The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 12, 1913, Image 4

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THE CENTRE REPORTER. |
ISSUED WEEKLY.
8. W. SNITH, Editor and Proprietor.
Entered at the Post Office in Centre Hall as
Second Class mail matter,
CentrE Harr, . . . PeNNA
THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1913
TERMS, —The terms of subscription to the Re-
porter are one dollar per year in advance.
ADVERTISING RATES—Display advertise
ment of ten or more inches, for three or more in
gertions, ten cents per inch for each issue. Dis- |
play advertising occupying less space than ten |
inches and for less than three insertions, from- |
fifteen twenty-five cents per ioch for each
issne, a composition. Minimum |
charge, sov ive i
Local 1 wos accompanying display advertis
{ng five coants por line for each insertion ; other
wise, eight cents per line, minimum charge,
y cents,
108, twenty cents par line
en ocenls per line for
for three
CHURCH APPOINTMENTS
Contre Hall, mornin 7 ; Tusseyville
LOOALS,
The W.C.T. U
afternoon,
. will meet Baturday
-(, P. Long Com-
(2%)
Miss Florence Rhone has been c¢on-
Potatoes wanted
pany, Spring Mills.
fined to bed since Friday.
telegrapher at
Hall
Harry Hubler, a
Pine, was at his home in Centre
for a few days this week.
Willian (3. Rossman, who suffered
old complaint, is out again
Fueaday was in town,
Paul B
vd station sat
from an
and o
of the
during
regular
wdford is in charge
Ok Hall
smporary absence of the
Grange Day for *‘ Farmers
' at Pennsylvania State College,
June 18th. That will be a fine time to
gee all there is to see at that great in-
stitution,
that wonderful bird,
visited Hall again after a
rather prolonged absence from the
borough, and brought to the home of
Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Gross a baby
girl
James C. Reed, of Boalsburg, was a
business visitor in Centre Hall on
Tuesday. Mr. Reed is devoticg his
time to farming, and reports that the
frosts on Monday and Tuesday morn-
ings did considerable damage in his
gection,
ine
stork,
Centre
Dr. H. F, Bitner and son Lynn are
in Lancaster to attend the commence-
ment exercises at Franklin and Marsh-
all College, He expects to meet his
son, Harry Bitner, connected with the
Pittsburgh Press, at Lancaster. Both
father and son are graduates of Frank-
lin and Marshall.
Rev, J. Max Lantz and family, of
Bpring Mills, and Thomas IL. Moore,
of Centre Hall, represented the Penns
Valley Methodist charge at the twen-
ty-second annual convention of the
Epworth League, Altoona District, in
Philipsburg, There was a large
tendance of ministers
from all points in the district.
Willis Browning, a hermit, residing
at Barree Forge, Huntingdon county,
was found by a tramp dying of pneu-
monia in his cabin and before neigh-
bors could reach him death ensued,
He was found to have in a coat pocket
the sum of $16,000, which was placed
in the Altoona First National Bank
in the effort to locate any relatives the
mysterious man may have.
Mrs, Nicodemus Luse, of Coburn,
had the misfortune to break her arm
day of last week, The fracture was
reduced by Dr. C, 8. Musser and Dr.
H. 8. Braucht. Mrs. Luse was visit.
ing her sister, Mrs. J. H. Rishel, at
cellar way, falling down the stairs.
J. H. Weber, the proprietor of the
Centre Hall Roller Mill, is erecting an
office and scale house, The scales will
be so arranged that weighing may be
done from the inner office, and at the
same time the scales will be in full
view of the salesman or purchaser, as
the case may be, on the outside. The
portion of the mill now used for office
will be used for a wareroom, or rather
to enlarge the present wareroom in the
mill, The carpenters dolug the build.
ing are Messrs. W. B. Fiedler, I. V.
Bhowers and Frederick Carter,
Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Hanley and
little child, who lived in a humble
cottage near Monument in the north.
western section of this county, were
trapped when their home took afire
from an exploded lamp. They were
asleep when their home took afire, and
did not awaken until the whole struct.
ure was a mass of flames. They
escaped in their night clothing, and
the little child the mother carried
with her through the flames was so
badle berned that there are fears for
its life. The mother and father were
also severely burned,
DEATHS,
David 4. paiven=, one of Gregg town-
ship’a most prominent citizens,
the third generation of the Musser |
family on the homestead, died
Sunday, after an illness of some dar
tion, Interment will be made in
Heckman'’s cemetary today :
day), and the services will b
ed by Rev. D M. (iasiey, pa
Lntheran church, of which th
and |
an
Mr. Musser wns bh.
on whiets he died,
he
later
For many years
)
self a bomes on the
{the farmiog operation
sone, His
Rearick, and the couple |
fir a pei
wile was
iod
it two
tgether
pb geLn
| years, when, ab
| t
| passed to the beyond,
| wes the father
pine of whom
Ms J+ E.
William H.,
State College ;
Luther, who lived
Beuna Vi
Calvin 8., Williamspor
George,
homestead ; M
home,
Back in 1802 Philip Musser
scendant of Barnhart
to Gregg township and
where Penn Hall is
Philip Musser migrated from
county, and one of
settlers in that portion of Penn
i ley. The farm
known sa the Martin place, the
Musser
logite
now
WAS the
he purchase
at one time been Rev.
Martin,
having
distinction
pas
WHO Las Lhe
ing the first Presbyterian
this valley.
Philip
father as
Musser second
his owner of
tead He was the
by
maiden name was Misa RB
home
sul jot
hia second
The deceased was the |
third geueration
Aan active 1
thin
LUE
WAS
+ buried in the H
Meek
I'yrone, sged
George Yi
home
YOars.
township, this county, ar
following
until about twenty ye
3
time he moved to Bi
mang
Near
He WAR born
the occupation
His wife
also of Ferguson t
invalidism of t
wwrmeriy
over
ceded him to
some eighteen m
a family of four children,
jer of the Firs! Natio i
Juniata ; snd Millie,
and Mrs. Armstrong,
daysburg. will
in the Tyrone cemetery.
Raich
Lula
loterment
r yprielresa of
Miss Regina Hubler, p
the Hubler House, at
died Sunday morning, aged fifiy.
years, nine months, Ioterment
place on Wednesday
t at ti
garvices being conducted at the
morning,
by her pastor, Rev, Howe of th
formed church. Miss Hubler
well known {
$
and was popular aa 8 hostess,
hie county
throughout
femme
Pottars Mills.
William Blauser and son John
to Lewistown on Thursday,
Mr. and Mra. James Relish, of Centre
Hall, were in town on Bunday.
Mrs. Geiss Wagner spent
with her brother, Emanuel Bmith.
F. A. Carson and family
Thuraday afternoon in Bellefonte,
Mra, Annie Immel, of Spring Mills
called on friends in town on Balurdsy
evening
Miss Laurens Faust, of Centre Hill,
pent Sunday at the home of George
Boal.
Chilcren’s Day services will be held
at Hprucetown on Hunday morning,
June fifteenth.
Clark Bible, of Lewistown spent a
short time with his sister, Mrs, Joseph
Carson, on Bunday.
Mrs. Alexander, of Belleville,
been here the last week with
brothors and other friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashbridge
George Thomas and Miss
Meeker, spent Baturday
Mifflin county.
Mr, and Mra. Rassler and family, of
Belleville, visited from Saturday until
Bunday with Mrs. Rassler’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Lot Condo
I——— MY
Old Fort Hotel Bunday dinvers sre
talked of ; they are giving the old
hostelry such a reputation that slmost
every Hunday duri.g the summer
months many persons from all sections
of the country go there to appease
their appetites. Last Sunday forty-
seven partook of the noon luncheon at
that hotel, aud oné hundred and ten
ate five o'clock dinner there. The
Bunday previous there were sixty
guests, and the Banday previous fo
that wseventy-nine gratifiad their
hunger at that old stand.
————— pS
It will require about one week yet to
crush and haul onto the road the first
coat of crushed stone, The one thing
yet needed is a good dressing of fine
stone and a steam roller.
Friday
gpent
'
haa
her
Thomas,
Maude
evening in
SR A
Hebarsburg.
Mra. and Mra Soott itaver are
spending this week at Biate College,
On Monday Mra, OC, OC, Long rec
effected
ived
a paraletie stroke which the
one side of her body.
Mr. and Mrs.
Williamsport,
week al this |
On Inst
Bair
few davs
lace visiting
(reorge .
gpent a
Sunday night we had a
3 whieh played h VO
by
garden vegetab
(*hiarles
thrown
'
On tne
Bierly,
from a
residence
y World Magazine
When the Waltz Was New.
I havea k
ten by a friend to great-grand
mother in tl 181%, at Christn
time, hi lady expresses |
grave disapproval the “modern” ten
dency toward rapid dancing. The para
graph runs as follows
“1 was yvester evening at your Cousin
Jotty's, where 1 was much struck with
the new fashioned dances, which seem
ed, to me at rate, to be out of
keeping with the propriety and mod
esty which we look for in young ladies
of our clase, 1 ean only regret the dis
appearance of those ‘magzurkas’ and ‘gn
vottes' as well as the ‘minuets’
hope that these new dances or ‘valses,
aus 1 think they are named, will quick
ly disappear from respectable society.”
Letter in London Telegraph.
i ———————
[LIVER PIL
«coated and all
or Yop beg Al
Indigestion,
Ayer's Sold for
Ask Your Doctor,
tter in my possession writ
my
' year
nny
nnd
Ep A Lt i BE
oro i on A
Bell, a Lunatic, Had the Entire Popu-
lation In a Frenzy of Fear
the End by Earthquake
River Thames Panic of
Awaiting
in 1761~=The
Men, it has been well sald,
herds. Et will be seen
mad in herds, for
dani
suddenly
shaking
and run
of some ny
Oh
Minic terrot
ryred i
predi
aestroyed or
owds of people
day
stead
of Springtime.
Freeman Co.
ly well dressed.
HL SR AIP
LEGAL ADVERTISING
i
iy 10.000
mplicitly
ilies pucked up
ed into Kent and
the
nts increased
white LUTE
arew near
Common Vieas
hangers.
$10 to $30.
BELLEFONTE, PA.