DEA DHS, Mrs, Clara Forry, widow of William Forry, died on Thursday of last week Hellam, in York wes made on Mrs. Forry Was at her home at county, and interment Monday st Yorkana, bora in Potter townpkhip, snd was a Her hus- ago, but her Mrs, Louis Forry, daughter of Robert Lee, baud died five year three children survive, namely : Anna Miller, Hellam: Zesrfoss, Columbia ; and Elmer Hellam. Thersg survive thes brothers and sisters: John R. Lee, Tusseyville ; Mrs. Anna Bell Hetting- er, Mrs, Jonas Bible, Potters Mills ; Mre, W, H. Meyer, Centre Hall, Jacob Lee, Spring Mills, The decessed was aged sixty-five years, one month, twenty days. Those froma Peuus Valley wh tended her funeral were : Mrs. W. H. Meyer, Centre Hall; John R, Lee, Miss Badie Lea, Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. Foster Frezier, Tusseyville : Mrs. Bell Hettinger, Mrs. Jonas Bible, Potters Mills; Mrs, Philip Bradford, Lemont, Mra. also and Dr. P. 8B, Fisher died at his home at Zion on Tuesday afternoon sfter an iil- ness of two years of Bright's disease Interment will be made at Zon a mm, Baturdsay. Dr. Fisher was the 8. Fisher, and was born at f-Beven yn of Rev, Peter Boalsb 1g, and was aged : years, H k 10WnN county, snd practic Zion for many years, was well thoughout the d his profession at At the time of counly coroner, his death Was There survive him a widow, whose maider Miss Eliza Fr ger, and three children : Mrs. Nelson Robb, Rtate Chi- M ise 1 NAME WaS yber- Charles, Licuis, g£ brothers College ; : Arthur, Bt #RIVIY Failtier Nevin F (Gieneral B. Frank Mre, D Mre, sher, lelphia ; Pitisturgh ; City. Mre, George home at 8 thir made two years, fou nthe i terment days. 1 Baturday : cn fc fn os ——— Candidate for State Committers man, WwW. D. Zerby, Esq , the juni ber of the law firm of Getlig & Zitby, ia 8 snd the Demoeratic committe Mr r mem- flats gat for gtood for clean polities, vigorcusly supported the tion movement, Heretofore the coun virtae of Lis 1 the state comml separated the tw BOD. jhelfe jis county casirmans Cy cannot be fi primary, K. the I'he party «ffice held by Dr. F While, wi ¥ alate ich is that of member of executive committee, is also a separate office from that of mitteeman and ccunty will be seen therefore Zerby is not atternp oue out of placa. Mr. Zerby ia so known throughoul Centre ¢ sinle con chairman, It that Mr, ingtoecrowd any well ¢ Wie south aide Ci Uinty as a faithful party man, and one always to Le relied on for port of ‘he riz} 1 contests, Up. the we i'l a place oromittee will be suj usiy by Dimucera's he welfare of the party in the county, state and pation at heart, that Eunowledge of his de on the state pOrt- €d altirost unanin who have ———— A Soo SAA LOUA LY Milton Klice has leasad the Bwarlz farm, at Taswseyville, and will succeed Foster Frezier as tenant (here. James Galbraith of aud OC among the recent callers at this office. Soring Mills D. Moore of Sinte lege were Miss Apnabell Krumrine of Balle. founte is the guest of Miss Ei Hoy at the Mingle home in Centre Hall, Mr. sand Mra. Andrew Corman of Fpring Mills are delighted over a trip to Ohio where they visited their daughter Anna, Mrs. Thomas MceNelly and son Master William, are guests ‘of the formers’ uncle and sunt, Mr, and Mrs, Foster Frazier, at Tussey ville, zZabelh George Sheeasley, who lives slong the pike about a half mile 4elow Penn Hall, is sfMlicted with smallpox in a light form, aud is under strict quaran- Kreldor-Meyeor, A quiet wedding was solemnized on Tuesaday morning, in Balem Reformed chuieh, near Penn Hall, when Roy H. Kreider of Chicago, Ill, and Miss I. Catharine Meyer of Bpring Mills, were married. Rev. W. D. Donat of Aaronsburg performed the ceremony in the presence of only the immediate relatives of the couple and a few in- vited friends. Mies H, Gladys Meyer, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and €, U. Bitner of Hastings, Ne. braeka, was best man. The ring cere. mony of the Reformed church was used. After the wedding the bridal party returned the home of the bride where a wedding breakfast was served Mr. Kreider, the groom, is the son of Wallace Kreider of Rebersburg, and the bride is a daughter of J, 8. Meyer of Bpring Mills, The young couple will spend several weeks in this vicinity sfter which they will be at home in Chicago, where Mr. Kreider holds a very good position as an electrical engineer, The Reporter joins with their many friends in wishing them a long, pros. perous and happy wedded life. Es ness. James P., Mangan and daughter, Catharine, are at the home of the former's father-in-law, M. M. Condo. Mr. Mangan is the busband of Bertha Condo, and is engeged as a life in- agent, representing the Metropolitan Life of New York at his home at Irwin, Westmoreland county. ——— to surance Letters of Introduction, In Rubinstein's reminiscences in » Par how the il ut from Berlin to 1a, fortitled by letters of to various celebrities gly. Annales we read ssian ambassador He wut any beneficial curred to him to remained and presented as ambas- 8 upon us and In- who sollo- ture to In. binstein, the Rubdustein ters of In i found that better without Easing Your Burden, t summer day 1 was driving I overtook a woman who vy basket. She gladly ac but sat with n her arm. 1. “your bas 1st as well in the bottom and you would be much ffer of a ride, et still o nan,” 1 se gir, thank you,” ught of that™ | do very often too,” looked inquiringly The Lord » up in his chariot, and 1} ide in It. But very often | len of care on my back that if 1 put MH willing to carry my cares.’ — up same thing ns well Chopin's Superstition. Chopin. i most musical geniuses late riser. He practiced so long unlike was a piano, with his back unsupport- ed, that his spine was permanently in Jured seated at the plano, and he always had the lights turned out when he was Im- provising. A publie andience unnerved him to such an extent that he could not properly interpret the music before Seated In the midst of 8 small he easily extemporized and vised Ile “talked” to his plano whenever he was melancholy He thought more of his manservant nod his eat than he did of his intimate friends Chopin had a snperstitious dread of the firure and would live in n house bearing that num or start upon a journey on that date. at the He never composed except when him. geleot circle, seven not ber Rings and Pledges, There was an anclent Morse custons according to which when an oath was imposed the person by whom it was pledged passed his hand through a sil ver ring, which was held sacred to the ceremony, In Iceland the bridegroom when plighting his troth used to pass his four fingers and thumb through a large ring and in this manner receive the hand of his bride. And even as lutely as the end of the eighteenth cen- tury In Orkney a man and woman pledged their faith at the standing stones of Stennis by joining their hands through the perforated stone of Odin. The Pillars of Success. fee the eminent author! To what does he attribute his sue: ceas? To the fact that he wrote a dozen unsuccessful books and wasn't discour. aged. And there goes the multimillionaire. a —— . HHluminating Gas. In 1792 a manumacturer of Redruth, In Cornwall, named Murdoch made gas to light his home and factory. Pall Mall, in Londen, 1807. was the first street to be lighted by gas Philadel phia introduced it In 1815, Boston in 1822 und New York In 1825. Gas is obtained from coal, which is heated in large The heavy gas drawn off passes by a pipe, called the hydrau- lle malin, through a number of curved pipes called condensers, in which proe- ess tar and ammonliacal lquor condense and fall into a well. The gus passes to purifiers over slaked lime, which takes up sulphureted hy- and carbonic acid. It is then headed downward to the gas holder, a large tank having its base resting on witer and from which the gas is dis- tributed to the consumers. Certain by- products are obtained in the course of manufacture which are more valuable than the gas {itself These include coke, ammonia, aniline, phenol or car- bolle acid; naphthalene dyes, various artificial drugs and basic perfumes,— Christian Herald. p——— The Actor's Triumph. In 1845 the Boulevarde du Temple wns the heart of the theatrical world of Paris. In the ten theaters that lin- ed that nparatively short thorough- fare so blood was shed on the stage at the popular plays that it was known as the Boule varde dua Crime. became so passionate. characters or thelr plersure that they nes showed quite fierce hostility who had to One night, had 'e In a scene retorts conl drogen every the some of take parts for in represented island was {im some on the in when Napoleon seized by ater and flung bateau d'Eau gloat he wins Making an Army Sword. y Army swords are 1 After tl tempers in ban a balr, A Good Word For the Salmon. Salmon live and flourish oniy in the S00 § ivers that 150 the u in hoosing the inces v From the tir they are caught they i reed and feed to the day n surroundings that are as nearly xt from a sanitary point of view ture can make them, and from the time they are caught and packed until laced before buman ¥ are kept beyond all dan ation. -Their ment has pearance, has a de is readily digestible and ot more, of the ! belngs elements that are required by the ho man system than other forms of meat - Western Canner and Packer, Mountain of the Sacred Footprint, Adam's peak, or Mount Samanala, a ugged mou in In the island of Cey lon, is known throughout the orient as the “Mountain of the Foot print.” In nan flat, rocky basin at foot of this mountain in stone as hard as blue granite there is the perfect im print of a gigantic human foot, and one-half feet long by two and one half feet The Ceylonese Brah mans have a legend to the effect that he Imprint was made by Adam. our first parent, but the Buddhists declare that it could have been made by no one but Buddha, In a Different Light. Watchful Mother—It looked very much as though young Mr. Huggins was stealing a kiss when 1 saw your heads so close together. Confiding Daughter—I wouldn't put it that way. He may have thoughtiessly embezzled a few, but I'm sure he'll repent and have them with him the next time he calls.~Chicago News. Sacred the five wide Cynical Foresight. “That boy of yours may be president of the United States some day.” “Maybe,” assented Farmer Corntos- sel. “But the chances are that he'll be one of the fellows who think they are lucky if they get appointed to be postmaster." Washington Star. Good For Business. Dr. Hoyle—1 believe that bad cooks supply us with half of our patients Dr. Bople~Yes, and | belleve that good cooks supply us with the other balf.— Woman's Home Companion. ——————————_ Old Cuckoo Superstitions. In the the first call of the season formerly played a great part in divinntions A English bellef was that an unmarried person hearing a cuckoo eal! and im mediately taking off boots and stock ings would find on the great toe of the spring Cuckoo's love Common that of the poll of the destined lover Another idea, mentioned by Milton and persisting till this day, was that an unmarried man or mald would re main single for just as many the number of the cuckoo's calls when first heard in the spring. years as The Counsel of Perfection. “If every one would mend one,” sug gested a witty parson, with admirable understanding of human needs, “there would be more true Christina world.” Matthew Arnold took this counsel for self discipline “Make each day a cri That was the star by which he guided his own difficult course.— Youth's Com panion. nity in the ennobling from Pope ic on the last” Right Up to the Minute. “His wife is a business wou right” “What makes you say tha “She installed a ti hall, and he ha goes out nights and —Kansas City Star. ' 5 to p when he gets Plain Facts. *You can't make a a sow's ear.” “No, and goods are Herald. willie Bilin wants to? the who all In the Tall Timber. “There's no sorrow, no unhs DO WwW Wisin, Stops Falling Hair Hall's Hair falling hair. a Will D . . atv) wh henewer certainly stops 3 3 “) " ba SE | No doubt about it wi gurely Sale Heglater PFTEM} Mors LEGAL ADVERTISING iiefonte, Pa. Aug I Fo AL NOTICE x, Notice is hereby given that the fa counts will be presented to Court x WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2TH. 191 tin loss exceptions be filed to of eptember 22. 1913 © for confi and partial ace Iy. guardian for Mary Reed The first and final acoount of substituted assignee of the assigned estate of i Howard Tipton, Curtin township The firet and fioal account of Homer F. Rarnes. am'gnee of the assigned estate of Prank I. Bart ley, Bellefonte Harry Ko DR. FOREMAN, Sept. 1%, 1913, Prothonotary, MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. LOST---A brown felt hat dropped from a wagon on the road between Old Fort and Emers's store in Centre Hall. Finder please return to BAM UEL GINGERICH, Centre Hall E33 UsINESs AND REAL ESTATE FOR SALY The late 8. M. Bell property and busines, in Boalghurg, is offered for male by the undersigned Apply on premises, THOMAR HYNES, Boalsburg, Pa 3 tu SALE OF CARPET, LAMPA LUMBER, ETO. There will be sold at pny sale at the Lutheran church, at Centre Hall, on Saturday, August 1:30 o'clock, carpet, lamps, etc. ~TRUSTEES LUTHERAN CHURCH. tl. SHOT GUN FOR RALE. A praciioally new ithaca double barrel hammerloss shotgun, with full ol grip, ws offered for sale. Bhell vest. re loading tools, ete. , i go with the sale. Will be #old at a remsonable figure. W, FF. FLORAY, Centre Hall, Pa, o 32.pd Early 8port on the Thames. wt on the Thames In London's day A than century, nore exciting twelfth “Bloods en pas spectators clerk t« es of the inys Lhey bucket” a4 naval ixed to a fixed in the middle river, and in the prow of a boat ng tan jet with breaks ition pint and un nttalne iis lance be not nto the river. it 8 com ng t ‘arn, however that the rules then allowed his friends to pick him up.—~London Spectator. it Moved Dr. Johnsun. Nn { “Berizus Call verted Dr, Jc X talker in Fleet street Oxfor was age of went to ounced the “finest nror 13) ear plete Wes ley } and YOW ed oxy as Gib Gently Laxative, Dose, one pill, only one. Sold for 60 years. Ask Your Doctor. f.f Lowel FOR SALE Sow one-half bushel of Stoner Seed Wheat to each acre, and you will be agreeably sur- prised at the result, next spring. Made a great hit in Union Co. this year, We can supply good clean Seed Wheat at $2.00 per bushel, in new bags, FOB Millmont, cash with order, {cle ri Union Co. ’ “out-of-date.” Real money Styles NNN TVD DW Encampment Opens Sept, 13th for farmers, purposes, ADMISSION FREE GEORGE GINGERICH, G. L. GOODHART, Commitiee TDD DTD TBD | | Labor Day Cape May -_ BB TB BBD BD DDD DBD DD VD BD BOB 675 Round Trip Via Market Street Whar! $7 Round Tri p Via Delaware River Bridge od retum From CENTRE HALL Hickets good ng on all regular trains (except limited express trains) and Ing antl Sep Stnbas 12, Ao vain ets from Natsoniows., Lock Haven, HN ADtsrmedi Tickets from Troy, Cogan Vaile , and intermediate stations will bo acoopied of last town on August 28, connecting with 62 on that date, STOP-OVER ALLOWED AT PHILADELPHIA For fall information concern leaving time of trains, consalt tal bills, noarest Ticket Agent, or David Toad, Division Passouger ame, wil PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD How did he lay the foundation of his great wealth? On twenty fallures.~Cleveland Plain Dealer, FOR BALE~1913 Model, Motor Cycles and Motor Boats, at bargain prices, all makes, brand new machines, on ay monthly payment plan, Get our proposition before buying or 1 will re ret it. a i ins in used otar Cycles, rite us today. Kaclose stamp for reply. Address LOCK BOX 11, TRENTON, MICH, 27-30-p95, tine, It appears a grandson from Flemington visted at the Sueesley place and brought the disease with him. * Howard Blabig, Mr. and Mrs, Durst and rons Edward and Ray, Mrs, Will. ism F, Keller, Mr. sod Mrs, Jacob Bharer and daughter Viola, and H, C, Bhirk all of Centre Hall, and Miss Priecilla J. Blabig of State College at- tended the funeral of Mrs, James Durst on Monday, Locating the Cause. Helter~After an intimacy of years Brown and Jones are estranged. Skel- ter—Is It a came of money loaned or wives introduced.—~New York Times. —— A Suspicious Man, “Why does your husband much horseradish?" “He read an item stating that it ls 80 cheap that It isn't worth while to adulterate It. My husband has but lit te confidence In his fellow man. = Kansas City Journal ent 80 wm Had Tried It. HENRY F. BITNER, A. M , Ph. D, Old Gentleman~Young man, hiteh SCRIVENER AND CONVEYANCER your wagon to a star, Reggle—It's no NM Bonds, Wills, Losses, Con. use. 1 did. and father cut off my al | MSGis 40d othor legal papers carehully ripared lownnce, ~ Lippincott's fice. Terms 1 Bell phone 1748, MURRAY'S DRUG STORE, C PA, E, BNTRN HALL DA spall hand Pa,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers