Paul Fortney Musser, State College Laura Sunday, Pine Grove Mills ——— tl Flanos sad Organs. The Lester pianos are used and en- dorsed by all the leading musical con- servatories and colleges in the U. B. The Stevens piano organs sre the latest achievement in modern orgar construction, Pianos and organs sold on easy pay- ment plan. Write for catalog. C. E. ZeiGLER, Spring Mills. ne LOCALS, Fifteen sulky plows for sale— Weberr, , Centre Hall and Oak Hall, Rev. J, Max Lan'z was returned to the Penns Valley Metucdlst charge Farmer Cloyd Brooks, on Rboney- mede farm, was taken ill Wedoesday morning. He suflers from an sflee tion of the heart Mr and Mrs. Thomas Bankey and son, afier a stay of several months in Centre county, returned to their home in Freeport, Illinois George H E nerick becomes a citi. z°n of Centre Hall todsy ( Thursday ) and will occupy his own home pur- chased sometime sgo, and since re. modeled. Frank Goodhart, the right hand man st the Rearick furniture store, de- livered a load of furniture to the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Sharer, near Pleasant Gap. The most valuable cow Harry Fye bad in his stable, was dragged out the morning of his sale. The animal had milk fever, and she was killed to be put out of misery. W. O. Gramley, at Bpring Mille, will sell two driving horses, five fine Jersey cows, shoats, and farm imple ments and household goods at public sale, Saturday, April 16, Perry K. Detwiler, of Farmers Mills, was a caller Wednesday morning and advertised letters testamentary on the estate of his father, the late Jacob Det. wiler. of Gregg township. Mrs, Marion Bauer, wife of the late Nieholas Bauer, died Friday evening at the home of her son, V. J. Bauer, after an illness of a few days with poeumonis, aged elghty-two years, Bhe was the daughter of Dennis Me- Cafferty, and had spent the most of her life in Bellefonte, The Centre Hall railroad station Is tobe enlarged by extending the build- Ing to the rear some twenty feet, The waiting room will be enlarged, and so will also the office of Station Master Bradford. While this will be aa improvement, Centre Hall needs better station facilities than are cor. templated. The waiting room, and there is but one, is ofttimes overcrowd. @d, and conditions are frequently dis tasteful to ladies who are obliged to #it there. The éontemplated improve. ments will add facilities for handling Glen Iron Merchant's Rash Act Tuesday morning, about six o'clock, Lemuel Fesenden, a (len Iron mer- chant, ended his life by shooting him- self while in his sleeping room. He bad acted strangely for several weeks, He was prominently connected with the local affairs in his community. He leaves a wife and four cobildren. He was aged forty-eight years. A — “The Girl from Rectors,” Everybody has heard of * The Girl from Rectors, ”’ and now every tbody will have an opportunity to see her, for she will be at Garman’s opera house, Bellefonte, Tuesday evening, March 29th. At Weber's music hall, in New York, this play ran for an en- tire season. Loute Bedaine is * The Girl from Rector’s, ”’ a merry, dancing, dashing slip of humanity. Of course, she is in love, ————— — Frazier-Krape, At the Raformed parsonage, at Cen- tre Hall, by Rev. Daniel Gr ss, on Tuesday afternoon, James Runkle Fra- zier, of Centre Hall, and Miss Mollie E. Krape, of Bellefonte, were united in marriage. LD PPLICATION FOR CHARTER wen Ip the Matter of the Incorporation in the Court of Com of Centre 9 May eof ils £1 possess and e ilegos conferre TO FIND FAULI. People Are Sometimes Paid For That Express Purpose. You have no idea how many things are wroug in a big business until you are paid to look for them, writes Ge- There were the clocks, for one when I first The girls wore too many rats lett Burgess in Collier's. thing, began. in their hair, there w elevator dumped one on 28 grease on the expensive hats were another, the ventila- tion was bad, the boxes on the shelves from the through the windows and about a thousand other things. Then Spindelbheim sold teapots just like eighteen cent ones f@r 14 cents, and for a concern like Smith & Co. to be undersold is fatal. There's really nothing that so iges Mr. Smith; also Rubinstein's window dresser has beaten ours, too, Down it goes in my little 1 any woman love my doors, showed sireet show our enr: paid for being a bard work my promenade store—~downstairs, up ittic and annex, If 8 dirty finger mdour to suit santiy, buy 9 and so get her She nev- her t gives ber a scolding the hawk 1 hound and ears like {00 F counter } © ide wp and ta » sales slip about it till » ¢yes like n when =a the sofa Gti baler sister In spotted the dust *» uisie, a girl who is, & porter who ia » his duty, a badly ar an error ino spelling tore detectives loaf- job and a hideous com. vlors in the front window, room and make a these things surreptitiously. I don’t dare go there too often, though, for fear I'll be identified, so sometimes I run back to iny office, two blocks away. So it goes till about 4 o'clock, hither and thither, nigh and yon, look- ing for trouble. It doesn’t do a clerk any good to be uncivil to we, 1 can tell you, or to make me wait too long for my change, but 1 try to be fair, and if I find a particularly willing and considerate sales person down that name my report too. Yon might suppose that there'd be good graft in that; but, of course, | keep my position only so long as the head of the firm bas absolute confidence in my integrity. The funny part of it is that the wore | complain the better he likes it. [I'm like the opposition party in congress. I'm never satisfied. When 1 am ['ll bave to look for an- other position. At 4 o'clock 1 go back to my HNttie office and dictate my report from my notes to a stenographer, and when it's typewritten 1 send it to the head of the firm, » ladies’ goes in When “Fluck” Was Slang. The word “pluck” affords an in- stance of the way In which slang words In the course of time become adopted Into current English, We now meet with “pluck” and “plucky” as the recognized equivalents of “cour age” and “courngeons.” An entry in Sir Walter Scott's “Journal” shows that in 1827 the word had not yet Jost its low character. He says (volume 2, page 30), “Want of that article black- guardly called pluck.” Its origin is obvious, From early times the heart has been popularly regarded as the seat of courage. Now, when a butcher lays open a carcass he divides the great vessels of the héart, cuts through the windpipe and then plucks out together the united heart and lungs-—lights, he calls them—and he terms the united mass “the pluck.” Alcohol not needed Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a strong drink. As now made, there is not a drop of alcohol in it. It isanon-alcoholic tonic and alterative. Ask your own dpctor about your taking this medicine for thin, impure blood. Follow his advice every time. He knows. We publish our ers Ask your doctor, “What is the first great rule of health?’ Nine doctors out of ten will quickly reply, *‘ Keep the bowels regular.” Then ask him another ques. tion, “What do vou think of Aver's Pills for constipation?” weeelfade by the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell formulas We banish alechol from our medigines We urge you to consult your dootoy , Mane, m—— DR. SOL. M. NISSLEY, VETERINARY SURGEON. A graduate of the University of Penn’a Ofhes at Palace Livery Stable, Belle. fonte, Pa. Both ‘phones, All Candy sold to Retail the Camp Candy Company, g Confectioners, Tyron NOT ADULTERATED IN FORM, are strictly pure and are anteed to conform with all Pure Law CAMP CANDY CO. Manufacturers TYRONE, PENN’A 29D VD VY NY Wanted ! 4 Local Agent to advertise and introduce the new educational § work, WEBSTER'S UNIVERSAL DICTIONARY and ATLAS of the WORLD, Must be educated and able to fur good releren OF a8 10 ality and characier § The SAALFIELD PUB. CO, ¢ AKRON, OHIO PH VVV VV DV VD ODP to work under all conditions. Jardin rifies are built with this idea foremost, The mechanism ls sirnple, strong, pers fectly adjusted quick and easy In operation, The Jardin e514 top and side elector keep a protecing wall of metal between yo head and the cartridge, prevent owder and gases blowing back, throw the shells away from you and allow instant, accurate, effective repeat shots. The Special Smokeless Steel barrels are hard and strong, specially meade for high power cartridges and 10 resist the wear of jacketed bullets. The deep on the Ballard system accuracy and killing power. are rifled B greatest Made in Models 91 and WS, oalibres 2% to 48, end fully described and Mustrated ‘with all other im re peaters! In our 138 page eatalog Free for 3 stamps postage. The Wlarlin Rrearms (b, 42 Willow Street, NEW HAVEN, CONN, W. L. DOUCLA $3.00,%3.50, 4.00 & 85.00 ~~, SHOES 3 Best in the World. UNION dreight, but the public will be served dittle better than heretofore, / Be i The Great Problem is to Make Your Home Sum of Money. IT you have not been accustomed to thinking that GOOD Furniture can be bought for a small price, the offering at this store will be a revelation 10 you. . . Quality should be first in choosing urniture, Comfort second, Appearance third, and Price fourth. . . Buying furniture has been our main study, because if furniture is bought right it sells itself, and we have made a special effort this year to buy good reliable goods. . . We shall be pleased to have you call and look over our stock. Rearick’s . . . .. Furniture Store CENTRE HALL, PA. CENTRE MALL, = - PENN, We Buy Our Farm Machinery WAGONS, BUGGIES, ETC. Car Load and consequently can Sell Right, The machinery we handle is the most modern, up-to date on the market, The Names Themselves Imply Much. ™“ New Idea” applies to a better method of spread- ing manure, and “ NEW WAY” to a Corn Planter that drops and plants to perfection, By the time the roads are settled we will have on hand a car load of Buggies and light Road Wagons. They will be first ciass in every way. We handle everything in the and implement line the farmer needs, as well as feeds, fertilizers, salt, etc, : Ao Api Choice and Common Red Clover and Asike Clover Seed ; also Timothy Seed and Alfalfa. Sod J.H & S.E. WE CENTRE HALL & OAK HALL STATION
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers