a bg DEATHS, / \ / J) ) PEATE WN The home of Mr, and Mrs. George W. Ocker, of Lewisburg, was dark ened Saturday by the going out of their only chiid, Esther Miriam. Bhe was in failing health for nearly a year, and waa seriously ill for more than six weeks, with sn affection of the stomach, She bore her suflering with such sweet patience that her parents felt that she had a sustaining knowledge of the land where there is no more sickness. They are support. MoUloskey-Magser, A wedding with a tinge of romance in it was consummated in Millheim on Monday in the marriage of Jobn C. McCloskey and Lydia A. Musser, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Musser, parents of the bride, by Rev. W. J. Dice. Miss Musser, three years ago, met the gentleman who Is now her hus- band ou a run from Lewisburg to Watsontown during the time of the Lewisburg fair. The young man sought and secured an introduction to SETTLED OUT OF COURT. Racing For the Honest Lawyer In a Town In Denmark, In telling of his boyhood home In Deumark, “The Old Town,” Jacob A. Rils says that he does not remember that there were at any time more than two lawyers in the place, One was good, the other bad-not a bad law- yer perhaps, but reputed to be tricky, whereas the other was known to be honor itself, It is therefore perhaps the best char- acter I can glve my people when I re- ssi ——— Special attention is called to the Its name describes it —it is g clog up, chains and sj of trouble, The long or light, on the wagon in better condition without tearing off the leaver, or without thresh other loaders do, and bas no pears to {0 break, cariess, rock ets stroke delivers the ler, chatted for half an hour while the resk, car was rushing on. Unlike many other acquaintances formed by both of them in times past, this meeting ripened into love and finally marriage, Mr. McCloskey is formerly from Howard, from there he went to Wash- cord the fact, writes Mr. Riis, that when two farmers quarreled, each sure that he was right, they made haste to hitch up to get first to the honest law- yer, and usunlly that was the end of the quarrel, for the last in the race was willing to make peace. ed in their sflliction by the thought of her joy in the beauties of that other world where they will sometime be again a united family, Either was born in Rebersburg and for twenty-six summers was the light of her parents home snd hearts, She run off and cause no. end easy hay whether heavy without chewing it ing out the seed not the cli was catechised and confirmed fourteen years ago by Rev. J. M. Rearick, at that time pastor of the Centre Hall charge, Her conversiun was manifest in ber earnest desire to do her chris. tian duty in every respect, in her in- tense epjoyment of the service of God’s house, and in a deep personal devotion which made her a constant reader of the Bible. Esther was a graduate of the Buck- nell school of music, and played the piano and organ with skill and good taste, thus giving her family and friends great pleasure, By nature and by training she was appreciative of beauly. Bhe had a circle of devoted friends who, while they mourn her loss, rejoice in her entrance upon the life of beauty, Funeral services were held at the home on Tuesday morning, conducted by her pastor, :.Rev. J. F. Beeuach, who took for his text I+, x: 8, * The grass withereth, the flower fadeth ; but the word of our God shall stand forever.” . Rev. D. KE. Juod of the Baptist church spoke also, basing his remarks vpon the words ‘‘ Iu every- thing give thanks, for this is the will of God concerning you. V’ Rev, Mr. Aurand, of Miffliburg, who cenfirmed Mrs. Ocker, was present and cflfered prayer Mr. and Mrs, Ocker have the tender 8y mpsathy of their neighbors and the members of the church to which they belong * » aged eighty-seven sud twenty-two Bpriog apoplexy Charles Grimes, years, (wi 0 months days, died at his home st Baok last Wednesday of Iu 1853 he married Priscilla Trouse, and to this union were born six children, three of whom are living, Mrs, Jacob Bnavely, Bpring Anna Hasseoplug, Mif- El'z beth, at home, cted Mone Lutheran by Rev. N. A. was made in namely Mille; Mera, flinburg, Fuoerai day morning church, at Rebersburg, Whitman, 1 Union cemels a were cond from te iterment William | t the home night near rn Thuraday { f Jame ww B. H where he made Li's home, He #ixty years, and for ¢ LO support him- ghters survive, swraer, Colyer, was aged some SOLO LilOe Was Oey peifl. Heveral dau The body and shipped to Bellefonte meat by Uadertaker Ros fr ——— burial for inter- stan. was prepared for Another Great Maguz as, The North American announces that another high-class magszine is to be given free. It will be called the Family Magazine. Ii is the same size aud general appearsnce as the Monthly Magazine which has been stich a popular feature of the Sanday North Awmerican for several months, The Moot Magazine will continue to be given fres the North Americsn of the Sunday of each month, The Family Magszine free with the North will be given American of the fourth Sanday of beginniog with pext bly with gecond each month, Fuuday, Jane 25. The Family Magszine, by its planned with an @pecial to appeal to every element io the family circle. LOCALS, Thomas Kietler, of Youngwood, was in Ceatre Hall over Bunday. Messrs. Bart Byard and Besjamin Jones, of Tyrone, were in Centre Hall over Sunday. W. M. Grove, the surveyor, is now surveyiog in the mountains in the vicinity of Renovo, Frank V. Goodhart, assistant to Undertaker L. , Rearick, is in Al tooua visiting his brother, R, H. Goodhart, a railroad engineer, The many friends of D. W. Rey- nolds, postmaster at Reedsville, and a former resident of Centre Hall, will regret to know that he is not in the best of health, . This week Miss Louelin Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D, W. Rey. nolds, of Reedsville, will graduate from an institution fo Boston. After the commencement exercises are over she will return to her home, and next winter will engage in teaching. Pref, and Mrs. John G. Rossman, of Btuttgart, Arkansas, arrived at Spring Miils, and for six weeks will remain at the home of the former's parents, Mr, snd Mra H. F. Rossman, Mr. Ross. mn is superintendent of the Stuttgart schools, having been elected to tha position a’ the beginning of the pres. ent echool year, #8 indicated name, is view ington, D. C., and then to Downey, Idaho, where he is a train dispatcher, and which place Mr. and Mrs. Mec Closkey will make their home. At present the couple are seelug sights in the National Capital City, and after the honeymoon trip is over, the groom will resume his duties in Idaho, and in a few months the bride will go west to preside over their home. The Centre Hall hotel is being re- painted. ff —— William Kern, who died in Potter township last week, is said to have had a life insurance policy for $1000, pn The woman of today who has good health, good temper, good sense bright eyes and a lovely complexion, the result of correct living and good digestion, wins the admiration of the world, If your digestion is faulty Chamberlain's stomach and Liver Tablets will correct it, For sale by all dealers. np fp A —— Savages That Grind Their Teeth to Sharp Points, The most terrible specles of canni bals living are the cruel, bloodthirsty Manyuema of Tanganyika, in central Africa. Living to the west of Tan ganyika, cannibals, clothed In primitive fashion with a plece of bark cloth rudely hammered out from a neighboring tree, have an appetite for human flesh which is well nigh in satiable, They exercise the most flendish cun ning in tracking down their quarry, choosing fat, well covered people in preference to those who are lean and bony. Their favorite practice is to waylay their victims at eventide so that they may have before them a long night in which to effectually dis pose of thelr prey by cutting it up Into strips and drying it over a low fire in the woods, These dried strips of human flesh are carefully preserved for future use, and on two occasions grewsome forest food depots were discovered and their owners kill ed by the Wafipa people, who inhabit east Tanganyika Most of these cannibals file their teeth to sharp points so as to enable them more tear the flesh from th when they have to eat their inable in a hurry. African these t Lose easily to e¢ bone meal id Magazine, Troubles of Those Ignorant of the Language and Native Ways. All Japanese Inns, of course, charge a great deal more to the globe trotting European tourist who does not speak he or she is not strictly a la Japo the entire house abomi Wide Wor the language, since ent to naise and worrles hold with a variety of strange de mands—extra quilts to sleep on be cause they find the floor hard, an im provised pillow, special food (the or dinary guest takes what is given hin and at the hour that his host pleases and is thankful), knives, forks and spoons because he has neglected tc practice eating his food with chop sticks, a bath with fresh water in if because he will not follow the custow of entéring the bath as soon as he arrives, thus getting the opportunity of first bath and the water while it Is fresh, and half a dozen other require ments. He reserves his chadal alse until he leaves, and often the host mis understands this action and, fearing he will get no recompense for his ex tra trouble, augments the bill accord ingly. These visitors not unusually treaf the waitresses like so many novel play: things, especially travelers of the sterner sex, who sometimes fail hope lessly to distinguish between profes sional geishas and ordinary maidsery. ants.—~Vera Collum in Wide World Magazine. cont travel Her Only Want. “1 have difficulty in satisfying my wife. She has a thousand wants.” “I have difficulty in satisfying mine, and she has only one want.” “What is it? “Money.” Baltimore American. Consistency. Mother—Aren't you goin' to wash up them tea things, Mariaranne, before you go out? Daughter—No, 1 ain't I'm late enough for “mother's ’‘elp” class as it 1s.—London Opinion, Modernity, “Some are so intensely modern that they prefer a Corot to a Rembrandt.” “If it's a better hill climber I don't blame ‘em. Me for the French ear every time."-London Punch, His Biggest Mistakes, “What was the biggest mistake you ever made?’ “Thinking I was too foxy to make a big ilatake." Old dlund Leader, There Is s something more Awful in happiness than in sorrow.—Hawthorne. , — They used to tell of two well to do neighbors who had fallen out over a line fence and started simultaneously for town, Both had good teams, and they were well matched in the race, For half an hour they drove silently alongside, each on his own side of the road, grimly urging on their horses, but neither gaining a length, At last as the lights of the town came Into sight, for it was evening, a trace broke on one of the rigs, and the horses stopped. The other team whirl ed away in a cloud of dust, “Hans,” the beaten one called after him, and he halted and looked back, “are you golng after Lawyer —-1 naming the square one, “1 am that!” came back. “Then let's go back. I''m beat" And back home they went and made it up. A MERCENARY MARRIAGE. Romance of Lady March and Second Duke of Richmond, One of the mercenary marriages which turned out happily was that of the second Duke of Richmond. He was married to Lady Sarah Cadogan as part of an agreement that her fa- ther's gambling debts should be can- celed, Lord March (as be then was) being eighteen and the bride thirteen Immediately after the wedding Lord March's tutor took him off to the con tinent for the grand tour, and Lady Sarah went back to her nursery. This is the sequel as told by Lady Russell n “The “Three the Rose Goddess" Yours from his travels, Lord March returned but, bay ing such an uninteresting recollection of his bride, was in no hurry to claim her and went the first evening of his return to London to the opera. There he noticed that all eyes—and lorgnettes directed to box, where, surrounded by several persoys, sat g most beautiful creature, Tuin ing to a man beside him, he asked who she was. ‘You must be a stranger was the answer. ‘not to ning toast of the town, Lady March” Lord time In going to the himself to his ever after lived that thelr devotion ‘ame proverblal” elnps edd were one young in London, know the relig the beautiful March lost no box and introducing ride, with so affe whom he tionately to one another be Crusity to Women, Fonder what death the man will t tortured life he will be d who discovered the lit. tie “trick” by which a woman's age can be beyond a doubt that 1s to while her health is normal. The only instrument required is an ordinary watch. The wrist of the lady whose age Is In question Is the telltale, for when you eount her pulse and it registers sixty-ulne beats per minute you know that she is be tween twenty and twenty-five years old. During the next five years seven ty-one beats go to the minute, and the “femme de trente ans” and over is en. titled to seventy throbs, It Is a pity the man of science who established these facts Is not more exact when dealing with the women of riper age, for, acconding to romor and tradition, it Is only after she is thirty that a wo man begins to leave off having birth. days.~Weatminster Gazette, —— caused to leg ascertained SHY, Dropping Coaches on the Run. The Ingenious means by which one of the great rallroad systems of Eng. land drops passeuger coaches off at Intermediate stations without slowing up the locomotive, even for a fraction of a second, in Its speed of sixty or more miles an hour Is called the “slip conch” systom and Is described in Popular Mechanles, It Is a system never tried in America and canslats tn dropping, or “slipplag,” one or more of the rear coaches just before the station is reached. Undoubtedly many American tourists in England after alighting at their destination have been amazed to discover that the coach which they occupled was still beside them, while the locomotive nnd the remainder of the train were no where to be seen, As George Sees the Peers, “David Lloyd George,” sald the miner from Wales, “Is a very witty speak. er. I've heard him many a time In Carnarvon. Speaking In Welsh, he once ridiculed in Carnarvon the house of lords, He sald the average peer thought so much of himself at family prayers he always made one well known passage run: “‘Burely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of lords for ever, "London Globe, His Wish, “Life Is something of a game after all.” sald the cynical person, “Perhaps,” replied Mr. Meekton, “but 1 wish Henrietta wouldn't regard it as bridge, with me forever playing Shpouige ns dummy.” - Washington I A PSA ———— Read the Reporter, can buy, but it is the asked for them, onto the wagon ; it does ging. apest hay loader you are worth more than is perform the work it is sold t Side Delivery Hay Rake aster Side Delivery bef wre. In the Lan those that have gone The Lancaster rake gathers uj air freely passes By the use of clover, The machine will the good 1 made, easily « 1 ; 5 i 00SEC Ana 3 3 1 $2203 ybtained slow speed, which 3 ue grass as well as the The Johnston Ma durability. wagon, from a cart to a carriage, cuse plow, from an iron machines ; their strong points are light draft and ired, but not overweighted. loader, from a child's wagon to a heavy farm fork toa manure spreader, from a hand plow to a ay rake to a hay Syra- to a 0-Jo0t reversible ladder find at our ware house, efore you buy os i esis rei FRODUUR AT STORES, 1AM csimcrniniinnes 1D BOIIAE....onc irrsrsmnen Potatom........ EE SR GRAIN MARKET. BPS curses wee 85 | Whent wtsammeen: 45 1 Onis. hn" he 000000000000 000000000 wu How About That Picnic ? Sowers Here are just a few suggestions : Olives, Sweet Gherkins, Peanut Butter ( in bulk or in glass jars.) Cheese, Bologna, Sliced Dried Beef, Sliced Boiled Ham, Baked Beans, Sar- dines. Lemons, Oranges, Pines Bananas, H. F. Rossman Spring Mills, Pa. Be PLUMBING Bath Room Work and General Plumbing Hot Water Heating A J. S. ROWE CENTRE HALL « + « PA. S000500000000000000000000000000000000000 "O00 OPC RRRO LD People Who Are Interested in what is done, are generally also interested in how it is done, We are going to tell you, Inter- est rates in the West have always been higher than in the East. For many years to come, they will be from 1 1-2 to 2 per cent, higher, I ook at these figures : $1 invested annually for 20 years at 6 pe r cenrt,, $306.99. $1 invested annually for 20 years at 4 per cent., $30.97, Difference in favor of 6 per cent. on $1 per year, $8.02. If you are investing $100 per year, the difference in favor of western securities would be $802, It is no wonder that the best returns are secyred in the THE ROYAL UNION MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF DEMOINES, IA. ——————— — JAMES I. THOMPSON GENERAL AGENT