Rev, Barry Accepts, The call extended by the joint council of the Centre Hall Lutheran charge to Rev. Fred W. Barry has been accepted, and he will enter upon the duties as pastor of the charge by the first of October, Rev. Barry has been located at Bellefonte for four and one-half years, that being his first charge. As pas- tor there he was very successful, and was much loved by his members and held in the highest esteem: by all as a citizen, Rev. Barry and his sisters will oo- cupy the parsonage here. i — Sr Marriage Licenses, Isaac J. Bhearer, Bellefonte Mable C, Bhearer, Beech Creek John F, Brooks, Pleasant Gap Sarah E. Breon, Axe Mann Edward Gingerich, Lavonia Bertha Catherman, Milmont Thomas McM. Walker, Cresson Jessie Swiers, Phillipsburg Alfred Davis, Munson Btation Lennetta Summerville, Munson Sta. Samuel I, Gettig, Madisonburg Mollie M. Keasler, Pittsburgh Se——————— —————————— Fall Orchard Demonstrations. Demonstrations will be given in the model orchards of Benjamin Limbert, Madisonburg, on 21st inst.,, and E. B. Way, Stormstown, on 22od. These meetings comprise the annual fall demonstrations in the orchards that are managed directly or indjrectly by the division of Economic Zoology of the State Department of Agriculture. The meetings are public Harris 1ownship. Mrs. C. W. Corl spent Tuesday at Btate College. Mrs. SBophie Hall visited at Miles- burg last week. Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Meyer spent Saturday evening at State College. John From, of State College, attend- ed to business at Boalsburg Baturday afternoon. John Fortney Is supplying the people of Boalsburg and vicinity with choice peaches, This place was well represented at the reunion at the Grange Eoncamp- ment on Tuesday. Bolling spplebutter and canning tomatoes is the principal employment among the housewives. 8. E. Weber and sister Miss Anna spent a day at the home of their brother F. W, Weber at Hecla Park. A pew “Fisher” came to Boals- burg daring the * high tide” last week, and George says the boy calls him * papa.” A number of people from Boalsburg attended the church social at the Ferree home st Oak Hall on Thurs- day evening. Misses Mary, Grace and Rath Swabb, of Pine Grove Mills, spent Sunday at the home of William Kern at Cedar Creek. On sccount of recent heavy raius farmers are prevented from getting their ground ready for sowing. This has given them time to attend the Grange Encampment snd Fair at Centre Hall. Mrs. Grace Fortney BShehan, of New York City, is visiting with rela- tives at Boalsburg. Her busband J. F. 8hehan died a short time ago In g sauitarium where be had been ill with typhoid fever for several weeks. Before returning to her home she will spend some time with her mother at Harrisburg. George E. Meyer, of Boalsburg, the piano tuner and agent for high grade pianos, took a trip down the valley as far as Aasronsburg, tuning planos, cleaning organs, and looking up pros- pective sales, He says there is no better piano made than the one he Is handling, and only asks you to try them and convince yourself. Mr, Meyer will bring a piaoo right to your home and one tual anyone can play. Bend him a card If you wish to see one. It may pay you to see him be- fore buying a pisno. He has several pianos which he uses for demonstrat- ing, and these can be bought at a bargain, A ui —— Woodward. Ammon Miogle and family will move to Carrolltown this week, Mr. and Mrs, J, B. Ard and son spent a day in Rebersburg last week. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Stover, of Aaronsburg, spent Bunday with their son Harry, Mr. and Mrs Reuben Musser, of Menno, Bouth Dakots, are visiting friends in this place. The stork left a young son at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Btover on Monday morning. Mrs. N. W. Evy spent several days last week with her daughter, Mm, Al len Hess, in Yeagertown. Allen Yearick and family spent the Sabbath at the home of James Winkleblech at Fiedler, Hiram Goodman returned to his home HBaturday, after spending two weeks with his son John at Lewis town. After spending » month in Wood- ward, Lloyd, Katie and Marie Beall returned to their home in Pittsburgh, A Good Biull, =~ He was youug und had just grado. ated from law school. His resources were exhausted, Lut he bravely swung forth his shingle and waited. But no clients stopped on that side of the street. His office rent was due, and his clothes were becoming shiny, but he went to his office with a regularity, that would indicate a thriving prace tice. He was deep in an imaginary case, and when the