THE CENTRE DEM© KAT, JFONTE, THI RSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1896, MADISONBURG ITEMS, The New Racket. No. Literary Society Organized—Lost her Purse 0 AND 11. Citrine Ex. BELLEFONTE. PA Dangeronsly TH, Miss Rosie Hockman is the with diabetes, she is in a dangerous condition, TAKES THREE Thomas Wolfe, would like to get married, but it DANGEROUS it present confined to house Eleventh Semi-annua! Clearance Sale Our friend, always takes two to make a bargain and sometimes three. In this case it takes at least, three. PURSE Lost:— Last week, while Mrs, Thursday, Jan. Sth 10 Saturday, Feb. 1st Inclusive Geo, Botdorf was returning from Smith | Bro's | she not find it, d her poc ketbook, | ack immediately but could | store, she mi went | The purse contained §6.05 | and is quite a serious loss | to one of her | circumstances. The ely LITERARY SOCIETY schools have | There will | organized a literary se be a regularly prepared program rend PREFRINAS ) FFERING ered each Friday evening, The question discuss including a ed resolved: ‘‘That «SPECIAL in every d U uo won't do Urself justice if U on Fn the debate day evening was, farmers of to-day have more ¢ } v he . od buy before than he bad thirty decided in the 2 mt . . 4 years age looking through New Racket. amrmative WOODWARD ITEMS. SPIGLEMYER. (ting and hauling ice JKR yG.R I SHEM SPIGLEMYER, portant business CORRESPONDENTS DEPARTMENT. school at this place, left for 7th page.) i ik y ee, M been iss Ida Long, of , who had working some time, took on Sunday evening in | She lef home on Monday church Samuel Bierly, who had been going to his former | home, Kre ounday. COBURN ITEMS Whenever our town 15 startled by an explosion of vivie { sonl frequent from Millhe . The parade tten ug | ane The Lutherans of this place are hay the § . ali t on | his PV | Post. three | i NEW that the WAITIONS Was WAS W f those untotored r paid to Ing a week of John Hoffe is d in grain and coal, the last hy i wers as an actor. —Washington DUSInCess i His Feo | B. F. Hamilton of never talks mu | an individ raigned for breaking int welry st | and stealing a lot of watches. The « | assign 1 ¢ vd and en orgetic } PINE GROVE MILLS | deford attorpey to defend the prisones _ | “Ididn’t do it," the prisoner told t! | lawyer. ‘1 wouldn't do such Eliza Musser. | that on m¥ life. Really, M: lava. Ididn't do it. You can take my we g as you hear me tell youn, but they'll railroad me The trial was held before Ju gin. The prisoner was when he met his lawyer iu tl noon said to him “What is the amount ar billF’ weeks, Biddeford, Me., nade a busi made a busi- h about John Seiler, of Virginia, J { rgind is defense of ness tr Ed. day evening. ip to Coburn last week y Pittsburg ial who was arrested and ar Robinson wen tt Mon- ’ ghirey Mr. Earnest Musser, of Belssera, Ohio, has been on Main stre Mr. W plates starting for Illinois this week. Mr. Jessie Piper the with his parents, at Alexander. Crorrrnc Woop:—Several of our boys a thing as Hamilton rd he guest of Mrs. et, for several ¢ { tt FUL Tee liam 9 Musser, Jr., contem- bon Vi spent holidays | acai tt o after | superintendent one | | ment of Mr | army a month or | friends would hardly reco | There is nothing freight and twisting brakes, but | at you with determined eyes ths | { i | few left on Monday for the purpose of chop- ping paper wood for the Tyrone paper mill. Their camp is along the railroad “Well, about $100," replied the law. yer. “Would you take $257" asked the free man. | “Well, that's better than nothing, *’ | said the lawyer, and he said, "‘Twenty- five it ia. ”’ They stepped outside, and the dis charged man said to the lawyer, '‘Say, {if you'll wait until I get to Boston so I can sell thoso watches 1°11 send you the 25." " Sow ; A week later Mr. Hamilton received All preseut were highly pleased his $25 —Rangur Commgreial with the excellent music furnished by . the Reed and Meyer orchestra. { Toole's Wasted Melody. fine so0lo's were sung by Mrs. 1t was at St. Annes. Mr. Sims Rooves, the famous singer, was staying there, and Mr. Toole, the comedian, called to A ne |#ee him. Sims Reeves had gone out for wonderful capacity for goose. William | 4 walk, and Tools strolled a to try to Kepler filling the position of toast mas- ‘find him. ‘Under a sihdy tree comfort ter in which some very interesting top. ably seated with a newspaper,’’ says ics were discussed, followed by a num. Mr. Toole, “1 mw my friend. He did ber of others. The time for going home NOt soe me. 1 went qiietly behind him came but too soon, for all, feeling sorry | And gave him a snatch of ‘My Protty that such ocqasions are so few and far Jane.’ No response. So I thought I Detwees? would rouse him up, amd I began with Lu (an ipitation of his forte style, ' "Twas A Special Officer Now |In rafalgnr Bay.' I had not finished when he tarmned round, with much On Thursday Jesse Dawson, the mail | pznusement, and—it was not Sims Porter, was sworn in as a special Rail: | Reoves !''— London Globe, road officer. Dawson has instructions to - — arrest persons who jump on the trains about the depot, He will enforce 1 these instructions from Penna. Furnace to Tyrone, near We wish boys success in their undertaking Goose RoAsT: One of the brilliant social events of the season, was a goose | roast, at the hospitable home of John Gummo. But the young la- dies seem to think that it was not a very social affair, as there were no ladies in. | vited the loveville crossing the | some of Some | Gummo and little girl; Ed displayed great skill in the use of the carving knife, and a To Put Your Foot In It *“To put one’s foot in it’’ is an Eng- ish country saying. After tho milk is deawn from the cows it is commonly moses | placed in large, flat pans and set on the HOOD'S PILLS cure Liver IMs, ground to oool, in which position 18 is Billousness, Indigestion, Headache, | A 0a8y matter for a clumsy fellow te | A pleasant laxative, All Druggiste P84 lls foot ia the pan. aa ‘ — . - AN ERUDITE BRAKEMAN, A West Point Geaduaste Work ng His Way Up A rather grimy corduroys and a stubby black beard, sat chatting with Fre shit Traffic Manager McCormick yesterday, says the Cincin- nati Inquirer. “Let me introduce Mr. Charlie Hine, a freight brakeman on our Chicago divi- sion,” said Mr. McCormick Mr. Hine rose, and, acknowledging the reporter's greeting, put ont his hand--he was shy a finger nail in the way of bus iness as the result of his first month's experience on the 10ad. “Mr. Hine has resigned his commis gion as Lieutenant in the United States army to turn freight brakem an,” con tinned Mr. McCormick. '‘He is a grad- nth Railroad Business, young mun, in dusty | nate of Washington High School, of the | West Point Military Academy, and of tut he is the Cincinnati Law School | ambitions and wants to graduate in the Big Four College. He is taking the op- erating department course nd will go in for his examination and degree of of these d er published ti AVS The Enquir y ANNOUNCES m from the - " His old him now Hines' resignati more ag of the trim and jaunty left, and he has sOIME husth Appearance local y looks sinile do not shift as he explains pounds in weight while i cheerily and his position “My ambition is to be a sup rintend- i the the- 1 neory ideal 1 i 1 in Tal ent,” he says ‘I have studie ory. but I want the pract and practice combined produ condition in A Mystery Expinined The street-fight was alm able-bodied gladiator lay pm the sidewa ing the f1 the r around ceedings wddenly a | strong men astonishment It was a policeman! With a fixed wlvanced wr 11 fs LAT OF § "1 his he victor gaze and step he ! laid the shirt ¢ nds mained ef HET Ve. oN y zed by the mysterious apps tearing himself 1 an alley with a cry of Awed and silent, the crowd gathered round and gazed at the stern set face of the officer. Suddenly 8 quiver passed faatures: he drew his coat cuffs several times across his eyes and help lessly abeut him. “Where am 17" he gasped The mystery was explained at last. He was a asleep walker. — Truth, para and, then lows over his looked An Issue In Deubt, Stranger—1 was over to your court house to-day at the murder trial. Idon't soe why the jury deliberates so long; the prisoner proved a complete alibi Resident (Boomertown, Oklahoma) Wal. 1 wouldn't like to gamble on the result, This is the first chance fer a hangin’ since the new jail's bin built, an’ local pride’s at stake! — Puck. The Bummer OGlrl Joke. Of all the jekes the dearcst That hangs on memory 's wall, The old, old joke of the summer girl, It seemeth the beat of all The ships have passed in the night time; Big sleeves are getting passe; Trilby has gone to the bow wows, And bloomers have had their day We look with longlog fondness At what we spurned last fall, And the old, old joke of the summer girl, Heemeth the best of all London Advertiser. It Covered the Ground. + “The late editor's wife is something of a humorist.” “Indeed.” “Yes: took a line from his salutatory and placed it on his tembstone.” What was it?" “We are here to stay.” Atlanta Con- stitution. haw A dog was advertised to play on a piano at a circus. When the time came | for the dog to perform he got on a seat and bozan playing. Suddenly a wag in | the crowd shouted “rats!” upon which the dog bounded off tke seat. But the Bapts y ts on playing. Minnenpolis List. : CATTLE HORNS IN DEMAND, They Are Highly Priz 4 as Ornaments In the West, Of the hundreds of thousands of cat tle brought into Kansas City alive every year and either taken out dead or not taken out all in any recognizable form, it is to be presumed that the ma jority have horns. These horns are not a part of the frozen, canned, corned or beef that leave the city in the unending pro- cession of yellow freight cars. Neither are they piled up anywhere in the packing-house district as they used to pile up buffalo bones out West await at otherwise preserved carcasses of ing the coming of the agents who bought them for fertilizers, Then what becomes of the tons of horn that are brought into Kansas City every ynar through the medium « the st yards? While pondering this inquiry oR to him self a reporter for the New York Times some interesting facts stumbled upon indus discov concerning Kansas City's infant tries last week and inci pred where at lentally least horns go to In the fir posed that that big pa portant element to go one has said that wher the doors of a Kansas ( there is no part « some important use, the animal's expiring Even that may At any rate, the form no in r weleht » said “I wish we'd r Oh, my!” shriel angel “Oh. dear, how awful! Then the great ther and farther gloud. and the angel queried “Why do you wish f ‘Because it would th my shoulder, and then I arm around yon and There ) flowy form slowly swayed over until vested on his shoulder-blade kis right arm stole and st waist, and as he reached and took her peachy his thumb and finger the old codger six feet away who had been trying to catch all they said tumed away and re marked “If such things hain't stopped I'm goin’ to quit riding on these ‘ere boats!” ~Detroit Free Press, white moor whina a collision?’ w you back on should put my : ¥ : was no sllision. but her wil it , and then le around her up his hand 1 i ear between On Hand All Right Little Jack prays every night for all the different members of his family. His father had been away one time fora short journey, and that night Jack was praying for him as usual. “Bless papa and take care of him,” he was beginning as usual, when suddenly he raised his head and listened. “Never mind about it new, Lord, end- od the little fellow, “I hear him down in the hall.” Albany State. A True Genius pains?’ Wickmire but if it be true my wife is a genius, | She never reads a patent medicine alma- | nac without at once taking all the sym- | toms it describes. — Indianapolis Jour. i | Too Realistic, Brushe--That meadow picture of yours, "New Mown Hay," was a good one. Why didn’t you exhibit it? | Buel--It was too good. The cows got | at it and ate it up. Detroit Free Press, Iiastrated Dally. | Jiblet-— What ix meant by the common | ran of people? | Hilo —Subgrbanites catching their morning Boston Courier, | canght, but if he cocuples a high official | | whi od. Moral: Don't steal till Yabsloy-—~Who was it that said “‘gen- | you g fus was an infinite capacity for taking | | Japanese residents the right to vote and I don't know who said it, | | to enjoy full citizenship. Highest of all in Leavening Power.~— Latest U. 5. Gov't Report Reval ABSOLUTELY PURE Baking Powder Traoslators and Translations, The translator is reported to be badly paid by the and this, to the general rea urally suggests feriority in the pat i ublis her, ler, nat in- He Kg the unskilled ut market of literature and are glad of ure of his wares, nked amor } nw hang al the odd If this low estimate he translator's 8 Wer the general paratively often c ane of the eries, — Lond etal the winter just past fresh cu- cumbers from Boston were a feature of the markets in the eastern sities They were grown under glass in what is the During largest plant in the world The great feature of the work is tuat the vegetables are grown by electric light. The projector of this ingenions system of market gardening finds that it increases his profits 15 per cont. By this he means that the cucum- | bers and lettuce grow 15 per cent faster ander the electric light than they would without its use e employs the light at night tMl 1 o'clock from Nov. 1 to March 1. The light is fixed 30 feet above the glass hothouse vegetable producing By June 1 Atlanta will have finished the work on the buildings for the Inter | national and Cotton States exposition Five hundred men have long been at | work on them. Atlanta is more forta- | nate in the matter of climate than Chi tago was. The reason that the work on | the World's fair structures was so far behind was that the materials needed | could not be shipped in time on sccount | of cold weather. | Several reoont legal decisions indicate | that when a man is a low down, oom- mon thief he will get punished if he is place he may safely count on being | into a very high office. The Hawatian republic should give ita to Hood's Pills. They are small, tasteless, and purely vege- table. They aot gently but thoroughly and satisfactorily do wot irritate or inflame the intestines, but lenve them in natural, CORdiiIou Will You Trade with us? What Is An innocent fustantaneot tablet form, « ymposed « licorice, hoarhound and They are useial In o ighs ness, “tickling.” trom dryness of the throat ar sages ot | and “smokers’ sore throat especially useful to singers wi teachers and all voice workers Sold by the 10 cents per box en or gross, at rey yhehe 1d A and soreness res 1 alr “olergymens sore edy in tolu cherry. 1d, hoars iting pas throat, They are spe Aakers, Price, box, doz 1] ‘Frog In Your Throat? a GREEN'S PHARMACY Bash House Block, Bellefonte, Pa Bellefonte Grain Market. Qorrected weekly by Geo. W. Jackson 800: Red wheat, per DUshel am cermin Rye. per bushel... Cort ears per bushel, new ; Corn, shelled per bushelawon : er bushel... wove m————— weekly by Baver & Co.) Apples dried, perpound......... Cherriesdried per pound seeded Beans per QUATT. ccm mv msmnse Onions, per bushel, Butter, per pound Tallow, per pound... Country Shuler... Hams .. Hamesugar cured Breakfast BACOH comm Lard, per pound ew won Las ORO sscuiss isin toesper DUShe | DOW....... a “nim [On 2 BOE PV mutiny n 65 “ 15 x 18 B «0 2.5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers