I DEATHS L.. T. Muvpson, of Bellefonte, one «f the best known men in Centra county, died Saturday forenoon at 11 o'clock in the above place, aged about sixty years, He has been in failing health for some time, The deceased was a son of ex-Sherifl Levi Munson, who died at his home in Philipsburg many years ago. Be: sides his wife he leaves oue son, John, and the following brothers and sisters, viz : Charles, of Kane ; Ha ry, Philips- burg ; Mrs. Julia Bollinger, Wellsboro; Myrtle, wife of William MeClelland, of Bellefonte, and Margaret, wife of W. 8. Rhoads, of Iselin, Indiana county. v The funeral took place Tuesday fore- noon ; interment at Bellefonte, Mrs. Bue Woomer, widow of David Woomer, formerly of P rt Matilda, died on Balurday evening at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Harry Patterson, in Tyrone, aged seventy-four years Surviving her are the following sons | and daughters: St. Clair and L. A, Woomer, of Altoona; Mrs, Sanford Lewis, of Clearfield ; Warren Woomer, of Bald Eagle; Mrs. Harry Patterson, of Tyrone, and Mrs, Isaiah Nearhoof, of Vail. Bhe also leaves three sisters and one brother, viz: Mrs. Thomas Bennett and Miss Navcy Woodring, of Port Matilda ; Mrs. Henry Woomer, of Bald Eagle, and Daniel Woodring, of Bellefonte. John H. Brunbaugh, a member of | Company E | 83rd Pa. Infantry, aged | sixty-six years, died at the Boldier’s| home, at Dayton, Ohio. He had been! i 8 resident of Panilipsburg for many | i Years, | ———— fl i LOCALS | Machine oil—Weber, Centre Hall. | My, how the timothy heads have | shot up into the air since the showers | set in, i The Y. M. C. A. of Boslsburg willl hold a festival in Boalsburg on the | evening of July 4th. i David L.. Bartges attended the fu- neral of his cousin, David Penn Hall, Tuesday, Jobn H. Bitoer and daughter, of Altoona, have been at the home of Daniel Daup, in Centre Hall, | ior a few days, Mr. and Mrs, Thomr son, | of Lemont, Hall on | Saturday on business, and one of the | persors they came tosee was J, Q A. | Kennedy. Bartgee, at | a $e ss. | Mra, little James I. drove to Centre Keep in mind the festival on the! evening of July 4'h, by the Ladies | Temple, K GE Centre Hall, eupport. , in Grange Arcadia, Give the ladies your] ! The Houseman families of Central | Pennsylvania held their annus! re-| union at Park, Altoona, | one hundred of the! i Lakemont There were avout clan present, H. F, Bitper farm, west of Old Fort, | has a large corn field people are talking | about on sccount of its very promising | BPPEATAL CO, | ¥F. Vv the andertaker, | drove to Milroy last week, and brought back with him bie mother, Mrs. Mary | Goodhart, who visited her daughter, | Mrs. Wilhham Wine gardnoer, fo: a week in Milroy, Goadhart, Misses Isabella Rowe and Cora Luse are attending the Lake Cheutan- | (qua, at Point Chantauqgis, New Y rk They will receive training for teaching and will remain until the opening of the fall term of the Central Htate Normal Behool, at Lock Haven. John Camp, of Milroy, runs a Ford machine and gets his name into print more frequently than heretofore, He hss had two accidents recently, and bith times the car struck a buggy. The occupants of the vehicle were not injured, but in one instance the buggy was pretty badly wrecked, The Millbeim Journal printed this personal last week: Mra. Harry Brown, of Keokuk, Is; Miss Aida Musser, a student at the Iowa City Biate University, and Misa Margaret Musser, a student at the Oberlin Col- lege, Oberlin, Onio, arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs, W. B, Musser, and will spend the summer in Mill heim. Mrs. Brown is a sister of Mrs Musser, and the Misses Alda and Margaret are daughters, Improvements to the interior of the Presbyterian Manse are beiog made, 01e addition being the installa. tion of a bath. The trustees of the United Evangelieal church have also contracted to make sabstantial lm- provements to the parsonage in Cen- tre Hall. The rear portion of the dwelling will be raised to full two stories, and a bath and other con. venlences added, John D. Lucas has taken the contract to do the work. George B, Gray, Ia lying in a eritical endition at his home rear Storms. town, the result of irjuries sustained Baturday evening by belog knocked down by an sutomobile. The young man driving the car intentionally, it is said, run into a hog, and losing con- trol of the machine, it whirled around and struck Mr. Gray, who Is eighty- three years old, and who was on his way toa neighbor's. His hip was brok. en and other serious ir juries I* flicted, x Appreciates the Reporter, Joan E Bodtorf, who with M. A. Zottle, Is engaged in the bakery, con fectionary aud ice cream business in Jersey Bhore, writes the Reporter thus: Enclosed find $1 50 for which kind- ly extend the subscription to the Cen- tre Reporter, which is sucha welcome visitor to my home. It always brings me the news of my old associates in good old Penns Valley, and thanks for the very regular delivery. LOCALS Binder twinc—Weber, Centre Hall. Samuel J. Rowe started on a busi. ness trip to Buffalo and Niagara Falls, Wednesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bible, of Belle fonte, were in Penns Valley the latter part of last week, and were entertain- ed by Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Mitterling, in Centre Hall, See the Johnston side delivery hay rake, that by turning a single lever tedder before you make a purchase of another make. — Weber, Centre Hall. David Grossman, who served jhis country in the war of the rebellion as a soldier in the Illinois regiment, spent a few days at the home of his cousin, Hon. L. Rhone, in Centre Hall. Monday morning he left for Gettysburg to join in the reunion of the “vets.” Mr. Grossman is from northern Texas, The Ladies’ World for July is called a Ten-Story Number, and it has a fine collection of fiction by such notable Calvin Blake, Elils Parker Butler, Mary Haatings Bradley, Mrs. C. N Williamson, Grace Duffie Boylan and John Gruelle, besides some unsigned contributions that are full of interest, Georgas Vailey. Mr and Mrs. E. IL. Lingle spent The farmers are all busy masking hay this nice warm weather, Mrs Sarah Reeder was a pleasant Mrs. James Faust over Funday. Mrs. Busan Davis her dsughter, Lingle. P. A. Auman, Bertha Jamison and Edoa Wolfe spent Sunday at the Finkle. F. W. Zttle and family spent Bun- day at Pleasant Gap, at the home of his sister, Mrs. B. E. Ripka. Mrs. F. B. Herman, of Altoona, sod gpent Mrs, Bunday Morris at the home of their sunt, Mrs. H. A. Haugh. Woodrow Wilson, the three.weeks- old son of Mr, and Mrs. J. B. Ripka, Tuesday afternoon at Valley cemetery, ems A A RA the Georges Wrestier Whe Wanted to Humble the Ruler of Japan, The till toid In Ja. ut the late mikado, all of which ulated to strengthen the admi- wmsedd monarch nce and sim- as well as his wisdom anecdot O8 Are » . 11% 1 2 1 count of his benevol On a« plicity, At one time wrestling was a favorite pastime court and kis majesty was able to throw the and officials. Tetsu taro, the emperor be afraid that the latter might become too proud of his prowess in that and other sporis the emperor challenged Yama. oka, and the latter threw the sovereign with great force. The monarch, so the story gues, was not too pleased at the defeat, but was too good a sportsman to say anything Later Yamaoka resigned his position at court the that, though he had defeated the emperor for the good of the throne and the country, yet in doing so he had subjected his sover- eign to a heinous indignity. The mon- arch, however, absolutely refused to accept the resignation, saying: “You have done well to show that the ring is no respecter of persons, and 1 appreciate your loyal spirit in beating me.” At all events Yamaoka was in high favor at court thereafter. Tokyo Gazette. MAKES NIAGARA A DWARF. A Waterfall In British Guiana That ls 822 Feet High. The Kaleteur waterfall, in British Guiana, is the highest waterfall in the world, It is of unsurpassed grandeur and beauty, as the Potaro river, unob- structed at Its brink by islands or huge masses of rock, hurls itself in full flood into a great abyss. Peering over the precipitous and sheer rocky face, within 100 feet of this avalanche of water, is an awe in- spiring experience. The total height of the fall is 822 feet, or five times that of Niagara, which boasts only 164 feet. The fall is generally seen at the dry season. and consequently the name Kaleteur means “Old Man's fall” and was so called after an old man who lived In an Indian village yenrs ago. One day the natives, exasperated at the old man's bad temper, put him inte n boat and let the boat earry Him over the falls. The boat was, tradition says, turned to stone and is now a large rock at the foot of the falls, while the old man's ghost haunts the spot at night, and no Indian will ap- proach. The full, if harnessed, could generate a horsepower of 1,204,804 New York Sun, —— at the Japanese with ease attendants Yamaoka to throw all court One however, Very anxious ause he was on pea A King In Disguise. } A ruler who journeyed to the sceno | of his inauguration in disguise was the | king of Roumania. Prince Charles of | Hohenzollern traveled to Bukharest in | 1866 In deflance of the powers when ' war between Prussia and Austria was Imminent. In Switzerland ke had a passport made out in the name of “Karl Hettingen,” going to Odessa on business with a special note recording that Herr Hettingen wore spectacles. At the Austrian frontier a customs of- ficial demanded his name, ani the prince had forgotten it Happily Counellor Von Werner, who accompa- nied him, had the presence of mind to create a diversion by insisting upon paying duty for some cigars and mean- while the prince consulted his passport, So he proceeded safely on his second class journey.