authorities were all noted and arguments prepared be started forth downtown and thrashed the mayor's son, whom he met in the street. The act aroused the righteous indignation of the townsmen, and he faced an angry court. But in his tes timony he was able to include a sharp attack on the mayor and his adminis tration. He quoted law from Lycur- gus and Solon and gave them the page, number and chapter every tine, The case was continued and sent up to a higher court. At last it reached the supreme bench, and the young man made the most of his opportunity to show his ability as a lawyer. He Jost the case and paid his fine cheer fully, for he had established for him- gelf a practice which assured his fu- ture.~Joe Mitchell Chapple in National Magazine, President Johnson's Impeachment. The house impeached President John- son on Nov. 25, 1807, charging him with having removed Secretary of War Stanton In direct violation of the tenure of office act, with having ap pointed Geperal Thomas contrary to the same act, with conspiracy with General Thomas and others for the intimidation of Secretary Stanton and the unlawful disbursement of the war department's woney and with induclog General Emory, commanding the de partment of Washlugton, to disobey orders. The house adopted the resolution of impeachment by a vote of 120 to 42 After the trial of the case before the senate the vote for impeachment there stood 85 to 19, thus being short of the necessary two-thirds. The senate ad journed sine dle, however, without voting on some of the primary articles embraced In the charges against the president. Thereupon the chief justice of the United States court entered a verdict of acquittal on the record.— New York Times, A Great Trade Secret. As every one knows, the process of manufacturing the paper of which Bank of Englund notes are made Is one of the greatest of all trade secrets. It is known only to the governor of the Bank of England and to three oth- er persons intimately connected with the industry, which Is carried on at Overton, a qulet little village in Hants All that the outside world is allowed to know concerning this precious pa- per is that it Is made, among other lo- gredients, out of charred husks and Rhenish vines, Quite as profound a secret Is the manufacture of both the paper and the ink used for American banknotes The former has the double advantage of not being a secret preparation, but one that only “takes” one particular kind of ink. which Is quite unique, the American government paying the man ufncturer, who alone possesses the se cret. the sum of £30000 a year for making it.—earson’s Weekly, How Did He Know? Joe, the fat boy In the “Plekwick Papers,” spent most of his time In slumber He was Lappler that way Probably there are a good many other people in the world a good deal like Joe. but moxt of them do not get the chance for sleep that he had This scrap of conversation, recently over heard. wonid seem to indicate that, al though this I= a nervous age, the de sire for sleep I= not wholly dead. “1 don't feel well,” remarked Smith as he took off his coat in the office, preparatory to sitting down at bis desk. "The trouble with we Is that | paven't slept as | should. 1 don't feel well unless ve slept” “That's the same way with me,” re marked his partner. “ln fact, 1 think I feet best of all when I'm sound asleep.” — Youth's Companion, The First Oyster Eater, The gluttonous Vitellius is reported to have enten 1,000 oysters at a sitting “He was a very valiant man who first ventured on eating of oysters,” King James was wont to declare, a sent) ment echoed by the poet Gay: Theaman had sure a palate covered o'er With brass or steel that on the rocky shore First broke the oozy oyster's pearly coal And risked the living morsel down his throat Trying to Help. Hotel Clerk (to rural guest closing front entrance)~lley, there! What are you trying to do? Uncle Eben-Don't git excited, young fellow! 1 Jeo thought, seeing as how | was prob'ly the last one in tonight, I'd do the right thing and lock the doors fore going to bed!- Puck. Matter of Intelligence, Mra. Suburbs~John, did you call at the intelligence office today to inquire about a maid of all work? Suburbs- Yes, my dear. Mrs. Suburbs-—-Couldn't you find one? Suburbs—Oh, yes; | found a dozen, but they were ail too intelligent to come out to this place. Chicago News, No Necessity, Perdida (at the candy pulling) Where do we wash our bands? Myr tilla—Oh, we don't have to do that Pulling the candy makes them beauth fully white and clean.~Chicago Trib une, Make not thy friends too cheap to thee nor thyself to thy friends.—Ful- ler, ——— A IATA AI Centre Reporter $1 per year ln advance, os ose Hoyt’ 8 Hospitality. It was the habit of Charles H. Hoyt, the dramatist, to invite almost every- body he met to come up and spend a few weeks with him at his summer home in New Hampshire Ope night Hoyt, Bert Dasher, Ww. IL Currie, Frank McKee and several other house guests of Hoyt were sitting on the veranda of Hoyt's summer house waiting for dinner. The train had just arrived, and they saw an old farmer and his wife coming up the path. “Who are they?’ asked Hoyt never saw them before.” “The dickens you didn't” replied Currie, *“That is that old chap and his wife you talked to over at Spring- field and Invited to visit you." “Oh, well,” sald Hoyt, “maybe they are just coming In to dinner. They will take the night train back.” Then he looked again and saw the hired man belind the farmer and his wife wheeling a big trunk on a wheel- barrow. “No, by George,” shouted Hoyt, “they are here for a run!” And they stayed a month.~Cleve- land Leader. jo Long and Short Story Writers, Which are the great short stories of the English language? Not a bad basis for a debate! This I am sure of ~that there are far fewer supremely good short stories than there are su premely good long books, It takes more exquisite skill to carve the cameo than the statue, But the strangest thing is that the two excel lences seem to be separate and even antagonistic, Skill in the one by no means insures skill in the other. The great masters of our literature, Field. ing, Scott, Dickens, Thackeray and Reade, have left vo single short story of outstanding merit behind them, with the possible exception of Wan. dering Willie's tale in “Red Gauntlet.” On the other hand, men who bave been very great In the short story, Stevenson, Poe and Bret Harte, have written no great book. The champion sprinter is seldom a five miler as well Poe is the master of all. Poe is, to my mind, the supreme original short story writer of all time.~Conan Doyle io “Through the Magic Door.” Yosemite Versus Grand Canyon. Yosemite for a home or a camp, the Grand canyon for a spectacle. | saw a robin in Yosemite valley. Think how forlorn aod out of place a robin would seem In the Grand canyon! What would be do there? There is no turf for him to Inspect, and there are no trees for him to perch on. 1 would as soon expect to find him amid the pyramids of Egypt or amid the ruins of Karvak. The bluebird was there also, and the water ouzel haunted the lucid waters. The reader may create for himself a good image of Yosemite by thinking of a section of seven or eight miles of the Hudson river mid. way of its course as emptied of iis waters and deepened 3000 feet or more, having the sides nearly vertical, with snow white waterfalls Suttering aguinst them bere and there, the fa mous spires and domes planted along the rim, and the landscape of groves and glades, with its still, clear, wind. ing river, occupying the bottom.—John Burroughs in Century. His Apology. A recent refusal by a member of the English parliament to withdraw “one comma” of what he had said about a member of the government recalls the fact that Richard Brinsley Sheridan once declined to punctuate an apology. in the house of commons one day Sheridan gave an opponent the lie dl rect. Called upon to apologize, the of- fender replied: “Mr. Speaker, | sald the honorable member wus a lar it is true and 1 am sorry for it” The insulted party was not satisfied and said so. “Sir,” retorted Sheridan, “the honor. able member can interpret the terms of my statement according to his abil ity, and be can put punctuation marks where it pleases him.” Posts’ Licenses, The poet was sick at heart. He just had submitted one of his very best productions to an unfeeling editor, who bad rebuffed bim In these gentle words: “lI wish there wis a law about poets’ licenses like the dog IMgnuse law. If 1 had my way a poet would have to take out a license every year and those who didn't would be killed." New York Press Her Little Composition, A class was reciting in a school. “Who can give me,” sald the teacher, “a sentence in which the words ‘bit ter end’ are used 7” Up jumped a little girl excitedly. “1 can, teacher. “The cat ran under the bureau and the dog ran after her and bit her end.’ A Method In His Generosity. My husband is awfully good na- tured. 1 gave him a beautiful box of cigars for his birthday, and he only smoked one himself and gave all the Beat away to his friends.~London Opin- Strong Evidence. “What makes you think he had been to a drinking perty?” “He came home,” sobbed the young wife, “wearing a phonograph horn for a hat.” —Loulsvilie Courier-Journal, Always Happens, A IE WHE pn around with a chip his shoulder will finally encounter big a fool as he is and there will a fight.—Atctison Globe. sense of smartness is sure to handled on rocky hillsides, for two or three horses, NEW It leaves no dead furrows to wash : will work as well. GRASS SEED The draft the New Idea, can be well throw the soil up hill bet- It is made Does its Work » To Perfection the 4—A Hopper that superior in quality, CLOVER SEED The cut here represents From the material the engine is in all ALFALFA SEED hs POR BALE-The Sndastsigned offnrg | sale & good chunk wil work Wie | oan be bought sl a bargain H W. DINGES, Ceotre Hall, Pa. ok BAL Be A \ solid oak corner china closet, with beveled edge glass ; first clams in For sale at a bargain, MEE W. EB MOORE, Centre Hall, Pa. every way. ARRELS FOR BA! E—A number whiskey barrels are offered for sale at 8 reason. able price. EDWARD LINGLE, Spring Mills, K. 3 RT ANTED) — Agent in Centre © county for | " bigh grade, mediam priced line of automobiles. * Get non this. you oan save money. © Write : Peas. Automobile Uo. 7181 Keily ®t, E KE Pitsburg, Pa. To WELLING HOUSE FOR BALE-~The un- offers for sale Lhe dwelling home adjoining the Penns Valley Banking property, Sa} Clare street, the prop Won Hau, Pa. Juan § FOR SALE-The undersigned item 1 private sale their farm, three | fing wx acres, foriy-nioe of wnioh are clear ana | £000 dwelling house. aad oak bo Jing areon Lhe £ooa out bul areon i premises ; also good cisterns, and pieaty of frum | of all kinds, Toe prope in for sale until | ist, afer which offer 0 sell is wilth- drawn. | The reason far selling is on account of the ad. For further partion. | EARN AT PRIVATE BALE~The unde: signed offers ai private sale Lhe a Milis, 1n Gregg | YTON HOMAN, Centre Hall, or HOMAN, No, 1904, 13 Ave, Altoona. wale Meglater, TURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, ose o'clock, two miles east of Centre Hail, on Puritan Stock Bhepherd dog. Also a lot of farm implements, L. F. ROAN (eneral Auctioneer Farm and Stock Sales a call For Bell 21-2, LEMONT, PA, Diarrhoea is always more or Be pre- pared for it. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Disrrhoea Remedy is prompt and eflectual. It can always be depended upon snd is plessant to take. For sale by sll dealers. A DMINTSTRATRIX ¥oTIC Elation of Administration on the estate of Amelia Roman, inte bin RB Twp, deceased, having een vf pe to uhdersigned, she would respectfully request all persons Kpowing them selves indebled to the estate 10 make immediate payment, and those having claims against the sane to present them dul suthentionted for set tiement. (MRS; BLANCHE NEES Administrasrix, Spring Mills, HOMESTEAD FOR SALE—The Houtz Homestead, located one mile northwest of Linden Hall is offered for sale by te undersigoed. ¢ place contains eighty hi acres, about seventy of which are under Siisivation and tue remainder Bs covered with | timber. There are good bulidings and an Toon oe of water ; also a la quantity and | loding two apple s BO that pos | For further | "Linden Hall. As usually treated, a spraived ankle will disable a man for three or four | weeks, but by applying Chamberlain's Liniment freely as soon as the injary | Is received, snd observing the direc: | tions with each bottle, a cure can be {effected in from two to four days. | For sale ide all dealers. 1 ronan R. R. Personally -Conducted Excursions to | Nagar Falls September 27, October 11, 1911. Round Trip $7.60 Ce BEPRCIAL TRAIN of Pullman Parlor Ones, Dining Car, and Day Oosches ranniog via Picturesque Susquehanna V. ley Route EEE a may be thom Ticket Agents. FRODUOE AT STOKES, 1AM .cnsminincssiinn 10 Butler. comme X Potatons...cc cones $0 swaverseees 16 GRAD MARKET, Bre en sone 55 Wheat creme B YF — wen 50 | OBES sss sssrsssnenn 35 COT ins eens wee GB C000000000000000 00006 bow Fall and Winter SHOES A full line of Sweet Orr & Co.'s OVERALLS for Men and Boys, SELZ RUBBERS also, Selz Rubbers for high-heel shoes, for AFew WHITE SHIRT WAISTS, and a few more pieces of Lawn at a BARGAIN A full line of CAKES for the Picnic, if you need any, SOPHO OLOLHONVD0NNBM 0000000000000000000000000000 H. F. Rossman : Spring Mills, Pa. PLUMBING Bath Room Work and General Plumbing Hot Water Heating J. S. ROWE CENTRE] HALL « « « PA, S00000000000000000500000000000000000000000000000000%0 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers