pen REE — or The Reporter ig called upon to re- cord the death of one of its old friends, James Kimport, of near Linden Hall, The death occurred Wednesday morn- ing after an illness of about ten days, and was due to paralysis, Had he lived until April 17¢h next, he would have attained the age of eighty years. Regardless of his age, up to within & ghort time ago, Mr. Kimport enjoyed fairly good health, and up until quite recently made trips to Linden Hall and other nearby points. Funeral services will bs held on Friday morning, services at the home at 9:30 o'clock, and interment at Bprucetown in the family burying plot. Rev. J. Max Lantz will be the officiating minister. Mr. Kimport is the last of the nine children of Johu Kimport., The fath- er came to Harris township from Lab- anon county, and the mother ( Fort- pey) from Lancaster county. For many years they lived in ‘‘the sold house” on the Kimport farm, apd it was there the children were born, and the subject of this sketch lived there, and later in the new improvements, all his life. He and his sister, Miss Liz- z'e, who died a year ago, kept up the Kimport bome, Neither of them were married, but took into their home A. B. Kimport, former prothon- otary of this county, and his sister Miss Elizabeth, and reared them. The latter remained there until the present time, repaying as well as she could the kindnesses bestowed by the uncle when she was a child. Mr. Kimport was a stanch Demo- erat, and some years ago was the can- didate of his party for county treasur- er. He was a man of Kindly disposi- tion, always willing to favor his friends and neighbors, and honest in his dealings with every one. Janes Kimport Dead, ———— ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY EVENING ta smth ©. Lawrence Abbott at Enterialner snd Imporsonator, Spring Mills ¢. Lawrence Abbott, entertainer and irnpersonator, will be in the Grange Hall, Bpring Mills, Fridsy evening, 15:h ipstant. Mr. Abbott was secured through the Beorer Lyceum Buresu, Philadelphia, and is an artist of high and wide reputation.” He will present “Aunt Jane of Kentucky’ in costume, and make her and “Samantha Allen” living characters before your eyes The entertainer’a literature contains recommendations from all the country, and all classes of people The admissions are fifteen twenty-five cents, Course $1 00, which admits to all of the five numbers in the For tickets, ete, inquire at the post office, Bprivg Mills. gections of and tickets, course. adv. A tm— W.0,. 7.0 Tue local W. C, to Its (irange Arcadia Friday evening Reception, T. U. will give » new members ip A suitable program will be rendered and a light luceh served. An invitatior is extended to all members of the gociety as well as to the families U which they belong. reception AP ——— LOCALS The directors of the Patron’s Raral Telephone Company are in session to- day (Thursday ) in the grand jury room, in the court house Mra, John Close and two children, and Mrs, Charles Corl, of Boalsburg, aod Mrs. Nathaniel Zsiglar, of Linden Hall, visited Mre. Jobn Rable in this place. Since the election, former Prothono- tary A. B. Kimport bas been at the Kimport home, near Linden Hell aesisting in the care of his uncle, James Kimport, a notice of whose death ap- pears in this isaue. ! i % i A 1 ' { hospital in that city. She ls a gradu- ate of the Centre Hall High Hehool and a young girl of pluck as well se ability. Mrs. H. J. Lambert, son Earl and daughter Ruth, on Bunday went to Millbeim in their auto car, nmking minutes, While there they were at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Guy National bank at Btate College, was operated on for sppendicitis at the Huntingdon hospital. He withstood the ordeal exceeding well, but the physicians were somewhat alarmed, owing to his general weakened condi tion, The out-of-town members of the Masonic order who attended the funer. al of J. A. Reesmman were: W, H stuart, John M. Wieland, W. D. Lud. wig, Boaleburg ; Frank E. Wieland, Linden Hall ; H. F. Rossman, Rev. J. man, E. W. Mauck, E. L. Auman, Millbeim. The citizens of Bpring Mills did » wise thing when they organized a lec. {ure course, the first number of which will be presented on Friday evening The course tickets sell for $1.00, and admit to all of the five numbers mak- ing up the course, The venture Is a new one in that town, but one that cannot fail to prove successful. The entertainments, lec'ures, musicals, ete, will be held in the Grange Hall at Bpring Mills, w Pe "THE MIGHTY ONION. A Tribute to This Vegetahle With an Artistic Temperament. Kill the onfon and you leave a gap in the universe. Kill anything else and there is a substitute. The potato 18 akin to the squash and cab- bage and turnips and cauliflower are of the same family; beans are elongat- ed poas; is a pessimistic grange, beef reincarnated grass, water- melons just the survivor of a very fit cucu r, and so on. But the onion is generis, alone, unique, triumphant. It special creation to tempt the palate of a weary world, The onion the futility of man's wisdom. He might have guessed at everything else under the sun, but wotld never an onion. Science may deduce a new star before It visible or radium before its but this succu- lent, starry vegetable would have gone uninvented forever had not its own In- not bashful qualities ves into tear brimmed anticipatory lips. mixture of gratitude e should we view the spectacle cereals; the lemon orp sul is a proves he have guessed becomes discovery, eyes | escent Wit and aw of nature turning transmuting of mere clay into a vege- table with an temperament Richmond Times-Dispatch what a her energles to the artistic HELD BY A COBRA. Agony of a Prisoner In a Military Jail in India. In the military ca dia the about feet squs are it grille, the iron ars being inches apar On one « confined | one of the n dia, crawl wrigg! It curled he was feelin the sn his had hours, At 8S his 1 prisor stick ed the into a The « he thoug! of In- which by ntonments went cells, are f high twelve oot rately. There no one side is a about punishment he ha had t hie * fa # Heres a right, up I chap was searched wasn't a sign of Never mind who will valt.”"—New York wr y Was the fo " n? that, joke 1 Globe. the How He Would Stop Dueling. Dueling in England until about the middie of the forties, “when,” says | Dorothy Nevill, “an counter Lieutenant Colonel Fawcett and Lieutenant Monro, in which the former was shot dead, led debate in the house of commons anrvived Ady en- 1 between to a owing to the wife of the former being refused a On this occasion Sir Charles one way existed of effectually putting an end to duelin No duel should be allowed was not fought across a table. Of the two pistols used only one should be loaded with ball, lots being drawn to see who should have the loaded one. If this produced no result then both pistols should be joad- od with ball and the survivor, should there be one, hanged.” Advice From Her Lawyer, Timothy Coffin, who was prominent at the Bristol county bar in the last century, once secured the acquittal of an old woman accused of stealing a plece of pork. As she was leaving the courtroom she put her hand to her mouth and in audible whisper sald: “Mr. Carfin, what'll T do with the por-ruk 7” Quickly came the retort: “Eat it, you fool! The judge says you didn't steal 1t."—Boston Hergld. whic Sure of His Umbrella, Departing Guest—Dear me, what a wet night! 1 wonder {if you pould give me the loan of an umbrella) Host- Certainly, but—well, the fact is, I think 1 would be the better for a walk. I'll just take a turn home with you and shelter you by the way. A Bad Feature. Jack—-Engagement is off, ch? Has she sent him back the ring? Tom-- No; that's what's bothering him. He owes money on that ring.~New York Presa, To smile at the jest which plants a thorn in another's breast is to become a principal in the mischief.—Bheridan. fi DOOMED HIMSELF. Chief Shavehead Boasted Once Toc Often of His Deeds of Blood. J. Seymour Currey in *The Story of Old Fort Dearborn” describes the mas gacre of the garrison of the old fort and tells of one instance of poetic Jus. tice for the Indians’ butchery. “Bloody retribution,” says Mr, Cur rey, “overtook one of the savages, who on the day of the massacre showed no mercy to his victims, This was a chief known as a deadly enemy of the whites and who bore the expres glve name of Shavehend because of his peculiar manner of tying up his scanty hair. “Years afterward Chief Shavehead was ih company with a band of hunt ers in the Michigan woods. In the party was a white man who had for merly been a soldier at Fort Dearborn and was one of the survivors of the battle on the shore. At one of the campfires chief. being of a boastful disposition, related while un der the Influence of liquor to those gitting about the campfire the fright ful tale concerning the events of that day, dwelling upon Its horrors boasting of his own deeds, “He was not aware that whites he had so 18 at that braggart The old he heard the tale was mad by the recall of the re membered scene. “Toward nightfall the old savage de the of the the soldier with load Oth lake the and one of the fiercely as listening whom moment utterances, dened well part d alone in direction forest, 1 ed rif ers oDServed as they passed out f ai iy 3 of jr sight inte hi ides of the forest to his thavehead was never after a time PROPOSALS IN JAPAN. Quaint Custom of Placing a Plant In an Empty Flowerpot. In some of the Jag ese islands, hon poor plant the next ered on below, The Oil in Cloves. Cloves are simply the dried buds of a evergreen growing These flower flower beautiful tree naturally on the Spice islands ids are gathered when bright red and t of opening. The 0 they have become of a are just on the t name o the prepared spice ain ning ines fre o small nails, the French word clon, for nail are heavily charged gent, acrid, volatile oll, vers with a pun as much as sometimes } being extracted ie for favoring and and has a limited fleid In medicine, but the habit of “eat ing cloves.” In whi too often old ones Indulge, is very rep rehensible, is a powerful nany cases an in a Purposes voung folks and ns the oll drug. becoming In sidious poison, Mitigating Circumstance. A Seotel balllie recently advanced t« the bench had a eriminal placed before him accused of some very modest vio jation of the law. Of course the bhaillic knew the prisoner well. He heard the charge stated. “John, man, I'm sorry to see you here. We'll just fine you half a crown.” The clerk here intervened. “But the charge is not yet proved We have not heard the evidence,” Then the benignant balilie: “Ah. well, John, my man, as the charge Is not proved we'll just fine you an elghteenpence.” London Telegraph Facial Horticulture, “A new milkman left anr milk to day,” announced Darothy, “Did he have whiskers?’ asked her mother, thinking perhaps it was the proprietor, “No,” sald the fouryearold; “he didn't have whiskers, but he had the roots." Harper's Weekly. Animal Food. Innocent Young Wife~The doctor gald you were to have a little antmal food today, John, sa Fve chopped you up a bit of pice clover hay and scalded it to make it go down softer!-London ORIGIN OF THE PEARL. The Prized Gem Only the Brilliant Sarcophagus of a Worm. Bcelence has discovered the real ori gin of the pearl to be a worm. Dr. Hugh M. Smith glves some interesting information on this subject in the Na tional Geographic Mag: We know that almost foreign body—a grain of sand, a bit of mud or shell, a animal mollusk make it Zine, nny piece of seaweed or a small may by its irritation cause the to with and the nucleus of a pearl, but the largest part of the of the world Is due to normally pass a part of thel within the shell of the pe Minute spherical worms known as ce ; bedded in the soft tissue forty having been found | oyster. As the result of eyster forms a protecting al intruder, and then, if the larva body is gradually bonate of lime, proceeds tO ETOW 3 If the larva the body of the strong fishes which pres there undergoing Ultimately It reac great rays, wi ger fishes, tain full deve vae that lodgment in begur cover it nacre antttal sear! a finnual ear: Crop $y is are of cycle is We may of a celebm that “the m ality only a worm." FAITH OF ri LOCALS The Democrats in the western of Centre county will hold a Wilson ratification meeting this { Thursday ) evening, in Philipsburg. Holomon Lingle, east of Centre Hall some yearr, and is steadily here, D employed A. Getter, a representative of the i i 1 i | | i Pittsburg Pilate Glass Company, was in Centre Hall Inst week and secured an order for glass for the large win dows in the Reporter buliding now Agent DF, Lie Byivis, Luse nj sted a slight Mra. Htormstown home of loss at Mr, and B_oOOve The fire broke out st night, and had where control been impossible discovered, The but $168 A peculiar incident was that the exploding of shells laid out for hunting exrly in the morning, waa the before it lors was alarm that awakaned the sleeping oc- Tuoesday evening of last week Miss Lambert planned as birthday Mrs. H. J. Lambert, in Centre Hall, With 8 view of. keeping the undertaking from the sll made mother’s knowledge, were large f cipated Tribes of Siberia, northwestern Siberia a writes: “A curious people as they sl strongest ter. Their counted 1 they c ness, dis! thelr lam result Sadness on thelr ple wi traits of th 1 lens } the with dark, spirits an doctors is In fen at death his « placed on so wild if the 1 beasts are exj News. Ventilation. Have we ever stopped to think how our ancestors two or back Hved and fic no ventilation ments? The n ree generationg {shed with little o their sleeping apart ight air used to be con gldered a to health and a of colds. Bedrooms were kept closely shut, and yet our ancestors, many of them, were hardier than we and lived to good old ages. Animals burrow in their at night, breathing the same air over and over again, while birds and fowls tuck their heads under their Of course ventilation is absolutely nec- essary for proper comfort, cleaniiness and health, but people have lived on little or none of it for hundreds and thousands of years.—Exchange. very dreadful menace sure inducer holes wings. A Giant Pepys Saw. King James I. had a gigantic porter eight feet six Inches in height, but he was not perfect, being round shoul dered, knockkneed and lame in one foot. Of a similar height was Charles Munster, a yeoman of the Hanoverian guard who died In 1676, and seven years before there was being exhibited in London a Dutchman eight feet nine inches high anent whom in Pepys diary we find the following entry on Aug. 15, 1660: “Went to Charing Cross to see the great Dutchman. 1 did walk under his arm with my hat or apd could not reach his chin wh the tips of my fingers." AAT ———— Happiness. If you cannot be happy In one way, be in another, and this facility of disposition wants but little aid from philosophy, for health and good humor are almost the whole affair. Many run about after felicity, like an absent. minded man hunting for his hat while it 1s tn his hand or on his head. A Safe Wager. Townley-—8ome one has sald that he is a benefactor of his race who makes two blades of grass grow where only one grew before. Subbubs—I'll bet saything that fellow never had to run a lawn mower.— Boston" Transcript, Two Pune. Miss Young-After all, what Is map riage but a mister-y? Miss Older—~Yes, and what is spin sterhood but perpetual missery ?-Lon- don Tit-Bita, - A asion, s————— a — Hepo ter Register boy's amszement, A pty appelite " f If you take ( The HAM Der- creale 8 the WOrk OL OLS stomach and enable it { te i naturally. For wale uli deal re. adv, ASOURT PROCLAMATION, Se 4 , WN ——————— sale Register CRDAY, SOVEMEE} » o'clock, ai Hall, by C. D Broon : Harness, ve sas and Bartholomew's stable, in Bariho'omew and George E hic puiiets iDAY ore ball mil non LIBR Two wor horses surk colts, 4 Cows H two ing stein bulls, 8 heifers from spring, 2 8 young § wd sows. | fers oid br sec 8 he br ? PER S“WANETD” AND "FOR SALE" ADVS, COLT FOR BALE~Beven is offered for sale by the Bell ‘phone 7-1, LEE, Potters Mills months old horse oolt undersigned. Call Spring Mills. WITMER E Ps. { FOR BALE Reporter. If you want to advertise do #0 in » | pewspaper, not on fences. The Reporter resch- os many homes in Pens and Brash Valleys and all other sections of Centre county. Be wise. sdvert'ss. THE CENTRE REPORTER, Oentre | Hall, Space for advertising io the Centre ail SHERIFF'S BALE~ virtue of a writ of Fier! Facias fesued out of the Court ens of Centre County, ivania, and to me rected, there will be exposed to public sale at the Court House, in the Borough of Bellefonte, Pa., on Monday, Decem- ber 2nd, 1912, at 1.30 p. 10., the following describ Pod real estate viz DESCRIPTION All those three certain messuages, lenemenia tracts of land situate In the township of 4, County of Centre, and Biste of Penne syivania, bounded and described sa follows, wil of Common No. 1, Bounded Howard Borough rond makes a ¢ three sides, namely, on the South North, and on the West by land of containing one-half acre, by p ihlie road to Marsh Cree and boun leading from which sald the land on East and Jacob Boon, more Or (ese, ve x SG Beginnin : Hone, corner at a public road ' I Kix ty ote one-hundredth land of James degrees de. ands of Ex ren West twee stone ox Bore Imeasnre, dwell ings lie road lead- thence by West fifty-one thence by land three degrees ng one " vatory fr a Aegroos 10 lone oond part 0 nine acres, xecution and Facias issued out Pleas of Centre County there will be irt House, in the ynday. Deceit owing described ment and tract wwnship of Penn- follows viz Villiage of Martin, on and on the ining regu ergct- to ask If you New Drug ng some bot- at least I n {Contemp- . » 1 expect t y News. be Puck nlp Is your husband cross? An irri- table, fault floding disposition is often due to a disordered stomsch. A may with good digestion is nearly always natured, A great many have been permanently cured of stomsch trouble by taking Chamberlasins tab- lets, For sale by all dealers. adv. good RT ‘Wall Plaster A limited quantity ol wall plaster, first quality in every respect, and admitting of the addition of two parts sand, is offered lor sale by C. D. BARTHOLOMEW and S. W. SMITH, Centre Hall