—London. Chronicle. Strenuous Chivalry, It 8 complaned that modern condi: tions are killing “the chivalry of the | middle ut mediaeval tales and romances show what that chivalry really was. Wife beating was a com- mon incident on the part of those knights and gentlemen whose gallantry was a mere convention, The Chevaller de la Tour-Landry in his book of coun. sels to his daughters tells them the story of a woman who used to contra- diet her husband in public. One day, after expostulating in vain, he knock. ed her down, then kicked her face and broke hier nose. “And so,” comments the good chevalier, “she was disfig- ured for life, and thus, through her ll behavior and bad temper, she had her nose spolled, which was a great mis fortune to her.” But not a word is sai about the husband's brutality Stops Falling Hair HalPs Hair Renewer stops falling hair. No doubt about it what- ever. You will surely be satisfied ages.” FMUSCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. COON fosires to hound, DOG TO TRADE. The undemignad trade a first.class coon g for a rabbit ELMER RUNKLE, Centre Hall, Pa ROHOOT male log Potter Township Becrelary 0.58 or further Bi W. EE BURKHOLDER, Administrator, Bellefonte, Pa, LOST - On the public road between Centre Hall : on Sunday evening, a lady's leatl five dollars in hand beg oon ing about 1 Mrs 2% Finder please return to HARRY McCLENAHAN, Centre Hall, Pa. CIDER MILL AND ENGINE FOR SALE The undersigned offers for sale a cider mill and fit, located at Rockey's at red dollars cash. This ; CORMAN Boriog : FOR BICYCLE—A 2 fie, purchased las! FOR SALE~1913 Model, Motor Cycles Motor Boats, ai bargain prices, all makes new machines, on essy monthly payment Get our proposition before buying or you will re gret it; also bargains in used Motor Cycles Write us today. Enclose amp for reply Address LOCK BOX 11, TRENTON, MICH 77-36-505 Sacrifice Sale of BREEDING STOCK sell quick for room. Centre Halll Poultry Yards C. D. Bartholomew , Proprietor CENTRE HALL, PA. Stationery We carry the best grade of writing paper—the kind that adds the touch of re finement to social corres- pondence, Pen and Pen- cil Tablets Good grade of paper ruled and unruled. Price, 4 and 10 cents, Want a Good Toilet Paper ? None better than Tokio Crepe Toilet Tissue, It is the most “Clothdike” paper onthe market. Made under strictly sani. tary conditions and is more cleansing and sanitarythan any other known toilet paper. Will not clog drain pipes. A large bolt for 10 cents. office of The Grass is Ready. Are You? JPENNS VALLEY FARMERS will in a few days commence work in the hay field. Ideal weather conditions during the past few weeks have made the grass, which threatened to be short, shoot up with amazing rapidity, and consequently a heavy crop of hay will bring joy to the tiller of the soil, Are you fully prepared to handle this big crop with the right machinery, the kind that will work without trouble the whole day long, and enable you to store your crop without undue delay, and in better condition than is possible with the use of doubtful machinery, Allow the following to claim a few minutes of your time. The Johnston Mower An examination of this mower will prove that that it is excelled by none. The superior workmanship, the high-grade material and the correctness iical construction make the Johnston zll that is desir- the grass that grows on any kind able and essential in a mower, n which the Johnston was constructed simpler a mower is the more easily it is going to work, The Johnston any of land, for it was made to perform that duty, JohnstonjCombined Rake and Tedder The side delivery rake is coming into popular use with the modern op farmer, Every year more farmers § are adding this implement to their line of havin ¢ belter work ching from os im in the barn. * Johnston Steel Hay Tedder as No farmer who gi ves the quality of his h:ay, clover or alfalfa, a:y consideration whateve.® is without a hay tedder. mpiement reduces the dder The Tah 1 $s YWrrre I'he Johnston is the ** hurry up" “quality maker” of hay for the farmer, kind of hay, wet or oT oe Or ight, and It handles any dry, heavy always does the work right. The forks have three tines in one piece of steel, spring tempered. A properly con- Every bit of hay is sure of being which touch the ground at the same time. The wheels are exceptionally strong and will last the life of the tedder & "ss ® structed spring trip allows the forks to meet obstruct Ly 4% Wns will “kicked up” by these six rapidly moving forks, no two of wut breaking The Johnston Tedder will save you time—money— labor. We would like to have you drop in, sce aur line, and become acquainted with the best in farm machinery, If you can’t come in person, call us by 'phone. J. H. WEBER, Centre Hall THE CENTRE REPORTER Come to the NEW STORE | You will find us ready to do | business in our new store in the “Reporter” building. Besides the famous Red Cross Stoves and Ranges which we advertised for some weeks, we also have a good line of HARDWARE, and especially a full line of Garden Tools and Nails We have nails in every size and you will find our prices right, Roofing and Spouting and all kinds of Repair Work, If you cannot come, oall us on either "phone : Rell or Commercial I. L. SMITH SPRING SHOES in the latest style--gun metal POT bo om ol town to purchase your Shoes for Sprin{ wear wh 50 complete a line of the very latest styles, coming from the best manalact- urers, are to be found at our store. We can satisly all tastes to a nicety, Gun Metal and Russet will be worn by all good dressers this Spring, and! the best in these leathers will be loand here, Moderately priced. See ours Hirst, KREAMER & SON CENTRE HALL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers