CIRCUL <>C OVER I~ aA PROCEEDINGS IN COURT. Unfinished Business Not Reported Last Week. IMPORTANT CASE ON TRIAL. List of Civil Cases Disposed and Settled, Sen tences Imposed last week—A Complete re port by Samuel Gettig, Esq In the of the com. k, assault and and the p to pay the costs of prose Case ' Verdi G battery. guilty rosecutor art Com. vs. Laura Cathcart, charge si ace, prosecutor Lom - : re and battery xutor to pay barge aggravated assault and battery tor A.A prosecutor prosecu ier revel gnored Dale and the to is of pros« tion. John Esther Grubb Com. vs, ( son, charge | OTR trayvai, proseculrix, ignored and the the costs vs. NW John county to pay Com Ream, charge forgery prosecutor Walker True Bill MONDAY MORNING Court convened on Monday morning with Hon. John G. Love, president judge, on the bench, The first Dusiness before the court was a habeas corpus proceeding in Com. vs. James W. Porter, charge vagrancy, et prosecutor James Lreps, “" After hearing the testimony the court discharged the | prisoner, The list was gone over and cases for trial noted Discontinued, Resides vs. feigned issue, Catharine M. John W. Coal Mining Co., and The Beeck Valley Coal Iron Co., plea ejectment. Con. tinued, J.T. lucas vs. John A, Yeager, plea judgment opened. Non suit, Twosuits. Charles i. Shearer and Emma M. Mrs ontinued Tohn owler assumpsi Non Fiz jane Fowl ntinued mas W NO Fisher and ( Resides, Reside Hartford Hartford, Conn., pl the above case was one the involv Bp court the to the jury ult no doubt ent to the Sug . The New Game Bill has passed the bill killed by one at Harrisburg. The limits amount of game to be person in one day to 10 woodcock, 10 pheasants, 18 But two by one The July. and also October quail and two wild turkeys be killed in a season deer may Pe som opening season for woodcock is in 15 to December October Is rabbits, same ; pheasants 1s; quitrels, same, No game can be killed for shipment of the No can bg killed for millinery pur. poses, but only for scientific purposes. outside state insectiverous birds — .-—— Curtin Monument. Senator McQuown introduced a bill | into the Senate the other day tomake an | | appropriation of $5,000 for the erection | of a monument or statue to the memory D. H. Weaver vs. C. W, Biddle, plea | of the late Andrew OG, Curtin at Belle. | fonte, providing the citizens of Centre | county raise by subscription a like sum. Cook, S.M. Buck, The Saylor Madill | If that bill should pass we believe the balance could easily be raised by popular subscriptions, — a a “You can get carbon’ photos from Shaeffer's gallery for $3, former price was $6. This is a special offer. nlea | species | snakes that escaped from Main's circus | Tyrone several years ago. | men killed the snake while it was lying BELLEFONTE, PA, PROSPERITY ARRIVED Wages al Furnace Another in t he EXPECTED SOMETHING ELSE Many Workme Last Week Their told to Vout Wages Reduced for McKie Pledges Were Prosperity Lampaign LConsideral not Forgotten Chairman Keller, of the Fin mittee, in regard to now borough build ing. recommended that the borough sell their lot on Howard street to some party who will erect the building and rent same to the boro until the sam an be pur chased The street committer erable work being done Bills to the amount of $654.19 proved PRR Echo of the Circus Train Wreck Railroaders are talking about a great snake that was killed recently at Thomp Juniata county, The reptile was sontown, by four coun trymen twenty Awo | feet long and was on the boa constrictor It is supposed to be one of the when the circus train was wrecked near : The country. in a semi-torpid state along the river -——— She Divided All Around, Mrs. Mary Anthony, an aged widow living at Mill run, Clearfield county, re. cently received a pension of £12 a month | and $2,400 arrears. After the death of | her first husband, a soldier, she had mar. ried another soldier, now also deceased. This second husband had another wife, and in all the families involved there are twenty-one living children. Mrs. An. thony has given each froo, keeping but $300 of the $2,400 for herself, THURSDAY, bY §) vittany at her bh vall »y ff =q afternoon 32 Age Deceased leaves a hushand an daughters Bartholomew, 0 in . Sloat Harrisburg, Mrs, Shaffer lis at toll gate near the junct the on. Her remains were buried in the | Madis utheran cemetery, in 1ay .-— onburg last Fri A Strange Freak of Nature Miss Minnie Was preparing to n last Saturday when Whitehall, bake of Lemont, some cakes and in breaking open an egg discovered a white speck in the yolk or yellow of the egg, which proved on examination to 1 the s in shape w a small egg about re of a bird's egg, but of It will be preserved in alcohol with perfect shell glossy white and can be seen by the curious - - » Large Contract The contract for making the paper on which the United States postage and re- | venue stamps will be printed for the en- | suing year, was awarded on Thursday | | last to the New York and Pennsylvania {pulp and paper company, and will be made as heretofore at the mills Lock Haven .——— Pomona Grange Pomona Grange No. in the Hall of Victor Grange, Oak Hall, Thursday May 27th. Two Session’s, 10 a.m. and 1.30 p. m. This will be an im. portant meeting. I. .—— - «Regular $6.50 boy's suits, we sell for f1.00, and all wool at that. Ask to see them, PrILA. BRANCH. more round 11 will assemble | STARTLING EXTRAVAGANCE Dr Swallow Furnish Some Startling Facts WHERE THE MOXEY GOES be erected than more half enough expense has n placed on theold to b suct as Governor Hastings f this anew one 1 wow advocates, and most expense was incurred dur. ing the last two years, and while the ad. ministration was shutting the eves with the cry of Let passage way economy us look at more figures. Erecting between Senate and Senate reception room, maximum, £1,400. Sev eral mechanics would have been glad to at $500 for the Hous {2 said to have cost much more lacing dows of the Senate at £19 cach, do the job The similar passage is not in the schedule Flac an extra sash in all the win about £190, proper estimate about $100 Storm vestibule at Bast entrance Capitol £175, worth about $40 Replacing with new windows the eight old ones in upper dome £19 each, total | $312, worth about $75 of Replacing sixteen wooden columns on exterior of upper dome with sixteen | wrought iron columns, at $110 each, total | $1,760. These took the place of sixtodn | wooden posts that with a little repairing | would have lasted as Jong as the wood | work above and beneath them, Wrought iron railing between the posts | at $20 per foot about $1,600 more. All {the rest of the dome was wood. This | was foolishly matching iron and wood in | an old building. | A low upper story added to the Goy- ernot's stable, $400. istimates for keeping State furpiture in repait are invited at $1,500, WANTED Correspondents to in the y Tyrone Oil Excitement Our announcement that an effo 1t would be made to sink a test ‘well, for oil near Milesburg, has aroused land interest among that Dut ing the past week scores of farmers call {ed on Mr. him that they were ready to sign leases | and do anything else to encourage the | project. There is a strong belief that | ofl can be found in that section owners in community Miles Green and informed An Old Conductor Alfred Strunk, one of the most popu | lar passenger conductors on the Phila. delphia & Erie road, died in Harrisburg last week, He was born at Jacksonville, Centre county, April 16,1847. At the age of 18 he was married to Miss Jary As. key, who was well known in Jackson. ville and Howard March 20, 18g1, his wife preceeded him to the grave. En | a w— - «First class organ at $55. AIkEN's Music Sronn
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